HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1886-11-17, Page 7•
t•
a
mire, s1i 1 n
4
a surprise, a beautiful
ook with gilt cover aud gay pietares:
She did nOeguess how much night
volt -Bois had done to earn it, .and
ttotv she was hard at work thinking,
thinking., thinking„ what she should
do that she might give Lois a pre-
sent on her birthday. ,,Lois would
be 24 pit the 3r1 of My. -
To do tbil3 TTIA knew that she
Most earn some money. She could
. not sew well enough, and though
s she Was iminstrious and did all the
• housework and.bought the provi•
alone and cooked theta and helped
.4 carry home the bundles, that ;node
no 1110tte5,
When Trot went to 'the bakersfor
bread, or to 00%1)46110.es for Say, a
neck of mutton or some sansarres, or
to the cheap store, where coeee was
cheaper than -it was anywhere
she thought of this constantly.
. .
She asked the prices of the pretty -
things in the shops, of.jewelry of
the Cheaper sort found in trimTing
stores. . .
Things seemed very .dear to Trot,
but one who only hoped might as
well hope for poundas for pence,.
And, sometimes, Trot lying Mous
in bed before Lois'euxislihd lair work
and came akrto • rest:Ther pretty,
weary bead ou the coitie pillow caae,
would wish that thore_were fairie&
like the fairies in her :book, Who
eame at night to pet shillings into
good children's shoes; At last the
very day WoreLois's' birthday, it
seemed, to•Trot that this happened.
• Tyot had a hole in her shoe, right
in the sole,•close to the edge where
• it Was fastened tO the upper. It let
in the water in 'iniuy weather%
It
was a trap for pebbles and
splinters'so that Trot was often
compolled to 14 on •one. foot to a
doorstep•and teke the Intruder out.
And ono day, when she hadbeen,
buying a penny Mince pie, .not foi
dessert but for d' er, -smoothing
slipped ,in, ea good deal,
and that seome o b i iike abutton.
"But if it ie a etton !, • thought
Trot, "I'll keep. it. (iota:tins are
atseful." . , •
•• • "She set her -little boket doean.
and held on by die arealailing, and
•ran ° her linger into her shoe; and:
into her lm dropped a sinalr,
shiniug silver thing -4 sixpence,.
retitle* a 6:1)eppy piece. Now, sika
pewee is nota largo sum, hut -when at-.
tainedonimenlously at •the Moinent
• ° wlienond had ceased' to. hope,: for
linytiting, it might iSerit SO at Proem.
age,
SOnle vague idea that fati.iee were
.really around actually. thrilled the
'
••• -
Then the substentiel• fat fixed it.:
self in her mind.
A present o fs�mo sort Lo should:
have.. She could give it to her:
Trot hid the treasure in the coin-
er of herpooket,hanrikerchiA tOok
lieojethe.Pio, and . kept her •seciet
04 she ate the Fie with her:coffee.
•
Then, When all nova, tidy,
she went, stealing out.,the house
with great iniportanee, and starine-
at the shops and pricing things,. and
finding nothing (for ,six".pence) that.
• was worth bitying, • •
AA' last; in a smell shop WindoW;
she eaw 'sotto little pin,•eashions--,
two scallop shells setnvor bit O.
colored satin, with 'a loop of iiop
to, fasten to one's belt or a nail,
They might do, she . .
. •
• Alas ! they were i.g.penoq 'apiece.
But the half-grown girl:. bdhilld
the counterwas good-natured. •
• "Looftlie-re," she whispered
Troy ".f know ,7,how hart it is to get
things when yolylse young and ;ain't
oartpog yet, ' She 'chug* 18 pence
for these, but she. buys tem of an
old sailor, who- mekes-theni-ltituselk
;for sixpence, :Yen'
a!reet, .along the Wherf-te 11.V. little
• olio w house. .There's•tOy boats ;tti,'
thonyind ow, and 'parrots,..• anti;bana
.pas,. and he'd. an old • ,Man- With a
• wooden , leg ; anda..,jest ;him
He'll sell'you ono ruf
. •
f 'It's very nice Of ,rpt! to .011 Mel".
