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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-07-03, Page 3,& "If a woman le pretty, To me 'tie no matter, Be she blonde or brunette. So she lets mo look at bey:" An unhealthy woman is rarely if ever, beautiful. The peculiar diseases rarely, which so many of the sex aro subject, are prolific causes of pale sallow faces, blotched with unsightly pimples, dull, lustreless eyes and emaciated forms. Women so afflicted. can be permanently cured by using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Presoription; and with the re. atoration of health comes that beauty which,. combined with good qualities or Nad and heart, makes women angels ot i laeae. • ",Favorite Prescription" is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give eatisfao- ttoa in every case, or ;money will be re. -funded. It is a positive specific for all those painful disorders, irregularities and weak- nesses with which so many women aro atl1eted. Copyright, 3888, by Woames Drs. MM. &aa'2 . Dr.PIERCE'S PELLETS I Purely Vegetable ! Perfectly Harmless IIAli,1GD AS A L1V�ER PILL: sheet, CheapeMt, Easiest to take. ne tiny, Sugar-coated Pellet a dose. Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipa- tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Stomach and Bo®C1& 26 amts a vial, by druggists. The Huron News -Record y1.50 n Year—$1.25 in Advance. ear The soon does not do jsstice to his Business who spends less in advettisiny than he• does in rent.—A T. STEWART, MP wallow:ire merchant of New York. Wednesday, July 3rd. 1889 Our Weekly Round Up. —Lord Dufi'••rin is suffering with a chronic ailment. The doctors are anxious ahout. his condition. —The p, oposed abolition of the 50 cents poli tax qualification for vo'1•rs, Voted for Tuesday in Penns r'jlvenia, was defeated by a good majority. un hot waste our time,' yelled the, temperance lecturer. 'Let ns a ,t w.t,t,: our time in deal• ing with the. Nidal! saloons and grog shops. Let us go to the fountain head. Let us go to the brewery,my friends.' ':'.II right,'t;hir ied in an old soaker front a back seat, .'I'm with you.' —The C. P. R. Co., ti ho were sued by Miss Bate, a well known Ottawa lady, for damages for the loss of her wedding trousseau; Mim- ed. on the Cala en route to Winni- peg, were ordered by the Court to pay the lady for her dr'.sse'.:+ sod millinery and the various articles enumerate 1 in the hill of partite... lars. —The Pall .hull iGa:r:'te asserts that Mgr. Peraico, who made an investigation of Irish affairs in be- half of the Pope, inserted in his re- port of the result of his mission a statement that he feared the Irish Nationalists would kill him if he returned to Ire!s:tnd, and declared he had proofs that that was their intention. —Ac the meeting of the York County Council .last week it was moved that 'the Committee on By- laws and Legislation be instructed to prepare a petition to the Domin- ion Government, praying that the Jesuit Act bo disallowed, thereby doing away with a question that will be a future trouble to the pro- gress of the Dominion. There was a full discussion, and the resolution was voted down by 14 to 11. —In ;Montreal on • June 21st, Judge Church rendered judgment in case of John Hennessy, who woe convicted of rape on a young girl. The Judge then paused and stated that as he was .a yoitc,g man of previous good reenrd and sober and industribus habits he '•would only sentence hini to fourteen years in the penitentiary. —According to the Dublin core respondent of the Standard, the " plan +•ion scheme," organized to oppose Mie plan of campaign, is meeting with success in Ireland. This is an organized plan for settl- ing upon farms from which the tenants have been evicted and which are boycotted under the plan of campaign, settlers being brought from Ulster for that purpose. I'his correspondent states that as a result of the operation of the plantation scheme on the Masserene estate, in Louth, the plan of campaign has been practically abandoned, al. though started by John Dillon, M. P., in person, a work for which he spent several months in Dundalk jail. There were 21 tenants to be evicted at the first house visited by the Sheriff. The tenant paid a year's rent and