Loading...
The Huron News-Record, 1886-12-22, Page 2Zhe Pion Moo 1400 VUMISAUD Every Wednesday Mc:ming 0&&s AT TIIINIV'OrrICEt Ontrio Street Clinton, Ont $1,25 in advance; $241 tug so paid. The proprietersof TICS OVDERIOTt Thiws, having purchased the businesS and plant of Tim Hvito REcuan, will in. future poblish the amalgamated papers in Clinton, Under the title of "Tim 1IU):00 NBW8- 131.c0to," , - Olinton is the most 'prosperous. town in 'ff estern.Ontario, is the scat of considerable .manufacturing, and Ilia centre of•the Aped agricultaral Section. in Ontario. • . • TIMcombined simulation of Tim Ignws- 13.neottn. exceeds • tinit,:of • any paper puli- ihad in the • County of Huron. therefore,•, unsurpassed' as au advertisinncsiimng : • . . . . rellates •of advertising, liberal and furnished on. application, . earParties making contracts for a spoof, 'fled time, who discontinue their advertise - meats' lasfore the expiry •of are Sarno, will be charged full rates.. • • AcWertisements, without instructions as to space and time,. will be left to the judg- ment of the compositor in the display, in - sorted until . forbidden, inedsureil by a scale or solid 'nonpareil (12 Tines to the Wall), and charged 10 conts • a line for tirst Ansertion and 3 cents a line for, eaoli sub- •• sequent insertion.' . Ortlets to • discontwue I•inlvertilements inust1;bc in writing. . • —"AV Noticeelet. as RENDINGMA'rrElt, (measured by a Scalcrof solidNonpariel,. 12 ' lines to the incli)..charged. at the • rate "of 10 cents a fine 1.:er each inseraint. " . . JOS WORK. "We :1.tave one of .the.best appointedlob Offices" Auest of Toronto. Our facilities in 'this department:entitle. as to do all kinds of woik—froni s esiling card to a marnmoth twitter,iu the • best .styie knownto the craft; and at the. lowest possildoerates.- Ordevs by.maarproniPtly attended to. Addre . , :77e News-Reeerd • • •crintOn.•oili December, '1882. ' ..... . .The.iNon News -Record •••"1 ,p • irednesday, December 22 •THE -WEEK'S DQI$GS. , . • • piing tali of gixet.en, named WashbOrne, 'While Visiting wbrother at Comber, fell or was tlfrown from • a waggon, and W.11.5... —The •ConScrvativeS„. selected Charles Wilson, deputy reeve Of Woodstock, to eentest the riding. arrabi4 Ur. gOwfit: --Owing to .thaTimiglits of Labor- : "the mantifaclur(rs of Chuthion, tt Witirnnt Int \to agreed to • lose their • estab lishtu Link; at - —At a convention held tit 'Foliar - ton Comore, Geo. Leversage„klsq., of Carlingford, was chosen to represent: the Conservativeinterest in South Pe'rth at the coming local eleetion, in place Of Mr. Cull, who resigned on aceounst of family 414:Wm, —Geo, Cunningham,. aa old end respected farmer of A.raeliasburg townehip,banged himself In :3cow shed on his premises, Deceased was nearly 77 years of age, Vamily trouble is said .t.o. have been the canso of his suicide. . • 7—The body of David E. Veachey, who was drowned off Thunder Cape on the t:19th of Septombe 1st, was found ou the bth inst. close to the place 1,idiefre he went &Styli, and at his parente' request the 'renntinei wore taken to Collingwood at the earliest opportunity, . 7---A young lady of Ripley, who was recently visiting 4 family on l0111 concession of.Huren, one even - in., put on male.atthe and went. seaiue. lodgings amour, 'n the. eigh- hors. °After having bc'een refused admittance at several. plitcea„ She knocked at the door of a certain widower who had retired for the night.: He appeared; Willa door in' his night cos' t•ti Me, and although the• trainp pleaded longe'for admission, it was positivelyand resolutely re- fused, At the next plaeo yisitd the • identity of the young: woman was discovered, and .sinethe story basgot alfroad the widower is al, leged to have stated his intention .of neveragain,. under .any cireum-. stances, refusing' ntramp the hos- pitality of his hose.... ••• -Mr. Thomas MeNayvoue of the the eunliner &wer show by his ., earliest settlers of Perth County, father, and OP seelag the flighland- . died last week. . The deemed eno, ere the HUN fellow' exclaim& grated from the siorth of Ireland to "Why, daddy, they're nut breeched this country with his parents during ; yet l Tee. warut , yo their granny the summer of 1.83,, and soon after caret afford it!" . 