The Huron News-Record, 1893-08-09, Page 2onstj1*tion
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For '8•iOlS$ Headache'
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For Liver:,
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Ayer", Plea
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Colds
Ayer ',1
FF`evers
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reiiared by lar. 7. C. Ayer'$ Co, Lowoil, Masa
nota by atl'llr�uggists, t
EVPOT �dso Effective
he" Huron ?News -Regard
81.40 a' Xeoi—$1.25 in Advance.
Wednesday, Wednesday, ;August 9th. IS:t3.
THE
ZT,PON NEWS -RECORD.
'Live Local and Family Weekly
Journal,
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A. 51. TODD, Publisher.
Clriselhurst.
‘Harvesting has now become general.
'Harvest threshing is now the order
of the day.
A.
T. Bell has finished his contract
• with Mr. Shillingtaw of taking off GO
acres of hay.
e• A gentleman in this vicinity placed
,Before his wife specimens copies of the
afferent; local newspapers for the
:purpose of choosing a ,family P.;p B y paper.
he chose Tnn NEWS -RECORD.
Cur boys while attending Goderich
O'ilegiate Institute, read Tac .Ni;ws-
EoqnD �l
;Your correspondent is sorry to hear
i1be death of' Col. Coleman, of the
aid Battalion, Huron.
WORD TO UNSETTLED FARM-
ERS.
,The same 'intense determination to
lttsh business which exhausts the
:'whole energies of the average Anieri-
eh characterizes also the efforts of
he tate officials in prornoting immi-
gration.
The farmers of Canada have for some
time been persistently dunned by Unit-
ed.' States agents, and urged by floods
'of United -States pamphlets, to forsake
f5heitr'lands in order to settle in Kansas
.attild Dakota.. Those regious have been
},,described as lands of promise, where
salt could be . acquired easily and
With a dead certainty;
'the acquisition of riches by a Can-
'adi`an farmer is a very rare achieve-
'•'Yneiit. •It ,is then the reward of a life
tirize of- exceptionally clever manage-
atieent, under exceptionally favorable
. cf cumstances, such as a fine farm un--
etrmbered by debt, good markets
6sceat hand very light domesticex-
Iiei'►ses; and hard work. But he has
compensations.
No'sVonder the prospect held out of
xtralting a fortune rapidly, said'to be
osmics b'p remo'ving to Kansas or Da.:
*eta, induced some of our people to
cleaf;gnt•from Canada in order to be-
atinie' Av althy Americans.
fulls highly significant that, the "Buf-
',',yalo,Millrng World," which is monoma-.
ldlladal lit its +attadks upon Canada, in
,the issue of 226th June last warns all
441dSundry, "Keep away from Kan -
„Its words are : " When the millers
jai.' Kansa�3 -hat~e their property vir-
`7vfidllybonflribated by these cranks, the
iyopifilists, and When the des rate
liYoppulhetdiuritttics Usurp political- and
itntiiitary power'„ it is Thigh time for
eaoe44i1, eole to' Move out of that
fate Surely no farmer', miller or
ratteclf'aiitc tie* Otitside of Kansas will
•itt000 lt*to that State so long as the
Voliulist:Irttioay prevails."
L ed nein
t" h tv cued five
o fraro do 1 Ontario farm to
uth Ditkota has hltxl..•a ieliserrable ex-
eritetleef tviiteh hits been published as a
annin .etiteeev.
ad: to tr ilrt dittatanrous fate,
lie sure t "1 went bees.uee li be
hewed tha ;toportN • whieh ,had been
mlttd,e ablaut! the 'Armee* Iirnapegta aIn
that 0etrtatry, f vita doing very well
'iniirdos aha 1 tint • wiehed. 't q- in'tprove ui)
1r west ,., plc ,•,xntney others ^who, went
west .4t the eatnp ti*ire., li. itzn sox
that la.. .o
h,fd t
td, q . oix as u
d . ata � M i►ti . m . clic, theta; ascii
•a n, w, . Y eep.+ rience htte just cost
nte,a, tlodafeirna e. Pentode', wortlt.pritli-
ably ..0 (WOO: itfarm;i*t,Daket�,fo>~ whi r.
