HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1886-02-26, Page 3FRIDAY„ 1886.
nodsog remit. •
---in-epeakinfrofaerpereon'e faults,
Pray elbn't forget your own;
Remember those with homes ofklass
Sheeler:lever throw a atone.
If we have nething °lee to do
Than talk of those who 'tritt,*e
'Zs better to commence at home,
And from thet point begin,
We have no right to judge a men
Until he is fairly tried;
Should we pot like his zompany,
We knoev the world IA wide.
Some may have faults, and who has pot,
The ele ae. well ae young; '
4 Ferber] we May, for airare loamy,
H.ave fifty to taeia one. "
I'll tell yon of abetter plan,
• And find it works full well,
To try your own defects to cure,
Ere other's faults you tell;
And, though I sometimes hope to he
No worse than some L know,
My own shortcomings bid me let
The faults of others go. ,
Now, let us all, when -we begin
To slander friend,or fore -
Think of the harm one Word might do
To those we little know I
Remember, curses, chicken•like,
Sometimes to roost come home;
Don't speak of others' faults until -
Yon have none of yonr own.
OFED
prOalif10 tO be his wife and then deserted
her. then epelte of the happy bridegroom
back in the palace car. At this the gentle-
man closed his „line tightly, 'hut hands
clinched and there wee Orange leek . in
his eyes as he remarked. :-
" don't wish hinajoy ; that le the MU
who killed that poor girl in yonder coffin."'
Not A er t A !Azar t
ER—miT
•
rstovine THE 817Prory OF THE INDIAN
SCH001, WINE.
•
Cleveland, Ohio, February 10. --Mrs.
T. C. Williston, the wife ot a contractor
and builder of this city, has just returned
from an extended trip after a most remark-
able experience, Mre, •Williston is not
yet•30, but her hair is almost white,and her
face bears the aigna of a life qf suffering.
She has been the victim for years, .at vary-
ing hourepf night and day, of pain hke
the cutting of a knife3and physicians sup-
posed her to be suffering from a cancer of
the stomach, Eminent physicians fallen
to exactly locate the 'trouble or afforkthe
lady relief, She. speet Months- in travel
and large am:rents of. Money endeavoring
to End effective treatment for her malady,
bet most of thephypicians whom sae cm,
Stilted send that he disedee was a cancer
of the stomach.. and that death wouldul-
timately result,
Last Ootober she Went to SanYeancisca,
stopping and treating, while en -route, at
the soda springs at Idaho, but in v, rain.
Later , she tried the • waters of.Calestoga
John fl. Gorsgb Springs -and the baths of Pease del Robles,
18. -John 43: without effect, San Franciscoarebest phy-
Paraeoeufmt, Feb. sicians could afford no relief, and she
Gough died at five o'clock this evening.
13tartecl for Son*, Mealco, aetending to
John. B. Gough; . the worl&renowned visit some celebrated springs near Naaalsio,
temperance leaturer, wag born in 1817 iu.
She was taken . seriously ill it Tricsein,
Sandgate, Kent, "'England. . His father
I' was a pensioner. of the Peninsular war, Arizona. One ,day during her illness a
Papgo Indian, of local notoriety. as a
and lived to see his son both honored
" mediciee titan," visited Tucson from Si.
and. famous. His mother was the village,
schoolmistress: She died ,whenf Gough
Xavier's Mission. He was taken to Mae.
Willisten's rooms and asked if he could
wae about 17 years of age, and her mein-.
tell her ailmept. He looked at her, .hail
or- was always tenderly cherished and
honoured by her gen, Who .'oftenmade -her•descrabeet-pains--and.--their location, ,
.
and then With the exclamation, "Me sabe•
references in his:leCtures to her excellen-
heap bad ,f3pirit,"' he, rushed put andaea
cies,..and to the mighty influence her
•
wards the Mission. In -a few hour.he re-.
teaching and example eolitinued to eau -
turned With 7herbs and es baelret of mescel,
cise upon his life. When twelve Years of
'
age yoepg Gough came- tie.. America, and a tocitused by, the Inalieneforlood.
He reotiofted to Mao: •tealwal-
a time yeera later found employment in the
hely the herbs: :They. nunte hear'deetbly
bindery department of , the Nev York
trick, so much se that she almoet died harm
• 'Methodist book room, Ile speedily. fell fright.,
into dissipated habits, lust bis employ. thinking she had been poisoned.
