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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1892-04-06, Page 38418IN S8 01 114'01'011Y Ipootlporatod by Act of Parllameut,1885, P4PITAI+, �... $2,000,000 REST. - $1.10.0,000 Road Office, MONTRE.Q.L- J. H. R. MOLSON, Presddent. R, WOLFERS'l'AN THOMAS, Gen6ral Manager. Notes dise0anted,Xolleetions made, Araftsi i8@nod, .Storljjn,g and' American -ex- change boughs; and 8o1d.4 low• Est oRrrent rates. 11n11Re@T AT 4 Paa CHNT. ALLOWED ON DIIOBIT 71.41:t1S.tE MRS. Money advanced to farmers on their own notes with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re luired'ae seeurity. TI. C. 'BREWER, Manager, February. ebruary. 1804 CLINTON °G. D.1V'oTaggart BANKER, ALBERT STREET, CLINTON. A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED. ,. Notes Discounted. - - Drafts Issued. Interest Allowed on Deposits. Clinton, June 8th, 1891 658y 11133TENIEP eattott . Irfres••• T, C. Bruce, L. D.S. Surgeon Dentist. Graduate Royal College Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Under Grad University of Toronto. Mee—Reefer's old stand, Coats' Bloek, Clinton. N.B.—Will visit Blyth, professionally, every Monday at Mason's Hotel. 675—y of ate G. H. COOK, Icontlate of Dental Surgery, Honor Graduate hof the Toronto School of Dentistry. Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for the painleee ;traction teeth. Office—Smith'@ Block, upstairs, opposite tho Poet Ottice, Clinton. itiir Night Bell answered. 492y Weed. DRS. GUNN & GIBSON. OStFFTCE Ontario St. a few doors east of Albert W. GUNN- R. J. GIBSON. DR. TURNBULL. T. L: Turnbull, M. 13, Toronto Univ. ; Ma D. ; C. M., Victoria Univ. M. C. P. d• S. Ont, ; Fellow of the obstetrical society of Edinburgh. Late of London, Eng., and Edinpurgh hospitals. Mae :—Dr. Doweley's stand, Rattenbury St. Night calls, answered at Grand Union Hotel. Electric night bell at front entrance, d W. SHAW, M. D. C. M. J. W. ShaW, M. D. C. M., Physician, Surgeon, 'kccoueher, etc. Office in the Palace block, Rattenbury St., formerly occupied by Dr. Reeve, Clinton Ont. '�egtYz. .MANNING & SCOTT, Barristers, 4rc.. ELLIOTT'S BLOCK, - CL�INTON. Money to Loan. A. H:'MANNING. JAS. SCOTT. DAVISONleAVISON & JOHNSTON, Law, Chancery,and Conveyancing. Oe—West Street, next door to Poet Office, Goderich, Ont. 57. 'p C. HAYS, Solicitor, .Lc. Office, corner of t RI. Square and Weet Street, over Butler's Book Store, Goderich, Ont. 67. far Money to lend at lowest rates of interest. EE CAMPION, Barrister,Attorney, Solicitor in Chancery, Conveyancer, &e. Office over Jordan's Drug Store, the rooms formerly oceu• pied by Judge Doyle. ,{g• Any amount of money to loan at lowest ates of interest. 1-ly. `kttet1<oiteert11 J. 11. W. BALL, A UCTIONEER for Huron County. ' Sales at- ( -I tended to in any part of the County. Ad- dress orders to GODERIcII 1' 0. V.17. CHAS. HAMILTON, A UCTIONEER., land, loan and insurance agent Blyth. Sales attended in town and country, sn reasonable terns. A list of farms and village for sale. Money to loan on real estate, at ow rates of interest. Insurance effected on all lassos of property. Notes and debts collected. Goode appraised, and sold on commission. Bank- rupt stocks bought and sold. Blyth. Dec. 16,1880. Photographers Crp W CLINTON. Life Size Portraits a Specialty. Moret to plat MONEY to lend in largo or small sums o good mortgages of_ppersonal security a the lowest current rates. H. HALE, Huron et Clinton, Clinton, Feb. 25, 1881 ly MONEY. A large amount of Private money to loan. Low et rate of interest C. A, HART:, Solicitor &e, Ohre - • Perrin's Block. .FOR SAILS. f,iiHE 8UIqORIBER ggerd flay sal,a lollreliblble two t o 6 ng{r o0 fronting r Street teithe; 'e' bl$a or Io 4epparato Iptg�, tp ,UIt purebaaere, For further. artioulartiapply. to the 00200114004,—.E. OINI2%4Y, C/11001).,82 A4 01 Ull1161, The Clinton Lode, No, 144, Meets in Diddle- ooulb'e Ball, opposite themarket, the let and 8r4. Fridays in each month, Visitors cordially In• rated. R,STON$r4tM1 M. W.; J. Dias, Recorder. ' 600y . .