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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-01-07, Page 3•,` 0 ISNTISr, festa inost ottraordi% violin, tot. WeelP. Ho came raided„ let sta.%,--,1 run:mire,. and LAY Ile left town vitt the slip-. 'OW litittyllipatIlKitl reilroeil. tie tt: matt 10 w Itun, the earth aud ist tittld .,f knowledge is far IWO eircu I11striboa. He hes tatare.d Ifbroug,h inimitable spaces the arry norl.11 that twiukie adul 11t3 bats dived into the tlepthe of the sea to bring to light its tote; fur ,getttou Tb modest servant is Prof. C. Jethoston, editor and proprietor 91 the Britialt Idiom published at 'ffaatilton, Ontario. He always keeps tlark. He can't help it, for lie is colored. t, lie came to Windt. or 4n Wednesday and announced ta the good brethren of the colored Baptist oburch that, notwithetandiug the vveulth of knowledge he had acquired sine his bud y ear -as vieit, he had „Mat become proud. He would pan out thie wealth upon the nremberstif the Baptito, church •in the hope that hi the colection lie would receive a few ferry tickets und holly berries for Christnins ; also perliape a new pair of boots to reach the mixt toe n with. Thursday night CAMP, but it was a cold night --e very • cold night for the prayseser. The janitor hustled around itid bertowed a few chucks of wood !to build -a fir., and the elder Quarters carne in and hung lovinglyover the profeseor, who was keeping the cold draft from the etove. And they three waited for the audience •--the audience that was to be enlightened by the professor, and lightened of cash for the "prof." :But it didn't come, and with sorrow in his heal t the professor shook the mud of Windsor from his moccasins, and lit out. The Detroit Journal him on the fly and learned gentleman of eystem-destroying logic. "Who ees Huxley, Doh win, Spen- eah an' others ob deit class?" he aske14. "Ees cloy de on'y oues wot has'arOtched de great principles in natur', and ems' we a'lus cling to de puff dey Ib trod ? No, no, my brudder. Dess men ani well 'Dough oz fah ez dey go. But do day go fah !nough ? No ! Kaise why ? well, lef us look inter de question. An' let me say right yere, brudders, dat I kin supply you wid de infor- vatien, but I kaint supply' you wid ins. "Now de scientis' wot I has mentioned hay'', al'us sayed do yal move an' 'the 81.11 sten' adil. D you go fob t' believe dat. Ef yo do you don't agiee wid de ma wot'a standiu' befo' you. An' eenten' to convince you dat John sing ees right. Huxley, D311 win Spencer, Galyeleo an' all dein me o' science to de contrairy notwill standin'. "Do de sun move ? Co'se sh do. • Let us see how things woul wo'k in nature of du yah Move, ati not de sun. S'pose a bi'd leave hi nes' full o' bus little ones, and th yath flyin round toucans o' miles day (ez de eminent scientis say) E dat am de truf, we'en de little bi' fiy back to Mu' her nes' whah h gwine to look fo' it 1 Whah he fin his cryin' chilluu? De place whah he have left dat nes' (co'din' to de scientis) an) miles an' miles off Ain't dat the troll Ain't 1 ker reclin" The interviewer at this poin endeavored to throw some discredi on Prof. Johnston's argument, bu that gentleman loaned over ivith sympathetic smile and said :— "My deah brudder, I think I frayed enn de boginnin' ob trey in etruction dat I could supply you wid de info'mation, but not wid brains. Ef you kaint unnerstan my argyment dat's you' fault an' not mine. roan catight relieved the part of . his 1•• 0 h 0 u 11 d a f d • t "13ut le' me take enuthur'lustaat'n fum nature. S'pose you huutin' tu'key. You see great beeg bi'd loomin' up an' you levels yo' gun an' prepare to fire. Now dat tu'key'e in de air an' you on • solid grout'. 