The Huron News-Record, 1893-08-02, Page 37177I
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V , ;tdapur ,sod, Pytip,
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surept on' ; or Lupg scrofu, t . in iia, earlier
•r w >y � t, y '1 is v oW ; para", .
Esu?' $'..
t d :dta< aQt ben66: ,qr icure'' n eveviy, cases
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r : "` l ov$, . ,money back,'
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111.•''!11`eduesdtax, Ai> ust Ind, 1SJ3.
s..
,''t �a ,, . ,
. ht 1,THE DEAD LOVER.
, l'.
a,' ' ",L'1,17, A lto.ux,4NIAN FOLK SONG. /
t 11'e whom I loved *o. well
Is Yeting 11,.18 long, long sleep ;
Yet I lament ghat not,
For he, me not to weep.
,` .
, Xbra dear to him the grave
i 1' r � Than I oonld ever be ;
fpr though I go to him,
He' duos not conte to me.
«. •
I envy not the grave
�' What yesterday was mine,
�, , But bots illy (read and say,
`.l• Keep him, for he is thine.
c '" But keep not, grave, my youth,
i,�r q Which cannot profit thee;
yr My smile and my,light st•ep-
0 give•tham back to me.
I 4, . W, - But the grays answered, No ;
, For these things still are dear,
i_ Since he, deprived of thein,
,� " s , �'� ould be too lonely here.
. Then to the dead I pray :
t
Restore my youth to Inc.
,, ,,� That when we meet again
' i I be not old to thee I
tit', i.
But he nor hears bor sees,
", ^r • For his eyes like thine aro dim ;
11 °O; See to his grave I conte,
r To get them back (torn him.
t
t „ For only in the grave
Are taste no lunger shed,
>: And the living. happy made
" Beside the happy dead.
—R A. SODDARD in Harper's Mage -
`+,,,1. ,.,,'.= zfus for August.
! •` ,
+ T9UR PHILANTHROPY.
t Po, t he Editor of The .Yews liecor <1:-
y•;A.;t ' Please inform your readers that I will
w ,, ? mail free to all sufferers the means by which
' i as restored to health and manly vigor
,r,, ler years of suffering from Nervous vVeak.
jr
k:, .. ,test+, I .was robbed and swindled by the
, qurtaka uhtil I nearly lost faith in mankind,
n ,'•- batthanke to heaven,! am now well,vigorous
raai,':..'• and strong. I, have nothing to sell and no
;'=- scheme to exturt ML BOY from anyone whom-
', i,; ,. soever, 'but being . desirous to make this
certsin cure known to all, I will send free
4 and oonfidental to anyone full particulate of
just how I was cure -I. Address with stamps:
+ Alit. EDWARD MARTIN, (Teacher).
"'`' P: 0. Box 143, Detroit, Mich,
' --A Eootou spinster has left eight
:,,,�°' thodsand dollars toa single cat, which
�y14 must be the wealthiest feliuo in the
+ '.:' country.
,,
"..; •' FROM INDIA'S CORAL STRAND.
DsAR SiRs,—I have touch pleasure ill
certifying that after suffering severely for
15 months from: die, rhoe,, which came on
after childbirth, previ.,us to which I had
Vis, suffered from dysea+ery for some months.
a,. I was cured by Dr. Fowler's extract of Wild
11
` Strawberry. AmilE M: Uinsox,
't a ,.... Brilipstam, India.
r
t,
'. —Rev. Som Jones denounces the
tv,. newspapers ae too sensational, The
,..,`,,:.,�'. ,,-,. - only trouble with Sam is that he it
jealous. t
1
u id he dog -day see on t drain o
D r g 1, g y e „had 1,m
nervous and vital energy may be conterseL'
ed by the use of Ayers Sarsaparilla. It
p purifying the blood, it note as a superb cot
+" restive and tontu, and en, the eyrtem to
defy malarial a 1
other r climair c
influences
rtr L. -=The baud that rocks the cradle is
� Ahe' hand that can't stone a hen. will',
11
any success.
Irlr�
r''` THREE DOLLARS A WEEK
11 FOR LIFE.
fibre is a chance for Braldy People—Thr
t Latest Thing gist.
Ill order to introduce The Canadian Agrlantturle
into Now home", th6 puplishers have dnoidad to pr,
sent an unusually attractive reward list for thei
(',creat Eighth Half Yearly Literary Attraction for th
summer of 1898. They have entered into a writte
agreement to,pay through the Judges all the roward
oaerad belga.
