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The Huron News-Record, 1894-07-18, Page 8e.,+ Yes iRCA11W W1'i[:'�Y::di�PiYX".�.^..�K.Y':�__�:.9s1C.S'13miiLi�:".CC•d.`-II- ii; ::1Y:S.JC...,.0. • P!" Advax +sirs« dtl olessrps tar 4drkytiso rtas.-4,* te. {a stare itetertioa })s tliolfreereent assns,, puns rr etOcl .At. the Orol:$ ta4 r. Shan St41,117,841,4 r 'V';Ot ,'1l: (ion foramigo* rmked iota, fil"1404 r$00.1! WM ArmentorOtta, ,stns 414110.tialer's. own ri41,1. 4, .A".,t !t70 Potxi014e i h fur .4 ewis- 'ecora ,s6, /41,0461 `* p.NF.sP lt'�•,;Jrrxx 18th, 1394 • In an i A,raa�nn l it to lib • u.i wnn, gibs,. 114sh pq i for er,g8 at t) 'tuner,--essrat es turas. Wa.'iYTEP, any quantity of GoodIRed On Block, Cherries' and Black Currants •at�Market Pr ce.. N. RonsoN. • Highest price in cash or goads. paid for Cherries,. Black CJrrrants, ete. CANTELON Biwa. COMVOSItO with six years experi- ence wabaxld secure like to a position as foreman•or assistant, Address 'Com- positor;" Nxwg-REcoI D office, Olinton. 141t. if. C. BREwsR, manager of the Mesons Bank here, was on a business visit to Exeter last week. MASONIC. -Clinton Lodge No. 84, A. F. and A. M., meets next Friday evening at 7,30. bin. D. CANTELON was in Goderich yesterday. He will ship another car load• of live hogs to London to -day. Miss t7, IsTssWoOlierta, Oi Is ptarrding ben elution in Clinton, , BOP P atka4 , The Dlii rtoi Oinhpleg this itfterneort with the (fedeciotl, ,".;;enlore all the grotrnile of the latter. is Lase . In the Match lost skin • .afternoon in pliiiten the .Seafe t Beavette,were tet, nsanyforthe Daunt. k' less boys, the visitors being vieto by, , four straight goals. , The winch 'Jn ted chant two' liorrrer sag that the B.savere earned, ,beltvictorr, This ll1e81ly . �`XCLES laeeg VliutQL e40ide the league Pon,. ALL1? n.-TnE IsTAws4tEconn- was fleased to have's..caJl last Saturday ront Mr. W,H, Clegg, of Gerrie. 1-1e le a aonatable and for some time had TE been SM. s, the scent of ' toting niaT named, Willraaas *he' is alleged t; have stolen$50,from MoLa)ughlin & 0o,, of Gordo. Finall y be secured his man inToronto-very cleverly, brought hi% hack to Gerrie where he was tried and sent isp to Goderic. on Saturdayfor further trial, As: a detective, Mr. Clegg has in the present case won laurels. Don DA,,Ys.-Thee are dog days. They began Ally 2nd and will end August llth, They have nothingto do with dogs beyond making tose animals uncomfortable, like the rest of us, from the heat. They get+ their name from the fact ,that Sirius, the brightestatarin the constellation of the Great Dog, and called the Dog Star, on these days rises and sets with the sun. You can see Sirius any bright winter night. It is a, beautiful bluish star, as bright as Jupiter, and rises soon after Orion, the great giant who has' stars for a belt and stars for a sword. The. ancients, who did not know enough to discover that the world was round or moved around the sun, took notice that the days when the dog star kept pace with the sun they had the great- est heat, and they thought, therefore, that this star produced it. MRs. (DR.) MCNALLY, of Tara, who spent a month's pleasant holidays with many friends in town, returned to her home last Saturday . FRED J. JEWELL, of Gwatkin & S'on's Type.. Foundry, Toronto, paid a business visit to Clinton last Wednes- day. Mu, JACOB McGEE, of,Egmondville, who owns the property occupied by photographer J. W. Cook, was in town Monday viewing the effects of the fire. The building is insured. S. S. PIC -NIC AT GODERICH.-Willis Church (Presbyterian) and the Batten - bury Street Methodist Sabbath Schools will pic-nic at Goderich to -day. We understand the Ontario Street Metho- dist S. S. will have their annual outing at the county town an the 26th. GETTING AROUND. --Mr. J. B. Rum - ball, who underwent a third severe operation and had a portion of another right ribresnoved about two weeks ago, is able to be out again. We are pleased to know that in a few weeks he will likely be able to resume business. BAYFIELD, according to a grit corres- pondent, wants a British -Canadian cannon for that pretty summer resort and asks advice from Wingham as, to how it may be procured. The necess- ary