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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-06-17, Page 6Th6/hiron NOM -Record
ibfite.ft Y4firr-14.04 its► Athritase.
Wednesday Juno nth, tow,.
TESTIMONY t~,QI TUP '1R,
Ottawa ,atop l}.-•-�I1. )oug tutor -
view view with Rev..?rincipal Granton
the political situation as published
in
the Everting. doormat ,of Qttewa.
It is a true panegyric on the on-
serYative:• :polioy,� and Sir Chanes
Tupper, k1e awl the Conservatives
had carried the- lata elections, and
the Majority Should now be repio-
sented toy the man whowas most'
identified `with prsaeutipg the: case
to the people. "Vnquestio"hably
that man is Sir Ohar)esTupper, He
csindetened by the Opposition for
having taken part'in the conflict,.
Well, let him say, 'I did take part
at the bidding of any, chief, though
by my ppeitiou a comparative out•
aider. I will now throw aeicle that
.positlop and step dowu into the
arena, meet Iuy opponents face to
face and .carry on the Government
according to the policy outlined to
the people by Sir John Macdonald
and myself. By that policy I will
stand or fall:' We owe to him all
that is good'in'the National Policy,
as well i)e itt very name, which is
an inspiration in itself, and the or-
iginator of the National Policy is
the man who is best fitted to inter-
pret and guide it as well as to eeoure
its proper eulargement. Do not
forget that 'fiscal policies have to be
adapted to the times. They are not
like moral or mathematical truths;
they are things to be narrowed or
enlarged, according to circumatancea,
and the man who is least of a doc-
trinaire and tuost open-eyed to the
signs of the times is
THE MAN BEST FITTED
to adapt them to changing circum-
stances. The man who is inflexible
in these matters is the trarrow, angu
lar being who fights fur all and gots
his reward by losing all Sir Charles
Tupper is a free trader, yet he orig-
inated the National Policy. He isa
free trader still, but he knows that
we eau no more act without refer-
ence to the indust.inl and commer-
cial facts of thisrcontinent than we
can act as free agents without refer-
ence to fate and the laws of gravi•
tation."
abafitir)n of the duty en cog
vise the axe by :had to griad. B+M
Wes, remember that the t leaned
Truni is APO of ,the .great factsof
the country and that it, will racist
long aftt'r k.ir Henry Tyler .and sir
Charles Tupper are ;dead, 11014er.
gentlemen .Oa (tinder it, leo far as at.
is a=t anadiari,work, • Canadians owe
nothing to either- reill'oetd, Bone
railroads :OWE a good deal to us, ,and
the aocnen both are made til under-
stand this elementary fact the better
for thew land for the people of
Canada, T 'would r'ecoalwend this
fruitful litre of thought to .the if}ci
pendent uaembera"iu the (lessee of
Commons. For instance, itbtaitu.p-
ly tnoitstreus that we should, have co
pay thr a cents a mile for .trn.velling,
when ou the New York Qeutral
two -cent ,rote pays well ;;�anti it is
simply monstrous that you can buy
a first class return ticket to summer
for less than is charged if yop travel
second-class. In. other words, the
poor are discriminate i against. In
this and other ways the railways do
what they like, and, since the people
give them th.iir franchises, I would
like to see is little popular control."
"Sir Charles Tripper is saki to he
wealthy aytd that he has made his
Money out of the public."
"That is all nonsense. Sir Charles
Tupper is not as wealthy as he
would have been had he kept out of
public life. So far as I know, his
wealth, whatever it may art Sunt to,
hair been honorably acquired." •
"Do you think that the Conser•
vative parry will send for him I"
"Iiow can I know ? I am not a
member of that party and am not in
its counsels. I have not spoken this
year to Langevin, Chapleau, Sir
John Thompson, -McCarthy or any
other -of its leaders. But one thing
I do know : they may try this, that
or the other combination without
Sir Charles Tupper, but all will
fail, for in the end -they will have
to send for him. But they
MAY SEND FOR HIM TOO LATE.
Every man has his limitations, and
-Sir Charles Tupper has his. It will
be• useless to send for hint when
differences have been accumulated
or when the citadel has been cap-
tured. In a word, they must hang
together or hang separately. If they
are to hang together they must have
oue head, and there is only one who
combines the necessary age, oxperi-
once and resoua'eefuluess. If, then,
he •must come sooner or later, the
sooner the better. It will be more
gracious on the part of those who
will have to work with him and will
give him a bolter chance. Even as
it is Ire will need every man. What
a farce it would be to send for him
after the tat is in the fire."