'Co'din' to de scientis you'se going along hund'eds o'- miles an 'our. You goin' one way, de tu'key de odder:Ef you shoot how's you bullet ever gain' to reach dat tu'key? `Cordin' to de scientis' youse flyin' away from dat tu'key fasteh dan de bullet trabel, an' no matteh how good you aim, you go 'thout you' dinnoh. Can ennythin,g be clearer? o, brudder, w'en do scientis' have ade the resahches I has' den he'll °gin to gee hoes error. Till den • t us bo charitable and say he's clone ez well ez he could." SUFFERING NEBRASKA The following is part of a letter from Wm. Cole:nan, McCook Neb., to the Chicago Inter Ocean: Since my letter appeared in the Inter Ocean of Deo. 16 I have meld- ed numerous lettere oe inquiry re- garding land in Red Willow Coun • ty. I3elow is a copy of one: " I write for information. Can fairly improv- ed farms be bought for frotn $9 to $8 per acre, $300 to $500 cash, balance on time, in Red Willow County, es stated by the Inter Ocean of Dec. 16, T890? I would like to invest in Nebraska farm lands, hence I ask this information." ' It attiskVez Yeas A quarter section, 160 WattsQt good lartd, with Ray to eighty acres in cultivation, eourfert- eble buildings, well and Windmil11, can new be had for $7 to $8 per acre, and in some instances $6,25 per acre, $800 to $500 eash, balance titne. This is leas than the real salue, but preseut urgent neoeseity compels it. If those wanting to buy wovld accept the opportunity now offered, through the misfortune of our people, of getting a home eheap. aud buy at once, it will give some relief and be of great benefit. M ey own two quarters, and by selliug one necessary relief could he at once provided to such. Much eau be done on this line, and while our friends are Wiping us they will at the same time place tehmselves in a position to be liberally rewarded in the near future in the adyance of farm pro- perly. GETTING READY TO SIZE US UP. Active preparations for taking the Dominion census next year are be. tug carried on by the superinten• dant, Mr. George Johnson, of Ot- tawa. " On the 6th of April next," Mr. Johnson says "alt over the Brit- ish Empire millions of handa will be busily engaged writing down the statements that are needed for filling up the schedules distributed. In the .Mother Isles, in the auxiliary countries of India, the Cape of Good Hope, Australia and Canada, thou- sands of rutin will be busy receiving the information that the people have to give them for this census, which is the ten years' stock taking of the British Empire. The army required to take the Canadian census will be composed of 3,000 enumerators, officered by 200 captains, called county com- missioners, and commaded by 15 colonels, called census chief officers. These have to be instructed and dill. ed in the manual so that on the day appointed within the wide domain of the Dominion, from Queen Char- lotte islands in the west to Blanc Sabion in the east; from Victoria, British Columbia, to Sidney; Cape Breton, with all the in °Evening territory, the questioning shall be begun. The plan to be pursued and infor• oration to obtained is based much after the American pattern. CHARACTER IN MUS- TACHES. Teem is a great deal of character in the mustache, says the Northwest Magazine. As, the form of the up- per lip and the regions about it has largely to do with the feeling:4, pride self reliance, manliness, vanity and other qualities that give self-control, the mustache is connected with the expression of those qualities -or the reverse, . When the mustache is ragged and, as it were, flying hither and thither, there is a lack of proper self -cone trol. When it is straight and order- ly the reverse is the cute, other things, of course, taken into act. ebunt. If there he a tendency to curl at the outer ends of the mustache there is a tendency to ambition, vanity and display. When Hie curl