information can be obtained, with- out cost, in writing the popular and obliging Minister of Militia. THE Chops:. -Haying is well under way and in many sections completed. The yeild will be fair, hut not as heavy as anticipated. In the southern por- tion of the county some farmers com- menced to cut their fall wheat last Thursday. Harvesting will be general this week. The yeild, it is expected, will on the whole be the best for years. ARM BROKEN. -Last Tuesday, while carrying brick on a scaffold for R Hey- wood at Harlock, 13th con., Marten O'Donnell was precipitated some twelve or fifteen feet to the ground. breaking a small bone at the elbow of the right arm. Owing to swelling the injured 'member could not be set until .Saturday and was very painful all last week. Art ADVERTISEMENT. -If you have a sign over your door, you are an adver- tiser. The sign is to advertise your business to passers-by An advertise- ment in THE NEws-REcoRn is"many thousand signs spread over many miles. You can't._carr everybody to your sign, but THE NEWS -RECORD can carry your sign to everybody. BAYFIELD VISITORS . -A correspond- ent says :-=-Mr. A. O. Pattison, of Clin- ton, took his weekly whiff of Bayfield breezes on Sunday week. Mr. J. W. Irwin, wife and family, of Clinton, spent Monday at the lake. -Picnic parties from Clinton, Seaforth, Stafia, 2nd concession of Stanley, and the members of the Front Road ,Presby- terian church, occupied the grektes rp Thursday. COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. -Final Ex- atninetion.-Form 1.-M. Lough 818, A. Meb wen 788, M. McKinnon 748, O. Helyar 738, D. McEwen 727, D. O'Neill `'711, F. Turnbull 717, G. Shepherd 716, F. C7unninghain 684, G Irwin 674, P. Plumsteel 661, F: Baker657, M. Stewart 648, J. Wilson 633, L. Weir 613, T. Mc- Cuaig 604, E. Dowzer 583, A. Bean 534, M. Disney 524, F, Gilroy 491, E. John- ston 447, W. Cantelon 432, 3. Leslie 390, Li Colwell 352, F. Fair 288, G. Cum- ming 151, Form 2.-M. Robb 771, M. Clegg782, E. Gray 731, M. Wiltse 709, B. Sepherd 098, A. Pratt 639, A. Me- Corvie 628, M. Aitken 620, L. Whitely 580, D. Brintnell 484 C. Ferguson 495, F. Ross 454, W. Miller 424, R. Holmes 407, J. Dunkin 314, L. Brigham 279. Bowsaw°. ON Tau GREEN. -There was a friendly contest in Mitchell on Clinton. . ami Mitchel Bowling Clubs our Club being worsted. The game being the first of the season is sufficient efrplanation. A return match will strengthen the weak points of the Olin- tptlians and the contest ip which they ,Will enge4e at London to -day will also ilaace,thern in better form. Following tache adore at Mitchell C:tif tON. MITCBELL. W. Jackson W. Kyle M McPaggart W. Woods B. A. Forrester W. Burnet Y. ft. Tiede% skip 8 J. Elliott, skip 80 1, •Harland F. Saw er Vtt.Brydone• 3..Coppin 'dodgems W. Kerr ' . (7r Bruce skip 18 W. Ryan, skip 28 ,11t11b�xr '>ttleigli,.11uldge,,: BASE 11,4FOOT BALL .T; 111, ' BOXING GLOVES Ax. GAMS IiiiitIOPK8, ¶1INT LAUS. ,t sk for O S p' i ,g goods aTly:/Up.,•" Otir Wail Papers are unrivalled, newest designs iu Car tain Poles, Window Shades' and Moulding; Agents for Palmers' Dye Works Suits, Jackets, Cloaks •,DPesses, Shawls, •Cartainns, Feathers, cleaned, SUNDAY BICtCLING4.-Rev. G. F. Sal- ton, the talented pastor of the Central Methodist church, Stratford, formerly of Clinton, preached e. sermon on sports in his own pulpit on a Sunday and in the course of his remarks took occasion to assail Sunday bicycling. He would not say that bicycles should not be ridden on Sunday. It was not wrong for one to take.a stroll on Sunday or a drive, and if a cydlist took a short jaunt in the same way as he took a stroll ,on Sunday he would not object. But the young nren would go off forty or fifty miles, remaining all day, and sometimes not returning till morning, neglecting all Sunday services, and de- grading the grandest and most in- nocent of all sports. He denounced betting in the strongest terms, declar- ing that the practice of gambling was fast bringing many estimable sports into disrepute. Men who bet were thieves, and the practice of gambling had the effect of making men hard- hearted and mercenary. Noss - etc. ANOTHER FIRE. -The dread alarm sounded about five minutes to five last