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AGE (S) ABIMEE (S) \ t Auatraliaao. LORD AND LA DT 8ALI8BOBT. f N The visitor to Australia may lay hisaocount with having what the Americans call Mu ovely time," saya Archibald Forbes. Hie boats-all the colonist* will be his hostswill strain every nerve to make him enjoy himself. Australian hospitality is prover- liai the world over, and it has in it a cordial freshness that imparts to it a special delight. If he ba a true man, he will leave no colony without realizing that he is leaving behind him in it many warm and genuine friends. He need not be a susceptible person to find that, with the friendships he has left, he may have left his heart as well. 1 he ladies have a characteristic, bright, airy They sparkle as perhaps not even the American lady sparkles, i heir mannerone finds one asking ones self who »nd whence they go. it- foi y ,u v ill lintl it in the damsel of a remote hush township, wf o is as graceful, frank and winsome as the Mel borne girl, who may have spent years in European lesidence an t travel. Une of the finest ladies 1 ever met, in every shar e of reflection of that term, was never in her life outside the colony ol Victoria, except fora visit to New Zealand. Australien wo men read. 1 imagine some London book- îfce CourtMilp sed Marriage «I ilic Pro*** I Premier ef EeglanU. One gray morning in the mld-spriag of twenty eight years ago there was a wedding in the little chapel at Aid Hill, Beits. All London knew the bride. For thee years the belle of Westminster, for thr* years the beauteous wonder of society, Oeoigiana Al dereon was the brightest and fairest of the ladies of the court But she was a coquette, and had drawn many loves by the silken charm so well discovered by w itchery and blue eyes and sunny hai . Many a had wooed In vain, for tie daughter of Sir Edward Hall Alderson vas an heireis as well beauty, and an esfcte of land is the finest setting that ostie of beauty can de- mand the admirers it oo:ld have been said that they were )rilliant worthy of the most coretcd honors of royal- ty, but not once or %ice the lady might have married well lui she not had an adviser who kue v man as mat deterves to he known. Miss Opie, the celebnted queen of society of ten or fifteen years *• fore, was (leorgiaua Aiderion s aunt a, d chaperone, and Miss Opi« knew better thm most other women of the time how to distinguish between heart and pr tense. She had kept the moths from her neioe, but \hile she was seeking an Ideally eligible mm her charge had given her hand to Hubert Cecil. Miss Opie was disnayed. Cecil was not a man after her likng. Though the son of an earl, h i was a younger son, and any- thing but popular with his family. There had bten a quarrel «d a fraternal scandal, and, to the horror o: the family at 11a field house he had to earihis own l ving. Begin- ning as a journalist he had shown marked ab.lity till he was a regular contributor to the Quartely. For three years he had been in Parliament for Stamford, where he con- tinued to sit for fifte n years to come, but where he had made no consequential mark. It was no wonder that Miss 0,.ie was dis- pleased with the match. With but few re- deeming qualities socially, the young was at best a book-woim, and so tenons and quiet that he was cstei med dull. But the neioe had ft It the brain of the (- tile, and though nine out of ten thought as did the aunt, the nine and the aunt came to witness the ceremony. It was a matter of fact wedding, as Eng glish country side weddings ure apt to he. There was a gay company filling the chap I, and the white ribbon that kept the common herd of ^cjuaiutances from the chosen many 0,^elumily. There w as at 10 the 1°^ 0f the weddi g march from LyMiigM, tW quartet of able bodied ushers patting up the c ntral aisle and parting $bt sHk;i& harr&r. There were two little girlsVK-ewing the aisle with white flowers from tU-ir upMis, and four bridesmaids be- hind them. There was the bride on her father's arm with thequn'* bouquet in her ■h«ud. There was the groom meeting them -u^ie chancel r& l. There was the ceremony Vaad the klemlog and tho congratulations, f ______ - A NI0E BABY STORY % NO 6 BRYSON, COUNTY OF PONTIAC, QUE., THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1885. VOL. HI. wooer » piquancy •• But do you like the people ? '; 1 uk re memberiug things Mollie had laid of what people thought of her, ••I dont bother my head about them. 1 *m one of those people who nevtr feel leas lune than when alone.•• I wish I could feel like that," I sigh. ,eBu:I have always depended upon other people for happiness, ever since 1 was a child. I was always devoted to one or other of my schoolfellows, and liked to be petted and made much of. " •• Perhaps It is the happiest kind of tem- perament. " ••I dont know about that. The other must be so much more independent." Independence is a tine thing, but it is very lonely sometimes,Miss Irving says, looking straight before her. And it is a very louely thing to be an only child." *I never minded that in the least,"! A RUSSIAN REVIEW Mollies ttoiles. I never heard my aunts esy one word against you." 11 Have you ever heard them say one word about me, good or bad ? " I cannot remember that I have, just at the moment. But what can they possibly know about you ? " •• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says carelessly, ••If people say anything against )#i it must be because they are jealous ci you,exclaim wain ly. •* 1 dare say there is a good deal in that. Well, dont you want a book ? I don't think anybody else in the village does to day." I approach the press reluctantly. When I have chosen a book I shall have no further excuse for trespassing upon Min Irvings I walk leisurely up to Mollies gate, aed, pushing it op n, find myself in the sunny, «weetbriar scented precincts of her neat •ittle garden. Here another sound greets my ears the music of a girl e laugh, sweet and clear. At the same mom » n t somebody comes to the door of Mollies oo'tagea girl with h*r nead turned back to speakto the old wo man presumably, since 1 hear these words, 'poken slowly and distinctly••Whenever I want to hear a catalogue of my shortcomings, Mollis, I shall certain ly pay you a visit ! " Then she looks round and sees me, and I see her, a tall dark girl with a laughing faceor it Is laughing nowand a pair oi great, beautiful, golden brown eyes which open very wide at sight of me. We gaze at each other for a moment with- out speaking ; and then Mollie who has fol lowed her visitor to the door, seems to feel It Incumbent upon her to go through some form of introduction. •• Mias Lisle, this is Miss Irving, our Vicar's daughter. But 'tis a queer thing the pair of ye should meet first in my little garden 1 " •• I have often heard of y su," Miss Irving says, taking the initiative as she looks at STURM AMI SIASIIINE A truud Military lUnpIsy Knilli* with a He tullar Meadlilww «r a Frayer. E Of some of the most eoltish of CHAPTER I. -(Continued.) •• It was a very Bad thing, Lisle, and nothing to make anybody laugh, " auut Anna says severely. 111 am only laughing at the Idea that he couldn't get another wife, aunt Anna. " 1 dare say he could find plenty of girli very willing to marry him1 never said he nould not. But nobody tninks he will ever We rode at least a mile and a half, says lien, liiggiuson in Blackwoods, past the line of tents, and must have seen 50,000 men. The ground is prettily accidente, and alto- gether well suited for camp purposes. At the end we came upon the guard regiments and the 1'reohrajensky regiment, with whom finished the inspection ; and here were as- sembled all the hands and drums, to the number of H00, in one compact mass lacing the empresss pavilion or tent, at the door of which she and her ladies alighted, and were joined by the emperor and grand dukes. 11 We all dismounted and came inside ihe stocking in Australia ; but 1 have had the of which the royalty and stall form | honor of conversing with many Australian of high culture and deep thought on men ami I I Mias * à 4 sellers could supply startling statistics in re- gard to the number of high class reviews and jteriodicalM they send to the Antipodes, happy to say that 1 never met a blue- marry again. 4 And Mr. Errollwhat is he like ?” '* Very handsome, but not so steady as his brotheror at least he used not to be, though I hear he has improved very much he went to China. Ho is at Velfry t 1. am since now, his mother tells me. She seems de lighted to have him back, poor womanKr roll warn always her favorite child. . think the scamps are always the favor square, ed one side, the musicians the opposite side, the other two side# being composed of ofli- I subjects, superficial thought about which is core of the various corps who had hurried to as the crackling of thorns unuer a l>vt ; but the spot. In the centre, on a mound, stood you do not find yourself oppressed by vol the conductor of the united bands of musis, | u 11 tee red frankness of this soit; you have to ask that you may find. To sum up with women time. I.ugh, « I alway thought if I h.d . .Uter " 1 don t ,UPP<* wil1 <*" mDch ,or I should be jealous of her, specially if aha f »f UuKh'- «hruggiog her were prettier th.u 1 waa, or more lovable." '"ouldera in her negligent way. They are - Are you of a jealous d .poaiti, n ! " .he I ünly ht for pnri.h , chool chUdren. 1 you ,miles, turning her head new to look at me. ™"y want. book I dare any I can lend you something more amusing than anything you will find there/ Ob, thank you!I exclaim, turning round. May I go with you for it now ?*If ycu like. There is no use in my stay- itoB, aunt Emily.To this unorthodox opinion aunt Emily does not see her way to agree probably, for •he pretends not to hear it, snipping away at her dead leaves. We must take you to return Mrs. Hath erfurd's visit very soon, Lisle, aunt Anna says, putting on her spectacles again, will like to see Velfry ; it is one of the finest places in the neighbourhood. And Mrs. Kutherfurd spoke of having you to stay there for a day or two. That would be an Amusement for you, now that Knoll Kuth- erfurd is at home.I suppose it will be an amusement, but, never having met Mr. Errol 1 Kutherfurd, it does not fill me with any particular elation. Of all the people whose names I have yet heard I feel most interested in this clever, cynical Judith Irving, who took the trouble to carry broth to nourish the decrepit body of old Mollie, whose wicked old tongue cannot say a word for her in return. I will make this girl's acquaintance, whether my aunts like it or not. I want to know what the new-fangled notions are of which Long- hurst does n«t approve, wrong to which my aunts obj *ot ; old people always look askance at any novelty, and my auuts seem to me to be particularly sensitive and near him one diummer-boy, or per haps a lad of JO. We - the foreign missions I a curtness and rough generalization cl which stood in line, and the emperor came down apology is dueAustralian ladies are ,'airly from the pavilion and spoke to each of the accomplished; in modern languages th^y generals. He was very gracious to me, and somewhat weak ; in music very goodocca^ inquired about my service and the coin-1 sionally t xceptionaily so, I hey all sing, manda 1 had held. This over, he stood and many sing well alone in the centre, and a detachment oi dower painter 1 know of lives under the sergeants in full marctiing order passed him southern cross, and her gift is real genius, one by one, each sergesuit giving the even-1 Victoria can boast of an amateur actress in ing report of his picket and of the usual I whom also 1 venture to recognise something 44 watch setting in a loud voice, the czar I of the sacred tire. In physique they are tall thus fulfilling fur the moment the role of camp 1er, slighter, more lithe, shapelier than the it We (generals only) were then I congeners at home ; their color, save in, las taken up, oue by one, to the empress, who mania, is seldom brilliant. The expr« khv " talked to me about the Princess of Wales, I is full of vivacity ; the eyes neam a.wa)n Cowes, Osborne, etc., and was altogether I good and the head and feet shapely, but nut gracious and charming. Then tea was hand I exceptionally small, i hey dance divinely, ed round, and the crowd of officers and of Australian gentlemen are manly, cordial the troops generally kept closing round the fellows; they arc more pronounced and less square as the hour for the retreat,'* or za reserved than Englishmen. The tone is a drew nigh. Meanwhile heavy clouas trille brusque, but it has the genuine riug in had gathered in the horizon, and a storm it. I think, perhaps, that they have me, as she opens the door and walks in. We walk on through the village together weemed to threaten us, though the view down prejudices than Kugliehmen-1 do nut There is nobody in the long schoolroom ; *(1 Miss Irving tells me who lives in each the &nd over the valley to Krasnoe dis personal prejudices-and they aie certainly nothing but empty forms and desks, a pair cottage, and describes some of the "chars c t&nt about a mile, was not rendered less beau freer spoken in the enunciation of them, of dilapidated «lobes, a black-board with a Urs " which seem to abound in the place in t,ful by the combination of waning sunlight They are wholly without one attribute that sum upon it. The walls are coveied with a clever good-natured way, at which it ap BBd threatening clouds. Eight o'c.oca sounds; is a discredit to so many Englishmen-the pictures of wild animals of hideous aspect, P6*" nobody could take exception, each tield i^tery tirel an evening gun, three affectation of being idlers because of an ab- with descriptive letterpress underneath, not even the individuals themselves. rockets shout into the air, and the drum* sence of necessity for being workers. fUve with maps of the world and all the countries Her manner is very gay and sprightly Md jiandg roll out> with a solemnity and you a leisure class?' asked an Englishman in the world. There is a large press at one *nd the can make herself very amusing; vo]ulue 0f sound not easily forgotten, the of an American. What s that, any row. end of the r«y)in ; this Miss Irving unlocks, but at the same time she la exceedingly quiet eveni„g hymn. As the last notes die oil the enquired the citizen of the l uion and then, Living opened the doors of it wide ** least her voice is quiet, and remarkably drummer boy steps forward, the band mas who can allord to have no avocation, ex enough t^display the rows of books covered clear and sweet. Her dnss is also quiet descends, and the little drummer, sole oe- plained the Briton. Why, certainly, in gray hollaed within, and having laid an- enougha simple chintz with a black ground 0f the square, repeats slowly butlsponded the American with alacrity, other and a larger bock open upon one of strewn with tiny red rosebuds, and a knot with ptrfeut distinctness the Lord s prayer, call them tramps.' It is much the san.* But they think it is the only life worth the high desks with inkstand and pen be I of crimson ribbons here and there. 1 had p;very gead uncovered and hows, from the in Australia. The only people w ho let them living ; that is what amuses me I uide it, leans her elbow on the desk and her thought from Molliee description, that Miss emperor t@ the furthermost spectator ; and selves afford to have no specific object in lift* M They have never known any thing better, chin on her hands, and looks at me. Irving might be perhaps a little fast, j Bhould in my heart pity the man who, as are the sundown* rs," as they are called poor old ladies ! 44 I suppose your aunts will take you But nothing could be farther removed froir. tge little lads Amen went up in its sol-1 colonially ; the lo**r~ -v.o waunver iro 1 suppose that accounts for it; but I am .bouta little ; it will be a good thing to f***-!■ •PP~aa~. Iitary simplicity, could scofi at or even be station to station m ^interior, very glad I have met >ou, MU. Irviog.for giv, tho.e fat oil .ponie, eomething to do ! " thi. tall girl in her umpto calico gown and unimpret8t(1 by the .iler.ee which followed, nightly ration anda bunk. Uru «thu Iwaajuit beginning tof«d (Werbrookin -They are .ure to take you to Velfry. I black .traw hat, with the ky of the par There wa. a total aUenc, of all exagger- downer, every A„t,.h.n huh,.avocation, tolerable! What do you tlink aunt Anchor Mrs. Itutierfurdi. everything their b.au oohlal *' library dangling from the finger ltlon or .training for mcreawd eUect. The and would think .hame of hlmee - ett. offered me by way ofwme light read- ideal of agentlewoman ' ought to be. " of ner chamoi. glove. band, then bnr.t forthwith the Rumlani eorry prideof not being ur.luetro,u. nit. ing, j=.t now r "I believe .he i. very nice ! - (to .. OONT.Ntr.B.) national air ,o well known to all of ne. and He work, like a man and he lay. lto. "I dont know I " .he an.wen, with the " She certainly is very nice. Have yon | ----------- " the mieae 0,oted M °6ht ,eUl | % Ù the bu.ineeo man. and same curiou», amused look, never met her ! The Art of Keeping Oool. -------------- he therefor, may experience a greater viciai- A Report of some Jewish mission, i-boat Not yet She came to sec me > esterdsy, It msy seem surprising, yet it is none the Health and Ability to Work. tude of fortune ; but he has an elasticity and twenty years old.but I was out. She is my godmother. ^ that the art of keeping cool is un- Thistle a working age. The merciless law a versatility that are more American than ei Wretched girl 1raising her dark eye- Ie ihe really?So they told derstood in Cuba a hundred times better than Qf the survival of the fittest is driving the p^ngiiah* and so copious are the opportun!- Sassesysa: ..................................................................................................................................................................... It is fortunate you did, as I have the key ** * ch^ld ' *y u er . . . , M they feel They look picturesquely cool. non of succeee ^ work. It is fashionable to of the library in my hand at this moment ; sotlyi 1 6 1 ne agean 8 6 , yrrQu crew They wear suite of linen, of thin silk, oi wor^ Kven many Qf the rich and lazy are M I am quite ready ; I can come and see 6 _ _d, never msrrv when we see them, look unshapely, and even ^ 0f Gther signs point to the fact that chorelU ? Mollie another day.BULti thtok he W,U unsightly. So they do ; beoaims our tail- ^ ^ Uvlng ha country and period where C " Keep them Lisle 1 Toe annual Reports We turn up the lane, laughing and talking, •« , do laugh at that? ore do not seem to know how to make them, MÜvlty ^ the rule and sloth the ixception. of our societies Iold Molle, standing in her doorway, look- "ikcm* I think it so unlikely-a young and our laundresses starch them too eUff. jhe competition in all sorts of labor and But they are only rubbish. One might ing after us. man, with plenty of money and a fins old Experience and practice.would overcome travel# enormous. The strength demand- fwsllkeen a lot of old almanacs.Ihavs wanted so much to make 7°"|pUot/. that Havana Is a very dressy and fashion- ^ ^e excel In any trade or profession Is 441 have ülmanaoe there forty years o d,acquaintance,I say, as we reach the road. wfce very fond of his wife,Miss fearing oity. The tallors make those thin ^ great, aint Anchoretta says, glancing up at the 1 " It seemed so odd that there should be two My| looklng ât ine, garments as stylishly and as shapely as our Women who have their Uvings to earn ■I elf with a curious kind of obstinate eatis girU living so near esch other Ins place uh|B0 he might bel But other men suite. The women there do not drees so enter thig „vere competition, and faction. Your aunt Theod< ela is always like this without being acquainted with who were fond of their wivee have married very unlike our own women ; that is to say ^#y will never receive consideration because btikLMDV me to burn them, or to sell th* m as each other 1 agsin»» that Canadian ladles dress more "nsiblym Me women They most excel in order wasteraper and give the money to one or It dote rather; but I dtnt supposeyour 441 &m afraid you are very cynical.Summer than Canadian men do. In both ^ ^ successful. Excellence implies Other of the societies ; but that I shall never aunts will like j ou to care for any society « y0 $ but I cant help laughing wher countries the result is reached by lessening ltreDgth_not the spasmodic, nervous do When I am dead they msy dispose ol but their own." people say things like that.. the number and weight of under garments Btrength which makes an effort once in them for that purpose ; but »s long ae I live Their own II repeat, laughing. They Dont you believe people could care so donning Sommer silks or other almost swhiU ^dB, extraordinary pressure, but it shall never be done. If you want some can scarcely suppose that I should oars for much for each other that nothing could make | gœeamer goods for outer wear tbit g to read, why do not you go down to their society !_ , ^emferget ?' '" 1 , j the Darochial library? It is open every Do you expect to remain long at Osier- Scarcely. . . IndiinUrSTtii to Older. them with their jaws, > et fr^menU olII - ^ down its number and your It is to be hoped not IMiss Irving laughs, leaves outside the window. dent Is worthy of being published to show desk, at the easel, in the kitchen, in the sects have been sometimes found Ln name to the book they keep for the looking at me. Four maiden ladiee of the I study her faoe, lounging on the form ^ ^ey exercise to their peculiar «.bool-room. Snch strength as this does stomachs. nnrMBe » name of Warburton are enough to any one opposite. It is rather a long face, or it loo s To dleoover sn Indian grave Is, of not g0 wjth & small waist From the nature Tb«. u M much .Won tob..Hng.ith P-rpo»^ ^ e gooi idWi ^ 1 wy It p^.sb I «under her «Her h.tof bUvk ooeiWi B ^ ^ ^ y,, ob^logtit 0, thingl> it M De,-unl«., w bw k.n other people . de icti ..in being forthwith. It will be more .musing to "I wur. you I her. no pMticnUr fancy . breed crimion ribbon round the crown. R IndUn g„Tes in ni.nal.ctuted to out, in exoeption.1 «mi -be found their good qa.lltie. ; «id w. should m.ke . , ,e do wn y,, viiUg, then to .it In th. I for being the filth-, but even old Molli. I It Is .1» r.ther .pM.fw.-e cwr d«ky I ^ y would .ppw. At let, the fol ^ women with «umll widiti. Strong Uck the follies of other, rather . werniog .n dra„ing room, with It, nnoUnt seem, ta think it i* ineriuble." pMlor which nothing owing raoently occurrad In New Jeney. .Womkral muclw-miwclw which c«i initructinn ti our.tlve. then e ,ublcct Clbinet, .od chin, «id feint im.ll of dried " There era ,o few bwh.lor, here it, «id which oonti«U rather oddly with th. ^ phUedyphle Flint J.ok wcurad e Wf do thelr work without th. dewlly prop, ol mirth «id mockery of thow who comm ^ [eives M |Jone| ; been sitting " I suppose ihe meuu thstorimeon of her soft curved lipe. Her fe. dwjeyed lkelrton horn e potter's field In the lteei u,d „h.lebone now to univeraUly worn sxplosion, whisk will be attiU>ut#Ki to WOedüIhs* and ray own feotetepe, as 11 would," Of course 1 am ; all women are.I am not.are You would be if you cared for anybody.Do you caie for anybody, that you know all about it so well ?Not for any bidy in the way you mean,here Dlier* I l.ugh"only for my fritnd.at ichool." tiut. three or four young girl, coming in " Oh I" Mi». Irving ray, with a «nil. of j»t •*« peak, together with two of tim •• I do not think th.tthe eervanti from Velfry, Mies Irving waits " You The moat exquisite me. And I have heard of you," I answer, smiling. Not from Mollie, I hope Miss Irving toughs, shrugging her shoulders and I a*e grtat friends, but 1 know she abuses me like anything behind my back. ' And to your face too, Miss Judith, when you do foolish things. As if I ever did foolish things 1 I must apologise for not having called upon >c u be- fore now, Miss Warburton ; but the fact is my father keeps me so busy copying his manuscripts, ana brushing his clothes, and paying duty visits for him ail ever the parish, that I sometimes have not an hour to the day that I can call my own." I envy you ! I lsugh, looking at her. The days at Osierbrook are so long that sometimes 1 fancy they will never come to an end.You must find it rather dull at Osier- brook ! Dull 1 I think It is the dullest place in Eng and ! How my aunts have managed to exist there for the last half century or so is more than I can comprehend" I should tcarcely call it existence," Miss Irving says, looking rather curiously at me, or at my candour. indulgent scorn. _ _ jealousies of men and women. Une is the while they put back the volume, they sting of a midge, the others the bite of a brought with them, choose fresh ones, end scorpion. | make an entry in the book on the table. 1 thought you knew nothing about it ! Then she locks the press, and we follow X can evolve some idea of what it might I them out into the May sunshine and the coj be out ol my consciousness,'' she laughs, I delicious freshness of the afternoon air. shrugging her shoulders. But here we are Is it far to the Vicarage ! "Not very at the school-house. 1 hope you admire our far." old village, Miss Warburton." Notthat 1 mind what distance It was, Don't call me Miss Warburton; it re-11 back to dinner at six." Oh, you can certainly be back long be- Mollie man commandant f ( minds mo of the teachers at school.She does not ask me what she shall call I re *** * na mure mean Everything is not l on this subject. It was only last night that aunt Achore ta took me to task for saying someth ng was awfully" pleasant. But if I am not to say awfulI do not know what is to become It seems to be on the tip of my moment ; I never knew till A clafta of me we tongue every how essential it was to anything like o now fluency in conversation. Mrs. faery leamls for an Idopled f Mid amI Haw She Kal Oar. \ CHAPTER II. 1 want something to read aunt Anchor Col. L. F. Cas* y is a prominent heal lawyer in Ceutralis, III. Hu wife is an estim- able lady. Alter a married life of many unmarred by rrgrtt < r dinplcasure, I etta. I am standing in the doorway of her room, having found the door ajar as I passed down stairs. Aunt Auchoretta is standing in the middle of the floor, with a bundle of what look like magazines in her hand ; her ward- robe stands wide open, and the upper shelf to be stuffed full of periodicals in covers of every colour in the reinbow. Iam afraid I have nothing here that you would care to read, my dear." Oh, one of those numbers in your hand will do as well as anyth ng else ! But these are Repots of the Church Missionary Society for 1870. I dont think you would care to study them ! " Oh, no, thanks 1 " I exclaim hurridly. •• But there are others up thereI think I numbers of Temple /farin the years, lave the need of a child # companionship to brighten up the old hr me, they determined to adopt a baby girl, if a suitable one could be found. One night two years ago Mrs. Casey and her sister in law, Mrs. Thomas Casey, Mount Wrnon, 111., retired together, and before going to sleep chatted about the proposed adoption, tion had ended Mrs. Carey WiS electrified by a vision of childish loveliness at her Bale. A baby girl, with large brown eyes and au burn ringlets, lay there smiling and cooinir and lilently supplicating for a good night kiss. Mrs Casey Insensibly stooped to caress the beautiful vision, and it vanish- ed. Being wido awake the incident made a deep impression upon her. Not many «lays later a stranger appeared bearing a little girl in bis sums. He explained that he had heard of the desire cf Mr. and Mrs. Casey to adopt a child, and he had made bold to to them with this, his only daughter. ■eemi \V ht n the con versa ear to that ii, di occasional hard exercise, the recoil front which has a tendency to make men burly if not portly. There is a ruddy, sturdy manhood in them, even in the towns. In culture, in refinement, in manner, the Au- stralian women are the superiors for the most part of the men ; but I think this in all communities of which the civilization hits not attained to an exceptional degree o ove see some 11 80 come He was anxious that she should receive a good education and all the advantages of a cheerful home, which he felt unable to give her. Thus speaking, the stranger placed the little one on the floor. Mis. Casey, from the moment of the stranger's entrance, had been a tar in g fixedly at the child in his arms. The baby had the large brown eyes, and au bum locks, and the smiles of her vision. When released the little one i ushed fearlei s ly into Mrs. Casey's outstretched arms. ••This is my little child," she e%claimed rap turoualy. This Is the one I want." The baby returned the kisses and ''tresses, ftüd Mrs. Caeuy explained the cause of her emotion. The adopted daughter was named It L finished organization. ors Labrador Indiana Starving. A correspondent writing from Bersimqia, on the north shore of the tit Lawrence, re- lates the most ha: row ing distress among the Indians there, and says the reindeer, which has been most plentiful in the large domain of the Montagnais Indians of Labrador i* al- most extinct The result of this, coupled with the unusual severity of last winter,w »h that some of the Bersimis Indians on their inland hunts, to avoid starvation, were oblig- ed to eat their furs, and that in one camp three died of hunger, and that there are dark rumors of their havingeemmitted canni- balism ere succumbing to their terrible fate. In addition, bad luck of the direst kind at- tended the efforts of the hunters to Wear* furs, and out of more than a 100 who start- ed out from Beraimis not ten on their return able to pay their debts. In view of M Thanks. But what do you keep them for aunt An 12 M Vision. That was two years ago. learned that she is the great grand now daughter of Commodore Oliver Perry, the illustrions hero who, in 1813, wrote : 44 We the strength which can turn off daily work without excessive fatiguethe strength which leaves the eye still bright and the have met t e enemy and they are ours." were ___ this deplorable state of affairs, the new grand chief, Moiee Bacon, and a delegr ion of the leading men of his tribe, are shout to proceed to Ottawa to interview the Depart- ment of Indian Affairs. the A gentleman who was exploring t mber limits around the Lake of the Woods, Mani- toba, came across an Indian boy about fifteen years of age, belonging to the Sioux tribes without arms. The lad appeared to be an Adept at bushcraft, and earned his living b>y hunting and trapping. The Winnipeg*** induced him to come to the oity with hi* He Is a clever, Intelligent lad. Instead, Arms, lumps appeared to have grown om back of the shoulders. He is very ad And can do almost anything with the ui his feet He showed how he fished wf line, throwing it into the water with hU And drawing in the fish in the same maS He shuffled s peck of cards and dealtf - " out In a very clever manner, knife and fork, bow and arrow, pencil, count money, or h fact al thing he is asked to do, solely by the veins and the arteriesHe can Give offered to take him thither for $60, the money maligned, the condemned large waist Me toes. It is a A Kentucky girl was struck by her mouth, she simply eeH i ; 44 What *

