Clinton New Era, 1894-05-11, Page 7-Yr"
.THE CLINTON NEW ERA
May 1 ., 1$94
MONEY 1N TEM FARMERS'
POCKETS.
his nomination speech at Whitby on
relay, Ontario's Minister of Agrioul-
the Hon. John Dryden, referred to
good work done by the Travelling
He pointed out that while. accord-
°..Toronto market prices, creamery
er remained unchanged from 1892 to
he prioej of dairy batter advanoed
n average a cent and a half a pound.
Dryden, considers this due to the im-
ved quality of our butter product, a re -
that he attributes to the labore of the
yelling Dairy. According to the Do -
ion census returns, about 50,000,000
nds of, dairy Butter are produced an-
ally in this Province, An increase in
rue of a cent and a half on that quantity
)resents no less a gain than 8750,000 to
i3 farmers, Mr Dryden haat all along
enalive tothe desirability of -
keenly rabi se
-
ring for our butter as enviable a repnta-
on as Canadian cheese has won in foreign
arkete. If" this improvement continues,
ong with a better system of packing and
aneportation, it will not Abe long before
lis hopes are realized and a profitable
rade of unknown possibilities opened up
or farmexe and their wives.
Commenting upon. Mr Dryden's state-
ent, the Toronto Evening News (Inde-
endent Conservative) says: "The claim
oes not laok justification, and the fact
hat this is so shows how much can be done
owarde the advancement of a great in-
nstry by means of intelligent government
direction. "
Mr Dryden has the astuteness to dis-
cern the needs of the farmers at this
juncture, and the success that, .' ::ts all
his efforts is the best proof of r practica-
bility of his ideas. if the Mi. •seer had ac-
complished nothing more 't. an the im-
provement referred to, he would have earn-
ed,the salary the Province pays him many
times over.
iLELIEF IN 131x Houns.—Distressing hid
`''ney and Bladder diseases relieved in six
hours by the "NEW GREAT SOUTH AAIEIiICAN
KIDNEY CURE." This new remedy is a
great surprise and delight to physicians on
account of its exceeding promptness in re-
lieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back
and every part of the urinary passages in
male or female. It relieves retention of
water and pain in passing it almost im-
mediately. If you want quick relief and
mire this is your remedy. Sold by Watts
& Co., Druggist.
THE BABY'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS ,
It can wear out a $1 pair of kid shoes
in less than 24 hours.
It can keep its father busy advertis-
ing in the paper for a nurse.
It can simultaneously occupy both
sides of the largest bed made.
It can cause its father to be insulted
by every second-class boarding-house
keeper m the city ,who "never takes
children," which in nine cases out of
ten, is fortunate for the children.
It can make itself look like a fiend
just when its mother wants to show it
off.
It can make an old bachelor in the
next rooms use languagge.• that, if ut-
tered on the street, would' get him in-
to the penitentiary for two years.
These are some of the things. a baby
can do. But there are other things as
well. A baby can make the common-
est house the brightest spot on earth.
HOW TO GET A "SUNLIGHT
PICTURE.
Send 25"Sunlight" Soapwrappers wrap-
er bearing the words "Why Does a Wom-
n Look. Old Sooner Than a Man")to LEVER
3Roa., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and
on will receive by post a pretty picture,
ree from advertising and well worth fram-
ng. This is an easy way to decorate your
come. The soap is the best in the market
nd it will only cost lo postage to send in
e wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
'ur address carefully.
Bruce, M.D., declares that
die annually in England
amity dress than from all
seases combined.
ters of the Red Sea the ces-
engines on a steamer for
ns extreme physical suf-
passengers; for a day it
ve absolute torture. The
%Ir- which prevails every day is a hot,
sphyxiatiog blast, and its continuous
irections are from north and south
oward the centre. As a result, every
passing vessel is subjected to two days
f almost intolerable heat, followed by
two days of comparative comfort.
ff A Boon To HORSEMEN.—One bottle of Eng-
lish Spavin Liniment completely removed a
curb from my horse. I take pleasure in
recommending the remedy, as it ants with
mysterious promptness, in the removal from
horses of hard, soft or calloused lumps,
blood spavin, splints, curbs, Sweeny, stifles
and sprains. GEORGE -ROBB, Farmer,
Markham, Ont. Sold by Watts & Co.
