The Huron News-Record, 1894-11-21, Page 3NQINTDDI,SE %SE.
11Pllzatbatli, Harrjion Co„ IzuI.
At thee 140 of eight
• th years Y" 1111)- joinies ntDlw
e e ,
ease.', Farm• ar I suf.,
fared as much as it was
p,yogslble for. a hump be-
*In'g to suffer. My ph
y,
told me I would
have to wait patioptly,
but my father procured
iRe some Of Dr. Fierce's
golden Medlcal?Discov-
cry, Mind I found my fan-
g health restored.
1 can cheerfully may
that I believe I owe my
life to the use of that
valuable medicine.
7ilAirttr1j'ae friend,, EDWARR�D''11. J. TRUSH.
PIECE
GTEES
ESA mi.) !J fl.®.'1
Ritlt i11ONE7f Ws REFUNDED.
lt;,
A scrofulous "tato of the system 1s the
Frimal cause of Hip- joint Disease. Dr.
ierce's Golden Medical Discovery bas cured
ttidllsands of eases of Scrofula. In Skin
Diseases, all Scrofulous Sores and Swellings,
is the only guaranteed blood -purifier.
file . Huron News -Record
$i,60 a Year -$1.25 In Advance
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21st, 1894.
THE VOGUE IN MOURNING.
crape worn at the Funeral of the Coutts
de Paris.
The Comtesse de Paris wore a crepe
gown, lined with flew de Suede, with
folds of white crape at the neck and
wrists ; a Marie Stuart bonnet, 'with a
white •crape cap front, and a long, soft
undraped crape veil, reaching to the
hem of the dress at the back, with one
iC of the same quality falling below the
waist in front. A shawl of black Indian
cashmere, gracefully draped over the
1-' 'shoulders ; suede gloves and a deep
black -bordered handkerchief. Her
Gaveling dross consists of a skirt
_.. and jacket of soft vicuna, with
• deep bands of crape and a fit-
ting coat bodice, made entirely of
crape. The Queen of Portugal 1had a
traveling mantle of camel's hair, with
folded crape collar. and double shoulder
capes, stitched, at the edges. The man-
tle •entirely covered the dress, which
• consisted of a crape skirt -and crossing
bodice of the same material, and full
sleeves. Princess Helene d'Orleans
wore a skirt and bodice of ::oft undress-
ed -crape, a shawl of black Indian cash-
mere and a largo crape hat, with net
veil 'bordered with crape. She also
ordered a dressing gown of heavy vi-
cuna, with Watteau bak, and black
silk satin tied in front. Princess Isa-
bel and Princess Louise wore vicuna
skirts and bodices ti immed with deep
bands and fronts of crape. Large
crape. hats with net veils and crape
hems,cashmere shawls,and suede gloves,
etc.
•
A Quickly Blade Stable Pen.
It frequently happens•that one desires
to make use, for an emergency, of a
Miall -or pen in the'stable which is not at
hand and for which there may not be
1 ,•
CHEAP STABLE PEN,
convenient room as a permanent strife-
, ture. Our illustration shows how such
a pen may be made in a moment's
time, in a corner that ordinarily may
be used for other purposes. Two gates
are made and hinged against the walls
in the manner shown. Ordinarily they
are folder back snugly against either
wall, but when a pen or "box stall" is '
suddenly needed the two ends are swung
together and locked with hooks, and the
needed accommodation is secured. Such
gates should have slats quite near to.
gether, and should be of good height to
accommodate both largo and small
animals.
Not an Ungrammatical ns 1t Sounds.
"We can dispense without you." The
sentence is not so ungrammatical as
It sounds. It was spoken by an apoth-
ecary to a prescription clerk whom
he had just discharged. --Youth's Com-
, panion.
Proposed netiet
Railroad editor -"The debts of the
railroads of the United States amount to
eleven billions of dollars.
Base ball editor -"Why don't they
make the Pullman porters divide with
them 2"
BEYOND DISPUTE.
There is no better, safer or more
pleasant cough remedy made than
Hagyard's Pectoral Balsam. It cures
Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Coughs,
Colds, Bronchitis and all throat and
lung troubles.
