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The Huron News-Record, 1889-10-09, Page 3.-- • •aq^v $E 1/IA11IC1flE'D WITU f311�:It1►IAN, trudged all the way on foot, over moun- tain and through morass, carrying knap- otfthe,ocgticold, rottepnomudauhmhkeep of which his friends thought he would never recover. Lingering with slow con- sumption for many years, he saw Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery adver- tised in a country newspaper, and he de- termined to try it. .A few bottles worked a change; six menthe' continued use cured ;him. Always too independent to ask his ,country for a pension he now says be ds neenone. He helped save his country, he saved himself t Consumption is Lung - scrofula. For scrofulain all ita myriad forma; the "Discovery' , is an unequaled remedy. It cleanses the system of all blood -taints from whatever cause arising, and cures all Skin and Scalp Diseases, Salt- sheum, Tetter. Eczema, and kindred all- tnenta.It is guaranteed to benefit or sure in all diseases for which it is recom- mended, or money paid for it will be re- funded. Sold by druggists. Copyright, le8s, by WORLD'S DR, MID. Ass's. DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY tures the worst cases, no matter of how long standing. 50 cents. by druggists. The Huron News -Record $1.50 a( Year -01.25 In Advance. tar The mean does not du justice to his tus:nes3 ho spends less in eluerds:nf`than he does in rent.—A. T. STIW&RT, the mztlioua:re merchant of New York. Wednesday, Oct, 9th 1889 CURRENT TOPICS. IIURRA-a R FOIL 'MEEIKEI1. The American CultivaCor says :— "It is claimed that there exists in Kansas City the most disastrous business depression that has been brought upon any Western city in the past fifteen years. There is,with• out doubt, 520,000.000 invested in Kansas City that is not paying a dollar in return. (i1VE L'S EQUAL RIGHTS The Hamilton Spectator says :— Nobody has proposed to take from Roman Catholics in Quebec any privileges which they - enjoy in common with their Protestant fellow•citizens. If they have any privileges which Protestants do not .enjoy they must be taken away, or must be extended to all. There will be neither rest nor peace in Canada until all the people stand on an equality before the law. There must be no favored section, no favored class and no favored church. The Kingston Catholic Freeman says :—As to those legal privileges, enjoyed by Catholics in the pro- vince of Quebec, they are theirs, by every just and honorable title, and and they would be poltroons, indeed, did they not defend and maintain them against all outside opposition and invasion. When the French Canadians themselves find them detrimental to their interests as citizens or as churchmen, they will be perfectly justified to agitate for their abrogation, but until then; intermeddling busybodies will only prove themselves to be more knaves than fools. We are strongly against them or French Canadian influence being introduced into On- tario, but we have nothing to say for or against either as existing in the province of Quebec. They are the private'concern of its Catholic inhabitants, and when they become too irksome, they have their remedy in their own hands. AS YOU LIKE TT. —On the evening of Sept. 25 the Jewish people celebrated the Rash Hashonati or New Year, the 5,650th year. —A 9,000 -pound mass of tin ore was recently exhibited at a smelting works in New York. It was taken out of a 29 -foot vein in the now well-known Etta tin amine, in the Black Hills. The specimen will be sent to London for the benefit of those British tin•mine owners who have so complacently watched the heretofore unsuccessful search for the metal. —At the Marxist congress in Paris on Sept. 21 Cunningham Gra- barn, a member of the British par- liament, who presided, took a slap at the British workingmen in these words. Speaking on the eight-hour question, he said : "This is the great question interesting English works men, and it is very difficult to get them to demand more, so degraded are they by the pipe, Bible, beer, and admiration for the upper classes." r` —Rev. , i. H, Barbour, pastor of the _Belden avenue, Chicago 13aptiet Church, created a sensation in the Baptist ministers' meeting. Monday by reading a paper in w hitch he de- nied the existence of a personal devil, and treated the passages from Scripture speaking of such a person- age as figurative and not literal. The paper gave riee to a atom of unfavearble comment. --Last spring B. Closson, of Highland Creek, Ont., got a potato from the Rural New Y.orker which contained six eyes, which he planted. He dug thew last week. The result was 28 pounds of potatoes, eight of the potatoes weighed over a pound apiece and the .largest weighing 33 ounces. Mrs. Closson also had a plot of potatoes for prizes offered by the same publication and succeeded in growing them at the rate of 696 bushels to the acre. —If Columbus were alive to -day, says the New York Sun, and if his contract