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Clinton New Era, 1894-07-20, Page 2duly 24,. 2094. tilintOn VelVt,(t so, SO4, '3'RIDA7Z SUT,i'R' � Gasp Count yClipping's _ D. Milner of Grey',b,#d to kills fine re- gistered: brood make on Tuesday on ac- . count of her hating ,one of her hind legs broken bya kick from another Horse While in the pasture field. r Donald Grassick,. ;Stanley raised his new barn en Wednesday. i it wM . when finished, be a fine build nig Hood, in the same neigho bonc�c, has his view bank nearly completed. MrDf .Dyer Hurdon;who has been sub - mans Friday, of the'Molson's Bank, Exeter, left Fiiday, for Ridg@ town, He has e beepromoted romoted to the position of man- s ager of the-MR1son'sBank there. We are pleased to be able to state that Mr .Bishop is recovering from his late illness, and although still very weak he is gaining strength daily, and hopes soon to be as good as ever. It is, important to keep the liver and kidpeys ingoed condition. Roods Sarsap- prilla'is the remedy for invigorating these orgens The directors ° of the South Huron and Tuckersmith Branch Agricultural Societies held a , meeting at Kippers, Friday, 6 inst., and arranged for the ;Union, h anfalld 28 h ohow f Septemberbe held at . n Monday of last week Edna Elsie, the infant daughter of Rev. W.J. and Mrs Waddell, died at Ethel, aged 6 months -and 5 days. She had been failing in health„ for several months. Mrs Sage, of Walton, sold 37l acres of farm land last week to Duncan Mc- Cuiag for the sun of $3,000. This land adjoins Mr McCuiag's farm,' will add greately to the property even if he had to pay a good price for it. Considerable excitement has been caused at Gorrie over the arrest of Alf. Williams,, charged with robbing the safe in the Glasgow House of l50.' He was arrested in Toronto on Tuesday and brought back to Gorrie. To make" your business pay, good health la a'prime 'factor.' To secure good health, ' the blood should be kept pure and vigorous by'the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. When the vital fluid is impure and sluggish, there can be neither health; strength, nor ambi- t ion. T#0) Great struge, FP�1?all' :ANcAlmENTe '1'hd'great railroad strike has ppraeti- rally eollappsed, and the'railroads, are Masters of the situation. It Is thought the loss of the tailroade in chicag0 alone will foot up $10,000,- 000. The cost to: the United States of put- ting down the railroad strike in the west is estimated by the Government officials at fully $1,000,000. Chicago will have to pay dearly for her inability to prevent the destrnc- tion, of property! by ticter's. An act passed ' in 1887 provides: therefor the statue is similar :to otie in force in Pennsylvania under which the city of Pittsburg was compelled to pay il2,- 700,000 damages to railways after the great strike riots of 1877. The Buffalo Express says: It is cost- inglthe men themselves. a pretty sum to prepare for strike, The expenses of Mr Debs and hisisassistants are placed at $145,000 a year. The Baltimore American says: - "Debts get $3,000 a year; the Vice -President and the Sec- retary get $2,000 each; there are 70 organizers who receive $5 a day; 10 clerks are employed with wages- of from $2 to $4 a day. The strike head- quarters in Chicago cost $10,000 a month. The 10,000 telegrams a day which have °been sent and received since the strike began cost from $400 to 500. The missionary work of send- ing speakers to other points and hiring halls means in the aggregate $3,000 a day. Who; pays this?" Well, this organization has 145,000 members, who contribute $1 each cash to the union. There is a good deal in the point of view from which we examine things. Only a short time • ago Mr Debs, the leader of, the Pullman boycott, was publishing sin the Locomotive Fire- man's Magazine his card of thanks for free transportation in Pullman cars. Then he regarded Pullman as a public benefactor and a model employer of labor. The first of the cases against the strikers on the Wabash Railroad end- ed in the United States Court, Detroit, Mich., Thursday: H. R. Burdeno• who dragged an engineer from his cab on the Wabash, was adjudged guilty Thursday afternoon of contempt of court in violating an injunction, and was sentenced by Judge Swan to pay a fine of $500 or be imprisoned for thir- teen months in the Detroit House of dor rection. ' The many friends of Mr and Mrs W. Cooper, formerly of the