HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-09-25, Page 2•
sta
Charlet; H..EutoAingi.
Sisk Hadache
CURED PERMANENTLY
Il S' TAXING
<, 9LIs
F'
" I was troubled n long time with sick
headache, 1 tr•l.`dagood man' remedies
reoeruTIOtided for this cornlllaInt; Lut 11
was aut. until I
Began taking Ayer's Pills
that I received permanent benefit. A
single box of these pills freed me horn
heaJ:tches, and I am now a well man."
—C. 11. Ilu'rcuHNGO, East A- .aro,
Aseaarded 11?cial atWortd'f Fair
,ivte:r's Sarsaparilla is t:ee Be`st.
The Huron News-Recoda
1 15 a Year—$1.00 in Advance.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th, 1895.
WAS A PflTIENT
In St, Joseph's Hospital,
Hamilton, Ont,
The Doctors Said a Surgical
Operation Was Necessary
to Effect a Cure.
THE LADY LEFT HOSPI-
TAL AND DOCTORS.
She Uses Paine's Celery
Cgmpound and is
Cured.
Another wonderful, almost miracu-
lous, cure to report. As usual, the
atllicated one is saved by the use of
Paine's Celery Compound.
Mrs. Annie Saunders, the cured lady,
lives in Bracondale, a pleasant suburb
of Toronto. Her sufferings from a
trouble common to many women,
were terrible, and the wonder is that
she now lives. To her, medical and
hospital treatment proved of no avail.
At a critical juncture, the doctors
deemed) an operation imperatively ne-
cessary.
Mrs. Saunders would not sanction
the proposed operations; she decided
to try a medicine that had cured thous-
ands ; she had faith in its wondrous
powers to make her a new woman.
Paine's Celery Compound was her
chosen agent ; she used it, and thanks
Pro vidt.i ' for the happy change effect-
ed. She writes as follows regarding
her cure :--
"It is with much pleasure that I
testify to the value of your wonderful
Paine's Celery Compound. I was a
great sufferer from severe attacks of
neuralgia in the left ovary. At times
the attacks were so acute that I
thought I would lose my reason.
"Several doctors treated me, and I
was a patient in St. Joseph's Hospital,
Hamilton. I obtained no relief from
medical treatment. rhe doctors said
unless I had the ovary takeii away 1
&mild not, he cured.
"Instead of submitting to the opera-
tion, I used Paine's Celery Compound,
and I am thankful your valuable medi-
cine cured me. I feel like a new wo-
man, and I would like all sufferers to
know just what this great medicine
has done for me."
A deacon went to his minister, and,
professing to speak the sentiments of
the congregation, began to complain
of his style of preaching. "I do not
say these things, for myself," he added.
"I am not at all dissatisfied ; hut the
people are very uneasy, and I am afraid
we shall have trouble." ''How is it,"
inquired the pastor, "that you hear all
these complaints? No other member
of the Churkh seems to he so familiar
with them as you are." "0," said the
deacon, "they all know that I am On
terms of intimacy with you, and they
make a°tunnel into which they pour
every thing they wish you to hear."
"Yes," replied the pastor, "and it is
because you are a funnel that they
use you as such."—Watchman (Bap-
tist.)
PECULIAR TO ITSELF.
.Hood's Sarsaparilla is peculiar to it-`
self, in a strictly medicinal sense, in
three important particulars, yiz : first,
in the combination of remedial agents
used ; second, in the proportion in
which they are tnixed ; third, in the
process by which the active curative
properties of the preparation ere secur-
ed. These three Important points
make Hood's Sarsaparilla peculiar in
its medicinal merit, as it accomplishes
cures hitherto unknown.
But it is not what we say but what
Hood's Sa saparilla does, that tells the
story. WhatpHood's Sarsaparilla has
done for others is reason for confidence
that it is the medicine for you.
Of Mn. Qre.latead•
000a la a'. argil ttrd, the Salto 'tsan11,
'o meditate on life and death,
With a' ceel well, 1l hive or bees;
A hermit's grot. below the trees.
Good Is an orehard; very good,
Though one should wear no xrionkish
hood;
Right good w,hgll spring awakes her
flute,
And good in yellowing time of fruit,
Very good in the grass to `ale
And see the net work 'gainst the sky
A living lace of blue and green,
And boughs that let the gold between,
The bees are types of souls that dwell
With honey in a quiet cell.