�ae t..r • I ILINTON Lodge, No, 84, A. F. lc A. V meets every FrideY, on or •atter the moon, Visiting brethren egrdtally invited. 410H ,if EY WOOD, w. At.. OW bIN BALL4RDD, Sao Clinton Jan. 14, 1890. 1. L. O. L. No. 710 CLINTON', Meetseecosb Monday of every month. Hall, 8.sd flat, Victoria block. Visiting brethren always made welcome. WM. WALKER, W. M. THOS. KEARNS, D.M; P CANTELON, Seo. -p•11Ftt gaigitto Jubilee Preceptory Ploi•- lOI, (Black Knights of Ireland) Meets in the Clinton Orange Hall, the second Wednesday of every mouth, at 7.30 o'clock in the evening. Visiting Sir Knights will always _sceive a hearty welcome. A. M. TODD, Worshipful Preceptor' GEORGE HANLEY, Deputy Preceptor PE'T'ER CANTELON, Regletrar Royal Black Preceptory 3911 Black Knights of Ireland, Meets in the Orange Hall, Blyth, the Wedne day after full moon of every month. Royal Black Preceptory 3151 • Black Knights of Ireland, Meets in the Orange Hall, Goderich, the Third Monday -of every month. Visiting Knights always made welcome. W H MURNEY, Preceptor, Goderich P 0 JAMES RUSK, Registrar, Goderich P 0 S. H URON ORANGE DIRECTORY. 1892 Names of the District Masters, Primary Lodge Alastels, their post office ad• dresses and date of meeting. A. M. TOD D, W.C.M., Clinton P.O. BIDDULPH DISTRICT. John Neil, W.D.M., Centralia P. 0. 219—Robt. Hutchinson, Greenway, Fri- day ou or be 'ore full. moon. 662—Thos, H. Coursey, Lucan, Saturday on or before full moon. 493—Richard Hodgins, Lucan, Wed- uesday on or before full moon. 826—William Haggart, Grand Bend, Wednesday on or before full moon. 890—W. E. McRoberts, Maplegrove, Wednesday on or before frill moon. 924—Henry Lambrook, Exeter, 1st Fri- day In each month. 1071—John Halls, Elimv on or before full moon 1097—James Cathers, SyIv . on or before full moon. 1210—Gilbert Grieve, Moray, on or before full moon. 1343—G. Lawson, Crediton, on or before full moon. 610—Joshua Huxtable, Central day ou or after full moon. 'Ile, Saturday an, Monday Thursday Tuesday ia, Fri- GODERICd DISTRICT. Andrew MilPliaB W.D.M. Auburn 0. 1'15-WIIIie Bell, Goderich, 1st Monday in each month. W3—Andrew Milian, Auburn, Friday on or before full moon. 182—Charles Tweedy, Goderich, last Tuesday i.n each month. 181—Adam Cantelon,'iJolmesyille, Alon- day on or before full moon. 202—Jhrnes Wells, Saltford, 3rd Wed- nesday in each month. 3013—Matthew Sheppard. Clinton, 1st Monday in each month. AULLETT DISTRICT. James Ilorney, W.P.\L, Winthrop P.O. 710—Wm. Walker, 1 Iluton, 2ud Mon- day in each motet 1- 813 --James Homey, Winthrop, last Wednesday before full moon. 928—Thomas Mcllyeen, Summerhill, 1st Monday in each month. 826—Jahn Brintnell, Chiselhurst, 1st Monday in each mouth. STANLEY DISTRICT. Robert Nicholson, W.D.M., Blake P. 0. 24—John Pollock, Bayfield, 1st Monday in each months 308 -James Keyes, Varna, 1st Tuesday in each month. 833—Win. Pollock, Bayfield, 1st Wed- nesday in each month. 733—.John Berry, Iiensel', est Thursday in each month. l03u—YVilliam Rathwell, Varna, 1st Thursday in each month. I rNorF,--Any omiesions or other errors will bo promptly corrected on writing direct to the County Master, Bro. A. M. Todd, Clinton P.O. BILL HEADS, NOTI lle..de, Lotter Heads, Tags, Statement@, Circulars, Business Cards, Envelopes, Programmes, etc., etc.,printei in a workman- like manner and at lox rates, at THE NEWS -RECORD FOR SALE. The property at present occupied by the undersigned as a residence on tho Huron Road, in the Town of Goderioh, consisting of ono half of an acre of land, good frame house —story and a half—seven rooms, including kitchen, hard and soft water, good stone cellar, stable, wood and carriage houses. There are also some good fruit trees. This property is beautifully eitoated and very suitable for any person wishing to live retired. For further particulars applyTB. to ON, 642-tf Barrister, Goderioh. PROPERTY FOR SALE OB RENT.