HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-04-03, Page 2e
l't
Dr Tl. r ire mist
o• ether edicine
SO THOROUGH AS
R' H
Sarsea
AyERo parlll�.
Statement of a Weil Known Doctor
"No outer blonde medicine that 1 have
ever used and I have tried them all, is so
thorough In its action, and effects so many
��Inermnaueut cures Las Ayer's Sarsaparilla,"—
] r. N. P. 51.nuXnLL, Augusta, Me.
r , ij rsa ar lia
•��� Of S ®t�19
Admitted at the World's Fair.
dyer's Palls for liver and bowels.
he Huron News -Record
1 25 a Year -81.00 in Advance.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3t'd, I8h5.
The ;boy For He.
His cap is old, but his hair is gold,
And his face ns clear as the sky ;
Ahd whoever he meets on lane or
Street s,
He looks hila straight in the eye,
_ With a fearless pride that has naught
to hide.
Though he bows like a little knight,
Quite debonair, to a Iady fair,
With a'smile that is swift as light.
Ddes‘his mother call ? Not kite or ball,
Or_ the prettiest game can stay
His eager feet as he hastens to greet
Whatever she means to say ;
And• hie teachers depend on the little
friend,
At school at his place at nine,
With his lessons learned and his good
marks earned,
All ready to toe the line.
I wonder if yon have seen him, too,
This boy who is not too big
Por a morning kiss from his mother
and sis ;
Who isn't a hit of a prig,
But•gentle and strong, the whole day
long
J3.AO Merry as a boy can be
,gentleman, dears, in coming years,
And at present the .h6y for we.
—Harper's Young People.
A YOUNG- LAD
AND
HIS FAITHFUL F ,TEND.
'''Ern est McGregor, of Whitby, Ont.,
Gives an Account of His Experience
—Cured of Per"sistent Dyspepsia
by B. B. S.
WORST KIND OF DYSPEPSIA.
'GENTLEMEN,—I write to inform you
U-4 for years I had been troubled with
DfhpepsUt, and having tried other
rnoaicmes which entirely failed, I at
last.found relief and cure in Burdock
.Blond Bitters, Of which I took two
bottles, the result being a perfect cure.
Although only a young lad I had been
tronblecl with Dyspepsia for four Or
five, years, hut I can say now that B.
B. B. does its work faithfully in the
worst kind of Dyspepsia, and has
proved itself the only eure for ins.
ERNEST lUCGREGOR,
Whitby Ont.
---,ma•. ��_
Cannot Do Both.
There is just a little inconsistency in
the Liberal declaration that the Na-
tional Policy is the cause of a decline
In trade and of the growing wealth of
mangfacturers. If trade declines and
stagnation results, it is difficult to see
the benefit to the manufacturer, as
'well as to any one else.
It is a pity the Mail and Empire
could not travel Mr. Mercier's bones
AS a campaign exhibit.—The Globe.
As well that as the Riel scaffold.
DON'T PUT IT OFF.
Die necessity of a spring medicine is
universally admitted. This is the hast
'tune of year in which to purify the
hlodd, to restore the lost appetite, and
to build up the entire system, as the
'body is now peculiarly susceptible to
-benefit from medicine. The great
..popularity attained by Hood's Sar•sa-
parilla, owing to its real merit and its
remarkable success, has eetttblished it
es the very best medicine to take in
• the spring. It cures scrofula, salt dental
rheum, and all. !minors, biliousness,
dyspepsia, headache, kidney and liver ahem
complaints, ca.tarrah, and all affections
caused or promoted by low state of
the a stem or impure blood. Don't
put it off, but take Hood's Sarsaparilla
ntow. It will do voi. good.
W. B. Clark, a prisoner in the King-
'''. Ston Penitentiary Hospital, has welt-
telta' a letter to High Constable Schram
ski �iyltltth he professes to tell how the
Deirflelly' tragedy in Diddulph wars tenttm
e' fected, together with the names or l of the
',the ierncleret's, who were fourteen in of thes
All. Ile is evidently a crank. - -Free
.Press, troll.
There
AS OLD AS ANTIQUITY. 1 existin
Either ti' ae4utted taint or heredity instant
Anse, Old )nes Scrofula and Consume duced
do i" Mist be faced generation after to that
ries` tine ; bi
tL 1t 'n!
1 may ll meet tai S them hen
1
With tlttt Odds in your favor by the of a Got
Jielp of Stotts Emulsion. I change
F; 449J&VIP!
