The Huron News-Record, 1889-12-11, Page 4O
"AGE CANNOT \VITUEIt HER,"
remarked an old gentleman, as he gazed
fondly upon the comely little woman by
his side; "but frankly,' he continued, "at
one time I was afraid cosmetics would.
The silly little woman, in order to appear
youthful, plastered her face with different
varieties of whitewash, yclept balms,'
creams,' lotions', etc.' Yes," inter-
rupted the little woman, " I did, until my
skin became like parchment and so pimply
and coarse." " Well," said the listener,
What do you use now?" ' Use," was the
reply, " nothing but common sense and Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medlcal Discovery. Com-
mon sense told mo that if my blood was
pure, liver active, appetite and digestion
good, that the outward woman would take
on the hue of health. The • Discovery '
• did all those things and actually rejuve-
nated me." if you would possess a clear,
beautiful complexion, free from blotches,
pimples, eruptions, yellow spots and rough-
, Ess, use the "Golden Medical Discovery.'
is guaranteed to do all that it is
--Maimed to, or money paid for it will
be promptly,refundod.
. Copyright, ma, by WOALO's DIS. MED. Ass'N.
$5OOP
for an incurable case of
A\• Catarrh in the Head
by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy. By its mild, soothing and heal-
ing properties, it cures the worst cases, no
matter of how long standing.
Thelhron /11e143 -Record
.$1..,0 .1 \':,a, .sl.•', in •Ul,.tn,1.
d 'r 7711• ••,a., •1.. ,. " •' 4, 1,14.0 (•,
h• aj.•rt,l.e l .... • r rnh•..rl,.;:o,l Ihr4.4 hr ,t••.N ,
real. • -A T. rr,,.'11. (h, ,,,i:r"drfir'10,re(irrl
'•f
Seto 8"1.)14'.
1Yeditees'siiv, ver,', Ili;i II'ifi:P
,tiULI001.;_,• .1a; 1) L•'i)l.'t'.1•l'ION.
Theft w • 1tl,00t Loot 1'111,•,,'. lu
L110 18111', ,'lett w e lt)a!• a a 1te111•4uC'nt h•).
ale 010111..11 1. 111 our' pojrtll tl lou t1'I,9 ata,
nut nlln.vt•lI I1y^ th'•ir • ,•elrsi l.I Intl
rulers to he u, symit tIh, trap a
ay,teun ut il..•ttU nt;fr;,u;.., Intl, ill'•' 1't-
ilaited to withdraw from thrum.;
while that priest): ,uta demands, by
divine right, to ne alto.. tel t" educate
ata eltilILl'n, at,.l t•vr•/l ul•;ively iiit,rr•
fere, with State.suppu ted schools.
The uuly think that J. ohm' Neu.'
Yee nun du, tied tuu;t do, is to he
t "aye at it," with sword in 0114• hand
etrowel .111 tlit• u;.lhei, trying to
• ail up uta' odue:atonal s1 tem,
yet leudy at any.. tient to defend it
against all ,tt.t,:ks, w'uether frui>r
dgnostic u0:rt•1i•'I', • or file arrogant 1
ii tolera oo "f Popery. \\-ei accept
our task and Ihove, to ,do our • part
fearlessly it, the future, its wit Inst'
in the p.l,t, nidi )Utadeiig how tau'
advootiev of what s•'e1u'; right .,III
Silent pol it rrd parties. x Tui,
C a nada•ut ours is it t;hcisl la t nation;
her Iawm ars ha,,ell 1111 11. I:t%4' Of
God. Christianity i, t the Kum..
dation of our urt'll rig It s, liberties
it nal duties -"ti is tut int •'r.tl part,
of the common law of the I•tnri"
(hfarrisoi), U,utada is also 5 non
Cathulie or Protestant Iletin;,. ( hu•
11 lt'a!i,'it ,til re,ligi� ulu=
u 4 1) not pru,elile., tis i,
done in lt•)wau Cat hullt• countries,
liberty of conseienee, and the right
of private, judgment; in no sense is
our Uoverement subject to the con-
trol of the 1i•otnan Catholic Church,
its hierarchy or its head. ;t * \\'e
are convinced the trouble is nut
with the Itm'Ian (.':ttholic laity.
