HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1892-12-23, Page 6M
6'.
•
HAI!PION WHIPPED.
Eoddard knocked Mather Out by Brute
Force in Three Rounds.
THREE
rounds Joe
dard, -the' A
• - �_• lien pugilist
short
God.
tifitra=
,' de-
aher,
pion,
eland
Con -
boom
has
the
very
y on
e fact
tried
n his
n in
nein
meld
aher'e
poor
uare
ahn-
self
tars
ere
ling
ling
nd,
to
her,
art,
who
ho
the
yen
rd,
and
one
and
featedPeterM
he Irish °ham
at Coney I
last night.
sidering the
that fighting
got lately
betting was
light, larged
account of th
that neither man had been thoroughly
before. Goddard's reputation rested o
success in defeating a dozen local me
securing a draw with Peter Jacks°
eight rounds and in 'whipping Joe Choy
twice in four rounds each time. M
stranding was made in stopping two
fighters in one night at Madison Sq
Garden. He afterwards met Bob Fitz
mons in New Orleans and showed him
to be a thorough " quitter," as the figh
tsay. The impression got abroad that th
was a job. Hence the want of a fee
of seetu•ity among the betters. The fee
lievailed that Billy Madden wan
to make Goddard a champion, a
knowing that he could not do so withou
victory of some kind, bad picked out Ma
a man who was supposed to have no he
to be the first victim of a heavy man,
is known to have bulldog courage and w
can hit a hard blow. It was 9.40 when
nen came on. Their weights were gi
eat officially as : Maher, 175 ; Godda
187. Maher probably weighed 180
Goddard 195.
First round -It was lightning work fr
the very start.. The men went hammer
tongs, slash and crash, with Maher a
seienced man and Goddard onlyy a bulldog.
All for the head. A few body blows were
struck, the two or three being given
Goddard. Maher went down to his kne
once, bat got up and tried again, but it wa
ao good. Goddard Ianded on him with h
sight and left, missing many times, b
getting there often enough.
Second round -Maher got -in a couple
*cantle on Goddard's fade, staggering th
Anstrali ch time, and Goddiard__look_-
lti groggy after' a couple of rights on th
cheek, but he smashed the Irishman on th
ribs three times before he let go: Mahe
then got in a sicker on Goddard's breast
and Goddard fell back to the ropes. Mahe
ran after him, but swung his right wildly
Instead of touching the man on the jaw h
went way beyond his ear. Goddard dashe
at Maher, and gave him a fierce blow on th
breaat. Maher fell back under its effect
and the bell sounded before Goddard coul
land again. It had'been a tremendous
round.. Both men had worked apparently
for e ' knock -out blow -Goddard in hi
unclean, heavy and strong style, Maher in
form that showed' little. of the neatness that
belied displayed before, and was known for
in New York for ,weeks after his -arrival
.from Ireland.
Third. round -Both came up looking
dazed from the furious fighting of the
'previous round, and neither. showed the
dicast science, but rained blow after blow on
each other as fast- and hard as possible.
Goddard went at Maher like a wild beast,
and fairly heat his man down by brute
strength. The Irish lad stood up gamely
ander the shower of blows, but at last was
laid low by a straight tighten the jaw, and
tell face downward on the floor. The ex•
oitement.was intense, the crowd being fairly
dazed with excitement. The round lasted
• jnet fifty seconds.
The contest . "was short and brutal.
Goddard was favorite at all stages of the
betting and his victory was of coarse,
popular.
, AMONG THE PUGS.
THE FRUIT GROWERS
Read rapers and Discuss Questions of In-
terest to Shippers to the Old Country.
ELEOTION OF OFFIOERS.
The afternoon session was opened at 2
o'clock. The following committees were
appointed by President Pettit : On new
,fruits,.Prof...."John:"Craig, --horticulturist -at
the Experimental Farm, Ottawa ; Mr.
Whiliborn, Leamington, and Mr. G. C.
Caston, Craighuret ; on the fruit exhibit for
the World's Fair, Messrs. G. S. Morris,
Fronthill ; J. D. Stewart, Rueseldale, and
W. S. Turner, Cornwall ; to attend the re-
vising of the statutes relating to the exter-
mination of black knot .and yellows,
Messrs. E. D. Smith, Winona ; A. W.
Peart, Burlington J. Ctrs, Galt ; J. K.
McMichael, Waterford; and G. W. Cline, ' ` ' active as many a woman of
Winona. ball i ,,r ` years. Thia activity the Queen
Mr: Thomas Brooks, of Brantford, read a , attributes to the regularity of her habits.
very interesting and inatructiire paper on She rises early and goes to bed early, which
"Apple Growing." A short discussion on ! ebe avers is the golden secret for vanquish -
the paper followed, after which Mr. G. H. ging old Father Time.
