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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1889-05-17, Page 3A fobbing Department is not surpassed in. the County. The Clinton New 'Era - NEWS NOTES. Is published every Friday Morning by the proprietor, ,btoBT. HOLMES, at his printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin- on, Ont. TEBus.—$1.50 per annum, paid in ad vance • JOB PRINTING In every style and of every description executed with neatness and dispatch, and at reasonable rates. NEWSPAPER DECISIONS. 1. Any person or persons who take a paper regularly from a post office, whether directed in his name er an- other's, or whether he has subscribed or not, is responsible for payment. 2. If a person orders his paper dis• 3ontinued he must pay all arrears, or the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and then col- ect the whole amount whether the pa- er is, taken or not. 3. The Courts have decided that re- fusing to take newspapers or periodicals from the post office or removing and leaving them uncalled for isiorima facie ev dence of intentional fraud, • ADVERTISING RATES. , Locw NOTICES—At head of local column, 10 cents per line or portion thereof, each insertion. Articles lost or found, girls wanted, &c., not exceeding three lines, 25 cents each inserton. Five lines, 50 cents for one insertion, and 25 cents for each sub- sequent insertion. Houses to let or for sale,' farms to rent or for sale, stray cattle and all similar advertisements not exceeding eight lines $1 for one month, and 50 cents for each subsequent month. Advertisements without specific in- structions, inserted•till forbid. Special contract arrangements with business men. General advertising rate for unclassi- fied advertisements' and legal adver- tising, 10 cents per line for first inner. tion, and 3 cents per line for each sub- segtient insertion. ' Changes for contracted advertise- ments must be handed in as early in he week as possible to insure a change that week. CLINTON CHURCH AIRECTORY ST. Pact's (Episcopal) —Services on Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday School at 2.30 p.m. Rev. W. Craig. Rector. • RATTENBIIRY STREET (Methodist). — Sunday services at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday School at 2.30 p.m. Rev. Jas. Livingstone, Pastor. WILLIS (Presbyterian)—Snnday ser- vices at 11 a. m. and 7 p. in. • Sunday School at 2.30 p. m, Rev. A. Stewart, pastor. ONTARIO STREET (Methodist)—Sunday services at 10.30 a.m. and.7 p.m. Sun. day School at 2.30 p.m. „ Rev. Joseph Edge, Pastor. BAPTIST—Sunday services at 10.30a.m, and 7 p.m. Sunday School at2.30 p.m - Rev. J. Smith, pastor. NEWS NOTES The Scott Act was defeated by large majorities, Thursday, in Middlesex, Oxford and Lambton counties. • A,farmer named Rufus Huntley was found deal ini Hanover on Thursday morning with a wound across bis cheek. Forest fires communicated to the village of Vulcan, Mich., and 22 houses were burned; also 3,000' cords of hardwood. - A band of Kurds attacked a wedding party in the Mouth dis- trict, robbed the guests and out- raged the bride, whom theyafter- wards boiled in a pot, saying 'she would do for a wedding meal. The new Inman line steamer City of Paris arrived at Now York from Queens -town on Thursday. She made the fastest trip on• re- cord -5 days, 23 hours, 7 minutes No boat ever before got in under xT-friss:•,.__ _,_ __ .. ., A Washington woman, prose - eating ] eating in an assault and battery ease, who called the court's atten- tion to the marks on her face, the result, she said, of the. beating she had received, almost fainted when the Judge ordered an officer to closely examine the injuries, He rubbed a handkerchief over her face when the marks instant- ly disappeared, having boon' made with paint. The case was then dismissed. 'HmforiaUAUE may take place from the kidneys or from tho mu- cus membranes, particularly that of the nostrils.'