The Huron News-Record, 1886-11-10, Page 7is •
TfTAM-MORI
°Friar'
BEEZsT-,-
Iterndved
13,emoved
Ilempve
Optario-St.
Ontario -St,,,
OntarioZt.
iDrop in and see us on the
Ground Floor
,
• -
ithere is often ,a great deal of
lbathos indulged in by the ad:hirers
of Wm. Lyon 11Ittekin4e himiiig
Credit to that gentleman 'for his
.w.sing'ing from unwilling •Imperial
'Britain 71the • basis of the' .present'
. municipal' form of Gjvernment:iw'
Canada. • We have on several, oecas,
ions- pointed that tip. much exagger-
eled fossil ism of I).o wiling Street vile
'has for •the last iiixtar ,yeari Or So' al-
ways teen ahead of the times, Years
bfQle 'Mackenzie and his hantlftifOl,
•i•dbels raised the standard of. revolt
4,0 Canada, the, Iniperial authorities
were arrging the people this Ceon-
..
try to take over the ChoWn lands
. . .
and guarantee the civil list payment
•'But our people wore -unwilling to
do so • thinking they were .getting
the best .of the 1r:11.g-dii. an. the old
line' s'We. 'are' again reminded: of
matte'r by au editorial-re:mark
IT the • liTitneas that "the era of Eng-.
hilmanity.' This is au attack wi
Go& This conntry is prominent
for,blasphemy. The crime is multi.
plying in intensity, God verY often
,shows ,what he thinks of It, hut for
the most part the fatzdity is hushed -
up. I give you alatit that is proved
by. scores of witnesses. This last
August:of 1886 a man got provoked
at the •e,otiutted dronght end the '
ruin of.his ,crops, and 'in tha pre.
senee of his neighbors .keursetl. Criod,
saying he would cut his heat t out if
He would come, calling him a, liar
and co Ard and flashiug a kuie.
„And While lie was syeaking,hiplow-
er jaw ..dropped, At1to issued from
mouth and. nostrils, and the'lleat
'his body A211.9* 'se -intense it -drove
'back tho;e who would 'come near,
Score4 Recline' Visited the. scene.
•aud saw the blaephether in the a eel
process of expiring, Do net phink
that beetles() God has been silent in.
your case., 0 profane swearer, that
He is dead ! L there nothing now
14 the peculiar feeling or your ton -
gee or nothing in the tnembraneo. of
your brain .that' indicates that God
•may come to avenge your blasphe.,
mitts, or is already avenging them V
There. are hundreds of such 04894.
FareiiieskeeP them still to avoid the:
horrible- couspieuity. •Physieiana•
suppress .theiu tlironglt pro fesSioual
confidence."-
1\Cr.:Talinage Waft ked foi a eir-:
cunistantial• acooent of the blasphe-
,
Ve.r who was iramde uSfy bnned4
to .deat•h. ,pii..0?0•SriCiiiii.o was as folt
lows : "LaPpriate the. desire . for
further, details •in' this matter, but i
Purnoselyaviiided locatingthe event,
and the reasons ..thitt actuated • nie'
then itnpel.jae. now, to' ,keep the
.liffa;if sham the' public,' an
• nvent. is: a terrible.: thing for the.
feel ily and frieeds,.of the. man tvhO
was putnshed, and it, Was ont'of con,
sideration fel...thine that , omitted
to state Where the; scene was laid..
That It Is •strietlys. true,....110WeVer,
have onclnsivp evidence. just
forget,: how ' it was. brought to My
attention., 1. heardAt •reported by
•seinebody, or got my Iirst,:infortna7
Lion from a private letter, I eappot
say • wiltiolt .1 aril' ino1ind.. to,
think it' was .:the latter.. But • zo
nnitter. • :: I asked a trosted friend of
mind to investiigate.for Me, and be
did so. • Some correspondence ensu-
ed, whieh hO tuillOd • over to me,
and from it' ram •s.sure: that- the
affair did aetitally,and e60:y •!:take.
place as deieribe..:-it. I 1iavetlie
eorrespondeneo.: stilt, bet 1. thiuk• I,
li4ilbetter.keep it niyselt"
., land's free e4ti iaj system coincides
eFaCtly with tier Majesty's reign.