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Page 1: Sassesysacollections.banq.qc.ca/jrn03/equity/src/1885/07/30/83471_1885-07-3… · you ? "•• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says

AGE (S) ABIMEE (S)

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t

Auatraliaao.LORD AND LA DT 8ALI8BOBT. fN The visitor to Australia may lay hisaocount

with having what the Americans call Mu ovely time," saya Archibald Forbes. Hie boats-all the colonist* will be his hosts— will strain every nerve to make him enjoy himself. Australian hospitality is prover- liai the world over, and it has in it a cordial freshness that imparts to it a special delight. If he ba a true man, he will leave no colony without realizing that he is leaving behind him in it many warm and genuine friends. He need not be a susceptible person to find that, with the friendships he has left, he may have left his heart as well. 1 he ladies have a characteristic, bright, airy

They sparkle as perhaps not even the American lady sparkles, i heir manner—one finds one asking ones self who »nd whence they go. it- foi y ,u v ill lintl it in the damsel of a remote hush township, wf o is as graceful, frank and winsome as the Mel borne girl, who may have spent years in European lesidence an t travel. Une of the finest ladies 1 ever met, in every shar e of reflection of that term, was never in her life outside the colony ol Victoria, except fora visit to New Zealand. Australien wo men read. 1 imagine some London book-

îfce CourtMilp sed Marriage «I ilic Pro*** IPremier ef EeglanU.

One gray morning in the mld-spriag of twenty eight years ago there was a wedding in the little chapel at Aid Hill, Beits. All London knew the bride. For thee years the belle of Westminster, for thr* years the beauteous wonder of society, Oeoigiana Al dereon was the brightest and fairest of the ladies of the court But she was a coquette, and had drawn many loves by the silken charm so well discovered by w itchery and blue eyes and sunny hai . Many a had wooed In vain, for tie daughter of Sir Edward Hall Alderson vas an heireis as well

beauty, and an esfcte of land is the finest setting that ostie of beauty can de­mandthe admirers it oo:ld have been said that they were )rilliant worthy of the most coretcd honors of royal­ty, but not once or %ice the lady might have married well lui she not had an adviser who kue v man as mat deterves to he known. Miss Opie, the celebnted queen of society of ten or fifteen years *• fore, was (leorgiaua Aiderion s aunt a, d chaperone, and Miss Opi« knew better thm most other women of the time how to distinguish between heart and pr tense. She had kept the moths from her neioe, but \hile she was seeking an Ideally eligible mm her charge had given her hand to Hubert Cecil.

Miss Opie was disnayed. Cecil was not a man after her likng. Though the son of an earl, h i was a younger son, and any­thing but popular with his family. There had bten a quarrel «d a fraternal scandal, and, to the horror o: the family at 11a field house he had to earihis own l ving. Begin­ning as a journalist he had shown marked ab.lity till he was a regular contributor to the Quartely. For three years he had been in Parliament for Stamford, where he con­tinued to sit for fifte n years to come, but where he had made no consequential mark. It was no wonder that Miss 0,.ie was dis­pleased with the match. With but few re­deeming qualities socially, the young was at best a book-woim, and so tenons and quiet that he was cstei med dull. But the neioe had ft It the brain of the (- tile, and though nine out of ten thought as did the aunt, the nine and the aunt came to witness the ceremony.

It was a matter of fact wedding, as Eng glish country side weddings ure apt to he. There was a gay company filling the chap I, and the white ribbon that kept the common herd of ^cjuaiutances from the chosenmany 0,^elumily. There w as at 10 the

1°^ 0f the weddi g march from LyMiigM, tW quartet of able bodied ushers patting up the c ntral aisle and parting $bt sHk;i& harr&r. There were two little girlsVK-ewing the aisle with white flowers from tU-ir upMis, and four bridesmaids be­hind them. There was the bride on her father's arm with thequn'* bouquet in her ■h«ud. There was the groom meeting them -u^ie chancel r& l. There was the ceremony

Vaad the klemlog and tho congratulations, f ______ — -

A NI0E BABY STORY

%NO 6BRYSON, COUNTY OF PONTIAC, QUE., THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1885.VOL. HI.wooer

»piquancy•• But do you like the people ? '; 1 uk re

memberiug things Mollie had laid of what people thought of her,

••I don’t bother my head about them. 1 *m one of those people who nevtr feel leas lune than when alone.’

•• I wish I could feel like that," I sigh. ,eBu:I have always depended upon other people for happiness, ever since 1 was a child. I was always devoted to one or other of my schoolfellows, and liked to be petted and made much of. "

•• Perhaps It is the happiest kind of tem­perament. "

••I don’t know about that. The other must be so much more independent."

“ Independence is a tine thing, but it is very lonely sometimes,” Miss Irving says, looking straight before her. “ And it is a very louely thing to be an only child."

*‘I never minded that in the least,"!

A RUSSIAN REVIEWMollies ttoiles. I never heard my aunts esy one word against you."

11 Have you ever heard them say one word about me, good or bad ? "

I cannot remember that I have, just at the moment.

“ But what can they possibly know about you ? "

•• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says carelessly,

••If people say anything against )#i it must be because they are jealous ci you,’

exclaim wain ly.•* 1 dare say there is a good deal in that.

Well, don’t you want a book ? I don't think anybody else in the village does to day."

I approach the press reluctantly. When I have chosen a book I shall have no further excuse for trespassing upon Min Irving’s

I walk leisurely up to Mollies gate, aed, pushing it op n, find myself in the sunny, «weetbriar scented precincts of her neat •ittle garden.

Here another sound greets my ears the music of a girl e laugh, sweet and clear. At the same mom » n t somebody comes to the door of Mollies oo'tage—a girl with h*r nead turned back to speak—to the old wo man presumably, since 1 hear these words, 'poken slowly and distinctly—

••Whenever I want to hear a catalogue of my shortcomings, Mollis, I shall certain ly pay you a visit ! "

Then she looks round and sees me, and I see her, a tall dark girl with a laughing face—or it Is laughing now—and a pair oi great, beautiful, golden brown eyes which open very wide at sight of me.

We gaze at each other for a moment with­out speaking ; and then Mollie who has fol lowed her visitor to the door, seems to feel It Incumbent upon her to go through some form of introduction.

•• Mias Lisle, this is Miss Irving, our Vicar's daughter. But 'tis a queer thing the pair of ye should meet first in my little garden 1 "

•• I have often heard of y su," Miss Irving says, taking the initiative as she looks at

STURM AMI SIASIIINEA truud Military lUnpIsy Knilli* with a He

tullar Meadlilww «r a Frayer.E Of some of the most eoltish of CHAPTER I. -(Continued.)•• It was a very Bad thing, Lisle, and

nothing to make anybody laugh, " auut Anna says severely.

111 am only laughing at the Idea that he couldn't get another wife, aunt Anna. "

“ 1 dare say he could find plenty of girli very willing to marry him—1 never said he nould not. But nobody tninks he will ever

We rode at least a mile and a half, sayslien, liiggiuson in Blackwoods, past the line of tents, and must have seen 50,000 men.The ground is prettily accidente, and alto­gether well suited for camp purposes. At the end we came upon the guard regiments and the 1'reohrajensky regiment, with whom finished the inspection ; and here were as­sembled all the hands and drums, to the number of H00, in one compact mass lacing the empress’s pavilion or tent, at the door of which she and her ladies alighted, and were joined by the emperor and grand dukes. 11 We all dismounted and came inside ihe stocking in Australia ; but 1 have had the

of which the royalty and stall form | honor of conversing with many Australianof high culture and deep thought on

men amiI

I Mias

*à4 sellers could supply startling statistics in re­

gard to the number of high class reviews and jteriodicalM they send to the Antipodes,

happy to say that 1 never met a blue-

marry again. 4“ And Mr. Erroll—what is he like ?”'* Very handsome, but not so steady as his

brother—or at least he used not to be, though I hear he has improved very much

he went to China. Ho is at Velfry

t

1. am

sincenow, his mother tells me. She seems de lighted to have him back, poor woman—Kr roll warn always her favorite child. ”. think the scamps are always the favor

square,ed one side, the musicians the opposite side, the other two side# being composed of ofli- I subjects, superficial thought about which is core of the various corps who had hurried to as the crackling of thorns unuer a l>vt ; but the spot. In the centre, on a mound, stood you do not find yourself oppressed by vol the conductor of the united bands of musis, | u 11 tee red frankness of this soit; you have

to ask that you may find. To sum up with

women

time.I.ugh, « I alway thought if I h.d . .Uter " 1 don t ,UPP<* y°“ wil1 <*" mDch ,or I should be jealous of her, specially if aha “f »f UuKh'- «hruggiog herwere prettier th.u 1 waa, or more lovable." '"ouldera in her negligent way. “ They are

- Are you of a jealous d .poaiti, n ! " .he I ünly ht for pnri.h , chool chUdren. 1 you,miles, turning her head new to look at me. ™"y want. book I dare any I can lend

you something more amusing than anythingyou will find there/“Ob, thank you!” I exclaim, turning

round. “ May I go with you for it now ?*’“ If ycu like. There is no use in my stay-

itoB, aunt Emily.”To this unorthodox opinion aunt Emily

does not see her way to agree probably, for •he pretends not to hear it, snipping away at her dead leaves.

“ We must take you to return Mrs. Hath erfurd's visit very soon, Lisle, ” aunt Anna says, putting on her spectacles again, will like to see Velfry ; it is one of the finest places in the neighbourhood. And Mrs. Kutherfurd spoke of having you to stay there for a day or two. That would be an Amusement for you, now that Knoll Kuth­erfurd is at home.”

