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The Huron News-Record, 1894-10-31, Page 2A FRIEND &peaIts through tifetoothtiay (Me.) Register, of the betteftoial resuitsiie has•recelved from a regular use of Ayer's PM ' He says: "1 was feeling sick and tired and my stomach seemed all out o1 order. I tried a number of remedies, but none seemed to give me relief until I was induced to try the old relia- ble Ayer's Pills. I have taken only ono box, but I feel like a new man. I think they are tile most pleasant and easy to take of anything I ever used, being so finely sugar - 'Coated that even a child will take them. I urge upon all who are in need of a laxative to try Ayer's Pills. They will do good." For all diseases of the Stomach, Liver, and Bowels, take 1� i ER'S PILLS PrepuredbyDr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Every Dose Effective Me Huron News -Record 1.50 a Year --31.25 in Advance \WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31st, 1894. - THE HURON NEWS -RECORD. A Live Local and Family Weekly Journal, Issued Wednesday Mornings. OFFlca —Brick Block, Albert Street North. Clinton, Ont. Teams. —81.50 a year 95 in advance. No paper discontinued, except Rt •pilon of publisher, until all arrearages are settled The month and year to which all subscriptions a c paid will be found on the addresslabel. TRANetnNT ADvsaptsrNo.—Ten rents a line (non- parioi measure) for first insertion and three cents a line for each subsequent insertion. CoNTRAc•r ,11)vat:rtstNo.—Special position 10 to 25 ptr cent above regular ratre. The table below gives ..ontract rates for run of paper for definite periods : St•.1t:it. l 1 YR. 1 0 MO. 1 3 m0. 11 110 One column ..... .., 000 00 035 00 $20 00 57 51 Half C011111111 ... .., I 35 00 90 00 12 00 4 00 Quarter column... 00 00 12 00 7 00 2 57 One eighth column .12 00 7 00 4 00 9 10) Ono inch I .6 00 R 50 2 00 1 00 Servants wanted, for sale, lost or found, advertise menta, not exceeding three lines, 25 cents each in- sertion ; nut exceeding seven lines, 50 cents fur first insertion and 25 rents for each following insertion. Farms, b •uses or town property, for ,'ate or to rent, stray stock or similar advertisements not exceeding eight lines, 01 fur first month. and 50 cents for each follcw ing nionah. Local notices 10c a line for each insertion. Advertisements without definite inatrnctions in• variably inserted until forbid and charged accord- ingly. Tr,.nsiour advertisements in all eases to be paid in advance. Ail u rntraot changes must be received at the office not later than SATURDAY NOON every week. A.M. TODD, Publisher. Let is Take Time. Let us take time for the good-bye kiss. We shall go to the day's work with a sweeter spirit for it. Let us take time for the evening prayer. Our sleep will be more restful if we•have claimett the guardianship of God. Let us take time to speak sweat, fool- ish words to those we love. By and by, when they can no longer hear ns, our foolishness will seem more wise than the best wisdom. Let us take time to read our Bible. Its treasures will last when we shall have creased to care for the war of poli- tical parties, and. the rise and the fall of stocks, or the petty happenings of the day. Let us take time to be pleasant. The small courtesies which we often omit because they are small, will some day' look larger to us than the wealth which we have coveted, or the fame for which we have struggled. Let us take time to get acquainted with our families. The wealth you are accumulating, burdened father, may be u doubtful blessing to the son who LY a stranger to you. Your beautifully kept house, busy mother, can never be a home to the daughter whom you have not time to caress. Let us take Hine to get acquainted with Christ. The hour is coming swift- ly for us all, when one touch of His hand in the darkness will mean more