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Clinton New Era, 1893-10-13, Page 7re 4 4 rratOtiCali ', 1t us tIStiO4 —11A s be Forest ' t ttY : Btisiness . 'College of London .' . IR the proud iosit.Ioa it gceuples tollaym Qatal9she tve,i J. NV, NitES . t '.ELT We are now giving a •Discountt'of Ten per cent to ail Cash buyers ofBoots'and Shoes a1 our stoke A,CKSON, Clinton OOTABLES 25c. 30c and 45c ---- 000•— We have now a fine line of Bamboo Tables at 25e., 30c, and 45 .cents. Whenever you have any time to spare we would like yon to take -a look through our wareroonis whether you wish to buy or not J. W. CHIDLEY, Funeral Director and Embalmer= -Night calls answered at his residence, King St., opposite the foundry. JOSEPH CHIDLEY, FINE FURNITURE FANCIER, CLINTON First car now GrAXIS- 01•111. arrived direct from. Redpath's Refinery,Montreal Quality the Purest, Prices the Lowest. Special Cuts in 100 lbs. of Barrel lots. :._..__..Teas, Coffees -and -Spices a Specialty BUTTER AND EGGS WANTED . IrwinGrocer 9 MACKAY BLOCK, - - - - CLINTON. COOL WEATHER IS HERE But yon need not suffer from the cold, as you can purchase very cheaply at ADAMS' EMPORIUM Under Clothes, Top Shirts,Flannels, Flannelettes Pants, Suits, Overcoats, Caps, Mitts, Socks, Gloves,; Hosiery, and Good Boots & Shoes Suitable for all classes of people. Special -see our Fur Coats, Goat Robes and Horse Blankets • MILLINERY of the very Lb/eat quality. ADAMS' EMPORIUM, LONDESBORO R. ADAMS. L 30 °ySSacrifice Sale Days OF BOOKS, Stationery WALL PAPER, &c In order to clear out the i3ntire stook of W. H. SIMPSON, it has been decided to offer the same at prices away below cost. Everything will be sold at snoh 'Agues that will make it of interest for purchasers to come here. THE STOCK MUST BE SOLD OUT PRICES ARE MADE ACCORDINGLY • This is a genuine clearing sale, and it is desired to clear the' whole out in 30 days. UIABALL' 5 CflML FACTORY :Eluron Street, Clinton . We have on- hand an assortment of splendid BUGGIES. 'GARRIAGrS, & WAGGONS Whit;]] wo giitrnntee to be ofifizet-'oiass material and workmaliship. I you want a good article at the pries ofapoor one, call and See ue NI CLINT TliZ CLINTON • NIX h11A1040DOA.. ¥y Ileighho wag R widder,. an'taho. boa a run, 40wlt* farm.; 'hercowti au' Piga an' cbiol"na dons; n fohtylot .o harm To my Melds t.400x3V, :an' X .st008 it • (JO, a.hale, Till '4. wculdn'S be irntaoeed on ha rao eieh .e$f'le, Soo I ]oohed .ley very maddest .ea I walked. lap to her dear, ' Tull she looked up,at tale omajlin' while a 'waehin' tap the floor, 40' her cheeks was red ee roses an' her Mgr 08' 144 ka .146114; I forgot to scold an' sass her fer she eeeared so sweet a1.,' height. Dat my hone] was to the plow noW, an' it wouldn't never do Tofergit them depredations fes' by Iookin' at her slaee. So I gethered up my anger au, I said, "Now, Mrs Brown." An' my'to1 a put, out her eyes' light and the lashes they 'fell down. Bat I ain't no man fer foolin', an' I went right on to say Hew her pigs et all my melons an' her owe et tons of hay; How her ohiolena scratched my aorta out, an' I wouldn't hes it so, Gittin''harder all the time, like a man - man will, you know. Then the widder, she looked up, with a teat -drop on her cheek, An' a somethin' in her throat that wouldn't let her speak. I ut she sob] 'd an' cried out in a kind of teary tone, Thet she bed no ono to help her, an' was poor an' all alone., An' my hand was off the plow then and a- reachin'out for barn, I bed learnt a euddent lesson that I never thought I'd learn. Well, my sooldin' was a failure, seein' what I thought to do, For her pigs an' cows are all here, an' the widder's with 'em, too. Down -With High Prices Fos Electric Belts. $1155, $2.65, $3.70 ; .former prices $5, $7 $10. Qualty remains the eame--16 dd. ferent styles;. dry battery andaoid belts mild or atrong current. Less than half the price of any other company andmore home testimonials than all the rest to- gether. Full list free. Mention this paper. W. T. BAER & CO. Windsor, Ont. LADY BARBERS. "The lady barber," said Louis Ed- monds to a St. Louis reporter, "cannot be called a success. In almost every city