I suppose it will be an amusement, but, never having met Mr. Errol 1 Kutherfurd, it does not fill me with any particular elation. Of all the people whose names I have yet heard I feel most interested in this clever, cynical Judith Irving, who took the trouble to carry broth to nourish the decrepit body of old Mollie, whose wicked old tongue cannot say a word for her in return. I will make this girl's acquaintance, whether my aunts like it or not. I want to know what the new-fangled notions are of which Long-hurst does n«t approve, wrong to which my aunts obj *ot ; old people always look askance at any novelty, and my auuts seem to me to be particularly sensitive

and near him one diummer-boy, or perhaps a lad of ‘JO. We - the foreign missions I a curtness and rough generalization cl which — stood in line, and the emperor came down apology is due—Australian ladies are ,'airly from the pavilion and spoke to each of the accomplished; in modern languages th^y generals. He was very gracious to me, and somewhat weak ; in music very good—occa^ inquired about my service and the coin-1 sionally t xceptionaily so, I hey all sing, manda 1 had held. This over, he stood and many sing wellalone in the centre, and a detachment oi dower painter 1 know of lives under the sergeants in full marctiing order passed him southern cross, and her gift is real genius, one by one, each sergesuit giving the even-1 Victoria can boast of an amateur actress in ing report of his picket and of the usual I whom also 1 venture to recognise something 44 watch setting ” in a loud voice, the czar I of the sacred tire. In physique they are tall thus fulfilling fur the moment the role of camp 1er, slighter, more lithe, shapelier than the it

We (generals only) were then I congeners at home ; their color, save in, las taken up, oue by one, to the empress, who mania, is seldom brilliant. The expr« khv " talked to me about the Princess of Wales, I is full of vivacity ; the eyes neam a.wa)n Cowes, Osborne, etc., and was altogether I good and the head and feet shapely, but nut gracious and charming. Then tea was hand I exceptionally small, i hey dance divinely, ed round, and the crowd of officers and of Australian gentlemen are manly, cordial the troops generally kept closing round the fellows; they arc more pronounced and less square as the hour for “ the retreat,'* or za reserved than Englishmen. The tone is a

drew nigh. Meanwhile heavy clouas trille brusque, but it has the genuine riug inhad gathered in the horizon, and a storm it. I think, perhaps, that they have

me, as she opens the door and walks in. We walk on through the village together weemed to threaten us, though the view down prejudices than Kugliehmen-1 do nutThere is nobody in the long schoolroom ; *“(1 Miss Irving tells me who lives in each the &nd over the valley to Krasnoe dis personal prejudices-and they aie certainly

nothing but empty forms and desks, a pair cottage, and describes some of the "chars c t&nt about a mile, was not rendered less beau freer spoken in the enunciation of them,of dilapidated «lobes, a black-board with a Urs " which seem to abound in the place in t,ful by the combination of waning sunlight They are wholly without one attribute that sum upon it. The walls are coveied with a clever good-natured way, at which it ap BBd threatening clouds. Eight o'c.oca sounds; is a discredit to so many Englishmen-the pictures of wild animals of hideous aspect, P6*" nobody could take exception, each tield i^tery tirel an evening gun, three affectation of being idlers because of an ab-with descriptive letterpress underneath, not even the individuals themselves. rockets shout into the air, and the drum* sence of necessity for being workers. “fUvewith maps of the world and all the countries Her manner is very gay and sprightly Md jiandg roll out> with a solemnity and you a leisure class?' asked an Englishmanin the world. There is a large press at one *nd the can make herself very amusing; vo]ulue 0f sound not easily forgotten, the of an American. “What s that, any row.end of the r«y)in ; this Miss Irving unlocks, but at the same time she la exceedingly quiet eveni„g hymn. As the last notes die oil the enquired the citizen of the l uionand then, Living opened the doors of it wide —** least her voice is quiet, and remarkably drummer boy steps forward, the band mas who can allord to have no avocation, exenough t^display the rows of books covered clear and sweet. Her dnss is also quiet descends, and the little drummer, sole oe- plained the Briton. “Why, certainly, r« in gray hollaed within, and having laid an- enough—a simple chintz with a black ground 0f the square, repeats slowly butlsponded the American with alacrity,other and a larger bock open upon one of strewn with tiny red rosebuds, and a knot with ptrfeut distinctness the Lord s prayer, call them tramps.' It is much the san.*

“ But they think it is the only life worth the high desks with inkstand and pen be I of crimson ribbons here and there. 1 had p;very gead uncovered and hows, from the in Australia. The only people w ho let themliving ; that is what amuses me I ” uide it, leans her elbow on the desk and her thought from Mollie’e description, that Miss emperor t@ the furthermost spectator ; and selves afford to have no specific object in lift*

M They have never known any thing better, chin on her hands, and looks at me. Irving might be perhaps a little “fast, j Bhould in my heart pity the man who, as are the “sundown* rs," as they are calledpoor old ladies ! ” 44 I suppose your aunts will take you But nothing could be farther removed froir. tge little lad’s “ Amen ” went up in its sol-1 colonially ; the lo**r~ -v.o waunver iro

“1 suppose that accounts for it; but I am .bouta little ; it will be a good thing to “ f***— ”-!■ •PP~aa~. .» I—itary simplicity, could scofi at or even be station to station m ^interior, very glad I have met >ou, MU. Irviog. for giv, tho.e fat oil .ponie, eomething to do ! " thi. tall girl in her umpto calico gown and unimpret8t(1 by the .iler.ee which followed, nightly ration anda bunk. Uru «thuIwaajuit beginning to f«d (Werbrook in -They are .ure to take you to Velfry. I black .traw hat, with the ky of the par There wa. a total aUenc, of all exagger- downer, every A„t,.h.n huh,.avocation,tolerable! What do you tlink aunt Anchor Mrs. Itutierfurdi. everything their b.au oohlal *' library ” dangling from the finger ltlon or .training for mcreawd eUect. The and would think .hame of hlmee -ett. offered me by way ofwme light read- ideal of a’gentlewoman ' ought to be. " of ner chamoi. glove. band, then bnr.t forthwith the Rumlani eorry prideof not being ur.luetro ,u. nit.ing, j=.t now r "I believe .he i. very nice ! - (to .. OONT.Ntr.B.) national air ,o well known to all of ne. and He work, like a man and he lay. lto.

"I don’t know I " .he an.wen, with the " She certainly is very nice. Have yon | -----------" th„e mieae 0,oted M °‘6ht ,eUl | % Ù the bu.ineeo man. and

same curiou», amused look, never met her ! ” The Art of Keeping Oool. -------------- he therefor, may experience a greater viciai-• A Report of some Jewish mission, i-boat “Not yet She came to sec me > esterdsy, It msy seem surprising, yet it is none the Health and Ability to Work. tude of fortune ; but he has an elasticity and

twenty years old.” but I was out. She is my godmother. ^ that the art of keeping cool is un- Thistle a working age. The merciless law a versatility that are more American thanei Wretched girl 1”—raising her dark eye- “Ie ihe really?”—“So they told ™ derstood in Cuba a hundred times better than Qf the survival of the fittest is driving the p^ngiiah* and so copious are the opportun!-

Sassesysa:.....................................................................................................................................................................

“It is fortunate you did, as I have the key ** * ch^ld ' *y u er . . . , M they feel They look picturesquely cool. non of succeee ^ work. It is fashionable toof the library in my hand at this moment ; sotlyi 1 6 1 ‘ n‘e age’ an 8 6 , yrrQu crew They wear suite of linen, of thin silk, oi wor^ Kven many Qf the rich and lazy are

M I am quite ready ; I can come and see 6 _ _d, never msrrv when we see them, look unshapely, and even ^ 0f Gther signs point to the fact thatchorelU ? Mollie another day.” BULti thtok he W,U unsightly. So they do ; beoaims our tail- ^ ^ Uvlng ha country and period whereC " Keep them Lisle 1 Toe annual Reports We turn up the lane, laughing and talking, •« , do laugh at that? ” ore do not seem to know how to make them, MÜvlty ^ the rule and sloth the ixception.of our societies I” old Molle, standing in her doorway, look- "ikcm* I think it so unlikely-a young and our laundresses starch them too eUff. jhe competition in all sorts of labor and

“ But they are only rubbish. One might ing after us. man, with plenty of money and a fins old Experience and practice.would overcome travel# enormous. The strength demand-fwsllkeen a lot of old almanacs.” “Ihavs wanted so much to make 7°"|pUot/. that Havana Is a very dressy and fashion- ^ ^e excel In any trade or profession Is

441 have ülmanaoe there forty years o d,” acquaintance,” I say, as we reach the road. wfce very fond of his wife,” Miss fearing oity. The tallors make those thin ^ great,aint Anchoretta says, glancing up at the 1 " It seemed so odd that there should be two My| looklng ât ine, garments as stylishly and as shapely as our Women who have their Uvings to earn■I elf with a curious kind of obstinate eatis girU living so near esch other Ins place „uh|B0 he might bel But other men suite. The women there do not drees so enter thig „vere competition, andfaction. “Your aunt Theod< ela is always like this without being acquainted with who were fond of their wivee have married very unlike our own women ; that is to say ^#y will never receive consideration becausebtikLMDV me to burn them, or to sell th* m as each other 1 ” agsin»» that Canadian ladles dress more "nsiblym Me women They most excel in orderwasteraper and give the money to one or “It dote rather; but I dtn’t suppose your 441 &m afraid you are very cynical.” Summer than Canadian men do. In both ^ ^ successful. Excellence impliesOther of the societies ; but that I shall never aunts will like j ou to care for any society « y0 $ but I can’t help laughing wher countries the result is reached by lessening ltreDgth_not the spasmodic, nervousdo When I am dead they msy dispose ol but their own." people say things like that.’’ . the number and weight of under garments Btrength which makes an effort once inthem for that purpose ; but »s long ae I live “ Their own I” I repeat, laughing. “They .« Dont you believe people could care so donning Sommer silks or other almost swhiU ^dB, extraordinary pressure, but it shall never be done. If you want some can scarcely suppose that I should oars for much for each other that nothing could make | gœeamer goods for outer weartbit g to read, why do not you go down to their society !” _ , ^emferget ?” ' '"

1 , j the Darochial library? It is open every “Do you expect to remain long at Osier- “Scarcely. „ . . IndiinUrSTtii to Older.

them with their jaws, > et fr^menU olII - ^ down its number and your “ It is to be hoped not I” Miss Irving laughs, leaves outside the window. dent Is worthy of being published to show desk, at the easel, in the kitchen, in thesects have been sometimes found Ln name to the book they keep for the looking at me. “ Four maiden ladiee of the I study her faoe, lounging on the form ^ ^ey exercise to their peculiar «.bool-room. Snch strength as this doesstomachs. nnrMBe » name of Warburton are enough to any one opposite. It is rather a long face, or it loo s To dleoover sn Indian grave Is, of not g0 wjth & small waist From the nature

Tb«. u M much .Won tob..Hng.ith P-rpo»^ ^ e gooi idWi ^ 1 w„y It p^.sb I ’’ «under her «Her h.tof bUvk ooeiWi B ^ ^ ^ y,, „ob^logtit 0, thingl> it M D„e,-unl«., w bw k.nother people . de icti ..in being forthwith. It will be more .musing to "I wur. you I her. no pMticnUr fancy . breed crimion ribbon round the crown. R IndUn g„Tes in ni.nal.ctuted to out, in exoeption.1 «mi -be foundtheir good qa.lltie. ; «id w. should m.ke . , ,e do wn y,, viiUg, then to .it In th. I for being the filth-, but even old Molli. I It Is .1» r.ther .pM.fw.-e cwr d«ky I ^ y would .ppw. At let, the fol ^ women with «umll widiti. Strong Uck the follies of other, rather . werniog .n dra„ing room, with It, nnoUnt seem, ta think it i* ineriuble." pMlor which h« nothing “ owing raoently occurrad In New Jeney. .Womkral muclw-miwclw which c«iinitructinn ti our.tlve. then e ,ublcct Clbinet, .od chin, «id feint im.ll of dried " There era ,o few bwh.lor, here it, «id which oonti«U rather oddly with th. ^ phUedyphle Flint J.ok wcurad e Wf do thelr work without th. dewlly prop, olmirth «id mockery of thow who comm ^ [eives M |Jone| „ ; been sitting " I suppose ihe meuu thst” orimeon of her soft curved lipe. Her fe. dwjeyed lkelrton horn e potter's field In the lteei u,d „h.lebone now to univeraUly worn

sxplosion, whisk will be attiU>ut#Ki to WOedü—Ihs* and ray own feotetepe, as 11 would,"

“ Of course 1 am ; all women are.” “ I am not.’

are

“ You would be if you cared for anybody.”“ Do you caie for anybody, that you know

all about it so well ?”“ Not for any bidy in the way you mean,” here l°Dlier*

I l.ugh— "only for my fritnd.at ichool." tiut. three or four young girl, coming in" Oh I" Mi». Irving ray, with a «nil. of j“»t “ •*« peak, together with two of tim

•• I do not think th.tthe eervanti from Velfry, Mies Irving waits

" You The moat exquisiteme.

“ And I have heard of you," I answer, smiling.

“ Not from Mollie, I hope ” Miss Irving toughs, shrugging her shoulders and I a*e grtat friends, but 1 know she abuses me like anything behind my back. '

“ And to your face too, Miss Judith, when you do foolish things. ”

“ As if I ever did foolish things 1 I must apologise for not having called upon >c u be­fore now, Miss Warburton ; but the fact is my father keeps me so busy copying his manuscripts, ana brushing his clothes, and paying duty visits for him ail ever the parish, that I sometimes have not an hour to the day that I can call my own."

“I envy you ! ” I lsugh, looking at her. “The days at Osierbrook are so long that sometimes 1 fancy they will never come to an end.”

“ You must find it rather dull at Osier- brook ! ”

“ Dull 1 I think It is the dullest place in Eng and ! How my aunts have managed to exist there for the last half century or so is more than I can comprehend"

“ I should tcarcely call it existence," Miss Irving says, looking rather curiously at me, or at my candour.

indulgent scorn. _ _ jealousies of men and women. Une is the while they put back the volume, theysting of a midge, the others the bite of a brought with them, choose fresh ones, end scorpion. ” | make an entry in the book on the table.

“ 1 thought you knew nothing about it ! ” Then she locks the press, and we follow “ X can evolve some idea of what it might I them out into the May sunshine and the coj

be out ol my consciousness,'' she laughs, I delicious freshness of the afternoon air. shrugging her shoulders. “But here we are “ Is it far to the Vicarage ! "—“ Not very at the school-house. 1 hope you admire our far."old village, Miss Warburton." “Notthat 1 mind what distance It was,

“ Don't call me Miss Warburton; it re-11 back to dinner at six."“ Oh, you can certainly be back long be-

“ Mollieman

commandant

f (

minds mo of the teachers at school.’She does not ask me what she shall call I f°re *** * ”

namuremean

Everything is not

l

on this subject.It was only last night that aunt Achore ta

took me to task for saying someth ng was “awfully" pleasant. But if I am not to say “awful” I do not know what is to become

It seems to be on the tip of my moment ; I never knew till

“A clafta

of me“wetongue every

how essential it was to anything likeo nowfluency in conversation.

Mrs. faery leamls for an Idopled f Mid amI Haw She Kal Oar.\

CHAPTER II.“1 want something to read aunt Anchor

Col. L. F. Cas* y is a prominent heal lawyer in Ceutralis, III. Hu wife is an estim­able lady. Alter a married life of many

unmarred by rrgrtt < r dinplcasure,I etta. ”I am standing in the doorway of her room,

having found the door ajar as I passed down stairs. Aunt Auchoretta is standing in the middle of the floor, with a bundle of what look like magazines in her hand ; her ward­robe stands wide open, and the upper shelf

to be stuffed full of periodicals in covers of every colour in the reinbow.

“Iam afraid I have nothing here that you would care to read, my dear."

“ Oh, one of those numbers in your hand will do as well as anyth ng else ! ”“But these are Repots of the Church

Missionary Society for 1870. I don’t think you would care to study them ! "

“ Oh, no, thanks 1 " I exclaim hurridly. •• But there are others up there—I think I

numbers of Temple /far—in the

years,lave the need of a child # companionship to brighten up the old hr me, they determined to adopt a baby girl, if a suitable one could be found. One night two years ago Mrs. Casey and her sister in law, Mrs. Thomas Casey, Mount Wrnon, 111., retired together, and before going to sleep chatted about theproposed adoption, tion had ended Mrs. Carey WiS electrified by a vision of childish loveliness at her Bale. A baby girl, with large brown eyes and au burn ringlets, lay there smiling and cooinir and lilently supplicating for a good night kiss. Mrs Casey Insensibly stooped to caress the beautiful vision, and it vanish­ed. Being wido awake the incident made a deep impression upon her. Not many «lays later a stranger appeared bearing a little girl in bis sums. He explained that he had heard of the desire cf Mr. and Mrs. Casey to adopt a child, and he had made bold to

to them with this, his only daughter.

■eemi

\V ht n the con versa

ear to

that ii,di occasional hard exercise, the recoil front which has a tendency to make men burly if not portly. There is a ruddy, sturdy manhood in them, even in the towns. In culture, in refinement, in manner, the Au­stralian women are the superiors for the most part of the men ; but I think this in all communities of which the civilization hits not attained to an exceptional degree o

ove

see some

11 80

comeHe was anxious that she should receive a good education and all the advantages of a cheerful home, which he felt unable to give her. Thus speaking, the stranger placed the little one on the floor. Mis. Casey, from the moment of the stranger's entrance, had been a tar in g fixedly at the child in his arms. The baby had the large brown eyes, and au bum locks, and the smiles of her vision. When released the little one i ushed fearlei s ly into Mrs. Casey's outstretched arms. ••This is my little child," she e%claimed rap turoualy. This Is the one I want." The baby returned the kisses and ''tresses, ftüd Mrs. Caeuy explained the cause of her emotion. The adopted daughter was named

It L

finished organization.ors

Labrador Indiana Starving.A correspondent writing from Bersimqia,

on the north shore of the tit Lawrence, re­lates the most ha: row ing distress among the Indians there, and says the reindeer, which has been most plentiful in the large domain of the Montagnais Indians of Labrador i* al­most extinct The result of this, coupled with the unusual severity of last winter,w »h that some of the Bersimis Indians on their inland hunts, to avoid starvation, were oblig­ed to eat their furs, and that in one camp three died of hunger, and that there are dark rumors of their havingeemmitted canni­balism ere succumbing to their terrible fate. In addition, bad luck of the direst kind at­tended the efforts of the hunters to Wear* furs, and out of more than a 100 who start­ed out from Beraimis not ten on their return

able to pay their debts. In view of

M Thanks.But what do you keep them for aunt An

12

M

Vision. That was two years ago.learned that she is the great grandnow

daughter of Commodore Oliver Perry, the illustrions hero who, in 1813, wrote : 44 We the strength which can turn off daily work

without excessive fatigue—the strength which leaves the eye still bright and the

have met t e enemy and they are ours."were ___this deplorable state of affairs, the newgrand chief, Moiee Bacon, and a delegr ion of the leading men of his tribe, are shout to proceed to Ottawa to interview the Depart­ment of Indian Affairs.

the

A gentleman who was exploring t mber limits around the Lake of the Woods, Mani­toba, came across an Indian boy about fifteen years of age, belonging to the Sioux tribes without arms. The lad appeared to be an Adept at bushcraft, and earned his living b>y hunting and trapping. The Winnipeg*** induced him to come to the oity with hi* He Is a clever, Intelligent lad. Instead, Arms, lumps appeared to have grown om back of the shoulders. He is very ad And can do almost anything with the ui his feet He showed how he fished wf line, throwing it into the water with hU And drawing in the fish in the same maS He shuffled s peck of cards and dealtf - " out In a very clever manner, knife and fork, bow and arrow, pencil, count money, or h fact al thing he is asked to do, solely by

the veins and the arteries—

He can

Giveoffered to take him thither for $60, the money maligned, the condemned large waistMe toes.It is a

A Kentucky girl was struck by

her mouth, she simplyeeH

i ;44 What

*

Page 2: Sassesysacollections.banq.qc.ca/jrn03/equity/src/1885/07/30/83471_1885-07-3… · you ? "•• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says

mm

'/ •

THE EQUITY : THURSDAY, JULY 30, TK&S

—".........................—LL___ j_____ L

/ 'rotcssioi/ntt Vfzv/.v.'

