HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1894-01-10, Page 3ITIF!tIVi7Nl�i
St' 7001e0p as ilt, Jo- aptWien upon
"stns liver. 'The ihlao, pretterit.
are Pr, rierco 1Pleatant Pellets,
il•one -of these !!tile P0114tIf tor
t19rxeettvtt or; :geria; latr;etive-.4 'ejr
lar *. eatktartia,. 'Theyre the >sIP41• ,
rot, esafctttt0'take, plat santest and
frit iteral ila'the w,0y they .adt
They do. pet ihanent good., Galntf
` ntialrt 1nttigeetlori, $a iA)le Att/tfilatt
Sick oi.l3iJla?ri l;Iei44aus$, and -
t49 liitor,,stoplai<h;
unci
bowels' are prevented, !relieved,
'n4l eltrod..
T4ey?re pitarctrttec4 t$ give settle=
!~sedan ii every. cuss, or your ,'money is
retllreed.
Tri 'tiyol' t. clksee of Chronic Ca-
tal,rit in the Head, yield to Dr'
Catarrh Remedy. So cer.
Xt that its !Makers offer UCKI
• or ., .,,..,u,uhle ease,
Uhl
r1i
`Huron News -Record
1.50 a Year -,$1.25 in Advance.
Vi"ednesditY. Jan 10th,1894. .
C URRE v1' 'TOPICS.
• Wllen the Mowatt government is ao-
ened of wrong doing, that govern-
1'nent immediately accuses the Domin- '
len` government immediately accuses
the Dominion government of similar
wrong doing.' The Dotninion govern-
ment is held, by the Grits, to be the
MOS corrupt on earth; and the Grit
mode of replying to accusations is
simply au acknowledgment that the
Ontario government is no better than
the worst on earth.
NOT THAT KIND
Scott's Emulsion does not debilitate
, the stomach as other cough medicines
do ; but on the contrary, it improves
digestion and strengthens the stomach.
Its effects are immediate and pronounc-
ed.
The
man who is
0 0
desirous of making
his way in. the
U
world and
is try-
ing to do
business without
advertising, is like wink-
ing in the dark ; he may know
what he is doing, but nobody else
does. Therefore to he successful he
must advertise and keep his name
bo fore the Pplic. T HE
NE WS -RECORD- is jli St
the paper to meet the se
req uirements. Its mo-
tto is "adverti se,"
and its advise is "Ad -
ver tine judiciously". ''Jo
clic iousadvertising 'is the key-
: sto ne of success." Do not over
oro. wd your advertisements so that
no thing can be read distinc tly
but word them so that
they can be read at
a glanc e. The
mostsu cessful
isers of
advert
the d
tiros
hav
of
wo
Let
rule be
SAORT AND
ay are
e who
ebut
e w
rds. -
your •
alwwys
TO THIE POINT
•
For Ove r Flity Years.
bIss. WINSLOW'SSOOTHING SYRUP bas been used b
millions of mothers for their children while teething.
H disturbed at night and broken of )our rest by a
sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting
Teeth send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Win-
slow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teethlin�. l
will rellore the poor little sufferer inenedatoly.
Depend upou it, mothers, there Is no mistake about
it. It cures Diarrhea, regulates the Stomach and
Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softons the Gums and re-
duces Inflammation, and gives tone anti energy to the
whole system. "Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup"
for children teething is pleasant to the taste and
is the prescription of one of the oldest and best
female physicians and nurses in the United States.
Pride twenty-five cents a bottle. Sold by all drug
fists throughout the world. Be sure and ask for
Mets. WINSLow'S SOOTHING SYRUP "
RUPTURED AND DEFORMED PEOPLE.
-There are Ruptured people ei'ery-
where, they want the best Truss for the
least money and to make it convenient
for them, I will be in their neighbor-
hood. There is no doubt that your
case will he attended to properly, as I
am known from Ocean to Ocean on
this contixlent as a man of rare ability
and skill in the mechanical line of over-
coming Rupture and all Deforinities of
the human frame -Spinal Disease, Club
Feet, Knocked Knees, White Swelling.