"But has not Sir Charles Tupper
compromilted his position with the
Grand Trunk Railway?"
"I have not heard both aides of
the quarrel, as I do not read the
London Times. But all I can say
is that the two great railways of
Canada bad altogether too much to
do with our elections. The sooner
a law is passed
CLIPPING THEIR WINOS
the better. Now it is a crime if
you or I pay a voter's travelling
expenses, yet a railway company is
allowed to pay those c'f tens of
thousands. It is preposterous, and
the last election has opened our eyes
to this. If the two great railway
companies combined, their solid vote
would control. the eonutry. 1 hate
the 'solid vote' in every shape and
form. Free institutions mean the
Government of the country by the
highest reason and conscience of the
country. Everything in the shape
of a solid vote is high treason, and
against it we must all combine.
Fortunately, on the lest occasion the
Grand Trunk was to a great extent
on one side and the 0, P. R. on the
other. They nullified each other,
therefore, but next time they may
combine, and then where would we
he 7 I wish Dalton McCarthy would
brinz in a big nn the linesof his
old measure ou this pressing matter
instead of bothering himself about
the Northwest dual language, with
which we have about as muck to do
•
as we have with the British aristoc-
racy or the am0 erneute in the dog -
Star, The Northwest can and
WILL TRICE CART; or ITSELF.
Eevther, allow me to say that even
. by his own showing Mr. Seargeant
of the Grand Trunk triers to utilize
lfis ftrtt rttii'ilwytvichr°Sir Ohrtvl+ -faro
per by getting him to promise the
WHAT SHAKESPEARE MIGHT
HaVE SAID.
To take or not to Wu:: that is the
question.
Whether 'tis hatter fpr a :nen to
suffer
The pangs and torments of indiges.
tion,
Or something take, and, in its taking,
end them.
Shakespeare didn't say that, but very
likely he would have said something
similar, if he were living in this IUth
century, when so many suffer un4nlrl
agonies from indigestion. Of course he
would have gone on to say that a man
must be a fool not to take the "some-
thing" which would put en and to the
"pangs and torments" spoken of, if he
could get it. Now it is a f •et that
weakened, irupc,venehed blood brings on
indigestion., which is the cause of dys-
pepsia, constipation—a poisoned condi-
tion of whole system—and it is fact,
also, that Dr. Pietee's Golden Medical
D•saovery will an purify the blood and
enrich it that all the weakened organs
are revitalized and streugthoned, It is
guaranteed to do this. If it doesn't,
your money will be returned to you.
BLACK DEEDS.
HORRIBLE TIDINGS FROM PORT AU
PRINCE.
baht* nr iaRrp. qa7 1�fitla>stM
tion idi tousled rcpt in tbta 'lit ea'Id'
blooded way, the a ceentioner's bsiug
soldiers belonging to th most de,
graded type •of man, who seem to
enjoy the bloody„task..
TER1.10H. OF! E .1140 l t,
Tc is impassible :to enumerate . ii
4etait all the murders that have been.
peipetratett under tliecolQr of stew,
tis estimated that froth. Mayo 28.tft
May 31 at latest: fifty persona have
been., put tat.,tieath and the 'figures
are placed as high as 100. Na utas
cansay how long this state of ad'aira
will last, nor eau anyone whohas
not been an eye,wittieas Of the
scenes of hgrror.enacted: have an idea
of the terrified cottditi,gn o£ the Pea”
plc of Port au k'rinoe.
NABCISSE LAEOOQUE HANG*
ED,
Narcisse Baroque was swung into
eternity at I, Orignal, paying in hie
death the penalty of one at the
most atrocious crimes ever perpetrate
ed in -America, the cold blooded
Murder and outrage of two little
school children. He died without
a word and wlthotit a sign of
rear.
HE MADE NO CONFESSION.
The execution was probably the
most•expeditious on record. Exact-
ly five ruinutes from the time the
hangman pinioned his arms he was
out of the world. Not a muscle of
hid face moved. Hs met his death
in the sante coldblooded manner he
had inflicted it upon bis youthful
victims. Ae the 'priest reached the
words in the Lord's Prayer, "Thy
will be done," Radcliffe let gd the
tope that held the weight, and it
fell with a sickening thud, and the
next second the body swung in the
air. The struggle was not long.