T 4
l
a oQO.
to � , .and Made 1tnllxovelnertte
worth $2,Q64; five., yoare of,.lhard labor'
Awl,: 1
n e o r
t * ppo t ttrties T: hove :lost,
These etre seine of the thlttga 1.egtt d, •
futpre
ted
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eac� W11110. tP371n tri 00,70 90.4
fox myself atd.fsrx*ily in, the. Un.i
States, I wish �ho 4tnet'lean grail..
land agent wha some yent's ago ere
-glowing picture of Dakota to me, .
with them induced gee to leave Oan
, would go with me to.thatGfod-forsak
region today 1 would show h
Mlles , and reales of .abandoned la
farm after farm with firer -glass bot
Ings uponthemand improvements co
ing in the aggregate hundreds of tho
anc1eofdollars, all left to thelnopgage
who have ground money from th
victims in such a manner as wo
make a Man's blood run cold."
South Dakota is the especial dra
ing earct of the' U. S. Immigration age
fakirs. To read what is said of th
region one would suppose grain gr
wild, and commanded double the nt
kat prices of what is grown el
where.
Yet in this agricultural Paradise a
Elclovado combined, the farmers a
flocking out of the country in thot
ands wile U. S. agents are working
Ontario and other Provinces to indu
well to do Canadians' to go where t1
will be mercilessly plucked and inev
ably ruined.
Mr. Loughead says further, "Ta
about landlordism in Ireland, it is n
a patch to what is going on in
western States. Hundreds of miles i
owned by large firms, who get farme
in, take all the ready money they ha
and mortgages for the "t/alance. T
farmer, without knowing it at the ti
signs contracts to take all his suppli
from the agent of this company. B
this means they bloodsuck their victi
until he is quite ready to leave his far
implements and house as I have don
No, I don't want any more of thte Uni
ed. States. I was a Reformer before
left, but it makes me sick to hear the
talking commercial union. If we ha
cotumercial union the farmers in Cu,
ada would soon be on the same level
those of American how would, Can
diens farmers like to sell the be
wheat their land could produce ro
from 25 to 40 cents per bushel? ii al
going back to a Canadian faro
thoroughly -cured of my idea that Ca
aria is not the place for a man who
willing to work."
There seems here a"flne opportuni
of securing settlers for our North Wes
Farmers who have been ground uncle
the harrow of Dakota experience, woul
feel -in Canada a relief that would pu
them in good heart for another effort
every movement of which would be en
copraging, and a happy reward certai
fortheir labor, their skill, and thei
capital .
Dakota is "the land of freedom" n
doubt, freedom from everything the
makes life endurable. Our farmer
should give American immigratio
agents as wide a berth as they woul
any other " confidence" operator.—grin
adian Jaar•nal of Commerce.
TWO IRISH- MISERS.
An old miser living in Connaught,
nd seemed to be an utterly forlorn
reature, without "chick or child" be-
onging to him. It was rather fortun-
te for the non-existent chick that such
woe its state, for if it had had an exist -
nee it would surely have lacked the
Bans to support it. This old miser
was so mean that he denied • hitnaolf
read, and only kept his miserable life
n its tenement by gifts of food from
heritable neighbors. -
But he was known to have plenty of
oney hidden away in bis wretched
hauty, and his neighbors at last got
ired ot giving to one so entirely un•
worthy.
For some days no cue went near the
Id mac, and the cabin stood desolate.
o one was seen to go in or out, and
t last the constable determined to take
he obstinate old creature to jail. The
oor was broken open, and the old
miser was found dead, In his wr•etch-
dly starved condition,,and frantic at
le thought of leaving his loved money
ehind him, he had died trying to
wallow some of his own bank -notes.
ieces of them were clutched in his
ands, and pieces of them in his throat
ad choked what little breath remain -
d in his body.
