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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1886-06-23, Page 7• s 1 1. a 1 A 1 II,I NEWSPAPER LAWS —The Toro~titoCity-�Conni;i .i sent $1,000 to alit lite• sufferers by We call the spacial attention of Post the Vancouvely B. 'C, fire. naa'tdes and 8ubscribe!'s to thefoltowing 11;<aye Moray, of Ilarniltan,. io}tss of the newspaper Wyo..- telegraphed. bOO TO the "destitute l ,;.A, postmaster is. required to does, Roamux LETT .returning a payersloes, of tizons of Vltinoouver, B. C. *At litiswet' the law) when a subscriber does' -911 Fridays`' ovening•at the eon - sot take his: paper out of the office, and elusion of a bee Elio, a serious riot State the reason for its not being taken. ' 'slcourred, in. which •a man namedl. Any uegleet to do so makes the postmaster Jalues lirQUQltt'oix'ivas1 truolt 011 t118 responsmle to the publishevs for 'payment. tent• head with a hands Ike b another '1♦,-lf auv :, crsun'ortlat's his paper' dis p y 'spht'chiltl, !18 must pay all arrearages, or loan named Bobbie, felling him and the 'publisher may continue to: send it causing a serious concussion of the. "autfl p'thyfilblit is made, and collect the brain. Immediately after the °t;eter- A•hole amount, whether it be taken freer >h tJte officetjr `ntit. There can lie no legal Tie gobble Made tor 114e ,wood$. fitiseontinuance ilutil the payment is made. a-Any'person who takes a paper from the post -office, whether directed to his tame or another, or whether be has sub- scribed, or not, is responsible for the pay. 4 -=If a subscriber order's his paper to'be stopped at a Certain time, mid the publish yr continues tosend, it the subscriber is bound to pay fort if he takes it out of the. pee -office, •office, This proceeds upon tfreground , a man must pay Tot Wilret he uses. Isehi-the Division Court i't 'Goilet'idh , st thtt November sitting a 71t'Wsiltiper pub- t • licher seed for Tilly of pones, The i1e'fei,tl- ant objected peril* on tale ground that he wait-'ortdered's. former proptte civ o'f the • •IrsrY,et'to-disconrirae it. The luilge•lield that thawas s not a valid defence,. The plaintiff, the 'present • T rnprietorr, bad.to i1w>rre 'tom d'iscnlltinue and consequently i= oulil'coll.ect, although it was not denied 'Oak defoodiint bad -notified forme pro- . ripiiictor to , discontinue,. In any event defendant Vita bound 'fp pay fol'. the time • he-had.'rt',eeive& the paper, and until;l'e had paid all arrears due for subscription: 1; TITE'WEEX' 8 DOINGS. S. CANADIAN. —Calgary, N. W. J. offers $'1,500 , in prizes for Dominion' Day sports. ---Diptheria'is:very bad at A.ncas- ter. Three and four persons are ill in some families., —Toronto 3.Sethodist G`on:ferenee 1passcd a resolution. favouring total and 11 o'clock, as sho'was going' :in prohibition. - • • - ' • to the.yard tit' Marshall's and just after' she had parted • with a boy.. friend, Christmas came pp from the Side of • the road and caught.: her. ' Fte asked her to go for a walk 'with biui-but she would not. He would • —At the Presbyterian General not lot her: go in; although slie'cried Assembly the selection of Winnipeg_ out for help,; but field- her at the • :gas next year's.place of .meeting •was gste until' almost .2 o'clock in :the confirmed. • . •• •rnol:ning. ,' Christmas : made a lot of —If the. Scott Act.is tubo in fore •co '•Insinuations against the• girl's Cher- i n this, city for rho next'tlirac years,' octet,' but the mbagistrate Would not • the police court' will. have to be on- hoar••them. He found the defend lfiined: It draws 'big houses.