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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-10-16, Page 7*WINE me TSE MAN ON IIOBSEBACK. • General Boulanger, who cut• a big swath an _European. aff€tirs re few. years ago, and who, some people thought, would, like the little corporal, be one day dictator of France, committed ;Weide this morning at the grave of his late' mistress, Madame Bonnemain. George Ernest Jean Marie Boulanger, general of France and ex -M nise 'ter of'-War,.was born at Rennes,, in 1837 $e receiveit a portion of his education at Brighton, Eng., but, 'like a good ' French- man, he detested speaking any langua�ge "hut his -own. -i a entered the "mil=itary col- lege of St. Cyr in 1855 ; he wasmade a sub - lieu e 1857,_ __Ile -we sent to Algeria; where he ,ed under Marshal Ranolon in the Kab :le caul , ai - . . He aery rano- tan war, and was wounded at Turbigo. In 1860 he was made a lieutenant. In 1862 he became a captain, the promotion K• havin "�' i?itaiii:Ctiina;'He was made a major just before the war with Germany in 1870. At Metz he was with Bazaine,, but he some- how escaped the fate of Bazaine's army, and turned up in Paris, where "he 'Was made a lieutenant -colonel by the government of national defence. This was in October, 1870. From November 30th to December .9 TO CYT SCOTIA. IN TWO. d 9;r,eat- lalnttt. (lanttk to Slice Her at the Waist. English and Scotch engineers and ship- owners are talking over escheme for digging a big ship penal clear across Scotland, so that great steamers may be able to sail,, up the Clyde on the. West coast and ^omedown the Firth of Forth into the North Sea on the east. There is actually a cal al between. these two points at present ; it has been there !00•yeare,e but it i pn y." 5fi feet-Aideacid 10 feet deep, so that it is of no use for ocean steamers. The plans now under con- sideration provide for an entirely new canal, two routes for which are suggested. One o . t . tee~ tee-' och Lemonti,and Loch - Long, and strike the Clyde near its mouth, On this route, however, the canal would strike a few miles of mountainous country, part of which _s, l c=rass el- y ireav iirgKieiii firdiit two miles of it by a tunnel 150 feet high through the hill. The length of this route is 69 miles, and the.cost of the canal is esti- mated et $40,000,000: A more probable and wore favorableroute is that shown in .the map, which is re- produced from Cassell's Magazine. This line is very nearly direct . e &IQ "troops a a iet the Qonlmuniats h was wounded. Aftergthe suppression of th Commune, his newly attained promotio was quashed by the Grade Revision Com mittee,.but it was restored to him in 187 (In 1876 he r resented France at th centennial exhi tion in Philadelphia.) H m becae a 1 adier-general in 188 Boulanger was' appointed tothe domman ---of the army -of oeeh -'ation -in". Tunis, but h was soon recalled because of disagreement with the resident general. I the Do Freycinet Cabinet, formed Januar '7th, 1886, Boulanger became Minister War. When Goblet succeeded De Freyci net, Boulanger retained the portfolio, bu he went out of office when Bouvier becam President of the Council in 1887. But th general was sent to Clermont Ferrand to take command of an army corps,. Paris giv- ing" him an ovation when he left the city. When the LimousinTscandal startled France, Boulanger was thought to be implicated. But he wrote an indignant letter of denial which. seemed to satisfy the country. Not content, however, with his denial, he made some rather free assertions about Gen. Fer- ron, the Minister of War. For this act -of insubordination he was placed under close rest at ' his own headquarters fc • - period of thirty days. Just. before -tis Jules -Ferry, in a .public speech, had ailed " le brav' general" a cafe concert hero." This brought a challenge from Boulanger, but Ferry, like a sensible man, declined to fight. In March; '88, the Government having decided to cashier the general by placing him on the retired list, Boulanger resolved to takes' advantage of his growing popularity by beginning a vigorous campaign against the ministry. -,Vacancies shortly after occurred, in the representation for the.Dordogne and •the Nord. 