1 settled -on lot -10 tu tbe 4rst causes- --,A. professor in a medical; col- siun of Logan, where he resided . lege called the tatentioa of b is. class until the sammer of 180, when be,1 to a man who had Applied for vied - removed into Vullerton. .1w poi- loal advice, "Now, g'entlemea," tilos he was Conservative, in rellg- .eeid the profess -or ."Will you be ion a Presbyterian,, and was for laud enough to 1(4 at this patieut many years a member of the first closely, and 'see if you. can tell what Orange Lodge beta in Mitchell; is really the matter with bile 'I -7-Last Monday, Thonms Iiieberd. Look at' his oyes, the shape of his eon, . taxidermist, of AlMxaa as- head, and 'the expressionof his sieting Mr. Samuel Hill to kill pigs, features. , You eon detect nothing. and in the evening started forborne, It needsthe eye of the practised Carrying a single barrelled shot gun physielau to •detect at a f;Tlauce the along. That. was the last seen of malady of the patient. • .I ant 110 him alive. About ll: o'olock in the more acquainted with this man than night Mr, John' Wateen, found him you are, yet as soon as I looked at - lying on the • road. dead. A, gun hini I saw that he was a.dear nude." shot wound wa's found', in iris. left The students indulged in exclaria- breastrand the gun byhis side had tions, Of .admiratioll. As soon as recently been discharged:- 110 one this heel. sabsided, the senposed acquainted with the deceased be- nintwoperted his retieth and. spoke. lieved that ho committed suicide, "1 s ty eir; I hope you will -excuse nor had he paiythjug in•his i,bssess_ nie,but it's my brother who is deaf jou 30 -account for murder, yet, it is and dumb; 'Hie is outside waiting not easy to imagine i11. what way he to know if halhall cone in... Shall could carry' the gun so that its .clis-. Lietcli him.' in I" churn would find lodgement in his —Thi Watson, da hoeing . break . • , , . • blizzard Of the prairie," as he called --Drigald Conne.1, who died at .hintself in a Chiltana Baleen' pro - St, Themes ou ,SeturdaY evening. posed to make: a soft seat for the last, lived- in meanly, furnished eorbner out .of a- Tuining, engineer,. apartments and on the plainestfood, becitese the latter doelined to drink • and frequently wetild go • for tWouty,- whiskeywith him. This. Ichl the four liuura without eating 411.'ordar elfeet.ofbrinif,ing the engineer to the to savo the expenae ptit irtFetl,.. • A bar, . where, before, touching the 'few lieurabefore 'his death he.point7 wlitakeyo he drew a :sharp pointed ed out two betties Of medicine, -dratigh Una n's p•etteil front his 1 i ack et which he had not used, •aiiii,.:_eltit.- and .• allowed- it . to the cowboy. tioned :his - attendants - that • •eare 'Tow, 1. want- to tell, pou;', Ire re- Shouldbe taken- that the' physician merited, "that S up aro an infdruel.' did -not charge for ' them', . ()untie!, cOwar'd and 'a scoundrel., and I ean however, was knoWn tO OWn..consi11-. lick you with ..it lead;peucil;" and erable preperty,and by Inc will ;h0' just as:the billlYroaehed, for his gun • becitivthed $62000 to, his brother, , the • pencil. 'darted, .ferward. like. a Duncan Connel; an inmate uf the• :flash 11210 his eye, the 'point passing ElginlIciose--of Inifustry. . .. .