The result, ;after a few hones, was the
ruent, and fer a thne mede •miserable
enlissien of a dead. lizard that was fully
ng comic songs at low grog shopsHow i
subsistence by giving reeitatiope and sing -
'four inches inlength, ft was apparently : of the dpecies common. to the East, but
low he fell, and how at last he was,deliv-
how it 'had Manned, to live for eu many
ered from his easily besetting' sin, • has yeate was
often been told: In 1842 he had a short a mystery. Mrs. Wilhistii saYs
'
. elapse into hie old habite, but an -eloquent that but one explanation occurs to her,
neehicli. is that when -re ohildandaltvitig
• •• confession re.atored him to feyene, and ha at Phillipsburg, N: J. she and her
has ()Vet -Since -lectured with great accept- brother wet% aacustotned to drink froat a
anus both in the old world and the new,as •
olittle. brook that ran neer the house. They
ne ef the most diatinguiabed and eloquent rwould scoop the Water up with their hands,
•- advocates of total abstinence that has ever.
appeared on any phi:dorm. •
and she thinks that in this way she swal-
-Gough may have said. ' • pot-te few things
lowed the embryo lizard. Mrs. • Willistores
,
of which severely good tastes courecovery, has been rapfd, and She nowld,not apr•
peove. His eloquence, it is to be feared; •
fairly on the way to a complete restoration
. '
'e
of health. Though. the •taking of living ometimes degenerated into met, and hie..
objects. into the system is not rare,' meal;
funny stories occasionally touched the
cal reed sey that:this ie ene_of[the Moat -
•level of. buffoonery. • Bak! taking him_all.
a.e
. in all, the lecture platforia will not ries. reerarkabl•e• ceses on record •• .
• . • •
his like again. No one could more:thor-
• oughly take•poseessiou of his audience or
retain his hola \ more absolutely till the
very close or hitidiscoutse.. No lecturer,
,could so frequently travel, over the 'earee
• greend with the same certainty of being
Attlways warmly weleemed and theroughly
appreciated. No one a matter of bed-
• nesecould put his ItonoAaliam at a higher
figure, or coati more. absolutely reckon
upon being always greatlY • in demand on
his own terms. He was; kinstance, as
-popular
his.firet, and he was alWaya.cate of the few
imported "stars," Whose expenses and
• demanda cOuldhe easily met, while at the
• same time, a handsome margin. wa0eft to
thbee under whose auipiceslie Came.
No one coald tell so frequently as•Gen.gh
• did the story of his own "dectinannd fell" that lie could no longer eUpport them es
without • beipg dan,ger of. dropping un- .lotig.as they followed 'Sir John' Macdon-
Changing Seniniteilt. •
At' the .convention the'Liberals of
• Renfreeicothity, at Pembroke,hist -week,:
efidiesses mere `delivered by Mei.
• Murray, M. P. P,, Waters; .M: P, P.,
,Findlay,. and., others, • and resokitions
•cdirdeeming..the Derninion Government
.were passed. Mr: Wm. °oak, hitherto
• aleading Conservative.' in North Ren-
fr-e*Tearne forward and proelaimed his
.adherence to the Liberal.' cause.
Cook stated that he had. notified -
Peter 'White, M. P., and Mr. Thee.
Deacon, the. defeated Conservative cam:.
didate in . the ,lafit Provincial 'election
• consciously, so far into egotism as to run
"fearful risk of being' so inuehitakeeup
with the emulation as to lose 'sight of the
sin..After, all,,however, there :wait less �f
this, in Johne.13-than might have been. ex--
• peeted. He was a thoroughly' doVout,
Etjd,as he had become ootripletely dis-
usted with tile ,l'yernier course in. pub-
:
\affairs..." ." I he remarked,
.
.••-" nt.,YVote.o.r_Support to_a.rnan with
Such\ • stainedreputation as Sir .John.
lArlatianly, geed man who had no avishe_elLwee as some some appear to Fave,.to make himself life we neust,have uteri to. are spotless
a hero, even when sketclupg his own de- in their private life, .., Hon. R 331ake is
gradation or telling how far he had sunk a man Withan unbleroiShecl reputation
and how reckless he had become. ,.t•Te bas•
died full of years though not a very old and I at.ill : \fpF t.he 'future 'fellow '11.4
man, and leaves another striking illubtra-, leadersInprfonat zs only from •sueh Men
tion and
uray-be-aecomplishedbY some as he that we can expeot an honest ad-
men in- spite of the most upptopitious ministrationof our own affairs." Mr.
"environments." . •• • • Cook represents a large and influential
class�f independent .Conservatives. .
A Strange Scene FroinReal•Life: .
