HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1898-01-06, Page 2' l-I"rern News-Recora
yew a Year, In Advance,
TliURBDAY. JANUARY (ith, 1898. '
THE PROVINCIAL PIGGERY
Committee Investigating Mr. St.
John's Charges.
MR.
WOXON GIVESEVIDENCE,
Hogs Sold for Food Ten Days After
the Cholera Outbreak.
BUTCHER NEWTON'S STORY.
Diseased Animals Slitughtered That
Were Unfit for .Foods -Some Died
Before the Butcher Could Get Hie
Knife Into 'Theta—"We Actually
Killed a Dead Pig," Declared the
Witness --Yesterday's Doings in the
Legislature.
Toronto, Deo. 29.---(Special.)—The
public accounts committee was the
centre of interest this morning. Mr.
St- John has talked piggery until the
Grit members of the House grunt when
they see him arise. The effect of their
jocularity is riot that MI, St. John is
greeted with opprobriety where he goes,
but that crowded houses gather to hear
' his story of theswinarium wherever be is
billed to -speak. Mr. St. John is cer-
tain of his -ground and can prove his
statements, •
To -day the committee devoted .stalely
to the hearing of evidence.
Mr. St. John began by st✓ating that
he intended at once to peeve that the
Ontario Government heel been a party
to a sale of sly. le -tainted pork. He
proposed tlirat Mr. Fred, Newton be
called o give evidence.
Mil. Harcourt, for the Government,
esreplied that, to'begin at the beginning,
Prof. Noxon should be called first.
A motion to call Mr. Newton to give
evidence was voted down by 11 to 9.
Mr. Noxon was then sworn, and
began to tell the story of the hog chol-
era at the Humber piggery.
Mr. Kidd objected to the oath ad-
ministered.
"He only swore that he yvould tell
the truth," said Mr. Kidd. "Ile swore
nothing about the whole truth and
nothingbut the truth."
Mr. Noxon was sworn again. -
"Is the Bible of the revised edition ?"
questioned Mr. Harcourt.
Mr. Noxon knew little about the
pig•killing. He had received reports
from Mr. Warner, the pig janitor,
The hogs had been sick, and were ex-
amined by a veterinary surgeon, who
said that they had become ill from
over -feeding, Then the cholera broke
out. He knew but little directly.
The hogs which were sold for food
were sold ten days after the beginning
of the disease. The hogs were all in
the same building, breathing the same
air, and separated only by low boards.
Mr. Noxon did not know whether
there was an inspector at the killing of
the hogs. He said that ho had re
ceived uo report from Dr. Smith, whom
he had given charge of the affair, until
Dee'. .21', 1897, atthoueh_ the killieg
took place on' July 15, 1896.
"Would you ,eat the pork sold at
that piggery?" asked Mr. St. John.
"Yes I certainly would," said Mr.
Noxon.
"That •will do)•then," said Mr. St•
John.
The Government asked for Dr.
Smith, but the opposition raised such
objection that Fred. Newton was call
ed.
Fred. Newton is the young man
who butchered the hogs at the Hum•
her, and a gory tale he told, He, with
his brother and a young man named
Dunn, were employed by Mr, Robert
Hunter, the Government cattle buyer,
to butcher the hogs which were fat
enough and large enough. They kill.
ed.for two clays. The first was suffer-
ing with canter, and yet it was the
best of the lot.
While I Was killing, hogs were
dying in the pens," said Newton.
"We would take a hog out and dress
it, and, coming back for another, would
find that some in the same pens were
dead. Not one hog was fit for food,
•about half of them were shipped. Out
of some of those shipped large purple
epote had to be cut, Five or six pigs
were dressed, but were so badly dis-
eased that they had to be burned, We
killed and dressed hogs that were
dying, They were lying on their
rides choking and 'giving „ their last
kick."
• "Did you stick any pig that was
dead ?„asked Mr. St, John.
"We actually killed a dead pig,"
said the witness, while the committee
smiled. •
Mr. Watnor, the keeper, told us that,
the hog had not been long dead, and
we might dress him, anyway," "
"Was that hog shipped V' aeleed,
;Mr. St. John.
• I believe it was," said the witness.
The Government did not ask to
cross-examine Newton, but called Dr.
Smith..