A)`t EX'tw:ANI ipkri QANNor
' l.AURIER'S PLATFORM.
atraltrltt, Mows. Alnnngnacru,nt The
Shite netting—Tbonaand, 1f Pitt 7yotiow—
r♦ by a I'rowlneut Ottawa Lawyer Lau -
not Support ;1;r. Laurier.
Mt:. A. F. McIntyre, the eminent law-
yer and Q.C., who was only a few years
ago the Grit candidate in Ottawa, being
asked in Montreal the other day if he
was, as reported, notin accord with Mr.
Laurier's policy, replied to the Tho Press
correspondent as follows. The article
appears in The, Daily Free Press, of
Mart•h 13th.
"Well, yes ; it is the fact. I a
in accord with the Federal party
issues oft which the corning el
will be fought. It would be n
short of a calamity if the people
endorse Mr. Laurier's trade policy
an
T,
.: ion,„ work tortrt ' lrfli Play` tI
ohould be one Ir;►t9 Weak *44' ,041414
RG Pi +l'xlRiclple 4t $'I4 : trine, la; '
not
on the
ections try, era policy of expansion rather than
othing contraction, of expenditure at the pres-
should eat time, and under the pre-
-free sent circumstances, I have faith in
pot fee rho peoptel. of okb fr eorilt �
4 lttx44 yi ew:
"WWI, it x, Melntyre,li t4i4 thei Preas
repreaeftn,tive, "you don't grout tri !e
in i ccort1 with Ur. Laurier'8 ,p01.
icy en the crucial questions of the. caata-
pal n•"
" ant sorry tq say. that 'that is the
fact. It is a wrench for any maty to
divide from bis old friends; but, believ-
ing they aro in error, I am compelled
to differ with thorn an this occasion. I
may say, as is known to Mr. Laurier
and some of the other of the leaders, for
whose ability I have very great respect,
I have been differing with them on im-
portant question for some years. Every
party loses friends and obtain recruits.
1 must follow my convictions—whether
they he right or wrong. I am in favor
of a policy that will give work to our
people and development to the couu-
trade as it is in England—and the
tructiou of every vestige of prote
iu the Graff. Nothing but the ra
want of consideration on the
of the people can induce the
endorso this view. The mer„
gestion of such a policy in
event of a so called Liberal success
is at the present time disturbing the
trade of the country. How much more
will it disturb and unsettle trade if, upon
des-
ction
nkest
part
Canada, and believe it will tomo out of
the existing world's trouble increased
in strength, relatively to the strength
of other countries. Mr. Laurier and
his friends would appear to be in favor
of the Gbit e411t'vreeUen dist nailttivaiegl,
t"may Pa�nx�ttltrl m IgE` of tlk4 Dop, 4A:
aa)teat thealgrlctlt>E11r rohliIt3 Af ' 'e t
Nein tit the no .t: PiNll)linlelx 1114tiott,
Out v110 ie Pateenh to thAeo U We8t
Kentr'1lov
Another designee.
•
Tho riding' is held by a Tor4nto.miiier,
ttu.'ultraRtadlcit� in everything else,
but -rt preeounced protectionist to the
extent of one dollar a barrel duty on his
flour. And so he is not to be opposed
by a Patron • because, forsooth, as a
prominent member of the organization
said to me the other day, "Patroriism
and Liberalism aro identical ire Domin-
ion politics." Here, in a county where
a Patron would be certain of election,
no Patron is to be brought out because
the riding is held by a Grit, Let us
look for a moment at how matters stand
in South Essex,
Now South Essex.
Hero the ultra -Grit candidate has not
the ghost of a chance as against the
popular Dr. King, and what are the ac-
tions of the Patrons in this case ? At
the last local election a Patron candi-
date was put in the fluid, and I don't be•
lieve he polled enough votes to redeem
his deposit, were it a Dominion contest.
In one of the polling sub divisions,
where the organization numbered some
nindr. ds, the Patron candidate got
only fourteen votes, and a baker's dozen
of these were Conservatives. But still,
n the lace of the overwhelming defeat
my a few months since, the Patrons
ave put a candidate in the fief(' for
m to ' of 'Little Canada' and itelepoo fence. I ; i
sug– I am a believer in Greater Ca::ada'and
the I Greater Britain. The Little England
a Liberal victory, it should be p
operation? I am a believer in a
so adjusted that the raw materials
other things that we do not produce
come in free, and that the taxes sha
levied on the articles we mannfact
thus giving incidental protection to
manufactures and work to our pet
This was the policy inaugurated b
Alexander Galt and Sir Francis Hill
two of the ablest financiers it will
confessed that Canada has.had, and
has been sought to be continued, par-
ticularly in the readjustment of the
tariff, by Mr. Foster.- We can rely upon
internal competition lowering the prices
of the manufactured article, as has been
found in the United States and here.