"I have been trevelling a• good many
years," remarked a commercial salesman,
and -have seen some queer incidents, but'•
' the most,peculiar sight I ever saw was at
a country town in Ohio, Our train drew
up at the 'station, and I saw there quite a
crowd. -It didn't seem to be a political
crowd, either, Looking closer 1 discovered
that there were two crowds. At one end
of the station stood a number of carriages.
From theme jumped a lot of well-diessed,
young men and ladies; They bade good-
• by to a blnahing yeung couple, and there
was meet' hand -Shaking and kissing, peals
of laughter and innocent jokes, It was a
wedding par* and the happy couple were
starting on that toer by palace oar.
"At the other end of the station the
people nettled entirely different, They
were. exceedingly solenin, - The -men were
silent and looked dawn to the ground,
while the ladies were all in black,and most
• of them wore iei1s, The -two parties did
not Mere to 'notice each othdepetleast they
didn't want to appear to recognize each
other's presence, though they were Only a
• low feet apart.. This unhappy looking
• paery. stood about a hearse; and as the
r tram came to. stand -still, I saw a e6f1n
lifted from the baggage-cii'rszintkplacediet
it amid sebdued weeping: At the same
moment the wedded couple were 'stepping
on board the palace car amid: joyous
laughter and friendly wore& � parting.
, "at wakone of the meet strange and
impressive scenes from real life 1 ever
witnessed. The contrast Waft &lunatic,
But that was not all. Engagilig in con-
versation with a gentleman who had eome
on the train „there, I learned that the
coffin contained the remains of a young
ledy_atheeeLleeelth_lied
or itt, u iere Wile 110
•air that could restore her, said the gentle- l
man, because she Was dying of a beeken
heart. It was a lovo affair. A. young 1
• man bad e on her and scoured . her
•
lie Could' Not Lobe Mlet Money.
•
The; other day I was on My Way to
Buffalo over the Great! Western, aud
while occnpyinga seat in the. 'smoking
oar for -a-few 'ininntes,1 found a paper
parcel kicking around tinder my feet.
It was but natural that 1 should pick it
ureand make an examination, especially
asrpthe only other ;man in the cox' sai at
the far erd « 'What was my hotter,
when I came to unroll the mei., to And
if'package of greenbacks marked g3,QQQ
statiiiian the face! It.. quite took
my breath away and sent cold shi.'vere
Up and'doWn my spine.
• It was my money: I had found its;
and I would keep it. But Nthat on
earth ,could do with $5,000 1 It was
to much for a poorlintie, and not enough
for I rich one, It. Wasn't "enott4etto
skipThecountry'ou, and yet to1entIor
a poor -man to have in the bank. I Was
wondming if' it wouldn't be best to put
$200 in my po‘ket and throw $4;800'
Out of the window,t.when a thied.loita
Mudd lift 'alai:tear/glee' fh the oar. He
epoke to the man at the end, and then
came sauntering up to me and carelessly
remarked,
• "Haven't found a paper parcel contain-
ing $5,000, have yotii" .
"Why, yes. I pich:44"lb up off the
floor two minutes ago."
Oh you did' 1 was sitting here,
and I suppose the darned thing worked
out of my oveeeoat pocket, • That's 3
101-lost=litTt'infM4Wdliickage
since T left C'hicago„ Allow me to pre-
sent you with a i„4•2.0 bill for your
honesty,'
oh no no ' I am not honest. t
•
, should have walked off with the whole
boodle!"
" 1 shouldr4 have awned. ye.e..,
In your place I'd have had ,this money
in my boot leg long ago. Say, come
back into the eoach and beve a. sip or
wine and a chat with me,"
We went into the parlor car and he
produced a flask, and proved himself a
whole Souled, gend natueed fellow. We
had been co sing for 411alf an honr
when the conductor pale along with
that smile paper parcel, centaining that
mune $5,000,- and said to my friend
Ilan,g it! Why can't you take care
of this money'? , What's the use of leav-
ing it lying around in thisnmanner 1"
"1 declare, but I believe I did -Jay It
down on the seat OVer there when WU
unlocking trey travelling bah.. I told my
brother I'd lose the infernartbing before
I got to Buffalo, but he has an idea that
express caMpenies are not safe."
•- When the conductor had gone this
absent -minden man turned to .me with a
pleading look on his face and said "My dear please take care of this
money fer me until We reach Buffele.''
"But I'm a stranger to you."
