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The Clinton New Era, 1886-07-02, Page 6, ".• • FRIDAY, JULY 2, 4880. A leisure litreamr. 3Tioll Tux oraytt nuaren, Ob, birds that .aing such thankful psalms, Rebuking uMan fretting; Teach us your secret of content, Your science of forgetting; For every life must have Re ills, You, too, have times ot sorrow. Teach ue, like yet, to lay them by, And sing again to -morrow; For gems of blackeat jet may rest Within a golden setting And he is video, who understands The science of Ithetting,, - 01;lia1re5.that blow before the,gale, Until its peaceful endieg, „ -Teach us your yieldin gilinted Mt strength„ Your graceful art of bending; For every' tree must meet the Storm, ' Each heart encounter sorrow, Teach us like you to bow, that we May aearid erect to -morrow. For there is strength in humble grace, It wise disciples shielding; And he is strong -who understands. _ The -happy art of yielding. 3. 011, brooks which laugh all night and day, With voice of sweet seduction, Teach us your art of laughing more,. At every new obstruction; For every life bas eddies deep, - And rapids fiercely dishing, . Sometimes through gloenny caverns forced, SOmetimes in sunshine flashing; Yet thereis wiadmid in your ways, Yonr laughing waves and Wimples; Teach us the gospel of your smiles, The secret of your dimples: Oh, oats that stand in forest ranke, Tall, strong, erect and sightly, Your trenches arched in noble grace, Your leaflet§ laughing light.Iyj. Teach us you firm and quiet strength,. Your secret of extraction. From slimy darkness in the sdil; • The grace of•life and action; For they are rich who understand. - The secret of combining - The good,, deep hidden inghe earth, With that where sub is shining. , Oh, myriad forms of earth and,air, • - Of lake, and sea, and -river, Which makes our landscape gle,danal fair • To glorifly the Giver; . Teach as to learn the -lesson -Ira In each fatniliar feature, , The mystery which so perfects • , Each lew or lofty creature. ' For God is good, and life is sweet, While suns are brightly shining, To glad the gloom and thus rebuke • Our tellies .ofping.. The Slowest tjme neebrd. • As the car reached Westville an Old man with a long white beard retie feebly from a corner seat, and tottered toward the deer. He was, however, stopped by the ceadnet- or who said : • 'Your fare please.' ray:Jd3t eri ' ' en ? I don't remember it.' 'Wfly, I paid you when I got on the car,' 'When did you get On the car.' . `At Fairhaven.' • 'That won't e • -.. • 'When I left Fairh' aid the conductor. there Was only a. little boy on thegar! • anawerecl the old man, 'Iknow it. „ I was that boy.' v 4 life, and oinks to hopeless unawakened death. Think not that you have shed your bittereat tears, until you' have steed at suidt a death -bed. nit* not the mesa- Went/ant of any human gruif has boon found until you have sunk the plunime line of such a sorrow. The grave stud never buret its eheath to let the soul this death free, like a lily on the Eaate air. The door shall never ming like th 1-rjr A Hollow Tree iron of Trout, TIM FISHING SEASON' SWATS WW1' 000D - . x A week or tWo age a singular occasion t tratuipired at the wood camp at Wolf j„ Creek. The land on which the timber is f / being cut is extremely ragged and broken by huge boulders and rocky cliffs.•Over s these rocks are the streams which from Wolf Creek cotne tunabluig down from their snovvy sources on the mountain tope. Near e onof the streams a couple of sturdy wood- men -eat to work to fell a large pine tree which stood dose to a high stnooth wall et granite. About thirty feet from the foot of the tree, at which poiet ie seemed to be decayed, the trunk 'divided into two large • branches, tine leaning over against the perpendicular wall of rook. A small stream of water poured over the rock and, falling upon the limb, fell in spray down along the side of the tree. The water made the wood -choppers, position very -un- • comfortable, but they kept. at their work and soon the