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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-03-20, Page 3The Huron News-f?ecorc/ $1.60 a Year -31,26 In Advanco. Wednesday. Hardt 20th. 1889 DEVILISH DOINGS. —While Mr. Omagh, a landlord in county Clare, Ireland, and his sister were driving to church last week they were fired upon by un- known persons. ere tglt and his sister were nit by the bullets, the latter's nose being shot off. the are in a critical condition. —Mrs. Walters, who lives tau a ranch noar Buz'+Min, Montana, was found dead iu bed, Monday, with her throat cut and her body horri- bly mutilated with a razor. IIer husband and eldest sou were arres- ted on Tuesyley, charged with the crime. It is supposed the *murder was eomtnitted to get possession of $200 the old lady had concealed. —A fearfultragedy occurred after the services in the' Methodist •church on the second liue of Warempty.�vialt, Lambton empty. Miss Sarah Marshall had just cuwo out from the church, accompanied by a friend, when Albert \Vilsqu Dame up and asked if she would come with him. She answered "Not to- night." He then drew a revolver, saying "Take that," and fired, the bullet strikiug her in the head and killiug her instantly. He immedi- ately made off iu the excitement and set fire to a straw stack adjoin- ing a bane near by so as to draw off the attention frons his tracks. "Numbers of people have been out in all directions, but have failed to track him. —Thee, authorities et Denver., Col., are excited by reports of a mysterious person who call himself "Jack, 'the Choker." . For some nights worsen and girls have been approached by a slightly built man, whose dark, swarthy complexion and peculiar dress indicate that he is a foreigner, IIe is described as possibly forty years of age, with dark piercing eyes. He seeks a dark recess in which to hide, and without warning springs upon un- protected fernalea and throws a rope around their necks. This be twists in garrote fashion so Out a scream is out of the question. After in- sensibility ensues the victim is laid on the ground and the mysterious enurdorerer disappears. —The.•Presbytery of Paris yestor- •day passed a resolution condemning the Jesuits Estates Bi11., • A BIG STRIKE. .A big strike was make whish Powell & Davis issued their Extract of arsap- ,arilla and Burdock. It has mot with great success, and it must, for it is the most powerful blood purifier in the mar- ket. It is used'with.the greatest success n all diseases arising frolu a debilitated condition bf the system, and everyone needs, and should use a bottle or two' at this peason of the year, of Powell's Ex- tract of Sarsaparilla and Burdock. Bear in mind one 50c. 'bottle contains more solid medicine than most dollar so-called Sarsaparilla and bitters. Also remember that it is sold in Clinton by all druggists, price 50c, a bottle. Sold by all drug- gists and medicine dealers everywhere. 4431Iy —The horse of a farmer in Bork- shirs, I'a., suffered so severely from difficulty of breathing that it was doodled advisable to shoot the ani- mal. "When the neck was severed from the shoulders a toad crawled out of the windpipe. It was .quite red. AN INACTIVE or torpid Liver trust be aroused and allbad bile re- moved. Burdock fills are best for old or yore • —An Ohio farmer named Gray had a stack of wheat fired about fifteen years ago, and the other day he received a letter from Iowa in - closing $100 to make good his loss. It takes some mon a long time to got their conscience leavened up. CONSUMPTION SURELY CURE. '1'o Ter EDiTOrt : Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its,timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send. me their Express and P. O. address Respectfully, Dr. A. '1'. SLOCUM, 37 Yongestreet, Toronto, Ont, 499y —The Universities Press edi- tion of the English Bible contains a typographical error, whish has re- mained uncorrected for fifty years. It is in the seventeenth verse of the eleventh chapter of Zechariah, which reads, !'Woe to the idol shepherd." Tho word "idol" should be "idle," FOR NETTLE RASII, Summer Ileat and general toilet purposes, use Low's Sulphur Soap. • —Thomas L. Thomas,alias.Jones, the pastor of the Carlton Baptist church, who was caught in a smoke house Last Thursday, has confessed, He acknowledged that he eves not a clergyman, not even a member of any church, and that he had forged his ordination papers. He said he should attempt no defence, but appear in 'court, confess his crimps and plead for mercy. ADVICE To Manusag.