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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-11-04, Page 2" .' '_ �w.Y o 0oQ - q- Gooda Repeive.: toy Acknowle thing "e c , by Experts to • 1)e Far i.perior to Amy - Have Before Shown. • A l,. B.IG G• In Grey Flannels at 19 cents, worth 25 cents ;. a snap in all -wool. Ulster Goods. good patterns and double fold, at,$1, worth. $1,50 ; big drive in Ladies Undervests ; the New Things for Fall in Ladies' Kid Gloves ; handsome things in Ladies' Suitings, popular weave and texture ; all sizes in Children's and Misses'Undervests - lovely things in Black and Colored Mantle and Cloak Goods, Sealettes, Astrachan, Grey and Black ; great plum in MEN'S UNDERWEAR, all sizes, prices, colors; and .makes. • THE 0L014K ADRESS MAKING IS NOW BOOMING WITH US As this is the season when everyone is after heavy, warm goods. We are happy to say the Public aro very generous in giving us a good share of their patronage, and we purpose if good goods and right prices will induce them we will yet add more to the list. J. C. GILROY, CLINTON. Constipation, IiF not remedied in season, is liable to 1 become habitual and chronic. Dras• tie purgatives, by weakening the bowels, confirm, rather than cure, the evil. Ayer's Pills, being mild, effective, and strengthening in their action, are gener- ally recommended by the faculty as the best of aperients. _ "Having been subject, for years, to constipation, without being able to find much relief, I at last tried Ayer's Pills. X deem it both a duty and a pleasure to testify that I have derived great ben- efit from their use. For over two years past I have taken one of these pills every night before retiring. I would not 'willingly be without them."—G. W. Bowman, 26 East Main et., Carlisle, Pa. "I have been taking Ayer's Pills and using them in my family since 1857, and cheerfully recommend them to all in need of a safe but effectual cathartic." —John M. Boggs, Louisville, Ky. "For eight years I was afflicted with constipation, which at last became so bad that the doctors could do no more for me. Then I began to take Ayer's Pills, and soon the bowels recovered their natural and regular action, so that now I am in excellent health."—S. L. Lougbbridge, Bryan, Texas. "Havin used Ayer's Pills, with good results, I fully indorse them for the pur- poses for which they are recommended." —T. Conners, M. D. Centro Bridge, Pa. Ayer's Pills, PREPARED IST Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists and Dealera in DSedjotne. me Huron News-Recora .50 a Year—$1.26 in Advance Wednesday. Nov. 4th. 1891 WILL BON USING PAY ? A few remarks which we made a couple of weeks ago with reference to aiding the inception of new industrial . concerns, or the extension of old ones, in Clinton, has given rine to some slight dis- cussion on the merit" of bonusing general- ly. Some in talk ing over the matter say, "There is no use in trying to interest our people, the town is moribund beyond re- suecitetion. We have had the matter taken up by the town council, by the board of trade, and by .private in- dividuals and all has come to nought." It is, we must admit, discouraging for those who would, according to their limitcd means, do what they could to place our good town in the van of in- dustrial progreos to find their more wealthy fellow-oitizone either throw oold water on or squarely oppose bonus, loan or other municipal aid for manufactur- ing cpncerua iu thie town. A favorite argument with some ie : "Look at the many inetaucce In other teams where minicipal aid has been given to manufacturing concerns and they have ceased to exist as soon as the artificial pap was withdrawn." But therm should look again and they will find that a great many more have succeeded than have failed. The principle of boeusing is a thorough business one. It is the investing of the people's money for the benefit of the people. It may mean the borrowing of mon:•y. for the purpose of investment.` The whole business of the country is based on iuvoetments that hove a certain amount of etten3ant risk. Bat invest - moats are made all the same, A farmer who has had a bad crop, or whose neigh- bor hen lied a bad crop, is not deterred from plowing and manuring and seeding and otherwise expending money on the very came ground. It is the same in all industrial as well as commercial puraulte; there are ever and always elements of risk. But what farmer or merchant or manufacturer is deterred from engaging in bnsineos because there is a possibility of failure. With capital, prudence, in- telligence and proper businea■ manage- ment we have concerns in our midst whose labor -employing oapaoity can be doubled, and we have openings for now industries that could not help being successful with the carne uonoomitants. Our citizens should let it be known that e,.,,„tltsy,_.t>egeoy,fll,irg, tee give more or leas flnanoial aid to manulac'lurrug 'ooriiibtlii in Clinton that will comply with certain bullidcer oonditione and safeguards. Of oouree it is nnderstood that municipal aid (loan or beano) should not form the capital of any concern, but he simply supplementary to the capital of private individuals who have a larger amount but not sufficient to operate manufactur- ing on a soale sufficiently extensive to