They, it' lilt atom', would prefer
that their children should attend
the Public schools. 13ut the Church,
the hierarchy, i,lt'hrferes, and Sep-
arate t3c110018 1,1'4: tho C011sf'1111eu4'e of
their 'demands. Rot wily should
men who are :tot p irelt14, nor rate
Sys, nor in the legal" sense guar-
diat.ilt, he permitted thus to il)tnrf,ilt'1
The Glt'e'1'n11)etit should know.no
one in any other eapeeity th'ul e4 a
citizen in edecatiellttl matters. Wye
us seliOOls Conunrnt to all the Citi•
Zell$, 811011 as all 1previ /x Can support,
and give no heed to the demand:4 Of
a hierar3hy that deities the 1 ight of
the State toe !urate and is under obli
gatiotls to nrlta^011izo, in every pas.
milds Way, a national Hystnl> Of edit -
cation over which) the Church 1018
no control.- /41.,/4114,j,,
4) Iie0i)'ti.
-Mr. J. 11, 11e\\'illiants, a melte
hor of the Pet( rhoro board of educe
tion, administered a flogging to Mr.
1?. C. Col(eide, ii. A., ellwsierd m(tss
for at the Collegiate institute.
Last Friday \Ir. Col heck whipped
Mr. I\Ic\Vi1lians' 12 year old son,
the father thought ton severely, tool
he purellaved n heavy rawhide whip
'and wont to the school, \ir. ('ul•
heck offered to explain when \fr.
\Villianus entered the room, but
the latter meld he w•antell nn explarul
tion, and at once struck him a blow
with the whip, which witty rapidly
followed by ot!er4. Having given
the teacher a severe whipping, the
irate father withdrew, the teacher
hid:ling hint a '•('land morning sir,"
1fr, C'olhet'lt vas not hurt, lad 11e
was not at the school in the after•
moon and will prefer a charge of
assault ag 114151 his assailant,
't„
1 ill) i 1!, jl1S '1'11 �l•
! , 1•:. I 1 411,"
Abe 41eitessed hurriedly, and went to
Is ; taut tl••cru Sas 110 sleep for her that
M tat. the was strct:hed on a menta' awl
n.•, 1i lat'k. it was such an awful thin;; fur
u a a.• t:, hay.t to (t h her haailtud to gu "•d
h, , : 'utast the peril of chilli:lug tut witch of
eseil>te 111:ul ; and might not Eustace thank
tln•,u tr14e even worse dan'g'er 1lrall this?
au•. s i 'c'ruelty, but not unnaturally, 0.>is-
ju 1. a l.er. 11'oul.t he unit distrust her in the
tut ore, eecatt,eo 8110 had deceived Itim at the
first ? And then the wound to his love, to
his pride ! But always Renee's pure mind
minas b:n;k t., its first honest purpose. Be
the ordeal what it might to her and to her
husband there was 0111, one right thing to
do, b telt him the truth and ask Lim not
to invite Sydney Dena to the house.
1.1 hu girl tried very hard the next morning
to appear her usual evil at bieakfast, but
she could not hide from Clairvaulx that
something was wrong. Pule she was habit.
sally, but not such pallor as this ; and that
troubled look in the dark eyes, 1) hot could
it nte,ut ? But he would not ask her con-
fidence -yet; be would wait and see if she
gave it of her own accord.
Hu rose up presently and wnint to his
study, glancing wife, who was absent-
ly caressing a favorite collie ; but she did
not stir or leek up till ho had reached the
door, then she started and asked, hurried-
ly-
" Where are you going, Eustace ?"
