The Clinton New Era, 1891-02-27, Page 3'
•
,
(:)1)bir)
Oa th,e4)andldateS for ;
tionin.hc DondnIo:
Parliament
he following are the. cat didatee
004n QUterie, up. ;to the pre -
-44
natituet ey " con_seryaare Liberal
,, ,• 14a ........11Ittcdoneell.,.,. Backe ..... ,
•: .t ro4.'•',Bc.,.il ...PI)aatwursegmin• • • • ••• '• •
Plant N..,,,.,....,., ...... „Somerville. • „
Earetkville;,. „. Woods. . , .. Derbyshire
, Bruce E. . . .. Carl,ta, ...,.....Trui- ' .
Brace W.,,,...,,Vor.son 'Rewind.
- Brace N, ,.....,.MCNell Bur t'min. .
POthwell....,...Langford ...•. i hie°LaDi„y [bad)
; Pgrawen "'"'"Vtlibtebs*[;;',iy'!: 313 era
• Corawn'l ik8t't.Bergiu. . , Smeteinger ....
i,
Dickinson.—
• ee'leten .„.... 1 Powell [Ind].
Hodgias (Ind
Dui 'hos Rosa John. ton
Duruain 1V Blackstoek elt Beith.......
Berbera E.....Clemes Grandy[E R1..
Essex N Patterson McGregor ....
Baum 8 „ ..Wigle .... Allan
• Eigin.E .: ..,..
:...',Ingram 1Vileort
• Elgin w„ . , . , . ,• Casey
, Peontenac libespae.ielt.„..,.Clyde .. . . .. ...
„,-,- Grey N Mneson Horsey ..,.....
4 , UPS' 8. . :Blithe Landerket .•...
r Grey E.... ..... Sproule (awl>.
Glengarry .....,R It McLennan ,,Schell ., . . ... .
• - . Grenville 8-• ...-.Reid Carruthers ...
Efaldimand , . Montague
Doran.
•
ITamion ..
ltMeKaY
* 0 i Fackman Laidlaw
Hr u 13 ..
McMillan .....,
u
, Herod E .......Holmes McDonald .. „,..
---Weron-W- -7.Pirrter., Cameron
' Helton : - ... . . He..de• son .....Waldie
• Halting° N,.... Howell
Hastings E Northrup.. Bu (tette
Hastings W Corby. Clete .... ....
Rent Ec milaaeckaeoenah:. „, Cfantpbell
-.11hxten ','•• - i Edw. ‘,=. , id) 1 G"I'll
Levis North and
Grenvi!le Fergon ...... F-ost . .... ...
Leeds Taylor Turne. i ed...
Lonsrl, isl Jamieson ..1, .• -e
Ix nnox Wilson .Allison.........
.
London., . . . . „fled' nj
I ,.nr it S' Hagca 't
L. mbton E Moncrieff • IIStiiiietnt::11.eY - • • •
- Li .nbtou VV
Lister .
Lincoln...,. ,...Neelon ..b1bsou
Middlesex N.....fiutchins ..... ......
Middlesem 8 ....Oh:shell:a
A
Middlesex E. roarns
yi.ortrm,
ti „i,
Middlesex W.....tRoovoime e
Monck McFarlane ....
„Drown
Muskoka . O'E.'en ........ Fitzgeta'd
Norfolk N .... .7Ss.,,Cialsi.: • .. . . Cha Don ..
Norfolk 8 Ell's
Nrtloymbland N . . .. ...I' Mitchell
No • hunibleno E../ochir w ..I etchi n...
' • • ' r 0. thiirohland W.Oui•let.. ....1- cia graft . ,
Onto.: io N Modill . . . . Coehhin n . ...
OacartySSmithl
eatedson
Betes W ..... . '.'''''Ellr
Oford B Wet earwiIel
t.:'''
Ottawa i McIntosh . ...310)01,01 . .
-Oxford N Sutherlaud ....
Peterhozo E....Lot nharn Forke . ..
' 1,, 0 .0 ro so ,.. if Siitieevderyzie,
[ (••::Flall
/ ..tth N Ler sou .Cr'eves
1,, .,se ,' ,a,....1. l'o• 'er Platt
01.4.. T 01'0 'or ... ..... ....
