Clinton New Era, 1893-11-17, Page 27"7"01,1Fr!”11111P107 71117F
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fiAF&4 ATA$ iiT, , Ci II`1Tori, LINT
-s, 'then*a dr bv89Daarr p ,*.Qne dollar pe#; year
it ptid in'adAanoe, ,50 pox year 0 not Vag'.
• , T Z d9.te tQ. w71i¢li eVay siibsoriptictt is pad •is
,denoted.bythe date ort the ad4rees talzei,
dritrta7nsnict b4Ta>i •-•Transient advertise-
lsieiXte, t►eeealtPer 1 leareilline-ter".$rstineet'*
Mellx80eUtsperl eforeachaubsaquentinsertion
CONTr 4 V tNnla."-Tla5 folloivtrtg table. shows
Alrfrratea ter the insertion o! advolrtillbruents fpr
,, ripasi6o perlatla,41' . •
Advertigepaents, sithopt speoinc directions,
Will
be/ported toll forbid and charged aeeordin
137-J' d'ranellat`adVertieemehte must be paid I'n
pdVaneee
g.x
Sanaa, -1 1,1ex. 1 8 Me. 1 8 MO. I 1 740
'?Qrie colds tfi,.;. ' $8000. 340'00 325 00 28 00
Heli•oolrimln 55'00 25 00 1s so 4 60
L,ina:]tto AL4ri.,., 88 t0 14 0000. 3550 3 0000
' 4ecl , 7OTI0a5—At the head qt ?oral column
IO rents pgraine or portiontnereof,eaob insertion
Artioleft'logt •or found, girls wanted, &o„ not
Ozeeeding:three lilies, 25 cents' each insertion.
Ivo lines:;5Q eenta, one insertion, and 25 Dents for
eaob,>1abeoquent insertion. Housed to let or for
sie,iamis torent or for aale, stray cattle and all
ednifla;advertisements not exceeding eight lines
;119r ops I aenth and"'50 cents for each taubse-
411ent month,,
Obapgeaioi contract advertisements must be
13file;eibee'by goon on Wednesdays.
•
BORT. HOLMES.
Crisp County Tippings
'The new Botz bridge across the Mait-
and river, 12th con., Grey, is being re-
r1aCed by a new superstructure.
?Ve are sorry to hear that Mr John
unease saddler, of Seaforth, is very
•,, and is no expected to recover.
Theaaippen grist mill is now under'
F:ding repairs, and is being put in good
ape in order to iteet the demands of
rade.
We hear that the fishermen of Hay-
field, who went to the islands, have
dost a large number of nets, and are
i ei*pected home.
Old Mrs Bradley, died on Saturday
'and the funeral took place on Monday.
She was a resident. of Seaforth for
over twenty years.
Mr John McNevin, while working in
thennill, Kippen, which was being re-
eked, had his hand hurt by an iron
block which fell upon it. •
The Salvation Army, Bayfield, has
been for some time without a leader,
now two captains have charge, Ca
s.' tains Storey and Ogilvie.
Mr 11 Sutton, formerly of Stephe
and owner of Sutton's mill in th
township, died at the residence of h
sots, Dr. Sutton, Clancteboye, on Tues
day.
John Clark,, of Grey, has purchase
. H., G eenere's farm, south half lot
'noq.orr_'}}s, and has moved on to th
srhmises, ¥rGreenen and family hay
moved to the vicinity of Teeswater,
Mr Henning, who has had the mil
in Port Albert rented for the past yea
is leave shortly again for God
rich, the mills having been rented b
Mestrs. Runciman & Platt, of Toront
kr Alexander Sproat, • of Tucker -
smith, escaped from the London asy-
lum recently, and arrived home safe
the 'following day. He walked all the
way, and took a straight line through
the fields.
Mr N. McTavish, son of DrMcTavish,
of Brucefield, was, on account of ill
health,obliged to give up his position
in Toronto far a time, and has returned
home to recuperate. We wish him a
speedy recovery.