'Boulanger declined to stand for the Dordogne,- but he was nevertheless elected ,by 59,500 votes, as against 35,750 'for his opponent. In the Nord, where he personally conducted the campaign, he scored 172;528 votes, against 85,548 for two opponents. This was on the 15th of April, 1888,' a date which he .declared would be marked in' the' annals of the country as a date of true deliverance. Boulanger became the hero of demonstrations wherever he went; The populace idolized him as the coming man who was to save France from the blunders '-of incompetent statesmen and the frauds of immoral political "combinations, and who' . would be,_ perhaps, the leader in- a war of revenge. Subsequently Boulanger's popularity waned for a while, and his candidate in.the Charente, 'M. Paul Deroulede, Wes defeated at the polls. Boulanger ap- peared „ - in the Chamber of Deputies and demanded the, dissolution of the Chamber. A stormy scene followed. M. .Floquet made a vigorous oratorical attack upon the general, who. replied " You lie !" Then, came the duel with rapiers on Comte Dillon's estate at Neuilly. Clemenceau and, 'Georges Perin were Floquet's seconds ; ' Laisant and DeHerisse acted for the general, who received a deep wound in the neck. Recovering from the -injury thus received, Boulanger stood as a candidate at the bye' elections in the Nord, Somme and•Charente Inferieure departments, and he was elected by large majorities. Then he stood for Paris, and was elected. For a time lie was the idol of France, but stormy days came ;, the General fled and took refuge in England, and from the date of his flight his downfall commenced. He had gradually disappeared from-pub}ic-view;-and•the- announcement of- his death to -day only recalls the fact that such a stormy petrel once lived. ' e- . e n 4- e e 0. d e a n • t e 0 The Funnels of Great Steamers. Most pewns would say, that the diameter of vie largest steamer funnel is four to six feet, and would want to wager thatit is not more than eight feet. How far from the actual slze such guesses are may be understood when it "is stated that the funnel of the Etr}iria measures a little over 18 feet in diameter. At even a short distance away this can Hardly be believed. It gives an idea of the enormous size of the big steamers. An Accompaniment Wanted. Minnie (with novel, to Mamie, at piano) —1!ease play something pathetic, dear, I hevejust reached the chapter where the heroine stands weeping on, the shore as the hero sails away, perhaps never, never to return. inenisitiv ems Rebuked. PueR : Ie Tuffy rinking man ? Bltil:y—Yes ; an eating man, and a sleep- ing man, ttnel a dressing titan—just like all the rest of us ! Base, is the Slave ri'ho Pays. J'inlcs- eI-Tnw did Berate come to recover? Filkins--\Vlty, 1)r. Fourthly tried to con- sole hint by speaking of his debt to nature, and :Beate said he'd be hanged if he; 1 aid it. William Flemming, of Cemphcllford, was severely .injured 1.y he Nplo,ion of a blast yesterday. Aaron Fetterly was killed at Morrisbnrg ▪ yesterday in a collision between two ballast trains on the canal works. " Wanr Things Titan Death: r Oh, woman, woman ! dry your tears and praise God your bairn's deid ! There are waur things than death ; aye, muckle weer—ptuckle-waur" t" And three toddling Tittle ones, lifted wet -eyed to kiss the waxen face of tlteir dead sister, cast frightened glances at the grizzled old. thanwhose hand rested with tender touch on their weeping mother's head as he uttered in a voice broken with soba, his strange effort at consolation. Consolation ! Ah t -what eon --consoler -the-'moth'e`r while- her freshly torn heart fibres weep tears of deso- lation, ted. her -maternal: yearnings essaytobridge the chasm which sunders the living and the dead ? How trite and ,.cuuan•,on- trte"iincl uielteetuaare words, even from the truest and best, when the lower depths of our being are thus sounded ! Friends will try to console, a e ut not all the preaching since Adam Has made death other than death." And so the little mourners are taken away, hushed, awed, sorrowing, yet , not knowing the wherefore of it all, ' Mother weeps ; and they know she has been hurt, and they' sorrowfully sob themselves to sleep. Kind friends perform the occasion's sad ofii "laalleeeeeelleekweteeaite SOOTHING, CLEANSING, HEALII!ip, Instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure Impossib/e. Many so-called•cjseases are simply symptoms of Catarrh, stiot li.aasmelI, foul breath. r`IOeh R lens king and spitting, generl feeling 2f debility,._ etc. -If you -are- troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, you have Catarrh, and should .lose no 'time procuring_a bottle of NASAL BALM. Be warned in time, neglected cold in head results in Catarrh, followed by consumption and death. Sold by all dru'sts,,•e�.t., ewes gioet Citi .