HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1891-11-06, Page 39'. 11•,'Mr','r-tF71C"ir .,.: C s.y fill ,
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Whoa
Whoa x ► p �.
taboo she Ching to Cultorls.
`1 ,a Rho had O tH411Wki tlorwil cbeg► Csritgrbe
the intention of theawith
m the evening hen they,'re-
te their shanty in the eva�iiing
e rent g, when they returned,
they found the wolves: had been •there'
during the night,: and had eaten the
soft parfs.af toks bones, and left only
the hiArApart of the shank.
The difficulties and::hardships of tra-
velling in those )early days oP the .set-
tlement are well described in the fol..,
lowing story; One day Mr Ross was
coming from London With his: often
and sled, and lit was. intensely} Cold. In.
order to keep. himself from freezing, he
got off the s ed. and'ran back a -quarter
of a toile, then turned and caught the
oxen. This he did several times, till at
last he calve to a house. He unhitched
the oxen and turned them to the sled,
where he had some hay for them. He
then went into the shanty. The people
were in bed, and no fire on, so he went
outside to get Some wood to put on a
are, but there was nothing but the
great trees and the ground covered
deep with snow. He went back into
the 'shanty, and just then he saw a lit-
tle smoke come up from the logs on the
floor, so he dropped himself down upon
them, hnd there lay till he was warm.
He then got up, and started for home,
which he reached in safety.
Mr Ross had a few potatoes in a pit,
and one day the 'Indians came and
asked if they could have some of them.
Mr Ross thought that if he opened the
pit the frost would get in, so he refused
as politely as he could. Their camp
was away to the west, so the next
night they went down to the creek,
and went east of the, pit about half a
toile, and went north a little way, and
came straight into the pit at the east
end. They did not take very many,
but just enough for their present need,
and returned the same way they came.
Mr Ross' pit suffered no more damage
from either Indians or frost. The In-
dians evidently tried to decieve Mr
Ross byleaving the pit in a direction
opposie to that in which their camp
For the first two summers that Mr
Ross was in the Huron tract, he did
not see a white woman. During all
this time he had to do all his own
washing and mending. In 1833 there
came two woman into the settlement,
these were Mrs McIntosh and Mrs
A' rery.
In the last part of the sununer of
1833, Mr Ross' companion took sick and
left him. He then became so lonely
that he determined to get married,
though he had not intended to do so
till the next summer. The woman of
his 4ioice was Miss Margaret Ross, a
nati a of Invernessbire, then living in
London township. She proved to be a
true partner, sharing willingly his cares
and troubles and his success. Mr Ross
elates that one morning she went
own to the creek before breakfast,
nd returned with one hundred and
three fine flsh in her possession. -.,.-X3,1
Another of Mrs Ross's adventures
as the following: One time Mr Ross
et a trap for a wolf, and the next morn -
ng had to go away somewhere. In the
morning a man, who lived with them,
went out and there was a wolf in the
rap. He came back and got the gun,
ut he never loaded one, so Mrs Ross
oaded it for him. Then they went
own, and he shot at it. He then
throw the gun away with such force
that the muzzle ran into the ground.
The wolf made a spring at him, but the
chain jerked him so that he fell. Mrs
oss and the man then ran in and kill -
d it with sticks. On skinning it not a
lin of shot seas found in the skin,
e man in his hurry having missed it
ntirely.
The first drag or harrow Mr Ross
ad was made in the following 'way.
e first got ironwood for teeth, and
plit it up the right size and laid it up
n the shanty all winter' to dry. In
pring he got a crotch of a tree, hewed
t on both sides, bored holes in it and
Iled it with these ironwood pins. It
worked well, ' When the teeth got
ull he turned it up and sharpened
hem with the axe.
Mr Ross carried the irons of his first
lough from Goderich on his back, and
with it and the drag he put in his first
top in 183.3. It was a good crop of
heat and Mrs Ross stored it on the
eams of the shanty and fed it to her
ow and hens.
