HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-12-30, Page 2rl
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TS atnre'e effort teCtepeliforeign .$ub
still;:;:s-irorY >lae lrouoZire
sstgea•
Frequently,tide Ceti:see irlliltreatdon
Mal the need, of .an: anodyne. Na Other
eee14e-atorant or anodyne fa vont til
, pee"te Cherry I'fl4tt, ,tri: It assists
Vetere 104 ejectfi1g tete >;nelotts, allays
irritation, Wailes lis, repose;, and is the
Moat poPular et all couyhc eareee
00f 40' any preraratlons before ileo
lrllb11c in. the mire of colds;, eou„lta,
brenehit;e, ;tea ii;u(ire4 4ieeesos, there
is none, within the Vane of ley ex a1•i-
cee`e, so reliable as Ayer's Cherry Pee-
r, total, For tieara I was subject to colds,
followed by terrible coughs, About four
Years ago, relren So afflicted, I wile ad-
yieed to iter Ay'er'a Cherry Pectoral and
to lay All other remedies aside. I did
so. and within a, week was well of my
cold and covet. Since then I have
always kept this preparation in the
house, and reel comparatively Femme."
•—Mrs. 14. I3rown, Denmark, Miss. ee
"A. few, years ago I took a severe cold
which affected my lungs I hats a ter.
rible cough, and passed night after
night without sleep. The doctors gave
me up. I tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
wlfirllt relieved my lungs, induced sleep,
and afforded the rest necessary for tho
recovery of my strength/Iiy the con-
tinual use of the Pectoral, a permanent
cure was effected."—Horace Fairbrother,
Rockingham, Vt.
Ayr's Cherry Pectoral,
PRRPAmrD BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Bold by all Draggiate. Pelee 81; six bottles, 9d.
- The ref uron News -Record
1.50 a Year—$1.25 in Advanoo.
ti`'ethi esday Dec. 301h, 1491.
G.lt-)I) ADVICE.
DEAR FIRS. —I hate bran troubled
with head echo f, r ov-r 40 years, and had
it so bad ab-.ut once a wank. that I' was
enllletintes net expected to lire. I wag
advise, to nee B, 11. B., 14n4 hive used :i
h ;Wee 1 now have an attack only once
iu four or five months, and f..•l that if 1
continue using it I wet bo et.thrly cured.
Then. fern I reeorrtin. nl it highly
Mits. E. A. Srii oy, SeetEtud, Ont.
—4 by law will be voted on at
the municipal elections next Janu-
ary to enable the corporation of the
t twn of Sarnia to assist Mr. John
Dytlble, shipbuilder, of that place',
by urians of n loan of $4,000 to con -
trait periaaneet ways for the haul.
it out of the water of sliip,l requir
iu; repairs ntll rebuilding, and to
fully syn p his shipyard, the loan to
run 10 years without interest.
•
1s ere fotq•irntly the result of de-
ran,eTneut: of the stomach and of a low
Deed,:, ,n of the st s•ein generally. Au
a correetit'e reel itrei th"n,-r of the ali-
mentary organs, Avet's 1'i1!s are invalu-
able, their: nee being always attended
with nye ked benefit.
•
—It was in 1Iolwos'store,Newry,
Perth county, the other night n
party offered to buy as much stuff
as a certain young man of the lo•
cality could eat. The challenge was
accepted and the young waft straight-
way proceeded to stow away the fol-,
lowing bill of fare :-3 plates of
oysters ; 2 cans of salmon ; 10 dry
soda biscuits, in seven minutes ;
sucked :rix eggs, anti (,tidied up on
a pound of fine. This was devour
ed after eating his supper a few
minutes previous.
A.CCJ ANOE FOR THE BETTER.
SIRS. -1 have taken three bottles of
Burdo.;k Blood Pitters and hu.] it a
splendid medicine for oonatipatinn and
poor appetite. I will continue taking it
as it is a great blessing, and I feel a great
change, io my health wince taking it.
MRs. J. V. GREEN,
5 Sy !outline St. Toronto, Oat.
• —A men named Remington,
formerly oC Bruce county, is on trial
at F.tr;;o, Dikota, for the murder
and robbery of an elevator agent
nail.,d Flett. He was traced step
by step, from n clue given by a liv-
ery man who noticed as he got into
the buggy, that the top }pint was
gone from one of the fingers of his
left hand. This linger joint was
atnputated some years ago by Dr.
Bradloy of Bervie, near Ii-ineardiue.
l emirtgtou's chances of ornament,
iug the and of a rope look very pro–
Inisin; at present.