Each year the competition has been
bettering the quality and reducing the
price of the manufactured articles of
Canada. This is indisputable. I do not
believe in giving our markets, manu-
facturing.and agricultural, to the Am-
ericans and other foreign nations and
getting nothing in return."
The Question of Economy.
party, great as were its leaders. is a ' 1
thing of the past. and the party of Lit- °
tlo Canada cannot hope to have a large 1 h
success. The times and that party are I t
lit in , out of joint. This is conspicuously the I 13
tariff ; age of union and progress. In the 'att-
end guage of Lord Rosebery, 'The British . a
shall I Empire is the greatest instrumentality I
11 be for good the world has ever seen,' Let ,
ere, ( us maintain it. In my opinion Mr. 1
our Laurier and his friends must have a I it
11)10. I larger faith in Canada, a larger desire b
c Sir 1 for its rapid development, a larger ap- a
cks, predation of the glory and inestimable n
be ' advantages of a continued and closer d
that connection with the Empire, before the ti
Canadian people are likely to entrust s
them with the admindstsation of af-
fairs. " fe
fr
FARMER LAURiER'S TARIFF FREAK, Al
a
81)
ho Dominion election, a life long Con
ervative, I am told, brought out by Cr(
wirepullurs to split the COOSsrVat1ve vet
lid do teat Dr. King. Surely such shal
ow trickery will no longer deceive the
iberal•Conservative electors. Surely
n a coi-,test like the corning one, in
-hich our very national existence will
o at stnkc, Conservatives cannot go
stray. Surely Conservatives are not
ow going to assist in tearing up the
eep lom;dation-stones of our young tut -
()minty that that noble old hero, whore
acred dust now reposes in Catat aqui,
pent his life in laying and died in Be-
nding. With his holy urn to protect
om desecration, with the memory of
tat noble soul who, through forty dark
nd stormy years, led his people through
desert to the land of promise, and who
nk lifeless into bus country's arms
st as the vista of a glorious national-
ity broke upon his vision, the great alai
gond principles of Conservatism can-
not fail."
t
C
Po
ex
hi
du
ch
in
rie
mo
eh
ke
aK
the
me
to
tim
shit
is
gui
of
liam
'a
fine
an
the
leve
not
tion
ours
ran,
ing
This
Iffe
ed r
was
a err
stupi
ing
expe
furth
has
confl
bank
fessio
con vc
Thes
the c
econo
which
ed tl
Caned
ment
"What do you think of the Libe
1icy with regard to the reduction
penditure ?"
"I do not see that Mr. Laurier a
s friends could make any sensible r
ction in expenditure. The fix
arges must remain, and public wog
course of construction must be ca
d out, and my opinion is that,
ney is cheap, the Governme
ould, if necessary, go into the ma
t and borrow what is requisito, an
times aro chill push the work upo
it hands with vigor, giving employ
nt to our people, and enabling the
tide over the hard times. The goo
es will come again, but we cat=t our eyes to the fact that the wort
going through what that distin
shed man, Mr. Balfour, the leads
the Opposition in the British Parent, expressed the ,other day
commercial, agricultural, and
ncial crisis,' I might almost say
industrial revolution. Certainly
world is going through such a
]ling and reduction of values as has
been witnessed in mane genera
s. We in Canada can only adjust
elves to the situation as best we
and we have not made a bad show.
in our capacity to do so so far.
is Piot a time, in my mind, for tar-
xperiments. Abe Lincoln express -
properly when he stated that it
a poor time to swap horses crossing
earn, and if our people should be so
d as to support a policy at the com-
election as would be absolutely an
rimental one they will see such
er drop in values as this country
never experienced, This, I feel
dent, is the opinion of the leading
ers, merchants, farmers, and pro -
nal men—in fact of all who are
rsant with economical gnrstioni:
e people know that the tariff is not
ause of the depression, but the
mical changes—the rapidity with
all countries aro being develop -
trough steam and telegraphy,
a has had a wonderful develop.
and prosperity under an inchprotection tariff. Let us not
pt to disturb it. Sir Oliver Mowat;
Mr. Blair, the Premier of New Bruns-
wick ; Mr. Fielding, the Premier of
Nova Scotia ; Mr. Peters, the Premier
of Prince Edward Island ; and even Mr.
