The Huron News-Record, 1895-05-15, Page 6.r.M.. E. Nicaolso$.
CANCER ON THE LIP
CURED BT
AYL3RS_Z
"I consulted doctors whorescrlbed for
pre, but to no purpose. I suffered its agony
seven long years. Finally, I began taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla In a week or two I
noticed a decided improvement. Encour-
aged by this result, 1 persevered, until in a
month or so the sore began to heal, and,
after using the Sarsaparilla for six months,
the last trace of the cancer disappeared."—
.a=s E. NxcsoLso'f, Florenceville, N. B.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
a? .Admitted at the World's Fair.
�Y��i'LY PZLLB Regulate the Ifoweia.
.m
rhe Huron News -Record
$1.25 a Year—$1.00 in Ady.Aage.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8th, 1890.
CURRENT HUMOR.
A cook and a dramatic critic are
alike in one respect. They can both
roast a ham.—Philadelphia Record.
"Did Miss Reciter move her audience
very greatly ?"
"Yes. Inside of half an hour after
she began two-thirds of the house had
gone to the box office to demand their
money,—Chicago Inter -Ocean.
No use to go to war as long as the
foreign gunners can't hit the United
States.—Cleveland PlaindeaIer.
Wife—You say you don't like these
living pictures, and yet you go to see
them.
• Husband—Merely as a matter of form,
my dear. --New York World.
They may succeed in reducing the
price of the telephone service. but they
will never be able to thaw out the
voice of the young women who inform
us that the lines are in use.—Washing-
ton Post.
"So you still believe in the Darwinian
theory, do you?" -
"Of course I do. What is the spring
housecleaning mania but a survival ot
the times when we were birds ?"—Cin-
cinnati Tribune.
"Sorry to disappoint you miss," said
the turnkey to the young woman who
had called with a basket of flowers, "but
we haven't any murderers in the jail to-
day."—Chicago' r•ibune.
First Nighter--Wltat! Every seat
taken?
Ticket seller—Every one; but don't be
discouraged. There will be room
enough after the first act. I was at the
rehearsal.—Tamm:uiy Times.
Troubles of a Porter.
The porter of a palace car is envied
and cordially disliked, by a good many
people, but all is not joy and tips eveu
for the porter. I saw one the other
day whom I actually felt sorry tor—
the only one who ever came within
the category of my sympathy. The
car was nearly full, it was a cold day,
and, of course, the ventilation was
bad,
yelled a stout old gentle-
man near me; and the porter carne.
"Operesome of these ventilators—we'll
smother here."
"All right, sah !"
And the porter got lis stick and went
along throwing open the little oblong
windows above, while the ladies looked
about nervously. In five minutes the
temperature fell ten degrees.
"Porter !" exclaimed a little bald-
headed man at the other end of the
car, "are you going to freeze us to
death ?"
The porter got his stick and began to
close seine of the ventilators. He knew
he had lost one tip and was a half dollar
out.
'lNow you're going to roast us again !"
cried a third gentleman. The' porter
was now a dollar out.
"I can't stand this draft, porter," said
a lady, as he tried to get away This
was probably a quarter more gone.
"Shut that door!" yelled a man down
the aisle. "Porter!"
The porter went down the aisle with
a cold perspiration on his sable fore-
head. He explained that there was no
door open.
"Then it's the ventilators, porter—
shut 'enc up ! This lady is chilled
through !"
The porter hustled*along with his
stick making a mental' calculation as to
which ventilator would lose him the
least money, He chose the one Im-
mediately over the head of the man who
started the row.
"You strut that ventilator and I'lI re-
port you to the company," said that in-
dividual.
But the porter wee angry himselt now
and he closed it with a snap. 'Then tate
ether people quietly settled themselves
back with a feeling of satisfaction—and
not another voice was raised during the
trip.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
HANDS AND ANKLES RAW.
For years I have been a great suffer-
er trots' itchy skin trouble and salt
rheum. My hands and ankles were
literally raw, The first applica-
tion of Dr. Chase's Ointment, allayed
the burning, itehing sensation, One
box and a. half entirely cured me. !tis
a.iso instant relief for chilblains.
Henry A. Parmenter, St. Catharines,
Ont.
BOW WOMEN WORK.
Aid.I1.w Their Entry tato Rushee** Lire
is Regarded.
