The Clinton New Era, 1891-09-11, Page 37r vee molt!
EVERT YEAR.
'tilt growing colder
]-aver; year;
1 a
aseer , Tiara ? get!t ?'.der
•,•1 k se:tr
1136:i W:J'i ar,a tents afiectiun ;
I beet: ocile r eeree`Lon,
Dwell se ee'eeeW,altd444tictiterel
t,. cry year.
•
Of the levee and sorrows blend
Every year ;
Of thee iteri of leiel deielp .ended
Avery year
Of the 'ties '-that atoll might bifid me
13-44#1 Time .to Death reaigned me
NtY anLr>zaitiQR moraine me
Every year.
l`.bere Sad to loop before ma
When the alpud grows darker o'er US
Every year ;
When we see the blossoms faded
That to bloom we might have aided,
And immortal garlands braided
Every year,
To the past go more dead faces
Every year.
• As the loved leave vacant places
Every year.
Everywhere the sad eyes meet ns.;
In the evening's dusk they greet us,
And to come to them entreat us,
Every year.
les, the ehgres of life are shifting
Every year ;
And we are seaward drifting
Every year ;
Old pleasures, changing, fret ns ;
The living more forget us ;
There are fewer to regret us,
Every year.
Beit the truer life draws nearer
Every year ; a
And its morning star climbs higher
Every year.
Earth's hold on us grows slighter,
And the heavy burden lighter,
And the dawn immortal brighter,
Every year.
Ever year..
GLAD TIDINGS.
Two Chinamen were recently re-
ceived into the membership of the
Church of Christ in Knox Church,
Winnipeg, They had both been
under Christian instruction for
several years and had siven good -
'evidence both of their acquain
tan ce with the great truths of the
Gc,:pec and of their desire to 1 ead
u t.'bristian life.
The total Indian population of
Canada is about 120,00D, and of
these about 30, 00, it is said, are
more or less under Christian in-
structions at -the bands of the Meth-
odist, .Episcopalian and Presby-
terian Churches. There are in the
United States 243,000 Indians.
Of these only 58,000 receive any
assistance whatever from the
. Government, and a largo propor-
'tlon of these are only slightly
dependent.
'There are those who wish to be
Christians in secret, and those even
n lands where it is deemed no
reproach to follow Christ. But
lwe hear of a Japanese workman,
who was necessarily away from
his shop most of the day, who
-put the following notice on the
door : " t am a Chrit tian, and if
anyone likes to go in and read my
Good Book while I am out, he
'may. Buddhist priests need not
come here. I do not want them
any more;"
ti
The price of bread is rising in
London, England,and the working
classes are already beginning to
feel the pinch of the distresscon-
sequent on deficient harvests.
The advance so far is a halfpenny
on the quarter loaf. People are
talking of dear bread during
the claming winter, and with the
throngs from Russia and Germany
that hay crowded into the city
during the season, it is apparent
that charity will be fully taxed to
supply the needs of London poor.
The Salvation Army is increasing
its lodging and food accommoda-
tion in preparation for thedemands
, of winter. and notwithstanding
the opposition of the church and
of the Times, money is flowing in
liberally from various quarters to
the army exchequer. There is a
public sentiment that however
crude the Army methods they
reach•, the right spot, and that the
Door are assisted without the red
tape that' involves so many of the
London charities.
A Peterboro despatch says:
A shocking affair was brought to
light last week. .About two
weeks ago a child about two years
old, belonging to parents residing
in town was taken ill with fits.
While in a fit, the old-fashioned
remedy of putting the child into a
panofwarm water was tried. When
the child was put in the pan it
was found that the water was not
sufficiently .warm, so the lid was
taken off the stove and the pan
with the child still in it was rats
ed and•il.aced on the stove with
the in tention of heating the water.