it wts in 1838 .that Lord •Durhani,
'the father of free Celoeies,. •came
.011 t to Canada as dictator, andtaiti.t.
good •deal of dicfatItitr itniposed
(10,ttada .ber premtt free. cong4ii,ation,
-7 constitution .which: has so far as
possible 'been, ,eopied in. all Other
Colonies and whi6h tlie AoL of C94•-
. federation, completed.... upon his
• model." ' .Federation is
sow keing agitated. in : Eoglaeil
• which will place the' coloniea..On .0
• opmplete equality with the Mother
country. This prog,ressive ineve is
looked upon with. disfavor by:many
Canad. a on accoent Of the pciSsible
•. expense it might 'entail, just as the
iniposition ofieTpresentative
institii-
tions were looked upon with '\ dis.
• favor by many of our,,:p.sopiet-tit
A Win come just as its ,compleinent
Aid and .we will then -., trend:eV ftisitt
anyoun ever -opposed it.
•
A BLASPITEMEIt' DOOM.
•°TALMAGE ntidr,,iiiTIIrTAcenttACIV:•OF
Ai
4.STONISIIibk
, •
111 a recent Sermon Ilev..Dr.
mage discussed blasphemy and. its
• ,conse.quences. • 'lie ditaW from anei-
mit and niudore history' rntialStathe-eS
the stteldens and stSssiiii'' pituistIlF
• !pent inflicted by divine power upon
blasphemers, and warned. his 1)carers
to avoid the sin as one that 'brings
them into special-dangaIr from ...an
_offended Providence. Ilis ubst stet's.;
Pig illustratien Was 44 incident that
: §AM ,JONE'S
. "
• Rev. w. Ounhingbam. AlethedIst minister',
, hard shell .preacher 'who took
• •
hos
bitters: Was Called to 'aecoetit fur.'
taking too much.. defence. wes
"Ilreetherin, 1 dou't drink becaose
. I like the -taste of my bitteisrbut I
,
drink for the good. feeling's it gives
• me.", When.Sam Janes was asked,
- I.
• ."-Wliy •cio• you chew tobacco.3" he
replied '"To got the juice out of
it ;" but from the 'amount lie con-
sumes it maybe •conchided that he
..-
._takes i als
Of' it for the "good feelin'e"
it gives him, and beeattse it has got
• the mastery win,. hini Anti he has
evither the.inelination Viorthe pow-
er to rais6 above • it. Ire is a. hoPe.
loos, helpless tolmeeo.elrunkard, pla3.
ingtlie'.1.6 before a laughing, ap.
plauding' workl, who izingb and op-
platul jnSt es they mould the ton,
• git ney..perforeitanees. of a cI
own in. ,
'circus, if they were there.
Sant .Tones is the moat prominent
man in the,A.merieart pulpit: Draws
larger ',Crowds to hear him than any
,clechtred happened only testi ,other man. Is sought after in every
Angst. if° gives to a Sun reporter
tile following corrected, version of
4Is narrative.
"So common hasblasphetnybecotde
that the publie'inind end the pablie
ear have got,used_to it,and Mos.
phemer goes up -ally 'down tjis
eountryln-hie deeturett-defying the,
plain law againgt blasphemy, ,ap4
there is not a mayor in America that
has backbone enough to interfere
with k him swim nee, and that the
mayor ' of Toronto: Profanity is
worse than theft, Or arsim 'or Mr"
er? thetie crPnes are attacks on
direction. Is potted by the church -
rip and applauded by the world. 110
AS sharp et repartee mi.
11 Gedigila'turke4 gobbler's spur, and
ho is at the sante time the most dinn.
proms and,mischevious 11113» on the
tobacco line now living.
TVs ex:n*0'8nd his tongue will
be on the side of tobaaao if Imre.
hittked. topers" will be eon -
armed. "Young tipplers" will he
endenraged and many 13 litIJo chap
eaught by his father behind the
barn or by his mothey it the
side chitnney, co -nor, chewing ar
smoking, will get a vigorons thrash.
maim by pleading' ",Sate
mes" as his greenPillpiar.
N4)141.1.
SOME SCOTTISH ANTIQUITMS.