The deadly writhiug motion lusted
only a few secouds,and then all was
still.
DEATH RESULTED PROM STRANOU-
LATION.
The prisoner's neck was too
thick set to bread. The crowd,
many of whom had never seen an
execution before, were greatly of
fected.
Now YORK, June 9..—A letter
from Port au Prince, Hayti, dated
May 31, says : For the last two or
three weeks there have been rumors
that a revolution against President
Hippolyte was emminent in this
capital, and these having reached
the ears of the chief executive, he
ceased the arrest of about eighty
suspected persons, dragged them
from their homes and put them in
irous in prison. Among the sus-
pects were General Sullia, who,
hearing he was "wanted," hid him-
self. Failing to secure the General
hitnsels, his wife was thrown into
prison. Thursday, May 28, Corpus
Christi was a national holiday, and
it was repotted that on •that date
Hippolyte, iu order to effectually
terrify the populace, had ordered a
Gatling gun to be taken to the pfis-
on and the eighty prisoners to be
summarily executed.
SERIES OF ASSASSINATIONS.
The friends of the prisoners,
among whom was General Sullia,
met in council and while the Presi-
dent was in the cathedral they fore•
ed open the doors and freed all the
prisoners, about 250 in all. Then
by order of the President, began a
shocking series of assassinations. The
first victim was Ernest Rigaud, a
respectable merchant and hardwork-
ing man, who occupied himself ex-
clusively with his business and was
positively known to have been in
nocent of conspiracy of any kind.
He was sitting on the balcony with
his wife when the President passed,
ordered him out and sent him to
the cemetery to be shot. He asked
to be allowed to take his hat, as he
was uncovered, but the President's
words were : "You won't require a
hat long."
MURDER OF A BOY.
His nephew, aged 16 or 16, fol-
lowed him to the place of execution
and returned with the news - to the
afflicted wife. He told her : "My
poor uncle has bean foully murder-
ed," These words were reported to
the President, and twenty minutes
later the boy was brought before
him. Being asked if he had made
the above statement, he did not de-
ny it, but said, "Mr. President, I
have never conspired against you
by word or deed." The boy was
shot at once.
WHOLESALE SLAUGHTER.
About the same time Alexis Roe-
signo, an inoffensive and ntuoh es-
teemeta man, was executed in the
streets, another man was put up
against the cathedral wall and shot,
seventeen were executed in a batch,
and even at this date an occasional
volley tells that another poor wretch
arab been sent404 a dotkosvn-4irere,
is no fighting Au the streets to ex -
het
• TILE CR1ME
fur which Narcisse Larocque, the
young Frenchman, died was the
murder and outrage of Mary and
Elizabeth McGonagle in October
last. Larcoque followed the .girls
followed the girls home from school
overtaking them in a louely bush
about a mile from the village. Ile
evidently made wrong proposals to
the girls,and they refusing he forced
them. He murdered first one, and
knowing what would result if he.
• let the other Sue go home lie cover-
ed his first crime by the murder of
the other child. That he did this
in cold blood was evidence in the
manner in which he arranged the
bodies, smoothing down the clothes
and laying the school books in their
laps. He went about his work as
usual, believing that none had seen
him do the deed, but Bon Barna-
part, a cow herder, had seen hint
enter the woods with the girls and
others had seen him beyond them
before that. The bodies were not
found till two days afterwards. He
never denied or admitted his guilt.
SWALLOWED A THERMOM-
ETER.
IT HAS BEEN INSIDE HIM FOR SIX
WEEKS AND YET THE BOY FEELS
NO INCONVENIENCE.
smelt' IZehos Ionjf. Young Martin
I to be in food health. Re is
years, old, end :attends sahooi,
bait he is. r4 boy of unuvftal size, he,
ba early silt feet 'tall.. The only
discomfort' which he ezeorieloces•,ba
,says,is: the tea tion haiia obliged to
e2sereisa iri moving shoat+ Ile, can;;.
net rain or play ball or wrestle for
feats that an tyriiteual or violent
..roovement might t rush the ther-
mometer! 'wbaratroff it may be, a>n
the• result "!would 'then. be serious.
The glees, call hardly bErezpected, to
dissolve, snd,he can only wait for
it, q;give 8Qtne.11-ldication of its :press
TE(E.DAAxcl t uQF' ATT TEX.