than all that is written in the day- book and ledger, or in the records of our little social world. Since we all must take time to die, why should we not take time to live— to live in the large sense of a Life be- gun here for eternity ? News Notes. Editor J. L. Montgomery, of Mar- Nhall, (Ill.) Democrat, states that for many years, he suffered untold agony front Dyspepsia. At hist he began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and by the time he used six bottles, he was as well as ever. Cures others, will cure you. Ald. Ilallam, of Toronto, while in England a fete months a n, brought four fine white swans. He paid $70 for them and freight amounted to $16. Now he finds he has $14.80 more to pay for fluty, which makes the swans pretty clear eating. Poems on "beautiful snow" are in order, that ancient jokelet about the young man's winter overcoat, and his "uncle" ndn.y now be written with a fightingchance of the writer escaping with hs life, the iceman sells his space in the comic papers to the coal man. And the soup kitchens start. The Church of England boasts among its clergy an Esquimaux, Rev. Robt. Gibbons is the clergyman in question, and his parish is Parrsboro.' N. S. Mr. Gibbons was born in Labrador, and educated under the guidance of the Bishop of Newfoundland. Ile intend- ed to work among his own people, but ill health prevented hien from living in the far north. An Esquimaux mission- ary to the whites is a novelty. SO GAY AND FESTIVE. Alt DIlorobes Are Not Enemies of Man. kind and Dere Are F'oetr Every. oiie Sltirdld Know. ?ho ubiquitous microbe has no respect for unbelievers. It follows out its life history. It is only since that wonderful bit of transparency, the microscopic lens, has enabled us to see and study the infinitely small that greater success attends the warfare between human lite and its rauages. Few unhealthy eoud - tions are flow mysteries. G.)l erallyf they can be- traced to microscopic rife. Decomposition, fermentation, putrefac- tion, stagnant water, foul odors, bad air, which has been breathed and rebre+nthed in a room and received the exhaltatious of many people, are the result ot' bac- terial action. It surrounds us ou all sides in air, water soil, food, dust. Ex- isting in the air the toilers, more busy that bites in a hive, tall upon congenial soil and begin immediately to reduce it to conditions favorable to sorne other sort of bacteria. These change it into food fit for a third, and so the work of mutation goes on so long as there are elements to be changed and bacteria present to work the change, It is a n'orrn which turns milk sour. Otte curdles it, another gives it a bluish tint and another snakes it red. There is an "ecclesiastical" °sere, so-called be- cause it forms blood -like spots. The ancients used it to find their sacs ed bread, left on the altar over night, spotted with blood, and they believed a direct • messenger had been sent from God. Now almost any laboratory will show you just such spots forming in a test tube by an invisible midget. Tho iridescence seen on old wood and decayed moat, on fish and ou the sur- face of stagnant pools, the light along the wake of a ship. the decay of teeth, the changing of wine into vinegar, sugar to alcohol and carbonic gas, these and hundreds of other familiar conditions are due to our friends or foes, as the case may be. There is a specific germ for every disease as there is a speclhc seed for every fruit or vege- table. "Tho germ of fermentation finds favorable soil in grape juice, the germ of scarlet fever.finds the soil in the hu. man body." Whether they are friend or foe depends upon their kind,our abil- ity to offer hospitality or hostility, and their capacity to carry on antagonistic warfare' among themselves. There are those which live on other kinds. Other live in the human body and destroy in- truders