{MUGiickdng%ot 1)4 QA tlte'l'itbliir 1
Schein grotituts at giceter recently,
Zildie, son of lti'i' Riebard. Pickard, hacl
both, bones of his. legs broken, the re-
sult of a ruin -kick delivered by Frank
llllis, The break is a bad one.
The,people of the Methodist church
turned: out in goodly. numbers' last
week end 1er>uoved the aid fence i
fr out of the church, Kippen, replacin
it with a new one, which adds grea,tl
to the appearance of the property,
The Wingharu W.a.T.TT. asked the
eOuracil to pass a bylaw to have the
town bell ring at 8.30 p.m. in winter,
and 9 p. zn, in summer, and children
found, on the street after those hours
be taken in charge by the Chief of Po.
lice. The council, as allowed by Sta•
tute,glranted. the request. [We think
it would do good if other councils would
put the Curfew,Bell Statute into oper-
ation.]
It is with feelings of regret and sym-
pathy far the bereaved that we chroni-
cle the death of Mrs John B. Aiteheson,
of 'near Winthrop, this week. Her
maiden name was Mary Sparks, and
she was a daughter of Mr Alexander'
Sparks, of Stanley. .At the date of
her death she was 39 years and 7
months old. She was married to her
now sorrowing husband nineteen years
ago, She leaves six children, the
youngest a little over two years ola.
She was attacked with acute dysentry,
but thought there was no reed of
medical assistance until Saturday,
when it was too late toafford relief.
'w4211fA.N 4' ' OONYEIiiiiATIIQI`i,.
bleep a sten on youwords, Aly esters
For etch are Wenderfinl things;
They are sweet, Tike the bees fresh honey—
lake the bees they have terrible stingsl
They nazi bless like the warm glad stip-
thine
And brighten a lonely life;
g They can out, in the strife of anger,
Iarke an open, two-edged knife,
On Thursday afternoon of last week,
Mr John Cash, a highly respected
resident of Grey, died very suddenly.
Mr Cash had been in very poor health
for some time, and had decided to sell
his place and give up farming on that
account. On the day in question, how-
ever, he was feeling so well that he de-
cided to go over to his father-in-law's but
was persuaded not to do so for fear the
jolting of the wagon would be hurtful.
He then went out into the barnyard,
and while returning to the house was
seized n ith a severe fit of coughing,
which resulted in the rupture of a
blood vessel. He had scarcely time to
reach the house and sink into a chair,
before he was dead. Mr Cash was a
native of Glasgow, he came to this
country in 1843. He had lived in
Grey for nearly 30 years and was
greatly respected. He leaves a wife
and several children. He was the
youngest brother of Mr Edward Cash,
of Seaforth.
CONFIRMED.
The favorable impression produced on
the first appearance of the agreeable liquid
fruit remedy, Syrup of Figs, a few years
ago has been more than confirmed by the
pleasant experience of all who have used it,
13- and the success of the proprietors and man-
ufacturers, the California Fig Syrup Com -
n, puny,
at
is
d
3,
e
e
is
r,
e -
y
o.
During the past year there have been
delivered from farmers wagons at the
G ,
Seaforth oat -meal mills over 120,000
bushels of oats.. This would make
about $36,000 distributed at this point
for this one .establish ment.
Mr John Caldwell, of Tuckersmith,
having recently purchased the wood
off Mr D. Bell's lot, adjoining Mr Mc-
Arthues farm, is busy, together with
•a force of hands, in cutting dewn the
wood. and converting it into logs and
cordwood.
The auction sale on the farm of Mr
Wm. Allan, Tuckersmith, on Wednes-
day, was attended by between three
and four hundred people. Everything
Offered brought good prices except
horses and implements. Cows were in
lively demand.
Mr F. Jordan, of the Medical Hall,
Goderich, has sold out his business to
Mr John Davis, of Wingham, a gradu-
ate of the establishment. Mr Davis is
a popular young marl, who has already
acquitted himself with credit in his
profession.