Pt 1 Cu /a , Fetliet '.ong ..
Perth 8 Sharp Trow,
" Renfrew N. White
lew S_ Fe .„'• ;Igoe—. ,Cra piton
. 11'd
i ••se. ... i -.Dick won .. ... Edwards
" MeCr. thy • . Cook
-
S:mcoe 8 T3 v..itt
S'incoe 5 Berhott Dr S1 dm
• Toronto E Co dswoc..1 . Whcele •
' Toronto W ,Denison. . &owatt
7..o :onto C .Coekbiu a
ken'
Victoria N eghes
Il .
Barron
••• ' .1 ietor ia S Fairba'rn Walters ... ...
Waterloo S Clare
Livbiga ne
Waterloo N ..
Welland Fer• son German
We111agton N. ..0 „a ..... ....McMullen . •
Welllni, on S.• coli"6 lanes .. ... -
Wellingou C... F- alio,* . ... Semple .......,
, Wentwonh N ..Wa. iall ..._.. Bitin
Wentwortb fil...Cr mentor Midelc.on
YorkYork
N Pe,:.g EtoMeDora_d lool,
•4fork: W l•ce WMcKee . e
Clenient
A DOSE OF "FARMER S FRIEND',
. Do I like your scheme, Protection
said the isrmer, ilienk yen ! No
For twelve long years`we've tried it and
Ume it onght to go;
All your promises are tempting when
you talked of prices high,
But you'll pardon the expresSion if I
term.it "all my eye."
It may look all right on paper and
- sound fairly while you preach
Of manifest, edva,ntage of the doctrine
that you teaoh ;
Bat still facts are vezy stubborn sort of
things rsith esTiich toRlay,
• And Protection -here in 'Canada works
• - just the other way.
Now the farmer in thke country, if the
plan were what you plead,
Should be piling up his fortune, at a
-. rapid rate of speed.
We've protection here in nicety, as is
very widely known.
Upon all things manufactured and on
. . -every thing that's grown. •,
The farmer pays the dearest price for
all he may require,
But when he sells hilproduce—why, his
prices once were higher I
First his clothing pays a duty front his
boots up to his hat,
Then the plough he tills the soil with
there's a duty then on that.
0
And the harness on his horses and his
wagon and his dray
Must.all bear a like proportion of the
tax he has to‘pay.
His implements, bis reapers, his ma.
• chince to cut up chaff,
Must each one bear heavy duty on the
maker's stole behalf.
And thus the system works until the
farmer is a slave
To the custom house official's from the
16re.d1e to the grave;
When at last he "turns his toes up"
and he disappears from view.
Mnst his coffin lid be fixed on with a
"well protected" ecrew ?
A ettli the thing pursues him till
the final act is done,
d the very rope that lowers him pays
seeleses "dear knows what" a ton,
lind when within his final resting place
The mould is raised above him with
more duty on the spade.
So looking at the queetioe, it seems
clear enough to me
That your little ficheme is not the little
scheme I Wish to see.
That on who manufacture may grow
richer tle'v by day,
I don't want roese victimized in every-
thing I pay.
Go, i you like Protection. where they,
work upon thie plen,
But please to let us purchase in the
cheaPeet place We Can.
W. OF WOMEN FAN,
FADSFANCIEg.i. FSHIONS OF
THE GENT‘Ell SEX*
Interesting Compilation of Woman's
Wok in. the World -Anecdotes of
Their Cleverness in pawl -
snouts -Latest ruble/ Notes.
There are more incongruous things in the
gender than in the young person who wears
Yeses in her sealskin coat.
Do the duty that lies nearest. That is
living. Character and eervice and beauty
make perfect womanhood.
There are plenty of so-called fashionable
mothers in New York who do not see their
children more than an hour a day.
Miss Elinor Buckingham, a senior of tise
Harvard Annex, has been appointed an in-
struoter in the Royal Normal College for
the Blind at London.
Where do the mauicure artists get theit
custom, At a recent $230 dinner party
there was not one polished or pointed finger
nail, and every guest was a recognized
authority in the gay world.
" The ubiquity of the Kings' Daughters is
soimething remarkable. They are in Japan,
China, India New Zealand, Australia,/ the
Sandwich /elands, Turkey, France, Rale',
Germany, Great Britain, and 1.7uited
States.
