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Clinton New Era, 1895-12-13, Page 3j l �o, 4,v ii �Y E 1 G S .7 a , W TE ow, i o.N.. And 'UTNE,. . , FrJ , .. L .. 1 FR AND NERVE 'CONIC, Al.,: ���` AND �����i�14' U�/l� .M . �� ��a`� ud "�,erlwRnegt`�telie} is guaranteed iq, oases of Con, I, ria tojnrionuZ rn i ,Every i,n,,��leni.ie a Health. Solider blr 4! , DYapepeia, ;Nervoaapeeee, Ail; We.kneaeeq, Blood and Skin 140.0uM, it is bawd on Glycerine instead of Alcohol. For Pro; dabing"Sof1t, 01sOr Ski)? and Bright Complexion and nelborigg ill 01' P Quliar to Women it is Unsurpaesad, fogsti. 4.xioral• Ifk.. WxL$oN' Drug Stores 01,1044.8.'1' eert.aiu to gilt 'tMA.NlbEr'S." Inure No others• COMPOUND' tsar's., Pow NO DRSIRE TO PROOE1 D. NEWS NOTES p 1ppgr v ;in the dock on a fler- i On Monday evening Alfred Warnica 'ions charge, Of stealing,, and, the case raving been presented to the court by the proseccut}ng solicitor, he was order- eel,.to, stand tis. t'H ve you, a lawyer?" asked the i3urtfi. t'No, siz " "Are you able to employ one?" "Nor 'sir." "Do'you want a lawyer to defend the carer "Not partickler, sir." "Well, what do you propose to do about the case?" "We -11-11," with a yawn, as if wearied of the thing, "I'm willin to drop the 'Case, far's I'rn concerned." NONE BETTER KNOWN, There is no better known traveller in the Maritime Provinces than Mr G. Fred An - ..,demon, the popular representive of Messrs. T„ S. Simms & Co., St, John, N. B. — 'Speaking of Norway Pine Syrup, Mr An- ' derson says:—It is the best onre I have ev- er used and I prefer it to any other. I ha'ee given it to friendalof mine and it cures }every time. It would be a difficult matter new to induce me to use any other. MONEY IN A BIG CELERY FARM The latest horticultural report of the Government states that the largest celery farm in the United States, if not in the world, is at Greentown, Ohio. The place is a hamlet fifteen miles south of Akron, 0. The farm is owned b__yy the Borst heirs, and managed by C. 1. Borst, one of them. Under cultiva- tion and devoted entirely to celery are 125 acres. Mr Borst employs the mem- bers of seven families, all of whom re- side on the farm, in operating the place. Much of the celery produced is shipped to Chicago. The value of the annual product is about $20,000, but this year it will fall some $8,000 short of this. The very dry weather and frosts in October are respon4lble for this. The farm twelve years ago was a worthless swamp. To -day is valued it at $75,000. Mr Borst is authority for the statement that six acres devoted to celery culture will net a farmer as great an income as he , would derive from I25 acres of ordinary farm land. ALMOST DEAD. and his son were drowned near Barrie. Conductor Tobin, who had charge of the Grand Trunk World's Fair excur- sion train, wrecked at Battle Creek, died at an insane asylum at Toronto, on Thursday. Ladies clean your kid gloves with Jos- ephine Glove Cleaner, for sale only by Hodgens Bros., Clinton, sole agents for the Perrin, Freres and Alexander Kid Glove in all the most desirable shades, dressed and undressed, lane and button. A seveateen-year-old husband was divorced from a sixteen -year old wife in San Francisco last week. The hus- band was a messenger boy. A boy of 14 and a girl of eleven, at Johnson county, Georgia, were married the other day. The par- ents of the children interposed no ob- jection to the marraige. It is often a mystery how a cold has been "naught." The foot is, however, that when the blood is pocr, and the system depress- ed, one becomes peculiarly liable to diseas- es. When the appetite or the strength fails Ayer's Sarsaparilla should be taken without delay. Wm. Harris was fined by the Police Magistrate of Toronto yesterday, for cruelty and neglecting to feed a lot of old horses shipped to him from Mark - dale. Captain Sweeney, U. S. A., San Diego, Cal. says: "Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy is the first remedy I have ever found that would do me any good." Prioe 50o. Sold by J. H. Combe. Wm. Currie, a farmer from Rich- mond Hill, was found guilty in the As- size Court yesterday in Toronto of set- ting fire to his father-in-law's barn. The jury recommended him to the mercy of the court. PITABLEG O DN TORONTO.FAYOUNG A MysTsmous L TO RLETOGIVE HERANY RELIEF—HER UNCLE'S STORY OF T}IE GABE. the Toronto News. remarkable reoovety of Cora Gray mysterious illness that baffled two of t est known physicans of West To- ronto as been the subject of a good deal of talk among the residents in the neighbor- hood of Bloor street and,Brunswick avenue. As it was expressively put by a neighbor, "she was all but dead, when soddenly she bAgan to regain strength, and in a short time vvas out in the street with the color restcred to her cheeks and the brightness to her eye. Learning of the case a News reporter cal- led on