THE EQUITY.! A DtNidly lirai. Thk Vimo.n Ih» unx... The kauliNvw > ork, July V’.—Thr f^mncnihn* hri fn. ml \ .tillable pii:',es that w ill boaw aid

......... v.u„i,a»„..i„„ ,Twmtv-twocrnu-s or |troMtifitloii from lieai > niton elections on Hiv lltli ami l'.'tli , . .

SSSEEESESx % 5; rBS-SztvslSttHtEssS'» S“i”î! y* *"* *> ■ ~ * |,*1^ j

rail iiinl >i-<- liisiissinlim'iit

8WÏH-'....... ..................... |Fille French Coatine.a

EffiEESSSKES «.....>*u\™........................... . 1 SootchSuitingsgrvuuU that before the Dominion statute of ism» was ntaiMHiniti.il vvvlit took place ill St hX«’UR>l«»> < >u I HH. il.iy evening ot

\;wr's.,,,u"vh’ <hi //“ ‘fwwl!v,j rr1 """t1 H t̂?_____,i 1 -n j.-ng-raled though tin- a- t of isnj had iwn posi-1 n ''vUiivmI.iv morning of tills we k. the stvainiT «laitv-t t m: : . ntertamed a large ! W GSL OT ülI10l Hill ( I Hrl M T.1 Tl CTQquoted from the English eUtiitvn m which i-'w.t coutrnctiu ; parties thereto being Ml*. It. nuttilfvr of ladle* ami gentlemen «»f Biistol O

2*S M »............. ............................ .

SEE. sSSKs&HS ] K % ys jambs m. quinnl«ftled. althoiigh ccrtein otherclauseH rrlntitig lo. iiu r Kist Miss Han y lias been a resident of Blass Batnl. After upending uhout an “ )!wi™v\nL*lîm. ,mo!. ll: huhlitig an iinjiorUiiit tk wit ion hour livre tlm cxcimnonists returned tv

Mr. Rnhiuson repno! oii in half of im Vi--\u . ,m«i in the ollteo <>t t lie < Uvat North Western the boat, which steamed up t lie lake on «leslt with only twu imiutti what thy Vominn'ii l‘;u Telegraph ('•».: hut the pleasing reiiiin- the ret urn to Bristol, liaiiu'iit had a right to rtiait ami w hat it <ti<l «nut. : 1 . , • , , n . ,The only quation wasth.jnniMlh-tion or Pai liai,, i.t. lm‘,u.TS »^"vmteil xvitli the place ot her vxeiiing By • wriv» of dis ishm* it h«» Iwn n itatvl that th. liativitv svnii t" haxe hcvil so thoroughly pleasant

"mi s,,r r I ' 'ni* r" "*}? ''';ur i,vrfom IVI.aiuent l*einusupnm* ii* irpinlatii-ii u ii. proinpteU to in ike it the scene of her the comforts of ins guests, anil the all.nr «•’lute. The Crown hjAl uYichedtverv pint iiip-'l to nio; t notable turning |M»int in life. I imn was one which will be lvmenihereil with the deffiht-. a»<l linally rv5olv«it that tin* trial could Li . f . ' . , », f , .• . , ,, .onlt be held when- the crime wm committed ii. . t llu "Watmin ot her nuptials Miss t are) feelings of pleasure l*\ all who pirUci e«l the jurttfiiHiit of the Hui renie court of MhuiIoIm «n ' was attired in a law u-coloml suit, trim pa ted therein.

«ravl luv1,1,1pMftftcd when Kuport'* land wa*admitted mi" tin-1><• uuiti'Ii, anil was inane the recipient of miuioii. in which it WMetui'ta-d that tin- 1‘arli uiu-m nnineroll presents, most of which were

V «'”• ........ . takvMr. Osier, on t>eh.ilf of the Crown, elated that ih» i* passage on the félicitions ship of eon-

c i;w,';,v imv,ir«cn">:K,rm' -•*latureby the Itiii-.ri.il ParTiameiit, aim 1„ • i.. n i.d tlto Ihm.uii id tlm great matrimonial r.ea, the court tint the law *s t<> irvawii was adn-im-n-nwe cheerfully take up our position on the

z:'. ^ •" a».i ««h

mmm §mmmfound, and an RU-'li he rlainied thin n.iNn pe r. ih • -i> the sveiie, and it well tiveomos those who lie )o (hodi>l pu "ii.t H'ixon,

......... ........ .... .... ............iv";?■ rl>i ~»;v,::ntTlreotof lsaoho did n.d -onsid.i • li 1 b» oiler a tribute of respect to their •lumhi.r oj J. s. i; .. i !‘ -i. of Norththervfom «-ailed upon Biel to plead memory. A standing liiotiuinent of their * ‘fisiou.

*»**>:jh^v a,.,i fvi.i. niM hy the juil#., wh» thouiilit ii .|i.| .ml mi !■. I"". i* I no bvautifu! vuimlry winch wo

Sissws.w.‘i tit.^rsrsiito-suUnamnirnt till IvhIhv t«. j.n'iwv .... «ffi.l.v it n.. .. sniiiv wirntry forty ) cars ago. how pirnni-

ncnlly a|.|K»r* tlio reasmi for thinking with vouomtiuu anil uatcciu, >.f fat lion, ainl mothers who have spent their lives in prislueii.e the great change in the land. Think how * tout-hen rl oil they

were, to fine an niil.rnkeii wilderness, eiitlmg i..,1.1s wailing streams, clearing the land, often eartyitig provisions for their families on their hacks for seine

l.iKt rill.' I,i n; IVrth is I., l.c Id up hy electricity on tic I I of t*. toiler next IMPORTANT!x viy mit « v .fui ;m«l

xx ,n licit 1 t»ii I lu*Ijli U I III l.l'MAN. M |« i M , niTh'H'i.XN

T f’1" nul Xi Iivmi, fmnluatp of llrùill • 'f Phyeivmim

Offltf

Smith a Cowan, Proprietor*.

brysonTH ly 50™ uw>.I nivi •: v

V' :• "ii i f H I'i n im . ..| y,,s'l"ii Im| tNutlonyr, <^u«

",J* Vti illtellun.. al all Iiouim,

11. I' ll'" "I I lie l "III. !. .

About 100 Bills were passed during the of Parliament just ended.

In the shooting fur the Elcho Shield at imbledun, England see rial 1,076; Scot­

land, 1,668, and Ireland 1,064.

The Session of Parliament closed last Monday was the longest since the 1667, which occupied lli; days. The ■ion of 1880 occupied 17- days.

•tiSMVll

•I. i» I "Mi.Il

II li xi ni!Ireported. 'll* til "III iff of X U tori* Vn| —• , t I» 'InMi III || llllllMlfflt |-'ii|t UolllollK* • ii*l Ii is lu ,iih" •• i l.miit» ID ii I

yearTrial of Louis Riel.St‘8-

1 ! i.vim: i » \ I ,■ i . xi»\tk'atk, haI D i, Hfill. Itm .iiil'i.n |nr lit i^iw

"i 11' ' -Main t. lit v. .in l-uit, r y>

KIEL'S TRIAL.It is evident that the proverbial delays

t>f the law are not permitted in the trial »f the instigator of the Northwest rebel­lion. The adjournment for a week to on able counsel for the defence to their witnesses will probably he the only one taken, and as the Crown counsel have consented to share in the expense of ob­taining witnesses, subject it ts presumable to a voice in deciding who are to be deemed material, Riel is certain to have a fair trial. The defence will, judging flour Tuesday's proceedings, be rested upon the plea of insanity, for although the counsel for the defence ask for the pro­duction of official papers, the list of which was prepared by Mr. Blake during the last session, and caller! for then, with a tiew to making political capital out of the tiM, it is not conceivable that they will he allowed to go into i|uestions of this character. Riel, at least, is not in a posi­tion to plead that any hardship posed upon him by the character of the administration of Northwest affairs He held no property in the country; he does not even pretend to be a British subject. He is simply an adventurer w ho entered

Northwest of his own accord a year ago and engaged in plotting against the peace of the country and in advancing his mid.and * teked schemes. Did lie incite •he people to rebellion; was he concerned in the lights at Batoehc; is lie responsible for the deaths of those who fell on that battle-field I These arc the ouest ions upon the evidence in relation to which the ver­

, diet will hinge, and to those we imagine the Jrial will bo soniew hat closely confined.A fair trial is required and a fair trial will be given, but it would assuredly not lie in the interest of justice to permit the pro­ceedings to be made the instrument of party warfare, as some of our contem­poraries and the counsel for the defence desire —(Montreal Gazette.

| \ ! l.'i.Ki I I■ r% f • Ollii .•

Ml' min nil t

B M'MM \ J K. BAHRIhTKn.4 I* -ill* IM »• ; I’nllflvr «III V(t||in • in » uuntj .Hi'l Bum rk»

■ v iifcii i nr i ). For i\ mmucink. fwn*1 9 l.ix.il I'nixirsil |i,v, i>labll*ln‘d liiuisvlf In

V* • ttllvinl.mvv will be given In

summonI'll l|« . X lllflpv| Mil ill ' Willi rail/ v N M UK W. n I.l Nuti,iy I’uldle, P-irlnpr «In » r«.rt, Mill \Ini hlmwxille «very mtoihI and l'mill I Inn",lay mid llriatul 0»rnern every Ihiixl Tlmis lny «if |hr nnmli.

609 Sussex Street, Ottawa.ottnwu. May II, |vv..

\ x vi y enjoyable xx.'.s .s|iviif, tin* tin» living a most «•no. The menial Honunoilore

lh/r/s.IIJ A. H HORN - UNDERTAKER,PEBCBROKB, ONT.

VoIBns. «'askrl.% Metallic Case*. Shrouds, raps, «•loves, Ac., Ac.

Tt'LMHM'll 0lll>i:i;s "UeM U, „l AU JIM l!S.

rrill IOIJKVI IK CM l,V M«l . ItlTCHIK. I’m* h 1 • • I• i S|*.i‘ i»'i« San,| 1c IliHiins. Kxviy atlrii-

li"ii |»hI'I tu |.m stH. Vj,>| vlnsa Tahirs.

TI It is in ws ( 'ttrtls.

ti i it re & t o..Tho Cliolnrn in Spain.

Pirn follow Illy ll'inr s show f hv ovogn«8 ol Hi" vliolvra In M|hii n Min I* Mn l'»r Ii IiinI : - July Will. -«’iiso*, J., 117 . i|>Ilis IViJ. JIM raw » Y7 ; <!«*ni||s *T|. ill ;iMy« !•>< V’tml ini'llTti, no i Im n. •J.Mli,—111 « 1-ilM v, J. wVJ; ill .1111: l.l Ij. JS*h, now rnSI'S.'. I.': !'!!>.

\.m ru m:iN<; miioxor. iuiokski.|)i‘l»«is<lriy nf

Ottawa, (Hit.vi-asm i M I' M. li-M.khimli ii 1*1 ml, i .I,.

‘lit Ottawa Auxiilnn liiV -sirl.vwatt nu nowL’-’nil, irw chm’s :;T ; me ». heath QUYON,

<■<*ncrn! EiXr/iinre Ap nl.|.il, A. finit II lms Im-■«•iiI 'IN l>S limn' '

I'lm fl in my Ilit IBOUTMARRIED. t. S1 8theN

F GoldÊHsitha Hall.tilitiarv ami

rfiort.

Waft !;< üftîllisii Walehcs.

ïiîgiit W«mi iics. Swiss V* «tie"

Ok: worn Fine

-«l «

Iht S

Jewfîrr.' 7_____DIED.Ill tillsVlllagi* ,)|, Stiml.n I I'!, till* Jfitli iiisi.,

Jo.M-pli IMgnr, Imiuii s,,n m \|,. \\ hi. < ,|,HI, Mill'll II months ,i|rI JOil.i \ >.

V nl'hr I. • t ami nnwt rlegaMi stock lelhi Ott

Wl|l*\. rJ llF.ll T1 ft? Kill:» III' liai runs anil Irlviul* Hint I have luMvil lu my stock u

FIRST CLASS ASSORTMENT OF ALL SINES OFhXsJfcflI

mi\f I |*|»«*r Li toll flv 111, mi I i nli \ vx niiiir: I In» Jl'.li ills!., Colin A ■ iiiuir, (Itinl'i»n ,,i ,|n|m Thoinpxon, K*i|.. .u« fl ii ,'t.f . ii monilis, ami Vilay«.

■iV. J. DOUOMAIN MTRKKT.

mg the necessity of lutvim; brought from Moutsii*. TIimg was tho filing of Kiri's affidavit* in Htip|n.i t ..t the fi|'l«liv*tion fur an adjournment Tlivy <vt i.-m, ii..,i (ihtiriel Piuiiont and Michael IMhiims, *-f H,|. mi.Montana, w#»rr eH*enti»| witnesses, tli.it V,i».|.',.n XftuM, of Turtle mountains, Fatlmr* Fmivmd md fiourmond, A. M Hurgrss. deputy minister of the Ul­terior. and Mr Vankaughnvt. Indian, omniis»!.mi v. in also material witnesses for the defence Mr IVn^. and Mr N ankaiiglim t are custodians of various..theml documents, petitions and representation* mad, ».\ the half-breeds of thr Northwest to the Dominion Movetn . ment, praying for a n*drfa* of gru vniires. the n tii*:il distance, ulliUiriltg fatigue aim luuxlshijis

“*:!rc",,,<'Ia!m,lf,,f iu,a r mpetitions and documents are as follows i; , ,.f XX V look at tllVir tottvilllg mmiCSIllHl Clirv-Mr. Pierce relating t • the settle'inent of Prim. \Hwrl ; xx'ul tl features, they a PI ictlf US relics of aKSIRRASg.iV/r.!" ,-« «*,.......... ,T «».•«• »,.«■xilleaildresaed to Captain Ihville. dated 1"tli .l;im irv, teiulvvlv tllV> ought to HO cam l for hy

,:zi% ; thf r1, , ,Huw 'flMh Novemlwr. iww; litter from the land • »m vrax vu the heart that couhl treat the•ionera to Pfeive. dateil 14th SepteintHT. is> . i- tf« » venerable ones xvith neglect or abuse.

Vv. rl... s,y. i. H Often seen where the lietifbm from settlers of Piim e Altiert. f. nvanli-l ,i '»g»*U father or nn»‘lief is looked upon as a the Winter of lKSJnnd 1H8.I and signnl l.v a kirpiiiiii- hailgoi oil, «me to be \x isîied out i >f the b«r of s ttler* ;iietitioii from St. Antoine >!•' Ft In.d- , ,, . .drvaaaii to sir John MaedotiaM as minister of the mie 'Vfly, l>y those caring for them. May rinr,dated HtliSepteniiM’r.issj;|H.titioiifromui».,i i Midi cares he more rare than they are'

A I"""1'1’1 "f North < Inslo» lu»h» the Lieutenant (inverm-r-in-V.mn, il. Jim,. issj. lately gone to rest, who settled there oetitinn presented bv the inhabitants „f Pm,. . Ml» rt forty five wars ago. Man , beloved wife to the minister of the Interior ; petition i,\ the half r i, i *i \ ' i , ««breed, and Fivn. h-(\midiav* ,.f Prim , xli» n. , “I bu liant A Mintage, passed peacefully wanM by Mr. Liird to the |>omitiion non. nr ivv iv on the Irtth inst,. after a lingerin''

"^=,^^1, m ^i^d ;ment ; petition presented by Qu'Appelle liait breeds in failli i|lliet trust III tile atoning merits ofsa'ArKXTirKrn: 1 --)*"*»• ".7»*•xaya he has reason to believe that thr ilovuim tits nu n c' luvtlie of faith 111 I Mill to bring herttoied are in the hands of the Dominion (lovenmient safely to Himself through the solemn

ri -f ta,b ^ i-*.j defence and would he deprixed of justice He bad “f tile Value of early closing ill with the uo uiasns of bringing witmsses, and unless the c.ov often* of the Hor.pel of Salvation Her enmient i»ay their expenses he ,-ould not pnvurv said i;r .. .. - .witnesses to the defence. Various papers and doeu- ^ W518 n|lt. °* toil and faith, ns during a menta taken from him at the time of his surrender protracted illness of her Imsband. of sever

«1 -he lm;l .he can...fa family „fStates court that he wa* a duly naturalizedHtift-n, and *ei1 children, all of xvlvun, except WMired this to prow that lie »u cot a Bril,.I, »„t,. attended her funeral. She was widely

Mr. Fitzpatrick nai.l Riel had no mean», aud the *tno*n ”» » kind and provident paient,

a true friend, and an obliging neiglilior. Her funeral largely attended, and an ap­propriate, brief discourse by the Rev. H. Gomcry, English Minister, solemnly im pressed all present, with the need of be­coming acquainted with God to he at peace. —Com.

certain material w itn* ■ *< s ehr*t thing •l"iie t!n* i >i n- BOK I

REA DY MADE FOOTWEAR, /

I'm Hi i Vi i. ■ " It 'll Ih loir till"iiti'lviii'i nmrt*.IN I v. !. i ">

11 'pi#' I ••■•lax that • "in tusi "I III'' t* XX III, a I» t|r| - II, I'.tiurtofWlkl Mi ml'ii \ tiff.ill.ldiall form» <*f .>»iini,,rr # ■ •?:,] i ■ it

Il" l'I' I'jll Bryson Carding Mill. /l:. Which 1 Hit. i .1 .li«|«»nig ..fMl III,, lowrxf living 1 li.nrhmi m. |.m;. |;, n„. .............. ....that. I think . hi safely w.y Klllic.nl Ik-Iiiie .liargml will. egollMii, I run !.. t i.r ..in. Ill aof Kva<V rout «• i'i>i»l than mu !«• pitrclinsiMl niiywh<in* v!m\

it - ft it* I y for% Prorogation of Parliament.On Monday of last week his Excellency

the Governor-General prorogated parlia­ment with the following:—

SPEECH KROM THE THRONE:(ItntUmev o/the Sr note; (icntlemtn o/tkt Ilona*

Commons:,1 u«l re to convey toy.™ my Issl thank# for tho diligence with which you have performed your (lullen during this long protracted ses­sion. It has been In many respecta un event­ful session ; in none more so than because, since its commencement .the peaceful progress of the Dominion, unbroken for so man v vears. has been interrupted by » serious Insurrec­tionary outbreak In the Northwest territories. I congratulate you upon the prompt and com­plete suprcsslon of these disorders and on the restoration of public confidence throughout the regions in which they

The Insurrection has been encountered bv the military force of the Dominion under Major-General Middleton in a manner deserv­ing of t he highest commendation. Thdcour- age which our citizen soldiers have shown In the face of a formidable and determined ene­my. their cheerful endurance of privation and fatigue, and the readiness with which they

"li!>il,ltted to sacrifices, inevitable when-

g?*!?

