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The Clinton New Era, 1886-06-25, Page 3FRIPAYs TUNE 25, 1886. . ermas Await )(terror. Of all the meaninglees wars the world has " ever known we doubt if a Virallei •could be found for the Bast riets. There must neve bleu some provocation to rouse a populace suddenly to entria eenseless fury, but none Worth epeakingof appears, other than the ex- citing speeches of the entioHolne-Bulers, The women and men of Belfast did not surely. hope to make successfel war upon the Britieh Bospire, Yet such seems to have been their intention, a deliberate intention, according to Mr. Herbert Gladetone, who holds that the outbreak bad been long planned and actively prepared for. His theory seems to be, that, ss or the sake • arousing the no popery cry 'throughout Britain, tne enemies of the Gov- ernment were wicked enough to bring about this collision between a drunken populace, under the name of Oraegemen, and the de- fenders of public order. The cry notv be to avenge the blood of protestants shed by the papist Gladatone. The methodical tactics of the Mob„ as they appeared to one reporter, would seem to bear out this improbable theory. But if that view of the case is ad- mitted it affords a envious commentary upen the efficiency of ttie police. eugh no city in the world has been more, continually in want of masterly poliee management, and al- though the Irish anstabulary are noted far wide fol"-their"ffltick and efficiency, yet method anddecision seem to beinst the cmaW qui which have been lackingin all proceed- ings, If this assault upon them had been oeliberabely planned ad actively drilled for, tst the knowledge, of the whole Orange fra- ternity, as well as of politiciahe of both -parties it seems strange that they were so taken by surprise and actually allowed themselvee more than once to be worsted by the mob. The lige of the killed, end weunded, so far as re- ported, include hardly any but non-combat- ants, Such• a result of firing intcra close and fighting mob is quite incredible. The onl3r. explagationsiatbat the killed and "wounded of the combatents were sphited away by their companions, acoording to a well-known lrish i istinct. The complaint raised in I arliameet bud out of it against the police for having fired on peaceable citizens. has some color from therreqrstif but-iin solar as it domes from sym- pathizers with the riotere it is the summit of ithpern.Th� only way to.deal with a murderous mid) le15o,11 cartridge, and the feels. ing of cant people at or distaoce was that'a few onnces of it used socner would have put a stop to the whole thing. One thing Itge find it bard to understand, namely, tbe order to close all taverns at six o'clock, apparently for the night oily. When it ems well known that liquor was ctu* of the riot,and to a large extent the aim of the-rioters,one weuld think a mere absolute act of prohibition might have Iren indulged in, at least, till peace was re- stored. -Montreal Witness. 74- nev,,saion series' Oddltiri. KPICY RE:TARNS 11. HIS SERMON.. • . , • There are some people who will let their , childrel`go to parties at othen folks" house,' iiiiremo'rlet-tirems-kare-mre-at-the it-ew house.' That _is -as mean as dirt: One worldly women in a settletnent"Wiil ruin the whole settlement. The other Child ren • will_goshotne and say : 'Mrs, So -end -So . did eo "slifignrcite;:be - Mighty [nem, beeanse you dpn't do it.' You hold • your position and influence;o and if the ;devil aver, a witifis over Your horne,let it be after you are gone. A right. • adjustinent-towards this world! We Will say, in the next plane; that you Might not • 'to go anywhere or do -anythingthat you •- dont want your childrestto-go, or to do, now and -forever. There are ,woinen in one City that I know of, who *stop on their • way home and drink hiker- .beer svith.their • children: /1 you. ado% a:pretty !pothers& you do that, then I don't know what.' an - talking sheet. I can in soino sort' tolerate a from that diasipetess 'but when a woman . sets the example lain sorry for that little orphan she has hold of.. • . Aman has got to give up or do weree one or the 'other. A man said to me Duce: 'Why. sir, if.I.giVe up now I will lose • eVerything I hue.' I will tell you. ',This ' thing was illustrated- once by a man who cameto set:vice and, wits powerfully con- -itifitiNd. • His wife diedto get him :up to • the/ altar,but one could, not. •„When they got home she. asked hire, 'Why did you not gonpr . 