The Erie limited express on the
Grand Trunk narrowly escaped wreck
neer Strathroy. The authorities have
arrested two men named Fife and John-
son, whom they believe to be the guil-
ty parties.
You may. eat cheap food and not be
seriously hurt by it; but you cannot
take cheap medicines without positive
injury*. If you use any substitute for
*waif Ayers Sarsaparilla, you do so at the
peril of your health, perhaps of your
life. I t on having Ayer's, and no
other.%
Edward Shouldice, a young man of
20 years, was arrested last week by
Government Detective Rogers and
Detective Ward in McGillivray town -
lip on a charge of stealing some
ithe from. .John Muir, of Exeter, in
TV1ity last. Shouldice has been ?emend -
.ed to the 19th. The goods were found
qn lila possession.
1 ` iflLOH's OURS is sold on a guaran
Safi., It cutes Incipient Consumption.
It i
the best Cough Cure. ' Only one
eyjt.f; nose; 25 cts., 50 cts, and $1.00
twee bottle. Sold byJ'. H. Combe.
A NI(H.T OF `'DEATH,
It was a disagreeable night. A sharp
cutting wind had set in early in the
evening, and continued with unabated
vigor a1the night. A drizzle, half rain
and halt snow, set in with it, and cut
the face of the unlucky pedestrian like
so much hail.
At the club we huddled around the
fires and, warm though the rooms were,
shivered uncomfortably every timo a
strong gust would send the sleet driving
against the window panes.
"Ugh!'t said the colonel,looking at mo
under his heavy eyebrows,and grasping.
the lapels of his coat he pulled tthoui to-
gether as though to shut out the unplea-
sant feeling that seemed to prevail iu the
air.
I shivered sympathetically.
"A bad night,' muttered the colonel
laconically, and he drew his chair closer
to the fireplace.
' "It might be worse," he said, with
an attempt at cheerfulness ; but it fell
flat.
It was near midnight, and Colonel
Montfort and I had just returned from
the theatre to enjoy a moment's warmth
in the clubroom. We had it almost to
ourselves for the night did not encourage
late wanderings.
I rose to my feet and stretched my
arms and legs.
"Home?" inquired the colonel looking
at his watch.
"Just as well," I said with a shrug of
my shoulders ; the gloom and dismal-
ness of the weather seemed to have set-
tled everywhere.
Colonel Montfort and I enjoyed a
suite of rooms in one of the best flats in
St. Paul, and led a nearly ideal exist-
ence for two such old bachelors as we
were.
The colonel was an old southern man,
and had seen service in the "Brothers'
war." He had earned his rank by vali-
ant and distinguished service for- the
Union threes he was a tall, well built
man, with a connnanding presence, and
although pass the middle age carried
his years well.
I, on the other hand, although snugly
put together and possessed of unusual
endurance, was greatly his inferior in
point of physique,and our friends at the
club were wont to allude to us as "David
and Goliath."
"That comparison is unjust," gthe
colonel said one day laughingly, "for J
am sure neither of its desires the other's
death."
And we did not think then that one
woulr .
"And it is extremely doubtful that
this David will ever inflict a death
wound to this Goliath," interposed a
friend.
We laughed at that idea.
But the .colonel rose with a yawn and
again looking at his watch d'onnocl his
wraps, and we went out into the slippery
streets.
"Nota beastly cab in sight," grumbled
my friend, as we peered about. "And
on such a night too !" he added, with a
grimace.
So we had to make the best of it, and
trudged slowly home through the slush.
The rain poured and beat upon us, and
the wind swirled pitilessly about our
muffled heads.
"Ugh," said the colonel with a shake.
And "Ugh !" repeated I. But I could
not shake off the depression that had
settled upon me with the sleet ; and a
tbrebodiug of evil took possession of me
that I tried in vain to dispel.