Miss Jennie, youngest daughter of
Mr Wm. Ballantyne, Seaforth, has re-
.•„;ceived the appointment of assistant
teacher in the Bluevale public school.
Miss Ballantyne is a clever young lady,
and the people of Bluevale will find her
a competent teacher.
On Wednesday afternoon the house
oP Capt M. McDonald, Lighthouse .t",t,
Goderich, was discovered to be on fire,
and the department responded I the
call in quick time, Owing to the fire
being between the siding and inside
wall of the house, a good deal of dam-
age was done before it was quenched.
A farmer had a narrow escape at the
Seaforth station Tuesday afternoon.
He was driving across the track when
his horses balked, and a shunting
freight train backed up,caugbt the end
of his waggon and pushed it off the''
track. Rad the horses stopped a few
.feet further back it would have gone
hard with the outfit.
A few days ago Mr Frain, of Grey,
tied his team at the gristmill, while
waiting for his grist. The horses took
fright and ran away. The waggon box
was found near the railway, but the
Waggon and team, after a seven mile
shun were found wedged in a clump of
tree's near Mr Frain's residence, not
much worse for their run,
As Abraham Cook was driving home,
oh the Sth con., Grey, Tuesday evening
somebody in ,passing frightened his
team to that it ran away, Mr Cook
' aikete thrown out on the road and had
his head cut and shoulder and side hurt.
Be Was f=ound in,eemi-unecnscious state
by John wive. The horses were caught
half aiiaile away, afterwhich the injure
ed xillaii 's7as eGIIVey'ed to his otvltt home.
Children Cry for
$tchcr'S Cattoritii
HIS CHUM.
A newsboy, small, wiry, with; eyes
like a ferret, and a clenched fist, sat on
the curbstone crying in an aggressive
way, when a pedestrian halted and
laid his hand on the youngster's shoul-
der.
"What's wrong, sonny?"
"I ain't your sonny,"
"Well what's wrong, my boy?"
"Ain't your boy, neither. Lernme
be,"
"Oh, see here now, what's the row?
Lost five cents in the gutter?"
"Naw, I ain't --oh, oh, oh!"
"Spit it out, then."
"Me chum's dead."
"Oh! that's another thing. How did
he happen to die?"
"Runned over."
"So? Was there an inquest?"
"Inst hollered
oncet anand rolled over deadues' nothin'. He . An' I wish
I was dead, too, along of him."
"Cheer up! You can find another
chum."
"Yer would'nt talk that way if you'd
knowd Dick. He was the best friend I
ever had. There weren't nothin' Dick
wouldn't a done for me. An' now he's
d-d-clead an' buried. I'm a wishing I
was too."
"Look here," said the man, "go and
sell your papers, and take some poor
little ragged boy and be a churn to him.
it'll help you and do him good."'
"Pshaw, Mister, where's there'sa boy
wot'd go round nights s4 _th me an' be
cold and hungry an' outen doors, an'
sleep on the groan' like Dick? An' he
wouldn't tech a bite till I'd had enuff.
He were a Christian, Dick were."
"Then yon can feel that he's all right
if he was such a faithful friend and good
boy."
'Boy? Dick, a boy? Dick worn't
a ragged, good for nothin' human
boy, Mister—Dick were a dog."—De-
troit Free Press.
D'OlV'T BE FOOLED
by the dealer who brings out some-
thing else, that pays him better, and
says that it is " just as good," Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
is guaranteed. If it don't benefit
or cure, you have your money back.
No other medicine of its kind is
so certain and effective that it can
be sold so. Is any other likely to
be "just as good' ?