her uncle, Alpheus Ramsey, who is the proprietor of the Bloor street shoe store, at the corner of Brunswick avenue, and with whom she has lived almost since in - that reporter he was s On learninme hat visitorie loth to epeaksof the case. "Everybody about here knows of the case," he said, " and I will be glad to tell any sufferer about it, but I would rather not have it published." When the reporter pointed out that he was in a position to let thousands know and probably be the means of giving them information that would lead to their recov- ery, he began to hesitate, and finally he gave a brief account of the girl's miraculous restoration. He said:— "My niece is more like a daughter to me. She has been in my care since she was a child, and when she was siok a few months ago I was heart -broken. I got two of the best doctors In the west end to prescribe for her, but their medicines made her worse instead of better. She laid in bed week af- ter week, looking like a corpse, eating noth- ing, and apparently wasting away in a mysterious manner. Her blood was this and poor, and almost every day there was a change for the worse. She could not take the dootore' prescriptions, for she sickened at taste of them. While I was in this state of worry and anxiety a man Dame around one day delivering phhampi le e and be shop. threw one into my P it up and I read an exact description of the ill- ness with which my niece was suffering.— The remedy prescribed for the owe of the malady described was Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I sent for a box and Cora took them in a mechanioaI- kind of a way. Well, sir, when she had taken them 4 days a change name over her. She began to eat with s relish and every day she seemed to gain fresh strength. She adhered faithfully to the direotions, and took four boxes. By that time the roses had returned to her cheeks and she was a different looking girl. She discontinued taking the pills and the same lengnid feeling began to creep ov- er her, so she bought another box and is now as bright, and well as she ever wee.. "That is the whole story," added Mr Ramsey. "There may not be much in it for others, but I believe these pills saved Cora's life, and while I am not anxious for publicity on her account, it may be that other sufferers will be benefited by bearing of this remedy. I cannot speak too highly of Pink Pills. I recommend them to ev- ery one I know, and I take them myself. Mr Ramsey 19 no of the best known men in hie neighborhood. He is the superin- --- _.tendent of the Sandy school of Concord Congregational church, and has the confi- dence of the entire community among which he lives. He has spent two years in business at his present location and his business has grown so much tbat he is about to remove to larger premises in the Douglas block on Bloor street, near Bath - horst. His statements as to the young girl's condition are amply coroborated by resi- dents of the locality, and up that way there is a boom in Pink Pills. A.ny akeptio who has the inclination to visit Mr Romney will be courteously receiv- cd, no doubt, and the circumstances frank- ly related. His gratitude for his i tieoe'e re- eover j+ leads him to make the most enthne- fuitrio statements regarding the eMoaoy of thoreritedy'ihat saved We girl's life. DO NOT BELIEVE IT. Do not believe that Nerviline will cure Neuralgia almost instantly. If your teeth ache console yourself with the reflection that pain can't last for ever. Don't use Nerviline; it might stop the pain. Rheu- matism is often difficult to ours. Keep on rubbing the old fashioned liniments as a matter of respect to your grandfather's aunt. Nerviline is a new discovery that in itself ought to condemn it. Therefore cling to the eld; suffer pain; avoid the use of Nor- viline, the most powerful, penetrating, and certain pain remedy in the world. THE BRIDGE OF AN OCEAN LINER Let ue spend an hour with Captain Randle, of the American liner "St. Louie," on the bridge in mid -ocean. He first takes us into the wheel -house. It is a room about ten feet long and ten feet wide, with a curved front. A wheel about three feet in diameter is placed in the centre of the room, and you are surprised to see that the head- master keeps turning it almost con- stantly. You have always thought that be had simply to keep his eye on the floating compass in the box direct- ly in front of him and hold the ship steady on her course. As you looklat the compass you see the ship veering now this way and now that as she rolls and plunges, or as one screw turns faster than the other, and thus pulls the ship around. It is hard to make two independent screws go at exactly the same speed, and so this man at the wheel is busy all the time turning the ship straight. He has to fight the waves and the screws and the winds at the same time, and he is a busy man. This