Dr. Smith said that he would as-
sume all responsibility for what was
done by the Government. He had
made an impaction on Saturday, and
found that 12 hogs, had cholera, while
the others were free from the dieeaee,
lie ordered all to be killed, and thoee
infected to be destroyed, while those
Bich were not could be sold. For
this reason Mr. Sweetapple went to
the Central Prison to examine what
was sent in. Some hogs came in their
which Mr, Sweotapple did opt see.
He would not assume responsibility for
them.
WINTER IN THE YUKON,
Words Powerless to Describe the
Condition of White Pass Trail.
LATEST FROM MAJOR WALSH•
a
HAS SUFFICIENT SUPPLIES
MONTHS TO COME.
P011 SIX
Ottawa, Dgo430.--A letter from In-
spector Wood at.Skagnay, Dated Dec.
18, was received by the Comptroller of
Mounted Police to day. The hotel
men there, he says, are hard put to find
accommodation for the people crowd•
ing into Skaguay. The weather there
is described as 'awful.' Words will
not describe the state of the White
Pass trail. Heavy frosts and thaws
altotnating have made it one•g'}.ai•e of
ice, which the euow savers to the
depth of a foot or tli0ore. Six cote
stables started to teleefover some forty
pound tobogganf to Bennett. They
would, with great labor, reach the top
of one ,of the euluerous hills only to
slide back at a breakneck pace to the
bottom again. Finally the Inspector
left the trail and took to the ice on the
Skaguay river, but found it very dang-
erous, opeu water in some places and
thin ice • in others, aud. very rough
where the ice was safe. Constable
McNair went through iuto the icy
water. Creepers were procured next
day and the toboggans taken to the
sumit. On Dec, 18 -it was raining in
torrents at Skaguay.
DIFFICULTIES OF TRAVEL,
Speaking of the difficulties of travel,
Inspector Woods says, 'Every day wen
from Dawson are arriving hero on foot,
having abandoned their sleighs because
they could not get through with theta.
They all report to the same slyest,
namely, that from eight to ten miles
of the lower end of Like Benuett is
still open, though the open end is
frozen solid. The open end of Like
Labarge is open and so also is Marsh
lake. Thirty Mile river is quite open
but the ice in the Hootalinque was
commencing to jam and it will soon
freeze over. This report is from a man
who left the Hootalinqua on Dec. 8.
Mr. Piche was still at White Florae
and could not proceed, although he
has only two dog teams with him, and
has two Indians to help him. Mr. J.
D. McGregor, government inspector of
trines, is still at Bennett, although
anxious to get on. He writes on Dec,
15 that lie is going to haul his stores
down to the edge of the ice and float
across the open water on rafts, bet, 'as
he says, even that will not help him
much as other lakes arid rivers are
open, and if be heel to build rafts very
often he would be too late to be of
much assistance to Major Walsh, whom
lieu following with houses and d'ogs•r
Persoaaaai Chats.
The Duke of Cambridge completed
his sixtieth year of military service on
Nov. 3. He was gazetted a brevet colo-
nel on Nov. '3', 1837.
Don Livio Borghese, second son of
the Roman Prince Borghese, is about to
Marry Mlle. Porges, daughter of the
rich Hebrew banker of Paris.
The marriage of Miss Lillian Gary,
daughter of Postmaster General Gary,
to Mr. Robert Taylor of New York will
not take place until next spring.
M. 13. Curtis, the actor, has a fine
collection of elk's teeth. In Oregon
.recently he bought300 from the Indians,
paying an average of 30 cents apiece for
them.
F. Marion Crawford, the popular
novelist, waited over 15 years to see his
first magazine article published. In the
mOantilne he had written about a dozen
two volume novels.
General Charles E. Hovey, who died
recently in Washington, was one of the
originators of the'normat school idea in
Illinois and the first president of the
Illinois Normal school at Normal.
Miss Mary Rachel Dobson, a daugh-
ter of Austin Dobson, is one of the most
active workers in the university settle-
ment for women in Bombay, India.
Their work is principally among the
Parsees,
Pope Leo rna-1e eight hogsheads of
wine this year from the vineyard he had
set out in the Vatican gardens. A small
part of the wine is reserved for his own
use, another portion is sent to churches
to be used at mass, and the rest is sold.