—Advertisers will find "The News -Record" one of the best mediums in the County of Huron. Advertise in "The Netve-Record"—The Double Circulation Talks to Thousands. Rates as low as any. • .TO THE "ARMERS.. Study Y.014 awn tnterost 01130. ga•Ti!here • • t; ypu Rail got 1►01.a1)1e a Ra.e$s1 I Manufacture none but toe Boer or STop t, l3eloaro a✓ehops that sett cheap, .go they lava gat to ilea tar Call and for price!, order' • by malt prolnplyu tended t90 �O.I [IN 13ELr., HARNESS EMPORIUM, HI+Y(Tlls Ol4'1` J. H. BLACKALL, Veterinary Surgeon honorary graduate .91 Ontario Veterinary College, treat@ dlseas58 of ail domestlo animals on the most modern and sclerltlno principles. girealls attended to night or day. Office immedlctely west -of the old Ijoyol Hotel, Ontario street. Residence-- Albert esidence—Albert street, Clinton. 549-301 ABEL S.:WEEKES, Civil Engineer, - P. L. Surveyor, Draughtsman, etc. Ofllce—Upstdirs in Perrin's Block, Clinton, Ont ALLAN LINE ROYAL MAIL aSTEAMSI UPS. REDUCTION IN RATES. Steamers sail regularly from Portland and Halifax to Liverpool via Londonderry. • DURING TrIE WINTER MONTHS. Cabin, $10 and upward.. Soco,,d Cabin, $25. Steerage at kw rates. No Cattle carried, TATI SERVICE 0F ALLAN LINE LINE. STEAMSHIPS., NEW YORK AND GLASGOW via 'Londonderry, ovens Fortnight. Cabin, $40 and upwards, Second Cabin, $25. Steerage at low rates. Apply to 11. & A. ALLAN, Montreal ; or'to A. 0. PATTISON or WM. JACKSON; Clinton. FOR FIRST CLASS, HAIRCUTTING AND SHAVING. Go to A. E. 1 VANS, FASHIONABLE' BARBER, 2 doors east of NEwa-REcoRD of- fice. Special attention given to LADIES AND CHILDREN'S Hair'cuttitlg. POMPADOUR HAIRCUTTING A SPECIALTY COPP'S WALL PAPER and Paint Shop IS .STOCKED W1TH A SELECT ASSORTMENT —o F --- American and Canadian Wall Papers WiTH BORDERS TO MATCH, from five cent rolls to the finest gilt. Haring bought ivy Papers and Paints for Spot Cash, and my practical ex- perience justify rase in eaymg that all wanting to decorate their houses inside or paint them out- side will find it to their advantage to give me a call, gor Shop, south of Oliver Johnston's blacksmith shop, and directly opposite Mr. J. Chidloy's residence_ JOSEPH COPP Practical Paper Hanger and Painter The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company, arm' and-I•slrlated-1owirProper.v ty only Insured. OFFICERS. Thos. E. Hays, President, Seaforth P. 0. ; IV, 3. Shannon, Secy•Treas., Seafol•th Y, 0.; John Hannah, Manager, Seaforth P. 0. DIRECTORS, Jas. Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Donald Ross, Clin• ton ; Gabriel Elliott, Clinton ; George Watt, IltHock • Joseph Evans, Beechwood; J. Shan- non, Walton ; Thos. Garbort, Clinton. AGENTS. Thos. Notions, Hetlock; Robt- McMillan, Sea - forth ; S. Carnochan, Seaforth. John O'Sullivan and Geo. Murdie, Auditors, Parties desirous to effect insurance or transact other business will be promptly attend- ed to on application to any of the above officers, addressed to their reepective post offices. sages slat SPIN" •rs ',sorest; ERRORS Organo We Energy, Physic liazolton's Vital Dimness of Sight .