The Huron News-Record, 1892-07-13, Page 2it
4.;
Ludi.gestiort
....,,........„,,,,....,,,,,..,,..,,I
'and only at (lietree.stng cG.Inplaix►t, of
itself, bttti by ca►.tsing the blood to
Become dtrpreved and the, Berstein, etafecltled, is the parent yet innumerable
a maladies. That Ayer% Sat'sape,t'i,1la
its the best cure Per Iudigeetiot►,'even
when complicated with Liver Complaint,
is proved by the following testimony
from rirs. Jennie Lake, of Brookway
Centre, I i h.;- ,
"Live; complaint and indigestion
made my life a bunion and canto near
ending my existence. For more than
four, yoarr I•suttered untold agony, was
reduced enemas to a skeleton, and hardly
bad strength to drag myself about. Ail
hinds of toed distreeletii ma and only
fiho most delicate rotoa be digested at
all. Within the bine mentioned several
physicians weatc(l me without giving re.
lief. Nothing that I took seemed to do
any permanent brood until 1 cemeneneed
the use of •.Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which
bas produced wonderful results. Soon
after to tae the Samaia-
rids I coul nsee an Improvement le t
dy
condition. 11;1 appetite. began to return
allt] theth feud taken, came em y ability
gth digest
iln-
proved oault day, and after a few
rnontha of faithful attention to your
directions, I found myself a well
wolnan, able to attend to all household
duties. The medicine has given ane a
new 1 .00 of life."
Even as tactless roan as tho dea-
A ` erISa 0 sapai11ia, cons were silent before the augniel'
t which could awe their email souls
r_ixrsnnn 01'ulthongh they tailed t0 contpreheud
Dr. J. 0. Ayer es Co., Lowell, Mass, it; but by it, power the lank d011 0U
•Price$1; elibetttee,$5• • ort1 5 a bottle.
was led back ninny years, and he
was hitueel1 a young mail, no Wee
then the part,on, stated ing beside a
title furtu trout whence the spirit
The 1, u! on News-Recordliedtake►1 its= flight, and the p►reou's
Lie a Year--ill.`2s to A,11'unet+. face tec+illed it us it bird not been
brought back fur years. Tile dea-
r I@'ealtna�Afl:ti' July 13th. 1S92 con's dry heart rustled a little in
his breast as he drew near the small
_. -- - ------ white shape, and lo ! memory hail
GIVES (GOOD APPETITE. saved each tear he shed so lung ago
Sets, -1 think your veinal -de nlettioire and now alto poured then, freely on
gAT1n••t ht. • t.p,ssod, aecurrli"t; to the his ptrolled old ilu,r't, and for the
beueGt 1 r.crivel frond it. After suffer- hour it became .fresh again.
int from headache and Toss of appetite
The fat little deacon, seeing that
for nearly four years, I tried i , u' li
with this Oroat •.:t sect:era, tin•line it g .v'• he lingered near the table, and
mf et est relief a•,d goon annotate. I wish rug not to beoverduot in loyalty
new.•.t,j .v good i et, th w`.ion 1 ON to ,to.his parson by a deacon who could
your vu; `lei`s, Nasere ro. flit wx, L iudt,u, desert his political party in its dark -
Out est hour, likewise ad vanced with
gentle step, and etood near the silt
—It' ie illubahle tir)t 1lriunipeg out babe.,
wilt bee eel, her water works fur No sooner had he cast his eyes
$200,000. upon the marble face than he too
----- went back in years further than his
The aroma of the touter. leaf is so brother in the church bad gone.
c.'mutetely ceneereed is the manufacture The ver da was like this day.
of "Myrtle Na)',"vthat ate has no effect
Y y
in diminishing tr ; even aft.:r the plug Tho scent of roses filled the air,
hes ilr.vt, lt<,pt ter yeare it few s , et its and the sound of children's laugh
full a.v,r it le.r the c .+ni,uat:• n ;n the t.er came in thro igh the open win
pii o, itteneeett in t"oe by its ago, and dew. He remembered how it
intori1 , tri•• 111•.:.'. emote -eta siilOke which
intact:.cin 1!,r ',id....to Five. Age too, emote his sore little heart, for the
hardens t. r v,- ee, in .t td Ilia ping and baby, the best beloved of the
ewe.: to tat• t slitter, e. hen cut, that al- household, was dead. From that
meet, weeder el•ees:t. ise in which all d,ty to this he had never sten a
c:nuAte. ea, d I,.bt. dead betty. He bent over the
try lttg to @wflo
An`'t1te altildrou passed nut they
tout ' tall Ionic Deaton Perkin anti
iiatltt f'at Deacon •q fitter. They
knew that the two deacons. had nut
spoken to tttbuh other--- uo,u0t evert
atter passing the bread turd wine o0
uu sontiouvion ,Strides.-,-siXien ti u
Inst Presidential election. Yet
uhauoa bud brought them et the earns
moment, to the 1lalsun a gate,. and
1.either wit line to retreat, 'rhe
children. wato1(ed thorn es they
pees•d up the gravel wells wit hoot
exchaugiug a wird and went into
the house.