It is very hard, even in Europe, New
York, etc., }o improve on gttp.ls made
under my superintendence in my
Factory. I am the Inventor• of 27
Patents in the different lines of Truss-•
es and-,Orthopedical Appliances, and,
if you wish to have your case attend-
ed to, would ask your to be ontime, as
I will be found as follows with Samples
and Goods, as Trusses in all their
variety, to take measurements, etc.
Will visit as follows :-Seaforth, Co1n-
mercialHotel, Monday, Jan, 22,1894;Clin-
ton, Rattenbury's Hotel, Tuesday, Jan,
23; Goderich, /Albion Hotel, Wednes-
day, Jan 24; Exeter, Commercial Hotel,
Thursday, Jan, 25; Wingham, Queen's
11001, Friday, Jan, 20; Brussels,
Queen's Hotel, Saturday, Jan, 27.
CHAS. CLUTHE,
Surgical Machinist,
131 Kinu St. West, Toronto. Ont.
Don't wait till the last hour.
A DISTURBANCE
- Jsn't'what you want, if your stomach
and bowels are irregular. That's about
you get, though, with the ordinary
rk' 1. It may relieve you for a moment,
you're usually in a worse state
>t' Ward than before.
SAS- just where Dr. Pierce's Pleas-
e an Pellets do most good. They act in
an easy and natural way, very differ-
ent from the huge, old-fashioned pills.
They're not only pleasanter, but there's
no reaction afterward, and there help
lasts. One little sugar-coated pellet
for a gentle laxitive or corrective -three
for a cathartic, Constipation, Indig-
estion, Bilious Attacks, Dizziness, Sick
and Bilious Headaches, are :promptly
'relieved and cured.
They're the smallest, the easiest to
take --and the cheapest p111 you can buy,
for they're gnaranteed to give satisfac-
tion, or your money is returned,
You pay only for the good you get,
HE BROADWAY TABLRt
aT WORK. AND TI* DIF.FICtJL,TIER IT
HAS TQ`OONT>rND 1KI.TH.
Ogg cables .Aiwiayo oi> 44a151 for' the !Ors
ua•HNA Trieffto, o ilrq AI$tSopolts;;-,!gull
Menthe of yrlfes-The Opari►tio t alt
.t3liitiotsg,sp(oW ",1P ilaa" A.va )!!help 4Nt4
T goated.•-Tho W,atgliee, or the Ceneltiia
Ctseriaritii.
If one stands astride the narrow, slot
n-itich .is, 1,15 it were! anurtory through
an artery of our great Qity, on Broad-
way, null watches, ,the snaky cable as
ft glides along, he must pause a mo-
ment to consider before he can realize
Whet au enormous amount of power it
carries and what experiences it !leas tO go
through, (Cruelly gripped by the me-
chanism .beneath the cable cars and
straining as it passes over Curves, it has
indeed a hand road to travel. What
stories it could tell 1
Before we tell the history of the cable,
let Os see of what it is composed. A
strong hempen etntmid five-eighths of an
inch in diameter forms the inner core;
around this are wrapped six steel cables,
which are iu turn composed of seven
strands wrapped around with ether
strands of steel wire, the whole making
a total diameter of one and one-half
inches.
A steel rod three-eighths of an inch in
diameter and one foot in length weighs
approximately one pound. The differ-
ence in weight between this cable and a
steel rod of the sante size may be realized
when it is known that this cable weighs
but threeounds to the runningfoot
P
The use of the central hemp rope is for
the purpose of giving a certain pliability.
In order that rust and decay should be
avoided, the rope is kept smeared with
tar and 'oil. This is what causes the
black shiny appearance.. As one of the
cables which obtains its power from the
Broadway cable house is 20,000 feet in
length, it is not difficult to determine
the entire weight, which in this case
would be 60,000 pounds. The market
price of cables being about 40 cents
per foot, the cost of this would be in the
neighborhood of $8,000' for ono coil
'of wire. The Broadway Company
maintain six cables, and as the approxi-
mate life of a cable in our busy thorough-
fare is little more than eight months, it
would -appear that the expense caused
by the renewal of cables' is not a small
item, In Denver, Col., longer cables
than these exist, the one on the main
street being 30,900 feet in length, having
a diameter of but one inch and a quarter.
