The Huron News-Record, 1889-11-13, Page 7L
II
ick eadach
...., .--_—_,,
li comP>laiitt from which many anffate
and few are entirely free. Its call*
1s indigestion and a gunk*liver,
the
ui
Cure for which le Tgaali7
found
wee! Ayer'* P1111.
"I have found thet:fot u1ek o adach
caused by. adisordergtl condo Of the
stomach, era P111N ere. -he *oat re,
liable renA Y " 8* n C. Bradburn,
WorttdoittRf► -'
•
uAiter the pap of A,1fir'*, Tills 3qr
ieiany ytearP,•in 1Wy practica Ori$ fainfya
I ata ju.tiffe$ heatiedettinteStexAreite
exceltOnt catbartio a 'live iln —.
austaintpg all the.cl amide for'them• -
W. A. Westfali,.p. , V. n Austin
& N. W. Railway.Co.;ttrreit, Texas,.,.
"Ayer' Rina are 00bee4 meflleililtt
known to we for regulatieg the bows ,..
and for all diseaaca ,caused 1y a t 40.ei,
ordered atomlmh, mud. liver,• I luut[ere
for;pver three *sass frit <headlecb•
e ,11tl-
digestion, and .Cotuat pattont I '4144*.
iG
appetite and wag., :weak Mntk neXVOUi4
WOO the lige, B3• uetng,tbree: Page!.
of Ayer'fi Sala, en at, tl tettareet iniek..
diettDlin self,1 wae.con pletelycg>Ged._
_Yh1 •p Lockwpnd,T0P,��•A4.4400.4*,;.
"I: iwas troubled far tyeara„ . tb• is .
Sacorea, go atipatton..agd, he> aobg.
ew bezel of ,Ayer p Pilb. ufiod in stnl U
daily doses, restored me to health.
They aro _prompt and effective."—W. B.
Strout, Meadville, Pa.
Ayer's Pills,
PRSPARID let
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mow.
geld by all Dragnets and Desists in Modish*.
The Huron News -Record
141,:+0 a Year -31.26 In Advance.
The e.aa does not do y.lttie• to itis rrif8'tne44
who.spends fess in rtdeertisi.nd than he dues in
rent. —A..1. S111WART, the 4,illu,uaire 'u.erchant
of New York.
Wednesday. Nov. 13th 1889
C/t I UL'N7' 7'0PI CJ-
SEMPER 'DAN!.
A \Ietho.li,t preacher went iUtu
tL,• town of xlyet, the •ether .lay
allot prl4el1 1 stet II ly agn1181
111411 1:1111104181+411-1', athIliyisra; .4144 kt'nn,IIl
Cothoiica, W110 ctln,p•,s. LIP, hulk of
ch.+ populiitu,o 1u-c71u•1• rnr8,ed 81141
threw the preacher unt of the house.
• Several Catholics were arrest ed,and
the ill tical ions of a to •rieu4+ riot are
80 f41r4uiol:lhir, that a conIpnuv Of
militia ham kt,•e i nrd4•re'1 tier, from
TOpeka.
peso of affording facilities for rejig•
totia instruction or for any other pur-
pose, prescribe a aborter period,
If the truetee82 think the caecb'
isnt ought to be taught one dour
each day, they inay palm a reao!a
tion closing the beltool each day at
three o'clock; after which the teach-
ing of the catechism will go merrily
oa, and Proteataut ratepayers will
be compelled to bear their share of
the expense.. Mr. Rosa'new regula-
tictis do not fort id the imparting of
Neetarian instruction in public
schools ; they legalize it.
VACANT:FAARMS JN VER-
MONT.
A. rather ead story is told by M r.
Valentina, a Vermont official, about
the desertion of that beautiful State
by: its former initeibitataMa. Stand -
leg with _other otilciels ort a hill in
•Beletpugtoq Coutttyt and looking
9Ytli t3le,,valltty of the West River,
a
trilleteey of the Connecticut, they
counted fifteen contiguous farms, of
perhaps a hundred acres each, all
fenced, and with dwelling houttte
and barns in at least tolerable con-
dition, without a single inhabitant.