of April 17, 1492, with Ferdinand and Isabella were sus- tained by the American courts, he would be enjoying an income of about 18,000,000 a year from the bullion product of the western hemisphere, to say nothing of his one-tenth claim in the pearls, pre, mous stones and general nlerchan• dise of America. —William G. Dillingham, while fishing in Gordon creek, near Port- land, Oregon, a few days since, dis. covered a beautiful fossil trout, 15 inches in length, in a huge boulder. Every fin and scale of the fish was as .plainly marked in the rock as if cut by a skilled artist. Many peo- ple wonder how trout get in streams °above high falls. They were doubt- less there before the falls were made, as front the fossil it is evident that there was trout in the streams of Oregon in prehistoric ages. Mr. Dillingham intends to go out some day and catch that fossil trout with a hammer and chisel. —A Buffalo carpenter committed suicide last week and left a letter alleging as his reason for the act that, having been engaged in the carpenter, trade for many years, he had decided upon doing something higher and better. The Bible, he continued, says that ''In my Father's house are many mansions, and some of them must need repairing. So having been a good carpenter on earth he guessed he could get along in heaven." He then shot himself. —The town of Leesburg, Ohio, has been in a state of excitement for several days over the outrage of a colored girl by a drunken prisoner in the town jail. Marshal Dooley, of Leesburg, arrested a colored girl. named Annie Blanton,, of Hillsboro, for disorderly conduct, and it is alleged, put her in the same cell with a drunken Irishman named Mike Kennedy. Dooley says his reason for placing the girl in the same cell with Kennedy is that there was but one cell in the jail. When soen ail the cell, Kennedy was almost naked, Judge Gardner, of Hillsboro, and S. H. Beard, of Lees, burg, have been retained as counsel by the colored girl to bring suit for damages against Marshal Dooley, and a big sensation is promised. —Australia is not going to be satisfied with a champion smiler. A champion giant will probably be the next contribution to the world's great from the Antipodes. In the colony of Victoria the other day a Scottish settler named McLean was summoned in court for not sending his little boy to school. He appear- ed in court with the little boy, who turued out to be a considerably bigger man than his father. The lad's age is 13 years 6 months, his height is already 6 feet 6 inches, and he is growing favorably. Being of the age prescribed by law for children to attend school, the parent had to pay a fine, but appeared to derive consolation frons the physical possibilities of his offspring. —Boston Transcript : Sixteen years ago the newspapers were filled with the Modocs' savage warfare; now they are industrious farmers. and half of them professing Chris- tians. The Rocky Mountain Chris-. tian Advocate says : " While the Dakotas were savages it cost the Government $1,848,000 to take care of them seven years. The cost after their conversion for tine same length of time was $120,000—a difference of $1,728,000 in favor of Christianity." And yet there are sneerers at' the philanthropical Indian policy who think their old dragooning crusades the only practi- cal and senaihle way of dealing with Indians. The most unpractical of all idealists is your conceited "prac- tical man." —Mr. John Palmer, of Pickering, Ont,, has en old clock. The works are massive, and the clock is, (if an early make° It has been in the family since the reign of Charles H. of England. That monarch ascended the throne in 1672 and died iu 1704. Mr. Palnl.er'd clock baa beeu in the family for upwards of 200 years. Heas a great litany heirlooms, ams g others a needle, work motto ked by bis grand• mother at the. age of 10, over 124 yeara ago. It bears her name, Frances Gater Bloss, and the date, May 23', 1765. Mr. Palmer also ebowed several old letters, written many, many/ears ago to his father. Oue of.tbese was addressed : "Mr. Samuel Palmer, No. 8 concession, Pickering, Upper Canada, North America, By way of New York." These letters are written in the elegant, dignified language of the old school, as different from that of to•day as can well be conceived. —A Canadian pastor's double life was brought to light by the Chicago police. At the armory the reverend gentleman, Frederick T. McLeod by name, walked the floor of a cell detained ou charges of adultery and bigamy. In another cell was his alleged wife, her eyes red with tears and her babe in her arms. Mr. and Mrs. McLeod were arrested at their home on warrants sworn out by Mrs. Mary McLeod, of Central Economy, N. S. The complainant, a pretty blonde, said that Rev. Mr. McLeod married her two years ago while pastor of the Congregational church --at Central Economy. " He was driven out of town not long after that," she said, "on account of a family matter and came to Chicago. He has been here now