tree began to totter, and fell - with a reaounding crash and broke in twain. The men followed its course with their eyes, but their gaze turned to a stare of wonder and their surprise found vent in a loud shout, which ran from molith-te- mouth and sent its echoes ringing through the mountains. "Fish; fish in the tree I" cried the woodmen, for from the top of the tree poured a vialume of water ail it fell and with it a hundred or more mountain trout, which were left helplessly upon the stony ground. The excited wood•ohoppers crowded around and began .to pick up the • ash.arthey-could, all ata -lose to account for the presence of the trout in the tree top. • The Most, plausible theory is that the water caused the tree to deoay and be. cane hollow, and the fish, being swept over the rock, fell down into the tree. In whatever way their presence there may be accounted for, the sight of the tree empty- ing itself of its lively sontents was' won 'derful, not to say starfling.Alpine (Cal) Argus. bare of a cage, to let this murdered hut flash forth like a plume of a singing bir to the stars. No, Over the grave of a dee end buried trust no resurrection note Ca ever :sound Me a bugle amid the dew hills, to call the Bleeper trona his celioli Once dead, it is deaVorever. Deck t •4;100, sweet sqlacing„ Years, and kende bloom of inemeiry 1 At its head, the moll stone of forgetfulness ; no• tear can kee green the meagre mound that it beape above the grave where Rep youth's con stancies end love's forgotten, dreams, Go pity us all who have wept by ail& a grave or have autidered the. faithful hand-olas of years at such a hopelesis deathbed:- " Atnber," in Chicago Hormel:fan, • • •• Plgeittieve to the .Desith. • -Detroit- despatch •trays :-=." Tillf' Geogan,ofBiaston; and.'‘Jekey" Blenheim of England, two- notorious thievesi, tame to • Detroit a few months ago. They had been concerned to a bank robbery at Men- dota, Ill„ and, as they were wanted for a crime, cominitted in London, Ont., they aid not dare cross over to Canada. Geogan hail been in jail in several Stites while • Blenheim, al-thOugh-inany-tinieti-A;rested-, had never been convicted. About- three weeks ago the pair quarrelled over a wot man, and Blenheim wae pounded by Geo, .gan until he was linconscions. The ter- mer then swore to be revenged,. and. Geo. ..gau, knowing the fell extent of his former conirad'e's vindilltieeness, Concluded in Arisk his chances in Windsor rather than be "given away". by ffekey. He oroetied the river, ,therefore, and made his head- quarters at a -quiet resort for .persons or his ilk., When .131enheitn had recovered, he offered to lure Geogan or from Can-. acia into the hands of a detective, if he (Blenheim) were given immunity for the Mendota job. : The WIndaor authorities were informed that Blenheim'a, offer:had been accepted by the Detroit authorities, and presently Geogan' found himself so oloseljr watched in Windsor, tnat he deter- mined t� cross to this side, selecting last night 'kir the time, • Mean while Blenheim had got into trouble. Yesterday -he net a Ohicago baciebell enthusiast and , fleeted. him •of $700: . The Chicagotie pointed Blenheim out to e Pinkerten detective who accompanied •the Chicago delegatiori to Detroit, and 'Blenheim,. featinwarrest, re- solved en ertatcro-Wiirdenr. ;Brii singular chance the two villains met in midstream: The meeting and the 'struggle that'follow- ed were witnessed only by theTinkerton detective who was shadowing. Blenlieifn.. He says that in midstream Blenheim niet a boat containing pee person, who -hailed bhp. " The stranger was Geogan, who as. he drew near, and recoldized Bletiheitn, • euspectedeeme-trick to capture.hiin. He ..nulled alopgincle, therefenpnd.struck at Blenheim with an oat., 'fore the 'latter had recognized his assailant or &mid get hiarown oartrom the locks. -.