*meg scottdals•
'Phe name Scotland is eupuosed to corns
Timm Seythia., from whieh the inhabitesitat
.are .fsid Iy seine.* lime originally pro.
told were called from the licuythe
'or Scuyts ; and even in some of the
remote districts of Scotland is pronounced
Senytliard. They are at first mentioned
in history by the title of Seats in 257 s.e.
The mole Seotleatitin Preech is lieeassfe;
la Sumgait, Escotia.; and in Latin Scotia,
• THE SCOTTISH EZIDI,E)I.
Triumphant be the thistle still unfurled,
Dear fiymbol wild; on freedoin'e hills it
grows, . •
Where rin al stemmed the tSiants of the
world
Aud Roman eagles.found unconguered foes.
Outepbeg•
'The thistle, the floral emblem of Scot-
land, is said to have been chosen by the
Sots duritig the invasion of Scotland by
the Donee.' `the Danes are said to have
crept int ;,,the Scottish camp one dark night
with the ietention of slaughtering the
sleeping -II -loots, but sme of their number
haviugstepped en rthe Obarp prickles of a
thistle•howled 'With painsand thus alarmed
the camp of the sleepers, who awakening
eimoteithem 'with Might 'au aiu.. , Such
IR the legend of ths adoption of the thistle
as the sational' symbol of Sciatiand.- The
edoption of the thistle as a Sorel emblem
is also attributed to AChaius, King of Scot-
land,' whb flourished in the ninth•century.
He is sict to havessessm the friendship and
leve of Charlemagne, King of Germany,
and ef several other great Obriatian,kings.
Marling himself 00 oevierful he took .fer
device ,the Thistle „and Rue — the
thistle to exemplify his greatness inhettle
by its sharp guardian spines,' and the.Rue
from its wholesome- virtuee, thus showing
ins wisdom during' Eines of peace, Aos
.0 ,rding to the -laisguage ..of 'flowers the
fibistle denotes retaliation. • '
Spelt qs•it fillott•description -of the thistle,
,of which Butts sung ef ;in the Sallowing
manner— • • • ' • •.
'The rough'burr. thistle spreeding wide
• Among the'beardectbear ;'
ttirnSid-Oe weeder -clips aside, •
• And•spa.red theiYmbral dear. .
THE SCOTTISH 'PATRON SA:INT.
Ft. Andrew the patron taintof Soetland;
was a fishermall; sand the son of a fishers
:niten named ;tones, Who lived at lsethsaidat
in Galilee. .Siiir,n Peter wee a brother of
St. Andrew,. btrt 'whether an elder or
younger brother Scripture does not say,
.St. Andrew add another disciple were with
John the Baptist when the latter cried,. as ,
he saw 'Christ pitsrby, -"Behold the Lamb
of od," John I., et. seq. On hearing this
,were are toldthatrthe two-diseiples followed
Sour Saviour, :and at Ilts invitation they
remained With Him that • clay. Alter
ascension St. -Andrew is not
referred to in the New Testament,: but it is
acipposed he bedtime ,a .missiot..ary .of the
GsiSpelco:Sind travelled throtigh, European •
afia. Asiatio Scythia, and latterly to. have
passed through the diOriets of, Thrace,
Macedonia, .Epirus,. and into the :city i
Petra in Achicia, wsere he suffered mar-
tyrclOna- about the year 70 ,s,ts. This die--
triet was tinder the Roniftei :sway, and the•
Pro -consul caused him to be sconrged and
cruoifieLl. In suffering the latter punish-
ment lie was pinioned lo the cross .with
cords instead or nails. The S•ross he was
• drucified on was..shaped like an X, instead
of ,being 'I' shaped like that of the Man of
Sorrow, and thee eriginated the SIC Andrew
or d-esertseetts,orosit. Trcisliticist, also teljeue
that -e, wealthy Christian lady ufrined Masi-
nielacatisefithecorpe of theApostleto be
embalmed and decently buried; tlins per..
forming to tfie, body of. St. Andreiv what
Joseph of Arlinathea •clici to ,that of our
Lord. In thebeginning.of thefotottscons.
thry the remains ,of St.'. Andrew were
removed by Constantine to Constantinople -
or
. • . • • • • -
Bystiostum
iowhers -they i
were beried n
ta,ohapel.which was erected and Acclimated
to the,Apostles. • In 808 A.n: a 'the.* monk
named Rule or Reguluscated the remains
• of the *poetic's to, Scotlan;s and there
iuterred there. on the east coast of the
k'ngdom of Fyfe, and thus gave a name to
the place which afterwards became the
ecclesiastical ,capital of Scothuid. ' What-
ever may be f -t. Andrew's connection with
. Scotlandis legendary,.but this we can say.