two years, but I did not hear of his second marriage until this month. I at once came from Nova Scotia and had warrants for his arrest sworn out. I have one child—a boy, fifteen months old." McLeod refused to make any state- ment. —The New York Democratic State. Convention met last: week - The first plank of the State platform says :—"We have not advocated and do not advocate free trade, but we steadfastly adhere to the princi- ples of tariff reform, believing that adherence to the right alone carries in itself the certainty of triumph." —The Earl of Galloway bears the proud name of Alan Plantagenet Stuart, and sits in the House of Lords, as Baron Stuart of Garlies. He was Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, and is honorary Colonel and Lieutenant Colonel Commandant of the Royal Scots Fusiliers. His town residence is a magnificent house in upper Gros- venor street. He has country seats at Garliestown, Culnloden, °Glen• trool, and "Bargrennan, and is a member of the Carlton, St. Stephen's, Hurlingham, Constitutional, United Service, and Scottish ,Conser,vative clubs, the most exclusiye and aristo. cratic in England. His wife is thy. sister of the Marquis of Salisbury. And yet this "noble" earl is on trial for indecently assaulting little girls. ' ---A baby is a specimen of human nature uncontrolled by principle. It is a being of fierce instincts with no morals. It is the opinion of observant persons who have studied babies from a philosophical stand- point that if their capacity of nine - chief were equal to their ferocity, they would soon exterminate 'the_ adults of the human family. A FATAL JOKE, —John Gordon, an employe of the Lake George paper and pulp company, at Ticonderoga, fell asleep near the machinery. Two fellow - workmen, it is said, in a joke plan- ned to scare him. They. tied a rope about his feet and threw it over a shaft making 125 revolutions a minute. They could not cut the rope' in time and Gordon was killed, the body being horribly mutilated One of the perpetrators of the joke lost his reason from the shock. —Fifteen hundred and fifty-eight million letters, or forty -ono per head of population, were delivered in the United Kingdom during the year which ended March 31 last. Besides that there were 800,000,000 post -cards, newspapers and parcels. The telegraph service showed a de- ficit of £240,000. —A banquet was given in Belfast last week in honor of the Earl of Dufferin, formerly Viceroy of India. Most of the loading Orangemen of the city were present. In a speech Lord Dufferin said that the men of Ulster had mado their mark in every quarter of the globe, especially in India. —The village of Rockood was thrown into an unusual _state of excitement on Saturday night, when it was learned that Sam- uel Soper, a rsident had stabbed his son, Wellington, presumably with intent to kill him. The affair took place between 17 and 8 o'clock at Soper's house. Well- ington had been in Acton, and on returning home found that a row had occurred with one of the other sons in the evening. After an angry discussion the fight began, when the father stabbed Wellington twice in the arm, once in the fleshy part near the shoulder severing one of the large arteries and again near FRESH -:-AND :- RELIALLE, —r--o.-- REMOVED I REMOVED I One Door North of Young's Baku g, Albert Street 0 Our stock of Groceries and Provisions for spring and summer are very complete, and will be found Fresh and Reliable, embracing every line of Goods to be found in a First - Mass Grocery. We aim to give the Best Possible Goods at the Loi -est Possible Pride, and to economical buyers we offer malty advautages. PRODUCE TAKEN. GANTELON BROS., Wholesale & Retail Grocers, Clinton. J� FOWLERS r a.•1NIL(D� 3IIIRY OhER hbleralMorbus OL iC-feta-- RAMPS ' IARRIICEA YSENTERY AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES OF THE BOWELS IT IS SAFE AND RELIABLE FOR CHILDREN OR ADULTS. the wrist the latter being but slight lia bled profusely and had not Dr , Dryden been' called and the blood I ickH eadache stopped be wouldwould9oosoonhave bind to death. The father skipped. —A robbery, aggravated by a most brutal assault, was committed near the village of Atherton, in Ancester township, early Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Travers, an elder- ly woman, has for several years been living alone in a frame house situated a short distance from the village. Her nearest neighbor is Robert Mulholland, Some fow weeks ago Mrs. 1Pravers sold three cows for $60. Luckily for her She used the most of the money, keep- ing only $10 in the house. About one o'clock Saturday morning, after she had retired, three or four neon broke into the house, and, after ran- sacking several of the rooms, they forced their way into her bedroom. They demanded money from her, and when the poor, helpless old woman refused to give them any, the cowardly ruffians threw some- thing over her head and boat her into insensibility. Then they con- tinued their search through the house and found the $10 which had been hidden aw•,ly. The woman was so badly abused that she could not ,get up and she had to lay, in bed with nobody to attend ler until morning dawned,when she found strength enopgh to .walk to Robert Mulholland's farni, where she received kind treatment. A doctor was summond from Ancestor, and Mrs. Travers' wounds were dressed. She is very old, and it is just possible that she may not re- cover. When• she 'reached Mul- holland's house her face and cloth- ing were covered with blood. She is not positive whether there were three or four men in the house. 