••Bleeheint saw that it iviis,to..be a battle to the deathan boarded Geogan's boat; • The twe, *strug- gled. tor; the pciseessiOn of the -ear which' Geegan had, and 'finally went Overboerd.. They struggled .desperatelywith one aub: .ther in the. water until, locked .in one at/O- ther's embrace'they 'Went to :the bottom, • and were drOWnec1,- jest as • the 'd'eteetive's ' The awkward scenes often :exhibited in boat wiii.toinieg to their reecue, leading horses, both on coUntry.roads and : , • •, city streets, gen.erally evince the„obstinate, ir.onkrennavatniettietiy. llooj. or lazy nature of the animals, though the is a beautiful: present l'te.f4iVo.allY• lady, fault's sometimes attributable totheir bad But there is .a little book •published in Management. Amidenti OCO816i011D1137 oc- pamphlet •form, withno pretensions to • our frciro pne or the-otherbt these, causes. literary merit, that would .be as apPrOnri,A, -the groom • being unhorsed and Seine- ate, and might be .tlie means Of saving a. times seriously inj. ed by 'the heldinaINA calledDr. R. v.Pieroe's troat.ie' back of the horse he is attemptieg:tolead on.diseaseii of Won244:" • for whose peculiar Probably, careful trainina. while young troubles- the. • "Favorite Prescrintion" is would materfally remedy tlbils,defect, even eapeciallg.designed: It is profusely inns - in animals • that a e .nat•urally-lazy or trated with wood -elite and colored. plates, obstinate. • . • • and will be: sent to anyaddress for ten • Often, when a number, of horses are ha., 'cents . in stamps, by the World's Dispen• • ing led along.e.road, one. horse batik§ back sary MediCal 'Association; •Etiffelo, N. •Y. • .. and 'allows himself- to he drakged.by the • . • •• ' •' ' • ' halter and ...,pulled along,, while. another sienenter care: et 'tlrerk norsea... • • The grooming -ea tis called -of heroes,' q.uite as impertimt the. feeding, and 10 summergme when. the fearneare work- . ed hard, it isLiedispe.nebble to -their wel3.. fare. When a horse is working, the ex- • B •Ce ' tretion from 'the akin is nrofiise, and ,pours e rt. e ections wi open on uly '3 2nd and Will end July 1.4th:: • . ; • Leading -Horses. trots up freely, ahead:cif the -horse hie lead: •• er rides. The difference in the, dispositions of the two animals, so. opposite...in their. nature, is by nomeans an iudicatioti of their respective abilities, for some of our fasteat horses are naturally lazy and don't lead or go freely, requiring., the whip or spur to keep them up to the free- and -high mettled are nowhere •in the .face. Yet the latter are generally pre- ferred for pleasure and • the former for aPt to close the pores and prevent the est profit. • The ' horde that •leads well; •and ea.Pa-:44-tbe.-lifersPiftrtium" This produces runs well up to the bit, hike thefirstole dtalId9Vo• in the form'of congestion ot the • merit of a good and- pleesanteriddle- horse .myriads of capillary vessds which; form' a While the obstanate or lazy animal is:otten close • • net -work' near the. surface of the • ody, and the excretion and secretions being stopped, the sktn becomes harsh.; r contractesLand-diseased.' The -i matter -being unable to escape -gathers • night men at the rolling mills in Hamilton, had a diepute, and the tortner was Orrick by the latter with a. pair Of tongs, breaking his cheek bone and doing other seeere in- jury. Grill was fined SO for the offence, half of which ivill go to pay Matindera' timber's bill. 1, The iatest remedy for Camille, Colds, Croup, whooping cough, Bronchitis, etc., is alcove.: Ies goLung' Compound. 't herein Ile remedy in. entscomposing ateGregorat wig Cie o SO do not say you have teiree everything until you It, viz., that it is the beat. Sold lu GOo and 81. bottles byA-v-Wortlilngtoti,-drugghit. A greedy hen belenging to Mrs, Hummer of Barnestalle, Ohio, ate ao much that her „crop became dogged, and ahe wasin danger of (lying, - Mrs. Huninier was equal to the emergeney. $he clipped the feathers off the crop, then opened it with a sharp 'knife receoved the. contents, deftly sewed • it up again, and the hen is new the mother of a fine brood of chicks. •-*-- • 13 ail for the Coo. An old engineer tells the Omaha Rail. -way News a story in which a cow made" it almost as bad for the (snipe Stevenspn prophesied that it_would be forher.