I was possessed of very sensitive
nerves, and this combined with the lite I
led and the influence that had surround-
ed me since m •made birth
�uteecoward
in some things. And• never did I feel
such an undefinable dread, and never
were my senses so quick to make moun-
tains out of molehills as at the times
when my spirits were depressed and my
nerves made jangling- by untoward
weather. I was veritably a coward in
the dark.
Usually when 1 got in a wt+ll lighted
and heated. room 1 could shake this de-
pression off : but not so to night.
"'You look excited, my dear Kane,'
said the colonel as we flung ourselves
in easy chairs and stirred up the lire.
1 rose and went to the looking glass in
one end of the room and started back
shocked as I caught sight of my face.
It was filled with a tense, suppressed
excitement that I had never seen there
before -hair actually appeared like
bristles upon my head, and under my
eyes were barge, dark rings.
After my first start I laughed some-
what awkwardly 1 am afraid, and told
the colonel that 1 had evidently been
dissipating too heavily of late.
He smiled absently and kept staring
into the fire.
"Well, I guess I'll go to bed," I said
after a pause.
The colonel nodded without looking
up, and bidding him good night I left
the cozy sitting room and made pre-
parations for repose.
The colonel and I occupied separate
sleeping apartments, as our suite was
large, using the remaining rooms to-
gether. Until a clay or two ago we had
head a valet who attended to our wants,
but he had left us, and we had as yet
been unable to find a suitable person to
take his place. My room was quite large
for a bedroom, but for that reason I pre-
ferred it to a smaller one, as I was quite
a stickler on matters of hygiene,
1 undressed and went to hod. I finally
heard the colonel leave the sitting room
and go to his own apartment. A little
later 1 heard the springs of his bed creak
and knew that he also had sought the
arms of Morpheus.
1 heard the clock in the hall strike one,
but I was still as wide awake as I was
an hour before, My nerves, instead of
becoming reposed, became more and
more susceptible to the least jar. . The
crackling of an ember in the fireplace in
the next room caused my heart to leap
into my mouth and almost stop boating.
The creaking of a board sent the cold
perspiration to my face. I lay still and
scarcely dared to breathe untilmy body
pained in every joint from lying In one
position so long.
I heard the colonel's breathing in the
next room. Then I heard a door slam
on. the flight below, and with difficulty
suppressed a shriek.
And all the time I cursed myself for
my cowardice ; cursed myself for being
such a child, and vowed that if I were
allowed to live until morning I would
stop drinking hot gins and smoking
strong cigars.
I heard the clock strike two and then
must have fallen into a troubled sleep.
I dreamed -oh, God, what did I not
dream? Would that all that happen-
ed that ill fated night had been but a
dreamt
For one thing,I dreamed that the last
dav had come,and that I with countless
others had hurried toward a large, snow
capped mountain. There were billows
of fire behind us and mountains of fire
above us, yet we hurried on-on-ou--
never stopping, never turning. Clouds'
ot'smoke, and flame rolled about us, yet
through, it all'could be seen that moun-
tain top,00ld and serene in the midst of
all that heat and woe, and its snow
decked top seemed ever to becilou us on
-on -on.
Thousands and millions died at my
side, before and behind me. But I cared
not. I grew guant with hunger and faint
with fatigue, but still I hurried on. 1
crossed rivers of ice and valleys of fire,
but they stopped ine not.
At last I reached it. I started toward
the top: Wearily, night and day, I
traveled, and those who with me reached
the bottom of the hoar capped giant fell
off one by one, and at last I alone was
left.
And alone I reached the top. And a
feeling of indescribable ease and peace
came over me, and I laid mvselt' down
in the cold. white snow and fell asleep.
How long I slept in the crystal snow
I know not. For there, too, I had a
dream. I saw two forms approach. One
all white and pure, with peace and good
will beaming from his eyes; the ocher
black as night, and from his eyes gleam-
ed forth the fires of hell.
The fair one looked at mo sleeping,
with a world of agony and sorrow in
his eyes ; then turned' his head toward
the sky and looked up in supplication,
while great tears fell from his eyes and
onto the cold snow. Aud wherever a
tear fell sweet flowers sprang up, and
the fragrance that was warted from
them was not of earth.