That's nothing -I shall certainly
lose it on the ; Como, now; be a
good fellow." •
I took it to oblige Mid. • At Niagara
Falls he got off to secure a view, and
when ao train started up he Was left
behind. Before reaching Buffalo he tele.
geaphed. me :--
" Am very sorry to trouble you, but
hope you will wait in the station until
arrive."• , ••
And I waited irm the Belittle station 6
long hours before he calmly slouched in
and said
, "11' I'd been you have ,fleone off
with the money, and perhaps taken the
baggage with it. You don't know how
grateful I am, and want You to accept
this diamond pin•es a token of my: es-
• -.Bet
• "1 shall. lose it within n week 'iryou
don't take it,". he protested, :
• When 'he wag' ready to go I pit Cale
'money-. an, bis. oyercoat Vocket, fastened
il with Pins; addle went away Saying :‘
" do not lenvegthe overcoat some:
. .
where Pm right; .Farewell fellow
Detroit' Free
Press. •,
-,----•••••••••-- • ,..°
' Jink;. ,W119,01aelii_. of: ,NC;Vada• .
There tante to the city the other day
and slapped.his name en•one...ef the ho-
tel registers, • one; of the simon-pure ori-.
ginals of the wild WeSt..-- It was Jim
:Whaled', of Nevada: Whitlach is ' a
character.. • Ile hae..,been, triinee 'and a
prosp.ecter in the fat west for -more than
eteventy-•;yeitrar--Th];:is-orre-aoja-tffe&bes
unscientific miners in the eountryeand
next to Senator Fair and George Hearst,
of California, the best jridge cif a miner-
al prosect the mining reozons have ever
b 0 _
kn6Wn: Wien Whitlaeh looks d_owft a
.
shaft or '" "skin" hie.eye ahlhg hang..
itig wall, he seems to knoW
what is behind it. • .When the great bo-
nanza was discovered in 1874 in•Virain
ite city, Whitlech went into thd. mine
• and inadethe •Closeet.guess..of all.e.a.t6
the extent and. value of the deposit.; and
there were many wild griesses Made by
very scientific Peron. A..Y•ale profes-
sor. said .that•the great bonanza was
woeth $700;000,000. Diedeshel-
•nter, a German mining expert and geol-
ogist, Went nearly crazy over the. find;
and Wildly asserted that the bonanza
was Worth, $1,500,000,000. Re had.
tioughta little stock; andon the strength.
of the. millions' he :was going to make,
he went to a, big betel, in'San Francisco,
rooms, • s oc e
Ahem with champagne and cigars .and
kepi open house fora.week: Every-
body laughed at the crazy German:
John W., Meckey gueAsed.wide of
'the mark orethe'ht �flh�find. He
put it et. ssoo,o9o,oao, and deelared
that it would take ten years toe:lichen:A
the mine. But 'Whitlach guessed with-
in a few. millions of the truth. He said•
there was $125,9,00,000 in the borianze,
and that 120 stamps:Would use tip the
ore in five years. The actual yield of
the mine' wriS $116,000;000, and the
pay Ore was exhausted. in four years
end eight months after the mine was
opened. In 18fit.' • Whitlach •himself
macle adiseovery in White Pine, Neva-
da, which ahowed some Of the richest
silver ore ever found in • this country.
• flia mine contained dere worth $14,000
a tot. Hasoldit for $1175,006; put the
• money into the San Premise° stock
and 'tiyo inonthe-he-wa
aghin in the saddle, and, .with a little
pack mule trailing behind; en route for
the motintaine. WhitIlich is now scour-
ing Colorado for new mineee'with Lead-
yille as his headquarters. Ho. S
there is moie money . undergebent
Leadvilla than has ever been taken out,
"Tho eamp.hasn't begun to boom yet,"
he says.--Chiertgo Herald. •
rawer of an Ocean Wave,
111.9..110",••••
•In a 'fewer by the Rev, Philip Neale*
late British chaplain at Betavie, in Lei-
sure Hour, speaking of the great inun-
dation from the Sea •eanied by the
Kraketoa earth quake, Java, he says
"One of the most zenzarkable facts con-
cerning the 'inundation remains to be
told. As we wal k el or ecrambled along,'
O 8 were mtich surprised to and great
masses of white mei lying at the Elide
of our path in every direction. Some
of these were of immense size, and had
been ciiet up more than two or three
miles from the seashore. It was evident,
as they were bf coritl formation, that
these immense blocks of solid rock had
been torn up from their "ocean bed in
the Sonde Straits, 'borne inland by the
gigantic waye, and finally left on the
land several miles from the shore. Any
one who had not seen the sight would
seemly credit ,the story. The •feat-
seei‘s almost an impossible one. How
these great masses,crould have been cal-
ried solar into the interior is a ,mystery,
and bears out what I have said in pre -
pious papers as to the height of this
terrible wave. Iriany. of these rocks
were from twenty -to_ thirity tons, in
weight, and some et the largest must
have beep nearly doulde. Lloyd's agent,'
Who was with me, agreed in .thinking
that we could ,not be mistaken if we put
dowil .the largest block of coral, roar
,that w6 passed as Weighing not 'less than
fifty tons. ,
1t11 •Perkins in Richmond,
Further on we came to . a -very ,hiroe
and a very ancient bacilli. ••• •
•
'Is diet' a tobacco faCtory, ..testi___I:
,i, :
asked the driver.