Beyond, toward the Connectioilt,
but hidden by the maple groves in
the volley, were, as they knew,
fifteen more, also deserted. yet all
well situated and still showing signs
of their former fertility. Statistics
show that a similar condition pres
veils all over the State. In Wit.tl•
ham County alone are snore than
th9t!Qand area of land, OW
eulf:ivated, bili now deserted, and
in the whole State the number of
abandoned farms, complete with
houses, fences, barna, and eutbuild
ingm, must be several thousand.
Yet Vermont is one of the pleasant-
est, healthiest, most fertile, and
most civilized States in the Union.
1u its river valleys is no miliaria,
while the Mills are covered to the
summit with vegetation. The reck-
less agriculture which- has made
portions of the South nearly barren
ilea never bean favored in Vermout,
where a century or more of stock
farthing has rather' enriched than
exhausted the soil ; yet the people
who once found happy homes there
have crowded into the towns, or
have left the State altogether. In
thirty yearn, from 1850 to 1880, the
increase of population in Vermont.
Was five per cent,, while the popula-
tion of the whole country more than
.doubled, and that of the adjoining
State of Massachusetts increased by
nearly eighty per cent. Not pre-
tending to any ideas iiu political
economy, we will not try to account
for this strange condition of things,
but it is certainly curious that a
region so favored in climate and
position should he retrograding so,
440 rapidly.—Anter. Architect.
WHAT'S THE MATTER WITli SIR JOHN
IN THI4.
Sir John \I•,e4uual,f the other
day said that the ,Iiaall ,,t•nuce Of
the Jesuit E+tale Act was n quer•
tion opens to a-ditf.trence of opiu•
ion, and had he been in the Quebec
Legislature he would have had voted
against the lneasui•e, but Colonel
O'Brien'* motion tt•am-oue of want of
o nlfidmnce, which he (tout.' not have
accepted --Mail.
NO IRISH NEED APPLY 1
Lord Dtifferiu, himself a disting-
uished Irishman, has been reminding
people how many son., of E' in are
ornaments to the 'civil and military
services of the Empire, particularly
in India. First, we may begin with
a name Lord Dafferin'was too modest
to mention—biniself. Thee, the
Marquis of Lansdowne, a 'Kerry
nobleman, is Viceroy of India ;
Lord Connemara—a I3ourke of.
—Mayo—is Governor of Madras ; Sir
'4'rederick Roberts, a Waterford
pian, commands the Queen's armies
in India ; Sir George White, the
SubdD•°�-.,g>+sy'.h, is a native of
n tad able Indian lite
ancie•r is Sir David Barbour, wbo is
claimed by Belfast. This lista of.
name Cartes out at. a banquet in Bed.
fast to the Marquis of Dufferin and
Ava, who assured his hospitable
entertainers that British rule bad
done much for India, had establish•
ed peace, enforced justice, built
railways, promoted education and
utilized the commercial interests of
the country so that a prosperity
existed there which was real and
lasting.
" ALLED A CANDIDATE AN OteANoa-
MAN.
Judge Cimon, of Montreal, gave
judgment last week in the libel case
of J. P. Noyes v. Le Monde news-
paper. During the late election in
Sheffert] that newspaper had in-
ainuated that the plaintiff was 140
Qrangeman rand Freemason, and
Mr, Noyes, being spoken" of as a
candidate, he pretended that he had
been injured by the charge, Ac-
tion was therefore taken for $10,-
000. Tile Yarned ,juldge'sabl it hail
be'n proved that \I r. Noyes was a
Freemason, but not an Orangeman,
and the paper would, therefore, be
called upon to pay $500 damages
and that co stm. It would appear
that the libel consisted i11 alleg.
ing that Mr. Noyes was an Orange-
., man when be was not.
Our i4fortnant adds that that tteotion
of Manitoba has not egffered from
frost to any extent during the lair
:en years.
—Mrs. Mollie Corwin, the touch
wan ried woman, of Shelbyville, Ind.,
was the cause of what, may turn out
to be a murder. Late one night
cute of her ex-humbands, John H.
