HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-10-30, Page 23
•
A, Ylsi'r• `TQ l lv ' 9t 1,11g, n!lST iN,4r
7'. REW S. i`4a 0.1•011.14,14,0 ,.
lis Bloaknaotit pub 2n 1P+r, is.-.W1,y the
j'atnoue lather of LA Nouvelle Aellnile
Itteeo1 ed. When lihe Board Thiat Her
First Ceneort Was Dr&d,
Madame Adam, editor of Iia i.V'ou-
velle Revue, and one , eif the meet In,
t€iesting personalities among contem-
porary women in France, says a Lon-
donsketch correspondent, lives In the
13oulevard Malesherbes. that seeming-
?/ endless thoroughfare running from
the Madelein past the Church of St.
Augustin, to the Porte 'd 'Asnieres.
She has, however,' tt pretty country
house outside of Faris, to which she
frequently retires when her engage-
ments permit. From this rural re-
treat she wrote to me in response to
several letters of introduction which I
had presented, regretting that her ab -
sense from town prevented her call-
ing, and asking me, in view of my'
short stay in Paris, to waive ceremony
and come to one of her popular re-
unions on the following Sunday even-
ing. These Sunday evening gather-
ings include all that 1s best and bright-
est in the French capital, and invita-
tions to them are eagerly sought. In
the little theatre attached to the house
plays are acted by more or less dis-
tieguished—and invariably clever—
amateurs. These plays are repeated
fol three Sundays in succession to en-
able Madame Adams' immense circle
to witness them without overcrowding
and on ,the occasion for which I was
invited was to take place, according
to the program, the first representation
of "Un Gant" (Traduction Monnier), in
other words, of "The Gauntlet," by
I33ornstjerne Bjornson, done into
French.
Madame Adam smilingly made me
at home, and waited while I took off
my cloak. "Venez, ma fine," she said
kindly, as I returned to her, and, lead-
ing me up the room, she found me a
comfortable seat near the stage,
\%
,(cines L'1,100coiaon,
CANCER ON THE IIP
G10IIXD B
Sarsn-
YE
parilla.
"1 consulted doctors Whoprescrihed for
tne, but to no purpose. 1 sulY red 1tt /If; u y
seven long years. Molly, 1 bourn to t
,Ayer's S:u•saperllla. lu a week or t N.;
noticed a decided Improvement. Eeeour-
aged by this result, 1 persevered, mite hi tt
anonth or so the sore beetle t.t Meal, n.',d,
after using the Sarsapariila for six men:h';,
the last trace of the calmert1!sappearet.."—
JAMLs E. NICHOLSON, Floreucovillo, N. 11.
9 The
Ara.sV SaP2.1�e�
Aderatted at the World's F a.ar
iP1'l l'.S .Z'.LLLS heyuetalrrthao 2$owele.
rhe Huron News -Record
31.25 a Year—$1.00111 Advance
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30th, 181,5.
THE WEAK MUST PROTECT THEM-
SELVES AGAINST THE
STRONG.
When nations of the earth are exact-
ly equal in armaments and in their
ambitions, and agreed in their general
policy, we tnay look for the cessation
of war and the corning of the millen-
nium. So when the nations are equal
in point of natural resourses, of indus-
trial ability, of the power of production
and the power of consumption, we
may expect the laying aside of hostile
tariffs and the establishment of a uni-
versal Free Trade Zollverien. But so
long as one nation is weaker than
another, so long will hostile armaments
and tariffs exist ; for self-preservation
is a fundamental law of human nature.
Fifty years ago, England, having by
three centuries of the most careful
Protection developed her resour'ses
until she feared no competitor, put
aside her tariffs and blandly asked the
ether nations, weaker than herself in
all that makes nations great, to follow
her example. But what has been their
answer ? It is inconceivable to suppose
that Cobden and Peel surpassed all the
other statesmen in the world in wis-
dom, or that the latter should have
failed with one accord to believe in
Free Tradet had it been in the interest
of their respective countries to adopt
it. Their unanimous refusal, then, to
follow England's example must be
based on their conviction that what
was good for her was not good for
them. France, Germany, Austria,
Italy, and even little Belgium, admire
England's doctrine in the abstract, but
reply to the cajolings of the Manches-
ter school that they cannot become
Free Traders because they cannot
afford it. They do not control the
world's wealth, the world's marine,
and the vast capital which her three
hundred years of high tariffs, coupled
with' her own natural wealth, centred
in England; and their circumstances
being different, as they are yet weaker
than she, they cannot afford as yet to
compete with her on equal terms.