90 When you need a good, safe laxa- tive, ask your druggist for a box of Ayer's Pills, and you will find that they give perfect satisfaction. For indigestion, torpid liver, and sick headache there is, nothing superior. Leading physicians recommend them. MILBURN'S AROMATIC QUIN- INE WINE fortifies the system a- gainst attacks of ague, chills, bilious fever, dumb ague and like trouble s Professor Gauthier, of Paris, states that ;certain vital processes of the body develop putrefying substances in the tissues, which; if not speedily eliminated, produce disease. Ayer's Sarsaparilla effects the removal of these substances, and thereby pres serves health. TOWN LOTS FOR SALE In the Town of Clinton, Belonging to the Estate of the Late NELSON GLEW. There will be sold by Public Auction, on the MARKET SQUARE, CLINTON, on SATURDAY, OCTOBER FIFTH, 1889, at one o'clock P.M., the following property :—Lots 62 and 63, Matilda street, no buildings; Lot 51, Matilda street, no buildings; Lot 39, James street, with small Frame Dwelling thereon. Ali in the Town of Clinton. Title Perfect. TE.ItMS CASH. CHAS. SPOONER, t Executors Rop'r. PEACOCK, S D. DICKINSON. Auctioneer. 509—td Diamond Tea. The Only Genuine, Safe Cure. Just what the people want, for the following reasons:—Ist, because it is Cheap; 2nd, Durable; 3rd, Effectual; 4th. It le Nature's Own Remedy; 6th, it is easy to take, and young and old, rich and poor. must and will have it, and cannot do without it. Superior in every way to any Blood or Liver Medicine on the market, with hundreds of bona fide Testimonials to back it up. The following from one of Clinton's best citizens will suffice : Clinton, August 28th, 1889. After suffering for 'years with Dyspepsia and Its dire effects After eating, i have at last found the "pearl or great price to me" in the shape of "DIAMOND TEA," which maker life worth living, and can heartily recommend it to Buffering humanity as a remedy unequalled. A. COUCH, Butcher. At yoursDrugg DrugAk for gists, and 50 CentOND TF.A and s. Wholesale other. Wholesale by W. D. EDWARD`, Chief Agent for Canada, 607-3m London. HOUSE FORQSALE OR TO RENT, Situated on the West side of Victoria street, comprising seven rooms and kitchen with appurtenances thereto belonging Coal for sale. JNO. McGARVA. • 11111111W. IS a complaint from which many, quffer and few are entirely, free. Its cause in indigestion and a sluggish liver, the pure for which is readily found in the nae of Ayer's Pills. " I have found tbat for sick headache, caused by a disordered condition of the stomach, Ayer's Pills are the most re- liable remedy."— Samuel C., Bradburn, Worthington, Mass. "After the use of Ayer's Pills for many years, in my practice and family, I am justified in saying that they are an excellent cathartic and Byer medicine— sustaining all the claims made for them." —W. A. Westfall, M. D., V. P. Austin & N. W. Railway Co., Burnet, Texas. "Ayer's Pills are the best medicine known to me for regulating the bowels, and for alli diseasdis- ordered stomach and liver.d I suff ed for over three years from headache, in- digestion, and constipation. I had no appetite and was weak and nervous most of the time. By using three boxes of Ayer's Pills, and at the same time dieting myself, I was completely cured." — Philip Lockwood, Topeka; Kansas. "I was troubled for years with indi- gestion, constipation, and headache. A few boxes of Ayer's Pills, used in small daily doses, restored me to health. They are prompt and effective. "—W. H. Strout, Meadville, Pa. Ayer's Pills, PIIEPAB70) IIT Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists and Dealers In Medicine. TO THE FARMERS. Study Your own interest and go where you can get Reliable041Iarliess. I manufacture none but the BEST OF Since. Beware of shops that sell cheap, as they nate got to hive. re' Call and get prices. Orders by mail promply attended to,z JOHN° T'. Canx.RT' 1R. HARNESS EMPORIUM, DLYTIS, One., HUMPHREYS' Da. HunrnnEYs' SraclF,cs are scientifically and carefullyyyears in ivate practice tice d prescriptions with sccosaand for ver thirty years used by the people. Every single Spe- cific Is a special cure for the disease named. These Specifics cure without drugging, purg- ing or reducing the system, and aro in fact and deed thesavorelgn reatediesofthoWorld. LIST OF PRINCIPAL NOS. CURES. PRICES. 