,, , How To Sacco$ A RxwAnn—Those who becom
•`subscribers' can compete free of charge. All that I
,iiecaeeary Ia to take low sheets of paper and make a
' the words Jou can onto( the lectors in tho three words
, "World's olamblan Exposition;' and send them t
ns,`inolosing $1 for
r six months subsaription to elth,
, The Csdian Agrlorilturiet or the Ladles' nom
.a Magazine, tae`df the choicest illustrated perlodlca:
/ • of"tneday.
ti • Thd sender .at the largest list will receive 88 p,
week for lift; 2nd $1,080 in gold; 8rd, $500; 4t1
s260 ; 8th, $lOtl ; nth, Ticket to World's Falr and to
days expenses; pianos, organs, Indies' andgente'gol
. :find 6pfor watbhes,,silver tea sorvtata, diamond ring
andoier 10,000 other rgpards, making altogether tt
4 . • 11 flrost valuable prize Hot ever offered by any publishe
Send for printed list of former prizewinners.
Rntsg.,•-1. Foreign or ob"otett words not counter
a 1 2. Letters cannot be used oftener than they appal
In the words "W'orld's Coldmbian Expositlon"—thi
M the word "Addle," tor.instance could not be -ase
beasn'so there is but one •'d" In the three words, otr
8.- Names of persons and plasos burred, 4. No obarl
'.;G `'1, ,'p :- dor packing or shipping, but all prize winners will l
t
6=eetod to help ns to extend our oiroulatIoil. 6. A
is containing oter 100 corroot words will resolve
-.. Apbel"el rowdrd,
y . dinar a.- The following heft known gonttoihon ba'
eonsonted to not as ledges and w111 Aga that the prig
aro fairly -warded--0001riso orb Calautt, (Propriet
bgiCtftt'" Llne of t3tenmorA , Peterborough, and 1,f
I 'W., Rob6oson, `Prtaldaat Timetl Printing Oompau
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Address, ,Aolltttiravntar Pub. cosy L'td, Pott
11,
•r �ough,;Comids.
.
,,
4'
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wht h y 1,.P. 100. #1,l the p e _
fellori "then.. whioh, mode 'film never iso
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9 ,.
,., Only to.erabi . so, t)aaltts<. oft Tared , .;
r 1: y 1 y; , Fred,,
esti h uover o4 over ltw grezit
r" m l v no
')before; t 1, 1 k. h11'ml t
f a d 111$ . t' n4 r$ 1. .
b4 , n. d
4 vMetit ' rep a;gtion.;: has could 'm- in*
pe
When e ad. fasten: is Dote.--
11ai?IaY l?$ wh. n h h.,. e'cl h
you „ t .
oss,
vent uud 110 naa • ala;ifulty raokilm iris .
#'
.
door and secuxtid 1i1#tt5e1R rota- tall pose i
,a N 't sa' u,tt i ton de ern el
+ 91, }d I I i 1# , t y ,.
b - s o n f tile Jo
miP4 , t fl d same ir4xti9n q . h e ,
lo.
r,
bility pCuttuaiot4 ; Llltlydl< it wtis t 1
most 4n unnecessary ltreeautloll, for no-
.
,•of co11rd9 not; ft wus u --a iar;u sural 0#
oil-
which u a r it -:avi n
y''_ iG . wQ td 1pe.. t cyst. ioir 0...
there was another knock .at 1119 door,
bodv !ever thought 4f coming to see
FWIlillgton,
money to hose ail st 0",
,. y •r
t was not refe5iiil; 1,4 u1rY�aty, said
AL this F lushiaigtoas gyne .perfeptl3. :
dumb with horror ; he: hunt#e13L
' In a . rear' hq was a mart of'midsile
Pl
"lie, with 1,,v sli tit, touch of stontaess in
' , g,. g
her. nlanu.r, I -was alluding tts'tiie
prepared
blank! o {
y I' i another aunt With, A fresh
1, d a
height, With 1� long seragfiy nee and
death tit your. cousin Joila,
relay of female 09us►t1s, or melte aid
large head,. vrhteh gays him the as of
than he was ;
a
Flu tort had Ietthimself getting on
g S
family servants who, had, w4sbod' hrrtm`fn.
his iofano
being shorter really
B
rath.er well just 6elore that, lltii� his
a
y, ua'he pat t1►e1`e.'ca�Yering,.
- use a d
lie hips, little• :11mak eyes,, q n n
awkward mistake--fov he could not
B v i-
at '' hen the dtlaropene4l a 11111 fa t
ver
mn. utll of na particular shape, and y
reCAllect 11ttvltil; heard, of Cousilt Johli
o
hatred, good-lo9ka#rg• young' feliow, Who,
o e its col >" He .H si
s i hat f n R,
m t 1,h c d !ln
o r
w is i la
e 6—t 1 e I,it 3 01 i s t. again; n
b f r 1 r t 1 b•1 1 1,.P t,
u g
fo o u d e. tit
h cat me yid .1,l . s
raft 19 lie era.. Y. J
P
e d
which se rat
deprnsdjoi
�,
goliop4d. into silerica• once more, it).
come, n o a• burst -
. from t14e tennis es ..ort, Fame
dtimid.
n6le,A hhe
due to the cancotouanees that h$ was an
uniiltorestiug anomaly, and hd•certainly
warily rrbofviug .to belurod mtonu mora,
ut;atielsis uoncernhig relatives.