-- ant guilty :of .common assault, and :•Guel Heiv ld.: b, l fined. •hint the • highest •. possible p - =mint in 'oat Bishop )uhamel, of Ottawa has J d until the whole amount was -pail. circulated. through his diocese a ry attempt it leas made to •' denunciation of the .knights -,of -�A dating a ttel 1 Labor order,' rder, ' and Warns Catholics : -rob Scott's Bank, Pellnerston. 13y against joining it. a rase, J. W. Scott, -the proprietor, Was got rid of, and about 11 o'clock --The attentianee at the Colonial k Filed and dressed . g Month 0. f May g'. n person closely Vo e ibition chitins, tht 3n0 t , y inau'el•lelothe8 went into the Canalted to over 38report . The - o ee and asked to deposit f.00Q-1 Canadian exhibit is reported ' as-- , 1 $ It liking splendid and` receiving• .a 11 a teller, Bert Boomer, showed his § customer to •,a, seat: in the' private i;roat demii. of attention... ,offices (until lie got througlrli>ith the = Hamilton Spectator•: 0 r odd otlrer. custoir}ors. 'When he retul n folds;, the Scott: Actors; seem to.--..ed- ,veiled one he Was asked to the d think that the mord prosecutions to. loc1K the door until the deposit' there are against • violations of ' the I' a . :wits Irlado. As'. the customer appear- • Scott list the better the Act a elks., •"od very nervous' .Boomer': complied y , P • —the Calgary! Trib.• • , reports• ''with the.xoque;t,.And oli tetul'iling-to• ' 'that "Cariboo" Canueron,..who'lnade - the private office, the party display. $150,000'in 'th'oCariboo 13r C.'mines,:od• a large knife and ordered him, in in '63-'6I- is at. present„"broke," and ' the ,,s ashrom. - • Boomer •refused to has goodie the Big. Bond• of Colum= go; and a -struggle ensued, the; toner' bia river ,to repair his fortunes.: • . getting badly cut -andl'otheltvise' in - Under . n - Under' the -Scott • •Act: $1,200 jured.''. Finally. he overefilne • tlie. • �W,�•ll have to be raised in the count ,;robber, pg.. and'.tookthe knifofrom him, , • .o7 Halton this -year for. ,license and on stripping tilo veil from his , poses. This stun is requiceci.,'to meet•. face, found Jiiinself confronted by expenses, and•is in.adclitioli, to the. one Ben Biggs The would be rob-': fines collected. ' • ' •' her was arrested. It is thought he —At Saginaw, " had an accomplice. $ bon 112.ic1>hl ,.Charles . Wylie was thrown from` a • vohiolo •-qtr,. T. IL: • Hood, farnierly of by a. horse find sustained Gilelph, died recently in Michigan injrunaway' se r :under 'circumstances .1,oenliarl dis, uries that causcd.hfs doatlt,•t IIo' un e c c� 1 .Y-� was there on °'visit, and itis' rod • trossing.., The birth of a' child to ' will be taken to Coliingi oti Onty '111' r. and Mrs: Hoc[1•-wiis'anuoiinced,p where his parents reside; • . Airs.'Etniau, a trp 'd li d`eiefuu . —The barn 11. John•'Slotz,nurse, was, engaged.do attend Ma. • Eramosit, was- Struck by lightning Itoofl, and a few:days liitcr'proposed' and entirely destroyed, ineludin' to. give •11Irs.. IT. a sponge 51091191 four horses, litany iiiiplelnonts, hay,: 'bath, as is customary in suds cases. and about 500 bushels. of +train, .Mrs, Hood told bor where the•aleo- Only $600 iusuranee on the %time. 1101 was kept; and going -to the closet Mr's. Eastman found. two bottles —Warden a crier, of York Goan- labeled 'alcohol, • and tool. one of ty, declined to hives the annual din- them 'mid bathed.her•patient with •a• Iter to Couuty Colnnclllors, and will portion of the contents. • •A couple pay $100 for erecting a tountaill 011 of. 110111,8 later Mrs.'Huod oxperionc- the grounds of. the Contiity nor c1'burnitr�Main all over herher' house, at Newmarket. ` y ' ' body and Dr. in was sent fur, —A terrible thtindorstorin ocatlr-• b'ut being out at the time, it was red at