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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-07-01, Page 3e iu7 on N8ws-Record` . dvaneo . 4!''el le,>astliey, July 1St *SOI. BQTki SAINr ANL SINNER, A troubles the a -Inner and trotlblee the mei.at, troubles nue, trying and natty oow- plelot, i1 en't think it i,lourable ; I tell you it Excuse the gramm tr ; it's the %ruttaI'm after, whether grainstioelly told. The truth ie Meat c aeerrh enn he car - ad. Tae proprietors of Dr, Sa,e's Ca 4.tarrh Remedy offer $500 for an i tearable tease of Catarrh in the head. Tue SrMrr3Ms ole CAT.1aLuI.—Head- ache, obitrueti•,n of nese, r1is°h'irkes title lag tato the ramie, etmetitues profuse, Watery, end &evil, et etudes, thiek, ten- affieul macule p'truleet, bloody, putrid and off glees ; by+. tv,ic, ring a; fa th, + ears, d etfu, a ; eti •naive breath, swell and to i to intp.i • d i..,t i hd int al. debility. Qaly A few Jr th• t. avere tuills likely t , ha }treeen: at ease, lee St?e't Rervirly cures the w °asci. 0 dv 5) oynt Sold by drugeistl everywhere. THE CONVERSION OF I.ON• DON. Lou:ion w.ts converted in A. 1) 604. Tee citizeus relapsed, it is true, but they Iv:,ro :14lin converted, and theu, iu euuaf u truest, put away their oll glle, keelin;; only a fow of the more ft7orite sere? rstitions. Some of these remain still with us. They were so thoroughly converted that the city of London beeeine veritable ;Luther .tther of saints. Thera was the verrL•thte Erkeu,vald—stint and bisli ip,—he who built Bishop - gate ou the :+its of th t 01,1 Rain to gate ; there was Sc. 1':'.halburg u, the wife of Safi rt, .the first Chris:•iui Bing—her church. still stands, ,tole beside tits site ut tile old gtte; there was. St. Osyth—queen and martyr—the mother of King 01Fi— her u.itue also eurvivus is Sizi, ur St. Osyth's, Lane, but lite churuh of St. Osyth w.ts dededicated to St. Ben'et Sherehog—lieuedict Skin- the-Pig—you may see the little old church -yard still, black and grimy, surrounded ou three sides by till ]tonins. Eugiiylt piety loved to d',dic:tte ChUl'Che5 to E'lglish saints—'Bore likely these, than Ital • ian or Freugh, to look after the n1t- ion:lllntefesr.s. Thi there were 1'1 London • churches dedicated to St Dunts.ln, St, Swithin, St. 11,to1!)h, (whose :Lir Ic'ion for tile citiz, ua W.1P so well known that it was rncogaiz• ed by four churches), St. E imund the Martyr, and later ou, when tho Danes got their turn, churehee to t St. Olaf and St. Magnus. The Englishman, thus ,converted, was received into the company of civil;zed nations. Scholars cam e across the Channel to teach him Lat in ; Monks cime to teach hire the Life -of self-ateritice, oiedience, sub• missiou, and abstinence. The tfon- .astery reared its humble walla every- where—the first foundation of the first Bishop of Lout?on was a monis tery. In time of war the monaster fes wore spared. Therefore the poo ple settled around them and enjoy- ed tllbir protection. The monastery towns grow rapidly and pro -pared. New arts were introduced and taught by the plonks ; new ideas sprang up among -the people; new wants wore created. Moreover, intercourse be- gan with other nations; the ecelesi attic who journeyed to Rome took with him a goodly troop of priests, monks, and laymen : they :taw strange lands and observed strange customs—Frorn "London—Saxon and Norman," by WALTER BES.tNT, in Harper's Magazine for July, TROUBLE FOR TWO MEN. There was a moment's silence after the introduction. Woman-like each was mentally "sizing the other up." Then one of them spoke. "My husband frequently speaks of you," she said. "Indeed I" returned the other, ';My hnabend thiuka you're wonder- fully clever." ':Really i Why that's the way my husband talks about you. He told me how you reshaped and recover- ed an old parasal and so saved S. "Parasol 1 Why I never tout bed it until my husband had harped all ono day on your cleverness in up- holatering and relining a baby car- riage at a saving of $6. "Nonsense. The thing that made me do that was the way my husband talked about that parasol. Then he got me to fixing over a last year's hat because you were working over an old dress." "But I never started to do that until my husband told me five times about your hat." "Why really my dear madame, I heard of that dress twenty-four hours before I touched that hat." "Impossible. I—" Then ebe stopped and her eyes began to flash. "•I believe our husbands—," she