when they approach. Each kind has its own place in the world and more work for us than against us. Scientists distinguish thein as readily as we do a daisy trout a dandelion. They cultivate thein as easily as a farmer grows his corn and beans. They require for growth just what plants do,a proper soil,warmth and moisture. Though one must be Magnified 2000 times to be be photographed,andit takes 1,500 put end to end t:' cross the head of a pin, they are seen "through the lens dancing and wriggling, glidin„ push- ing, kuoct;ing about like a "lot of fran- tic skaters." tione very big names have been given them. Those that look liken tiny dot are called "micrococcus." The little straight rods are "bacillus," and a kind that look like a cornnla, or, when elongated, • resemble a corkscrew, are "•spirillunl." "Sachaomyces cereoisiae" is a big name. but considering its importance it is tint inappropriate, I1 is the name of that little agent which makes yeast, Called so from "gheast," meaning "spirit" in German. It used to be thought that spirits got into wine, beer and other fermenting substances. Now we cultivate the little plant and know just what it is doing. Some bacteria work rapidly, some slowly. Some grow so fast xis to multiply one to 16,500,000 fn 24 hours, while the slowest grower doubles in the sante time. It is frequently stated by microsco- pists that in less than a week every ocean on the globe could be filled by bacterial growth provided conditions were favorable. Luckily for us, no such thing can happen. Tootnany of our friends stand waiting to destroy en- croaching armies. So long a8 Our physical and terrestial soils are kept in cleanliness and purity we need no fear bacteria, Deteriorated health affords a favor- able field for germ propagation. not only because weakened tissues aro more readily consumed or changed, but be- cause the friendly invisibles are weaker and unable to destroy the enemy. Some bacteria are more tenacious of life than others. the typhoid bacillus and tuber- culosis ge' erm being the greatest. Fre 'z• ing renders harmless for the time, but in rare cases, kills. Heat at the boiling point is a germicide. Direct sunlight and pure air are valuable aids in destroying almost all disease germs. Will She Smoke? Motherhood has always seemed to me the crown of a woman's life. Who can suppose nicotine to be,a useful prepara- tion for the young life to be launched into the world? And for the nursing mother, with a cigarette, what can we say ? We should have to bury all our pictures of the Madonna fathoms deep, that they might not behold so unlovely a sight! Still, my other reason is doara-t. me, and I should like to recommend it toyou. It seems to mo that In learning to smoke women aro binding themselves with new fetters. There is the cost—no inconsiderable item, as I am told, if one has a tine taste—we may be sure wo- men would have that. Then there is the further burden of a smoking cos- tume—we can hardly suppose women will be Tess fastidious than men in this respect : but, above all, there is the burden of a constantly recurring neces- sity of life, which imperatively craves satisfaetion. Now. we women are, as it is, bound hand and foot to artificial wants. We have idols of the house, idols of the toilet, idols of society, idols of fashion. and now, in the name of break- ing with an old tradition,which,as we see, has touch to be said in its defence, we propose to enslave ourselves afresh, and to sacrifice to a new idol, more exact- ing than any of these. In the matter of clothes alone, think how many times a fashionable woman changes her. cos- tume every day—to breakfast in. to ride, to drive, to drink tea in, to dine, and now, alas, to smoke in.—The Nine- teenth Century. Did !In Dn It ? Mother (sternly)—"Kitty, didn't Char- ley Lee try to kiss you last night at the front door?" Daughter (blushing)—"Not very hard, mamma." µ;we, 0. 