pleaded for time to pay the balance. There were no evictions carried out, as the other tenants came forward in the same way and made offers which the agent at.cepted, , WAGES IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1800 ' Scientfv Arnerican '—The con• dition of the Americus wage class ninety years ago is full of instruc. tion. In the large cities, unskilled workmen were hired by the day, bought their own food, and found their own lodgings. But in the country, on the farms, or wherever a hand was employed on some public work, they were fed and lodged by the employer, and given a few dollars a month. On the Pennysl- vania canals the diggers ate the coarsest diet, were housed in the rudest sheds, and were paid $6 a month from May to November, and $5 a Month front November to May. Hod carriers and mortar mixers, diggers end choppers, wlio from 1793 to 1800 labored on the public buildings and cut the streets and avenues of Washington, received $70 a year, or, if they wished, $60 for all the work they could perform from March 1 to Dee. 20. The hours of work were invariably from sunrise to sunset. Wages at Al- bany or New York were 38. or, as money then went, 40 cents a day ; at Lancaster, $8 to $10 a month ; elsewhere in Yennyslvania work• men were content with $6 in summer and $5 in winter. At Baltimore men were glad to be hired at 18d a day. None by tbo month asked more than $6. At Fredericksburg the price for labor was front $5 to $7. In Virginia white men employed by the year were given £16 currency ; slaves, when hired,' were clothed, and their piasters paid L1 a month. A pound, Virginia money, was in Federal money, $3.33. The average rate of wages all over the country was $65 a year, with food and perhaps lodging. Out of this small suns the workman had, with his wife's help to maintain a family. MOST ENTERPRISING CROW ON' RECORD. Farmer Crowder had finished planting his corn, but his heart was heavy. Ile knew the crows were whetting their bilis to pull up the corn as it appeared move the sur• face, "I can tell you how to get away with the crows," said neighbor Stokes. "1 -low 1" "Get you a gallon of wean whisky and soak some corn in it till it gets full of the stuff and then scatter it broadcast in the field. The black rascals will eat it and get drunk, and then you can catch 'eel and pull their heads off; That heats pizen or shootin'." • In a few days farmer Crowder wet his friend Stokes. "Well, how's craps 1" queried Siokes. "My corn's bodaeiously ruint," re- plied Crowder, dolefully. "I tried that 'er scheme o' yourn, and it's a humbug, I soaked the corn and scattered in one day, and next mornin' I went to the new groun' to see how it'd worked." "Pound 'em drunk, eh 1" "Found nothin'. 1 Hearn a devil of a foss clown nigh the branch, and went to see what it was there was a dad •blasted aid crow that• had gathered up all the whisky corn, had it on a stump, an' he was retailin' it out to the others; givitl"epi one grain o' that sort fur three grains o' my planted corn, • and dinged if they had'nt clawed up that field by sections." A NEW YORK COURTSHIP CASE. There is a very delicate question raised in the $25,000 breach of promise suit, brought by Miss Jennie Farley against James Slevin. The defendant claims that Mise Farley repeatedly refused his offers of marriage, and that when she finally yielded, her coldness froze his affections. Mr. Slevin related the following incident in court yesterday: "Did you buy her a ring 1" asked his lawyer. "Yes, sorr." was the reply. 1.1 tuk wan ter her, but she sez, "it hasn't lustre enough.' So I tuk it back an' paid $100 fer another, an' got it for $93. When I went Up agin she sez, 'have yer a ring 7' ,yds' sez I.' 'Is metname in it ?"No,' saz I, 'What kind is it 1' sez she. 'A deemond,' sez I.' 'An engage- ment ring, 'sez she. 'No, 'sez I; Pin Irish an' don't git engaged till two minutes before I marry. 