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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1891-05-01, Page 6.41S .41S 4 Jobbing Department is not surpassed in the County At the call of the Bishop of Huron about 75 clerical and lay representativesiof the church i)f England in Hu,on diocese assem- bled at the chapter house London on Thursday to consider the es tablishment of an organization having tor its aim the promotin,i of the lay work in the church. The meeting resulted in the fin m- ation of the Huron Angliciau Lay Workers' Association. Roatcs of Popular Stallions. ELEVA FOR. Witt stand for Mares during the season of 1891 as follows: MONDAY, Aprill27,geave bis own stable, Con. 3, Hullott, andjgo by Clinton to John O. Elliott's, Bayfield Concession, for noon, then to Lot 94, Bayfield Concession, Goderich T'p, fur night. 'TUESDAY, pro- ceed along Cons. 11 and 12, Goderich T'p, to Wm. Colclough's for noon, then via Holmes - villa to Keppple Disney's, on the Huron Road, for the night. WEDNESDAY, proceed via Clinton to his own stable for noon, then east down Concessions 2-3 to Geo. Dale's for the night. THURSDAY, proceed east 1} miles then out to Alma, up the Huron Road to E. Jones' for noon, then by Clinton to bis own stable. FRIDAY, will proceed up the Gravel ttoad to.pons 4-5, then east 1} miles, then north to Cons. 6-7, then east to David Ferguson's for noon, then north to Cons. 8-9 to B. Hunter's ifor the night. SATURDAY, will proceed west to the Gravel, then home to his own stable, where he will remain till Monday morning BEN. CHURCHILL, Proprietor. re PRINCE VICTOR Will stand for mares during the season of 1891 as follows: MONDAY, April 20, will leave his own stable, Con. 8th Stanley and proceed by way of Varna to P. Cole's, 10th con. Goderich Township for noon; then north to G. Hanley's for the night, TUES- DAY, by way of Holmesville to Huron Road, for noon; then by way of the 16th con, to W. H. Ball's, Base Line, for the uight.- WED)NESDAY, 'proceed north to Manches- ter Hotel, for noon; thence north to West. field, thence east to J. H. McClinton's for the night. THURSDAY, will proceed south to Mr Scott's, con. 13, Huilett for noon; then 1} miles south, then west to the Base Live, and by way of Ball's Bridge to Mr Good's, Colborne, for the night. FRIDAY, proceed by way of Hanmlller to Mr Taylor's, Huron road for noon,, then south the 6th con. of Goderic'1 Township, to' for the night. SATURDAY, will proceed south by way of Bayfield, to. J. Johnston's, Sable Line, for noon; then east to his own stable where be will remain till the following Monday moor ng. This route will be continued through s,3asony health and weather permitting JOHN DANBY, Proprietor. YOUNG JQE GALES. MONDAY, April 27, will leave his own stable and proceed down the Lon- don road, then west to John Diehl's, Stanley,for noon,then bywayof the Bayfield road to his ownstable for night. TUESDAY, will proceed by the Huron road to Holmeeville hotel, for noon, then down the 9th con, to Middleton's corner, then west and on to Swarts' hotel Bay- field, for night. -EDNESDAY, will proceed up the Bayfield rotted, then down the Goshen line to Drysdale for noon, then up to Cook's hotel, Varna, for the night. THURSDAY, will pro. ceed by way of Gabriel Elliott's side road, Goderich townsbip,to the Bayfield road, then to his own stable, where he will remain till Monday morning. G J CONNELL, Clinton. GLENLYON MONDAY, April 27th, will leave his own stable, lot 34,con. 14, Goderich township, and proceed south to Bay- fieldline, then east to the 16th con., then north along the l6thas far as the Hur- on road to Nicholas Butler's for noon, then down the 16th to Robert Thomp- son's for night. TUESDAY, will pro- ceed to J.akes' 1\ aitland con. O I , fur noon, then to Robinson's Hotel, Holmes- ville, for night. WEDNESDAY, will proceed west along the Huron 6 road to R. Taylor's for noon, then across to the cut line to Adam Cox's for night. THURSDAY, will proceed vest alongn g the.cut line as far as the 6th con., then down the 6th to Andrew McGuire's for noon, then across to