They must keep up a tariff armament
because, unprotected, their markets
would fall an easy prey to her superior
wealth and strength. Even the United
States, three thousand miles away,
feeling her home markets insecure
against England, maintains a, high
tariff. Now, all the reasons advanced
by the nations named for protecting
themselves commercially against the
stronger power are particularly true
when applied to Canada. She is a
country of five trillions. Our only
neighbor is an enterprising and ag-
gressive nation of sixty-five millions of
people. Can it be expected that our
people can hold their own against such
a powerful rival without Protection ?
If so, then in protecting themselves
against England's superior power,
France, Germany, the United States
and all the rest have gone mad, their
statesmen are blind, their experience a
chimera, and the armament of the
weaker against the stronger a mon-
strous doctrine! But what was our
own experience of Free Trade? We
should never forgot that, for, after all,
experience is the test. The history of
our industries from 1873 to 1878 tells
the tale. Many were utterly wiped
out of existence by American competi-
tion. Our foundries and rolling mills
were closed. All our manufacturers
suffered, and through there the me-
chanic whom they employed, and
through him the farmer and storekeep-
er who clothed and fed him. The
volume of our trade fell from $218,000,-
000 to $152,000,000. The bankruptcies
in 1876 alone numbered 1,588, with
liabilities amounting to $31,361,154.
Though the Government raised the
customs taxes from 15 to 171 per cent.,
deflects were an annual occurrence.
Meanwhile, the surplus products of the
American loom? mine,workshop and
farm came pouring ino the country to
the despair of the Canadian manufac-
turer, mechanic and farmer, while our
products were debarred from the
Arnerican market by a high tariff.
Surely such an experience should pre-
vent all thoughtful Canadians from
desiring a return of Free Trade, which
would certainly bring about a similar
condition of affairs.
IArARaAII RSIIRVID 18 10 ro 60 'Levers... -
One short puff of the bloath throngh the Blowre
supplied With mob bottle of Dr. Agnow's Catarrhal Pow-
der, diffuses this Powder oror the enrfeee of the
nosed passaged. Painless and delightful to ues, it re-
lieves instantly, and pormenently soros Catania
Hay Pow, (folds, Headache, Sore Thrust tenant'
find beefeoss. Oa conte. At Watts & Ca'.s
my Vassioate lave or nitr .,t but
'I_cculd stand. the Pte no longer and 11t1Q4
'i' 1} sepal'ati ne, I car?ie to fails and.
ed wltlt JnY falhel^-and mgthOr. W1#T
MO tie shpcked when 7i tell ytu that
X never wart iso bappy'as when ,'1 lxears
Tit mIr first hUsbanri'e 404th 7, `.[t Val!.
o; say' of t'eloiclnt3 !,several years afte1
1 married again.- Xent.have, been the',
trial of my exiatpnee, and the. ;elrlcerfe
onee the meet treublesoxne:"
A oxv We. diet Sunllnent.
The ekimulue of the son's direct rays
and that arising from the friction of
the fresh air muses_inereO,eeti activity
iu the capillaries supplying the surface
With plood. When this stimulus le
conthfued for any considerable time
these vessels become gorged, and
uta portions of the bleed force their
way into the layer immediately under
the epidermis, or outer akin.. It is the
presence of the red corpuscles of the
blood which gives the ruddy flesh tint
seen through the outer skin. At the
sumo time the sweat glands and oil
glands, whose function it is to lubri-
cate the surface and keep it moist and
ccoi, become exhausted by overstimu-
lus ; the outer skin gets hard and dry,
and soon begins to peal off in the fa-
miliar way, taking the minute particles
of extravasated blood along with it.
Direct sunlight also has a darkening
`eifeet upon the actual coloring pig-
ments of the skin, but this action is
distinct from actual tanning, and
manifests itself in the form of freckles.
The permanent bronze or ruddiness of
complexion seen in sailors or travel-
ers in hot countries is the resuilt of a
lcng-continued combination of the two
pre cesses.—Mirror.
MRS. ADAMS.
introducing me to my neighbors,
and set me completely at my
at my ease. Her daughter, Madame
Segond, a handsome woman with dark
hair, very regular features and clear,
pale complexion, who looked quite too
young to be—as, in effect, she is—the
mother of a grown-up girl, helped, with
the aid of Mlle. Segond, to receive and
entertain the guests.
When the play—in which M. Barbier,
a very young man, with a slight dark
mustache. distinguished himself as
Alf,and Mile. de Kapatzinskt was much
applauded as Svava—was ttnished,Ma-
dame Adam merrily asked for votes
from the•women present as to the ques-
tion involved.
"Who takes Sava's side?" she cried.
"Hands up please '."