turns up- ward there is geniality, combined with a love of approbation; when the inclination ie downward there is a more sedate turn of ninel,not ac, companied with gloom. It is worthy of remark that good- natured nien will, in playing with the mustache, invariably give it an upward inclinatien, whereas cross - .grained or morose men will pull it obliquely downward. OUR WEEKLY ROUND UP. —Mrs. Margaret Donnan, of Ad• jala, aged 75, died suddenly after partaking of a hearty supper. —Mrs. Donald, of Tottenham, while seated at her knitting, was suddenly stricken with paralysis and, only lived an hour or two. • —At Dover, N. 11., Friday Isaac Sawtelle was found guilty -of mur- dering his brother arid sentenced to be hanged. —John Simpson, 8 young colored 1111•11, was shot dead in Anderdon Township, Ont., on Christmas eve, apparently by accident. —John Shannon, who was tried on suspicion of having shot School Teacher Damm in East Zorra a few weeks ago has been acquitted. —The British ship Talnokdar was sunk by collision off. Pernambuco, and the captain and 22 of her crew were drowned. —In New York yesterday°an old lady fell on the sidewalk and her hat pin was driven into her brain, causing instant death. —Robert Scarlett, of Toronto, died Saturday from the effects of a terrible beating received Christ, mas day. —On Nov. 19 Mrs.John Sullivan, of Orange, N. J-, gave birth to a sarong, healthy batty. Tuesday she gave birth to a second child, also strong and healthy. Physicians Rfiy such a case was never before t hearof. Mettles, aged 00, a wealthy and retired nutvepaper men, well Isnowe in Ohio, and Miss Elizabeth Blizaard, aged 21, a eharming young lady 9f Columbus ()ay, were married on Chrietmas day. --A Nleigh 1°4,1 of 22 young people broke through the ice on Riee Leke, Ont., early ou Christmas itiortaiug. They all got slf., to tillore, but one of the young ladies died from the exposure. and others are in critical euudition. —At the Morgan house iu Kin' oardine, ou Weduesday evening, Mr. Joseph Lang, late editor of the Kincardine Review, who has remov- ed to Owen Sound, woe teridered a complimentary banquet and pre- sented with a gold -headed cane awl a purse of gold. - —The Rev. W. F. Pettit, of Ind- , iana, awaiting sentence for life for wire poisoning, attacked a fellow prisoner at the jail one morning and beat hits nearly to death before the other plisoners could separate them. —Mr. Thomas Seldon, of Inger- soll, shipped between four and five thousand turkeys to the Old Coots - try via New York this week, and will send more later on. He says it is mainly due to the McKinley tariff that the birds are being sent to England, where no difficulty in ex., perienced in disposing of them. —Joseph Watson, a young man of Port Huron, MiCh., related to people in Downie tp., Perth Co., where he formerly lived, was found dead in an alley in that city last Wednesday night with his skull smashed in. John Morrison, a 8810011 keeper, and his bar -tender, Mike Doran, have been arrested in connection with hitt deaeli. —Wentworth county council has become ziotable of late yeas owing to the trouble experienced in the election of ite warden. The voting has hitherto been by ballot, with politics prob., bly t he lever moving councillors; so at Tuestle.)'s Session to inotiou was introduced and c irried unanimously doing away with the voting by ballot at this election, and compelling councilors to vote openly. —John Gimlet, aged 40, a section tuan employed by the Grand Trunk Railway, was working just west of Brock street bridge, Toronto on Thursday when a Canadian Pacific train ran over him, taking off both legs, and inflicting a deep cut in the right temple. He was taken to the hospital in the ambulance, and died during the afternoon without regain ing conscioustiese. Gimlet resiaed in Palmerston, where he leaves a wife and two children. —On Saturday evening as Mr. Win. Hu,niar and daughter, of Otonobee township, were driving over a railway crossing neat' Peter• boro' their buggy was struck by a train.