V['oo!ijaw, Man. and -',vicinity over. five 110t11s after the application June 9, doing great damage, Mr that he reached 'the house, It• was s11C. Cline was killed'Aril Ile plo.ttghing,' then diecoverrxl that, the liquid with a180 one of his team: Ho loavos a which \1rs. Mead had been bathed , wife and Six ohilclaen, was not pure alcohol but alcohol -Mr.'Rossithr, the pvosocutter for containing large quantities of cur. the "Scott 'Act Assoeiation,• at rossivo sublimate prcpft!'ed as. rat - Poterhoio, was • insulted by Mr. poison, .and th it' the poison lied Stapleton, auctioneer, who: had to pen(trated the Patient's burly cans- „pity $18.15 for,tlro tumefy of calling - ingserious iniintnrnation,finrl,l,ispite an honest, feii.rlcss, consistent ab- ' the utmost efforts of the physician stainer a sneak, etc. - Mrs. Hood gradually grew Worse —Mr. R. Montgomery, of Icings. until death canto to bur rtilio1. ton, late Comity' Master,. and Mr: •---Dr. Williatii Arthur L'ivell,-oi' Callaghan have' -been expelled from Smith's lfalls,.son of 1)l. Michael the Orange otd'rr for publicly assert- 1:avell,.1-Verdi:Il of Kingston p eTion i - ilg that it was hello' used and.1,vs trr6ito asks for a hill declaringin 1 • titntetfor oltlicalb u se$.• r. ' hat a certain eei'ernol,y . sit1 0011' font„otnty tataly pdareil his views ' trt t f marriage 4olrr.l.tdtuit,en- ' `in print.torpid into at the city of I'ianiilton, Dr, FIatniltou] pronounced 13rough- ton's iujuriorp serious, and a warrant was issued for Robbie. Up to thepre a sent Robbi0 has not been , cangltt. Broughton. is still Rt<rrcohseious. ,• "t'lnoancar[line Beview•says -John Humes, uncle of Mr.. • Wm: - Beate, has lived in this locality at I least -33 Seats; . Ipie is now •80 years - of age, and lives in a house opposite the Walker House. Over 50 years f WO he parted from . his • brother' William,. now .85 years ;of age.. 'Little. or ,no •titiillgs of 'each 'other' . had. been known' to these brothers ` during their separation,, Last week, however, John was surprise. by re- ceiving a visit froin his long separat- cd'hi'othen••Fancy 60.yeais interven- ing since these . two had clasped •• hands 1 What changes have °volved' in that time. • The Meeting 6f these two tottering old:men, standing.on the brink of 'tile 'grave, is said • to havo been moat affecting. - "Merry Christmas, a piing:mar,: tied roan of •Barton township, was arrigned before -the Hamilton polies • magistrate, • county of Wentworth, on a oharge'ot ooniruitting.an Inde- centli'tssault-•Upon Jlidui--WTtilkor,, a domestic employed by W. Marshall. 'Tho prosecutrix is a good leaking girl about 17 years' old. • Slio • said that on • S unday. , night, 'between '10 'tin the 29t1i-'. day of September, A. D., 1882, between the said William' Arthur Lavell by and ulilider the natlie.�'f Arthur Vane, and Ada Mar 'Caton) then in the village of Now u'igli, in 'the Coutity'ofLennox and Addington, by and do el; thies• '; ?aeof Marie 'Torbert,.irad null and void, on the ;round that the said marriage • was. solemnized and entered into by and under false names. Surae time after the sup- posed bogus wedding, i't upas. fontkd that a gonuii s,e 3narria'do license- had tbeen issued, and that the gentleman who performed the ceremony was a regularly ordained legal adv'o•e was, sought, and the late 1blr..1 Bethune, Q. C.,, and the firm of Blake) Kerr, Lash & Cassels advised Dr. -Lovell that the marriage Was., valid acid biwiing,• .MissCaton was never informed of the real state of affairs,., and some time after the hock wedding married a young man from Newburgh, and to relieve her front ail danger of being prosecuted for bigamy, as well as to set himself free, Dr..'Lavn11 has made applica- tion frit a divorce. —At Point Roberts,',,•B. -C.