• accurately through the pupil... Witte ...There. .is a ..peculiar strike at soe may recoVer„ but his- privileges Paris, Ont. • • Seven of' the town bat: 4 bad'Inall-aYs.'gofis, - - cliers werefined. fo.r.infringement:of .4-.",I have been figuring," said the ‘by4s.w. regulating thii.sellina, of Mr: Satistic, '•"on.. the arnoent of Meat on the markSt.. The buteriers linger-nail•:that .is wasted • in . this have .appealed the Case . On . taw World- .evor'y :yeen, and, • sir,-, it „is ground 'that the• Market sbnilding.is soinething :overtimes..., New, . Sir; . . .. Alot a proper plane.fur OM .keenin,i, :the. average peraiin trims of a thirty- �fmeat, and until. a settlement': of• second of an inch -of.nail from 'each the .diffieuity is reached the. hutch,. 7fine.er every Week, or three inehei. 4 • er.s have resolved . to sell .:no: Merit and if .poasible prevent oth9rs: from selling.; :. Public sympatlik . seems scrireely to be with the•!btitchere in. this' departure; yet latteng efforts' are -being made to ,speere.a. fresh tiPply uf moat aod ivnew stock: at . ... In:044m. - • . : • .are rumors to tho effaet theta number of Toronto Method- propeSe to. follow the example -of the•Presbyterian founders of -the *Review `and etart••anothiAr church 'organ, because they regard Rev: DO wart, as "an, olfenSivcr.partisan " It is a lour, ante. since there was ..so anuch* polities in the .Pulpits .amt pews of -this country as there is now. -Arelibishop Lyneh Inia by what mist, at the mildest, he•described tis 'his indiscretion, aroused 'a 'stoViii • thati`itay Wre4,a 604 many .of bis friend's :shi pa effeet...of ib already • .visible the - awkward peal Ilona hi W hi.011 tuan-Us.Tfrbbs asPininle . to *.flie legiefature -find thernseLyes..SeineAff their: do not dare 'to ..talltAt aneI• those_who Lire running:11nd .th mse ves. upon. an .uphill track. • Many. 'Protestant Liborals, too, find:themselves sorely perplexed' by the cemplex.hin Wive assuluod. But the effects uf atin 111 SUIVI e the oleatiots, Rival chareb organ§ begot riYal church_ Organfiations, and men's creeds will becinue'• more: , Party, name. An; ti 11]) prospect,. truly: . • .: -Otto,T.'1Clots;•whelis in charge • Of the D:timinion',astrondmical surf •-vey; ariivedui Ottawa last Wednes- . clay frOM Winnipeg, to which itof fit 'he Jias thimpleted from 'the - M r, Kloti says he Int'sjra- yea ted eirer5- trans-euntilleal Dna ef :fltilviay, D.C.:North' .AMerica front: Uexico upward$.. but not a si.ttgle''.. ono will. compare WiL1). the Canadian' Pacific . rtrilWity: The Den vet and Rio Grand' has some 'magnificent scisnorY;Ibut its extbil£ is but small oompared the GOO miles of mann- Linn grandee'. Which formS a contiun bits pietuio from Calgary tothe .coast: . Ile 'ascertained ;the ',height of the more prottinent peaks along the Canadian Vuci (lc Tliiimty to beffiS ftillOWS Stephen . 74 "feet •abOve the'iiilstahd 10,5.23 abovo•tho--sea "Atuldit liiii;e•esi 7 071 . „ feet..abuVe the sea Mount Mount • Viehl Devit1n0,321,,Munnt' King • .8;876, AI on fit Sir Donald 10,045,.3tunn%1(lotez 8;570; INIonut . MoArther S,00i, Mount Carroll 0,4-10;• Meant .11ermit _9,063 feet above the sea. Mottut;Sir which is the-higlioSt on thti line, is -.0'440 feet itbove the..railwav. 'o'cluCk. :au Stasurdays. • • —11 is sid that the Conserva- of 'Toronto hava invited...the; lion.; J. A. Cliapleau to'deliver an ttldi'ss iii .thtt OitS, in reply to the . .•:Wilfrid:. Laurier. ": It is Ile; ....lia0ed that the Secretary of State ivill ancopt. • . • the 161,hbf•November 161; A Couple of col tS strayed. froIn • the. promises of MOyer, Con,. 2',- 3)ereittun. 'i hey Nlitt,ro orst tracedto the centre aide road, 1 /01.01104er, and •••froin thence to .Behnont. From rielutont they were followed to • St.. Tboinak and fi.ont there 'to Fingal) • when4 they'were followed -to Iona? .glieuce to Dutton.and from•Iltere to Dimly hilt township; near:Chatham, )yhere they Were' found 85 Miles from where they •started.:•• • Mr. Angus Thempseir, ' .Erin., was catching a pig; on a boar .maile a.dash at hini • asbo 'Wasstoppiim:and strikihg 11101 iii. the face -made a bad gash :with Its • • tuska. • Mr. , T hoinpsan 'was 1. knocked insensible,and it Was fear' ed .110 220 01(1 lileed to 'death. In . . addition to Ore -gash in lifs feee,' ono * ....eyeball. was . St).1116Wilitt'. ailytiteea. On@ of t110 ttiska'• entei•ed 'Elt 016 Cp racy Of Mt. Th din oye the •other belowthe jaw,. and. 