- The vehicle was shattered and the horse stripped of its hasuess but not injured. Miss Hunter was thrown tome distance down all en] bank meut, and Mr Hunter found himself seated on the pilot of the en- gine with his buffalo robe under him. He rode in that position until the train was stoped. He and his daughter escaped all injuries except a severaThhaking up. --Thursday at the County Judge's Crinnual Court, before Andrew Drew, at G,uelph, Thomas Kenny was again brought up. The records of seven previous convictions were put in, our of man -slaughter, five of assault and (Me of vagrancy, for which Kenny hart already spent over ten years in jail and peniten- tiary. For the present charga, of which he has -been found guilty, robbery with violence, the Judge therefore sentenced him to ten years in the penitentiary. In doirtg to he adverted to his past reconl, the promises he hail made and broken, and the danger to his parents and others of having him at large. —One of the oldest citizen, of this part of Canada ended a long and useful life on Thursday in the township of Ancaster. Mary Van Every was the daughter of a United Etnpire loyalist who settled in West Flom horo int medietely after the revolutionary war in the 1C.Teited States. Mary ,Wita born in what is now the vi,llagt Weet Flamboro, in 1800, and she has lived in the township or in A ncaster all her life. She distinctly rentembere events eotl- nected with the war of 1812. West FlamItoro was looked upon RR 8 stra- tegic point, and officers; frequently ,came and went. She remembers Brant and Tecumseh very well. 0 Lives of others oft remind us Married life may be sublime. We trust to he forgiven this parody of lines from Longfellow's immortal "Psalm of Lite." Husbands who are wise and thoughtful, know that tbe happiness of the hotne depends largely on the health of the health of— the mistress of the home. Many are the tasks which daily con. front her. How can a woman contend against the trials and worries of housekeeping, if she be suffering from those distressing irregularities, ailments and weaknesses peculiar to her sex? Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre.. seription is a speoifice for these disorders. The only remedy, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from manufacturers. Satisfaction guaranteed in every ease, or money refunded. See printed guarantee on bottle -wrapper. Allilidllgilik GOSSIP OF TEE WEEK. THE TOCSIN IN THE QOMING MUNI- CIPAL ELECTIONS. Parnell's Vigorous riglit for SISPreirtwo7 in Ireland—Dentk of "Dig Push" Willtinsos: in Toronto—Tuts Hellions of Ulanehard et sherbreorte. INANCIAL reform is to be the warcry tn the corning mutii civet, elections 1 Toronto. There i certainly nee, to reform and a terbet- eyetein o flouncing in Queen City. It ha several million dol- lar projects on toot but only the other day it :was brough up short and ac. counts amid not be passed because Ilse city was "dead broke," as one of the local papers put it. Now, this sort of thing dose not betray much financial wisdom upon the part of the authorities. It is like the roan in the Parable who started to build a house worth $5,000 when he had only half that amount in resources, and when the foundation of the great house was well laid he bad to stop by reason of the demands upon him w hick be was not able to satisfy. Toronto people have well laid the foundations of a great city ; but they have only counted the .cost in such wise as would have befitted village lesions instead of wise men of cosmopolite ideas. The check, therefore, will