100 • Yip^° s�� � a�--� a tk a 13 use rl t a by c r"11-° a p�•,rst��AN ��>��® ooa a 13,12. �t ply uta s�P{tet �o �fl b1o1 Wls ttoate ILs1a G,1t cb ot111a.�;,J 1et1 1 t1cb 11,1 v1 at 1,1•flash n� nF'�wtoClowt�n`ta 1t boilalY na k wU1 tot ttlaiiC; f,eiG1• ,OtCg LP ba \t0 w, d1Yee Isentatthein inf; t�°,ina w so•sn 1 ��li s0eakas4il {u1 to .101 a :6aea{°f 131:,r^113T�: 5d.5i ,N kotou r. out, • 01100 $0 P'1 -1,-'r' �1GH1NQpeY' v V� W l4::::7::: >iNE"�v �OB.I ea e � e. e 0?!0it � �uKOd�by . �1aoa8�`sut- eUti {01y n�0,.� J 61 Ti b Sigbo` eljea els y�llits o sedteac07,100. ata ed n edd�Dgoae� gid:{eget toi t�felYenneJbuti at\s o�ansi.4t D•but gin r�ota;idelm�eJi sbost4..� Catucu cot with `liaisoase 211 ea unaeci raY It tOYq ono .0 t5s tldn,Sbletr 6.Y 110 ostYenscinbacaaslJ tbo tine) Ui0t, boJYalla {KUoitaUt1yy Jtas�nco`efa�lm4tal nob Jr}o5 o,ve ti to GEOs: acio ay.0.. fife Cut, suah INIOSCOMXIIVRCRICINSIM Last Saturday Jos. Robinson, of Mountain township, calve to town, says the Winchester Press, and sold 090 bushels of oats to J. R. Weir. He got his money and carried it, home. He kept $80 of the amount in his breast Docket. and went out to feed his cattle. While distributing the fooder he suddenly discovered that lie had lost the $80. He hastily hunted around and soon to his ailiazetnellt saw One of his cows with the money in its inouth chewing it up. He grabbed the animal 'End succeeded i;t saving $40 in frlsgranto fromthlt! maw of the cow, the other $40 havi lg in all probability reached the animal's stomach. That cow should now produce gilt-edged butter and cheese.—Winchester Press, BUILD UP. \Vhen the system is run down, 11 person becomes an easy prey to Con- sumption or Scrofula. Many valuable lives are saved by using Scott's Emul- sion as soon as a decline in health is observed. Four then near Gordon, Texas, Fri- day morning held up a train on the Texas Pacific railway and robbed the express car of between $4,000 and $5,000. They could not open the com- bination safe, which contained $31J,000 belonging to the Pacific Coal Com- pany. Heart Disease Relieved In 30 Minutes. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief n all oases of Organ a or Sympathetic heart Disease in 00 minutes, and speedily eff"ets a sure. It Is a peerless remedy f r Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Smotbtring Spoil, Pete 111 Left Side cud all symtores of a Diseased Heart, One dose convinces. sold by Watts & Co. Mr. W. J. Fowler, of Detroit, who was lessee of the Grand Trunk lunch counters at Lopcion and Chatham, was found dead in bed in London Thursday morning. ON THE INSIDE. As tt remedy for internal use Iiag- yard's Yellow Oil is wonderful in its curative power. One or two doses cure Hoarseness and Sore Throat. Asthma, Bronchitis and Swelled Tonsils are quickly relieved. For Quinsy, Colds, etc., itis the best remedy. crank entered the Clinton Place Bank in New York last week, demand- ed $1,000, and failing to get it, fired a shot at the teller, which missed. The crank was arrested. Por Over Fifty Years MRs. WIN•LOw'e SOOTHING SYRUP has been used by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest bye sick child suffering and erying wi-h pain of Cutting Teeth sem: et once and get a bottle of "Mts. Winstew's Sum hingSyrup" fr.rdhildren Teething. It will relieve the poor little enfferer immediately. Depeed npon it, mothers, there is no mistake alma, it. It cut es Dinr• rhea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, pores Wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives tone and em ray to the whole system. "Mrs. Winslew's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the trete and is the prescription of one of the oldest and beat female physicians and nurses in the United States. Price twenty five cents a bottle. Sold by