- last week' John McSweeney was. fatally - stabbed by William P:ollaid, The murderer has not been "cfiptared PRESS QP/IV/ONS. The •Scotch Grits out in the coun- try are all at sixes and sevens as to theMeaning (Stile 'Globe's' strained ` advocacy of home rule for Ireland on the dines laid. d6wn by Gladstone at the request of Mr, Parnell. They naturally take the side of the Ulster' Presbyterians, and do not approve of the loyal Protestant minority being _1 ed2ver-..to the tender mercies of disloyal. Catholics. • Yet they see the journal to which George Brown, devoted his life, champion- ing the 'Cana° of the Nationalists •against that of the Loyalists. -The: Scotch fanner as' a. rule .is a Grit, and all over Canada the Scotch farmeris to be found: ' The 'first great shock he reeeived-was the en-, dorsatien of iiiel by the organ,; the second is :the abandonment of the Ulster : ,Protestants. Those • 'who thinl:that by tl'lese teetics the Grit Organ ' is helping to build: up and solidify . the 4tieform party mako a grave lnietalce. .It is tearing .the patty- to pieces as: surely as the Sun shines. _. Thi's is 'the. ladder by which the oganthinks the party can be 7telped into' poivev, unmindful of the fact that the mon who made the Reform party what it - is anji stood by it through sunshine and shadow are -t the :Scotch Grits. They are• . being 'forced••to leave' because 'they cannot swallow' the Rielito -and' Separatist dishes prepared for them by the organ, that in the days, of `George Brown theyrespected• and believed iu.-Toren, to Telcgrtcf!t • •NOB LY" SPOKEN.' The - Rev, .ITtigh Hanna, • D. I. Presbyterian minister.o.f St.-Dnoch's- cliiii'C1i,•in Belfast, Ireland, preached a sermon On the recent recent r.•iots, • He said : "We will not'beconio'patrons ofthe apostles •ostles of'redition..' But We. , will' .defend • darse,lves float• `'the 'domination of ' such. • ' The 'loyal' celebration of vietoi'y enragil°tl the Government, Which traitorous to its trtist, has • slaughtered'our people. We . are 'resolved ; to niaiutain our ;relations .with' -England. If the Government thinks: that Ulster will he easily sttblugatnd by. .a.seditious Parliament, it has signally failed in its: estimate of ns, The'; pv ogle of the_)\Torth:.liave hirectiv°- moans._ of. resistance, b • ut tho time has not come yet to employ thong. 'Tho humblest o•f.the seven victims who suceulnbed last 'Wean esilay uli;dor.•the murelor ons fi.reof i11'i'. Aforloy's,militia, pre. Betted a higher and .nobler type of oharacter than dcios Mr. 1V1'orley.° THE NON1E-SUOH dODKINC STOVE ! NO COAL 011 HUMBUG. - Will'ilo the edol:•ieg. baiting, Pte., of an ordlitiny.family, with nue•fltth the whinge to Do and,to Know. CHURCH DIRECTORI, St. Yavl sChurch,-Services on Sunday at irl. Vogl! to ell. Put all your fences in repair this month, a.ar, tort Bible Clans, 10 a,m Sunday rikled over a. mast dextro School 2,SO in perigee onwedis Oa • 6 .Iu, f3ulhpur opt1b R41V. \V MAM CRAIG, B. D., Rector 3 P vermin, Rabhen$uiyStreett . odlet,-Services at 1040 In the. tettidn'states April Is the meed plant• a. m, And 7.00 .tri, b. th ,School at 2,8p s T P& . Tho small scarlet tank' kadish IS excellent Canada Presbyterinn,-- Services at 11 a,m, gn9, ("Al* or breakfast, 8,80 p,. an, Sabbath School, 2,80 p, m, Ilay ALEX. 3•ras ere, Pastor. As a rule, farmers eat too much L11144°11(4 . . Ontario Street Methotliat.