'She tuk it an' put it on her finger, and thin she tuk it off agin, and asked me to put it on for her,an that's all 1 done in the matter." At what point in a courtship is a man priveledged to withdraw without paying damages. He may ask a woman to marry him and discover in the very manner of her consent that she does not love bim7 Sup- pose he desires to retreat from what seems to him a loveless ongagement7 Have the four -ply steel hooks of the law already taken hold of him,or can he escape scathloss 1 Where is the danger point 7 JUST FOR FUN. —Under the laws of China the adult who loges his temper in a dis- oussion is sent to jail for five days to cool off. —Judge (to police officer):—'A re you sure, sir, that the prisoue5' was ' drunk 7' Officer :—'Ie it dhrunk, yer honor 7 Shure, of he ud spoke through the tiliphone the brith uv dui ud av made the poles litagger.' —'Dennis,' said a gentleman to his janitor, 'you are late this morn- ing. What is the trouble 7' 'I wor obliged to go to court this mornin' where they wor investigating a little occurrenee that happened last night.'' 'Well, did they find anything 7' 'Yes, they fined me.' —Mistress --'Really, Norah, I wish you could contrive to snake yourself look a little tidier.' Maid (daughter of Erin)—'Faix, ma'am, ye're always wantin' lee to put so much tidiness inter yer house, the divil a morsel I've left to spare for meeilf.' —'Look at that now,' said an Irishman as, in company with a friend, he passed a couple of Italians wbo were engaged in Animated con- versation. 'Well, what of it 7 They are talking to each other ; nothing More.' 'Yes but here's the wan thing Oi want to know.' 'Yell, what is that1' 'flow can they tell pwhat they're talking about —A. man coming home late one night, feeling thirsty, procured a glass of water, and drank it. Iu doing so he swallowed a small ball of silk that lay in the bottom of the tumbler, the end catching in his teeth. Feeling something in his mouth, and not knowing what it was, he began pulling at the end, and the little ball unrolling, he soon had several yards in his hands, and still no end apparently. Terrified, lie shouted to his bleeping wife, 'For guidsake, 141ary, rin for the doctor, there's something far wrang wi' shy inside, I'nh ravellin' a' oat, —A debating club in Germany has been discussing for two years the question whether it is possible to get nothing for something. The realists say yes and adduce numerous instances itt commercial' transactions. But the idealists say no. " For," they argue, "if nothing really is nothing, how can you get it 1" Then everybody drinks beer for a month or two, until some bright realist thinks rip an answer to this question. The beerseller in whose hall the club meets says it is one of the finest debates he has ever heard, and he confidently expects it to run along for another year at least. . —By one of those unexpected turns of fortune which occur in Australia as often as any where, a plan who but half s dozen years ago was a hod -carrier has become .cotes partitively 'wealthy. This change of financial circumstances has had the usual effect on the ex -hod -car- rier's wife, who enjoys decorating her. adipose from with what she supposes to be the latest styles. She has, also, notwithstanding art utter inability to real, affected a fine literary taste, which she ostenta• tiously announces whenever possible. Calling upon a lady, whoa, she had been trying to make herself acquaint- ed with, she; picked up a book from the table, and innocent of any knowledge that it was a copy of the Bible, asked the loan of it for a little time, as'sbe-had not the book in her library.' The lady readily consented. After keeping if about a fortnight her visitor returned the volume with profuse thanks. 'How did you like it 7' was'&eked. 'Very well indeed ; but I knew how it would turn out before I was h elf through. They gat married after all.' —The sense of humour never des serts an Irishman, and constantly relieves his darkest hours. It would not be easy to discover a life niece full of anxiety at the present time than that of the Irish land agent, honest- ly desirous of holding the balance justly. His life ie somewhat that of the Galilean publican tempered with the dread of assassination, yet few men are brighter companions. Not a hundred miles from Kenmare resides, perhaps, the best land agent. in Ireland. Firm, shrewd, intellis gent, just and kindly, withal the best pistol shot and bicycle rider in County Kerry. It is told of him that at a critical moment, when the tenants on a certain estate were hesitating as to the