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The Huron News-Record, 1889-09-04, Page 35 IILALTHFVL EXERCISE. lie in Only a low months ago these rolnping, g, rosy - cheeked losses were puny, delicate, pale, sickly girls. By the aid of Dr. Pierce's world-fameFavorite Prescription, they have blossomed out into beautiful, plump, hole, hearty, strong young women. Fa- vorite Prescription" is an invigorating restorative tonic and as a regulator and promoter of functional action at that crit- ical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, it is a orfectly safe remedial agent, and can produce only good results. It is carefully compounded, by an experi- enced and skillful physician. and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It purely vegBetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. It imparts strength to the whole system. For overworked, "worn-out," run-down," debilitated teachers, mil- liners t dressmakers, seamstresses shop- glrls housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally,Dr. Pierce's Fa- vorite Prescription is thgreatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonin. It is the only medicine for women, sold by drug- .giste, undo. a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfac- tion in every case. or money will be re- funded. This guarantee bas been faith- fully carried out for many years. Copyright,1888, by WORLD'S DIS. MED. ASS'x. SOOOOFFERED ''��++�+ by the manfactur- ere of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, tor an incurable case of Catarrh in the Head. The Huron News -Record $1.50 a Year—$1.25 in Advance. ire The roan ,lues not do justice to his business ho spends less is adeerthday than he dues in real.—A '1'. 8•rzw.va'r, the nnelionaCJe merchant . (if .Sero R'edlicsday. Sept. 4th. 1889 T E JESUIT P.RI.NCIPLE , OF OBEDIENCE. 'yrs RADICAL IMMORALITY. lis Rev. W. U. Armstrong, P11.1).. Ottawa. 'There is One point that I would like to see hrought into greater prominence than it has been in the discussions of tits ethic" of Jesuits ism, and that is the radical imwor alily of the ,Jesuit'.; Vow of Obedi- ence. \\-e du well to make clearly conspicuous the immoral teachings and practices of this dark cohort of Satan, which have made them the subjects of suspicion in all ages of their history and led to their expuk sion from all lands whore loyalty, liberty and goodness meso 110141, in esteem, but I think sufficient enipha- Sis is not given .to the fact that the vow of which they boast ,is initially bad end rentlm•s a true morality an impossibility. A. tholough investi- gation of this subject would be e SUfh.a1'llt answer to the statement 80 Often h''ah 1 in these (lays:—"'Che Jesuits aro not now what they were a hundred years ago and should not be made responsible for the mischievous actions of the Society in days gone by." 'Clleir bad actions in days gone by arose from frons bail principles, and as the had principles remain we know that bad )Ictions will continue to Hoe front them. The 000 is tie• same and the same fruits will follow. As long as the Jesuit maintains his vow • of obedience, tine that is as long es Ile is a .l,•suir, he will be, and "ought to be, subject to sus- picion nn the part of all gond free men. There 1:1 an obvious advantage in showing that the ,Tesuit id essen- tially wrong from 14 -own admitted, principles. Tt is their policy to deny all damaging historical faces, but they cannot deny t110ir own avowed root -principles, Herr we can in safety keep to documents which the Jesuit, cliluu)t refuse to aeknowle.lge. The fc'llowing is the form Of the Jesuit vow : - u Eye .1r »)•rf/.. 0;0, et pia. unitt° OntatpolPr 'i l argine .1Iatre-, et mil verso rnelesti curio, err ornn.ibrrs eir'ruitshlotibots; et ribs Pari /leofr0)0lo .