ladies haye opened barber shops with a great flourish of trumpets and have been patronized ver•4liberally by the youths of the city, who regarded the idea as distinctly novel. But the cases where the project has proved anything like,a permanent success are very rare: I have been shaved twice by a lady barber and would not go through the ordeal a third time even if paid liberally for so doing. It is not because alady cannot shave so much as because she cannot keep a raaor in good condition. "It looks very easy to stra'i a razor, but every man who has trier. to shave himself recollects how he has absolute- ly -failed tcr'nroduee the desire l -dr ct in spite of t.le most vigorous applica- tions of energy and what he regards as skill. A lady is at still greater dis- advantage and cannot seldom sharpen even a penknife, let alone a hollow - ground razor. The only possible chance the average lady barber has is to keep a man busy sharpening her ra...ors. and by so doing she has to pay the bulk of her profits in the way of superfluous wages. In addition to this most men who are expert stra-,pers are also expert barbers, and prefer to complete the operation themselves." when Baby was slob, we gave ber fastens. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Oastoria. When she had Cbildren,ahegave them Castoria When it is said that the annual drink bill of the United States is $n0, - 000,C00, it readily occurs to one that this great sum spent on clothing, 'fuel, food, etc., would go a long way to- wards increasing the comtorts of the people. The subject is not so. often approached from another side, which was recently dealt with by the Hon. Walter 13. Hill in Christian Thought. Mr Hill says that while the capital in- vested in the manufacture of alcoholic liquors, employs 36,000 men, the same amount invested in any other business, would employ an average of 135.( men. A simple transfer to other busi- ness, he says, would "create a demand for 10,000 laborers The liquor traffic pays for every $1C0 worth of product, at consumers' prices. $1.93 for labor. the shoe business $23 per $1C0 to the laborer, and so on. Ooto ?iBvi3, 18e3. • lti l>hotFer' flame fpr ' •� S4txG5+7%r'ti, �`1►o (Moe) Wool, and yltlld>E t0 Per The Beget ' 11r e.' on z,. 10 lbs. .at '50e,R A PUNY AND FRETFUL BABY. This is now quite unnecessary! Like many others, you may have your baby fat, laughing and happy, if you give it Soott's Emulsion. Babies take it like cream. The Freat Conservative combination, consisting of the Premier, the Finance Minister and other Dominion Ministers, fails for some reasons to attract the at- tention that Mr Laurier alone attrac- ted. Even the Conservative press does not give as full and glowing accounts of the Ministers, tour as of tnat of the Opposition leader, a certain indication that there is not as much interest at- tached to the former as to the latter by the general public. There are two ways of accounting for the greater in- terest created by kr Laurier. The Op- position leader being a French-Cana- dian and an exceedingly eloquent speaker, as well as an attractive per- sonality, his reception in an English nrovinee was a matter for curiosity both inside' and outside of the province. The other xplanation is that Mr Lau- r:er's polic of ttritish free trade is the More attr ctive one, pt'oteetton being playedou'. Celtainly from this dis- ,. it 1 ks as if Mr Lx rl r s sttt lance u e 1 was waxingwhile that of Sir John Thompson a 1111; roster wits waning. --1 fontveal =ss. h 1 I, ten Cry los P `abet'' . 