--,tire you dip. turbed at night and brokers of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Quitting Teeth? If so send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value is incalculable. It will relieve the poor itltlesufferer immediately. De - peed upon it, mothers; there is no mis- take about it. It cures Dysentery and Diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives tone and e 'orgy to the w hole system. "Mrs Wiuslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the United States, and is for sale by all druggists throughout the world. Price 25c. a bottle. lie sure audask for "Mrs, %A,inslow'aSoothing Sirup," and take no other kind. —A New Jersey bird dog went into a rootu where a parrot was at liberty, when he stopped and point- ed. The bird approached, looked •tile dog square in the eye, and said, "You're a rascal !" The dog was so surprised at hearing the bird speak that he dropped,;his tail, wheeled and eau away, and from that day to this he has never been known to point a bird. A FEEBLE FAILURE Many persone become feeble and fail in health from disease of the blood, liver, kidneys and stomach when prompt use of Burdock Blood Bitters, the grand purifying and regu- lating tonic, would qutokly regulate every bodily function and restore to perfect health. —Miss Lowe, a pretty 17 -year- old girl, of Latonia, Pa., eloped from that place with Frank Forsyth, a man who had lost both legs above the knees. The girl had to push the wheeled chair in which her lover navigates, They reached Mc- Keesport the following day, and there succesfuly eluded the officer who were after them. IMPORTANT TO WORKING MEN. Artizaus, mechanics and laboring nien are liable to sudden accidents and injuries, as well as painful cords, stiff joints and lameness. To all thus troubled we would recommend Hag- yard'a Yellow Oil, the handy and reliable pain cure for outward or in- ternal use —A story is told of a clergy- man who onoo attemped to translate into \\releh a well-known English hymn. His knowledge of Welsh idioms, however, was not very ex- tensive , and he therefore produced a translation of; which the Welsh equivalent. was "Arise, 0 God, above the head of two hens' and a crow's nest, too." YOUR LIFE IN DANGER. • Take time by the forelock ere that rasping hacky cough.of yours carries you where so many Consumptives have preceded you; lose no time, but procure a bottle •of the rational re- medy for Lung and Bronchial •lis• cases;Scott's Emulsion of CodLivcrO;l with flypophosphites. It will cure you. Sold by all druggists, at 50c, and $1.00. A LIFE OF EASE Mise Lizzie Ratcliffe, writing from Falkirk, Ont., says: "I had such a cough I could not sleep and was fast going into consumption; I tried everything I could hear of without relief, but when I got Ilagyard's Tec- torial _Balsam 1 soon got ease. 1t is the best medicine I ever tried." Lizzie Ratcliffe, Falkirk, Ont. • —A man while eating lettuce in a Boston restaurant came upon apiece of gravel so suddenly that it snapped a tooth ell'. Ile sued the proprietor of the restaurant for $500 damages. 1110 judge gave the case to the jury. The latter found out what an entire set of new false teeth would cost and made that the figures of their award. EIGHTY PER CENT Of the human race, according to a high authority, suffer from one or other form of blood taint. Never allow this Iatent evil to develop into serious disease while the blood can be kept pure and the system clean by proper precautions, such as using Burdock Blood Bitters, whenever any scrofulous symptoms appear. No medicine equals B. B. B. as a blood cleanser. —Tho third colonist party of tho season left Toronto March 12th by the C. P. IL for Manitoba and the Northwest. It was made up of eight special tt'aius, in addition