I
Ing in impulsively.
Oil, I say t he abehan, "have you
was as impervious to .the ordinary in-
q His ignuraucu seemed to have aroused
•
heard--havo you seen 8. Oh, beg pardon,
fluenge• 0,f his surroyndings'as any un.-
,derg ailup.te could t�bll b$ $e lived a
pathetic sentiutents in his unt. "I
ought to have knvwn;' she sass shaking'
didn't see, you know I" he added, a$ lie
noticed the extraordinary fact' that
colorless, aimless life in his little rooms
under the every morning
hi;p !read, "they'd soon forget us iii the
4ualtington had people up.
"Oh,
rogf, reading
old country ; here's m y own sister a sou,
let me introduce you;" said
,from 9 till `r with .a• superstitiously me-
chanical regularity, though- very often
and liu doe3u% renteutuer iiia cousin's
death. Well, here, we
Flushington, with a vague idea that this
the thing to do. "Mr. Lush
his books completely faildd to convey
well,, now ;we're
if
was. proper -
ington, -no, I don't know her
any ideas whatever to his brain, which
must see we can't know one another a
better. Fred, bruU take the
Mrs.
'
was not a particularly powerful organ.
little you
girls and ole overywhore and .show us
name—my aunt-�-iny cousins;"
The young man, ,who hath just been
. If the afternoon was rine he generally
everything, like a good nephew, you
about -to retire, bowed and stared with
sought out his one friend, who was a
sniow,"
sudden surprise. "Do you know," he
few 4egrees less ally than himself, And
Flushington had a, horrible mental
said slowly to the other, "I rather think
they took a monosyllabic yvalk together;
vision of himsed careering about all
that's my aunt!" ,
or if it was wet he read the papers At
Cambridge, followed by a lung prooes-
--I—Pia afraid not," whispered Flush -
the Union, and in the evenings after
sion of female relatives—a fearful pussi-
ington; "she seems quite sure she's
hall lie studied "general lite rature"—a
bility to su shy a urau. "Shall you be
mine•++
graceful term for novels—or laborious-
there long?" lie asi:ed.
"Well, 1've got an aunt and cousins
piano, a
ly 8 eft OIIL a sonata npOII his p ,
p
••Qnl a week Ul' 80 ; we're at the
Y
I've never seen before coming up to -
habit which did not increase his popu-
-Bull,' very near you, you bee; and Fin
day," said the new comer, "and yours is
larity.
Fortunately for Flushingtun he had no
atruid you think us very bold beggars,
J''red, but we're going to ask you to give
uncommonly like"the portrait of mine."
"if they belong to you, do take them
v been made a
•gyp, or life life might have e
us souietlunx to eat. I've set my hoai•t,
„
awayt said Flushington, feebly; "I
positive burden to him, and with hie
favorite
so have the girls (:haven t you, dears i),
don't think I can keep up much longer."
bed -maker he was rather a as
"a gentleman what ave no trouble"—
g g
on lunching once rause with a college
student in Iiia own r,,um' „
"What are you whispering about,
"Is
meaning that, when he otserred his
•-There's nuthi,rg ;a extraordinary ill
Fred?' cried.the aunt. it something
?" • g
we are not to know.
sherry unaccountably sinking, like the
it, Iassure you,' 1)COWStr,l Flushin'ton,
,, Tie says he thinks'there's been a mis-
water in a lock when the sluices are u
s P.
and—uud I'm airiul there's very tittle
take, and you're not my aunt," explain-
to e, andFlushfu you're
Flushington was too delicate to refer to
for You to eat, The kitchen and buttery
the phenomenon,
. He was sitting one afternoon over
are closed" (he said this at a venture as
i,e felt absolutely u:,e lust to foci hg the
lie?" sh her-
„Oh doe, he?" she said, drawing
awingwhat
his modest lunch of bread and butter,
college cook and Orderuig, lunch frmn
self up fed, "Anti doee
he know uboat it—I didn't catch his
potted. meat and lemonade, when till
that tremendous p,•roonage, lie would
name, who is ho:'"
at once he heard the sound of unusual
rather order it from his tutor even.)