0, st tlai.. Of Pure Norwegiaii Cod Lt'lier 011 and Hypophosphites. isapaeceieited and impure Wood i¢ at, spays ejl'eotfvely restored fo eigorous con,.. ditton, by MTh waonderf'ul remedy. Qure1 *mew, cows and all Wasting Diseases. Almost aspalatable as .1111(1e. . Prepared only by St ott & Bowite, Belleville. The general offices of the Manitoba & Northwest Railway are to be remov- ed from Portage la Prairie to Win- nipeg. The Telegraph's Berlin correspondent says that Prince Bismarck has suffered a stroke of paralysis and that he is in a comatose condition. Liver Complaint, Kidney, De- bility and Female Weak- ness all cured. LONDON, June 29th, 1880. For some time I was a rufferer of liver cora plaint, affections of the kidneys, debility and female weakness, also with pain in the sine, be- tween the shoulders, and underneath the shouid- der blades, and much weakness in the back and distress across my body, and much sinking down of the system. Through persuasion I tried Williams' Royal Crown Remedy; and have de- rived great benefit from its use; an taut 1 am feel- ing better at present than I have for a number of years. I can with pleasure recommend it, and I would induce any one who is afflicted to get it without delay. - MRS E. GREEN. At 11 o'clock Wednesday night, about two and a half miles south of Wood- slee, Wm. Ryan with three other men were taking a load of oats to Wm. Langley's, Gosfield, when the bag slip- ped on which he was sitting, throwing him off. The wheels passed over his body, and he. lived only ten minutes after the accident. He was an un- married man about forty years old, and employed by Wm. Langley. His mother lives near Cobourg. Grumblers are of all'people the most depressing. It is not necessary for you yourself to be personally found fault with to make it worse than misery to be with them. It is the atmosphere they create about themselyes, the life they give you to lead. And when their cross humor translates itself in- to personal displeasure and quarrelling over trifles, then they ate the very scourges of their time and .place, and no one can be blamed who tries to es- cape from them. While Mr W. E. Jennings, who lives at Staples, a few miles from Leaming- ton,was returning from Rochester, on Thursday, with a load of oats, he over- took a ma,l named Mackenzie, who asked for a ride: Mackenzie, who was somewhat intoxicated, after riding a short time fell from the load, which, before it could be prevented, passed over his body. Mr Jennings stopped at once and assisted him on the load again. When Mackenzie, apparently not badly injured, got seated again, he said, "I am all right now," and had scarcely uttered the words when he fell back and expired. A lamentable accident occurred on Wednesday evening, on the 5th con. of Kincardine, resulting in the death of a bright little child, the only daught- er of Mr T. G. Young, of Armow. Mr and Mrs T. G. Young and child and Mr James Young were driving home to Armow in a single buggy. The child was in the arms of James Young when the horse, seeing some object in front, stopped suddenly short throwing Mr Young and child out. The poor girl fell under the horse's feet and was trampled upon, sustaining injuries which in eight hours proved fatal. Ayer's Pills Are better known and more gener- ally used than any other cathartic. Sugar-coated, purely vegetable, and free from mercury or any other injurious drug, this is the ideal family medicine. Though prompt and energetic in their action, the use of the pills is attended with only the best results. Their effect is to strengthen and regulate the organic functions, being especially beneficial in the various derange- ments of the stomach, liver, and bowels. Ayer's Pi les are recommended by all the leading physicians, and druggists, as the most prompt and effective remedy for biliousness, nausea, costive- ness, indigestion, sluggishness of the liver, jaundice, drowsiness, pain in the side, and sick headache; also, to relieve colds, fevers, neu- ralgia, and rheumatism. They are taken with great benefit in chills and the diseases peculiar to the South. For travelers, whether by land or sea, Ayer's Pilis are the best, and should never be `omitted in the outfit. To preserve their medicinal integrity in all climates, they are put up in bottles as well as boxes. t' I have used Ayer's Pills in my family for several years, and always found them to be a mild and excel- lent purgative, havin a good effect on the litter. It 's the best �►. 