to the regular express, and there were about 512 passengers and 1'21 cars of settlers', effects. Tho movement to Manitoba this year is trammed - nee. SOME SYMPTOMS OF WORMS are:—Fever, colic, variable appetite, restlessness, weakness and convul- sions. The unfailing remedy is Dr. Low's Worm Syrup, = A special train on the M. C. It, with Cornelius Vendorbilt and party on board ran from Windsor to St. Thomas, 112 miles in 160 , minutes on Saturday. TRY TO BENIFIT OTHERS "I had a very bad pain in my side of which one bottle of Iiagyard's Yellow Oil made a complete cure. I hope that, this May be of some bene- fit to those who read it." A. It 9'. Walker, 441, Iligll St., City. slags yard's Yellow 011 is a specific for all inflammatory pain. THE LETTER THAT CAME From Mr, J. Iiayden, 139 Chatham St., Montreal, says: "1 was troubled for year with biliousness and liver complaint, and I never found any medicine to help me like Burdock Blood Bitters, in fact one bottle made a complete cure." THE JESUITS. Rev. Father F-lannery's Reply to Ven. Dean Inn' To the Editor of The Fre ess. DEAR Sin,—In your issue of Fri, day there appeared a letter from the pen of the Ven. Dean Innis, of this city, in which the editors of the Catholic Record are accursed of Bill- ingsgate, want of courtesy, etc., be- cause their journal made seine sharp comments last week on his publish- ed estimate of the Jesuits. As one of its editors I 'feel called upon to state that the Record never could think of contesting his. right, or the right and duty of any other clergy•• man, to vindicate the doctrines of the Church of which lie is an accre- dited, and, no doubt, in every sense, au exemplary exponent. But that is no reaaon why the Record, or its editors, should allow clergymen holding responsible positions to mis- represent and attack, as the Ven. Dean has done, the principles and the teachings of accredited ministers of the Catholic Church, who enjoy the confidence, the respect, and, I may say, wherever known and un- derstood, the affectionate regards of all those with whom they are offici- ally brought into cot)tact. The Ven. Dean is willing to admit that the Jesuits (I quote his words) "are in general an earnest, zealous, self- sacrificing body of sten, and many of thein very talented." "This country is undoubtedly, in its early histor'y, indebted to theins in some respecte, especially for the self- sacrlfice and zeal with .which tliey devoted themselves to the education and civilization of the native tribes." With all this in their favor, how is it possible the Dean can bring him - Reif to say almost in the next breath : "'.Che. Jesuits have been one of the greatest curses on earth. Their principles are wrong, and their whole system a falsehood." If the Record were to make such unmeasured and sweeping denun- ciations of any Protestant body of glen, the Ven. Dean would have reason to complain of want of cour- tesy and Billingsgate. The Dean bases his condemnation of the Jesuits not on what he admits them to be to -day ;-"Earnest, zealous, self•sacrificiug men," but on what they are reported by history to be over a hundred years ago. Now, histories differ, and the Ven. Deail may have read one prejudicial to the Jesuits. It'must have .been a very partial and jaundiced history, indeed, that would snake him call such earnest and self-sacrificing glen of God "the greatest curse that ever appeared on earth." But' now for the facts. "Let the following list of expulsions from Roman Catholic countries, and by Roman Catholic rulers, suffice." says the Ven. Dean. "Bull issued in 1741 by Benedict XIV., in Which he calls the Jeatiits dieobedient, crafty and reprobate men." With the Dean's pernliseion I deny this utterly. There is no such Bull in eeisteuce, and if the Dean ever read of such a Buil in sortie controversial work, he should have probed into history and he would have found it to be ea 'genuine ''cock-an'•aebell story." It is true that Pombal, the corrupt minister of Portugal, sent in- structions to the Portuguese minister at Rome to request Benedict XIV. to condemn the Jesuits. But the Pope, who was always a zealous friend and admirer of