\'. J') posito Generale aS'orielati5 .I0s21, locum Dei, tenenti,h et 8)tecessoribus, Luis; (vet tibi Reverentlo Petri .V. Vice Praepositi Ge,teralis Jesu : et sitecasor•um ejus, locum Dei temente;) pier rehears pcittp)ertatern, C((St latent et obedientiarn et secu)tdulr, elan, peen• liarem coram circa pucrornnt er•ndi• tionern, juxta for»tam vivendi in Letteris Apostolicis Societntis Jesu et PJ1ts eo08tttuontb9s Co)ltentunt." "1 N. make profession and promise' to Almighty God before his Virgin mother and the whole heavenly court and before all here present ; and to the Reverend Father N, General of the Society of Jesus, holding the place of God, and to thy successors (or to proxy for the General) perpetual poverty, chastity, and obedience., and in conformity therewith a peculiar care in the instruction of youth according to the rule of life set forth en the Letters Apostolic and the Constitutions. I promise a special obedience to the Sovereign Pontiff in regard to missions," Now the very heart and soul of Jesuitism, is the vow of obedience. Et may be wade to appear ax a very simple effeir, but as inter• preted by the Jesuit it is a te.rriWH tow demanding the surrender, the whole being to the will and judg. went. of the General. 'lite whole training of the Jesuit lice this end in view, to reduce the whole wear to this condition of coutulete abdication of will, judg• went, conscience—all that consti- tutes the moral man. Steinmetz states in his narrative of is year'a novitiate ; '•\Ve heard comparatively little about the vows of poverty and chastity, but every ulouleut of the day we were remind ed of that of obedience. If chase tity was the crown and poverty the robe, obectitnce was the body and head to wear them. It was to be the virtue of the .Jesuit. It was to extend over body and soul 'as if we had solei thew to the devil.'" • But as to the nature of the obedi- ence I will rely upon no less author- ity than Loyola himself. 111 his Letter or► Obedience addressed to the Jesuits in Portugal, ho makes perfectly clear what is to be undere stood by obedience in the Society of Jesue. He declares that he does not wish to see the members of the order distinguished for fasts au'l virgils, but by a perfect obedience, an abdication of will and judgment," "1 would," he says "that every BOB of the Society should be known by this very ,nark, that he looks not to the person to whom he immediately yields obedience but that he sees in him the Lord," for whose sake the obedience is tender- ed.. The moral or mental qualities of the Superior are not to be taken into account but obedience rendered to him solely "because he is i), God's place.. ' "Nothing is acceptable to God which is not strictly conformed to the mind and intention of hits who is in God's place toward, ourselves." "Take care that you never attempt to bend or mould the will of your superior, which you should esteem, as the will of God, to your own, will." He argues for complete sutljuga' tion of judgment as well as will "In this this manner a living holocaust, grateful to the Divine Majesty, is offered—the users retaing nothing of self." As helps to the attainment of the obedience he offers the follow- ing 1. "See in the Superior not a man liable to erross and to miseries but Christ Himself." 11, "To cherish an affectionate zeal ready to fulfil all the Superior'. requests." ' 111. "To fix iu • your mind that whatever the Superior- Co)mmrands , is the order and 20111, of God itirltsej" Now when we Like these teach- ings in connection with the Hies - ',rations of obedience Loyola uses, we can be in no doubt as to his meauiug. As was to be moulded at will by his superior ; as a corpse incapable of independent motion ; as e, staff in an old mail's hand, so the Jesuit is to submit himself to those over hint. Let the issue be 'raised and pressed home that this principle of obedience is in itself immoral, that it removes, 80 to speak; bodily, the moral nature, and plants instead a blind obedience to a worldly power, that it dis• places the true end of ethics, eternal righteousness, and substitutes the welfare of an earthly society --that it destroys individual responsibility and cuts up by the roots the truth, fulness of menet mental and moral nature; that it is utterly contrary to the spirit and teachings of God's Word, for God Himself, in dealing with Ulan, reasons, entreats, threat- ens, persuades, appeals, but Jesuit obedience puts its foot on the neck of reason and freedom. It is this absolute unreasoning, immoral ohss thence which gives Jesuitism its exewitive power and makes it the sharp "sword whose haft is at Rome and whose point is everywhere."