Owing to the fact that there is less traf-
fic in the latter city, the work required
from the cable is not so great. Its life
is slightly lengthened, and ten months
may be put to its credit,
It is quite' interesting to watch the
peculiarities of the cable, end when we
stop a moment to think how the grip -
men, when they reach the termini of a
line, have the 'destruction of $8,000
worth of property in their power, we
can see that some means is yet to be de-
vised which will perforin automatically
the action of throwing off the grip, for
unless the grip is loosened its the car ap•
proachee the power house, when it
reaches the place where the cable de-
scends to the driving wheels something
must give way, and while the cable
generally has the best of the encounter,
very often a couple of strands are rip-
ped, which entails considerable work
upon the repairers.
At the Broadway power house Mr. M.
Moore is the person who is technically
known as -the ''splicer." He was
brought from Denver, where he had
been in charge of the cable in that city.
He has about eight or ten men under
hint, who, with dexterity, make neces-
sary repairs.
Cables are in a measure human. They
have their diseases and they need their
doctors. Mr. Moore is the medical ex-
aminer, and from hint we received sev-
eral points concerning the trouble to
which the cable is subjected.
In case a cable has become bent in
any way, it is difficult, in fact almost
impossible, to straighten it absolutely.
The bend remains, and if we stoop down
to watch its onward approach it looks
like a huge sea serpent, wriggling to-
ward you; performing wonderful gyra-
tions as it approaches. Several of these
"kinks," as they are termed, have been
made in the up -town cable, which
travels at the rate of 810 feet per minute.
As the rate of the cable is invariable, by
simply looking at the clock, the man,
whose sole duty it is to watch the cable,
can tell at exactly what place the
"kink" is situated. As a natter of
curioaity we inquired of the watcher at
the Fiftieth street power house when
the next "kink" would arrive. Looking
at his watch and hastily making a
mental calculation, he adswered. "be-
tween 4.11 and 4.12." In fact, the "kink"
came in sight immediately as the hands
of the watch pointed to eleven minutes
after four.
With the Bowling Green cable. how-
ever, few "kinks" occur. The line is
straighter and does not run under
dangerous curves like those at Four-
teenth and Twenty-Tliird streets. It
,.,might be well to mention here that, un -
lees the grip is held fast to the cable as
the curve is rounded, the enormous fric-
tion, resulting from the slipping of the
cable through .the grip at this point,
would be eufHoiont to "burn" the strands
or grind the grip ; in either case doing
considerable damage.
While it is easy to localize accidents,
it is difficult to assign causes. However,
recently, for some reason or other, the
Bowling Green cable had about 1,000
feet of strands ripped off, and the writh-
ing, curling mass of wire, as it lay upon
the floor of the power house, presented
S. most confused appearance, and one
would be led to wonder how puny men
could have the power to cope with such
an apparently unwieldy mass. With
huge shears, however, those pieces of
metal are snapped off, and a new cable
must be'put in place of the damaged
portion. The splicing is an interesting
operation. Unlike ropo. the strands are
extremely difficult to manipulate ; yet,
with skill acquired from the continual
work, each strand is woven into place
among other strands, heavy pliers
and marlinepikes being used to
separate the layers. When all
is done, about four inches of the ends of
each strand are lefts' outside the cable,
and by continued wear they finally.
break off and the splice becomes practi-
cally as a virgin cable. Even the trained
eye of Mr. Moore is unable to detect the
spline after the wires have been thor-
oughly covered with tar. The joint is
as firm and as Strong as the original
cable.