. So writes T. Granger Stuart, M. D., F.R.S.E., Ordinary Surgocn to H. M., the Queen, in Scotland, ProR'essor of Practise of Physic in the Univer- sity of Edinburgh, in an article on Bright's disease. Hence tbo only natural inference is that the kid- neys must be restored to a healthy condition before its effects will disappear. Warner's Side Cure is the most a eient agent for this purpose knjwn to science. . Mrs Maria Elliott, formerly Mrs O'Flaherty, Who has kept the We1l:n4ton Ilouse,LO.rdon Ifcr some time,is mourning the loss of a husband- and $2,000, especially the latter. Elliott by some means got hold of the money, which was to have been paid on some property, and is 'now far away from his better half. Mrs Elliott does not think her second marriage a Very brilliant success and is now advertising that sho will' not bo responsible for any debt incurred on her account without her written order, Don't hawk, hawk, and blow, blow, disgusting everybody, but dife Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Further evidence regarding the Junction Cut disaster• was taken at the Coroner's inquest, at Ham• ilton, last Thursday evening. Rev. Mr Evans, an Angle- cian clergyman, went over the falls on the River aux Lievres, Que., in a bark canoe and was killed.. John O. Wood, the Toronto druggist, who has long been wanted in connection with the death throogh malpractice of Lily Charlton, .has been arrested in Buffalo. The churches at Fingal will all be opened for divine service on Sunday next, after being closed for three months, on account fof tho prevalence of small -pox in the vicinity. _. • - 13ones were found in the well at Spring -field into which it has been rumored a man wasthrown seven- teen years ago, but• whether the bones are human or not remains to be established, - Henry West, who tried to smuggle the thoroughbred bull into Canada at Windsor, has set- tled with therrovernment by pay -.1 ing $600and all costs and shipping the bull back to the States. • At Providence, R.I., the other day an elevator car waspurposely cut loose and let fall five stories in order to show that such a thing could be done with safety. Three men, a basket of eggs and a glass of water were on board: Ono man was fatally hurt, another seriously shaken up and the third, a reporter, badly bruised. The report says nothing about the fate of the eggs. An English firm is making printing ink from the oil and grease extracted from spent cotton waste. On every railroad and in every works where machinery is used, a large amount of cotton waste is used, . to the extent of sorno thousands of tons per annum in the aggregate. 'This used or spent waste is bought up at a low price, the oil extracted and.con-- verted into printing ink, .and the waste cleansed and again put on, the market. - Count Antonette, leader of the Italian mission to the King of Shc a, telegraphs that in the re - ser fight between •the Abyssin- ians and the Dervishes these le- gendary stories aro afloat: The Abyssinians were victorious on the first day. Tho Negus was wounded, and while suffering with' fever he ordered 2,000 Dervishes to bo beheaded in his presence. On the following day after pro- claiming himself the elect of God •he headed his army and was again wounded in the neck. He fell and the army fled, leaving 30,000 dead. Many of the recognized author- ities in civil as well as military circles say, "The malarial dis- ease is most' dangerous' • in that the kidneys are most liable to break down." Such men as Da - costa, Atkinson and Pepper, pro- fessors in our leading medical schools, and Soldoten, , Surgeon Gen. in the Russian army, Wood- ward, Surg. Gen. in our Ameri- can army, speak of' malaria as a direct complication of chronic Bright's disease. Tho kidneys must- be kept -free:- from and the poisonous germs of mal- aria; they must act normally in cleansing the blood, for 65 gal- lons bf it passes through them every hour. People. in malarial localities recover from both the cause and effect of malaria by us- ing Warner's Safo Cure. Every person, in the spring or fall, who has either kidney disease or mal- aria, should use Warner's Safo Cure as a precautionary measure. The coolest -headed farmer in Monroe county, Now York State, is probably