"lean old things!' exo'a'mod
lithe Betty. "1 should thiuk they
would he aellemed o' themselves
MA to s"pw►k when it ►cakes the p. 1'.
Fun feel .,o bud,"
In a (1(01nent the deaCOne were In
the presence ill' the still, tiny form.
Smell 118 its pr,,portions,pulseless ((8
its heart, it rein'eseutrc( that which
tl►111 has revered and feared since
the human wind and heart began
to think and feel—iuuucenee uud
sed death.
A1.1, Y l;a w1 g Fy4r.
TILES.
STfiAN.Cto SIGLt'1`5. IN Wii5T3134N 11,id-
NR13 JtlO'f A1'fl Rt TIIU' IIiQ
• FLOOD.
(Plymouth, lit, Letter to St. Louts Roptibtie.)
Crooked Creek has been higl'er
this eptiug thou for teeny years.
The entire uuuutry for some dist
niece on either side of the streltm,
especially it' Mt:D.uuugh C uuty,
bus been fl•,o,l.•el, and elicit damage
haft resifted to faun property. The
farmers slung the creek have good
reason to be dieouursged.
little face, He could flee the faint.
Arthur Webster ;1 promising blue 00 1100 underneath the pale lid
boy of 8, fall °tithe bridge and wail just as he saw it through Iia boyish
drowned in 1Vi1le4, creek, neer tears se many yense ago, and felt
Paisley. that if he waited patiently the dear
eyes would, open and look up
. SL'1tE RLfr,IaVCE
again.
GENTLP:Mr: \',-We h,s..A .. family 01 tb Ila basil forgotten his bother des•
i3O van .'0t1 ensuued ka. ve seal nett on Dr. o
Fowler's Extract ,f.:• tV 11 ' Strawberry con. Never had he forgtitt.•11 hila
for the past ten years in all rias- s of in the church when in bitter silence
diarrthe1 anti rummer comp:amts. It the had (nut and anted.
novel. tails 1:s and has saved ru.ny doctor's y p
bide. "You remember, don't you—"
J. 1', PApICIN3u$, Glendon, Ont. he said, softly, thou stopped sed•
— - — daily, for the sound of his voice
—Winnipeg's electric street eat' called hits back from the past.
service will bs in operation by the The tall lank men beside him
end of the mouth. was no loaner the 801(001 fellow
who had led him away after the
011, 1i Y HEAD! baby was buried, and had given him
That splitting headgear, aening brow his "new fish pule to Mud o' take
and irritable ferttue can 1) a iinnl'+dittt' 11 Itis child off," but a brother deacon
relieved and t:ern,an'ntly oared by liar -
Who heti refused to speak to him
dock Wood rioters, the beta, remedy far
he,.daohe, oonsteeation and 11.11 disorders even after communion.
of the htou,a,ch, liver, 1 0.ve's and 1) Tel "\Vhat—what did ye soy 1" stem-
__. _
tem-
_-----..--- mored the lank deacon, mildly.
TH.E PA.R UN'S BABY Lille IT "I was gout' ter say that he
favored my baby brnthor that died
Every white flower had been cut when we went to the south parish
in the village. The parson's baby 80hool. .But—hut I dou't s'poso
was dead. "Th,+ news of 1\ lire -never you remember hits; yet maybe, ye
travelled faster through the Main can recollect eho,at the fish pole?"
street. "I don't remember no fish pole,"
Even the burly saloon beeper, whispered the lank deacon, "but I
the rum seller in then piece, who 110 recollect th'1t baby that died jest
].eked upon the terpin as Iii eat❑ as plait] ns though twa8 only yester-
nal enemy, when told the fatal yaws slay'. 'An' don't ye remember that
exclaimed, with au wan, •1'litt'a my first boy died jest the sizefofe
lou h !that'd rough this little feller?"
6 ° "So he did, nn' I ain't thought of
The cobbler's dteghter sent her it for years, Eben. 'Taint right for
one white i'°ae. She had wondered f'orget'etu," murmured the fat little
as it grew, who would be worthy el' deacon, feet approaching a state of
its beauty. huakinees.