began again. "I believe they have," chimed in the other, becoming excited also. "It's a wicked shame 1 "An outrage 1 Theylve just trick- ed us ; that's all !" "It was a regular plot 1 And to tthinit how 1 e'a Made MO work l 1' get, a new gown to day." "And Z a hat" Then two wpnlon. went into. a dry goods store and spent all the plane they could scrape together, two men got mighty little for auppe that night and when they complain ed they were convinced that they ought to have said noticing. r y Aad r CASTING OUT TUE CHURCH. SOMETHING PERTINENT TO THE EX, PULpON OF SOME WORTHY MEN FROM THE REFORMED PEESBYTERIAN CHURCH Independent : By a ,vote of 95 to 37 the Syuod of the Reformed P.e-byterian Church has expelled five true, able, and useful ministers. It did not expel thew because they hurl preached any doctrine contrary to the belief of the church ; 'they were not adjudged guilty of heresy with respect to any of the doctrines sot forth in any of the creeds of Christendurn ; nor were they ex yelled for insubordinetinn. It is well known that the synod occupies an attitude of dissent toward the Coostitution of the United States, and that because that constitution does floe recognize the hea+.labip of Jesus Christ in Na'i>n.tl affairs, the synod prohibits all the Members of the church from voting in National, State, and local elections. These young then were not expelled he- c,►use they had simply united in a deol tration to rho etFiet that, iu their judyutnitt, the uilurult in r.e. 00i Vil0Lr new meats:ire ()eget 11 ,t to invist that they should be bouud to the ann.:Ws "explanation in the matter of politic tl dissent," het that they shoulti he received oo the a;:- cept,utce of the testimony and trams of communion. Far the offense of holding this meeting and tt lopting this declara- tion the ministers were put on trial he fore tineir presbyt.•ries hist year and were eu$p"n.1c I. 'reeir cases cam , before the a,t:111 ti syn 11 in Pittsburg ou appeal ; and, after a lung .lelile:,rtciou, the j pigment of the p, eibyturie.+ has been confirmed, nod tilt mien have Woe expelled from tit.; 01t01'01t. We do not hesitate to say that, iu our judgtneut, this is a most un, rightmees act. These young men were able and successful ministers. Not a worn has been alleged against their doctrinal souudnesa in matters of faith, or against their uliuisterl•tl clierate or. Ties solo sole reasons for shutting them out of the church of God is that they leave tl,wlttred in favor of A MODIFICATION OF A LAW of the church. On the theory that the Church of Jesus Carist is a club to which men may be admitted or front which they may be expelled at the pleasure of the mein tern of that clue, no fault could h i found with such a decision, if it did not violate the rules of the club; but our idea of the Church of Christ is that it is broader than any merely social organization in which ruen of kindr- ed tastes and like purposes meet for social enjoyment or mental or moral improvement. The chnrch of JesusChrist was intended by H m to he as broad as the gospel. He proclaimed. As that gospel is a gospel of invitation to everybody, without distinction of race, or sex, or age, or social condition, it logically follows that the church, which is organized of tleose who accept that gospel, should he as broad in its terms of communion or fellowship as the gospel of invitat- tion ; and any law set up by any church which excludes from its fellowship those whom the gospel calls and whom the epirit regenere ates, and whom God himself fellow- ships, is in oppositeion, in our judg- ment, to Christ's law of fellowships, is itt opposition, in our judgment, to Cheist's law of fellowship. If the Reformed Presbyterian Church be- lieves that the Government of the United States is a godless govern- ment hecauce its Constitution does not recognize the headship of Christ, it been right to protect against it; it has a right touse alt the influence and argument it can bring to hear to in- duce the people of the United State to change the Constitution in this respect. But what right is given to this Church anywhere in- the teach• ings of Christ or of the New Testa- ment to refuse to receive into its Com nluniou DEVOUT FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST. unless they agree to forego the privil- egeand duty of a citizen, or to ex- pel from its communions those who declare that while they thenieelvee are willing to obey this law, the