\ lilHM* I II Tl V - |'l • M ' ! ,< III ll ••'lIsfM, |llIi- «llll. I lie l« :«*( ji'ipii : t \ -I. • i U », |,v ,» y.Hwl

"• «'ili' . | lu I, i in In

"Womoas, M ans, Soys, Misses and Youths Boots, Brogans, He. &c. w Wto -, all sizes, supers, Shoos, &c. Sects from COc upwards.

rfr C»l! j,«i I ' Ml 111 I in- my Work heron' |iim'lm*liie rlseu h' ri\it. I». <ok;iiuv.

ChildrensMil' I‘hit Ml'»"'! i> il-,' • i . { • rfvi l liv.iHli v ill..nit I* | •

Iti-Kiilntr Un I i \« I v iih Ituhl.i k Hi.... I liitlaic |hin- Ii! " !,

mill. \l "\ I ' inlhi* mill II n | Un*«l atnl vtfll ht<v

ill NVI. hi sand h

Im I till' T~ tliv

Z

of jijiAi.l"in whi k un I

Itrysoi». I n. rv INS.».I'NKNoH V I.V.Till'll I > i i« in '! !. i "ii h limlii rtlsi n ni'v that «au 1‘Xi'i I 111 I 'win's I \ti.„ t ,.f Wild NihwIhti) ,i> a run h i i ’ |. i hyaeiitrrv. ur am f--iii i h • rillgi'lilldlrli III I'lult>

Hon oj FIRSTM l I 'I III !»» It,i 1 Nil1! i f nlllivt- A BOUT PHOTOGRAPHS.

lia- iAU. W Kl I NI Mil!.L"" n l’ha-aiit Wulln St nip nti«| |M»vniH Ils vhlut*».

AUDI SL Till. Ll\ i.R«In a f|•••! with N.ttj -iial Pilla. h K«mwI imii-liili.MiH ••iillmrllv, sugar- "fini

I * NNt;Ki:« »» S KITS •I I' i man * Wuini I . ilrsi, .i-t

I !i* • 1 h lih< Ih",I • .1*1 V "VI I nm NOTICE. .

y jj G 2 rartie: from a distance can hav

o it *• P p their Wcel In Rolls hack with then fffgff tisane day.

t 11 E'3 ! GOOD work guaranteed.

«■>>? B

,.Rs'X

S 8 s g s fl

i?iÿeS

• "N, | I" \\ .triii»%

f U lit IB R IC K S !occurred. rair STUDIO

Over K. II. Gray's llriig Store.BKÏCZS ! B 320 EVEN MONEYI.

1'•msmmmemriif H ilt I'K l ? ipli Studio iii thr Ottawa \ alley. imd tliv pta«r win rv you .in* gunrauh« «I f|i>| . I.»,m . i k i

Spr mrOK S3 /1XZI. I Hum

UrurArilfr ht II 'htne pc o',•ii'l 'IH | "il ls in Xmllivrn Minnesota and llakotah liy

I lie nil'lri s; 'I' il U , » t . it | l«I lie Jint Imriitl.uge k11U ni Illicit' v lie U lu ..II. it loi s il' al

«llill.'lIlls. |»r4«*.'v

i l.in-iel'Ui. July ju“ i >' .

‘ s¥ • '

DANIEL KENNEDY. n:MBH"kt:c CEASROiT'S Art Studio, Msdn Street, Pembroke GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY.lam gratified to And that hntli house* oi Parliament have considered the conduct oi Major-Ueneral Middleton and the offlcera and men under hie command deserving of their formal thanks It ha» been an agreeable duty to bring under the notice of Her Maleaty'e Uovernment the value of the services which have been thus rendered to the Empire.

I cannot leave this subject without exprèss- *P® sorrow that the success of our arm* should have been purchased at the coat ol many lives which Canada could III afford to "W"- The memory of those who have fallen.

°JLfl.eld or. 'mm "lekness. contracted

iSSiSSSm the °n«urgentsTromt he"r f routiers.***0D

franchise to numbers who have not hitherto enjoyed the right of voting the election of members of the House ofOom- ?'<™* ,*Dd "nder such representation free

sflssp-ss

UBW I yiir.si.iii inulling through to St. Paul, Minn, with- •ill ling: ,,| , ,UN, giving -'ml elans passenger all the

h,,i" nts "f n M fcla.ss riil»*, Ivavv* BR< m.'KVILLK on APRIL, 1st, 1885, mi'l a HjK*«*lnt agent will go « illi tin-evulsion to In Ip passenger* to pass the eus-

I "Il i ul. •riu.it ion sent »n applh ation and tickets will !*<• v of |.\ Hf.jietrrfil l.rttrr III days liefore passengers nr* i .civ In start, »n receipt of money. It* tuemls r I lin t lie only agent of the 11 rand Trunk Railway in l‘« ml'iok,, and that James lv Gorman, telegraph #mee, l’i tal-roke, lia» now no connection whatever with tin* Gian I Trunk Railway.

GROCERY Just arrived, tin: largest importation of WHITE tun! (’<)/,.O HE It MA HULK ever brought to this part of the county.

Our work is too well known to require any pulling. ‘See the monument to the late Rev. Father Burns, in the Roman Catholic Church, Renfrew.

Our Motto-“GOOD anti CHEAP.”

one,

-ANDend» of justice would be defeated unless time were given to raise money to pay for the attendance of sud. witnesses. He intended to prove Insanity as an inmate of Beauport asylum, that the rebellion w as conducted by a council of which Kiel was not a mendier, nor did he take part in any of the fights. These facts could be proved by Gabriel Dumont, Michael Du mam Napoleon Neuld, Dr. Roy of Quebec, and Dr. t lark» of Toronto.

Mr. Lemieux put in an affidavit to the effect that witnesses from Quelwc, Dr. Francois and Dr R.,y. had promised to attend, but circumstances prevente'!them being in time.Mr. Greenshields contended that if the trial proceeded with now injustice wouM hr done both to the prisoner and the counsel. He dwelt at length on the right of the peonle to agitate to redress griev­ances that were now admitted on all hands to exist If an adjournment were procured Mr. Lemieux would goto Que lire and secure these witnesses, ami other cases could he taken up

Mr Fitzpatrick, supporting tlm application f,,r an adjournment, maintained that by the witnesses want­ed it could be nmved that if Riel's advice liad Wen taken not one drop of blood would have »*een shed

Counsel for the Crown asked ten minutes to aider the question, and upon their return son argued that Rial’» certificate as to I*

W V MOFFAT.F» uilnoke l‘ohl « »ttiee Muilding.

1'em broke, Maidi 17, IKk.Vv.PROVISION STOREfl ATABRHIN F JAT

FORT COVLOITOE.

CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST

FOR CASH.

'/’. J. SOMERVILLE,ffor

II. /!. Si MEIUILLE, A'jrnl.TF As for using acid to polish Renfrew Granite, it is what

Tue Bristol Iron Mine.—Few | ample in Pontiac, who have not visited the scene of operations, know the extent to which the mining industry is being worked by the “Iron Mining Company" at the Bristol Iron Mine. There are now three shafts sunk. Shaft No. 1, is being used at the present time as a reservoir; No. 2, (12 feet deep, is lying idle: No. it, which has been newly opened up, is 85 feet deep, and gives between SO and 40 tons of day. A very large machine called compressor has just been added to the plant of the company, fordrillingpurposes. Its weight is 22,000 pounds, and cost about $2,500. Its capacity is tiOO feet per day. It was manufactured by the loger

tl,r "oil I lock Drill Company, NY A great deal of trouble ensued in bringing this weighty piece of machinery from the station, twomiles below Quin, to the mines.It took 0 men and 0 teams with teaiostarg,5 days to accomplish this task. The wheels of the compressor weigh- alone 4,000 pounds, and are connected By a massive stationary bar of iron over which a tem­porary carriage, with a tongue attached, was erected and this way hauled from the station to the mine. The roads in many places are soft and springy and very fre­quently blocks and tackle had to he re

General Grant's Death. I---- ■■■ -■ ■ Sorted to ill order to move the wheels outSÏtS;F-"FÏ'Î ~ JfflmONAI. LOCAL NEWS.pain. i an wlt‘,°ut evidentl Ths Grand Conckrt at Vinton.—The added, among which will be a powerful

I11"!*»» Oram was horn at grand concert in connection with the Yin l?ni,ti,,j£ engine, capacity 2,000 tons per was therelbrerè year's'o’r'lS, aMhf'tmi'o'r ton two day's demonstration will be one d»y- The Pontiac Pacific Junction Bail his death. He was a graduate of the U.8. Mill- never before equalled in the Ottawa Val- "ay Company lias made arrangements with “u53b?.m£oalm m1 im.nlI?hh|r.emMiu,nv" ley' fcomic drama "All that glitters is 'l,e Mininï c<>'»P»'jy V have the rapaeu/the deceased Gene r alw 111 bel o nrest I not 8old » being prejared by the ladies branch line completed by the first of Oc- mSrnühla ilî.'Sun,,jvm'n- As asiates- and gentlemen of Bryson. tober, prox., and on the strength of this

--------------------- arrangement the Iron Mining Company25?.“®* £*m*rk,»b|e for any extraordinary CONCERT AT P. D. Fort—The concert are l""c paring to be able to give the Rail- Supéwlcan parTy noi h^aü^tiSra"^ which “ t*ke Place »* Portage d i Fort way company the guaranteed number of •«“Of Of eminent quallflcationT hut by on the evening of the 5th August is ex ("neper day as soon as the line is Tlmrendâ^d hïîm^lJJÎt.?rth*.!n,lltary wr- peeted to surpass anything of that nature ldotoi,\ The line will he a little leas than

e nation. I held for a long time past. Parties at- b'ur mile* long and is estimated to coatMaeess Beatrice Married I tending the celebration should alao make $35,000. The ore in this mine essays <57

.%%,%%%%% | "~"11 " I LrsjsffaXTKs•hTmllei"fromdor!L,"rTt"pp,'njf.ham■ ----------*---------- Sta,es or (’«nada. There are now twenty-The Princes,?* the yôunîsst of'ihrfOniîn'. I The Pontiac Railway.—The locating five men employed at the works, but by î£ôM.rk5’i?ïî7at.bo,;n 2" iS* Hth o«.April, engineers for the P. P. J. Ry. C'ompy , tlle Ml. the superintendent, Captain beeithe closeS%âmono%er%tbîrIin% emTed ot 0“'°■“» Thunday evening and Symons, informed us, there would be one •b* earns to tbs years of womanhood, accom- I commenced locating the line no the fob hundred or more men employed. Shaft-rrriîrffix T?r??ittl}.*lill.b” feurn<7*' •”«! lowing morning. This wp believe is the N,‘- 2 and 3, which are 700 feet apart willnamejS* Beatrlee Mary viemifc réodoie firul ,urvey G. W. Pangbom, Eatp, the be connected by an underground tunnel vil?, fut?? another name to thé contractor’s superintendent, is now cn by the spring. The estimate of ore in

lato th?™!, KISh? Of EnllfsndT^d geged with twenty men ballasting that this mine is 8,000,000 tons. The superiu-drewn t5Lîl,owan<we from that beast of portion of the road fmm Eardley to the tendent maya he has been a long time in thtSfJüwTS!, t^ELtl*-h...1*?Py>r' '".(h' end of the iron. While in conversation connection with mining but never morganatic Polish with, afterwards created I wilh that gentleman he informed us that mm0 that promised better, or sp|M>ared to CVm*1i5I e.1? waa bo,n Oeto- he expectedalarge force of men every day *le *" inexhaustible, and contain such richyear younger than his bride. ’"pcTnce aum-* I to oommeneeconitruction. Withaforceof ore ** the Bristol Iron Mine. We have «Tmo1' 4a“*r> *“• weed some fame «s a 11.000 men, he thinks the line from Quio "«doubt but that in a short time this will dull nîtiïm7uœ5?<AS«r^,p^iTn,?l,w.Kh I to Fort Coulonge could be complete! in be the most important industry in the Ot- ‘ ' el*)and PrancoOcrman ware. Prince three month». The first two milts of tawa volley, and, indued, at the presenti1.*”17,' T.1*".*111 the title of Royal High- rued from the already completed portion time is the most important in this county.

“aîtobui,d*-dLudwig Is a lieutenant In the *nd take a longer time to build than any

other “rtion ™ ‘he county.5S25Tof W** r'"*nlD* NOR NETTLE RASH. Bnmmrr Hoi. Eruption*an,Ipnnee Of Bulgaria pseral toilet purpose* use Low , Sulphur Sear

IS A SL'UECUin: I'Oit Al.l,FORMS of NASAL CATARRH.

AUSTRALIAN>vc never use.

HORSE and CATTLE SPICExs-.ra. - E3TÆLIS:ll'IV illji II liiiilmrtg

Formerly occupied by II. Cahill,

m*il out « (in»i i-r> mi l 1’mti .i..u Mur ED 10*73.Is llir In-stin the iMertiim.

THOMAS M0RA2T, Blond Piriler ail Apgtlinr,hi I lie market. A most valuable retuftly lor the ilis-

• MM K of UorseH jiiiiI I'uttlo. For low of Appvtitr, HoihjIi new of Jiuir, (ovi/lm, Coldat iHutem-

a-* a lv«tel, | will >»• Il Dp" * ru s nul Provisions nfwvry description, eheaper than tlm « In apt sl for each.rnmm Merchant-: :-tailoR

I K CEI'CONSTANTLY ON HAND

Pork, Flour.Baron, Hams.

Tra. Sugar.Raisins, Currants.

Blsritll. Crarkrrs,

X) con­i Mr. Robin­

-, b> *"*ing an alienwas not material to the raw a# there was » certified

ipeg As to the plea of insanity, lie what his state of mind six months' ago

ore j ht an air /XT, IIMhhi ml, <(r.

H Uwrence’s celebrated sj-eitselew and eye-glasses f'»r -«11 sights atin Wmnicould not •«* what hie state of mind nix months

had to do with the matter. He did not think the Crown waa exercising uuduo haste When Kiel captured he and all associated with him known that a trial would imrelv come n arrangements could he made; defence prepared. As to hr and Du maie h

mvnttbe commerce of the Dominion.

r fourJ. FINDLAY’S,J

SSKS3r-:'“OntlmcK i}/Ou Ho<m n/Cowwon.-aBjSttessagaa-aB st

must havesurely come on a* soon

is not•ringing liahiiel Dumont abeuid. and the Crown

could not entertain the idea It waa unheard of, and without precedent, to Lrwg une who had escaped from justice back to oiler testimony in defence of a man who failed to make good his escape documents found at Batoche, he believed tliev utterly inadmimhle aa evidence in the case. The documents, were regmided as Stale documents, as they might implicate others Although the Crown felt they could refuse an adjournment, still the

Pembroke, Ont.COBB STREET, IBRYSON, P. Q.It rooms. Foils. «V<\hmythlIl'J Iff thf *wy /»«»*#, mu/ II I, 1' h II'UI

he mild <>t the eery lowest Jtyme possible for ( Wi.

Aprils, 81.satisfactory state ami why wt : (iAhfii Wm. McVEIGH |ere, it wan

The scibscrihcv in returning thanks to his numerous cus­tomers fur past patronage would also intimate that ho is now in a better position than ever to till all orders in his line with satisfaction.

As to the were tît As 1 am «h |.-mimed to imlM up « hh.iu . aj*

business, |*e..|.|. Ml want of anything in m\ In» will •bid it to tin ii advantage to give me .1 rail I "fore pun basing elsewhere.

I\ Tens, - 'Bon. GtnlUntn of Iht Scnatt; Cmllrmn o/fhe ffmi* of Commons: *

The readjust ment of the tariff will tend to I .T2!U. •" *imn*,0 i™* me week, and would « increase the revenue and unahle the Govern Ith,t thr Cro,n l0"l*rite with tbe Urfenre In trip- mrnt to meet the various engagement» of thé I ii"Im’hl"Msf* ,nd ,’c*rin* thf ««pm» of

. 1 now,’with reiterated thank,, relieve von The Cfer *•» ariwted hy |I„. defenre. when (hr ■ohe present from your Important duttea. conrt *Ununied until Tuesday, the 28th, then to gn „„

peremptorily.

ToUmumJSugars, tir., &r„

*•( cptionally oud and at prive» to suit all Iwycw. mlALPHEUS COLTON.rifyIfei i'»rt Coulongf, July 16, its,

« LHM OKS :speciality

""«M 1 «aille» i»uy irly tip «a getting the very best article in the market, either for medicinal or other use.

wm mcveigh.

------ A CHEAT VARIETY OF------I As lie is making a f this branch of IuimI*

TWEEDS, ETOFFS, &c. &c„ fay A call solicited. Bryson,, June 7. 1833.own ALWAYS I.N STOCK.

zw Good Suits from Tea Dollars and upwards ITHOMAS MORAN.

rEXTRACT-iWILDllis R. BRUCE CRAY,WHOLESALE & RETAIL

CHEMIST <§ DRUGGISTPembroke and Mattawa.

Bryson, Jtm# Î.1S83.

=: JUST OPENED OUT-• .v Cl/RES?

c HOLE HaCHOLERA INFANTUM

DIR RRHΠR,AND

ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS

H

A LARGE AND EXTENSIVE STOCK OFcom-<Inh-is from tlie County of I'ontioc at

laulcd tv with cart and detpattk.<H A R D W A R F>( 'on tspondeuce tvHeited,

Pembroke. June 81,1883.______ï&QéSÆfLL Dealers.— UAHJV8T BEEN OITNEII VH BY TUB VNBBK8ICNKU IN—

Walsh’s Hall, Bryson, STAGE LUTE.

UNTIL FURTHER NOTICETHE STEAMER St. ANNE ■

(Pnilding form'd]/ ocatpird by the the Pontiac News.)

THE STOCK CONSISTS OF

Double, Parlor, and Box Stores,

Every description of Shelf Hardware,

Coal, Iron, Nails, Saws, Scales,

Class, Putty, Paints, Oils, §r., §r.

A CALL SOLICITED.

WII.LRVX

EVERY DAY,■I a(Sunday» exrrplad)

T HAVING 1 •OUTAGE DIT FORt on arrival MJ ot tinge from ('nekiiigu at II am. ron- nertlng wltli (lie I tsrxprem *i Hand Point. IJ UTUUNIXG WILE EE A VKHANI) POINT JV on arrival of •>.« rxprn»* railing at nRIHTOI. mid INTEIIMEDIATF PORTS and arriving at Portagr du Port at 5.08 |>,in.

D. SHEA’S STAGEWill have BRYSON every morning, (Sunday■ es

espied), for Portage du Fort, at 10 o'clock in tbs morning, and i et uni at half past 6 In the evening.