• �TlQN,
H DS . ORGAN -ME
ve Awar !th Baking Powder, Best 1) v Tit
•� � .mss.=.w.r-s,p..;M�.,'+;, .,
lam"'°` See 0e, liautc.solue Organ, uow on, -exhibition,
t3vt`>fTaaho,. N,'Y., June
wives are makin% life very unplea-
sant for Philip li,oueh,, who lived
at East Buffalo tiutil three weeks
ago. Rouch: canto to this city from
Canada two years 'ago. He wee
good lookii;g,, dressed fashionably,
and had not difficulty in getting --a
charming girl of East Buffalo to fall
in Iove with him. A brief court-
ship was ended by marriage, They
settled down and seamed to be lead-
ing a happy life. A month ago,
however, Mre. Rouch was horrified
to -hoar that her husband had anoth-
er wife living, whom he married in
Toronto several years ago. She
set about quietly investigating, and
found that hooch wedded Sarah
lionuer in Toronto ten years ago.
Ho deserted her after'livieg with
her seven years, airs came to this
city, where he met the woman who
is his second wife. He secured no
divorce from his first wife. When
-confronted with it by hie second
wife he pleaded innocence. Two
days later lie skipped from I3uftalo
and has not been seen since. The
grand jury indicted hint for bigamy
at its last session, but as he could
not be found 'the indictment was
kept secret. Mrs. Rouch No• 2 has
begun an action iu the supreme
court through her lawyer, Edward
T. Durand, to set ayrtte the marri-
age, on the ground that it is void
owing to Rouch having another
wifo living. A referee was appoint -
ted to hear and decide the case.
•
• "Drinking ie a fine art—a fact he
did not know or grossly miunder-
stood ; thus it led to his ruin, then
his death. Drinking when done
artistically and with taste and discri-
mination is a most attractive pas
time.- Never attempt to. combine
it with any thing else; it is in its na-
ture a lhiug apart. Drinking and
business are a mietake. Drinking
and a married life are fatal to happi-
ness. Drinking and gambling are
suicidal: So you see the secret is
never to attempt it in conjunction
withany other career you may have
in view. If you propose to make
1t your whole existanCe, it is wen•
derful how short and useless your
life may be at a very small expense•"
—For two months tate 18 -year-
old son of D. N. Strayer, of Salem
township, Ohio, has had serious
trouble with his stomach. Last
night he did not sleep any and had
a high fever until daylight. At 10
o'cluck this morning he vomited up
what looks like a horse -hair snake.
It is ten•inches long' brown in color,
has one eye, and is aboutone-eighth
of an inch in diameter. It is of the
genus nematodes of the variety
known as filiarile. Tho young man
is supposed to have swallowed it
while drinking from a spring.
New York Tribune : A great
deal of anxiety is felt by the family
of William A. Martin, a prominent
builder in Hatlem, over an accident
that happened recently to his son
George. The boy was taken ill six
weeks ago with an attack, it was
feared, of typhoid fever. The nurse
placed the thermometer beneath the
patient's tongue to obtain his tem-
perature, and whilewaiting for the
result young Martin was seized with
a fit of coughing and the thermom-
eter disappeared.
The nurse looked around for it
without discovering a trace of the
instrument until the patient gasped
rather faintly : "I think•.( swallow-
ed it," The nurse could hardly be-
lieve this at firit, but when an addi-
tional search failed to reveal the
missing thermometer, and the boy
reiterated that he had felt its smooth
globular serfage- eliding down his
throat, his physician became alarm-
ed and took measutee at once to re-
gain the instrument. The patient
was placed in a reclining position,
bead downward, but was handled
with much care, to avoid any vie.
Mee that might fracture the deli-
cate instrument which be had swal-
lowed. Various methods were tried
to dislodge the thermometer, but
without. avail. The patient recov-
ered from his fever symptoms, but
was kept in the house for more than
a week by the physician, with
strict orders to remain perfectly
quiet.
He has not yet felt any bad re-
sult from the thermometer, and the
physicians who have been called to
consult in the case have as yet been
unable to locate it, although now
six weeks hove passed since the in-
strument disappeared. Harlem
physicians are deeply interested in
thIrtsWitelrintritreatiffariViabtr
precedent. The thermometer is
—One night last week while John
Osborn and wife of Elkhart,Indiana,
were standing in their yard taking
in the clothes -line aremarkably vivid
flash of lightningoccurred. Osborn
threw up his hands and falling pros-
trate died within a -few moments.