In Germany, according to the "ma-
shinen-Constructeur," india rubber is
beginning to be used instead of carpets
or wood flooring in apartments; or,
rather, many experiments are being
made in that direction. The rubber is
employed in the form of sheets, one
metre square and five centimetres
thick, which are placed side' by side,
after the floor has received a coating
of beton. These floors are easily
washed, and on this account, and also
because kegs can be easily rolled on
them, they will be used in breweries
and other places where heavy objects
have to be removed.
ra
Blood
should be rich to insure
health. Poor blood means
Anaemia ; diseased blood
means Scrofula.
Scott's
Emulsion
the Cream of Cod—liver Oil,
enriches the blood; cures
Anaemia, Scrofula, Coughs,
Colds, Weak Lungs, and
Wasting Diseases. Physicians,
the world over, endorse it.
Don't be deceived by Substitutes!
Matt lis llow■o, Ballivilla. 4,11Dea`tfatia ilea $1
•
The Zodiacal Light.
Sometimes in the evening, some little
time before and during twilight, and also
sometimeR,.-.though rarer—before and (hir-
ing sunrise, a close observer may detect
peculiar fanlike strew},s of darker and
lighter shading across the clear sky. These
streaks, of which the plainer ones may
number from four to six, together form a
triangle with its base on the horizon and
extending out at varying altitudes,
This appearance still holds a rank as an
unexplained phenomenon in nature, It
000urs only occasionally. There may be a
fine illustration on a given evening, and
while there may be a week of clear sun-
sets succeeding not trace of the streaks
will be risible. From this it would neem.
that a particular atmospheric condition
must be one of the factors in its produo-
tion. The assumption would be supported
by numerous analogies not necessary to
enumerate. In the propea�atmosPb
atmosphere,
then, let it be assumed, that the streaks
are due to alternate lines of shade and
light. Now, let something, to tome ex;
tent, obstruct the rays of the sun which
has set, either an impediment in the dis-
tant landscape or an unseen cloud, the
combination at the proper angle with the
observer's vision, and it is probable that
we may approach to the solution of this
long standing puzzle. The fanlike appear-
ance is such for the same reason that the
lines in a brink wall leading away from
the observer seem to focalize to a center as
do also railway tracks seemingly come to-,
gether in the distance. These zodiacal
lines are undoubtedly parallels, as are lines
of cloud streaks that to our vision seem to
point to a common starting place.
It is more than probable that this mod-
est and unobtrusive streaking of the clear
evening sky has been unsolved because of
its very simplicity. It is probably only a
modification of what is commonly known
as "the sun drawing water."—Pittsburg
Dispatch.
Woman's New Field.
Many women drift into odd employ-
ments through circumstances, but there is
no reason why such should not be deliber-
ately sought. A firm of clothiers who
have branch establishments in several cit-
ies have introduced women as saleswomen
in the boys' department, and the innova-
tion meets with the approval of all moth-
ers who have grown weary 6f being re-
garded with a pitying smile whenever
they protested mildly that clothes did not
fit.
I am acquainted with two women who
carry on the business of a taxidermist
successfully, and another who is success-
ful in mounting specimens for the micro-
scope. Some of the finest work in the nat-
ural history museum at South Kensington
was done by a woman.
A colorist who had learned to tint pho-
tographs well, but who could not make a
living by it, sought and obtained employ-
ment at coloring illustrations for a med-
ical book. This one order kept her busy
for a long time and paid her well.
.A teacher of languages who was an ad-
mirable translator turned aside from pub-
lishers of novels and succeeded in obtain-
ing work from professional men who wish-
ed to' keep up with foreign notes on scien-
tificsubjects, but could not take time to
translate for themselves. :She was for sev-
eral years connected with the staff of one
of our colleges, though her name did not
appear, as she was engaged by the pro-
fessors themselves.
