HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1879-08-21, Page 7Atioi.7sT 21, 1879
ceneernIng, wheat.
Wheathas been ito use for bread•food since
- the earliest antiquity. Its origin cannot be
authentically traced, nor are the millions
who use it much -concerned on that head,
cio long as they have plenty of the flour
which the nourishiag article furnishes. It
was introduced into this country, according
to the alattericap Miller, in 1530. As to ita
cultivation this may be true, but there is
good reason to, believe that it came over
with Coltanibus, in some of his voyages, at
an earlier period, Ite dieeoyery afi attri-
buted to have been by dance on this con-
tinent, the story of which runs in this way;
A slave of Cortez •ftiond a few graine of
Wheat in a parcel of rice, and shoed them
to his master, who ordered them to be
planted. The result showed diet wheat
weteld thrive well on Mexican soil; and to-
day one of the finest wheat Valley§ in the
world, is Pear the Mexican capital. From
Mexico'the cereal found its way to Perri.
A few grains were •earried to Lima and
planted; the entire product being -.used for
seed' for teveral imegessive crops: M Qui
to, Sucadur, a• monk of the order of St.'
Francis, inteeduced the new cereal, atad it
is said that the jar which contained the
seeds is still' preserved by the monks of
- Quito, Wheat was introduced into the
-United „States contemporaneously with the
settlement of. the.country by the English
and Dutch, •
Devoured Nave,' .
••••••••••••
Aavriter of Australiap life, relates the
following story in the Boston Conomerciai
• Bulletine:-One,evening, on the retina% a,
a. the miners tat_seinalle-theak_Wea_n-terrible.
• --eiito-ry trolls one of the tents. - Scores of
.minerainehed in a body whence. thecry,
issued andfound a miner bending over his
'mate, who; having been +dirk; had not gone.
....... _out that datay, The trick . mon _Was „deed,
• with a 'diggeTiriliiii heart, Pnaatlie'bex On
• which•he lay for.a. bed ' showed evidentie
of having been broken open and rifled of
its Contents. - The' body Was still warm,
showing that-tho deed had but recently
been perpetrated. The miners itninedi-
•• ately soatterel in Pursuit of the tnurderer
or murderer's. . An hour liter a Man was
brought. ima-onecf. the most ' vitiate:me.
looking eharaaters t ever beheld. His
•-pockets were tilled with 'wild, which was
. identified by thesarviaing mate as thepro.:
- perty of himiself and dead emerald:: . There
•• 'wasario 'niistake abelit the Matter. •The
t— hagsainavetrinirthaftust was contained were
• • marked with tha joint imam of the mates,
and the identity of tho nuggets the suraiv
iug mate sw,ore' to, • This: was suflicient to
..establish the guilt -6f , the, accused. • Same -
•were for hangierg.hini on the• spot, bat the
• law-abiding verdant .of the, .cotninamity, •
being in . the majority., insisted upon. 'hail
having a feir trial. Ile was 'remanded ler
the night and 1),:gnerd placed oaer him: '.
Next morning he was Oniesing. ; ' It iw he
-------elnalecl-the••gnardthey-knew note -but. that
a.,........-1 be had. :esbaped 'therealineld 'beano depaata--
• What was 'worse, he carried eff the gold,
with ban which .had been 'pratiallafcir safe-
, keeping in the prison, -to be usea akatee-
• downy agaiest him. ' -:
• It was deemed idle. to persue him, but a
description of the murderer Was drawn up
and cireulated, and a reward offered for
his -capture-, dead or alive... A week pasted
away without any tidings being, heard of
the fugitiee. At the end of 'that tame aa
• native carne -into- camp, and hating a lei -
ter for the presiding magistrate, disappear-
ed as suddenly as be came.. The letter '
was short, but was to the point: •
.Mr. Magistrate.: Jim'Bell (the iniirclef•
ed man) was onCe &mate of Mine. He was
a good mare .Yott will :find. Bill 'Gnomes,
his murderer. ,a the bead of Deadflorae
gully; 1 have kept the gold for the reward.
a, .
. • • .• pa:moat:0o' Bum; .
- , captain.of thot Bushrangers.
' ' A party of miners iMinechately proceed;
ed to the localityabilicribed, eirpecting to
findthe murderer fastened' toaatree or rock.