Small grunp.e of children etOl,ped ''No,'111l1•_ Wye right, .Iosiah,"
on their way to suhuul, and were The lents deacon admitted in a
led into the dim parlor 1,0 "look up.. warmer tone.
on the beautiful no'nou reed face, They looker: act oss the small
which for the lirsttitne refused them peaceful flee at one another. The
a smile. Cue of them asked to lank deacon said not a word, but
touch the dimpled hands which over the tiny folded bands his big
were folded ever the little heart bonny palm closed closely over the
which had known the world's love, fat hand of the little deacon, and
but not its bit feyness. the troubled soul of the young
Death had sumo suddenly, and parson grew calm, and his over-
Death
is aspect roust have been less ter-
charged heart founts relief in tears.
rible than ilio children had been prayed
which he had struggled and
prayed to accomplish through nearly
led to believe fOr. there Wit.) 110 hint the whole of one administration had
of resiet•luce in the peaceful face; beeen accomplished almost in the
but the grits shadow was still passing of a moment..
thrown across the room, and it The deacons went their way, and
awed the children, although it could as they walked up the main street,
not make them feel afraid, the villagers, seeing them together
in friendly conversation they won -
"I don't believe be litres it so dered, sneered, smiled or rejoiced,
clerk here,' whispered little Betty eaeh according to his nature.
Parks, The parson's wife crept back beside
And the person't wife throw open the little shape to lay her aching
the blind, nut the .lane snnehitle head upon the same pillow, where
shot past her drawn white Face and the sun still lingered and the tiny
fyellow rings seemed lost in a golden
flooded the tiny yellow curls until
glory that was not of earth. And it
they seemed to move with life, seemed to her that at the same ma -
"He liken thtr, 1 ant sure ," and ment she heard the sonorous voice
little Bettysmiled, and her voice of her young husband from the old
grew stranger, as if the light of the pulpit, where he had read only the
Itesun'o0tion lied already driven Sbnday before, her favorite hymn,
beginning
the blackest shnda\vs from the tomb. "God moves in a mysterious way
"Betty is right, said the parson, His wonders to perform."
corltlogpunefi of Olerttl ulliklt 0183i,
hut moat oft' 1st priylt+ioue are yo4
throes,—\IVitnesi.
AN OLS MAN ICILLIW.
The uneroce.l•euted rise has driv-
atl hundred8 of venomous reptiles
f1'0111 then' lelre in the 8Wl(n(py
region, and they are invading the
country round about. Will Bar-
tter, of Macomb, ie eompauy with a
number of companions, has return-
ed from a hunting and fi.hiug trip
to Colmar and vicinity and relates
a thrilling encounter with hundreds
of snake) which had boon•driveu
out by the floods. The boy's were
10 a boat cud sighting a slump of
willow trees they rutvati towards
them, (hiul1.iug that perhaps they
might find genie in the breeches.
They did fled gime, but of a differ-
ent sunt from what they expected.
As they ►•owe,i under the trees a
loge black Bunke dropped from a
limb into the bunt. A lively scene
ensued, and after a sharp htttlo.,the
reptile was deep:Nched. No sooner
had this been accomplished, how
ever, than they beheld in the
branches of the trees above them a
hidootis erose of suakea—hundreds
of them, it seemed. The air watt
filled with a fetid odor, se well as
the hisses of the serpents, niftily of
which shot out then' wicked tongues
rinse to the blenched cheeks of the
110W terrified sportsmen.
Tho boys did not lose their pros
e+tee of miud, however, and began
firing into the mass of w't'ithiug,hiss•
iug reptiles, until in a short time,
eVer a hundred of the hideuue crea-
tures bed been alai❑ t There was
water moe,cas.ins, rattlers, spotted
snakes and other species, 801110 nein''
ly eight feet louse Hundreds of
the loathsome creatures escaped into
other low willuws 811irting the
creek. The snakes acted its a tuost
peculiar manner. They hissed and
darted out their tongues and whirr•
ed th(Yir rattles as if they hod been
rtoruered like lats. The water Ives
around them and many of the
811(111.438 seemed to fear. being driven
into the flood. 11undretie of the
reptiles were coiled around eao1(
other in a hideout knot as big, the
boys declare, as a barrel. It was an
exciting epis de. The farm conn,
try is overrun with these uexiuus
reptilea end they will cause trouble
during harveet ft. case the rain
stops long enough to give farmers
a chance to get into the fields.