As a blood -cleanser, flesh -builder,
and strength - restorer, nothing can
equal the " Discovery." It's not
like the sarsaparillas, or ordinary'
" spring medicines" At all sea- ap
sons, and in all eases, it purifies, in• se
vigorates, and builds up the whole
s stem. For every blood -taint and "�
disorder, from a common blotch or
Let them pass through your lips unohal-
lenged,
If their errand is true•aud kind—
If they come to support the weary,
To domfort and help the blind;
If a bitter, revengeful spirit
Prompt the words, let them be unsaid;
They may flash through'a brain like light-
ning,
Or fall on the heart like lead.
Keep them baok, if they're cold and cruel,
Under bar and look and seat;
The wounds they make, my sisters,
Are always slow to heal.
God guard your lips, and ever.
From the time of your early youth,
May the words that you daily utter
Be the words of beautiful truth.
Itwas the old bachelor who staid that
he never read the woman's corner in
his paper, although he was something
of a woman scorner himself.
"Where is Mrs Sham?" She has
gone to the symphony rehearsal."
"Has her husband gone with her?"
"No; heis in the woodshed at a Chopin
recital."
HOW TO GET A "SUNLIGHT"
PICTURE.
Send 25"Sunlight" Soap wrappers wrap-
per bearing the words "Why Does a Wom-
an Look Old Sooner Than a Man")to LEVEn
Boss., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and
you, will receive by post a pretty picture,
free from advertising and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it will only cost 10 postage to send in
the wrappers, if yon leave the ends open.
Write your address carefully.
Annie Pixley, the well-known ac-
tress, died in London, England, Wed-
nesday night.
There are rumors in Key West, Fla.,
that the long expected revolution in
Cuba has begun in earnest, but no con-
firmation of the news has been re-
ceived.
Down With High Prices For
Electric Belts.
$1.55, $2.65, $3.70 ; former prices $5, $7
$10, Quaky remains the same -16 diff
ferent styles; dry battery and acid belts
mild or strong current. Less than half
the price of any other company and more
home testimonials than all the rest to-
gether. Full list free. Mention this
paper. W. T. BAER & CO. Windsor, Ont.
THE SELF-DENIAL OF PARENT
That parents should deny thernselv
superfluities for the sake of their ch
dren is not in the least to their cred
it is meet, right, and their bound
duty. That they should_ give the
children better advantages than th
have had themselves is equally, in t
nature of things, their proper line
conduct.' Each generation owes to t
one in advance all that it can besto
of preparation, of culture, of opport
nity, and of privilege. The self-deni
of patents is the tribute the race d
mands; It is not especially notable, n
particularly praiseworthy, because
is the appointed and expected ro
which is given to people when the
take upon themselves the obligat.ion9
of parenthood.
But self-denial on the part of paten
is one thing, and self-eflacement quit
another. The plain man and the plai
woman who have scrimped and stinte
and saved, contrived, managed, rise
early, sat up late, to send their son
and daughters to college, to educat
them liberally, to place them well 1
the world, are not to he set aside as o
small account when their children ar
rive at maturity.
They are wrong to allow thewselve
to be pushed to the wall, set in th
background, as they sometimes are
The mother may not know Euclid, o
have the faintest acquaintance wit
the Greek poets; the music her daugh
ter plays may be a Chinese puzzle t
her comprehensi an ; bat she does kno
a whole world of science. not neves
eerily in books, t which her daughte
can gain no clue in the class -room, sine
life must be the teacher. The fathe
may speak a less ornate vernacula
than his boys' vocabulary, but he has
the shrewdness, the acquaintance with
men, which come only by intercourse
with enes fellows, by joy and sorrow,
and the different phases through which
all pass who live long enough. It
hould he no part of the self-denial of
parents to do without the deference,
he tenderness, the regard, of those
whom -they have brought up.
One finds it, oftener in acomparative-
ly new country than in the mote con-
ventional Iife of. our cities, a state of
things in which parents seem to have
been outgrown by their children.—
There are farm -houses in our frontier
States where worsen, nut yet middle-
aged, have put on gray hairs and
wrinkles, lost the beauty and elasticity
of youth, years before their time, re-
signedly accepting privation and toil
and loneliness to give their girls a
chance. If the girls are noble, sweet -
natured, and true, they will hold the
dear mother in the greatest esteem be-
eause of all that she has done for .them.