the 7th con, via side lines to P. W. Currie's for night. FRIDAY, will proceed by way of cut line to J Dempsey's, 9th con., for noon, then down the 9th con. to P. Cronyn's for night. SATURDAY, will come down llth con. to G. Holland's for noon, then to his own stable, where he will remain till the following Monday morning. R M CHURCHILL, Prop and Mgr. PRIDE OF OXFORD. Will stand for mares during the sea- son of 1891 as follows:- MONDAY, 'April 27, leave his own stable, Base Line, and go to Ml's Tebbutt's, Mait- land Concession, Goderich township, for noon, thence to Robinson's Hotel, Hotmesville, for the night. TUES- DAY, proceed by the'Huron Road, to George Edward's for noon, thence along the 6th Concession, to Thomas Tichbourne's e s f or the WED- NESDAY, ht. ED- g NESDAY, proceed by way of Porter's Hill to the 7th Concession, to Robert Elliott's for noon, then south to side - road and across the 6th Concession to Wrn Townsend's, Bayfield line, for night. THURSDAY, proceed east to Cole's Corner, then north to J G Steep's for noon, then across east to A Innes', Stanley, for the night. FRIDAY, will proceed to the Rattenbury House, Clin- ton, for noon, then to Owen Flyhn's, ird Concession Itullett, for the night. SATURDAY, will proceed to his own stable, where he will remain till Mon- day morning. J J McLAUGITLIN, Manager. PINCHER Will stand for mares this season as follows: -MONDAY, April 20,will leave his own stable and proceed north to the Base Line to Robert Mason's for noon; then on the Rh con, to East's corner, then north to Benjamin Mason's for the night. TUESDAY, will proceed along the 9th con 21 miles, then south 1 }, then east to James Snell's, lot 10, con. 7, Mullett, for noon, then south to Har - lock, then east to Joseph Stevens' for the night. 1VEDNI:SDAY, will pro- ceed east to Leadbury, then south to Winthrop, then west to 1'l. George Hen- derson's for noon, then sgnth q miles, then east 11, then south 24 mile, toJohn Seaforth, for the night. TIIITRS- DA Y, will proceed west along the Iluron road allm .� ile. then n r 0 1• 11 then west l W S to Wm. Aitchison's for noon, then west to Enos Hull's for night. FRiDAY, Will proceed to the IIu•on Road, then east to Samnel Wise's for noon, then to his eon stable for the night. SATIllt. DAY, will preteen down the ;ltd con. of Stanley, to II. Dielrl's for noon. then south to Brncefiold, then north to G. ROSS' for one hour, then to his own stable. This route will he continued throughont the season, health and wea- ther permitting. AVERY it NOTT, Pr.,piletcrs B ,SIL KINNY'S ARREST, HIS THIRST FOR GORE OVERCOME BY POSSUM AND LICKER. Opie Read Tells How a Wily Sherif Got the Handcuffs on a Tennessee Desper- ado Who Resisted Arrest -A Capital Character Sketch. Bill Kfnny, of Dry Fork, killed a promi- nent man of the community, and the au- thorities, after some little meditation, de- cided that he ought to be arrested. But Bill objected, and when three deputy sheriffs called on him he laid a Winchester rifle across one corner of his homestead, killed one of the deputies, and so painfully wounded the other two that they strolled back to the Shady Grove court house. Sev- eral days later, while Bill was sitting in front of his door, Mark Townseud, the sheriff in chief, walked up to the fence and lazily placed his arms on the top rail. Bill reached back and took up his rifle:' "Good moruin', Bill," "Hi, Mark." "Had a good bit of a frost last night." "Yas, ruther. Which way you travelin' Mark." "Oh, no way in particular. Lowed you Mout be lonesome an' I thought I'd drap over an' talk with you a while. Don't make no difference how lively a feller is he's apt to git lonesome once in a while, specially this time of the year." "I reckon that's true," Bill replied. "Some fellers come out here the other day, an' one of them got so lonesome that he jest nachully had to lay down," "So I beam," said the sheriff. "By the way," be added, "them fellers that you speak about wanted you to go to Shady Grove with them, didn't they?" "Yas, they 'lowed that a jedge down thar wanted to slake my acquaintance." "You