-Fred Lushington," he said,, "that's
voices and a strange flutter of dresses
"But if you don't mind potted ham,
„
corrin u the winding staircase outside,
g p g
tuero's a littl, + at the bottom of this tin,
my name.
you Lush -
And who are you if he's Fred Lush -
and was instantly seized with a cold
aiLa there's souse hrrad and an itica of
ington?" she tare
turning upon the
dread.
There was no particular reason for
butter and usarn,i,iada; and a few bis-
cuiks. And were was souse sherry this
unfortunate owner of the rooms.
"
being alarmed, althourli there were cer.
woruing."
„1'm Frederick Flushington hs
sttimmered: "1'ut sorry—but I can't help
tainly ladies mounting the steps—pro-
The girls all profesbud themselves very
,,,
it!"
bably they were friends of the man op-
hungry, and contented with unvthing;
you're not my nephew at all,
posite, who was always having his
people up. But still Flnshington had
so they bat round 1,,.e tame, and pour
I lushuigtuii served out meager rations
sir!" cried the unlit.
Bill"
that odd presentiment which nervous
of ail the provisions lie could find, even
you very much," said Flush -
ingtongratefully.
g
people have sometimes that something
unpleasant is un its way to them, and
to his tilts and French plumes; but there
was not nearly enough to gu round, and
.
"You see," her real nephew , was ec-
to her, "there isn't much light
he half rose from his chair to shut his
they lutiebed with evident disillusion-
plaining
sn the staircase, and you must have
outer oak.
It was too late ; the dresses were rust-
luent, tianking that the college luxury of
o hien they had heard su much hud b,eu
thought his name over the door was 'F.
lin; now in his very passage—there was
greatly exaggerated.'
Lushington', so in you went, you knowl
The porter told me you'd been asking for
a pause, a few faint smothered laughs,
and little feminine coughs—then two
During lut,cheun the aunt began to
,,turfy Flubbingioti s f, atures attemfvely.
me, so I looked in here to seen wliethor
taps at the door.
• There's a strong look of poor dear
anything had been heard of you, and
..Come in," cried Flushington faintly ;
bunco about hint' when he smiles," she
here you are.,
lie wished lie had been reading anything
said, looking at hini through her gold
"But why, didn't he tell me?'' she said,
but the- work of M. Zola which was
double glaabes, ••'There, aid you catch
for she was naturally annoyed to find
propped up in front of him. It is your
it,,gu•ib7 Just his mother's profile (turn
that she had been pouring out all Iter
mild man who frequently has .% taste for
your fnce a leetle more toward the win-
pent-up affection over'a perfect stranger,
seeing the less reputable side of life in
dow, so as to get the light on your no: e);
and she even had a dim idea that she
this second-hand way, and Flushington
don't you see the liLeness of yuur aunt's
had put herself in rather a rediculous
would toil manfully through the volu-
p,.rtraits, girls?"
position, which of course made her feel
minotrs pages, hunting up every third
And Fitnir,iogton had to sit still with
very angry with Flushington. Why
word in the dictionary, with a settee of
allthe girls' ch.rmiing eyes taxed critical-
couldn't he explain before matters had
injury when, as was often the case, it
was not to be found. Still, there was a
ly upon his crimson countenance ; he
lunged to be- able to slidu deryll tinder the
gone so fart'
"How was I to know?" leaded Flush -
"I
sort of intellectual orgie about it which
,able and evade them, but of course he
ington; dare say I have aunts in
had strong fascinations for him, while
was obliged to reni.,in above.
Australia, and you said you were one of
them. I thought very likely knew
he knew enough of the language to be
-- He's got dear Caroline's nose T the
you
aware when the incidents approached the
improper, though lie was not always able
aunt went on triumphantly and the
cousins agreed that Pe certainly had
best.
"But you asked after Uncle Samuel?"
to neo quite clearly in what this impro-
,
Carolihe's nose, which made Fiushington
she said accusingly. "You must have
priety consisted.
feel vaguely that lie ought at least to of,
had some object -1 cannot say what—in
encouraging my mistake; oh, I'm sure
The door opened, and his heart seemed
ter to return it.
Of�i t !"
to stop and all the blood rushed violently
to his head as a large lady came sweep-
Presently one of the girls whispered to
her mother, who laughed indulfiently.
You told me to ask after him, and
ing in, her face rippling with a broad
"What do you think this silly child
«I
did, baid the unhappy Flushington, I
thought it was all right. What else was
smile of affection.
wants me to ask you, Fred?" she said.
I to do?".
She horrified Flushington, who knew
nobody with the least claim to smile at
-,Site says site would so like to see what
you look like with your college cap and
The cousins. were whispering and
Trim so expansively as that; he drank
gown on ! Will you put diem ou, Lust
laughing together all this time and re -
garding their new cousin with ally ad -
lemonade to conceal his confusion.