Tho other miser displayed' an equal
mount of cunning, yet wee overreach•
as completely. This second old
icier was blind, and lived, with a half-
itted son near the seashore. Togeth
they managed to do a little work,
hich supported then. But every
dy knew the old man had a " bag of
oney" stowed away ou which he
uld have lived without work if he
ished.
What to do with this bag of money
oubled the old man greatly. He was
owing feeble, and felt he had not
ng to live.. Ho resolved to take the
g out and drop it into the sea, where
one but the fishes would ever have
chance to benefit by it. But his son
d sense enough to saved what the
d•man was trying to do, and deter-
ned to outwit him.
The old man, with the money bidden
der his coat, asked the son to row
m out to sea. So they started, but
o son took care to keep only in the
allow water by the shore.
" Are we farout now 1" asked L1e
man.
" Oh yes, father," answered the boy.
ure there's water far about us."
So the old blind miser, with a sly
ile, dropped. his bag of money over-
ard, and the son, reaching out his
nd, had nothing' to do but to:lift it
of the shallow water, and carry it
me under hie own coat. And this old
er died peacefully in his bed, con-
t that hie artful beheine bad been
b a itucceeee, . ,.Prom Iarper's Bazar.
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DUG
' c4.Natarour ' •G Iioeatr.'. • 'he 4u,:.
vuanklivaubar� of hhe• G"afttttiliuo�a4trtiii
eau at bleagga lir a very cretiltable
illuettgted' edition, I pogo. ore full
of .half raise engravings a�lf represent*,
Live Qanadian,.:at tk�,a Worldk . 'sEr,.
ArnQog trlewilpaper ,men wa'notice the;.
nano o a
4t1� f (Millar r
o qa t' to
G to nia ;,�,,. '„
bald. McAlpine Ta ,for `.b r . A.ru
p Y „ I' o A. June:
8,
�.7
G., alt Brussels►; Rarer,
Qnuntyt: le a 1194 Of Archibald . Taylor',
it 1'aapeoted pioneer of rorris town,
r•
ahtp, - His wot•ktld ort. -hitt fatbex a fare*
t z►tt1 il,a; wan e.eVeutegfti. wbeaA ' #e. began
An evou..tful career marked 'by great,
00%4 •,�., a teorkod: on the railroad
ea, a 9entianap Aavv , for one ,ear, sav-
ing y ,
enough to pay six months schooling,
at the end of which brae he qualified
as a teacher. For over three roars he
bad charge of School Np, 6, Grey
townahip, and waif tben prornoted to
the second mastership t of the Model
School, In 1881 he was appointed.
head master .of the Ingersoll County
Model School, being the youngest
headmaster ever appointed . in the
Province. Hie reputation as a teacher
having bocotne more than provincial
he wae asked by the late Hon, Adam
Crooks, Hien Minister of Education,
to accept the mastership in the Provin•
oial Normal and Model School at
Ottawa, while iu Ottawa be studied
politics, and commeuoed public speak-
ing during the campaign of 1881,
,His oratorical'' abilities attracted the
attention of the Hon. Edward Blake,
and he entered the law office of that
gentleman at Toronto. Here he
studied three years and accomplished a
feat as a student which has never been
attempted before or since, He ander•.
teak to cover the law course at.Osgoode
Hall and the university course at
Trinity College concurrently, As the.
brightest students only wore able to
master one of these courses in the
time altoled he was advised of its im
possiblitty. But he persevered, and
not only took first clues honors,but was
a frequent contributor to the Globe
and other papers and magazinea on
political and edutlational topics, and
also found lime to take an active
peat in politics. He secured a scholar-
ship in law and the gold medal award-
ed by Trinity College for the highest
profaeliency iu the course. He opened
a branch law office at Aurora for a
Toronto titin. Su great we, his .necese
as a pleader that at the and of two
yeara he was forced by his partners to
assume tho.-head of the firm of Taylor,
McCullough, Burns and Langater. In
religion Mr. Taylor is a Presbyterian.
In politics a Liberal. He was one of
the eight original founders of the
Young Men's Liberal Club, Toronto.