'I warited. ittogo there wife, but leant get,religion in the btisineert I, am in.' •He was a; barkeeper. "-It is giving • up too much; 1 (mut aftord it. Husband, dear,...a,. there are societies oli large cities, eo , p aidssh Who w-rauclistnopey4144on • insigniheant m• eorriparison with the •wholes year with your bar 9' Two thousand, dol, .;‘ Flldo, n 'think •poi Will- etaleibarbarity_p_Lactletkin the west det ow ong _ l a fettv raen imay.become that it is live to rnn that bar? 'ye ' '1 Might " to • live strange ht no national movin eent hes, ever about twenty years,!_ • 'Flosi tinuili is $2,- been starteda for its siappreesion. • 000 fortwenty years?' Fortis "thousand' Travelers On Inaneys,:t attlitshis rseason in th the Vi' dollars,' Now, if a man were to walk in Weal! Southw the docr right now and say, "I will give year will see from the car Windowsohostaoef you $40,000 flit your hope, of going to whitening skeletons, in some cases groat piles heaven, -what would you say ' to him 9' of them. • They are the remains • of battle which efeW.months ago found their way to _ 'No! BY the grace of God, I will detrain . --=th-e-morrring. 1 -will give myself to'd-b-cf- ... right now. MO of them tor „the i'orld. Whenevnr you 1180 aB ol4 nsaid it is because SOnati Mali has not done his duty, or she was too partieolar, I have seen children 10 years old so ivrouglit up with what they wear and what they are going to do, that you eau do nothing with them oil a higher plane in life. The little Arcot monkeys wero never prouder of their little red saoka, than your children are with the toys and finery of this life; and the monkey lute .just about as much religion as your child- ren have. Some of you womei look inno- cent. You 'ODIC ST if allyou wauted Was a pair of wings to fly off with. , You had bet- ter go barite and reform your liouseholds before you go to heaven. The President's Getters/00', . A lawyer friend of President Clevelaud from Buffalo gives me some interesting gossip about him President Cleveland is worth about $100,000 and he owns con. iderable real estate hi- *dial° which is fast growing in Value. kle made abet $25,000 a year at hie practice before he got into politics. lie is tiot au extravagatit Man in any of his tastes, and has never • been SO, fie had' a chits of cae at Buf- falo which -paid well, and he wee often the cinema for corps -rations -two big cases. • While he was governor of New ).'ork he gave away the whole '.of his salary iti charity., Bove what be used for his person. • at expenses and for the 'support of his mother. 1 have seeu rnauy instances of his charity; • One night I was with him iu hisprivate office at the Albany capitol, It was after he had been eleMed President. He was opening his mail, •and Many of the letters contained requests for alms. I saw•Gov. Cleveland answer fully a half dozen of 4 these • by etiolosing $5, $10, and at one time a $20 bill in an envelope • with a kind wOrd, add- sending tt tlisthe' beggar. One case was especially tcsuching. It was that of an old Man in s mthern New York who had lost his horse by death. He lied a little garden Dateh of a fain, and this horse was hie sole means. of makirorses.. .1tVolilidods tipon it. • He had raised Bottle money: by coetribu tions from his neighbors, but etilHaeked *enough by $20,o buy thti horae,-vehiphiwita „to serveas the support of. himself and his gray-haired wife: Soine (Albs neighbors had heard --of- Cleveland's charity, aud had .suggested that he write •to*.hinf.to help him.. FroM the tenor of the letter you Could _see that the old man • . • was very proud of his hand -writing. Ile said that hehad written it :himself with his lined, and the appeal throughout was that of.a simple-minded:, unsophistioated; child -like person. Cleveland's eyes tilled with teeth as he • read and' he put a twenty -dollar bill in an ,enVelope and sent it to him with a few kind words. , have no doubt," coubluded.'this Juan, "but that President Cleveland is giving away a pod deal of his salarY in charity. .11 he does so -0-1LIARY--b-catul re that op pmetiteichte White House will know h.'