He paused.
" To my study," he said, " to write seine
]otters Why • +"
"Nothing, she answered, "nothing."
Clairvaulx waited a moment, looking at
her keenly and wistfully. but she had bent
over the dog again, and had evidently no in-
tention of saying more. And stilling a heavy
sigh her husband left the roots.
But it was fully half en hour after he was
soate d in his study before he could attack
the letters he had to write.
C'IIAPTE11IX,
A gentle top at the tenor.
"Como in !" said Clairva :1 x, not raising
his eyes from the letter 110 was writing, but
taw closing of the (Icor. tondo him look tip,
to soothe eIcndtt• figure of his wife standing
within the ratan ; but before he could speak
she made a quick step forward flushing to
her brow.
"Eustaco,11 sho said, in a 1.11', hurried
torso, " please forgive nue fur disturbing you.
Can you spare me a little tithe -some other
time if nut now ?"
"I can always spare time to you, Thence,
nntl on must never talk of apologizing to
nee. 11c•wheeled his chair round from the
table, and stretched out his hand to ilur.'
"Conte dearest," he added, tederly, "and
tell me what it is that troubles you."
She went to hint, kneeling at his feet and
hiding her face against hint as lie folded her
in his arms.
"I sari• this morning," he said, and his
'10100 WAS lint quite steady, " that there Wile
something wrong ; but I would not speak ;•
I hoped you would come, to me of your own
accord. !'hank you so much, darling, for
your trust int me."
" Oh, Eustaoo, don't, don't !" burst from
her, in u passionate sob ; " you break any.
heart ! Don't speak so kindly to me !"
A vague thrill of fear . shot to the man's
heart, and held him a moment silent ; the
next he had strained his wife's trembling
form closer to him, with a sharp pang of
self-reproach ; Renee was so young, so in-
experienced, over sensitive : she would ex.
aggerato so small a thing into a fault ; there
could bo no real cause for the pain she suf-
fered.
" How can 1 speak other than kindly to
you, Renee?" he asked, caressing the
bright head that, lay against him. "Love
cannot bo harsh without a cause ; and if
there were our, I could not be harsh to you,
dear."
But she only sobbed the more bitterly, so
that he was fain to soothe her silently until
she grew calmer, as such tender assurance
as he had given her seamed only to deepen
her grief ; and by-and-by she mastered hor-
self, and began, low and falteringly, not
raising her head from its resting -place-
" Eustace, there is something I ought to
have told you long age, only I did not know
-I wanted to tell you -but mother—"
She p8 i140)1. '
"Yes, dear one, go on."
"And last night -I know I roust tellyon,
It was when you said -you had met --Syd-
ney Deno---"
" Renee !" So hoarse and changed his
voice, even in the utterance of that one
word, that it might have been another man
speaking ; and partly misunderstanding
hint, the girl clung to him with passionate
words -
"No, no, Eustace---don't doubt me --let
me tell you all 1 I -I only loved him once -
not now 1 I had not seen hits for months
before your met me, and not once since I was
your wife ; Anil I have not written, nor he.
Oh, Eustace, you do believe ole----"
She stopped, choking. ii(' pt'essed the
dear form close and tlo,cr to hint, and bent
over her.
"My wife 1" he whispered, "you wrong
me. I did not dream of doubt. I know you
are true-tru e to me, es Ito you ; though
it is harder for you. You wound me in-
deed when you doubt my perfect faith in
you!"
She lifted her eyes to his face, meeting a
look that tr,ok her breath ; and she hid her
face again, with a strange bewildering rush
of emot ion that held her speechless.
Clairvaulx laid his hand gently upon her
head,
" When was it," he said, "that you first
mot Sydney Deno ?"
" When I was nearly seventeen ; he was
ahnut twenty•two then, I think. Ile was
staying with some peopl) near us we were
at the seaside -and he and I used to go
lung walks together -sometimes alone, and
8o111et1 11108 with other pc opts."