The gree mise has filled the creeks
and its ern*11 r tributaries with' fis'b
of all kinds, some of which aro
monsters. Huge river catfish and
buffalo have found their way into
the, smaller streams and have be-
come stranded by a sodden reced-
ing of the water in those localities.
Quantities of large fish have thus
been captured by the natives.
There is no exaggeratioi fn this re-
port, although stronger stories are
told. One old native declared that
it rained buffalo fish in his pasture
one night recently.
iRUN DOWN 13Y A TRAIN AT A LONDON.
0. -
A fatal aooidout happened at the
Egerton street crossing of the Gland
Trunk raIlway,Loution, on Wed nes
day, sit the noon mail expriass from
the east was coming into the yard.
'Tltutuas Haywood, fish pedfur of
'l'rafalgar street, an old citizen, was
the victim- It appears he was go-
ing south iu his curt, when he saw
the train approaching. Thiuking
be could safely owes the tracks
alined of the train he drove 00 10
tho calls, and getting excited, jerk
ed the linos vigorously. His feeble
old horse doubtless thought it a
signal to him' to stop, and he stop-
ped, just as Ile had safely cleared
the, track himself, leaving the cart
directly it' the path of the engine.
llaywood, realizing his predicament,
acrumbled to get out of the cert,
and had just laid bis hand un the
front of the cart rind wee in the net
of rising to jump to the vented
when the eugIne struck him with
fearful force, knocking him some
distauce into the air and allowing
hint to fall in front of the engine
with his right leg lying across the
iron. with the result that the limb
was completely cut off by the pon-
derous wheels. The train was
stopped and backed up to the street
trussing, where Heywood was
found. He wa still breathing,
'but lived for of ly a few minutes.
A terrible gash his forehead;
from which the blood was pouring
in a stream that,ran among the old
fellow's long, gray hairs; told in
part the story et' the fearful blow,
he bail sustained. The waggon was
smashed into kindling wood, but
the horse escaped without injury,
Deceased w'as abut' 60 years of age
and leaves a wife and one son. An
inquest was .opened last evening
and ,adjourned till to•rnorrow even•
1Iug.
The NEWS-RECORD
THIS DOCTOR SAW A GfIOST.
St. Louis Globe- Democ,•et : "I saw n
ghost once, and have no desire to see
another," said Dr. A. P. Hepworth,
of New 'Orleans, now sojourning et
Laclede. "It was while 1 was a medi•
cal student at New Orleans. fly
room -mate and I decided that we
would get a head to dissect. A half
crazy negro died that' day at the
hospital, and we dug him up, nppro
rioted his head, and filed it away
in the ' dissecting=root' for future
reference, We then separated. My
route home led past a desolate old
garden, in one of the loneliest quer.
Lets of the city. Suddenly that dead
negro rose up before me. lie was
very much alive, his head was on all
right, and he glared at me with eyes
as big as saucers. ' I involuntarily re
tired about 300 yards, and would have v
none further, but was stopped by a A�9.SAIl ACC,IDE�ti•l.
thick wall. Well, I decided that I .
must lay that ghost or it Would Avery sad acuidnnt occurred at a
haunt we sill toy life; so I went back. harp raising on the farm of 11r.
It was still a there, and its eyes hada Robert Nickliu, lot 14 coneeseien 8,
wicked glare. i explained r situ- lloruiugtoil, on numbly. A euros
alio» to tt; told it I was a poor etudes o'
ent devoted to science, and did not bar of men were at work on the
suppose a dead colored gentleman building, and had raised two bents
cared particularly about having his into positiuu, In some way' not ex
head removed. But it only Glared lained the that'd bent, when part -
the fiercer. Then I got mad. I tally up, was allowed to fall. A
didn't think a was being treated with (tun titan mimed W. Glenn, son of
proper respect. I made a rush, Edward Glenn lot 14, coaceeeion 9,
struck at the ghostship with ray call, +
and he vanished. What was it? A in endeavoring toget out,of danger's
black tom cat sitting o0 a fence way tripped over a timber and fell
_- post." The bent eau's down upon biro, and
LRITAI1 'S CONQUEST OF _______ almost crushed the entire life out of
CANADA. THE APOSTLES' BURIAL him. Dr. Johnson, of Millbank,
PLACE. was called, and also Dr. Veitch, of
Q.-1. What was the date of the Linwood, but nothing could be done
cap+tutation of Quebec and the (0t' All that now refuting of the to save the man's life,. and he died
Sequent surrender and cession of apostles of Christ are in the follow- in about an hour and a half after
Canada to the Bridal) Crown ? 2. In ing places : Seven are sleeping the 111th accident. Deceased was a mem
what year were the French language sleep of the just in Rome, viz: mer of the C.O.O.F., and resided
and laws conceded 10 the French Peter, Philip, James tbo Less, Jude, about three miles from from the
people of Quebec Province 7 Ans.— Bartholomew Matthias and Simon. scene of the accident. Another
The following are the priucipal The remains sof three lie in the young elan nand William Reid,
dates and memorabilia of the con- kingdom of Maples ; Matthew at eon of Mr. Peter Reid, was 51110
quest of Canada of Canada :—June Salerno, Andrew at Amalfi, and badly injured by the accident, but
30,,J 59�Brrtrah fleet arrived at 'Thomas at Ortona. One, Notes not fatalty.