church, in their judgment, ought not to impose it on others i We honor the member of the Synod who, when he was called upon to vote on the cages of these young ministers, stood up boldly and said : "•l would rather stand with the Lord than with theReformedPreshy• terian Church. I vote No." The..,. i sp rite. -awl of—Christ ere not represented by the ninety. five who voted Yea, but by the thirty-seven who voted No. w ITILOSOPUY, nig POET OF THg SIERRAS' SrrORET OF MARRIAGE. The Kind of Women Men Want,. Hoar to Get aarrfe$ and How to Stay Mae- rred„The Law of Love anti the Law of Labor. Tell you how to get married ? Aya, that I wile, with pleasure. .And, what is far More important in this age of rapid traus- l+ortation, I will telt yowl how to stay married, taw. Now, thou, in the first place to begin at the begitutiug, read this from the sienna chapter of the Boost of books :— "And the Lord took the man and put him into the Garden of Eden, to dress it and to keep it." So, you ,see, moan was put to work. He was Put to work, and put to work at once, even before woman was made. He was put in the " Garden of Eden, to dress it and to keep it." But what is he doing to -days Ile is not dressing or keeping the Garden of Eden or auy other garden if he can help it. 1f he can only manage "to dress" himself and " to keep" himself, by hook or by crook, by the practice of the law or the preaching of the Gospel, by -marrying almost auy woman in the world'except his grandmother, ouly so that she has money "to dress" hiut and "to kerp" tout, why ".Sarkis is williu"' Of course this loafing and this lyiug— lyiug in wait ou the highway of life to pillage some womau—is no new thing. But it is none the less contemptible, Iu fact, I half suspect that Adam himself first carne to grief by this innate desire to shirk work. For W.3 read that when the Lord came to ' walk in the garden in the cool of the day," Adam had already eaten the fruit. if he had kept to his work he had not had time to haste with the fruit, whatever that fruit may have bu.;u. 1 ltkntow you who read only novels and newspapers will say it was an ap- ple; but you will read more pages of the Bible ellen you have rend in all your life, I reckon, b••1'ore you will lied Lite ututte of that one par- t ieulur fruit. fiat, as I was going on to say, Adapt bad left off his alloted task "to dress mid to keep" the Garden of Eden long before the cool of the day, when the Lord cane to walk in the green, and had gone to dress and to keep hiutselt—au occupation to which nine - tenths of his descendants have devoted about sixteen hours out of the twenty-four ever since. It is a mistake to'say that man's toil began only with the expulsion front Eden. God Himself toiled and toih still. There is not a tree, not a Hower, not a bird or a beast— except onto—that does not toil and toil inces- sautly. Trite, the harder task was laid upon man on his b.ing .1 ,v . nut for his tally and idleness. And thou and there it was pronounced, "lu the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread." So I think you may let it be written down that it was mainly out of sheer idleness and unwillingness to do the lighter task first laid upon hies that Adam found marriage a fail- ure. Anil yet he was not so badly dealt with for his disobedience. We, read after he was sentenced to earn his bread in the sweat of his face—now it dou't read "iu the sweat of his brow ;" it is easy enough to sweat your brow, but to sweat your face is not fun— that "unto Adam aid to his wifo did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them." So they had the whale world to choose from, and at least two suits of ciuthes to go on the excursion with. But he had to work. Antl„he had to work hard; yet not harder than other animals, not harder than a rosebush or a flower or a tree. Why, never in all my life have I soon men in bottle or elsewhere struggle and strain for existence as the trees of a forest have to struggle in a storm. All nature is ot.e teeming and tum- ultuous workshop. And the Lord of all, it 800na to me, is the very hardest worker of all, Man, and mum only, aspires to absolute idle ness, and is not ashamed of it. And now do you know that this aspira- tion for or rather this affection of idleness is confined, so far as the Christian world is concerned, to America? The English are steadily and stubbornly industrious. Whoa Bret Harte aitd I were spending a season at Newstead