Mr Ross one morning started to Gode-
ich for pork and brought home sixty
ounds on his back. He got home
VIGOR aha'STR[NGTHT)
For LOST or FAILING MAN$OOD,
General and NERVOUS DEBILITY,
Weakness of BODY OD MIND,
Effects of Errors or ticesseshi Old
or Young. Robust, Noble MAN.-;
HOOD fully Restq d. ; Hoy to en-,
large and strong cu WE K• , Ii1 k
DEVELOPED OR NS and PARTS
OF BODY. Abioi Lely 'n11611114
HOME TREATMENT --Benefits in
a day. Nen testify from fifty States
and Foreign Countries. Write them.
Book, ex lunation and s,proofs'
mailed 1,(. d), > Ad, espy
ER1 4 EDibALL `CO.,
BUFFALO, N.Y.
41.
NASALBAIM
SOOTHING, CLEANSING, NEVE R
HEALING. C'')IL-IistIs
Instant Relief, Pprmaneig
sim
Cure, irelallt diO i.4,IQ' a Many so-c'a7 ed diseaasues are
ouch asB1=17mi 'o t se
Eches COtb
of smell o '• tea b, hawliiug
End spitting general feeling
of debility, eta. If you are
troubled with any of these or
kindred symptoms, you have
time tesrproe ri gshould b loseil01;
Fusel. B Sematic $
by eons , ud tdj, i
Bold by :':o�nt,,
Post Pall .ce10k of »Tido
(60 cents an. $1)byaddressing O
FULFORD & CO. BrockvIIIe.Ont 1 N
CATARRH
loLt
when I .ay I cure I do not' mean merely to stop em
for a time and then have them return again, I mean a
radical cure. I have made the disease of• FITS, EPILEP-
SY or FALLING SICRNE�B;qOtte-long Study. • I warrant
myrcmcdy.ri Cute::the N' !dike.: 'Selbh.o oth'era have
faied 1s no reason for nor now reocivtos ft ✓care. Send aC.
once for a"treatisd and'a Vino Bottle rd my
mint. Give EXPRESS and POST.OFFICI1. 1'
(a. ADELA"344,7,
WEST. ,TOROt4TO; %I-J�Ti.
,ab
-ac
BRONCHIT.I-1
188 Levin on Ave.
New York C , geptd9,16881.
I have nsetS the FlariiSeed ' tiis`I „
In {t�y�{
Ens of Chrollk Stetichkis,•e di the t .
and veb in t histedivi diddit'Ittit.
{� , I, s 11, C119AK/I�.D ,1.
COQ&1 } 'M'PTI Vii'
I have n Iyunt Emit'Iileda a t' e�ci „f- -Mans. ,
(consumpti 1� 2eStlit! V1i0t' 1 L
could notFin an s'rnc tr) )
•
1
NE D:I ' J . `L
aj-,OBrookiyri, N v:1 Naga
I can ssnop and"Flax sed Emulsion
helpful to t1 lie d. ' ly,tlecpreoffsftLddg
Bronchial a loft jh, fJons,laad� a,got�d, ges j,
end tonic ia�
rtsc•f±JQuNt1.I t.ALMAGE;'M: D. ,
GENS' i
I regard plat'te H EmdfAin as greactlystopelrioorr to,
the Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in u
D. A. GORTON, D.
WASTING -DISEASES
New York, App , i
1 have used your Flax -Seed Emnitien Contpon'd
in a severe Tee 06 Mat -nutrition ao d the reattit Ww
more than ilopad fdr•=it was marvelling, and Con-
tinuous. I recommend it cheerfully to the professidtt'
and bumanity-at large. M, H. GILBERT, M.D.
RHELJMAT,ISI VI
Sold by' Druggists, Price 51.00.
FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO
38 Liberty= St., New York.
of pure Cod river. 09 tvlth,typo.
phosphites '`tif''Llht'b' gild SOUS Is '
almost as ri i4 ble..he milk.
A MARVELLOUS
:1
FLESH PRODUCER
It Is
Mcleod. and the little lade and
lassies whckla irooltf"R'ssily, may be
fortified eghilh tri 00tigli.that might
prove sertku.¢..by, taking Soott's
Emulsion after their msate during
the water season.
Beware of subMU,l iota attt2 {rnitairohs.
