HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-11-20, Page 7Me Huron Rews•RRQard
i,t4 aTear '^T '4140 in Ativiunat
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'A'148 Turkey' ,1Fii 'ewCil,
When 1 was hatcltea, deap'inother.
The bud WOO ou the bug
wish .to gracious, mother,
Tbe bough was budding now.
' But oh, 'tie (rear *Noxel,lber,
The` moul irF which you say,.
'We',f;,ir'slati 11 .caeca, by t, e ilnilllon
TO Make OkOilrlay.
Qh, rue file hour that s*tw me
Come slipping from my shell
The sunnrner days that knew me
An innocent, young swell!
Oh, blithely did I gobble
All through the month of June ;
But now, Thanksgiving coming,
How altered is my tune.
I know you told me, mother, '
I tntst not eat so much ;
I know you' warned rue, mother,
To flee the fatal hutch.
But youth is gay and thoughtless,
My appetite was strong,
And consequently. dearest,
Your darling son went wrong.
You see me here in prison,
Reflecting on my face,
While every precious moment
I grew in size and weight.
But hark ! what horried clamor
Is that? that awful thud
Oh, who, the farmer's spilling
My youthful comrade's blood.
And now he's coming hither
I see the gleaming axe!
Farewell, farewell, dear mother;
You'd best be making tracks!
Soon, soon my fondest mother,
I'll lie among the slain,
And budding boughs next spring, dear,
Will bud for me in vain.
Varna.
Evangelistic services are in progress
in the Bayfield Road Presbyterian
church near here, The pastor, Rev.
J. A. MacDonald is assisted by the
Rev. J. W. Mitchell who aided him at
similar services at Blake. The meet-
ings are well attended and give promise
of increasing interest.
Blake.
A very successful series of evangelis-
tic services, extending over three
weeks, has just been brought to a close
in the Presbyterian church here. The
pastor, Rev. J. A. MacDonald, was
assisted throughout by the Rev. J. W.
Mitch10, M. A., of Thorold. The at-
tendrroffe was large from the outside
and on some occasions the largest the
ppastor. ever saw within the church.
Manyi`bmaiued as inquirers from time
to tune, the greater numbers of whom
found the rest for which they were
seeking. Professing christians have
been greatly cheered and strengthenel,
non -church goers have been drawn out
and 'the whole community stirred as
never before to consider eternal verities.
Mr. Mitchell' is an earnest and able
preacher of the Gospel and possesses
special qualifications for conducting
evangelistic services.
DID YOU EVER THINK
That you Cannot he well unless you
have pure,` rich blood? If you are
weak, tired, languid and all run down,
it is becuase your blood is impoverished
and lacks vitality. These troubles may
be overcome by hood's Sarsa-)arilla be-
cause Hood's Sarsaparilla mases pure,
rich blood. It is, in truth the great
blood purifier.
HOOD'S PILLS cure liver ills, con-
stipation, hillionsness, jaundice, sick
headache, indigestion.
The Editor's Course.
An exchange says : "The editor that
can't stand the abuse of the whole town
he is situated in had better go out of
business, for he never will Le of any
account as a journalist. It will not
pay for any editor to he at all sensitive
to abuse. Why is this? Because an
editor talks to and for the public ;
e erything he says for this thing and
apinst that is said publicly, and as
every question is supposed to have two
sides, the editor is dealt with accord-
ingly. Things in which he may have
no interest personally, if he publishes
one side, he must expect to be handled
without gloves by those who see dif-
ferent. With the true editor that is all
right. He expects and would feel
about asa lastyear's bird nest without it.
He would feel about as important as a
linen duster in midwinter, if no abuse
ever met him, and his feelings would
not be deceptive. Give him plenty of
so-called abuse and he knows at once
that his work is effective, and if he is
right he will work all the harder, and
if wrong he can correct his work."
FIFTY-TWO DIVIDENDS.
As a general thing invetors are
pleased to receive Only tWodi.vidends a
year, and if they arepaid with regular-
ity are fully satisfied. When one,
however, can receive fifty-two divi-
dends in a year upon an investment of
only three dollars, the matter deserves
very serious attention.