Abbey a few years since, we were surprised one morning on passing through the great ball of our way to a specially early breakfast for some excursion, to see the master of the place in the midst of about fifty farmers, giving his orders for the day. He wore a flannel shirt, big "hobnail" shoes, and had been on his feet, as was his daily custom, I learned from his wife, the whole year through, with the exception of a short season in London, from the first peep of dawn. I have been Often at the home of Princess Louise, and found her the hardest of workers. And I have it from gocd authority that not one of the royal family has ever been per- mitted by the mother to waste an hour of time in idle pleasure. I tell you, from the throne down to the bottom of the empire, the English are toilers—toilers and persistent toilers. And what has all this to do with getting married 1 Why, I first want to put you right. I first want to prove to you that it is right and in accordance with the laws of God and man and good manners to toil, and toil, and toil. Having once put your feet solidly on the right track, all the rest is easy. We have copied enough English nonsense to last us a century. Lot us now copy this one divine virtue—industry—and all the rest will follow. I have, or rather, I had, two friends over in San Francisco, one a sweet young girl, who kept house for her invalid brother, a clerk in a bank; the other friend was a son of the president of the same bank. Of course nearly every girl wanted to marry this young man—not for himself, not for anything he had done or won in the battle of life, but for his father's money. And ire, for a wonder, had sense enough to know lt. I say for a wonder; for all men—and women tee, as to that—are ready to ascribe all admiration to their own merit. It was sad to see the wondrously beautiful girls of this great new city flutter around and fish for this young man at the receptions, to see them try to sell themselves for this man's money. Love him! No, not at all. True, be was lovable enough, but they, poor els, did not want love; they wanted money. ey had been brought up in folly and idle- ness. All their futures were staked on the desperate lottery of desperate marriage. And yet it was only a pieluro of every American town and city, if one may possibly eroept Boston, where women have really be- come English to some good purpose, and have gone to work a little bit. Attd yet this one swept San Francisco girl of whom I spoke did not flatter or flutter around the young than with the big fortune at all. She avoided him when her brother ,Ibz ol? 1?t _h l_r.�t to ; thec hotel w1 re they i(ved when lfEft' w ork requfretlfier-attentlon. And when required to speak she was care- fweuibiuI tea 1p,put, " mach truth in as few words ae s ' Alt met ah mel if ryorpen only would, it women only cool(t be honest and truthful, with men, wikat marriages, what happy n'iare rlages we might have right along/ Put wo- Mert take men for geese aid men take women for fools, and so the whole thing is a edam and a lie, even up to the altar that stands in the centro of God's house. And yet, do you know that nobody really ever deceives anybody? The only person that is ever deceived by lie or sham is the person who utters it, as a rule. One evening, as the young banker entered the open parlor of the pretty girl, he saw a tent through the half-closed curtains of the rear rooms. She was leaning over a map wed some drawings of the table. "All this is our little secret; but perhaps brother has told you He is not strong, you kuow, and new, at Iasi, he has saved utouev enough, together with what I have saved by typewritiug and teaching, to buy five acres of orange land, and we are off for the cutin. try to plow and to plant alltheough ht; vaca- tfou trot'• Christmas. Yes, that's the teat. And stere, you see, is the map of the grounds ti here• we will pitch it. I will stay there and run the ranch, while he makes a few more dollars here to get it well started " The young man came to me with the whole story next day, and wautcd rue to advise him; and when I refused to advise hit, he s:ud ho would give me $5 if I would kick Mtn half way down the hill And when I refused to kick him he cried o •. "Here I have been lying to that girl; lyin+and lyiug, loafing nttd lying right along all the time and the hard at work with her honest little hands tryiug to help her broken-down broth- er. Yes, I lied to the otitur girls, tun; lied to thew all. But then they li.d to ate. They loafed and lied and 1 lied and loafee to re - tern. And so all that was even. But hero this only honest and industrious one la the lot has given ute truth for falsehood. And vow 1'nt going to marry her if I possibly can get her." Well, he married her, after barrel work and very hard training in telling the truth; and now the orange rauch-500 acres instead of live—is run Ly three of theft.. No, there are four of them—I forgot the baby. And now, my little fair maiden, let ole tell you this; there neo more good men looking for truth thaw for money. 