SCOTT & BOWNg. Bellevine.
1, . i
1
The scene Of the owin a ' of Of •pro-
neer life, thaam to relate,,is laid on
t a't part the London road which
(lies between the townships of Ticker-
Smith and tailey. , '
• .t the time att Which my story coal-
mences, The district waS an nnbroken
wilderness of tall, stately trees of elm,
Maple, beech and other noble giants of
the woods. Within the shelter of this
fo=rest roamed thew red' deer, the:
shaggy bear the r tivcl#, whose
or/ea were heard ; tonally during
the night, the pit fug fox, and the
ming , marten and otter, valuable for
their furs.
During the spring and early summer
the "bush" was one elegant flower bed,
sparkling with red, white, blue, purple
and other various colors of flowers.
The brooks were full of clear, sparkling
water, and abundantly stocked with
delicious fish. In the summer and au-
tumn there was - abundance of fruit,
suchria strawberries, raspbe xiep, black-
berries, and plums: i , ,
The only other inhabitants were the
Indians, soon to be driven from their
,hunting grounds.
Such Was the state of this place sixty
years ago, when our hero, Mr Neil Ross,
came into the district. Mr Ross was a
native of Lord Ray's country, Scotland.
He emigrated, with his parents, when
quite young, and spent his boyhood in
Nova Scotia. He left Nova Scotia and
,roved west, arriving in London in the
spring of 1830. The London of 1830
consisted of two stores built of logs,
two taverns, also of loge, and a few
other houses.
Mr Ross, better off than some other
pioneers, had the sum of two dollars in
his possession, when he arrived in the
Forest City, and threefourths of this
sum he invested in an axe. His first
work was a job of chopping half an
acre of land on Ridout street, in what
is now the ventre of London, for which
'tie received the sum of three dollars
:Without, board. Thus supplied with
money he made his way toward Gode-
.rich. From London to Goderich the
'road was marked only by a "blaze"
and guided by it he inade his way
`north.
During the first summer he work for
man who had a job of cutting out a
art of the London road. The road had
be cut four rods wide, logged, burn-
ed, cleaned up and sown with timothy.
seed. So fertile was the soil that the
timothy sown the first year grew so
,nk and high, that before it "lodged"
-andd�nnpfell, it completely covered • the
)tkMr Ross wdrked for this person for
three months, then he found to his
great regret that the contractor was
Insolvent, and Mr Ross got nothing for
his work, but a patent pail and a fry -
it, g pan. Nothing disheartened, how-
e°per, Mrs Ross continued to work at
rhatever he could get to do.
The Canada Landed Company°;were
cutting roads, constructing bridges,
building mills and making other con-
venienc=es to render settlement more
easy, and for some time there was
plenty of work. It was during the first
summer that Mr Ross had his first ad-
venture with a wolf. The gang in
which he was working ran out of flour.
The foreman sent one of• the gang, a
Frenchman, to Goderieh, for a supply.
He, however, did not return when he
was expected, and as the flour was
quite out. Mr Ross volunteered to go
,With the foreman to hunt him up and
get some. So they started off one
night, but when they got to the Bay-
field river, near where Clinton now
stands, it became so dark they thought
they would remain there till morning.
Just then they heard a cry. Mr Ross
thought it was the Frenchman. for his 1
yell at the oxen was somewhat like the
cry of a wolf. His comrade told him it 1
was a wolf; as this was the first time
he had heard a wolf cry, he did not
know on which side of his comrade to
take shelter. However, the next cry 1
of the wolf sounded farther away in
the woods, and his anxiety was over
for that -time. In the morning they
prtoeeeded to Bridgewater, got flour
there, and returneclhome safe. It was
learned afterwards that the French -
Min was sent by the -company to the
Worth of Goderieh with a load of flour,
dwder, tobacco and other necessaries
or the Indians.
buring the second mummer Mr Ross
t ookajob of cutting and clearing three
t ales of the London road, commencing
t Kippen and going north to West-
cott's (now Woodley s). He also built
'file first bridge across the Sable river,
,near Exeter; the first•one across War-
ren's creek, and that across the south
branch of the Bayfield, These bridges
were all built of timber , hewn and pre-
pared by Mr Ross and his men, for
there were then no saw mills within
reach. When he was building the
bridge across the Sable, a somewhat
singular incident occurred. A large
ox, that had belonged to the gentleman
for whom he had worked the previous
summer, suddenly appeared from' the
woods, seized a large piece of salted
pork and swallowed it, no doubt on
account of the salt it contained. He
then disappeared in the forest. He
was very lean, having lived all winter
on "browse," and whatever he could
pick up in the woods.