don't say so," exclaimed the sheriff. "W'y the jedge is a mighty big man, an' I think you'd like to meet him, Bill." "I would, but you see I ain't in society this year." "Sarter retired, air you?" "Yes; thought I. was agpttin' a leetle-too old fur the bright foolishness an' yeller tris.. in's of this here life." "Yes, that moot be," the sheriff replied. "A; feller does withdraw 'nightly as he gits "SO I'VE HEARD. along ago; • but say, in g s y, the jedge is a friend of mine au' I want you to meet hila." "No, I'm obleeged to you. 1 never han- kered after these here fellers flat pride themselves on their book l'arniu'." "I don't exactly crave them," the sheriff rejoined, ;'walloping" -his tobacco about in Lis mouth, "but still I think we ought to meet them once in a while. Iiut say, Bill, there's a man down at Shady (:rove that I do want you to meet." "111 -ho is he?" "Sam Powers." "He's the jailer, ain't het" "Yes, an' the best one you ever seen," "So they sat" Bill replied, fondling his rills. 1n fact hem fellers that was here the other day wanted me to meet him." "So I hearn," said the sheriff: "but Ilovred that ',webby they didn't extend the inverta- tion in a soft an' gentle way," "Oh, I didn't have no fault to find with the invertation. I gest didu't wanter go, an' sorter pulled back a little, au' then one of them laid down au' the other two limped might'ly." "So I hearn," said the sheriff. "Still I thought there mout be a easier an' smoother way of puttin' the invertation. Gentleness always pays. You can sometimes lead a man with a string of beads when you couldn't drive him with a hoop pole. You recollec' old Wash Bowles that was once the sheriff of this county, don't you?" " Mighty well." "Ah, halt; well that old feller had more gentleness an' consideration for the feelin'a of other folks than any man I ever seen, One time he had to hang a feller named Brice, an' Brice sorter kicked against it, bein' a feller that was hard to please anyhow, so Wash, in that soft way of his'n, stepped up to put on the rope an' says, `Brice, you will please excuse me, but I'll not detain you but a moment.' So I thought that if I'd corse here to -day with strong consideration an' smooth gentleness you mout accept the jailer's invertation to come an' spend a while with him." "No, frit obleeged to you. I don't care about going to -day. I've got to go over the ridge an' whip a feller tomorrer, an' if I don't dei it I'm afeersel ho moot he disap- pointed. Well, now, Mark," he added "ef you ain't got no further bus:ness with we 1 reckon you'd better be shovin along," "But I have got some further business with you, Bill. I want you to go with me an' see the jailer," "Wall, I ain't goin'." "I 'lowed you would, Bill." "Wall, I 'low I won't an' ef you take yo' amus Offen that fence 1'11 drop you right whnr t you s 1+�t d.' ' "So I hearn," said the sheriff': "say, I crarm .u-ei' hero to take Sunt 1 "You don't say so." - ~ 4 I II ��u �yy "RP' Yo' T\518 Yo'l•R AaVV ill I•(N THAT FP♦I F." "Ya•. an 1 Dan' you le go e 1 u•.' only ou11,5 urn slid r 'n hi 1111 with yet "NOB, n' but e lis air a ,o it, ' "Al/bb•• n ter all tin•, 8 h, it. cora i l r+ is shut off " "No, 1 thought v, ,i void 1 go w 1,h me W1113011} having to wal.te any et the cart- ridges. You know the price of brass an' powder have riz mighty of late." "Oh, now here, Mark. I don't care 'fur expenses. I don't mind shootin' a few balls into a feller that wants to put me in jail an' afterwards hang me." "I am glad you ain't stingy, Bill. Some of the boys over at the store said that you was mighty economical; but I am glad to see you ain't. It hurts a ,man might'ly, you know, to have it aerated around that he is close." "I know that, Mark, an' I'tn allus tryin' hard to keep that charge from bein' sung ag'in my reputation." "I'm pleased to know you think so much of yo'self; but say, I told the boys or at Shady Grove that you would come bac , with me, an' I wish you would," "I'd like to accommodate you, 'Mark, but I don't feel like strollin' today." "Sorry to hear that, for 1 told the boys that I'd have you