Delicate hands are out of place in this
work, and cable splicers are veritably
"hornyhanded eons of toil." Their work
is mainly in the wee hours of the night,
ncli :traf lc is at its rnininttun, !lir,'
Jlfoota assures me that with his eight o!
ten 1helpershe own ,splice in. 0100401 .
filet of cable in one hour and admit
int flee, Broadway Rtatlon, fart' down.
ntulergr(tund, nrregions :ckantgl 0011.41'1P'
pinta With stoma and tar, tore May O3tl
Chkl teitaitomt QJrI'iagea; lkli,ait llt;l ^ Wks
WILI'd and fQ1•WtLfd on their elinlybitch,
sunlit fire real rhllnMg-forces st t`te ea We
itt Ont dir(tetioff and they toindon height
>al 44Q0 pounds iu the othee, Everything
is at told ttl.r,`but tie iatnto;i rlaeie,IS 14'0
''',0$004114,7' Pyre: by a huge ventilating
Riga, Around and around the ponderous
Wheels revolve; on Word glides tile.
snaky cable, anti, with 'eyes 'ever alert
ler eppfoavldng aleNt;,;el, ' the' tire:LOSS
watcher sits and waits for Wake or
broken nds. , Electi'icul Review. ,
AMERICA'N WHALING FLEET,
Tolirton Stearns end 78 Selling Vessels*.
San lt'randipoo C„ete the It,tl.•ea.
-- +If the reixarki£ble success of steam
whalers in the past selasnti, &tall bring
:Omit the substitution of steam for will
power in the Antericlur vbalittr feet, it
will mean something; montentuous.for
the capital engaged In whaling. Stettin
whalers have been, used on the Pacifid
coast for a good many years past, as
•they have been in the European fleets.
The great majority of theN.Atnerioan
whaling fleet, however, is still compos-
ed of sailing craft, There has-been a;
decrease in the tonnage of sailing .wiial-
erssince the census year and a alight
increase iu the tonnage of steam yes -
eels The increase„however, has. iiet
been sufficient to indicate thte: slreedy
substitution ofate•tI for i
, n sa Is ru the
whaling fleet as a whole. •"W,1) .i
practically -the latest official ;all}!holt!
list of whalers, shows 91 ves,)yls''bf all
sorts, Of these 13 at a stem -nets;, same' ltlme'
remainder sailing craft Of aariQ..s tfyt5.'
Of tllo 78sailing
allsax.
s craft the
a
,
list 40 are barks, 28 sonnet 0;,,,7-
brigs,
s, „7
brigs, and 8 slops. , The �bttttilit
whalers are usually larger,than the
sailing vessels. Ui the thirteen- metra
vessels only one is of less than.100-
tons burden, nubile eight are above '300
tons. Of ,these eight one is of 440 tons
and auother of 491 tons, while several
are of nearly 400. -
-Of the salling craft eleven are of less
than 100 tons; thirty others are of less
than 200; twenty are of - more than 300
tons, and none is of 400 toes. Tho larg-
est sailing craft in the list is the bark
Emma F. Herrinian, of San Francisco.
The next in size is the ship •Niger, of
New Bedford, 891 tons: The whaling
fleet is distributed according to !tailing
ports, thus: New ,Benford, forty two;
San Francisco, thirty-four; Province -
town, nine; Edgartowu, three; Boston,
two; New London, one. Qnly two
steamers (tail from New Bedford', The
total tonnage of the whaling fleet carried
on the list is about 20,000, and of this
more than 15,000 tons is in sailing craft,
the tonnage_ of t welre steamers footing
up 4015 tone, and that of the thirteenth
steamer not being given.
Perhap 'it is indicasise of a certaiu
business -like character in the steam
whaling industry that the steamers
seldom bear the romantic and seutiulen-
talnames that -the sailing craft usually
bear. Some of the steamers are the
Helena and the Beluga, the Navarch,
the Karluk, the Orea, • the Narwhale,
the Grampus, and the Belvedere. Only
one bears a woman's name. The sailing
craft bear such names as Bertha, Des•
demona, Josephine, Kathleen and a
dozen other persou Sl names, or such as
Morning Star, Greyhound, Petrel, Sun-
beam, Bounding Billow, Hunter and
' Reindeer.