James Andrews, of Greece. Ho came to Rochester, on Thursday in a lumber wagon drawn by ,.a pair of young and high-spirited horses. While on the oast side of the river the an- imals became frightened and start- ed on a run. Andrews found that he could not•manage them sitting or standing, so he threw himself on his stomach'in• the bottom of the wagon, and held one rein in each hand: Tho,runaways wore headed for the river, and it ap- peared as though the farmer must either be drowned or break his neck by,;umping. IXe did neither. Ahead of him he noticed (a tele- graph pole• and a lamp post so close together at the edge of the sidewalk that a space barely three inches was loft between them. Andrews headed the team for these poets, and so straight was his aim tint Lo iag•led the polo of the wagon squarely into the open space. This apt stopped the horses and wedged tho polo so firmly into tho place that it bad to bo sawed off. Andrews un- hitcl•o i the horses and walked off. NEWS NOTES. Patrick Ford, a St. Louis dray - man, made' his mule drunk the other day, and the animal's first move towards painting the town red was to bite off three of Pat- rick's fingers. Even' a drunken mule may hit 'the mail do the head. C. E. Grigg, son of S. Grigg, of the Grigg, House, London, Ont., has ]eased premises at Vancouver for the purpose of establishing bottling works in that city. Ho will handle Labatt's ale and porter. • A Cheboygan, Mich., despatch says:—Mary Ann C.ollagber, aged 23, went into the woods on her father's farm, lighted a pile of brush, lay down in the flames,and was burned to a crisp. The rea- son assigned for the deed is that her parents object•A; Viler receiv- ing the attentions oTa young man whom they disliked. Reports from all sections 1)f Southern Arkansas are that the farmers are alarmed by the rav- ages of worms. In many places farmers have planted cotton and each time the plant has been des- troyed by worms.' Merchants are appre n ' e and business i paralyze d "If I gave you a pound of metal and order you to make the most -of it, what kind of metal would you select?" asked a well-known jeweler. "Gold; of course," was the prompt reply. "MI prefer steel," said the jeweler, "and I'd have it made into hair springs for watches. A pound of such springs would sell for an even $140,000." Rev Father Damien, widely kllon:l! as •the leper priest of Molokai, died at Kalawa, Hawaii, April 10. Father Damien was born in Belgium in 1840 and went to Hawaii in 1864, - For the last sixteen years bis labors were con- fined to the leper settlement at 11life.2olokai, where he contracted the dread disease which cost him his Monday. night, May 8, a small black cloud hanging rather low was noticed to move rather queer- ly ovey Jamestown, vale. ,Sud- denly the cloud was lost'sight of and a pr'ecipitatioo,of frogs ' was seen, There were several hund-• red of them and they could be seen hopping up in the street a block away. The theory of Some is,that the frogs were `caught up frofil Some slough in a whirlwind. Six women were killed and five injured in a collision which occur- red between a street car and a switch engine; on the Michigan Central track in Kalamazoo, last Wednesday evening. The engine was on its way to aid a freight train 'at Ostemo, the first station west of there, and had orders to make egtr11 speed. At the same time a street car on the West Main Street Line was nearing the track and the driver not bearing the warning or seeing the gates low- ered,,supposed that all was- safe and proceeded as usual. While the car was crossing the tracks the engine struck it squarely and carried it several blocks before stopping; At the time there were a dozen persons in the car. The British are having no ead of trouble with a very peculiar tribe known as the Chins who infest tho western border of the new, British possessions iner Bur- mah. The Chins do note care a snap for Queen Victoria and whether Britannia rules the roost ekiertet tiles-; nsietaupon.non.i_ater-, ference with ono of their very strange'customs. It is their firm belief that agricultural