' While working during the summer
they were tormented with mosquitoes,
blackflies and other troublesome in-
sects. They were obliged to kindle
a fire and stay in the smoke,when rest-
ing, to get relief from thein. . ,
Another !amusing incident is thus re-
lated by Mr Ross. One day a man
came from London, with some cattle,
intending to take thein to Goderich,
and remained all night with Mr -Ross
and his companions, one of whom we
shall call the lazy man. During the
night, when they were asleep, the cat-
tle strayed away. The lazy man said
he would gb after them, as he knew
the bush well, if the stranger would
work in his stead, and to this the
stranger agreed. The man went off,
-and did not come back till night, and
the stranger worked hard all day and
had gone to the house at night. 1'hen
the lazy man cathe in, weary and tired,
as he said, after his long journey, with-
out finding the cattle. The next day
the stranger had to go to London on
some business, and when he was gone,'
Mr Rosa said to the lazy man thathe
strangerwas
a good worker, and they
had lost nothing by the e�ccMn e.
The lazyman said, "Yes, for I' lay be-
hind a lg all day and watched him."
d another occasion, when Mr Ross
and his men were building a bride at
Mr Avery's creek, being scarce of flour,
they made their meals chiefly of beef
and potatoes. After picking the bones -
they were thrown back into a pail, Milord b liniment is used by physioians
r
d
a
w
s
t
b
1
d
R
eggrr
th
i
i
fi
t
c
c
r
early in the mornin , but would not go
to bed for the cow ria not h
'e
d
h
an
k
a
0
a
pace
a
e
a
tr
d come and
e was expecting her to calf. He start -
d off And after he was away a short
istance he heard the bell, and thought
here was something at the cow. He
ad nothing with him but an Indian
axe, so he ran and when he reached
them, the calf was 1 ing beside a log
d a big fierce wolf watching it to
eep it' away. Mr Ross shied the axe
t him, but missed him, and he made
ff.
The following items will give some
dea of the.prices of things, and the
value of money in those days. A letter
from Nova Scotia cost eighty five cents.
The first barrel of salt cost eight dollars
nd sixty cents. The highest wages
or a man was seventy five cents a day.
ace will not permit`nre to say more.
Mr and , Mrs Ross are still alive, hale
rid -hearty, and living on the same lot
as they settled on in 1830. They take
great delight in relating the adventur-
s of their early days. Yours truly,
ROBERT BAIRD.
[This interesting story is the one that
short time ago won the county prize
n the Montreal Witness story competi-
ion.-En NEW ERA.].
CONSUMPTION CURED.
An old physician, -retired from practice.
having had placed in hia hands by an East
India missionary the formals of a simple
vegetable remedy for the speedy and per-
manent Cure of Consumption, Bronchitis,
Catarrh,. Asthma and all throat' and Lung
Affection's, also a positive and radical pure
for Novena Debility and all Nei -bolts Com-
plaints after having tested its wonderful
curative p powers in thousands of oases, has
felt it•hie( duty to make it known to'hialsuf-
faring fellows. Actuated by this motive
and a debire to relieve human suffering, I
will send free of oherga, to all who desire
it, this recipe, in German French or Eng:io
with fall directions for preparing and usii
Sent by mail by addressing with ►stamp,
naming this paper. W. A. Noires, 820 Pow-
ers'Block, hochester, N.Y. June 19-91-y.
American trotters are spreading all
over Europe. Geraldine, formerly
trained over the Buffalo track, Smith
O'Brien and Ussau were recently sold
to Amsterdam, holland, and Edison to
Italy.