.that. when SC 'Andrew's Day ;comes round;
• Scotsmen, all...the sworld over, meet for
social intercourse. • In doing ;60 the Sob
' follows tise example of his patron saint,
who was it eocifit man, brotherly to Peter,
and friendly 'Ito the ,Greeks. 1 This social •
phase of his character inay be seen
perusat of the matter cOntained .
20-22..
THE COSONATZON flEritit, ea srese inisTnir.
" Unless the fetes are faithless grown; •
• •
And prophet's voice be vain, .
i ,
Whereer ei found this emoted stone,
• The*.ettish race shall reign."
The rtiinsesofsDestioy (called-Itea-Ptribeor
jacob's.$tone) belonged to the trish nation.
It state have isoidsto have foemed the
pillow of the 'patriarch :facet' WIl n 44444
on the plein ef Luz on his way to Paden-
aratos ((43),,e81s .xxv:P.) On thisstone,
the.Irishitings used to be crowned in the
following Manner. .It was supposed to
send forth a noise under the prince Who
'was to reign ; • so if a ' prince sat 'On it, and
it. Made 5 noie under hi*,, it was a .840
'sigh of his accession to the Irish throng,
but if it remained silent ' it excluded hhn
from all cliaocg. of obtaining the crown of
the, Emerald Isle, !E edition efai ca that
since the incarnation of our Saviour it has
given forth, no Boned; 'In the year .516
Percale, thesen of Ere, berried this stone
to the Island of Iona, and from there it
Wag coilveyed. to Dunstaffnage, three miles
north of Oben, theece. to the' Abbey of
goonn, in Perthshire, in the 842 by E'en.
neli II., after the Scottish had united and
exteoded their rule over the northern and
sontherit Picts. It remained at Scone, and
wits used as the"coronation chair of the
Scottish Sovereigns until the Hine of ,Tohn
when King Edward I, of England
Mug' shanks') carried it to Westminetee
Obey in 1 29fi., By the absence of the cor-
onation chair, Crown', sceptre, and robes,
the crowning of Bruce was fts lowly one,
Ile was crowned at Scone in 1300, p,bhnp
lending the robes, and the Abbot of Some
11chair'its -coronation- seat, while t gold
circlet, " borrowed probably from the
statue of some saint or martyr served for
a crown," Edward II., the weakestman
whoever held the English crown, prornised
to rettirn it to Bruce, but a London mob
prevented it from being removed. The
Coronation chair et the time consisted of a
cearee wooden chair, with etone bottom.
The foltotying prophetic penpleta says --
Else fates 'belie'd, for what; this stone be
found,
A prince of Scotia race obeli there be
crown'd,
The Soot ii shall brook O that realm as mo-
tive ground,
11 vvierds failnot, whoreier this steno
found.
•
These predictions were said to be
Bed when Ring James VI of Scotland was
invested on it as Ring Of Great Britain,
'ranee, arid Ireland, on the 25th et July,
1603. Roderic, O'Fleherty in his Ogygut
Paye There is no other manner of in-
auguration with Some Of the northern
nations than unanimouply to constitute
the kings elect, lifted upon a stone, with
all pessible acclamations .8nd demonstra-
tions of joy, its Saxe Outrun:talons and
,others relate," * • .
THE OLD SCOTTISH 10Ii0NATION On%
The following is the form of the old.
Scottish coronation. oath :—" In the name
of Christ I promise three things to the
• Christian people, my subjects. I. That I
shall give, order, and employ my force and
assistance. that the Church of God and the
41)riatian people enoy true peace uuder
•ottistithe and gov rtinient, 2.1 shall pro,
ihibit and hinder all personesOf sechateves
'degree. from violence and • injustice. 3. Th
all judgments I shall follow the prescrip-
tions of ;:ustiee and mercy, to the end, that
our clement and merciful God may show
mercy unto me, and to you.''—Celi,,iii Fyfe
Free Pres..