'the flealt was strippelf °loam off that • iiide of the' taco. k poriitin of the. • ear . Was also tadkon off. ,' injured ifon ie over 60 3fears of ego and his, recovery is considereddontilful, --A most melancholy event °c- entred in itppei, -Nichol, on WWI - 114S cbty. evoui ng, Nov. Itth. . Mrs. George (ameron, of Alma,' (fertner- IY of Nichol), h:td occasion to vi• it the residence.,of Init father, Chalurers, it boing the evelifeg. before ber: sister A.nrue'S marriage, Snugly and lovingly she wrapped up her' baby girl, 6 months • old,in brittle to protect her froui ,,the in. element blast. 3,titt on .11113, 0.'s . arrival at her destitution, who :lot siep id the;herror of the g4ief-strieken mother when She ttudid the ,wraps and dieeovered that the vital spiral: had lied and she held in her arms the' jifeleas fin in of her infant, vAto had boon called away without rho slightest warning. .WYOMI.X.G TE143,ITO1LY JU$".1.1.0.E:: • • A.yetir.ago• J.Olin riNleGill, a resi- 'dent of ACtun., Ontario, but at . the time spending a, few inontla 'in Cheyenne, W1enting1Tor1 itorYi. was .shot. d.etul in Lite street there.1128 . murderers, and • Stowitrt -1(fdriitoe1i;' have been'..ilf Custody from the tight Of tho tritgedy until last 'weeli, When their trial took place. The hearing Of the case oc- , . . . several days, the following •from. •tlip Cheyenne Seim will show the docal intereet• felt in the eaSe "An intense interest lias prev1117 ed in V¼Is 00lflI11l1fl1 V 21 51 the :pro:mention of the McIntosh Broth - ors. since tho commeneetneet of tho trial oh. Wednesday last and • tire court room has boon crowded -to extreme e,apacity. 'Lite • evidence presented by the proaecittion was untixpectedlystrung• and tionvineing, and thit, aft pts to destroy.it seem- ed unavailing; It was thercfore 'a matter of!genoral asronislittaynt, last ntglit, when it became known on the stroetstlbat the jury" lea brought in a.vcirdict Of acquittal, • •;,.-J'attica L. Hughes, ,Pitb116 Scheol Inspector of Taranto, lectur- ed to a very, • largo • audience in Streetsville, .111e other night, Tim Chair 'was occupied, by, the Reeve of S tree tsy I k, 11 r. Wm. And rews.. Mi-.•.Chisholtnof Ilraniptun iteetnn- pained 1)3r two young lawyers from Toronto, claimed Lite, right -of dis-. . Cussion with Mr. Ifughos, Ito de- alined*to be farced into a ' wrangle, :and . fold the -.nudiono.o that while ho w ts quite prepared to meet Ross in TarOnto,.. Strath.' • roj• or any other plaee, he was not otx the, stump .•and . would not bo .forced. npon it. • Ito altered to an - ewer -any 11110$1 i011 • proposed: .hy Mr, Chisholni ;or any. of his friends. The audie11ee405112111ed Mi-, llughos, and Mr, Chisholin,and hit friends retired, Mr. Hughes spoke for over twobours regirding the school book monopoly, the removal, of the 13ible from tbe publio sehools and the% aubserviency or tha uoyeat GOVOT11. MOO to Archbishop Lyneli, A gentleman stated at the close of the meeting that feta of his neighbors had decided to •voto .1.50uservative fettle first aura, MA by marriag,e, it makes we a ilttLe pertiekler. Mary Jane ain't over n above easy t4 please gUYIKPW1 au' I often says to her, says I—' %ere are both light and dark pieees,,ma'am.' 