eeid Trot, end.' with h gratefiil look
she sped • away;' and though Vote
. wou id. have, expected to see herkill;
ed ()aright, did get safely throusgy
the crowd of 'drays and carriages at
the watetsidq, of the. yellow house,
wheee the little oltrman with his
wooden leg kspt „,this 'queer • little'
shop, and, a§ leletaciagn. at the deor
declared, ilboarderealse
Lame •tsailors ntoketi:On the steps,
• gne Whittled at Ole end of the werke
irionL" , •
As Trot stood modestly waiting,
a tall masti with a leng beard, who
looked' thin and 'ill,' and very sad,
hnfried past lior and. • went up
states, . It was thou that. the 'old
!non asked her what she wanted, •
"One'of them cildliltgar ,he ro
'peated. "Well, my dear, yee. Ily
thedozen is my rule, hut I breaks
rules for pretty little lassies like you,
/Will you have a blue, a pink, or
/yeller 410 Make up your iniRd
and. piteh down what you choose
My darter fixes the silk, I, gums the
shells OA afid polishes 'em; and so
they'rb• finished. She's at• work up
BMus now, So which
"Blue, please," raid Trot, and
away stumped the old man, When
.he canto ,down he showedAber the
cushion., took the silver, Mid went
to hunt'up a bit of paper to wrap it
in ; and the whittling sailor spoke
Lo him.
•
"Tbat poor chap looked bine," he
said.
"lle is blue," said. the old sailor.
',All that's come and gone is -nothing
to this," he 'said. 'We hoped an,tu
hope until Dow, But, you see, rte's
looked for his gal a month now; awl
Can't tind her ; and 'he says either
she's deedor married and. he's talk-,
-ing of putting a pistol to his head.
never see.a. 'chap. so Mortal down:
in the month afore."
•.-
Folks'have lived.„-throngh it and
married other galsr'said the sailor,
whittling bard ,aud turning ...very
red
,""rest" said the old, mat, "brit
don't .yon :see he's, had • three years
On a- desert, island, .and' seen two
wen alongof hiM 'die, Ono erter the
other, and -Was at Starvatintes doer.
• when, cal* Brigare pielted hini up,
that weak he dontan2.t. stand. And.
now bis Worry.. • 8artluty Oen be
barite better thanjthaarinty be if
ever so woful.. Here • little. lassie 1"
.But Trot, with, eyes and mental -
wide open, did. not • even ..see the
1itUe•peckege he hold, out to her,
memory of a ncise..and .of hair.
like those. of the tall man she hid•
seen burst upon bor. . '
jack had. •nd.beard, -het ohLz-hiit
oh—she was Strong ill childish hope
. and that Childish expectation of line
eudingis to real life stories which we •
lose in after life-. • . •
• ilole Would have sighed 'and. Vire
• but Tret .el• uteitett the
man's: jacket 'With-, her thin ,
•handa, • • • : • .
• , '40b, please, err she said,'
believe always low:
he wasn't drowoed.- „-,0 In,pleasa tell
• him that it' he's. jaCk; I'M Trot,' mid
!.Lois iemysister.'', Oh, tell him ! • I
'think it's Jack, and that. it is Lois
•he.' is, Woking .PD:; .Wele, Capt.
LOOS datigliteTS tell hiin tell
hiiii !".,' • ' •
• "Good Lord 1" Omitted the Whit-
tling .sailor, • dropping• his luife.
"It's like ..a play, The fellow ••ie
looking for Oappen Lee's darter."
Up ho went, five stairs at a time...
.bowin he Caine. With' 'die ni ni With
the beard. • • • •.
"Whore ie she? :Wbero is,shel
h..! gas pecl.. "T is—thie isn't Trot
"Th his isn't Jaide. ." Oh, dearalear ?".
'cried Trot. •"Only:your tiosee-Aliat
looks like. "Olt; is it -Jack: liar-
ierw ?"• • • • •••
. • ... . •
"Where is Lois?" was all he.
swered. -•.' • • .: -•
'And the whittling sailor wiped his
'eyee, With 'a big i,edbandkerchief
and the 014'n -tan yelled "it tirrith 1"
'Then..*he • 'crammed ties, pretty
ettsliiou•intOl the child's 'pocket and..
he Went away With her ,hand itt .the
, thin brown. hind of 'Jack Darrow,
and told hit» all 'as -they hastened
along, ' •
• Go. up• and -prepare her,' Trot,
Said. Jack e "This is 'sadden, a It,
might hurt her." : • • • .
.'So'Tret el imhed the stays,. mink- :
ingwhiA. 010 iniglit say, anti; she
came Where Lois..sat at 'work and.
said: ." ' • • : •
"s, 1 want to give atoll e birth-
day ;areas:sot, and the fairies put six-
.
•
pence into the hole Irony shoos and:
• I •went to buy pin .ousbiott„,bot
I've:.got a bigger pres.ent.thito
It's --it's Joelo--" • ,•
• "The child is delirious 1" Shrieked
' "Oh, Trdt. ,•Tre,t-my little
Trnt
. e,
• • 1‘011, Isaie"'said • "I'M only
;preparing.. you,. .has eyine
'hack. , 'He's down Eltairs;'t
1314. .Jack wasfiPstaiis by . that
time and for.mpu
y t I think , . • „ ink that . •
joy, however Sudden, 'seldoni.kills,.