in jail by 1'3 u'vlu:.t to- day." "I wish you hadn't told them, Mark: and you oughteuter done it, fur you didn't !,now, how busy I mout be." "Yas, mebbe I done wrong," sued the sheriff; "but I didn't know, after all, that you couldn't fling aside your busiuess au' come along with me. The boys air all ex - pectin' you." I '1'11 II Y "BRLNO ON YO' HAND-CL'FFSI." "Yas, the boys- -up the -ri-ver expected Gineral Jackson once, but he didn't come." "Su I hearn," said the sheriff, "an' you air not combs' visth ore." "That's what I ain't." "I'll het you S15, Bill, that you do," "I'11 take the bet, but in the meantime if you take yo' arms offeu that fence I'll drop yo' right iu yo' tracks." 'That's 'he way I like to hear a 1111111 talk, Bill. Say, last night the ,jailer an' his two sons went 'p0ssom huntin.' They called up the dog; -and they have got some of the finest digs ---turd they, have got soma of the finest hound, you ever saw -au' here they came with brightness in their eyes au' deep music, in their voices. Yon ought to have heard then? go 'monk, ouuk. monk.' Well, they went out an' about midnight they came back with two of the biggest au' fattest possouts you ever saw, Well, they d"essed them right that an' then an' put ,hent out ou the top of the house so the frost could all on thein, an' this marnun theytook'thom down an' began to bake thein along with some sweat potatoes. Then en the jailer's son he saS+ says 'pop we ain't got no regular wild cat licker to go with these here poss0u,s,' so the old man, havin' a mighty eye for art gave a jug to the young feller an' told him to go up in the mountains. The young feller went, but he - ouldn't find no licker, an' at last he seen a ole feller (Isle - in' a wagin, an' when he asked the ole feller if he mould get any licker, he swore that he didn't know nothin' about it ; `but, says he, `if you will take that jug up on the hillside an' put a dollar under it., I dou't know what mout happen, but whets you conte back I don't believe the dollar will be there.' Wall, he went up on t he mountain side an't •t a dollar r, punder a jug at went away, but bless yo' life when he came back the dollar was gone, but the jug was filled with the hest lieker that had passed its teens. An' so, at dinner to -day they are goiu' to have them pussoms au' sweet potatoes au' that old licker that's got a bead ou it like a dew drop; an' say, the jailer says that you may share the feast." "Look here, Mark, you ain't tryfn' to trifle with my feelin's, air your ":'To: I'ut tellin' the Lord's truth; an' say, that ain't all. The Perdue boys caught a big bear down iu the bottoms, au' after dinner they air goin' to sot the dogs on hits in the jail yard right in full view of yo' cell. Think of that." "Look here, Mark, I am about converted, and I'll go with you if you'll lot me take my rifle along." --•--'•`No; can t do that, Bill, an' besides, I'll have to handcuff you. Possoin, sweet po- tatoes, licker with a head on it like a dew- drop, an' a hear fight in full view of yo' cell." "Mark," said Bill, as he put down his rifle, "retell on yo' handcuffs. Blamed if I ain't with you. "-Opie P. Read. [En. NOTE. -The first column of the fregoing article appeared last week, the end, by an oversight, being omitted. We therefore give the article in full this week. faua:. SOME MISSING LINKS PICKED UP FROM ALL OVER AND ADD- ED TO THE CHAIN 01 Events Which Make 01/ a Readable. Racy Newspaper, and Which Furnish Valuable Information in Small Com- pass for Busy, Wide -Awake Readers. A distinctive church dress for women to wear on Sunday is proposed in England. California seems to be a lucky state. Nettur al gas has been discovered three miles from Vallejo. France upends nearly 1,000,000 franc's a year in -providing warns seals for the pour school children. Bavaria, by a recent census, slumbers 5,589,362 inhabitants, the female exceeding the male population by 131,396. Cheap tin ware is said to be very kit, i I'taus, the coating of the iron containing poisonous materials, generally antimony. A tablespoonful of powdered alum sprink- led in a