all drngglsts throughout the world. Be sure and ask for "Mos. WINsr.)w's SOOTHING SYRUP." Port Huron Times:—"The Margaret L. Shepherd Company appeared before a slim audience in the Opera House here Thursday evening, in "Tried as by fire," the story of Mrs. Shepherd's • life. I1' the story is true, Mrs. Shepherd should be ashamed of it instead of par- ading her filthy record for the gratific- ation of the vulgar. There can be no excuse for this outrage againstpropriety for the only moral which this play teaches is that if a woman is bold as well es bad, she can impose success- fully on a certain class of the commun- ty. Mrs. Shepherd as an actress is a failure. She possesses no dramatic talent whatever. Ier leading man, Martin Cheworth, can only be described as a ridiculous barn-storu:er. The play is without• a redeeming feature. Any person who sits it nut will certain- ly be "tried as by fire". ON THE PLATFORM. Public spears and singers the often troubled with sore throat and hoarse- ness and are liable to severe bronchial attacks which might he prevented and cured by the use of Hagyard's Pectoral Balsam—the hest throat thiel hung remedy in use,—^ - _ ---- — Charles Judd, a clerk in the Depart- ment of Agriculture at Ottawa, shot himself dead with a revolver. He came from London. ROEnMATISM CURED IN A DAY.—South American Rheumatic Cure, for Bhou,aatiarn and Neuralgia, radlenlly cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system W remarkable and mysterious, It removes at once the arose and the disease Immediately dis- appears. Tho flint dose greatly benefits. 75 Dents, sold by Watts & Co, Druggists. At a hull fight in Pueblo, Mex., one of the hulls dashed among the specta- tors, injuring eight persons. FOR THROAT +TROUBLES. Norway, Pine Syrup is the safest and hest cure for coughs:, colds, asthma, bronchitis, sore throat, end all throat and lung troubles. Price 25c. and 50c, sIrBscRaBE FOR Gaoada's Best family Paper THE • amiltoll< Speotator -EIGHT PAGES a'-.� SIXTEEN • Twice A Wed. ate' PAGES a4TWEEKLY Weekly papers are too slow for this age and to keep up with the spirit of the times the management have increased the size of His popular family paper and are now issuing eight pages Every Wednesday and Saturday. or sixteen pages weekly. The Saturday edi,ion will contain the news three days ahead of regular weekly papers, and our subscribers will find this quite an advan toge. Among the many features are Talmage's sermon, women's department, notes on agriculture, market reports, editorial comments on leading events, and we make a special feature of a long instalment of an interesting serial story by leading authors, $1.00 to 1st January, 1899. To new subscribers we give the balance of 1894, and until 1st of January, 1806, for One Dollar. TRY IT ! 1 Liberal commission to Agents. Agents Wanletl in all unrepresented districts. For terms and particulars address, SPECTA TOR PRINTING do. Hamilton, Canada, A Week1Free Press FARM ANDD HOME ot-For 1895---4; $1.00 BOTH PAPERS FOR $1.00 ENLARCED AND IMPROVED. A HICH-CLASS FAMILY PAPER. EACH NUMBER WILL CONTAIN Rev. Dn. TALHAOR'S SERMON delivered the Sunday previously SVtiOtat.t:'S WANDERINGS, AGRICULTURAL MAT'rea—Illustrated. LADIRu' PAui—Illuottated, SrLxNDID SHEET OF MUSIC each week. A SERIN. TALE, and other Intereetlng reading matter, •..SUBSCR:IBE NOW.'