Mil road, Tuckersmith, but now of Bienfait,Man. will regret to learn of the death of their third son, Frederick G. Mr Cooper died in the general hospital, at Winni- peg, on June 30th, of acute inflamma- /Lion. He had for the past three years been an employe of the Canadian Pa- cific Railway. at Winnipeg. On Wednesday afternoon, a most joyous affair took place at the home of Mrs Simpson, near Walton, being the celebration of the marriage of her fifth daughter, Miss Maggie, formerly a teacher of Hensall Public School, to Mr W. E. Hoggarth, the very efficient teacher of School School Section No. 7, Tuckersmith, and only son of Ben - Jamin Hoggarth, Esq.,; of Hensall. Minard's Liniment -the Ct. A. Deadman, of Brussels, has what might be called a model farm. He has only 6} acres in hay and pas- ture but has kept to date an average of six Jerseys, none under one year old and has an estimated yield of 11 ton of hay. He expects to make one acre keep ;one Jersey in hay and pasture for twelve months. • Edmund Paul, a brother of Rev. R. Paul, of Brussels, departed this life, very suddenly and unexpectedly, on Monday of -last week. as was 71 years of age. Mr Paul was born in Dorset - shire, England, and came to Canadalin 1854. He lived in Minto and Peel townships, Wellington -Co., for a num- ber of years, and in 1878 moved to Parry Sound District. A wife, 3 sons and one daughter survive him. The deceased was a member of the Metho- dist church for many years and his con- sistent Christian life was an example worthy of imitation. Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism. A little over a week ago, a young man named Nicholas McLean, of De- troit, who had been in poor health since Christmas, came t0 spend a few weeks at the residence of Mr John Douglas, on the lake shore, near Kin - tail, in the hope of recruitinghis health. He had only been there a few days however, when he suddenly took worse and died in a few hours. He was a member of the Oddfellow's Lodge in Detroit, and the body was taken charge of by the Lucknow Oddfellows and in- terred in the society's plot in the Kin- loss cemetery. on Friday last. The de- ceased had no relatives that he was aware of, his father and motherhaving died when'he was a mere boy. THAT TIRED FEELING Is a dangerous condition directly die to depleted or impure blood. It should not be allowed to continue, as in its debility the system is especially liable to serious attacks of illness. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the remedy for such a condition, and also for that .weakness which prevails at the ohange of season, climate or life. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, care- fully prepared from the best ingredients. 26o. Beyond doubt the largest Orange de- monstration ever held in western On- tario took placeat Wingham on Thurs- day. About fifteen hundred visitors were present, comprising lodges from North Wellington, South Grey, West Bruce and North and South Huron. A procession of about 4,000 Orangemen and Young Britons was formed at the town park at two o'clock and marched from thence to the beautiful grounds of Mrs Wm. Johnston, situated on the banks of the River Maitland. where addresses were delivered by Rev. Dr. J. Wood and Dr. Gifford, of Wingham, Mr A. F. Campbell, ex -M. P..,P., of Brampton, Major Bennett, of Torohto, and, D. Weismiller, of Hensel!. The weather was delightful, and altogether most enjoyable and profitable day was spent. A CONTRAST IN CONDITIONS. CL' PITON NEW ERA NAM; lOTER. The celebration of the' nth. of 71117 in Toronto was one of tli most en- thusiastic for years, he number of those in the line of procession- being• estimated at between font and ' five thousand, Many wworklnet are said to be'nov- ing their faniailies from Canada to the United States side of the Niagara river, owing to Immigration Inspect" or O'Brien's recent order that no per- sons living on the Canadian, side could be employed on, city" work. While the'prior() and Princess, of Wales were driving to Penrhyn Qastle, in Wales on Wednesday, a man rusk ed through the crowd towards the landau. Lord P.enrhyn, who was in the vehicle, struck the man, stagger- ing him, and he was then arrested:- RsrpmaTISli CUED Di ft; telt. -South Am- erica Rheumatic Cures for Rheumatism and.Nsnripia radically puree in 1 to 8 days. Its action upon the evstem is re- markable and mysterious. removes at once the cause, and the