What was theirbontot On approaching the
place, to find nothing but a fleshless skele-
ton, every bone picked Clean until. itgloo
The Cobden Club Meeting.
mow Tao ENGLISH FREE TRADERS IttIGARD
TEE PROGRESS OE ratexEcTioar IN Toe
PAST YEen,
London Tunes, Amu 21.
r•Che annual meeting of the members of
the Cobden club was held on Saturday. Me.
T. ta. Potter, M. P., presided. The secre-
tary read the repOrt of the committee, which
stated that the year whieh had passed since
the last annual report was Made was the
first year since the foundation of the club
in 1869, in which the soenduess of the prin:
&pies of free trade had been seriously and
openly challenged in politital controversy
in this country. The committee coeld not
but sympathize With the feeling1.11the coup -
try, which natnralligrew stronger in times
like these, that our commerce suffered ma-
terially from the protective systems of other
colintries, and their attention continued to I
be given to the; task of ,premoting .aaacmg
foreign nations and ijo our oblonies the de4
veloprneut of such economic views as might,
they hope, toner or later result in the gen-
p,ral adoption of the I:whey of free exchange.
In almost every country and every capital
there were men of *sanction and of politi-
cal and literary inflaience who were, commie
ated with this club aid workincfor the
cause; and, in spite of much discourage-
ment and some actual retrogression there
tias no Xenon to deubt that itawould ulti-
mately prevail, In Germeny the costly and
burdensome system'of gigantic armaments
THE OLINTON NEW ERA,
goo drawn by two horses. After driving a
Short diat4nce, Mr. 'Muer, on looking ahead
a mile or so, saw that the woods were on fire
on both sides of the reed, but as the timber
was small, end the undergrowth light, he
thought he would. be able to get through
without much trouble. When he entered
the, burning district the wind seemed to in-'
crease, and the fire moved with such :mum;
ing rapidity that he could hardly keep pece
with it. After driving through the ON three
or fornalvandred yards the smoke became so
denim that the travellers were alinostaelfo-
oated, aed a feta seconds later were cope,
pelledto lie down on the bed of the waggon
to prevent beiug smothered. The stuelse
ao blinded_Mr. liffner thathe.could. hard ly
me the read, and consequently he allowed.
the horses to go along pretty much Ite they
pleased. A half mile was traversed in this
way, when the smoke suddeuly cleared
away, and the flamet on- either side of the
road increased. inmtrength en re pidly that
they almost roasted the now thoroughly
frightened travellers. Seeing that if they
did not escape very soon the Wire platy
wotilcl be burned to death, Mr. Uffner tried
to urge his. horses to a gallop, but the pater
animals became so frigIttened that they
hardly moved, and at last tame to a stand-
still, end begen backlug off the read. Fear-
ing, that the waggon would be piithed into
the fi 3,M.tUffner jumped out,aand taking
the,latts, managed, to qatiet them netil he
foetid a good stout stick, Then, ordering
his wife to take the reins, he proceeded to
had led to •the attempt to xeconede the belabor the horses untd„ they struck a gal -
'manufacturing and producing classes to lop, and dashed along the aoad into the very
•high taxation by the allarerneets of nro- heart of the tire, •Uffner succeeded-in-elm-
dopoly, bob the adoption of,this policy,obering lute the waggon as the horses fan,
ajta.cameepeeneeaanyaine, ,eejentenre _end Aaking -thealinee_from..his-wife, urged -
roads; manifest the factef a widely exteecled
:feeling in the country., though entirely 'de-
feated for the time, in fairer orfree 'trade.
It had come to the ,knowledge alf the cow--
mittee that arrangetheett were already, be-
iiiiiale;haraihieli large quantities -of Res. -
:dad exports . to this ,end, other countries
would no longer pass through Germany or
• be collected at a Garnett -1 eatrepot. le the.
position of _the' free trade' question in
French politices and among the etatesinen
of the French Republic the crimmittotemo
gourds for encouragement. Tliey had been
made aOarelhat among. stioteirmen arid men
f If political influence In Roumania and.