In 1881 he published "Boyhood
Hours," a collection of poems, songs
and odes, which the Toronto Mai/char-
acterized as the most musical and ori-
ginal poetic production written by a
Canadian pen. He has been an indue
trious contributor in prose and verse
to both American and Canadian maga-
zines. In 1890 hie novel "Jean
Grant," was published by the John
Lovell Co,, New York, and was well
received. About the same time he
gave up law to accept the editorial
management of the Staten Islander,
published at St George, Staten Island,
New York, and whilst there, he direct-
ed the attention of capitalists to valu-
able silver mines in Port Arthur and
Rainy Lake districts, who with himself
became fortunate purchasers. Im•
pressed with the immense possibilities
of Superior as coming metropolis of
the Northwest, Mr. Taylor decided to
make his home here, where his law
practice after eighteen months' experi-
ment is 'perhaps' the beat individual
practice in the city. His latest novel
"Anthony Boyd," is in the hands of J.
W. Dillingham, the New York pub
Usher, and will be out at an early date.
Mr. Taylor was married Sept. 13, 1883,
to Miss Henrietta Gertrude Wetter -
worth, daughter of William `Vetter -
worth, of Ingersoll, Ont.
THE BOTTOM OF THE AT-
LANTIC.
It seems that the hollow of the
Atlantic is not strictly a basin whose
depth increases regularly toward the
centre, the latest investigations slum.
ing that it is rather a saucer or dish -
like ono, so even is the contour of its
bed. It is found that, proceeding
westward from the Irish coast, the
ocean bed deepens very gradually—in
fact, for the first 230 miles the gradient
is but six feet to the mile, though in
the next 20 miles the fall is more than
9,000 feet, so precipitious being this
sudden descent that, in many places,
depths of 1,200 to 1,600 fathoms are
encountered in very close proximity to
the 100 -fathom lino. With the depth
of 1,800 to 2,000 fathoms, the sea bed
in this part of the Atlantic becomes a
slightly undulating plain, whose
gradients are eo light as to show but
little alteration of depth for some 1,200
miles; the extraordinary flatness of
these submarine prairies, therefore,
rendering the familiar idea of a basin
rather inappropriate. The greatest
depth in the Atlantic is claimed to
have been found some 100 miles to the
northward of the island of St. Thomas,
where soundings of 3,875 fathoms
were obtained. 'The seas around
Great Britain, instead of forming part
of the Atlantic hollow, as heretofore
generally regarded, are now alleged to
be rather a part of the platform haulm
of the great European continent which
The ocean has overflowed.
--Pctroloa had
week. •
a $1,000 Ire
1110,5 N4i'UTtAL.BENT,
The other day a aon of, Lite Green
ia100 whose heavy br,oglinlletl1ibora itbe
'tracers of the bops. and wtroao tot ue
woe thick with the, brogue. oi'. GOunt,1
gWrk'►°attappod into a tidies station and
ached .for Oa oaptaizi
•
rtVnat Wiest rent here V inquired,,
the .1liku,hty aergeaut at.the dank,
"Of :rt'+tilk a ',iota" Bays the verdant.
••to
vlet t',
ulna, this ain't no • .pleat) for u:
job; anises it's a brstQo 4oeey cell yee
want."
"A call{3 it, begob't 'Air! .le thot
way see got yer jet, a.0 th.' toorhe 1",
Hie hantlftinses tread?! fail off ,his
stool, Ile "finally Game aroOnd the
rail and looked the air gulag visitor
over, ; +.
"Who sent yes to the et.ition fur a
job 1"
"Every Oirish lad Oi met" retorted
the loan. "1lvhiuever Oi axed for
wtlrrektheytold me to go on th' p'lice•"
"Flow long si'noe yea colue over?"
"A fortnight come to•morrer," said
the 'eau.
"Au' what kind of a job Ie it you'd
be after haviii' hero 1•'
"Shure, an' yes don't s'pose Oi kem
here to feed ohickeue ? Oi want a -job
ou th' fooroo,"
"Howly mother," exclaimed the ser-
geant, running his hands through his
hair "not }fete two wakes and are.
wantiu' to be a policeman 1''
"01 am tllot:non, was she confident
reply.
