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The Clinton New Era, 1898-01-21, Page 5a, ' A W ERA ' 3 fitly exceeded our • Wa , re Settled down to trio140 thio aeaeon. A ohoioe stock of 1i AES, CLOCKS, , Y° :WARE d ow:very lowest b•; We do all 0411I a manner ve 111x >lt melte 11 Uiift$.$ CJocIs, Ilverware, Yi..aw t astire<<t reminliry7��,,ag- i co tellns so edtiVe, ifthe p tlg�ti t"tile .$ con Os fad o . thou erl, 'muds ower Never- before inftlitygoods pi'iee,ss.. The Kit >ie;atorehas .dfor'*bolt i b quality t sold, 't[t t1 still be Fety a well as m dealing cordial in,- el tended to every- , ; Welviii'be pleas • l! w, our stook. to J, Biddleoombe, IN1 ON4 ave a few Dollars. At .this season of the year many dollars can be saved by shrewd buyers. Ra- ther than parry over any winter goods we are willing to sell them and com- pletely lose sight of profit. It's quite reasonable that we will come out ahead by giving special inducements to oaeh buyers wbo require winter goods. We get the money and are ready to pay oaeh for wine purchases. That's the position in a nutshell, and accounts for the following; - GBEY FLANNEL, worth 160 for 130 GREY FLANNEL, worth 20o, for 163 Special Brand SAXONY YARN, worth 20o per bunch 150 LADIES' VESTS, worth 35o for , 25o LADIES' DRAWERS, worth 35o, for 25o Plain Grey DRESS GOODS, worth 25o, for 18o Fanny Tweed DRESS GOODS, worth 25o for 18o MEN'S SOX, speoial, 2 pairs for 25o LADIES' FELT SHOES, worth 95o, for 750 Meters for Menland Boys will be oleared at interesting prices. Ladies';;Mantles, up-to-date, at prices that will clear them in a few days. Flannelettes, Blankets, Comforters, and all lines of Winter (foods will have to ,Hove during the present month. Ws our constant aim to have the goods yon want and. at satisfactory primes. CASH AND ONE PRICE. !McKinnon 8 Co., Blyth ss 0011411004110 A Bonanza This week we are offering some Special Bargains in Dress Goods, to clear out several ends. Prices reduced far below wholesale. If you want the best value in a Suit of Clothes, either ready made or made to order, we can supply you. OUR OVERCOATS `� Are extra good value. but for all that we will sell them very cheap. Try us for BOOTS and SHOES. Do youwant a Chinese Lily, Poultry Food and Welt of instruction, call here. We have a few Calendars for distribution free ADAMS' EMPORIUM, R. ADAM S LOt DESBORO; Fir ZetE S HEADACHE CURE xtnd speedy ewe fors ll kinds of headaches, sink, bilious, nervous terionl Gives prompt relief in neuralgia. Easy to take, always tlffsotlon, Guaranteed free ,from morphia, chloral or opium, 12 ,loo*, :25 cents. Liver Oil with : Hypophosphites, i egu1ar 75c size for 50o. Dispensing rChemist, Clinton • e selling out, and as the stock gets smaller s get lower. If you want to save money t. the bargains while they are going. ow are a fewwliites Jackets at $1.00 Jackets at $2.00 ackets at $3.00 to formnOr,prices were from $5 to $17.50 lotOf Old Men's Fur Caps, were $6.50 for $2. big stock of Clothing, Suits, Overcoats, Odd ,Pants, )ate and. Coats, Overalls, flats, Caps, &c. See our PrintS Flannelettes tinge for 5 cents. f 'Children's and Youth's Boots, Shoes, Rubbers erahoes at ;Much below cost. See them. s Coods, ` Shirts and .Drawers, Ties, Cuffs, s, flandkerei iris, OA, , away down in price. fig out, no, atter what others may say and you n get bog/tins here, • CLIN'LTh 'MARKETS Corrected every Thuruday afternoon. Thursday, January 20th, 1898. Wheat, 0 81 a 0 82 Oats 0 25 a 0 26 Field Barley 0 25.,.'a 0 30 Peas 0 50 w'a 0 53 Buckwheat 0 28 a 0 30 Rye 0 40 a 0 40 Flour per cwt 2 20 a 2 50 Butter 0 13 a 0 14 Eggs per doz 0 14 a 0 15 Hay new 64; old • 6 00 a 7 00 Sheepskins ...... ... , 0 25 a 0 25 No. 1 Trimmed Hides6 a 7 Potatoes 0 40 a 0 45 Turkeys, per ib 0 08 a 0 08 Geese per lb . 