• "Qh, 'what a. wonderful birthday
present' yoa '•brought moV5 eoeed
Lois, embraoing ' her sister . next
morning. • "Oh, my .pet, washall
be so happy .tegether.!
4114 so they were.
, THE 'MUT WAY-.
The only proper si'ai" to cure
PinIgh is to 'omen the tough anneoato
or phlegtn that clog ii the bronollial
Pipes. This is why fiagyaisl's Pec-
toral Bitleam is ,the most
peniedy.for Coughs*, colds, throat and
lung troublep,
,
AYer's Sarsaperilla works directly
and proinptly, to purify and enrich
the blood, improve tJte appetite,
strengthen the nerves, end tweet!, tip
the " system. It is, in the .truest
ionise, an itheratim. medioine. li;very
luvelid should give it 0414
AgoTic EXPLORERS.
—
sna, urx.
The excitement consequent upon the toe.
tielpated departure of Mr. Odder or the
north pole bus recently awakened in the
buSern of the •Americen people a new inter-
est in what 1 may terxn that great terra
incognita, if I may be pardoned for using
a phraixe from my own,rtiother tongue.
Let us, f• r a moment. look back Hormel
the bleak Waste 4,f years, and see what
Wonderful progresshae been made in the
discovery of the pole. We may then wok
eurseives, who will be the tirst to tack hie
location notice on the gnawed aaid season -
cracked suriace of the pole itself, aud what
will lie do with it after he • hat3 110 filed
upoii
Iceland, r Presume, wits Also -mama about
860 A,», or 1,020 yeers agb ; but the stern.
pede to Iceland has ahvayei been under cen.
trol;',aud yon can et oorper let.i in the
most desirable ipies of 'Oland, and wear
A long. riolcetty name, with links in it -
like a rosewood- sausage -to -day, nt slow
price. Eaddodr, a Norwegian viking, dis-
covered Iceland A, D. 86", but he aid not
live to .rneet Lieut. Greely. or any of our ,
most celebrate t northern tourists, Why
N achiodr yearned to go north and. drciebver-
a colder conntry than his Own; why he
shod(' emelt to wet his feet and get icicle
down his lack, in order to bring. to light
more suovv-baultp and chilblains, I cannot
• at this time undinitand, #hy ebould 15
robust viking roem around in the celd,
trying to nose out more frost-bitten E'squi.
mitux, wheri he could remain at home and
viko ?
1But I leav• e this to the thinking mind,
'Let the thinking mind grapple with it. •It•
bus no charms for me, Moreover, I haven't
that kiinl of a mind.
• ( lather, •another Norwegian gentleman,
soiled aronnd North Cape end crossed the
Aretic 'cirele iu 890 A, D., but he °reseed
itilnc).
ii)1t.1e night, and didn't notice it at the
t :
•
Or three years •after, Erik the Bed
took a large seow-shovel and discovoreclthe
east °omit of G-reenland, Erik the Bed
.wes a•Northeian, and" he flourished along.
about the ointlx century Mid before the war.
lleeailed around in that. country for 'Bev-
ertil yeart.drinkinAl hay rurn and bear's oil.
and 'having a goad; time. Ile wore for
underclothes all the time, winter and sum,
.nier, .aud evaded the •poll -tax for .0, long,
time. J•lrick also established a settlement
on the tioutli-east coast Of Greenland in
'about latitude siety degrees north. These
people remained here for some, subsisting
on shrimp salall, Ramose farina, and
neat's-foot ell: But•linally they beeame, se
.be•red with the quietcountry Iife, and the
backward springs. that they .removed frOM
:there to a land that- ts' fairorthan dayrte
use woicki of another. They' remoVed
clur-
iztg the holideve ...leaving their axle grease
• andwil they'bel4-ilear,..iadediavtheis
From that:on down. .tO .:1380..we.holtr•or'
read varying end dtsconnected aocciente of
people who have been up that way,:
gaired a large red chilblain, made an 1.1,
servittion, and died: Repreeentatives from
altnest every quarter 'of ilia globe have
been to the far north, eaten. their little
hutchof jerked. polar 'bear, andthen the
polar. bear his eaten his little hunch of
'jerked explorer; and so t1ij work went
on The polar bettri with Ins wonderfulre-
tentive fnculties, has succeeded in retaining
his izrent secret regarding thdpole,•-together
*ith the man Who came, out there to tind
abont it. So op to 1380 a large number
• of namelesif explorers went to this cele.
