The Huron News-Record, 1887-02-16, Page 9411•R
II.ATED- i i,E."
the as toorinal leave
li t le in an
hfhg of
f�lteh_I*•
,�. ITS IlapsmsOTto? ,,ND iNIt1U1a'IEs gible fofrtn, Whether these- things
1'oINTED one. were eta fir not they would pee.
(Theft followed a• history of the
(look from the resolution of the
Rads Presbterto
.`gregation.gathered in. Victoria street the athorization,in March or Apr
iil,
Church to hear Rev. Mr. Saltou dis-
cuss the book of Scripture selections.
Vile remarks were eagerly lietlti ed
to, and favorably ,received evenelly
`those- who have hitherto been un-
able to eve anything 'wrong in the
book or its, history. The following
is a fair synopsis of Mr. Salton's re-
marks :
l3efote announcing Its text the
rev. geutlem.tu supposed he was in
n positiuu to Briticise the book in as
touch al he bromght to hear upon it
an umpruj ttdicud miud, a • Bible
student's accuracy and A public
school teacher's experience, having
himself fur "due years had charge of
a large school of "tow -headed" Lan-
cashire lads. Ile earnestly wished,
however, that no political capital
would be made out of any remarks
tirade duriug the service ; he didn't
care "a rap" who was in fault . and
who was not; neither Tories.._n or
Grits, Catholics nor Protestants
would feel offended, for he wtatego-
ing to deal not with pai°ties but with
the Loot,:.
The test was from Jeremish, 36
chap. and 23rd verse.—"He ant it
with the pen knife." Juhoiakitn
Was but 25 years of age when he
was elected King _ of Judah in the
stead of his fat her, the good Ding
Jusi:tlt, I' rIkaddun, through one
of his generals, had laid Judah
tooter heavy tribute, which, in addi-
tion to tho tyrannous extortions of
the King to sustain royal splendour
-and to build curtly palaces, brought
the'Jews to a state of despon(Ieuc'.
It was easy for the idelators to pur-
suede the people that the dark times
were due to the religions reaction
which set in, during Josiah's reign.
The temple was therefore deserted,
altars and •groves to Moloch and to
Adonis were ere'cted,;, impurity,
adultery, robbery and murder were
rampant, and «t•en sacrifices of sons
to Moloch were not uufrequent. Jere=
Hliilll Bpiiears ou the sceue during this
reign of last anl,tar a quarter of weeps
tory, rings out his fearless warnings.
He was, however, put iu the stocks,
dungeumed, bastivadoed and threat-
ened with ,death,—until in sell pre-
servation he dictated his Words to
Baruch' and ordered that he should
road them to the people. Nehuchah-
nezzer's approach to I•Iermon with.
his lahylonish army and .Jeremliah's
prophecy of coming calamity arous-
ed the people's fetus. They sent
Baruch and itis roll to the princess
who) in turn, through Jehudi, had
it read in the hearing of the ding.
His treatment of:. it is declared io..
the text. (Tbo writing of the second
roll and Jehuiakiui's unhappy death
were then graphicaly described.)
But this treatment of the divine
word.did nut occur iu the month of
December, 604 13: C., for the last
time. There are leen here to -night
who cut the Bible even as Joliuiakim
of old' did. Beware lest your
epitaph be that of Jehoiak.ir writ-
ten by Jeremiah : "Buried with
the burial of an ass,"
Many mel were denounced by
the preacher as modern Jehoiaikims,
ono of whom was he who dared
with his "sneering soc:alai:nt" to
exput•g:ate words•and sentences that
would not "trim their meaning to
the Shibboleth of his So -culled but
miscalled free -thought." One man
objects to the story of the creation,
another to the story of the flood,
and out those stories must go. One
objects to the word_ hell, and an-
other to the phrase • eternal punish-
llleltt, so the pen -knife is used, and
these deluded mortals believe that
because their 33ibles trimmed by
their own sacreiigious hands do not
er,ntain the doctrine, the reality has
gone. No .man can alter one word
of his (the preacher's) Bible. No,
not to the erasure of the dot over
an 1 or the blotting out of a cross
from a t. He wanted the Bible' as
it was given him, every warning
and promise in place. gob hint of
any' secular or earthly thing, but
alter not one jot or title of his
Bible. •
Ooderieh Star.