4 •� r SOU ll atf ul pill used. � atilt p , S ebur, Ky. prepared by t)eC: Ayer & Co., t,owelll, MAad. d Sold by all Druggists ai+eryiehtre. very Dose• Effective ("up usitiral 1rge aeisgrtlrneitt, pleieel lower than ever. Gifu Frs G-oA.rr I E1 i .52x66 for $5. A.. nice) SICX.MEILME CQL.t- JILA.R. and 1111.1E.TF.F` for 0 this is Fur, not Cloth. Robt. Coats & Son; Clinton, TH IIGHz��� FtTG: No investment that .you can make for • your home will pay you such large returns in comfort, economy and ever increasing satisfaction as a "Happy Thought" Range. There is no other "just as good" or "just the same," and the genuine is sold only by Harland Bros., Clinton. In Base Burner with or without oven, the Radiant Home leads. New Store �HARLAND BBOSIIOld Stand vfaekay^BlockBrick Block hreshers! SE LAR.DINE MACHINE"- __ _._._•: -- OIL -- The Champion Gold Medal Oil which cannot be Excelled. Gcollre CYLINDER OIL I3A$ EQUAL. —MANUFACTURED BY— McCOLL BROS & CO., TORONTO Ask your dealer for "Lardine" and beware of imitations. Sold by all leading dealers throughout the Country. WEAK, NERVOUSADISEASED HIEN. Thousands of Young and Middle Aged Nen are annually swept to a premature g�rraave through early indiscretion and later excesses. Self abuse and Constitutional Blood Dfeeasee have ruined and wrecked the life of many a promising young man. Have you arty of the following Symptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tired in Horning• No Ambi- tion- Memory Poor; Easily Fatigued; Excitable and Irritable; Eyes Blur; i.'imples on the Face• Dreams and Drains at Night; Restless:.Haggard Looking; Blotches; Sore Throat; 'Hair Loose; Paine in Body; Sunken yes• Lifeless; Distrustful and Lack of Energy and Strength. Our New Method Treatment will build yon up mentally, physically and sexually. Chas.Pntterson. Read DDS. KENNEDY & KERGAN astue. What Cared n one m'nt Dr. Moulton. " At 14 years of age I learned a bad habit which almost ruined me. I became nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could etand no exertion. Head and eyes became dull. Dreams and drains at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Firt s, Elec- tric Belts, Patent Medicines and Family Doctors. They gave me no help. A friend advised me to Drs. Kennedy & Kergan. They sent me one month's treatment and it cared me. I could feel myself gaining every day. Their New Method Treatment cures when all else faits." They have cured many 02 my friends." CUES MUM Oa MOM aEpDSD, "Some 8 years ago I contracted a serious constitutional blood disease. I went to Hot Springs to treat for syphilis. Meroury almost killed me. After n while the symptoms again appeared. Throat became sore, pains in limbs, pimpleson face, blotches, eyes red, loss of hair, glands enlarged. eta. A medical friend advised Dre. Kennedy de Kergan's New Method Treatment. It cured me, and I have had no symptoms for five years. I am married and happy. As a doctor, 1 heartily recomend it to all who have this terrible diseaso- Cnreu o yeuie age. syphilis." It will eradicate the poison from the blood." Capt. Townsend: lir YEARS IN t1CTDAIT rr-n nun CURED. "I am 88 years of age, and married. When young I led a gay life. Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble for me. I became weak and nervone. My kidneys became affected and I feared Bright's disease. Married life was unsatis- factory and by home unhappy: I tried everything -all failed -till . 1 'took treatment from Dre. Kennel` and Kergan. Their New Method bail` me tap mentally, physical] and sexually. I fool and act like a man in every respect. Try them." Ili' No Names Used Without Written Consent of Patient. Cured in time. Our New Method Trt atment It°sirtans hetasaha Diseases tabs sail Braine and lessee, purifies the blood clears the brain, builds up the nervous and sexual systema"and restores lost vitality to the body. We tittarantee to Pure IKervotte urebiritlr, Falling itlfanhoOi11 ilie $yrph,� tarieoeel e, vtriot Ire, Oleet, Entiatural-Oluenarretl,, Weare Parte afnd Alt Mickley and Hladder aieeaees. E Dre. liorinedy do Kergatl Ars the leading epeoialistoeeof : . Mien eau Tfiftteeen�ye years of bUsineaa ate eat.etTaker tae run ear sk , rite theta for an holiest oppinion, no Matter Who treated feu. It meq save ye yoat t regret told sa]iering. Charges reasonable, Write;for a Qui tion' List cod 'Book Fret. f UM*Itatttoo. Vireo. UUL' h.��itts�/7 148 ShOlb St. Detroit, Sohl` ti •s;