Little, her sixth, and Joseph Cur -
win, her eighth, met near her house
and got into a quarrel over a dues
Little had bought her. Finally
Corwin struck Little with a stone,
cutting a terrible gash in his head
and fa suturing his skull. While
this watt going on Little's second
wife, unknown to him, was speed-
ing on her way to Covington, Ky.,
with Jetties Neal and all of Little's
savings—anus $400.
—The report of the special audls
for appointed by the Eosex county
council to audit Treasurer Wright's
books, shows that the township
owes Mr. Wright $11,212. Year
after year Mr. Wright foul,d a
deficit in Ida books which he couldn't
account for, and he was compelled to
sell nearly $10,000 worth of proper-
ty at different times to make this
good. He at length asked for a
special audit, end this showed that
he had by hie bad book keeping
cheated himself out of more than
11,000. The county council are in
a quandary how to raise funds to
repay the treasurer.
STATE RELIGIOUS 1NSTRt;CTiON.
Mr. Ross has again issued in-
structions that religious instruction
shall not be given in public schools
during school hours. But notice
bow neatly the honorable gentleman
proyides that the instruction may be
given just as it is now given, The
new regulation is as follows :
The school hours *ball be from
nine o'clock in the forenoon till four
o'clock in the afternoon, but the trus-
tees by resolution may, for the put•
4
•
--Prof. E. L. Curtiss, of the Mc
Cormick Theological' Seminary,
Rockport, 111., startled the congre-
gation of the WANttni nater FrPa1, -
terian church On Sunday by declar
ing in hie sermon hie belief that the
Book of Joh is Duly a poem written
by Nome Jew doling the 'period of
the exiin, that the honk watt only a
parable, and that Job and the other
perton4 mentioned were but the
et tures of poetical fancy. He -
gave AK 010 of the reasotta for this
belief that it was not reasonable to
suppose any wan who had become
so reduced by failure and bodily
suffering could utter such lofty
poetical 9entinetnte as ate ascribed
a
Our Weekly Round Up
--J. A. Harris, of the Milford,
Delaware; canning brut• decamped
with $8000 not iris., own, and also
took along with hini, May Ellis the
20 -year old book-keeper of the firm.
—Friday at Glasgow,Scotland,the
gable wall of a building which was
being erected along side of the Tem-
pleton's carpet factory was blown
down and fully fifty persons killed.
Ed ward S. Ebert, agedlt 90, a
paralytic, fell into a fire at Sitinns
stone; W. Va„ last week and was
fatally burned. The injured man
claiwa in 1818 he helped to build
the first house ever erected by white
men eu the site of the city of Chic-
ago.
—When Joseph Brayton, of
Minne.ot *,•went out to milk his cow
the other evening a big black dog
wanted t 1 play with him, but
Joseph kicked. Then the dog
turned into a big bear add_ hugged
Joseph until he had to have three
ribs and an arm trended.
—The n!ftcials of the Order of
Modern Woodmen, one of the many
benevolent societies that flood the
United States, have been shown
guilty of forging certificates of nient•
bership, death and burial of bogus
menthols and drawing their insur-
ance benefits of $3,000 and pocket,
ing the money,
—The American Acting,Secre.
tary Batcheller has decided that
Chinese laundrymen are laborers
within the meaning of the Chinese
Restriction Act, and are theriafore
prohibited from landing in the
United States, no matter whether
they have been here before or not.
—Sir John Lawes, the foremost
authority in England on crops, says
that England will require to import
the current year 18,400,000 quay•
ters of wheat. This is 10,700,000
quarters more than The Times' esti-
mate made 1•. August, and The
Tines accepts Lawes' figures as ac -
en rate.
—George Davey, who used to
live in Wentworth county, near
Hamilton, bolght one hundred and
mixty acres last year, one mile from
Westbourne, Man., paying $15 per
acre. He put or.e hundred and
thirty acres in wheat, reaping his
first crop this season, from which
he has already shipped over four
thousand bnshels at 65 cts per
bushel, paying for his farm with
the proceeds of his first crop and
having a few hundred dollars over.
to Job.