".11111 ymlr parents, what did they
any ?"
'''flee •if 1 11 ,t nihil nt tir't. I; •-t 1 t•
'!'her,: w.," 1,11,,.41 ea:1111•1 r. I melt r tIs•i..'it
(1111.(1, '4'l 14•, ..*:.ti.1 for n,(' in 111 t1. it w.ay,
And 11101 4, 4t•.) u! .cher know he 'hill, she
was very angry and said we must mut see
each other again. He was so poor—"
" And she wautod you to make a great
marriage -yes? Ind you meet or write to
each other?"
" \Vo neat sometimes by ehanee-he knew
so many people we knew -but never on put..
pose ; but we did not write, except once
that he wrote to me, and I wrote and told
him when I was engaged to you and asked
him not to write back, and he did not. 1
would give you his letter to roe, Eustace,
only I burnt it before my marriage. I
thuught ie was not right to keep it."
" You were loyal, indeed, Renee; but I
would not have read it if you placed it in
my hand, it was your treasure nut mind."
"You are so good tome, 1':ustace,"whlisp-
ered the girl, tremulously ; then, after a
pause, she wont on, "I did not know Lady
Laura was a friend of Sydney's, I never Paw
him there—"
" You told me you had not seen bin, since
our marriage, dearest, and I believed
you."
"Olt 1 Eustace ; but when I deceived you
at first."
" Hush ! I cannot let you speak so of
yourself. You say that you wanted to tell
Me, and your mother -was it that she told
your to be silent ?"
"Yes ; she said no man would like his
promised wife to toll hint she loved some•
one cess—"
"bio on Renee."
" Must I tell you all she said ?" faltered
the girl.
"1 thinkso, my darling."
"She said," Renee went on, "that I know
nothing of the world or of the Wren to want
to tellou ; she did not wish me to utter
Y
any falsehood, but only to bo silent, and if
you knew the truth it would sow distrust at
the outset, you would suspect every letter I
wrote or received."
"She knew," said Eustace Clairvuulx,
sternly, " that if I had known the truth I
would have spared you until at (east I had
loon your heart, if it were posiible. My
darling, there' was no wrong, no deecit in
you; but I would to heaven you had told
me all this before it was too late."
Ile put her suddenly front him, and ris•
iue lnuved'a few pace$ away, pressing his
hand over his eyes. Renee, half kneeling,
half crouching by the chair, watched him
with agonist ,1, bewildered eyes.
" Eustace 4" sho said, under her breath,
"Eustace !" He half turned to her again,
and let her take his hand in both her Own,
pressing it against her heart. " Don't think
that," she said, passionately, "oh 1 don't
think that, Eustace, that I wish our mar-
riage undone. I did not want Sydney to
comp here because I was afraid lest any of
the old feeling should come back, and that
would be a deadly sin, a bitter wrong to
you."
The light sprang into the mans dark eyes,
horn of the wild, sweet hope his wife's words
roused within him. \Vas it poasiblo that
she was nearer loving him then she wilt
of ; that this supposed lova for Sydney Dene
was only a girl's fancy, leaving the wo-
man's heart untouched, • and sho, in her
sensitive loyalty, feared that which, if sho
came face to face with it, .she would find
had no danger for her? But if this were so
indeed, the ratan who loved her had the
more need of patience ; self-knowledge
would come in time. If he 'tried too soon
to bring the (lower to its fulness, he would
bo like the child who forcible opens the
bud and thinks ho has mado the flower
blow. And then, swift as the hope, came
the demon doubt. _Renee loved this lad,
and though sho had striven bravely, nobly
to put Biot out other life and bo as pure in
thought as in deed to her husband, and had
in some measure su:ceeded, yet let the early
lover return to her and the early love would
leap into life again, and fealty valid be-
come only a stern duty, wearing out heart
and soul in the conflict.