Chess players often die of brain dis-
ease, and the latest example is Berthold
Englisch. the Austrian champion, who
was famous for his proficiency. Since
1879, when he first became widely
k,rown, he has engaged in frequent con-
tests with meters in the art. •
The mission of Hood's Sarsaparilla
is to cure disease, and thousands of,
testimonials prove it fulfils ite mission
well.
A single bell is mode by a German
manufacturer to give more than. one
note. A number of dents divide the
bell into seotions csf different ekes, and
each section when struck emits a tone
corresponding to its size.
The Archbishop of tlatnterl►atty ou
the Temperance 311 oye>tttcaat.
'1'o tho'great cause of temperance I
have been attached now for a great
number Rf 'et►re, and have given to it
a great deal of labor, so far as it waa
possib10 for me to fit that labor in with
the duties which belong to Me fn the
Church of Christ. And 1 have alwaye
looked upon everything that I could
FAIRLY WELL ISN'T
WELL ENOUGH•
Let us say your wages aro twenty
shillings a week. You have worked
bald, done, your beet, and feel that
you have earned your money. Very
good. No,w imagine that when Satur•
day night comes your employer berm
and haws and wants to put you off
do for the promotion of this cause as 1 with fifteen, I'll be bound you would
being closely bound up with the work think yourself herd's treated. What
which I have to do as the minister of are the great strikes in this country
the Lord to the people of England. commonly about? Why, in some
I aiu myself a total abatsinep be, fashion they are about wages or hours;
it comes to the same thing. Be it nn -
cause I believe that is the beet and
most effective mode of bringing about derstood that the writer uses this fact
sobriety in the community in general.
I believe that I can do more as a total
abstainer in that direction than if f
were to be ever so careful and moder-
ate in consuming alcoholic drink.
The progress of the temperance
movement during the sixty years'
reign of our Queen has been very
remarkable, especially in the attitude
of the medical profession t0 the neo of
alcoholic liquors, and if this progress
continues I am quite sure we steal! out-
number our opponent., and, indeed,
make it the custom aud the fashion
not to drink alcoholic liquora.
There has been progress both on the
social side, and the estimate which
ordinary people make of the matter,
and also on the scientific aide a8 re•
garde the judgment of officials. Ou the
moral side also do people rnoro and
more sums to the conclusion that if
this country is really to deserve the
name of Clrrietiau country we 'must
drive this curse out,
'What I object to is for a man to eay,
"I have nothing to do with the hatter,
I keep myself sober, and I treed not
care about other people. They. must
resist their own temptations." To all
such men I would say, in the first
piece, "Du you really ,take caro that
you will not put temptation in their
way 2 Aro you doing your best to
keep out of that which is certainly a
practice of the father of evil ?" The
Lord says, '(Ternptetions must needs
come," It goes on to eay, "Woe to
the man by whom the offence cometh."
Therefore, every man who calls himself
n Christian at•all is bound to examine
carefully into his own life and say,
"Is my conduct such as to tempt my,
brother to this great sin, to this ruin-
ous vice of intemperance?"
I want to see changes made by the
Legislature, but there is a great deal
we can do without going to the Legis-
lature; and, further, what we can do
for ourselves, without the aid of Par-
liament, will help us far more speedily
to persuade Parliament to do what we
want from them. If you want to carry
your cause to victory, endeavor to
increase your numbers. In a matter
like this, members of parliament do
not listen very much to argument, but
they lieten very carefully to numbers.
The quiet action of ordinary people
who have seen what a really important
thing it is to get rid of this curse from
the country is far better than any
speech spoken by the greatest orator
who ever lived. The real strength of
the temperance reform lies with the
rank and file, not with the general
officers.
rhe more I have looked into the mat-
ter the more gonvineed I am that the
Welfare of the lase that lives by
manual labor—and I confess I care
more for them than for any ether class
of society—largely depends u[ion our
driving out the terrible temptations to
intemperance that n ev besot their
path at every turn. I do believe that
if we could make this a really sober
country we should be conferring a
benefit upon our fellow -men far he•
yond anything that can bo done by
money, or by any other kind ,of self-
sacrifice.
The one thing that I would impress
upon 'all those interested in the cause,
beyond everything else, is perserver•
ante• you may be defeated again and
again, and should statesmen pour cold
water on all your efforts in abundant
streams, but presevore I It may hap•
pen in a very little time we may turn
the streams back again, and make
those who gave us the cold water find
that it is boiling hot.