0 05a a 0 05 Dunks, per pair 0 50 a 0 60 Chiukens, per pair ..., 0 25 a 0 25 Pork ' 5 50 a 6 00 Dried Apples, -per lb0 04 a 0 05 • Apples, per bag' 0 90 a 0 90 MONTREAL LIVE SK MARKETS There were about 500 head of butchers' oat- tle, 10 calves and 85 sheep and lambs offered for sale at the eat and abattoir. The zero weather did not prevent a large attendance of butchers and trade was good, with a small advance in prices over those paid last Thursday. Prime beeves sold at about 410 leer 1b; good animals, 44o do; pretty good stools including large fat cos, from Sic to 4c, and common dry cows at from 21c to 31c per lb. The calves were all young veals, and sold at from $2 to $6 eaoh; sheep sold at from 8. c to 8.1c per lb and lambs at from 41c to nearly 50 per lb. Fa% hogs are slightly higher in price, and sales were,at from 5c to nearly 510 per lb. TORONTO LIVE STOCK MARKETS There was a pretty fair trade done at the western cattle yards, the run of hogs and oat- tle being heavy. There were 63 carloads on the boards, which included beside cattle 804 sheep and lambs, 1,600 hogs, about a dozen calves and 14 miloh oowe and springers. Hogs advanced again and are still tending upward, Export Cattle—There is some demand for exporters, but not many of the best kind are coming forward. Some good cattle are chang- ing hands for shipment to the old country at 8$c to 410 per lb. Butchers' Cattle—Trade was pretty lively in this lino and everything sold before the close of the day. There were over 100 heads of good cattle taken tor the Harrison abattoir at prices ruling from 31 to 31e per lb. Some ex- tra choice cattle for local butchers sold close upon 4c. Common cattle are somewhat off a drug on the market, but choice stuff is easily gotten rid of. Stockers and Feeders—For Bnifalo there wore taken about ten carloads of light stock- ers at prices ruling from $2.80 to $9,20 per cwt, Sheep and lambs—For export sheep there continues a quiet demand and prices are steady at 8o to els per Ib. Lambs are moving freely at 84.60 to $4.80 per owt, Hogs—In spite of the somewhatiieavy of- ferings, prices advanced about $c, choice se- leetions selling for from No to bio pet ib, weighed off the cars. Light and heavy hogs sell for $4.55 to $4,65 per owt. Sows fetch 810 and stags are dull at 2o to 210 per lb. For Seed Grain,, Spring Wheat, Peas, Oats, Rye, Buckwheat, etc., or. For Feed Corn ot; Staudarci Ele'trattor, or .& f ud ncon ib0 ftht leo JO%lia ry .21; g0 wwwwwiAMMiw DISSOL UTION WE WILL BE RIGHT IN -IT FOR SATURDAY, January 22 As there are to be a number of go -called Bargain Days here on the abov date, we purpose that our Dissolution Sale will overtopthem all on that partioular day, as it is prices people re after. So come on ' the 22nd, when our whole stock will be at your di§: osal, at prices that you will find much below any other place. ut Here's Your Last ehance On SATURDAY, the 22nd- of January, which will be the last Saturday of a six years' partnership between •Mr John Wiseman and Mr J. C. Gilroy, as dry goods merchants, in Clinton, we will give you all, town or country, men, women and children, eke last grand wind-up Bargain Day of our existence as a firm. Other Bargain Days will sink into inig- nificence compared with this one. You will simply have to be on handy .early to secure what is going. •, GILROY & WISE1VIAN, Clinton. nnwun+tn+Ul NEWS NOTES, Sir Charles Tupper is in Ottawa. Dr. George McNair Shaw died at Ham- ilton. Mr. David Richardson of Ancaster,isdead at the advanced age of nearly 100 years. Mrs. Sternaman bas been granted a new trial on the strength of evidence