But the other form apploaehe, ale
until it stood at my very side, looking
down at me with burning eyes. 1 strove
to move, to shriek, to pray, but al in
"vain.
Then I saw him stoop and stretch out
his hand. It hung over my face an in-
stant, then fell upon my forehead.
Then a great pain racked all my bony
and spirit,
a land at the instant 1 heard
countless voices give a cry that boomed
c,ut from the mountain top and was
heard over all the earth. And this was
what they said, and the words still ring
in my ears and never leave me while
life lasts :
"And this is death !"
And I awoke. And horrors of hell,
that clammy, burning hand still rested
upon my face, and talose burning orbs
stillleered into mine !
I did not faint. If I had, I would not
now be alive to tell the tale. For that
clammy, burning hand had moved down
my face until it reached my throat, and
the gleaming eyes shifted and turned.
and moved with the hand.
'Then with an all powerful effort, with
a strength that was not mine, I clutched
the hand and flung it from me and leap-
ed out of the bed.
To reach the door and dart into the
sitting -room was the work of an instant.
I turned even as I ran and saw those
burning eyes follow.
"Colonel!" I cried hoars'dy and scarce
louder than a child. And as the dread
thing approached I ran to his room.
But, oh, God ! the door was open, the
rooin empty. And turning again, with•
the despair of death upon my brow, I
saw those burning eyes again. They
were the eyes of a madman, and the
face approached until the hot breath
hissed into my ears.
And the face was that of Colonel
Montfort.
W * * * h:
What happened ! then I do not know,
Itis a year and of er since that dread
night, and I am still an invalid. -They
say I am mad at times, but what won-
der ! My nerves are shattered, shy life
ruined. Never can I efface on ci
e e, e m dont
of that eight from my seared memory,
and even at night it haunts me in
dreams,
That morning, so they say. they
found the colonel and myself lying on
the floor in his bedroom, the colonel
with a knife in his heart and I lying by
his side with my hand still clutching the
handle of the knife, 1 was delirious for
months, and from my ravings they
gathered the story. I suppose now that
in that moment of supreme agony and
despair I grasped a knife which the
colonel always had in his rooin, and to
save myself killed him.
And hi the colonel's will it was found
that he had left his all to "my friend" -
the man that killed him. -A. 13,. Feder -
mann in St. Paul Pioneer Press..
The British Empire,
The British empire is a political crea-
tion unparalleled in the world's history,
not only by its extent and population,
in both which respects it is slightly sur-
passed by China, but because, with an
area of more than 10,000;000 square
miles and with 352,000,000 inhabitants,
it is scattered over the whole globe. It
embraces all zones from the icy wilder-
ness of Hudson Bay ' to the tropical
jungles of India......and the mahogany
forests of Honduras ; there is scarcely a
product which a British province does
not bring forth in excellent quality ; and
not less various are the degrees of civili-
zation of its inhabitants, from the
Kaffirs of the Cape to the highly culti-•
vated citizens of Toronto or Sydney.
We find, with Christians of all confess-
ions 200,000,000 Hindoos, about 70.000,-
000 Mohammedans, and 8,000,000 Budd-
hists ; and the Bible is printed in 130
languages and dialects represented in
the empire, yet, notwithstanding duck
promiscuous elements, the government,
with rare exceptions, maintains order,
and no sign of dissolution is visible, -Dr.
F. Heinrich Geficken, in October
Forum.
Ilei Slamming Experience,
An amusing story is told of' a West
Walnut street young woman who? hav-
ing read strange tales of slumming in
London, determined to visit Philadel-
phia's own very tough slum district and
see what life there was like. As a sort
of preliminary she supplied herself' with
a number of tracts, havinga vague idea
that the benighteresidents s there were
in need of spiritual instruction. Board-
ing a Seventh street car she got off at
Bainbridge and to the first man she saw,
Wto was leaning icily against a lamp-
post, she very politely handed one of the
tracts. He took it good-naturedly, and,
after glancing at it, returned it with the
smiling remark that he was a married
man. Greatly mystified by this expres-
sion, she looked at the tract and saw
that it was entitled "Abide With Me."