We shall, in the course of time,
make statesmen understand that their
government of this country ie very
much bound up with their dealings
with such evils as arise from intem-
perance, and unless they are willing
to take their part in handling such
difficulties as are constantly besetting
us, they will find their hold upon the
affectione, the esteem, the regard, end,
what is more to them than all else, the
following of the people, is lost, never
to be regained.
DR.. CHASE'S CURES CA-
TARRH AFTER OPERA•
TIONS FAIL,
Toronto, March lath, 1897.
My boy, ago fourteen, has been a
sufferer from Catarrh, and lately we
submitted him to an operation at the
General Hospital. Since then we
have resorted to Dr. Chase's Catarrh
Cure, and one box of this medicine
has made a prompt and complete cure.
G. FORD,
Foreman, Cowan Ave,, Fire Hall.
Why He Flesitatod--"I atn thinking
of tendering my resignation," remarked
one official. "I envy you," was the
reply. "I wish I o'ared." "Why? It's
a free country." "Yee; but mine
would as likely as not be accepted." -
1 Washington Star.
as an jtiustration to another fact—that
is all. What is that other fact 1 We
will work it out of the following per•
sonar statement.
"Nearly all my life," says Mrs.
Sarah Dalby ; "1 have been subject to
attacks of biliousuees, accompanied
with sickuees, but gut on fairly .well
up to the early part of 1852. At this
time I began to feel heavy, dull, and
tired with au all gout) sinking senea•
tion. My skin was sallow and the
whites of my eyes of a yellow tinge."
As everybody knows, or ought to
know, the coloring matter was bile.
The liver being turpil, and therefore
failing to lenitive the bile from the
bl,.od, it entered the skin, and showed
itself en the surface. But the discolor•
atiou isn't the worst mischief dour) by
the vagabond bile, coutainiug many
pule0n0us waste elements ; it disordete
the whole system and seta up trouble
801118 and dangerous symptoms, some
of which the lady names.
''1 had a 'bad teats in the mouth,"
ehe goes on to say ; "aud, in the mora
lug particularly, was Wien vet.y stoic,
retching so violently that I dreaded the
dawn of day.
"Dry appetite was poor, and alter
eating I had a pain at my chest and
side. Frequently 1 couldn't bring
myself to Much food at all ; my stom-
ach seemed to rebel at the very thuught
of it."
[This was bad, but the stomach was
right; eeverthel(es. More loud would
have made more pain, more indigested
matter to ferment and turn sour, more
of a load for the sleepy liver, more
poison for tee nerves, kidneys, aud
skin. Aud yet, wn'Iio0'I"rhe Foon,
how was she to live ? It was like
being ground between the upper aud
the nether millstones.]
"After this," runs the letter, "I had
great pain and fluttering at the heart,
Sometimes I would have fila of dizzi•
nems and would go off into a faint,
which loft me quite prostrated. Then
my nerveq became so upset and excit-
able that I got no proper sleep at
night, and on account of loss of
strength I was obliged to lie in bed all
day for days together. I•went to one
ductor after anuthe.t, and attended at
Bartholomew's and the University
Hospitals, but waa none the better for
it all.
"In September, 1883, my husband
read in REYNOLD'S NEWSPAPER about
Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, and
got me a bottle of it. After taking it
for three days I felt relieved. En-
couraged and cheered by this I kept
on taking the Syrup, and in a short
time all the pain and distress abated,
and I was well—better than I had ever
been: Tinge ie. ter years. agog and,
since then I have never ailed anything.
With sincere thanks, I am yours truly,
(Signed) Mrs. Salah Dalby, 03, Tot-
tenham Road, Kingsland London, N.
Jet -tory 2nd, 1894."