— /'resbJte)•i-nt Review. ' THE YEAIt OF GREAT DIS• ASTERS. Jnrlged by the record of its first six months, the year 1889 bids fair to be remembered as the year of disaster all over tiloNlrorld. During the month of January there were no serious railroad wrecks except the collision on the New York, Pennsylvania St Ohio railroad, in which eight persons were killed and as Many more seriously injured, but there were fifteen marine disasters, involving a loss of 165 lives, includ- ed among them being the steamer Paris C. Brown, which went down in the Mississippi river, costing the loss of 11 lives. February and Marcie also were singularly five from railroad disasters, but the marine losses in February were 284, an increase of 119 over January. Dur- ing the same month 20 persons lost their lives by a railroad disaster in Belgium, 10 by a wind -storm in Nebraska, 23 by a terrible hotel fire in Hertford, Conn., 200 by an earthquake in Costa Rica, 13 by a cyclrnio in Georgia, and 11 by a powder explosion in Wilkesbarre, Pa. In March the marine losses further increased to 351, the number beim: swelled by the 246 sailors of the German end American war vessels who were drowned during the hurricane at the Samoan Islands. In May the Hoods began their work of death and devastation. The first iutelligeuce caste flow Austria Fuld Bohemia, where 135 lives were lost. The consummation was in Conemaugh, Valley on the 'a t of the month, when over 6,000 per - 80118 perished and $10,000,000 worth of property was destroyed. The month of June was characteriz- ed by a frightful series of disasters. Thirty persons were killed by an accident on the Pennsylvania road at Latrobe ; 70 by a railroad dis- aster at Armagh, Ireland ; 1,200 by a tire in China ; 40 by a falling market building in Mexico ; 70 by a mine disaster in Austria, and 70 by a cyclone in Cuba. July well keeps up the record with railroad, mine and storm disasters. Altos gether, during the first six months of the year nearly 15,000 lives were lost in disasters of all kinds. Be- sides the loss of property involved in these disasters tire lute swept away property amounting to over $70,000,000 in value in the United States, It adde to the mournful record of the six months that suicides, murders, hangings, lynch- ings, and crimes of all kinds have oleo shown a marked increase oler the corresponding period for many years past. JUST FOR FUN. — A man never knows that a woman has any old clothes until he has married her. — A Berlin•scientist says salt is eonduci•ve.to longevity, but appears to have failed in the ease of Lot's wife. — "None but the brave deserve the fair." And even the brave can't live with some of 'est. —As'the butcher adds his hands to the weight of the steak, lie pious ly sighs to himself, "I love to steal awhile a weigh." Does the captain my whether we shall break the reoord ,or not 1" "Yes. He easel the record or the boiler must go." "How lovely 1" A Desirable Forfeit—"Will you eat a philopcena with nee, Miss Emily 1" "\Vhat if I lose 1" "Then I shall win a kiss." "And if I win 1" "Then I have to kiss you." —Brides—"George, dear, viten we reach town let us try to avoid leaving the impression that we are newly Married." "All right \laud you can lug. thebvalise." . • At a school examination in Scotland one of the questions asked. was. ' Who signed the Magna Charts 1' No reply he.ing given the question was repeated. Still there wag no answer; when the examiner sternly eleutanded, ' \Vho signed the Magna Charta 1' Upon which a little girl meekly called out, ' Please, sir, it wasua me !' --There is a story of n pastor W10, at the opening of a new chapel, favored ills congregation with a minute account of the structural features of the sacred edifice in which, for the first time, they were met. 11 was in the Ionic style, he remarked. Over the portico, he added, was a tower ; over that a cupola, and on the top of all a mortgage, " which last, my hreth, ren," he concluded, " being cote trary to the rules of architectural proportion as laid down by Pro- fessor Vitruvius, I hope to see promptly removed by a liberal col, lection !" —A story is told of an old resi- dent of .Marlborough, who, years ago when Miles J. Fletcher kept store there, was a " pillar in the church." Ile had, however, an appetite for drink. Fletcher sold whiskey by the jugful to nearly tall the