"You don't know me, my dear
to ph a:e her ?"
So Flnshington lied to put them on,
mrration, very different from the man=
Fred?" she said easily. Of course not
? I'm—for
and walk slowly up and down Lire room
in them, feeling all the time what a dis-
tier in which they had looked at poor
Fluabington; and the old nurse, too, was
—how should you goodness
sake, my dear boy, don't look so ter-
tial spectacle he was making of luiuseif,
overjoyed at the exchange, and declared
'ribly frightened 1 I'm your aunt—your
and remarked that, somehow, they had
that she felt sure from the first that
her master Frederick had not turndd
Aunt Amelia, come over from Aus•
thought the academical costume more
out so undersized as hits, meaning Flush -
tralia 1"
The shock was a severe one to Flush-
ington, who had not even known he pos-
becoming.
Then bean a hot! rrYaintained cate-
chisill upon his stud'ya; Iris amusements,
ington.
hastily,
"Yes, yes," said on both sides;
"quite a mistake on both sides; quite
sassed such a relative ; he could only say
"Oh t" which he felt even then was
lits friends, and his l�rode of life general-
ly ; which he met with uneasy shillings
sure Flnshington isn't the man to go and
scarcely a warm greeting to give an
and short timid answers that they did
intercept any fellow's aunt.
aunt from the Antipodes.
not appear to think altogether mtisfuc-
"I wouldn't have done it for worlds,
if I had known!"' he protested very sin -
"Oh, but," she added cheerfully,
"that's not all ; I've another surprise for
tory.
Indeed, the aunt, who by this time felt
cerely., ••
you ;the dear girls would insist on cum-
too, to see their college
t disagree
the potted ham beginning u �
with her, asked, him, wi•h something of
"Well," „
i mollified"'I'm
Well she said. a little o e ,
,
very sorry we've all disturbed you like
ing up, grand
cousin ; they're .ust outside. I'll call
?
rever'ity in her tone, whether Ire w•erit to
he he didn't
this, Mr.—Mr. Flusbington, (the unlucky
man said something about not minding
them in—shall I
church regularly; and said
In another second Flushington's' small
go to church, but was always regular at
it now) "and now, Fred, my boy, per -
room was overrun by a horde of female
chape),
Orr this observed coldly that she
haps you will show us the way to the
right rooms?
relatives, while he looked on gasping;
They were pretty girls, too, many of
she
vi,as sorry to hear her nephew was a dis-
Flushington was much too
"Come along, then 1" said he ; "I'll
run down and tell them to send up some
them ; but that was all the more dread-
ful to him • he did not mind the laitrer
senter; and
shy to attempt to explain the tnisunder-
lunch" (they did not explain that they
,
�t41*01buira.
,_ _.-, __r.. ....�...�..,.-.....:..R ,m .. ,7' '
,M.,:GopAorh ltJti4 k Wortis h1g ° 7Gr t ,M,!;
had lunched already). "You come too,
i1'Ir. Win. ,Paulcip 4f this 1 h con',
difilillory 4 nhoot tQ blot �f►W ,
Flushington, and then after lunch you
ai l �blpata;, iii 11111 t>alrfl �arl,t'd With
a ,, - � ,
': 41u 1 Rl h 1,w �1.�ktQ,AQ�l�it11441 Will4_140,
and I will row the ladies up to Byron's
ill its cullttttite• ',l'hvrd kkHk jtutt0
: Ivhlaictt f1I'A1Rfi9k. The ;pla'tiioro' k1a11. , ;
Pool t"
"Yes, do come, Mr. Flushington," the
'ttrttflti, !),p-, i4na 111;' 1)» ; nlad a Jai
y $
. Pxartseomii to sae duo. to 1,;h 1fo;y rfatt�tt �
1
,
optity. f : , t e .. i
Q. Qd 1 k .etu.F, 13 -ltd+' .*Wdoi
Bait ; t?f ills dfstiller rawther 1 i.il t: 1,l
y y 9l� _
: f, , '''
k.! Z1
) j . a ► ' 0
�! t �. , . , fl loj, 1l a tigt ',it.et•l? *Act#
iW.4 thu kre , It 9. 0.11Pt. e " i .`
r . ! !le i ellr Nit
a res , a i .i.t; ,. t .,.
1.
t o t►st t; 1, 1
t� 1,J 1Pf t 1!1, 1,1 l
� 114,.. y � F� title;
fro ire. 7 llettt Rd t1.A' 1s+ta . elitlp0 cal* ";
11 , Oxt
- n . 1, o
t) to e . t
1,l t. "Milues. a .Tho
i h I $ a :r
1 �I d u
1' k 1,t f' "�
,F,,,
• `Ila .t tit
1# I . 11, Q
1. t a t. it F
a t
h ,� i..
