HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1898-01-27, Page 2. O'. a t
ilk
OOATAON:
I
lilnsR ullciiangpa,71.t,
,•is iii
( uelaec, fou the iiaply ex,
ceeds 33 acres, rutin,Om enc-
aide sit± t -.e road 1V)ea, t,110
houses so cla9e tR-gs to give the
appearance of the 4 ter a gre.Mcity., They etre tiand a liiw•abidtrig people, acimely hospit of St, J'os-
ph will oolne new iia to theatre,
As- a bay NarclSbe 0autJa cherished
the dreatli of building rt city here, and
`wh06 yet It lad of seventeen he turned
his face against the world and set out
to make su$icient• money to. realize
is dream His plans have m6t with
u uph ridictile, but he has adhered
steal dfftstly to his pilrpose, and already
the'foundations oY the future city have
been firmly laid, and over QSI(X),000 has
lioen ek+n,ond'ed.
The -to iVnsite lies in the Township of
Hay, and,41reetly on the bank of the
bike, which at -this point presents a
sheer cliff fo'rcty feet ill height, with to
Sha sandy b'yech circling about a
natural bay. In bile east the thriving
'town of Heusall, on the London, Huruti
Sa Bruce Railway, Is tell miles distant.
Grand Bend, asummer resort on the
lake shore, is ten miles south, and
Bayfleld and Goderich, on the lake
shore, are ten and twenty ruiles north,
respectively. If a circle, with its center
at St. Joseph and a' radius faf t,veUty
utiles, were drawn, it would (incluse litre
of. 'the richest agricultural district in
the ptovinee, a district dotted with
thriving villages and towns. It is Mr.
Cautin's stapenduus plan to cuake his
city not oIlly all ideal sumnier resort,
L but it ulanufacturingr point and it sup-
ply centre for all tills territory. As
I already stated, over $100,000 hits al-
ready been expanded oil the uudertak-
ing. A complete systein of uridev-
ground drainage and sewerage has been
laid, miles of planed sidewalks have
been ccnseructed. duzu• handa
oe
residences have been erected, each
fitted with baths azul all model it con-
veniences, and it large sawmill and
plauiilF mill is in operation and, like
the brickyard, is already self-sustaul-
•ing. One of the most important iigjus-
tHes of the new town, and it r+tpid-
ly growing one, is an organ pipe fitct-
Ory, under the rnanageuient of a skill-
ed organ pipe manufacturer, formerly
of Montreal. The most pretentious
building on the townsite is the new
three-story brick. novelty ,factory,
which is now nearing completion,' and
in which fifty men will soon Ile ern-
ployed. On tyle four turners the nias-
sive stone foundations of a huge
block of stores have been laid, 320
feet long by 150 deep. This bloc) mill
.be completed next spring. A other
structure is being erected to �h` I
•ter an
electric lighting plant; au, a park has
been designed and over.; f000 worth of
young mriples plapied. All this has
been done in it ligix' over eight months,
and in order te, farad an estimate of
the energy ; 4ith which the work is
being 'conslileted it is necessary to
know tjAi the stone foundation on
which,rAery building rests held first to
Ile .bed ont of the bed of the hike;
tl, bricks that go into the construction
f!i every building on the place had
first to be made from the soil on which
it stands; find the.lutuber from which
doors, sashes, Ehingles, etc., have been
made had first to be cut in the woods,
rafted up the shore, find sawed and
worked up. In addition to this, sower=
at vessel loads of lumber have been re-
ceived direct from the Georgian Bay
district.
There are seven grades of clay in the
soil about St. Joseph, one of which is
a: pnre aluminferous clay of great
valve. Aluminum used to 'rival, gold
in value, but now threatens to becofire
its common as the clay in which it oc-
curs. Mr. Contin looks forward hope-
fully.to the day when the historic tin
dipper shall have given place to olut of
aluminum; and the metal conies More
comulonly into use in Oa•nada 'the St.
Joseph fields are to supply the demand,
Negotiations are already under way
looking toward the forfnation of a
strong eonlpany•in Paris. France, for
the manufacture of the metal in this
coming Canadian metropolis. In addi-
tion to this, Mr. Cantiu, although
somewhat reticent, clativas that three
]urge factories have already prepared
plans for immense hranches here, and
th,ltt, the hands employed by thein
alone will bring the town's population
up t O ,5,000.
:Che plans of tbds energetic man also
include A huge breakwater, which is
to convert the already natural harbor
into a safe port, extensive dredging
operations, including at ship canal in-
land to the: factories, and a railroad to
tap the main lineof the Grand Trunk,
twenty utiles distant, thus placing St.
Joseph in direct title between Chicago
and Portland. -
If it realizes what its promotor
hopes, St. Joseph will become not only
the chief city of the Huron country,
but of fill rlorthwest•er•n Ontario,
Dr. J. H. Fell of Manitowaninis
the 0onservative candidate g for Al"
gonia.
MANACLED
BY ACUTE, INDIGESTION — WHALTl3
WOULD NOT BUY MY FnBHDOM—
E40UTH AMERICAN NERVINE BROXE`
THE SHACKLES.
Reuben E. Truax, M.P., millowner
and manufacturer, of Walkerton, Ont.
writes . of the. great South American
Nervine: "I had been for over ten
years very much troubled with acute
indigestion, tried many remedies and
treatments and got little (l• no benefit.