1 Fevers, Congestion. infammation25 2 Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Collo95 g CryitoC'olic,orTeething ofInfanta 25 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults2 SO Dyye ntery, Griping, Bilious Colic, Cholera Morbus, Vomiting iCoughs, Cold Bronchitis Neuralgia,T'oothache Faccache Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo 1 Dyspepsia, Bilious Stomach 11 Suppressed or Painful Periods 12 Whites, too Profuse Periods 13 °Crone, Cough, Difficult Breathing. 14 Salt Rheum,Erysipelas, Eruptions. 15 Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains, 10 Fever and A gue, Chills, Malaria 17Piles, Blind or Bleeding 19 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head 20Whooping Cough violent Coughs 24 General Debi tlty,PbyslcalWeakness 27' Kidney Disease r.Nervout'Deblltty 1 00 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed50 Diseases of theHeart,Palpitation 1 00 Sold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. DR. UMPHUEVS' MANUAL, (144 pages) rHieuhmn MedicineCo IOSFultonSt.NY. SPECIFICS. WELLS fit RICHARDSON CO. Agents, MONTREAL. EXAMINE OUR STOCK OF . ?WOO'LS? We carry the best finality and the largest stock in the county. SANITARY -:-YARN! something new for Underwear. BILI. BEADS, NOT/. He -ds, Letter Jleads, ;fags Statements, Clrculars, Business Carle, Envelopes, Programmes, etc., etc., printel In la workman like manner and at low rate*. THE NEWS -RECORD Office. BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT. CORRESPONDENCE. We will at all times be pleased to receive items of news from our sub- scribers. We want a good corres- pondent its every locality, not already represented, to send us RELIABLE news. SUBSCRIBERS. Patrons who do not receive their paper regularly from the carrier or through their localpost offices will - eonfer a favor by reporting at this- -- ofice at once. Subscriptions mai commence at any time. ADVERTISERS. Advertisers will please bear in mind that all "changes" of advertisements, to ensure insertion, should be handed in not later than MONDAY NOON of each weelc. CIRCULATION. THE NEWS -RECORD had a larger circulation than any other paper in this section, and as an advertising medium has few equals in Ontario. Our books are open to those who mean business. JOB PRINTING. The Job Department of this jour- nal is one of the best equipped in Western Ontario, and a superior class of work is guaranteed at very lom prices. NEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post nasters and subscribers to -the followin fynopsis of -the newspaper iaws := 1—A postmaster is required to give notice nY LETTER (returning a paper oes not answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper out of the office, and ;tate the reason for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to the publishers for payment. 2—If any person orders his paper dis- z.ontinned, he must pay all arrearvges, 01 the Publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect the whole amount, whether it bo taken from the office or not. There can bo no legal discontinuance until the payment is made 3—Any person who takes a paper from the post -office, whether oireetcd to hie name or another, or whether he has sub• scubed or not, is responsible for the pay. 4—If a subscriber orders his paper to bt stopped at a certain time, and the publish. er continues to semi, it the subscriber bound to pay for it if lie takes it out of the post -office. This proceeds upon theground that a man must -pay for what he uses Orin the Division Court in Goderieb at the November sitting a newspaper put - lrsher sued for pay of paper. The defend- ant objected paying on the ground that he had ordered a former proprietor of the paper to discontinue it. The Judge held that that was not a valid defence. The plaintiff, the present proprietor, had no notice to discontinue an,.k consequently could collect, although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event defcnant was bound to pay for the time he had received the paper and until he hail paid all arrears due for subscription. 8 d r~ tsf t at0,my ki 1611714 it r� A neva �g 6A431 O6i'7,t pty.CQwy W a. O6mM ° 4 07 COOPER'S BOOK STORE. A 401 PROP'ERTYFOR SALE QR.TO RENT. A cottage on Albert St, lately occupied Mr. James Moors. Five bed rooms dou parlor, dining room, kitchen, summer kitchen and pantry. Hard and soft water. Stable and fruit trees. There bre three lots on Maple Street besides the one on which the cottage stands, making an acre of ground in all. Tho Cottage and one lot will bo sold separately if desired and on reasonable terms. Possession given at once. Appy to MRS. THOMAS C"01'P.R. Clinton, Sept. 2nd, 1889. f 07•tf, A NICE HOME AT A nAROA IN.—Eight acres of land with a select orchard of choice apple trees ; comfortable house and stables ; ihljoiningglode. rich township. Apply to B.fL. DOYLE, Omle- rich. :5204f1 U1 0 its w 0 r—� Lam., 5 tv o ao tf1 eW�1 4••) Obti b rn W5a .z as 8 a O Q �•y a•aN ,,,,,,.rtt rtt ....t )cts C1 o 0 4 ;F, iw.