Now run your eye back to the first
sentence of Mrs. Dolby's letter, and
you will come to the words, "1 car ON
FAIRLY WELL," &e THIS is the sad
thought. Her life hod al ways been at
a discount; she had always got less
than her duo ; she lost part of her
health—wages. Do you take my
tneaning ? Of course. Whatever
may be our difference of opinion as to
the rights of capital and the value of
labour, it is certain that every human
being is entitled to perfect health—
without reduction, without drawback,
All the more, as nobody else loses
what one person thus gains, No, no,
On the contrary, a perfectly healthy
person is a benefit and a bleseiog to all
who are brought into relations with
hire,
But du all have such health 9 God
help us, no ; very, very few. Why
not.? Ah, the answer is too hig ; I
can't give it to day. To the vast crowd
who only get on "fairly well" I tender
my sympathy, and advice a trial of the
remedy mentioned by Mrs. Dalby.
New York's Decreasing
Death -Hate.
Tho supreme test of a nineteenth-
century city as Is desirable civic home
is the safety and protection which it
guarantees to human life ; in other
words, the death -rate is the civic
barometer, and as it rises or falls human
beings live or die. A. low death -rate is
usually coincident with a high tax -rate,
because an administration whioh dares
to provide the moat improved methods
in its various departments must pay for
them, and in matters touching human
life the best is neyer too high-priced.
No one department can ever bring
about, a low death -rate, but it will always
depend on the intelligent and harmon-
ious working of all the branches of the
city's service.
For New York City the death -rate in
1891 was 26.31 ; 1892, 25.95. 1803.25,30;
1894, 22.76; 1895, 23.11 ; 1896, 21.52;
1897 (up to the week ending December
11), 19.62.—Front "New York's Civic
Assets," by William Howe Tolman', in
American Monthly Review of Reviews
for January.
The Lady is Always a Lady.
Ruth Aehrnore,twriting on "The Sirn-
plioity of the
January Ladies' klcon
that "a lady may f
counter, be mistrese iii her own home,
or busy all day at a desk, but no matter
what her position in life is, elle never
swerves, and unconsciously she always
impresses those who are around her
with the fact of Ger gentleness and her
simplicity. The lady gains her strength
not from riches, not from her high
position, not from great learning, but
from good Common-sense. Any one of
us may learn this if we will take a good
model and copy it. No lady is free -
and -easy in her Manners. bite does
not, however, go to the other extrema
I and become stilted, but she tends
rather to quietness and to a slight re-
serve, since, when she takes a friend,
she proposes to keep her. She dons
not become intimate with you after
twenty-four hours' acquaintance, put
you in the place ofa confidante in forty-
eight hours, and in a week's time tire of
you. The lady knows you first merely
as an' acquaintance, and then, if she
finds you interesting, or if she thinks
she can in any way be of use to you, she
permits you to come gradually into her
life, and between you may grow up a
friendship that may last through life,
even unto death."
ande Dame'' in the
Journal, asserts
and behind the
For Over Fifty Years
MRS. \VIN<Low•4 Sturri 1N(1 SYRUP bus been
used by millions of mothers for their childree
while teething. If disturbed at night, and
broken of your rest by it sink chill sutl'ering
and crying with rutin of 11,11 ug Teeth send nt
once and get 11 hot tie of • Mrs. Win;low's suoth•
ing Syrup" for ('hi ldren Teething. It will r0•
neve the poor little sincerer unreel rte.ly, 1)e -
pend upon it, mol h.•rs, I here t: uo 111kt<tke 111)0111
It. IL cures Inarrhma, rct;uhtlus the Stomach
and bowels, cares 1\'ind ('clic, sef(e"s the
Uuins, reduces L Blair a mitt ion, and ((i cos tort(' and
('ncrg1 to thew•lole, ,.tout. '•311.s.1Yinsluw's
Soothing Syrup" fur children teething is plea•
sant to the tu..L, n.nit is the preseri;,ll,n of ono
or thy ,ld(,,t ;nn1 hest female piy..L•iaus <ui(1
11/1rsesi1< the failed SL•(le:, fries ItvunLy'-11V0
„Tilts a 110111e• Si/111 by all druggists throught.
out the world." lie sure and ante fur "Mits.
\1' INSi.ow's lou n, INC 4 V 1U'Y
A Profitable Guess—Stranger—I
want its room slow down as you can
spare. Clerk—Give you No. 976, top
storey. Best icandoforyousir, Strang-
er—I want to be low down, 80 as to be
handy to the barroom. Clerk—Front!
Show the geusleman to parlour C. --
New York Weekly.
HEART IIOPE.