Last Sunday, evening a lard con-
(IIo then attacked the man who
ran* his knife from beginning to
end, from Genesis to Reveiation,
and he declared • that the divine
origin of the Bible was sufficiently
declared in the fact that it had with-
stood Without lose of a book or a
verse or a sentence or a letter, the
scholarships and philosophies and
onslaughts of ages.)
It is urged, said the preacher, that
the book °placed in our High and
1 tubba pcbools. is. a scarred bible, a
tnutilated-thing; a book of bits and
scraps, indeed a book through which
the—penknife of Archbishop Lynch,
of G. W. Rose, of W. II. C. Kerr,
had been thrust in so deadly a man -
1885.)
lie could not reprehend either
party for the appearance of this book,
slot even the Catholi.a, buthe did cer-
tainly blame the jdint deputation of
Episcopalians, Presbyterians and
Methodists,who,on the 23rd October,
1882, allowed such a Work to pass
through their halide. Their assur-
ances were not sufficient f'or hint ;
lie would examine it for hitntolf.
It was only a book of selections,
and consequently it was impossible
to have evert/ chapter. and verse in
place, but he was sorry that the
whole of Jeremiah, the whole of
Esther and nearly the whole of
Romans, that epistle which contain-
ed the fundamental doctrine of
Protestantism justification by faith,
had beeu omitted. (Then followed
a number of special verses that had
been missed.) ,If the Miuister of
Education had published and author-
ized a calendar or list of Scripture
readings, -land allowed the teachers
and scholars to have handled and
read the Word of Life itself, all this
strife of words would have been
avoided.
But f these selections are good and
correct lot us adopt them in order
to avoid the difficulties that would
occur if passages were read Indis-
criminately. But they are NOT con-
Rrcr. They do nut contain tie
words, the sense, or the harmony of
-the Scriptures. The Erst page the
rev. gentleman saw was p, 170,
whore Ps. 84 is given. But Ps 84
has only 12 verses, this selection has
15 ; which Ps the extra verses carne
front, lie did not kuow. Ho did
not like the Psalms meddled with
in that way, especially as the added
verses had not the slightest e0uuec
tion with the Psalm.
Look at the story of Joseph ; he
wished that that story had remained
intact, for there was no purer lan-
guage- in the Bible, but hero the
penknife cut of than was seen to av
terrible - extent. The book roads
smoothly to the sixth verse, then
slips over to the middle of the 17th
verse, between which verses he pats
in words nowhere to be found be-
tween the lids of the Bible. True
the• added verses are iti brackets.
but the children don't know that,,
tor the teacher reads without cont-
inent or explanation, spud even if
they knew the brackets were there
they night not know their moaning.
Well, this selectiou after leavilig
the half of the 17 verso Misses that
18th and 19 verses, and, reaching
the 23rd verse, misses from it one
Ford, then going on with the fortieth
chapter it closes with the 4th verse,
from the middle of which it con-
trives to ini8S a whole sentence of
four words,., thus destroying beth
sense and harmony.
In I John III, the selection be-
gins at the first verse, travels only
to the end pf the sixth; misses ..two
beautiful paragraphs, and juleps
fairly iuto the middle of the third,
destroying altogether the connec-
tion, and then lops off the last verse
of the chapter which tells us we
know we are iu •Chi ist by the
Spirit which ho gave us (one of the
fundamental truths of Methodism.)
Atter dealing in this way with seven
or eight passages, amongst which
was Christ's sermon ou -the mount,
the preacher went on to say there
are 99 such mutilations of more or
less importance. Five score gashes,
through which the life blood of
God's maossago streams. Through
those open, bloody wounils there
conte eloquent appeals for redress.