barrel of water will precipitate all impure matter to the bottom, say's the Pharmaceutical Era, A fourteen -year-old girl who was sworn as a witness in a Camden, N. J., murder case said she had never seen a Bible before she entered the court -room. The man who hauled the first load of sand used in building the Polk County, Iowa, penitentiary has just been sentenced to that institution for six months. A Philadelphia man wanted to commit suicide as painlessly as possible, so after much thought he carefully shot himself in the left foot. He is still alive. Virus taken from hares is being experi- mented with in France, and thus far it has been found to work equally well fur the pur- poses of vaccination as virus taken from calves, Alaska Contains eighteen square miles for each inhabitant. Its population consists of 22,135 natives, 4,41:1 whites, 2,215 Chinese, 82 blacks and 1,508 half breeds of uncertain paternity. Cork oovering for'steam pipes 'had proved very successful in 'England; and iu some cases it has been found to make a difference of 100 to 124 deg. from the temperature of uncovered pipes. Nearly thirty thousand violent or sud- den deaths occur every year in England call- ing for inquests, twice as minty as the num- ber of Germans killed in the Franco-German war, and for every violent death there are at least fifty accidents. The effect which living at high altitudes has on the blood of animals has been recent- ly investigated, and the results show that the proportion of oxygen in the blood of mon and animals acclimatized there was the same as that of dwellers at lower levels. A Concordia, Kan., preacher had a valu- able horse blanket stolen during the progress' of a series of revival meetings. In a few days the thief was converted by the preach- er's words and the next day returned the stolen blanket and confessed his yin, A woman's champion in the Kansas legis- ' Im call., himself "Duncan of Punp- I., . delivered himself: "1 am a dude, a, in my hair in the middle. I r fav • o t:,' 001/1011 from the ranks of the idiots and imbeciles and allowing them to occupy the sauce rauk . as the gentlemen from Af- Hua." A new device is used by traveling men for the name strap on their valises. A curd bearing their name and address is slipped into the leather card -pocket in the usual way, but now in addition a piece of mica is slipped in on top of the card, keeping it neat and clean, and at the same tine' permitting it being rend by reason of its- transparency. A new discovery was made in the famous Wind Cave of the Black Hills last weak by which openings were found that took a seven hours' tramp to one of the subterranean chambers and return. This cave is surpass- ing the famous Ma nmoth AVB of Lc ntuoky in magnitude, and will be a principal object! of attraction to visitors of the Black Hills. An English naturalist who put in two years in a boarding house spent the next five in tracing the bedbug hack to his native lair. He found perfectly authentic information to prove that the insect existed and was full of business in the year 120 B. C. He was even found in the camps of the army, and no war fleet was deemed fitted out without a liberal spriukling. There was a lively scrapping match be- tween two Indian light -weights the other night, and when the victor returned to his home in Seymour, puffed up over his victory and $100 in his pocket, his mother realized that his egotism might prove his downfall if not nipped itt the bud. She therefore squared off and broke his jaw and knocked him out in the semoud round, In certain parts of Africa crickets are said to constitute an article of commerce. People rear them, feed them in confinement and sell them. The natives are very fond of their music, thinking that it induces sleep. Super- stitions regarding the cricket's chirp are very varied. Some believe that it is ominous of sorrow and evil, while others consider it to he a harbinger of joy. An Egyptian scythe recently unearthed is exhibited ta1(1o11g the antigun lea in the priv- ate musetnn of Flinders Petrie in London. The shun . tf the instrument is wood, support - 1' 111111010, iug a row of flint sores, which are securely I ', I Ih ter Ise s," •.a1,1 '. i . 