interests cannot prosper without the saori fico of human victims, and they look to the neighboring tribes to furnish material for tho sacrifices. The Chins are the best fighters in that region. When they go on the warpath for the sacrifices the other tribes have only one re- source, and that is to take to the water, and live for a while on the islands in the Chindwin River. Tho Chins cannot swim, have a remarkable aversion for water, aro never known- to cross a river, and fugitives who reach an island can squat on tl€b bank and watch the enemy on the opposite shore with perfect security. In d lecture Col.Woodthorpe delivered in Lon. don, last winter, ho expressed the opinion that the Chins would not cease their raids for victims until forts were built along their terri- tory and garrisoned by small forces of troops. The• British took his advice, and occupied the districts on one side of the Chin county, only to find that the Chins, cut off from their eastern hunting grounds, turned their at- tention' With great enthusiasm to the Indian possessions of the Queen on the west. Tho Mins have scorned the proposal to re- linquish their inhuman practise, and their country is now invested on loth sides and desultory fight- ing is going ,on. They are said to be hard pressed fbr food, which may tend to confirm them in their notion that bloodshed is essential to securing good crops. NEWS NOTES Mr T. D. Craig, Conservative M. P. P. for East Durham, will design his seat in the Legislature and help to "build up this coun- try" by settling permanently in California, While Mr Adam Clarke, of North Elmsley, was narrowing on Friday of last week, says the Smith's Falls Record, one of his horse's feet went though the soil and left a small hole. When he was coming back across the field he met an army of snakes which came out of the hole, and with the assistance of his boy Willed 65, the rest escaping. Poor••Dakota has more weather than any half dozen of the States, bar Minnesota, and more bad weather than all the Canadian provinces" put together. Last week's despatches brought news of a wind storm in that state which blow a car off the track, of 'ra di•fiught that has -Bono much damage to the crops," and of a shower of frogs not unlike ono of the plagues of Egypt. On Wednesday afternoon -at the Eustis mines, Capelton, Que., the roof of one of the buildings con- nected with the smelting works caved in. Thomas Beakey, who was working at the burners, ob- serving a disturbance, started to run, but in his excitement ran in the wrong direction, so that the timbers of the roof fell upon Dim and crushed him,breaking one leg and injuring his head, his injuries resulting finally in his death. Stephen Bates, a Danbury, wealthyold farmer who is posses- sed of an ungovernable temper,last Thursday evening horsewhipped' three women who crossed his land and took some wild flowers. The women were employed in a factory and crossed 'Bates' land to make a short out. The factory employes witnessed the outrage and, run- ning to th'o scene, caught Bates •and attempted to lynch him. The woman finally interceded and 'Bates was allowed to go home. Last Thursday afternoon a gang of tramps, seventeen in number, took possession of a stock train running on the Canada Southern Railway (Michigan Central) west from Niagara Falls: They put the train hands off and ran the train to Hagersvil1'e• "Word bad been wired there and a• crowd of people had turned out to capture the 'tramps. They succeeded in capturing three of them, •but the rest escaped, and when last seen were making in the direction of Hamilton. Misfortune only stimulates the brave. A young Canadian, rend- ered blind by smallpox during the epidemic in Mtintreal, has passed his final law examinations with the highest honors, and been called to the bar, where there is little doubt the concentration of mind, induced partly, in all pro- bability, by his blindness, will assist him in his career as it has done iii Alis studies. One of Eng- land's ngland's most useful statesmen, the late Right liion. Mr Fawcett, met with a gun 'accident