.A similar instance of enterprise is that
of two translators, one of whom selects
the French and German publications for
the . book counter o1 a large dry goods
house, and the other, who does similar
reading and sifting for a public library.
Each of these ladies earns $1,200 a year,
and they have made themselves so valua-
ble to their employers that their positions
are assured.—New York Telegram.
The Margay.
The margay, or American tiger cat, is
a little smaller than the ocelot and not
quite so handsome. The legs and feet are
spotted in true leopard fashion, but the
shoulders, sides and back are plentifully
besprinkled with small, irregular rosettes
or else big black blotches, which on the
shoulders are lengthened into semicircular
bands. The ground color is bright tawny
above and lighter below. A specimen in
the American Museum of Natural Histo-
ry measures 24 inches in length of head
and body; tail, 10 inches, and height at
the shoulder, 10'Ain chem. Of all the Amer-
ican felidaa the margay cat approaches
nearest to the domestic cat in temper and
habits. In South America, where it is
commonest, it is often tamed and allowed
the freedom of a house, because of the rats
it exterminates. It is said to make, when
caught young'and well treated, a very do-
cile animal. In its wild state, however,
it is death on poultry and young pigs, and
wherever a house stands at the edge of its
jungle home it makes itself a great nui-
sance. I once shot a bold and audacious
specimen on the Essequibo river, in South
America, about midday, as it was in the
very act of carrying off a duckling from a
spot within 30 yards of the house.
The home of the margay cat is in the
heavy, low lying forests of tropical Amer-
ica, from the state of Vera Cruz, in Mexi-
co, southward through the whole of Cen-
tral and South America to Paraguay.
Even hunters seldom see it save along the
margins of water courses, a very favorite
resort for forest dwellers generally.—W.
T. Hornaday in -St. Nicholas.
The Three E's.
The famous toast to the three R's—read-
ing,'riting and 'rithmetic--is naually ac-
credited to Sir William Curtis, lord mayor
of London in the year 1795 and for many
years one of the wardens of the Tower. He
proposed it at a dinner given by the Lon-
don board of education in the days when
Dr. Bell and Quaker Lancaster were plead-
ing forincreased educational advantages
for the poor. It was received with great
applause and drank amid much merri-
ment. But though recognized at the time
as a jest,it was afterward taken up In ear-
nest by Sir William's detractors, who have
handed his name down to ,posterity as a
blundering ignoramus. A late writer in
one of the leading English weeklies says
that an aged ex -member of the board of
education, now deceased, assured him that
Sir William Curtis, although a man of lim-
ited education, was very shrewd, and that
it was the height of presumption to atm -
pose that he used his immortal alliteration
otherwise than as a jest.—St. Louis Re-
public.
Gas Fattened Fish.
When the water was withdrawn from
the lake near Geyser spring, in Saratoga,
an immense quantity of trout and pickerel
was captured, many of them being of
great size. It is thought that the mineral
water, impregnated with gas, was the cause
of the uncommon abundance and fatness
of the fish; that the stimulus of the mineral
e nstituents and gas aharpena the appe-
tite, invigorates the nerves of the stomach
and promotes the digestion of the fish.—
Chicago Herald. -
NOT A. POLITE BUY.
The lady had given the small boy an
apple, and he had said nothing in re-'
c ignitiop. "What does a little boy
say wheil'he gets anything?" asked the
lady, insinuatingly. He hesitated a
moment.
"Some little boys," he said, 'Ways
'thank you,' some says 'much obliged,'
and some just keeps thinking how
much nicer an orange is than an ap-
ple,"
The Secret of Happiness.—It was not
bad generalship, it was neuralgia, that lost
the battle. It was not a bad heart, it was
dyspepsia that made Carlyle so hard to
live with. Headaches have shattered dyn-
naeties. The headache has been respon-
sible for the wrong order that lost an em-
pire. The cure for siok or nervous
for neuralgia and bilioneness is Stark's
Powders. In other words, Stark's Pow.
ders,apell happiness. An infallible, swift
and easy remedy. 25o a box.