'Well, I know she don't went it too dark nor yit too light, an' as to whether she wants a figger or a cheek or a plaid, rm sore/ don't knowr If she wa'n't oar second cousin by marritwe to my mai I'd a' said right out to nor -7i 'Here is a pretty plaid piece, ''Yes, so 'as; but I dotno as Mary Jane i -ants a.' plaid, an' I don't reekomeinber as I 'see her wearin' a stripe, Om' she has got a -wrapper that's a pit a a stripe, tee. But as for 511 out-a11';p1.1t 'Sot stripe ---2 illow"would you like this piece, .With.the lOtis vine in itr 'I'd like it well enough,but Mary Jane she's sort 0011-11008. twould7 n't*33ay it 50 git to her that I Said it, but .she is euribus like, Why, pita kuosed that .11t011aiit tO t • ''..C11011 you don't like this piece I' ci•Arhy, yes'. I ,griesa I do, but .T don't know' whet' 111 ar,y Jane would say tO it. I'll tell you -what yun du. You give inc ten Or .fifteen samples and Mary Jane Gan pia oat the one she , wants. I'm eomin' .10 agin Saturd:y, Can git it then, • Mary Jane, Vtql.1 Wallt.,AS: 11111011 :as ,three-• quarters Of a yard., and 1 du'uo 'bUt she'll . need a hull yard, when 'she does buy; for Wafer a kitchen apron, and she's a middliu' fat, woman, and • . • . , • Tho. ivronized clerk can stand no . . more- He ani,os olf hell a dozen samples end flies to the farther elil ofthe store,. -Whthe ,gnashes his teeth and froths at tho month in the impotence -of his rtige- and 21110- 1.4E1).-01?lf V1I2 FkNop., WESMIN RAW'S 2111(4, O A015NO AfAxm xe FOLLOW, Uore ris a maxim, grand, yeklimali; For legal voter:4, 000 and a , Axil no exPense, Since soleetion day' is drawing near) It's pertinence may well anpear-- A.void the feuea. If yon have stamina and plack, In face of oniene Of ill leek, In couseqaenee Of what you aro about to (10, Then steer allead and braving three-, Avoid tho fence. • 'Tis vastly pleasant fer a while, To claim a sitting ou the stile With show of Heim ; Buteot so easy the descent, When all your iefinance is spent-. Avoid the fence. FATAL tiF.ROTS Or. AN Grrastio , must :lainentablo• affair mitred Jest • w#t in West Wawitnesh .by which a young mau ..naincd Oliver Ferrier; son of ;Wes: 101 Ferrier, of the 10111 concession' .o f that to NV11811 ip, met 'with'ft'oi,ribfe. death. - It appears that, on Wednos, day. night of ha iv:Ark-the- youn„ci Mau. leftborue . for the .purposo , Of .y 0(1.1.. 'The average o I' .lfunian life ning tohis, uncle's, a 21)11e distant. the world over la forty years. Look S' Ile . reached his .destinatioo :safely, and steetedfor.home about 9 o'clock. ',I:h. the tini•e• a •terriblO snoW storm was. prevailing, As be did not re- turn his parents,.nOurally supposed' ,that ho was staying all, nig,lit at his uncle's, but the following ,inbilling a mesi-enger wasSent ,over, only to: ascertain that •Oliver had leftfor hoine the iii6dit before. ' ,A, seareh , . • was, at once inStituted, and althongh • Nem' , 50 to. 100 neighbor's scoured the ' country every day, lie‘ was:not found until' Monday meriting,' when his body, frozen stiff, was found:be- nd:1th. an.Jtpple.tree in .: 'Look ridge's ,old, plaee; on -thel...2th 001 .., About • live mil, s from • his .• h•onit .. It is 'suppo.. d' 'btiiat the . young . hen be- came bewilder . in tho storm. Por 'how lOne-be Wal • hed'aboat it is d fill.° nit' to say; bot . his traelks wore . . at that, sir 1 Ten f6et of fingernail for oaeli finger—a round 200 feek. from tho tivoi)ty fingers •and 'toes: Well,sir,there are1500,000,000 peo- ple in -this...world,- and illto,,ethe'i. they waste,'.0n an •average, 300,000,- 000 feet, or 56,818 1-5: mace of 'fingAr-nait in a generation.. sir, that is.sullicient to reach arotind 1110 earth; and atilt lelvo:noarly 10,- 000 mi los to do our scrittehing with: And ouly think 1 It would take less than :rotp,ZO1101'atic)118 1.0 raise finger- intil enough to serateli the eyes out of the man' in the moon. There is heap.of waste :in tliis world, sir„ heap', ' said Mr.,Statistic.. " easterners Thu> 1110 0110 mentieny; 'ed below; delight •the souls of 'door dry goods clerks who Weald • have little bappiness. in Tie life if, "The 'result is ' worthy of the earnest'.bee'sideratioix cif our people. 