It will occur to unpartial observers
that if women are not as persistent in
business as tnen it Is because they re-
gard busluess ns a possible stepping
stone to something better and higher,
while to a man it is the end and atm of
existence. A man starts in life as
lawyer, merchant, doctor, architect,
clerk or what not ; if he be a serious
person all his soul is consecrated on the
effort to succeed in his calling, and so-
cial life, political ambition, even love,
are side issues, because he sees no hope
for future ease and comfort except by
means of that catling. A woman. on
the other hand, has always two strings
to her bow. Success in the employ-
ment at remunerative pay, which
probably increases with the years,
but, until she grows too old
to consider matrimony among the
possibilities of life, she never loses sight
of the chance that a mon may pass her
way whom she could love and who could
make her a happy wife. Thus with
her there is no concentration of poten-
tial energy on a single object, but al-
ways a withholding from her labors ot
a reserve force which is only called into
play when the man appears on the hori-
zon. There are women whose toil is at
least as unceasing as that of men—
wives who got up early to light the fire
and cook breakfast for themselves and
their husbands, who despatch the child-
ren to school with washed laces, hurry
down to the desk whore their business
is conducted, toil over figures all day,
and when night falls drag their weary
legs house to cook the fancily dinner.
Such women work as hard as men and
exhibit a parsiatoney more enduring.
than the average man can boost of.
But they are probably exceptions.
The average shop girl, saleswoman,
milliner, typewriter, bookkeeper or
cashier of the female sex is often lack-
ing in concentration and absorbing
devotion to her work. Other concerns
flit across her mind like light clouds
skimming; the surface of her sky. She
thioles of her dress, and whether she can
afford a new hat ; of a girl with whom
she is intimate and whole she secretly
hates ; of a man whom she has met, of
what he said and what he meant ; of' a
party to ,ivhich she had been invited and
of the prospect of her having a good
time there. For the moment these
topics of thought divert her mind from
the business in which she is euga;ed,
and consume some share of her energy.
A young men of the same age, unless
he is a poor thing, never allows matters
of the kind to intervene between him
and his business; he is trained to con-
sider them after business hours.—Saul
Francisco Argonaut.
THINGS WELL SAI .
Hatred is the madness of the heart.—
Byron.
Fidelity is seven tenths of business
success. —Parton.
Haste trips its own heels. and fetters
and stops itself. -5 tueca,
There is an oblique way in reproof
which takes of the sharpness of it.
—Pope.
The mind is its own place, and in it-
self eau snake a heaven of hell, a hell of
heaven.—Milton.
Two persons cannot long be f'r'iends if
they cannot forgive each other's fail-
ings.—Bruyere.
His daily prayer, far better under-
stood in acts than words, was simply do-
ing good,—Whittier.
If there bo any truer measure of a
mut than by what he does, it must be
by what he gives. --South.
The old scriptural sobriety was effec-
tual dein;, • asoetic sobriety is effectual
dullness.—H. W. Beecher.
I1' any mail seek for grt'atness,let him
forget greatness and ask for truth, and
lie will find both.—Horace Alarm.
Envy is a passion so full of cowardice
and shame that nobody ever had the
cowardice to own it.—Rochester.
It is tnuch safer to reconcile an enemy
than to conquer hint ; victory may de-
prive him of his poison, but recoucilia
tion of his will.—Feltham.
Whatsoever that be within us that
feels, thinks, deserves, and animates, is
sotnething celestial, divine, and, con-
sequently, imperishable.—Aristotle, •
Football Salaries.
Some of the well-known clubs keep
the salary list a secret, but as far as is
known the distinction of paying the
highest retailing fee belongs to the
Everton Football Club, which, in one
case of a professional leaving the Black-
burn Rovers to join their club, agreed
to pay hits £250 down and £5 a week.
The Sutherland Club is riot far behind,
and to secure a Scotclirna tI, a player of
repute, -gave him his .own terms, which
were £1(s0 down, £150 a year and a situ-
ation of £70 a year in a shipbuilding
yard.
Then two clubs, at present the lead-
ing clubs ot the Association Football
Longue, have the reputation of paying
the highest retaining tees, and also se-
curing the biggest gates, Most, if not
all, of the league clubs find it requisite
to pay substantial sums to secure pro-
fessional players, of which their respec-
tive teams for league matches entirely
consist. There are 450 registered pro-
fessionals in connection with the league
clubs whose wages range from £2 10s to
£5 a week.--Tit-Bits.
Queer Origin of Two Fashions.