—Mr. Krooker, Ir, Mennonite
farmer living at Morris, Manitoba,
heard cows in its garden one night
Iasi week, and went out and drove
theta away. ria the morning he
missed hie pocketbook cotteinining
$130 in bills and silver, and going
over .hie tracks o1 the previous
night, discovered it covered with
saliva and partly chewed up with
the., bills missing and the silver
scattered about the ground. The
calves had evidently secured it, anti,
expecting to find the missing bills;.
he killed two out of the five, with,
out, however, finding the treasure.
A little child. tired of play. bad 'Allowed
his head on a railroad track and fallen
asleep. The train was almost upon him
when a paeptng straoger rushed forward
and saved him from a horrible death. Per-
haps you are Asleep on the track. too,. You
are, 11. you are neglecting the hacking
cough. the hpeilo flush, the lose of appe-
tite.growing weakness and lassitude, which
have unconsciously crept upon you. Wake
up. or the train will be upon you! Con-
sumption, which thus Insidiously fastens
its hold upon its victims while they are un-
conscious of it$ approach. must be taken in
time, if It is to be overcome. Dr. Pierce'$
ssaanddsofMcasesof thisroostyf�lof malaaddla.
1f taken In time. and given a fair trial. 11
Is guaranteed to benefit or cure in every
case of Consumption.
o�rm onne�y paid for It
will be Shortness of Beath. Bronchitis. Astof hma,
Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, It
is an efficient remedy.
Copyrlgbt,1888, by WOSLD'a DI& ¥ZD ASIPII:
S500!!!")
an
incurable cans
of Catarrh In the Head. by
the proprietors Of Doctor
Sage'a Catarrh Remedy. Only 50 mita.
bold by druggists everywhere.
rnbl• 141 'l rte, :Smith to sive teeth
.11,+11,11,4' to en14. lin being, rates
,i tt.••t' went (1211 11112 1(011440 a1111
lerc.•,l t1r.. emit 11 1,11(1 Icor 11)4418
81/IN '8O" (DIRECTORY.
unto to gad.
ONEY to lend In lgrge Or entail 6011.6 on
tiI good utortgitgee 'o,R ppptMgn4t 4eeurtty pt
the lowest 4:nov1 4 xttt8d. IT. U41 Fre fiuron fit.,
pitntiotr,U. i Clinton.
Clinton. Fah. 25. laid Iv
G. H. COOK,
MONEY*
Licentiate of Dental surgery, Honor Graduate KIVATE FUNDS to WA on Tott n and fern,
of the Toronto School, of Deattstrl • I P property. Apply' to
Nitrous Oxide Gas admiatetered tor the patnlees C. ftIDAUT
extraction teeth- Orrice, nextNEwe-RacoRb(up•etalrl)Altert-fit
mace—over Jackson'* Clothing Store, next to 869'8'° '
Post Office, Clinton.
CST- Night Bell answered. 492y
R REEVE. Office—"Palace" Brick Block
Rattonbury Street. Residence opposite the
temperance Hall, Huron Street. Coroner for the
County of Huron. Offs hours from 8 a.m. to
Clinton, Jan.14, 1881. 1-y
MD' the pito!. lft,,r r•Ie•a.ki,tg
the house and appr•Ip!•i4Iin:: all tl,t•
money, ole., the., veuld tied they met
fire to it; Th.•y tossed \l l 5 , 1411'.
bale lit the ail x':`4'4% ',.;u "111'1
let it fall back 1111110:41 nn 1 i;e 1•uiu1
of sharp kni%ea which diet• 1,• 11l
under it. 1",c t,nttca til:alh heedo(1
th, frantic vronn:l,', entrr:(I:ivb and
went away. leut,ing her with her
half dead babe hemido Lim ruins of
her home. People for 11ni1t•4 around
have beeu searching the country fur
the villains, ,till Ar. lfa aecumasa
hree of thew hodhers.! captured.