be commensurate with the cheapest ecouornio conditions. And it must be borne in mind in tbeee day of fierce competition that manufacturing in the largest quantites means %saving in 000t of material and labor and ooneequently the lowest cost of goods manufaotured, with resultant ready and profitable sales for the output. THE FIFTH OF .NOVEMBER. Thursday of this week will be the two hundred and eighty sixth anniversary of the diabolical gunpowder plot, a boheme the most devilish his satanic majesty could suggest or fiends attempt to oarry out. Both its inception and failure are thrice told tales, but humanity and Christianity will have sunk low indeed when civilized people shall cease to be thankful each recurring fifth of Novem- ber for tho overruling of a divine pro- vidence whoreby proteatantism in Britain was saved from utter effacement by mis- guided wretches. However, it is an ill wind that blows no good to any one. .And the treasonable gunpowder plot intensified the feeling already held by the Eugliah people against the civil and religious tyranny sought to be imposed on them by the papal power. It was the means of more strongly uniting the various protestant sects against a power whose fanatical followers would not hesitate in the name of God and religion to murder princes and people who would not become eubjeot to the pope. It was the same secret moving power concocted the gunpowder plot that hes ever since in one form or another created discord among catholic(' and protestaats throughout the world—the Jesuits. The same power that in Canadato-day is netting our mixed peoples by the eare from a mieoonoeived idea of doing a eervi:e to Almighty God, religion and mankind. It is this same Jesuitical power that is creating achieves in the Roman Catholic church today, in Canada, in the Ucited States and in other parts ..of the world. It is thie power that is doing all it can to keep apart catholic and protestant by prohibitlog the rising generation from being educated side by nide in the public schools. This same power has and is driving out of the catholic church theemost liberal minded and christian men. It has driven forth a Rev, Dr. McGlynn and others. It is the same power that caused Rev, Father Powers of St. Louie to say, no later than last week, in reply to vicar- ganerel Brady's order excluding the catholic children of his pariah from at. tending a catholic celebration because Father Powers allowed children of his congregation to attend the public nehoole —to say that this country is without merit, and there- fore should be abolished. In no way does it compare with the publio school, system. "When the Catholios attack the established eduoational eyetem of thla country, they are fooling with a boomer ang that will rebound on them and deal a crushing blow to their own institutions. I am not the only priest who has felt the injustice of this egmmittee'e mandatory actions, nor am I alone in resenting them. EGGSACTL Y. When one Mr. McKinley sought to coerce Canada into annexation by put- ting a duty of 5 Dents a dozen on Cana- dian eggs going into the United States, Mr. Wilson, of Seaforth, one of the most prominent members of the Canadien egg ring, was in a bad state of mind. Mr. Wilson deolared that Canada was ruined; that the United States was the "nataral" egg market for Canada ; and that noth- ing but commercial union could ever again make the egg business' profitable in this unfortunate oountry. He pooh- poohed the idea of an English market and was decidedly in the dumps general- ly. But Mr. Wilson seems to have changed his mind. He is nocc in Glas- gow, Scotland, whore he deolared to a reporter of the Glasgow Mail that con- signees in Glasgow had, on the day of the interview, 12,000 dozen Canadian eggs on the Clyde, all sold in advance without the purchaser having sampled a box (this by reason of the excellent re- putation of Canadian eggs) ; and that many dealers were selling his (Wilson's) eggs "for country egge at two shillings a dozen," "I'm a Radical," enid Mr. Wilson to the reporter of the Mail, "and b ljeve in free trade. I'm anxious for Calteda to adopt free trade and not keep by the pro- teotive 'pot icy." "I feel that the executive committee of the Jubilee Associatiou has aeeumed an uuwarrantahle position in excluding the children of my parish from participat• ing in the festivities of the celebration, and I am surd if the venerable archbishop should hear of it that he would either see that a change was effected or veto the whole thing. I have been working day and night getting the children of my pariah toady, and have contributed to the general fund. I first thought this order excluding public school children had been misconstrued, but I have cor- responded with Vicar-Gleneral Brady and with Fr. Coffy, the secretary. I have been informed that the order flatly ex- cludes public school children. I have written a strong letter, which will go before the executive board. "I have denounced their order as an insult, not only to the Catholic children attending public schools, but to the public schools, nad to the parents of the Catholic children attending public schools, but to the parents of the chil- dren, and I a.n sure they will resent it in the near future. To the general public it will appear as