10 tact, no really good and courageous nine is loosing for money itt the matter of marriage. What an honest man wants is an honest \venian. That is what he wants, and that is all he wants. Let an honest ratan meet an honest woman, and, all other things being equally propitious, my word for it, be will marry her. Aud hand in haul these two honest souls w i11 go on gladly together down to the doors of death. Truth is fortune enough for any two. And now One word to you, my brielless young lawyer— you who 1 urued your beck in the battle of lite, you e ho left the good old film whore God first set yon down in the fight, you who fled from your' old schoolmates end took refuge in the tiawn to live by your wits; well, sir, you want to marry that rich ohs man's girl, do you ? I will tell you how to do it, and Itake out my fee in thesatisfacLiou of baviug date a bad than a good turn. Go to work. No, don't join a base ball club nor straddle a pair of steel wheels. Go to work. Work like Gladstone, or any other one of the ,•10,000,000 honest Englishmen, and if you don't get the girl in less than a year send the bill to nto for all the work costs you. How many handsome and ]earnd young clergymen there are treading this same soft path in a cat-aud .mouse scheme to catch another man's money, I, as an Amoriratr, would be almost ashamed to publish. But these are less bad, less deliberately burglarious than the young lawyers by a great deal, for they teach and preach peace, while the others only stir up strife and perpetuate enmities. But the road to triumph in the matter of marriage i, the same. Go to the heart; go with truth in clean hands. Take for your text God's very last utterance to man in Eden, for whether all your hearers are literal believers in the Book or not, all accept the fact that the man who will not work deserves not to eat. And let me add, finally, that you will search the bible from lid to lid in vain for any excuse or escape from toil under its teachings for any one man or class of men. Even the priests of heathen China toil. Their Emperor sets the example with tite plow every year. I found the priests of India toiling and starving at the same time. It is only the Christian priest, the follower of Christ, the carpenter, who dares to fled for himself ex- cuse from the universal task of all things, animate Or inanimate. When I was living in my cabin at Wash- ington, writing when I could and helping to plant trees tehen I could round about the city, my little girl, then five years old. came to spend a month or so with me from New York. And she too, wanted to plant a tree. So she begged five cents of me and went and bought a leafless little. tree. You see, that was all I could spare then, for I had recently been in Wall street, under the protection of Jay Gould. And while I was busy at work in the cabin, my little girl took her leafless little tree out behind the house, and by long and bard work she dug a hole in the dirt with her little dimpled baby hands, and planted it there all by herself. Then she came gleefully, and lad me out to see. And lo! God bless her! she had got it upside down ! But I didn't care a cent for that. The spirit was there; the effort was there; the sense and obligation of toil in the garden. And if I caught her up and kissed hor and cried, it was because I couldn't help it. Yes, my young friends, first conies toil. Then the candor and the truth and i h. truth and tho candor that come of toil. ;,est things go to heart. This is the secret of mar- riag. It is this attempt to escape toil that has put half the farms of the United Status under mortgage. The boys must have buggies and the girls ;mist have bonnets, and that is the end for the poor honest old granger; tboy dress the garden nu lu,:re. They go to town to dress themselves, to get married, to live