--"Thet e Was a place away np. in thg Allegheny Mountains •where the wagon road ran .under the.railroad, the trestle •work being about fifty feet high. The yoad was new and had not been "surfaced" up. The ties were not imbedded,. but were lying on top of .the ground. We were annoyed a great deal by cattle gettieg (AI the ^"taae15, and it was with great difilculty that they' eould get out of our way when ediapelted. to hobble over the rough ties. There was a • etirve n9ar this bridge,• were rounding it one day at a geed fate of speed,. svhen_f_discovered-rt, cow standing on the track between the two ties within five rods .af-the bridge. • We struck her, and she .fell lengthsvise off the rail, the pilat• wheels of my engine cutting her in halves as neat- ly as if it had been. done with a butcher's , eke. ..0de-half of the animal fell on the • right side °Elbe track under us. A§ I ran past I distinctly saw the peleations „of. the poor anianareheart wilichliad not yet quit beating.' My engihe was thrown from the •track, of iiourse, and the wheels got tingled up in the loose. ties in such ainadber as to shovethe ties.:ahead under the rails, so as to.rnake a solid flooring of ties clear across the bridge. When the further end of, the :string of ties we were shoving struck the opposite end of the bridge, the "slack" stopped, and with it sudden "jam" we cattle to a stand right on the Ifigh*bridge. The engine wavered sidewise and atood in avather diagonal position'aeross the track It seemed to me that 'siren the *eight of my body might have overbalanced her if I had Changed position. But, as luck iveuld have it, she clung to The ties, and I es. caged Withent a serzittli, but pretty. bad1y. shaken up " A• " • A Raleigh, NO., telegram of June 24th says :-.A.0 oily SOD 1113 has appeared on the waters along •the south-eastern coast of the state which extends for several miles out to eea, and affects the river for a long distance inlank_niaking_the_ainfaceismooth -Fieh are dying by thousands and floating on the water. It is aupposed they are poisoned by the Oily scum, but whence the destroyer comes nobody knows: A teleerain from Niagara Falls says:— On Wednesday a lady, who is a stranger here, hired aback to visit the whirlpool, ArriVing there, she went down' the bank to get the whirlpool view, and the hick_ man waited her return. After becoming a little anxious, the hackman commenced a search for the stranger, but she could not be found, and it is not known now, where she is, It is siipposed she either fell or jumped into tlie boiling waters. ' • A community was started at Anaheim; Cal„'several years ago, the principal fea- ture of which was that only Uncooked vegetable food was used,. One after , an. otherof the members has left, either by re- signation or starvation, and now but two are left. One of these, the spiritual ad-. riser of society.. Walter Lockwood Thetas, is sonearly starved to death that he is confined to his bed from weaktieriii, and the other, Pb near the hodnd of- life that the ladies itrairffear her are forbidden to see:her pale, wan face in the dying pangs of death by starvation. • TEL GREAT ENGLISH PRESCRIPTION Asuceessnumememetestedever ••so years in thousands of cases. Promptly cures Nervous Pros- '• „„,.'„,464 tration, iVeubness of Braiah Spi- •nal Cord, and GenerativeOrgans eithior veg, Rtnissions uud illscausedbyinctis- cretionoroveratortion, Six paceagesis guaran. teed to effect a cure when all othermedietneefail.' One package $1, six packages $5, by mail. Sold bydruggists; Wrierfer.Panipaiet, address EUREKA CHEMICAL CO.,DETR01T, 591d hi Clinton by T. H. C011113E, and Druggists • everywhere. , • • • itIore .about We bare had our lar suit and. proved White Bronze to be s':*• •' FAMILY AROCERS, WE HAVE, A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OP ROCKERY. AND GLASSWARE. • , . S, PALLISER and CO.; '4 oLINT0N. CASH FOR EGGS, , • • • Haying leased the preiniaes now ocoppiedsbj NI, for anther term o_l_f yeam..