Pattison, of Grimsby, gave a paper on Regarding the early rising, a certain noble
" Fruit -Growing on Clay Soil." . The paper t lord greatly amused Her Majesty once by
stated that fruit, such as grapes, pears, I telling her of having met some ladies named
plums, apples, quinces and red and black , Dudley Carlton, at Mentmore, and speak -
currants, grown gel clay aoil, were superior : ing of a house (Sir B. Heywood's) where the
in quality and quantity to those grown on ladies always got up by candle -light,
sandy soil. There was considerable dis- Mrs. Dudley Carlton exclaimed, " What
suasion on the statements contained in the a delightful house ! How I should like to
paper. know those ladies."
Mr. Thomas A. Good, Brantford, led a She thought, of course, it was candle -
debate on " What is the Proper Way of light in the afternoon. Thia story amused.
Caring for an Orchard after it begins toBear the Queen immensely, but when It reached
Fruit ?" He was followed by Messrs. MoD. ' the ears of Mrs. Dudley Carlton, this lady
Allan, Beadle (Toronto), Prof. C. C. Jarnes was greatly annoyed.
and others on the same subject. • Her Majesty Queen Victoria has always
Mr. G. Woolverton, Secretary of the mien an admirer of Scottish Hong and Seot-
qUEN,COURT AND GOSSIP,
Her Majesty®Queen Victoria Shows
Signs of Waking Up.
Death of a Noted Duellist—London's Fash-
ionable Sorceress—Baronets Kick at
Being Confounded Wlth Knlapts—The
Duke and Ills Letters—Queer Freaks ilia
British Nantes. •
LONDON, December.
'The recent disquietipg
rumors afloatconcerning the
health of Queen Victoria
have been proved utterly
groundless. Her Majesty
in the enjoyment of per-
fect health and, in spite of
ler seventy-four years, as
by
es
Method of Caring for an "Orchard From the
ut Time the Trees aro PlantedUntii They Begin
to Bear ±''
of Mr. R. Holterman, Brantford, gavo an
�e address on bee -keeping and
fruit -growing as a united industry.
Prof:' J. H. Panton, of the `Ontario' }Agri-
cultural College, Guelph, delivered a lecture
lure.
in the Temperance Hall this evening, and
illustrated the lecture with stereopticon
views.
A paper on " Apple Grewing " was read
yesterday afternoon by Mr. Thomas
Brooks.
Mr. Pattison read a paper on " Fruit
Farming on CIay Soil." His experience
was that clay, and especially red clay, was'
capable of producing apples very profitably. j
On the apple question Mr. Allan, of
association, opened a discussion on " What
Canna the Apple Scab," and gave the com-
ponent parts , of, several solution which
would tend to remedy the evil.
Mr. Fisher, of Burlington,, was the first I
speaker in a somewhat long discussion on !
the effects of wind -breaks forore"bards- He
was followed by Messrs.'McD. Allan, Thomas
A. Good, J. Z. jtraser, Morrie P. Casten,
Gott; Brand, John Little, J. R. Hornell, S.
Hunter, and others.,
Mr. Thomas Ivey, of Brantford, intro-
duced the question. -",What ie the Proper
e inetrt;oti
ed
e
e
r
r
0�d
e�
a
a
Before the Buffalo Athletic Club last
dight, Tommy Dixon, of. Toronto, defeated
Walter Campbell, of Bethlehem, Pa., in.
three rounds.
It took 49 rounds to settle the 20 -round
contest for the lightweight championship of
the State of New York, between Tommy
C :;d, of New York, and Mike Haugh, of
klyn. The latter beat his man in the
49 nn
Jim Orbe , the champion pugilist, was
arrested in Boston in an action brought by
Joseph A. Lanoon, the Boston pugilist, to
recover $5,000 for an alleged breach of con-
tract to spar at Lennon's exhibition in that
city. -
George Dawson, the young Australian,
met " Doc " O'Connell, of Boston, at the
California Athletic Club Last night. They
weighed in at 8 p. m., just under 140
pounds. The fight was for a purse of$3,000,
the loser taking $250. Dawson won in the
20th round.
Ed -lie Shaw, of New. York, and Jack
Casey, of Williamsburg,, fought to a finish
yesterday with skintight gloves. 'Casey
succumbed after 16 bloody rounds. •
Hall and Fitzsimmons vdill meet in New
Orleans in. March. In an interview after
landing in New York yesterday, Hall de-
clared that Mitchell would surely fight
Corbett.
Care of the Eyes.
Avoid all sudde>p changes between light
and darkness.
Never begin to read or write or sew for
several minutes. after coming from darkness
to a bright light.
Never read by twilight or moonlight or of
a very cloudy day.
Never read or sew directly in -front of
the light, or window, or door..