brated watering -place, shot a few :penimi-
•eiti-eate a jerked -whale, shuddered a couple
ef times. and Inied. It has beeti the his-
tory Of Arotio exploration from the.earliest
•...11fee have taken their 'lives apd a
few doughnuts in their liancTh, veandered.
away intp the Uncertaiplight of the frcr'en •
north, . made a few o servationsto ,each
, .
other *riiigarcling the 'bookward spring
and then cached theirskeletons forever. ,•
•
in 1380 two Italians 'named. Lem took a
-load ',Of •Stin•Iti.Sserlbanainte and made
voyage be the •extremeonortli ; but the his-
torian Says the scouts are 86.condicting;
and de the Stories feta by the two brOthers.
did not. agree, and neither lever ON it the
seine on two separate.opoe.sinnei, the history
• Of their voyage is net used very much.
. 'leers relied on. continued to go
to selfziol and.'ecie in their geographies en..
ticing pietures of Men in expensive fur
clothing relining sharp iron spears .and
long dangerous , stak.ltnives into ferocious
white bears, and- sporting around on large
cakes of cold ice, arid having a good time.
Theseieseireci the growing youtIrte riseup
and do likewise. So every nation -'neatti
• the esti has contributed ts assortmente
clice, white skeletons ,and second-hand
clothes te the rernorseles's mew of the hun-
gry and raver -lona north. •
,• •
.And etill the greet pole continned
slneak on through 'days, that . were elm
; months long and nights that zinnia break-
fast seem almo-t useless. • , • •
:In 1477 ColUmbee went lip that way, but
aid. not miceeed'in starving to death. :lie
,gist a bird' e "eye: 81ev'e- Of -,a.lerge -depeett-
• Of dark -blue toe, got • hung' y and. cattle
Durim.., the Afteenth. and sixteenth cen-
turies the northere na• ions of Europe, and
especially the :Dutch, kept the discovet:y.
leur.ness recl.hot; but they did not get arty
fraerhents of the tree phi°. . The niaritinie
nationL of Europe, o together with Cithee
foreign powers, dyrittaties, and human
beinge, foe some time had spells of -visit-
ing tho Polar seas and neglecting to earn°
back. It wed the enstom then as 15ig
pew, ---to go twenty .rocle ,farther than any
'other man had over been,„eataa deviled
hoot -log, 'eurl,up, and perish; Thpusauds
of the best and britlitest Minds ef
ages have yielded to thiswi d'desire tg lire
on eporm oil;.pteinAciller,apaiorked livalreat
keep a little blue diary for tiny& en weeke,
and then feedit- tie a tall, white bear with
red ginner, •
,
Tilift-is not all. *Of .gallons Of
vvhiekei kre sent to these frozen eonntries,
and used by the explorer in•treatieg the an.
tutored Esquimaux. It seems to me uttorly
ill•adyised itqaelitR,T3fu1l?' id120p1-701if
News,
4 0
•••-•
Not It he Vroannu tor Warm
wen.known Doetonian was trying a
hero one day in cenipitoy with the owner,
U professional joe'key. Hal ing driven him
a mile or twe the gentleman, who noticed
thet he pulled pretty heed, regeiring eon.
stant Watching and Steady rpm paid le-.
"Do you think it just the horse for ai
lady to drive ?l' "Whl, "sir," answered
the ',pokey, " I must say I ehiorilhi t want
to marry the woman Who peuld ,theye that
horse."
Wild Pigeons IgateraffltateL ,
'The wild pigeon is disappearing frona
Korth America, like the butTalo, before this
mareh of civilization. A dealer, who hag
in yeare past bought and polci many thou-
sands of these delicate birds, told a nmes
worter that a wild pigeoncould not he
bought In the city yesterday,
The supply has been decreasing yearly
during the past years, until now we get but
a few barrels a, year, which are received
&Wetly front the Intlian1 erritory. It costa
less to transport them front there than
film the •far Northwest, which. is now the
favorite nesting plebe for them: Chicago
gets a small supply of the birds netted or
abet in a:innetiota and elsewhere in the
North.West, the prices paid being ueueil;v
$140 to lie a dozen, and St. Louis and
other Western cities get a few, for which
about the same rate e are paid. Lovers of
this game in this city have nearly ceased
to ask for wild pigeonsde the market, hay,
ing been so often disappointed in not find--
ing the birds they seek. There ie cense.
quently no vigorous effort 'made by game
dealers to•proolire them, the profits upou
their sale beteg small.