131thoiria there was a. decided aispositide
to offer factilities for crillitiatiiiir, inteanaa
timed Commercial eoletiens and for making
those young 'nations the high.wavs of co
tuerde beCween the not dr and" the south, idea of the terrible heat they oassed through
the tendeamY of-WM.011 would be graatially may be had when it is atated thal the paint
to breell down the`elose fiscal system. of the • on the weggep was bund -entirely offa and
Ressian 'Empire. There could not be a the hoirie'e hair was, scorched in hundred(
doitht that the tidead-p-oliticalaoptnion in: of pleats by the clouds of sparks that fell
America was turning • against protection', nnthein. —Reit-ale Miner. • . ., .
and the conunittee ventured to entertain
the .hopellnat ataaladiatatitclete anew fiscal
pitliey awould :lie beguriamt Washington.
As to the sudden :adoption ri few menthe
ago of a'Protective rialicy in Canada there
WIIP V0.0,5011 teibmie that Ale_ tariffaptathe _mari5s.should'serveas a Warning toCa
Itarietdoitald administration • would ' reit but ilaii-tui-w hiTmei,..faii 'alispoiad—tal line
fashort career: The colonymflaicteria ad- migrate in thattaireatioo ;• In the first
hared' as yet to' its polka, ofQreteotiod la
.n, anlao03.1here•ia. a ring that has a.dveta
year by year; was' being beaten' in -the deed:this sterte'•and puffed-itnp on iia,
for wealth and proeperity.laje.s
e : "thister ae, aa.r in •t • ' ' - .'
•order to. deeeive andwindle All s
lony of 'New South: Walea, utider the.influ. ' ' '
ence of free trade. A anb•corninittee of the • the &paters' they can. ' • This -State is
club had been .appointed to . consider tbe faifaid on •aagraod- scall.. It is a, fella
question of the production eatel publication in aevevaa particular • no farming: a The
/
of an original work on' the effeots _of pro- farmers, have drouth, ,hot winds, li aVy
them .on at the top of his voice, This race
w toetin tied over the rough mon n tain road
for several hundred yards, with the flames
relating on both sides, and Myriads of sperks
falling le •• and- About ,the waggon- -Mrs.,
Uffner'd these caught fire, and her husband
dropped the reins to assisth er in mai non ish-
ing it, when she fainted in his arms. While
he was endeavoring to bring bis wife back
to 'Oeusciousness the horses were -tearing
along it breakneck speed, and the waggon
twerved, jolted, and swung around,in any-
thing but a comfortable manner, Mrs.
Uffner became conscious in a few seconds,
however, and just then her husband eaw a
cloud of ,darise black smoke enveloping ttp
road, andknew that they had reached the
outakirts lof the fire, and were safe. The
tialtelleraezeardlealightlialaurned-r—S
Bottom Facts About Kansas.
•.ten fartrier writes'thos' to- tho
LooisvilleCoUT ier-Jutovia His
•
tee ion in the principaPcountaies of the hail, grasshoppers 'awl chinch. this.
r,
'world,' and on the question of free 'trade' There is nal eetlainty of a crop uatil
bi3tween England and her colonies. The von have' it gathered:. n :is itn ossible
muse of free trade seemed likely to; be • ,
.
materially 'advanced .in another direction to grow tame grilse here for isto We
by the results of the speciel coternittee of havsajust gone through one dr right of
the House of Commons en the wine dutiee, ablaut _eight_ months . without rein; It
ThoChairman in moving the 'adoption ef
•tho report said that thelast twelve months'
;had, been a time in which the friends of
principhie hadbut little reason to
rejaice.. The outleok with respect to free
trade was .riow, hardly less diacouraeipg.
They lipa.w "that :there was an, opinion in
high quarteas in Germanrehich was op-
pOsed to • the present reactinnary policy.
The .paespectra were a little brighter in.
France, .but they had made no progreas in
toped like ivory in the sun. The bush- Italy or Spain, although there was a dawn
e rabgers, bad robbed the nutrderera_and_ filing from theareaort of -the -Wine Duties
then, driving stakes' into the ground; they -Corninittee which might he fa' orable to free
had faster:0dhim, hick °doyen, to an ant trade.: . Bed: harvests 'in Europe' artioht
hill. The:tots of Victoria are a,s, veramous
m death. The ariaiderer wa eitten alive.
Fanning in England,
r- .