—Auguste Archambault. rebid-
ing at Contaco44ke, Quebec, narrow-
ly rscsp.•d h,•in,; buried alive'* few,
days ago, He h.4d • been s4•riotwly
ill for s• ver,tl weeks, and began to
sink rapi ily• until all sign of life
beamed and the dout(rs pronounced
him dead. ' Tile 11,1181 W14k.• 'wa8
held, and et, 0i to dit4s the body
was taken to the riling.. churchyard
for burial. The friends of the de.
ceased than had gathered around
the grave, kite which the coffin was
being lowered, When all .Pre, svartl-
ed by hearing a groat i proceeding'
from the coffin, The lid of the
coffin WAS Iluit:41' r■•114lV4-41, when it
Way fon,hil that AreIts nl•ault wits
alive. lie was earri, •1 hon,.', aro,
although very a eel:, the. two phy-
sicians wile were cellist iu have
strong hopes of compll'11, restoring
him to health.
--Farmers living in the vicinity
of a corncob pipe factory are excep-
tionally fortuuate. Although many
millions of cobs are burned or al-
lowed to rot every year, the price
for pipe making purposes keeps up,
A farmer living near Washington,
Mo., recently sold 100 bushels of
corn for $30 and got $27 for the
cobs. This is at the rate of fifty-
seven cents a bushel, and if only
sufficient Missouri meerschaums
were smoked to make the demand
larger, farmers would soon be rich.
Corn cob pipes are manufactured
by a very simple process, and are in
fair demand all over the country.
Some were recently shipped to
Europe and more were ordered
soon after their arrival..
—Robert Campbell, of Tara,
county of Bruce, a. cattle buyer,
had been in ,the neigltborhnod.. of
Lindsay for several days pursuing
his business, and was going to visit
his brother, a few miles distant.
On the way he had to pass through
a swamp, where his horse was
stopped suddenly, and a map, stand-
ing at the side of the buggy, pre-
sented a pistol at his head and ate
tempted to fire. The cap snapped
and Mr. Campbell struck the
pistol from the hand of his assailant.
He .was then attacked by another
man, who struck hist twice, once
on the side of his body and on his
head. This rendered him insensible.
On his recovery, after a few hours,
he found that he bad been robbed
of $1,740. The pistol was left
behind, and on it are stamped some
letters which may lead to the detec-
tion of the robbers.
6 —Kicknosway, the "1'>ig Injun"
of Walpole, is dead.- Ile passed
the century notch some years ago, if
Indian stories can be relied on,
He died from sheer old age. For
years Kicknosway has been the
11dg Injun" among the tribes at
Walpole. He. was a man of more
than ordinary activity and phvsi•
cal endurance. In mental endow..
meat he was far above mediocrity.
He is said to have been honorable
in his business dealings and jealous
of his good name. On 27th August
his will was drawn by Mr. Mc-
Kelvey, of Wallaceburg, for whom
Kicknosway always manifested
special regard. In his will be en-
tails all his property, amounting to
about $7,000, to his two wives and
three sons. Kicknosway was a
pagan and had as many as four
w,ives at a time.
—Near Lafayette, Alabama,
Albert Smith and hie three oldest
children went some miles to church,
Sunday. During their absence five
negroes approached the house and
Diamond Tea.
DR. GUNNY
W. Gunn, M. 044. R. C. P. Edinbur•h L. R. C.
S. Edinburgh Licendateof the3lidwl1ery, Edin.
Office, on eornerltot Ontario arldew'ininm bts.,
Clinton. 478-y.
'tent.
OWENS & JOHNSON,
Barristers,
ALBERT STREET, - - CLINTON.
AND QUEEN:STREET, - - BLYTH
E. W. J.IOWENS. '1. F. JON.C•N
MANNING & SCOTT,
Barristers, tgc.,
ELLIOTT'S Bi,CCK, - CLINTON.
Money ,to Loan.
A. H. MANNING. JAS. SCOTT.
SEAGER & MORTON, Barrletere,i0e.,d; , God -
erieb and Whitehall'. C. Seager, Jr., Goderich
J. A. Morton Wingham. 1-ly.
DAVISON & JOHNSTON, Law, Chancery,and
LJ Conveyancing. Office—West Street, next
Moe to Post Office. Goderich, Ont. 67.
C. HAYS, Solicitor, .8c. Office, comer dt
tie Square and West Street, over Butler's Book
Store, Goderich, Ont. 67.
egl Money to lend at lowest rates of lntereet.