%giii hit -o )114e (,50 cents and $1) byaddressing FFULFORD & CO. Brockville.Ont. la.figured that a canal on _this line cou%_d ba built twenty-six feet deep and 100 feet. wide at the bottom, for about 635,000,000, and it is estimated that a low scale of tolls would yield -an income of 63,000,000 per annum. On this route twelve locks would be re- quired, and the canal would cross six rail- ways and the present barge canal. Vessels now bound from ort on th oast-,ef Scotland to one on the west coast have to go round by the north through dangerous cur- rents and prevailing fogs, or else run down through the crowded English channel, and make a long circuit round the southern end of England. The proposed Forth -Clyde canal would lessen the dangers and save -some hundreds of miles. The Boarding-house Keepers. Le Monde gives the following practical advice to boarding-house keepers : " If you wish to open a boarding.-houso, bear in mind, from the very'first day, that your success will depend especially upon one thing, namely, the kind of table 'that you will pro- vide for your boarders. There is nothing that disgusts ono so much with a boarding- house as to find the same kind of dishes on the table. Your boarders must not know to -day what " they will have for .breakfast three weeks hence ; they must not find on the table, in the morning, crusts of bread left over from the previous meal ; they must not be obliged to use the same napkin for several days in succession ; when, in the morning, their appetite is not good, they must not find on the table nothing else but charred cutlets ; they must not be com- pelled to eat in a cold hall where they freeze in winter, or a badly ventilated room where they are suffocated in summer ; they must not know that, for luncheon, the meat left over from'the previous day's dinner will be served to them cold; they must not be obliged to drink their tea or coffee in ridicu- lously' thick. cups. This is . good advice which might benefit a large number of boarding-house mistresses . in this city. It is very easy to follow and requires but very little money to put into practice." A Rai/road Manager. Ohio and Mississippi Railway, Office 'of the President and •Gen'I Manager, Cincin- nati, Ohio, U.S. A., Nov. 15, 1886. Gentle men : Recently while in the act of alight- ing from my car I stepped upon a stone, which, turning . suddenly under my foot, threw nie to the ground with -•a severely sprained ankle.. Suffering exceedingly, I was helped into the car, and my man rubbed me most generously with.arnica and kindred remedies, but to no avail. Reaching a station where St. Jacob's Oil could by se- cured, two bottles of it were bought and the application resulted at once in relief from pain, which had become well nigh unbear- able. .I was out and about nay work in three days. W. W. PEABODY, Pres't and Gen'l Manager. . A Sermon on Dish -Clouts.• Says a writer in the New York Ledger : "I think I could preach an excellent ser- mon with dish -cloth for a text. I have tried all sorts of cloths—liiyen, cotton and ,mixtures of these materials --and for a long time could find nothing that exactly pleased me. One day, in a fit of desperation at not. being able to lay my hands on just what I wanted, I caught up an emty flour sack. It suited to a T. The soft, fine cotton makes absolutely perfect cloths, and when -my-supply-of-these-runs-msupply-of-these-runs short rimy' —"cotton as nearly like the sacking ,material as I can find, and stitch it up into bags in precisely the same shape." mg, tortured; by witnessuig- her dant •sui1er-ings, racked by - hopes and fears stricken mother knows the worst, and nature brings relief in tears and insens ity. But the strange, rough, kindly man sits through the long night, and w morning brings other friends he lifts up little brother and sisters to show them wee white face, whose