A Stage will also leave Bryson In the morning at 7 o'clock for Fort Coulongr, returning same day at 6 o'clock, p. m.

*4MMIPFor further parllmlar» apply to

A» l»r„„L, Po« Tlir pntsanons germe of dlnraee •fr lurking in I lie all we l.rrathe and in III* water we drink. The i.rutem .honld le kept • r»fully periled rnd ill the organ, toned In proper art Ion. This ran

tW Paaeengns will find this arrangement much to their advantage, aa the tmj I. esantneas of travellingby night will be avoided thereby.w «OWLET.

Portage da Fori. June * IM-,. DENIS SHEA.Bryaou, 0<t. 10th.

X it

Page 3: Sassesysacollections.banq.qc.ca/jrn03/equity/src/1885/07/30/83471_1885-07-3… · you ? "•• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says

THE EQUITY ; THURSDAY, JULY VU, J -c;./

<cTHE ARCADE ”SpecialTheubscriber has moved into his new premises.

Bargainee now being offered in every line to purchasers. BOOTS AND SHOES A SPECIALITY. Call a see me when you come to Portage.______________________________ C- I

Pian os & Organs.Wednesday, the°5th August, nipt,

IN THE VILLAGE OF PORTAGE DU FOR TV,

I lr W.Ui a liM' , l,Il .Ills , wi ll fulllinkIt V pUml Ha ir almost hixl Mnkr on him ;m«l'I'M I. 'I .....«■ll-rl "I I"-.

recognition of lil.s services was repose.l m a^v«l pan-lit a. aim m< «I m |»m« n with him, success followed ii|»<»ii sm-eess amt I In- ,vnrl man. An imimat is living In-M al tin-

p— i iv«* .......... ...... .mini. Th«“v can !»«• no honor loo «n ui for Ills muni ry to In-slow on all Iliai «\\isls oi him on IhlwvnrMi.—T. I*

LOCAL TA l / GEjYCE.Ti.MHru._A r.ii/,

inki'ii out on I In- i f rl last Wednesday.

Richard While's ver arrived livre

I.v i Solihkb’nI-TIio fimrial "f Hi" lair Mvul. C'ul. tt'fl'X'k plarr III I’urt lln|>r on Tut'Mluy * "N'rh, anil wa« hi -Ti:r1pàg^nuL™j:re lZnKonvP!,rr,,;ï,î: , Krnmivk Thu Mu.iual <■nnvouti,... grandest that lue passi'd through tin* recently held at Carlo ton Place was a sue

M minor n Canudfii* oesaful ft fair in every way.

I am H'i m*ak I an li «oilyIll Al I 1.1» \\ I I.I.Ymove, all run I wn with « I'hviili Suiiiiiht < "in ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___

... FOR THE NEXT TWO MONTHSI m vrf have ;

Siiiniin r <,"iii- I

tin »»tIn r 'la;, fi le ml/' gn to ytt'ir Ihin -I'l and

I l uwli-r's kxlriif I «if Wild Straw i known II I" tail hi Hiring any kiml I jilnintn."

.'r ---- 1 WILL ( » I \ h-----» m i: CI i MM ITTKK ill i liaign III III" full lirai Inn Inn" sf»:i mil un pains ii'-r ixprni." I» .n'Vgp1 Hits one ot the most successful ever held in the County of Pont iac. Those who wish V Z)

i»a«sn pleasant day should give It their patronage. The bountiful Grove of John A toy, mayor of our town, lots been kindly granted for Ihl* Celebration, where an excellent pro­gramme of K|H>rts will he gone through,and for which liberal prizes IN( \ Mil will he given to the successful competitors.

UNHEARD-OF-BARGAINSwm'.ww.'h'.mSiLtoilhiMv'lul'C- S,'«irr Ait Vl.-rouv. TI.e Soott Act Tkmpeiian. r. Mkktisu. .........................»gn du Km i hi nlii., Ixiwer Litchfield wiw carried m tho county of v ictorm mat ndmiced in uiir last issue, the mooting Xm'roiv's Churl'l'fcn2atT,*'pm"''nm j Thursday l.y nearly 500 of a majority. ; under the auspices of tlm Women's Chris"nine gniulemnn Jach on Habhnth tlm! --------- * ----- tian Temperance l nion came oil'on ThinssimJiIV'u.!" o'ni1! «‘mf'io N,1 i Hayixo,—Tho hay harvest has set in, day evening of last week. Thu ratherAndrew *81'hurcMn at 6.3U p.m. ! and ns a consofjuoitce our maehinu agents limitvd seating room which ilio town liai I

__»-------- I have a revival in business. 1 ho cut this afforded wjih all taken up .several minutesHour An.uN.-roliinteiMs of the van- , season will lie much lielow the average. 1 |K;flirc the chairman. Mr. 1). II. Hodges,

♦ T| , , opened the meeting by givmgoutthoti.ilHih Norlhwr*i, ituruwl home again. I NDBii THF. rlAMMKR,— i he jilant of the hymn, “Rescue the Perishing which8S5BS3BSI totrviM taras s

SSBBtHRUE&i......T......... ” ..... ,£ rr«S

ûr-KK!!-fc$:Krsvt sXïï .................. .....................................................................

lakes place III, Witday next, the ath pros. I 8 *- | In rcs{"iiiso to tho chairman I lev. Mr.aa^d^ïimülhe ''i^mmumonmür'.f this ' LaboeUkivk.-Sherman, Lord A Hurd Knox first address,si the meeting. Ho

i*/h 1 V1 niakiiiL'f|iarati<mK of the most man, and Perloy tV Patteo liavo one him- said he uaa gl.vl he pic.sent m connue-ifiSSfe «TiS as. tssVx * sut '5 7

S£« ?HsSS i tf52S SZt'ZS ÏSttZ ; Cï V*t

lull an oxn /inmi d from Amprlor will !«■ stream. fare of this county to have it adopted.I rescnl. I — — i Some thought it a wrong measure inas-

Coi lonok \Tj_m m* wnii r Pkiwonal.- Mr. Herald Hrabazon of much as it interfered with people's liber-|Çmibrolie, màiii/IVry èoôuent nnd'te'lîlng t*10 Surveyor's Intelligence Corps, and ties. Ho argued f lint it was no mole mi- jirldliv eV'1"! f"l’l'7l'«terti«i Chureli here, on Mr. Charles Campbell arrived in Portage just than laws which prohibited the com- ' _____. _

S3#£ss?~£SS S'XïïJSï'ZK™d^nc!S' ISS;.:At Vinton, Franktown,undurstand^vyhlire"", ie «“the/i°mln"ll this (Thursday) evening. markably silly. Others said it would m- .—ON J1,1*1 ",,tuetlilna «hoold done to help the ' --------- ♦- " — jure trade were tlm county to pass the ____

te'SSS'!.i£‘Skr:Tuesday and Wednesday, Aug. Uth and 12th, 85.'"lmnT:h'A"li A8%,""s Tnihl, fourteen months died on Saturday last accept that conclusion. IT......... |y business IX All) OF TIIE ROM AX CATHOLIC ('III IM'II.

, ork is iir.'j,,!!'fâijï." |vep«,r»') will starve.' fc,,,, tho o fleet of severe burns on the injured by it would be tho rum business ----------o----------Ii'is-l'iw1;,'sl'w"-»flfli,uieneni,ph*yod on hands received a day or two previous by those who were immediately ei gaged in ()FFI CIAL Fit 00'It, Uf.MF OF SFOIt TtS, /\r ■Ou longe rivl.îïï M-l.1"'1 ■■ The water In Hu falling on the stove. tho liquor t rallie. It was the object of —"on orihe y, „r. »u«lly high ihr thissos- — ♦ temperance workers to destroy that Imsi- FlHST D.\Y. TVESBAY, AutlVST ll’ITI.

k ,hl,wi!l^',!"“?-l?!^r ,r Hr Hardman, of IlliHUANT Meteor.—1The meteor no- ness, la-cause it had a demoralizing ellevt. *«ml .Miss juiVnie ivLfi Vi' *r 'VT'! *’ , ticed by most of our citizens on the even The passage of tlio Act would, be believed, H O'clock, A. M. HASE HALL MATCH, between two most renowned clubs.

Monday hJ: " u " ing of Hm 17th mst., was one of unusual benefit the tavern keepers, because they II “ “ MAT UK C'OCAHNE, followed by a grand Halloou Ascension.m or.rvtttage'tmvs'7'^'S and brilliancy. Most of our exchanges would thgn embark in a more respectable I " I’.M RCNN1NC HKIH Jl'MP. IIH1H POLE LEAP. HOP,

% Ottawa, With th- hm,.Xm,oi^ol„7to «lake mention of it, thus showing that it I avocation. Tlm speaker then referred to STEP AND LEAP. ONE STAXIMNfi JIMP. HALE MILE A'. M.linXIll.L. /V*wP*. '. - was observed over a wide extent of conn- the moral ell'eet produced by the adoption RACE FOR HOY’S. CL1MHINO THE SWlNOINfl POLE.iflUli""' • ^r*^' — —- ' ATIII>IAN- liy. (.film Act ill tlio Comity of Renfrew, to ONE MILE RACE FOR MEN. HORSE RACE, (4 entries or

—s—♦-------- ™ , _. * ' which he belonged. In Benehburg a re- no race.) Prize, a beautiful Silver Tray.

SEE5$s35E ss; stt-srcsstM *« % .>.« ^t 4C LZK; miS t,T%:!< lar hu,y rwi'iiu,itof 1«■ ^v“h“Wo,i,,M Wiudi-

"Un:_ houses. w.H not be an average crop. In tho flat Uquor was then allowed. Hut at a recentMessrs. Wm. ClarKe, Win. Young and Wm. '‘I!*. , 111 oristol and Onslow, however, it demonstration at which three thousand

McVcl«h- i Wl11 '""''illy iip^to the average. ,arsons assembled, what a difference was

i-BSiS ppflpp ' :SstSiS;:, sis ss^itxe SSf"ZSro «sanav ,,17.........7" SStSE

lautyne. A Eltv buvKssiri -1 lie committee vvuathur ,Vxs warm and the hour pretty Caiiien.n, Kw|., Fort Couloiige: M. Hayes, Esq.. Sheenbim. ; M. Hughes, Esq.,wdm had in ehatge the celebration, in late_ ,|t; aajll ,l0 pruccod with the CulllieldjT. Lang, Es,,.. Bristol, and S. McNally, Esq.,Calumet Island.

In view of the abundant harvest the dlrec- iimt,, is to be congratulated oil the ex- vy itlomt Huv'intnlliich irv ivneuLs' ' Tftlr lOUûOdiatûly after the SlOCtiOtt Will tâkeplftCOthO dTSWing Of the XiOttOry In?n%,*r]L Thc, —‘ XS u,:'±ii„gw: aldeftheOhmh. Prize. » Ttiuaue SU?r Tea Set abated by tho

.-------♦ — „ . ^"«l- clcarofnlloziamses foots up to to ^gauizo a I,much of the Women s young men Of Vlatoa.

BFS5teH5^$KS 77“ se T&K&ltS:

= Stiï.ririSSAK

r*.sA,,E■s:,.1;"?;:.":t™: IZ'ÜZ,','Zt'''.IZiZt''ZS a±'.t&Z8, IjltSl

s5iSSSH:3:;,^=l Tlckets, Allults 25 Ce„.s.was large, people coming from all parts of I hr ,|le i.,mr „f ,1,11 ict ion victims to its thraldom, lie spoke of theAllumette'island. A huso-ball match was !1110 _ + strong feeling which had been stirred up mB aBA.1, PRIZES

Hlo Ht siSKsx.—Air R u Feathorsloiio in tlio various churches against the liquot |..| ill* ,ip„ rn-tiliomsl H.nn. > I«.lh-lays, EnliksTrii is-rrnit onKii-i Pn/-trallie. In defence of tlio Scott Act, he

to cash purchasers of Piano» and Organs.LIST OF SPOUTS:

I SELL A BRAN NEW ORGAN .TOOROBBBWill tak': in the forenoon between two (Irat-iluee I lube, ami

TOIIBlack Walnut cas», three sets of roods, two knoo swells,FOR ONIm

BETWEEN TWO RIVAL CLUBS.Tssx JUMPING AND FOOT RACES.

Running High Leap, Sigh Polo Leap, Quarter Mile Hurdle Race, Potato Race, Sack Race, Boys’ Race, (under 11); also Men’s Race of One Milo for the

championship of the Counties of Renfrew and Pontiac; the win­ner will to presented with a beautiful Champion

ship Belt and Five Dollars Cash.I*u 11 lug Hi* Shoulder Weight.

Pianos and Organs sold on the two years instalment plan.Fnr awl fK'im mid MS

I ./. DOC U EUT Y,Eating tlM* Biiii.Variâtij Ifnll, Ani/nioi.

Arnprior, July .50, 16s T aquatic sports,/ ! .Y I'll: > 7; AT IS ri: A M F. FFF vil! ht ihorytd in •''! U" >--• v-"1-/ 7""

THEGREATESTOF THE GREAT !THIRD GRAND

VOTING FOR A GOLD HEADED EBONY CANE.Wits

k n I,iik Ih-cii a I road v announced through tho public press, a voting contest will behold im- iiHdlat. lv alter dinner to deride that Important (|U»“*lion of who is the most popular man in our County. A polling booth will be opened lor tin-purpose of part tea reeoni- Iim their votes for either of the following named geiitlemen : \\ .1. Poupore, Al l .1 ; 1 '•Nash, and I" It. Coyne, Kvpiirrs. The gentleman receiving tliegrealesl number of votes will t., presented bv the President ofth»'committee with a Cold Headed Miony Cane. Itlstol.e hoped tliat tbe*ladles and gentlemen already entrusted with canvassing books In the tnteiu>r of their respective candidate will ns. every effort to place the man of their choice at the bead of liie | ml I, as the cane I* a very valuable one.

SHORT A hUKKKSKH will !"• delivered by home of our prominent m< n on public matters.

AANNUAL CELEBRATION/

Dinner and Refreshments of all kinds can he procured on the Grounds.FIRST mss Ml SIC Mil I BK SI I* I'Ll KB.

TIIC PIPX KEPINPSOl-THE PAY Wil l. WIN P IT WITH A

Grand Concert in the Town Hall,L Which will In* one of tlie la st ever held on the 1'pper Ottawa. To •vinmrnce of A'lmission to Cnits.I loin’s oj it'll of /.

Admission to Grounds, including Dinner, 26 Cts. Carriago & Driver, 35 Ote.-----;i ii:U'RL\ Hm i rm

H Qtl BEN.CIOS SAVEJiilIX MOUSEY, ««■ :/../. L. .S I UYE, Tmt*.

P..r1a*i -In Fort, July Til:, l

Pr IANOOLISH

WISH ill INFORM THE PEU VLB OF PONTIAC lli.it I will tr.mI fn>mI

) In dimming Balloon Ascciifiiojis_aiiil_a_Graii(l Display of Fire Works; &c.Second Day Wednesday, Avcist 12tii.

QUYON TO FORT COULON&E,TWICE EVERY MONTH.Will give your old Furniture, Piano,

Pictures, See., a new appearance. A rf“child can apply it. For sale every- the commercial union.whore.

CATTLE AM) NIIKKP.Donald McLuren, Hand Point; J. Lindsay,

and J. Htewart, Horton.PIUS AMI VO IN,TRY.

John Young, Klvhard Sally and Win. Glenn. BOOTS, HARNESS, IMPLEMENTS, AND CAIt-

III AO KM.A. MeCrcdle, W. J. Hammond, and .1. J.

McVeigh.

IThere wirt no sign of drunken

t *ndon, England.rm: vumi iikiti^ii and mercantile,

Ldmburgb and Londeu;iGÏ \»GUW A Mi LONDON, Great B.lUin

* BRITISH AMERICAN, T-ronto.NATIONAL, 11 eland.THE ROYAL < ANADIAN. Montreal,WESTERN, Toronto.LANCASHIRE, Manchester, England.

Tlio l.iiKinees dour by the late C A Smith west iif Vuulouge has also been placed in my hands. ^^Having l.-id four years' hence in the insurance

I businva# i*« "pie i'an safely rely upon nit to do their ! business c rreetly. 1 would also take this opi.ort>in-

it y to thank the people of Pontiac for Last patronage and G'g to solicit a continuance of tin-same m the futur*.

Pembroke, May 28th, lb8.j.

MEEDS. i:

WALL PAPERS,

FANCYGOODS,LA I)I ES DKPARTM ENT.

Mesdames F. l’urvls, H. Mutheson nnd D.J. Craig. ARTISTS' MATERIALS.

Books and MagazinesMTrUKI) TO OlIDER.

Picture Framing lone in every Style.MIRRO

Of .*11 kinds supplied to order

.1 II. BROMLEY.AT SEVEN O’CLOCK

-:A GRAND CONCERT:-I hi sttuir rrnj *listinyi'idied Musii iftiu vndcr flic aide manayement of Mr*. Price oj Bryson.

TICKETS .... 25 TEXTS. fURNITURP L URNITURFI urniturL

Orders by Alail /o'oinjdly attended fo.

GEORGE FRASER,John St. • • Arnprlor, Out. -----

Amprior, Fob. 3, IrtSl. |MEALS AND REFRESHMENTS ON THE GROUNDS AT ALL HOURS.Children under 12, 15 Cents. '

mini k.BurdockBlood

Bitters

Art A GENERAL THING people will say that they % must go to Ottawa or Montreal to buy their rur-

■ niture; but if they would consult their own inter* ■'t* W thw .would not go a step further than Portage du^ Port, os there they will lind the uubscriber selling! fl

plavod between the clubs of Allumette Inland and Westmeath village, the Westmeath boys

, 1 i " «». «rg,„„e„t ^heart. Various sports—running, Jumping, ! nanv Ima been doino a larim huainoss this 8ulno tlmt it was nota prohibitory act, rtliouM llir wratlur provr unfavorable, the Dcmonatratmn will lie «•ontinuM ThurMlay, August l.ih,I &L He ha. already dfa|mW »f »nd quoted the law thereon to show that

rash prizes. A very interesting feature was twenty-two car loads of implements, in no ease dul it permit the saio ot liquor tjl(, for thousands.

::é1:lEïHiESs:™^:'t-ti:::1Fil::'i?iFrH?si Jomouu, jahloan, pat . kavaxagb, johnfebngan,EEsFHHESi-E™; S™ 53^: ............j» ™*'

those who w ished to dance had been erected i 0f tho company which ho represents. 1 r?“l these parties lie thought nounder the trees, and was well patronised | *______________ / man with sound sense would say theSSssSSS^SSS, ■'v,T'”,d‘w'i; ’'“V'i”"' V, STauffU! Notice.