•
46
ILei.e :
salmi 2nd Cts D RAWERS 25 . Cis,
T V,
14 elu,zeu of (glass Fruit Jars
JARS ' arrived this week
s e
The Bou. . W, >�'enniplore is the
Sheriff of Kent Ce., DeL, and lives
at. Dov, er, the County Seat and Cap-
ital . of the State. The shelf is a
gentleman ,fifty-nine years of . age,
and this is what he says : "'I have
" used your August Flower for sev-
' `era' years in my family and for my
" own use, and found it does me
" more good than any other remedy,
'"` I have been troubled with what I
" call Sick headache. A pain comes
" in the ba* part of my head, first,
" and then Soon a general headache
" until I become sick and vomit.
" At times, too, I have a fullness
" after eating, a pressure after eating
" at the pit of the stomach, and
"sourness, when food seemed to rise
up in my throatand mouth. When
" I feel this coming on if I take a
"` little August Flower it relieves
" me, and is the best remedy I have
" ever taken for it. For this reason
" I take it and recommend it to
" others as a great remedy for Dys-
pepsia, &c."
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer,
Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. L
FillIEST City Business Coke
---AND- —
Shorthand - Institute,
London, Ont.,
Is without d rabt the most TUORODGH and PRAC-
TICAL institutions in Canada.
G3ADrATsa Of both BelOS ASSISTED Tn GOOD
PIR:TIONB. Over •50 of, last season's students in
positions.
CATALOGULU MFR.
•
MANTLE CLOTTI very beautiful, , tt
80 cents per yard.
WALL PAPER AND 'BORDERING
5 llons of Goal, Ori for 80c, cash• onry.
COAL 011.,r
if you buy one of our Oil Cans tit
$1.25, will give the 5 gallons for 75 cents.
See our $3 per dozen GRAIN BAGS
We don't pretend to sell cheap. WE DO IT. --
Highest price for produce in exchange. A fair trial re-
quested; it will benefit you.
ADAMS' EMPORIUM,
LONDESBORO
R. ADAMS.
CASH!
J. W. Westervelt, - Principal
Electric llair Restorer
Restores Grey Hair to Its Original
Color. Beauty and Softness
Keeps the Head Clean
Cool and free from Dandruff.
Cures Irritation and Itch-
ing of the Scalp'
Gives a beautiful gloss and perfume to the
hair, produces a new growth, and will stop
the falling out in a few days. Will not soil
the skin or the most delicate head-dress.
FULL DIRECTIONS WITH EACH BOTTLE.
Try it and be convinced. Price Fifty
Cents per Bottle. Refuse all Substitutes.
SOLE AGENT FOR CANADA
H. SPENCER CASE
'Chemist, No. 50 King Street West
Hamilton Ontario.
For sale by J .H Combe.
C41%'1 Oh
RAILROAD TIRE TABLE
Issued June 28th
The departure of trains at the several
stations named, is according to the last
official time card.:
CLINTON
Grand Trunk Division
Going East Going West.
7.43 a.m. 10.00 a.m.
2.33 p.m. 1.28 p.m.
4.55 p.m. 6.40 p.m.
9.32 p.m.
London, Huron and Bruce Division
Going North Going South
a.m. p.m a.m. p.m
Wingham ..11.00 7.50 6.45 3.20
Belgrave ..10.42 7.27 7.00 3.4t1
Blyth 10.28 7.12 7.14 4.06
Londesboro 10.19 7.08 7.22 4.19
Clinton 10.05 6.50 7.40 4A5
Brucefield9.42 6.26 8.15 5.04
Kippen 9.84 6.17 8.24 5.12
Hensall9.28 6.09 8.32 5.19
Exeter ... , 9.16 5.57 8.50 5.83
London8.05 .'.25 10.15 6.45
If YOU WISH
To Advertise
Anything
Anywhere
AT Any time
WRITE TO
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO
No. 00 Spruce Street,
NEW YORK.
sanitary Pumbing
AND HEATING
,1 Ir
1'.G
ALECK SAUNDER
CODER,TC]�3 , ,'.,'
LATE 8 T METHODS., p;.ry `y1-1,
UL A R ATTENTI ' rlvd,;i.l,
TO SANITATIQ1 NI), ,,1.