-be Cfneis Kosloatt7 of Pottle.
01121BETORI • '
St. Pads Obureh.--Services on Sunda s at 11
ists Ines p, P1. nibie Clefs, 10 ton, sunsay
School, g.ae p.m. service on Weculeseas, pan,
Rel', Witatsit Came' Ills, Bettor.
Rattenbuts Street Methodist,- Berth:et. 1410 30
a. TO. tlid 7.00 p. Sabath School at 2,80 p.
Etsv, Ala. Benne, Pastor.
canatla Presbyterien.- Services at 11 clan. aril,
%so o. m. Sabbath School, 2.30 p. at. 'Re,
Atzg. iiirow&wr, Faster.
Ontario Street Illethooliet-sServicesso 10.30 s.
to. and 7,00 p. in. Sabha% •Sisheel, 2.30 p.m.
any, W, W. SPASLINO, Paittatt.
Baptist Churche-Service at 8.30 p. In. kat
bath. Soho+ 2.30 st. In. Lbw J. Pao, Pastor.
BUSINESS DIRECT-0'ff
gyatiotq.
EDWIN KEE.FER
ate of Toronto, ifonor 'graduate ftloyalconege
of Dental surgeons,
• Coats's Block, - Clinton:
Al) Work itegisteiest. • Margo, l'Iciderate,
/Ulster :is rate. benne .of :the ,flax stt,,ri,tStbs_
igratentl blue blossoms of which give finch
!delight to the summer tields, affording a
.pleasant relief to the many -acres of meads-
ows carpeted with the fanowswhite linens
„which the factories have produced from the
name plant. "The mann factut of ll ex be-
• longs alnioet to the'beginning ceS things hi"
Ireland, its ,iotrodection into the country
being anterior to the p4riocl.of
record The first Engheli representative
to manifest any real sympathy with local
enterprise, sc. far as the ' Irish linen trade
was -ooncerneds was homits Wentworth,
Karl Strafford,' who, When acting , as the
Viceroy of ClIpties I., adopted measures
for the improvement .of the cultivation of
flax plant The •Vicerey made a tour
through Ulster in...the stnumer tof
'This -trip wait fruiVul ;of fobservation snd
lsensticial in its results. (Lord -Strafford wat
attracted by the abundance -of,. wild flax
whiCh he sew growing .alaig, the hillsides
' near Ballyeestle, and was ..not long -in
coining to the conclusien that tinder fever-
• able. cnitivation the yiehltng-• power of the
soil miglit be greatly •impreyed. With the
view of putting his ideas to the heat pee- .
•sible test, he bacleteargo of seed Ireporter
,from Holland, end got overslevertil experi-
encedinttch farmers to superintends and
ieSteuct the native celtivators.•in the art.of
growing the }dent. The result was samet.
.gratifying4the next year's .crop being a
hundred tidies larger. in 'quantity than the
preveious yield, • while in quality it was• ,
greatly superior' to any that had formerly
been ra settin thestoutitry. .. In this, as
in• .ether, things, the Lord Deputy was .
thorough,". and in • procooting the „Ifiten
•menuftreturessCIreland spent in 600 year
210,000 of his on private forinne.'• At
hie own Cost he had a. hundred Of the best
!line:1.160ms brought over from Amsterdani
and these Weredietrilinte.d amongst the
-west wostis'S of theIrsi Weavers. Tim
the linen 'Wade of 'Illeter• mune to be g.
polverfall lector in the sum of, Irish in-
dtiStry, and had the foundations of its pros,
perity substantially hi:id.
.
In the province of Ulster there is now
not loss than 259,000,000 .invested in flax -
spinning and power -loom weaving, three-
fourths of that sum being credited to
Belftist alone; There are over 20,000 looms
atid 000,000 spindles at work, giving direct
employment to about 100,000 persons. The
• full capital embarked in the Ulster linen
• ioduStry,... estimating the sum repaired
for the ,parryinz .on ' Of ,11,e v.ariceis lopero,•,
dons' as equal -to that invested in mills,
• plaut, et., will arnohnt to 2100,000,000: .