In England and Wales there are, in round
• numbers, 37,250.009. mime and 17 500.000
acres, or nearly one-helf 'are owned.by 4,500
persons. Three of these persons own 420::
000 acres. In•Seotland there afe•19,000,000
acres, of Which 9,400,000 are owned by 70
persons. The Duke of Sutherland oWns
l ,326.,000 acres in Scotland, and oine-tentlis
• of-Sootland's area are in' the hands 'of . less'
than 1,700 persons. Una-halCof Ireland it
owned by less than .750 persona, mid two
thirds by leas than 2,000: These nentheris
population of which they are e part. These
land laws now demand spacial attention,
because the influence of Arnerica'has made
, farming in England unprofitable, even, it is
said, upon farina for which landlords.chaige
• no rent. By the law of entail, whieh teeny
Americans know only by the part it, plays
in the navels they read, the landowner cana
• by deed or will, keep his, estate intact, and
from being sold for teeny years :literati's
death, and, as his heirs tonally renew the
deed or agreement, many eetates belle been
tied np in tide way for htindreds of 'years.
This law withholds arnich property from
gopc1 management, and favors tho imposi-
tion of incumbrenem or which ten:nits have
to pay in in,creased rent. • The law of primo-
geniture and the lea; which allows ea land-
owner to tneke b. lease for 999 years also
. tend to tie up estateand' keel) land out of
the market. Another law gives to the land-
lord anything which a Unmet: adds t� his
fartn—such as a barn ; a greenhouse, or a
rbill—as soon as it is added, and works di•
redly against 'n.grieulttiral imprOVend,ent.
13y the law of dietreas thnlancllord recovers
from a tenant who cermet pay hie rent with•
ont ordinary process of biol. Ile simply
aims eneugh of the tenant's cattle or fur-
ffiture to satisfy the debt at public auction,
and thoge whom the farmer may OtVe for the
cattle or furniture can do nothing. While
the English 'farmer coula Melte a living at
holm these laws could be endure4,new,„
when he gannet, helAtIgVetirinit-fo America:,
where farming nave, ;Ina he will be seen
h
teaca different 'ippon to Continental:. nit7'
a ionliand ter. Atnerida, also, The olub'aienld
render all the asirietatice it could on the
• meadow -of -the -reform ; of theL land laws,
O tevieg thatfree trade in land was as es
sential to the 'prosperity of this country as
free trade in ot er corn mod' les. Alluding.
to the appointment of the royaadommissime,
he urged the necessity -for a mere accnrate
and taustwor thy system of agriculturni sta-
tistics. They had not lost hope inibeir ea ii era
and in the 'end Ophdon's principles would'
triumph throughout the world in spite of
tereporetryshadowe and dimppoinforreols.
The atainieu,
. are very.stuall in comparison with thetlenee . .
In, att interesting motor in'tlib' Sei di,fie
Americana -Prof. Langled gives sent car -
toms facts rewording the rainfall, lose m -
Ing- the
area of Manhattan Islandfo be 20
"miles and the animal rainfal1.80/inches, lie
shows by a simple calculcitidn that this,
einall portion of the earth reelveie 2,303;-
920 cubic feet, or 38,78160 toes of rain
in a year:, ' The amount of this,' he saps,
' may be bailee appreciat dby comparison.
Throe the Piramid .Of ChoupS contains
• less than 100,000,000 c, We feeerand weighs
less than 7,000).000 toAs ; and this water,
there in the form of ;lea, ,would many times
replace the largest Pyrainid of Egj pa. If
-Ivo bad traced. it, away,it wonld. require
2,,231,800.cata crying 12 toneexeh„te re-
move it; and these, at an average length
ef 30 feet to the car, would tnake six trains'
each reaching in one cootinuous line of ears
across the aContitient, so that the leading
locornotiye of each train would lee 'at San
Francisei before the mai had left Nov
York.'/ A day's raidall of one-teuth of an
inch,lipread over the 'United States ampre-
senile ten thonsancl millions of tons and
wirald take, he stidest nlore than all the
putt:ming engines which supply Philadel•
phie, Chicago, and other large cities depen-
dent more or less on steam fof portable wa-
ter, working day, arid night,for a century,
to put it back to the' height to which it was.
rafted by the sun before it fell.
for Life,
Between' 8 a 9 o'clock one evening re
ere long On the broad lands of the Western coney, Irobert 0, Uffner, his wife and A
Stetesor thosewhich lie jt above the daughter twelve years of age left Frackville
, ,
for fahenandoali in an ordinary farm wag,
vr ierthern boundary—in IVIanitoba.