Henry Ward Beecher lives and
writes in a suit of sunny Parlors, where
birds are always singing or chirping and
flowers are always in bloom. She has one
servant to whom the canaries and plants are
more care than the entire household
machinery.
Think of having your portrait on a des-
sert plate? °Well, yesterday I saw a set of
Dresden plates which had been decorated to
order for a New York woman. Six of them
contained the portraits ef nieces of the pur-
chaser. As all six girls are noted for their
good Woke the plates, were, of courss, things
of beauty.
Art has no sex. Women stand abreast
with men in decorative designing. The
French, Swiss and English schools are equip-
ping thousands of women every year for
employments especially suitable to their
natural refinement and richness of 'fancy.
They are thd designers of elarge pereentage
of the artistic fabrics and confections that
France exports. ,
Speaking of George Eliot's continued pop-
ularity, it is interesting to note that book-
sellers assert that -Robert Elsmere" is as
dead as a book well can be. Misr. Humphry
Ward beceme famous at a bound. Perhaps
her success was too sudden. At all events
she has done nothing Mnce "Robert Elmnere"
worths' of her reputation and her chef
demuvre has lost; its grip.
Mrs. Marrable, who has been elected for
four years in succession President of the
Society of Lady Artists, holds a prominent
position in the Art world of London. She
is a -member of the Belgian and Roman
Water Color Societies, and is an associate ot
the Liverpool Water Color Society. Her
pictures have appeared in the Royal Aca-
demy, Dudley Gallery, and in many foreign
galleries, while she sends- sbme excellent
pictures to her own Society. Mrs. Merrable
is in favor ,of woman suffrage.
Gifted young ladies employed in the fami-
lies of the upper ten as governesses and
teachers barely earn sufficient wages for •
support. A girl who comes in to a house to
teach for two or three hours received $25,
some times $80, a Month. Employed by the
week she averages $6, or $1 a day. Family
governesses who sing, play, sketch, embroid-
er and dress'who are conversant in at least
t wo foreign languages, are paid $60 a mon th
and treated like one of the servants. In
several of the Vanderbilt families the salar-
ies of the Irish laundresses and English
• governesses are identical.
. NOVELTIES OF, FASHION. •
All the favor fans bear the mmogram of
the recIpient in silver.
Peat-ey is a very flue thing to have, but
style I-, vastly better.
Fr z.res, curls and waves are essentially
the ittocies of fair-haired Gallbr worneri.
emidys of shell. mon 110,1 in gold, 1.il-
1.10. 1-111-1,1/111U Sto/los :11'0 sLill woru by tris
.51 t.
il.d5 5501115 rn bv ;1. 1; 1.1.
colors this yo,c.. I 1 ., i • vit,i A:ill'11110
pepuhirCOiiiI)l at
The newest t 1 1. • •• • 11- o•i••5s .:1 fri itz.e
of sob:o ini., 1,..• s • •,.0 p4 carnet
over 11.5 slp•ti• ..• .• I J 1. 1 1'Oita.
A 11.e1.V1111(1 r,,miti; for evening
gow.s 'is a lialdi. ur rather roil, made of
Eilk (wily I -tas • ',id fr. Ted,' and of any
shade to maten the Gress.
Loug-waisted cor,ef,-; are absolutely neces-
sary for the long, s raight, slender woman
of the period. ,Mail5 0 ante' they aro nearly
as costly as the lasi Ma itself.
Farisiennes affect the style of on gar-
ment over another, as in the pinafore dress,
and running the changes on this mode
produces many, pleasing and unique designs.
The latest thing in necklaces is a chain of
pearls wound once or twice about the throat,
the pearls strung upou a scarlet thread and
the thread strung in a little bow at the
back.
Muffs for evening wear favored by the
elegantes are very dainty and tiny little af-
fairs Made of violets, rosebuds, or humming
birds in conjunction with lace, silk, and
plush.
On many of the well-dressed children are
?men stockings in the Scotch plaids. These
are Very artistic and reld much style to the
very short kilts of the small boy and the
dainty white frocks of future society queens.
at is not surpassed I
arunty
ICJ ST HAVY4 BEO PROOITY, GOOD SENSE
.Disease is largely the result of
impure blood. To purity the
blood, is to cure the disease! As
blood-pluifier and vitalizer, Dr.