•-• 'The W11011 trade or Ireland benefited,•like
:the rest of the fabric-produoing world, by
the introduction of stearn power in the
firet hall of the century; still, although the
Pieter loonis are of the most Improved
piitteen, the hand-loona is yet largely em-
ployed in the Production of the finer kind
of damasks, whetter quality Of piepe.being
obtained from it than from the power-locue,
The Ulster landscape is thiektY planted
with 'factories—their tall chimneys and !
many -windowed frontage!) telling of an
industrial prosperity which is in niftrked
contrast With the agricultural depression ,
• that fornis so unwelconie a feature of other
parte of the country.As for Belfast itself, :
the capital of the." province, with its 250,0
000 liduthitante, its miles of street, its
handsome public buildings, its splendid
warehouses, its, scores ofgigantic mills,
and it extensive shipbuilding end engineer-
irig
establishments, it is a vast inclustria,
metropoliss,eanibining. the beat elements
of 0,21..7EINIIMI menutacturhirlowirstvith-
the.mote agreeable features: of Irish .lifi3
and ehariteter, Belfast hes produced many -
notable cononercial leaders, whose abilitiee
have been wiftely'divided between the pro -
Motion of their own individnal o•nterpritics
and the advaneement of the general good, •
and to -deicer: show as noble a. roll of. in-
dustrial nantee aa almoet any pity: in the
esnpire,s-s•Lentdoe Sonisfy.•
'
Row to lit:comp pielh
A. Danish superstition saYs:,•.-.If --You
would be rich, you must go out on Twelfth
Night to a crose-roact where five ways,
meet, one" of which lea -is to* 'ehurelr;'
and you. nineti take with youin your
liana 04 grey calfekin and An SNP* W hen
you reach the gross roztil you must sit
down on the calfskin, the tail of which
must be extended in the direction of the
road which beads . to „the churchyard.
Thor you mast look fixedly at the Elie,
w.lialt must be made esi sharp ai possibl9.
Towarcla midnight the goblins will Come
in Multitticlea and put gold in great heap;
round you. to try, and make you book bp.
and they will chattel-, grimace and grin at
you,. But when at length they have failed
in (*using you to look aside they will begin
to tette hold of the tail oc the cuifskin and
dreg it away with you upon it, Then you
will be fortunate if yoti Caw anecee4 in out.
ing off the tail With the axo wi bout, look:
ing'about you and without damaging the
axe, If you enceeed„ the goblins will van.
fah. 8,nd all the gold mill remain by you.
Otherwise„if you leiek about you or darn.
age the axe, it will be ell up with you.
If the wave threitte to engulf 3,ott.
1011184d by your tears to the ainetint, 91
ws ter,
rIti. REEVE. Office -"Palace" Brick Block,
Ili,ompllearattroietuibtuirayu,Sitirleierto,n stiorseirtcoegorpzereirtgerttihne
County of Huron. °Mee beers hones enusto•st
(ninon, Jap. '14, 1881. • 1-y
pod.
& SCOTT,
Barristers, 4.e., •
tutcalts CLINTON.
•
llfon4y to Loan:.
A. 07. MAN'NING, SCOTT,
• FRANK R. POWELL',
.ffiirrUter, Notary •
• Ptailic, qtc.
Office,-
: Setille'sMeek, Albr
et-st., Chilton.
Torontb agents :-Itlessrs. Mcbarthy Osier,
floskln & creolnaan.: •
•tor PRIVATE FUNDS TO LEND .at lowest rates of
• interest. .
QE&MORTON, liartIstersote.,& Ood•
erieliptI
Whip:ham. C. Seeger, Jr., ElotIcrieli.
J. A. Morton Witighant. ' . 1-1y.. • •
DAVISON& JOIINSTQN,.LaW;Chancery,ang,,
•Convexancise. Office -West' Street, n0xt1
door to Post, <Ellice, GOderich, Cart., : 37; ,•
Taintvg to pad. -
$1001000 PillVATFUNDS to 'LW
A r fil.!C (0) eat esz.n.
b'. It. POWELL, Barrister, soileitorslites
asaq Seale'SBiutk, ChtSvOn
It trONEY to tend in Serge • or inpall sums, an
..LIL geed sindager,a • &I. 000 sersitits, to
Ibe loSent sunset rates. 11. 0411,5', Innanalt.,
Olinton •
01,nton, reb. 25,1884 1,11,
MONEY,
"DitIVAIM PUNDS" to 1e84 en Town and ,Fanu
property. Appls-to '
tr:
°Mee, nextNs...awn/woes (up stairs) Albert•St
35041u.