not work any permanent injury to the city if its best men, its men of business and Seance, put their heads together to find a solution which is in keeping with the probabilities of future growth. At the meeting of the city council when the facts came out the information was in the nature of a surprise to mayor and members of the etouncil, and explana- tions from the Treasurer showed that he had been holding back city bondsof$1,800,000 in order to float them together and so ob- tain a larger price in London, la the mean- time accounts came in for various services, and the Baring,' trouble (which could not have been foreseen) caused a cable message to come Iran London: "Can neither sell nor loan your bonds." The city was dead broke in very truth, and the executive hat to negotiate elsewhere. They tried the banks of Turunto, but the gentlemanly managers had nr forgotten the time w hett the city had plent7 of money and had laugh- ed at them. The turn of the lane had been reached, an 1 the laugh was on the other side now; but the Mayor and colleaguss ate hum- ble pie and obtained, after much E.ersuad- ing, a temporary loan at high figures of $2,• 000,000 to put the city mow July whoa $1,- 200,000 of taxes is due and payable. The city has learned a lesson; but whether there is municipal patriotism among capable men in Ike preseut crisis is as yet problematical. Other rautticips.1,ties, too, taking a lesson from Torouti, are cry ing out for financial and other refortns. Tbe fact is that everywhere there is too little interest taken in the municipal well-behig of the towns, cities and villages of Ontario, by the business men of the various places. The reasons are ,not far to seek. They have their own growing businesses to attend to, 'Ind they naturally think thsy would be tooli•-h to jeopardise them by attending to the mining of their municipalities. Other reason:: there ae, but these aro the chief, and Ley can °illy be met by appeals to local riotsssi and commonsense. The warcry 111 menteient !natters throughout Ontario, III I I II1g Wit II TI)1.011t0, is reform, and 'it ls le 14, p& that the people's voice will p onounce for the best men i i; °lieu the case, in favor of se • *0 swiss.' though rotagriu ling can - 1:. * * Wallace Blanchard was hanged s so, oraoks, Que, un Friday morning . ne Charl,,s A. Calkins on .•• I ; R Iclive of 'Toronto per- ; ; , • sx •,s,s isss . Toe drop fell at •• •I th.. surgeon pro- • 1 1 .1 . ue whole pro- ..., ., withoa. an unpleas- . High mass was eelebrat- , •• c 14 1-atued ;joined heartily ip i• exe visas and he fervently con - L,'• ‘,1 n•,:trt, Tint past mortom ,tie 1..,vealed teat d3ath was due 1„ mud the verdict was so ••• Tneci inc fus wli:ch Blanchard suf • lo. Si„, 'xtreelpenalty vas' committed N • I. •-;), near Ayer's nuts. It appears t a Id a cempanion named Catkin had I, s4 1r.11.. ingaiid eutrrelled about a boat. A .4.11• fo.l. eyed; Blanchard drew a revel- er Cillkiniin the head, from the ressh. ei which he die,i. Blanchard was 1,•••••I 81111e Oc otter tern! of court, found ad sen'timead to ba hangea. * 9 * * * * 5 r • and stones have already begun to figure in the Partial' fight for supremacy i !reknit. The physical in politics in the imbeeey issind began with the seizure of d ;relate' newsptp.e* by Parnell, who hotels 474 of the 500 shares of its stock, an 1 its re- capture by the anti-Parnellites. Teeir triumph, however, was not f, r lie g, as Part lel! (Ind his friends Ili 11 captured the p "per and hold it i 110 p1111 .,f tee crowbar. The 1 ti ',tiny meetings were very violent, the eecites of the various stompers being in- upted ir . hetes 11.0111 the audiepces of wssesies the various factions. Itt the 144 CLIC!. Or leaders, the most noteworthy r, ettlIttj. C OD ,Sunday were Parnell's (.4:..4.:“....eriza lion of his oppoilen s as "miser - SI 4'ul er 'prows,' and Healy's declare - tam t bat L1441 neli had nehle Mrs. O'Shea's 144 ICI.41 ta 41 1,11112a.i. i• 11 u hich to stump lre,o11,1, • l'arliell is physically feeling the htrain ,everely, 9 9 9 * * * J.44111 Wilkie ion, well • known in On - term nee s) aro- era poli Ileal circles, died 04, 441 '1 onto. Years ago he was et- 11n Pu -ti” Wilkinson from ,tile•e ton 18)14 11 well known political 4'',, I t t tate', and )1.4 cognomen thus lee-tewed '1 1.4 s o him. He was rwee ..her or the illetheil:st ministry, ,• 04, .te 1441t. te nee the el,torship of the 4. 1 1141.11.1414 :Neu-, and later on he p I The Lat,c a (*.elide paper, in For .ti.a east five years ho »o. been c, sisected with any 1w,p14; er, owlug to .ickne-,s, but he has le, IIlltliflg 8(.1)It` (jilt literary veork, which wa meet' above tie, vdreg.,. The story now running in the E,414.414., the earistinei story e seelety 05) 11, Toronto, and that tte (7hicagr, N 03 are from his eati, oison's reinnie: wer., convoyed 1 1,41 tg en Mondty for 111i•011IP•1i. 9 9 9 . * * * There is in the chief iudestrial centres in the 11 Sted States a continued depressed restriction in the general trade movement t hroughout the country. This is considered due in part to the season of the year. A Se00111) SOLOMON. ;IOW IlOtilliCI14 1 1 4HiE1 0114 ittgl tit 'r.t Ie. Diiriiig the rei ol.i i .1 try p ,-I al in ill I8-0 I Centel, t •*, . e10,.11 Com nu called at the Roth;., . .1 esist •listi lie•it i •nutialed to see the feel •us bsots r. It teiiiii appeared. as *Al ," : es y .11 .th,.t.,• "Pety be settte I, ;.11 tt:eunse," se 1 "and now, what en 1 i ..1, t .t. y •1I;" "le aliscaild," said el ,, Clairai vi •e committee, "out. true ;las come at lass. people are triumphant—;bo Cu usiva ., i top." ... "Gooa for the people—Vive la Clout it i tt o He Rothschild gleefully. "Tee time has come," 0 huhu i Chairtuou of the committee, "0110.1 must share equally with his fellow -el( i We have been delegated to mill up In and inform you that you must share y enormous wealth with your c ,untrymeit "If it is so decreed," saki It aas,• i urbanely, "I shall eJeerfutiy- es uply. bow much is my fortune estitu eat" "At 200,000,030 francs," rept ed the I er, boldly. " And at what in the popunttio.t oe Fra estituatedl" asked Rothscaild. "We figure it at 5),0JJ,OL/0," mat WO tiWer, "Well, thee," ssid Itsthschild, "it wo appear that I owe each of my country' about four francs. Now, here, ge.itleat he continued, putting his heed int ) pocket and producag a lot of silver, "It ure twenty-eight francs for you. I h paid each of you, have 1 Li AL: Please g me your receipt, and so, good day to yo The vonnuittee retire', and the Comm u never pestered the wary fla,111010F 11,pLfl French Thi Tho thrift of the Frenca people is 111114. ted in its accumulated savings, which intrusted to the savings bulks of the Co try. According to a document prepared the head of the statistical bureau in the pertinent of Finance, there are recon 1*1 the savings banks aud postal banks 6 000 depositors, representing 2,S00,000.1 fralICS, or say, 018,000,1.0J. Al grattAy4 as this exhibition must be to all. i r i. of France, who believe in inaki tg 111 ti 4. cause of his own elevation, Without ree,iu to Government ownership of hand or (..b ernment suppression of co,upetition, t officer points out that the figures would much larger were it not for that foe thrift, the drinking -shop. He (.1c1ares 11 a war to the knife is waged in every Feel town and village between the sevii.gs b u aud the rumeshop. In certaincommit:1,s Brittany the establishment of say ban has been temporarily able 14,1,3 1, so d 3t 3 mined is the hostility on the other 4414 The animal outlay on spirits and absint amounts to 1500,000,000, that on tobacco nearly as large a sum.