Your remedy was recommended to
me. I obtained great relief front a
fety doses, and when I had taken only
two bottles I felt entirely free front
my ailment. I strongly recommZd
it
and believe it will cure anv whmay
be suffering as I did:, Sold by ittts
&Co. -• ,
Mr.',Dunhar Plunke
member of Parliamen
Division of Armagh, l
A to the House of at
)ppcisttion on his app!
Ator•G onei al for Trek
After serious Mile
'ever, pneumonia, or
garsap4i is hits wol
?riving power.
V
y rnorefrequent, the seat
IolaTMAt
k� then was from time to time
t
clean never a thou' ht of re-
gg
ry
litiquishing t,lle hopelass task occurred
ortiotl'
to them.
j ani all
At last came the final' blow that not
y, of ;in>r'
only wiped aavay the mission forever,
mi ds,
butmarked theHieghining of the bloody
t�ex-
exterpif ration of the Hurons by the
_
,.
overpowering force of the., Iroquois.
1.lGular
.,come
Over a thousand.. Iroquois braves were
3t tip.
on the war path, and one sett lemon t
eed,
after anothet" was captured and burn-
qle, be
ed, its Huron defenders and its brave
Lt a� than
Fathers meeting a common fate. "Bvi-
llle district
bedf, the 'Apostle of the Hurons,'bound
,a rol;.en wit-
to a stake, was scorched from head to
-
foot; ,his lower lip was cut away and
] wirl ttud.extremt?-
a heated Iron thrust down his throat.
ii>�ee ..the ebore of
A collar of red-hot hatchets was next
'hunj
' sot ' what rocky
around his neck; and in trav-
1,�1"i ce peninsular.
.esty of the rite of baptism, kettlesftill
tl'ay. bunt, acid the
of boiling water were pouted over his
s le.
> tempers t
• e . 1
tk s P
l._
head. Not flinching under th tor-
c fl g 4y
,
inteir. hat peach cul-,
tdre, the'lroquois, enraged, cut strips
'from
0WJa t' be profitable'.
of flesh hisdirnbs, scalped him,
f the lake, tit a
tore out his heart, devoured it and
, f Goderich, and
drank his blood, Lallemant, physically
', rkhIll, Narcisse
unable to manifest the sante fortitude,
I I young French-
had strips of bark, smeared with pitch,
. need the hercu-
bound to his naked body and set fire to.
a city.
Half roasted, he was flung into con -
months aa.go
finepient, tortured it whole night, and
the new town
finally killed with the hatchet of tin
limed—was known
Iroquois, who had gown tired of his
ens, atnd 'c6ntained
protracted pastime.'
)g h tiiises and a postoflice
Thus ends'the heroic story of the
vveeltly mail for the con-
Huron mission. The tale is.an old one,
thfl f;rrmers along the Aux
and the prosperous farnmer, whose crops
e.; 'fid -day the "Corners" is
fatten on the very soil that once was
us,try. The old log dwell-
soaked red with the blood of Christian
V!, which have stood, per-
wen, concerns himself less with the
c e earliest .settlement of
awful draws, than with the wheat
` jr`by the ,French, have been
market or the price of prime steers.
n 'and replaced by a dozen.
But the scene changes and with it
g r}iiodern ones. Till factory
the title of the land. 'Phe sanguinary
ys;:uCe beginning to darken the
conflict.on the Plains of Abraham had
11 Smoke,sa,nd the gulls that used
'his
changed the destinies of half a con -
quiet coast as.theig own
tinent. France had lost her grip in
lal,,t- &ritory are giving the place .
North America. Soon the Huron coun-
e l.erth.try,
which, after the conclusion of
Before describing the. embryo
the struggle just described, had fallen
St. Joseph, it may, be well to:
back into the unbroken solitude of the
onELnf the
primeval wilderness, began to be in -
1r: Cantin hits c"Cear'%�f le
vaded•by stout Britons, Scotsmen, Eng-
qe land by right of purchase; bu
lishmen and Irishmen. The vast plains
11 t* S trot always thus.'
to the westward, that were kgowo as
.-bene years before the first intrepid
he Indian territories, had passed into
sty [ Father.' set foot in ,this magpt_
a hands of thQ Hudson Bay' Com.
tiit:4vllderness, the Huron country
P , who ere everywhere beginning
disputed soil. Frere Iroquois and
to ' e), .en competition • ' of the
Otis [net in a dearth struggle; here,
ries before Champlain took sides
Nor west Co . )any. Sault Ste Marie
became it great'tm,t•,•or•trading
pts e,. a fight, wits breathed the awful
jaost—
indeed, it had been such under t rench
,;.;
;:';utile song of the Tdnron brave :— "O
ktces which the sun floods with' his
rule' and trappers on their way thith-
t er from the Huron country bivouaced
;I , t, and the moon tllunfinates • with
on the pretty little bay, and on the es
^:}ierpaley torch; places,ivhere vendors
act spot where to -day a new town is
iiwaves in. the breeze, where runs the
rising .rep.