Marie Antoinette, history tells us, cne
day noticed on her toilet table some
peacock feathers which bad heeu placed
there accidentally, being designed to
decorate some fancy work. She stuck
one of the feathers in her hair. Being
pleased with the effect, she added an-
other, and then called for some ostrich
feathers. The next day she appeared
in court with a beautiful headdress of
feathers, a fashion which Immediately
spread throughout France and Europe,
and which is followed in dress circles
down to the present day.
Don John, of Austria, the son of
Charles V., and the fascinating young
hero of Lepanto, bad a patch of hair on
one side of his head which grew up-
right, and to conceal this peculiarity he
used to ecrmb all his hair back from hie
forehead. When he went as governor
to the low countries, all the peopleof
fashion imitated the mode, and from
them it descended to our own day.
Dionyslus was extremely short-sight-
ed, and his flatterers, Montaigne tells
us, "ran against oue another in his pre-
sence, and stumbled at or overturned
whatever was under foot, to show that
they were GA purblind as theirsover-
eign."--Youths Companion.
fi LADY OF OVER 80 YEARS.
r•
HER RIGHT SIDE WASS:BADLY PARA-
LYZED.
or Sufferings Were Such That Sha Wished to Dia
Paine's Celery Compound Saved Her Life
and Renewed Her Strength.
THE BEST MEDICINE FOR THE OLD AND YOUNG.
It is now an established fact that
our dear.' Whets and mothers and our
grandparents can have their lives pro-
longed, and t.heir yeas made happy
anti joyous by the use of Paine's Cel-
ery Compound.
Many old people suffer from nerve
troubles, rheumatism, kidney and liver
complaint, sleeplessness, and terrible
paralysis. '\Vith such dangerous dis-
eases clinging to them, they are liable
to drop Off at tiny moment.
If we are truly and honestly interest-
ed in the welfare of the old people,
we will anxiously seek to use the
agency that will hest meet their trou-
bles. In the past, thousands of our
aged people have been rescued from
death by Paine's Celery Compound,
and are now enjoying a happy old age.
Every week new testimony is received
from old people, as well as from their
friends and ;relations, lauding the
strengthening and rejuvenating pow-
ers of earth's best nlelieine.
Mrs. James Cain, of Perntt Settle-
ment, N. S., now in her eighty first
year, has just sent in convincing and
cheering testimony regarding the value
of Paine's Celery Compound ; she
writes Os follows:—
" I arts Nappy to state that Paine's
Celery Compound has been a great
blessing to isle. In November, 1893,
the whole of my right side was para-
lyzed, and the doctor said I was too
weak to take much medicare ; I man-
aged, however, to use a little, and was
;tile to sit up far a short time, hot felt
so bad, that I wished todie, as I throught
death would be a great relief to me.
"In illy weak condition I began using
Paine's Celery Compound. The tirst
bottle gave rue relief. I continued to
use the compound, and I have gained
health, strength itnd flesh, and my
friends say 1 look quite healthy. Al-
though in my eighty first year, my
limbs are getting stronger, and I hope
soon to be quite myself again.
I would advise alt who are suffering
froin paralysis and other troubles to
use Paine's Celery Compound and the
Wills' English Pills that accompany
the compound, and if properly used,
they will surely cure."
Death front Eating Onions.
As a result of over -indulgence in
onions ;it Jeffersonville, Ind., last week,
purchased from a huckster, Herman
Wilson, aged eight years, is dead, and
Elnlere Wilson and Paul Mozier, two
other children, ore lying at the point
of death. During the day the children
purchased several hunches of onions,
and procuring some salt, ate heartily.
Almost immediately they became frig.
The physicians think that poison of
some kind roust have become mixed
with the vegetables.
TIRED, WEAK. NERVOUS,
Means impure flood, and overwork or
too touch strain on brain and body.
The only way to cure is to feed the
nerves on pure blood. Thousands of
people certify that the best blood puri-
fier, the hest nerve tonic and strength
builder is Hood's Sarsaparilla.. What
it has done for others it will also do
tor you --Hood's (;ores.
Nervousness, loss of sleep, loss
of appetite and general de4),;lity
all disappear when Hood's Sar-
saparilla is -persistently taken, and
strong nerves, sweet sleep strong
body, sharp appetite, and in a
word, health and happiness follow the
use of Hood's Sarsaparilla.
The strong point, about Hood's Sar-
saparilla is that they are permanent,
because tney start from the solid
foundation of purified, vitalized and
enriched blood.
One of the patients rn the new
asylum at, I3tockville, A•Ir. Gallagher,
who lately cause from Ottawa, com-
mitted suicide by jumping from a high
cliff into the St. Lawrence.
