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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1892-08-31, Page 3____: _ A WOMAN'S CAPRICE. 4.00..arOlaintlrem *lttoli rnany uupfer W, o 1 o �.d ft1 , av►lr ±entire y ttr @, Etta canoe Ia► indigestion .arid: a sluggish liver, the Mira lar whit* is 'retatktI7 loand in the aAe etArer't! P,iilla. • ''X have IOWA that ler slok betldeehe, alauged by d,,4isoxdered condition of the 'etorntlehr A er'a Pills are the moat re. liable •remedy."--Samnei o. Bradburn, •Witlibingtgn, Masa. a'Affer ,the use of Ayer'a Pills for 'gnlany years, in, my practice and family, Hoon netitled,Inr,aaying that they are an eel crit cat]tlartio an liver medicine—. laruststiltingq all the claims ►nade forthem." --W; A, Wostfall, M. D.: V. P. Austin dF N. W. Railway Co,, Burnet, Texas. "'•ktyolr'a 'Pins are the best 1110(1/01110ktiow,u to lite for regulating the bowels, '•filtd /Or s11 diseaaea caused by a dis. , ordered Atm/nigh and liver. I suffered tor over three years from headache, in. digestion, and constipation. 1 had no appetites and wad weak and nervous host of the time. By using three boxes of Ayer's Pills, and at the same time ' ,dietinggmyself, I was comrlletely cured." .� 7?liiiip Lockwood, Topeka, llamas. "I was troubled for years with indi. gestion, constipation and headache. .A leve boxes of Ayer's Pills, used in small daily doses, restored me to health. The are prompt and effeetive.' —W.II. Strout, Meadville, Pa. Ayer's Pills, Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masai gold by all Druggists and Dealers In ifsdlolnq .The Huron News -Record 1.50 a Year -51.25 in Advance. Wednesday August 31st, 1892 SEAFORTIH IN THE SWIM. A short season of wedded bliss was that enjoyed by Mre. Elizabeth Sharkey Morris, of Seaforth. She is twenty nine, and on May 26 last became the wife of William M: Morris, of Seaforth. Morris was a widowei a second time when he married her, and is slightly passed middle age. Mas.. Morris did not get along well with her husband from the start and left his house on August 4 last and went to Toronto. Site is living at 37 Simcoe street, and in her behalf F. J. Roche, barrister, has isaued a writ for alimony. Mr. Roche applied last week to Chief Justice Galt for a cap ias to arrest Morris, who had announced his intention of going to New York. The Chief Justice agreed to grant the copies, but wanted to fix hail at .$400, while the plaintiff's solicitor asked $700. The arrest has not bean made pending the settlement of his point by Justice MacMalion hief Justice Galt. r tis hase bo n turning n hispro- perty r g P 0 - perty at Seaforth into cash, and wrote a spirited letter to his wife the other day informing her that he would go to New York right away ,and take his money along. Thus he gave the other side the informa- tion necessary for taking out the capias. By another coincidence Morris arrived in town and registered at one of the hotels. The plaintiff's solicitor immediately engaged a sheriff's officer to shadow liim until the capias was issued. In her affidavit Mrs. Morrie alleges harshness against her hus— band and the refusing of money to buy .wearing apparel and violent conduct at timer]. He is worth considerable money. THE CANAL QUESTION. HON. JOHN HAGGART ON THE SITUA TION. Very little except President Har- rison's canal proclamation is discuss- ed at Ottawa. The Cabinet enret last Tuesday, but the canal dispute was not discussed, in the absence of the leading members of the Ministry. "My own opinion is," said _Hon, John Haggett, Minister of Rail ways and Canals, that the policy of the Government will be to place the Canadian shippers on the same footing as the American shippers, even if they have to recoup them 'out of the public treasury. I have , /.. heard nothing of the proclamation beyond what I have seen in the press. I see that the President has fixed the tolls at 20 cents—the same as is now placed on the Welland— and that they will only remain in effect, during the time we are con• tinuing the alleged- discrimination. Lon before this we saw that it was in interest to push ahead the -Soo nal so as to have a line of navi on between theg reatlakes and ter own territory. Instruc- tions have been given out to carry y on'and complete the work as soon as possible. Work will be carried on night and day till that is accom- plished. An increased number of men will be engaged, and work twill be maintained summer and winter ':'until the job is finished. I think that by the end of next summer we will have a system of navigation of our own connecting Lake Superior '' far better than the Americans. 'We pwill have a lock 900 feet long and :: 00 feet wide, which can hold a wht)le tow, and make lockages in one half the time it can uow be galls on the American side." fA tbrllitag story Glttq, A Ata and death race with grean•e .ed vtalVS ever nertihe plains. The treaty otgh ` to m"d pplugging of itis harass, the howling G 4 wolves, 4u to graphically Sot out by @ muster hand. Along with these events the writer keeps up a cunning photograph of the mental emotion of the ow:wauts of the sleigh as it is carried along in its destruotive course. The tale hinge) en the cvtprice eta. woman end shows how a toelish whin east her a brave man's love.] . Two men and a woman" a great baronial repro, furnished half in the English, half in the Oriental style; a wide, low divan, covered with rich brocade and heall.tad with Bratty cuehions ; deeriikina everywhere—on the floor, the furniture, the tow, easy, chairs; a buffet crowded with ntaasive silver; a huge stove of tiles and Dutch faience ; beside it a square table covered with a cloth, upon which steams always the inevitable samurai surrotuided by transparent cups and crystal g}asaos in ]solders of metal filagree; the walls ]lung with draperies of dark red vel- vet', faded pastels and photographs, and a fox hunt in oils. One of the men, wearing a brown velvet jauket and his feet in soft shoes, leans back in a deep easy chair reading a newspaper. His hair has begun to whiten, but his brows are as block as his oyes, and his expression s One of bored weariness. The other—e Dung 'lieutenant in undress uniform, his open coat slowing beneath it a crimson silk shirt—paces back and forth with a step rc,ynler and firm. He is tall and robust with blonde hair and mustache, and a frank amile on his somewhat full lips. The lady --young also and fair and deli- cate, her golden hair coiled in a loose knot on her neck—reclines on the divan. She is in dark blips, her waist clasped by a silver bolt studded with turquois, her slim, white wrist, circled by a narrow hand of plain, dull gold. Her eyes bold and laughing, dilate from time to time with those fleeting gleams and shadow's peculiar to the eyes of the feline race. Indolent and Languid in repose, nervous and feverishly alive at the slightest tnoveinent, she is a singular mix. titre of vivaeity and indifference, of softness and hardness, the scarlet curve of her rose red lips announcing clearly an indomitable will. Out of doors it is a night of clear metallic whiteness, the hoar frost tracing even the window panes with fantastic flowers. Within all is warm and snug—a balmy atmosphere impregnated with tea fumes, tobacco and that subtle odor of tanned skins, the perfume of Russian leather. The silence of the room for the moment is broken only by the rustle of the paper and the lieutenant's measured tread. Pres- ently the lady yawns, re -arranges her stately cushions and begins to sip from the frail �'�� Japanese cup the smoking amber fluid. The lieutenant turns, a flame like a ray of sun- stat light in a dark place in his brown eyes, and bye throws himself at her feet. She answers bon the gay, caressing glance with a coquettish dui pout and a movement of the arta that the makes the bracelet at her wrist ring like a ton belL II "Prince," site says suddenly, addressing lTim the reader in the chair by the smoking same over, "what are wo going to do to -morrow ? What are your plas for us, prince, tell us ?" nevertheless, I A r et yen t give, uv Wel, k „ ' fancy, It is very tempting, 1 know, for a Irimi