? • Deeals Among The Csiti.le, Tug ;woaa._ OF IttINGEB.; .4Na; • ppLD -1JP0FHaLAI5.S."". Lite Axiants, Con. .Inne stbok eoWing industrY -has about reaehed a. point where in the interest of the pocketbook, is well nein that of cornea -on decency, it must .in most placeSbe,learried on with more eon: servatism. .t.s long as n'obody suffered ma: terially in purse it matterei little to the men heavily engaged in the industry whether the most,eutrageoes critelties were ieflibted upon the, dumb oreatiires in their keepingslurnot but now that the mortality agnong stools is •beconung se great by, reason of exposure in - 'winter and scant "feed iii slimmer' as eitiotiitY • t� affeat Profits, it is seen that if the businees is to be prosecuted hereafter. it roust be done finder more favorable circumstance!' Ndbody OtiLl estimate the amount of agany Arkansas river country to this vicinity laet fan found only fifty oL them alive this sprolg. About one-half of the native cattle and near- ly all the pilgrime on these ranger' Imo died, In the early days Of the stook industry the buffalo. gran, will& was then igenty, was then plenty, was depended upon Co keep the nettle alive (luring the wieter. It grew lux- uriently, and.atter the firet frost bourne like hay in appearance and quite as nutritive. While this lasted the °Attie that could get it Were able to survive if the winterswereg not too severe, but it is a singular fact that, with the disappearance of the buffet°, •the erase to which, his name was given has gone also, and on none of the ranges east of the mountains is it now to ne found in any quautity. 'Itha been suceeeded by a grass vvhich is good enough when green, but after it has beau touched by the fg•oat it is of uo more value as feed thau common stiaw. Cattle dame to- deeperatiou will scam:num till themaelvee fail of this sluff, hut, as it contains little notoishment it generally baetene the distem- pers which result in their death. Appteciating the situation now as never before, a number , of big companies have come to the conclusion. -that if they are to continue iH the bit, ingots they must do some, thing more than turn a few thousand cattle loose on the range to shift for themselves: Where this decision hes been reached, great barns have twee raised, or are 'now in nourse of construction, whiohlsover several 'acme of -land, anct in -which tlumsagds pf- cttIe may be prsperly housed and fed during severe weather, When these seathern and southwestern breeders take some ench measures to provide adequately tor their 'betide, the contiugency of a dry season will not find them in soela a situation as that which -now confrontethem... • • Tittsrotigiospeds. • • .,-- The following from the Victoria (Britian Columbia) Times, pays a just tribute to a well-known breeder of this. county ;-Some few weeks ago the announcement was made in these columns-of-theLarrival•-from-the-east of Mr. 4eilia S. Shopland with a oar load, of throughbred' stook-. The shipment con- sisted' of 27 ewes and 11 rams, l'helie were eelected kern the noels -of -Mr:" Humphrey Snell, Clinton, County of Huron, Oa, who has been avery sucesseful exhibitor and prize taker for a number of. years througliciut the east. Mr. Shopland iospeatecl many_ flocks ere . milting his • choice. 'In Ser. lecting the flock which ia now on his ranche ht Foul Bay, near thia- 'flay, he had the as, sistance of thoroughly experienced sheep men, who aecompanied him on his tour of inspection. Mr, ShOplind's • desire was to parehasethe best in the market regardless of cost, as the transportation charges on an in. ferior animal .-are exactly the ' same as oti o high bred One. These who have examined the flock 'pronounce them far. 