disease immediate ly disappears. The first dose greatly bene- fits. Sold by Wavers & Co„ and Attars & Wusoi, druggists. Samuel Archer, an elderly man with a club foot, met with a frightful death on the G.T.R. track at the foot of Yonge street, Toronto, about 12 o'clock Thursday night. He fell or threw himself in front of a shunting engine, and was crushed and dragged over a hundred yards by the fire -box. He was miserably mangled, and every bone in his body broken. It is not known if deceased was a Toronto man, or if the occurrence was an accident or a suicide. There are times when the American eagle sits very quietly in a remote corner of the aviary and refuses to indulge, in his tend, eney-to-�sereii•ir ITIFF when 'TM The &io side of the oage he sees oity mobs, factory look -outs, and miners' riots and industrial armies:• and on the other Bide he notes the quiet and content of his Canadian neigh- bors. Are:our friends made of other flesh and blood than we? Are they speaking digerent tongues and bred in opposite faiths, more home geneons? It will be a long day in the future before any one will hear of discontented masses seizing the Canadian Pacific. Who can remember a case of lynching north of the boundary line of our States? The fact is that we are drifting rapidly toward Anarohy and there is no use in assuming to be blind to the Pack. The swarms that terrorize our national and State capital would not be tolerated for an hour in a remote settle- ment of Manitoba. Even the Indian buri- es bis tomahawk or Winchester as soon as heorossesthe line. Englandsuffers neither citizen nor savage to flouther laws; we suf- fer immigrant, tramp and desperado to go his own gait; and just now we are paying clearly for the substitution of voluntary organizations foroivii compacts. Centuries before Christ was born a philosopher of Greece described the orbit of a state through revolution, liberty, lawlessness, back to despotism again. The question will arise in every thoughfnl mind, "Are we nearing the apogee from which we start- ed one hundred and twenty years ago.— The Chicago Interior. We are getting very strange verdicts dur- i11g the heated term. Brit a few days ago a Qnebeo man was fined '41200 for calling an- ' other a Methodist. This followed the otiee of the man wlio stiffered in the " same pro- vince for wielding the epithet of freemason too liberally. Here in our very midst is recorded the sueseos of a gentleman who west to law against those who denied he 'was a Sootohman. It would seem to be dangerous to call a man anything but "Mr" these days. WHEN .TRAVELLING Whether on pleteu're bent, or busineso, take on every trip a battle of Syrup of logs,si 0a ns it sts meet lssa antl and ofootou I1nthe kidneys, liter and bdwele preventing fever, hetidaohe and othorformeof elokness. For tele'in /be bottles by all leading :dra Maiinfaotrired' by "the California Fig $yrn j' fio only, . r. •i1�71 � �ieiie. . , . .. BEAUTIFUL SLEEP —ie an expression used for sound 'deep. Nothing is so gratifying to the nerves, heart, and head, as per- fect sleep — a companion of good digestion and a healthy liver. A tired digestion fails to assimilate, or take care of, the food we eat. Some- thing bracing or invigorating is needed for the liver, stomach, and intestines. This is where you will find Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets do the most good. They are tiny, sugI.r- coated pills, scarcely larger than mustard seed, made of concentrated botanical extracts. These " Pellets" are .easily dissolved in the stomach and absorbed into the blood, stimu- lating a flow of bile from the liver, and arousing to activity all the gland- ular secretions. Thus they act in nature's own way. They're guaranteed to give satis- faction, or money refunded, in all Bilious Attacks, in Sick Headache, Constipation, Dizziness, and In- digestion. Since . the Manitoba Government withdrew the grants for the mainten- ance of Catholic schools, Winnipeg Catholics have been forced to pay tax- es for the Public schools, and have al- so borne the expense of maintaining their Separate schools. ' This burden, says a Winnipeg despatch, is more than they can bear, however, and they now offer to conduct their schools ac- cording to the regulation standard and under the public inspectors, provided they are given an annual money grant. If this o#fer is refused they will turn all Cath�clllic schools over to the Public School Board, which will then be for- ced to heavy expenses in erecting new buildings to meet the additional re- quirements. A Boort To HORarMEN.