pinched,_pained, ' as given pl`aceto an expression of ins peace; and then he takes his old fur cap his iron -shod staff and slowly moves a pausing at the door to take one more 1 at the still form on the cot, and to mur as he sadly shakes his head : " Aye, th are waur things than death !" * • * *• * Leaving Scotland', early in the forties hard-working couple, with their two s made the then weary journey across Atlantic and up through the new coun o the Huron Tract, where they set ab he work of hewing out a home- in orest. It was hard work for the n omers, unaccustomed 'ad they were to ifficulties with which the . pioneers anada had to contend ; but they egged• health, hope was strong, -and esire to see the " bairns " well 'settled fe gave them .courage for the strugg odden gray, and 'lamely fare made too ome by the appetite acquired in long ho f toil, was the rule of their lives. T oys were, as the mother used to -say, hat, heart could wish " ; their paren ride . and hope. There was much nromantic hard work and, ve ttle of iiariety in their life ; but th ever murmured or complained. As t ears passed other boys were., added to mily roll, but loved as were the la niers they were not the boys who boil e sap and brought the cows, who chopp e fallow and sat up with mother wh e was sick and helped her with her hou ork as if they were young women— re more like big loving brothers th ildren in their care of her. The mothe art was large enough for all, but the fir aces were taken. Neighbors tante b d -bye, for one pioneer attracts others, an on there were roads, rough, enough, urse, but better than the blazed -pa ugh the woods on which they bad d nded; whispers from . the great out rid began 'to reach the opening in th est. • Among these were stranger wil es of the wondrous wealth of the newt coveted gold -fields of the far west, 'whit id-ly passed -from lip to"r ftp. Some ad nturer had returned' frons the new Ride o, and around the blazing 1 s the settlers . were wont to ' dis s his narrative, attested to b rough nuggets and glittering low dust which he had brought back him from the " diggings." It was a journey and rough was the way. rose a great continent ole foot and by ggons. gons. And such a continent ! For two - ds of the journey the traveller's lease of was held by virtue of his. ride.' For ch of the distance he must rely upon des said to be - the most untrustworthy cunning'; and to lose his way, in the . d wastes meant death—death by starvation, death from thirst heat, or death by 'the knives arrows of savages. For weeks the veller's route lay through territory where lesnakes of the'swamps and rocks were compared with the human savages who ted for the blood of the hated white The simple-minded folk. shuddered hey related in whispers .how a party of roue spirits had ' been, trailed for ks by these implacable forest fiends, one by one its members . fell by knife- sts in the des d eefeaight lehrarati,.,.not.,a.,l�etyf. led or twig - cracked to an - cc the presence. of the asses - or -how shot to death with ws their mutilated bodies Were Ieft to , the kind ibil- old hen the the look. ffable and wayd o ak mur ere , a ons, the try out the- ew-, the in I ccs `honest tides, •itt__ •, ,i•. ing••s- , Pk s,- of , a brush with savages. lieyloo ed' for danger, butthey were brave boys, and it was only by reading betwee the lines that the parents discovered tha which perturbed them. A small party ha been completely wiped out, but -their part was stronger and well armed ; they did no fear. They would send letters by the nex returning party__ - �' "And -that was all. For fifteen years tho parents had waited, prayed, hoped, nor rowed ;'but from the silence of the past n word ever came to explain the , mystery o their lost ones. " If we only kenned they were deid," the aged father used to say t me in later years ; "but oh, .ts weary waitin' !" And then I understood in a measure what he felt when he offered my sainted mother that strange consolation, " There are waur things than death ; aye muckle waur !" Nearly thirty yearn have elapsed since. a a little boy beside his dead baby sister I viewed the strange, kind, sad -voiced old man with curiosity and awe. Sorrowing 'mother and comforting friend have been released from duty. ' And now, looking at Wer' own children, his words come