The Independeat of New York for
forty-seven years has held the first
position among the great religions
literary and family weeklies of the
land. It presents features for the com-
ing year far in advance of any hereto-
fore offered. It has the leading con-
tributors of the world, it prints the hest
poetry, it has twenty-one departments,
edited by specialists, devoted to Fine
Arts. Science, Insurance, Finance,
Biblical Research, Sunday -School,
Missions, Health, etc. The Indeperld-
ent is particularly fitted for intelligent
people,. whether professional men, busi-
ness men or farmers, and for their
families. It costs but six cents a week,
and gives a great deal for the money.
A subscr,ibpr receives flfty-two divi-
dends a1410 ` ..
The sttbgOription price of The Inde-
pendent is onlrthree dollars a year, or
at that rate for any part of a year, and
a silmple copy will he sent to any per-
son free b addressing The Independ-
ent, New York City.
•
Mr. William Cameron was burned to
.death in his house near Thamesville.
TI4i4>ik0017114011MOS.
Thanks, to, tier QQod we pay,
Thanks for the year
Of love and .cheer,
Of conetant good,.
Thanks to ear Ghia this day,
Thanks to our God we pay,
For morning light,
For 'noontide's sheen,
For quiet e'en.
For peaceful night,
Thanks to our God this day.
Thanks to our Godwe pay,
For winter's ,Sn , w,,
For springs.softilow,
For summer's: glow,
For autump'sfa shove,
Thanks to our God this day.
Thanks to our God we pay,
For senile and tear, ,
For grief and cheer,
For grain, for loss.
For crown, for cross
Thanks to our God this day.
You may eat cheap food and not be
seriously hurt by it ; but you cannot
take chew medicines without positive
injury.tIf you use any substitute for
Ayers Sarsaparilln, you do so at the
peril of yonr health, perhaps of your
life. Insist on having Ayer s, and no
other.
Mrs. James McKenzie, a widow,
committed suicide by drowning herself
in the Head River, Dalton Township.
She leaves a large family of young
children.
TO CONSUMPTIVES.
The undersigned having been restored to health
by simple means, after Buffering far several years
with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease
Consumption, is anxious to make known to'bis fellow
sufferers the means of pure. To those who desire it,
he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copy of the
proscription used. which they will and a sure cure for
Consumption, Aafhnta, Catarrh, Brownchitis and
all throat ,,u.i Lung Maladies. Ho hopes
all sufferers will try hie remedy, as it ie invalu-
able. 'f hose desiring the presedptton, which will coat
them nothing, and may prove a blessing, will please
address,
Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Brooklyn, New
York.
A celebratiou was held at the Metro-
politan Opera House, New York, in
honor of the 80th birthday of Mrs Eliz-
al,et.h Cady Stanton, the pioneered wo-
man's rights, under the auspices of the
National Council of Women of the
United States.
Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes
Dr, Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief
n all oases of Organo or Sympathetic Heart Dtseaso
in S0 minutes, and speedily effects a cure. It 1s a
aeerloss remedy f ,r Palpitation, Shortness of Breath,
Smothering Spells, Pala In Left Bide and all symtorns
of a Diaeaee.f Heart. One dose convinces. Bold by
Watts & Co.
The sentence of W. H. T. Durrant at
San Francisco for the murder of
Blanche Lamont was postponed for two
weeks to allow his counsel time to pre-
pare a motion for a new trial.
A VAST DIF-
FERENCE.
HOW TO DISTINGUISH TIIE GENU-
INE FROM THE IMITATIONS
AT A GLANCE.
Paine's Celery Compound
"Makes People Well."
Other Preparations Mislead and
Deceive.
There is truly a wonderful difference
when the pure, solid, heavy and legal
gold coin is compared with the miser-
able iiniLotion.
The genuine coin is passed with con-
fidence from one person to another; all
people believe in it. How is it with
the imitation ---that spurious coin made
and issued by dark and criminal hands?
It is made in dark places ; it is issued
stealthily to deceive and de: raud ; and
all who are connected with the work
of deception are ever fearful of the
hands of justice.
The genuine gold coin has music
and crispness in its ring; the base coin
sounds dead and harsh to the ear.
As the genuine gold coin and the imi-
tation differ so vastly, so also is there
a world of difference between Paine's
Celery Compound and the imitations
of Celery that people are frequently
deceived by.