Within the memory of twiny middle-.
aged, persons hereabout, hundreds of thou-
sands of these birda have been seen flying
in great flocks over the large cities of the
Atlantic States, appearing like black Morels
ageinsethe sky. When 'these great flocks
roosted in the woods their weight was so
great as to break down the limbs of trees,
it is while these tlocace are roosting that
the birds become the easy prey of the
pigeon limiter, either by net, shotgun
or in- other, ways, The professional
piagteionilis hunter enter in the Weet although his
v
asily killed leads a -rough life
in hun; ing the birds, ana is poorly rernim.
orated for his labor and the harcishiPshe'
forced to undergo. • •
A. large game (1. e'er said that before the
veer and when' the birdsi were plenty Ile NO'
frerpiently, sold as many as 1,0110 clomp
•pigeons nt retail in one day. They wero
thee (rite cheat) and aithin the retell, of
poor people. The chief ofink;e of tbe thin-
ning out of wild pigeons is the destreetion
of forests in all parte of the conntry. Tho.
pigeons are thus deprivectof nestng places,
and of their favorite .beachnute and the
rood they got from theipAc and other trace
Shat were ogee ea pleuty neat here.-Aere•
Voi.k 2 lime,
Jernsa 'eat, .
We will tithe a welle., The .cItyis not
large, the walls not Very long;,simpose we
take them on our left and see how long it
takes '4o come bookagititi..• The way abott
the walls istiret by the Wellone.detnodern
.road that • leads to, Betlilehemiy • the
deep, dry moat and by the rim of Itinnom
vale. Then by•it chiekey path it takes the
• Isit—now up, now down; nowby the bury-
ing •ground, and by . old gates and older
stones-, skirting the Kedrcin vele, and then'
• G ellen eel t'ke gulch .; then, hy.a.narrow,fOot,
• path past the gardeu patehes; 'past ola,
knotted, gnarled &Him, treee4 past Beth-
, any's mud houses clinging to the dreary,
. blistered walls and past the golden gate-,
skirting the valley of Jelioettphat with hie
rock tomb' ai ia. thet of Meek/1-11,mA Zaehr.
ariali ; "p.a•st the St. Stephen' gate that gives
a view •of 'sad Gethsemane and Olivet;
then through among -the Moslem graves
and tombs • Where waitieg Women sipetd
mourn their -demi ;, past • the Darnsecus
'gate, in vie* of Jereinfeh's cave where erst
lie sat so Many recleie Years and pondered
• o'er .the- past, 'and prophesied of fnturb
. woes ; thenepitst• More walls and heaps of •
nribbiell, stones. and ag cl olive trees that
have seen the tears' and hardthe sighs of
centuries, • we 'come back- to the modern
homes"andetreets again. and an it.timdern.
pavement by a lot of rnodern traders' sl,ops
stand we by Jaffa gate. again.. Look at
your wateli. Not quite niNtV minoteti gone
sinee we .stood liero before. yet we • have
• ocentiessed ell these walls about—been
• dear • around the • present Jewish . city,
whieli nowis twice as Is ge.as it was when
the. Saviour flied -Ow • Cal vaiy '• Now are ,
thee walla .tWo Miles and a half about;
thee perhaps a fraetion •more•than
• city then, upop. a walled space -with Zion's
hill; MOriah--rwith all its teinplea, tionsea,
streets, about ,the sive of six' modern city
, blocks Snobwas the niagnitacle of the
• great City of David, a fin re'. speck' upon
5.de jeclettn mounaiu range; .a barren
'place -amid More barrettplacee; city with-
out sewerage, gas or aqueducts city with-
out streets where can huge wheels could roll-
-Merely a hornet's nest hanging' to a reck, ,
an eagle's nest among the pmentein cram
-and yet, for so the erred story rens, the
only home•op, earth of Himwho made the
world and Lief the Sun and stare aboye,e-
1.)ovOtert Demo:Tat: ,
•Ipte' Unman; 1Vont107:,
The human family living to-dey, on- earth
consists of about l$50,000,000 individuals;
not ,probably more: ,- These are (Lis.
tiibuted over the earth' s surface, so that
now . theio 18 110 considerable part where'
. ,
man is bbt romia. n Asia, where he was.
first pluoted -there are now-iippioximate-
ly .about: 600,060;000, detisely crowded; on
an -average. 1'20 to . the square mile. In'
Etat:me there are 320,000,000, 'Livers gi ng• 100
to tho nave mile,not, tio :Crowded., bet
'everywhere 'dense,.tpyt: et' pointe over -pop
glated. • .in Airiea there ere' 210,000,000,:.