—One bottle of Eng- lish Spavin Liniment completely removed a curb from my horse. I take pleasure in recommending the remedy, as it acts 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., and ALLAN & WusoN, Druggists In the House of Commons, London, on Thursday, ?,Ir Herbert Gardiner, President of the Board of Agriculture, replied to enquiries made a few days ago by Mr Henry Chaplin and Sir John Long in regard to the removal of re- strictions upon Canadian cattle. Mr Gardiner said the conclusion had been reached by the Government that it would be impossible for the present to dispense with the requirement that all Canadian cattle arriving should be slaughtered_, at the port _of'•landing. Nevertheless he was glad to state that only two of the cattle examined by ex- perts appointed by the Board of Agri- culture had been found to be infected with pleuro -pneumonia. In a few days, he said, he would be able to lay upon the table of the House a state- ment of the results of the inquiry con- ducted by himself, Major , Saunderson and Sir Henry James. he ter Catarrhint 1V cures .1 -lead pelrf'e tIy" and ,per- manently . Dr. sage's Ca. i tar helirzecr• ' , PRRF1rc T tlgA4.TMr Oen the ?rears of It De Bully Realfsed Mere, and Now? Health consists In a full and perfect de- velopment of all the expire, intolleetual end physical, itcoording . to the Original formation: of oar parents;' it' just' below ,,f power and symmetrical action between. the different parte of the oomple; machine; the whole famished with a suiiioient duan. tity of vital power, and in 'full and operation, ' In tills condition of.the sys- tem, there would be q hari;uonioua and happy blending°of all the faonitlee. mpg bodily sensations woold be pleatant find easy; ;those of the mien, the sole being ;'renewed .in the image of tto Maker, would be oalm, and happy beyond expression; the uuderatending end judgment, enlarged and enlightened, would comprehend truth. on all subjects relating to the, general wel- fare of men; and excite, them to • do that Which, was best calculated, to promote their: true interests; the affections would go out and fasten upon oiled* in exact pro- portion- to 'their moral -worth; and the relation sustained. by man to his Maker world be Been in its true, light, and inspire a holy confidence that would seek and' ob- tain all needed good. Men would then eat and drink in order to live, instead of living as they do now, in order to eatland drink. This would constitute perfeot men, and nothing short of this will constitute either perfect men or perfeot Christians. The connection 'between the different organs is so close, and their reciprocal ac- tion upon eaoh other so great. that no faculty—nor evena moral faculty—Will be put forth in perfection, until the whole man is "entire, wanting nothing." Can this state of things be realized? Yes; nothing is wanting but that men should "cease to do evil and learn to do well." Snoh is the law of our being, that perfeot obedience to it will inevitably se- cure the thing in question.—Hill's Journal of Health. COMFORT SOMETIMES. When health is far gone in consumption, then sometimes ease and comfort can only be secured from the use of Scott's Emul- sion. What is mnoh better is to take this medicine in time to save year health. A Law Graduate. He has Just come out of college, With his head crammed full of knowledge. So bethinks! Soho thinks! He will surely make a hit, With his argument: and wit So he thinks! So he thtnirel ' He will argue like a sage, Though but 20 years of age, So he thinks! So he thinks! •„ 3 fie has come the courts to alter. In his work he'll never falter, So he thinks! 8o he thinks! ,l • But he'll run against a stump And receive a great big bump, s • 8o we think! 8o we think! He will learn he's sometimes wrong And his points not always strong,'i.. So we think! 8o we think! Ho will learn life's hard and drear74 That courts don't run by theory, So we think! So we think! And he'll say: "I've very oft l �o Been very green and very soft.