13ut he mastered the agony he felt and
spoke ,driest calmly.
"Heaven bless you, Renee, for your truth
and your faith, in me. I have been wrung,
selfish. You told me you did not love me,
but I so feared to lose you, and I loved you
80 !"
Her heart went back to that evening
under the lime trues, when he had first taken
her in his arms, and she had been willing,
more than willing, to rest there ; and some-
how those words spoken with such passion,
made "strange melody" within her, though
she did not yet comprehend it. She could
only whisper, still clasping his hand -
"Not selfish, Oh ! Eustace, you do not
believe me then ; you think I speak' to c•om.
fort you, not as I feel."
Cleirvaulx sat down again, and seemed as
if he would have drawn her b, him, but
paused, curbing the impulse.
"I think, my darling,"he said, very tzen-
tly, "that in your true and pure devotion my
happiness is so much yours that for my sake
you cannot wish what would make me un-
happy, and you are so loyal that yon try
never even to whisper in ye11r inmost 800 I,
`\\'aurid it hall never b( 011.' !lilt if the whis-
per conies unIid('n the f.,ult is not yours,
Hence; you aro loyal still, end I have no
wrong to tbrgive. -.
('rouching quite de4(41 at her lln)'bltn(t'$
feet, Hence bowel her head on his knee,
"I never wisher! it, even in my inmrst
eettl," she 81hbed. "Oh ! Eustace, w'an't
you believe 1110 ?"
Ile bent 040r her, and raising her up,
wrapped her to his breast, pressing his quiv-
ering lips on hers.
"My wife -my darling 1" he Pail, when
ho teeth' speak. "1 (1' l,e!iev.• you. !Geula
not my heart play me tr.titer to 11,11111t you,
when you speak such preciuus words? .\y'1,
cling to ane, dearest ; where o-heald your
shelter be, but in your husband's .trine 1"
If he had asked her then the queetiun
that trembled on his tongue, "IReu10, do you
love me "." how would site have answered s
But he said in his heart, "Patience, pati-
ence ! 'I'hc fruit is ripening to the ga:llcrin:;.
I will net 1•e toe greedy to plu.'k it, and ;all
will yet be well." Yet if 1I, )1411 ep114011
thee --lint who, tan (orient the future?
•
CHAPTER N. I i
Fcr til( tint week or two (:ghee ('lair•
',111:)'1 galea) 111111 was to e" iib' trent her- 1 ,
self It bail lifted a lead oil her consolehco
to tell the truth to her husband ; and all
was now clear butweet' them, burl the way in
which lie had 1eo,eived her a•ufessiou
strengthened still 111.10 the ties that •already
bound her to him ; but her young heart was
in a whirl of perplee!ty ; site dirt a •t lot e
Sydney Dotes an : y of it was not home in
upou I.er fully til It e140 1.,1'ed her husband.
If she had brought herself face to face with
her own heart, she taust have 4.8140d tltu
qucstiult --aid answered it ; bat this was just
what ahe ipstiuetiveIy shrank from doing,
and es insthn•tivoly sought every kind of
distraction. ticeing which Clairvaulx began
to waren in his hopes, and to think that his
wife was trying to banish thoughts of Syd-
ney Deno. }low Ihceld he divine the real
euus0 -- the chaos-- 4 ,0 bewilderment of a
young and iuexp4'rtene0,1 heart? But lie 14t
her have her oe u w 1'y, 14 a$a$ tender with her
as alw'ay's . perh4,)4, ergo more so ; rand
would not lot her .oeo Laos mueh he sufleresl.
Sydney Deno had not yet chanced across
Lady Clairvaulx, of whose beauty he heard
everywhere ; and be chafed b•':uus0 his
hopes of being asked to Park Lune were
frustrated.