by which he lost his eight, but he rose with ex- tlifraordinary rapidity in' 'political e. No fewer than 183 fires of a greater destructiveness than $10,- 000 occurred in Canada and the United States during April, and the total loss footed up to the en• ormous sum of $15,987,000, as against 811,125,350 in the same month' of - last yea -07:- There -as. some consolation for the under- writers, however, in the fact that, severe as the loss 'for the past month undoubtedly was - the total for the first four months of 1889 is but $46,507,700, compared with $48,497,950. If the prairie fires in the West are not soon combat- ted the contrast at the end of May will not be nearly so favorable to the present year. In Great Britain there is much speculation as to the honors which Her Majesty will distribute on Saturday, the 25th inst., when she will officially celebrate the 70th anniversary of her birth. It is expected that on this occasion Prince Albert Victor, eldest son of the Prince of Wales, will be conferred a dukedom, and that Prince George will likewise be given a seat in the House of Lords. There is an expectation also that the coming marriage of Prince Albert Victor will then be formally nnnouneed. After joining an athletic club, attending boxing schooling, and being able to lift 195 lbs. dead weight, Alonzo Wheeler, a resi- dont of Columbus, was licked by a woman with abroomstick.. It's no use,training agin 'em. Engagement annouecodA-Clara, ho whispered, ardently, do you think/you could bring; yourself to marry me? No George, sho ans- wered, with a sad little smile: I couldn't very well bring myself, I'm so timid. You might bring me though, George. 01 1110P + Cry for HUMOROUS. Agent—Is your new home a Queen Anne? Owner -Yes; Queen Anne in front and Mary Ann in the rear. , Even the plainest -faced woman is disposed to look upon the bright side of things, provided the thing looked at happens to be a mirror. All bills payable inside of one minute, was the system a Chicago grocer started out on, and failed for $8,000 inside "'of two months. It was too rapid transit. I say, Jenkins, can you tell a young chicken from au old one? Of course I can. Well, how? By the teeth. Chickens don't have teeth. No but I have. Mrs D. Lane—calling—Is your servant girl a good laundress? Mrs P: Kay—Well,no,she doesn't wash and iron very well. But, ob, she hangs her clothes out so artistic- ally. --A Logical Deduction—Bright Boy—I'm a chip of the old block, ain't I, pa ? Fond Father—Yes; my son. B. B.—An' you're the head of the family, ain't you, pa ? F. F,—Yes, my son. B. B.— Then you're a blockhead, ain't you, pa ? • What idiots they have on news- papers now -a -days I exclaimed Hornblower. There was a re- porter in here yesterday, and I told him about the big improve- ments I have been making down our way. Of course I told him not to mention my name in his paper, and the blamed fool didn't. Swell Boy -Feel of that muscle, Charley. Dudley—Good gracious! How did you get it ? Gymnasi'• um, diinlb.bells, sand bags, Indian. clubs, and all that sort of thing, you know. Why, Willie I What do you want to get up ygiir muscle for? You're no fighter. Doah boy, I've hoard from London that vanes will, be larger than ever. Don't you see? I'm in training for my cane. A young lady broke off her en- gagement with a suitor when a wealthier lover appeared upon the scene. She wrote to her old lover, requesting him to return her pho- tograph.- Here was a chance for revenge, which ho took by send- ing hei' the following note : ; I would gladly comply with your request, but if I do .it will spoil my euchre deck. I have a collec- tion *photographs which I use for "playing cards' and I do not want to break. it by givilig away the queen or diamonds. • FOUR NEW STATES. SouTII DAROT.A, NORTH DAROTA.'i11ONTANA, WASHINGTON. On February 22, 1889, the President signed the bill creating South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, and Washing. ton states of the Union. Sorin DAKOTA.