-aNesith; datae a meiliin' het -Ise, salt
;
dat's wliar 'Patrieft '•Henry made his
great sphch, sahf. . .. ••' .. g. '
. 'Whet did Patriek say 1' ralsked. ' ,
'Why, he done say, 'Gib me liberty
or gibine deth. ? . . . - ' •
• ' 'Well; ,whicli did they givo hirn 1' .
. " "Dey grtv him , Imf, self; bof2-Pi Us-
burgh.'Dispatch. • .. • ' • '-'"''. .
NORTIT-WEST 'CORM,ESPONDE.NCE.
. •
•• QuAratiar,e, Feb. 11, 1880.
To the Editor of the.Clinton'Areto Rea.
Sru,--Allow Me to state some facts to
the pribitel"--through your pa.per, in centre-
-dletioan. tee certain ruiners &incoming this
;Wien riaidahreetinding country, s'e_4 afloat
by parties, who are suppbsed. to knowy
the trutb, because they-bave just returned
'frem this "wicked northwest country.'
These aresome of the many iurnors abroad:
That this place is noted for its .Wickedhess
and Sabbath breaking, in general, and
also,.-taat Hetet; - set apart to mipister
to the s iritt • . • 44,110-peepler-
ecome enelrossed in the world, and termed
spectilatorsa and • horse dealers. •Naw, in
the first place, Ishould like te know what
our friend, who circulated these reports;
:has done during his term with ne to pro-.
• Mote civiliaation apiongst the people? Did
he not, with others, break fag Sabbath,
'(if he 'balls it such) when en Ihe,transport
service, during the late rebellion he was
.forced to drive his team on- the Sabbath,
, and he, of course, with all others; we think
perfectly -justified ,10 so doing, We think -
110 does his. shirre tef_ Sunday, yisiting; and
air'for, anathing else, (excepting yenning
of trains where neceesary) we have as quiet
Sabbath keeping here as you have'in Clin-
-ton. Then again, "ministers ate epecula:,
tors and horse dealers." Well, 1 ehonld
like to knqfw where he gots the tenth of
this statement. • I shnply have te say he
knows/ this to be wholly -Untrue: The
only horse dealing:we know of, by .a.tiain-
ieter, is, Mr. Latvian, Methodist minister,
aold his horse at ar�asonable figure, 81.50:
andboughtamothaiesterbe few.Viteake later,
rathertook it'orean old debt, Abeo he
could not get the money, anctwe would,
knastrwhat is the penalty" for such
an' offence. If Out friend would shoulder
pert of . the responsibility in connection
with church work, and thus elevate the
morel and religious feeling in our midst,
he might do more good than by standing
aloof, and .repeating the old old• saying,
"God I thenk Thee rain -not as other mod
.are.". Now, Mr. Editor, 1 think I have
said sufficient , for this time, bet if Mr. W.
wishee to protest, the way is clear for
further contest.• .A NORTHWESTER,
T ED-
•.•••••••••‘•
J,000 buehele of .04L.T.Es WANTED in
oxchauge for CORN MEAL, BUCKWHEAT
• rLourt. OAT alaliele We eve nabs to the
• bush. Lots o BRAN and SHORTS 1).y the ten-
et: hundred. Beet ROLLER FLOUR given in
egellange for Light Spring Wheat,
• WHITE CHAMPIOX OATS
• FOR SEED, yielded 70 bUSh, to the acre lust
Year, and weighe 40Ibs to the bush. Agent On
r.nortrx Foon ori. CAKE, Flax and nil
kinds of suAns.
4,ADIES STEEP, • CLINTON,
1 Yellow fur cattle. Sbeeptb,al 11
.
IIN/XPC:31z1.111A--
To Owtiers of SAM**
lle Livimollt Amilionii
ell Utisightly Beneliee: Oases tatuaguma 14 Cittle:
0041 hleniuggi ; b
Penuiiier, Weak Lahr
ug fillp‘1ik.11100!!!0
garner
TY-144ralg*
N. litiable 410011 he w I firma tp. aallroad alining and ex •
DiargetaTenraDemelatlaleits: aettiatiVLs 111.58kaahd lan•Alhieegredaalerrot:*
dent. One trial will vouv lac..