If there was no dust haze above us
the sky would be black. That is, we
would be looking into the blackness of
a limitless space. When in fine, clear
Weather, we have a deep, rich blue
above us it is caused by a haze. The
particles in the haze of the heavens
correspond with those of the tube in
the koniscope, and the blue color is
caused by the light shining through a
depth of fine haze.
"If all the gold in mint or bank,
All earthly things that men call wealth
Were mine, with every titled rank."
I'd give them up for precious health.
Thus in anguish wrote a lady teacher to
a near friend, telling of pitiless headache,
of smarting pain, of pain in back and loins,
of dejection, weakness and nervous, fever-
ish unrest. The friend knew both oanaes
and cure, and flashed bank the answer,
"Take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription."
The distressed teacher obeyed, was restor-
ed to perfect health, and her daily duties
once- more became a daily pleasure. For
lady teachers, [salesladies, and others kept
long standing, or broken down by exhaust-
ing work, the "Prescription" is a most po-
tent restorative tonic, and a pertain cure
for all female weakness. Guaranteed to
oure in every case or money returned. See
printed guarantee around each bottle.
Filbroid, ovarian and other tumors cur-
ed without resort to surgery. Book, with
numerous references, sent on receipt of 10c
in stamps. World's Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
TO BENEFIT FRUIT ORCHARDS.
The travelling dairy conducted by the
Ontario Government has done an immense
amount of good for the farmers and is,:per-
haps, the most effectual method that could
be adopted to convey to farmers and their
wives practical information to enable them
to supply a product that will compete in
the British market with Danish butter.
On the same principle, the project for
establishing experimental fruit stations
should be of benefit to the fruit growers.
This is good so far as it goes, but should
be extended, and more money provided to
go into the diseases of trees.
The proposal to group counties and
establish these experiments in many sec-
tions is wise; to have one central farm
would scarcely opread the information se
well, for many farmers would travel a
short distance who would not go across
the province.
The Government is to be strongly com-
mended for its decision. Toronto Evening
Star (Independent) May 2.
A Racking Cough
Cured by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral..
Mrs. P. U HALL, 217 Genessee St.,.
Lockport, N. Y., says:
"Over thirty years ago, I remember
Learing my father describe the wonder-•
ful curative effects of Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral. During a recent attack of La.
Grippe, which assumed the form of a.
catarrh, soreness of the lungs,a.ccom-
panied by an aggravating cough, I.
used various remedies and prescriptions.
While some of these medicines partially
alleviated the coughing during the day,.
none of them afforded me any relief from.
that spasmodic action of the lungs which_
would seize me the moment I attempted
to lie down at night. After ten or twelve
such nights, I was
Nearly in Despair,
and had about decided to sit up all night
in my easy chair, and procure what
sleep I could in that way. 'It then oc-
curred to me that I bad a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I took a
spoonful of this preparation in a little
water, and was able to lie down without
coughing. In a few moments, I fell
asleep,• and awoke in the morning
greatly refreshed and feeling much
better. I took a teaspoonful of the Pec-
toral every night for a week, then geed-
uaily decreased the done, and in two
weeks my cough was cured."
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Prepared by Dr. J.C.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas.
Prompt to pact, sea're to curer
POWDERS
Cure SICK HEADACHE and murales
in QO MINUTte' also Coated Tongue et-
ness, Biltousne*s, Pain in thi.Side, ConttlDitpttten,
Torpid Liver Bad Breath, to say cured also
regulate the {rowels. vtier "ma TO TANN:
PRtom 26 OYtNTA AT DRUI,.$TORta.