Who will act the good Stnaritan'l
Oh, trustees of our school interests,'
if it be legally possible for you to
banish these wretched and mislead-
ing selections and give to the child-
ren the Bible, the whole Bible, and
nothing but the• Bible, I pray you
iu the name of the great Reformers,
in view of the rich blood of the
martyrs, in consideration of the
sufferings of the. Scottish coven-
anters, nay, I pray you in God's
name, give the children •the un -
mutilated, pure word of God.
CONSUMPTION CURED
An old physician, retired from practice,
having had placed in liis•ltattds by an
East India missionary the formula of a
simple vegetable remedy for the speedy
and permanent cure of Cousuntl tfom,
Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all
throat and Lung Affections, also a pos-
itive ous Debilit
te 1 alli(Nrvotts Complaints,dical mire for ivafte 'having
tested its wonderful curative powers in
thousands of (MRCS, has telt it ban duty to
make it known to
suffering
Actuated by thisntot ve and desire e to
relieve human suffering, I will send free
of charge, to all who desire it, this re-
ci te, in (Imrman,'Frenchor English, with
full directions for preparing and using.
Sent by mail by addressing with.stamp,
naming this paper, W. A. Neves, 149
Power t J3lock. Rochester, N. Y.
885 -y-e, o, w.
CANADIAN ORDER OF FQR-
ES'I'Ei S.
tT$ WONDERFiJL GROWTH AND THE AD-
Vq,NTAtiES AFFORDED THE MENDERS.
This noble order was founded in
the year 1879. and originated in the
feeling that a purely Canadian
society was needed ; one entirely
independent of control from the
United-Stattes or elsewhere, and the
fact that nearly six thousand mem-
bers have already enrolled them-
selves in its membership, proves
conclusively the justification of this
conclusion.
iTS AIMS.
Tho members are banded together
to foster genuine practical brother -
hoed, and cultivate that spirit of
fraternal interest, so needful in
view of our mutual dependence on
each other.
While` other societies have had
the Sante noble aims, yet failures
have resulted in consequonee of a
departure from a sound business
basis. These warning notes have
been heeded •by the founders and
m,tilagors of the C. O. F., and the
result is that the funds are economi-
cally handled, the membership
charges are low, and the security
given to insurers is the very best.
Iu the ,language of' the society's
prospectus:—It aims to shut out
sectarian, political, or class pro-
jedices, that would interfere with
the true peace and happiness of a
united brotherhood.
ITS BENEFITS.
Each court provides for attend-
ance of a skillful physician during
illness or disability ifls- givos a
weekly allowance of from $3 to $5
during the time a member is unable
to work, On the death of a menu
ber tato court at once contributes to-
wards tie funeral expenses the sun,
of from 81,5 to 840. Lastly, after
satisfactory proof of the death of a
member in good standing, the wife,
children, or legal heirs of the de-
ceased receive from tie order ono
thousand tlLI;als,
SECURITY OF THE FUNDS.
Realizing how absolutely neces-
sary it is to inspire perfect confid-
ence on tho minds of those who
purpose insulin -, the nlan:Tors ex-
act ample security from every one
who controls the fund, and such
safeguards -are provided as to ensure
the -payment to those fur whose
benefit it is dovigned. The machin-
ery is simple and 'yet in perfect
accord with recent legislation iu re-
ference to mutual benefit insurance
associations. As evidence of the
hood acconlpli,lted, it may be added
that 'already over one hundred and
sixty thousand dollars have been
paid out iu insurance and for sick
Benefits, and volu.nros. could bi writ-
ten of the comfort imparted and the
substantial aid extended to thousands
of dependent ones, in their hoar of
need. In addition to this there is
a reserve fund on. hand... of .'early
thirty thousand dollar's. Such a
showing reflects the highest credit
on the gentlemen who have con-
ducted the affairs so' successfully.
Any person or persons desir•otte of
further informr.ation.ts to the advan-
tages offered, or as to the methods
of orga,ni ing a court can 1(pply to
It. Elliott, Listowel, II. C. R. ; A.
BIc�'oill,- Poterboro, H. V. C. I. ;
Mayor Neelands, Winghaant, 11.