•Ilmpid stream, aapd. the torrent leaps ;
Still again, however, the title of.
take witness, O earth, atid.ye heavens,
these lands changed hands; and froru
a'' '.that we are ready, everyone, to en-
foes. The
this point begins the story of the Clan-
! ado Oompanyof John Galt, Dr.,
Mounter our .• . . . war
clubs wesnatchfrom our enemies shtcll I
y,%%
and the
Dunlop, poet, dr•eanle'r and backwoods -
testify to our surpassing valor, The
man. _ Galts famous mad,, cut through
the forest from Guelph to Goderich,
sett[pps wtear from [herr pro§trate
will, huts. Our
the first influence.
Y.. heada ornament 'our
' ddor lintels we shall redden with the
was colonizing Both
he and Dunlop early recognized the
Blood of our prisoners.' Timid in cap-
value of this lake -washed strip of the
kt, " tivity, as feeble ip co'mhat, we $ball
Huron country, and the future lows
cause thein to perish with slow tortur-
of Goderich '.vas soon on paper in the
ings; and when life.hasfled their mutil-
company'solliaes.
,,I''
• ated frames we shall burn theta up'
The ownership of that portion of the
,I.I .and scatter their ashes, to the four
track in which we are directly in
winds of heaven.„
terested was soon again transferred.
,A - But the already bloody stage was
In 1827—I quote the Lizars sisters—an
soon to feel the tread of Champlain,
old Belgian nobleman, the Baro) de
who, practical as he was.devout, was
Tuyle, made tin arrangement with the
at work An the new world "winning
Canada Cothpany whereby he was to
souls for Heaven and a colony for
have a choice of their lands in the
France;” and from this date begins the
Huron track. To assure a right judg-
story of the Hui -an missions. It is a
ment, be brought out Captain (then
story of toil, discomfort and discour-
Lieutenent) Bayfield, R.N., whose
agement; a tale Of terrible episodes.
name, "dear to Canadian science," is
The year 1615 saw Champlain, ac-
known still 'as an tluthority from
4 `:companied by two Franciscan Friars,
Huron to Gaspe:. Bayfield made a sur-
. ,
a'_ j toiling laboriously up the Ottawa to-
vey of the ,lake autd of the rivers run.
into
- r ward lake Nipissing, across which
a'
nine it, cruising about in his sur-
µ the sinewy arms of his Indian pilots'
"veying schooner, the Gulnare, and,
-' the French River.
*opelled him
tender pressure of difficulties, taking to
,to
After braving the rapids and toiling
canoe and batteau, marking his way
over the portages of the French, the
much after the manner of Dunlop vi ith
party coasted 6be shore of Georgian
Indians and half-breeds, and as it re-
Brry and eventually found themselves
sult of his litbors made charts, which
in the Huron country, wbither Father
were in useupon the lakes until 1881, .
Le Garen had'proceeded them, In this
and which are still looked upon as
manner was established the first Huron
authorities. His minute inspection of
outpost of the chinch, and the country
the company's coast line resulted in
became the property of France.
his advice to the Baron'to purchase
Pierre 'Margry, a French writer, in
extensively upon the lower coast.
art,article on Lotois Joliet, describes
flow the country was first formally
The present Village of Bayfield, ten
napes north of the new town of lit.
taken possession of in the name of the
Joseph; was the first townsite selected
by the Barron. The little hamlet of
King of France by Simon Francois
d'Aumont, Sieur de Saint Lusson.
Bayfleld consisted of lombermen's
Faithful to their promise were the few
shanties to huts
, > g pub up for tits
Barons men, who once began
. Wdrichmen and Indians who on that
memorable day swore, with shouts of
h
ing ont,timber from the estate. But
But
"Vive}e Rol," allegiance to the '"Most
k
the work seems to have been ithef is-
ed, for in 1& the year of the fat,
Claristidn Ding of France and Na
„
dark, little Baron's death, the logs
veins.
' "'' The establishment of the mission,
were lving rotting'. The bnildings
consisted only of hes store and a few
a though in:itsel'f a task thaC might well
huts; fend in tbo year following, the
fine appalled. a less enthusiastic body
of itiien, wait the leant arduous part of
rebellion year, brit fifteen able-bodied
men could be found for "the defence of
the undertaking. The, maintenance of
the country,.
o became a
` 1 .s uttered post t ills wide c
y P
Nareisse Catntin the a
the int owner
constant pet>plegit,v, completely iaolat-
of a portion of this historic soil, and the
est, as they where, from the eiviliza-
tiotl of t,►uebec, But what the Vathers
projector of the St. Joseph enterprise,
in
.
is many respects a remarkable man.
lacked in number and :Strength they
lie is but 27 years of age, and was
t , 0upplied with that tntenae religious
born within Stonethrowofthe tnwnsite,
i fervor which has made their story the
but has travOled extensively through-.
;J I ,host wrol5dotftl'I n the tlnnals of the
oat Uabada;. and- the United States.
nowt'waNld; and i� the exiiirrplt� salt. by
tete? gentle ; piety of their iivee filled
Deprived during# youth (if the oppor-
tdnity of acquiring an b'ngl sh educa-
tcl.accaw 1►Sh whathad e611411 it ipat.
thin, be could not speak a 'word of
od', they Cd »6t themad vos to blame,
Bngi Ili nine years ago. To -day leis
tlata t
0 is bevel 161 fru i n
'Tlte betel+; d u
'
speech is so pure that. 'cue fails Co do-
iltikhhed froth the OW -Imposed' task::
tQa.6 the' lease tl5itcre of Yrrttnc accent,
As °the dreaded Frog)tuis bdcitmo rnore
> h
arae atia t e rai itlto t e
tLMc►ublet h dli
L. • a+
DurilSg the day of the arae de
Tu lee lett' iiiie �ir, Vantin ,.