deacons, elders and class leaders. One day the good old man aforesaid rushed into the store and nearly out of breath and very much in a merry, " Miles," said. he, " give me two gallons of that there—" Looking up he saw the dominie, and he be• came confused. " Yes, Miles," he continued, " that's what I said, give me two gallons mackerel in that there jug." —The following was overheard et the London Law Courts while the Parnell Commission was sitting :— Two Irishman were conversing when that devoted patroit Mr. O'Brien walked proudly past, 'Ah !' said Irishulan number one, "There's amen, now who Balfour womld like to imprison for life if he only dared.' Without a moment's hesitation, Irishulan number two replied :— "Irnprison for life, d'ye say 1 Sure man,'twould tae no nee at all, at all O'Brien winked would die long before such a brutal al sintienco could conte to an and 1" And, as though to remove any possible doubt as his nationality, Irishman number one replied, with a signifi'• cant shake of his head :—' Ali, me. Misty 1 Faith, and I believe ye're right!" --Police station janitor—Whet have you arrested this man for 1 FRESH -:-AND -:- RELIABLE1 REMOVED ! REMOVED ! One Door North of Young's Bakery, Albert Street 0 Our stud( of Groeuries and Pruvisiuus ter spring and summer are very complete, and \rill be found Frush and Reliable, embracing every line of Goods to be found in a First - Class Grocery. \1'e aim to give the Best Possible Goods at the Lowest Possible Price, and to economical buyers we ulcer many advantages. PRODUCE TAKEN. CANTELON BROS., Wholesale & Retail Grocers, Clinton. Utall FEE— I Naming dry g '141 oa✓' Ei ��N 2 Of/20',I,ag H peri ,,, ` El . -0 �� aW illJ i/2h" ftpetaP,1 as WOG ,.('im cq�l„y i 'Smo,i� ° W H '�w � �dbA�af/l.�°'ceVu..iD ��a-,4°.g::‘; �m eAa4aadWH.o m, y �~• � ~ � ::1771:..,!; yj~',rt fir =° �v.P.�k4033P9F catarrh r N )a� TJ! HUMI HREYS" VETERINARY SPECIFICS For Horses, Gatt1e, Sheep, Doge, Hogs, AND POULTRY. pot) Page aBond konT1Bent\risePAutmalr moms iFevers Congestions, Inflamm,atiouy 1 Spinals Meulugilin, intik Fever. R.B.--Strains, Lameness, Rheumatism. D.C.--Distemper, Nasal Discharges. PSD., -Bots or Grubvs, Worms. Worms..E.--Coughs, Heaved Pneumonia. p'.N,--L'alle or Gripes, Bellyache. G.--1Hiscarringe, Hemorrhages. H. --Urinary and Kidney Diseases. I. --Eruptive Diseases, Mange. 3.K. --Diseases of Digestion. ,Stable Case, with Specifics, Ifanual, Witch Hazel 011 and blodicator, 11.00 Price, Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - .00 Sold by Druggists; or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Receipt o> Price. Humphreys' Med. Co., 109 Fulton Si, H. Y. ZEUMPHRETS" HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFIC No. fin use 30 years. no only enoceeaful remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, and Prostration, from over -work or other causes. $1 per vial or 5 vials and largo vial powder, for >D8. BOLDRIC DRUGGISTS' orsent postpaid on reoefptof price.—namphro:.' nwilcnate.,100 shotes 84., 8. r. WELLS &Y: RIHA ItDSON CO., Agents, MONTREAL. 1� NEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post • nastene and subscribers to the following tynopsis of the newspaper laws :— I5 a blood disease. Until the poison is expelled from the system, there can he no cure for this loathsome and, dangerous malady. Therefore, the only effective treatment is a thorough course of Ayer's Sarsaparilla—the best of all blood purifiers. The sooner you begin the better ; delay is dangerous. "I was troubled with catarrh for over two years. I tried various remedies, and was treated by a number of physi- cians, but received no benefit until I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A few bottles of this medicine cured me of this troublesome complaint and com- pletely restored my health."—Jesse M. Boggs, Holman's-Mills, N. O. " When Ayer's Sarsaparilla was rec- ommended to the for catarrh, I was in- clined tel..