There is no evidence of lightning
having struck him, and the coroner
is of the opinion that he died from
fright.
THE NEW AIR SHIP.
The new air ship travels 200 miles an
flour, good time, but none too quick if
one wanted Hagyard'e Yellow 0,1. This
peerless, pain -soothing remedy is a
prompt and pleasant cure for sore throat,
croup, colds, rheumatism, pains in the
chest, and back neuralgia. For external
and internal use. Pride 25o.
—Wm. McMachon died in 1888
at Guelph leaving no will and $800
cash and $15,000 in real estate. He
left behind him no relations in this
country. Annie Irwin and Wu,.
McCabe, of Shelburne, put in a
claim for a slice of the estate of de-
ceased, claiming that they were the
next of kin, but their claims were
dismiased. The ilarge amount of
money still rested in court. Mr. John
and Mrs. Elizabeth Lynch, of Mol -
binary, Carrickmacross, Irehtnd„ag.
ed respectively, 91 and 65, put
in a claim for tfia money, but
about 10 days ago Mr. Lynch died,
and last week Mrs Lynch
died. In Toronto last .seek
Mr. Cartwright made a motion to
have Wm. Lynch, the son of the old
couple, deoiared heir, but the mo•.
tion was rejected and the matter
ivae referred to Referee McLean.
The Lynch claim is based on the
fact that Mrs. Elizabeth Lynch was
sister of Wm. McMahon.
seanneweasselamesmismansiraitarlie
•,a
n.r.ele• ,,r„
• UINT
Ye need botiiinternany to tl externally,
0 auto qufol3,p,nrording r imoet instant
reliof from She sever Oat pain.
t.;
0.111ECTLY TO,TH4 Opoi
flSTA$TAIEOUS .ITS A.OTXO
For CRAMPS, `OI=$, CQI.1C,
DIARR;II p,d1, rt3rs>~UTEi Yr
CHQX.ERA•'MQRBV.S!
sand., i►11 pOWEL. carlll,'I.4,7,N S,
MP
fl EDY.EOUIU.S
THE. PAIN -Kll..l.l<3.
In Canadian ChotQra and ] •owei
Complaints Ito offeot 1e rem., Igo. .
it a'.tres In a vary short time.
THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY FOR
BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS,
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE.
GOLD EVERYWHERE AT 260. A 60Tri.E,
t� kewaro of Counterfeits and Inaittioru,
AS- AIV. IP to�irltasesi. e: ,e, t ..fare
kfniltiig a tows Sulphur Soap
proves very valuable, • •
DO YOU KEEP IT iN THE HOUSE?
LLEN'S LUNG BALSAM.
• I'lO BETTER REMEDY FOR
COLI H.SS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C.
URI
DINA
. m ar
Mg
era 1-1 G 'i 2
Com 1,3 qm
d9
61,1
ERRORS OF YOUNG AND OLD
OrganicrWeakness, Failing Memory, Lack of
Energy, Physical Decay. positively cured by
Hazelton's Vitalizer. Also Nervous Debility,
Dimness of Sight, Loss of Ambition, Unfitness
to Marry, Stunted Development, Loss of Power
Paine in the Book; Night Emissions, Drain in
Urine, Seminal Leases, Sleeplessness, Aversion
to Society, Unfit for Study, Excessive Indul-
gence, eta, oto. Every bottle guaranteed.
20,090 sold yearly. Address, enclosing stamp
for treatise, J. E. HAZELTON, Graduated
Pharmacist. 808 Yonge St, Toronto, Ont.
—The addition of 480 names to.'
the list of fathers of twelve children
who have received the Quebec Gov-
ordmeut hundred acre grant brings
the number otgrantees up to 680,
and makes the aggregate area of the
lands granted in this manner 68,
000 acres.
IIEALTH IN HERBS.
Health -giving herb., harks, roma, and
berries ate °arefotly combined in Bur-
dock Blood Hitt.se, which regulate the
secretions. purify the Mood and renovate
and strengthen the entire system. Price
$1 a bottle, six f',r $5. Lass than I cent
a dose.
—Messrs Hogg & Habbick of
Waterloo, shipped a carload of eggs
12,000 dozen to British Columbia
The freight paid amounted to $580.