.,
t 1 r� 13... i ;1.: a
l
'� F Y
1,1 d �. l tit order. '.,
ad pa t.
S F the
, _.h f ,.
„
1
44V a .0ii'd .hera't ,
a 3E as •-.
Il ,..
tE6 R A
.aRe r i
W 1 0
1 f Far
foots, a, a * 1 i
h9 rbP �
�' ,• t iota
i t...
I 1 ";`
f
R!Adar (,Its weather alp Irtaselit, It to.;ro
t ii )
J _.o d e 1
e e i v1, 8 t're li
f 1 U9 t R kcr.
N u
� "'a•
e:
.,o
�
Itav, Ali. Walker otalready gettio
' COU31iCUR
2ME a$sio
.
.
Qpwitr Witt! (kite ptigple, He to a
attionoll Protestant and 'that gees
qu.ilo
awayys, •
A ratan by th'P frame of Murrey went
f Qnl Soofortlif Tburr,day Ili'g. ht to
-.
Bxticefielti and stole frotutthe creamery
two Oarkins of butler. n, sold the
butter e to
b �YI11
u Will. Ta 1e, htitol keeper. He
wailr N d eat
e
r d near 't 'a
S tI_ b P. 4. y C. Dun
r
0 of al 1,f
i S or r assist 'b.
d i♦Ir J Russ
p ,
� .Iso
y ,
of Clinton. He ,vee brought t9�eut'grtii.
but made hie IRS
during the day
(Fyidsy). It' W. J. 13aialey gets a .bold
of him lie won't got away kor at least
two years. .
AN INHUMAN WIFE. -
The inspector of the Humane So-
ciety at L'ont on, Ont., has unearthed a
inuat flagrait ease of cruel neglect.
Word came to him that a man named
Daniel Rice, living in a house on
Gray street, suffering from an acute
fos m of paralysis, unable to aid him-
self, was being completely neglected
by his wife. In compliuy with the
Medical health Officer the inspector
visited the place mentioned. On enter-
ing a small compartment, squalor and
filth'being the chief oharaetariaties, a
repulsive eight met their gaze. Upon
a dilapidated couch lay Rice. Every
indication was that he had lain in the
Sallie posture for a ilouth. lu anoth-
er part of the roou his wile was sloop-
ing oft' a 4runken debauch. When
the inspector commenced to remove
the mall's clothing maggote fell to the
flour in hundreds. They had been
gelminpted upon the unfortunate's
flebh. The; slouch in the room was
something unbearable. When Iemov-
ed to the hospitA it was found that
Rice was sutl'esing, not only from para-
lysis, but from herpeszoster, an aggra-
vated shin disease. He has.. also a
chronic nervous affection. He will
never recover, although, say the hos-
pitek authorities, he may live for
some time.
ones half so much ; a coTbinat on of
standing; he sat quiet and felt miserable,
had lunched already). "You come too,
beauty and intellect reduced him to a
while there was another uncomfortable
Flushington, and then after lunch you
' condition of absolute imbecility.
pause.
and I will row the ladies up to Byron's
He Ivas once caught and'introdueod.to
t a charming young lady from Newnham,
The,�'ousins were whispering together
and laughing over little private yokes,
Pool t"
"Yes, do come, Mr. Flushington," the
r and all he could do was to back feebly
and he, after the manner of sentative
Indies said kindly,' Just to show you for-
a into a corner and murmur "Thank you,
' re eatedl
men, of course imagined they were
laughing at him—and perhaps he vias
give us 1"
But Flushington wiggles out of it ;.to
r He was very little better than that as
not far wrong on this occasion. Su lie
begin with, he did not consider he knew
o his aunt singled out one girl after an-
"We
was Iowink hotter every second, in.
w srrd�y cursing his whole race and wish-
hisnoighbor sufficiently well, as they
only had a nodding acquaintance before,
other. won't have any formal
i "
nonsense between cousins, she said ;
ing that his father had been a found-
an d, besides, he had had enough of fe
p "you know them all by name already, I
lin when there came another rap at
g— ,
m ala society for one day.
r dare sa —this is Mill that Jane hero's
e Flora, and Kitty, -and Margaret, and
the door
"Wiry, that must be poor old Sophy !'
Indeed, long after that, he would be
careful in fastening his door about
e that's my little Thomisina over there by
said his aunt. "Fred, you remember
old Sophy—no, you can't, you were only
luncheon time, and if lie saw any person
in Cambridge who looked as if she
r thebookease."