•doubt its efficacy. Having tried so many remedies, with little ben- efit, I had no faith that anything would cure ole. I became emaciated from loss of appetite and impaired digestion. I had nearly lost the sense of smell, and my system was badly deranged. I was about discouraged', when a friend urged ole to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and re- ferred me to persons whom It had cured of,eatarrb. After taking half a dozen bottles of this medicine, I am convinced that the only sure way of treating this obstinate disease is through the blood." —Charles H. Maloney, 113 River st., Lowell, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED nY 0:. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, .Mass. :'rice $1; Bis bottles, $4, Worth $5 a bottle. Policeinan—I saw hie) cut the ropes of a hammock in which two young people were sparking. Janitor— • What crime do y,ou intend cliarging him with? Policeman—What charge 1—A postmaster is required to give notice BY LETTER (returning a paper does sot answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper out of the office, and state the reason for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to the publishers for payuvnt. 2—If any person orders his paper dis- 3ontinned, he must pay all arrearrges, of the publisher may continue to send if until payment 'is made, and cellect the whole amount; whether it be taken fron the office or not, There can be -no legal discontinuance until the payment is made. 3—Any person who takes a papni frog the post -office, whether eirec teas to hit mime or another, or whether • he has stab- • eceabod or not, is responsible for the pay. 4—If a subscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certain time, and the publish• er continues to scud, It the subscriber bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the post-otPee. This proceeds upon theground that a man must pay for what he user E'll the Division Court in Goderich at the November sitting a newspaper put - hshor sued for pay of paper. The defend - ant objected paying on the ground that be had' ordered a forme' proprietor of the paper to discontinue it. The Judge held that that was not a valid defence. 'l'he plaintll1', the present proprietor, had no Ileti 1C to discontinue and eonsegl:dnt ly could collect, although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event defe0uhlt was bound to pay for the time be had received the paper and until he had paid all arrears due for subscription. 1110 p10110r pesitl.ole, and Noel was Why, why contempt of court. about to speak 011010 tnore when the executioner touched the lever and the knife came down on Noel's neck. The head was severed from the neck, but remained hanging by a piece'of skin which the oxecutioner had to cut With his pocket knife. Whey the head fell in the basket convulsive contractions were noticed for a moment. —`Eye troubles cost a heap:of money, .Jacques." 'Yes, I shonld say they did. L ist year my wife was struck in the etre with the tip of a coachman's whip, and it cost me X25 to pay the doctor's bill.' 'That's nothing to my experience., '\Vhy, two weeks ago 1 was walk• lug past a jeweler's shop on the boulevard with illy wife when a solitaire diamond in the window struck her eye, and it cost n"' $175 to pay"the jeweler's bill.' THE GUILLOTINE A'I' S'1'. .PIERRE. A private despatch was received in Montreal one day last weel:,froul St. Pierre off Newfoundland, giv- ing an account of the execution of one Noel, a French fisherman, who was condemned to death some months ago for the atrocious mur- der of an elderly man named Cott - part, whole he cut to pieces after the style ofJack the Ripper. There was no guillotine and no execution- er in the place. and the authorities were much embarrassed as to how the execution was to he carried out. The Privy council had decided that justice must take its course as an ex- ample was deemed necessary,but the Government was unable to find a contractor who would undertake the erection of a guillotine ora man to work it and 'was obliged to tele- graph to the French government. A guillotine was sent out by way of New York. Saturday last was fixed for the execution, and at 3 a. m. on that day Noel was aroused and told to prepare' for death. One hour afterwards the condemned man was carried out, bound hand and foot, and driven in a carriage to Courbet square, whore the execution was to take place. In spite of the early hour there were about 2,000 people on the square besides the authorities whose duty it was to see the execu- tion carried out. While the execu- • tioner was slaking bis arrangements Noel recognized him and said, "Ah!' well, .Jean Marie, you are going to kill me. You will have another to kill before long. You ought to offer me a drink before I die. I will be the first man to die in this way horn; would to God I were the last,' The executioner was more nervous than the condemned man and placed the latter too far forward on the block. 