•
I) C. HAYS, *Solicitor, 4e. Office, soreeraT
Squat.% and West Street, over metieVe 1100g:
Store, Goderieh, Ont.67,
• 4OT Moue; ttcilend at %sweat rates of interest,
. „
CAll PION,. Barrieter,Attornes, Solicitor in
0, Chatteety, Conveyancer, &c Office over
Jordan'* Drtig Store, the rooms, formerly ecu -
pied by Jude Ow la'.
SW Any atiouut of Money4o loarnatlowest
rate, eviatere.s
t. •
.••
xtrttoittritvg.
• 13A1c.,L,
ArcTrrizikke for Huron County. Sales at-
tended to :i" anypart oflIto County.Ad-
dress orders to Gonsmon P0. • V•17:
CHAR.
A ITc'rioNs'iffl, land, loan and insurange agent
111.y11 bales attended in town anti country,
31) reasonable terms. AIM 'of farm, and village
iota for sale. Aioney to loan on real estate; .fit
low rates of ietcreA, Insuranee effected on all
classes of prOper0. • Notes and delitecolleeted.,
(tootle appraised, told sold on ecannilesion, nardo
ript stocks bellow a:4401e, . . , • .
•••1lv10 Dec 10,
. , .
•I••a
Tetirta'ary.
•
4.E.BLAQKALL,
Veterinary Surgeon7
gradna Et of the Ontario Veterinary College,.To
ion.% intylitg opened an office in Milton, is
.prepared to treat all diseases of domestic
animals on the Most modern prin-
ciples. MI opemtions carefully
•performed, and calls prompt.!
Ir attentledials.tily or
. . • • ' . night. Foes moderate,
•
OPpicn,---ist. door West of Ken-
nedre Irotel, Clinton, Out. V-17,
• PhotoorP pher
potting.
TIE 11111SONS IMIKO
Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 1835,
CJATITAL, — $2,000,00 ,
. BEST, - - $509, 000
aead Offide, - o N itt
Tnomns WOlt MIAN, President.
J, II, It. 11101,SON, Vice -President,
F. WOLFEUSTANTIIOlUAS, General Manager:.
.NOtue•cliscomiteil,,Colieetionsleatik1Dril*fts
e S.teesit'l.ion::::41.raAtenoi.eriean • ex-
• change bought and sold at low-
• •sHi.A.RMEREI-
imitator Jer ,4 Mee Oast Ssiowen ON 'Thcrosze
Money advanced to fartnerson their own note°
waft one or more endorsors, No sattrigage.re••
•quired uS soeurltY•
• ,11, o. %Ammon,
31411"rikrox
•Pebruary.1884 .
kttoonte...
• .1
C111TTON Lodge, Wo. 84, A. F. & A 31.,
.eneets every Friday, on 'dr after the'ful •
Moon. Wisitingtbrethren•cortlially Invited:
YETNO, J. tE..1 xr.LA3ccEn,. Riau
°ninon, Jan. 14, 1881.
• L. L lib. 710,
• 001.1N -170N • '
Meets moo Monday iirevery
month. hall • Upstefee, ,oppok.ite'
tho Town flail. Visiting brethi
=Vt. pg0 **hs 3* wade waispee. • ,
• • 0. k.. •
-P, Seey.. own:Ivry, Au..
• • • ..
.riLINTON E.NIG•FITS .47)11" 1..k33(11t,•
• •toonis;- third liat;Nietoria block. Regular
• Meeting every .Thursday At 8 • o'ktlook.
.811rip. .V,isitiug :It:nights made welcome..
,
NTON4
Life. Size' Patraits' 'a Speoialt
. •
Chilton Ilarble Works
•
HURON STREEri tLINTON•
W. .11e.
• Manufacturer ef itt, ,S sal or in ail -kinds of
Marble & Granite for Cemetery
Work at ligureit that, deft competition .
Also mantifactnrer of the Celebrated
A.RTIPrOtAt ,c4T0NE for i3uildin pur-
poses and Cemetery 'Work. Which ninst
warranted to vivo matisfaction.