She took the next car home, vowing
vengeance against tracts and slumming.
-Philadelphia Record.
Hardablps of Literature.
Bilgers-I toll you this literary work
is terribly wearing. Why, I've got writ-
er's cramp.
Willis -Working dna book ?
Bilgers-No, Sign' ug petitions for
candidates. -Chicago Record.
Change
Of Business
In Cook's Photograph Gallery
MR. ANDERSON !has opened J. W.
COQK'S Photograph Gallery with
a New Outfit.
I have reflit:ted the Gallery and will
be glad to meet any old .custom-'
ars and will try to please you.
I WILL MKAEDFOERON) MONTH
$5 CABINETS, BEST FINISH
for $3
A SECOND LINE at $2.50.
4 LARGE SUNBEAMS at 25o.
GOOD WORK ANDS
QUICK DELIVERY"
...._CHILDREN'S PHOTOS
4`-A SPECIALTY.
C`11LSEEL AND C. ANDERSON
COOK'S OLD STAND, ALBERT STREET,
CLINTON. ,
EUREKt BAKERY
AND RESTARUANTII
Under the new Management business con-
tinues to flourish.
Our Stock comprises everything required in
a tirst-class Bakery and Restaurant—such as
Plain and Fancy Cakes., Pastry,
Superior Bread, Confectionery,
Cool Simmer Drinks, &c., &e.
WEDDING CAKES A SPECIAL -
T Y and prices reasonable.
Pic•nie parties dealt with on the most liberal
terms and Bread delivered to all parts of the
town.
Better value than we offer cannot be obtained.
Give us a call. Stand next the Grand Union
Hotel, Clinton.
p
JAMES BOYB, Proprietor,
Money
For
Nothing.
If you
Want
It
Speak
Right
Hp.
\
TE are offering a year's
subscription to THE
LADIES' JOURNAL nearly
Free to all our patrons
who renew their subscrip-
tions to THE NEws-RE-
collD before the FIRST OF
JANUARY NEXT. We will
also send THE LADIES'
JOURNAL one year to any
new subscriber who sends
in $1.40 for THE NEWS -
RECORD before the first
of January next.
The ladies' Journal
IS A
Beautifully Illustrated
and Handsomely
Printed Monthly Magazine
of thirty-six large pages.
It contains the Latest
Fashion News, carefully
and finely Illustrated,
Household Hints, Fancy
Work, Home and School
Page, Mothers' Page,
Elocutionary, Short and
i Serial Stories of all sorts.
Almost all the mat-
ter contained in the
LADIES' JOURNAL iS orig
inal with that publication
and cannot be found else-
where.
All the woman of your
household will be delight-
ed with the JOURNAL.
Send in your renewals
and new subscriptions
now. Address all orders
to the Publisher of this
paper.
TOWN TOPICS,
27to Journal of Society,
(S2 PAGES.) (TIUJRBDAY,)
NEW YORK.
Is universally recognized as the molt complete
weekly journal 1n the world.
Its aunteringe" columns aro inimitable. Its
society news especially of the doings or the 400 of
New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, and oil
over the world, le not equalled by any newspaper.
Its Financial Lepartmeot is authority with all
bankers and brokers. Its "Literary Show" -notes
on current literature -1s by the cleverest of re•
viewers. Its . Afield and Afloat" mutes it the
most interesting paper for all lovers of sport -
yachting, football, rowing shooting, fishing rte.
WI "On the Turf " exdcls all other racing notes. Its
burlesques poems and jokes are the cleverest. Its
atones are by the beat wrhere-among them Atp(11e
Hives, F. Marlon Crawford. Julian Hawthorne, Edger
Fawcett, Gilbert Parker, Mary J. Hawker (( Lance
Faleoncr"), Barry Pain, Paul Bourget, Itudynrd
Kipling, Ambrose Blerce, etc., ate., not are even ft'
a trifle risque yet always clever, bright and pretty,
without coarseness or anything to offend the my-
refined and moral woman. In addition to all this
there Is each week a sap{ Ienent, portrait, in colors,
�f Borne man eminent In his walk of life,
Tales From Town Topics
Quarterly, first day of March, Juno, September,
December; 2i0 pages; Iikno. Contains in each
number, la addition to short stories, poems. bur,
leagues, etc., from the old Issues of Tows TOPIce, a
complete, original prize story, of 1X0 to 150 pages.