~ 8o we think! So we think! HAILSTONE' RECORDS BEATEN. A gentleman connected with Musco Nacional (National Museum) at San Jose, Costa Rica, in a private letter printed by the Atlanta Constitution, tells agraphic story of the wonderful hailstorm which recently visited the south/west coast of that Central Ameri- can repunlic. . His letter, in part, is as follows: "The cloud came almost directly from the west and was blacker than the proverbial 'Egyptian darkness.' We are now well used to tropical storms, with their accompaniments of real thunder and lightning, some- thing grander than the folks in old Missouri have ever seen or heard, but in this case it seemed a thousand squalls, hurricanes and cyclones com- bined in one. All of a sudden there was a terrible roaring and splashing in the bay near the camp. I have since thought that the only thing it could be ,compared with would be a shower of bricks and cobble stones falling into the ocean. We had hardly time to take shelter in an immense hollow grave when that portion of the cloud which was dumping its immense load of ice into the salty water veered to the northwest and crossed to the treeless tract of mountains lying over towards Hanfeta. It was not a hail- storm in the grand, true sense of the world—it was an awful precipitation of thousands, of tons of ice from the clouds. Some of these lumps were not larger than one's fist, but the majority of them were larger than full sized building bricks, and one which buried itself in the sand near our camp kettle en the beach was a jagged, three cor- nered mass of ice weighing 23 pounds an hour and a half after the storm cloud had passed. As one of the boys afterwards remarked: 'It seemed as though the cloud had been frozen solid to the depth of six or eight incnes and then suddenly knocked to pieces and thrown Io rho 'earth:" -But- few- of the ice chunks bore any resemblance to or- dinary hailstones; all were of jagged and irregular form, the majority of the pieces containing foreign substances, such as a ball of earth, wads of rotted leaves, sand, fish, and frog spawn, etc. The head of a dead sunfish was found in one piece and a half dozen or a doz- en of the ice slabs gathered up and put into our water jar yielded two live and one dead frog, a mass of kelp, or sea- weed, three small pebbles a sea shell and some queer blackneeds about the size k ." of buckshot." +il:- j..>l Children Oryfor . • efOtt�3h.*tor � �: � *o Trying to Mate Paris a Seaport. The project of "converting Path into a seaport,” to borrow an expression current, or in other words, of enabling ships to oome from Havre and Rouen to the French metropolis. through the utilization of the Seine and the construction of a canal at various points where that river winds oon- •siderably, has made great progress of lata The question is now being examined bya special committee, and it is thought tat the bill may be voted by parliament at no 6s?ant•data thus admitting 'of the comp pinion of the work in time for the opening of the great exhibition of the year 1900 One of the principal advocates of the en- .tatprise says that the engineers who look atter the navigation of the Seine are of the opinion that no insurmountable difficulty will be encountered. If the plan one day becomes an accomplished fact, vessels up to 4,000 tone burden will make their way to Paris from the sea.—London Tele- graph. . • . $NOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the worlds beet products to, the needs of- physical being, will -attest — the . value to heal it of the pure liquid .laxative prinie• embraced in the remedy, Syrux of Figs. Its; excellence is due to its presenting in the_Jorm most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax. ativo ; effectually cleansing the oyster, dispelling colds. headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every ohjeetionable substance, Syrup of Fids in fox Osla by a`li drug- gists in 75c. bottles, bub it is manu- factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castorta. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Mrs John Shillington, 50 years of age, of the township of Hichinbrook, Fron- tenac, while driving cows in a pasture field, was attacked by a two-year-old bull. The woman seized the animal by the neck and called for help. The daughter came to her rescue and drove the brute away. Mrs Shillington re- ceived many wounds, some of which are dangerons, and it cannot be told whether they will prove fatal. Broken_..01 Health That Tired Feeling, Constipation and Pain in the Back Appetite and Health Restored by Hood's Sarsaparilla. PROPERTIES FOR SALE OR To LET PASTU1tAGE at WOODLANDS kid$A0tou41 and othov et4vdo AIM i OOTTo Barrister So icitor eopgEY L3, &e,t Commieeioner< -Pr Ontari<. and nissis„e4 Ossose ,neas'Does, Tori,ewSu, 0/4Nlt,fi, Subscriber has about 40 acres of Lucerne Pas- turhge.apd can accommodate a limited number of horses and cattle. Plenty of spring water. Terms, Yearling Colts for the season, 81 per inonth; iHorees for the season, 4l1.25 per month; Cattle, for the season. Cattle -for the season, 75c fer month for yearlings, any others $11ermonth or the season. W. B. FORSTER, Lot 18, Mait- land Con., Colborne, Holmesviile P. 0. FOR SALE The following valuable reaidental property in the Town of Clinton, is offered for sale. Lot 1137 and part of 108, Victoria St., and part of lot 113, High Street. There are two comfortable dwelling Houses upon the property, in an excellent state of reprir. For farther particulars and terms appl to A. MoMUROHIE or to the undersigned. MANNING & SCOTT. Mr. Chas. Steete St. Catherine's, Ont. "0. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: "For a number of years I have been troubled with a general tired feeling, shortness of breath, pain in•tho-back,.and consttpatierl....i could g©t • only little rest at night on account of the pain and had no appetite Whatever. I was that tired in my limbs that I gave out before half the day wits gene. I triode, great number of modiclnos 1 but did not get any permanent relief from any ood'svo Cures source until, upon recommendation of a friend, I purehased a bottle of Rood's Sarsaparilla, whieh made me feel better at once. I have cen- .tinuedits use, Wing taken three bottles, and 1 Feel Like a New Man. I have a good appetite, fool as Strong as ever 1: did, and Miley p0M ooTort at night. t. Ybaterich pleasuro in.reeomtnondfng hood's 5"km- serving tsa' parllla." CPTABI.ZS SrHn>;It, with Erie ro- servingCo., 8t-Oatherine!e •oatatfo.. Hoods IIIA ate Prompt and efaetent, yet berm.ittt11ettoit..8oldbyalldrugllt*tae 2$0 6' HOUSE FOR SALE. BSYDONER, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, BTO,. Office—Beaver Block. Upstairs, Otipoeite Foster's Photo Giallery, CLINTOII The commodious and conveniently situated house on Ontario Bt. recently occupied by Dr. Appleton, is offered for sale on very reasonable terms. The houseis adapted for ordinary family and has every convenience and requisite also lot adjoining, and facing Victoria Street, Flull.par. ticulars on application to MANNING & SCOTT, Clinton. GOOD FARM FOR SALE. I)R. WM, GUNN, CEEB=ONTARIO ST a few doorsNaat of Albert Street. D0 J. L. Tim/sista, M. D., TORONTO Uaivereity, MD. C.M., Victoria Universa acsoSlbuclofLd Ene ieufEdiingb late nn, pi aa EdinbrghHospitals. Office.—Dr.Dowsely a office --Rattenbnry__St. Clinton.. Nightbellanswered at the semi place. DR. J.; W. SHAW, PHYSICIAN, SUBOEON A000poheur, eta., office in the Palace Block Rattenbury St. formerly occupied by Dr, Reeve Clinton Ont. DR. R. MOORE, PHYSICIAN, SURGEON Accoucheur. Office and residence, Huron street, near railway crossing. TAR Depart GRADUATE D otoria OF' city, Toronto, formerly of the Hospitals. and Dispensaries. New Yorx, Coroner for he County of Huron, BaySeld, Ont. That excellent farm of 150 acres, being lot 32 on the 13th con. of Hullett. •85 acres cleared • in good state of cultivation, balance hardwood bush. Good freme house. nearly new°, and good outbuildings on the place. Bearing orchard, good well, and never failing spring. Three-quarters ele mile from ecbool, 3 miles rom Londeaboro, 4 from Blyth and 9 from Clinton. The farm is in an excellent suction of country, and will be sold on very reasonable terms. For particulars apply to MRS. TAYLOR, Clinton, or W. WHITELEY, Londeaboro. *Ito CHOICE BUSINESS STAND FOR SALE. The undersigned having bought out the buai nese of Mr H. Newton, Porter's Hill desires to dispose of hie WAGGON MAKING BUSINESS and premises at Holmeeville, A good trade can be done here, and a spiendidopportunity will be given to anyone desirous of purchasing There e a good dwelling, and workshop, with three- quarters of an acre of land; good stable, &o. E: C. POTTER, Holmeevillo. CASH FOR EGGS. The undersigned is prepared to pay the high- est market price in cash for any quantity of Fresh Eggs, delivered at hie store, Victoria Bt., opposite the residence of the late J. Whitehead. WM. GRANT. T. C. BR17CE L. D. S. Dentist - Surgeon - Clin#oI}. Rainless Extraction by the use of local Antesthetio will visit Blyth every Monday se