adoption of the Plan of Campaign, he desired them to assemble for conference at his office. When they arrived he was riding this bicycle round a ring, and a the pace of twenty miles an hour was, with unerring aim, mash-. ing bottles with his revolver; he Came in, wiped his brow, laid his smoking revolver on the table, mildly remarking, ' Well, boys !' ' I think we had better pay, yer honour,' was the reply. Upon a certain ocs rasion, bo met atKillarney an equal- ly detested land agent from Clare, 'What, H—,' he playfully res marked, 'not shot yet ?"No, T —, bedad, it's safe enough 1 ani,' was - the retort ; I've towld the boys that if I'm shot you'll bo appointed land agent in me place, and there's 'not a boy in Clare 'ad touch a hair of me bead.' iwotw.r e Inter c:eE: 9 Is Published Every. Day of the Year, and is the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF THE NORTIIW EST, Price, exclusive of Sunday, by mail, postpaid 85.00 per year Pride. SunctaY included, by mail, postpaid 10.00 per year THE SEMI-VV'EEKLY ire -rare OCEAN. Is published on MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and besides the news condensed from 'he Daily, it contains inany speoial features of great value to those co situated that they can i:+.t itemise the Daily every day. The Monday issue contains the sermons printed in Tho ilei; y Inter Ocean of the same date. i THE WEEKLY Ir3'rE..R OCEAN. Is the bloat Popular Family Newspaper published West of the Al.eirhnnyll+ut:n•- alns. It owes its popularity to the fact that it is tho BEST EDITED and Last ,: 1:-.• - IfST LITERALLY CHARACTER of any Western Publication. It 15 CLEAN ..1, BRIGHT, and is the able exponent of IDEAS and PitINC4PLES dear to the Ame: i• .:, people. While It is broad in its philanthropy. 1t is FORAMEIt1CA AGAINST'r11 t; WORLD, and broadly claims that the beat service that can be done FOR MANE TO INCREASE AND MAKE PERMANENT THE PROSPERITY OF Otrr. REPUBLIC. Conscientious setvioe in this patriotic line ot duty has given It un ace.: bold upon the American people. Besides, no paper excels it as a disseminator of rows. THE MARKET REPORTS ARE RELIABLE AND COMPLETE. -. . NEWS OF THE WORLD is found condensed in Its columns, and the ver;i t • • stories and literary'.productions THAT MONEY CAN PURCHASE aro regulurl) in its columns. Among the special family lectures are the departments—r:17. FARM AND HOME, WOMAN'S KINGDOM, and OUR CURIOSITY SHOP. Ong.- whole. ni.-whole, it is A MODEL AMERICAN NEWSPAPER, and richly deserves what 1, L.r•• THE LARGEST 0 IROULATION of auy publication of the kind in America. 1, r:• t:., best paper for the home and for the workshop. The price of The Weekly is. 81 00 per ;: The price of The Semi -Weekly is 82.00 r,. r , r For the accommodation of its patrons the management of THE INTER Of`leil h P made arrangements to club both those editions with THAT BRILLIANT AND SI' t• CESSFUL PUBLICATION, SCRIBNER'S NAAGAZLNNE, One of the best LiteraryMonthlies in America, and which compares favorably with any o,f the older Magazines In illustrations and literary matter. TITS PRICE OF THE M..ei t- ZINK IS83,but we will send THE•-WVEEKLY INTER OCEAN and SCRItINI:it's MAGAZINE, both one year. for THREE DOLLARS. Both publications far non i,r've of one. THE SEMI-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN' and SCRIBNER'S MAGA%i.`;::, both one year. for FOUR DOLLARS. In the politioal campaign that ended in the election of HARRISON and MOitTt)N and THE TRIUMPH OF PROTECTION PRINCIPLES, no paper had more lntluon.e than THE INTER OCEAN. It has been first, last. and always Republican. and tl;; r .:.; the °ampaixn Dame to be recognized as the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF 791 E WEST. Irwin maintliin this position, and will give special attention to governmental AI. political affairs. r Remittanoes rimy be made at our risk, either by draft. °zeroes, white/lice order,exprei. sidera.orregistered letter. Address THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago. 455.55.5....1.5114511101, FRESH -:-AND -:-REL/ABLE. 0 REMOVED ! REMOVED ! One .Door North of Young's Bakerg, Albert Street 0 Our stock of Groceries and Provisions for spring and summer are very complete; and will be found Fresh and Reliable, embracing