"Sir Eustace )rust have heart anuthing
about you and is jealous," sail L ,'.ly Laura,
on one occasion. "Fur he is net generally
a jealous husband. ilia wife'is adoral every.
where, mid he doesn't appear too )feet. But
she is not happy, Syd. She seems to pass
her life in ono rOunc( Of gaiety. l'oor girl I
sacrificed to a man alto doesn't love," and
sho sighed ; while Sydney clenched his
hand, and stuttered something between his •
teeth.
"l1'hat it lot of letters you have, Restates,"
said his wife to hill) nno morning at break-
fast, "anti 1 have only four.'
He looked up, smiling.
"Few of mine are interesting," he said ;
"I hope all yours ere I"
"I don't know -ono from mother, one
from Lady Wellborn, number three from
Lady Lanra-oh 1" touring it open, "art in-
vitation to her soiree next week. I suppose
we can go?"
"If you like, Renee."
He wusglaneing through some of ilia let-
ters, and Hence opened number four. An
exclamation from her husband madel,er !raise
her Dyes quickly. a
"What's the tlr.3.tter, ktt.stace'!"
".Matter enough, dear. Day old college
friend, Henderson, is dangerously ill, snd
begs me to 001110 and be with hien. Ho is
too ill even to write himself, for his servant
writes this."
"Oh, then you must go !" >o h1 Renee,
though her heart sank. "Where (Ines he
live, Eustace?" -
"In Oxford, in bachelor's chambers. Moir,
Hendorson ! Yes, I must go to hint. I shall
bo able to catch the tet o'clock train if I ata
quick,,,
Ho handed the letter across to his wife, and
Its she seemed to lead it -hut her eyes wore
too full of tears to see it -he went round be-
hind her chair, laying his hand on holt
►boulder.
"So you will have to go alone to Lady
Laura's, perhaps," he said, speaking bright-
ly.
"Shall you be more than a week away,
Eustace ?"
"I hope not.; I hope Henderson may be
better before then. But if 1 have to stay
longer, why yt?u-will do very well without me,
sweetheart, won't you !" ho said, and smil-
ing, draw her head back against his) ; and
his face changed, his cheek flushed, his voice
shook as he bent over her. "What ! tears,
my Renee ?" he said, softly, "aro those for
ore dearest 1"
"It's selfish !" she whispered, her dark
eyes drooping under his look.
('lairl'anlit bunt lower yet, and laid his lips
to the parted, trembling lips that had made
such sweet confession. 1t was full a minute
before he raised his head again.
":sly darling -thanks 4" was all he said
then, and wont out.
There leas only time for a brief farewell
before he left, but as he held her in his arms
be asked her to write to him "sometirnee."
"Mayn't I write every day, Eustace?" she
said, wistfully.
"Mayn't you 1 Ah, Renee ! how can you
ask that question? If you wrote to No twice
-three times a day, it would not bo too
much."
Ila never forgot the look in her eyes as she
lifted them to his ; it .lade his heart stand
still; the next second they sank, and tho
soft co'oir swept over hor cheek. .
"And -sand I may say to you whatever
comca into my head?" site said with a
strange 111:51 shyness.
"Anything •- everything ; nothing that
your hand traces, lienee, can seen to me
foolish or trivial."
A half wistful glance under the long
lashes ; then the pretty fingers playing with
000 of the buttons of his coat-
" Anil you will write to me, Eustace, very
often -as often as you can ?"
'Was it lova that dictated the request, or
was BSc seeking shelter against her own
heart? 1[e, whispered Lack -
"I will send you at 1 east a line a clay, if I
can, darling."
One hot close embrace, one last long kiss,
and then he was gone.
t'if.\l"l'1lIt XI.
How ineffably ,hull the house seemed to
Renee ('latrv•ulbx teatBut fashion has
is duties, like work, and site had to pet a
bright fern on things.
In the •.fteinese, I,ady Laura chanced le
!rep in Riming r th(lr visitors, and learned,
with ser(', delight, that Sir ,Enstaee WNS
%'o 1) l'1llti/+4olj,
Sesg STboy s
Mf, ga 7,y4oabll3
srs, ora ` !!