RAISED IN AN INSTANT AFTER THE USE
OF DR. AGNEW'S CURE FOR THE HEART
—A POTENT LIQUID REMEDY—AND
NO CASE TOO ACUTE FOR IMMEDIATE
RELIEF AND CERTAIN CURE.
"For fifteen yea's I was a great suf-
fered from heart disease. All this
while I was in the hands of one of our
best physician', from whom the only
encouragement I could obtain was that
I was liable to drop off any minute.
I had many times read of cores made
by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart.
Was induced to try a bottle of till
cure, and to my surprise the very first
doze gave me immediate relief. • I felt
encouraged and persisted. I3efore the
first bottle war taken the dropsy, which
had sorely troubled tne, had disappear-
ed, and when I had completed my
second bottle I felt as well as I had
ever felt." Mr. John A. James, Wier-
ton.—Sold by Watts & Co,
Unlucky Thirteen—"Thirteen is an
unlucky number in all cases," said
Jai•l.ey, "I don't know," said ,Butler,
"I'(1 rather have'$13 than $12," •"I
wouldn't," said Jerky. "If I had $12
I'd spend only $12; but if I had $13
I'd speed $13."—Harlern Life.
A MOTHER'S S'I'OItY—HEP
LITTLE GIRL CURED
OF CROUP.
Having trit:d your medicine, my
faith is very high in its powers of cur-
ing Cough and Croup. My little girl
has been subject to the Croup for a
long time, acid I found nothing to
cure it until I gave Dr, Chase's Lin-
seed and Turpentine, which I counot
speak too highly of.
Dins, F. W. BOND,
20 Macdonald Street, Barrie, Ont.
Kind Sympathy,—The Fiercti One—
I do wish the Lord had made mo a
man. ,The Gentle One—Perhaps He
has, Amelia•, dear, but you haven't been
able to find him yet,—Cincinnati En-
quirer.
Icer Youth,—Judge—Witness, you
aro 40 yews of age? Female Witness—
Yes, alae! One gets older every day.
And yet I was young once (heaving a
sigh). Ah, yonr Lordship would
hardly believe how young I was —
London Tit Bits.
Catarrh •
Shackles
Broken In 60 Minufee -
It's an alarming fact, but
statistics bear It out, that
at least 8o in every hun-
dred persons inthis
country aro tanned in a
lesser or greater degree
by that disgusting, offen-
sive and dangerous dis-
ease—Catarrh. If symp-
toms appear snob as cold
in the head dizziness,
pains Inthe forahead,
n
the throat, offensive breath losscof taster and smell,
the Catarrh abackles may bo tightening about you—
DR. AGNEW'S CATARnfl.4 , POWD1e.IL
is the most potent Catarrh cure known to -day --
Recommended by eminent nose and throat special-
ists—gives rel(efln from zo to 6o minutes.
" For years 1 was a victim of chronic Catarrh;
the first application of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal pow-
der gave me instant relief, and In an incredibly
short while 1 was permanently cured,"—lames
Headley, Dundee, N.Y.-33
Sold by Watts & Co.
SCRI M R'
MAGAZINE
aOR 1896
A CREAT PROGRAMME. °
THE STORE' Oh? THE REVOLUTION by
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, to run tltrouglrcut
the year. (For the first time al! the modern
art forces and resouroes will be brought to bear
corps of artists Howard are making over l
100paintie uge
and drawings expressly for this great work)
OAPTAIH A. T. MAHAN'S "The American
Navy in the Revolution," to be illustrated by
Oarttou r. Chapman, the marine artist; Harry
Fenn :ancl• others.
THOMAS NELSON PAGE'S FIRST LONG
NOVEL, "Red Rook—A Chromate of Recon-
struction," Mr. Page has devoted four years
to the story, and ho considers it his best work,
(111ulltrated by II. West Clinedinst.)
RUDYARD KIPLINt, RICHARD HARDING
DAVIS, JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS,
GEORGE W. CABLE, and others, are under
ongagement to contribute stories during 18J8,
ROBERT GRANT'S "SEARCH -LIGHT LET-
TERS"—replies to various letters that came in
consequence of his "Reflections of a Married
Man" and "The Opinions of a Philosopher."
"TILE WORKERS" in a now fiord—Walter A.
Wyckoff, the college man who became rt
laborer, wits tell about his experience with
sweat -shop laborers and anarchists in Chicago,
(Illustrated frurb life by 1V. R. Leigh.)