The orifmt:s of the certificates of
cures c f,oted by use of Ayers larsparit-
la arc kept on filo at the ott;ce ..f the J.C.
Ayer C• iopluy, i.i,tull, 11-0,a. P.o'i.tb-
ly no eimiter eate,i,ishmont in the world
cal exhibit euc11 a Masa of vajutt';le and
oonvincine testinioey.
•
—Joaoph (elvein, a young man bo -
longing to Seeforth, arrived in
'rurouto on the noon train Thursdave
on his way 1) the hospital. Ile was
suffering from the rfleets of a run-
away, awl his head and arms were
covered with bandages. in some
matinee his leg got entangled in the
chain of a waggon which he was
driving and he was dragged a long
distance, His right eye wee terrib•
ly bruised, and, owing to the woul4:1
having got full of clay from the
road ieflahtnl:4tion set• in and the
Seaford) physioiau considered it ad-.
visable to send him to Torouto.
EDITORIAL EVIDENCE.
GENTLE If V • —Your 'Iia •yard's Yel-
low 0:1 is worth its weight in ;;old for
both intsrnal and ex'ornal nee. 141,ring
the late Le Grippe epidemic:weunrf it of
a most excellent prsvnntivo, and for
sprained limbs, oto., there is nothing to
equ-tl it.
Wer. PRST1ili3ifi0v, Enter Reporter,
Delhi, On+.•a
vonsllrlcptton Cuted0
Au old phyelelen, retired frond preotteg, baying
bath Pbteed 10 hilt hetnlds 11 au k eat I:144: 4 naialt!on.
art tine brindle 4t tt al(aMide vegetable teatii4Y ler
.tirovia, pareemoet euro t'f ConsaMPttou,
Munebitite (lstnvrb, JlstbuYA anti ell •ttlrentt god
-Lt4u tO4etdono, else n eat -lye erre radical. anru
.for f(arvoail Iiobfllt are aR Nerrgtlp l'emplitints,
ettec3twn,;txcettel.tt •arenlorfut ourab1eq pavers,'
•Un thousands i1 sees as felt, it his ddty4..to:mako .
noeettobet saitar4244 fellows.4otuatetlelr tole
meuvea•rd It deelrll:to rellevo liatoolt sefferllee,
will coned trop or ebargei to 1111 Why listre it, this
r,ertea-141 di*rt4184t, k'roualt Or t<u8l1411, with .fal
directions for ireparing 0nd ustnlrr sent by mid
-by edereeeing with ,otema•nter/lee :thi$ peter.
W. A.1oxai,$:i0l4owele14;44, ltuceester,
Oup•-y
.--Judi eSinclaili of Hamilton, who
was in a critical condition from a
paralytic stroke, ditdl on Thursday
I knit.
IT $IU.D0 f FAILS.
DEAR SIRS.—I took two betties of
iiagyurd's Yeotorat Bale re, and it cured
mn of n ateer:eas soft tightness of the
chest after ether thinga heti fail -d. I
have also tried 13. B. B., it works e1.1un-
didly for weakores sue Ifeudaehe,
SAMt'ra. MADDOCK, Bettina vil'e, Ont.
-,—The custom duties collected at
Woodstock last mouth were $5,129.-
26;
5,i29.-
25; roods exported, $86,638; value
of geode imported $30,988.
Wit PAIN OR COLDS.
(oENTLEvI:N.—Pittoon mouths • ;Igo 1
hada beating breast. I tried a number
of remedies but got bo relief. 1 then
tried 11agyard'e Yellow OJ, werell gave
me in•taut relief. It is the beet thing 1
ever used for all kinds of pain or c dd.
M14s, JOUN Coact .TT, St. Mary's Out.
—The Dominion Mineral Com-
pany, of Sudbury, have Bold out
their Blizzard and Worthington
nickel mines to an Englislllpudicate
for $2,000,000.
NEW SARUM NOIE9.
DEAR Setts. -1 have used mix bottles
of 'n. 1i. 13. 1 took it for liver o,nl-
plaiut, l:efcre I tack is I had head -
eche and (tit a. lipid all the time, hitt
now I ant healthy and euttrely well III
additiou 1 have a v od eppetae, wh:ch
I tic. not hays pre.viou•ly,
LJB11lr I'uuND, Now Struul, Oat.
—A young man nailed Nargaug,
living near New Hamburg, was
allot in rho mouth, perhaps fatally,
by his brother, yesterday. Didu't
know it was loaded.
FRESH AND VIGOROUS.
On a tine morning and a flue, road,
what 14 more iuvigoratiug thau a spin,
on eAyele, When it c toles to a r-teo
the sng;eetion of Mr. George Pnilips,
Secty. Leinster Cycling Club, Dublin,
Ireland, hue force ; ''I have foetid St.