-Wit_are , reparect-te-tivw"tliti-BEST-B-ARZIATN possible. We here* on hand a large and - • • and well:selected stock of • GROCERIES. • CANNED GOODS, EXTRACTS $ • FRUITS and SPICES wARRANTED p.uxtE, Noninta BETTER TRE MARKET._ ALSO „ k 14sACXING, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS, BISCTITSr CONFECTION- • ERY2 CHINA, CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. We have the largest stook in, town. Clombine quality with price and we cannot - A. ANCITS, emelwiliwoosawsoisassl cLxv wely The Best and Cheapett. • • t7, N DLERSONS;-„.. . Send in your orders at once, and they will be promptly: filled. Lee Ciream, -Virnter, Are, •JAS. 41STIDEELS 017, NEXT G :AND ciairrr •• • • • reat Inducement. 'what we tepresenteint toile:by scientific. men.--Withrognni• • . .., • • . to the information from Flint, wd g ve It as 4re A'Ot• it from . . . . Mr. Carpenter; and we .believe him, as he is riot interested ur . ..• . • , . the sale of either White Bronzi2 or marble, and we shall not • • . .NV bite Bronze MoMonent j purchased from you, It has, Mit yet -blown down. nor hate 1 the least •fear but 'cid It will. • • ' 111R. V. M. Glyrix,--I inn perfectly satisfied With :the ' ,.. ' Cotierieb, AprIl 15th, .1 eel • - lj .. ' 0 0._ *_ . .b CHINA. - CIROCICEE,Y 4S4. CLAS.S.177. ABE. . 9. • . . . • . reply to the intexested statements of the opposition log leave • . • . , . . ' , Havinn bought C. J.--Xuthill s Stock of . .. 7 4 • . • our customers to spoitk, for us.' • .. . . . . . ; , • .•• . . . • stand the greatest blow that may couie-eren that of il marble •• At • it discoent ' tvill-sell at Wholeiale.Prioes until all is.eledned out. ' . ... .:. . • agent, neither has itturned black, nor decal t abott'avaigna.g....2._ • . •' . A. FIE0'i ASEOIVI'MENT- 'OF. J. ' ; HIRE:Psi Olf..CHIC,A.00 . . • .-..... becoming discolored, I like it better etery time 1neo it 'and • • 'FINE To11.11.: E T .S0 A• P.: ., '' '. ' • • this is the opirilou 01 811 who hare s ma it and spoken to me trbout it. ' • • , • W. J. LI.bliTRONG;Tbei ..leartiesieteedii,g to purchase monnuient should call on or write to nr. M. GIFFIN, Clinton, or JAMES ,GALLAWIER,, Goderieh. • A Reply• to Mi. Broken Arin• Freud.: . Office of Morton, Barites' .52:7 -Co.. Flint, bitch:, Junc•12, 1886, ' To NV. 11. Coornit.• HEN.. C1111t011. . • ' . Sin., -Yours received, Mel in reply would give you some idea of the facts pertaining to what the advertisement par. tieularizeS as being very flattering to tlid Witte Bronze and to 31r, Dunham. Me often In reeeipt • of slettcus Dam a great Many lowils•in Ontario, as I am well aconainted witha oritv ef•the marble and granite men there'. . . • erfuLaceount Of Die White Bronze dtlinft %•410111e 11.411410 013,ciap0 Che u emot• ion, or2es vour letter shown, mtaining' some wh . • . . .FLEESTI.MA'ig 00!S YEAST; -f'ormerly kept .by Co; fil.w:ItyS on hitriTi • JCIEW,C INGI, TYPE CLINTON • OR .ta P 11.1 0 FhT.1 eeshty--m this pattiCular instance tls no remote en mgli • 8.13 Rd Would Do, • • • •Item irg is an absolute end unanswerable Ile. 1;heres ' . . • . . • ,. • not -nor has there ever beep -a marble monument erected • • • .Barry t . • Avit burn radios of seventv,11ve ladles. costing any such 141(4/1f4 1 213, 0 Irish .tragediau, ivaa-t-tue La8 therdbeen• any 'Marble mioniunent taken down, aii;ti ' ' ' ' ' 0 . . • • •• ' teiflad with White.nronze, If there had even been a small . ' ' - '• ...- • • . • •• . • ••• • • . , playing Richard III genie years a41,10 at . ohithniebneii ode (11/94 Constantly being dOrib tO • 1.41ake w414. , . • •. 5 ' . • ' . . • • . Shrewalnity.iti Erigland.•.-Whtn the ater.• formio re Humeri' wors) 'been tallen lurk they; woolhave ' ' • ' . citoc Cheap PlIOVISIONS. • - Wowed and advertised it; Wirt tlieyg iltkodo=as vef came to the " Alloree, 'a horsey iny Oeiney tIranft AO 'el lin I Mil • bey, fe. 2 22 4, lie kingdoni for a'-hor0 se..+" 11 :"94.fi)r atid.