REMOVED.
11, r5.1 VIStn
t -TER has roots4 him
TT'1sh2,.,:ci Parlor to tne trees' Iran, where
he invitee Old and net% patrons to on11 for
a nice clean share and ),1 lish hair enk,
Latest st) lee of leap, hpir.tuttingt
ef,OVraltt.e JO'r.10
FARM FOR •SALE fit TOMENT.-That
• able farm coniPatial of lots 20 and 20, (.011. 8, .
Ilullett, 200 nercs, of this 1..$0"•aeros-ata cleared,
balance food hardwood bush Benrirg oreludd '
of three acres. 'OrdinarSdwelling home.; goof ••
frame barn 'and other outbuildirats.-. Fenn ks
well water.ed, and 811 *1 about ' mn
iles •fro •
the Teem. of ClintoffEIPTernie . ectsy. Appiy • so".
AL 11eTAGO.A.11T, Oliefon. 383;C'
• •
FOR SALE.
SniSCIIIBER offers, sale four eligil 'e
ilnilding Lots fronting. on•Albert Street: alto
two fronting on lilateatury street; enter in
;bloc or in soparate lots, to suit purchasere. For
further particulars apply to the Imdersignol..--
D1NSLEY Clinton, '
I)WELLING TO ItENT.-lhe %stairs
InlyyS On All)(MG areet Over 811 re, tc..miirk-
ing seven rooins, Apply to NsttoBSOSI. sus. ti
LT, •PAIMES INDEBTED.TO us will
11- ray ainounta to J. W1181311Als; managev,
brthe Hodgelis Estate, before.the Iwo thLy,
liner Ulla, date accounts *1111 bo Pitteed in Court
'for collt•;etion.-0. J. ILL & CO. 3C74
. •
.0A R. It TAG.g GilMertilL PAIRTE.11.
• •
Ea PO rrs , House; 8ign,
Popo' II muting and Kaleteininitw 0(4)? *5'
to none. &hoot filacklfroarclo a opeoialip. &aft,.
faction Guaranteed anfl prices lath tile tind.r.
!ter:Nolo-Nary St, -et, VMS
N EWS PAPER LAWS
We call the special attention' of Post
nastors 'and Subscriber's. to the fellowinej'.'
ismo oftlienceaser laws
,peatmastor •is :required to git
notice 11Y 1.10"rInt (returning. a paler doss • "
ot answer the law) when rr subscriber du..
not tatre his paper out Of the' office, en:I
itate • the reason for its not being .takeS.
• Any ilegitiet to do so Ineltes the.postmaitti r
responsible to -the puhliSliere for paynwpt,
any peri4,,i1 010441ns piper.ii
aotitinued, he inuste. pay allartxmrage8,
the publisher may cootinue bo Send 'it
until payment is made, end egilteet"tht.
whole amount, whether it 'he taken Irma
theoffiee or not. 'There ean be ne legal
dis.ontintinece until thepayment is made. .
_7 -Any .peraen who takes ,a paper from
ilia post-otlice,_ whethee directed' to. his
Sarno or anothdl., or • whether he bas Sul".
4cribed or not, is responsible fo'r the 'pay.
si SIIIJSCriber orders iris paper te la,.
stopped at a certain tune, and thopublish• ,
or 0011fill COS, to seilt1;-it tha•subscriber • is
hemiti to pay for it,i1119 takes it Out of 11
poSt.oftlee, ink proceeds pen. th e won
man must pay for what he uses.
•
itartn 1110 Dioano court 11.-1- -60-0e-vn
it the Xiweinher sitting a newspaper pn
!niter sped for pay of impel% The defend.
ant, objeCted paying on the ground thai lie
had rdete.t a former _proprietor of tile
paper to dts-eiintinuelf. The Judge heti
that that Was not it valid defenee. Thc
plaintiff, tile present proprietor, bad MI
'notice to discontinno sisil SOH seri neliiiy
'Milli collect', Although It Wilk not denied
thet defetiderit had notified former pin -
Kiefer iaeon thine. Tn nny CV GI I t
/kleinlaut was hound t0. pay for the 111.
he lied ree'elved the sioper mid!ie.('
liadrVald ge arreany for so
ubse pt ft 11,
• • •
,to