Far from entertaining a feeling of
pride or of complacency, they will re-
pay the beautiful self-denial of their
parents by a devotion which never
shows a shade of diminution. It is an
ignoble nature alone which is capable
of feeling ashamed. of those who belong
to one's kith and kin on account of any
simplicity of manner or plainness of
eech. Self-denial' must not become
lf-effacement.
A few years ago it was not uneom-
on to find the parents of young peo-
S,
es
al-
it;
en
it
ey
he
of
he
W
si-
al
e-
or
it
le
y
is
0
n
d
n
s
e
n
f
s
e
r
h
O
iv
•
r
e
r
r
s
t
e rather crowded out of the way, the
eruption, to the worst scrofula, it fn
is a perfect, permanent, guaranteed i
ee
remedy. Se
rawing rooms given up to the youth -
I daughters and their friends, while
e mother and father sat by them -
Ives in a basement dining room, or
(dr own chamber. A better state of
ings obtains now, and young people
ave learned that society is crude and
•" th
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy un
cure% Catarrh in the Head, no
satisfactory in which parenks have
ttheir fitting place.---Iiarper'e azar.
At.tbe pt;tivinelai ploughing ikuatch
held on the Asylum farluM 11amllton,
on Wednesday, a' large 'number of
prizes were wonby i ndiau.ploughmen
tfronp'I.'rrscarora and 4nandage,'
Au extraordinary death,`` resulting:
from the bite .of i rate, took place at,
Dover. A man named. Till a Itboz t
time ago WAS bitten by rat h0
was trying to capture, Sa Subsequently
he became i11. Sytnptoros of hydro•
p`♦obia set in, resulting in the rnaifs
death.
Fashions change in dowers as they
do in clothing, gems, plays, novels
and dogs, A New York florist who
does a large business was asked if he
had any orchids. "Got a couple in my
greenhouse In the country," he answer-
ed, "but it's no use having them here
in town, for they're hard to raise and
nobody wants them. Cranks on or-
chids collect theta and pay fancy prices
for the, but there is no call for the
commoner varieties. Begonias and
erotons and all those fancy -leaved
plants, to, I sell very few of them now,
though there was a time when I could
not get enough. Chrysanthemums
° are ready sellers, but the fashion seems
to be setting in for green things—
palms, ferns, lycopodium, rubbers,
selagineIla and such."
A notable engineering fact was ac-
complished a few days ago in the bor-
ing of the Busk -Ivanhoe railway tun-
nel under the continental divide of the
Rocky Mountains at Hagerman Pass,
Col. The tunnel is almost two miles
long -9,393 feet—and is through solid
gray granite. It took 3 years and 20
days, of 20 hours' work each day, to
bore the big hole. It is 10,800 feet
above ties level, through the top ridge
of the continent. The water draining
from one side of the snountain under
which it is driven, runs to the Altantic
Ocean and from the other to the Pa-
cific. Its ccnstruction has cost $L000,-
000 and 20 human lives. The tunnel
which is on the line of the Colorado
Midland Railway, the Santa Fe's cen-
tral route to California, substitutes
two miles of track for ten, and does
a vay with one of the most expensive
railway climbs in the world.
Keep the Doctor from the
door:
DEAR Sln.—f am pleased to add mytestimonq
to the great number you have already received
recommending in the highest terms Williams'
Royal Crown Remedy. A Mr Scott called at in
hume about six years ago and told my wife of
of the virtures contained in this marvellous li-
quid So my wife the persuaded me to try two
bthoatfI bought six otes of the ytlestmo a andmfoungood
great remedy for many complaints and has been
a great benefit to us and uur friends and has les-
sened our doctor bills from those of former years.