steering -wheel con- trols the ship by means of a small column of oil in a little tube. By turn- ing the wheel this way or that the oil in the tube is forced up and down, and that opens or closes certain valves in the steam stearing gear four hundred feet away, and the rudder is turned as easily as if a child had done it. In most steamships the steam stearing- gear is controlled. by hydraulic power —that is, by water—but the use of a column of oil is an improvement. - As you look about, you see fastened to the cornice directly in tront of the wheelman a little scale in black with white lines marked ofl on it. There is a dial on it, and as the ship rolls you see this is a device to mark the degree of the roll. You may notice that it takes about a second for every degree of a roll. On each side of the room is another long black gauge, and the dials point to certain figures, generally between ninety and ninety-five. These dials are little electrical devices, show- ing exactly bow many revolutions the screws are making. The captain at a glance knows what is going on in the engine -room. Over in the corner of the room is another curious electrical device. It is a little hox with a clock in it. The captain tells you it is the machine that controls the whistle in time of fog. The law requires a long, blast of the whistle at such times every two minutes. By pressing in a button on this little clock apparatus, and by setting the clock in a certain manner, the whistle is blown automatically for seven seconds every minute. There can be no error of a man in that work. Just as sure as every minute comes around the whistle will blow seven seconds. Under the old way, when a man pulled the whistle cord, there was no exactness in the work. When the fog is over the button is released and the whistle Mops. X14 $1l PEOTC►'VOOp* TE*ebe lnteiregted-' in the (*tinned prosppe'rity of .Vanada's dairy interests will he glad to know that in England the. principal n)edieel journals' have recently vigorously congbatted the view that cheese is inferior as a nutri- tive agent to tinned meats. From an- alysis conducted on behalf of the Med- ical Press and Circular, it has been found that dodder cheese contains a much higher percentage both of flesh forming substances and of fats than of meat, even of the finest quality. The medical author of "The Spirit of Cook- ery" also asserts that "cheese is the most valuable animal food obtainable," and that it is "from two to three times as nutritious as the same money value of ordinary meat," When these facts are better under- stood there will be a very large in- crease of our prime cheese both at home and abroad. Canadians are not a cheese-eation nation, but they ought to be. SCROFULOUS SYMPTOMS Are tumors, abscesses, sore eyes, eruptions' and,obstinate skin diseases. Burdock BlooBitters cures all blood diseases, from a common pimple to the worst sorofulous tore. In all oases of this nature where the skin is broken and sores or ulcers exist, the outward application of B. B. B., diluted with water if necessary, and applied on soft linen oloths is recommended to insure a perfect cure. A LITTLE STORY. , "Mamma, do you like stories?" "I like true ones, my child." "Shall I tell you a true one?" 'Yes." "But you might not like it." "Oh, yes, I should if you told it." "But it is quite short. Well, once up- on a time there was a water -bottle —" "Yes; go on." "And yesterday I broke it; but I'll never, ooh! ooh! do it age n." CAS ORIA s .5 fo. Infants and Children. , MOTHERS, Do You Know that Parr--•- Bsteman'e Drape, Godfr'ey'e Cordial, many so-called Soothing Glx., most remedial for children are composed of opium or morphine 1 Do Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons 1 Do Yon Know that in moet countries druggists are not permitted to sell nar'cou without labeling them poisons/ Do Yon Knoe' that you should not permit any medicine to be given your cilia. unless you or your physician know of what 1t is oomposed ? Do Yon Snow that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of its ingredients is published with every bottle? Do Yon Snow that Cetctorla is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher. That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castorla Is now .old than of all other remedies for children combined 1 Do Yon Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of (other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns m use the wont a Castoria" and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense! Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protect:saw/ Ilecause Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do Ton Know that 35 average doses of Castorla are furnished for SI' •lints, or one cent a dose ? • Do Yon Know that when possessed of this perteot preparation. your ahlkben mai le kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest/ Wells these things are worth knowing. They are facts. The �-simile signature of . 