THE .IMPORTED DRAUGHT STALLION
ANDREW LAMMIE
No. 8453, B. C. B., Vol. 11,Will stand for the
im robement of stock as folowed—Monday, April
80t wf111eave hie own stable,Londesboro, and
proceed to Jos. Webster's, 18th con., Hullett for
noon; thence to Manchester Hotel for the eight.
Tuesday, will proceed by way of Westfield to
Alfred Carr's for noon; then to Belgrave Hotel
for the night. Wednesday, will proceed by way
of Sunshine to John Hagan's, Morris, for noon;
then to Emigh'e Hotel, Blyth, for night. Thurs-
day, will'pproceed by way of the 9th con., Morris,
MR. 13. Laidlaw's for noon; then to Wm. Har-
rington'e,18th con., Hullett, for the night. Fri-
llwill
Fri-
day, proceed y eH
d wayof arlock then down
pon
y�Y
to the 8th
e and 9th cone.,lot Hullett�to William
Oakes' for noon; then to his own stable. Satur
day, will proceed to Thee. Carbert's, Gravel Road,
for noon; then to his own stable. The above route
will be continued during the season health and
weather permitting. J. & E. BELL, Proprietors.
THE IMPORTED COACH STALLION
MOSS ROSE.
Bred by Jeff Armstrong, Parkersburg. Ind., im-
ported in 1891 by late David Fisher.
(Makes friends wherever he goes)Registered In
American Cleveland Bay S;B., will stand for Mares
as follrewei—Monday, April 30th, will leave bis
own. stable Huron Road, Goderioh Township,
lot 25th, and proceed to Thos Beatty's 4th con.,
for noon; thence by Goderioh to Sault's Hotel, for
one hour; then to And. A. Young's, Colborne, for
the night. Tueeday, will proceed to John Ack-
land's, boundary of Aehfleld for noon; thence to
Port Albert for the night. Wednesday, to Mal.
lough'e Hotel, Dungannon, for noon; then to Wm.
Loughead'a,bonneybrook, for night. Thursday,
to Samuel Morden e, East Wawanoeb, for noon;
thence to, John Daer's, boundary line, for the
night. Friday, to Joseph Govier's for noon; then
to 1 C. W. Williams' • for ]night. Saturday, to
Bell's, Commercial Hotel; Clinton, for noon;
then to his own stable, where he will remain until
the following Monday morning. This route will
be continued throughout the season, health and
weather permitting. WILSON & ALLIN, Props.
ince wi
DAYaS'
PAI No
KI LLE R
IS THE BEST REMEDY FOR
DRAINS, RUiSES,
CALDSB
URNS
& CUTS.
ALL THE WOMEN
An healthy some of the time, some women are
healthy all the time, but all women are not
healthy all the time unless they wash withia
SEWARD :: WASHER
We warrant the 'Seward Washer to cleanse any
fabric that soap and water will cleanse. Now is
the time to wash your carpets and lace purtains.
Get a Seward Washer, manufactured by
J. T. SEWARD, : Clinton, Out
AGENTS WANTED in every town in Canada
'a:
SAFE
,
•
BRISTOL'S
INFALLIBLE
i;UG4R—CO4TED
:::-.1
s.
i • .0.
iX ��'t-•��1 �I
C:ZtT
J'I' flit{Y
I/C.iII
�
i�
2
4
411
1::a
VEGETAB'LaE
1 MaTT.Ta
Z
PROM PT
HOULDERS I VE - MOTHERS
Co TGEOR E
This is one of the beet Farm Waggons mann-
actured, having been on the market for 60 yearn,
and being very strongly built, while at tho same
time adapted to all kinds of work, and is noted
for its light/owes of draft and easy running. Those
who have used them willluse no other, while the
price atwhich It is sold is no more than would
be paid for an interior article. The undersigned
is eels agent for this neighborhood. and the wag
eon may be inspected at any time at hie shop
OLIVER JOHNSTON,
BLACKSMITH
ISAAC STREET, : CLINTON
BEANS
NERVE BEANS aro a new due
oorery t1OIt cure the worst oases of
Nervous Debility,'
Vigor and
g Manhood; restores the
weakn,ss O body or mind caused
by over -work, or the errors or ea
. .. we-- ,s i loes of youth. Tine named/ alp
least ty euren the most obstinate cases when all other
TaaATIIINTs have failedevento relieve. Sold'oydntg.