1,1 CAMPION, Rarrister,AUorney, Solicitor in
L'.
L Chancery, Conveyancer, &c. office over
Jordan's brug Store, the rooms formerly occu
pied by Judge Doyle.
Mr Any amount of money to loan at lowest
rates of interest. 1.1y.
gllli'ttolturinl{.
H. W. BALL,
AUCTIONEER for Huron County. Salmi at-
tended to in nny pert of the County. Ad-
lrees orders to Ouoiaica P 0. V.17.
.nnhtn!.
Til MLO&, On
CHAS. HAMILTON,
A UCTIONEER, land, loan and insurance agent
F1 Blyth, Sales attended in town and country,
in reasonable terms.. A 11st of farms and village
lot8 for sale. Money to loan on real estate, at
low rates of interest. Insurance effected en. all
classes of property. Notes and debts collected,
Goods appraised, and mold on commission. Rank-
rupt stocks bought and sold.
Bluth. Dec. 16,185n
Photographers v
�_.,o-R`11E'
V$351
Incorporated by Act of Perllau.ent, 1866
CAPITAL, - $2,000,000
REST, - - $1,000,000
CLINTON.
Life Size Portraits a Specialty.
Head Office, - MONTREAL.
THOMAS WORKMAN, President.
J. H. R. MOLSON, Vice -President'
F. WOLFEKSTAN THOMAS, General Manager
erinary PhysicianF. ) and Surgeon,'Vet
Hon.
orary Member' Ontario Veterinary
Media Society. Treats all disease of domesti-
cated animals. Veterinary Dentistry a specialty.
Charges moderate. Office—one door east of Tits
Naws•1tecoao office, Clinton. 649-3Dt
The Only Genuine, Safe Ctirc.
Just what the people want, for the following
reasons 1 -1st, because it is t heap; 2nd, Durable;
3rd, Effectual; 4th, it is Nature's Own Remedy;
51h, it is easy to take, and young and old, rich
and poor. must and will have it, and cannot do
without It. Snpericr in every way to any
Blood or Liver Medicine on the market, with
hundreds of bona fide Testimonials to back it up,
The following from one of Clinton's best citizens
will suffice :
Clinton, August 28th, 1889.
After suffering for years with Dyspepsia and
its dire effects after eating, i have at last found
the "pearl or great price to 100" in the shape of
"DIAMOND Ton," whn:h mattes life worth living,
nod Don heartily recommend it to suffering
humanity as a remedy unequalled. •
A. COUCH, Butcher.
4l 'Ask for NAM, INDTEA and take no other
At your Druggists, 25 and 50 Coats.
Wholesale by W. 0. EDWARDS,:
ChM Agent for Canada,
L07.3111 Landon.
Arc '.;;.• o ; ..— ! ;.......... _ ^—n
far c^..l r. ua
decree,^ r c 1 i s
Notes discounted, Collectio11a made, Draft
issued, Sterling and American ex.
change bought and sold at low-
est current rates.
INTERIM? AT 8 Pas CANT. ALLO%ED 'a DKIOe1T
F..A-RM17RB_
Money advanced to farmers on their own note
with one or more endorsers. No nwrtgJce re
qulred as security,
H. C. BREWER,
Mandger,
CLINTON
.1. E. BLACKALL, Veterinary
Surgeon, ho norary graduate of
Ontario Veterinary College, treats
diseases of all domestic animals
on the most modem and scientific
principles. Arcane attended to
night or day. Office humedittely west of the
old Royal Hotel, Ontario street. Residence—
AI bert street, Clinton. 649-3m
Clinton Marble Works,
February, 1884
HURON STREET, CLINTON,
+AD
W. H: COOPER, Jr.,
Manufacturer of an dealer in all kinds of
Marble & Granite for Cemetery
Work at figures that defy competition
riLINTON Lodge, ,No. 54, A. F. S A. M.
LI meets every Friday, on or after the hit
moon. Visiting brethren cordially invited.
J. YOUNG, w. a. J. CALLANDER, Ss
Clinton, .ran. 14, 1881 1-
Also manufacturer of the Celebrated
ARTIFICIAL STONE for Building pur-
poses and Cemetery Work, which roust
be seen to be appreciated.—All work
warranted to rive satisfaction.