-B,etten Transeri A Supreme Test. Going to Springfield the other day tno VMS seated in the car 0:1.3 of Holyolte's leg. lights, accompanied -by his wife and six -ye old son and heir, who..e sole ambition in li was. to learri to whistle. The window w open and the boy had peen holdieg on to h hat with one hand for fear it would Ido away. The conductor coming III slamtn the door, and foe an instaat 1:113 b y lot g his bat. His father reached round throe the window end whisked it off his hes The boy Was disconsolate. "Look straight ahead and this le for and it will came back," said tito114...d.. "1 can t whistle, Pin 100 10 i "Well, then, try," an 1 the 41 g:dil 3 lawyer whistled a few bars of "Atinis ite nay," and shorti; afterward placed 111 on the boy's head, whose tears wore turned to :unites. Tee he stood up ilt 1 seat, and snatchin7 his fhther tt ie" Se( ti, from his head deliberately threw it en, the car window, saying*, "Whis'ld for again, papa." Annihilation of sleeks.. An English electrical 1.31/ 1 v the large number of emitted sta, iens .s. i.1 e now being erected, 011114,. to i414.1..4 upon station designers the need i.i.y ,,, ganizing, proper smoke annlhi leti le 1.... 1 i meats iu connection with their sesti 4 . shows, in' addition the devie1; mal known, of washin.r the issuis /:12 /s It dirty froth by the impact or linshit14 watel a German blast furnace Maker covered a method by which the smolto soot are deposited by water spray 11 1 chamber. From the result;ant froth th ammonia and sulphur Call he esiol i 1/1 recovered and yield a 110013 111' profit is further surmised that "it. is r stIly no too much to prophecy that littera elee light companies cati emulate the gas c,ltt patties' example in the matter ef by -pe) ducts, and can havd batter burniez fu .1, ah settee or smoke nuisaned 101! vele tbl products in chemicals, which shall eve recoun them for the actual cost of fuel," High -Priced Autographs. And whose writing fetches the lolIg9lt pricer The signstnre of Christopher "Mai bus can always fiud a buyer at 4,0ox., one letter existing in Titan's hall lwriting fetched 3,000f , and an epistle of Raphael' to some fair dame 1,503f. Moller,. never seems to have writtenti letter; his signature alwie is worth 1,000f. The one letter writ- ten by Corneille which was ever in the tea 1 wus sold to Mr. Airred Morriom, th, g English collector, for the sum of 4 0011'. The s'gnature alone fetches 1,00M. 111,3 value of any particular letter varies etc iugly; thus Napoleon L'e last letter to cite Empress Alerts. Louise was sold for yet one of his ordinary le. tors can b b fcr 500f. Royal autographs alwaYs c nn - mend a cortain pr1ce, Hairy IV, and Louis XIV. signa'ures are worth altnoit 1,000L—Fall Mall Gazette, The Dust Enemy. Dust is the great enemy of health and of women's good looks. It settles in the skin, especially where there is a litt:o stestit to help it. Ibe vi ax and oily matter of 110 skit, fix it till no ordienry weighing will remove it. Wrinkles are accentuated by it, as they have a deeper bed to draw in the dust with the stylus of time. That is the riet-on so many women look about tee years yolte; e.• when they find time to take their hot bete and the vapor has fifteen minutes or 11101"0 to sof tee the tissues. nothing like steam for plumping the skirl and washing out the grime which clouds every complexion not daily treated to soap and hot water Furnaces are light- ed by the time you read this, but how Intlny have the heating -pipes cleared of the yoar's accumulation of du -t) From the p po roils it is ready to enter lungs and skin, ;Ind being deadest of all dead matter, 11is its If d ,ath to hair, to freshness of complexion end gen- eral vigor. Almond Pudding. Mike a sponge cake, bake