and die in idle iusincerty and misery. Go t0 work[—JoAQUIN MILLER. Weight on Various Planets, On Jupiter, which is a much larger and heavier itody than the earth, a man would weigh about 484 pounds whose weight on the earth wsuid be 200 pounds. This man would weigh 218 pounds on Saturn. Coming to the smaller bodies we find that he would weigh less than on the earth. his 200 pounds would shrink to 174 on Venus, to 02 ou Ater- cury, to 60 on Mars, and to 30 on the moon while on the little asteroids, or telescopic planets revolving between Mars and Jupiter, his weight would be from two to four pounds only. The matter depends on the !Hass and attractive force of the planet. Tunneling a Volcano. It is now proposed to drive a tunnel into the very crater of Popocatapetl, and to build from the mouth of the tunnel a railway to connect with the interueeaulc road at Ameacameea. The parties who are negoti- ating with the owner of the volcano are said to represent a rich French syndicate, who ex - eget to get ,at least 100,000 tons of sulphur tnnually From file 4;314%16i -41e or o old` lltexioao, landmark. -worn-kis h►iI7I'rFII*AQF' n was,►vba.t a. witty woman called that per- iod of life which all middle-ige4 parts throtth,and during which so many seem to think they meet sulk—that Nature intended tt so. The came lady added : ".If you tiara44, believe in'waman's suffer- agt,'there none baliot which wlti tdli'otu- aily defeat it—Ur, Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription."' This Is true, not only ,at the perio 1 of middle life, but at all ages when women Buffer from uterine diseases, painful irregultsritiee, inflammation, uteel'ation or pr,lapsne, the ",favorite Preecriptiou"neo streugth- ens the weak or disea,.ed organa and en- riches the blood, that years of health and enj ,ymeu,t are added to fife, CANADIAN NEWS NOTES. —Six dwellings were washed away and a number of persons in- jured by is flood at Leeehburg, Pd., Thursday evening. —Mr. Van Horne seems to mistake the Witness for the Bibte.--Moutre- al Witness. This wap a frightful blunder,—Hamilton Spec. —A tornado swept over Aroostook county, Hying, '1'hereday. One house and eight barns were demol- ished and miles of fence destroyed. —The editor of the medicine lint Tilney has been committed for trial for libelling Mr. Harmer, a road - master on the C. P. R., whom the paper connected with a charge of rape recently. —Io a game of basebill at Blen- heim, Ont,, ou Saturday Stanty Ar- nold and a young man named John • son carte` into collision. Arnold's cheek bone was stnesltetl i17, and lie will be disfigured for life. —1,1iss 1)inlsdale, the evangelist, who was AO well known by her re- cent visit to 'Western Ontario, is to be married ou Tuesday next, at her home. in Belle Evart, to Rev. James R. Aitkeuhead, a young minister of the Methodist chinch. Wagon Shop and Business for Sale or Rent. A SPLENDID OPENING.—For sale or rent, the carriage shop turd business in the Village of Wtutt.rop, at present owned and occupied by the undersigned. The shop is frame with a comfort- able dwelling !louse attached. There is also it good eider trill and a stable. There is one fifth of an acre of Lind. A gond business is beingttone and there is a blacksmith shop in connection close by. This property ;ofd business will be sold or rented cheap, ,t, the proprietor has had to retire on account of ill -health. A steads, pushing own urn 0,, a good business- and make money. Addre,fs Winthrop P.O., ur apply on the premises to WM. 11OItNEY. 1152-5t FOR SALE. fj�HE SUBSCRIBER offers for sale four eligible j Building Lots fronting on Albert Street; has two fronting on Rattenbury Street; either en bine or in separate lots, to suit purchasers. For further particulars apply- to the uudersient.d.—E, DINSLEY, Clinton. 382 New Blacksmith Shop GEORGE TRO\VII ILL has opened out ti gon- eral Blacksmith and Repair Shop in the building lately ocatpied by Mr. G:wley, opposite Fair's lumber yard, Albert street, Clinton,.Ont. Blacksmith and 'Iron Work in ill its branches. llorse•Shoeing promptly attended to and satis- faction guaranteed. The public are invited to call before ordering any class of work in the above lines. 