McKillop Mutual Insurance Co,
T. NEILANS, HARLOCK
(iDftnet.
GENERAL AGENT.
Isolated town and village property, as well ne
farm buildings and stock, Insured. insnranees
effected against stock that may ho killed by
lightning. If you. want insurances drop a card
to the above address.
602.11.
Goderich Marble Works
,,i..,, L. 0. L. No. 710
i4•';:, CI-INTON r
Meet. D Monday of ever
1 eaaoe'month. Hall, aid Hat, Victoria
1 / block. Visiting brethren always
'�...0 made welcome.
W. G. SD11TIr, W. Al
P. CANTELON. Sec. D. B. CALBICK, D. M
fi
Having bought out JOSEPH VANSTONE,
in Goderich, we are now prepared to fur
nish, on reasonable terms,
HEADSTONES AND MONUM ENTS.
GRANITE A SPECIALTY.
We aro prepared to so11 cheaper than any
other firm in the county.
Parties wanting anything in this lino will
find it to their interest to"reserve their
orders for ns.
• ROBERTSON & BELL.
May 17th, 1886. 892.3nr
Q
Jubilee Preceptory No. 161,
(Black Knights of Ireland).
Meets in the Clinton Orange Halt, the second
Wedneilday of every month, at 7.30 o'clock in
the evening. Visiting Sir Knights wilr always
r••ceive a hearty welcome.
A. M. TODD, Worshipful Preceptor
GEORGE HANLE8, Deputy Preceptor
Pares CANTELON, Registrar
Royal Black Preceptory :39!
Black Knights of • Ireland,
Meets in the Orange Hall, Blyth, the Wednes-
day after l ll moon of every month.
Royal Black Preceptory 315,
Black Knights of Ireland,
Meets -in the Orange Hall, Goderich, the This
Monday of every month. Visiting Knights alway
made welcome.
JAMES WELLS, Preceptor, Saltford P 0
W iI MURNEY, Registrar, Godcrich P 0
•
QLINTON KNIGHTS OF LABOR
Rooms, third flat, Vidtexie block. Regulr
meeting every Thursday everting at 8 o'cloc
sharp. Visiting Knights made welcome.
FOR FIRST CLASS,
HAIRCUTTING AND SHAVING.
Go to A. E. EVANS, FAm111.ONABLE
BARBER, 2 doors east of NEws•RECoito of-
fice. Special attention given to LADIES
AND CHILDREN'S Haircutting.
POMPADOUR HAIRCUTTING A Sr13'1AM,
oe
FOR SALE.
THE SUBSCRIBER offers for sale four eligible
Building Lots fronting on Albert Street; 44480
two' fronting on Ratienbury ,Street; either en
bine or in separate lots, to eta purchasers. For
further particulars apply to the undersigned,—E.
DINSLEY, Clinton. 382
•
cloy PROPERTY FOR SALE OR
off; I�l� RENT.—Advertisers will find "The
0i 1 t, News•Record" one of the best mediums
in the County of Huron. Advertise In
"The News -Record"- The Double Circulation
Talks to Thousands. Rates as low us any.
J. C. STEVENSON'
Furniture Dealer, &c.
THE LEADING UNDERTAKER AND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Opposite Town Hall, - Clinton, On
SALE RILLS.—'rhe
News•Itecord 1408 un•
surpassed facilities fur
turning out first-elass
work at low rates A
free advertiseuw nt in
The News poem's with
every set of sale hills,
WILL CURE OR RELIEVE
BILIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS,
DYSPEPSIA, DROPSY,
FLUTTERING
OF THE HIfART,
ACIDITY OF
THE STOMACH,
DRYNESS
INDIGESTION,
JAUNDICE.
ERYSIPELAS,
SALT RHEUM,
HEARTBURN,
HEADACHE, OF THE SKIN,
And every species of disease arising from
disordered LIVER, KIDNEYS, STOMACH,
BOWELS OR BLOOD,
fits,
T. MILBURN & GO.. PropriTORONTO.