Hoart Disease Relieved to 30 Minutes
Dr, Agnew'' Cure for the Heart gives perfaet'relief
n all caaas of Organ c or Sympathetic Heart Dia-ne
in 80 minutes, and ape•,dlly eCnets a cure. It is a
aeerless remedy f r Palpitation, Shortness of Breath,
Smothering Spell., Palo in Left Side aid all symtoms
of a Diseasaf Heart. One dose conyinoes. Sold by
Watts & Co.
On Monday night of lash week .t
rumour was circulated in St. John's,
Newfoundland, that the Bank of
Montreal bail suspended, and there was
a run on every hank in the eit.y. Each
hank stood by the others, not, hesitat-
ing to redeem each others' notes. end
the panic WitS ailayed. The business
people took no part in the t•un, which
was confined to the poorer classes.
The rumour was traced (i to a number of
anti -Confederation fanatics,
KiDNEY PACTS.
In Jan., 1892, my Sin was taken with
Kidney disease. Though attended by
three physicians and change of climate
he grew worse and by '9i3 had fallen
from 105 lbs to 95 lbs. In ten days
from starting to use Dr. Chase's Kid-
ney -Liver Pills we were able to move
hire hone. In 4 months he gained 511
Drs. and was fully restored to health
by the use of this medicine. Jno. S.
Hastings, 23 Si. Paul St., Montreal.
"Ten people out of a dozen are inval-
ids," says a recent medical 'authority.
At least eight out of these ten, it is safe
to allow, are suffering from some form
of blood -disease which a persistent use
of Ayer's Sarsaparilla would he sure to
cure. Then, don't he an invalid.
GITTHE BEST.
The public ere too intelligent to pur-
chase a worthless article a serond,tlme,
on the contrary they want the hest 3
Physicians are virtually unanimous In
saying Scott's Emulsion is the hest
forth of Cod Liven• Oil.
Political Points.
Free-trader though he is, Mr. Bull
has no objection to collecting customs
duties at Cloririto,
The Globe complains that the rumor
of Mr. Blake's re-entry into Canadian
politics was stattel for the purpose of
Injuring Mr. Laurier. It wits the Ot-
tawa Free Press that started it. \Vhy
does the Ottawa Free Press wish to in-
jure Mr. Laurier ?
If the National Policy could now
bring rain as well as prosperity it
would be entirely above criticism.
If the price of beef continues to go
rip in the United States, it is reason-
able to expect that the noble animal,
the horse, will become a more valuable
commodity,
Sir Oliver's fame is now spreading
far and wide in the dominions of Uncle
Sart, for most of the great newspapers
have published the following brief but
impress: v: announcement :—"Sir Oliver
Illownt has become the honorary pre-
sident of the Hamilton, Ont., baseball
tears." Iu view of his forthcoming
trip to England the British press will
do well to follow suit.
The Grit mind has an abiding horror
of the "bringing out of Mercier's
bones." They hate any reference to
the public robbery of Quebec to for-
wal'd the Grit cause at Ottawa. The
bones of Mercier are marrowless, but
the memory of his dealings with
Pttcitud and the rest will be meat and
bread for the cause of political purity.
FOR YOUR OUTING GO TO PIOTIEESQOE
puma iSLRHO.
ONH THOUSAND MILES OF LAKIi RIDS
AT SMALL EXPENSE.
Visit this Historical Island, which is the
grandest summer resort on the Great
Lakes. It only costs about $13 from
Detroit ; $15 from Tcicdo ; $18 from
Cleveland, for the round trip, including
steals and berths. Avoid the heat and
dust by traveling on the 1). & C. floating
palaces. The attractions of a trip to the
Mackinac region are unsurpassed. The
island itself is a grand romantic spot, its
climate most invigorating. Two new
steel passenger steamers have just been
built for the upper lake route, costing
$300,000 each. They are equipped with
every modern convenience, annunciators.
hath rooms, etc., illuminated throughout
by electricity, and are guaranteed to be
the grandest, lar est and safest steamers
on fresh water. Th( se steamers favorably
compare with theresit ocean liners in con-
etruction and speed. Four trips per week
between Toledo, Detroit, Alpena, Macki-
nac, St. Ignace, Petoskey, Chicago, "Soo,"
Marquette and Duluth. Daily between
Cleveland and Detroit, and Cleveland ana
Put -in -Bay. The palatial equipment
makes traveling on these steamers titer.
'uglily enjoyable. Send for illustrated
lescriptive pamphlet. Address A. A.