We have kept some of the "Royal Crown Rem-
edy" on hand ever since we first used it (over six
years ago) and would highly recommend it to all
who suffer from any Durable disease. Yours
truly, A, SWEETMAN, 24 Charles Si. Guelph.
The Canada Presbyterian does not
like the way many temperance meet-
ings are conducted. It views the ques-
tion of the reformation and prevention
of drunkards as a very serious ' one,
and it objects to jesting and ribaldry
in the treatment of the question. It
says:—"Much of the poverty of Canada
is caused by intemperance, and poverty
is no laughing matter. Hearts are
broker and homes darkened by drink,
and the man who can laugh at a broken
heart or a darkened home is unfit to
address his fellow men on any serious
question. It is said that five thousand
men go down every year in this Do-
minion to a drunkard's grave and a
drunkard's doom. The man who, with
that awful fact staring him in the face,
can retail Yankee stories to make an
audience laugh, has as little moral ear-
nestness as the audience that laughs
at him.
Mrs. H. D. West
of Cornwallis, Nova Scotia.
S2CO Worth
Of Other Medicines Failed
But 4 Bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla
Cured.
"It is with pleasure that I tell of the great
benefit I derived from Iiood's Sarsaparilla.
For C years I have been badly afflicted with
Erysipelas
breaking out with running sores during hot
summer months. I have sometimes not been
able to use my limbs for two months at a time.
Being induced to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, f got
one bottle last spring, commenced using it; telt
so much better, got two bottles more; took
them during the summer, was able to do my
housework, and
Walk Two Miles
which I had not done for six years, T':ir.'; T
am cured of erysipelas, and recommend any
person so afflicted to use
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Four bottles has done more for mo than 9200
worth of other medicine. I think 1t the hest
blood purifier known," Mns. H. D. WEST,
Church street, Cornwallis, N. S.
HOOD'S PILLS cure liver ills, constipa-
tion, biliousness, jaundice, stok headache, 25c.
DR. McLELLAN LONDON, ONT,
497 Talbot St., Specialist on the
EYE, EAR, NOSE & THROAT
Graduate of the New York Eye and Ear Hospital
1889. Post Graduate Course at the Nett/ York
Post Graduate Medical Bohm)/ and Bospital or
Eye Ear, Nose and Throat 1802, Tested.,
Full E7es stock of Artificial Eyes, Spectacles and Ler
'sos. Will bo at the
Rattenbury House, CLINTON
The First FRIDAY in Each Month.
DECEM13tiR let next. Hours 10 a. m
to 4 p.m. °harges Moderate,
Pleo's Remedy for Catarrh Is the
Pest, gelded to Ilse, and cheapest,
5610 tit• diuggidta or sent 6y
llstAtflw ,'0ttlr iyn, M,
two'eacifolre
Loth the meti:;,,l tylia, results alien
Syrup of Figs lh taken; itis pleasant
and refreshing to the taste and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Towels, cleanses the sys-
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, preparedoai• from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many e xcellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
yrup of Fig3 is far sale in 7%
bottles byt all leading druggists.
Any reliable druggist who may not
have it on hand will T,rocure
promptly for any one who wishes
to try it. Manufactured only by the
CALIFORNIA Flt SYRUP C0.1
SAN s^' ILANCI5CO3 CAL.
LOUIBVILLB, iSY. NEW 8010, .l! is 5?,
PROPERTIES FOR SALE OR To LET
HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.
On Albert su
ing purposes.t Smallonelot house and on place lin e ogoodire-
pair. Apply to MRS. THOS. COOPER, Clinton.
For Sale or To Rent.
A Cottage and Stable with two acres of land.
A good bearing orchard thereon, situated on
Victoria Terrace on the banks of the Bayfield
river. JOHN MOGARVA.
HOUSE TO RENT.
Good commodious and conveniently situated
dwelling house to rent ; has every convenience;
good garden. Wili be rented cheap. Formerly
occupied by Mr Jas. Turnbull. For particulars
arply to MANNING & SCOTT, Clinton.