', Poor Flushington ducked blindly in
a baby when she came to live. with us,
might by any possibility turn out to be a
a the direction of each, and then to them
but she'll remember you. Site begged so
bard 0 be taken, and so we told her she
relation, he would flee down a back
street.
all collectively; he had not presence of
u mind to offer them chairs or cake or
might come on here slowly after us,"
r, anything, and, besides, there was not,
And Allen an old person in a black
scorpion $ants In Mexico.
1, nearly enough of anything for all of
bonnet came feebly in, and was consider-
ably affected when she saw Flushington.
The scorpions have become so numer.
in the City of Mee., that
,r them.
,t Meanwhile his aunt had spread her-
"To think," she quavered, "to think as
ous .Durango,
the municipal authorities have offered a
1. self comfortably out in his arm chair
•o was untying her bonnet strings an
my dim old eyes should see the child
I've nursed on my lap ,growing out into
valuable prize, to be given to the person
capturing the largest number. Two
and
Ia beaming at him until ho was ready t�f►
a college gentleman t And she hug-
on his shoul-
.thousand of the deadly pests were killed
a expire with confusion. "I do think,'
she observed at last, "that, when an old
sed Flushingtun and wept
der,. till he wad almost cataleptic with
at the hospital there recently in, one day.
For theale scorpions the city pays silo
three times a week
,e aunt all the way from Australia takes
in the trouble to Como and see you lilts
confusion. r
But as she grow calmer, she became
cents a hundred, and
.those collected aro counted and killed at
r this you might spare her just 'one kiss!"
more critical ; site confos)sed to a certain
disappointment with Flush-
the ,hospital, and 80,000 were thus de.
r, Flushingtun dared not refusal he tot-
.feeling of
atroyedlast year.. Persons who qet per -
ftp and kissed her somewhere
ington , he had filled onto she said,
mlts to hunt the pests have the right to
.y
'y about the face, after which he did not
snot
so. floe as held[ promised to fill out."
And, the asked if he recollected
entir and seAroh private houses for
a; know which way to look he was so
when
them. + ' ,
r.
I
.
.
.� V
01 I
v' b
THE WORST FORM.
DEAR Slus,—Al,out three years ago when
I was troubltd with dyspepsia in its worst.
form, neither food nor medicine would stay
on my stonisch, and it peemed impossible to
I took one bottle of 13
13 Ril e
rgliemkonllbox of burdock Pills, &Q
thty cured me completely.
MRs. S. B. SMITH, Elmsdale, Oat.
COSTUME OF THE POOR ARAB.
They all dress alike—Arabs, Berbera,
Moore, and tine rest. Item : One
"biled rag"—notthetiiled rag of the wild
and woolly West, but a piecce of cotton
cloth actually sewed up bog -fashion,
with holes cut in for head and arms,
now and then affording the luxury of
sliort sleeves; and which under no cirII
cumetanceB whatever, is "biled," until
age has withered and custom staled it
into actual rags. Item : If well4o-do,
asleevless buttoned vent. Item- Real
"bags," to adopt our young hunting
swell's term, for trousers. Sartorially
•speaking, these are made of cotton, and
are literally like a bags whose depth is
lgnal to a little more than the distance
from waist to knee. and whose width
squals thrice, the distance a man can
stretch apart hia.legs. Cut out the two
corners of the bottom of the bag, step
through the holes, and gather up the
mouth round the waist, and you have
the Plymouth Rock pants du pays.
There is thus left pendent between the
Arab's legs a bag big enough to bide
himself in. The origin or utility of
enquire.
thi`a leg gear it were vain to en q
Item : One scarf to go a number of
times around the waist. Item : If cold,
an additional skirtlike garment of
woollen goods coming down below the
knees. Item : One burnoose of white
or in Tums blue woollen goods, with a
very r000ry,hood' exceeding loose so as
to wrap about one and throw oyer the
shoulder. Item : One fez; with some'
cotton cloth twisted, rope -fashion, to
wrap round into the guise of a turban.
Item : One pair of sboes, from woven
rushes to Morocco leather. In this
dress, or so much of it as he can afford,
the native lives day and night, from
early manhood to old age. When he
dies he is buried in it, or the dress goes
to his Bon and heir. A very few work-
ing city Arabs wear ready made cloth•
ing from France, England, perchance
America. Mora is the pity, It aouude
the death -knell to national costumes. --
From "Riders of Tunis," by Col T. A.
DODGE',U.S. A., in HARPERS MAGA-
ZINE dor August.— ,
—
The way she looks troubles the woman
who in delicate, run-down, or overworked.