"There, go 'long wid ye ; they wur a
kiddie' ye, lad." The officer spoke
sympathetically. "Wail till y' • kin
epako th' laugwidge of th' country an'
know Brpdway from Baxter street."
"Begob, an' its taagwidge, is it, yer
givin' me 1 Shure, an' yez ain't bin
over mor'n sivon wakes yeroelf. Yer
brogue's as thick; as a bog. I'll see the
capt'iu."
Aud ho Waite! half an hour, and it
required the entire reserve to put him
out,—Now York World.
'Allhuman history attests
That happiness for mac, -the hungry sin-
ner !—
sin :e Eve ate apples, nisch depende on din -
mar."
And a good liver is absolutely essential
for appreciating a good dinner. Lord
Byron knew that as well as anybody. One
t,f his greatest regrets was fur hie weak
atom tch. "Gal' elan !" his lurdahip would
say, "why don't one of these infernal dce.
tors invent a liver medicine?" ' •
Byron would never have asked that geee-
tiou were he now living. Why ? Because
he would have been using Dr. Pierce's
Pleasant Pellets, an absolutely sure cure for
Coc tipition, lndigostion, I;itious Attackr,.
and all doraugemente of the liver, stomach
and bowels. There is no griping or violence
about these pills, and they're Guaranteed to
give satisfaction, or your m iney is refunded -
Don't live with the etomach weak, when the.
cure is within your reach for 25 cte.
Thousand, cf cures follow the use of Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy. I.'e 8500 reward
for an incur le case.
A LUCKY GAME OF CRESS.
From 1lareer's Young People.
Smllll things aro sometimes very im•
portant factors in the lives of men and
of nations. A chance word spoken 110 -
intentionally has often resulted in dif-
ferences between rulers that have led to
tho overthrow of kingdoms. A mere
act of ordinary kindness has been
known to change what appeared to be
the destiny of a man from a wretched
and ignominious death to life with
opportunity to make life glorious,
and all within the short space of an
hour. The story is that of the' Moor-
ish Prince, Abul Hejex, who was
thrown into prison for sedition by his
brother J4uhammad, King of Granada.
There he remained for several years,
until the King, fearing he'might es-
cape, place himself at the head of a
fresh revolt, and seize the aroma, order-
ed ono of his Paehas to see to his Ina.
mediate execution, Abul I-fejex was
playing at chess when the Pasha came
and. bade him prepare for death. The
Prince asked fortwo hours' respite, which
was refused. After earnest entreaty he
obtained permission, to finish his game.
He was in no hurry about She moves,
we aro told, and well for him that ho
was not, for before arrhour had elapseda
messenger breugiit the news. that Muh-
ammed had been struck dead by apo-
plexy, and Abul was forthwith pro•
claimed King of Granada.
It was indeed a small favor for the
Pasha to grant, but it altered the whole
current of the King's carper, and it is
to be hoped that when from prisoner
the latter became ruler ho possessed
that quality which Kings are said not
to have, that of gratitude to his unwitt-
ing pr'eeerver. If the Pasha was not
suitably rewarded, then truly was Abul
Hejex an ungrateful wretch.
—Mr. Alex. Johnston, of McKillop,
returned home on Saturday week, after
spending several weeks visiting friends
in Manitoba. He likes the country
well.
—Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholls, of
Uxbridge, Ont., celebrated their golden
wedding yesterday, and Mrs. Nicholls
Evora the same costume aft on her wed-
ding day 50 years ago,
—It must be quite a relief to the
resident, of Llanfairwilgwyngyilger•
trobwilgerohwyrnbyl igogerbwlizantivs•
iliogogogoob, the village in Wales that
baa the longeat nano in the world, to
know that it should he properly
writta
t
n I.ta nfat
rp w i l g wy n gy l igogery-
ohwyrndrebavill(sdiliogogogooh, need -
lest ing only bfty'flvd; instead of ecvehty
1.' a�
L ttera,.
sem..