• stinivau•n, ycsi,„.,.vespooded the.trs.ke„.. • 4; 600, end °Jot. Ilief bail dien, turning quickly on the interrePter ; .:ist;t11.00,1 Wukii,t,t82."Ito 1 he took'Inielv that granite unit maim capital out of tehe ex, called ',out,. Wodld an, do you , 111`1•=8111•4;.eor•IN),etitM..i?.' t nod. into tradin fo • IVI •4/4144, t i of t ie bite Br owe !3,0esse oeite around to. the sts o do „ Born,lova. • Ili2w, then, why don't' purnhom ndvertin that. (+angel He knows better ; lots of rooplo hove mind •ed that 1 . same timmunent in lus show room ; t is well set off 4y coin. • • • " C G. R, • • • NEWS 'NOTES. • • parison dingy, so milled "White Bronze,'" Besides, .„ • . ORN Wit • A Nra , . •, •• ":117LIETZTOZT.,, • •• "•. stair, and at a respectable dear°. • Now, net look at it: -• - - he 10 as zealously endeutoring to sidl,the ,ranitc -as hie sine' • . Having. a lerge StOok of 'Salt On,hand, orders will .14' fil led at the lowest prices . . ever offered in Clinton, tis the salt wcirks - will be seld . when arrancrementa are , • completed. • Will buy and sell TIMOTETY and CLOITER-SEED. . A •lob of . 0 •-' SALT SAQICS and:GRAIN I1AGr'S for Attie. ' -...- , , , • • • . ••• , • .• SIX 'LARGE i3S.Rs OF • N • P SOAP .411OR ONE DOLLAR. : ' fr m it, the form of perspiration. When' • 115 ariert,on-the skiirdt--leaves •he well known-Fenian,Patrick_Whe-' of impure matter adhering to it, land, died yeacerday in Ireland.• , - Stones of great violence have been quite prevalent of late throughout Minnesota. nuisance, -American . Agriculturist .Afrir- Juee. inven or,sdv#439, in places and forme pimples,. blotches or George Stevenson When advising young tumors, and, if it is not removed;..theee is men how to get on would finish by Saying danger of poisoning the blood, and, with "Do- as I have- alone -persevere :For the appearance of farcy and glanders; fifteen years he plodded and worked before finally death. All this may be prevented giving the finishing touches to his locotno- by careful attention ta.the skin, by oeca•- tive. In its man) days those perseverving in sional washing, regular currying and In ush the use of Dr. Pierce's "Golden 1VIedieel ing, and proper 'care to avoid galling, by Discovery," have experienced great relief the rubbing of ill-fitting harness. As per - and found themselves on the high road to ventien is the best cure, -it ia well that health. Liver complaints, impure blood, owners of horses should exercise all posai. chronic. lung, diseases and moos, others bis presalm,„ to avoid the fregnent dis- orders which result .from neglect in •the direction pointed out, and thus ear° much annoyance eed loss. -American Agricult- •. mist for july. yield to tts keeling influetrces never to re- turn, All- druggiats. • "'-''' A Death Ilea. ' heard someone bewailing the death of Denq Do It. a friend the ether clayrisaw a other Bill 3./ye says:' "Don't attempt to lendingover an empty crib, whose' dainty' ' cheat an editor out of -a year's subsoription pillows no golden head' should ever press to his paper cir any other sum. Cheat the again. I marked the half-contrelled, dry- eyed and voiceless grief that ate. at a fa. minister, cheat the doctor, cheat• anybody ther's strength until no wind-blown reed and everybody, but if you have any re gard for future consequences don't fool was ever so wasted of its self reliant , power. I saw wife whose love had set with an editor, You will be up tor office some time, or want some 'Abbe favor for in the grave where her young Itheband was . It is estimated • that the area sewn in Wheat in Manitoba this year is 450,000. acres. • • The..,:fort :at Oariten; *destroyed during th at' rebelliont-will:riet'Aibe-k built. •• . • • , ;A metnber of a -Kansas firm of horse,cleal- era has just purchased fifty:1AX Clydesdale stallion§ for $75,00 from Mr. Riddle, the owner of the.farnima, Blackball stud in Renfrewshire. , The °Minty Council of Storrnont,. Dun des and Glengarry, at its session Wednea- do; nuaninionsly refused to recombiend the appointment of salaried or unsalaried county Police Magistrates