'in advance of any hitherto imported, and thet Mr. Shop land to day has probably the best floolc,Iso far as it goeS, on the L'acilic Coast. .From Mr. Snell's'stock_he:..selectes,1 a pair of.young Berkshire pigs --74 sow nine menthe old and A boar now.rising five -months -which are -ex • celleet spechnons of the porcine race. Mr. :Shapland also imported a splendid .young heiterin calf; yvhith'she dropped on his farm on the -23M ultibib. litr• herd of a noted breadeni in the county of Huron. Shesis very pure and Shows her line of high -breeding to advantage. From the famous 'herd ofMr. Joseph Salkeld, StratfordssOnts, he- seleated-the-beet wools - 'Then of a young hall* te ba found. hi . filet , geoleman'e.herd,-aed a fine Young animal • lie he and gives great promise of becoming a noble anunal that will•leatve his. impression .on his progeny atid the stock of this country. The cattle beloUgs to the Bootbsiatmily of Shorthorns, whilsti erept-saiiianced to be the purest in bleed, and, consequently are OA: sidered to be of*greater value. than the Bates _ - generation. , •' •. , which has been inflicted on cattle in the wed in the last ten or fifteen year as a result of Run roal Curves Are -Useful. , the miseaken.notien that, all that was neces- . • • • The Last Tear, 113813. , Atter the above year is ended there' need be no Person suffering from Nenraissis, Toothsome, as it cures instantly. Pain cannot stay*here it is.used. The siameis Fluid Lightning. Sold by Worthington, Druggist, • sary to bring in rich returns was to turn eat- WHY ; A TitAIN CANNOT TRAVEL ON. A° tle loose on the ranges and leave them to . LTVE, DoWN.GRADE. ithift for thetheelyes. Iftlye, tens fifteen or ---- • . •evest thirty per cent. of than died • in the snows of hunger aud odd, Or were frozen stiffin their tracks,. it was 'espy, enough. to - send Mit reports to the bontrkry, and the, . skelethicritrewn plains are,not often uglier the.eye of aoyotie Who *ill talso the trOgible to describe what he ;had seep.- .The oruelty to animela in- the east, . to suppress ivhioh • . Therees another &MS of prisoners. o'f • : hope. The matt who says, "God knows my heirs; I wish.' was a better man thesbey-w-hossaye, 'I wieh_l_were_adnette boast' the girl who. says 'I; wish I was a better girl;' ' r Wish I were a Christian.' In the wickedest days of my lite I never • forgot my precious Mother: As long :aa. • the Boni- hungers and thirst for 'a better • life there is as Much chance for you as for , -Mos my heart tuns out in synipathy for some men under this tent to -night. Pbor fellows! I recollect I had made my wife thousand premises, my•Saviour a Oohs - and premisesprny.frierida anxious for the a • Imunred 'mumbles ,yet in spite of -plighted vows and honest promises, I went deeper • ' and deeper. 'Wife forgive me; I'll neve drink any rporey 1 catne.home worse inS• wont drink any more to day ;',but with' thirst and appetite impelling me forward, I was but a lamb in the power. of o • lion. There is hope at the cross for the . weakest Man in the world. I sometiines think th • in spite of tny mother's prayeris and father a advice, God -allowed me to, go. eight into the gates OrliiIrraiirput ine forward, nowT to go down to the depths td pull my fellow •men back. Whenever you sheart--ihat terve had a littld'barty, yeti can eay that Mr. Jones is dead. • He diedlast night. My children don't have any parties, but they have more fen than any other five children in . tbe_Stete Geeegyt. ; I do feel sick for any poor *Milan whiCheild'haVe a 1h1� party to keep the children eiijoying them, eaves. Mother's, I don't know whether your children need a little party, but they no a mother mighty bad. They do, they Lk at yoet. children at home. What • o they think oe heaVen and everlasting life 9 Before your little girl is ten yearit hund.redrandirrsome 'places by the thousand1 old. she i3 banged and pimped up like an by far the greeter nittlaber havnigyerished of old maid of 'GO. And 1 lope all the old Mold and 'imager dliritlif the winter: One maid). 1 would not hurt, the feelings of mao who drove 4,00 yearlings into the 1) • I the lailyriad track:jail Alio „suilyAiage hia their reach that ever manifested signs of life and there they 'stood famishing and fresiing until death put an end -to their sufferings. The greed of man was responsible for all this. Trusting to luck for food and water, thousands f-thesespoorsa brutes -hays -been-turned- oti every year by their owners to experienoe the most-pitiful-suitering and death, while those Wheliave survived have been scarcely more fortunate, Last winter, when the •Kineas Pacific railroad was blockaded with snow, *tic' great steel ploughs were attached to the louomotives, it