Saturday morning. The fiery fiend was making rapid headway in Jacob • Miller's blacksmith shop on Princess street. Mr. George Swarts was giving his horse a feed of grass on Orange street and at first thought the smoke was ascending.from Beckwith's bakery, but was not thinking. of a conflagra- tion. Soon the flames were visible and Me. Swarts hastened to sound the fire alarm. The building,<a frame, seemed to be enveloped in one flame. Mr. and Mrs. D. Cook, of the feed store, were awakened and the bed on which they slept was on fire almost as soon as they left it. Wilting hands were soon at work hustling out the furniture and unintentionally smashing things gen- erally. The next store, Cantelon Bros. grocery, was also being scorched in the rear and one of.the firm broke in the front door just in time to save the Books and valuable papers already blazing. Here, as at Cook's store, the windows and doors were burned clean through when the firemen commenced to throw water. The large tank for street watering at the rear of the hlaeksmith shop gave way and the gush of several hundred barrels- of water checked the flames considerably and greatly assist- ed the firemen. Beckwith's bakery, next Cantelon Bros., was burned and damaged at the rear and a big batch of bread destroyed by water. The furni- ture and . stock was soon moving. These three stores ' were brick and resisted the flames as well as could be. Cook's photograph gallery adjoining, a frame building, was burning, while Woo Sing, the Chinese laundryman, was beckoning citizens to remove his stock and furniture. West of the blacksmith shop were two storehouses owned by George Swarts gp which there was no ilasurance ; -both were burnel to the ground. In the+rear of the blacksmith shop were two stables, one owned by D. Cantelon who also owns the store occupied by Cantelon Bros.. and the other by Wnr. Youn who owns the bakery occupied by M. Beckwith. Both, were laid in ashes and the end of an adjoining stable owned by John Johnson, of Johnson & Armour, was pretty well burned before the fire was checked ; he had no insur- ance. Just how, where, or at what hour the fire originated seems a mys- tery. Mr. Miller, as was his custom, left everything safe the night before at 8.30 o'clock. There had been no fire in the forge from 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, and at 8.30 there was not More than a handful of soft coal fire under the boiler. As near as can be judged, the fire must have originated in a line with Cantelon's stable. Whether the work of an incehrliary or accidental is hard to say. Mr. Miller's loss will be heavy. He had only $500 insurance on a building, plant and stock worth about $3,500. The books and a lot of valuable papers were also consumed, and on these alone were over rrew$1,00Olo, t go $50 worth Mr.od accounts. And- rewsof tools, &c., in the fire. Mr. D. Cook's principal loss will be on damaged furniture, as the building is fully covered. Cantelon Bros. had their goods insured and their loss will be light, while the.owner of the building, Mr. David Cantelon, is fully insured against all loss; id the burning of the stable, on which the owner had $70 insurance, Cantelon Bros, are the losers of two sets of harnecs, light waggon, a quantity of hay, &c. while Ed. Cantelon's 'valuable hound wes also consigned to ashes. Mr. Beck- with's lose Will be abont $100 in bread, hay, wood, &e. In rescuing. his horse the fire scan�gged his arms. Mr. Young had only $50 on the stable while the bakery is fully covered. J. W. Cook had $50 on Ins,gallery and will lose coaisiderable.