The ripe fruit figures goldenly
The soul's peffeetion in God's eye.
Prayer and praise in a country home.
Honey and fruit; a man might come
Fed on such meats to walk abroad,
And in his orchard talk with God.
- —Pall Mall Budget.
LOVE IS BEST.
Dusk had come in the drawing -room,
but the lamps were not#yet lighted,
and the young women in the pictures-
que hats clustered round the little tea
table as closely as their huge sleeves
and illimitable skirts allowed and sip-
ped their Aesarz Pekoe between the
bursts of confidence proper to the half
hour. They had discussed the reign -
in,; tenor, touched delicately on the
last scandal, and were now busy with
Jack Ilodney's name and money. Alas!
he had no money. A decision of the
court had given his inheritance to
another heir, and then he had gone
into Wall street and been caught on
the wrong side of the market.
"I can't picture it," said Sally Little-
john, balancing her little gold spoon.
"What will become of him? The spoil-
ed darling! Why, he will have to gu
to work!"
"Work!" said Julia Montressor. "With
those aristocratic hands! What sort
of work?"
"Poor Jack!" said Arabella. "H0
wouldn't know himself out of his hab-
its. How is he to go without his
horses, his club, the opera, his London
tailor?"
"I don't believe he will try to," said
Felicia.
"Why, what will he do?"
"The only thlag he can
living."
"Oh, Bab! How horrid of you! Jack
Rodney, the dear, splendid fellow! Has
anyone seen him? I wonder what he
is doing now," said Sally.
"Walking on his uppers, don't they
call it?" said Bab.
"Such a shame! And he has lent
and given away a fortune to other
people. He never seemed to care about
money."
"No, indeed; I supose he has dropped
a modest fortune in cards before this."
"Why, Bab; with the poor fellow in
such a strait. He only does what all
the men do."
"And he does a great deal they don't
do," said Arabella. "Everyone else
was letting Will de Luys reap what he
sowed, but Jack made good all the
misappropriation—isn't that the next
term? And 1f It was Jack's yacht that
went cruising up the Mediterranean
and had Princes on board for guests,
it was his steamer that took those chil-
dren from Seven Alleys down the har-
bor every afternoon all the hot sum-
Iner--"
"You always had a specific talent
for turning a telescope on microscopic
subjects," said Bab.
"No, thanks. I don't drink another
drop of your tea, Felicia, though I de-
clare it does put the spirit in you,"
said Julia. "Well, just one cup—lemon
—yes," as Felicia's Jeweled hand sus-
pended the sugar. "What a perfectly
lovely cup. Did you know that one of
Dolly Van Ven's engagement cups was -
a tiny thing of gold, crusted with per•1-
dots?"
"NO!"
"And who do you think gave It to
her? Well, Jack Rodney. And she cut
him dead last week."
"She ought to," said Felicia, "for do-
ing such an utterly silly .thing." "
"I suppose he paid for it," said Bab.
"Where is Jack; does any one know?"
said Sally.
"Going to Texas ranching. He has
cleared up everything and starts at
once, someone said. He'd like it if it
were play, poor fellow!"
"Oh, it is really getting dark," ex-
claimed Arabella, as the maid stole
gently about the room, and great lamps
flared up like moons dressed in the
fashion. and she pulled on her ermine
cape. "We must be going. Why, Fe-
licia, how white you are! I should
think you were ready to faint your-
self."
"The sudden light," murmured Fe-
licia. And then she saw herself in the
glass, and passed her hand quickly
ever the shining olive eyes that glit-
tered there for half a moment like
points of steel.
Years afterward Felicia had only to
make that motion with her hand across
her eyes to call up the whole scene—
the lovely, lofty room, with its old
Lobelin hangings, the great mirrors
framed in alabaster, the moony lamps,
the high vases heaped with red roses,
the lounges heaped with silken cush-
ions, the Dresden and silver, the beau-
tiful girls getting into their princely
furs, talking scandal like dowagers,
her sister Bab's face with the scarlet
on both cheeks and her own, white
and angry, in the glass, as the marble
Diana behind her.