Jacobs Oil en invaluable remedy for
strains end brui.es, and sd have several
members of our club. Tlrie ought to be
borne in fr:ilfd.
• —Tho two younger sons of 14 Ir.
George Gibson, of Pontypool,. Ont.,
while sleigh riding on the ice on
Monday broke through and were
drowned.
ADvicE To Morin:as. Are you disturbed at
night and broken of your rest by a sick child
suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Tooth 7
If so send at onoo and get a bottle of "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teeth
ing. Its value is iucalculable. It will relieve
the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon
it, mothers; there is no mistake about it. It
sores Dysentery and Diarrhoea, regulates the
stomach and bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens
the gums, reduces inflemtnntion, and gives tone
and energy to the whole system. "Mrs Winslow's
Soothing Syrup" fur children teething is pleasant
to the testa and ie the prescription of ono of the
oldest and best female physicians and nurses in
the United Status, and is for sulo by all druggist's
throughout the world. Prion 25 ciente a bottle.
Re sure and ask for "Mae. W100Low's SOOT1INd
Sravr,"and take no other kind. 056,y
ABANDONED FARMS.
An official pamphlet issued by
the State Govel•nment,of Massa-
chusetts shows the entiire number
of abandoned or partially abandon-
ed fare
ns in that
Commonwealth,
as reported to the 'Secretary of the
Board, to be 906. The largest num-
ber, 256; are in Worcester County.
Tho only other counties with more
than a hundred are Berkshire, 146,
and Franklin, 103. Eighty six
acres is the average area of abandon-
ed farms, upon which there are
buildings, and 87 acres the average
area of those without buildings
Tiro average value of the farms with
buildings is stated to be $894, and
those without $561. Official reports
about nbandoned firms of Vermont
and New • Hampshire have also
recently been made by the Boards
of Agriculture of these States.
There were only 409 of them in
Vermont last spring, and la good
many of these have been taken up
since that time. There were 1,442
of 'thorn in Now Hampsuire two
years ago, but hundreds of buyers
have gone to the State and made
selections from thein- within those
years. There aro said to bo fower
abandoned farms in Connecticut,
Maine nod Rhode island than there
were in Vermont, Massachusettsand
New Ilanlpshire in tho early part of
this year.. In some of the Southern
States the amount of land that has
been abandoned or that has lain un•
tilled for years is very groat. A
report issued by the Virginia Board
of Agriculture says that in the State
there aro 15,000;000 acres of land
suitable for crop growing which are
not tilled and which aro a burden
to the owners. "Most of this land,"
we are assured, "is for sale at low
prices, and all of it would produce
splendid crops, profitable to in-
dustrious farmers," As it ie En
Virginia so it is in the adjacent
State of North Carolina and the
other States as far west as
Arkansas. It is these Southern
States that send out the loudest in•
vitations to farming immigrants
Who possess at Ieast a sinalT capital.
—Irish Paper.
-4
t
Int x'fI MAl 7.f+''1' AI+' SIXTY
al -1,141,0X4.
. UUII:fax, -,.towel or O4 lei 1ieaG
014arae1er, who Is At k1Jftseiil doing
1!nHir4teitl 141. Neat York writes t0. a
atlutivt .in that city, sok{ OW
1ie.raldt as follow
4iA 'few Joy's. wail. I. received a lot
ter from a41 old friend* who is, tra-
y'a11i14A :Oro.agh tfl'e States of Nen
jHanlpshite. find Vertoent, in. a I usi-
tlea ttapat;ity for •the Now England
Telephone Company. late latter is
datvti Lebatlou, N, F.f., Dec. 9tb,
from wluoh !copy the following ins
terestitig iteuni
",Vo have lines in pretty Lear all
Massachusetts townie, but iu title
State it is very ditterent; .tiesorted
farms, houses have no use fur tele.
plfoues, and that leads me tb remark
th111 on tt drive from Goshen, to
\Vashiugton, a week ago, I counted
the houses for a disterree of seven to
eight utiles, just twenty, of whih
thirteen were deaerted and seven
Occupied, and a school house with
bun'° wuo oei:o}tlud house within a
,Lila.
•• "You may have heard of Austin
Corbin's Park ! He has bought up
farms in • the towns of Croydon,
Cornish, Grantham, Plainfield ar.d
Newport, to the extent of some
25,000 acres. The towns have
allowed hint to close all the high•
ways running through the tract
which is enclosed with wire fencing
ten feet high, and Blocked with wild
hogs, deer buffalo, elk and other
genie. Indian ponies are used by
the employes to patrol ,the domain,
whieh will fest grow -up into a wit.,
derness again."