1,444( is on every wrapper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. A LOCOMOTIVE ENQINEER, How Ile Acts In the Cab of an Engine Drawing a Fast Train. The locomotive engineer is a remarka- bly placid follow, with a habit of deliber- ate precision in his look and motions. He occasionally turns a calm eye to his gauge and then resumes his quiet watch ahead. The three levers which he has to manipulate are under his hand for instant use, and when they are used it Is quietly and in order, as an organist pulls out his stops. The noise in the cab makes conver- sation difficult, but not as bad as that heard to the oar when passing another train, with or without the windows open, and in looking out of the engine oab the objects are approached gradually, not rushed past as when one looks laterally out of a parlor oar window. The fact is that the engineer does not look at the side—ho is looking ahead and therefore the speed seems less, as the objeots are approached gradually. Those who have ridden at ninety miles an hour on a locomotive know that on a good road (and there are many such) the engine is not shaken and swayed in a ter- rlffio manner, but is rather comfortable, and the speed is not so apparent as when one is rldng In a parlor car, where only a lateral view is had. The engineer can he very comfortable if he is quite sure of the track ahead, and it is only In rounding- ing curves or in approaching crossings that he fool& nervone, and It is doubtful if it is any more strain to run a locomotive at high speed than to ride a bicycle through orowded thoroughfares. Judging by tho countenances of the bioyule rider and tho engineer, the engineer has rather the best of it. • �N, WhoDoes Not Know -=---- That Christmas will soon be here, and that in order to properly observe it you must have a good pudding, and that to have a good pudding you must have good material to work with. Granted that you Blltis.d y know this much we wish to inform Cyon that we have the material of the highest quality at a very reasonable price. We have also the in- ferior quality at a lower price, but muoh prefer giving yon the beet, as it is cheapest in the end. Everything yon need in the way of Raisins, Currants, Peels, Spices, Figs, etc., As low as any, quality considered. We are in a position to sell as cheap as others, and will give as good value in any line of goods we handle as can be got in town. OUR TEAS are the best to be had for the money, try them. If you have not tried "Salado" you should do so, as almost daily we are getting new customers for it. The best 40 cent COFFEE in town; try that also. A shipment of Din- ner and Toilet Sets just in. Call and examine goods and prices. Mcl!HJRRAY & WILTSE, NearPostOffice—CENTRAL GROCERY—Telephoce 40 Mrs Beers, the Christian scientist who was on tr 11 at the Toronto Crim- inal Assizes on charge of manslaugh- ter in connectio with the death of Percy Beck :8 discharged by order of Mr Just eFalconbridge. The judge held tha f any criminal neglect took place t, e parents of the boy, and not the ac used, were to blame. a• . •••tN••••._ �& '' MENTHOL • PLASTER • • • • • • Didn't Care About Anything. Bishop Pottor is credited with telling the story which, more aptly than the thousands of other stories on the same subjeot, illustrates the abject misery and utter irresponsibility of sea-sleknoss. Wo hardly know why it is, but it cannot bo denied that any yarn involving the hor- rors of mal -de -mor is seized npon with avidity by the public generally, and with particular gusto by those individuals who have themselves suffered the indeeorib- able wretchedness of that grievous mal- ady. I was Doming from Liverpool upon one of the famous liners, says Bishop Potter, and, although the sky was clear and the weather warm, a somewhat tempestuous sea had occasioned more than the usual amount of sea -sickness among the passen- gers. As I paned the deok one afternoon I noticed a lady reolining upon ono of the benches, and the unearth1' pallor of hor face and the languidity of her manner in- dicated that sho had reached that state of collapse whloh marks the limit of sen- siokness. Touched by this piteous spectacle I ap- proached the poor creature and in a most oompassionato tone I asked: "Madam,can I be of any service to you?" She did not open her eyes, but I heard her murmur faintly: "Thank you, sir, but there is nothing yon can do—nothing at all." "At least, madam," said I, tenderly. "permit me to bring you a glass of water." She moved her, heal feebly and replied: "No, I thank you—nothing at all." "But your husband, madam," said I, "the gentleman lying there with his h.,ad in your lap—shall I not bring something to revive him?" The lady again moved her head feebly and again murmured