It was while the last dinner guests
that night were still saying tender
nothings to Bab, as she leaned against
the mantel and the low firelight played
on the satin sheen of her white gown
till she looked as if taking life from a
flame tinted jewel, that a slender shape
slipped swiftly down the steps and
passed along In the shadow of the
houses like herself. The girl had never
been in the street at night before with-
out attendance; every sound affrighted
her; she shrunk behind her veil from
every passerby. As soon as she had
turned the corner she brought into
plainer sight the parcel she carried,
that she might pass more readily as a
maid. A half hour's rapid walk and
she ran up some steps to make sure of
a number, rang the door bell, said
something explanatory to the man who
anewererd it, passed In and followed
him to the door up one flight of the
broad, low stairway there.
The room was in confusion. A leath-
er box and a portmanteau lay packed
and strapped by the door. There were
empty and discolored spaces on the
walls where pictures had hung, brack-
do—stop
et* had -held ' their` b1Af+ta 0l114 Brent:
Cal0.ea and raillnete bad stook. ' lit wail
Plaint to See: la its dismantled ata'tA'
that it bap; lately been a place„At ll -
airy,
A man sat tiler% with his head boW-
ea Upon his arida as they lay aloi;g,
the table, in an attitude of tittr do-
Lection. He did net leek up when the
door opened and elosed. But the giVi.
crossed the room quickly, and stand-
ing behind hint stopped with her arm
laid across his shoulder, He lifted his
head, looking straight before him. "I
suppose it is a dream,” he said, half to
himself. "If you are a dream—"
"I am nota dream, Jack," she sa!•d,
bending lower, her soft, cola cheek
touohirg his, "I am Felicia:"
There was a silence in heaven for tie
space of half an hour. For one mo-
ment there. was silence and rapture
here. And then the transfer men came
for the luggage, "And this parcel, too,"
said Felicia.
"Felicia!" he exclaimed.
"This parcel," she repeated, "You
know I can not go back after coming
here," she said, when they were alone
again. "I have burned my ships be-
hind me."
"Do you mean it?" he exclaimed toy-
ously. And then his tone fell. ".l
thought --oh, yes; certainly, I must
take you home before my train leaves.
"You will take me home? My home
is with you, Jack."
"You don't know what you say!" he
answered her. "C)h, no; .I cannot ac-
cept the sacrifice!" the eager gleam of
his eyes belying his words.
"Jack," she murmured, "the sacrifice
was in my coming here unasked."
"You knew I Loved you, you knew
I loved you! And then this crash
came—and there was nothing for me
to say—to you, who have lain in the
lilies and fed on the roses of life. I,
whose part was the husks!"
"Yes, I knew it, or I could not have
came," she replied as she moved away
from him, going about the room, and
pausing at the curtainless window
place where the moonlight lay upon
her pale and impassioned.
"Don't make it so hard for me!" he
exclaimed. "An hour ago it was the
darkness of despair. I was going to
bury myself in that ranch with its
bunch of cattle, the one thing left me,
as if it were a grave. Now I shall go
out in that new life radiant with this
happy knowledge and my hope. And
even if I should never prosper enough
to come for you," he said after a mo-
ment, taking a step towards her, "if
you should weary in ,the long waiting
and give some other man the love I
have won—well, I could bear it, per-
haps, remembering and living again In
this night's joy."
"Some other man!" she exclaimed.
unclasping his arms and looking for
the hat and jacket that had been
thrown aside. "I am going with you,
Jack. If you can live summer and
winter in a tent in Texas, I can, too.
I have the fit clothes in that parcel,
I have my jewe's there. They were
my mother's and are mine and I have
the right to take them, and their
price will hinder my being a burden."
"A burden! Oh, Felicia, if I might,
if I dared—"
"You will have to," said Felicia,
calmly. "The Church of Blessing is
around the corner, and the rector is
my friend. Jack, you made me pro-,
pose to you. I shouldn't think you
would make me ask you to marry me!"
Standing there in the moonlight ad-
justing her disordered hair, she was
too beautiful, too sweet and tender for
mortal man to resist.
"The train leaves at midnight," he
said. "There is but scant time—oh, my
darling, if you should repent—If! On,
you must, you will!"
"Never!" said Felicia. And then lir
to lip and heart to heart, they lingered
one moment before they went out to-,
gether.
It was a year afteryard that Felicia
sat one night in the refulgent moon-
light of the high prairie after a day
of heat, tempered by •the great Gulf
breeze blowing over 300 miles of flow-
n: =.
"Are you sorry I came?" she said.
"Are you?"