'My neck is too far ahead, said Noel; 'you will strike illy shoulders. I beg of you don't be long, and . above all don't miss your stroke.' The executioner was over a minute getting the man in A ilART1?N1)1;l1'S PRAYER. Some of the ludicrous incidents of that terrible Friday evening aro now being related, says The Johns- town (Pa.) Tribune. It is told that a young professional gentleman, who, with several other persons, in- cluding a number of woulon, had taken refuge on the roof of a largo building, became so will\ with ex- citement that lie threw his arms about a young lady --an entire stranger to him—and hugged her vigorously. This story is based on the young lady's own statement. In a party of men and women on the roof of a house there wero sev- eral Catholics. In the fury of the deluge they kissed the scapulars which they woro. A Protestant young man, anxious to take advant- age of everything that seemed to suggest a hope of rescue, besought one of the Catholics to allow him to kiss the scapular. Permission was of course granted,and ho smack• ed the emblem vigorously. IIe was saved. A saloon -keeper, who, with his colored bartender, had taken refuge on the roof of his building, was so impressed with the awfulness of the situation that he appealed to his bartender to pray for both, as he (the saloonkeeper) did not know how to pray. The bartender pray- ed : " Oh, Lord, if ever you saved a nigger and a Dutchman, save us now!" They were saved. —Geo' F. Parker, of Chicago, is alleged to have become infatuated with his young lady bookkeeper and plalined with her to elope. It• was agreed that Parker was to leave first, and he did so, but the young woman thought better of it and did nit follow him. Parker came to St Thomas and for the past few days has been boarding at Herendeen's hotel, Naw Sarum. It is said ho drank heavily while there and was attacked with the D. T's, and fear- ing 11e was going to die his wife was telegraphed for and came at once. A local physician succeeded in bringing the man around, and his wife took hits back to Chicago to -day a sober and a wiser man. BILI• HEADS, NOTE lic..ds, Letter Heads, ,Tags, Statements, Circulars, Business Cords, Envelopes, Programmes, etc., etc., printei in la workman like manner and at low rates. THE NEWS.RECORD Office. TO THE FARMERS. Study your own interest and go where you elm get Reliable Harness. I manufacture none but tne BEST or STOCK. Beware of shops that sell cheap, as they have got to live. re Caltand get prices. Order* by mail preunply attended to JOHN T. CARTER. R. HARNESS EMPOIRIUM, BLYTII, ONT. . BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT. C CIIESI'ONI!ENCE. We Mill eat 'all times be Plea:met\ "te, receive Jews r f news from our sub- scribers. We 'wrest a good corres- pondent in every locality, not already represented, to send us 1RELIA111.F. MMews, SUIISCRIBI:RS. Patrons who do not recelce their paper regularly from the carrier or tier )U1h their lose/ post offices will confer a fester by reporting at this ojliee at once. Subscriptions 100.4 ct,lnmtefcc at any time. ADVERTISERS. . Atlet:rldsers u'i111dease bear in nhiud that a7/. "ehan les" of utlt'er•li0enrents, to 008rtre insertion, should be handed 210t later than MONDAY NOON of each week. CIitCIILA'I'ION. Ttir. N1:ws71Ecolt1 has a larger cir•CU, tiro than any other paper in this section, and us an atlrertisinfl medium has fete 14/001s in Ontario. Our hoot's are opuen ti) those who mean -b usiness. . • 4O13 PRINTING.. The Jul, Department of (iris jour- nal is tote of the hest equipped in Western Ontario, and 0 superior class of work is fl4irtrantced at eery loth prices. DR. FOWLERS •EXT: OF • •WILD' TRWWRERRY► CURES HO%ERA. holera Morbus O Lr I C'a�a RAMPS IARRHCEA YSEKTERY AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES OF' THE BOWELS IT IS SAFE AND RELIABLE FOR CHILDREN OR ADULTS.