Itt A•inerida, North and Soutt, there are
110,000,600, relatively thinly sqattered and
recent. In tho Island, large and.sinall,
peobably. 10,000,000. • l'he extreinee of th.e
white and bleak e V 'five' to three; • the
rem al 'dna70O000,000, tnterrnediete, brown
and tawny. • Of /1190rapo 5.0,000,0qo are
well .o.othed-thaf iger'Ayear garments of
:soine'ici.,,00ver' thee: ncl
ak, imes ; 70•11,-
0001'1.40. are geriii-clothecl, coveringin feeler
'parte of the bpdy ; IBQI0U111()0(.1 arcypiitetiot
ally naked. , Of the 'race, 500,966,000 live
in hausee tart1y. famished with the ep-
peintniente 01 itiyiliza- ion i . 704i,009,000itt
hats Or eavee with lip fernisllingt .260,000,-
00o have nothing thetoan'be called a home,
are berbarons and' savage. The range is
frorn'the topmost round -the Anglo-Saxon
civilivatiote which.is the -highest knowe-,
down tc, tnthed eayailery. The portion of
the race iyIng battlw the line of hnman
condition is IS the very least threteliftlis of
•oeefee. •• . •
the whole, or ,up Deeit.
•
Abend er Pectieettleo.
deeman photOgraPhere have it.ucteeded
in photographing a profootile in the course
its ilight., arid !team of these pbotographit
show the head fif peeticesecl air Which pre.
eedes every idiot, at is said to" bp tlihr
o beta" which prevouts even ekilfel
mon from hitting an empty egg 'then When'
hung on a long thread. The tor bleats the
eliell out of the way of Ole 4ilget.'-'2304g4/6
Trope2Lro
_
1
CRUM% DIRECTORY,
St. Nuts Cliturch.-Sercleca on Sundity at 11
A.m. Intl 7 m ni, 1111;10 01440, 10 ttan. sundey
Sebool. 2,00 p.m. service ors Wednesday, s pan,
• Raw. Wittiatt e5A10, P.D., fleeter
Sattenban Street metbodist.-servicet at te.Sh
11. to. 4nd 7.00,p. rn. sabbath Sebo.n at 2.00V.
10. Rav, MIS. Write, Vallior.
Canada .Pitsbyterian.- SOrVicila at 11
3.80 o. in, Sabbath „Sehool, 8430 V. in. Bev
A.1,11x:ST/14/11hT• Vae•tor,
Ontario, Street Methodid.-Servlees at 10.80 s.
7
in. and .00 p. m. salmon) &hoot, atm p.m.
Rev. W. W. Sealable, Pastor.
Baptist Ohureb.-Service at 6.30 p. m. Sat;
Path scampi, 2.80 v. tn. Rriv J. olio, Paster,
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
igenttotry.
EDWIN KEEFER
00.7"
DimizzirxsT,
ote of Toronto,, ftonot Graduate Eve! Oollege
of Dental Surgeons,
4 •
Coats's Block, - • Clinton,
All Work Registered. • Charges Moderate.
• ,ti.odltal.
11EBV$, Oflice-••Palttee" Brick 13look.
•Rattenbury Street, Residence opposite the
Temperance non, Huron Street. Coroner lei, the
County of Huron. 011iee hours fivnt 0 ibin. to 0
401inton, Jan. 14, 1861i • • 1.1
pgaI
MANNING 41 $0ATT,
Darr4ters,
gbLIOTT'SILCCN, CLINTON
itioney to;Loan.
A. II. MANNING, • ,TAS. SOOTT.
FRANK R. POYVELL,
llavrieter, Saicitor, .Notary
••• j-'ublic, etc. •.
Office, S0014010 13100k, Albert-st., Clinton• ,.
Toronto agento *fte0art1,y, Osler;
Hoskin & Cree111111,1ff •
'AV PRMATIs Itim•S 1'0 at lowest. ralteS Of
interest, . • • . •
0EAokin & 3fORTON, God!
Q0/101 and wi -O. seager, Jr., Goderiell.
• J.• A,-MoCten '
•
•
AvisoN,JOHNSTON,•T,aw, Ohitnecry,and
..Conveyeneing. Oflice-West Street, next
door to Post 011itte,•Goderich,. Ont, 67.
RD 0. n'nays, solicitor, fee-, Ottiee, corner of
Square and West Street, ever Butter's Book
St:0re, oilitt
teMonet to lefi .1.v01..e.g.,t r.otos of ittnTtiere.st".
• j'7,1 CAMPTON, Harrietor,Attorney, Solle.itoi 01
-c.o. Chancery, Coliveyaneer, Office at er
' „Jordan's, Drlig Store, the' rooms formerly' ocen-
pieti • bAynyjll-tileQiti);01te
Y1,afMney
. O''
' keen at loWest
• rates of interest. • • • • ' •
1.1y. •
• - •
•
ttettotte;r1.)1.0'.