Two alone had the courage to testify
in favor of the heroine. The others dis-
creetly abstained from recording their
opinion. Then we all trooped to supper
in the oak -paneled dining room over-
head, whence we moved into the red
sa?on, with its plentiful but subdued
light and handsome bric-a-brac. The
patty speedily broke up into groups by
the code of morality enforced by the
Norwegian dramatist and to listen to
some excellent music. The greater num-
ber of the guests gathered round the
stately hostess, but after a time she
broke from them and flitted from one
to another, praising this man, rallying
that, detained on every side by those
anxious for a word with her. She was
full of life and animation—the very
soul and centre of the reunion.
I asked Mme. Adam : "Do you find
the Northern dramatists interesting ?"
"Immensely 1 Little as they have
in common with Parisian life and
French character, the great movement
of the present day comes to us from the
North—Tolstoi, Tourgenleff, Bjornson,
Ibsen—and this because the east -and
the south are already exhausted, the
great Christian movement having come
from the east. Every sixth century God
sends us revelations. These revolatfons
become gradually absorbed in some
from of worship (ces revelations petit
a petit deviennent absorbees dans le
culte), thereby losing their original
ys lue, and we need fresh revelations to
stimulate us."
"Which do you prefer, Madame, Ib-
sen or Bjornson ?"
"Bjornson, with whom I am in con-
stant correspondence; but Ibsen I look
on as a great moral teacher. I delight
iri taking in hand authors whom their
plays for representation, for, after all,
the public must be considered to a cer-
tain extent. "The Gauntlet," for in-
stance, had to be considerably altered
before even I had the courage to pre-
sent it to a French audience. Bjornson
himself was nervous as to the result of
my undertaking."
When asked about her own career,
Mme. Adam said : "I took to writing
!n the first instance because I was so
derperately unhappy in my married
life. There, ft must out. 1 wanted to
forget my sorrows and to occupy my
mind."
"Bat, if I may ask the question with-
out discretion; how did you come to
marry a man so unsuited to you ?"
"I never wished to marry him, but
I was very young—a mere child—and
very inexperienced. My parents had al-
wttys told me that if a man, kissed me
on the lips I should be dishonored if I
dict not marry him. They had decided
that I was to wed M. Lamesstpe, and,
to. arrange the match, they let him
know—we were then engaged—that this
idea had been strongly impressed upon
me. He promptly acted upon their
hint, and I no longer hesitated before
the sacrifice. My first marriage was
the beginning of years of terrible suf-
fering, my one ray of sunshine being
•
ea-
THIS SP'RIN0.
TAKE, Tne NEW
° MEDICINE
AND
NIXT SPRINU
YOU WILL.
TAKE NO ,OTHER
cott's
arsaIarlUa.
A Little While. 'Tis such a little while we walk to-
gether
Along life's way.
Some weary feet that march beside us
falter
Each passing day.
bear friends that greet us in the morn-
ing vanish
Ere it is noon,
And tender voices melt away in silence
A broken tune.
A brief sweet time we journey on to-
gether
Through fields of green.
And then our voices break the silence
never
That falls between.
No loving word can reach them through
the distance—.
No kindly deed—
We call to them in tender, loving ac-
cents—
They take no heed.
We long to see the dear familiar faces,
But all in vain;
The footsteps that keep pace with ours
bravely
Come not again.
We catch the echo of a voice grown
silent,
Faint and alar,
A dim white face gleams out among
the shadows
Like some pale star.
'Tis such a little while for loving kind-
- Hess,
Or cold 'disdain,
To smooth the way for weary feet
that falter,
Or chide and blame:
A little while and It were unavailing
Kind words to say,
For those that walked yesterday be-
side us
Have passed away.
—Lizzie Clark Hardy.
Some Smart Bonnets.
Another Libel.
Paterfamilias—Breakfast ready yet?
Where's the paper? Now look here, my
dear, this is the only time in the day
that I have a chance to see the news.
Just hand that over.
Materfamillas—I've only the adver=
tising part, my dear. That's all I ever
get a chance to see.
Paterfamilias—Well, where's the rest
of it?
Materfamillas—Willie has the last
two pages containing the baseball
news, Flossie is interested in a divorce
case on pages 11 and 12, Daisy is read-
ing the latest murder case—
Paterfamilias—Which one is that?
Materfamillas—The one that occur-
red at half past three this morning.
Jack has the part relating to the mur-
ders that occurred at 2 o'clock and at
midnight. Poor dear boy, ever since
he has been sick he has had no chandc
whatever with the other children.
Paterfamfllas—Were's the part con-
taining the account of that swell wed-
ding? I've got to have something to
read.