111 2100111 seem as if therd WaS 80,1110-' tiling wrong in. our lawn or our jury, system. This.is oaSA where rThin is 511a cloWn t11 tho sti`eat, W101 wit- nesses standing'•4 ; wherd Clio plea, ol self-derenee' is scarcely nulable, and no dispute LIS to the iitenti flea- iien :of the persona -W.110 did did killing. The evideneeprodueed by proseentien ahrl apparently complete, mut the charg,o of the judge as quite strong .upou the material points of the peso. "Eras it come'.to this. that our eourts are powerless" for the punish- ment of grdat crinursj Lot our peo;.. ple calmly reflect Upon this verdict, and cousvier in What way the is to be 'remedied." AS YOU LLLE 11' Iv* , ....a t/1 A fellow between three and four years old, who` lives in Newcastle with his grand ' paren ts, having a groat wish to wear trousers like a matt, was told by his granny that she could not afford to buy him any. $bortly afterwards he W4s Likon to it wdro.not for oCeasiona L:bits • of and the bereaved family have the :audshinc brOught.to hem.. 041. ympat , • 1 • : •. . • . giy of the community. Sweetly dienosed ko14.tidu ta:. • • . • ' . • -• dile such ambled luta a oit PEouril'AnDeArn.-•---The people of stoia3 the other day. missals were sti-cielcod-last 1V 'What'a•e. right good quality of day :rnorting.OVer thS report thitt Thomas Hall sr. had beep. ±01111(1 01081111 wuth te-dayy she.•asks. • . dead„hy George.Love, hanging, an. his 'front gateat his little heme oti .`Frolit 10 to 12 °mita a yard,',. an 'Thai -nes street, The old gentleman swered. thwelerk. :had been;butchering ti pie.'011 er008 'IS it a yard ..ivide.T. ‘)Lres; 'Warrant it not to alirinki' l'Yes, nrit'Aurt.'• • . • ' • 'Is it. w uth any loss by the bUil bolt V • •No, rria'arn.'• ' 14)1u)w‘ passinet on the street and Was appal,' fonnd to the snow -for miles arortrel, mild: it wag evident thitt lie had a very long and weary tranip.. The deceased was but .21 years of rage, Our state of politics is such - That men Of mind aro valued inneh • . a, defence, . W110 show their colors left and rigliht .413 midnight as in broad daylight— Avoid. the letup,. • • Whichever party is Your own, Assume it as you wpuld a throne, Witlt rpide intense, • . Nor for a brit* disgraeo your. name, And gain a pinnacle of fame.. • :Upon U1(1161/00, • . This 1512 thne when attitudes . And law forsaken platitedes • 'Seek recorepeuse. . • When mere i3. covered than , inaale Avoid. the felice. • ./U AN EDITOTS ADDAbS, , • . • - This . is Wertbington'a story juat as lie, told- it -to umber of us one Chriatinris evening at his house... - 11:1r.. '.1Y,orthingten',...isn't Mr,\ot 112 fOu. • at 01 . real: life;htit a 2021.__, famous man whose tongue • and pen carry' great Weight • • •,...3.‘ry &at journal 'wait a, 001.iiitry• . . weekly in Doonville. ing• and fearless" journal, was 'the ..wity•my kindly disposed,couteniour- spOko. of 11 111 their maid e" . es. lts• 1.1a4110 Was •The ,1(1111111 b, ancl I speakpnly the. plaineat truth whim. I any that it gave forth no. . sound.' was a very ,young Man mid-, very iinthif.iOns.-1' theught:1 ' kneW. .exactly f'vhat . foreefid weeltly, newspaper' should be, and..I hadn't the least dotiht • niy capacity to. construct and mani- pulate sneli.an engine of reforisond ' • . . , ad vencemen t. • T hat is the WaV �l the Very yeang,. God .. bless ;than. -; • :13eferethe,y have had' a hand to.liantl. -encoenter with. life they- feel so : stymie. and confident they •bolieve they 6.an du anything, '812(1 this' very belief, nia Tic . 