Immediately on being placed on
the stove the child commenced to
writhe:in agony. The women in
ittendanee, deeming it the result
of the fit, paid no attention, but
allowed it to remain there, while
as being slowly cooked. Fin.
a ,'ono woman,_ more thought-
ful than the others, entered the
room And, seeing what was going
en, rushed forward and snatched
the child from the pan. As she
pulled it away, the skin peeled off
its body and stuck in large pieces
to the bottom of the pan. The
baby was badly burned, it having
been in the pan long enough for
its body to be literally' roasted in
places. On seeing the result of
their thoughtlessnesshe women
were horror-stricken, &physician
was stiml?ioned, bat although
b e thio possible V r Otis wall done to
p
relieve the little stlfforer, the
phy8ician'sof ort8 Weft 'unavailing
and Tho baby dried,
fate* ro 0 .14 •
7"h : 11x. W RNA arerr es a large,
rrrrlQufett � f %1 es/t' Ale :1 netul[, every 7Aeaell
',thou any outer f,• ;, a• lea the county
,Tee ,tV,rEif .E.8,1 <G•trites WA=2g1iaint
,Dlytr'r, £ozrdt'soua'o J/almesmite
I ever?, Thursday evening, beside, a
large town diit)'ibution( the s'tvre
ir/et. '
The ,iVEIV ,E2=4,4 sloes not claim, "the
largest circulation under tice sun"but
it does claim to cover pretlyfairy
the territory from .wlaicfZ the town
craws its trace. .
.Tice NRW ZE.4 condenses its news $o
43 to give the greatest amount of in
formation possible, and for this rea-
son is "the people's popular paper"
Ontario's Town. a11id Villages
The following is the population in
places numbering 1,500 to 5,000, as
shown by the census;
1891 1881
4,940 4,445
4,829 4,957
4,752 2,911
4,401 2,890
4,364 3,042
4 557 3,465
4 191 4,318
4 066 3,992
3 839 4,564
3 416 3,4],5
3 316 3;817
3 287 2,975
3 252 2,920
3 136 2,467
3 094 3,173
3 071 2,684
3 061 2,604
2 962 2,847
2 941 2,066
2 919 2,999
2 786 3,140
2 726 1,525
2 698 1,275
2 674 2,645
2 641 2,480
2 635 2,606
2 631 2,876
e 611 1,605
2 587 2,688
2 273 2,456
2 424 1,418
2 279 2,672
2 254 1,538
2 214 2,170
2 167 1,540
2 167 1,918
2 163 1,939
2 143 2,006
2 110 1,089
2 101 2,284
2 100 768
2,088 1,095
2 058 1,979
2,057 1,614
2 035 1,870
2 077 1,828
1999 1,866
1984 796
1 974 1,734
1955 900
1 915 1,601
1 882 1,293
1,419
1,015
1 825 1,710
1 813 1,798
1 809 1,725
1 776 1,808
f. • 1 743 1,540
1 740 1,381
1 733 1,617
1,709 800
1 708 1,212,1
1 698 1,800 I o
1 680 14539 (1 g
1 687 1,772
1,659 1,400 t
1 599 1,738 e
1 509 1,473
1 n
Collingwood
Cobourg
Orillia
Pembroke
Trenton
Petrolea
Inggersoll
OJ3ltawa .,.,
Godes ich
St. Marys
Strathroy
Pioton
Brampton
Perth
Paris
Almonte
Walkerton
Orangeville
Waterloo
Prescott
Whitby
Wallaceburg
Port Arthur
Simooe
Seaforth
Clinton
Kincardine
Renfrew
Listowel .
Thorold
Campbellford
Amherstbnrg
Ridgetown
Mount Forest
Aylmer
Wingham
Tilsonburg
Newmarket
Penetangnirahene
Mitchell
Magog
Midland
Dresden
Forest
Welland •
Palmerston
Meaford
Wharton
Portsmouth
Drummondville
London West
Point Edward
Gravenhuret ..........1,848
Preston 1 843
Oakville
Merriton
Exeter
Danville
Aurora
Louisville
Waterloo
Essex Centre
Blenheim
Port Perry
Parkhill
Harriston
Port Elgin
Fergus
Georgetown
0
L'S HAT 1 + ..
'rviil, rather ia,erehtlle Qltan }aRYq a tendency
4ierta1•
nig EvfJ[,.l.l"floN FROM. 'Ida NATTY ►lncllet ,t?}e stlbordnate cut Of the auiwiq;
arrived wearit if they will. No doubt a}}.
SAILOR ROVERINO• will do se, diepite the kindly, pay anxiouuly
Urged advice- given, herein; such is: the ob.