At Rack Butt: •;
S'TOVF 4ND.HARDVt*AP4
4.,lter Wit "cllip•
kdn'.,
--t
Disease commonly comes, on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangcrous.•-
2v 11 you STIFFER FROM HEADACHE, 4YS, TAKE, F PAN'TABID' LES
('jPC•?SIO, er {NDIGF.Si1QN, TIE
CE.
(i if ye, are BILIOUS, CQNSTIPATED, or have .. a $ , S
`, LAVER COMPLAINT,' AKw
. TAKE RIPAI1� Q ,1 ni V
f 1! your COMPLEXION !$ SALLOW, or youSUPER DISTRESS AFTER EATING, TiKE RIP75 T6Ei }) S'.
�Fe: OFFF.t aiVE BREATH and ALL DISOR- t"3 C � t7, S . r. r.. r. ,
:' te,
e DERR OF THE kOMACN, TAlCE . 1,'b �, ass •:.
•; I'ipa:;s T r!c:les Regulate ffio Sysfsm and Prot:cr:•a flie d. et:10. �;y;
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`ii : cz Il sl SAV: MANY A IOCaOR''S £1LL.
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2.,s,a«,uN,a.,s.a.:HM.e,....a... Sold by Druggists Everyv hero,
tSv':rw^,.1,rtCOC?C:0GC:Lr.10;i.00C' 01.."(:,C+G:0DC.)0f..Acv^.ii:S.atata:-..at`5e;,:.•:,10 V.'1.,
HE HUB GROCERY7,,
:.
We have closed our financial year 1st of February and find that it has been a
year of fair prosperty to us. We wish • to render our beat THANKS, to..;
Custoruers for their patronage and will always strive to win your con-
finance in future, by giyiug you GOOD GOODS as cheap as any other.
House in Town.
Our Stock of '
CHINAWARE, PORCELAIN AND STONEWARE,';
is well assorted (and las we have n large Import Order coming from
England) we wilt offer tlieui at Close Prices to make room.
GEORGE SWALLOW
We are selling
!ought Steel 000killg .
At one -halt the price they are be-
ing sold for by pedlars.
Our prices are from. $30.00 -to $50-.00
and are the best in the market.
CALL AND SEF 1'HEMM •
HARLAND BROS
alms Aussom.ro
NEW
Hardware Merchants;
• CLINTON,
i'.
0
WILSON ih HOWE have bought the good -will and interest in the bs,kory
recently carried on by Mr. R. McLennan, in addition to the Restaurant
carried on by Mr. James Anderson, and have amalgamated the two businesses
The combination will be carried on in
THE OLD STAND IN SEARLE'S BLOCK,
and will hereafter be known as THE NOVELTY BAKERV .AND RES
TAURANT. Mr. McLennan will he our baker. Bread of suForior quality
will be delivered as usual, and Bread, Ctalces, &c.,/constantly kept on hand and
sold only at the Novelty Store. We solicit the patronage of all old
customers and ma y new ones.
Filson 4'' Howe - - Clinton
111 'flee.
o --
As an extra inducement to Cash purchasers I have made arrangements with a
leading firm of 'Toronto for a large supply of Artistic Pictures by well-
known Masters, all framed and finished in first-class style, and suitable
for the best class of residence. Each customer will be 'presented with
one of these magnificent Pictures free when their cash purchases aggre-
gate Thirty Dollars. •
My motto in business is to supply my customers with good reliable Goods aI
Bottom Prices.
Although the principal Soap Manufacturers have advanced prices 30 per cent.
1 will supply. all Electric Soaps and the noted Sunlight and Surprise
Soaps at the old figures.
Call and see those beautiful Works of Art, samples of which are on show at
our 'Store.
Our Sock is replete and well selected. We offer excellent values in fine Teas,
including best grades in Black, Green and Japans. try our RussialiA,
Blend and Grown Blend, the finest in the market,
Examine the qualityand prices of our Combination Dinner and Tea Settop
and l,, convinced that Bargain Day with u; is every business dill,
throughout the year.
. RQBSON,
C111ntona babe 1.4, 1$01
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