SCHANTZ, G. P. A., D. & C., Detroit, Mich,
The London School Board will ask
for $34,100 to provide more accom-
modation.
Lightning struck and instantly killed
Fred. Moss, aged eight years, at
London last week. Ilis companion
was injured.
Edward J. Edwards, acnrpetcleaner,
of 28 Hayter street. Toronto, committ-
ed suicide by hanging. Iil health was
the cause.
Mr. Joseph Olivier Joseph, B. C. L.,
Q. C., has been appointed Judge for
the District of Montreal, to succeed
the late Judge Barry.
Rev. Wrn. Hail, I't incipal of the
French Methodist Institute, West -
mount, committed suicide by shooting
himself. He had been in ill -health.
At this season of household and do-
mestic anarchy, when so many people
are either in the throes of an annual
house cleaning or recovering from the
agonios of moving, the poet's line, "It
is not always May," is appreciated.
NIAGARA FALLS.
The Present Condition or the Electrae
Power I'Innt,
" Nearly three years ago you pub-
lished a letter from this place in which
I gave some account of how the dreams
of the engineer were in the act of being
realized, and, without injury to the nat-
ural beauties of the spot. Three years
have passed, my work Is ended, and it
seems natural to continue the narra-
tive and tell what these three years
have brought forth. I am perched on
top of a small Eiffel tower, lately erect-
ed, and, casting my eyes up the river,
over the housetops and ,,beyond the
town, I see a new world created. There
is a wide canal leading water into that
gigantic power house, where three tur-
bines are set up to drive three dynamos
of 5,000 horse power each. There Is
the bridge to carry cables across to
the transformer house. Inside the pow-
er house the water is carried down b
pipes 71 feet in diameter into the tur-
bines, whence it passes through a 7,000
feet tunnel under the town, emerging
below the fans and capable of develop-
ing 100,000 horse -power. Far as the eye
can reach extend the company's lands,
with here and there a huge factory,
either now using the water power or
waiting for the electric supply. One of
these uses 3,300 horse -power, another
300 ,a third one 1,500, and that unfin-
Ished mill requires 1,000. You can see,
far away, the model village for work-
ingmen and improved sewage works
with drainage pumps for water supply,
electric light and well -paved streets.
There, again, is the dock, where ships
from all parts of the great lakes can
unload, and there a huge expanse of re-
c./aimed land, while the whole is swept
by the company's rat/way, seven miles
long, connecting every factory with the
great trunk lines. The power is trans-
mitted by electricity, and the first
work Is to produce aluminum with 1,500
horse -power. New types of machines
have been devised for this work• as
also for every other purpose. All crit-
icism as to cost of electric works has
been swept away by the results
achieved, and the efficiency of each
type of machine is greater than has
been attained before. All the inachln-
ery for the first working has boon
made and tested in the shops, and the
last parts are now being set up. The
plans for carrying the power to Buffalo,
eighteen miles distant, are ce:nl,lete.
In a month or two factorizes will be in
full operation ; In a year iluffalo will
110 Supplied ; in two years rho same
eoinpany will be working the Canada
side of the falls, and In ten years (shall
we say ?) the whole of the 100,n00 horse-
power which can be supplied by the
existing hydraulic works will be giving
power to smokeless manufacturing
towns. The period of planning the
transmisei„n sfaheme, of designing the
greatest dynamos In the world and of
construction of the first plant now
closes. The earning of dividends and
the ordering of duplicate maaehlncry is
the future work of the company. In
conclusion, t lis difficult for me to say
who were the boldest—the capitalists
who embarked on the scheme before
any plans were matured, or the manu-
facturers who moved their factories to
this field before it single result had been
achieved. The r,ctlon of both was typ-
ically American, hut their confidence
was not misplaced. Their success is
now a'surred."—Prof, Forbes, in Lon-
don Times.
Carl Von Every, a foul -year-old resi-
dent of Galt, fell into a mill race and
Stas in imminent danger of being
drowned, })r. Mackendrick rescued
11111r a1ticl rem; (111'.1 hint to life.
The centennial of the establishment
of the Orange order in ireltnd will be
celebrated in Ottawa on the twelfth of
.1uly by Orangemen frmn'all parts of
Canada. It is expected that het ween
15,000 and 20,000 Orangemen will be in
the city that day.
Is it marked 18954 TAB
NEWS -RECORD is $1.50
per year, but if paid in
advance only $1. Tbis
seems to be a good oppor-
tunity to save fifty cents. •
Send along subscription
now. Address
The Huron News -Record
CLINTON, ONT.