Pierne'S Golden Medical Discovery
stands bead and shoulders above
•any other known epeoifio 1 Its
power in this direction is nothing
sLert of wonderful. Guaranteett
to benefit or etre in every case,or
money refunded,
W.S. Evati, a well-known To-
ronto banister, died suddenly'
early Friday moi ning.
A. W. Hepburn, a prominent
Conservative of Picton, and at
one time a etrinig finpporter of
the National Policy, bas kicked
017 er the traces. At thesConser-,
votive nomintion last Saturday
he placed his party in considerable
embarrassment when he declined
a nomination in these ternis
'Gentlemen, while I thank you
for the honor you have done me
tc {lay, you have made a mistake.
and I -will be compelled to with -
•draw from the field. I am on the
wrong aide of the House. I have
made up mytmind that 1. will pay
no more.unequal customs duties if
I can prevent it through my vote
and influence. Gentlemen, I am
in favor of reciprocity and will
support such a candidate.'
Aprons are coming in again, but to be
quite of the approved mode they must be in
black Chantilly lace adqrned with tiny
velvet bows. White ones are rarely used,
and are of Valenciennes lace and insertion
over silk.
• A beautiful new nutterial for evening
gowns is a black net, liberally embroidered
and fringed with torquoise, steel, and jet.
It is to be made over black, with a bodice
and train of turquoise -blue velvet, lined with
steel satin. .
Mme. de Steel turbans in plaid Mlk stuck
with jewelted pins aro quite the !age now.
A pretty young girl inaugurated the mode
at a 5 o'clock tea by wearing on her dark
hair a yellow silk turban stabbed with a
diamond arrow.
Our linen eheete, whith are strong enough
for bed Been, can be utilized to advantage
for tea scarfs, bureau scarfs,' or any of the
covers which are nectiesary. This old Hien
is much finer than that bought for em-
broidery purposes and M much easier to
work on.
Now that it is the fancy to have fur
EVERYBODY KNOWS.
That_ at this season the blood is
filrenavatk— h impurities, the accum
ulation of mon ths.of close confine-
ment in poorly ventelated stores
workshops and tenements. All
these impurities and every trace
of scrofula, salt iheum, or other
diseases may be expelled by fah-
ing Hood's Sarsaparilla, the bo -it
blood purifier ever produced. it
is the only medicine of which 100
doses one dollar' is true
During the last two weeks the
family of Mr David Hunt, of
Niagara Falls, has been passing
through the deep waters of afflict-
ion, having been called upon to
bury five children -who were fat-
ally attacked by thatfell destroy,
or, diphtheria.
Mr David Guinter, a promi-
nent and well-known farmer of
Pelham, Ont., died at his resi-
dence last week, of conf3amption
He had just returned from a. trip
to Florida, where he had been in
hopes of bettering his health.
The West Huron Reformers
have norninaied theirold leader,
Mr M. p. Cameron, for the House
of Commons. In past years Mr
Cameron has served his consatu•
ency and 'county well. He was
defeated in 1887 by the small
majority of 26, and there is JittJo
doubt that be can win the, eiding
back to reform. His old feieods
in the House of Commons will be
Llathto welcomelhim back, for be
was vc ell versed in public questions
and a formidable debater.
The grippe is still as prevalent
as ever in Japan'and it would he
difficult to find a foreign household
which has escaped; while in Jap-
ese circles it is said to be as bad,
both the Emperor and Empress
being repo,,1 l to be among the
sufferers. _deported cases of in-
fluenza among the, Japanese in
Yokohama up to the 3rd inst.,
aniounted to 50,000. Ile numbs'
ofcases not repot If is s-zd
very largr
When Baby was sick, w. gave her Caatorla,
When she was a Child, she cried for Caatoria,
When ehe became Miss, she clung to Castorie,
When she had Childrenehe gave them Caatoris
The Clinton New Era
Ispublished every Friday Morning by
the proprietor„ ROBT. ROLMELL at his
printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin-
ton, Ont
Tenms..-$1.50 per annum, paid in ad.
VanCe .