1:1 lin,? c tuent••d into it. Tues discovery will set at Torii ver. :it,t' ti ' lt." ,•r 1! 1 i11' I'ob ter rest the sln•culations is filch. have been made hsi. ., ,.,hr,bibti s'l,'o f L. G. s, letty as to how t he-erops of the land were gathered thimsicinl:ed tin m;1'rmiblr." in the flint and early velvet. age. -Wiles iii• 1111ntelit ineliiired 1'lelinris mother. '•limn' de shn Ider twill...nines dal yids was gi\in' l i ' ui:'it e„int all' nil til hl stained°. . I 1tr-,leist.And 1,1.' i oncbed , � hill soy• was ;;r:nl'. 13ut hit.0'.lenkim lies I.. . 1walk out in front nl• i1' sheet fl•. int ni, I ;.nee. ?itis 11110 s 1 dot c1 7-vlsl : rr f, it het• own 1,11' an' she g.,t . 1,1 .,n' bis:-' up de pah- t\... 11 There bas be.•n a decrease during the year past in the number of studntsattel.eling the German universities, especially in the de- partments of philosophy and natural science. It is the first annual decrease since 1873. There are now 29,711 university students in Germany. Berlin is easily first with the large total of 5,527, and Restock is last with 371. Leipzig has 3.4.18 and Munich 3,382. A learned professor of the Paris Academy _ _..- des Sciences has been making experiments which have resulted in convincing him that "Say," sail n olds to the botcher of whom the rabbit is of all living things the most capable of withstanding very low tempera- ture. Inclosed all night iu n block mf ice, a rabbit wa: found next day grit M; on very cnrnfortnblyand ,evidently not SWOT, of any - he pitrchtscd his daily supply of meat, "that last piece of steak i bought of you moat have been from a steer old enough to vote." '•1Cn- it tough(' inquired the elan of meat. thing eery peculiar in his circumstances. In "Tough' 1',11. I -heal,' it was. 1 this r,,gai• i the rabbit leaves fnr behind our could tourist rut it. - "I ill, is that all' 11 -11. you o 1 -1I to have heard nn.dhl + Illnn kickingtt tires or two ago. 1 e ben••h' . 1 ,e that hrsaid it OR eo tough hu t'' it lill get his fork in the grave " �nrldrn .\IIaet. 't'u1111 ' t' 11 1Z1`11 Ion 111, may i'"in,' from churl•hi •'1\ Itit outsilte ,rt n. nal hl please, Walrlonia. ,i Idle I 0101. int" Illi. 11.1,4 011,re n11 1 yet tl it.t tr. 1 Wife of 11"•nnto t'it i;•rn -n1 .n,11' Ilru, gists in1IA, folia wr1r nt tI r,11,‘„11 cigar. miens ly " fetes to l 11 17 'i •'I'1 ., ; ,wed 1 , ,:ell •I...,,1 when r,en;i',l for ,.II.irrb. rl•'i ;-gist, n few m-(1.10, 1;0,11. '.I ,,ter �iie be to te,l •e 1l, '',Kit r. lttl t.l'll. )d.. 'I'hn faithful f'rienrl the dog, though, nec"rding to the learned professor, 'he -p. ;;l alts rind pigs take gond •e•onrl, third e,, t ( itth P1 Airs The new ride with w1114•11 the t;rlu•en •army and navy- have been amici during the last few months is a let reit in the was If small wenpmns. 'flee gun has a herr- mf 11 inch and throw: a prejeel etc of lend coute,l with nickel steel weighing 11 1 grn,'Trs, or about half an once. The cartri.lge rased weighs ?wally nn 0,11110, 11.111 is f,i,hes in length The magazine of the 1,t:r lorries ilii ••a i i rid;;ee The speed of the lit:l lef ell lets, i,iz the 111115/11.11f the gun 1, about ',1(10 feet per see'md, and the limit et its etTrctive range is n little muter ten miles. Brick walls of ,:mall thickness are not absolute proof against this g -un, as several shots strike Mg the same spot will make a breach. I OU ONE OF THEM? We have quite a number of subscribers who have been troubled ler some time with a disease called "slow pay" and it worries them till they look like the man in this picture. The only remedy for the disease, one never known to fail, and a single ap- plication of which will make them look like this picture, is to pay up all arrearages at once. See Timor change! Rev Joseph Smith, son of the famous Joe Smith, one of the founders of' Mormonism, at the recent confer- ence in Kirtland, 0., denounced polygamy in the strongest terms. The Latter Day Saints that attended the conference hold the same tenets as those in