A Q�artrting xaaa-clear fair atinac;r, tias clinging illusions, of worlaan'8
>R'retty luuug human nature. lint the newly arrived must!
ulrXtrr But dee Rosy It Lodks on elect tala) 'thew scoffing cousequcnsr.s, thou la it
cosi & cide,splittin„.cat'toon..
Wo mer Who Xn est on eVeeriaag It-
Comment by $ Cynical Woman-leatee,
Strictly In the, Interest of the picturesque,
the pretty, and the approp.
riate:in the way of girls',
young ladies', women's
hea.wear is this warning -
note article written, It
comes apropos of the sea-
son, and timely in respect
to the marine preparations
/ now under way for yacht
contests, regattas and ua-
Yal displays,
f1IIITS DAIIGHTn a. It Is not proposed
to ouch upon any other article of
ladies' attire ; except the bat, save a
passingallusion to the fact that all such at-
tire is fashioned after models which catch
the eye of the arbitrary dictator of fashion
who sets its severity, and when the ice is
broken all enter after cautious approaches
A leencs et Surprlseft area a Offense,
I'Ie :came into the office of a merchant on
Jetrersgx Avenue and with a,.; , erry "good
morning,' las- rt' fazpiliar fr tide puled .a
eliaim up near _ ...le and sat dowel, The
merchant eyed 1 or a moment and quietly
remarked:
"Weill" .
"Yee, thank you,",he replied with a smile,
"I hope you are well also,"
It almost jarred the merehant out of his
chair.
"I didn't ask you whether you were well or
not," he said, getting hot, "and it is none
of your business how I am. What do you
r4alut<?'+
+ 1 want $1,000,000 and a palace, and a
yacht, and a four-in-hand," he rattled. away.
"Confound you," angrily exclaimed tee
merchant, "what do I care what you want?e
"I don't really know," he answered, in the
best humor imaginable, "but I presume you
did care or you wouldn't have asked nee."
]n the way of attempted , modifications, "Come, come," stuttered the angry mer•
or after long and' steady gazing at the odd chant, "this is past endurance. You are a
looking object In the looking -glass. Thus perfect stranger to me, and you come in here
the natty tailor-made girl in the close -fit- and take up my time and talk like an idiot.
ting garment, that becomes ber so well, was What did you come here for?"
originally fitted, the mental
eye of the fashion dictator
being steadily directed, in
the process of modeling, to
the close fitting cassock of
florae elegant priest, snob as e
may be seen meditatively
rambling in the , classic
shades of any college town. on! uv!
But the modeler, contemplating a hat, paused
at the beretta, and cast his mind's eye upon
the jaunty sailor lad, the wet sea boy of
Shakespeare, in his holiday attire, : ad saw
Inspiration in the boy's round, stiff- brimmed
bat, suggestive of the romance of the blue
ocean. The dictator instantly seized it, and
without a single change in its form, placed
it upon the head of one who was youug and
fair, and whose glistening curls suggested
ocean spray, and fashion knelt and worshiped
it, you threaten to do I fairly beam with joy
Unlike the original tailor-made suit, and hope breaks out on me in great blotches.
which I have been-"
"For a few minutes only," said the visitor
serenely, and with the same placid demeanor.
"Oh, did you?" and the merchant jumped
out of his chair and started for him. "Well,
if you don't get out in two minutes VII break
your head for you."
"Now -now --you are talking business,"
calmly responed the 'visitor. Go right on
and break my head, and my arm and my leg.
That willelay me up for at least twelve weeks
and PIl g t $50 a week from the flnesb dent -insurance company in all this beautiful
world oe out's, sir, the very finest and surest,
and most reliable and richest. I represent
that company, sir. Don't you want a polioy
with us? Dead sure snap on $50 a week, if
you are injured by any accident, and $10,000
spot Dash and no commissions if 'you get
killed. I carry two policies myself, and
when I hear a man talk abolat using me as
has undergone a than -
sand pretty modifica-
tions in the way of
slashes, puffs an d
shoulder erection, the the full value."
hat steadily m-aiutained Ten minutes later the victim wee in the
its supremacy, regard• net and the captor had departed wYbh his gall
less of the smiles or for the next one. -Detroit Free Press,
"For Heaven's sake!" interrupted the vic-
tim, "shut upl How mudh is a policy for a
year? Give me one quick and get out betore
I commit suicide and stick your company for
frowns of fortune, and
no change in its general
form was tolerated.