an attack on the publio school system, and a hue and cry will he mimed. Even without this affront to the educational system of the whole country, the feeling is fast being aroused against Catholiciam whenever it conflicts with the publio eohooln. ADVICE FREE Keep the head cool, the feet warm and the bowele regular, and uo disease eau attack you. This is a celebrated German physician's advice, and can beat be accomplished by using Burdook Blood Bitters, the beat regulator and purifier known. It ourea all disorders of the stomach, the liver, bowels and blood. —The clerk of the Presbytery of Brockville informs the Kincardine Reporter that the Rev. John M. McIntyre, minister, for some time past engaged in evangelistic work, was, at a meeting of that Presbytery held September 14th, 1891, deposed for all time to come from the office of the gospel ministry and member- ship of the church for the sin of adultery. Mr. McIntyre conducted special services in Lucknow some years ago; "I don't like the breath of that etovel" exclaimed little Ethel one day when the gas was escaping from the Bitting -room stove. Coal.gas is like the "perfumes of India," compared with the breath of a person affiloted with catarrh, but among many other symptoms the sense of smell is often deadened, so the sufferer le un- oonecious of the offensiveness of hie pre- sence. Why any one will endure such a painful, dangerous and offensive disease, when Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy—coet- ing only 50 cents—will cure the moat stubborn 0680, is one of the many mys- teries. The proprietors are so confident of the success of this Catarrh Remedy, that they offer to forfeit $500 for any case of catarrh they cannot oure. It would be (suicide by their remedy, for them to make this offer, unless they un deretood its exact powers. But notwithstanding Mr. Wilson's free trade principles he was able to tell the reporter an interesting story, of which the following is the nub : A Mail reporter iuteryiewed Mr. Wil- son, better known as the "Canadian egg king," who is at present in Glasgow, and the interview took place in the grocery warehouse of Meatus. Blackwood & Co., Howard street. Mr. Wilson was moat affable, says the reporter, and after I had put a few leading questions to him, he said '' Well, y ou want my life ?" "No thanks, If I took it the authori- ties would make an eggsample of me at the circuit." - Clearing his throat, he said, in a Yan• kee tone of voice ; "My plane is at Sea - forth, Ontario, Canada. There are other tow gentleman in the "swim" with me, and altogether last year we handled 33,600,000eggs, which were sent on td' London, Liverpool and Glasgow. I have fifteen vans on the road, and they call at the stores up and down the coun- try and oolleot the eggs, which are taken to Seaforth where they are handled, selected, packed and dispatched to the sea -board. The shopkeepers, or atore- keeperr as we call them, buy the eggs from the farmers." "How long will eggs keep? Excuse the childish question." "Oh, yon can keep them ea long that the consumer would declare that the hens which laid them were unhealthy. Joking aside, you can keep eggs for a great length of time. There is an erronenne idea which some people have —they think that salt is a good thing in which to keep eggs. Why, salt has the same effect upon eggs as it has upon beef. No, the best way to preserve eggs is to keep them in a cool and dry place. However, great care should be exeroised in the handling, and above all they should not be exported to a change of atmosphere, Eggs should keep fresh for six weeks. There has not been any great development of the egg trade within the last year, many of the farmers having 'killed et" through fear of the McKinley tariff affecting the business." "Killed off ?" "Yes 1 the hens." However, I think the prices which have been going on will induce farmers to re-oommence the trade in eggs. I would not be surprised to see tbiabranch of trade opening up in a way that many little dream of." The Hamilton Spectator thinks that when the radical Canadian egg king can talk like that, and do his best to be humorous while so talking, it may be token for granted that a profitable trade in Canadian egge in Great Britain has become an cetablished fact. Long live the Canadian hen. (so and hide your• pelf, McKinley. "In my own mind, thio assumption of power is a direct and public blow from a lot of zealots against the publio school system, and should be trodden under foot before it can grow strong. enough to prove a formidebte enemy. There are a number of mon in the exeoutive com- mittee who are without reason on this point. "Moreover, I consider that the com- mittee deliberately oasts a slur on every sperielf the rieswithoutoe- /math jai -tootle oL-- In some districts parochial eohools are anneeotaary, and nine happens to be among the number. If the head men of our church would give a few minutes' consideration to the subject they would find that the parochial school system of ADVICE To MOTIIEns. - Are yen disturbed at night and broken of yonr rest by a sink child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth'? If so send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teeth ing. Its value is incalculable. It will relieve tho poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers; thorn is no mistake about it. It afros Dysentery and Diarrho3a, regulator the stomach and bowels, cures Wind Colic, softeps -erg umifrredueca-inilamluatlonr•nuat.. t9.15 andonergy to tho whole eyetem. ' Mrs. Winslow e Soothing Syrup" for ohildren teething is ploasent to the taste and ie the proscription of one of the oldest and best female phynleians and nurses in the United States, and is for sale by all druggist's throughont the world. Price 26 dents a bottle. 