3' f3 s grand•
I
lilnsR ullciiangpa,71.t,
,•is iii
( uelaec, fou the iiaply ex,
ceeds 33 acres, rutin,Om enc-
aide sit± t -.e road 1V)ea, t,110
houses so cla9e tR-gs to give the
appearance of the 4 ter a gre.Mcity., They etre tiand a liiw•abidtrig people, acimely hospit of St, J'os-
ph will oolne new iia to theatre,
As- a bay NarclSbe 0autJa cherished
the dreatli of building rt city here, and
`wh06 yet It lad of seventeen he turned
his face against the world and set out
to make su$icient• money to. realize
is dream His plans have m6t with
u uph ridictile, but he has adhered
steal dfftstly to his pilrpose, and already
the'foundations oY the future city have
been firmly laid, and over QSI(X),000 has
lioen ek+n,ond'ed.
The -to iVnsite lies in the Township of
Hay, and,41reetly on the bank of the
bike, which at -this point presents a
sheer cliff fo'rcty feet ill height, with to
Sha sandy b'yech circling about a
natural bay. In bile east the thriving
'town of Heusall, on the London, Huruti
Sa Bruce Railway, Is tell miles distant.
Grand Bend, asummer resort on the
lake shore, is ten miles south, and
Bayfleld and Goderich, on the lake
shore, are ten and twenty ruiles north,
respectively. If a circle, with its center
at St. Joseph and a' radius faf t,veUty
utiles, were drawn, it would (incluse litre
of. 'the richest agricultural district in
the ptovinee, a district dotted with
thriving villages and towns. It is Mr.
Cautin's stapenduus plan to cuake his
city not oIlly all ideal sumnier resort,
L but it ulanufacturingr point and it sup-
ply centre for all tills territory. As
I already stated, over $100,000 hits al-
ready been expanded oil the uudertak-
ing. A complete systein of uridev-
ground drainage and sewerage has been
laid, miles of planed sidewalks have
been ccnseructed. duzu• handa
oe
residences have been erected, each
fitted with baths azul all model it con-
veniences, and it large sawmill and
plauiilF mill is in operation and, like
the brickyard, is already self-sustaul-
•ing. One of the most important iigjus-
tHes of the new town, and it r+tpid-
ly growing one, is an organ pipe fitct-
Ory, under the rnanageuient of a skill-
ed organ pipe manufacturer, formerly
of Montreal. The most pretentious
building on the townsite is the new
three-story brick. novelty ,factory,
which is now nearing completion,' and
in which fifty men will soon Ile ern-
ployed. On tyle four turners the nias-
sive stone foundations of a huge
block of stores have been laid, 320
feet long by 150 deep. This bloc) mill
.be completed next spring. A other
structure is being erected to �h` I
•ter an
electric lighting plant; au, a park has
been designed and over.; f000 worth of
young mriples plapied. All this has
been done in it ligix' over eight months,
and in order te, farad an estimate of
the energy ; 4ith which the work is
being 'conslileted it is necessary to
know tjAi the stone foundation on
which,rAery building rests held first to
Ile .bed ont of the bed of the hike;
tl, bricks that go into the construction
f!i every building on the place had
first to be made from the soil on which
it stands; find the.lutuber from which
doors, sashes, Ehingles, etc., have been
made had first to be cut in the woods,
rafted up the shore, find sawed and
worked up. In addition to this, sower=
at vessel loads of lumber have been re-
ceived direct from the Georgian Bay
district.
There are seven grades of clay in the
soil about St. Joseph, one of which is
a: pnre aluminferous clay of great
valve. Aluminum used to 'rival, gold
in value, but now threatens to becofire
its common as the clay in which it oc-
curs. Mr. Contin looks forward hope-
fully.to the day when the historic tin
dipper shall have given place to olut of
aluminum; and the metal conies More
comulonly into use in Oa•nada 'the St.
Joseph fields are to supply the demand,
Negotiations are already under way
looking toward the forfnation of a
strong eonlpany•in Paris. France, for
the manufacture of the metal in this
coming Canadian metropolis. In addi-
tion to this, Mr. Cantiu, although
somewhat reticent, clativas that three
]urge factories have already prepared
plans for immense hranches here, and
th,ltt, the hands employed by thein
alone will bring the town's population
up t O ,5,000.
:Che plans of tbds energetic man also
include A huge breakwater, which is
to convert the already natural harbor
into a safe port, extensive dredging
operations, including at ship canal in-
land to the: factories, and a railroad to
tap the main lineof the Grand Trunk,
twenty utiles distant, thus placing St.
Joseph in direct title between Chicago
and Portland. -
If it realizes what its promotor
hopes, St. Joseph will become not only
the chief city of the Huron country,
but of fill rlorthwest•er•n Ontario,
Dr. J. H. Fell of Manitowaninis
the 0onservative candidate g for Al"
gonia.