the .Jesuit Order, appointed Cardinal Saidhams, Archbishop of Lisbon, Apostolic Visitor ; directing him to report on all cases, but to proceed, said the Pontiff, with the greatest considera- tion toward a society "which bus," said he, "deserved so well of the Church, and which has at the price of its sweat and blood, borne the light of faith to the ends of the earth," (Darras Hist. Eccles. Vol iv., page 406. So much for the Bull of Benedict XIV. Next comes expulsion of the Josuita from Porte'gal. Is the Von. Dean prepared. to take sides with the infamous Pomba), the vilest and most tyrannical Prime Minister that ever disgraced the annals of history 1 Does he not know how Pombal, who hated the Jeauits because they opposed his intrigues, made poor King Joseph Emanuel believe that they had mines of gold in Paraguay ; that one of them was elected emperor in that colony under the name of Nocolae i.; that the Jesuits wanted to mut, der hini and put his brother Pedro on the throne; that Pomba) sent an army to drive the Paraguaians from the happy homes made for them by Christian civilization and the teach, ing of the Jesuits, and that., because the Jesuit Fathef•s tried to protect the poor Indians, they were all lin- prisond in filthy dungeons to the number of 250, and several of thein horribly tortured to death? Is tiro Ven. .Dean ready to espouse the muse of this monster of a Prime 11Iinister, who, in a subsequent reign, waa tried, condenaled and sen- tenced to death for his abominable crimes, and who died impenitent, blaspbetuiug God 1 Expulsion frotu France! Again we must appeal to history. We are told that the Jesuits, like St John the Baptist, condemned the guilty amours of Louie XV., King of Franco. Madame Pompadour,a bra. zee faced Jezebel, usurped place the of Lis virtuous and amiable consort, Maria Leckzinska, daughter of the King of Poland; Choiseul, a Parti, cular friend and disciple of Voltaire, was Prime Minister. Voltaire's motto was "ec•asez Clnfaute' which in common parlance, means "extin• guish the Church, or blot out Chris. tienity." Besides these infidels and lewd women (for Pompadour had a seraglio in her train) came the Jan• senists, fanatics condemned by the Church, who all plotted the suppres sion of the Jesuit order and obtained the object of their wishes from a weak, voluptuous "(big. The Jess uits were banished, and all their Colleges closed or occupier! by Vol- tairiens, in the year 1762. Thirty years after a now generation had been born and educated in the new schools. What was the results The most terrible and bloody revol- ution that ever horrified humanity by its butcheries. In 1790 the successor of Lous XV. was beheaded on the public square of La Greve in in Paris, to the deafening bound of 200 drums. The reign of terror was begun, and during fours teen years subsequently the fair fields of France were deluged with the blood of its best citizens and of Catholic priests, who refused to trample on the Crucifix and deny the existence of God. I ask again is the Von. Dean prepared to take sides with Choiseul, Pompadour, the jasnenists and the infidels lidels Vol. taire and Diderot, against the Jesuit Fathers, to whom lie ecknow• ledges Canada is so deeply indebted? As well might he have taken sides with Herodias and tier dancing daughter against the pure-souled martyr of chastity, the intrepid St. John the Baptist. Similiar intri- gues are related in history of the corrupt Infidel, Prime Minister D,Arando, in Spain, against the Jesuits. In the year 1766 a riot took place in Madrid, known as that of the Sombreros, The royal authori- ty was overthrown and King Charles I11. obliged to retreat to Aranjuez. This disturbance, which the guards could not quell, was appeased by the Jesuits, who were very popular in Spain. Unfotu- nately they were cheered by the crowd, which accompanied•them to the doors of their monastery shout- ing :--"Vivent leu " Peres 1 This circumstance was taken advantage of by their enemies, D'Choiseul, in Paris; Pombal, in Lisbon, and D'Aranda, the ;unbelieving Prime Minister, who• hated the Jesuits on account of their popularity. The King received advices from Paris stating:—''It torts not difficult for the Jesuits to quell the riot which they had themselves excited." 