SKSKBîESH SSiSnsapplied towards the erection of a new school tor of the nriatol congregation has accept- jn this connection lie instanced the Co. vim* of Ontario, Fnrm*r. will, plenw, hmneUiati ly house ill the section. On the whole the pie- cd a call from the congregation of Man- C u.u,ltl -, *iin ul... ... ,,f „im» f.vle Hum at the ofttve of the nndentlgiit d Notary Pub-

not yet heard what the proceed* amounted to. shortly t" move. Tho Ilev. gentlenian for tho purchaae of liquor; 3,93*1 of thesebv his kind, affable way. and exalted been «iron by three doctors in Oak-

«ïs»« îïïæiïsi: s,îstj£it:mmmmâ sss-sa=cisprovetl as expected to lie the grandest of lHE > INTON LiOTTtPA.— I hose who desolated homes, - it liad broken mother s

a5SE®was?a?«the different military corps with the sober quested to make their returns before collent; lie considered it a tremendous

ü"£n°/ zaizra th° 6thl"f.ug,.,,t’ ii8t.,rd™r,gof tho . . ..well deserved, was paid to the brave heroes same will take place oil the 12th. be banished from the statute books. The

SSaaSsS -Mirerais j-ess a tetsa twere e.pm laity appropriai,, mid profil»,' sud of Mrs. S. Prive. All who attended tho liquor tn .the, and supported his argument taring lluttci TiiFw tlwy uir |«p«rot l«

isnss ttySSi Sit Rvprnte all Mm eilml-OUai«a«ain wiKîmor sd|»p|sj"dHf- witl} the oiitertainmont this year i»romiaos force, and the Province of Ontario, under LAUUUIU (HI UlUUlU UUUUUl erent of course I “ta nature, but as ususf most a still grainier success. the license system. He also gave figures j i iL mith Ihn nfmnnt

& San,eux A-raJu ^v,. Last u,“m 6(1 (0 lU Will 1116 «SItied somewhat to lliescviic as tlielr presence Monday evening about 7:30 o’clock tho tlio commerce nf the country. Ho gave _ J IL - lîlnhn mill

sSHSSSf ; :cs%.- uispatcB,and toe Tonswill „„AWi U..„ULIssssSkS®s2."s^sm,‘si.*be iii toot mrrCemetery Worki 0TTfWA„1”7”’,ifsy on account of the arrival of the (mows turned out that a young mail named Pat- could 1,0 effected mid the comfort pro- "" 111 Ull U lu tjl * U U1UIJ nr m vivnmv ! »s Wyman. filaga 1m,m Uli lintel eicry mnramra::ro?tt,.a:2 as.ri=k ny.„, m L iwr. ^ r7.„, duced b, it, .wison Mr -of the campaign as far a. Ottawa I» concern- had Imeii trying a new Winchester line, was list ailed to throughout lus lecture

wm».«•ere receiving well deserved honor» or those Charles Cooper, wlm was sitting at his own following turtles from Pembroke: Mr.SS?S^^MlIdlnvViS' thTlS; ***, U*. ull entering the back and pass- Porcival, Alra and him Pcpcival; Mrs.

Ilian ordinary interest displayed proved eon- inu out through the groin. Medical aid Hunter, mid Mrs. Williams. At the close

SsvSS'ESZ:1 ssi” srtair s («.ÿiK %% j »««■• «*** *SStSiKtSSS ira’rt œs es cy,5 ^ «*« *» <* xregret ami sympathy. It Is of eourw as a very kuenly over the matter. His friends a branch Union. This end was satis mrbïïStMr’&nomSr .r'hJ’wl.m are doing everything |»«ible toward, the factor,ly attamedand officer,.glinted as

In the pa*t quarter century attained an a1- comfort and welfare of the wounded man. follows. J resident, Mrs. J. J. Mac- a gpecwMl/.mowt commanding flguro In J*1* : —Since writing the above, wo deeply ro- donald; Vice president, Mrs. T. Htitt;2ï5*Ul5SS KÎfBffgSSS. M;! M th»« Charles Coo,Kir tlio vie- Recording Secretary, Mia, Amanda Moor-

war of the North mod South, where he carved | 0f the unfortunate shooting accident head ; Cot .SecraUiy. Miss M. M« < ’uoig; me'":i,cn:%Z%ao%;Zt«trZ: I died yesterday morning about eleven Treasurer. Mm. Harkc.

THE BEST OT MUSIC IN ATTE NUANCE..Parlor Setts,■ BcflrooCSetts,

Tables. Chairs.i Sideboards.WILL CURE OR RELIEVE BILIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS,

FLTOrGHr«T, iiucnt nccuin'iH'e which a l»*»ttlp *>r two of Murdock JAUNUICu* Ur I ML ilLAn11

> BI-nnI Bitters would entirely rvmovr. It regulates thv FRYSIPELAS. ACIDITY OF> Slnmai'h, Li%X‘r, Bowel* nml Blootl to a hesltliy ertlou. RHEUfVl THE STOMACH|

HEARTBURN,’HEADACHE,

»

5 Ciipboanis,l hr Nht stvie, with the very t*e»*t of

in- that the ni"*t fastidloua cannot lie beaten in either

Unit' Il III' III workmanship. and at a tigi , .muot < ax il at, and which

im'«I cities.of the aU.vi'-nai■ifOrders by mail promptly attended to.G DRYNESSFor Salein OF THE SKIN,

itoo:SOW ON CF*

ce-oo:! OK ALL KINDS OK KVKN1TVRK

Bedroom Setts from 118 to #200.

S. A. M M KAY,Notary Public. SCREW STEM PING MACHINE. Prive, i 3.

Apply toAPortage du Kurt, July 0,1883.JOHN* STEWART. Clarendon.OTTAWA JOTTINGS. T. MILBÜRN & CO...tunc 33rd, 1MI3.THE CLARENDON BOTTER TUB ALMONTE

, MARBLE and GBAHITE

TDOYALrt j^/j-ATLSTAGE LINE,

FACTORY ('nil what in Portage.

A. W. SWALWELL.Portage du Fort, Rev. 11. 1884.

T.< (iyain in full blunt. WORKS. iBETWEEN-

PORTAGE DU FORT and HALEYS. gpySON POST OFFICETIME TABLE.

HE PROPRIETORS ln*g I* ainiouiue tint in, roinntoiivltig tills muhii'i buitiiietoe ill iiiauuf.u

OT MiES I ta xv tbv <M!u" a ll"h 1 »x.iv di'. < vepl ' O Miiil.i'*. it Half pad "in with tlio mail »•• on I n«vt with tin traite g#*lng east. Regular coiineot lou

Ui.i Ui vui) d.i) xtitli traiusgoing Nuetlt.Monuments,Headstones, ARRIVES.

Pnnple travelling from Portage l»u Fort to Diiatol, j Qu)on or Axlmrr, will find it convenient to stop at From Kurt Coulonge, Vinton,

Hathaway, ■ Calumet Ialand, Colltield, daily, (Sundays ex

-AND- the

9.00 a.m.CCptCil,

Wyman'# LEAVES.(Sundays excepted).

For Portage du Fort, Bristol, Quyon, Sliawvillc, Thome, &c„ and all Dointa east and west ou tho O.P. Ry........

il THE STAGE LINE going NORTH,They are (tho seltimj four .-FOR—

Bryson, tori Coulons? anil Inter-meillnlc points

«In lc.it» flic OTTAWA HOUM retry nmrstSR excfvt Sunday).

Order. by talegraa or inter for q* W .Uptoe.C.l’.R train.. .1 Ucalcy., *111 receive |-r. m|-t atlee

9.16 a.m.MARBLESsizes oj an improved Ouk DashRETURNS.

—AN1>—From Portage du Fort. — 6 30 p mLeaves fur Oetdonge................. 7.00 “

Office hours 8 a m. to 8 p m.Money order and Savings BstsV h iurs

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.E B. D LAP-------

GRANITE.thi.iy. White ash butter tubs Designs and Estimates fur­

nished on application to J. A. PHILfJPS,

ftrupmttvf, Almonte, Ont. Aluiuntfi, June *, MR

tlim.DANIEL MACDONALD,

PROPRIETOR.STEWART BROS. tCUrondon, Juue 23, 188V P S.—Poel OlBvc jddrrsM. Bryson. Q«ie

Bryson, Due. 22, 1884I'.nlyc Pli rut. >l "l IS, MSS.

Page 4: Sassesysacollections.banq.qc.ca/jrn03/equity/src/1885/07/30/83471_1885-07-3… · you ? "•• Oh, everybody knows everything about everybody else in a place like this Irving says

PAUL (S) ABÏtoEE (Sî

«3J

1SEND FOR CIRCULAR ANt) STATÉ^c,.» •

« The Mlnluiere' Poor WagesaoiEimno and übbtül. RCM ibyfrightening Children.With painful frequency we hear oi cruel

“ practical joke» ” perpetrated upon little children. Again and again oomei to ua the old «tory of a child frightened int<> convul-

by a playfellow who “only wanted toOne would think that

Afc? 1» it i t KSs i i IOS. | A TâLB OF^SHIPWBEOK— Example 1. Three hundred dollar! par

The British Government officials are tnak- year without parsonage, ing experiments with a new locomotive tor- g Mve hundred dollars per year by a pedo steered by electricity from the shore. churoh occupying a sanctuary costing over

It is now claimed that birds as nearly as possible imitate the neeta in which they were reared, and bring to the work a sort of rod- mentat y reason.

The camphor laurel, a native of China, and the tree from which most of the camphor of commerce is obtained, has been success­fully introduced into Ualtornia

Dr. K. Von Lendenfeld found traces of glacial action cu the highest peaks of the Australian mountains. No evidence of ice action was found at less than 5,800 feet above

•«Con lined lor Three Bays In Ihe Hell of â Cap*sized Mil*.

The story of a poor woman who, with her know h, has for man three children, was imprisoned for seventeen

hours under a capsized boat, has recalled to of our correspondents a similar case of

Mml no longer is it 8Utfering which he thus describes. The leidere.l an vxil omen to com brigNerina, of Dunkerque, sailed from that

twoikon that day. A place on Saturday, October 31, 1840, under • opposite extreme, and the command of Capt Pierre Kveraot, with e best day tor good luck

iI.hW «U«iHow ¥ rhla> I» K#hwI lu l°,fVo in in «TM*

cis <I|ÙBr riday, as every ont yrara Lot'll regarded Ly many hh an unlucky day. But gradually Un--au perstition regarding the day is dlwppeai ing generally

$20,000, and no parsonage.S. Attending funerals In families not be­

longing to the congregation, with no claim upon the services of the minister, who rides six or seven milee, perhaps In a storm : then goes to the cemetery, spending the greater part of the day, and with nothing to eat, and receives not one cent for services, nor even the thanks of the bereaved who sent for him.

Bit'll» mmmm mhave a little fun incidents like this had been enacted and told with ghastly Iteration often enough from generation to generation to warn oil the most incorrigible fun lovers and fools from the dangerous ground. The progress of the witless plot is generally the same up to a certain point. There is neither origin ality nor variety in the favourite mode of cution. It soundstrite in telling. A figure wrapped in the conventional sheet lurk­ing in the dark corner ; a spring upon the unsuspected victim, selected because he it- the most timorous or delicate of the fami­ly or sch'ol; dismay, shrieks of anguish blent w ith goblin laughter—then a diller-cnee in the ending parent harm is done, unless that one child is made more timid, another n'*»re cruel

unbalanced

•one

.7x -

& PUMPS FOR : ALL PURPOSE^.,.V*port. <o t

moifew

i*i*Sof oil atul canvas for Marseillesa cargo\« h.> 10 defy tradition nur burden was about 114 tons. The crew satisfied themselves consisted of seven persons, including the

captain and his nephew years old. At three o’clock in the afternoon of Monday, November Kith, they were forced to heave to in a gale of wind, at about ton or twelve leagues southwest of the Scilly Islesa heavy sea struck the vessel, and she sud­denly capsized, turning bottom upward. The only man on the deck at the time w as thrown into the sea and drowned.

4. Supplying pulpits for congregations that pay their pastor $2,000 or $3,000 |>er an

and receiving $I0 because one servicey of the nvst iuqort

lent and modemhoy fourteen oie

bvn an•option on Friday, or , and, therefore regard d;iv. There are other

mini,only ie required, one being dispensed with, when the supply ie at considerable expense in getting to the church, and spends the liest part of three days in filling the engagement, and is prepared for both services, and kn not what he will receive until the services

am •••vs;ti the sea.A Bavarian chemist is reported to have

invented an enameling liquid which renders any species of stone or cement barder than granite,and gives it the indelible appearance of any mineral that may be desired.

An English w.iter points out the proba bility thut a smoky atmosphere is not a whol­ly unmitigated evil, since its carbon and sul­phur must absorb ninny germs of disease, ami tend to prevent the s4 read of epidemics.

•• riuoun 1 rTHl SOYAL ENGLISH lloRH* AND CATTLE UNA- |

MENT AND WASH EOK DOMSHTIO,ANIMALS.», ^JwTA|Mll LllHEb

‘ WHITBY, ONT.

,lu(lip. Four I'rnf.iwr., .iK hn Iwly

thorough woe., snd wrol reasonable • pecU- lions of the beet patrorsge. Btu entasrw PJÇ}1*1

. à for trochees snd mstrkuladon »s».lh»tio»e.

h, snd definite sppUoshoe to J. J. BAllh, M. A., Principal. ____________________________ ____ .

• OoUEtiE,l1 k wl-ich are regarded as unlucky, and a f« w even intelligent of the comme-

Monday as indicating what t dm in the following days

their business. One of

\t sex en o'clock of the same evening

Sometimes no ap have all been rendered.5, Travelling over one hundred miles to

reach the pulpit to be supplied ; met by the elder at the depot, who takes him to sick person, preaches preparatory sermon at night, administers the communion the next morning, baptises a child in the afternoon, | ] preaches in the evening. For which $10 is put into his hand as a remuneration, and by a congregation having a fine church, a beauti ful lecture room, and a magnificent parson

it

In the forecastle were three seamen—-Vin­cent, Vantaure and Jean Marie. The two foimcr succeeded in getting up close to the keelson, and so kept their heads above water.Jean Marie was not so fortunate ; he musthave been in some measure entuigled, for af- I for his tormentor • prank with his ter convulsively grasping the heel of Van- or hi, life. In a less tlagrant manner incal taure for a few seconds, he let go his hold ouittbl© mischief is done in many nurseries and w as drow ned. The other two, finding tales of ghosts, bogies, the black that the shock of the upset had started the w|lQ vomei down the chimney to catch chib bulkhead between the forecastle and *hc dren who will not go to sleep quietly, etc. hold, and that the cargo itself had fallen ^he mother is culpable who, when she finds down on the deck, contrived to draw them hcr unduly timid, docs net watchselves alongside the keelson toward the stern rowiy for indications that tho of the ship, whence they thought they heard ganisro of her oilspring has been tarn pew) some voices. At the time of the accident the and who, should her suspicions be concaptain, the mate, John Gallo, and the hoy prmed| docs not follow the clue to its source Nicolas Nissen, were in the cabin. I he cap ^ banish the criminals from the house tain caught the hoy in his arms, under the | impression that t' eir last moment had ar

ÈmmimêmNicholas Churchill came to Newfoundland

as tmi i\ haï U of cue of our cities, TJ jthe $ Again, the nervous system is

so far that a swoon, or, as in tho case beOnce in a while

see a a Wo oc S3k few yt 1rs i::o,wouldnoteveu pay n that day on any consider­

ed would tviu let a note go to pro ather than pay on that day. He was,

precise business man that tc which would become Among foreigners here

jss who will bemoan a me of th<m will court

ofore us, convulsions ensue the innocent subject of the practical joke

reason

>A concentrated solution of bichromate of

potash and glue makes a cement tor articles of broken glass which will resist boiling

It is carefully applied to the surface,

tea25r. si Lût'water

and when the broken glass parts are brought together the wiiolc is exposed to the

F 3he sold; in gave due on Monda there is a large dull Monday, and

i nft *mail

Iactionage

These five examples are actual occurrences, flQyjl %&!! StB&IDSlllpS

and known to 500 ministers snd moreof the sun

Many soft timbers, especially walnut, are destructive to the cutting ed*e of

g to the first customer ruing at a nominal

good luck by selli who appears Monday i

Others have for various reasons lllilSNT , to llteîpf ol fortnlrhtli duriu, ijssw moi ibiAbout our lot in life, we cannot deny that SMSany are exempt by their po.ition from the g^*a5»BSSS,7JttSScommon lot of pain and .offering. The high- other Informado.est as well as the most humble must be ever eppl-10 Bchumacher k Co., Baltimore i B

(trnard fc Co.. Halifax : Shea *Ca. 8t John. h m N. F.j Wm. Thomson à Co., bt John, N. B.

" Government House, Ottawa," asking for a Allan. Portland. Boston. Montreal, supply of “Putnam's Corn Extractor ' we

reminded of two things— the first, that universal, and secondly, that Put-

Painless Corn Extractor is icccgn re

moreplanes than harder w ood, sued as oak. The

the presence of extremely minute

narnervous orfigure

selected other days of the week as lucky or unlucky. From the number of marriages

Thursday and Tuesday it would appear that these days are regarded as lucky ones

lly Inclined. The ques-

Co in plain as we mayreason iscrystals of silica in these soft woods. These particles are of uniform size and evenly dis­tributed through the tissue of the w ood.

VI

Mr. F. W. Clark has exhibited in Londonby the mat tiou of the influence particular days may

of a couple docs not, enter the minds of

on the alert to take advantage of such meanssystem of gas lighting for privatea newhouses by means of recuperative lamps, ity a ventilating method the lamps consume their own smoke, and the burners are so formed that the requisite air is heated to a high temperature and admitted to the lamps at the point of ignition.

have upv . Ihowever, appear t those w ho r

Country storekeeper, anl ethers Eaedlleg mmê . raefclag Better wUl flodjl to their edvanSagelO

CAUTION I oîieirated Walker, Butter Worker,iway from their homes for

\ irginia couplesthe purpose of marryü gto regard tlie opportune day as their

lucky day. That the matrimonially inclin­ed generally regard Friday as a had day to commence married life is evidenced by the

look in the office of th 1 0f ; he captain. In alxiut an hour they were # v . .urt, which often remains j0jned by Vinr ent and Yantaure from the surplus earnings in rea e8 k ,n ,n*\am

closed during that day. Probably during | forecastle. There were then five persons INewfoundlan . - 18 eR a '°U

the year less than a dozen licensee are issuedThe fact that in this section of

areseem£where stores are gem rally stowed away.::r,rs&rrus i - - »• - - -

He was very prosperous and in vet ted his

corns are is. Price list snd olfSpecial sises for use of fsi olsrs sent on sppiiostlon to

jumn*41 to IT IT. LAWlKVOf MiRKKT. tOROWT*

EACH PLUG OF THEnam sby all claiies as the most certain, painlee and non-poisonous remedy for corns. Ho­

of the article just as good, snd use only MYRTLE NAVY18 MARKED

T.tScZB.

CURIOUS FACTSmarriage In clerk of tl aim t wen.------ ware

The giraffe has never been known to utter ] Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor.

It does us good to admire what is goodthirty years later, ho left some $10,000,000 $1-2,000,000 to hie daughter, Elizabeth

Churchill, a whimsical lady living in Keg- Eliraiveth died without marrying.

and added

a sound.Swans have been known to live to the age | an(j beautiful ; but it does us infinitely

of 300 years, and Coxier thinks it probable that whales sometimes live 1,000 years.