407—tf GEORGE TROWHILL. SALE BILLS,—The Nows•ltecord has un- surpassed fniii ties for turning out first-class work at low rates, A free advertisement in The News Record with every set of sale bills. NOTICE. The undersigned being necessarily absent from town for some time, has left his hooks and acconnts with MANNING & SCOTT, to whom pay• menta may -be made. JOAN WISEMAN. FOR FIRST CLASS, HAIRCUTTING ; AND SHAVING. Go to A. E. EVANS, FASHIONABLE BARRER, 2 doors east of NEWS -RECORD of- fice. Special attention giveni�to LADIES AND CHILDREN'S Haircutting. POMPADOUR HAIRCUTTING A SPECIALTY J. C. STEVENSON, Furniture Dealer, &c. THE LEADING UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Opposite Town Hall, - Clinton, Ont WATCHES! Waltham, Elgin, Illinois, Columbus, Seth Thomas, and Rockford—new, model. agrAlt these makes in key and stem winders. Mao pendant set watches. J. BiDDLECOMBE, CLINTON. FARM TO LET That excellent grass farm at present occupied by Mr. Isaac •Epson, well known as the Dods - worth farm, being north half of lot 30. 9th con., Hallett, containing 85 acres. it is situated on the Base Line, 2i miles from Summerhill and 0 miles from Manchester. Is well watered and particularly adapted for pasturage. Has good dwelling house, barn and shed. The lessee can have privilege of plowing after harvest with accotnmodttion for man and horses. Possession given March, 1892. For further particulars apply by letter or personally to MRS. JANE CUDSWORTH, }Clinton. 657•tt or C. A. HARTT, s ALLAN LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMMS1IIPS. neap Excursions to Europe. EVERY WEER Montreal and Quebec, TO Derry and Liverpool. to 080, According to location of Staterooms. Intermediate and Steerage at low rates. NO CATTLE CARRIED. CABIN 050 STATE NE SERVICE OF LINE. ASTEA STELLAN AMSHIPS. NEW YORK AND GLASGOW via Londonderry, every Fortnight, .Q,tgdltt,, ,355,W'upupwarffs".ds.,, Itotura,,?QG and,_ wti"ri Steerage at lowest rates. Apply to H de A ALLAN, Montreal or A: 0. PATTiSON or WM. JACHSON,Clinton. The 'Cold* Tho dtsagreeaitie taste °fthe CRD LIVER OIL --is dissrAate4 in SCOTT'$ ULSION 011'Pure Cod Liver 011 Withh' HYPOPHOSPHJTES cm LWZEI AND BOMA. The patient suffering from CONSUMPTION. WASTING IDI9EASES, Cttakes' the remedy as he would take milk. A per, feet emulsion, and s wonderful flesh producer. Take no other, AIL Druggists, S0e,, 1.00. SCOTT et DOWNE, Beitesijle. Cares henna, Cots, Piles in their worst term, lite c11 l,i„s, 19rys ipelas, Iu llautaui (lea, ib'iost itil.a ('hnppul tiisntt, sad till Skin fltli;, earn. Hirst FAIN EXTERMINATOR Lumbago, Sciatica, lithe rnuntltn., Neu- ralgia 'Pool harhe, feint. is every rot t ,. By all dealers. Wholesale b,v F. F. & Co HU M PHREVS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS For horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, AND POULTRY.. 500Page Hook onTreatment of Animals and Chart Sent Free. ovens "rove rs,Coutrestions,Intlammation A.A. € Spinal ltleuinghtis, prink Fever. B.B.•-!strains, Lameness lChcnmatism. C.C.--Ilisteatper, Nasal Discharges. D.D..-Rots or Grabs, Worms. E.E.--Cnngha, sleeves, Puonmonia, F.F.--Colic or Gripes, Bellyacbo. GI.G.--11LiscarlInge, Hemorrhages.. H.11. --Urinary and Kidney Diseases. I.T.--Eruptive Diseases, Mange. J.K.--Dlaeaeet of Digestion, Paralysis. Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - - .60 stable case, with Specifies, Manual, Veterinary Cure Oil and Medicator, gv.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, - 1.00 sold by Drugglatn; or tient prepaid anywboro and to any quantity on receipt or pried. IiUMPuuIYe' MMEM, CO., 1 t 1 & 118 William 85., Now Tort. HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFIC N o. In use 30 snore. The onlysuccessful remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, and Prostration, from over -work or other onuses. $l Ser and, or 5 vials and largo vial powder, for $5. sold by mrugglntn, or Bent pontpetd on receipt of price. uuiaelrahYs' IND. co., I t1 &Ila Wiliam s4, New York. AVEL.LS,i: K10!! l RDSO Co. Agent. SION['R.EAL. 'Regulates the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, unlocks the Sec retian s,Pu rifiesthe 'Blood and removes all im- purities from a Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore. =• CURES DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS. CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA. HEART BURN. SOUR STOMACH DIZZINESS. DROPSY. RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES t`. Lye • ({_ t 1 v eal 771•' ,,,.::11-a.2.7: 9. Aron ..:n+.t`.:,t ,t.Ct•a"^t»thrirewflk Pur .ttico. Id a 6,'.:o, sure, tit Cfil'C(411+ destroyer 01 v. orae in Cai1.1,cu or Adult,^ —1N THE - i