Paine's Celery Compound is univer;
sally popular owing to its great
efficacy ; it is hailed everywhere as the
great healer of disease ; it is recom-
mended by professional men all over
this continent; it is genuine, reliable
and honest, and "makes people well."
The imitations, and all the crude
preparations, are made to sell without
regard to results. Deceived buyers
are naturally indignant at loss of
money and the aggravation of their
troubles. When such imitations are
used, life is positively endangered.
The genuine Paine's Celery Com-
pound—the kind that cures—is easily
distinguished by the • words "Paine's
Celery Compound," and the "stalk" of
celery, found on the bottle and outer
cartoon. Look -for these special fea-
tures and you always get justivhat will
meet your case.
TIM LONDQN TflLES,
4,
SQME OF THE VICTORIE WON BY
THE THONi?aRER.
-� ..
The Acta* MAns.g'eFn,l t oC thq; 1rap1
Always Sp the Bands of Young Moa-'
Extracts From nn Article b7 the I4ate
Mr- Ore amen, the Times War Corres-
pondent, in McClure's Magazine.
In these days of blatant Journallam
It is refreshing to recall Nome of the
great deeds of The Times, and, to re-
member that they were allowed to
epealt for themselves. It organized the
historic campaign against the Corn
taws, and put victory into the hands
of Richard Cobden ; it crippled the
French Republic of , 1848, and aroused
England against the situation so that
more than 200,000 volunteer constables
were enrolled against the Chartists;
it preached a crusade against R1ssla,
and even when the Crimes, was invad-
ed, 1t indicted the generalship of the
British commander-in-chief and com-
pelled the Prime Minister, Lord Aber-
deen, to resign his office. Prom the
time of the Duke of Wellington to the
time of Lord Wolseley, its world-wide
corps of correspondents had penetrated
into the secrets of camp and court
alike. All this has meant the employ-
ment of first-rate talent and the ex-
penditure of vast sums of money. Yet
boa oaie word of boasting has ever ap-
pea ed in the columns of The Times in
the present century. Its mechanism
has never been paraded before the
public.
It is not too much to say that John
Walter the second was the most com-
manding, the most creative, and the
most many-sided editor the world has
ever seen. The common impression Is
that John Thaddeus Delane,who after-
wards occupied the eritor's chair, was
absolutely independent of Mr. Walter,
but the truth is that the editor was
always under control. Mr. Delane had
the strategic mind, the personal mag-
netism,' the profound intuition, the
firm hand, the self control and com-
monsense of a torn general. He was
a commander of almost immeasurea-
ble resorces, a courtly, chivalrous gen-
tleman; but he .was not a man who
could, like Mr. Walter, look upon the
convulsions and conflicts of the world
with eyes unclouded by personal sym-
pathy. Mr. Delane used to dine with
the great statesmen and philosophers
of his day, and he would have been
more than human not to have re-
sponded to the influences to which he
was occasionally subjected. Mr. Wal;
ter stood in the shadow and watched
over his editor, rarely interfering
openly, but giving from time to time
signals that were never disregarded.
As Mr. Walter advanced in life he
became first a magistrate, then high
sheriff, and later on member of par-
liament for his county. In and out of
parliament he was always the same—
inscrutable, immovable. He declared
war in 1834 on Lord Melbourne's Poor
Law, and prophesied that the union
workhouse system organized on such
a scale would partly depopulate the
country. Year after year he fought
against the scheme, but it was carried
through parliament in spite of his
heroic opposition. Indeed, this was.the
only time he suffered an important de-
feat. The' coalition of the two parties
upon the measure so disgusted him
that he turned his back upon parlia-
mentary life. During the great famine
of 1846-47 three millions of population
were lost to Ireland through death
and emigration under the operation
of this system, and on his deathbed
Mr.Walter learned that the brutal law
was utterly discredited.
There is a marble tablet set over
one of the doorways in Printing
House Square as a memorial of a
great event in the history of The
Times. Upon this stone is carved the
story of how the paper, in 1840, at
enormous risk and expense, exposed
gigantic frauds and saved millions to
the merchants of London. The cost of
this work was so great that a large
fund was subscribed to reimburse The
Times; but Mr.Walter insisted that the
money should he used to found scholar-
ships connected with Oxford, Cam-
bridge and Christ's Hospital. The tab-
let in Printing House Square was put
there by the grateful commercial com-
munity, and another tablet was plac-
ed in the Royal Exchange.