to me with a deeper meaning. As I think of the vigil of the years, the heart - hanger, the -uncertainty, the horrible sug- gestions which fancy would persist in presenting to the mind and which no will could repel, I cannot but conclude that a certain knowledge of their peaceful death among. kind friends would have been less hard to bear ; that.in the old man's expres- sive words: "There are waur things than death ; aye, muckle waur!" - . Mestenn'ree. A -TAX -ON BACINELOBS. A. hill That Will Mako Unmarried Vii. glnns.1 .arse: •A bill has passed the Georgia Leggiias1atnre imposing a tax on bachelors. Under its terme it will costa Georgian $25..annually to begin the bachelor business at thirty year of age? and oe a rising scale of 62,5 for .each 1ve years a man of sixty will be vette the expense of $150 for the"priv ile ogees " without a Wife. • A more ghastly piece of legislation could -hardy be conceived,- striking as .it does at the very roots of personal liberty. Government has 'quite as much right to line a man for not wearing ie beard as for not marrying, Government has also' the same moral right to impose a tax on bach- elors as it has to fine the poor for the benefit )L :i" sencie'f4'.-.�U'ksec sic riLV '; Qtytetiee :a:.J.'$PC^".�- te,••. 101sMI1e,1,1•SV1P riff " Government" is only all of us, and "all of us" can do as we please. —Pawtucket (R. I.) Tribune. - Are most esteemed by every intelligent man. and woman. Derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels speedily • •resent to ns LL 1• - at nonce found- in .Dr.. „Pierce's 'Pleasant Pellets, which ~cure sick headache, consti- pation, indigestion, bilious attacks, etc. Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless, they are unequaled as a specific for the com- plaints named. One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet a dose. In vials, 25 cepts. Carry them in your vest pocket. t t f c d C a li 0 b t p u n y fa co th th sh w we ch he pl an BO co thro pe wo for �tal dis -rap ve rad fire cus the .yel with far Ac thir life mu gui and San slow and and tra ratt kind thir as t ad'vemu wee how thru Rai The Milk' Turned Soar. • noun I will not tell you her name, but one of 'sin ; ad the in le. Gh- urs he g.92 ta' of ry ehe the ter tel ed en se who. an is yd of th e- er e d y h: og y the neighbors 'says that, during her. brief arro visit the other day the milk turned sour. Her countenance looks a. yard dong. She eighd perpetually. The cloud on her brow is deep. If ,beaten out thin,. I believe would cover the sky. Her voice is doleful, and her eyes show no rediance. Her wrinklee are numberless. She is .9. sorry picture, and all because she is the victim. of one of those complaints common to women.. Her system is deranged. She needs a course of self.treatment with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pr,escription. 'This will eradicate thoroughly those excruciating periodidal pains and functional weaknesses incident to her sex, and at the same time build up and youn invigorate her *bele. system by its health - imparting influence. A trial bottle will those less fortunate ones captured alive were subjected' to tbrtures such as only special endowment with that ingenious, fiendishness npon which the imagination of Milton and Dante cast a poetic ray, could account for. But beyond the toilsome march, beyond the stretches of plain and forest and desert of mice and quagnure where crawling ser7 pents.and creeping sti:vages lurked, over the burned, scalped, mutilated corpses of Vic- tims—somebody's darlings who had started Out full of hope and ambit ion, hut who *ere never more to greet their loved' ones—the g men saw and Were laseinated by the gleam of gold. It was a slow life in the woods ; their expanding manhood yearned for e fields. They loved adventure, and, r still, they longed to inake life pleas - for, their parents, to lessen their toil o surround them' with such comforts as h can procure. d so one spring morning when' tile birds gaily in the yeting foliage, the boys mother and the babicS good-bye, and tiler apoonspanied them to the nearest town, where they were to find com- pany for the ;journey, gave them his. bless- ing and returned with a sense of brooding loneliness to his hackwoods cabin. And never frein tessellated floor or altar grand rose