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A. Until!!, Burgher.
•443'.t814 for 1(1 t11nN14'1'1•:4 and hake Ito other
At )ear 11ru.4 .ls, 1.1 411111 511 Cents..
11'hulu.',Ivb 11'. 11. IiMVAItlls,
Chi,.f '1 gut for 1'unada,
(437-311> L,!ndeu.
-sasses:4, jr•i.V1 r .
1 .J\N(Ir.A til 1 1 r':y
.7.1
1 11 1,
L.. I -•
t
r'
1,141!'
•
Arol!r:,t.... ,): ... ,1'.11'''1'... ,....,
gull',^, Intl'. e. -1i g.'.1L'... "•. '12.8
destroyer et 'orm.J la 1.,_t1,1: t u or Aalultes'
CLOTHING.
ABRAHAM SMITH,
Market Square,
O.ODERIOH.:' .
WEST OF ENGLAND SUI!.
INGS & TItU1'S1?itiNC1S,
SCO'T'CH '1'11'1';1,D SVI'1'[NGS iii•
TUUUSEI1.1.NOS,
F11I:NC1[ AND ENGLIS11 \\'O1.•
S'1'1?1) CLOTHS,
111.p/c' 1111 4/4 1JISt S/yle and llI4)•k-
?moot/lil, u•t Alwah(n4) 84,4ith'14.
Norlt in stork one o, the ('h('u1u'-
eued heel xtorl:. r!j
WINTER CLOTHING
AND CLOTHS.
A Full Line of GENTS' FUR
NISITINGS always in stook.
11 tr,//!pay ,yon to call on;
ABRAHAM SMITH
fI[.r. IIEADS, NU'L'L
He„da, Letter Ilenda,'Tugs
Statements, Circulars, 1114int•.14
Cards, Ent elopes, I'rugrauln4a,
eta:, et,.,printe1 in la workplan
like planner 1111,1 at Inn rate..
THE N )w•Sal l':Cohn 0111',.
TO THE FARMERS.
Sands %lair own interest and go where
yea eon get
Reliable k*Harness,
i natnitaetu40 none 'hot till' IntST nr STOCK,
f' l'ai'r 4rrNhnp1 that N'•(l rheas, nN (hay/ ha,
fjol (” (fr"., ed. ('(AI and get',rtee4. Order.
1)3.1)114.11 prolia0 attended to»
JOHN T. CARTER.
HARNESS I':111'oRt1l'yl, EILVTII, O1i r.
11-3 1.4•.• v/,)
NO O fCi O a a
V
iv 0 Ila.
C
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'm e
O >N., ('L1'11liN(; 1tATES;
`}�+ ��t a Rat 'rile NEw•s-Itl•:(v,hh :11•,1 1:1I19L1{, to,
.I,.� 0 r a.•t..t p 0 of the h1,4 114, 11111.' in 01. llolul,don, frena til,
�„�. . 0 " prl.ent date
*�aaN�
�..� � �, . a o � I To January, 1891, for $2.
.�•Z•1 di b (all on nr.,, i
ro O cid t`(,. x $ Whitely & Todd, Clinton, Ont
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Iry •ural/ i(/ e(// tinges he /doused to
Ilr'llIs of news from, od/' x'rfh-
rwriti rs. Ire mud (4 flood (vwv'et'-
ln4utlet(1 alt o'er!' /ur(1/il//, not already
re/I(','110/, 4/, 111 send (4xBEL IA1i1.L 5) 418.-
• S ItSC11I ,ERS.
Pulronx Ow do not receive their
paper rw/1(he4l1/ from the carrier r r
tlu')/0//4 thole lora/ post I/fleen' wilt
confer a Perot by reporting at this
0f%1r4 at ono,. Subseri1)tiur(x nea:;1
conlb/4ure at any time.