•
-
has rained for the pest .tw or weeks,
but.too late.': The grass ill born to.
day. Wheatis a &au e here.In
rueny placesthere it iici-t pnolief In live
on. , The pelage are des
is no money. - The
clothed; and the me
the streets. There
_that a large pOrtio of the wheat' and
corn, was not lost/S I have seea it iina
known it to be t ue. You see the ad,
vertisements a -0 as false as possible.
There is no mare than: ten per tient. Of
.the lapd vibilkenything 1 willadmit
• we have so
few. Yo
is the SI
'yery o
very
them
Auto, and there
omen are half
are barefooted on
as not been a year
e good crops, but they are
are made to believe Kansas
ora.do of- the world; •bat -the
esite is the Case. Taxeg are
avy, end the fanners cannot rlay
and li‘;e. There is a. class of
rou18and unprincipled wen who rule
thys country, get up.a scheme and vbte
bonds; get them legalizld, sell them and
"skip. out. If this country vvere-to
sold today, and everything that is in
it, it would net pay-theit debts. '
, I claini one' of die best farmers
in Illinois' end :have lived., and farmed
on the prairie for 80- yeers, 'and I be.
Hey° Ikuow what it is. I have taken
three years to test this country, 'ancl
aavise q,11 men wbo think of coining
bite to stay wbieU they are, and if
they -come let thein Como and traVoi
.v.;ith farmers ancLeee for ,thernselves,
cooking their meals with grass, Corn.
stalks- and -straw, if they- elm, get -it,
You have- Men fixates advertised for
sale as being: finely improved, With Or-
chards npd'harns, This is false. '.1.7here
is not one farm in the State as well
improved'as an ordinary.farth in. Ken.
t u ck y rand....whee, Affian 00111t1a. here and
sees he has been bitten, he rills in ania
tries to eell ont ,and beat SOnie one
from -the East, There is one other
pOint 1. wish to notice. The. people
vote bonds for everything,' and try to
encoueage immigration West to pay the
taxes,. 'rho average of wheat the State
over will not be more than five bushels
per sere, and dorm the same:. Fruit is
but a trial, and it may be supposed to
Peaebes' ire sunbdrift, and are
pit fit for fise, and Some *nit .treee
will not produce anything. All the fine
fruit We got here comes from the East,
The premium awarded to'Kentiati on
apples grown in ,Eastern Stales, Were
geleeted by a fruit man in COlunibusl
Ran., whose name 1 carygive.
• All just Such frauds have gone t� 'the
press and been eeattered all over the
country to induce men to go West,
where no man can ever live comfort-
ably. There,is no State in the Union
that has so mind' poor land as Kansas.
Uen eorne here, look over the conntrh,
end to them i see1112 to ire rich when -
it Is very poor. 1 WAS reised near
Louisville,' mid know how this country
is. I have lived here over three years,
and wish to deeeive no man, as I am a
fernier and feel it my daty to state
what I believe to be feat for the benefit
of the people,
- -- •
The Uri war has been brought. to a
close:
New York Herald (Maeda is roping the
advantage of her new tariff. 'Her honest
traders are getting 'termer under it thaw they
were before and her rogues are getting doh.
Smuggling has become a, • regular iraltistlea
and all efforts to put a stop to it are fruitless.
The Dominion papers are beginning to raise
an outcry againit the government foenot pro-
tecting the legitimate business men, who
found themselves undersold by these who
are in association witb the smugglers, and
who plead for justice in vain. It is certaio
that an effeetive geardian of the frontier
would cost the gov,ernment more than the
amount of all tbe duties it would collect:
The people already see that they protection
policy is a blunder, and that, instead of im-
proving their cenclitien, it de/nor:IBMs trade,
breaks down the aorta Ale merchant, Yields
no revenue to the 'governmeot, arid_benglitgi
noonbntthI1etfljer. rtaivill not be
long before the whole bugbears/ conimunity
win elamor-for another -changer tnd this time
it will not be en•the side of prat ctiorathrough
a high tariff. • .