Mason's Hotel, Bayfield 2nd and 4th Thursdays of each month during summer eoialty Pre• servation of the natural teeth. Ma !Igoe Office, CoateBlook, over Taylor's shoe s ALL THr. WOMEN J• E. BLACKALIt.VETERINARY SUPGEO1 HonoraryGraduate of tbeontarioVeterinery College. Treats all diseasee of domesticated and mals on the most modern and eoientt o prineiii pies Office- immediately south of the New Era Office. Residence - Albert St. Olinton. Call night or day attendedtopromplly. Are health some of the time, some women are healthy ally the time, but all women are not healthy all the time unless they wash with a SEWARD :: WASHER JAMES CAMPBELL, LONDESBORO ISSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES. No witnesses require MONEi2 TO LEND IN LARGE OR 1CL Small sums on good mortgage security moderaterate off nterest. H HALE, Clinton. 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 curtains. Get a Seward Washer, manufactured by J. T. SEWARD, : Clinton, Out GENTS WANTED in every town in Canada Harness Trunks Valises Boots Shoes MiW. FARNCOMB, MEMBER OF ASSN Of • P. L. S., Provinoipl Land Surveyor and Civil Engineer, London, Ont. -Office at Geo. 1 Stewart's Grocery Store, Clinton. Going off cheap at J, Twitchells. AlsoPine• Cedar ..and British- Columbia, ritishColumbia Red,Cedar Shingles at Clinton and Brucefield• 1 orinox. 4,..„,..._.% ,., MRS. WHITT, M.C.PiM. TEACHER OF MUSIC, Piano, Organ and Technicon,or•Musol develope for use of pupile. Rooms in Beaver Block Albei t Street, Clinton. cELk Albe R. A©NEW, L.D.S,D.D.S5 DENTIST, Graduate of Royal college 6f Dental Surgeons, Ont. Honor Gradiate of Trinity University, Toronto. i*N" ar All nperatlohe in Dentistry carefully' performed. Beat local Anaesthetics for painless extraction. Omt:e opposite Town Hall over Swallow's store, Will visit Hensel! every Monday, and Zurich everysecond Thursday of each month. I -Night bell answered. A. O.U. W. The Clinton Lodge, No ,I44,_meeUia.Biddle comboHall'on the 1st and 3rd Fridays in each month. Visitors cordially invited. R. STONEHAM, M. W. J. B+EAN,►Recordor DR. McLELT N LONDON, ONT. 284 Dundee St., Specialist on the EYE, EAR, NOSE & THROAT Graduate of the New York Eye and Ear Hospital 1889. Post Graduate Course at the New York. Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital or Eye Ear Nose and Throat 1892. Eyes Teeted. Full stock of Artificial Eyes Spectacles and Len. res. Will be at Rattenbury House, CLINTON on AUGUST 3.1 Hours 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. McLeod's System RENOVATOR AND OTHER Tested Remedies. SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE For impure, Weak and Impoverished; Blood Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpa- tation of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Neuralgia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Consumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kid- ney and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Danoe, Female. Irregularities and General Debility LABORATORY, 00DERICH, ONT J. M. MoLEOD, Prop. and Mannfaotttrer- Sold in.Clinton by J. H. COMBE, and ALLAN & WILSON' MoKlllop Mutual Fire Insurance Co FARM & ISOLATED TOWN PROPERTY O11L INSURED OFFIOMRB. D. Roes, President, Clinton; Oeen Wet Vice Pres. Hemlock; W. J. Shannon, Seey- real: Seaforth; M. Mardis, Inspector of Mahan Seaforth. DIREOTORB. Jas. Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Gabriel Elliott. Clinton; Joseph Evans, Beechwood - Thos. Oar. bot, Clinton ; 0, Gardiner, Leadbnry ; John Hannah,Seaforth, AGENTS. Thos. Neilans, Harlook; Robt. McMillan, Sea forth; J. Carvings, Egmondvnle. Geo. Murdie auditor. Parties desirous to effect Insurances or Iran mot other business will be promptly attended to on application to any of the above officers adressed to their respeoitvo offices. HURON AND BRUCE Loin & Investment Col This Oompany is Loaning Money on Berm Security at Lowest Ratoe of Interes MORTGAGES i PURCHASED SAVIN(.4S BANK B#Afif01..•_ 3, 4 and 5 per Cent. Interest Allowed on Deposita, according toamount and time left. OFFICE -Cor, Square and North St., Goderloh HORACE HORTON, Manager CLINTON MARBLE WORKS. COOPED'SOL11 STAND. .rlai Next to Co mmoro Dotel. . 11itb establfbhment Is 111. full operation aad *1 YirdeIs ;filled in, the iriebt eatisfactery vay, Cenici s• 101yand granite teak brides Y®aeo abla those oast establionicrit SEA?,rk' lit pG>il r alinton, tsq