Greenway, the Premier of Manitoba,
have in the speeches from the throne to
the several Legislatures of which they
are leaders, during this very year, borne
ony to the prosperous condition
several provinces. The opinion s
o gentlemen is worth considers- t
They know whereof they speak.
are a few features in which the
g tariff might he altered, for d
e the tax on iron might be re-
or abolished, and the protection ' t
industry he given in the shape 0
tug only. But with a few minor!
s the tariff will be bettor left
ral
of
nd
s-
ed
ks
r -
as
nt
r-
d
n
•
m
d
d
r
��'�9►t „auto 1111
aa(h)ll •s•
Advance Agent Foster, of the Old
Policy Stow—Well, I own up when I'm
licked. The old N. P. elephant don't
cut any figure 'longside that animal.
A DEAL DECLARED,
Bow the Patrons are Work/az Their
Cunning scheme in western
Ontario.
A gentleman named Percy A. Gahan
writes from Wheatley to The Mail
and Empire as follows :
"Patronism is just now being worked
by the Patron leaders for all that it con-
tains to secure a Grit majority at Ottawa
and the leaders of the organization
are winking at the game, hoping to es-
cape detection until too late to save the
country.
Some Instance'*.
A few instances are quite sufficient t
expose this contemptible dod;e and pu
every Conservative Patron upon hi
guard. hers in West Kent, previou
to the last local election, Mr. Jame
Clancy, a farmer, a Patron, and one o
the cleverest members of the Legisla
ture, held the riding ; but ho was a
Conservative, and so not eligible for
Patron support. An uncompromising
Grit, and a man who was not even a
member of the association at the time,
was nominated by the Patrons. The
Grit coevention, a day or two
later, ratified the Patron nomina-
tion, and made the Patron candidate
its own. Tho result wart the
Liberal -Conservative Patrons, failing to
e0 the trick, conscientiously supported
he Grit candidate, believing him to bo
what ho professed he was, and Mr.
Clancy was defeated by some six bun.
red. But the Liberal -Conservative
Patrons of West Kent must have had
he scales removed from their eyes the
Cher day, when, with bare -faced shame-
ossness, the professed Patron member
for West Kent appeared on the platform
J
,. arae kehe. 4.
ju
ANSWERS FOR THE ANXIOUS.
i1AS TN E
NATIONAL.
POLICY
MADE "You t4t1 ?
Cho Club e
0
Western American Farmer—Waal,
no, mister, can't save it is. Y' see the
dere thing purty much shut us Western
American farmers out of the Canady
market an' didn't give us a chance to
undersell the Cannel); farmers. I ain't
stuck on your National Policy myself.
The Canoes of IIrprcaision.
Of all the causes which have promoted
the agricultural depression, by far the
most important is the enormous increase
of the importations of wheat and other
provisions from abroad. This being
the case, no matter how bad the har-
vest, the price has not increased.—See
"Barker's Trade and Finance Annual,"
page 233.
"Great Britain," he said, "was the
oiily country where poor harvests did
not mean good prices. If there was
only a hundred bushels of grain raised
in ail Great Britain it would not be
worth more than as if there had been
40,000,000 bushels raised. "—Speech of
Mr. Lope (Gladstonian), 1898.
Took the Eusleai Route.
Jndge--You are charged with hog
stealing.
Prisoner—Yes, sah.
"Couldn't you find anything else to
do?"
Prisoner—Well, sah, I might er stole
a cow, but dey's mo' trouble to manage
den hogs is f—•Atlanta Constitution.
4
Combinpj Drill. &Broadcast Seeder, Single DriIls,Sing'1e Broadcast Seeder ,
There may be other Drills I But there is only Otte Hoosier 1 All others aro back numbers,
The proof is, there are more Hoosier Drills, and Seeders in use in
Canada to -day thah all other kinds combined.
No Purchaser Dissatisfied Yet! Why should they be, when they have got
THE GEST DRILL EVER MADE ? WE GUARANTEE THIS.
NOXON BROS. MFG. CO. L'T'D.,.INGE SOLL
T. T. l OL1;�t,lt , Agent, Setiforth. Ili, BBOS'4rlC' ONT.,
lYttq:ttit'fY, Ag4ut, Zurich:
851'4t C. Dt,tDILTON, Agent, Blyth.