MEXioeN ExEouvoxs Eieetitions
in Item° are conOuptiO,.#11.an„sye to.
artimatieetreet; Befor-•U prisoner is
executed, he is ptit i the OaPilla ;',
that is, he is Cloistere for about forty--
eight hours With spiel nal advisers, who,
ha, a well -regulated system-, of relive,
il
keep at him, l-ginei
' im to mplore for-
giveness and to giv himself up. to God.
In order to inspir the doomed with the
liveliest tenstitien of fear a death -bell is
kept tolling &n t e sa'me,aparttnent with
him: In this ay he is kept in the duty
of pi•epatiog foe death, until a short tint%
•.forgx e a tone. e is then allowed
some mires! lent ,ina again forced to.
resume his %teprutions,until blindfold-
ed mod mer hed forth to the Place of ex-
eeution, t which last paint the ceaselete
noiee of%he mpffled heal aud the exhor-
tatithis o the padreconiesser aursue
. . .
Tony/ref( titanic Questions:
Aro ou a despondent eutterer front Sick
Head the; "Habitual.,Oestivenets, Palpitation
of tl Heart?' -Have yew Dizziness of the
Uoid.15 yone Nervous -System :depressed?
Dos youe Blood circulate badly ?• &have yea
'a Cough ?' Low Spirits? Coming up Of the
f adaafter eating? lee. • All of these and math
•ore are the ,direct results. ef Dyspeasie,
Liver Complaint aed Inaigestioa. Gieetes
August Flower is now acknowledged by all
Druggists to be it Odsitive cure: '2,400,009
bottles were given way in the U. S.. and Ca- •
nada thaorigh ..Druggists to the people at a
trial. Two closes will satisfy any perdon of its
wonderful finality in ettring all forms ofIndi-:
gOation. rianiple bottles. 16`ete. Regular
siee 75 :as., Sold poeitiVey by ail first-class,
Druggists. '
NEW HARNESS SHOP
f Illifkleaaerstaneebes maned a harness shop in the
promiseslate/yoccupied. by
NI. J. EXIII liOR011 STREET CLINTON'
Wilere,he will keep on han4 an assortraera of the arti-
cies Ana 000k lemony f mind in s store oathis kind.
Being a prsctical workmen, he is prepared topeccute au
orders in good style. •
Repairing Promptly Attended to.
GIVE PI 1M A ()ALT,.
S. STEVENS,
01htton, May 1st, 1819. 18
-THE ALLAN 1.I1T.
LIVERPOOL=LONDIVIHRRY—usanv.
SHORTEST SEA PASSAGE,
cabin, In termed late and SteeragoTiek..,
eta oat pretest Dates. "
EVERY SATURDAY FROM 'QUEBEC.
aincassiAN • ' August and
SARDINIA
=LIMN
PERUVIAN . lath
23rd
PoLTNESIAN ." 80ib.
•
Parties desiring to brine out Mende from the old
country, can save money by pirehasing propels. serial.
'tattoo f on) the agent in Clinton.
' , sTEERACIT TICKETS TO
•
LiuerP.01,Londonder)#,- Glasgow,. 'Queens..
tmere Belfast, London, Bristol, Cardff.
For through tickets and ever' infermation apply to
• - A. STRATTON, T.Vaaaeila-oilittona
olinton, May 80;1878.
;ea •
-
.aosi elaa,
do. s, eaatatitrakge.., ..-04aeee.
lialt00AVIP
MITE 81.0380MBER BEGS LEA,VE TO STATE
-L• to the public that ho keeps constantly on hand
a large and superior chins -of
COFFINS, CASKET,.
Coffin•TrUnaninge and Robes,
'WWI; splendid REARSE. PLAIN flopiairs ill;;ays
on -hand. Parties tan be 'Applied in one hour, at
• any.tihio, et, • .
•'.17EN PER GEN7.7 •I,ESS
--”..— Than can lie' pioeured atatha etiltr pia* '
,....--.-,x.-...-...-.
1 A full etack-of :FURNITURE.
.. Always ourhand.,
•THOS. MTEVENSON.
printc;.
o,Ma;10, 187,7., '
• -
REMOVAL.