. She's hollow-cheeked, dull -eyed, thin, and
pale, fintlglttworries her. Now, the way to
lack will to to be well, And the way to be
well, if you're any such wo{1nnan, to to faith-
fully use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
That Is the only medicine that's guaranteed
to build up woman's strength mud to cur
woman'* ailments. Ia ovary "female Dom
" t I t or weakness and i
s0 , •
VereerI goneaar}?tloo.n '¢n -ti s Vronl *svr•;i
Thir9Ar Sold hg., %Pruitiisjs on a.fiuorA4tea
NV 1i 1;sTfl Side, #lxc>i orChett t? hf 1041Ja ro;sits
loiaMt�f; wt.I,klycI rant01,0 i;G00+14-� 44, t;attr..
�-- --" : 11
6,H1L pH1kV1TA, L1;:t100iii r
1 n
T nn. e
Hnwlt L'lratta
1,8. ns $
?,'Rob'aV1 10rr•i1A,h, aii 144., I ,
,- . ter Bs,,a
a c && 1144; ural
colitt&irfLfriebe 1,r srtticiUlartl
Iega+'.twd,!/ �o 1]D tipP Sta lit>tetzQrleY
troiivo 0 e1OR P,cice 7fi ohs.
A_ D
Have eult7atatnch�2 Trytttiaitbanetiy.atwilt
aitiveyly relieve 11114 041.4 you.. 1100 49 oto.
ir'°hto Injector for its aufic,agsful treatvaQnt 1,L
Yurnte)iedlree. Romombol;!?tilloh'alic±meriit
gra 11111411141 it yeiat anteo to 41ve aatJatacays .
, , L', "
r3 ,, .- pF
I PV11 :
F6
RAW cif
5 �♦4
s. 1p, CURE J i.
11% �'
�, of .1
!? ^
o
R �""� JjI ER,
L
ANU COMPLAINTS
y�ry y"i - 'of �.
Si.1d �1 k � ei,A(�ULTS
, cHILDRR ors
price 35 7loNs
.....,ear^v^cff/'lt�s}«�P.'d+y"i"..V •c: ,.
It IDOCSIX't
take a very smart person to catch cold but a
man or firer must be wide awake and enter-
prising to catch trade. Newspaper advertis.
ing is the surest way.
,
Now Pijotogiaph Gatte�.
J. W. COCK, the leading photographer, ,has
bought and fitted rap the piomises next
Young's Bakery, Albert Street, Clinton, and
. is prepared to execute all orders.
Everything from a SUNBEAM to a LIFF,,
SIZZ PHSTO on the shortest notice and. first
,class workmanship guaranteed
Tintypes taken. Pictures taken on cloudy
days equally as well as on sunny days by the
new process. Prices as low as any and
superior work. Call at the new gallery.
J. W. COOK, Practical Photographer
Albert St., Clinton.
Cantelon Bros.,
GENERAL GROCERS & PRGVId-
ION MERCHANTS.
Grockem, Glass & Ckinaware.
ALRRT ST., CLINTON, ONT.
Highest' Cash Price for Butter and Eggs
762.1-v '
Fr W. FARX0OIIIte
(MEMBLR OF ASS'S OF P. L. 9.)
Provincial Land Surveyor
and Civil Engineer,
T,,ONDON, ONZ',
OFricu : At G. J. Stewart's Grocery Store, eltn
ton. 781-1y Bmd+`
NY.vICE.
There being some misunderstanding with re-
gard to wreckage, let it be distinctly understood
that if any person takes possession of any kind
of wreckage and falls to report to me I shall at
once take prooce4ings. Remember this Is the
last warning 1 shall give. CAPT. WM. BARM
Receiver of Wrocks, Goderich.
Goderich, Sept. 7th 1801.
John Gunpingoaq
GREEN GROCER,
CONFECTIONER
AND
Canadian Express Agent,
ALBERT ST.. CLINTON.
Fresh I3addiesand "Bloaters. Oysten
constantly on hand. Also some
Canadian Cranberries, cheap.
FARMERS, ATTENTION S -
>$100,000 to loan on farm plroperty
at5i per cent., straight I - - - 0,1±onlo
mission. Also a limited amount, df
private funds at 5 per cent. ' .
T. E. MCDOtlOtuglh.
I .Loan and Insurance Agent,
Office, Jackson Block, Huron strebk,
Clinton, Out.
e PRODus sTOaleg:
Hnving rented the store next to that of Mr -J. it
In
Combe, the undersigned It prepared to bus, for cash,
plaint, Irogu mr ty, ' any quantity of first class utter and Eggs. No
every, elthaustod condition of the female trading whatever, but all cash.
system -it it ever falls to. benefit or cure, you Clinton April 27.1893. ISAAC) mottL` A A
have your money book. 768-tf ,`'
. .,
•�
. 0 9
, - d• k ,
.