for.the trial of Scott Act cases: • • ; •. A. stranger by the name of Geo. Whit- taker committed "Einicide an Tuesday ly hanging himself to a beim in the barn of James Kern, hotelkeeper, Beachville. He is a large, heavy Mani. abotlt 05 years of of age. Nothing is known of his history or friends. . Colonel Philips, late of the 4th Hussars,:. and: colonel Ravenhill 'R. H. A,, camo. over the Parisian. They will make large purchases of hoses in Canada for the Cavalry and Artillery, .and report on the capabilities of the Dominion its source of supply in case of war, lain, ag the_sun eats on_estormy-elman, (Yr Wine 640! end when 3. _ your• A man in Now (Marina haa tried the ex- " thhig Ont otlight.,Ibtaa jittie_child_ianien,kllucktlifare,„IfAtaa 6:1,:leauelL40:1ti"heLfc::: .,ellineditolifenthbe :gfg.s,t4attnillgd whaenhetnhobsilheal(11wilinsbrleei saw an rild man rend his snovvY hair, be- , 000130 the faithful one whose hand had the editor will "open upon you and knock yolked egg.with entire suecOse. On- Sun 1810 in his for forty years had vanished day last a little head came through each your air castle into a cocked 'hat at the - ,, put op (monument which two men Bite, and pat en a one camas . . - , • • horse draY, and took bark an ill polinhed Tot tage granite monument, the base of whicliihe same dray would hot carry. Manufactured zinc yields the.matinfocturers, at 15 cents Per _pound, dlarger than 2331 per dent profit, and it is 01111 1)7 Bump -a -to giiikerifitt 45=Culits-Mul titer -if -he canitcht, per lb. rhe life size figure of Faith may be 05 nil 041, (IIIIIIII8. I' tet saw Faith, hot It that iisure• As• life size, 'then Faith tigs• t have had t ;men' high chair to sit at a .common sized dining table.' , • ..Tteni 2. Pert truth -port falsehood.. The -price bas been piked at. $1,5_00-tu $1.600, probably itidging from size weipitluil appearance". The Boyne (immorient coat about $8.20. Gallantly 511100 a few mople went to see tbe mono. ment, (not thousands, hondre, 24 would ),e(:Merging the truth) en accOunt of the notoriety it gamed in being brolibn. If we sooty and could prove that Burnham' wrote that anvevtleo, merit reflecting against us, or conld pr0018 thaLlie-meant-i VC COI* 11 eat him where we had ids privatefietective ensued. In ferreting out•the eulprits via, iitjnll, and • -u oirld-hate sent the deleetiVo to State P1n after he lind served his • Dine In county jail, if be had not'whineil so, and elaimed our tnerey, rt, rasa Tito covoi:irnoy, •Burnlinui 1110517 (1110 liliits, just as the advertiseinentliints and his detective abd others . got bold of a man who used to work for us -and they sop p0851 be was working at the tithe -wide him drunk, And then swore his complieation in the matter. Of course It fell through with the above renult,.viz., jail • for. Mr, Detective. ' They were undouldedIv wrifking for the. reward, 8011 1011 Willi • as felloest--Burnlinin $23, WI»te Ilidnze Co., Detroit; $ 09, Mrs. Payne $100, cemetery Asseelatins $ 100 -total $125. sire. Ppm and her alIviStou (105 80 thougiht for tatuneut -VT - • - • • • WE ARE''NOW OPENING ONE;OF .THE L'ARGESTASPCK§ OP • 4 BOOTS and SHOES at Remarkably Low Prices. -- • TE IL$24. • SINGLE HARNESS .$10. BABY CARRIAGES" jUst:arrived, latest Styles very. Chea • UNICS & VALISES by the hundred, Cheali;• . • Nigh lend PINE and CEDAR SHINGLES. at Lowest Pricam------ that We, 05a117 tirm opposed in tratte to t le White, Bronze, • ' . .ita,. • comitaanecit any violation '1 anything in her interest 2 they f..al Wl (71:EX 10 I ....X... 401in.torte .-, . ....y.40.4,....1 it torami as the result Of !III Old fIIIIIIIy fend. . O . e Regording the soldering of a new kiln, Bentham had it east tip o him by experts. that the arid was not soldered on; but lititt it email new figure cant front mane 0141 meal 2-01,111e. onnmanammnowne, mild 1101 111111 dare itot contradict them. Yen, it.wati -optic! thing for .11nralutircl-he made the Sale of an ono for a the trine inane 24 11052 8171100 and left trifle for.prollt- reported $60; eosi or east from old mould, 24 39 I RISO note that theatreakage of the mamma 171114 It good adver, tisenteut, so he sold seven mium.monitinents and 11 number 2of smaller ones-st short time after. Now, he has not taktn a large orders since, 1101 111 the two years business Am 01113 towntas lie erected, froln ins first Nale till his last, the 111511ber lie C111111)8 as tile direct result of the lireakate. 