JOB PRINTING
in every style and of every description,
executed with neatness and dispatch,
and at reasonable rates.
NEWSPAPER DECISIONS.
I. Any person or persons who take a
paper regularly from a post office,
whether directed in his mune or an-
other's, or whether he has subscribed
or not, is responsible for payment.
2. If a person orders his paper dis•
lontinned he must pay all arrears, or
the publisher may continue to send it
until payment is made, and then col-
ect the whole amount whether the pe-
er is taken or not.
3. The -Cotirts have decided that re=
fusing to take newspapers or periodicals
from tho ost office or removing and
eavin s tnem uncalled for prima faoie
evid 1 It ci intentional fraud
ADVERTISING RA1ES.
LOCAL Noemes—At head of local
column, 10 cents per line' or portion
thereof, each insertion.
Articles lost or found, girls wanted
ctc., not exceeding three lines, 25 cents
each inserton. Five lines, 50 cents for
one insertion, and 25 cents for each sub-
sequent insertion.
Honees to let or for sale, farms to
rent or for sale, stray cattle and all
similar advertisements not exceeding
eight lines $1 for one month, and 50
cents for each subsequent month.
Advertisements without specific in-
structions, inserted till forbid.
Special contract arrangements with
business men.
A, General advertising rate for unclassi-
fied advertisements and legal adver-
tising, 10 cents per line for first inser-
tion, and 3 cents per line for each sub-
sequent insertion.
Changes for contracted advertise-
ments must be handed in as early in
the week as possible to insure a change
hat week.
FROM A FARMER'S POINT
OF VIEW.
--
R J Graham, son of the late
Ketchum Graham, a Conservat ive
M P, of Belleville, who has hither-
to followed in the footsteps of his
Sather, has cast off his allegiance
to the N P and calls upon the
farmers of West Hastings to look
to their .own interesis. At the
farmers' cobvention held in Work -
worth and in Pictou Mr Grahain
at] ongly -rged upon Ole farmers
the necessity of free trade with the
ni ted States. 111. Graham is an
exLensive farmer and trades lrrge.
ly with the United States. On a
carload ot dried apples which he
shipped to the States this E91/9011
he apid $400 duty: on a carlc ad of
potatoes. $150; on S00 bushels of
grain $80, on a pair ofhorses $60
on 100 bushels ofpeas $40. A ItD•
getber he paid a duty of $810 for
the privilege of sending his goc Is
into the States. Nor was this all.
He bought in the United State 3 a
carload of corn, on which he rid
a duty of $52.50, rDal oi1;. $4;
cheese machinery, $30; springs,
$6; evaporator, $40; apple parer,
$35: separator, $35; and on goods
and grocer les, $50, making a total
of $1,203.50 paid in duty in less
than six months. He asked if
any intelligent farmer could dtiy
the force of these figures. It was
an injury to the farmer s' trite, est
and, although he had always been
a Conservative, he did- not hesit-
ate to renounce the N P as an ab-
solute failure.
PAINTING. PALINITINO.
Tho undersigned desires to intimate to tit,
people of ...dinton ancl• vicinity that he has
returned to town, and intends to reinet.
here pe momently, and is better prepared
than ever to do anything whatever in the
painting or paper hanging line. 311 orders
entrusted to him will receive prompt and
carefal attention.
GE0RGF1 PO'CTSogirk St., Clinton.
••••""."••••••••!V•"!!!!"."1".../21_"•••-.
I1891••
HARPER'S Young PeoPi* ,
AN, ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY
Thm 'rwelvth Volume of Harper's Young Pee
ple begins on Novhcaber it, 1890. This best and
most eamprehenaive weekly lu the world for
rant/ readers presepta 4 rIelt and attractive pro-
gram. In fiction there will be "Campmates: A
!Story of the instaii,” by Mirk Munroe ; "Men of
Iron, romance, by Howard Pyle, with Mos.
tratione by the author; "Flying Hill Perm, bY
Sophie Sweet; "The Moon Prince." by R.