MANACLED
BY ACUTE, INDIGESTION — WHALTl3
WOULD NOT BUY MY FnBHDOM—
E40UTH AMERICAN NERVINE BROXE`
THE SHACKLES.
Reuben E. Truax, M.P., millowner
and manufacturer, of Walkerton, Ont.
writes . of the. great South American
Nervine: "I had been for over ten
years very much troubled with acute
indigestion, tried many remedies and
treatments and got little (l• no benefit.
Your remedy was recommended to
me. I obtained great relief front a
fety doses, and when I had taken only
two bottles I felt entirely free front
my ailment. I strongly recommZd
it
and believe it will cure anv whmay
be suffering as I did:, Sold by ittts
&Co. -• ,
Mr.',Dunhar Plunke
member of Parliamen
Division of Armagh, l
A to the House of at
)ppcisttion on his app!
Ator•G onei al for Trek
After serious Mile
'ever, pneumonia, or
garsap4i is hits wol
?riving power.
V
>
,
Dli, It C G>ltly enort1,*h tit: 41I.V1StarA M til
1�
to iaO t hta,, l h� t Kip 't'tto othe Ad ll'e
itwat svitI give vOil cslmril/ t. aA
,
(YRr� Jll,tlat flOrri t13iR'tt. lit t+"tit..n g, to
>6
.
.\
`�
c'il�iemi'.t cost A )hili
penny# It may bo-goml :oi; it li aF,q lit
<
ta+td; > 111 nfltt aistyllag anything oil that
art"bini� :tlis3
itig sl;itz' dt5g4svg.. 1t it t4 #ilte.xil�gic,
,
cetat, ;
,;
T.lases tl)tt shoev�li,ricllea. 1Yhi>lt I said
Ally, ft laud kli'-*trig the
o.
,,F
_
,.
.wast►
ed n- a to knock; oft ii of k foe )t Tear' O;nd
. , s.
Ma
Barton, Q C.
for the Middle
,s been return.
among without
Ament as Soli.
181
� ,rt�
.
,,
LS?`ING,,�i..�i D'�'tki� Nr. �-� . 1- ,THOSlfl. ORRYINUkP11M,
,tail.') `'WO IITx;08. ,
.'*,",""
i
Utie #i ila 14r At,l)t1 of L1r, ♦grown s -
,
Dli, It C G>ltly enort1,*h tit: 41I.V1StarA M til
1�
to iaO t hta,, l h� t Kip 't'tto othe Ad ll'e
itwat svitI give vOil cslmril/ t. aA
,
(YRr� Jll,tlat flOrri t13iR'tt. lit t+"tit..n g, to
>6
.
is. .Cllelrp'ita t>gg�z lei threellt)liCti It flOR>ll ,
f'rlieaper^fill ,it
and ein v eta 'affected. iii the tuoot,
> ,
littli)lld)i'n' 4rlRt ti i)1 I�lit1R�, L31tkd111�' Ol+
c'il�iemi'.t cost A )hili
penny# It may bo-goml :oi; it li aF,q lit
lite-llig .Mlles •:Qr..Atgnew's Ointment
tulles eezerrtatitilst.till 11LzCe•
ta+td; > 111 nfltt aistyllag anything oil that
art"bini� :tlis3
itig sl;itz' dt5g4svg.. 1t it t4 #ilte.xil�gic,
it isn't the GXVI>\Tdl atdvitai , it's. TAX* ''85
cetat, ;
x it, and trylnl~ tt)t31` un it� llaetc's
T.lases tl)tt shoev�li,ricllea. 1Yhi>lt I said
Ally, ft laud kli'-*trig the
I1r. Agnew'e TtiseriTl;tt?af sits
t)khcr rl:ty .
aha t feeling very tit la'0 44vis.
headuclb.cu and liver !lid, 2p c6nt;a' a 1r�r1,
-1,
.wast►
ed n- a to knock; oft ii of k foe )t Tear' O;nd
Sold y Watts & Co, ,
„� -
take t trip avotind the world! lite said,
A'X.pllt,on get a Vooklo ticket, whivit
llgcl[110 .�c., &e.,
, ,r , ,
Refatt>efisgttoii
""iligg" w, yy4)tl tttllz ISkH a fnOl," Ffi1d
The llpes6 ancient method Of uiaklIlg leg
In Holes in
T, WAlltt . otY to clisgusG. I couldn't
Is practiced India. are made
go,' ati.d Iter putt, to have known that.
the ground, drystraw is put at the bottom
I' Li'or the alma reason Mr. Ruhert
• of these: and on it at the plose of the slay
Lavender was not able. to use the ad.