The power of The Times grew. In
1847 John Walter the second died of
cancer in the throat. IIis eldest son,
Jahn Walter the third, took his place
in parliament and at the head of the
paper. He 1s to -day the absolute mas-
ter of The Times. For 47 years he
controlled that vast organization, and
during 35 years of the time he has
served his country in parliament. He
is now 75 years old, and spends much
of his time at Bearwood, where he Is
devoted to landscape gardening and
other improvements. Like his father,
Mr. Walter is intensely British. Under
his administration The Times 'has re-
mainedthe first newspaper in the
world; but, above all, it has deeply
impressed u'Pon its readers the indi-
visibilty of the British Empire, and
has pleaded powerfully against every
attempt to disintegrate it. That idea
overshadows all others in its columns.
The device at the head of the editorial
page represents three books—times
past, times present and times future.
The pages of the past and present are
open, the book of the future is closed.
This symbolizes _the policy of The
Tames. It alms to represent and sup-
port day by day the known will of the
British majority when the popular
mind does not conflict with sound
morals or the principle of constitgtion-
al monarchy.
In a certain sense the editor, Mr.
George Earle Buckle, and the acting
manager, Mr. C. E. Moberly Bell—
representing John Walter and his son
Arthur—are supreme in their respec-
tive departments; but the final autho-
rity is still exercised on vital questions
by Mr. Walten. He is a grave, well-
read man, with., strong convictions.
There is something leonine about his
head and face, and still there is not
a gentler heart In England. His gen-
erous patriarchal nature Is reflected
throughout the system over which he
Presides so wisely, so moderately and
so incorruptibly. Scores of grey -hatred
pensioners are protected by his charit-
able hand. The sternness of The Times
is shown only tee the public. Its ma,
vete bounties are countless. t)hiidren
are born at Bearwood to serve in Its
Make and they die Mesabi'? Ks: 'narTI P °
1}uring the Tae -Pink ,rebellion In
China, M'. Bowlby, the special corres-
pondent or The ''Pines, was 4ielzed and
Ilnprisened with Slr Henry Parke, the
British ,pilnlster. Mr, 15lowlby had
'dared to tell;, the truth and he was
slowly tortured to it eatII.•The story
of his. horrible fate was printed in The
Times; but after the regular edition
was printed, the presses were stot5ped,
and a single copy Of another edition,
containing a mild account of the death,
was struck off and mailed to the cor-
respondent's aged mother—so that she
might never know how her son died.
That touching incident illustrates the
feeling of mutual consideration and
the esprit de corps that permeates the
service. There are mien now in the
office who. have toiled there eontiny-
ously for over half a century. ' Most
of the employes In the mechanical de-
partments are related to each other by
blood or marriage. There is one 'man
of 82 years. Thirty-six men are over
60 years old, and 10 are over 70. Not-
withstanding this, the active manage-
ment has always been in the bands
of young men. Mr. Delane, for in-
stance, was 24 years old when he be-
came editor. Mr. Walter was only 29
when he succeeeded his father; and
he is fond of saying that the united
ages of the editor, manager and two
principal assistants then amounted to
11 years. Mr. Muckle, the present
ed tor, was only 30 years old in 1884,
when he assumed full power. Mr. Bell
the active manager, is a comparative-
ly young man. It is interesting to
see how youth and age, the university
and the farm, are blended in The
Times office, " Oxford and Cambridge
furnishing the editors, Bearwood the
printers and mechanics.
DONT'S FOR BICYCLERS.
The Wltoelmen Should Avoid Scorching
and Doing the .Century."
Don't wheel up a steep hill. Leave
that sort Of thing to fellows who
haven't enough sense to go in when
it rains. What gain is there in it,
anyhc.w Yorf''can walk up and push
_your wheel just Ls fast, and with one-
quarter of the exertion. If too march
wheeling on the level road is bad, too
much hill -c imbing is ten times worse.
Isf you could 1)ok into the minds of
the smart hill -climbers, you would find
that they half kill themselves to make
bystanders think they are wonderful
riders. Really, that sort of thing Is
too silly to talk about with patience.