Write DR. GILES, Vox 340e, y.r. O., wile wilJ trtelt
out charge, pre advise en all disestaes and 11160 US IRAN
ageinent of:rattle, Sold hr all tiruuslatsat Ho. and $1.46 a
'briltatilei ea:lett' Tea latet t2•11:15):;*: '1st hicb tfaleitertrie; mt
ii tisrmt laaTh!glit
-Giles iodide' AurienoowniditersIt. area ' Ned Cattle
THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND lug; rtellfalPALIg't' ay3g,t.lg,81211.d;,
11 a en d r
Used by all the lending horsemen on Jerome Park, Fleet.
• Worm*, eines In.igestien. Celle, Bets, Sere Turout, Catarah
FouDder*PinR-eye. and Rbeutoutiont. Tito dna. ie tunall and
the power is great The Po% I *7
rt era ur Guaranteed mid our.
Owlets failmir to ahtain 1 we money refunded. Sold by all.,
druggists at 2.5c1s. tier Flex. .
Please Notlie THIS ANNOUNCEMENT
tisInthe market to eompete Avith ay I
CALLANDERT ; Patent" HARROW— _23.7 re of" C'ouatorfoits
ROBERT. DOWNS
• Diamond narrow , made, .
50' 'Set of-, narrows.
'To aboost give away.
e
Dog in MC: Agelltr for the sale and application of
the itif VATEN'e Auvonavie Serum OLEANE11, .
STEAM MTV NOS furnished and applied on shirt
• CLINTON,
. •
Ilirel' and Pliiiirletor for the best grow Mkt
50 Ruggles to be littishod up for nex
spring, and Material lot- 400 set of
.
, . Harrow*. '
—
Notwithstanding all the bppesition by those
specially interested, I will sell to any man w110
may COMO before the lst ef "Januat7, 1886,a Set
Of Harrows complete, for the small stun of $8, -
and more than that, will warrant thenefor one
year. J. s Offer la simply,to show up some of
the Statements made about my patent harrows
as -false and misleading. Asir Ben Switzer if
What I aa' about my nerrowsts:uot rirret. the
.ft -newer; When asked for a testimonial, was `,`I
will sign ufy name to anythiee you write about
ganaeaer's Patent Harrow. Cannot been t
NV hem - I hate field tk. vEkiluAirs.03.)0VRIficesethintutonu:
io
• r, wake It loose. Would haoe_ no other.'"Tile
same ansWer isgiven by the alined:we, T. i •
bings. 'the ShiplePs, Albert May,' ann otherS
. . • . . :.•
ay.Law of -1886 `of ilie Taw!!!
ship .0flitilletl In Ma County- ot
- ' • -Aaron,
Whereas, in lien of the original i:Ohd allowineeliere
Meter 'particularly described, a new road or highway
has been •aequIred,• adapted and opened for public
travel, and is now used instead .of tlie said origleal
road allowance )v11161119 no longai reetilred for. public
PtAtriln°dselsylier‘ Pas; 1 C.1:ins'boiM resolved to close the Sald•
original road allowance, and sell the'eame pursuant to
Ilia Statutory. powers in that behalf ofAffietonnell of
-
the said Township. ..
. NOW. therefore, bait enaetcdiby thetald eorporatithi
and 15 Is hereby enatited, that from and after the eau_
passing of this by-law, that. certain react allowance in -
Abe said Townsbjp of Btillett, m the county of Huron
, described RR f01401111—. • I . !
All and Singular that certalit• well or tract of lend
end premises satiate, lying' and being in .the Township
of Hallett, and County of Durmi, and Proviece of On-
tario, containing by admeasurement 1 83-100 acres,
be the same. more or less; being coMpbsed of part.of
tbe original allowance for reed between lots 15 and 16,
in the'14th coneession of the Township of Hullett, in
the County of Buren and..Province pf Ontario, and
which Said parcel or tract of- land i *.. -
0 • °seri A asfollows; that id to say:
Commencing at the North Best Angle of let 16 in
the said 1415 Concessimpof the said Township, thence.
Southerly•along the weeterly 'limit of the • original al:
loivancp for the road; 74 clittins,15 linksonore er less,
to the Blind Line bbtween, coneessions la- and 14,
thence Easterly alongthe sahl blind line 49 links to
the West aide of the new allpwanee(for. rot, Thence.