T reas. ; or A. E. (.fammage, Brntford,
Ont., II. Sec.—Globe.
—Mr: Thos. J. Jones, a - former
resident of St. Mary's was run over
by an engine in the G. T, lt. yard
at Print Edward about six o'clock
Saturday morning. Mr. Jones, who
has for a numl•er of years been a
resident of Port Huron, came over
to Point Edward on Friday evening
to visit his sister. Ile remained all
night, and on' Saturday Morning
while ou tho track going towards
the transfer boat to go back to Por:
Huron he was run over by an en-
gino. Ile shouted when struck
and the engineer stopped • almost
instantly. Both legs were crashed
near the knees. His back and leg
were broken, and his head gasliod.
Ho was under the engine 45 min-
utes; and they had to raise the
engine to release him. He made
Ms will in the meantime, leaving
$4,000 to his wife, who was on a
visit to her brother, Dr. Hutchison,
of London, at the tinlo. Mr. Jones
lived about two hours after the ac-
cident.
Nervous, Debilitated Nen,
You are allowed a free trial of lhirev
liar, -of the use of Dr. Dye's Celebrated
Voltaic Belt with Electric' Snspensory
Appliances, for the speedy relief and
permanent cure of Nervous Debility; lose
of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred
tro'tblee. Also, for many other diseases
Complete restored in to health, vigor
and manhood guaranteed. No risk is
Incurred. illustrated patnphtet, with
foil information, terms, etc., mailed
free by addreeslog Voltaic Belt Co.,
d*rabal1, Mich. 818y -c343
a
A Rimitnnjpen.--Judge Ltxars
of Stratfetd, %as retired ou a pen.'
cion of $1900 a year. Ho stili,
however, retains his position as
Master in Chancery, which is Worth
$700 more. .The position thus va-
cated has been conferred upon Mr.
• J. P. woods, Q, (3,) ,of the city Strat-
ford. Judge Lizars is a eon of the
late Iffy, D. H. Lizars who was for
very many years Clerk of the Peace
for the County of Huron. He firet
etudied law with "Four Eyes" Stew-
art, and afterward married a daugh-
ter of the late Mr. John Longworth, BUSINESS DIRECTORY
all at once time of the town of God-
erich. -
NEWS GUST. --"Veteran" writes
the 1Vitnese protesting against the
"gushing rot of newspaper person-
alities." The press pokes its nose
into the doings of the most private
social gatherings. Tho public are
not interested, he says, and if they
are should not be- made acquainted
with' the fact through newspapers
that"SMr. Brown played leap frog MI Work Registered. Charges Moderate.
with Tommy and Dicky last eve-
ning, or that Mr. Jones kisses his
wife every morning before he loaves
hone for his office, or that Mr.
Robinson, the brute! did not even
say, good bye, my dear, though he
was not to return until next day.
A COCK: AND WHISKEY STORY.—
A Tuckcrsmith housewife fed her
fowls the other morning with a
liberal supply of oats from a bin.�cgitt.
Later in the day she noticed that
they acted strangely, and later on
Mend a rooster stretched out appar-
ently dead. She - concluded that
they must have been poisoned in
some way, and went right to work
and plucked the feathols from the
dead rooster, except the coarser ones
iu the tail and on tho avimgs, and
threw the body on the manure heap.
Toward uoou, to tho surprise of the
family, he was strutting about as
lively as ever, without his gorgeous
plumage. As the rooster is of a
touch prized species, the lady dress-
ed hits up in blouse and overalls
and he now struts about doing as
well ascan bo expected. Inquiry
into the cause of the trance into
which the rooster had fallen reveal-
ed the fact that ono of the work
hands had stowed away among the
oats a jar of old rye wbiskey'which
had toppled over, leaked out and
saturated the oats thoroughly. And
it was the moist oats the lady was
most particular in feeding to the
C111IRa131l DIREcTOR11,
St. Put a Chilrelb-ServIces on Sunday at U
..n,. and 7 p. tn, Bible Class, '10 it.tn. Sunday
tehool, 2.90 p.m: Service onlvudneed,t,•, 8 p.m,
Ray. tVn a t:A CRAIG, D. n., lteetot
Rattcttbury Street Methodist. --Services at 10-.80
a, tu. Led 7.00 p. in. Sabina)) Suhool at 2.80 p.
m. Rev, Ma. RUruar, Pastor.