-„to Marry, Stunted Paine in the Rack, Urine, Seminal Lows to Soolety, Unfit for gence, eta., etc. E 20,000 sold yearly. for treatise, J. E. H Pharmacist, 808 Yooge OF YOUNG AND OLD aknoss, Failing Memory, Lack of al Decay, positively cured by zer. Also Nervous Debility, Loss of Ambition, Unfitness Development, Loss of Power Night, Emissions, Drain in es, Sleeplessness, Aversion Study, Excessive Indul. very bottle guaranteed. ddross, enclosing etalnp AZELTON, Graduated t., Toronto, Ont. 1 tV1i,'.'4'{;lyht tine era':• Lti At® MEM ISPER New Firm in the Old Stand. The undersigned having purchased the old established meat buelness of Mr. Arthur Conch, bogs to inform the public that he will continue it e it has heretofore been carried on. Il ifoate of all kinds in season. Order; taken and delivered as usual. Highest flash price paid for sheepskins, hides and tallow. 667 -it JAMES A. FORD. 11 j?i1 kStOf, ,. R,, N> rO ax, ir.I: was troubled dor tillxty s'eal's witb hpain4 is m *,sidq, wJi ll. increased and I• became very bad, Mad Ts j'ACOBS 011 and it completely eared. I give it all praise,?' . n MRS. WM. RYPER, "ALL RIGUUt `! 8T1 ✓ACOBS QIL DID I7.'r- • The Huren News -Record 01.60 a Year -01.24 in Advance. Wednesday' April 6th, 1592. THE LICENSE SYSTEM IN MINNESOTA. Minnesota is a high.license State, and the fee for a permit to maintain a saloon or hotel bar in cities of Mora- than 100,000 population is $1,000. To obtain a permit in Minneapolis the applicant must be twenty-one years of age, and must not have Iiad a previous license re• yoked, or been convicted of an offence against the liquor laws or ordinances within a year of the.date of his application. The applicant must manage his place himself and for himself. JIe may not - have more than one license. He may not sell liquor in or next door to any theatre, or within 400 feet of a public school, or within 200 feet of a park or parkway. All this 11e must swear to, and agree that if he has sworn falsely iu any particular in his affidavit his license may be revoked. He must, together with his application and affidavit, also file a bond in $4,000, with two sure- ties, who shall not be on any simi- lar bond. • The license is for a fixed place as well as for a person, and carries farther conditions against Sundp Selling, gambling, and disorderly conduct on the premises, as well as agaivat selling to minors, or to pubs lie school pupils or to drunkards. The applicant goes before they City Clerk, pays a fee of one dollar, and registers his application and bond. If it appears that his case comes within the requirements, and his propoRed saloon is to be within the patrol district, the application is published once a week for two weeks in the official newspaper of the city. If any citizen then protests against the granting of the license, a hearing is had before the City Council. If the license is granted, it iii not assignable to any other person, though the executor or administra- tor of a deceased licensee may carry on the business under the license: It is not transferable to any other other place, though the alteration of the• neighborhood around the saloon may make it necessary for the city to grant a permit for re- moval. In case a license is revoked by the, Mayor or City Council "for reasons authorized or required by the laws of the State," then the liquor-sellor shall have refunded to him "a sum proportional to one-half the sutra paid for such license for the unexpired term thereof." But if the courts order the license revoked, tirealealarsloseasall-thatsheshauspaid. The courts may order a license re— voked on the first conviction for a breach of the law. On a second conviction they must revoke it.