:
are pldiced .pans of water which are left
vice his doc to t gave him. Yet the
doctor'a advice iv4ts perfectly in
until the next morning, when the too that
is found wttfhln the pans isoolleoted. This
good,
find Of itself. .4nd Mr. Lavender's
1ndustr-y is eaxried on only in districts.
case is the case of the vast llagjut•fty of
where the ground is dry and will readily
ns. It warns that .lt .1 illy, 1807, he was
absorb the vapor given off from the water
•ill with iut3airlfilattiou of the bowels.
in the pans. The freezing, of course, is
He might have died of that without
due to the great amount of heat absorbed
any trouble; but forinnately, he re-
by the vapor In passing from its liquid to
covered—at least p u•tinily, still Ile
its gaseous form.
wasn't title man he hail beou. He was
Another- process was practiced Inthe
weak, low and miserable.
day of ancient Rome when the wealthy
"I was so Much reduced," he •sitys,
are said to have had their wines cooled by
"that I hadn't even tile power ill dress
having.. the bottles placed In water Into
myself. In fact, I was so weak
which saltpeter was thrown, the. bottles
that I could walk ()lily' a few
being the while rot ited,
yards without help, What little
Dr. Cullen In 1556 discovered that the
I ate gave fite no strength, fur after
evaporation of water could be facilitated by
eating I had so utuc'h pitin at toy
the romoval of the pressure of tho utmos-
cheA and uncasine,s d11 wry stomach
phere, and that by doing this water could
that l got no relief uiltil t had vomit-
be frozen. Nairn in 1777 discovered that
ed it till til) again. Tho dovtorstticl uiy
sulphuric slid would absorb the vapor of
ivel' wits out of order, but the Illedicine
water If pla od in a second vessel separate
he gave we took feu effect. After I
from that containing the water, bubcon-
hall suffered about t))o months in this
nested with it. This discovery he put to
way lie recommended tilt; to try it
use in 1810 by constructing an apparatus
chilttge of ,dl', Witt 1 went to Illy nalit e
for absorbing the vapor of the water that
placeLit tleport, ill UauiMridgeshlre
it was desired to cool or freeze. This ap-
'I'here, I stltyecl five weeks Will retui'll"d
parattls greatly facilitated the freezing
1101110 it triile better, but wits s000 ay
operations of a vacuum freezing machine.
ball its evev.
—Cassler's Magazine..
,,Then the docuir gave the intwe
Wledicine still ordered tile. to go to the
Soasile. But there WAS suflicent rea-
Travel as an Educator.
son why I diel not act upoil hi, advice:
The usefulness of trnvol for rightly
1 UOULI) Noir A t•lvitit I'r. Owio,r to
trdined and constituted lads is so geuoral-
illy ha.vlug been so Inn,; ;tw;ty fr,a1,
ly recognized that it is not at all unusual
work tltn iuoney [vita nat.ni•rt.11y giettiu,,
for parents who wish to,give their sons ev-
low. •: ',•
� . Il' t here a t. I • ) 1, uu• e. -
a tau tit l 1 ti
1
er chane possible t in i v
c b o 0 crease ti wisdom
Y p
cept. at Irip t0 the siti why 1 ;,110111d
to offer them the choice between spending
have co wait 11111.11 the dt:•t:a.e 11111tle [til
several years in Europe or going to college
end of tile. Ile alight ata well have oar-
at home. Each of us knows one or two
tiered nae to illxke a voyato
ge :lustraliat
men who have pursued education in this
and back for wry health,
way, and we are used to compare thein
"But there wits nu alteitint.ive; and
with their college bred coevals and pass
ruy wire was the one to think of it.
opinions as to h*hieh method of intelloo-
Site reuteilibered that hpr brother, Mv.
tual development resulted best. Every
George T;lylor, who live, at Idle Pit, tit
year there are lads who were fitted for eel-
Throc'kly, was c•ure4l of a serious illiles,.,
loge—and perhaps entered—but went
after the doctors had givelr hint up, by
abroad. To compare them 6 or 8 or 10 or
Mot11N, Se igel's Sy till l). it wits a hal)py
20 "years later with their schoolmates who
thought. Illy wife wrote to London
wont on and took their collego degreb is
tut- the ilaedicine, and its soon as it, was
perhaps the most available test of the re -
,received 1 began taking it according to
spective efficiency of the two methods, and
the ].printed directions,
it seems safe to say that, according to that
"•After having used (tile bottle I felt
test, the educational fruits of travel and
much lienee; lily appetite picked up
study abroad compare very well with the
and rood agreed with rete and digested
products of the domestic tree of knowl.
without giving ole any pain ,or dis-
edge.—"The Pointof View" in Scribnor's.
tress, I was so cheered and encour-
aged by this that, I continued taking
Changes In India.
the Syrup ; and in it few weeks was
hack to lily work, as well its ever, My
I was lately shocked by seeing a Toda
.
wife, who hail suffered froru
boy stud in for the third standard in
tion ;tad great weakness, also meed
sou, d
Tamil Inst ad of tending the buffaloes of
IVYOthrr Syrup, and it has floe
his mend. The Todas, whose natural
Sinal
at new wand of her. She is now
emit better then she hats been
drink is milk now delight in bottled beer
and a mixture of port wine and gin. Tiles
forft.runger
ell years. I will answer any
and kerosene tins are employed instead of
the primitive thatch. A Bongall babu,
inquiries that play tae uLde nder, my
inquiries t ;tt
ivies
case. (Signed) Robert Lavender, 201,
with close cropped hair and bare'hoad,
ley, near' New-
clad in patent leather boots; white socks,
castle, n-TPlevn , October
castle on -Tyne, October 10th, 18ll,
dhuti; and conspicuous unstarched shirt
Thus see that, after all,
of English device; a Hindoo or Parsee
.Lavender oneMr.
hard only to sinep at homeg
cricket eleven engaged a ainstaEuro peen
team; the increasing for
and take Seigel's Syrup to lie speedily
struggle small
and thoroughly cured of his disease,
paid appointments under government—
whicb wits acute indigestion arid dys-
these are a few examples of changes re-
'the
pepsla. It was it process at once
sulting from refinement of modern
simple, easy, and cheap. More people
eivilizatiou.—'"lindian Anthr000lofrv,"
than you can count have adopted it
with the sattne results. Even if our
ft iend could have gone to the seaiside
it is d'onbtful if it would have done,
hien any good. Mother Seigel,s Syrup
NOW
A VERV
is better than salt aim for, Sonne things.