VENTILA IO
1
Ti. r i
PLANS AND SPEI VA1'I6I�„
D"il,I,,
CAREFULLY"I'P AEED T " ' i f , , r
-1u1 11.,1i•11f: 1,1; „I.
Repairing Pre mptip i 'Attendedto
Three trains daisyy. 'Telephone No' l8.
Correspondence solicited
HAVE
You
EVER
THOUGHT
WHAT
THIS
MEANS
TO YOU?
GROCER IES
Glassware
Crockery,
AT
HARD TIMES PRICES
FOR
CASH OR TRADE
J. W. I R W I N,
THE NOTED iGROCER.
Sole Agent for Ram Lal,s Pure IndianTea
THE B. LAURANCE SPECTACLE
` — 1
Spectacles And EyaG:asaettret'II o't'yrtit',1 t;1i,i Article, lu^k1t'lt10lPu, 10 tricot an oilr'1t 11
rl ro, )m n lndoi by 4811 to t;t,n alt hive b ld•l rano yr l fr):0 ti'w 1'•ev blots nt the Medical As '•
ciatleo of Ctnndt, 0)111;1 tf 1'tvtt.:itn) 19 1 onr;s,n, of Quebec and sere, of the bast physicians, .� ii Lr,t;tJ ;,i .�{
C•ttano. The 8 Laurencs patent test card used in all cases and guaranteed to fit a accurate'
any machine We guarantee satisfaction For sale only at. . , ,, :'t 1: ,til ;
COI)I'ER'S BOOKsnIrt ,F. .11.,'ti;,r..
OLIN-P()INT .
. 11: / •1.11!•*'l
FOLLOW THE CROWD TO
Walton & Morriso
TAILOR SHOP
Where you will find everything clean and new to sereottfa
SUIT or WINTER OVEEOOAI't•,`',
From. We have a few more Scotch Tweeds at $16 a Snit. Remember we are': , w^
going to give you a fit or no sale, and also give yon five •pet cent 'disdouat
for ten days following October Oth; , ', ; '
Walton : & f e M'o � ion `�lI
•.. r
Remember tbe t
SMIH S BLOCK. CiINTON•place
1 Opposite Coorr't. , . . , ! 1 t l uu
i Iiodlf rtbre
Ii
ti
ENLARGED
—TO -
16 PAGES
WEE
11 I,•Ip
': 1 f, I1 I1, r
11.'..nnn.
Ilrrl
P'ICY Ft2 '18 ge ; . „
AND- . BAL4N ' 'ask' 1 I• :1$911
;,- ,rlt '1, Ir
..,•IRi-'Tf+'t`_._I^.,,I ''._"J_°u-IT- ...�..,,I LI•r:lr •;I f :'.1111, 111/ ;>q, -u1,) '.
•11L1• i, (18j r .,u„ 11n: -I ,.'r I tuft r, r Juni% 1:' '.11 ,1 '.'ll,'rr'1 ,IrtUO'i
rill �' I xl 'IUK tlxE)If
THE MOSr:,,!;,13'411A1::',/r:OF `r at rill lllf,f.)VO
,n 1 "In; ✓.II ) • ('I tiriti
;uiir, , r1 arrrr,l'1,1/ , I:1 ' ,';i,- rill // 1f, • iltl11 -.rr, N t1
�t,.,,�,1 1,, 1;ui.'l of r.,i�,.._n11.L;.i ! Lrtn• ,u, it•rr, :,:w
NO FAKES t' 'NO'
t�tYrr;AP' O 1 a 'JAI* i(,�,t,� i r;, I,•,°i licl •,r;w
O 'r'�v D D rTtYyK..�y!�tf�t ,,.�� �V'>ts•#tS1V•Ti�'t�rl•J a r. 1o'r,
S1�:ISSORS. OR. 1�IiAJ.'`v,ir'it:I +IVN'1 :'OF`FE1tsrt•r,ilrl trr:rlfill4'iiiu
BUT I ,1iX1L -,7E
"vf+r
11 +.r', i f'1 )f
'1fiI/UPOi'1TS MERITS. :
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