faintly between gasps: Thank yon, sir, but he—is—not—my husband. I—don't---know—who—he is l" Children •ry f' Pitcher's east Almost a Hopeless Case. ♦ Terrible Cough. No Best Night nor Day. Given up by Doctors. • I have prescribed Menthol Plaster In a number all • ea of ses of neuralgic sud rheumatic pains, and am very much pleased with the effects and pleasantness of Its appllcatton,—W, H. CARPeN- TEIt, M.D., Hotol Oxford, Boston. I have usod Menthol Plasters 10 several cases of muscular rheumatism, and find in every ease • that it gave almost Instant and permanent relief. —J. n. Moon M.D., Washington, D.C. It Cures Sciatica, Lumbago, Nen- • rel a Paine In Back or Side or gi , any Muscular Pains. • • oPrice I Davis & Lawrence Co., Ltd, • 25o. Sole Proprietors, MONTREAL. dh • • • • •• • • • • DIRECT IMPORTATIONS TEAS I We have just received an import order of New sea- son's Teas, direct from the place of growth. The following are a few of the leading lines, viz: The Mazawatte pure Ceylon, the finest packet Tea in the market, 3 qualities; Moning Congow; Choice Sifted; Hyson and fresh uncolored Japans May pickings. All have been most care- fully selected and guaranteed to satiety. To the most fastidious taste—try our Popular Blend 25c; Russian Blend 45c; Crown Blend 50c. FRU=TS I New Raisins, Arguimbans Select; New �L 1.7 Currants in cases; New Figs, New Orange, Lemon and Citron Peel, New Evaporated Plums and Apricots. Pure Spices, whole and ground. In Vinegar we sell Cider, White Wine, Crystal, Pickling and Cross & Blackwell's Malt Vinegar in bottles. Extra values in stylish Din- ner, Tea and Toilet Sets, the latest designs of decoration with new colors and tints. Cash for Butter and Eggs. N. ROBSON, -- Clinton Not Giving up Business ! But continuing with full lines of seasonable goods. A LIFE SAVED • BY TARING AYCHERRY ER PECTORAL "Several years ago, I caught a severe cold, attended with a terrible cough that allowed me no rest, either day or night. The doc- tors, after working over me to the best of their ability, pronounced my case hopeless, and said they could do no more for me. A friend, learning of my trouble, sent mo 8 bottle o1 Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which I began to take, and very soon I was greatly relieved. 13y the time I had used the whole bottle, I was completely cured. I have never had much of a cough since that time, and I firmly believe that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral saved my life."—W. 13. WARD, 8 Quimby Ave., Lowell, Mass. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral HIGHEST AWARDS AT WORLD'S FAIR. fyoea Pills the Best Fam[ry Physio. In these days of talk about advanced methods of instruction in commercial work let us show yon what two large and successfully conducted schools under one management can offer yon. The only practical method in existence. Write us for particulars. Shorthand and penmanship courses equally thorough and up to date. Our echool to unsurpassed in equipment and our staff of teachers, all men, bolding teachers' cer tificateo. Send for catalogue. Central Business College, Stratford, Ont. P. McINTOSH, Principal. SHAW & ELLIOTT, - Proprietors. Rack -Ache, race-Aeile, Sciatic Paine. Neuralgic Pains, Pain in the Side, etc. Promptly Relieved and Cured by The 66D. 1" Menthol Plaster Gering nerd your D & L Menthol Plaster for severe pain in tho back and lumbago 1 unhesitatingly r.• , n ,'rod eamo es a safe, sure and rapid r•mody : In fru- t, they sit like megla—A. r.A•.E, E.Irabethtewn, Ont P11co 23c. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., LTD. Proprietors, MON'R*AL. PSYCHINE (PRONOVNOxn fiLgegN.l Will cera CONSUMPTION, Lung and Throat Diseases. Sample Dottie sont free to every sufferer. Give Express and Post Oalco Address. the T. A. Slocum Chemical Co. Ltd., Toronto, Can. New Boot and Shoe Store The undersigned begs to announce to the peo- ple of Londe'b aro and vioinity;that ne has o on - ed a Boot and Shoo Store next to the post office, where will be fond a eomrdetc assortment of FALL and WINT.9rt BOUTS and 8HOE8. Our goods are fIret-class t and our prloes are right — Custom work and tkiopnailan &done in a workman - 1 hu'ter and Eggs take'? ere cash Come and see us before bu-ying elsewhere. JAMES Y()UNO, - Loud(staoro. Clinton P1111'31(4\Mill --ANT— DRY KILN! proved \\ The ast i n aohinerq. annri haviempllg inhig the vermlottskiledwork- men is able to do work in his Line in the most satisfactory manner, at reasonabie rates and on the shortest notice. A trial solicited E'ACTOIWY NEABeCLT 11. STATION, CLINTON TBOS MoE8N2lE New Flannels, and Flannelettes New Cotton and Woollen Blankets New Tweeds, Trouserings, etc. New Ladies' Underclothing New Readymade Clothing New shirts and Drawers New Dress Goods OBT. COATS & SON CLINTON The Finest 112 PHOTOGRAPHS u) are taken by •0 ti. H. FOSTER