• Mr. J. McGee, the owner of the building, holds a policy for $8e50. • The fire, While it lasted, Mas one of the most fierce seen in inton for softie years. • dyed and cut'lt�cl. RANGE & SPALDiNG, BOOKS. STATLONERY, ETC. BIBLE DEPOSITORY. CLINTON, ONT, A Chauon for Evorybody. o------ We have purchased a lane oftBEDROOM SUITES, SIDEBOARDS, EXTEN- SION TABLES and' LOUNGES, ate Big Reduction on the regular price, and we are going to give our customers •the.benefit of the .reduction. come and Space will not allow us to quote prices of all our different lines, so see what Barguine we have to offer you. PARLOR SUITES, CENTRE TABLES, BOOK CASES, SECRETARIES, DINING CHAIRS, KITCHEN CHAiRS, ROCICING CHAIRS, MATTRESSES, BED SPRINGS, and everything in our line at the very lowest prices r We want your trade, and if Good Goods, Low niece and Honest Dealing is all that is necessary we will have it. JOSEPH V G Y, ir lerlltealer and J. W. CHIDLEY, JR., Funeral Director and Etubalmer. Night calls answered at his residence, King St., opposite the Foundry. B years. now we have ' steadily from season t .se4804 Called l ltegtia l to the ftuper1grzty of .they quality and, closeness` o£' the priee 0? the feat lutes of trousera'ws;1l40.e.t 012 _ • 3o S ' inhli Mat het ,.�n� as � are '��t� 'anything ul ,� the u�� het fob the same 'Money, CLINTON OLOTH/NO. HOUSE, HURON 6T., IMPORTANT TO MEN AN UNPARALLELED FI}IEWDLILI4E}IUOODS DISPLAY OF • this season it gives ils pleasure to anuolinee:, that for2 at $3 you are shown a variety of patterns, and > tiaaterial sups; ergot in every way to what's.we have O'er ,o eired before:; These were bought in a vtry unusual way, 30 p'er cent below cost to manufac- ture, which accounts for this very unusual selling. MEN'S, FINE WORSTED SUITS $17 WORTH $23 Sack Suits Spring Weights, All Wool Cassimeres and Imported Serges Made and Fringed in the best manner, good honest value at $20 for $15 1VMEN'S $15 SUITS Strictly All Wool Scotch Mixture, Medium Weight and Dark Colors from the best Manufacturers in the Country. Suits you can't buy elsewhere for less than $18. Own one for $13. We bought them for Spot Cash from manufacturers, who needed the money,;at prices below the cost of Manufacturing. This enables us to offer them at these Marvelously low Prices. Business Men, Clerks,, Mechanics who wish to dress Styliehly and for little money will do well to take advantage of this announcement. THORNE JrICKSO}I, S1L THE RELIABLE CUTTER AND CLOTHIER. �BEESLPY o--- is talking in a general way about the goods, get down to business the next time you need a, pair of working or knock -about trousers, Buy a pair of $2 of $3 pints and the result will be "ori your own statement" that "like" value was never before received for the money. SOMETNING� that may be said about $2 pants. lst. Cheaper in the end than overalls: - 2nd. The fit is like a pair of ordered trousers. WARM WEA'T'HER GOODS WHTE SUMMER CORSETS WHTE LAIIVN MUSLIN WHTE TUCK LAWN WH TE SPOT MU SLN MUSLIN EMBROIDERIES ALL WYDT1S MILLINERY at Clearing Prices. Snaps in • Summer Dress Goods. • 3rd. The make is consistent with the quality of the goods in every case. We offer all our Light Wool Goods at a Big Sacrifice in price in order to clear them out. The most fashionable goods in the market, colors, Fawns, Beiges and Greys. The prices we have put oh theta will sell them as they are the beat goodo shown and the quality ie AL 4th. When they are called knock -about pants do not imagine they are not good enough for better wear, for they are ACKSON :-: BROS. IMIen's and BoC's. Clothiers and outfitters. SUMMER COMFORT. All wogs, double fold ;plain black Delaine, light in weight, and dressy in appearance when made up BEST QUALITY, all wool black ground, • figured . French Delaines, new • Patterns-, will not fade..... Fine all wool "Delaines, light grounds, large and small patterns. Fine quality printed Irish Lawns, 34 inches wide, and ty little Pink, Blue, Red and Black sprigs and flowers, on plain white ground ; you might wash them every -lay and they would not fade .. 2c 35c 370 25c Organdy Muslins, will wash.. Fine Scorch C inghams, Pink and White, and Blue and White Stripes and Checks. The color will last as long as the goods, and there's no cotton goods wears as well Best quality Chambrays, plain colors:and fancy stripes Very fine Crinkled Scotch Zephers, require no ironing "Tally -Ho" Duck, the new Cotton Dress material, 27 and 36 inches wide ••18c and 20c , An endless assortment of Challies and Cotton Dress materials ••5, 8,10 and 1220 Any of the above materials are suitable for Blouses or Dresses. A dress or a ,blouse of some 'of them would go a long way towards helping you keep �. comfortable these warm days. 20c 25e 20c 25o Pure Silk Lace Mitts, Blacks, Creams and Colors, all sizes 1414011ftd4 N,.NM..MYV.N• 250 9' •