Mupkittrick; and "Yellowtop," by Annie Broil.
eon Xing. In addition to these five Bartok, there
will be storieaiu two or three parte by Thotuae
Nelson Page, Hjelmar Ifjorth Boyesen, Edwin
Lassetter Bynner, Harriet Prescott Spofford,
Mere E. Wilkine, Here Perry, and others. Short
dories, and ertioles on scituace, history, travel,
adventure, games and sports, with leutdrede ol
illustratone of the highest euaracter,will rendes
Harpecie Thing People for 1891 unrivalled as a
miscellany of the best reading for boys and girls
"The best weekly publication for young peo
pie le existence. It is edited with serupuloue
care end attention, and instruction and enter-
tainment are mingled in its pages in just the
right proportione to captivate the minds of the
young, and at the same time to develop their
thinking power"-N.Y Obeerver
TERMS: Peerage Prepaid $2 per Yew
Vol XII begins November 4, MO
People bound in cloth will be sent by mail, post
Volumee VIII, X and XL of Harper's Youee JOHN CUNMGHAME,
age paid, on receipt of 0.50 each. The other
velunaos are out of print.
Specimen Copy sent on receipt of a. 2c etas%
Single Numbers Fire Cents eaoh
IIRISTMAS 'PlOCERIES
A D
Fancy
in Candies
A T
Rock Bottom Prices
We have a splendid assortment of Choice Christmas Groceriee, including every
variety of Foreign and Domestic Fruits, whieh will be sold Cheap for Cash. Our
Stook of CANDIES is the most Choice and Varied, and cannot be surpassed.
All at Rock Bottom Prime. Just received White California GRAPES,'HAD.,
DIES, OYSTERS, clm.
Remittances abOuid be made by Post Plaice
Money Order or Draft, to void chance
Address; HARPER tt BROTHERSew York
1891
HARPER'S BAZAR.
ILLUSTRATED.
Harper's Bazar is a journal for the home. Ole
Ing the latest information with regar d to the
Fashions in numerous illustrations, faehion-
plateo, and pattern eheet supplements are indls
pensable alike to the home dress maker and th.
professional modiste. No expense le spared in
making its artistic attractiveness of the higbee'
order. Its cleVer short stories, parlor plays,' and
thoughtful essays satisfy' all tate, and lts last
page is famous es a budget of whit and humor.
In its weekly 1801.10 everything le included which
is of interest to women. During 1891 Agnes B,
Ormsbee will vrit,e a series of articles on , 'Thr
House Comfortable," Juliet Carson will treat 01
"Sanitary Living," and an interesting successior
of papers ou "Woman in .Art and History,1 su-
perbly illustrated, will be furnished by Theodort
Child. The serial stories will be by Walter Bes
ant and Thomas Hardy
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PER YEAR:
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nding, will be sent by mail, post•paid, on re•
p t °fin each •
RernIttances should be made by Pot Office
oney order or draft, to avoid chanc is of loss
ddres; HARPER & BROTHERS, New Yu.
• .
LIVERY.
The undersigned have bought out the Liv-
ery businese lately owned by R. Beattie and
desire to nform the public that they will
carry on the same in the old premises,
Next COMMERCIAL Hotel.
Several new and goocI driving horses, and th
most stylish carrages have been added to
the -business, and will be hired at reasogable
prices. Satisfaction guaranteed.
R. REYNOLDS & SLIN
— _
NU;TEDI
A good pushing Salesman here. First -
class pay guaranteed weekly; Commis-
sion or Salary. Quick sellifig new Fruits
and Specialties.
RME RS can got a good payingjob for
the winter. Write for full terms and par-
ticulars
FRED. E. YOUNG, Nurseryman,
RoOBEBTER, N. Y.
F GOODS
Just Arrived
'VV 114 ES,
,400Cla5im
”04ilverwribre.
J IDDLECOAiBE
10M1M....••
FJOR
knsecg Stings
Soe
ESteL
Erkuption
ppre Feet
cmeness
Ch4fin-re..
ite's
C'prarutaf,
•
g`soi
tq_s
„iters
male
-r&ihts
Uflosqui
utut \A ALL
I a n
'keit ;. SUBSTITUTES
I UTILE
jackets and ettpee open end pointed at the WL K PER
. • , •
•
neck the silk mufller is a necessity in seven ` ic,..-..._'1,04.- MUM 4 .4.tes,
weather, and it also protects the skin and WOKS
linen, if the fur cracks. The most fashion- Children Cry tor I. 411 MANUFACTURED ONLY mf 41111
able mufflers are the plaid silk ones. excitement of lost week Dur -
ng the football ;
1 Pitcher's Castoria POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY.
pll '
mufflers of Yale blue, or orange and black • %„1,, 70 FIFTH MEAD/ YORK.
were effected by many Hurray Hill maidens.
oofit'8‘00
3ceirlAtaitiaL
'At:pamphlet of Information and ab -
Street of the lawa, showing How to
Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade
Marks. Copyrights, sent free.