-services at 10.60 a. bathe often enol i, m. and 7.00 p. in. Sabbath School, 2.80 p.m. Dark eggs are richer flan, light; it is said Ray. W. W. 3P4R1450, Prater. , - - - - hath Schcal, 2.80 O. nI. Ray J. GRAY, Pastor; }}.,��yi�� �y The Tewksbury Winter Blush is a. small, . . M V rip E T i lateskeeping winteir apple that has Very vein- elm ain elm month, m. R. 31st, Iter ri , �r ` ei Ano0A) CPARIA (eFUNDS P R Cto ENTEND F. li. Z'QWE1JiI EiArriater.Solil[tor, etc:, 888-y $earls s i3lock, t't sso1 - t 1j� /1� ONE�6 to lend In larger or small Milne,. a'n .11 good mortgages or personal security, to tipe lowest current rates.. il. 11AL3, Huron-st•., genion Vi rite*, Feb. it, la], 3,Iy now find comrriand a higher pries. p user, Serviee at v en P. m Sab B¢ tate a In Aprilfga - BUcSINESS DIRECTORY' p property, RIVATE UNDS App>,tto 9a'1'olvu and Faith In April gather the steneg: off the meadow, y scythe ' , Office, next NnWs•R coiiin (p stairs) so that th@ will ,not - rtitin the sc he ands tnlrs) Albert•St 859 3m mower. • The.Pekcta Ilea Is now said to be the com,. lug potato. Try it, a few plants at a time, till you are sure. A level-headed writer declares: that the two farm nuisances are the hateful and hideous barn yard and'the privy vault, The sewage should be eaught in a wooden box and mine a gled with earth and ashes from day to days SO that it will not be e,ffensivu,, and then,' when the - receptacle is' full, it. should be emptied over the land as a 7•ertilizer. Then it will not pczon Wells and springs, 4.11. Country Where Umubreltas Are'Safe. [Cerin field Re',ublican.I The Norwegians aro' a wonderfully honest people. As wo were driving along one day, we saw two_ umbrellas hangit1 on the branch of a tree. Some people; not caring to - be encumbered with them, had left them there till they should pass that way again. Although it was raining, no one thought of touoh- ing them, An engliah lady told us that as she was, going for a walk one Clay she found her fur -lilted silk cloak too heavy, and remarked that she wished she bad left it at home. Take it orf,'' said a Norwegian friend who was with her,. "and hang it ou this tree. She did so. andwhen she returned two hours later there it still remained. The .P.noe for Beans in Beaton. •lNew Yoi ; Sind At'a• fair recent held in Boston •a very fine display of beans of the •different varieties was exhibited.' ' .A. visitor• who was interested in this peculiar product inquired of a young' lady doing dutya't one of the counters where this display could be found. "Beans," she replied, and certain lit- tle twitchi.n'. s at the corners of her lips showed. how her mouth watered at the sound. "Ah, yes, sir, you will find the bean exhibit in the art department.'.' • They Will try 011. • The National line of steamships will bo pro- vided with oil to he used to lessen the dan- gerous effects of heavy. seas• ' Ten vessels, in- cludinn all the cattle 'steamers, have been provided with the necessary appliances to use.. oil when occasion requires, The company's requiitioa called for fish oil, but the recent experinients proved it thickened too rapidly _when in contact with water' at the general low. winter teneperatur,s, 'To obviate this tendency, the conti•atitor has mixed amineral . -oil having a lbw,'cold test' with flsh'oil, which has .9.7 -comparatively. high test: the result is an eil;ttitichcoagulates'at irniuch lower tela-. perature'than ordinary fish oil, but which it is claimed will be as etiicacious. • The mineral . oil has stood the test as a 'tubi ikaut for rail-' „ roads•in cold weather, and it is claimed will' lie very'useful for sea purposes, 'whoa mix.rd •with a proper proportion cf fish oil. During. • the mild and warm. Mon hs fish alone is to be. •, yurplied. • The metliod adopted of using•oil is by means eft punctured. canvas' wags filled "with oakum. • ' „ . . (8ee•i