it in a pan, have the cake about two ihclies 1 h iek - Blanch a peptid of ahnon.1-i, en I p.) i d them in roHe wool., mix with fonr stored crackers, six oleo em 1 ef hither, a pound or s1140r, 111,13 11,1511 gl It of g ;me jelly. Pon ra 11, ell: set in th, 1 vet, 20 minute-, eover wI h me, ism , 111 )r)41.1 with extract of almont 410 t 44 ,i 1 ,citss i 'he Too 4 on ". t.: deo, you ear At "eu t"' u ld 1.311 11"larTtglir his ere Ivo fee al" me I. tra by 3e- iii 1 )0 eg ,u 6 se'e iv- he be to c 1 ik uf 1,4 r- 0. is to re 11 11* re EIS is w I. a ti 1. it • d it e if .t , r t 1 i 1 , 1 t ' , , of T. I 1 Curets form, ,, float, I Hirst Lumbago, By • ; '-',',4'' ''' -. . ,•• 7. ' •• , • ", /t",.• • 't '.:1. ` • -•;-.y , - • . _ • .. A of E ., .. •• mud , & Co floras, cots, treen Cade woes' swenings,,Eresinetas, seriatim's Prost Bites, Chapped Mods all Skint Disease*. FAIN EXTERMINATOR —Mies— Sciatica, relate Toothache, every (prim, all dealers. Wholesale Rheumatism, Nem Pains in by lo. F. Dalley HUMPHREYS' egiuirly preegarTrp,=ItafglY V years In private practice wichauccess,andforover thirty years used by the people. Every single spa- ciao Is a Special Care for the disease 'mined. These Specifics cure without druliging, ruse latifiltiraNaiesaaettlit nil Orilla MO PWCr'rge=g1eii01. llimWW1.•. 2 Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic..2 I crying Colic, orTeethaigof Infants Diarrhea, of Children or Adults.... Dysentery', GripingBWous Colic.- Cholera M orbits, vomiting i Coughs, Cold, Bronchltis in, Toothache, Facesehe Ne u me Headaciiess Sick Headache. Vertigo Dyspepsia, Bilious stomach 1 Suppressed or Painful Periods I Whites, too Profuse Periods . 1 aftntigoat figIftl.9%. Breathing, 1 Rheumatism, athematic ratell. • • • 1 FovrandAue, C s, Malaria 11 Pile, Blind or Bleed/9?8vAltIOritc uaegla- Catarrh, 4 General Debilltv.PnYllielaWeeknewi Kidney Disease i Nervous Herblike'1 3 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed. 32 Diseases or theHeart,PelpItatfon 1 , , ' , , , Bold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. Da. struremers' ilAialiOn 1144 Pages) richly bound in cloth and gold, mailed tree. aiumpereen,IVIedielneee.reeFultonat.Nr. S P E CI -F I 0 S - WELLS &RICHARDSON CO. Ageutey MONTREAL. . , URD 0 CK pi LL s : '. SUGAR CQATED . . A SURE CURE Fon BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS, SICK HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS. THEY ARE M1LDH ,TORGF1 OUH AND PROMPT IN ACTION, AN6 FORM A VALUABLE AID TO BURDOCK .BLOOD BITTERS IN THE Trice -rover AND CURE OF CHRONIC AND OBSTINATE DISEASES. • . -s Sas ;sys.S.ss s' I' • . 5 s i .. DESTROYS. AND REMOVES WORMS or ALL KINDS IN CHILDREN OR ADULTS SWEET AS SYRUP AND CA-NNOT•HARM THE MO.,,reT --e• DELICATC CHILD ID ID e..._, ... S' = --- effiti ril 117 11 I La ' I —./,N' 2'llks (X ell . 7 $ w THE KEY TO 1 .,,, , 131111DOCK {BLOOD .., Unlocks all the clogged oBfforraedlsn'alXlyied.nithera Navnenclk all the impurities and foul secretions ; at the same time Acidity of the Stomach, ousness, Dyspepsia, Headaches, ziness, Heartburn, Dryness of the Skin, ness of Vision,Jaundice, Erysipelas, Scrofula, the Heart, Nervousness Dlaradliomtpyla;inatIs1 thyyieels,ei taontdh emhaanppyo 'BURDOCK BLOOD Sample Bottles 10e; Regular Forsale by alt dealers, MILBURN et CO., Proprtetore, HEALTH. t ITTER4 aret, is ante cyrsrlyeining, eljn ill VI :Th. ,. : haulers of the Correcting curing Eiji. Diz. Constipation, Dropsy, Dim- Salt Rheum, Muttering of and General tihneflruseinmcie- BITTERS. size Si. Toronto TiffeROPERTY FOR SALE OP RENT. -Advertisers will and "The News -Record" one of the bolt Mediums In the County of Huron, Advertise in "Tile Necti•Itecere-The Double Circulation Talks to Thousands. Rates as low as ant-, onmumeaeomemmeima. • 4 , -1• `7.