every line of Goods to be found in a First - Class Grocery. We aim to give the Best Possible Goods at;;the Lowest Possible Price, and to economical buyers we offer many advantages. PRODUCE TAKEN. CANTELON BROS., Wholesale & Retail Grocers, Clinton. Ivte�s +Y::5• A ' AS YOU LIKE IT. —The truth cannot be burned, beheaded or crucified. A lie o,i the throne is a lie still ; and truth in a dungeon is truth still : and a lie on the throne ie on the way to defeat, and a truth In the dungeon is on the way to victory. —The Philadelphia Presbyteri;tlt says : " The most sternly orthodox Presbyterian body now on the face of the earth is the Irish Presbyter- ian Church. It is also as thorough, ly missionary in its work as it is sound in its creed. Orthodoxy may be dry, but it stimulates to high en- deavour." —Thos° who are writing novels to advance scepticism might give profitable meditation to a sentence from Welter Scott. Looking back upon his life work he said : 'I have been perhaps the most voluminous author of the day, and it is a comfort to the to think that I have tried to unsettle no man's faith --to corrupt no man's princi,. plus.' —Kindness, sympathy and ens cour'agemeut, shown towards the erring, will accomplish a thousand times as much as rigid severity. If, instead of hard words, that almost invariably a :,art the influence of crushing, wouti ling, and destroying the better impulses of the soul, the hand of love is, extended, .the noble nature in the errilone will be awakened, and the life redeetndtly. . —Hartford, U. S. Post : If societies of foreign -born citizens exist in this country in the nature of a government that pretends to have control of its members' lives, it is high time that the country was aware of the fact. They ought not to be allowed to exist. It is an abuse of the freedom they come across the water to enjoy. —A Scotchman had occasion to appease the demands of the inner man et a London restaurant the other day. On calling for the bill he paid it and was leaving when the waiter suggested that the amount did not include the waiter. 'No very likely,' eaid the pian from the extreme North ; but I didna eat the waiter !' In And About The County. —Mr. Jas. Morrow of Silver springs,Manitoba,who attended as a delegate at the Orange Grand Lodge at Goderich, and who has been visiting friends in Tuckersmitli has returned to his western honkie. —Mr, Samuel Lawson, of Hullett was married on Tuesday to Iiiiss Isabella Murphy. The ceremony was performed at the English church parsonage, Seaforth, and the happy couple left immediately on a tour to Manitoba and the Northwest. —Mr. J. L, Sturdy,who has been engaged in the groderybusiness at Brussels for the past year, will remove to Harrison, where he will take charge of the hotel formerly managed by him. Mr. Sturdy has proved himself a very worthy citizen while residing in Brussels. CURRENT TOPICS. U NDENIABLr. The Globe also has a Irina and protecting word for Mr. Mowat.- 1Vitness. THE. NEED OF THE IHOUR. The following should be a part of the unwritten law of Canada : "No political party shall be in partnership with any ecclesiastical, organization." A NECESSARY AMENDMENT. The following paragraph ought. to be incorporated into the British North America Act :- "No money shall be paid out of the Dominion tree u v or any pros vincial.t.reasury for •religious or educational sectarian purposes what- ever." IT IS DESIRABLE. With regard to the desirability of this move from a legal point of view it would be well for those who are lea.ling the agitation against the Jesuit Acts to consider whether it would not he best to petition for the reference of the Act to the Suprenhe Court. -Witness. KELLY'S CROSS, P. E. I. KIDNEY complaint and bad stow• ach troubled me for years, but I was cured by taking less than one bottle of Burdook Blood Bitters. For my present good health I owe my thanks to B. B. B., writes, JAMIE3 GORMAN, SEN. �' :B L.kainton, a wealthy eld miser, of .FrtInk,!in, Ky., buried greenbacks and grnment bonds to the amount of $30,0130t It them falling into the hands or ',is wife. NEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post nesters and subscribers to the following synopsis of the newspaper laws :— I—A postmaster is required-td'give notice BY LETTER (returning a paper docs not answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper out of the office, and State the reason for its not beim taken. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to, the publishers for payment. • 2—If any person orders his paper dis- :ontinned, he must pay all arrearrges, w the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect the whole amount, whether it be 'taken from the office or not. There can be no legal discontinuance until the payment is made, 3—Any person who takes a paper from the post•ofhce, whether directed to hit name or another, or whether he has sub• scribed or not, is responsible for the pay. 4—If a subscriber orders his paper to bt stopped at a certain time, and the publish, er continues to send, it the subscriber bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the post -office. This proceeds upon the ground that a man must pay for what he usesr qlg' In the Division Court in Goderich at the November sitting a newspaper put • fisher sued for pay of paper. The defend • ant objected paying on the ground that he had ordered a former proprietor of the paper to discontinue it. ' The Judge held that that was not °a'valid defence. The plaintiff, the present proprietor`, had no noti:e to discontinue and conseq'gently could collect, although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event defenant was bound to pay for the time he had received the paper and until ho had paid all arrears due for subscription. fiwuromzemenomumwommow iCURE FITS! When I say Gusut I do not mean merely to stop then for a time, and then have them return 11g:1.1 11 1 le max A'RADICAL CURE, I have trade the disease of TITS, EPILEPSY' or FALLING SICKNESS A life long study. I WARRANT ins remedy to CPUEthe worst eases, Because others have failed is ie reasuu for not now receiving a cure. Send Iitt once for it treattse and a Fltatc f1rrrLE of my t',il.L1tst.E 1311:111:11 V. (Ivo Evpr1,5s and Post (Mice. it ousts yea liOthl_ug for a tr!:si, and it Will (tie yin'. Address : H. G. ROOT, M.O., Branch Office, 164 West Adelaide Street, To}ry��onto.1R +..H DR. F:7'.yt LER t.7 " .r(T: OF •-1 ' ,`tir'al'aL,, �y.a' ' � D s d.3 -CURES •'ERi Morhus IARRH(EA )(5EIUITERY AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES OF THE. BOWELS IT 1S SAFE AND RELIABLE. FOR CHILDREN OR ADULTS. a RILL HEADS, NOTE Heads, Letter Heads, ,Tags, Statements, 'Circulars, Baldness Cards, Envelopes, Programmes, etc., etc.,printoi in la workman lilte manner and at low rates. a THE NEWS -RECORD Office. T SLI1 'S CARRIAGE AND WAGON FACTORY Corner Huron and Orange Streets, Clinton. • FIRST - CLASS MATERIAL and UNSURPASSED 14ON WORK. Repairing and Repainting. FALL WORK WARRANTED.TA 5211 TO THE FARMERS. Study sour own interest and go «here you can get Reliable ITA Harness, I manufacture. none but tee BEET or STOCK. Beware of slwps that sell cheap, ae they have got to live, _ Call and get prices. Orders • by mail proniply attended to eTO EEN T. C.Ik.d:t„TIrd dyt.. HARNESS EMPORILM,'GLYTII, ONT. BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT. CORRESPONDENCE. TVe will at all times be pleased to recc//e itr°t12.•' f !totes from olr)' dub - scribers. Il'd want a ;/oorl corres- pontlr•t,f i;r /.;r•-ey l,r•alit)/, not already rep' s,'n1, (1, t,,send e Ilei IA11LE news. 'e 1'i iSlldll$E3tS. I'0/')8 who ego not receive their paper rcyialarl,/ from the car'r'ier or tltt...nigt their local post ojiicr.s will confer a favor by reporting at this oj%ie,e at once. Subscriptions' may continence al any time. • ADVERTISERS. Advertisers will please bear in mind that all "eltanges" of advertisements, to ensure insertion, should be handed in not later than MONDAY NOON of each week. CIRCULATION. THE NEwsr li,EColtu d !ar Jar circulation than any other paper sn this section, and as an advertising medium has few equals in Ontario. Our books are open to those who mean business. ,IOR PRINTING. T/e' Jt,I, Department of this jour- nal is ma? of the best equipped in Western Ontario, and a superior class of work is yuaranteed at very loin prices. BUY YOUR TiCKETS from Tim NEws•Rscoau C.P.R. TICKET AeENCY .at c,.., bA r (n O A O .4 u '''rt'rn V i•r O O '11 a, &2 .a C J 14.04 ti• ..i