submitted to the Minister of Justice. Revs. Dr. Lucas and Dr. Grant will de- bate on prohibition in the City Hall, King- ston, on January 27 and 28. During a fire at Hamilton an excited Chinaman jumped from an up -stair win- dow with a money box in his arms, alight- ing in the dark 'ion Constable Ford's back. During the year just ended 2,400 home. steads were taken tip in. Manitoba and the Territories, against 1,600 in 1896. Canada is making great strides forward under the new order of things. The Right Hon. Charles Pelham Where, M. P. for South Wolverhampton, and known as the •'Father of the English Mouse of Commons," having sat continuously in the House since 1835, died at 9 o'clock on Sunday night. The Minister of Juetioe ie considering the evidence in the Orr murder case in con. neotion with the petitions asking for the commutation of Jamcs Allison's sentence. The boy's friends entertain but slight hopes that Allison will be saved from the gallows. Mr. Jetta is the eighth governor of con- federated Quebec, and the first Liberal to hold that office in nineteen years, since Letellier was dismissed in 1879. The sal- ary - is 610,000. ' The governor of Quebec ranke third in the table of precedence, the Governor-General being first. Judge Morgan, Toronto, has decided that a gift from a husband to a wife cannot be °seized for rent. The Land Security Com- pany seized for rent a Bell organ, given by Mr. Evans, of Delaware avenue, to Mrs. Hannah Evans, his wife. She sued to re- cover, and Judge Morgan gave judgment in her favor, allowed 620 damages and ordered the company to pay the ooets. An official report received by Collector Milne at Victoria, B. C., states that Amer - loan oustonis officials, under Commission( r Smith, recently advanced into the Lake Bennett and raised tbo Stars and Stripes past the British flag of the mounted police post. The Canadian police immediately secured the removal of the obnoxious flag, and obtained an apology. Mayor Templeton,Vanoouver,9ied Mondey of an apoplectic stroke, the result of his overwhelming defeat at the recent munici- pal eleotiona, His death is more tragio since two ex -Mayors died by,sndden deaths, ex -Mayor Oppenheimer having died a fort- night ago at,Vanconver,and ex -Mayor Cope a few weeks ago on Skagway trail by a drowning aooident. At the fellowship meeting -after the morn- ing service in the Methodist °berth, Burke Falls, on Sunday, .Joseph Remick, aged about 60 years, dropped dead in his seat. Deceased woe a highly respeoted farmer and one of the first settlors in this locality, where he took up a homestead some two miles east of Burke Falls, many years ago. tie leaves a grown tip family of boys and girls, his wife having died Bette three ysare ago. Ho left hie home thio morning appar- ently in good health and aorta, and ;was the only member of the family in attends' anoa at the ehnrch, He has been a concis. tent Member' of. ifho Methodic Ohur'oh for yoare, and spent his last tun eats ;la the aerviceof :bra Master, our' by Ills heart atrr101ier titans Sorrowful Woo*.SblppotN. Y Senaior W. E. Sanford, of Hamilton, has just closed the contract with a New York firm fora most imposing mausoleum, which will cost when completed nearly $100,000. Mr Andrew Schmidt of Stratford,bad an exciting adventure with two footpads who stopped him and were about to rob him when he threw one out of the nutter and drove rapidly away, escaping three shots from a revolver fired at him. • BQRN. WHEATLEY—In Clinton, on January 18, the wife of Wm. Wheatley, of a son. COWAN—In East Wawanosh, on Jan. 17, the wife of Mr John Cowan, of a daughter KIDD—In Kincardine, on Jan. 8, the wife of Joseph Kidd, ,ofa son MURRAY.