Canada Presbyterian.- Servlcea at 11 a.m, ani
1,80 o. in. Sabhath Behoof, 2.80 p. m. Rev
Awl*. STawART, Pastor.
Ontario Street Methodist. -Services at taloa.
m. and 7.00 p, in. Sabhath School, 2.80 p.m.
Ray. w. W, SL•eattat, Pastor.
Baptist Church.-ServIee at e.ec p. tn, Bab
bath School, 2.80 n. m. Ray J. oaav, Neter,
ptotiliitry.
— EDWIN KEEFER,
7»t1N'TIST,
ate of Toronto, honor Graduate Royat College
of Dental Surgeons,
Coats's Block, - Clinton.
las
nil. REEVE. O18ce-"Palace" Drlek Block,
l� Rattenhury Street, Residence opposite the
Teinperanee Hail, Huron Street. Coroner for the
County of Huron. Office hours. from 8 a.m. to 0
p. in.
Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881, I -y
fowls.
—The inhabitants of the county
of Two Monutains, abutit three miles
from Montreal, were startled on
Sunday on learning that the school
house at Sto. Monique had beeu
destroyed by fire during the night,
and that four young girls who
were in it had 'perished in the
blames. It appears tit+tt three sisters,
aged 10, 11 and 12, respectively,
,d:iughters of M)•. Ambrose, and
:mother young girl, daughter of J[r.
Forget, slept in the place during
the night. The schoolmistress, it
appears was absent, and duripg the
night the place took fire and was
Ibn•rned to the ground. The origin
of tho fire is unknown, ,The chaired
remains of the four young girls were
found among the ashes.
—A buy apparently abort. tan
years of age, giving his name as
Newbury, reached Ridgeway a few
flays ago all,d related Tate a pitiful
story ut' his adventures. Ho stated
that he loft Buffalo on Sunday to
fish on the lake, and while on the
ice a snow stolen carne rap and the
ice commenced breaking. Ile was
lost in the storm and'. wandered
about for some time, but finally
reached shore—not knowing whoth•
PI'he was in Canada or the States.
He stopped in an unoccupied shan-
ty near the lake and started across
the ice on Monday, but came
and stopped in the shanty another
night. He was accompanied by a
fine Newfuundliud dog, which he
sold and with the proceeds touk the
train for Buflirlo.
Wm. Jones, one of the appren-
tices in the flouring mill of Hodri &
Cullen, Stratford, had his eyebrows
and part,of Itis hair singed by an
explosion of dust Friday hast. Mr.
Jones was. in the act of cleaning out
one of the wooden spouts, anti had
set his lantern, which was lighted,
near. by, when suddenly down came
a lot of dust upon the lantern, ignit-
ing like powder and going off with
a puff. Besides having his hair
singed Mr. ,.Tones' face was badly
blistered. Speaking of dust explos-
ions, one of the most striking oases
occurred several years ago in Min-
neapolis, when the Washington
mill caught. The wails of the mill
were solid stone, six feet thick, and
when the explosion came they were
just like paper, and the roof, made
of sheets of iron, was blown so high
from one mill that it lan4,ed more
than two miles from the spot whore
it went up. Men have been blown
out through windows, hurled
ihrongh the air, and the walls of
a Imilding completely demolished
by 'a lean lighting a 'pipe in a big
grain house.
MAN NING & SCOTT,
Barristers,
ELLIOTT'S Iif.CCP, - -. CLINTON.
Money to Loan.
A. II. MANNING. .TAS. SCOTT.
FRANK R. POWELL,
Barrieler, Solicitor, Notary
Puff) le, etc.