Northerly along the saltWesterly side of allowance foe
new road to tho piaceef beginning shall be, and tlie
Ramo Is hereby deelared to be Closed and abandoned
118 a pUblie road Allovranco or highway, and that the
said now road now opened adjoining the Said closed
original road allowance and used by the, pnblic in lieu
of the said original alloWance shall be, and the smile
is, hereby declared:to be an °Pen public highway.
. : .Andit shall and may be tawful for the -said Council
et any time after the final passing ef this by-law, to
sell on ii...abeehitelrilispost of .the said -closed -road -el-
le -Wane° end to exeopte on behalf of the corporation,.
and under the corporate seal, all necessary conveyon-
cee or other deeker doetnifento neeesary to effectuate
such sale, - • ' •• .• .- • - • , *. •
.
— • .
rilAKE 'Malec . thee the above--tira- true top y of
a proposed By-law which will be taken'into , een-
eldertition by tho coterie of the Municipality, after one.
' month after the first-miileation in the Clinton New
..leaa newspaper,' the date of which Rot Publication
was the.2915 day of JautistrY, 3.880, and that it Will be
no taken hito. consideration' by. 'the • said council, in
the village of,Londesborough, in -the said toWliship;
.on the Halt (14Y of 'March, 1186, at the hour Of ten
o'cloek.in the forenobti •
."' -_. A'S. BRAITHWAITE,. Clerk
•Hitliett Jan. 24 .1886. .
, .
' Rev. J. G. raffia, Dutton, certifies "For
some years my wife haa been troubled with
Dyspepsia,. and, has, ;tried, Inta.thing after ,an.,
other recommended with but little or no effect
till adyised to give MoGregor's Speedy Cure a
Sine taking the first bottle I have n0.
tieed a decided improvement, and ean with
coefidence recommend it to be ono of, if not the
beet medieine extatit for Dyspepsia. This in.
valuable medicine for Liver Complaint,
gestion, &day Contplaint, is purely vegetable,
Sold at Combe's Drug Store. Trial bottles giv.
on free. •
Arr.Jolnt Iclorley s the first edit
who has ever entered a british eabinef,
io'r,.
but nearly every. great politician Who
liffMaretd the flanit rhffi
within the last century, has' been, an
author of books or it contributor to the
periodical prot. (Iltulsioneinul lioacons,!
tick( atenotable exatuples.•
I ant an extensive dealer in fine horserebuy
and sell as many as any men in Now England,
f use eadlusively-in my atables_Gilos' Lini-
ment Iodide Ammonia- and Giles' Horse Pow-
ders to cure.dieteraper yeueg cattle, dor°
throat, fevers, remove splints, puffs apa wind-
galls, The Doctor's reinedietrare what
rely on; no horse dealer Should be without
them. Frank Griswold, West Randolph, Vt,
Sold by all druggists. •-
. .•
The agent de, NewMexico ranchman
paid his Se,mi-annual visit to a distanc
grazing ground only to fitulthe sheep
herder.,..dealancLtlie.alieep-quietly feed-
ing in a fertile canon near by, jealotisly
guarded by his dog. - n the x•ear of the
corral, into which the sheep.wete
every night, jay the bleaching skeletons
Om d atelieeje„ •„ea e malted
aa. *45"','411eVattafititir
secreted' himself and Waited until night.
As the sun began to sink the. sheep
came 'trooping in, with the dog in ' the
rear; They crowded into the corral'
tliliiiglhiffow oPerling, and as the
last,one pushed forwardthe clog Seized
.aed.rtilled, him, and dregged the lifeless
body to the rear of the corral, where he
made a comfortable npper off a portion
of the' earoase, leaving the balance few
future meals. lie had been doing this
ever since the death or his. master, and
would pi,obably have continued his
guardianship over the flock until he
died, • • • .
0, -Parsons, JtW. Vantge $t., was cured
of ‘a hatal, looking cough of 16 months stand-
ing hy the too of J'ectroia, Mr. Persona says,
nllrielffeiinets were mtenee. The best
American physicians far.rel to care ine, After
tritiog one bottle et Pechnie I am in better
health thsti 1 have eraeyea 'Or two ,-,,i',"
Nebo; la evill anre tlu a'neal....t nee, at
cough. Ally amulet, tal cente, . •
._ • • notiee.
•
FogineS. and alt kinds of Ma •
eainery. repaired e epeditieusI3
. in a satisfactory inituner.
-
Falm intidements manufactured aid repaired. Steam
and Water-Piperfurnisbeil-apirrint in position. Dry
Kilns fitted up Vin application. Charges moderate.
HARKNESS
,HAIR BALM
Restores grey
hair to its na-
tural color, ie.
moves Dandruff,
stone the hait
from falling:Out,
increases its
growth, and will
riot soil the shin.