"Sur 011! Montanntl" Of course the decorative
eensh of the beautiful, which irresistibly
aseerte itself in woman, touched the plain hat
with a flower or a small bunch of ribbon, other
wise the smooth round of the hat was un -
fluttered by the breezes. True, there was some
widening of the brim; but that was all, until
the present seasou opened.
And when it did! Suddenly and without
warning the sabre of fashion, like Damocles'
sword, ever suspended by a baili, fell,
et' curved, razor edge severing the crown
of the hat; carelessly hung on
the bed -post, oompletely, close • {x
to the edge of the bereft brim,
easing it looking like a sawed- 4j1
ft', single turreted monitor- a' '•
at but fashionable.
It has bean asserted that ////
his stubby innovation has been
ocepted by the girls under
rotest. True; but what in- BOUND. To BR
ovat'nn, compelled by the die- IN sPYL .
tatoa, has not provoked a protest, and bas
not been accepted, from black stockings to
gauntlet gloves? That's the question. And
certainly it must have its answer -not a sin-
gle innovation, koweyer outre, but what has
been accepted, provided it was made by the
true, acknowledged dictator of fashion. But
there to another and a false dictator, whose
name is Reform In Dress, whose be-
hests have been disobeyed, whose recom-
mendations have been flout.
ed, whose authority has
been ,denied and whose
efforthave been laughed
to scorn. As witness, if
you so please, the fate of
, the bloomer costume. But
this is talking through our
hat. Return we to the snb-
xOW FOR VACS.- ject from which, ah, me!
TION FUN. there are so many sweet,
green alloys of digression.
Together with the severing of the crown of
the sailor hat has come the rage to trim it, to
cover its supposed deformity, perhaps: but it
looks well on the dainty girl that you and I
have in our eye; that is to say, the girl is
quite as charming with the innovation perch-
ed upon her massy, fluffy hair as before; for
she is slight and graceful of figure,
fluttering on the verge of 18, and her face is
bright, with swift intelligence and
sweet sensibility. The hat is perfectly at
home on such a girl, like Clara in a richly -
furnished boudoir.
This girl does not need
the trimming, but is
contact, because she
knows the effect, with
a plain, unadorned lap -
streak of a pattern, with /A
only a little scrap of
bunched ribbon perched
on therazed pilot house.
Of course such a girl its NANCY THIS! .
this would look well in any hat. iiwist a
hunch of straw in a large coil, tie the ends
with timothy hay and toss the result on the
head of such a girl, and it changes as if by
magic to a wreath of beauty and the girl
remains :ereuely adorable.
Splash the sailor hat surface with butter-
cups, throw a little fern at the front, and al)
s^hoot girls, since youth is a charm, look
well in it.
But after the dear adorable and the
school gird have now endurably crystallized
tee fashion by compelling the flattened
sailor hat to look beautiful
" -•.� and picturesque, let all
k other of womankind be -
sailor
f ware of it. Matrons must
E abandon it, at the first
k4.;*.
,, y'~ i glance in the mirror, lest
lingering be fatal; must
firmly reject the picture
SHE'S ALr. RIGHT. presented by the witchery
of 18; must, in fact, acknowledge wrinkledom
and set the hat aside, though memory's sug-
gestions may cost a sigh.
Ladies predisposed to embonpoint en-
croaching upon the face, to the obliteration
of the line et beauty, and, whose resolute
cast of countenance may auggest• the' ad-
miral rather than the sea boy, mast prov4e
a contrast under the hat diaad!ieitt gesud♦
Out 1n the Country.
•
TRIAL TRIP
\ a
e
CANTS
To the end of
NEWS NOTES.
S. J. Radcliffe, of Stratford, has
been appointed English roaster in
London Collegiate Institute.
Postmaster Grenier,of Newport,
Que., has received two years' im-
prisoment for robbing a register-
ed -letter.