was frequently found impossi- ble to "bunt" but the cots, because beet:lath the mass ef snow were scores of cattle that had huddled together in these'places in the hope of mitigatingin ii small degree the gereenesS of the blasts. ,Sotne of them Ploughs, after one or two • encounters, with such obetructiOns• of dead cattle, ice, and• snow, looked iiirtreliglitifey had run through elaughters house. Jtlst now, e rasarasssin ore, stilan j„0,;(), head of cattle en route to the • north Exptil, Texas on the old 'Dodo trail. The iitiffer- logs of these ertimals from the drought have Info most agonizing. The- whole earth ,is parched, and as everybody trusts to luck in summer for water, 88 15 the rule in winter for • food, the failure of tho naturhl supply has _produced hardshipa that almost ..rIval_that 'of the bleak northern ranges in winters The trail Over which these thirsting cattle pass is lined with the dead bodied of the animals whieh have been unable -to endure the torture. The greund is dry and parched, arid the.bel- lowitig of the suffering herds can be heard for miles. All through the cattle country to thp west and eolith of here the same condi. tion of affairs exists. Coming out of a. witater -that-was- unusually severe, the- surviving Cattle Were hardly able to get their strength before they were made the victims of the drought. In sons° cases herds have been found so weak from this cause as to make a round.upinipessible, hundreds of cattle being on their knees and too weak to move. Ou all the ranges carcasses are met with by the 1 1 1 "You'inay live till the yelloW•dog fades fruni'history," Said a .cOnduotor the other night; as the° tritin hitinmed _along.; "but you'll never ibe straight railread dowti. a steep • . *The, euriotis passengerwith the 'wart on his nose rolla up his eyes' in astonishment. A'My dear fellow" he exclaims, staring at the'ecned uctor, !`i do not understand -What is to prevent a train 'roots -running down h Straight "Just this," :continued the bonducter, • "curves arilfecessary , on • a very heavy grads. Passengers are sometimes struck with a great many, curves oh the road while it is up'emopg the hiIjs They im. agike the curves are tare), necessary be-. cense the road winds' around the hills. This ft -Only partly true. If • the railroad 'Werirto crone directly:lit-heavy-oracle-it- wotild still be necessary to have the curvet', No train 'can go at a high Ante of speed down a heavy grade on a -straight track with safety. The eXplanation is simple. --Thestendeneyso train ie to moye in a straight line, and the attraction of gravitation net sufficient to ,overcome the tendency tos shoot off where • great eplied-ornrcneenttrin has been :ob.. tabled. Hence, a train flying down a straight track on the hillside, instead of keeping the track ereeld shoot off on a tan. gent into apace. • ' "The Curve," continued the wise manin thebitie uniforin, "is one of the greatest safeguerds in mountain engineering. Thie is particularly noticeable in the case of a 'freight train. It very frequently happens that an engines, drawing heavy train cannot -Stick close enough to the track,' whie-gmeg-d0W11--teeheavygrade-to-co trol her speed. An engine going cittWit hill is reallymore !whiles& thad the sarne'ens gine going up hill. That is, the Can pull a greeter weight tip hill, than elle can hold back down hill. It ia a very eonimon ex, perience with engineers of freight engines to havestheir strains literally push them down heavy grades at a high rate otsrs eeds. In such inetances every curve is s salvation at the right time. The cur re, tams the tipeed and Mittblea the wheels of the flying train to get a firmer -"Purchase" on the track. Railreading in the hills, would be verydangerouri were it not for the curves sprinkled along at frequent itt- tervals. ii6Me raffia& Ma " to" discooneet the lever from the, driving rods when a passenger train is deseending tt, heavy grade that extende for many milea. The train is managed altegother by.the air brakee: tveryturve acts as a• brake on the sped,i eand n this *ay the train swings along for hours without attaioinga too reckless speed, with the aid of the air brakes." • Seat then the train wcht around a curve arid a curious passenger was thrown to one