As a hair dres.
sing, it has no
superior. 'Guar
..anteedharmlees:
Prepared by
.Harkness ige Co.
-.e-Londone011t.
Sold by all Druggisti
"and Patent le 0licliu
Dealers •
For sale by the GRAND RAPIDS & INDIANA
R. R. CO. Sugar maple the -principal timber.
Advantages: Railroads already boilt, numer-
od, es, pniest Water, good markets,
ous towns arNtties, one of the healibiest parts
f the Unite
fine fruit, good roads, schools, churches, 'large
agricultural population, best building material at
IoW figures, good soil; low prices, easy terms,
perfect title, For books, maps, charts, and all
additional information, address
• • , W. O. HUGHARL
.1r,and Commissioner, Grand Rapids; Mich.,
. . .
Percheron
'foams.
Island Hoke Rack Far;
.' Grosse Isle, Mleh. • •
• .All stock selected
front the get of sires
end dams of estab-
liShed reputation•aud, .
• r'egistprod•in the, '
'French and American Stud BookS. We -have -a ; • .
very, Jorge. number' of imported' and gradalstal- • .
lions and brood mares on. hand, Prices reYgon-
able.• Correspondence solicited. Send for large .
il1ustrated_data1ognet-frea.1*.i1nail.L...Address
$3:00 12LETtrAinn
•
FOR, ANY. SWIG
NI A. 40 . : INT1.
THAT CAN'T
• 'BE FIXED. • •
NoWis the time te get your sewing manillas
repaired, iron or wood work re -finished DS' a
man Who nes ilea 12 Years experience, and will
compete with, any•firm in Canada or United
States, either ou ehainstitch or lookstitell,
moven and back elastic _stitch -and all these
are a different BOUM. Then we have the curv-
ed needle, wheeler as Wilson, Florence, and
over 100 other different machines which the un-
dersigned will repair. Stop any machine from
breaking needles or thread dropping stitcbek
or any other ailment Iniabhines are subject to..
This gentleman win ten you how your kietvoini:.
machines work without seeing it sew, whieh
may seem impOssible, still, it is true. vAnw
,warranted. I also sell the Combination sewing
•maelnne oil, warranted not to gum or rust.
WIlarattngents R. Morris, J. J. Roututli,
Nichol &Doer, carriage makers, j. E. Norton,
ShAp.back offFLOODY'S Grocery stbre,Clinton,
lawyor, Wingham. JAS. VAri.S1CK_LE.
•
Clinton. Aug. 21,1886. •1m
ummtmuizemmilmmio
•
o_eli right;
• jEWhilliEltS A lin. OPTICIANS:,
'• rasiestiOurs tar
pIAMONDS, WATCHES,
BRONZES, MARBLE STATUARY;
ART POTTERY, OPERA GIASSES,
FANS, •.
•' BRI04.-131tA.C, vro.
,JortHrus AND ialtirinsms OF.
ELGIN-A,ND -WALTHAM' IVATCHES;'
• STERLING SILVERWARE,
TRIPII PLATED' SILVERWA,RE,
AlVitRICJAig CLOCKS,
• /
•
• . VI,NE CUT GLASS, nv)rp,,
- •-UMBRELLAS,' •
140 WOODWARD., ;Air4., DETROIT
• OPERAJrOvst BLOCK, .
bETIOUTI. - CitIGAN:
sott -STATE A*GEN71.'8 FOR PARK,
PIIILIP,11 ik; CO'S CRIABIlA.PFIDI
WATOITICK •
oactezieresestaissemetzeian
‘AVAllE FAEN1731, Detroit,' ldich.. • . • •
Cabinet Parior
UNDERTAKING.
The. sureterlber keeps tbe"anest.
OAS:KITS and COFFINS'
Always on band. laturerais furnished at
tbe.aborteat notice and lowest perces,
Letid I tit; Under tolkor4
• t
RE11.81631:171, TIT g PLA.Cg,
, • e
VPPOSITR, VIE TOWN HAL,
DIOS, STE ENSON
-
HURON -AND• BRUCE
•
Phie Company Lt 105aning Honey '04 ParOt
Veettrity at Lowest Rates Of Interest,
11,riadJa
MOItTc.4•AGES Ptill01rASED.
° SMA,g0Xt.
0, 4 rin,i J p r. Cent, Interest • Allow(
• Dopes ft4s, ing oingkiain.ounf
*•1 t keitup;rj. nil Nortb fiirCiqs
llt)TIACEi ItojtV)X.
.
Gedi 6.1! ,Aoini,t 1.sy
'
•
**,