Whiskey^At Sea.'
.
HAPPY MANI
---
ritten fur The Templar,
Tilt Templar one year ago de.ttlt
ediettrittlly with the subject of Wracks
and Whiskey. The ar icl.e was based
cr
Mr. T. R. Baxter says:—"After
upon It report to tie �alI Ax, N. S.,
the Use of Seven Bottles of
,, , „
Uhrouicle tO tile ff ct that " uu
ht,tidred—cases of whiskey saved fti,e
Paine's Celery Compound
wreck"—the Donaldson liti r,: 'War
1 Was Perfectly Cured
wick, on the Gland Marian, till islaml.
.
in the Bay of Fundy. fn the course of
and Feel Young
the article, wo said: �I
s,
Again.
"It: is not known by ally person thin
whiskey ever saved it wreck on the
__
waters of the Atlantic, whether where
.
they shoot tip into their narrow bed,
The Great Medicine
the High tides fur which the
Baty of Fundy is so noted, or where
Is Tr iump"hantly
they roll in magnificent, swell o'er the
vast expanse stretching front this to
Victorious After"
trans-AdaconinierceL7 of shores, ca riving the
cormrnercu of nation;:. I'er curlt•rat,
Medical -Men Fail.
malty it sad chapter of misery, suffer-
ing,.wreck and d^ath on the high seas
--
has had its origin in the too free use
of whiskey or other alcoholic Never-
This Almost, 311raculous Cure
atges. The explanations offered for the
Has Vastly Increased the Taatine
stranding of the Warwick d0 not sat-
isfy the St. John editors, who frankly
of Paine's Celery Compound In
confess than such incidents are' liable
toe lYHaritilllC H'rOyillCes.
to prejudice the claims of that harbor
as a wester port.
,
"Lying on the: eastern shore of the
Assurance and Hope for the
bay, and within five miles of the (els-
Loins House, is the wreck of the Bel-
Most Despe rate Cases
gravia, it splendid freighter of the
Anchor line, which attempted to leave
.
that port last spring. The pilot took
WE1,r s & RtcilARDSON Co:,
the steamer safely down the bay in
the, fog and gave the captain his
DEAR SIRS :—I desire to let you
know, about my wonderful cure by
course and hid him 'bon voyage.' Tn a
short while the Belgravia ran head on
"tir precious medicine, Paine's Celery
with such fort upon. the coast that it
has been found impossible to float her,
Compound.
I was afflicted 1?y three complaints
and she is now teeing torn to pieces.
The he
that made my life it misery and a bur -
sten. I had erysipelas for forty years,
captain admitted that had not
followed the instructions of theilot
bleeding piles for fifteen years, and
sciatic rheumatism for over,a
but hard taken, he knew not why, an
opposite course. What explanation
year. -
I tried the doctors and all kinds of
can satisfy the Public?. Is it to be
medicines, but no help or relief was atf-
found in the reported fact that the
forded me, and I could not eat or sleep.
evening preceding het sailing a tecep-.
I was then advised to use Paine's Cel -
tion Was held on board the Belgravia'
ery Compound, and oh, what a mighty
when wines and other liquors flowed
Chan e! The use of the first bottle
.freely? „
onab ed rn to ea an s
a e t d lee an
p, d after
The article concluded: Wherever
using seven bottles I was quite anoth r
Haan•. -was perfectly cured, and felt
else men may indulge in the free use
young again. All that I have written
of alcoholics, the high seas do not
can he proven by merchants, doctors,
present special advantages for that
magistrates, and three ministers of
practice.
the Gospel, and by scores of other
- --__,_
people. I shall always thank you and
Paine's Cel.
,
.
your wonderful medicine;
Compound.
. .
d A, , r
T'Hoa. R. BnxTis R,
I . , .rery
Karsdr� le, N. S.
0; ,O
I hereby certify that Paine's Celery
t
Compound has made a Well man of ,
,
T t
hos. R. tai
Purait.and Resttor tibio dad Dalry Jmlkga H. TaoRvn,
No adllitteatlon. Novel' dikeeil Justice of the peace.
1,. .
N��r
"C Tfcx.
.. ',
�11ififro Wag
tku,t ii i ;y Pia
Ut while oji tttld tltital .
mmoa *ko prootwiu.;A�.t
10#4 wArbli+g italt 7
rctohrb
Rettalvvr,at'H"r,,V ,f do
Gworlt ll, Sept. 7&b.1891.
C WOOD 02 0QAT1.