11DVEItTiSEltS
A(I cert leery will please bear' in mind
t
"changed" that all ( (
,,"
( r
Je (rl rJur
aclt•e)•tieeve.e nt
to e)Ixtlr'e insertum, should he handed
in not /1(h'n than MONDAY NOON of
moll week.
CIRCULATION.
1'11Ii N EWs-I.1a')ltn has a larger
circulation than any other /411)0v' in
this 144'r/i(,f, and ax dei aelret•lisiret/
nlcdi/n e ha., few equals /n Ou1(n'in.
/
Oar hooks are open those who
Mean h(l.4ine,4x.
.1011 I'It1NTING.
Tit, ✓o/, 1)')'0/•/4N(v(1 of this four.
nal IN (44r t 1hr' lu'/ e4/(till/,r'1 /)l
II'e.,/1'('tt 0)111tri•r, My, et (411/ 4 riot
01u0;6 Orf icor); is t/r/O(11(4(l/'(' 1( (4/ vert/
Ips! 1o'irex.
• NEWSPAPER LAWS
\\'.: roil the special attention ut fust
nesters and aubs,•ribt•rs to the follow•in
synopsis or the ucw'spaper laws
1- -A post waster is rood'ed to give
nntire 14,' I,1•1't'8'(; (returning a paper docs
taut $newer the Lav) when a subscril()'r doe).
not take his paper tut of the office, and
;tate the rens„u for it, net being token.
Any neglect to do so wakes the postmaster
reepensibh. to the publishers for paym•.nt.
'.-If any person orders his paper tlfs-
sontiu1ed, he must pay all arreareges, 01
the publisher may continue to send
unci, Payment is made, and Collect til(
whole ail shut, whether it be taken troll
the office or not. '!'herr., 'Pial 'ne 110 legs,
disoontinnanee until the payment is made
3—Any person )4L) takes a palter from
the pest•ttlice, 1cliet1er ((ireete(t to hit
Willie (1' another, or whether he 1108 $111).
4'111'ell or 1101, is l'es1100sible 1')4' the pay.
4 -If a sulj)p'riher «niers his paper to le
stopped at a certain time, and the publish.
er eont!uuts to s(1111, it the subecriher t
bound to pay ler i1 il' hr takes It ant of the
post -office. Tills proceeds upon the ground
that a man must pay fm' what he user
45 tjq,
Darin the 1)ivision Chw•t in Godarielt
at the November sitting a newspaper pub-
lisher stud for pl)yof' pope'. 'The defend-
ant lb,je4tId paying on the ground that he
had (inkiest a fennel. proprietor of the
paper to diseentinn(' it. The Judge held
that that was not a valid detente.. The
plaintiff, the present proprietor, had no
uoti 5. to disenittinee and consequently
eon111 gadget, although it w•ah not denied
that defendant i(a11 notified former pro-
prietr to tlis1outinue. 1n any evert
&tenant was hound to pay- for the till.e
he had received the paper and until he
had paid all arrears due for subsertptinn.
e. • •1890ee •e .
Sl,IISCItI111'i 111)1. Tari;
hush ... do
....ill.
CANADA'S LEADING NEWSPAPER.
Patriotic in Tone.
True to Canada.
True to the Empire.
'1'iil; 1';11'1111; iS N01
The : Great : Weekly :Paper
(11 '1'lIE DOMiNION,
And y,reiu4 nrr:ut4rmerit. arra tieing >imrlr toadd
new and attra'thi. h•anuvs, which will greatly
inertsls, its hitt rest nod la111,'.
A4 :111 indn,•ement to ptarl It in the bonds rt
all p.1Tn1O'1•0' 4,3.43.114,4, 114 the bahuua• or
prr"ent \ear will br 4il en
1
FREE to NEW SUBSCRIBERS,
ylahhn4 it only One ih,llar tr"nl now till
end of 1"I111•
THE EMPIRE, Toronto, Ont.
(l
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is