prayers to heaven breathing more of soul, of love, of timat, tlrin from that backwoods home for tle boys who had weighed anchor on life's trophled sea. ‘' And all beyond is conl,jecture ! They . never returned again. •Two. letters brought by crossing caravans, reached the' parents. convince. • wide bette ter " My. husband hasn't treated me very and t well, lately, but I'll 'get even 'with him," wealt said Maude. An " wouldn't if were you," returned sang kissed Estelle. " I'd get ahead of him." Beturiva Two Fires. Washington Star: " His friends ail ad, vised him to go on the stage," said the un- successful tragedian's father. . " Yes, I see now i it was his friends egged him on, and the audience egged him l' did. lint the steamer didn't stop at Queens - n t d y t t se 0 f If you are suffering from a feeling of con- stant tiredness, the result of 'mental worry or overwork, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will promptly cure you. Give them -a trial. , A' Girls Essab on Boys. Boys are men that have not got as big as their papas and girls are women that will be young la:dies by and by. Man was made before women. When God looled at Adam, he said to himself, " Well, I think can do better if I try again," and then he made Eve. God liked Eve so much better than Adam that there have been ni ere women than men. Boys are a trouble. They wear out everytbing but soap. If I had my way lialf the boys in the World wouldhe and the rest woulcr be dolls. My pepa, is so nice that I think he must have been& little girl when he was a little boy.--.5a6eihdreiv's Church Record. Bauer and Better. "Better than grandeur, better than gold, Better than rank a thousand fold, Is a healthy body, a mind at ease, And simple pleasures that always please." To get and keep a healthy body, use Dr Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, a remedy designed to not only cure all diseases of the throat, lungs and chest, but keep the body in a thoroughly healthy condition. It eradicates all impurities from the blood, and overcomes Indigestion and Derepepsia7. Blotches, Pimples and eruptions disappear, under its use, and your mind can .be " at ease " as to your health. Dick --Did you know that }tarry Clothes- Jessie—No, but • when I met him on the boulevard yesterday I thought he stared at me harder than usual. • Europe and the Far East. It has rained only twice in twenty-nine years in Aden, and then only enough to lay the dust. It is estimated that the treasure lying idle in India in the shape of hoards of orna- ents amounts to £250,000,000. In Corea sheets of paper pass for money; one sheet brings one quart of rice -or twenty sheets a piece of hemp cloth. The accommodittions of the Vatican may be imagined when the Pope put 3,200 beds in it at the disposal of the French pilgrims free of charge. Old. French forts are being sold very cheap. A French artist has bought the Fort du Guesclin for about $1,100. They go from a few hundreds to $1,000. The Babi in Danger. New York Press : • First Society Man -- Where are you running to ? Second Society Man—Home. First S. M.—What's the matter ? A fire? Second 'S. M.—No ; the nurse has gone off' somewhere and left the baby all alone with its mother. Mrs. -Lucian Mayberry, of Little Rock, Ark., is the mother of 10 boYs, bone within a married, life of 39 months. There, are two .sets of triplets and two pairis of twins. Mrs. Mayberry is a pretty blonde, plump aed heerty, of barely 24 years of age. They had been talking about Beethoven, "Vogner,",Annie RcioneYand other Musical celebrities, when she rematked " Do you is she ?" he replied, somewhat startled at. the rapid change of subject. " I didn't. know she was away." Theodore Thomas has taken up his resi- dence in Chicage and become acclimated—, all in a week. He will organize "the finest orchestra in the world," of eighty member& ' A Toronto hotel clerk Peides himself on his ability to distinguish young married , came inte his hostelry .the other evening and registered as " E. C. Wife & white, Detroit. ' 5rafte,COES Fromptly and Permanently AI lam 'Cr it/ AnZEIS NE, Lumbago. Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost -bites, Canadian Depot, 44 anl Loil3arl St, Toronto, Olt DIAM /c ND For Coughs & Colds. John F. 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