EXM.EMBER ffi PARLIAMENr
REUBEN E. TRUAX
Litt:te4 .f4 Id !..
a w -moi 'r•! it. \t.
tft
Hon. Reuben E. Truax, one o
Canada's ablest thinkers and states
men, a man so highly esteemed
the people of his district that he wa
honored with a seat in Parliament
kindly furnishes us for publication
the following statement, which wil
be most welcome to the public
inasmuch as it is one in which all
will place implicit confidence. Mr.
Truax says:
"I have been for about ten years
very much troubled with Indigestion
and Dyspepsia, have tried a great
many different kinds of patent
medicines, and have been treated by
a number of physicians and found
no benefit from them. I was recom-
mended to try the Great South
American Nervine Tonic. I obtained
s bottle, and I must say I found very
great relief, and have since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
entirely free from Indigestion, and
would strongly recommend all my
fellow -sufferers from the disease to
give South American Nervine an
immediate trial. It will care you.
"REUBEN E. TRUAX,
" Walkerton, Ont,"
It has lately been discovered that
certain Nerve Centres, located near
the base of the brain, control and
supply the stomach with the neces-
sary nerve force to properly digest
the food. When these Nerve Oen-
•
f tree are in any way deranged the
- supply of nerve force is at once t
by diminished, and as a ,result the food
s taken into the stomach is only
, partially digested, and Chronic Indi-
gestion and Dyspepsia soon make
1 their appearance.
South American Nervine is so
prepared that it ants direotly on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure every
ease of Indigestion and Dyspepsia, '
and is an absolute specific for alt
nervous diseases and ailments,.
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build up the whole
system are wonderful in the extreme.
It cures the old, the young, and the
middle-aged. It is a great friend to
the aged and infirm, Do not neglect
to nee this precious boon ; if yon do,_,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restore you to health,
South Amerioan Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasant to the trig.
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this
great cure, because it will put the
bloom of freshness and beauty ape*
your lips and in your cheeks, and
quickly drive away your disabilities/
and weaknesses.
Dr. W. Washburn, of New
Richmond, Indiana, writes: "I have
used South American Nervine not
my family and prescribed it ia
my practice. It is s most excellent
remedy."
FOR SALE BY WATTS & CO„ (LINTON.
-- --—
A Itroiceu Promise. IIoncstl'•
Having used for a11 it was worth in
the London bye -election the promise to
establish a normal school in that city,
the Government now says it has no in-
tention of creating the institution.
This is a C11rin118 commentary on
the virtuous pretences of the Liberals
during the contest that they were
not using the protnise as a campaign
carol.
Grit eulogies of the United States in
the past have tended to drive out of !
Canada the people who might have i
helped the Opposition into nft'e if 1
they hod stayed at home, says the •
Berlin News.
The rapidity with which croup de-
velops calls for instant treatment ;
and yet few households are prepared
for its visits. An admirable remedy
for this disease is Ayer's Cherry Pee-
toral. It has saved hundreds of lives I
and should he in every home where
there are young children, I
"Does it, after all, pay to be honest?"
a disappointed young man writes.
No, my son, not if your honest for
pay. it doesen't. Net if you are honest
because you think it will pay; not if
you ere honest only because you ere
afraid to be a rogue; indeed, my dear
buy, it does not pay to be honest that
wiry. If yon can't he honest because
you hate a lie and scorn a mean ac-
tion, if you enn't he honest from prin-
ciple, be It 1aecat ; that's what you are olke
intended for, and you'll probably sue -
('00d at it. But you can't make any-
body believe in honesty that is bought
and sold like merchandise.--Bnr'1:ngton
Hawkeye.
1 I aar.IRr IN SIV Her1a8.—DlntresRing Rhiney and
Bladder di.00Re, relieved 1n Rix hems be the "NEW
°env'r SUUT,I ANEHIOAN IiInNRo Cong." Thfa now
remedy 1a n great Rnrpr)R0 and deiight to phyeiciauR
on aoconnt or lOR oxacoding promptncoR In rolievtng
phi', In the brat'der, kidney,, hack nn•i ovary part n
th. urinary panRRgen in mnio or female. It relieve
retention of water and pain In pa.eing Ita) t
Imodim
moR ,1
fnteh'. If yon wont quick relief and vire EMI if
our remedy. Soli by Watts&Co, Druggist,,.
. Even the funny man sometimes gets
oat of humor.
0