— From "Western Modes of City Man- agement," by JULIAN RALPH, in Iles per's Magazine for April. THE COLUMBUS OF HISTORY HOW HIS CI'IARACTER APPEARS UNDER T1IE SEARCII-LIGHT Or MODERN INVESTIGATION. The Columbus of history is one of its least pleasing characters. He was evidently a sea -rover and a buccaneer. He sold his services to Rene of Anjou or Charles of France indifferently. A rude uns educated seaman, leo joined in the barbarous Bea -fight off St. Vincent, and aided in the massacre of honest traders and useful men. Time somewhat softened itis harsher tcaits, but his early impulses never left him. He became familiar with the slave -trade in Portugal, and intro- duced it to the. New World. He treated the natives of the new land with pitiless severity. He threw them into chitins, cut off their hands and feet, or sold them as cannibals to misery and death. He probably invented the fiction of Caribs only to destroy them. Las Cases thought that the judgments of Heaven had fallen upon the merciless discoverer. In almost every trait of moral ex. cellence Columbus seems equally wanting. To the Spanish settlers in Hispaniola he was a hated tyrant, a crud usurper. He threw Moxica over the walls of his fort with his own hands, and spurned him as he fell. Hie victimi3, hung by the neok, correspondence with Gent& • ,His ingratitude to the Pinzons, his be.. falsehoods, his fierce bursts tli rage, his avarice, bio revenge, his wild ambitio I, his pious frauds, his fan. atical faith, can never be forgotten ; they may be forgi-ven, fierce, severe, the features of Col. unabus look down upon us over the flight of four centuries, the symbol of his cruel age. Columbus found the nativea of America full of the patoeion for gold. The glittering particlee had for thein an irresistible attraction, 88 10 SO trimly of what are called the educst- od races. They searched in the rivers and sands for gold, and when they had found it hung it in.their ears and noses. Souvinies the more highly cultivated beat it into plates, which they fastened around their necks. It was their chief and almoat only ornament, almoet their only dress ; they used, too, paint, feathers, and strings of pearls. The universality of this strange passion for the ductile metal in civilized and savage man is without an explana- tion ; it is natural. We are told that there are ants that heap to- gether •glittering particles of preci- oua or colored stones ; it is their in, stinct. In Columbus the passion raged with a violence Held= known. He dreamed • of golden palaces, heaps of treasure, and mines teem- ing with endless wealth. His cry was everwherte for gold. Every moment, in his fierce avarice he would faney himself on the 1;rink of boundless opulence . he was al- way.s about to seize the treasures of the East painted by Marco Polo and Mandeville. "Gold." he wrote to king and queen, "is the most valor - able thing in the world ; it rescues souls from purgatory and restores them to the joys of paradiee." It was something of his early pirate life that stirred him in his plans of discovery. He was always the buccaneer ; he was always a alave-trader. Ile selected the port of Navidad because it seemed a con- venient harbor for slaveships. made slaves wherever he went. In his fierce avarice, when. he found the naked Indians had little gold, he proposed to sell them, and thus establish a wide source of profit. Gold lie must must make by some means. He urged upon the king and queen his infamous project. They seemed at first to disapprove, and afterward countenanced it. They could scarcely fail to see that hunting the helpless natives through the islands and the continent to sell them into slavery was not a Christ - like trade. They gently rebuked the discover, but soon after we find them_ Imisli,ng..,kin_kkeirApacH„ttir„, "Let ftim be informed," thes wrote "of what has transpired respecting the cannibals that came to Spain. He has done well," etc. Soon every Spaniard who sailed te Amer, ice became a slave -trader. Ojeda and Americans Vespucius filled their ships with "eaonibals," and the bro- thers of Columbue followed the ex- ample of the admiral. A boendless horror settled upon the new-aliscov- ered lands. Las Cases thought the sickness and pains that fell upon Columbus a judgment for the woes lie had inflicted upon the helpless Indians.