It is said that the crime of parricide was I we jove> unknown in one of the states of ancient In the manufacture of tobrcco from theCr< eve until a law w as enacted for the spe- sugar or molasses and gum of some kind cial punishment of such a crime should it oc-1 are uled. In the manufacture of the “Myr­

tle Navy" brand the sugar used is the finest On one of the Azoro Islands, St, Michael’s I * hite loaf, known in the trade as granulated,

the people invariably drop the family name, ^his is a sugar in w hich there is seldom any each being known by entirely different un- adulteration, but to guard against the p'S like titles. The same rames arc also applied §|bility of it, all sugar used in the factory to either sex indiscriminately. {, submitted to < areful tests of its purity.

Some time ago the two year old baby of | jhe gum used is the pure gum arable.Owen Walker, of Marshall, swallow ed a cop-1 Wjjen â g(ri j8 young si e wants numer- per cent. All efforts to remove the coin pu- but when she grows older herfrom the child's stomach proved unavailing, increase and she desires several doband the little one has been grcx% sg weaker 1#*#. day by day. Strange to say j je child is turning blue. A heavy blue circle under .g ^8t 0f man or woman e filleted with the eyes was first noticed. This began to | dist ase or derangement of the liver, resulting

spread and is gradually extending.

loscly ' ooped togetherAs they sat they were ohlige«l to bend Ie r STANDARD SCALESon Fridays

the country Fridays are selected as the day I their bodies, for want of height above them for min.* tir h .ngnnn s noose doubtless has whRe the water reached as high as their something to do with the selection of other waiBts, from which irkseme petition one at a days for tying thv matrimonial noose. Now time obtained some relief by stretching st and then an aj pi leant will appear at the | fu]l length on the barrels iu the hold, s*|ueez-

clerk

more good to love it. We grow like w hat we admire ; but we become one with whatland

She w as a good business woman much to the property. She died in I87t>, at thp age of one hundred and four years.

thine in lin k it in more unlucky to postpone I skylicht and then into the la/arctte through ti**,nent caMie 10 Mr' M“' ’>• an IC at of the license than to get th' ^ hatch in th. cahin floor. The day and '«8» to make inve.tig.tion 14‘.h* aomo

' lay, November 17th, and the time to establish the proofs, hut he thU.ks. h«lay following, , awed without food, without •>»» ha. made .t out a clear caae. Mrs Mai -y,

myth, l gy presides over love and marri-1 relief almoit without hope ; but still each the mother of the cla.man •wa8 a.

dates ami names copied and arranged so that the American family have little doubt of sue

, In this belief they are supported by ral lawyers in New York. There are eight

IH 1IR0HZB LETTERS

NOME OTHER GENUINE^CUT THIS OUT I

tht* day when he gives the name will show curweresymptom* of hack 11 assiaunt clerks intimate that if there is any

kChca a

The New Co-Operativethe pro vu reinmarried on 1 rviy, for that day, named | niglxl tf l ues

in the North

s.

Sewing JJachine !Irrs wlafter 1ernage, is the best day of the week for the candidates. This argument is generally a I iuage the pangs ( f hunger by chewing the knock down, and tho applicant pays the ba*k stiipped from the hoops of the casks, dollars and reviews his transportation papers Want of treeh air threatening them with to the state of matrimony. There are quite ,ieath by suffocation, the mate worked al­a number who, not regarding the question m0Bt incessantly for two days and one night <>f hek, ad< pt the axiom, “ The better the jn endeavoring with his knife to c ut a hole day the be tit *he dee-1, and select Sunday through the hull. Happily the knife broke for tv in/ the knot, in which uiuw the license. | |,cf„re lie had succeeded In •vuompltehtuM bie

object, the result of which mint have proved That to home extent the superstition re- I fatal, as the confined air alone preserved the

entcis into the minds vc88el in a sufficiently buoyant state. L

Are Ihe Best. At­tested by the Fart that tor rc are more of our loslre to use In the Dc minion than of all 0'her makes combinedHleek and Foal

Cr."r.t «="!#»' Seales, Sralea for lleiuotic lee.

Housekeepers Consult l our BestInterests

SEE,1

*Sjdc2iC: ms u.uô,tiy»p2i

application.

enrol

------IS THK------BEST IN THB MARKET,

:«KW STAID ! SEW lUmunTM I

Latest Improved AttachmentsAgents price for similar machine IBP

Our price only 125 each.

A Sad Case of PoisoningBay.cess

8€VCrelatives of the ancient fisherman living in this country and they have delegated Mr. Malby to look aftor their joint iutereats.

< .ne of the claimants to this immense for­tune is a modest unasuming carpenter liv-

accumulations in tie blood,I in poisonousA Mo iongahcla, Pa., cat is credited with 1 ^.^^y^rons affections, sick headaches, and

preventing the burning of a house last Win- diseases ofthe kidneys, lungs or heart. These ter. It is stated that the family all went ^roub|ei out one evening, and upon their return found I prjmary that a live coal had been thrown out upon y,eaithy condition. To acct mplish this re- thj carpet setting it on fire. For some dis- gult 0peedily and effectually nothing has tance around tbs flace the carpet had been provej itself so efficacious as Dr. Pierce's scratched to shreds and the blistered feet of | •« Golden Medical Discovery," which has their feline pet showed that it was through his efforts that a serious tire was prevented. | ^ never will

Italian antiquarians have discovered false

be cured < nly by going to the and putting the liver in a

is procured on the day befor cancause, Before buying send us stamp for our elegant photo

M auhintiS1^vlnT^i for three years and sent otIn *n Torontogarding different

of those w ho go t«> law anl members of the j jea(^ 0f the night of Wednesday, the 18thbar is sIt has often lx-en remarked that for com

and

trSTA $400,000 Fraud.A matrimonial agent lately appeared like

third blew the stern dropped so much I meteor am| disappeared in Paris, taking meeting cuits Friday must be regarded as I tbat a|| hands were forced to make the b?st g-j 000 with her. She hired a room andunlucky, ..a it sometimes happens that not a 0f ^hdr way forward toward the bows ; at- |n#er^(j aQ advertisement to the effect that asingle suit is entered on that day in the Unipting which poor Vincent was drowned. ^ hdrei§f the owner 0f $400,000, was district courts. Tbit; is said by some to M After the lapse of an hour or two, finding the I xioui ^ ft huab&ncl who would berather caused by habit than by any super- water ebbing, Gallo got down Into the cabin, w|p|ng overlook an error committed in stition that the bad lut k of commencing a anj while aeekieg for the hatchet which was youth. On the day after this adver-suit on Friday will lead to deft at usually kept there, was forced to rush up tieement appeared twenty eligible suitors

The superstition concerning Friday is fast again for shelter to avoid being drowned ; appj-e(| (jU|to prepared to be indulgent for becoming a thing of the past, though the the sea rising on him rapidly. Another hour the bygone error |n consideration of thehabit, which had its origin in that super-1 or two of suffering succeeded, and then they h%ntlsoine fortune. The matrimonial agent

were rejoiced to see by the dawning of the receive(j tbem separately, told them all that day of Thursday, the 19th, that the vessel ghe coul(| not g|ve the name or address of the was fast on the rocks, one of which protrud-1 hejrcg8 gioo were paid down in ad-

ed up through the skylight.The captain then went down into the" va

Any lady wan eg a machine will do well So write h

The Go-Operativeu lv the dockets of the courts, the vessel suddenly struck heavily ; on the

GURNEY&WAREHAMILTON.

failed to do the work claimed for it, Selling Machine Co.ntvtr

.... , A .. . A Wisconsin man was reported ta “mor-teeth in a skull which has been excavated in der6g » *hen the word should have beenan ancient Etruscan cemetery, with many « m0rried,” but the distinction was soother curiosities at present stowed safely slight uiafc the proof reader let it pass.away at the museum of antiquities at Com- what can be more disgreeable, more disto, in Tut cany. The sepulchre out of which guitiDgt than to sit in a room with a personthe skull was taken dates, according to ex- wbo is troubled with catarrh, and has topert», from the fifth or sixth century B. C„ keep coUghiDg and clearing his or her throatand the false teeth are nothing but animal 0j tbe mucue which drops into it? Such perteeth attached to the human teeth by means | a|ways to be pitied if they try to

themselves and fail. But if they getJoseph Robins, hailing from Chicago, is I ^ Sage’s Catarrh Remedy there need be

known in aide ahow circles as “ The Human J faijura.Furnace," because of the peculiar propertiesof his breath

Waishoüsis—Montreal and Winnipeg,82 JAMES 8T. SOUTH. HAMILTON

$10 Be ward for the ConvictionMcCOLL’S fericr Oil of Other

MatufactUid lorOf Dealers who Bell in-

LARDINEtion, still remains |Silof small gold platesHOG STORIES cure RApparently there was not a___ among the twenty applicants, for they

owner s brand upon them is the admiration I bjn and found that the quarter of ^the | aii paid the commission and were scut to• was stove in, and looking through the open I variouB towns In France with false address-

A Clinton, Ky., dog, who had been the pet ing be called out to his companions, “Thank | ^ 0Q & fooVe crrand. Nineteen of theof his master, quitted the house when the Qod, we are saved ; I eeeaman on the beach." i fcwenty y|ctiml lacked the couragemaster one day brought home a wife. Immediately after this the man approached mUB$câte with the police, but one cf them

Senator Vest has a dog that, after being ^ put in his hand, which the captain ridicule in order to be revenged, andtaken to church one Sunday, was found the eeized| almost as much to the terror of the wbo obtained $‘2,00u so easily is tie-same af ernoon in the woodshed, with a lot niAn M to the delight of the captain. The actively inquired after, of dogs about him. standing on bis hind legs 0f the neighborhood were soon assemin a dry goods box, holding an old almanac . the B|jB 0f the ship was cut open and

forepaw, while he gesticulated tbe fonr fellows were liberated after anwildly with the other. He swayed his head | entombment of three days and three nights | dynastyand howlrd to hi» audience of d( gs.

A fishing rod was seen Heating in a Con­necticut sticam, and it was evident that a big fish w as at the end ef the line. No boat being at hand, Charles Earle of New Haven sent his w ater spaniel after the rod. I he dog grabbed the rod at the thick end snd began to swim back with it, but the fish ob jected vigorously. Finally the dog was pul-

He came to the

wise evanceA dog w hich can pick out cattle with his

<3Mmanrr ,. I. . j 44 Which do yon like the beet, MissTo prove his claim to the Floreno0| ^wlng or driving ?" he asked as

title, he, some time ago, lit a match by blow* be ggged Into her azure eyes. 41 Oh, driv­ing hie breath upon it ; set fire to a piece of |ngf by all means." 44 Why ?" 14 Becausepaper, and singed the hairs on the back of a you have to use both hands to row.” They man's hand in the same manner. But the | wen*1 driving,

best test of all was when he lit a kerosene lamp three feet distant from him by blowing I This is always the case when Poison's his breath through a piece of stovepipe on to Nerviline is applied to any kind of pain ; it the wick. He was unable to explain his pe- I B sure to disappear as if by magic. Strcnger, culiar faculty, further than to assert that he more penetrating, and quicker in action became possessed of it while a child, when than any other remedy in the world. Boy he was ill for several years, and the physi- a bottle of Nerviline to-day, and try its won-

gavc him large doses of sulphur. He derful power of relieving pain of every de- asserted his ability to make water boll as | eorlption. Ivin cannot stay where it ie used,

easily as he could light a match

■cColl Bros. A €#• Toronto,

of a Montana town | For W, by ill leading dealer* |to com

ALBERT COLLEGE,(In Affiliation with Victoria University, Cobocrq,) Belleville, Ontario.

*«■8FOR " ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT" AND CIRCULARS, AD DU ESS

As If by Magiclate

The Kings.The King>f Greece is the founder of aunder one

The spot where the vessel struck is called King Humbert was 17 years old before a Vorthellivk, in the the Island of St. Mary's, I kingdom^ Italy existed.Stilly. She must have been driven on the ^ wM“ ^ Mt of abdicatlon that made rocks soon after midnight, at sliout the Frftnoil Joeeph Emperor of Austria, riod of high water, and was discovered at about 7 o’clock on Thursday morning by a

accidentally passing along the cliffs. In

cians

It ie jolt tho thing to have in a house to meets sudden attack of illness. Only ‘26 cents a bottle. Sample bottki « nly 10 cents

REV. W. P. DYER, M A., President.Don Carlos ie watching to pounce upon

the crown of the young Alfonso.The King of the Belgians is about the only

European sovereign throne and reached it

The Kings of Prussia, Portugal and Swe­den were born younger sons, the King of Denmark a distant cousin, and the Queen o England but fifth in succession of the reign­ing sovereign.

Eating Before BleepingIt is a common impression that to take I at any drug store,

food immediately before going to bed and to Hailing among lovers is thexjeu neighbor sleep is unwise. Such a suggestion is an ^ forgiven•wered by » reminder that the imtlnct oil,. Rnptarg radically cured, al.o pile tu

animal, prompt, them to .leep a* »oon u mM| ^ H,tui„. p.mphlet of p, rile alar, they have eaten ; and in summer en after- ^ utUr ,Umpi World., penury Med dinner nap, eepecially when that meal u icil A-ooirtiollf Buflelo, N. Y. taken at midday, is a luxury indulged in by

If the ordinary hour of the evening

mananother half hour the returning tide would have sealed their fate. The ltody of \ incent

thrown on the rocks a short distance from the wreck and was interred In the bur

MANUFACTURERS OFwho was born to a

.-Aled completely under water top blowing, but still holding on the rod. All went smoothly then until the dog was half way to the shore, when the fish pulled him under again. The plucky dog finally ceeded in lauding the \ole at his master's feel and the fish was taken.

wasAND OTHER

ial ground of St Mary's.Not the least remarkable part of the story

is that in the afternoon of Wednesday, the ISth, the wreck, floating bottom upward

fallen in with about a league and a half distance from the islands by two pilot boats, which took her in tow for about an hour ; but their tow ropes breaking and night ap preaching, with a heavy every appearance of bail weather, they aban doned her, having no suspicion, of course, that there were human beings *Tve in the hold of the vessel, whch was floating with little more than her keel out of water. Had the vessel not been so taken in tow the set of the current would have drifted her clear of the isles into the vast Atlantic.

oGOLD MEDALS AND FIRST PRIZES WHEREVER EXHIBITED.sue

A. P. QUEEN CITY OIL WOEKS, TORONTO.Examine Their Superior Merit' l

OUBHBTSNEW HARRIS HOT AIR FURNACES

manymeal is fi or 7 o'clock, and of the first inoro-

meal 7 or 8 o'clock, an interval of twelve hours or more elapses without food, and for persons whose nutrition is at fault this is el- together too long . period for («tin,. Thnt I p OR8AU-A such an interval without foed is permitted | ^Apply M. JURENT, Louden, explains many a restless night, and much of the head and back ache, and the languid,

VtLï: I V“ÏK s**,i % Mhsr%2pitlcuais, add rtf J. J. Lewis, New Barum. Ont

TJ!ARMS FOB SALE, CHEAP. — AU Slide.—Joe*JM J. Dalit, Guelph.________________________ _

-------------ASt YOUR GROCER FOBIMPERIAL FRENCH SHOE BLACKING

wasMr- Adams and the Mule.

Mr. Archibald Adams, a teamster had an interesting and exhilarating experience the

A week ago Mr. Adame

The Hour tells a story of a dog with a con­science. The owner of a Skye terrier had a dish of mutton cutlets for lunch, and when he had finished his repast there was one cutlet left on the dish. He began reading his paper and appeared to take no notice of the dog. The dog saw the cutlet and his mouth wutc red. Then he smelled of it and

overcome by temptation. He seized the cutlet and bolted under the sofa, evidently eipecting a whipping, but the master took no notice. Finally the dog, without eating the meat, became conscience stricken, pick - ed up the cutlet, laid it at his master's feet, hung his head, and slunk away.

mg

running and other mi rnlng bought a pair of plain, ordinary, ever) daymules at the hone market. Now Mr. Adams Is a careful man and has a kind heart for animals. So when he noticed inthe farmers' column of a new «paper a day f r

client thiog to wash

fwUBE BRED A YBSHIBEB tor sal two sows, two

otmpanied byThis meal itaelf often dissipate# these sen­sations. It is, therefore, desirable, if not pQR PLEASANT SEWINGessential, when nutriment is to be crowded, .—V8E ONLY—that the thing before to bedgMEEHMEgg^gMgMgRMB

should be the taking of food. Sleepleeanis often censed by .tsrvetion, end etumbler tomjywtt oe «,of milk, If drank in the middle of the night, i«i,L 8# For w - •» a*will often put people to sleep when hypno BLIND BBS .-tfcoM »BleU4 *re requested So

tics would fail of their purpose. Food be- J| wmkmf «i» Water,New sUijWssjJ fore rising Is an equally important expedi- i»1'WboiuUe by Lr*»n Sou i pa,ent. It supplies strength for bathing and ■yjfTSted^ïVcs'trïi'SoiO wjlhamh,tubs

cLcssicg, laborious and wearisome tasks for the underfed, and is a better morning “pick me up” then any “tonic.'

Program «ye “ the perfect fire escape I, not yet made. " The revlwrs, we believe, don't claim that they have got It absolutely perfect, but they do think that it b the heat

j ber | th^^rbZ/tÆlkS^Z: J IsiSS

no a

so ego that it was the hoofs of horses occasionally in hot water, he came to the conclusion that lie would try its beneficial effects on those mules. He got a pail of hot water yesterday morning and hied himself away to the stable. The mules blinked at him with a mild, languid sir, flirt­ed , their little tails about pleasantly, and awaited their master's will. Mr. Adams set the pail(of water down at the rear feet of

of the mules. The mule kept on lookingThen Mr. Adams lifted up one

Ûan ex

0Clapperton’s Spool Cotton I QRapid Blister.

The Southern Clinic, a reliable medical journal, gives the following. It may prove of real service in many cases where a physician cannot be easily obtained

It ie sometimes desirable to produce a small blister quickly. For this purpose nothing is better than concentrated water of ammonia. Pot a few drops of it in a watch crystal, or any receptacle of the sort, it with a pledget of absorbent cotton, invert on the spot to be blistered, and press closely. In half a minute or so a red circle will ap-

0ie ox

0■►Victoria’s Wars.

The ware which have been waged by Great Britain since Queen Victoria ascended the throne, number twenty five, which took place in the following order :—

1-40 New Zealind War.

1»*7 Ab' asinien War

0 rpleasantof the} hoefs and carefully pot it in the

bucket. —1 lie e # •The Keel# Swam VesW I# the ml- Vs.I,uu Meehlns r.

cover Brenemlral iMimls IBs RggUkessrghgw#

X' -♦1*39 vendflattef €rvonteiWon

THE E. & C. GURNEY CO.“Cl!iws • omen er * Irl I

iwi old. with onthe me of s will

lbdO Syrian War Chin» Wee Japanese fans sell from three cents up to

|300, The former are the beet for nee. It is easier to “ raise the wind at that price.

Mlle. Louise Michel is studying the Rue

Vsrd. eon with ess.MO plow1*79 Zol* War.

Ib79 Afghan **r pear on the akin around the edges of theIt ie am evidence that

a on* boar1M6 Sikh Warlot

» d Oft (LIMITED.)en place, and the blisterWar wUlky1War1861War.1864 a

186718*718#