BIDDLECOMBE,
Watch and Clock' Maker,
JEWELLER, ace.,
wonld revoitay anbutiozonge,toonhisenatomers ane, the
public gcnerally, that he has removed into las former
•
ALBERT STiomer, OprosiTg 'fttr.
Mei° ho will keep OD IWO in $10100 4840011ot of
Clocks, Watch0a,lewelry, and Silverware ofall kinds.
Which he will sell at reasonable rates. Repairing of
every dosoriptionpromptlyittendedte.
3.8o718..
pDLECOMSE, Atnn AT A TREE,
canton, Do. 5, 1
Clocks, Watehesoreweilery,
FOWLER..
•k• 1g4t.
:tpmfroeleesralliarl;issosnartnieceloutiriturrons.
hiesineerithanke
• 41 aiangsgehtotplabet:hsfe:nhaeators:rinen: .
ceiveawhileoarry• -
1 Clinton,andhopes.
by a Strict often,
• 02) A• don to blueness,
. (al -i, ,.., ,...,,,ar eaffnodrttroinnigeetvtelige - .:
.4.,.. we.ntsothiemany
He would meg tak-e this op'ip.OIrt'uniayotiefot:attrTieric't:aattliet:t:ier
frionas,tocontin• „,
has tom hie iron, into partnership,and that the bind -
FOWLER & SON. The firm wili keep on hand "
nee awwillat 0bile .ecsonilculootpei: n, jewfutureeli learn:, e rsrt he cot ;tot Yil:050:0L
-
- And fdi other articles; in their Inc
'Miklos ef Pipes Repaired ane Mounted.
Repairinteereanine, ea, done on short notice, in a "
workmanlikerammer, and on tea sonabieterms.
ALBERT STREET, NORTE OF TEN MARKET.
Clinton,Doo. 0,1877. °
• NEW
GENT S.. FURNISHING
TAR IN VESTA-MEM T.
• '•
J. -4)11N S' 311 Till
Raving opened out a shop oil
uron Street,- dliAton,
And. -procured 'WPILL - A SgOlIttp sT-• aux 0V
(itoODS sAitable•tur his business, will be, pleased to
Beo all hie old Customers and as many pow ones as
may fayor him aqui their Patronage. • •
1101P' -0Ticrt,
AND AT unite:lake Rates. . .• •'
;cod tosortmont of Gent's Purnishings in sto4
'PUMP FACTORY,.
TUE SUBSCRIBER DESIRES TO RETURN HIS
sitiocire thanks for the liberal share.ot patronage
afforded him, and wonldilso intimate ninth° hob, chit.
ifig the past 'winter, !QUM a large stook at ant -oleo
'mateirial,and is mile prepared to make and put in, the
. ,
•
MOST SUPERIOR PUMPS -
Of every description nn the SAORTEST Nonce, and,
•. • . on the most reasonable terms.
Remember the place —next door .to
• Math,esort's Blacksinith Shop,
: • • . ximES FERGUSON.
Clinton, April 19,1871. •
.MONEY1.'1,00
ArGSO,' ON. MORTGAGE SECURITi. :
A: nAmbex'of,goed FARK6 FOR SALE-
• :
ALSO, SOBIll•TOWN LOTS
Apply to ••A.'tiLliTT, Attorney, Jte
- Clinton, Juno 20, 1878. • . „•,•
131-rAckS111;TYL-IING.
• rptru undersigned haiiug purchased the stock and
leased the promisee of Mn. W. GAunns, on Albert
Street, opposite Mr.. Fair's 51111, takes this moans of
notifying his friends and the public gendrally, that he
• intends carrying on the Blackstnithing business in all
its branched, and, therefore, solicits their custom.—
Being practidally acquainted with overythingoonnected
with. the }nuances, 49 can guarantee satisfaction. •
. • iforse Shoeing a speeinity.
- •
D. STBPHIIIISOk
Clinton, APril 24, 1870. •
• MRS. W -H I T T .
TEACHER, OF _MUSIC..
Pupils attended at. their own rcsidences, if hciiiesary.