All, or nearly all of the regular sperm
whalers are sailing craft. Su are all the
vessels that go whaling from New Eng-
land ports to the North Atlantic. The
steam whalers have a popular advan-
tage in the Arctic, by reason of the
superior ease with which they are
handled in the ice, They are built with
great strength forward, so that they
may stand the shock when they strike
the ice with any considerable momen•
tum. They are also specially sheathed
about the water line, in order that they
may not be cut through by drifting ice.
The transformation of the whaling fleet
into vessels propelled in part by steam
will be an expensive business, and it
will doubtless hasten the decay of New
Bedford as a whaling port. Only four-
teen out of New Bedford's forty-two
whalers are reported as visiting the
North Pacific, which, with the far
north-western waters of Behring. Sea
and the Arctic Ocean, is now the region
wlere the baleen -bearing whale is chief#
ly perstied..Eleven of the thirteen steam
whalers now hail from San Francisco
and all make that port their" head-
quarters. Nearly the whole of last
season's whale catch has come or will
some to San Francisco. -New York
Sun.
Not Altogether a Had Fault,
We are told by M. Delisle, the librari-
an of the Bibliothoque Nationale, that
paper is now shade of such inferior
materials that it will soon rot, and very'
few of the books published nowadays
have the chance of long life. Probably
this fact is not greatly to he regretted.
We could gladly spare the tons of rub-
bish which annually flood the world
under the name of literature, and the
books that are really valuable could be
easily reprinted. Probably in days to
come we shall see books advertised as
"warranted to last a year,” or "guaran-
teed to'. crumble up in a fortnight."
This, what some have called "alarming
information" of M. Delif le, should, how-
ever, by no means be the cause of sor-
row. For it will give extra employment
to printers, bookbinders and publishers.
Possibly some people will be inclined to
lament that certain authors are not well
supplied with perishable writing paper,
warranted to disappear within a day
after the application of ink to its sur-
face. -London Graphic.,
Compulsory Affection.
A Grand Trunk commuter got off the
train at a small station this side of Port-
land. Said a passenger m a seat be-
hind : "I've seen that man get off the
train a hundred times or more and walk
up towards his house -he lives up in
that square building. He has three or
four children, and in pleasant weather
they're always playing in the yard or in
the road. But I have never seen those
children run to meet their father or
take the least notice of him when he
has passed them. They are never down
at the train to catch his hand. Yet lie
seems to think a meat deal of them and
brings thorn out little knickknacks from
the city. Funny children, shouldn't
you say so ?" "Well, I think I should
say so,' replied his cotnpanion. "If I
had children like that I'd lick 'ern till
they'd display a little affection and
come down to meet me sort of merry -
like," and he gazed back at the retreat•
ing family grays with a fatherliness as
winning as the edge of a meat ax.
a 1
-FUREALL:'IIVQ ' , `BE . r
-, QL. Bea L�L-A1� , T thi<t Will net . t , . - •.
�� . �- a �Qt xolla4v pF 6�i4k lviV11
per pe4 u. ,•
Ali loof- 86 Gott
ora. 86• Wool Shootingo
that give thebest of satisfaction for 35oR,45c; 50 "°r, , o , 5��.,Trio, n. aqd $1,66 per 113..
- Wool Bats for Quilts, Comaforter.. Ic.
s
HORSE 13LAKETSt ROBE IL 111�ifi�lta. Wo l anfocturti these goods
taken in exchange. Now is the tithe t0 bay these goons—they will be tad cheaper
Beaver Mills Woollen Store,. -
NEXT DOOR To RARLAN]i BROS, HARDWA
inton
witshiug, fa'gtu SQ Q
•
Seco Wool tarns
LS' are 'rho Gheapest
offered here taking quality into consideration. at St.. Thomas. Wool
in the spring,
HEAVY .KNITTED UNDERWEAR from 7&o, pox SLAT IIP. Our ,> ZAKNTE
• HOSE} 8004S,, MiT'J'ENS &o. very oheaR,
e t,.e.
OH.ton
RE.