The correspondent adds :—"'the
above io worthy of a few moment's
reflection. here is a large tract of
country desel°ted by the former Own,
era, and bought up by a New York
capitalist for a There song, to tura
into a game preserve. Strange to
say not a word cf this has been pub-
lished b the
daily —
rens that t.
Y P ,
fttr as I know, and I get a Morning
and evening paper day in and day
out. If this state of things had
happened in any .of the Provinces
of tete Dominion, every paper in the
United States would leave heralded
it with supreme satisfaction and
with copious editorials commenting
upon the decadence of the country
and suggesting annexation as a sure
antidote."
1892.
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE
An I11ust1'ated Weekly.
The Thirteenth Volume of Harper's Young
People began on November s, 1891. For the
coning year thin beet and moat comprehensive
weekly in the world for youthful readers offers a
varied and fascinating programme. In serial
notion 11 will contain "Diego Piozon," a story of
the first voyage of Columbus, by John 11. Coryell;
"Canoemates: A Story of the Florida Reefs and
Everglades," by Kirk Munroe; another story by
one of the best known and moat popular of
American authors; and stories in three and four
parte oy 'J'homaa Nelson _Page, E. II. House,
Anveline Teal, Ella Rodman Church, andMary
S. MoCorb. More than two hundred short stories
by favorite writers, articles on travel, ont-of-door
sports, in -door genies, and all subjects dear to
the hearte of• the young, besides hundreds of
illuetrationa by leading artieta, will combine to
make Harper's Young People for 1802 an irre-
sistible repository of pleasure and information
for boyo and gine.
"The beet weekly publication for young people
iu existence. It ie edited with scrupulous care
and attention, aid instruction and entertainment
aro mingled in its pages in just the right propor-
tions to captivate the minds of the young, and at
the same limo to develop their thinking power.—
Observer, N. 1 .
Terms: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year
Volume V,, VIII., and XII. of Harper's Young
People, bound in cloth, will be sent by mail,' opt -
age paid, on reooipt of ASS 50 each. The other
volatiles are out of print.
Single Numbers, Five Cents each. Specimen
Copy Bent on reooipt of two-oent stamp.
Remittances should be made by Post -office
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Address : HARPER & BROTIIERS, New York
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
CORRESPONDENCE.
We will at all times be pleased to
,receive items of news from our sub-
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Patrons who do not receive their
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ADVERTISERS.
Advertisers will please beat -in mind
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TILE NEWS -RECORD has a larger
circulation than any outer paper in
this section, and as an advertising
medium has few equals in Ontario.
Our books are open to those who
mean business.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job Lepartlnen•t of this jour-
nal is one of t1Ce best, equipped in
Western Ontario, and a -superior-
class of work is guaranteed at very
tom p»•ices.
152,.
• arpex's Bazar.
ILLIT$TRAT4
D,
upper's 73trae Is a iourz'a1 ter Ma bone. It
gives ilio 10'081 foreemetteta wets,. revert 10 tlto.
!t'asktoes 4wd.ita telmnro04 teliatratloas, Ear44
loslgna, and PettegO.Sboet seeelomentµ nra 4nd4s-
eopsa leo eiteeee the 14004)4 dr9AS•Makor .41,u,4 114s
reedilltc. 'ftp cspeese is spars,* .to'tnnjto its
tras4143 4ttraatireness 0114 bigkest order. Its
`triliht etaries, 4a10stee y)4451044o end thouttltful.
•9axy$ satlefy all 1)4818x, µed; ite 108b P1'e is
lrt4 005 es a budget of reit arra. flamer. mho
fta
woeklyieaal5,ovelythingi;t fnobe;lgtl which ie of
40100081 to 8r10nen, lho eertel4 for 18$2 s1ll be
'written by Welter P,aoalih and W4111114n Black,
Dire. 011pboat Will become aeontribetnr. l'54t'ioa
Earl.and'e Timely Tare, "Day In area Day Ont,',
are intended for mab1one, and' Helen Marshall
North wi•l specially yddress girls. T. W.Iliggtn•
eon, in "Women sort Men," 1011 please a ou1t4-
Vated eadlenco,
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
b ' Pan YEAR r0
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Address; HARPER & BROTHERS, New York
1892.
Harper's Magazine,
ILLUSTRIVI'ED.
The Marszine will eel,bratc the fonrth Centen-
ary of the Dloonvery of Amnrl a by its rs-
D1aC0VEnY, thron,rh articles giving a more thor-
a.gb ozpositlea than has hitherto Peau made o4
the Recent Uuprecedeutcd Development of row
Country, no 1 ..specially in the Groat lfe.•t.