Materfamilla.a—Hush, John, don't say
such things! The cook is reading that,
and if I did not let her have that priv-
ilege she wouldn't stay with me a
minute. 0, dear, you men are so un-
reasonable.
Paterfamilias—Well, there's another
part of the paper, isn't there? Let me
have that.
Materfamillas—There was only the
woman's page, my dear, and we lit the
fire with that.—Truth.
Don't Kiss on tiro Mouth.
Children can be trained with the
greatest ease to offer the cheek or the
forehead for the proffered caress, and
to allude the attempt to contaminate
the lips. The incubation period of any
disease may or may not be infected in
the ordinary acceptation of the term.
Upon this matter our knowledge, so
far, is by no means certain, while on
the other hand, recent investigations
would seem to indicate that the infec-
tion of zymotic diseases in ,patients is
of very much longer duration than
used formerly to be supposed, endur-
ing, indeed, long after convalescence
has been established.
The
Label ?
Is it marked 1895 ? THE
NEWS -RECORD iS $1.50
per year, but if paid in
advance only 81, ' This
seems to be a good oppor-
tunity to save fifty cents.
Send along subscription
now. Address
The Huron News -Record
CLINTON, ONT.
The McKillop Mutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper-
ty only Insnred.
emcees.;
D. Roes, President, Clinton P. 0. ; Geo. Watt.
viae -president, fiariock P. 0. ; W. J. Shannon,
Socy.Treas., Seaforth P. 0. ; hi. Murdle, In-
pector ofelaima Seaforth 1'. 0,
DIRECTORS,
Jae. Broadfoot, Suetorth ; Alex Gardiner, Lea
bury; Gabriel Elliott, Clinton ; John Han
nah, Seaforth; Joseph Evans, Beechwood; Thos•
Garbutt, Clinton.
eager..
Thos. Neilars, 'Ilarlock; Robt. McMillan, Sea.
forth ; J. Cummings, Egmondvillo; Geo: Murdle,
Auditor .
Parties desirous to effect Insurance or trans
act other business will bo promptly attend•
ed to on application to any of the above officers ad.
dressed to their respective post offices.
A Stock of Goods
Without advertising is
like a gun without am-
munition—there's noth-
ing to make it "go off."
• *•••••1•,,..-4t.4,74%••• E!.Se...A,fd . ',V. i..:1Z, ,..
4
COMMERCIALLY there are no flies
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People who desire to secure a
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Those who desire employment
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Hon. Reuben E. Truax, one of
Canada's ablest thinkers and states-
men, a man so highly esteemed by
the people of his distriot that he was
honored with a seat in Parliament,
kindly furnishes us for publication
the following statement, which will
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
a bottle, and I mast say I found very
great relief, and have since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
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would strongly recommend all my
fellow -sufferers from the disease to
give South American Nervine an
immediate trial. It will cure yon.
"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-
" ,," t . rty ,- - �a
c i ' F1 1 '1 �-
..t!l
tree are in any way deranged the
supply of nerve force is' at once
diminished, and as a result the food
taken into the stomach is only:
partially digested, and Chronic Indi-
gestion and Dyspepsia soon maks !
their appearance.
Routh American Nervine is se
prepared that -it nets directly on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure etary
ease of Indigestion and Dyspepsia; t
and is an absolute speoilo for al
nervone diseases and ailment..
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build np th ..,•w�hole
eItr
system are wonderful in the eme.
It cures the old, the young, and the
middle-aged. It is a great friend ta
the aged and infirm. Do not negleot
to use this precious boon ; if yon do,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restore you `'to health.
South American Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasent to the taste.
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this
great cure, because it will put the
bloom of freshness and beauty upon
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 in
my family and prescribed it in !
my practice. It is a most excellent
remedy." j
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DtFOitlt TREAT0ENT. AFTER •UuATnENT. DEFVkL. '1'1L 1 .N'T..er..-...nuATRERT.
NO NAMES 011 TESTIMONIALS USED WiTHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
John A. Manlin says:—"I was one of the countless vie.
time of early ignorance commenced at 15 years of ago. I
tried seven medical firma and spent $900 without avail.
1 gave up in despair. The drain, on my syeti m were
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READER I Aro Son n victim? Ilnv' ion cost, hoppe? Are mon cnntrmnlnting mar-
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for -NO NAMES USED WITHOUT wiliTTEN CONSENT. PRI-
• VATE. No Medicine s nt C. O. L) No names an boxeet try raltvto,.
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FRBh.
DRNo. NB 1-IEL 4V ST.
Q KENNEDY � A q DETROIT,. NICD.
4-
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