C. 3E: WILSON
1894.
Harper's Magazine.
ILLUSTRATED.
lltni'srt's MAGAZINE for 18941 will maintain the
ciiarecier that has made it tbd favorite illustrated1 per-
.lodteel for the home,. Among the rehurte of enter-
prises under' ,.0 b • bl
ak t. u ish • e 1
.p I the publishere, there will appear
during; the year superbly illustrated papers on Iudia
by Bawls Leen WEEKS, en the Japanese Hewett by
ALFRED' 2AReONs, on Germany by POULTNi:Y BIos•
Law, on Parte by RICHAIRD HAanINts Davis, and on
Atexie0 ht FREDERIC REMINGTON.
Among the other notable features of the year will be
novels by GEORGE Dv MAURIIae and CHARLES DUDLEY
WAUNea, the personal remiutaoeroe•s of W. D. How.
ELLs,and eight, Fleet stories of \V stern frnuter lite
by OwaN WISTEI, Sheri stories will *leo be contri-
buted by linANDEtt MATOHEws, RICHARD HHAttDING
DAVIS, !MARY 1i WILazNs,• RUTH MCEss ire 'STUART,
Mies LADaENCE Arata TADEnrA, GEoRoe A HIBnARD,
QUESNAY PE BeeOn.EI•AIRE,,1rHOMAs NELS0,1 P,toe,
and others. Articles on topics of current interest
will be contributed by distinguished epooialists.
•
HARPER'S PERIODICALS,
Per Year:
•
HARPER'S MAG VANE $4 00
HARPER'S WEEKLY,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,, 4 ea
HArteerr l I'AZ It 4 00
HARPERS YOUNG PEOPLE 2 of
Postage Free to all s'ubscr'ibers in, the United
States, Caltada, and Mexico.
The Volumes of the 11Inoeznie begin with the Nun
beret for Jens and December of each year. When no
time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the
Number eurreut at the time of receipt of order.
Bound Volumes of HARPER'S MAGAZINE for three years
beck, in neat cloth binding. will be sent by mail, pont:-
paid. on receipt of $8 00 per volume, Clolh Oases,
for binding, 50 cent, each -by mail, post-paid.
Remittances should be made by Posf-office Money
Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement
without the express order of HARPER K; BROTHEUS.
Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK.
1891.
Harper's Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
HAni,ER's BAZAR is a journal for the home. It gives
the tidiest and latest information about Faehions;
and its numerous Illustrations. Paris designs, and
puttern-sheet supplements are indispensable alike to
the home drags -maker and the professtonahmodiste.
No expense is spared to make its artistic attractive-
ness of the highest order. Its bright etnrle,. amus-
ing comedies. and thonghtfnl essays satisfy all tastes,
and its last page is famoes as a budget of wit and
humor. In its weekly issues everything le included
which is of interest to women. The Burials for 1894
will be. written by WILLIAM BLAcmt and WALTER
BESANT. f-hortstories will bo written by Meter E.
%ILRmes, MALL' LovISA Poor., Ru•rst MCENERY
STEWART, MAIrmoN Heet•AND, and others. Ont -door
Sports and In door Games, Social Entertainment,
and ether Embroidery, iutereeting topics will receive
conetent attention. A new series is promised of "Cof-
fee and Repartee."
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
Per Year.
HARPER'S MAGAZINE '.8400
IHARPER'S-WEEKLY 400
HARPF,R'S BAZAR 400
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 200
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States,
Canada, and Mexico.
The Volumes of the BAZAR begin with the first
Number for January of each year. When no time is
mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the number
current at the Brno of receipt of order.
Bound Volume of HAPrsn'SBAZAR for three years
back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, post•
ago paid or by express, trey of expense (provided the
f.riebt does not exceed oue dollar per volume), for
'p 00 per volume.
Cloth Cason for each volume, suitable for binding,
will bo sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of $100
each,
Remittances should bo made by Post -office Money
Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement with.
out the express order of HARPER 6t BnoTHERs.
Address: HARPER de BROTHERS, NEW Tome.