Particuuar attention will also be given to Dra-
matic Lpiscdoa of American )listory.
The Field of the next European 1Ver will be
deet ibod in a Ser10+ of Papery on the Danube
"From the Black Forest to the Mick Sen," by
Poultney Bigelow and F. 0, 21ilb•t, illustrutod by
Mr. Millet and Alfred Parae.np. Articles also will
be elven on rho German, Anetrtan, and Ita.iiu
AI mire, illuotr-trod by 1'. do Thulet•up.
Mr. W. D. Howells will contribnlo a now.novel,
"A. World of Chance," obat•acteristiceIly-tmor ran.
5:up0040 prom'nuo00 will bo given to Slim•.
Stories, which will bo uontributod by T. 11.
Aldrich, R. 11. Davie, A. Conan D•,yle, Margaret
Reseed, SSiaa 1Yuolsen, and other popular
writeaa.
Among the literary features will bo Personal
Raioiealeceneee of Nathaniel Hawthorne, by his
college class -mato and life-long frient, Horatio
Bridge, and a Personal Memoir of the Brownings,
by Aune Thackeray Ritchie.
IJAPPEP'S PERIODICALS.
HARPER'S ,MIAGAZINE, Per Your—••y1 00
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Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New Yor
1892.
Harper's Weekly,
ILLUSTIATED.
Harper's Weakly for the corning year will con-
tain more attractive features, more and finer
Illustrations, and a greater number of articles of
live, intense interest than will be found in any
other periodical. Ani these latter will bo a
eerleo of articles on •yhe twenty-five greatest
cities of the world, inch ng five hundred illue-
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and Navy, groat public events, disasters on land
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Hone. The editorial articles of Mr, George
William Curtis will remain as an especial
attraction.
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PER YEAR :
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HARPER'S MAGAZINE
HARPER'S BAZAR
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$4 00
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Address.: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York
cel TRAY TRAY STOCK ADVER
TISEMENTS inserted in Tel,
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makes it compulsory to advertise stray atcek
If yon want any, kind of advertising you wi11 not
do better than call on *oma-Reocor,I •
A NICE HOME
( T A BARGAIN --Eight acres Oland witha
select orchard of choice apple trees ;
eomforfablo house end stables ; adjoining Oodo-
rich township.t,';Apply to B. L. DOYLE, dodo
ich. 620-41
TEACHER WANTEmD.
wantbil; 11 soe5a4T Gl las 1ronTiei. Folary not
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5, Monis, Belgrnve P 0. 075-tr.
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ON ,S
THE MOST URERAL OFFER EVER SAD
NO F.&EES. 1 NO OHEAP BOOKS 1 NO J-AOIC-KNIVES; Li.
SOISSORS. OR OATCPI-PENNY OFFER, 1,
SOOT A. OLEAN, WIIOLESOME FAMILY NEWSPAPER
UPON ITS MERITS.
Commencing with the issue of 7th October T1tE_ WEEI{ OY'
GLOBIts will contain sixteen pages instead of twelve pages
heretofore, making it the largest and best family newspaper its:
Canada Every effort „will be devoted to making it BRIGHT„.
READABLE, ACCURATE and INTERESTING in all its departments.
Special pains will be taken with its Agricultural Pages, anis '
MORE SPACE WILL BE DEVOTED TO SELECT READING, FOR Tint'
FAMILY.
Sv713SCRIBERs WIIOSE ORDERS ARE RECEIVED PREVIOUS We
st DECEO1BER, 1891, WILL HAVE THE PAPER S.:NT THEM UNTIL.
CLOSE OF 1892 FOR 'THE ONE YEARS SUBSCRIPTION.
THIS MEANS
15 months of a 16 -page for $I.tE
every one who subscribes now..
AGENTS WANTED IN ALL UNREPRESENTED DISTRICTS.
For terms, address
THE GLOBE, TORONTO.
ob
tinting
0
The NEWS -RECORD
Is in a better position than ever to turn out
The Very Finest Printing
At prices as low as any other office in the West. Those
in need of any class of Job Printing should call
on THE NEWS -RECORD,
Albert Street, Clinton
PI TT 1 -R01\1 -I'll TT
NEW STOCK t NEW ST RE I
ELLIOTT'S -LOCK, o CUNT
JOSEPH CHIDLEY, Dealer in Furniture.
Cal] at the New Store and see the stock of
Bedroom and Parlor Sets, Lounges, Sideboards, Chairs, Springs,
Mattresses, etc,, and general Household Furniture. The wale Stock is from;