No one who enjoys the nichest class of fiction, and
would he au courant with s11 that pertains to g(t,.d
society, can afford to be wit bout TOWN Tortes ever
week. There Is no much Interesting reading to it
and In the "Tales," that n club aubsortptlon to both
will supply any family with abundant reading of tb.,
moat entertaining character all the year.
I1ATES:
Town Topics per aunnin, 51.01). A trial subucrtp.
tion for three mouths, $1,00, and a specimen cop!;
of "Tales" Free.
Tales Prom Tow -4 Topica, par number, GO cents
Per annum, 89.00.
Both Clubbed, per annum, 1133.e. 0, and any twr
previous Numbers of "Talee" you may specify Fttot
It1•rraend 10 cents for sample copy Tows Toros.
N.B.—Have you road AI11I,LIE RIVES' latest
and best novel,
Tanis, The Sang -Digger r
12mn, cloth, gilt uncut front and toot, 81.50 poet
paid.
Remit by check, P. 0 money order, postal note 01
registered letter to
Town; TOPIC'S.
21 West 236 Street. New Yo•k.
While Mr. Jas. Scott, undertaker at
Stroud, near Barrie, was returning to
his home on Saturday evening from a
funeral his horse ran away. He was
thrown out of his buggy alighting on
his head, end instantly killed.
r v HEDUOE YOUR COAL B/LL,
We believe in the merit of the goods we sell. If you want a Kitchen Range we believe
tjtat the HAPPY THOUGHT is the very best you can got, that it will use less fuel and give
you wore comfort and satisfaction than any other, and because they do this they haye wee
first place in the confidence and estimation of buyers everywhere,
There are over 6,000 in the city of Toronto and over 40,000 in actual use throughout the
Dominion and that is their experience.
For a Parlor Heater the RADIANT HOME takes the lead.
A car of the Celebrated Carlon Light Oil just received and oufy 10 cents per gallon.
See our Store Windows lighted with it as a guarantee of its excellent guality.
Old Store, Brick New New Store
•Harland 1j nd BMcKa Block.
STOVES AND HARDWAR. y
PEOPLE MUST LIVE
And iu order• to do so they want the very beat they can get. We
have antioipated their desire by purchasing the choicest
Groceries, Teas, Sugars, Canned Goods, Fruits,&c,,
Having have 35 years experience, think we know the wants of the
people pretty well. Our stock embraces everything found in a
first class grocery, and we will not be undersold.
We have a Beautiful Assortment of
FANCY GA SSWARE and CRO (IKERY
Special Cuts on SUGARS and TAS in large 1otx.
0
J. W. IRWIN, Grocer MoKAINTON.CS
Leslie's Carriage Factory.
BUGGIES, PHAETONS, CARTS AND WAGONS -all of the beat work,
manehip and material, *All the latest styles and most modern improve-
ments. All work warranted. Repairing and repainting promptly attended
to. Prices to suit the times:
Del -FACTORY -corner Huron and Orange Streets, Clinton. 657 -
THE HUB GROCERY.
ALWAYS RIGHT,'*
Our Stock is complete in canned goods such as SALMON, HADDIE,
FRESH HERRING, LOBSTER, BEEF, DUCK,
CHICKEN TURKEY,.
Canned Vegetables -TOMATOES, PEAS, CORN, PUMP-
KIN.
Canned Fruit -PEACHES, STRAWBERRIES, APPLES, &c.
In jams we have PEACH, STRAWBERRIES, • RASPBERRIES, CUR-
RANTS, &c.
In Picklos-McCARRY ONIONS, CUCUMBERS, CAULIFLOWER, and
WALNUT.