"Do you know, it seems to me pre•
clsely as 1f we were living on an out-
tkirt of the Holy Land with flocks
and herds, and the fig and the pome-
granate and the tender grape giving
a good smell?" she said.
"Precisely. And the flocks and herds
are prospering so that we shall have
to take counsel of the prophet. Wasn't
it Isaiah that said: 'Enlarge the place
of thy tent, and let them stretch forth
the curtains of thy habitation; spare
not, lengthen thy cords, strengthen
thy stakes? Col. Upshur lived in a
tent over yonder for a dozen years.
But we may build our house next year,
I ,fancy.
"With roses lying on the lower roof
and a night -blooming cereus clamber-
ing across the gallery, like some of the
houses in the old Spanish town there,
I don't know ,but I lice this better,
though—the lovely freedom of it. Oh,
we never lived before."
"Are you sure you never regret?" he
asked.
"Regret! Wel, I confess I should
like to have heard Bab read out our
marriage notice at breakfast—and Bab
so bitter the day before for fear of it!
But regret those days of littleness and
Idleness and gossip, the confining
clothes and cramping life!"
And the large, white, lamp -lit room,
sumptuous with mirrors and marble
and carvings and gildings, with
bronzes and paintings, with priceless
rugs and lounges, with its voluptuous
roses and great vases hung fo- a mo-
ment before her like the room you see
painted through a window in the dark.
She saw the young and lovely women,
heard the sweet, high -bred voices,
heard her stepmother's low laugh and
Bab's shriller tone. And then she
looked around her, at the sky flooded
with splendor, at the vast softly dark
slumbering land below, felt the pre-
ciousness of the love that was hers,
and it se4fned to her that a return to
that other life would be like a butter-
fly creeping back into its chrysalis.
"I—I miss my father," she said, and
her lip quivered.
But her husband's arm clasped her,
and the pressure of his own lips
quieted the sob.
"But even,' she said presently, "If he
never forgives us, or comes to see us,
and if poor Bab should never come
down here and learn what it to to live,
I shall be sure, I shall be sure, my
dear, that love is best!"—Harriet
Prescott Spofford, in Courier -Journal.
abEl
Is it marked 1595 ? THE
NEWS -RECORD is $1.50
per year, but if paid in
advance only 61. This
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tunity to save fifty cents.
Send along sdbscriptioll
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The Huron News -Record
CLINTON, ONT.
The MloKKillop Mutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper-
ty only Insured.
OFFICERS.;
D.ltieo, President, Clinton P. 0. ; Geo, Watt,
vice-president, Harlock P. O. ; W, .1. Shannon,
SeeyTreao., Seaforth P. 0. ; M. Murdie, In-
peotor ofolaima Seatorth P. 0.
DIRECTORS,
J.w. Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Alex Gardiner, Loa
bury; Gabriel Elliott, Clinton ; John Han
nag. Seat .rth ; Joseph Evans, Beachwood ; Thos.
Garbutt, Clinton.
AGENTS.
Thos. Neilaca, Harlock; Robt. McMillan, Sea.
forth; J. Cummings, Egmondville; Geo. Murdle,
Auditor .
Parties desiroue to effect Insurance or trans
act other bueinosa will be promptly attend-
ed to on application to any of the above officers ad•
dressed to their respective poet officer.
A Stock of Goods
VVithout advertising is
like a gun without am-
munition—there's noth-
ing to make it "go off."
COMMERCIALLY there are no flies
Upon the men who advertise.
FOR TINENTI'-FIVE gARS
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGESS'r SALE IPI CANADA.
WESTERN FAIR
London, Sept- 12th to 21st, 1895
SPECIAL EXCURSION RATES ON ALL RAILWAYS.
ESTABLISIIED 1868.
Canada's Favorite Live Stock Exhibition
CANNOT nEiSURPAeoED.
ENTRIES CLOSE:
Live, Stock September 121h.
All other Departments, September 5th,
Final Payment in Stakes, August 16th.
Auction Sale of Booths and Privileges on Grounds Aug, 26th
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS.—Ivied East Show, 50 people—
Arabs, 'Parka, Skeiks, Ladies of the Turkish
Palace, etc., with Horses, Camels and
Donkeys; and a host of others.
Prize Lists, Programmes and Conditionalof Sale for
Boothe free Apply to
CAPT. A.W. PORTAE, Pres.