--Frern "The Mystery of Col Umbus,', by EUGENE LAWRENCE, in Harper's Magazine for April. THE FISHERIES OF LAKE SUPERIOR. At little Port Arthur alone the figures of the fishing industry for the market are astonishing. In 1888 the fishermen there caught 500,000 pounds of white Bah, 360,000 pounds of lake trout, 48,000 pounds of sturgeon, 90,000 pounds of pickerel, and 30,000 pounds of other fish, or more than a million pounds in all. They did this with an investment of $3,800 in boats and $10,000 in gill and pound nets. This yield nearly all went to a Chicago packing corn - patty, and it is in the main Chicago and Cleveland capital that is con- trolling the lake's fisheries. The white fish is, in the opinion of most gourmets, the moot delicious fish known to Americans. The lake trout are mere food. I am told that they are rather related to the char than to the salmon. They are pes culiar to our inland oysters. They average five to ten pounds in Vreigbt, and yea grow to weigh 120 pounds ; but whatever their weight be, it is a mere pressure of hard dry flesh, calculated only to appease hunger. --From "Brother to the Sea," by JULIAN RALPH, in Harper's Maga-. zine for April. 0H BETTER, Torso Xn14 17.47V -0-04:X T./027 - organ(' A440,1v0401:0, 9917940, P1/40.40.4*,qi4cr 041/ AaP. trio SCOTT Of Pure Cod' Liver OH and —Of Lime mad Sedi107 IT 115 A.LMOST P.I.L..4TAIE FLEW PRODUCED, It is used .mart endorsed' by Physicians. Avoid 011 imitations -or substitutions. Sold by ,ull Druggists 'at lT0e. arta $1.01% 8001T 40 ,13 0 IFNE, A SURE CURE INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS, SICK HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS. THEY ARE M1LD,THOROUGH AND PROMPT IN ACTION. AND FORM A VALUABLE AID TO BURDOCK SLOOP SITTERS IN THE TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC AN D OBSTINATE DISEASES. Da. HIINPIIILICYS' SPECIFICS e-sselentificallyand carefully prepared prescriptions; used for many years in private practice with success,and for over thirty years used by the people. Every single spa - Wile Is a special cure tor the disease named. • These Specifics cure without drugging, Pure' ing or reducing the system, and are -in feet and deed the sovereign remedies of theWorld. LIST OF PRINCIPAL NOS. CERES. PRICFS. 1 Itovers, Congestion, inflammation— 11 1 1Vorms Worm Fever, Worm Colic.. Dysenterpi Griping*, Bilious Colic.— i "Cholera orhus, vomiting 1 Coughs, o d, Bronchitis 12 Illtites, too Profuse Periods 2 11 'rows, Cough, Difficult Breathing.— 9 1 sit Rheum, Erysipelas, Eruptions. '2' I Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains2 1 Fever and Ague, Chills, htalaria 17 l'il0Se Blind or Bieeding 19 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head 20 Whooping COUSL, Violent Coughs 24 General Debility,PhysicalWeakness 27 Kidney Disease 28 Nervous Debility ell li Sold by Druggiete, or tient postpaid on receipt of price. Dn. HOMPOSSYS' MANIVS, (141 pages) richly bound in cloth and gold, MA ILYD F11100. k 113 William -St., NowYork. nimmirmeamismiess WELLS & RICHARDSON Co. Agents THE 11Elf TO HEALTH. 111 6. UnIOCkS all 11,c Clegro. 1.t t or. toe' Accretions ; at the saint; tit I C. cosssesise A.cidity of the Stomach, cur:ng Dryness of the Skin., Drc-, 1.1)iesebsnoif:i;sion, Jaun clice. Sart P.12,2lITH, the Heart, Nervousness aad aeneral Ery4ipolas, Scrofula, Fluttering of all these and many other sin.d. 'ar nlaints yield to the haiipv influence er BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. • E"ansr..le Bottles 10c ;Regular size $1. For sale by all dealers. le. KILBURN CO., Proprietors, Toronto E-4 tu tf1 ccs —1N TN two trora 19, •