House and Lot for Sale or Rent
That desirable House and Lot situated in the
village of Holmesville, containing one acre. The
house is in gcod repair and contains six rooms;
hard and pre -
1 miss somefgoodt ofruithtreesere rande lastableso on the For
further particulars apply on tke ppremises,
MRS JENKINS Ina@
Brick Store for Sale
For sale cheap under mortgage, on monthly
payments of $11.55,
Large 2 -story Brick Store and Frame Barn
In the Town of Clinton. Apply to
LONDON LOAN COMPANY,
t6 r. LONDON, ONT
City ,,t BAKERY
OPJPOSU E FAIR'S MILL.
The undersigned baying bought out the bakery
business so successfully carried on by Mr Wm.
Young, will continuo the business at the old stand
He will endeavor, by supplying a first class arti-
cle, to merit the liberal support of the people.
Bread delivered anywhere in town.
Wedding Cakes, Fruit or Sponge Cakes,
•
supplied on short notice.
JAMES YOUNG, - CLINTON
THE RIGHT
The new model o ocktord Watch. when
placed in a screw him/ ease, will fill a Ion felt
want among farmers, as it is not dos proof
only, but very strong. The plate which the
wheels work between, not being separated by
pillars as in the ordinary
WATCH
Butd by
piece ofottom metal, with tte he edger left of the
top plate to rest on; it also being pendant or lever
set with sunk balance to prevent breaking, mak-
ing in all a;good rong watch
For a Farmer
JOS. BIDDLECOMBE
TThL lOc off Ehc
ON FALL AND WINTER
Boots, Shoes,
Felt Overshoes,
EtC
'ALSO A LARGE STOCK OF .
TRUNKS, VALISES,
ROBES, RUGS,
HORSE BLANKETS
DOUBLE AND SINGLE
HARNESS, ETC -
Pine and Cedar SHINGLES,
also British Columbia
Rett Cedar.
as. Twitchell,(
CimON.
`.-UiNha..•
tsf Axjoitx : i I tte r Oat;
N• 411$INo . SOQTZ. "
Barristers, isters, o1 a toIrs,
i1omiga'i►,ocz.B4, &t .
Commissioners for An. tario and Manitubai,
Q 'JOlt Nrixw noon To new EsA, Mower,
DEA'PD.ETON OFOE -- AT BES
EgisCrsutcinnpotnlh b cb. street,
gate.
DR, WM. GUNN, CFFIOE ONTARIO ST
a few doors East of Albert Street,
L. TURNBULL, Al. D. TORONTO
•1 -"University, M D. 0.M.. Victoria University
M. 0. P & s. Ontario. Fellow of the Obstetrical of Eldinburgb, late of London, Eng" and
Edinburgh Hospitals. Office.—Dr. DoWsely's old
office Rattenbury St. Clinton. Night bell
answered at the same place.
DAJ.
aeoaeheur,H etc., office ithe ais a islock
Rattenbury St. formerly oocupicd by Dr. Reeve
Clinton Ont.
DR, R. MOORE, PHYSICIAN SURGEON
Accoucheur, Office. the late lir. Worthing --
ton's office, Huron street. Residence, Huron,
street, near railway owning,
R STA I:URI, GRADUATE OF THE
sity,Toronto,, formerly of thel Hospitals and
Univer-
sity,
New "Yong, Coroner for he
County of Huron, Bayfield, Ont.
T• C. BRUCE L. D. S. SURGEON DENTIST,
storevSpeciaaltykPrre Albert
tTaylors' tural
teeth. Painless Extraction by the nee of the
most approved local Anaesthetic, N. B. Will
visit Blyth professionally every Monday atMa-
son's Hotel, and Bayfield the Ind and 4th Thurs-
day, during the summer.