. Price, One Dollar a year in adyanoe for the Weekly Free Press ant! Farm and Home— !n all 10 pager. Balance of 1804 free, Agents Wanted In every unrepresented district to solicit subscriptions. Big commission. FREE PRESS PRINTING CO., London, - - Oratorio. Io sand The Small Hny's Corn Essay. Corns are of two kinds, vegetable and animal. Vegetable corn grows in rows; animal corn grows on toes. There are several kinds of corns—unicorn, Capri- corn, corn dodgers, field corn, and the corn which is the corn you must feel. It is said that the gophers like corn, but persons having corns do not like to "go fur" if they can help it. Corns have kernels, and some colonels have corns. Vegetable corn grows on ears, but animal corn grows on the feet, at the ether end of the body. Another kind of corn is the acorn. This kind grows on oaks ; but there is no hoax about the corn. The acorn is a corn with an indefinite article indeed. Try it and see it. Many a man when he has a corn wishes it was an acorn. Folks that have corns sometimes send for a doctor, and if the doctor himself is corned, he probably won't do so well as if he wasn't. The doctors say that corns are pro- duced by tight boots and shoes, which is probably the reason• why, when a man is tight, they say he is corned. If a farmer manages well he can get a cod dei 1 qn the acro, but I know a armer who has a corn that makes the iggest ocher on his farm, Tho bigger the cropof vegetable corn a man raises, the beterr he les it' but the bigger the 9f animal corn, rho better ho does not like it. e THE WTI 0E4 i FA M] LY. -- R;••• - Father .. CrD Mother CID Grandfather CYO Grandmother C o D Children cJ And ,All READS THE NEWS -RECORD They read the Locals, the Storied,, the Advertisements—every line in the paper. Then they send it to distant relatives interested in the town, as ,lumerous post- masters will certify. The Local Weekly is the best -read publication in existence. It has the home ' news which no other paper gives. Advertisers take notice—THE NEWS - RECORD is read by several thousands of people every week. An advertisement in this paper is therefore, of some account. e Subscribe for THE NEWS -RECORD. Advertise in THE NEWS-RECHRD, CT,3NT��T_ ,,TI�'E CASH GROCERY� HAS THE ONLY 'STRICTLY FRESH STOCK OF GROCERIES IN TOWN. OUR STOCK CONSISTS OF THE FINEST LINES OF TEAS, COFFEE, CANNED -GOODS, FRUITS, ETC , In fact everything that is to be found in a First Class Grocery. See our display ot China, Crockery and Glassware. The Latest designs in Dinner, Tea and Bed -Room Sets, Water Setts, Five o'Clock Sets, Salad Bowls, Etc - Visit the Cash Grocery whether you buy or not, %� OGLE COOPER & CO. Telephone No. 23. Stand 1 Door North of THE NEWS-RECOl1D Office. Wash Day Made Easy. 1 hove secured the right to manufacture tit bantams Magic Washing Machine. Already I have made and sold a number. The purchasers aro delighted. To use the machine on trial is aura to make a sale it one ie required. Wash -day is made very easy and carpets can be kept perfectly clean; no sptao.n or waste water whatever. 'rhe price has been set or very low figure. The machine may be seen at my residence on Jean Street. 13, COLE 800•tf S. HURON ORANGE DIRECTORY. 1894. Nantes of the District Masters, Primary Lodge Masters, their post office addresses and date of meeting. A. M. TODD, W. C. M., Clinton P. O. BIDDULPH DISTRICT. John Neil, IV. D. M., Centralia P.O. 219—Robt. Hutchinson, Greenway, Fri day on or before full moon. 602—Thos. H. Coursey, L aeon, Satu day on or before full ,noon. 493 — Richard Hodgins, Saintstbury, Wednesday on or before full moon. 890 — George Walden, N plegrove, Wednesday on or before fullmoon. 924—Edward Gill, Exeter, 1st Friday in each Month. 1087—James Kenniston, Parkhill, Mon- day on or before full moon. 1210—Win . Mowsen, Moray, Thursday on or before full inoon. 1343—James Boyce, Centralia, Tuesday on or before full moon. 610—A. Nevins, Centralia, Friday on or after full moon. GODERICH DISTRICT. James Calwell, W.D.M., Goderich P.O. 145—James Cox,•Porter's Hill, 1st Mon- day in each month. 153—Addrew Millian, Saltford, Friday on or before full moon. 182—Geo. M. Cox, Goderich, last Tues- day in each month. 189—F. McCartney, Holrnesvillo, Mon- day on or before full moon. 262 -James McLean, Saltford, 3rd Wednesday in each month. 