• • . .
H. W. BALL, •
..,t ucTIONEElt 101, Huron Aninty. Sales Pt;
WOO to in any part of Shit (Joni*. Ad-
iress oNars•to Gonzalez; J.' 0. 1'47.. •
MAP.
,
A-roTioNEE11, land, loan and insurance agent
13lyth. Sakti attended in town 15031 countrY,
311 6:1901111We terths. A list of farms and vinage
lots for sale. . Monan
ey to lo, 00 real estate, at
low rates of interebt. InStirance efFacted 00 all
claseeti of property. Notes and debts vonected.
Goods appraised, and sold on commission. Bank:
r tpt stOcks bought and sold, • ." • •
Blyth, Deo, 10, 1880
•
(itettrinat.y.
J., E. lat.:ACKALL;
• .
Veterinary Surgeon,
Graduate of Hie Ontailo Veterinary College, To.
ronto, *wind an (Ave in °noon, is
prepared to treat all diseases of domestic
animals on the most Incident • prin.
ciples. All openitions carefully
. performed, and drill•s prompt-
•1.11‘ittliX.17esth
1(u1eil6)loltl.dtlelitito.O.r
1
-01it1orh4-21sir door-Vest:mt.- :Ken-
nedy -1a Hotel, (Il1ntip70iit. V-17.
phofoal•riplier s
LflSI C,F,D
CLINTON.
,
Life Sto Portraits a Sueoiaity,
t•-•
Olilltou liarb16'A
• HURtlal STREET., CLINTON.:
W. I . COOPER, dr..,
• Manufneturer‘of pp drier to all 1(113318 01
Marble & Granite for Cemetery
' Work at egares that defy competition
Also iniumflietrirer of the (lelebnited
ARTIP/OfAL ATONE for huihiing pur-
posee end Cemetery Work, widely tmist
he Peen to bpappreeinted,--A11..wotk
warranted to Ave eatisfection.
REMOVED,
•TT' /ffifla lrf(!mnwn tiltd•hh4
lie heves ,05 InT.enrikt
hie,g elenn share tihd six Mb hair tut.
LatotiK las of Joeletflailrenttli.g..
•
wontij to gold.
1•00
c PRIVAT-(Ervvps to "LE$.00f0A.T11X0YERN,
CENT.
• -Seethes block, CLINTON
V. it. ROWELL, Barrister,. Solicitor, eta,
•
atitto.
"4,44.441.4.4
oN:n.10:EY tendin large o'r Finial' sums, on
.193. good mortgages or perochial security, to
14•Woet current rates. 11. HALF) Ituron-st.,
Ohnton, Feb. 20, 1881. • 141,
• MONEY,
TIRIVATE FUNDS to lout 011 Town, and Valve
• prepetty,. Apphi to
0. RIDOrT,
Office, next NeWs-Rneonn (upstairs) Albert -St '
• 850.8m •
•1,.....,ain.,.....tanitsraranmotmannuanwsawarmerwo
anting.
• 414=7..M. 4,••••
THE .11101SONS' 1ANK. .
Incorporated by Apt of parliemene 1855.
CA'llITA Li • • , r $2, 00 0, qc.10
Itg8T., • s. VOI),000.
Vend. Office,. e 14bITTItt.A.L:
.11}01.11n1 A. Sm10V TOZN11..9
1N,N,1 rpricesl isldeen4
F. WOLFERSTAN TI1O1TIA8, lasartkol Swinger:
Notes'iliseounted, Collections made', Drafts
issued,"Steding owl American ex-
.eligng,e bought end sold at loW- -
est carp -eat aates.
a IfT4111.11/31. AT 4 Psa •CnNt. AL1,011.10) on DErOFIT
•' •
.L.Bloney edraneedto ferinersen their Mv» notra •
quit* . 111.0, BlinwRIta
-•••
with on -e„ -Or more endorpers, blorkage
-31unn0PLI;6%
•
l ;014
'Fe.i.rt.ntr.y. 1281
4111111
animlimegnemonnwriew
• kititoottit.
eiLINTON Ledge; No. 84, A. V, & A 151.,'
‘,) meets every Friday, on or after the ful
Moon. VieltIng brethren cordially invited.
J. YOUNG, w. 11. a. CALLA NriER, Pito• '
Clinton. Jan. 14, 1881. • 1. •
•Oranot. •
L(07 Ifq., 710
"ivf,
MTOINT •
ft* Meets •Scoorn Mende) -of ccory •
• 9
month. Hall upstairs, opposite •
•.• the Town 110,11, •Visiting-brethre.n
always inade weicem, .
• • O. TWEEMY, W. M.