./aS/DEINCEL,Ona door north,' of .211r, 0,
4. Harte .1, (Mew Sty<',et,
'Clinton, May 12, 1870. '
•
•
- SED WHAT
BARLEY, . OATS,
And all 41n2eof Field, Garden and !sewer Seeds.'
In returning thanks Ip my patrons tot the liberal sup:
port actiordod me tho past year, I take 'pleasure in in.
:mining thee:titillate:4 Ihave, at Considerable expense;
earbfully Boleated niy present large stook of seed 'patine
nein tho most reliable gtowere. I can emitiaentty to.
Ootinnend the
LOST NATION and WHITE RUSSIAN
al, the boat spring varieties grown,boilatorenantity,
outlay atiamining purposes. my PEAS aro eccend to
nOtio in the PrOvinetaor purity and 1104111y. lIALLEY
and oATS of the very beat varietiee. CLOVER and
TIMOTHY geed, TI71111/P, MANGOLD 8, and another
'Sold and garden alma,' fresh and pure, I alwase take
epeoial 011010 seleot Seed. °lean and tree from annex.
ions need seed. Alwaye glad to Show 187 a5eds, and
give azy intorMition deeired tannin" find etbora•
REDEMBER MY STAND,
Stlilitel Street, above aoTherne Hotel, CINIerieh
JAMICS ateNAIJEt,
tieinielt,Uarob,
Clinton, Ally 8,1870. • " • •
l'ommooloolooLmr,Losom_t__
. .
-educe
rices.
In order to aleiar .out hiempresent stock, said '
make room for Fall importalens„ the subscriber
offers his present stock of •
Boats and Shoe
• AT
Tel per telltrelle* off former prIgS
.
HARNESS. DEPARTMENT.
Inthis department 1 would call the attendee of Farmers and others, to my very largo stock
•
•of both LIODT AND HEAVT,. DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNESS, made with the best stock and
workmanship. Employing none but the beet workmen, fly!!! guarantee all work. '
arstaiNees 14111111 yALIsEel, ery large assortment and very cheap, TRUNIIS frem 75 innate up.
1st awl and elan SHINGLES, ,from 40 cents per bunch, up, 7`, A. rooaa over the Shop to ler
Att.; GOODS WARRANTEla. Are Appreptice wanted, to learn Hareem making
' JAMES TWITOHELL.
• yo. •
.G:gli.eral SEWING MACHINE.DEPO .
A splendid;assertineet ef,,first•class SEWING ,MACHINES alwaYs �n lined. NEEDLES
• a ,• a and every furnishing kept in stock, , • •
AL:SO. REPAIRel.NG-
Sewing Machines of every melte repaired,' and new parts kept on hold,' Being himself a ••
„ practical machinist, all work done here is warranted to give.geed satisfaction.
'Charges Moderate. • ' NOR,SWORTIrr, Post Office ,Eiox 105,
, littron Street, one' door ;Went of tke thinairtereini Motel, Olintoni Ont.
THE THOMSON SI WILLIAMS MANIFACTIENG CP
OF STRAtFORD;
INCORPORATED 1'874, StibeessOrs to Thomson Sa 'Williams, of hlitnhe11,
Agricultural fl Engine Works
o
. DiRperoris :
RoBtwr THomsozt, rummest A. R. WILLIAMS. Vrec-Pers, ; ALEX. GRANT,
Seta -Time. ; J. REDFORD, W, mpwAT, J couponAly, W.'MABSHALL.
M'A.NUFACTUREBB '•
Johnston larvaiters, ben Reapork. Mowers and Combined Machines,
Broadcast Seeders, Seed Drills, Horse Powers, Sawing
Machines, Grain Crushers, Straw Cutters, Plotaeo Gang MOWS,
.Builders of Steain Engines and Boilers, all sizes,
WA:PER WHEELS AND ALL KINDS OE 'MILL MA.01/INE1Ita
OeMtractorktor aritre and gate Mille complete, A.,.1 s,O.lo.r_Wetter Works for Mica; towns and
outage°, on. ettg goo, gyaUnt, Olitat Faetory Metchincry- a Specialty. .
,
Aditrenis TIK011411801yi at WIIIAIA1418, Mtusu(aetnr5* o, Stratio!d,fisi, '
Feb. 8, 1876. ,•
•
,
_7•••