300 --Thos. H. Cook, Clinton, 1st Mon- day in each month. HULLETT DISTRICT. D. Cantelon, W.D.M., Clinton P. O. 710—David Cantelon, Clinton, 2nd Mon- day in each month, 813—Robert Scarlett, Winthrop, last Wednesday before full moon. 928—Joseph Rapson, Summerhill, 1st Monday in each Month. 793—Wm. Horsey, Seaforth, 1st Mon- day in each month. ' STANLEY DISI.RICT. Robert Pollock, W.D.M., Bayfield P.O. 24—Jaynes Pollock, Bayfield, ,1st Mon- day in each month. 308—Wm. Consit, Hillsgveen, 1st Tues day in each month 833 --Robert McKinley Blake, 1st Wednesday in each mor , h. 733—Win. J. Clarke, Hensal., let Thurs- day in each month. I035—Wm. Rathwell, Bayfleld, 1st Thursday in each month. asTNers.—Any omissions or other errors will bo p�rom,tttJ eon -caul on writing direct to the County WO's. Bro. A. Y. Todd, Clinton P. 0, Property For Sale. For sale, the large dwelling and lot ownod and lately occupied by Dr. Appleton, on Ontario street. Hae all modern conveniences. Centrally !coated. Aleo a house and lot adjoining above property, facing Victoria street, For particulars apply to MANNING & SCOTT, Clinton, 807•,1 Manitoba Farm for Sale. A cultivated farm of 160 acres, situate in Southern Manitoba, near Hartney P. 0., is offered for sale on reasonable terms. Owner is unable t0 work 1t owing to illness. Apply to box 186, Clinton P. 0„or NEws•Racoan ottloe. 828-51 Properties For Sale. For Sale, in the town of Clinton, situate on Albert street north, tit desirable cottage containing eight rooms, bathroom, hard and soft water and general conveniences. There is s good lot with stable on it. Also seven acres of land adjoining Clinton, on the gravel road, with one hundred young apple trees. 'terms to snit purchaser. Apply to the owner, W. FOSTER, Clinton, or at Tint Nsws-Racoon office. 830 t -f To Farmers. We have Oats for sale, and give two and three months time on same—in lots not less than 15 bushels. Also for Bale mixed Corn, Barley and Wheat for chop- ping. July llth. W. H. PERRIN, 817—tf. Male Teacher Wanted. Applications will be received by the undersigned up to November let, 1804, at 2 o'clock P. bf„ for Princi. pal of Bayfield School, one holding not less than a Normal School Certificate, for the year 1895, JOHN MOROAN, Secretary P. S„ 880.45 Bayfield P. 0. House For Rent. That nicely situate and confortablo dwelling on the corner of Huron and Orange streets. All convenenees. and roomy. Hard and soft water, stable and garden. For particulars apply to 814 1-1 THOS. JACKSON, Sr Valuable Brick Store for Sale. Subscriber offers for sale on reasonable terms of payment, a valuable brick store, situate In Searle'e block, Clinton. Also splenoid building lots for sato. Particular') on application. 828-tf W. C. SEARLE, Clinton CITY BAKERY OPPOSITB FAIR'S MILL. The undersigned having brought out the bakery business so successfully carried on by Mr. Win. Young, will continue the business at the old stand. He will endeavor, by supplying a drat Blase artlelelto, merit the liberal support of the people. Bread de- livered anywhere in town. Wedding Cakes, Fruit or Sponge Calms supplied on short notice. M. BECKWITH, - - CLINTON The McKillop Mutual Fires Insurance Company Farm and Isolated Town Proper- ty only Insured. OFFICER&. D. Boss, President, Clinton P, 0. ; Gen, Watt, vice-presient, Harlock P. 0, ; W. .1, Shannon, Secy-Treas., Seaforth r. 0. ; M. Hardie, In• pector of claims Seaforth P. 0, DIRRCTOISS, Jas, Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Alex Gardiner, Lea bury; Gabriel Elliott, Clinton ; John Ben nab, Soatorth ; Joseph Evans, Beechwood ; Thos. Garbutt, Clinton. AOTINTS. Thos. Neila:s, Harlock; Robty McMillan, Spa - forth ; J. Cummings, Egmondville; Goo. Hurdle; Auditor . Parties desirous to effect insurance or trans set other business will bo promptly attend ed to on application to any ot the above others addressed to their respective post cfiloes,