E. BLACKALL
VETERINARY enaJ•Honora-y0raua soheOnte.rioVetrriryy
College. Treats all diseases of domesticated and
male on the most modern and scientific prinoil
pies. Office- immediately south of the New Era
Office. Residence — Albert St. Clinton. Calle
night or day attended topromptly.ir`,3 NM
M
ONEY TO LEND IN LARGE OR
Small stuns on good mortgage security
moderaterateofinterest, H HALE, Clinton.
D DICKINSON, THE OLD & RELIABLE
ing to conduct any lsales entrusted to him, will-
ing this opportunity of thanking his patrons
for past favors. Also Chattel Mortgages closed
and rents collected. Charges moderate. D
DIOEINSON, Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron. Residence Albert Street, Clinton.
F.W. PARNCOMB, MEMBER OF ASSN OF
Provincial Land SurveyorandEngia L. er,Lodon O.OfHa at
Stewart's Grocery Store, Clinton.
MONEY! MONEY! MuNEY 1
We funds at ow rates few and modate exloans peneer. privet
Terms made to suit borrowers.
M ENING & SCOTT. - - Clinton
MRS. WHITT, M. C. M- 5
TEACHER OF MUSIC
Piano, Organ and Technicon,or-Mnac1 develope
for use of pupils. Rooms in Beaver Block,
Albert Street, Clinton.
R. AGIIIEW,
Licentiate of Dental Surgery, Honor Graduate of the
Toronto School of Dentistry,
Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for the painles
extraction of teeth, ,r
Office in Smith's Block over Emerton's Barber
Shop, Clinton.
it4rNight bell answered, ly
Dress Making.
miss 1I.Joy having discontinued the Dress and
Mantle making with Miss B, Cooke, over Man-
ning & Scott's Office, is prepared to do Dress and
Mantle making in the very latest styles, at the
most reasonable rates and on the shortest notice,
at her home, North Street South. MISS M. JOY
A.
,The Clinton Lodge, No. 144, tweet in Biddle -
combo Hall on the 1st and 3rd Fridays in each
mRtSTONEHAaIh. Visitors 1,cordially invited. BEAN, Itecorder,
CLINTON MARBLE •R OIUIiS.
COOPER'S OLD;,S'rANL'
ex ;to Commercial Hotel,'
This estabfisnment is in full operation and a1
orders filled in the most satisfactory way Cemo-
tory and granite work a specialty. .Prices as
reasonable as those of any establishment
SEALE & HOOVER, Clinton. lm
McKillop Mutual fire insurance Co.'
FARM & ISOLATED TOWN PROPERTY ONL
INSURED
OD. , Ross, President, Clinton; M. Murdie, Woe
Pres. Reaforth; W. J. Shannon, Soy-Tress:Seaforth ; Jno, Hannah, Manager, Seaforth,
Jas. Broadfoot,
=RECTORS. Gabriel Elliott,
l'Watt,
lxvBeeohwod; Tho. GarbeClioon ; Joseph
Gar.
diner, Leadbury ; M, Murdie, Seaforth.
Thos" Neflans, HaAGENTS.
lock Robt. MoMiIlan, Sea
forth• S Oarnoeban, Seai<o,th; John O Sullivan
nd Geo. Murdie, auditors.
saot other business so will be promptlyattendeeto on application to any of the above officers
ddressed to their rospecitve offices.
McLeod's
System RENOVATOR
AND OTHER
Tested Remedies.
SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE
For wpure, Weak and Impoverished
Blood, Dyspepsia, SIeeplessness, Palpa-
tation of the Heart, Liver Complaint,
Neuralgia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis,
Consumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kid-
ney and Urinary Macaws, St, Vitus' Dance,
Female Irregularities and General Debility
LABORATORY, RODERiCH, ONT
J. M. MoLEOD,
Prop. and Manufacturer
Sold by J. H. Combe, Clinton
RARER 8Y%/;;:
Perieverance in using 0 will give reltel, even
15 cues of long 'standing, where a cure aeemec
unpossible and life seemed hdrdty went living
Per BottIe,25c„ Oc or'$LOO
,