THOS. A BROWN, Sec.
Don't Build Without a Plan.
J. ADES FOWLER & CO.,
Architects and Civil Engineers,
Aro opening a permanent office in Clinton and are
prepared to supply Plans, Specifications and details
for any class of work at most reasonable rates.
Patent Drawings prepared and patents obtained.
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pleasnre.
Dragged Nearly to Death's 'Door. by. Severe
Nervous Disease Suffered Extreme rain, in the
Head—Doctors Could Do Nothin —South
American Nervine Called in atthe 0.eventh
Hour and Restores to Health Little Annie
Joy, of West Toronto Junction ---The
Great Remedy is Reducing the Death
Rate of All Canadian Cities. 'N' .
MISS ANNIE JOY, WEST TORONTO JUNCTION.
A bright little lad, or golden -haired
girl, is the delight of your home.
Whether you revel in riches, or know
something of the privations of
poverty, that child is all the world to
you. It is no wonder that mother
and father become anxious when
sickness overtakes the little one.
The remedy, fathers and mothers,
is near by. South American Nervine
has been the means of giving back
the bloom of youth to thousands of
suffering little ones. It is not a
medicine that buoys up the parents'
hopes,only to have them inashort time
dashed down again lower than ever.
Whether with child or adult, 'it
promptly gets at the seat of all
disease, which is the nerve centres.
From this fact it is peculiarly
efficacious in the treatment of ner-
vous diseases of man, woman or
child.
A rete t case is that as told by
Mrs. M. . Joy, of West Toronto
Junction, \\ whose little daughter
Annie, aged 15 years, had been a
sufferer from severe nervous depres-
sion for about two years. As with
all mothers, no trouble and expense
was spared in the effort to bring
relief to the child. The little one suf-
fered extreme pains in the head, so
1 lt 1
distressing at times as to render her
completely helpless, sapping all her
strength. The beat skill of the most
skilled physicians was called into
request, but little Annie steadily
grew worse. Becoming more hope-
less and discouraged as the weeks
went by, Mrs. Joy decided on trying
South American Nervine as almost a
last resort. Employing her own
words she said : " I determined to
give it a trial, although I fe >i
useless,"
To -day it is all happiness around
that home, for before one bottle of
the medicine had been taken, the
mother tells us Annie commenced to
show decided signa of improvement,
The child has taken three bottles and
has practically regained her natural
health and vigor. There is nothing
rprising in the fact that Mrs. Joy
cannot speak too highly of South
American Nervine.
Much was at stake, but this
wonderful discovery proved equal to
the emergency, and so it does in every
case. Thousands of letters on file
from well-known citizens prove this.
For nervous diseases of young or old,
from whatever cause, it is an ab-
solutely infallible pure.
1 CO., CLINTON
S1NfUL IABITS INYOUTIII
LATER EXCESSES IN MANHOOD
MAKE NERVOUS, DISEASED MENA
of ignorance and folly in youth, overexertion of mind and body endo
T 11 E 11 ES U LT ed by lost and ezpoeure are constantly wrecking the lives and fntnre
whappines of t onsands of promising young men. Some fade and wither at an early age lx
""at the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag out a weary, fruitless anri
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victims are found in all stations of life:—The farm, the office, the workshop, the pulpit
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RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. el K.
•WM. A. WAi.RF.R. Wnt. A. WALKER. MRS. CHAS. FERRY, CHAS. FERRY.•
SBEFOnn TREATMENT AFTER TREATMENT Divorced but united agair
[Br'NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT."
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Finally afriend induced metotry Dre.Kennedy &Kergan.Cli
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• 147 -CURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED
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At 14 I learned a bad habit. At 21 I had all the symptoms
of Seminal Weakness and Spermatorrhoea, Emissions
apt draining and weakening my vitality. 1 married at
24 ander advice of my family doctor, but it was a ,�,y
Read experience. In eighteen months we were divert I 'VARICOCELE
: 'ENI I SI ONS
then consulted Drs. K. & K., who restored me to ma. ood
"'bytheir Nato Method Treatment. IPeltanew lifethrill through a::a•_,OURhED D
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j 1 my nerves. We were united again and are happy. This wait
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per•' We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal
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•
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17 YEARS IN DETROIT, 200,000 CURED. NO RISK
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OFTNO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRi-R
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(