The slight frost which occurred
in Manitoba on Wednesday night
is not believed to have done any
great damage.
A Vienna correspondent thinks
it probable that war correspond-
ents will be excluded from armies
in future warfare.
Mr Gladstone, in a letter in
Christian Reunion, expresses his
conviction that there will be an
early union of the Presbyterian
churches in Great Britain.
The body of a woman, believed
to oe that of Susan Kerr, of Maid-
stone, Essex County, was from
Thursday morning in the river at
Wyandotte, Mich.
Four hundred On tario excur-
sionists arrived here to 'lay. This
was to have been the last of the
C P R excursions, but the com-
pany have decided to run one
more in order to give easterners
a chance to see! the industrial
exhibition.
At International Bridge a Buf-
falo mechanical engineer, S. P.
Stiker, has discovered by means
of experiments that he can man-
ufacture ice, using natural gase as
the productive power. He has
produced a temperature 80,degrees
below zero, Widespread interest
is shown in the machinery now in
operation.
The following story comes from
near Newbury, and is vouched for
by persons of undoubted veracity:
A farmer has an adopted son, who
offended him in some way last
week. To punish the little fellow
the man, it is said, conceived the
horrible Idea of burying him alive,
and this idea was promptly carried'
out. He dug a hole, laid the boy
in it and covered him up. After
the lapse of a few seconds, think-
ing the lad had been sufficiently
punished, he relieved him from
his livmg tomb to find him al-
mostXdead from suffocation and
fright, and it was some time be-
fore consciousness was restored,
The outrage coming to the ears of
the neighbors they resolved to
avebge it, and the next night a
number of able bodied men visit-
ed the farmer's house with a stout
rail, a pail of tar and a bag of
feathers. The
tar
and
feathers
ers
were liberally y applied, a and with
the rail Ire was given a free nide
for a distance of a couple of eon-
cessiona.
New Yorker (to farmer) -So yefel kery
hens. I suppose you find them very art-
munerative.
Farmer -Wall, I might make some money
out of them if they weren't so blamed mean.
When eggs are ebeap they de nothing ha;
lay eggs for all they are worth, and when
eggs go up in price ten they quit Iaying.--
Texas Siftings.
She Simply Couldn't.
She could sing and she could play,
Sbe could dance from night till day.
She could while the hours away,
So 'tis said(
She could skate and she could paint,
She could play the patron saint,
But she couldn't and she wouldn't
Make a bed.
She could walk eight miles a day
And play tennis charmingly,
Flirting in a saucy way,
Little scamp!
She could drive and play baseball,
She could make a stylish call,
But she couldn't and she wouldn't
Clean a lamp.
She could swim and she could row,
She could always have a beau,
And I'm sure that we all know
That she was shy.
She could laugh and she could prance,
She could play a game of chance
But she couldn't and she wouldn't
Make a pie.
She could etch and write a book,
She could vanisb with a look;
She could winby hook or crook,
I confess;
She could scold and she could flout,
She could cry and she could pout,
But she couldn't and she wouldn't
, Make a dress.
She could talk of church affairs,
But knew naught of household care.
Still I'rn sure that none compared
With sweet Nan;
Even if she couldn't bake
Bread and pies and angel cake,
She enraptured and she captured
A rich man l '
Illustrated Baseball Yli1wS.
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largest paper in the county; , ade
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Stealing. horoa.MEMINNIONmaill
C.O. Erse/mu & Co.
tnttrs-I have owed your MINARD'S
LINIMENT in my family for some
years and believe it the best medicine
in the trio
rkot
as it doe it.
s all ie re
cora.
mend
od to do.
Canna,an Porto, N. D., D. KInrears.D,
John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs
us that ho tvas oared of it eery &Mere'
Otto* of 'rhettrnatisnx byf teeing MIX -
&1111 LINn NT,
WHAT IT DOES.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
1. Purifies the blood.
2. Creates an appetite.
3. Strenthens the nor
yes.
4. Melee the weak strong..
s, Overcame that ed
fooling.
6 Cards scrofula, salt 'rheum; oto,
7. Invigorates the kidneys and liver.
s, Eelieves headache, indigestion, dys.
pe isia, -
Subi
3
r
of
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