TllE THEATRE, THE MINE, etc., will be
treated in ,,The Conduct of Great Businesses"
series las were "1'lte wheat Farm," "Tho
Newspaper'," etc., in '87), with numerous
illustrations.
LIFE AT GIRLS' COLLEGES— lilte the articles
on ' Undergraduate Life at Harvard, Princeton
and Palo," nod 48 richly illustrated.
POLITICAI, REMINISCENCES by Senator
Hoar, who has been in public lite fur forty -fico
years.
C. 0. GIBSON will contribute two aerial sets of
drawings during '10) "A New Pork Day," and
'•Tho Seven Ages of American Woman."
as.' The fall pn•osptelas /or '08 itt ,small
book form (:.y )(ayes), printed in two rot-
ors, with 110,0<,0rt•s ill aNI rat ions ((orts
an,) ,lrrora.lidits Gy llla:r/iekl Parrish),
will be sent 1po41 appliralio0, po.slaep;'
pail.
PRI('Ie 33 .t YEAH, 25 (:ENTS A MriIOER,
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS,
NEW YORK.
The Workshop on Wheels Has Re-
' 1 turned,
The celebrated Sheffield Cutler, 10. Taylor,
has returned to Clinton and will remain for u.
short time. The workshop on wheels has been
rebuilt and a new steam engine house added,
All kinds of grinding and sharpening ofcuttery,
pocket knives, razors, scissors, &c , will be
promptly attended to. Pen and pocket knives
rebla est and made as good as new, as well as
umbrellas and parasols repaired and bought.
All kinds of saws sharpened, cross -cut Sawa
gummed and sharpened- Your wants should
be attended to nowt The steam workshop on
wheels will be found on Dmsley's corner,
Albert.street. Clinton.
N-OTICE.
There being some misunderstanding with re•
gard to wreckage, let it be distinctly understood
that if any person takes possession 0t any kind
of wreckage and tails to report to me 1 ehan at
once take proceedings. Remember this is the
last warning 1 shall give. CAPT. WM, BABB.
Receiver of wreck, Ooderich
Ooderich, Sept. 7111 1891.
CLINTON. — _ _--
WOOD AND COAL YARD.
Subscrter is prepared to promptly fill all or
dors for Wood and Coal which wi l be ,old at
lowest rates. Ofilec on Isaac Street, at LAVIS'
IMPLEMENTS ROo;M5, W. WHEATLEY
To Improvers of Stook.
The undersigned has on his premises, 10111
concession, Uoderich'Township,
A 'thoroughbred Jersey Iittll, Terms:—$1
and $2.
A Thoo•otighhred ('he -ter White Boar, regis-
tered. Turns:--$I.withtheprivilegeofrelnrn-
ing.
A thoroughbred Tamworth Rom', registered.
Terms:—$1, with privilege of returning.
This is a rare chance to improve your stork
9(i5 -tet T. ('. EoSr(•Nns,
Owner.
Notice,
We keep on premiss a very large, high bred, prime
winner, citester White hog which we leo a ',opt fur the
past three year.+ a, (110 a R(('<11i,1 st0ek getter. We
hn
Vo el•o pmuhased another pig of the Barr breed,
eo tbuse hut llig yunna sows bred from old hog can re•
turn them. T,1m4 $t cash at time of se< lee with
privilege of retntning then if her,<Isrv,
W)1, RLLIOTT,
3oderich Township, Dec. 24th. nay(h ld Hand.
Removal of Night Soil,
The undersigned will undertake the moult al
of Night Soil grit thorough cleaning of closets,
on short notice, an(t at rcnsonable rates. Alt
refuse removed out of town.
t•f IIOOT. ENNEL.
FOR TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS
r
INC
WDE a`
T ED®tOK'SBEEIN CST AFRIEND,
t.ARGt SALNADA'
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
Memos
'Copvnic rs dtc.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
(middy ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention le probably pUatentable. Communica-
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without Chante, in the
Srientifir American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir-
culation of any edentate Journal. Terme, )8 a
year; four months, 81. Bold by RII wowed.) lore.
MUNN & CO0solnroadway, New l �r(t
Dranatr ()Moo. 6215 N 5t., Washington, I). .
e