'what makoa the Olen ottenal• successes. we sp. ten admire and Wonder.. at. The Spaniards..have a orbrerb,.."lie 'wl)o e'xpects good Intik aml it. is as a Sentence IL, (22(2 was penned'. RolieVe yoti can do,. any-. thing, t-ricl :yen 'can, if any one . can• de it. SUCCORS, like.the art•of awim-• ming-, is 'largely a iiiattor 'of oonfi deuce.. . da and had taken a, shot 'chain oft' front gado, nsed AVE3.40t. pulliiicr it'shut,.to hang np; thc. large' kettre. :Wednesday morn- ing he rose as usual and after feed- ing his' cows took the chain • referr- ed to and went Ur fasten it on the (tate lie Conversed with . histioigh bor, :Imes Oliver; as the latter was • 'W611,1 wtt'n't wantin• any I she some ou the Counter thought rd. ask. .after to -day' -. • nuettm„' saya.,-llse • 'What kind of ealico de you want I don't hardly know. It ain't fur myself, it's Tor Mary Sane -Dixon, one &Amy neighbour -women or sort ot 001.18111 o' mine, -as I'd better say.' , 'What kind of canoe did Pa say ,vou wanted, ma'am an' jisb wty rrt geed (A that while arrtingiug the,. chain. caliker. 1 • Veil, I don't rzactly know. Mary Jane came a runulit' over get, •tia I was statin' to git ready,. an' I had the ehickens to feed yit, an" so much on my mind 'I didn't Tray muchNention to Mary Jane, ,She's sort o' seeond eotrein to—" 'Did you want ligh,t or 'dark print 'Mary Salm didn't say, 'sposhily which. rd know right off, but sr:re- in' as 103 for Arary Jane Dickson, and her hem' sotoutl oottstu to my, 1: worked very. h ard: on; T e Trim)... • pet, was,..• Ilusiness -man, eilitdr. . and staff.. 111 arl• very. decided idea's ; in remird to betterine• tho. world an'd • started out: with the praise- . •worthy intention of • ektingnishiner " severe' i -giant wrongs,'" tinder-whiell . „ I plainly saw that•aociety. suffered.- • have- the reformatory .9014 21111(111 strong,er' in us in yontli than later •on, .fer the 'reason, perhaps, ' that -we haven't meastrred' tho: strength of our an tagon ist,or the exist- ing system of things, . I Was siopere- , anxious to thoroughly. represent all worthy loeal interests' 'To'that. . . ,end..I scoured Doonville niglit'and. day, and ."wrote tip"' all eerts .of -things that never: ••before had been described by pen, or.immortalized. • in type.- wanted to Wake my felloW townsmen awl women to the interests:that lay (109(2 1l them; - and of all things I: .,.tvented them to. . properly appreciate The•Trumpet.: int:en:WI° issuea magnificent . Chrietmas. number of, my •beloved 'he took a • filleting spell and fell 'journal, twice ita ordinary siz0. and forward on the gate; his nook dr0P' .ping ' between two pickets. Tho gate swung open, and in this posi- tion he, was found with his knees noddy voting on 'the ground, MS face , was not discolored nor Wcro there, any marks on his neck, The deceased, was liurn in Yorkshire, England, .in 1810; or thereabouts, and came to America over 40 yeare ago.and after a sofoihn in Penusyl- vanilla he settled, about 28 years ago, on the 12th ouncessiou of Grey and was married to his lloW bereft partner, In 1877 the old.. gentle- men went to England on a visit to his old home, but did not stay very long. " •In the earlior years of Meth. odistn in this section be travelled over a largo trect'of country in do livering his practicel addresses on the old plan of salvation,--lirttssels rust, brim full,o1' the 'nod alluring 11011 - day 'matter 1- could ereateand rake tip. To parrot. that number r worked myself into a deeline. Lon:killer bnek• upon it .now, from the a:lapel:lit of what I beg to be perniitted to troll tnatnre oommon sense, I commend myself heartily . for the industry, zeal and confidence I nursed into respeetable develop- ment in those old, hard .working, moneyless days ou Tho Trumpet. Among other attraetive features for my Christmas paper I determin- ed te '1Vrit0 lip the pObr people cif Doonville. I could thus be the means of conferring two benefac- tions=giving the rich ft chance to taste of the bleseing of giving—for it is more blessed to give, than ' to receive—and Mao way for the poor to be helped. And on Chiainas, you itnlw, all hearts are 4.0