side of the Beat. "it)a 3 wonder to me," be gaspetl,that these meanly express trains don't fly off the track in going around these heavy •curves." "Well, air, said the conductor, "I've • been railroading for twenty -Years and I never yet knew or heard of a train jump- ing the track on a curve. There isn't the slightest danger on a graded curve, and hardly any ou a fiat curve." A proieettiooel hugger died recently in Rio Janeiro, and left a fortune of $300,000. A; Rio journal remarks that the discovery ehoultt (Tension no -unwise, as it is well- known, that many el the beggara in that city aro tvorthstnore than those wl.o bestow UlonS ri thee). • The attlite may be said ot beggars .elsewlit liRsibla bet Inetansasseons. All pains nr aches will be instantly removed by•tt few drops of Pond ifightning applied over ; NiolatimpeolliousitAnnmeiUcthus ; noar uxsiesoi 117 greasy liniments. it will net bbster Op discolor the skin. sold at 250, a bottle by Worthington, Druggist. StiTerers from Neuralgia assure us that they never fear it when their house cou. tains a bottle of Fluid Lightning. 1— 0 ;Ni Q I I% el la C-3 INT `T To ownere or, sropir. Giles. • tiilillicilt Reinoves all Unsightly Buitelma. Curm Lameuesein Cattle. Spinal Meniugiti . . , Emnider, Week Lualm- Sprium.auees.. Spavin. RIngliona Quitter, WiudgaLs No Stable shnelti be ,*.witlient if, Railroad mining and mess companies all use Gile's'Idulment. and in the great ran ing stablet of Belmont and Lorillard it lies achievedwoh: ders. One trial %111 convince, • ' t ' • Write DR. GILES, Box 3482, N. X. P. 0., who will, 'lilt ont charge. give advice on an diseases and rim) ou 00 mite agement or;cattle. Sold br all druggists at fIecand,841.00 a bottle and in quarte at $2.50, in whinh•tlie:eis great saving The lipanient iti White:whippers is fitr family mkt; tltat in yelloV fir tattle.- . •• . GtI� Iodide Ammonlix florae. and: 'Cattle • • Powders: Used hi. tte leatling horSemen �u Jerouie Park, FFw cmod, Btigliton Beach,. alieepshead Bas stal•Btill's tier „. Never di,ppotiit ere tome, Alterative aud Diumtle, Destro/ Worms, cures leuigestiou, loIja, Buts,'Sore Throat, Catarrh Pounder, P!ck:eye anti Rheumatism. 'Xhe dime. is walland the power is great, • The Powders are tOultranteed, and part. chimers far nietto oittaiii a core money refunded. Shld by all ilr.uk...,:tatl at Meta, per Ma. • • • ieewn..r.e: or (...;ottorea.-feite • .itEPAIR,FD • The fallowing testimuniais, nueeiVed 'by 36. JANUS , . spealt•for , r rtr*.1 red my sewing machine about four mouths''ago, and am jest al well pleased with the work at it -as the day I re- celyed• it f.em the Leptis of.the repairer. S. , ' I received my sewing machine alma slx, months ago, and was fortunate to get it repaired, end was morn risetbto see the xcellent work Minim, Sir It was laid by over four years and m ati" num); Youxs truly, W. 0. StIEPPIIAItll. 1 beg to acknowledge the receipt of my longlost . treasure,. •. • • . the New York Singer 8ewingq1lachine, whioL I Lave just got vesairst-tvarltighly-triessed'withlt-altd-retattcxeirnty-wii- Tete thanks, Mr it works splendid. • ALEX. SIOGREGOP. The Sewing iteehlne 1got fepairetl about six months inch , . proves to be la eVerysteSpect it superior jolt, a large number of people during the six Months have called at 95r tailoring establishment and are Kerne:tee at its excellent work, it is • Mit as advertised.. JA0EsON BROS, • • • • Parties hating worrititlitsline atteMI- edtp on leaving orders at FLOODY'S Brom or at residence, next to.old Presbyterian Church . JAMES VANSICKEL ClIntbn. ,SEEDS. BITOKIV HEAT • and ',WESTERN CORN: 14ANGO.LOtt: 4 kinds, -25e. per lb. 13R0N'zE KING OOT:ATi/ES1*400: per. lb, W-A-NTED, ---.A Int of OATS in• ex- haiigeefer-CA:T=Mnekbre42-11*-Metterbili CAKE, $2.50 . PER CWT, JAMIiS STEEP - (4.41N110g. Myth Pump Factory. 