!Siete atil per by addressing
or six HE JAMES MEDIC
rooeiDto prion by dressing T
'110.. Toronto. Ont. Write for pamphlo, Sold in --
Sold by Jas. H. Combe.
exa,xn' l .�ac' NiArsory
FRUIT AND ORNAMENTALTREES,
NOI•l WAY .``BRUCE, SCOTCH
ANDJASTAACHAN SINE,
The latter of which we make a speoialty.
LARGE STOOK ON HAND.
The above ornamental trees and shrubbery will
be sold at very low prices, and those wanting any
thing in this connection will cave money by pur
ohaving here.
OM'dere byMailtoill be promptly attended
to. Address, •
JOHN STEWART. -- BenmIll.rt
J. C. STEVENSON,
—TRE LEADING--
UNDERTAKER
EADING—UNDERTAKER
—AND—
EMBALMER.
A FULL LINE OF
GOODS KEPT in STOCK
ThebestEmbalming Flu idugrad
Splendid Hearse.
ALBERT ST.,CLINTON
Residenoeover store .
OPPOSITE TOWN HALL
ROBERT -:- DOWNS,
CLINTON,
Manutacturor and Proprietor for the beat bila
mut Dog in use. Agent for the sale and appli-
cation of the tarFteaea PATIINT AUTOMATIC BOILea
CLIANIR. STEAM FITTINGS furnished and app
ed on short notice.
Boilers. Engines, and all kinds o1
Machinery repaired expeditiously
and In aaattMfaetory 'manner
Farm implements manufactured' and repaired
Steam and water pumps furnished and put in
positipn. Dry Mitre fitted up on application
Charges moderate.
PUMPS : : PUMPS
If you want a drat -class, well -made p mp, one
that will give you satisfaction send your order
to the undersigned. He will dig and clean
wells, and do it at the closest prides. He also
handles a first-olass FORCE PUMP
JAMES FERGUSON
OppoeitelQueen'a Hotel - High Street, Clint
DO YOU WANT
A First-class Step or Long Ladder ?
A Handy Wheelbarrow ?
A Splendid Churn, or anything of like
nature? Then call onIW. SMITHSON, a
shop, No.7 Frederick St„ or E. Dineley
Will be atiDinsley's cornerevery Saturday
afternoon
HoDSe PainDng and Paper Handing
1 The undersigned is prepared to promptly exe-
cute all orders for PAINTING, KALSOMINING
PAPER -HANGING, &c. He is a practical man of
ong experience :and guarantees to do all work
in a manner that shall be satisfactory, whir
prices wil be exceedingly moderate. Orders re
spectfully solicited.
GEO. POTTS, Kirk St., Clinton
Uthin4
BAKING
POWDER
.uTHECOOKSBESTFR; ND
..ARt&ESZT SALE AN CANA ,- A
S.- WILSON,
GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE
HURON STREET, CLINTON
Repairing of all khide promptly attended to
reasonable tutee. A trial eoliotied.
II1TCEI SVl9PS.
City 3utcher sirup
SMITH'S 131.10 CK,
9PPOSITE THE POST OFFIOF•, CLINTON�
The undersigned having opened out in the
Smith B1oek, desi.ree to state,that he will keep on
hand the very ohoioeat Meats. Having no ex-
pence oataide of himself, be is in a position to sell Y
at the very closest prices.
He will. at all times be prepared to pay the
highest market price for Export Cattle.
LIVE HOGS always wanted (for export. Give
him a call.
' ROBT. FITZSIMONS. "
Clinton Plaiting Mill
—elzD—
DRY KILN!