'On the otter band it ,Iest a limit represents the total number of mounmente large itcd smell. And iniml rem the profits 08 that tun -tient kept ten 111,1,111ex01111 nni.i store rent I Thero is a business fer you to enter $00 espitni, 11)05 01 "lightning rod" cheek, Ann about 4 or 0 sales of inonntente 9(0 7000 win give you a good living. (ln)1 tiling certain, his business 1011 03! Ver,y 111(50 111, monument wag repaired, Be rifled to 11091 Ills store, and has moved mit ef the business portion of the town, Whenbe first (tame ber.e 110 bonstingly etnted that this thin would have to 0114.40 tut and go to rim neer house. 'Well, there 171 41 I II possibility tif 11 man going there. But when people remembered that 1110 bv‘uls Or this firm are taxed about $25,0011, 41141 are rated in Dim, Whoop & Do, and Brad* t(iittirieetl. 1111at that 1511011Anti then eptioltieLthnt U111.1,14011 luta i0Itato 013 at t e t g yilit with this lengthy epistle, tot fe, moleatilion,0 Wetilti say 1 11:in 4i1';efCrVi; Yo rdlY-taken-up-atul-fephicedhy-inatIA041111,:grtni:tel, ur s-, haft five vears-iwchilIchNacorteTobNe.ing aiol througheet the 14t0014 Mere t t 1., veyi rii j„ whtte Bronte Agent r-•-•" 130 7811 wont a tigninnienti" Intelligent Purchniiiir.-" wo wont tnonninont, hut we do not want to 1100 )111 elle or those Soft bellow, metal t)1n4.iegIgr:;to gtr1 °Ieig;00:gfrt74' ,li1ngotif chasig /nionninent froinW. L 0410Plik4 Jr, Clinton VirrigiZentkolloriiii-ritieererit111 fee&rns.tigire!nL .1" '6011" 310 After reoninf the npovt, • the heolligehtio 911111111 014 00)117 to ell 0,1011 )hli0110800lll)lB to1e0IC; olrleitgttr rtheirt ;lee Thoatenents. Further :particulars ibrohhtl,, ovritootton to W. IT. COOPElt Clinton iSlarble orits, Ong at bed -time the lullaby song which its 01188 yourself for a drivelling idiot go hire idliiirrelound:- They 'Were' - nio-verfkircli dead mother's,lips should never sing again. But sadder than all these thing ; more trag cal than any death which merely pieta; the blosanm of life and bears it en to hea-• von, as the gardener pinch the rose to Keep some feativeLefjoy.,.....is_ the Beene when trust° 1 friendahip dies ; when legal • someone to knoek you down, and then kick yOU for falling." . • "Reader," In informing Yott of thiStrondorful remedy for coughs, Colds, AtitItmno *Bronchitis, Consumption, and all mil:atone of the throat and Mugs We feel gut we are doing you a greet kindness. 48 11you have atly bf the abotri3 coin- plaInta, yen win only tty We Will guarantee antiofaction in extry ease or 1110(105!" m110(160(1, faith that hes °tutored the test of man ii$,41ifttfinnitingnottritynOoligillinnAen; slightly united, but were easily' operated. Robt. IVIiller; a successful cattle dealer, of Galt,died very. suddenly at his residence on Tuesday evening. He was taken down with congestion of the lungs on Saturday, and the news of his death on Tuesday took everyone with surprise. He leavea a wife i Drue an a young family well prov or years, gives up the breath of animating Store George Manedere a d 'Joe h Grill • P • ., • We have secured 20 half chests of very 60et. YOUNG ELYSON. TEA • which we will sell for a month at 45cts, by the blb, caddie: This is the beat value ever offered in this connty. • Don't fail to go a caddie beibre it is all sold. , We have opened a full stock of New .Valentia Raisins, Extra Selected ;Valentia Raisins, Black-BasketRaisins, Seedless --- Raisins, Sultana Raisins. NEW Sli _ORRItANTS,., NNW' ELLA. ED .T.41VIONDS, NEW LEMON ORANGE AND 'CITRON -PEEL. 21ba. GOOD kIVITXED CA,N,DY • POR 25ms, Call,and Inspect our Sioek, . os. Cooper & Son, CLINTON. 11