—In Bayfield, on Dec. 29th, the wife of Neal Murray, of a son, PARKE.—In Bayfield, on Jan. 6th, the wife of Chas. Parke, of a daughter. SELDON.—In Denver, Col., on Dec. 20th, the wife of Rev E. Seldon, formerly of Clinton, of a son. BORDEN.—In Wingham, on Jan. 19th, Mrs ,J, S. Borden' of'h, daughter. bld3.i M. BEZZO-.-MANNING}.—In London, on the I9th inst., by Rev. W. J. Ford, Charles Bezzo and Edith Clara Manning, daughter of Mr L. Manning, all of Clinton. DOW—JEFFERSON.—At the residence of the bride's father, on Jan. 6th, by Rev. C. C. Couzens, Mr Simon Dow to Miss Annie Jeffer- son, all of Donneybrook, East Wawanosh. HASTINGS-JOHNS=At the residence Of the bride's brother, W. A. Johns, on Jan. 12, by the Rev. Jas. Hamilton, William Hastings to Miss Sophia Margaret Johns, all of Wing - ham • LINDSAY—LAKE—At the residence of the bride's father, on Jan. 12, by Rev. J. Walker, Robert Lindsay, ofeepawa, Man:, to Miss Lottie, daughter of Wm Lake, Ethel. DED. DICKSON—At his late residence, "Glads- wood." Sea'orth,f',n Jan. 15,?John ,Turnbull Dickson, aged 76„years GLBSON—In Goderioh township. on Jan. 12, Ann Jane Thompson,;wife of J. W. Gibson, and eldest daughter of Robt. Thompson,Gode- rioh, aged 94 years and 8 months BRIGHAM—At Killarney. Man,, on Deo. 28, John W. Brigham, aged 27 years. KELNER—Ia Grey, on Jan. 7, Joseph Kell- ner, aged 79 years I , MENZIES—In Grey, on Jan. 10, James Men- zies, aged 48 years CAMPBELL.—In Londesboro, on Jan. 17th, Jane Peters Campbell, wife of James Camp- bell, township clerk, aged 69 years, Sale Register. Farm stook of W Hanna, lot 15, con 8, Morrie, on Thursday, January 27; 0 Hamilton, Auct. Farm stook of Mrs 1'. Hill, lot 25, con. 6, gra- vel road, Huilett, on Saturday, Jan. 22, C. Hamilton, Anat. dear xtuertiletttento. BOY WANTED Steady, reliable boy wanted, to learn the Mliilna business. 11. G. WEBB, Londosboto Mills, (SUN ' (7Lt'B The Annua' Meeting of the Clinton Gun Club', wilt bo hard at theRattdlibdry.House On Tu,0811A. L Tyening, JN. 26th, at. 7.5Of JNo MoMURRAY, 1 coy 4eettntt old. l l •awls' COUNTY Che (,orifi 3loaktfie Cotied o :the 136tttrty' rrrt iiiHtIrOfl 1V it�pop# in t e " 1!!�noal in the Town Of Gadsden, On ter 1 et b abuse C1.MRP' akin Powder Makes Better and Lighter Biscuits than any other. J11®o Manufacturing Chemist, " 9" Physicians' Supplies THE RpSON Of our marked success in the clothing Trade is just this: We take no chances, we 1-4y good materials, have them made up by peopi who knoly' an to make every stitch count, and who can put style intoe 'mple, every- day articles. This brings the people; the ph- 0 them to buy. That is all there :is ,about it; good goods, low prices. THE BLACK WORSTED SUIT mentioned last week at $14 is a clear saving of $4 to the purchaser. They would be good value at $18. SCOTCH and CANADIAN TWEEDS.—This week we show 300 samples of Scotch and Canadian Tweeds; "new spring styles" at prices ranging from $12 to $18 a Suit. There is certainly something among these samples that will please you. Come and see them—you are wel- come to look them over, whether you intend buying or not. vercoats and Ulsters Those shrewd buyers who put off buying their top col until the season has well advanced, r are now reap1ing;, their reward in lower prices. Of course the assortment is not so great as it was earlier in the season, but we'still.' have a good variety to offer, and prices are altogether in, the buyers' favor. . A good Ulster for $4.50, a better one for $5, and the Best one goes at $6.50.' Y, A few, sizes in Boys' Tweed Overcoats at $2.50 "IMPERIAL TEA" a blend of Ceylon and India, is growing more popastir day by day.: Have you tried it? The price is 35e a pound. , The Cash Haler, Londes aroo