Canada. They aro opposed to plural mar- riages,and in no way countenance that doctrine. English Spa yin Liniment remove all hard, soft or calloused Lumps an Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin Curbs, Ring Bone, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat, Couhs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by J. H. Combe,iDruggist. June 27, 1 yr LIVERY. - - The undersigned have bought out the LivAllik ery business lately owned by R. Beattie and desire to nfurm the public that they will carry on the same in the %Id premises, Next COMMERCIAL Hotel. Several new and good driving horses, and tb most stylish carrages have been added to the business, and will be hired at reasonable prices. Satisfe.ction guaranteed, tr R. REYNOLDS do SJN BIBLES & TESTAMENTS AT COST The Clinton Branch Bible Society have for sale at DR WORTHINGTON'S DRUG STORE, Albert Street„a flue assortment of Bibles and Testaments. TESTAMENTS FROM Sete. UrwARD BIBLES FROM 25ete 1,t0WARbe. COME AND SEE. DR WORTHINGTON, I® SEM lialicyousecollayward'Ombwoved Road Calf If not come and see it before, you purchase. It leads them all. There are no clumsy- bard to climb over when getting in or out. The Boot or Doily is made tight, so that no mud can splash through. It has a long spring in front, under the cross -bar, which takes off the horse's motion and the jar when the wheel strikes an obstruction. Also long spring back of axle, which comes right beneath the seat and makes -it ride very easy. It is so constructed as to be perfectly balanced with either one or two persons. Having had several years experience in the manufacture of Carts, I have no hesitation in saying that I now have the, strongest, lightest, in fact the neatest and handsomest cart in the country. We also manufacture a PH/ETON BODY ROAD CART, which is very neat and stylish, suitable for physicians, ladies, or general use. All our Carts are free from horse motion, built on mechanical principles, the material used being of the choicest quality, and we guarantee them to be satisfactory in all respects. Persons wishing to try them and see how easy they ride are at liberty to call at my shop and do so. We also manufacture fine Buggies, Track Carts, Phaetons, fuggy Tops always on hand. Our Buggies are not made on the old-fashioned scale, but with all the new improvements, making them neat and light. As this is the time of year you want your buggy repaired and painted, we are prepared to do the sante in good style and at modest prices. :4 . E. HAYWARD, opposite Fair's Mill CONS ki .Y. TO THE EDITOIL: Please inform your readers that i have a positive remedy for the above name( dl -°ase. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have con. sumpption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address, Respectfrdlyi T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 186 West Adelaide St., TORONTO. ONTARIO. The LATEST STYLES IN FINE • GOODS To please everyboh. Call and see all the latest shapes. We' are constantly offering bargains. We are showing a stuck that is wonderful in quantity, quality and style. We also keep on hand a magnificent assortment of am- mu IIJ !I S .tea Our stock is complete and well assorted. We invite your inspection. REMEMBER THE STAND -ONE DOOR NORTH OF THE DRY GOODS PALACE 0-70. CTL ASO -OW The Peoples GROCERY We have just added • a very select stock of Cottons,Cottonades, Shirtings, Powellings, Shirts Draw Prints, Flannels. Ladies s� Woollen and Cashmere Hose, W',tc. To our stock of OIG J r FRESH GROCERIES, RO FR[FS all of N hi < h fo'r the next 30 days we will offer at the very lowest earth prices,. Call and' examine our stock. Wear() confident you will buy when you see our Goods and Prices. G -JO STUTIW.AR►2' "BIG INDUCEMENT Call and see our PRESENTS GIVEN .SWAY" with e v cry Two Dollar Cash Purchase, not req itire(1 to be all got at once. Get a card and havo it punch- ed when you buy anything for cash. My stock in all branches is now'completo for holiday trade. Flour and Bread is Cash, therefore not included in presents. GEO.' NEWTON LONDESBOPO