Address MUNN & 00.
361 Broadway.
New York.
CLINTOIA
The LATEST STYLES
IN
FUR - GOODS
To please everybody. Cali% and see all
the latest shapes. We are constantly
offering bargains. We are showing a
stook that is wonderful in quantity,
quality and style. We also keep on
hand a magnificent assortment of
amow,tzu
-
Our stock is complete and well assorted. We invite
your inspection.
REMEMBER THE STAND—ONE DOOR NORTH
OF THE DRY GOODS PALACE
G-3110. CI-DA_SO-OW
see -11711:11W
ADAMS' Emporium
'Immo=
Haying returned from Toronto, I am prepared to offer the public a tine assort,
ment of goods at prices very much below the regular values. Many of the good
will be sold at and under wholesale prices, as they were bought at a heavy die
count, and I intense to give my customers the benefit. The stock consists of
Tweeds, Dress Goods, k lannels, Wool Skirts,
Linings, , Shirtings, Table Linens, Towels,
Towellings, Storm Collars,Mantle .Cloths,
Jersey Flannels, &c
I cannot here mention all the Goods and Prices, but will give a few.
$1 Tweeds for 75 cents. 15c Shirting for 12 cents
• 1
5 c Dress Goods for 60c. $5 Storm Collars for $3.50
5 c Jersey Flannel for 55c. $2.50 Storm Coll'',,$1,25
And other goods in proportion. We will sell Cheap Caen or Produce, and
will not hesitate to trust parties who pay 100 cents on tne $, if they require it.
We expect this to be better than other years. Our goods. are right -our prima
just. So come right along and be convinced. No need to pay $5.50 for pane'
worth $4, or 40cts for Rubbers worth' 35cts. Wishing you all a prosperelle at
happy year.
I am, respectfully yours,
BIBLES & TEST AM EN TS AT COST
, The Clinton Branch Bible Society SHINE f or
, sale at DR WORTHINGTON'S DRUG
STORE. Albert Street.,a tine USSOrtntont of
• Bibleahnd Testaments.
' TESTAKENTS FRoM. Ran. UPWARD
BIBLES PROM 2504 UPwARDs.
DOME AND SEE. DR WORTHINGTON. De
-
BIG MONEy
FOR AGENTS
NO RISK. NO CA
REQUIRED
An hoiforable and praiseworthy buoimas
withou t any possible chance of loss; steady
employment and control of territory Flave
done business in Canada 80 years. Liberal
pay to right man to sell our puexcelled
Nursery Stock. Send for terms.
ROTHERS COMPANY,
Nurserymen, Colborne, Ont
elele??.?.?..e.
712:111es ?Se'
rzt'g
.bo
7:1• •.“' •
r:1 rr.P.4
t
ste-4 •
••
eer
•C't1s1V,r'm'
Ehlisz°
4v,
R. AnAMS.
LONDESBORC
The 99 HO SE !
We have just added a very select stocicof
Cottons,Cottonades, .Shirtings,
Towellings, Shirts,I)rawers,
Prints, Flannels. Ladies
Woollen and Cashmere
i-41,tc.
To our stock of CHOICE FRESH GROCERIES, all a which for the
next 30 days we will offer at the very lowest cash prices. Call and
examine our stock. We are confident you will bay when you see our
Goods and Prices.
C3 -g110 STIEMTAM/1"
BIG INDUCEMENT
Call and see our PRESENTS GIVEN AWAY wit
evety Two Dollar Cash Purchase, not required to be
all got at once. Get a card and hove it punch-
ed when you buy anything for cash. My
sock in all branches is now complete
for holiday trade. Flour and
Bread is Cash, therefore not
included in presents.
GEO. NEWTON - - LC NDESIBORO