++•+wa oaru,+ttlypnireer ar 11 AYIf33
IJ 151:1.'7M%rRT8 JG1VRX 'W:.'Ii1 RVATh1>:W ' '
.
To Imp -vers Q£ Stook.
TUo undersigned has on his prc"fq,g,, 14tij
concession, Goderloh Township, .
A Thoroughbred Jersey Bull. Terms: --,1;1
and $2. g$�
tared h Tor tua br$1 with the White
Ilirfleio x rcitltrh-
ing. .
A thoroughbred Tamworth°Boal•, registered.
Terms:—$1, witli ptdvi}ego of returning.
This is a rare ollancc to improve your.ej:`i
965 -ti Owner.
C. FaimtINDS,
Owner.
o
Notiee.
\ire keep on timpilst N a very large, high bred, prizo
wlnr.er, theater wbito beg which )ve bnvalept for tbd
post three }cors and is n splendid stook getter. We
have also pu,chused unother pig et the some breed, ''"
w those having youno solve britd from old bog coo re I `
taaru thorn- Ttrm $t tush at time of secvico with
prhibge of retatuing li en if ner,ssnrv,
w1f. lu I,1OTT,
hayfield !toad, 1
I, dcrieb Totvn,bir, Doi 24th, '
Removal of Night roil,
The un,lorsigncel will Ondcrtake the removal
Of Ni 'Olt Soil and thorough cleaning of closet.
oil short votice, and ail rensotablp, rates. Ali
refuse removed out of town.
t•f, 1WBT. MENNEL.
80 YEARS'
EXP"CE
1
1 ►
iY TRADE MARKS
w IDESiGNS
COPYRIGHTS BGC.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
trutold ascertain our opinion free whether an
invent' on is probably patentable. Communlen-
tions,strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency :(or securing patents.
Patents taken trowgh Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, In the
Scientific )iwrican.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest olr.
collation of any scientific journal. Terms, $8 a
year t
four MUNN& C®a3616roaldway,d by NewYorkBranah Office. 625 F St., washlugton, D. C.
Rich Mein's sons.
Rev. Frank De Witt Talmilo'Ithe
11
the famous preacher, remarked
mon on "Rich Men's Sons:" Do '
1.
that as a rule the greatest misfor
pening to one is to be lullabied i
of luxury? The only dad failuit
of the merchants have ever madesons, of whom they are ashamed.
Too Much For Her. •
Brownti did you break your wife
of buying cigars for you?
Towne—When in the house I smoked
only those she bought me.—Brooklyn Life.
An Early Fog Horn 6tory..- . ,
""Tbat•portraitof lliain'Allen,"said•
the old citizen as he looked around the
sanctum, "reminds me of a story about
him that I have nover seen in print. It
was during the rattling campaign of 1840,
and Allen had been invited to spec lc in
Cleveland. The meeting place was a grove
near the corner of ,;rib and Euclid, and
of course everybody turned out to bear
the famous Ohioan. Then the Whigs, who
hated William, made it up among,them-
selves tbafas soon as he arose to speak
they would desert the meeting in a body.
Sure enough, just as Allen arose and open. I
ed his mouth away went the Whigs. But
the warhorse was enough for them. He
had a voice that covered a township, and
he poured hot shot into -the Whig party as
long s a retreating Whig.
as there was 1
„, in
sight. Ile gave it to them straight fr'elthe shoulder, and if any of them 1
over in Ohio City they must have wep
hearing him long after they got ho.
Lord, how the audience roared when
last Whig was out of sight) The see
ole of the deserters hustling along to
out of range of those thunderous inv
tives was a sight to matte the gods r'
with delight. I've seen many fun
things in politics, but nothing quite
funny as that. "—Cleveland Plain Deal
Fate of Noted Horses.
General Boulanger'sfamous black hot
now draws a Paris flacre. Alarshal Ca
rpbert's and General tlallifet's charg,
were turned over to the Pasteur histiti,
to produce antidiphthcritio serum, as R
also St. Claude, the winner of the Anter
steeple chase in 1890.
-
At ()lip of the Mnckan� is llntplc, love,
by its frequenters for its ass(iciation
It' spite Of lax management, a tie
guest demanded :t With. 'illy de . I .l
sir," chid the proprietor. "next yeas
we shall have two of the fittest Stu
best equipped hath•rnoills on th •
island." '"But" ohjecced the guest.
want a berth this •year."
- - - - R
F11
.i .
11
.11
Tk"#' If I IN G 41
C .I1, !� ... �,"l
I IIELFiI ,� I " 'A -rNG � ��",
AW i _111Milil . .y all It, 6 , '
Jldi
1,
'STER"061 NG I Ili
SKIN ID18111MRS hIgUitVED' 0%, ONE AP-
PLICATION OF
Det. Agnew's Ointment,
SS CENTS.
Mr. James Gaston, merehAnt,Wllkesbarrci,
Pa, writes :.•+-For little y6tim I have boon.
dish v
red with th to
iter Oil hands and d face
But tit last. I have ;toned a caro in Dr.
Agae/v's 910tment, My 811:6 Ig n6w
sniootil and soft ahci faa'e'e fr6ln ever, bloul •.
Iall. xhe Arat Ailplteatlon gave rellef.�-SO,.
Scud by Watts & Clo. .
. .I