OMee, Searle's lllock, Albert-st„ Clinton,
Toronto agents :-Messrs. McCarthy, Osler,
Hoskin a Creelin , . •
It. -. y.
ire; Paiva re FUSns TO Lavu at lowest rates of
iuterest,.;,;,1 381
PAGER MORTON, Barristers,d•c.,.e , Ood.
St
erich and N'inghan>, C. Seager, Jr., Godorieh.
J. A• Morton %%Inghrun. 1-1y.
DAVISON & J011NSTON, Law, Chancerv,and
Conveyancing. Odic; -West Street,' next
floor to Post Ottice, Ooderich. Ont. 57.
Ipt C. BAYS, Solicitor, S,e. OMee, cornerof
It.. Square and West Street, over Butler's Book
'Store, Goderich, Ont. 07.
tt.2T Money to lend at lowest rates of interest.
CA\tp(ON Barrister,Attorno, Solicitor In
, Chancery, entivec•anror, Kc. (Mice over
Jordan's Drug Store, the rooms formerly occu
-pied by Judge Hoyl .
S'tr An runonnt of money to loan at lowest
rates of interest. 1,1t,
gucttolteerittq.
H. W. BALL,
A,T'CTTONEEit for Huron County. Sales at-
( -I tended to in any part of the Country. Ad-
dress orders to Uouentca 1' 0. V-
CiUAS. 18,1,�11[H.'1 OA*r
CCTIONEE11, lnd, ( for�m. �a^-and tnanrancc,aitent Blyth. Salts tat L` ,; - tt•entu,tre
>n reasonable terms • dr raid village
lots for. sale. Money to. loan on real.ec14tto, at
low rates of irterest. insnnince effected oh nil
classes of property. Notes and debts eolleeted.
Hoods appraised, and sold nn commission. Bank-
rupt vtoclts bought and sold.
Birth. Dec. 16, 1580,
Photogra pier s -�—
CLINTON.
Life Size Portraits a Specialty.
Clinton. garble- Works,
HURON STREET. CLINTON.
W. H. COOPER, Jr.,
Manufacturer of an dealer in all kinds of
Marble & Granite for Cemetery
Work at figures that defy competition
Also manufacturer of the Celebrated
ARTIFICIAL SrONE for Building Fir -
poses and Cemetery Work; which must
be seen to lie appreciated.—AI1 work
warranted to 'rive Satisfaction.
REMOVED.
TAitRF FISHER has removed his
.1. Shaving Parlor to tno Town Hall, where
he Invites old elle new patrons to call for
a nice clew, shave and a stn lish hair , cut.
Latest.st3les of ladtesthair.etrttinq.
"BELL"
ORGANS
urtapproached for
Tone and Quality.
CATALOGUES F11Er,
BELL & CO., Guelph, Ont,
Ittooty to pull.
1$100y000
10O 00O CF PRIVATE TNDsto LEN
s Vt AT SIX (0) NEM (ANT.
'ASB -v h. POWELL, Harrieter, SoHCltor, etc.,
eesrl8 a Bieck, CtsSro t
MONEY•to lend in large or small sums, ie
good mortgngoe or _persons, security, to
the lowest current rates. 1. HALF, Hum -et.,
Clinton
CLnton, Feb. 26, 1881. 1.1r
MONEY.
11.pRIVATE FUNDS to lend on Town and Fat
property, Apply to
C. Office, neat Naws-inter tau p tairs) Albert -St
amaze
Jnitl;ittg.
TIIE MOLZO1L In
incorporated by Act of traili anent, 1883
CAPITAL, - $2,000,000
REST, - - $500,000
Read Office, - MONTREAL.
; President.
J. 1
THOMAS
/t R. 8IOLSONr Vlitlie•President.
F. WOLFE(ISTAN THOMAS, General Manager.
Notes rlisconnted, Colleetions
afts
issued, Sterling mai Ams can ex-
change bought and sold at low-
est current rates.
iNTaa@ST AT 4 Pea CINT. ALLOWED ON Dg1.0611.