'JAMES VEROVSON . • 'Wing Minorca Ttla'btinInesald chd minim fornrofly known :as THE HOUNTOASTLE ?JILL; %mild thank all old patrons for past ftivon, and is in a better pot: - Von than over to promptly MI all orders entrusted to MM. I STOCK OF GOOD PIMPS ON HAND. - Ordered work a specialty. Wells dug and completed cm short nottee. All work guaranteed. Prices reason able. ORDERS Int UATLA,SOMPTGY AVTUNDED TO, JAMES FERGUSON', 13LYTIT; • S. WILSON17 'GENERAL DEALER IN TIAWARE. &e.. • 4 • HURON STREET, Minn*. • eparing of all kinds twomptly-attendail-te itt :O'er rate% A trial qr,llilteit,' a Alaska. Many peram,.haVe Lana:thith-pyesight, completely by wear- ing unreliable_ spectacles,- Pon% „wait lintily67—Cannot read , this advertisenignt but.caltbilttirry-undersigned,. the sole agent hare for the celebrated. • • • A, I A • S 7<'' Spectacl.esEyeglasses Where you Can get your eyes accurately tested and fitted with these excellent glasses. Every- pair guaranteed. meet). Watchmaker, Jewerler and. Engraver, Clinton. , ILLINERY for June._ °Willi to OUR large trade in this we were enabled to. accepts). special .9ffig in'Ladies" and Children's STRANY ITATS.et big eeductions belose regular prices. We have just added this purChaso of over '20 dos. to out...already large stook) which gives ourTuitoiners over 300 'styles to choose from. SEEp OUR. BIG REDUCTIONS FOR JU,NE Prints, Dress Goods, Cottonades, Shirtings,'Cor- sets and Hosiery, Black and Colored Kid • Gloves at 25c. and 456. See 'our trMilelidOUS stock of EMBROIDERTES at. cost.. Ma,eniliceot range of SASII RIBBON'S in blhok and colors, 9 inches wide in'black silk: ORIENTAL LACES, full raege......11,I11,13.0.11 for Sash , and.' Dress 'Trim leings at 30e per yd: . . , .1(40 For 1,,a4lle$7, -Gents' uid Cbpdr (WS Wear. HIGHEST:GRADES, NEWEST STYLES, BEST QUALITY ,-Pra(`6 TO SU fT TIIE TIMES. EGGS • TAkEN IN EkCITANGE , AN FLEGANT LINE 9.1P • HASi CARLINE lEtieOtit CLINTON' • For saleby the GRAND RAPIDS & INDIANA - R. It. CO. Sugar maple the,pnincipal timber. • , ' Advantages . Railroads already numer- ous towns and 'cities; one of the healthiest parts of the United States, Fibres! Water, good markets, • tine fruit,• good. roads, schools, churches, large agricultural population, best building rohterial at low figtirek, good soil, low prices, easy ternia, perfect title. For books, /nal*, charts, and all - additional inforMation, address • W. O. 11UG11ART, . • ' Azad Commissioner, Grand Rapids, Mich., ' • • •Percheron HORSES. ' Mandible Sin Fanr- Grosso Me, Nick. All Stock selected from' the get of sires and 'dams of estab- - hed reputation and . •reg stored in tue • French and' Amer Can Stud Books. :we have a - • *ay large number of imported and•grade stal- • lions and brood mares itin hand. Price.s reason. able. Corropmidence solicited. Send for largo illustrated catalogue, free .by mail. Adtlitas %AIWA 4.F.LIIN N3 Detroit, kick. . . ,•. LANING MILL —AND— DRYEILNt L rilnE S151180DinEit HAVING JUST 095IPLETED J. • and furnished his new Platting Mill with Machin- ery of the latest itnproved patterns,'is now prepared to attend to all orders in his line intho most protnpt and satisfactory manner_ and at res.enahle rates.' He Woniti alnet return thanks to all .W1f.g patronized the Itilitrit-beforerthey-were-lin rn ed;olttrataltow-bein in a better position to execute orders expeditiously,. feels confident Ile 0811 giVe satisfaction to all, • FACTOR r --Near the Grand Trunk, . vox . . ' THOMAS weitEllzul, HURON AND -BRUCE Loan and Investment Co'y ThL9 Oolong is Loaning .ilionry on Farm Security at howest .Rates of Interest. . M'ORTGAGS : - PURCHASED. ' SAVINGS 13ANK NMI. • 3, '4' and 5 per Cent: interest Allowed on Deposit,t, according to amount •and tope left— • OF tdS.-Corner of Werke Neste tine Worth stn.° • " HORACE, IIDIITON, MAXAORK Godorich mime teli mg: Cabinet• Parlor' .-ForoittiPc Itlarcrooms. • -s-AND,--t • The subscriber lumps tits finest OASKETS ah.d..COFFINS Always -on hand. . Funerals fftrashed at the shortest:notice and loweat vices. , c.cru-orrar 'Lead I nir Undertaker. a ttEMF..31BBK TIIB PLACE, , 0 vrcrgrrE-- THOS1 STEVENSON JNN'S KINC WDER ECOOICS-BESTEREEND-- A (Snick, permanents . EN 0Nitettatt:y0settrrtfaa1111. • vousness,wealcriess, Jacket vigor, strength and de. velopntent, caused by indiscretions, excesses, ete..- - Benefits in a day; cures.usually withht a month. No deception nor quackery. Positive proefs,-fult. description, hundreds of tdstirtioniabe, with letter ' of advice maned in plain sealed envelopes, free. Erie Medical oo.„Butfalo,'Ns . ROLLER FLOUR 1.1.11AN by TON or CWT.; coas, Pia (At, Delivered wherein town free of Charge 1111S. 0101IN ItATSON.