1894.
Harper's Weekly.
ILLUSTRATED.
•
HARPER'S WEEKLY is beyond all quoetion the lead-
ing journal in America, in Its splendid illustrations,
in its corps of distingaithed oontributore, and in Its
vent army of readers. In special lines, It draws on
the highest order of talent, the men beet fitted by
position and training to treat the lending topics of the
day. In notion, the most popular story -writers con-
tribute to its columna. Superb drawings by the fore-
most artiste illustrate its apecial articles, its stories,
and every notable event of public interest ; it oontaine
portraits of the distinguished men and women who
aro making the history of the time, whilespeolal atten-
tion ie given to the Army and Navy, Amateur Sport,
and Mateo and the Drama, by distinguished experts.
In a word, HAneeles WEEKLY oombinee the news
features of the daily paper and the artistic and literary
qualities of the magazine with the solid critical
character of the review.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
Por Ycar1
HARPER'S MAGAZINE $4 00
HARPER'S WEEKLY 4.00
HARPER'S BAZAR + 4 00
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 2 00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States,
Canada, and Jfexiao.
The Volmmns of the WEEKLY begin with the first
Number tor January of each year. When no time is
mentioned, aubeeriptions will begin with the Number
current at the time of redeipt of order. -
Bound Volmmnn of HAnPER's W eEKLY for three yoare
back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, post-
age rata, or by express, froo of expense (provided the
freight does not excited one dollar per volume), for
87 00 per volume.
Cloth 'Casco for cash volume, suitable for binding,
will bo sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt 01 $1 00
*soh.
Remittances should be madelby Poet -Office Money
Order or Draft, to avoid chance Of lose.
Newspapers are not to Colts this advertiscm*at
s.ithoat the express order 0/MAnrEE A llaornitns,
Address : HA tlPhIl & BIro4'nEBS, blew Irons.
For. that Bad Couh of yours 4t
ij4i1IJ P
��
tl tf m ff nae• n•nr 11'i HGHLY nECQMMENDEU
t •, -�'. --.., --•-,�"a��,� r,�.��
$
As a,Preventive and Cure of all Throat and Lun
New Goods for the Xmas Trade .
J.ist'arrived and in Stock.
RAISENS, VALENCIA, 'rue Selected, oil' Stalk and Layers.
SULTANAS EXTRA DESSERT, CURRANTS, PROVINCIALS in Brie,
and hall' Brls. FINEST VOSTIZZAS in CASES.
LEMONS, ORANGES, FIGS, DATES, PRUNES.
NEW PEELS, ORANGE, LEMON and CITRON.
FRESH GROUND SPICES of all kinds, also. full lines of CROCKERY,
CHINA and GLASSWARE, TEA SETTS, DINNER SETTS, TOILET
SErTS.-
Cash for Butter and Eggs. ----
N. ROBSON. Albert St., Clinton,
Cantelon Bros,
vENERAL GROCERS & PRGVIr3-
IO'N MERCHANTS.
Grocicery, -Glass th Chinaware
ALBERT ST. CLINTON, ONT.
Highest Cash Price far Butter and Eggs
752.1y
House for Rent or Sale.
Comfortable dwelling with six rooms, on Orange
street, Clinton, Garden in good condition. Hard
and 'eat water. For rent or sale on reasonable
terns. Apply to
779-tt JAMES C001I, Clinton,
A Liberal Offer/
---c--
We are aow offering
TI LAnIE JouBonL
of Toronto, a large 36 page monthly
Illustrated Fashion Home Papel
particularly interesting to ladies, with
THE . NEWS -RECORD
FOR ONLY $1.50. •
The two publications will be given for one
year, and will be sent to any address. This
offer applies to those who renew for THF
NEW 3 -RECORD another year before January,
1894, as well as to new subscribers The
regular subscription price of the LADIES
.JOURNAL is One Dollar per year. The
JOURNAL and THE Newt's-RucconD will only
cost you 81.50 if you subscribe now.
Address
THE NEWS -RECORD,
Clinton, Ont.