1)'Arande, whop, the Protestant historian Schoen • represented as transported with the praise which Infidel Paris lavished ori lune and his colleague, the Duke of Alba, Continued on Editorial Page. MAHOGANY NO LONGER ' POPULAR "A fete years ago," said an up- town furniture dealer, "nobody cared Much to buy bedsteads, side, boards, tables, bookcases, or sofas made of any other wood than ma= hogany. Indeed, large pieces of furniture of any of the lighter woods were thought to snake a rather vul, gar display. The piano was the only exception to this rule. At all times rosewood was the most popu, lar frame for one of these instru- ments; but this was not duo to any notion that rosewood was handsomer, but simply to the fact that the great heaviness and density of mahogany stifled the music. Now black was, nut, cherry, ash, oak, and every bort of light wood that will take a high polioh are seen in fashionable houses, but of the heavy old wino -colored mahogany rarely a stick. I think it wasi the musical necessity of using a lighter wood in the manufacture of pianos that caused the revolution in general furniture making. When people changing their residences saw the difficulty with which pianos were carried t� the vans, they began to wonder how much power it would cost to lift thein if they were made of mahogany, and this lel to the reflection that fully two•thirds of the weight of the entire household furniture Height bo knocked off if it were manufactured in lighter woods. "Then began the decadence of mahogany—decadence of its utility as a furniture wood, I mean, for in its integral parts it is almost ever. lasting, •It is, undoubtedly, the richest, handsomest, and most state ly of all woods, but its popularity has been crushed beneath its own weihbt, A few conservative people in New York, and many in England, still furnish their houses with it, but such persons are not afflicted with the migratory fever that leads' the nvnrage American family to seek a tow IMOD, about once in two years. Mahogany furniture, Duce placed to ! TO TME FARMERS Study yoifr ow; h.ierest and go where you can get position, seems to be nearly as Un- movable as when the + lark wood was its its 'naive forests, and the restless, nomadic houiseholdtr of to-dtey does not care to be anchored to his d well• ing."—New York &a. CUR11L'NT 1'OPLCs, HEIRSHIP. Taranto Truth : Some of the Jesu- its, by the w ty, are whillipering about the hard things that have been said against their oh et•, and are even threateilltlgg legal lrruceed- iugs against theeii' Lrtulueer,,. If tht•se gentlerean are the heir, to the property of the defunct Jeoutt older they must not complain if they are made heirs to the reputation of that ancient order. The two things can't be separated, And hieLory is too strong against the Jesuit order for other judgeieut than that, ou its political side, it has keen an atubi• Howl, wily, subtly dangerous and intriguing power, obnoxious to liberty and laid under ban by every govern went of Europe. Whether the reorganized society is governed by the same principles as its pre- decesilbrs-,-rwd do not pretend to know very accurately, but he probabilities look in that direction, and as already said, .those who wish to heir the property of their pre- decessor's should not feel ton much surprised .4f public opinion clothes thew in the mantle of thobe pre- desessors' unenviable record for intrigue. This is not to say that on the purely religious side. the Jesuit order has not been worthy of high praise for self•sacriticing labours in many of the darkest places of the earth. This 111uet be cheerfully acknowledged. Eta the teen who did that sort of work were Mere tools iii the hands of the powerful and designing intriguers who pulled the strutge and were always politi- ciansruluah more than theologians or priests. JUST FOR FUN; —If a detective wants to catch a cold lie can get a clue by sitting in a draft, --A lady refers to the time she spends in front of her looking glass as "moments of reflection." —Many a man who should be ashamed to