All kinds of Spices, quality pure. Tea, all grads ;lwe push the Bale of Ben
Hur Blend which draws very fine. We have a big assortment of Crockery..
GEORGE SWALLOW, • Clinton.
Don't Come.Home and /Kick
up a dust by finding fault with your wife or her kitchen help because your dinner is not
ust what it should be. The women are not to blame, the fault lies at your own door.
Through
a mistaken i
dea of false economy you have been induced to purchase cheap and inferior
groceries, and I speak advisedly when I say you caunat look for domestic felicty as long as
you continue on that line. Moral—the best is the cheapest, in grocery as well as any other
commodity. Therefore try our new season's Teas, all tot' this year's growth, "In Blacks,"
English Breakfast Tea at 40c, per lb., extra value. In Blends of Indian China and Cylons we
can suit the most fastidious taste Alan, we have the best value in Hysons and Japans. Try
our Japan at 6 lbs for one dollar.
We have now in stock for the Holiday Trade New Raisins, Valencias off Stalk Selected,
Leifers, Sultanas, London Layers, ,New Currants in Cases and hall' cases, New Peels, Lemon,
Orange and Citron, "Figs, Mats and Elme 10 lb Boxes. New Prunes, Sphinx Brand. Pure
Spites, Essences, Extracts. Candies and Nuts of all kinds. In Crockery, China and Glassware,
full lines. 'We offer Dinner Setts, Tea Setts and China Table Setts at rock bottom prices.
Conte early and have first choice. Special inducements to cash purchasers.
N. Robson, - Albert St., Clinton.
CLINTON SASH, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY.
S. S. COOPER
0
PROPRIETOR,
General Builder and Contractor.
This factory has been under the personal supervision and one owner for eight
years. We carry an extensive and reliable stock and prepare plans and give
estimates for and build all classes of buildings on short notice and on the closest
prices. All work is supervised in a mechanical way and satisfaction
guaranteed. We sell all kinds of interior and exterior material.
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Lime Sash oars, Blinds Eta;
Agent for the CELEBRATED GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured
at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders
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LOOK AT THIS.
A Fiue Parlor Suite, Oak, in TAPESTRY PLUSH, bended, assorted colors,
$22.50 Cash ; best value I ever had for the money. Parlor Suites in
PLUSH and HAIR CLOTH.
Bedroom Suites $10.50 and upwards. Lots of Lounges, in PLUSH, MOQUET,
and The Peerless Extension Table, no leaves to put away,
Fancy Braes Tables, Marble Tope„ Beautiful goods for presents. Mattresses,
in Sea Grass and Wool. Cocoa fibres and cotton filling, &c.
Lot of Fine Goose and other Feathers, Steam renovated, for Sale.
Sideboard $6.50, Bamboo Tables 25c., 30c. and 40c.
C. STEVENSON,
TUI
TUR1� IT I
E
EMPORIUM.
THE PEOPLE'S GROCER.
Our Stock is now Complete inalllines of Choice GROCERIES St CANNED GOODS, full
ranges of BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS, etc., bought for cash in the best markets. We aro
gradually working our business to a cash basis (1. o , buying and selling exclusively for cash)
so that our customers may rely on getting the very hest value for their money.
INSPECTION RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED,
C. J. STEWART, ALBERT ST., CLINTON.
Properties For Sale.
For Sale, in the town of Clinton, situate on Albert
Arcot north, a desirable cottage containing •eight
rooms, bathroom, bard and soft water and general
conveniences. There is a good lot with stable on It.
Also sever, acres of land adjoining Clinton, on the
gravel road, with ono hundred young apple trees.
Terme to enit purohaae . Apply to tbo owner, W.
FOSTER,, Clint -ton, on, or at ins NEWS -RECORD cake.
880
Property For Sale.
For sale, the large dwelling and lot owned and
lately ocenpled by Dr. Appleton, on Ontario street.
Tine all modern conveniences. Centrally located.
Alpo a honer and lot adjoining above property,
facing Vietorla street. For particulars apply to
MANNi1G & SCOTT, Clinton.
807•tt