—The great Prairie State,to which the St.Paul,Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway has three main lines, reaching Ellendale, Aberdeen, Huron, Watertown, and Sioux Falls. Go to South Dakota via the St. Paul. Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway and pass through St. Paul and Minneapolis en route. NORTH DAKOTA.—Where is grown the No. 1 Hard Scotch Fife- Wheat; whose healthful climate nurtures the most vigorous and brainy civilization on earth; where single counties raise more wheat, oats and barley than entire states; the soil of whose fertile prairies is richer than the valley of the Nile; where the Turtle Mountain, Minot and Devils Lake land districts invite the home seeker to secure a free home. Magnifi- cent daily train service to Fargo,Grand Forks, Grafton, Devils Lake, Bottineau, and all otherimportant points. 4:14\T2.NA., THE GOLnEN.:—Treasures in her mines -of precious instals ; wealth in in her 4,000,000 head of live stock ; profit in her fertile fields, producing a larger yield of crops than any other state or territory ; the richest country per in -- habitant on earth; where prosperity is universal; which has the best paid labor in the cT'orld ; a ' balmy winter climate, caused by warm winds from the Pacific. The St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway ,is the only railroad passing through a continuous agriculturaC country from St Paul and Minneapolis to the Rocky Mountains. It runs through the Greaf"Reservation 18,000,000 acres of land, free to settlers, in the Milk River Valley. iVood, water, and coal in abundance; no irrigation required the only line passing through Great Falls with its 1,000,000 horse -power cataracts immense coal veins, and surrounding farming country of free land; through Helena,the capital city and commercial centre of Montana, and Butte, the richest mining camp on earth, to San Francisco by the Columbia River Valley Portland and Shasta Route, or Ogden, Utah, to Cali fornia.points. Remember this is the only line running dining cars sleeping cars and free colonist' sleepers of its awn from St Paul and Minae' apolis to Great Fails,Ilclena and Butte It is also the shortest line to .Butte. WAR1I nGTON.—The country of tall timber, indented by Puget Sound, the Mediterranean of the )Pacific. De not forgot that the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway is the only line which offers a choice of three routes to the Pacific Coast. The Manitoba• Pacific route is the only line by which passengers on route tor Tacoma, Port• land and San Francisco can pass through Port Townsend and Seattle. Free col- onist sleepers run throngh without change or delay. Distance to the Pacific Coast is same as by other lines, but prices of tickets are live and ten dol. lain less. Take the Seattle route. For futher information, maps, rates and publications in regard to the re- sources of the four new states, write or apply to F. 1. WHITNEY, Gen'I Pass. and Tkt. Agt., St. P., M. & M. Ry., St. Paul, Minn,, Brilliant-! Durable ! Economical 1 Diai'nind Dyes excel all others in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None other are just as good. Be- ware of imitations, because they are made of cheap and inferior materials, and give poor, weak, croaky colors. To .be sure] of success, use only the ' DIAMOND' DYES for coloring Dresses, Stock=' ings, Yarns, Carpets, Feathers, Ribbons, &c., &c. We;warrant them to color more goods; pack-' age for package, than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the Diamond and take no other. A Dress Dyed 'FOR 'A Coat Colored . 10 Garments Renewed CENTS. A Child can use them!, ,,At Druggists and Merchant,. Dye Book free. WELLS, R/CHARDSON & CO,, Montreal, P, Q. KENDA.LCS ,SPAVIN CURE Tin most Successful Remedr ever duet, emu, us it is certain in its effects and dura not blister. Read proof below. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CORE OFFICE OF CHARLES A. SNTbER, 0 CLEVELAND BAY ANDBREEDER TROTTI9EO BRED HOF • ELMWOOD, IIs, Nov.2 ; DR. B. J. KENDALL CO. DeLr Sin :I have always purchased your doll's S avtu Cure by the half dozen b, t• would like, prices In larger quantity.' I tlm,,t one of the best liniments on earth. I have u- . m my stables for three years. Young truly, CHAS. A. SI'::, KENDALL'S SPAVIN Mk_ BaooxLYN, N. Y., November 3, MS. DR. B. J. KENDALL CO. Dear Sirs :I desire to glve you testlthonial of my good opinion of your Kendall's Rpavin Cure. 1 have used it for Lameness. Stilt' Joints and Sett, cora.ine, mi I' have found It a cure cure, I cor• aly recommend It to all horsemen. Yours truly A. H. GILF,ART. Iilanager Troy Laundry Stables, KENDALL'S SPAVIN CORE. SANT, WINTON CODNTY, OHIO, Dec. 39, 1888. DR. 13. J. KENDALL Co. !t Gents: I feel It my duty to say what I have done with your Kendail's Spavin Cure. I have cured twenty -ave horses that had Sparine, ten of [ting Bane, nine afflicted with Mir 'lend and seven of Bi Jaw. Since I have had one of you! books and followed the directions, I have never lost a case of any kind. Yours truly, dsoREw Triomf!. Horse Doctc» KENDALL'S SPAVIN CORE. Price 81 per bottle. or atx bottles for 85. All Brine lists havaiLoLean era[. 4 for ,you, or It will be sent ceany adiire#s{s7t-reeelpt:of-ptfcerl}Etl'm:'1frtFl (f ;ors. DR. B. J. KENDALL Co., Eoesburglt Falls, V L. SOLit) BY ALL DRUGGISTS, • , AWARDER FiRST SiLVER MEOAL WORLD'S EXPOSITION, NEW ORLEANS, J.S.A., 1884-5, in competition with the tiauofortes of Europe and America. The nly U.S. International Medal ever award - d to a Canadian pianoforte ; also Medal ,nd Diploma at the Colonial and Indio] ';xltibition, London, Eng., 1880, with the upreme honor of supplying Her Majesty he Queen- with a ewcomhe Grand. elected by Sir Arthur Sullivan. Fel llustrated Catalogue, prices and terms, lddres' ctctavius Newcombe & Co., MAMurAOT,IASP• WarTCROOMS, 107'109 CHURCH 9' , TORONTO FACTORY. e9 TO 07 eELLWOODS AVENUE MARVELOUS EMOR DISCOVERY. Only Genuine System of Memory'PPatntngs i"our Books Learned in one reading. Mind wandering eared. Every child and adult greatly benefitted. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes. Prosp eetes, With opinions of Dr. Wm. A Item. [mon 1, the world•falned Specialist In MInd D susses, Ilan lel fereei,1('nf Thom peon, the great N , r'at..1. M. Ilneklcy, D. 9.: editorofthe Chi '(vat' N. 1-, Richard 1 roctor, the Set (tette. i •'itlnallln,tne1'lhers, runt vet freeby'J't 1.Oi.1iT'f I;, 237 Fifth Ave., PROIURTIES FOR SALE $1.3(1 WILL BUY TEE HOUSE AND nd occupied botg. oMtrLawrence, on the undersigned St Clino. ard and soft water and good eta Me. Terms of payment easy, Apply to JNO CALLANDER,24 Steely St., Loudon South (ARE ACRE LOT FOR SALE.. -WELL SIT- IJUArEI) for building tuts in a very desir- able part of Clinton with about 75 choice fruit trees, some hearing al, pies, pears, Pi taus cherries, grape vines, awl l,iack and red cur- rents. For further particulars apply at the NEW ERA OFFICE, t. f. p tpl'EItTY TUH F'ILII _.. 13.50 will buy a valuable lot ou t1;; s,n)th aide of Huron Street, Clinton. three duns below the Com- mercial Hotel, 011 441:1011 is Ort crud live houses, with hard and soft 4, ,ter•, eouLl] eta. ble, awl other eon yenhees ,. Per 1rvrt•ticul- ars apply to ,VAL'l'OS UULa1WUli7I1, or_at the \t:w ERN Malec HOTEL PROPERTY VCR. SALE.—SUBei: wenn offers for .salu the property known as the Railway Hutel, Cliutun close to the grain storehouse of 3Ir it. Irwin, vitich is a licensed houseaud (bine a good 1,118100s, This is a good stand and will be sole} on easy terms of payment. A Grocery Store in con- nection, can he bought vvitil tbo hetet, or separately. Full pnrtieulars 011 al,pliculwu, 111138 III, liELLY Clinton. HOUSE AND LUT 1'011 SALE—Situated en the south side of 'Townsend nsend Street. The house, which is new, contains prir}or, dining room, kitchen, a number of beer •r num, and a stone tadltirr the main, part.. being heated with a furi.ace. Hard x11(1 soft water in abuucleuoe. The lot contains on, quarter of an acre, end the property will uc sold on reasonable terms, Apply to BIIIS.C. CARTER, Clinton. PROPERTY FOR SALE — SUBSCRIBER offers for sale that excellent property at present occupied by himself, on the corner of Princess and Raglan Ssroets. acre of land all set out with eboice fruit trees and' grape vines, plenty of hard and soft water. The house contains three rooms down stairs, and four above, with good cel- ' . lar, closets, &c. This property is very con- venient to schools, and is 1n One of the best locations in town. IVill be sold entire, or the lots divided. Terms reasonable. 