F.ARM�RS-
Money advanced to tar person their own note
with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re
quired as security,
11. C. BREWER,
February. 1884 Manager,
CUIVron
t LiNTON Lodge, No. 84, A. F. & A M.
lJ meets every Friday, on or after the tel
moon. Visiting brethren cordially invited,
J. YOUNG, w. 11. J. CALLANDF.R, San
Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881. 1.
L. 0. L. No. 710
CLINTON
Meets sscoiiD Monday of every
month. Hall upstairs, ot'poFite
the Town !inn. Visiting brethren
0 always made welcome.
EEDY
E. FLOODY, Secy. f C.aDOHEitTY, D.M.
riLiNTON KNIGHTS OF LABOR.
Booms, third lint, Victoria Hoek. Regular
meeting .every 'Thursday evening at 8 o'clock.
sharp, Visiting, Knights made welcome.
s.a.e..v
Dot' a ate of to Wet, •
FARM FOit SALE OR TO RENT.-Thatable farm vnitt-
linllett, 24,0 ntrain,Tof this 16of 0 ❑ensn'ereacleared,
balance good hardwood 11151, Leering orchard
threeOf
fram ebarna and lother yonitl veld cgs11jsl *rmr'oitt
well watered, and situated about Si miles frim
the Town of Clinton, 'Perms easy, Apply to
M. JIeTAoOA1('r, Clinton, 88S.tf
FOR SALE.
9-311F. Sl'KS(?Rinn: offers for sale Incneligible
1 Building Lots fronting en Albert Street; also
two fronting on )b,tfcubnrp Street; either to
lithe or in separate tots;' to snit purchaa€rs. Fur
further particulars apply to the underaientd.-E,
DJNSL1iY, Clinton. SS?.
TWELLING TO SENT. -The upstairs pre.
Jr inises tng; seven rooms. App lyeto Net .IPOBSC N. ZC:>df
A LL P.) lTIES INDEBTED TO CS will please
of the
pay
Nnde-ens amounts
sta Estate, more the Ist Mtas,Fas
after that date accounts will be placed in court
for collection. -C, J. TL'TIJILI. t CO. 8611
Geo. POT.Ts House, Sign,
CAh'ItIA0R d• ,'8NJ''ifAL )i,411'TI:•1L•
Pape,. Banging atui lial,nvrini,n,/ err, -nal
In tone. School Blackboards a epecinit,,. Satin.
/actin+, G"arao'anleed and prim; ,with the bane'•,
Jteside.then-,llare''Street, CLINTON, 801
NEWSPAPER -JAWS
We call the special attention of Post
nesters and subscribers to the following
synopsis of the newspaper laws :-
1—A postmaster is reiinircd to give
notice BY LETTER (retui•niug a paper dors
not answer the law) when a subscriber does
not take his paper out of the office, and
ltc,tc the reason for its not being taken.
Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster
-espoisihle to the publishersfor payment.
2—If any person orders his paper did.
mtitinnrd, he must pay all arrearagee, n1
the publisher may continue to send if
until payment is made, and collect thr
whole amnnnt, whether it bo taken from
the office or not. There can be no 1elrn;
discontinuance until the payment is made
3—Any person who takes a paper from
the post-ofliee, 'whether directed to hit
inane or another, or whether be has sub.
scribed or not, is responsible for the pay.
4—If a strbscrfher orders his paper to la
stopped nt a certain time, and the publish
er continues to send, it the subscriber fr
hound to pay for it if he takes It out of tit
post -office. This proceeds upon thegrono
that a man must pay for what hil met
i01g x p ��
ie
at thee T11 the Novemberrsitt ngg aainewrpnrt in aer put
lusher shed for pay of paper. The defend
Int nlljceted paying on tiro ground that 11
hail ordered a former proprietor of al
paper to diaeontinne it, • The Judge he.)
that that ens not a valid defence. .Th
pTaihttfl; the present proprietor, bad n
notice to diaennthrne and consogtieutl •
could collect, although it was, not dente
that defendtmt heli notified former pry,
praetor to -discontinue. In any ever
defendant WAR llrmnd to pay for the tint
he had• reeeiverl the paper, and until It
had paid all all ears due for subscrrption,,
•
t'