Don't coast too much. If you feel
that life without coasting is a mock-
ery, then go to some hill that you are
thoroughly familiar with, where there
are po o.ossing, where you can watch
the road for at least one hundred yards
ahead, and then take care. No matter
whether you Lave coasted dowen the
hill a hundred times before or not,
the danger is always just as great.
Perhaps we are never in so great peril
as when we think we knew it all.
Don't "scorch" in the streets. A.
any crossing you are liable to run
over some feedest:tan or to collide with
a blg truck or carriage. Lith'r one
may mean a life lost, or at least broken
bones. Yate wouldn't drive a horse at
a 2.40 gait through the streets. Re-
member a fkeyele is quite as danger-
ous.
Don't ride on the left side of the
street. Your place is on the right side,
because a bicycle is a vehicle in the
eyes of the law, Laving the same rights
and subject to the same rules as any
other ve hicle. If anything happens to
you because you are on the wrong side
of the street you cannot recover dam-
ages.
Don't think, because scmebody you
know has wheeled a "century," that
you must d) it too. There is really
veu little satisfactt-n in riding one
hun,:red miles merely for the sake of
saying that you have done it. If any
other whet linen cheeses to tire his mus-
cles and overstialn his heart for a
mere bit of boasting, le him do it. I
knew that most of us are sorely tempt-
ed by the "century" folly, But think
a moment. If you owned/a fine thor-
oughbred horse, would you run the risk
of ruining him forever by speeding him
to the utmost limit of his strength for
rt` whole day? Yet is not your ON*
health more valuable to you than.I211
.the horses in the world?
Country and City Life.
It i• impossible to say when the
drift toward the towns will cease, or
be equalized by the contrary drift frons
the cities toward the country. We see
both tendencies 'at work at the present
time, and every student of sociology
it at liberty to predict for himself what
Is going to be the result of these very
interesting population movements. But
at any rate it is pretty safe to say
that life in the cities and In the coun-
talike w111 at some day be more
sdtisfactory than it is at the present
t e, the city adopting ,he more de-
sirable features of country existence,
and the village and rural community
availing themselves of many advan-
trges heretofore possessed by the big
towns alone. The electric light and the
trolley car are doing much for the
country districts, and in many States,
among them Connecticut, Rhode Is-
land and Massachusetts, a beginning
has been made toward betta r country
roads. The t lephone is doing much
to improve rural conditions, and city
capital Is being invested in the coun-
try in the form of attractive vans
and suburban estates.
In other words, improved methods of
communication and transportation are
bringing the country and city nearer
together, to the evident advantage of
both, and the same means will eon-
tinue to be effective only in a greater
degree, in the future. Perhaps the
sociologists of the twentieth century
will wonder at the importance which
we of the present generation attach to
the movement of population from town
to farm and back agtin. He will see
on every hand attractive cities which
will have done away largely witlihthe
noise and discomfort of m ;dein ex-
istence. and rural regions where the
best advantages of the towns have been
secured.—Providence Journal.
Economical Rn8Rlan Workmen.
The Russian workman spends very
little for food, ledging and dress, as
compared with the foreign artisan.
Coming from the village, he is very
modest In his demands. His food Is
'very simple, but it is abundant, and
answers to his taste. In Moscow, for
example, the board of a workman
amounts to not more than ten shilling's
pex month.
......z.-...� it
195 -NEW 01413114.895i.U
Aa, Valencia, 8..
tanarl, iondon Layoff
E*tI<a a L.emoa,
Orange and itron l.'g�a1,
FRUTI T SPECIAL DRIVES FOR'gASH OR TRADE. 0 lbs. Large NeWRaides for 25c.
0.14x. t'atras Qurrants for 25o. 6 lbs. Cooking Figs for 26e. 01ba. good; Mee for 25e.
Sugar. --The third earfrom Redpeths, Montreal, to hand. 221bs. Extra Standard Granulat-
ed for 11. 28 Light Coffee for 11. 20 lbs. Extra Bright for 41.
Tetitsi—Extraordinary chines—t!Mx-
.
Japan, Black and Greens from 10c. lb. np. Chinese x-
ture only 20o. or 6 lbs, for 1¢l. m
C*'OVkery.—Direct Importation from England and Germanyy, 2f Crockery, China and Glaaa'
ware. Special Bargains is Dinner, Tea and Toilet Bets, ttuitable for Xmas and Wedding
Presents.