401114 STEEP, Clinton. VALUABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE.— That moat desirable property just out, side the corporation of Clinton, ou the Lou- don !toad, lately occupied by Rev, John Gray, and consisting of 14 ser( s, with good frame House, Barn Mid Stables, splendid Orchard, and plenty of water, is offered for sale. Being in Stanley township, the taxes are low. Very desirable property for a' (armee who wishes to live "retired. Will be • sold ou reasonable turrets. Apply for full particulars to THOS, EAST, I'arlthill. 'WARM FOlt SALE,-•TII.1T S1'T ENDID farm of 11'0 acres, 011 11>,:Maitland con- cession, being lot ;7 Guth:rich township 'situated 1 utiles freta Ti >1' , vino, old four •hilus from the Town ,it Clinton.. 99ie soil a good clay 10002, with ca n,nerfa[Ihi spring creek running throuelr t) „}lacy: oche for i wells. Tl1el•e is ahem. 4` i'. r'1 i,n,l 1( 111(1, is oily of the best St> rr boli.:: 111 1311 coml. ty; also two ;(x100 11.1, t L.;01; baro. one frame horse stal,le, ro0:.t for -r: horses, also too goe.3 tn.nrlwu cry' r.r,::, fa • iugabout six acresiu Ji; r•,..;,. t, i in Leu,:-. About 43 tierce scat •1 3,,44o. Wel ie. 41)11 at reasonable ter!,:. ALON } 91)0011, lioll1csc•illc 1'. 0. 1" -OE, r;:1I�1:, That desirable pr„p, rty lately 'occupied by David Welsh, cieeea;oi, and being lot No. 4, corner Isaac and Dunlop struts, 0311800. On the premises there are first-class accou:- ntoda,tions—[del}, eistcrn, shed, fruit trees, and a garden well planed out: The cottage is new, open for inspection at any thee upon application to the undersigned. The premises niitct lei disposed of in er•:rer to:,wind up the estate of the Imre. DeviclWelsh Terms trade, known cn 1)Pplieri ion: ALEX. \V ;1,5li,))Executor of HOB'(:',V111,sl 1. y Will of A.il..:MIAN;1IN(:, David Welsh Property 1'(lI ;safe 1 will sell either one or both of my new Brick hooses on Ontario ,.:root adjoining the Presbyterian mans(, i n.. of land to each house: The lots run 'Cu .1011 to Townsend street on hich there is ro:;:,, for two more houses. 'the property is situated in; the best residental part of Clinton, Both houses are new and thoroughly well finished through - There is 110 more desirable propertp i11 Clin- ton either as an investment or for a Monte. I will sell lots on the ]inytield road or on Kingstreet at a reasonable price, from a acre or up. This is a gond chance for farm- ers and others who purpose (mining to Clio - ton to reside. They can buy lots now cheap, plant out trees, and their property will al- ways be increasing 10 value,, even if they don't want to'build at once, their laud will prove a good investment. 'Permscasy. 'Hav- also several other p1roj' rtil. s in Clinton, any of which I will eel], :41,1y to (1O1IUEN W. H. PETRRIN• 'hitt Bran l aaa alit CO'! 1 ST. THOMAS, ONTARIO.. We have the only f.u:tory in the Do- minion. Our material is pure and fine, and is endorsed by loading scientists as being practically imperishable. It can- not absorb moisture .1,11C1 consequently is not affected by rhe frost. .1, Baker Edwards, Ph. D., 1). L., F. C. S., of Montreal, P. Q., ,cav,( ih groat d ra• bility under all c:rpasnrc to weather and storm is fully ,torumd by its high quality. It is morn (Inrablo than stone antivsill: tLt. ka(pac: ;1 t hand lomL aisle tr-_v_ ance from general ion 10 generation. I'-" know of no otb r material which is equally capable or :;onlbinbig clergance of form, beauty 0 anrfave awl indefinite durability. , Please call on or write to our !agent at Clinton and see dc;ion;s 1.nd prices be- fore phu:in. your wrier. W. M. GIFFIN, .\GL_\ I CLINTON THE HT. Tltoltav WHITE 31',0:•141 MONU- IrENT CoMrANv', ('1. '1'1'0 1A4, ONT. -------- The. NEW ERA Job Room sur- passesali others in!the county. T