Cee'f )ir Ira a, "1759, battle- of the Gre`Ater, was buried in Spain, at
Montmorency Flats, British defeat- at St. Jago de Compostolla. Of the
ed ; Sept. 13, 1759, battle of Plains exact whereabonts of the remains of
of Abraham, British victorious ; St. John the Evangelist, there is
Sept. 18, 1759, capitulation of Que- much dispute. Mark and Loire
bac ; April 28, 1760, capitulation of are buried in Italy, the former at
ell Canada, signed at Montreal ; Venice, and the latter at Padua.
Feb. 10. 1763, treaty of Paris, Can- St. Paul's remains are also believed
ada ceded to Great Britain. Gen- to be in Italy. Peter is buried in
eral Wolfe, commander of the Brit• Rome in the church which boars
ish forces, was killed in action on in the Church of the Holy Apostles.
the plains of Abraham, Tho total Bartholomew his name ; so, too,
British loss, killed and wounded in are Sitnon and Jude, James
that battle, was 656, of whom 57 the Lesser is buried in the
were killed. The French lost about church on that island in the Tiber
1,500, including General Montcalm which bears hie name. The "Le•
and his two associates in command, gends of the Apostles" place the 're -
Generale de Senezergnes and St. mains of Matthias under the altar
Ours. This was in the battle of of the renowned Basilica.
Sept. 13. In the battle of St. Foye
the loss was much greater on both --Mrs. Maggie Robinson, aged
sides. 2. The legal use of the twenty years, of Sharon, Ont., was
French language and the retention taken from the 'Toronto City hall
of the French civil law or "Coutume station to the general hospital yes -
du Paris," was guaranteed by the terday morning in the ambulance,
the Quebec Act of 1774. The Eng- suffering from a bullet wound in the
lish criminal law, however, was con- right ,hip. On Saturday night last
tinued in force. The Quebec Act her busband was fooling with an old
was not acceptable to large numbers revolver of the bull dog pattern,
of the French themselves. It• gave when it suddenly exploded, the ball
offence to the English inhabitants of striking her. The grief of the bus.
New England and was one of the band at the unfortunate occurreuce
Cati8ee of the American revolution. was very great. The couple have
The Quebec Act, by establishing the been married but a year, and were
temporal power of the Church of struggling, to get a start in life.
Rome and by keeping separate the They bad rented a farm, and their
two peoples, has interfered seriously prospects looked bright until the
with the prosperity of Canada. Its accident occurred. Her condition
effects were partially removed in is considered serious.
Is in a better position than eves' to turn out
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The News-
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rnediutn, has few equals in Ontario.
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JOB PRINTING.
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class of work is guaranteed at very
lom. prices.
—Mrs. Fulford, relict of the late
Ira Fulford, returned front a visit
to relatives in Winghatn by the
late train Saturday night,,and was
met by her brother, N. W. John-
ston, and accompanied part of tho
way home. She seemed to bo per-
fectly well when they parted, but it
was not more than ten minutes
afterwards when she was found in
a dying state at ber own Iloor by
her brother-in-law, "Jesse Fulford.
She only lived a few minutes.
—Figures, the man who attempt-•
ed to kill his wife and made a gene
eral disturbance on July 1, at Ber-
lin, Ont., was brought before Mr.
Mackie, J. P., and remanded until.
the 8th. Ile was slightly under the
influence of liquor when lie made
the attempt, and the officers had a
hard job to get him to the jail, he
lying down and refusing to move.
—Le Monde says that if Presi-
dent Harrison dares to put his re-
prisal legislation against Canada
into force and refuses to listen to
the voice of diplomacy, England
must talk to him in the language
of cannons and getting guns. •
—Paul Blondin, suspecting Al-
bert Patin, a Winnipeg bar -tender.
of being too intimate with his wife
fired at him yesterday, but the bul-
let went wide of its mark, and
Blondin will be tried for attempted
murder.
Salentine American
Agency for
,y
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