Property For Sale.
For Bale, the large dwelling end lotrownod and
lately oeoupled by Dr. Aepletoo, on Ontario street.
Has all modern conveniences. Centrally located.
Also a houee and lot adjoining above property,
facing Victoria street. Iror particulars apply to
MANNINO & SCOTT, Clinton,
807 -if
Room for Rent.
Large roots, conveniently stitnte,--oo��,� 4.00ess, at
low rent. Apply to W.IIMPSEARLI9.
851•ef
Two Farms For Sale.
Being Bayfield rLIr o, Ooderiohnip
osed of oTownnnl containing 70
acres, mors or less, all cleared except about five acres
in good state of cultivation: to house on the pre-
mises; well watered; well fenced. Also Lot No. 22
Bayfield Line, comprised of 80 acres, more or lees
about 20 urea bnoh; In good state of cultivation and
well watered; house, barn and frame stable, and
small bearing orchard. Terms reasonable. Apply to
133741JOHN SHEPPARD,
Clinton P. 0.
Mrs, Whitt, Teacher of Music,
Pupil of Mr. Charles W. Landon, of Philadelphia.
The Mason Method used exciubively.
Itis considered by the le +ding Musical Artistes that
no methal develops the technic 10 rapidly as Dr.
Mason's "Toch and Technic."
Plano
Apartments Organ
nts inBes cr Bl ck, over W. Beesley'e and Technicon for nee of Albert
street, Clinton,
Wash Day Made Easy.
manufacture th (among
Magic Washing Me secured achine• ht toAlready I have made and
sol number. The purchasers aro delighted. To
Dee ui machine on triol 13 cure to make a sale if
one is required. Wash -day is made very easy and
carpets can be kept perfectly clean; no spLeu,ng or
waste water whatever. The prise has been set ata
very low figure. The machine way be seen at my
reeidenceon Isaac Street. B. COLE 800.t
NOTICE TO NEWS -RECORD READERS.
The publisher would esteem it a favor it readers
would, when making their purchases mention that
they saw the merchant's advertisement In Tas
NEWS-RECVKn.
PIANO TIINittG•
MR. J, W. MOORE has returned from the Evans
Bros. Piano Factory, Ingersoll. whore he has acquir-
ed a thorough knowledge of Plano Tuning, Ile is
well recommended as a Piano Tuner and Is prepared
0o tune and repair Pianos at reasonable figures.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Address J. W. MOORE,
Box 113, Cliuton, Ont. 8554
t;; • DROPERTY FOR SALE OR
zr*'A. RENT.—Advertisers will find "The
Fh' News -Record" one of the best mediums
in the County of nuron. Advertise in
"The Nees-Record"—The Double Cfrealation Talks
to Thousands. Rates a low as coy. 1'
COMFORTS OF HOME.
Ladies who desire the comforts of home, but
find it necessary now to be as Economical as
possible, can have sorno of the comforts, at
very little cost, by following these instruc-
tions :
COOD CARPET AND RUGS
CANNOT BE MADE ON HAND LOOMS
'UNLESS:
FIRST,—You Prepare your Rage
in rho Proper manner ;
SECOND,—See that only the boat
of Warp or Chain is used ;
THIRD,—The WEAVING rightly TO
done. REMEMBER
I Am Prepared to do the Best
of Weaving at reasonable prices
Carpets and Rugs You Need, '
And you can have them woven in a first-class
manner, in many beautiful and handsome
patterns—from the plain bit or miss kind (in
Carpets) to the gaudy striped, or fancy center
with border. Rugs too, of all shades, colors
and kinds, you can have woven.
YOUR CHOICE OF WART'.
My Warps are hougl(t direct from the Mills
and you can have your choice Cam/ 'an or
five-ply American ---the very hr. the market
and Twenty Shades to choose from.
Prices per Yard and a Yard Wide (when
we furnish Warp,) from 16c. up
Samples of work may be seen at my residence,
East Street, Godetich (Mrs. Miller's old
stand).
W. A• ROSS, - East St., Goderich.
POINTS
Horsemen
Will consult their own
interests by getting
their...
Route Bills,
Tabulated
Pedigrees
• 1 • • • . • •
And Any Other PRINTING They May Need
AT
THE NEWS-RECOHO OFFICE,
We have a flee and Large Assortment of
Horse Cuts and can turn out work in the
hest style and promptly. Orders by mail
will receive our best attention.
Advertise your Horse's Renta in THF
News-R>tconn, it will pay you 1 Rates rea-
sonable.