meet his fellows will ap- proach the throne of grace with all the confidence of a saint. —Information comms from Pad- cuah, Ky., that Mitehell Peebles; his wife and two children were found 'murdered in bed at their home on Duck Cree,k this morning. It had been reported that Peebles had received a considerable sung of money, and it is supposed thieves committed the deed. Sn093MMIY IAl Reliable -r Rarnesse i tuanu►aetate none bits too Basi DY Srooa. Beware of ahups that sell cheap, as they have put to true. zee' tali and get prices. Orders by mall promply attended to 'TO N T. C.A. .T RR., t1At1NESS EtMPOP IUM, MYTH, ONT. Aro r' air. r.t : Ln. (': ❑.'ia Rl t.:r,r R"•D E'er^t.ti.o. :.'e i„ a-•', u:.,1 etit'e'ical dosta•oy i eS r.,..' n is C_ 1:e•u or Adults. -RILL HEADS', NOTE Heads, Letter Heads, Tags Statements, Circulars, Resinous Curds, Envelopes, Programmes. etc., etc., priate 1 in a workman like manner and at low rates, a 'rill: NWS -RECORD Other.. LIa;SL7 E'S CARRIAGE AND WAGON FACTORY, Corner Iluron and Orange Streets, Clinton. FIRST - CLASS MATERIAL , and UNSURPASSED IRON WORK. Repairing and Repainting. s ALL WORE WARitANTED.`ic'R 521•y DR. WASHINGTON, Throaty`and Lunn, Surgeon, of Toronto. Will be at the ftattenbury lfousc CLINTON, MARCH I4TH. Forenoon. A few of the hundreds cured by DR,,, WASHINGTON'S New Method of Iithe'ation W. H. $torcy.'of Storey Sc Son', prominent glove manufacturers of Acton, Ont., cured by Dr. Washington .of catarrh of the throat, bad form, and pronounced incurable by eminen specialists.0 Canada anti England,. Write hint. for particulars. •' Chronic Bronchitis and Asthma Curets An English Church Clergyman speaks, Rectory, Cornw«IL Ont, Da. WAauitNoTe\•— DEAa Sm, -1 ant glad to be able to inform you that our daughter is quite well again. As this is the secut,d time she lute been cured of grave bronchial troubles wider your treatment, when the usual remedies hailed, I write to express nay gratitude. Please accept niy sincere thanks. Yours truly, 0. n. Ph"rTtT. Mrs duo McNulty, Kingston, Ont„ Catarrh and Cnnsnmption John McItelvy, li.ingeton, Ont, Catarrh. Mr A flopping, Kingston, Ont, Broncho consump- tion, Mr, E.Scott, i ingston, Out, Catarrh, head and throat, 11 re Jt o ncrtnim, Iharrowsmith, Ont, near King- ston, Catarrh, threat. Mine Stacy A Itumhota•g, Centreville, Ont, .,atarrh }lowland throat, ,buses Mathews, 1'. Master, Acton, Ont, A EiFirh, Gents Furnishing, Belleville, Catarrh throat. John Phippen, P. 0. Sandhurst, Ont, (nearNapa- nee), catarrh bead and throat- Dad case SOUND ADVICE.—Those having sales of any kind should consider that it 0 lust as important to have their posters properly r0splayed and rip - pear neat and ettracttve, as it 0 to ,suave a good auctioneer. Tint News -Ilio ne makes a specialty of thea classof work, they have the material and experience to give you what you want at VAr,i reasonable prices 1,;v._,;.a•- r; TRAY STOCK ADVER-- it `' M L TISISy1ENTS inserted in Tutt Nvws Itrc•oso at low rates. The law makes It compulsory to advertise stray tock. If you want any kind of advertising you t 'iOt o better than call nn Tews-Rccor'', .l tds ostri 41 (1.3 won. 0,000,000 na Bbeetwboyt s of the largest and most reliable Luso, and they tea erry's. Seeds ' M FERRY do 00. are acknowledged to be the Largest Seedsmen In the world. D M.Farm!,sioo'a rllnetratod Doscrip• tiro and Priced SEED ANNUAL For 1889 Will be mailed FREE to all applicants, and to last yesesonetomers aithentordering It. Neale. Sattlest iflt abtetoattEveryrterson using 0• I lI exht ia o tlldotret . I Garden, Yield or blower Beoda O. M. FERRY & CO.,send Windsor, Ont. CUBE FITS! When I say Cuba I do not mean merely tt Ito them for a time, and then have them re tura Mop limade the disease of OUittlyi, FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, Allfelongstudy. I wiRnArrrmyremedy to OrrRE the worst oases. Because others hav6 fatledisne reason for not now receiving a cure Bend at once for a treatise and aFRs It Dania of my, INFAr.LIBLE REMEDY, Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for 5 trial, and it will cure you. Address l)r IL G. ROOT. 8? Triage Sty Toronto, Oat.