CASH .PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS.,
J. W. IR'W IN, - - — (rocer,
MACKAY BLOCK. • - - CLINTON, - •
OUts,. A.P�icots,; t
Peaches and FIO�p wre It Inmost you to know that
Mute
1 where Yon _boy from sup you set the
Dates and Mots of beat eleatied Ltirraoti�ad lta1.h i
41 the price of Uneleanld Fruit?
kinds•
1,
Leslie's Carriage Factory.
BUGGIES, PHAETONS, CARTS AND WAGONS—all of the best works
manabip and material. ViSrAll the latest styles and most modern improve—
ments. All work warranted. Repairing and repainting promptly attended
to. Prices to suit the times.
WY-FACTORY—corner Huron and orange Streets, Clinton. 657—
Buy Where You Can. Always Get The Best Values
--At The Lowest Price.
I have just received a direct importation of New Seasons Uncolored Japan Teas. 'May'
pickiogs from 20c. to 50e. per lb., ask for Samples—will offer special cuts in 10 or 20 Ib.;
Caddies—Finest Black and Green Teas, also agent for the Delicious Mazawakee Tea, put up in
} lb. and 1 lb. lead packages.
New Raisins, finest select. New Currants, New Elme Figs, New Figs in mats, 4 lbs.for
25e., New English Peels, Lemon, Orange, Citron.
In Crockery, China and Glassware, I offer Special Bargains in Handsomely decorated
Dinner, Tea and Toilet Sets. Beautiful Crystal Table Sets cheap.
CASH FOR BUTTER AND EGGS.
Gratefully appreciating past favors, I respectfully solicit a continuance of the same,
N. Robson, - Albert St., Clinton.
CLINTON 8A8H, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY
0
S. S. COOPER
9
PROPRIETOR
General Builder and Contractor.
This factory bas been under the personal supervision and one owner for eight
years. We carry an extensive and reliable stock and prepare plans and give
estimates for and build all classes of buildings on short notice and on the closest
prices. All work is suprrvieed in a mechanical way and satisfaction
guaranteed. We sell all kinds of interior and exterior material.
Lumber, Lath Shingles, Lime Sash Doors, Blinds, Etc
Agent for the CELEBRATED GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured
at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates belcre placing your orders,
A BURGLAR,
Opens Safes with a Jimmy,
—'BUT WE
--Open People's Hearts with
NEW AND SEASONABLE GROCERIES
This week we received a supply of New
RAISINS, CURRANTS, SALMON, LOBSTERS.
All of which are very fine. rtarRemen ber we have a few pounds of COOPER'S
DAISY BAKING POWDER left.
-THE CASH CROCERY.A•:f- -
OGLE COOPER & CO., • Clinton.
THE HUB GROCERY.
ALWAYS RIGHT.s
Our Stock is complete in canned goods such as SALMON, HADDIE,
FRESH HERRING, LOBSTER, BEEF, DUCK
CHICKEN rU R K EY.
Canned Vegetables—TOMATOES, PEAS, CORN, PUMP-
KIN.
Canned Fruit—PEACHES, STRAWBERRIES, APPLES, &o.
In jams we have PEACH, STRAWBERRIES, RASPBERRIES, CUR-
RANTS, &o.
In Pickles—McCARRY ONIONS, CUCUMBERS, CAULIFLOWER, and
WALNUT.
All kinde of Spices, quality pure. Tea, all grades; we push the sale of Ben
Her Blend which draws very fine. We have a big assortment of Crockery.
GEORGE SWALLOW, Clinton,
ENLARGED BUSINESS.
We have just resumed control of the Whole Store and hays enlarged our Stork to meet the
demands of our increasing trade. All goods marked down to a Cash Basis. Special cuts in
CROCKERY and GLASSWARE. Inspection Solicited. Highest prices paid for good Butter
and Eggs. Agent for Celebrated Monsoon Teas.
G. J. STEWART, Grocer, - Albert St, Clinton
+.+++++++++t++t+++++++++++t+t.++t++t++++t+t
King of all
Bicycles.
+
Light Wight and
a !rigidity. Every Ma-
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Absolutely
the Best.
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Superior Material
and Scientific Work-
manship. .
S Styles
Highest Honors at the World's Columbian Exposition.
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