More Snapsl
Do You Read
For the low sum of $2.00 (Two Dollars)
we will furnish
THE J%TE WS - RECORD
and any of the following papers for one year :
THE EMPIRE, Toronto.
THE FREE PRESS, London.
THE GLOBE, Toronto,
'THE MAIL, Toronto.
THE STAR, Montreal.
Tits LADIES' JuunNAi, and NEWS -RECORD
will cost you only $1.60 for a year -regular
price $2.25. Address all orders to
TiIE NEWS-1[tECOItb `Clinton; Ont.
A Great Offer
GREAT PAPERS' - •
AND
GREAT PREMIUMS.
We are in a positlon'to offer Tee Hunote NEws-RE
MAD to Jan., 1895, and tho FAMILY HERALD AND
WEEKLY STAR, of Montreal, for ono year for 81.75, to
new subscribers. This offer ontittes rho enbeeriber
to a choice of the two great premiums given by the
pnblishere of the Yawne !Henna), these premium*
are the "State ALDIAIIAO for 1894, a superb book of
450 pages, or if preferred s popy of the great FAMILY
HERALD Souvssrn PresentT, which retallstat twenty
dollars. The protrllnme-Almanac and Pleture-yell
be ready about the end of November, and will be for-
warded in the order in which the entbscriptions are
received. Subscriptions to both papers may begin at
once. Remember the offer of a oboioo of preminnie
holds good only to people who .ubsorihe during the
autumn. Afterwards the choice will positively -bo
Withdrawn. Address all order to
'r$ ENEWS•RECOBb,Cllnton Ont,
YoiiNecdlt!
Theon.!&!,':
• Emulsion.
•ItWiit
CureThateough,
Heal Your Lungs.
Pt tElesh onYour Bones
Prevent Consumption.
CJITY BAKERY.
OPPOSITE FAIR'S MILL.
•
The undersigned having bought out the bakery
business so suoceeelully carried on by Mr. Henry
Morrish, will continue the business at the old stand
He will indeavor, by snpplying a first class article, to
merit the liberal support of the people. Bread de
Livered anywhere in town.
Wedding Cakes, Fruit or Sponge Cakes,gsopplied on
short notice,
JAMS YOUNG, - - Clinton.
For Sale or to Rent.
Good term of 240•acres within 1j reties of Blyth,
220 acres cleared, for sale or to rent. Apply to
786-4t .1. B.KELLY, Blyth, Ont.
John Uunfl!nflaM,
GREEN G ROCER
:-: CONFECTIONER
AND
Canadian Express Agent,
ALBERT"ST:. CLINTON.
Fresh Haddiesand Bloaters. Oysters
constantly on band. Also some
Canadian Cranberries, cheap.
The McKillop Mutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper
ty only Insured.
orrloERs.
Thee. E. Hays, President, Seaforth P. 0.; W;
J. Shannon, Secy-Treas., Seaforth P, 0. ; John
Hannah, Manager, Seaforth P. 0.
DIRECTORS.
Jas. Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Donald Ross, Ciln
ton •, Gabriel Elllntt, Clinton ; George Watt
Hariock ; Joseph Evans, Beechwood ; J. Shan
non, Walton; Thos, Gerbert, Clinton.
AGENTS.
Thos. Netlane, Harlook • Robt. McMillan, Sea -
forth ; S. Carnoehan Seaforth. Joliet O'Sullivan
and Geo. Murdie, Auditors
Parties desirous to effect Insurance or trans-
act other business will bo promptly attend.
ed to on a )plication to any of the above officers
addressed to their respoetiVe poet offices.
New Photograph Galin
A GA r . 60 DAYS' OF IL
J. W. COOK, the leading photographer, will
for 60 days give a • .
DOZEN C1IItINETS.
for $2.00 and other sizes in proportion:
TINTYPES taken, Pictures taken on
cloudy days equally as well as on sunny days
by the new process, Superior work.
J.W. COOK, Praotical Photographer
near Cantelon Bros. Grocery.'
A1l'heict St. • - Clinton.