GAG. VEL. OIL.
Thia stands for Hsgy$rd's Yellow Oil,
the hr et and promptest curd' for all pain
from the simplest sprain to the racking
torture of rheu;natiaei. A never -failing
remedy for croup, sore throat, and pain
in the ,chest.
—James Bailey, aged 19 yeirrs,
and Wm. Thompson, aged 15, wore
arrested in Toronto charged with ran.
lalling two seven-year-old deaf and
dumb twins named Maud and Min-
nie Tyrrell. One of the children
was terribly injured. No charge
was laid against Thompson, and he
wasdischar•gednextmorning. Bailey
pleaded guilty'and was sentenced to
five •years.' imprisonment at Kings.
ton and five lashes. '
ADVICE TO MoTnEne, Are yon disturbed at
night and broken of your rust by a sick child
suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth ?
It so send at once and get is bottle of "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup” for Children Teeth;
Ing, Its value is incalculable. It will relieve
the poor fltt)e sufferer immediately. Depend upon
it, mothers; there is no mistake about it. It
sures Dysentery and Dianhcea, regulates the
stomach and bowels, cures wind Colts, softens
the gums, reduces inflammation, and gives tone
end energy Co the whole system. "Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant
to too taste and is the prescription of one of the
oldest and best female pbyeiciane and nurses in
the United States, and is for sale by all druggist's
throughout the world. Price 25 cents a bottle.
Ole sure and ask for 'Mts. WINSLOw'S BOOMING
SYRUP," and take no other kind. 656y
—In a letter recently received
here from one of England's wittiest
men, this paragraph appeared relat-
ing to a lately deceased pal :
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
CORRESPONDENCE.
We will at all tinges be pleased to
receive items of news from our sub-
scribers. We want a good corres-
pondent in every locality, not already
represented, to send us RELIABLE news.
TWO YEARS AGO.
Two yenra ago I was troubled with nn
ulcer on my ankle, having used B, 13. B.
for bad blood I procured a bottle and a
box or Burdock• Itealieg Ointment.
dl;.fterarshira,botrinr--a i-3 br os. i"'tv '
completely (Cured, Mre. Wm. V. Boyd,
Brantford, OM.
SUBSCRIBERS.
Patrons who do not receive their
paper regularly from the carries' or
through their local post offices will
confer a favor by reporting at this
office at once. Subscriptions may
commence at any time.
'ADVERTISERS.
Advertisers will please bear in mind
that all "changes" of advertisements,
to ensure insertion, should be handed
in not later than MONDAY NOON of
each week.
CI11CULAIEION.
THE NEws-RECORD has a larger
circulation than any other paper in
this section,. and as an advertising
medium has few equals in Ontario.
Our books are open to those who
tpean business.
JOB: PRINTING.
The Job Lei artment of this jour-
nal is one of the best equipped in
Western Ontario, and a superior
class of work is guaranteed at very
lam prices.
cd = O a
Wci) 2 N G 1 O a.
>9 2.
tail a.r a •0 t�c :-+to o,.- .,ill
tU id
n •
STRAY STOCK ADVER
TISEMENTS inserted in T1I11
Naws Recone at low rates. Tho law
makes it compulsory to advertise stray stock
1f you want any kind of advertising you will not
do better than call on Tews-Reccord.
IMPLEMENTS.
The subscriber having severed his connection
with the Massey Company, desires to intimater
that he has boon appointed agent for the well-
known arm of
FROST & WOOD
implement makers, of Smith's Fall., and will be
pleased to 911 all orders in his line as heretofore.
Will also keep on hand WItrussoN Plows,
COhTEf & SCOTT DRII•LS, DIse, HARROWS, and
articles of like nature. •
W -M. STANLEY,
647-6m Holmesvillo and Clinton
A NICE HOME
AT A BARGAIN.—Eight acres of land with e
select orchard of choice apple trees ;
comfortable house and stables ; adjoining;Oode-
rich township. Apply to B. L. DOYLE, Gode-
leh • 52641
THE CELEBRATED
Ideal Washer
and Wringer.
TiIE iiEST IN THE MAi1tII;ETI
Machines Allowed on Trial
em also agent for all
All Agricultural Implements
Wareoroom opposite Fair's Mill.
Call and see me.
J. N. ;WEIR, CLINTON
•