140 sure end ask for "Miss.'tVir snow's Soornisa Srnvr,"and take no other kind. 656y . ler WELL RECON MEN DED. DEAR SIRS.—I am happy to pay I have used Hagyard'e Yellow Oil for burns, bruises, sprains and cute and find that there is nothing better. 1 recommend it to all my friends around here. ALAN 1*. MCLEOD, Souris, Man. —Rev. G. R. Riley, of Marion, Ind., has been turned out of the Methodist conference because he joined the Grand Army of the Re- public, a secret society. THE CZAR OF RUSSIA. The Czar of Russia probably Inas his own troubles as well as we commoner mortals. Where we have the advantage in auoh troubles as dyspepsia, bilious- ness, constipation, bad blood and the like ie in being able to procure easily a perfect remedy in Burdook Blood Bitters, nature's graud roetorative tonic and pur- ifier. —On the Stockton, Cal., kite shaped track last week, Mr. Robert Bonner's 5 -year-old mare, Sunol, trotted a mile in 2.08/, beating Maud S.'s record made on a circular track in 1885, by half a second, A SEVERE ATTAOK. DEAR SIRS.—My children were taken ill with ulcerated eore throats bordering on diphtheria. I had nothing in the house but Hagyard'e Yellow Oil which I used with great benefit. I am cure if it had not been for it the disease would have developed into diptheria. It is a splendid medicine. MRs. E. CAMERON, Moore's Falls, Ont, —The mayor and council of New- port, Ky., have been sent to jail for contempt of court in refusing to obey an order issued. Whether Selling Wall Paper, Yilldow Shades, BOOKS and STATIONERY or FANCY GOODS, A GREAT EXPLOSION. In these days of gunpowder. dynamite, giant powder, and the like, tremendous explonions are no rarity, but the greatest explosions of modern times is, without doubt' that of the "old.school" idea that Consumption is incurable. Then - sands of lives have been sacrificed to this mistaken notion, Modern researoh hes established the fact that Consump- tion is a scrofulous disease of the lunge, and that there is one remedy which will positively eradicate it from the eystem— Dr. Pleases Golden Medical Discovery. Of course, there were in the oldeu times many who would have pronounced mod- ern explooivo iuetruinents as witchcraft ; but there are, fortunately, few to -day who de not acknowledge that the "Gold- en Medical Discovery" is the one sever. eign remedy for all eorofulous diseases and Consumption is one of them. OUR MOTTO IS ALWAYS And at present our Wall Paper can be bought cheaper than any in the trade. WHY ? 1st --Because we will not carry Paper over - if prices will sell it. 2nd—Our stock is well -selected and bought for cash. 3rd—We Trim all Paper FREE, thus saving half the time putting it on. In WINDOW SHADES we are doing the trade. Why ? Because we buy the best goods at lowest prices and we are sure our colors, patterns and fixings will please you. Try us. Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an Eaet India mission- ary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption nronohitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat enc{ Lung Affections, also 6 positive and radloal cure for Nervone Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having tested its wonderful ourative powers in thou Ands of oases has felt it his duty to make Stikielcreei7eilffelisesefffelrosee Ailth8tocreythfee motive and a desire to rollovo hmnan suffering, I wilt send free of ohargo, to all who desire it, this reofpo in Gorman, Frenoh or English, with fall directions for preparing and using. Bent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noses, 820 Powers' Block, Rochester, N,Y. 869—y 0 GOOPER'S -:- Faaij -:- State, CLZNTO1�T_ A HANDSOME ORGAN FREE 0 Given Away With Baking Powder. Best Offer Yet 1W" See the Hant'.sorne Organ, now on exhibition. N. ROBSON. CLINTON. Groceries. -- Groceries. CANT H DLON BJOS —Have a splendid stock of— Choice New Groceries, Fruits, Peels, Crockfiry, Glass and Chinaware At prices eonsistent with good goods. We aro `.i a position to guarantee as goo value as any other house in the trade. Try our Famous Teas, the best for th least money in the market. Wo have a stock of General Groceries that cannot b surpassed in quality or lowness of price. Dc not invest till you call on us. CANTELON BROS., Wholesale & Retail Grocers, Clinton. v NT.TIR. - F NEW STOCK ! NEW STORE ! ELLIOTT'S BLOCK, - CLINTON. JOSEPH CHIDLEY, Dealer in Furniture.. Call at the New Store and see the stock of Bedroom and Parlor Sets, Lounges, Sldeboaras, chairs; Springs; Mattresses, etc., and general Household Furniture. ''ho whole Stock is from:the very best manufacturers. Picture Frames and Mouldings of ever, description. JOS. CIIIDLEY, one door West of Dickson's Rook Store .. :_d �,_ .,ivlr 1�., ar..e i .w,s.•-:eai�.e, . �i�.. '�r7a, r - •