E. FLOOD'S:, • Secy.. • T. 0. DOHERTV„; 1),M.
�UNION. KNi0II"r8 .0.F ABiIIL
• ..rtooms, tbtr&flft.t,:Vielarla Itegular
moefipe Oyerk Ilanristlay evenittg. rut '8 . o'clock.
:sharp•111Siting 11151(0 Aroloolue, '
."'• ..•
•f$11too1 to wtt
TAni, you sAt.ti TC-.1iE1T..L'Ili15t vain,
4 able farm composed of lots 1.1) alai :in, con. s,
•0n11e55e2e9acres,..oetilis.1.50 Antes -afro elefireal, •-
.4)111411e0 goad bardwOod 1)0411 ter rirg• • et dini d •
•oftliree acres.- Orditint,),- house •, enc.t1 •
frame barn.. and otherF111111 15
well watered, and sittiated ehout Ai (((11 •
the Town Of elintotl.. ,Torins ease, Appl• tO • •
ItleTAGG ARV,' (lin ton:. 851.0. • • .
- • -
• :FOR
.•
r-firrn SrPSCRIBER rdfors fOr fror.chell;en,
' • enfliiiiie Lots fronting en Albert Street; abo • . .•
eive--.frentieg osajtattealim•y Sfeeett either -.vv..-
'bloc or ill seParatClots; to ;mit juirchaer's. Fiq•
further pat riieulafrA apply to the u iideede41.: •15.
DiNSIXV, Clinton.•.' • :182 -
• • • . , .
1•1 WELLING YID RENT.4-Tite: upstairs,
wises on Albert 15frect over 4t•,. re, 5,T0/Tri., • *,
/ og.seve0 1001115,• Applr.to 1lOLSO.N.
'A. LL RTIE8 INDEBTED TO US 'will please
PAS'. •iinouitts to J. WISEMAN, miningtir
of the 114dIrane Estate, before 00.114 May; Its , •
after that date accounts -will be •piaced ie
for c011eption;-0. TIArIiILL keg/. •.
E0.. POTTS;' Haase, 'Sign,'
. cAnntAQ.K<T, GENET:Al, PAixquelt.
(41 51071eP.a2) yell( :h101:1711(49Tal.fleln C( KQiit3l4i17(fl9 0$07,itig!
Memel Motranfeed
03441 prim: 7olt4
treeidene,,,wir,ril street, c -0.941
NEWSPAPER LA -MT
We call tine • apeoial attention of Peet
mestere and subscribers to the*following
ireepsie or thenewspap'orlaw8
• 1-A. postmastev. te.'"refloirart, re givo .
hotice ItY 1•471"1"Int 1.otur..i1iiig a papeedoi:e
pet answer the lp.‘0 when a saliseriherdops •• ,
aof take his .paper mit of the ••otilesi, eta'
stitte the reason for its •net being 'tablet: •
-Aey riveted to do 80 31101508 the postmester
reeponsible to the tbiblieliers for poyment.
2 -If any person orilere his pa,per'ills-,
100 tin31ei4 lie most' pay all arrearages, or
the publisher' may rolitinue to eeiril it
uottl paymetit minute, andreflect the
whole amount,, whether it lie' token from
the office or net. 'There 'wen be no leiml
ilieconthmance until the'payment is 11111110,
".idief.;--pil'inst-3.
e7f111)(e!er,s°14.1Nl
i‘k.rl'titlrakii'liSireilP
et-elP'ticlf111111-1A1
natneer aeother, or whether be has Sill).
aeribed or not, iS reepepsible Int• the pox,
4' -If a subSeriber oiders Ids, paper to le.
etopped et a certain 13101.1110 reddish.
er emilinu(s tosend, it the 41111)8(911)41' is
hound to my far it if lie Ace it dot or 11 e
post.olliee. This proceeds upon the grou041
that a man mast pny for what he itees.
. 0 0
th •
• ri
• ItigrIn the Division Conti in Goilerielt
tt the Neveinher eittieg n newspnper piihe
'tither Ailed for tmy of piper. The defend.
?int objected paying en the.grentol thin he
lied ordered a former proprietor' or the
paper to diseontinue it, The ,Tedge• le ill
tlint'that was not a voila dertmee....The
onilltor, preeeet proprietor, knit na
moire te diecontinne and roneetinelitly
(mold eolleet, althoegh it wile not derdeil
that deretolnet hind notified, rei TIIOV wo..
priefor to (la:condom,, ney. event,
(1,,rpeonnt eels bound' to pny fel, the
he hod tete-teed no 11,1,0, miff moil lie
luul paid all 5(41 "0)8 due rersubsertoien.,
.„.
3