The subscriber, having the very latest improved
machinery, and employing the most skilled work-
men is able to do work in his line in the most
satisfactory manner, at reasonable rates and
on the shortest notice. A trial solicited
FACTORY NEAR G.T R. STATION, CLINTON
THOS. McEENZIE
When we assert that
Dodd's
Kidney Pills
Cure Backache, Dropsy,
Lumbago, Bright's Dis-
ease, Rheumatism and all
other forms of Kidney
Troubles, we are backed
by the testimony of all
who have used fhem.
THEY CURE TO STAY CURED.
By all druggists or mail on receipt of price,
5o cents. Dr. L. A. S ' & Co., Toronto.
'WAIL ��--
QUICI(LYYIELD TO
ALIENtla
HURON ST. BUTCHER SHOP
I desire most ooralally to thank a..;thoso who
have favored us with their patronage since I
commenced in busineee, and to assure them and
heipublle generallythat we are in better shape
ban ever to cattier to their wants, having added
an improvedrefrigerater and other conveniences
our shop.
1Y HEAT.LEY & SCRUTON
w
Clinton MEAT Market
BUSINESS : CHANGE.
The undersigned desires to Intimate that he
has bought out the interest of Mr Couch, in the
butchering business lately carried on under the
yle of FORD & COUCH. He will continue the
time at the old stand, and trusts by giving the
closest and mo careful attention to the buei-
nesa straightfo yard and courteous treatment
to all, and handeltlty�ng only choice meat, to merit
and receive a fai* share ofublio patronage. Ali
uU;'
orders oarctand promptly filled
JAMES A. FORD .
Central Butcher Shop
Subseriberdesires to thank the pnblio general-
ly, for the patronage bestowed upon him; and
at the same time to say that he is now in a bet
ter position than ever to supply the wants of all.
As he gives personal attention to all the details
of the business cuetomers can rely on their
orders being promptly and satisfactorily filled.
His motto is "good meat at reasonable prices.'
Choice Sausage, Poultry, &c.,
in season.
Cash paid for Hides, Skins, &o.
JOHN SCRUTON,
Albert St, Clinton.
Flour and Feed Stores
Flour, Feed & Seed Store
The undersigned having formed a partnership
desire to intimate that they will keep on hand
he very best
FLOUR and FEED
01 all kinds also the choicest variety of
Clover, Timothy & Small Seeds
which will be sold at close margins for cash.
SALT also kept on hand. They will also keep a
choice variety of all kinds of TEAS which con-
sumers will find to be excellent value.
HILL & PROUT,
HUHON ST., CLINTON.
GOOK'S
F our1Feed;Store
BRAN & SHORTS
In large or small quantities.
OIL CAKE and MEAL
OF ALL KINDS.
10 pounds Choice Oatmeal for 1
bushel of Oats.
D. COOK, CLINTON.
BANKS
The Molsons Bank,,
Incorporated by Act of Parliament 13551
CAPITAL, - -.,$:,0,0170,0,00.
REST FUND,815000
HEAD QF BICE, MONT'REALt
J. H. R. MOLSON President'.
F. W.,T$OMAS,....GeneralManager.
Notes discounted, Oollectlohs tithe, Dra 4ii,:
tined, Sterling end American exchange bought
and,sold at lowest current rates. Interest al-
lowed on deposits.
Money advanced to farmee on their own -note
with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re-
�uired Oe security
H. C. BREWER, Manager.
GEO. D. 'McTA(GART,
BANKER,
ALBERT ST, - CLINTON.
A. general Banking Business
ti ansaeted
NOTES DISCOUNTED
Draftajissned. Interest allowed on
deposits.
FA.RRAN & TISDALLL
BANKERS,
CLINTON. ONT
Advances male to farmers on their own
notes at low rates of interest.
general tanking Business transacted
ante -s at all wed on deposits.
tie Notes bought
J. P. TISDALL, Manage
THE COILED SPRING
Wove Wire Fencing.
II 11111111
Mesera"Stanley and Steep are agents for
the above fence, which is claimed to be the
best lensing wire menpfietnred of the kin
x l Titi0", vmu on
•
4