It is beat to have the light fall from above,
obliquely over the left shoulder.
Never sleep so that on first awaking the
eyes shall open on the light of a window.
Do not use the eyesight by Lght so scant
that it requires an• effort to discriminate.-
Aralional Educator
Isaac and Hyman Rinaldo, of New York,
are to receive but $1' each out of their
father's large estate. They were disinher-
ited because of the r disobedience. But if
Isaac shcuid procure a divorce from his
present wife and marry a " decent ,lewd
Goderich, declared that among the best i
that should be grown all over the province e
for the market 'was the Duchess of Olden-
burg. That was an apple that will ship
to Britain, and if ,well shipped will
find 'a good figure. The Graven- I ho
ate* was another good kind, although ``t m
it was not suitable to all the sections i -
of the country. He would like to see the
St. Lawrence grown pretty well all over.
If they, could get.it clean it was a profit-
able apple, and would : bring a good price
in England. " The Ribston pippin was, a
good apple and would fetch a good price in
the British market. The Maiden's e
Blush was a good apple, but John Bull was d
looking for a quality of a superior character 1 le
and they were not finding the prices they . a
used to do. The Blenheima had a place en
along with the Ribston pippin. It was a
good bearer, and with a medium crop it Q
Jpnld stand near the top/of the market, ,
ecially if honestly put up. The King of ' en
Tompkins♦ and the Baldwin had made more ba
money than any other apple, but it had ! e
not the British ' quality and would i•eom
probably go down in price. The Ontario ; ea
and the Spy were.good. The Ontario,' f
was a new variety, and had not been tested.
It would sell in the British market for a
Spy, but it was not as good an apple as the
tish _vocalists, and her latest patronage of
provincial talent has been accorded to two
native ladies who have been',singing Gaelic
songs at her castle of Balmoral,
This bas delighted the heart of Professor
Blackie -himself a song -writer of no mean
order and a possible Laureate were the
wreeth to fall on the brows of a " brew
laddie;" north of the Tweed -,and a worse
selection might be made.
TheProfessor has been telling a Glasgow
audience that he wishes all the .nobility
would follow Her Majeaty's example, bat
, he ought to be wise enough to know if they
1 did the flood of Bong !Would be a worse in -
fliction than the bagpipes.
This sanguine Scot has also been giving
deice.
ctoria
that
going
t also
meat
hopes
T.
what
need -
regal
have
ther.
the
his sovereign• a piece of patriotic a
Ile rejoices to.think that Queen Vi
knows she is a. Scottish Queen, and
eho would do better still by not` only
to Balmoral to hear Scotch songs, bu
to Edinburgh, to cit in a Scotch Perlia
there -a consummation he devoutly
to see before long.
RUSTY, FIISTY, MUSTY, FROWSY COUR
Living under a virtuous and some
recline sovereign, who long ago renou
the fitting pomps and vanities of her
position, the British people eeem to
lost sight of court splendor altoge
Quite rustic siinplicity . now marks
christenings, weddings and burying in
heir Royal family and were it not for
the German Emperor's yearly visits to
England and the fact that' Queen Victoria's
best things have. to be brought out in his
nor, an outsider from the planet Mars
ight almost fancy they had put their
revered monarch on half -pay, and that she
could afford no more grand doings. It is
somewhat hard on them, considering that
the Queen's income is the came now as in
the beginning of her long and happy reign,
namely $1,900,000 per ann
An indication, however, of the gradual
merging- of England's Queen from the
oleful dumps is the fact that the Carl
osa Opera Company has given a perform -
rice of Donizetti's ":Daughter of the, Regi-
ent " at Balmoral.
There was a -time, many years ago, when
ueen Victoria was exceedingly fond of
peras, theatres and the frivolities of exist-
ee'generally. That the Queen is going
ck to those happy days is hardly to be
xpeeted, but that it is about time she gave
e encouragement to music and the drama
e been the opinion of the British people
fo
was years past.
HAM JINKS OF FORTY YEAPS AGO.
py. The Englishmen wanted good value re
for his penny. He wanted a good month- to
fat He had given the names of these i wh
apples in proportion as they came on the giv
British ma>tet. The Cranberry pippin was
a good apple, better quality than the Bald- t the
win. The Spy takes so long to come into
bearing, and when they do bear, there are end
so few clear of blemish 'that there is not i brit
propos of dramatic performances at t
yal palaces, it was in 1853 that so
bleaux vivants, a ,form of amusement
ich the Qaeen was then very fond, we
en at Windsor Castle.
On this occasion the Queen's guests an
household at Windsor sat .for some tint
a dark room, with a red ceurtain at on
of it ; at length the curtain rose upon
liantly, lighted stagand reveal
he
me
of
re
d
e
e
a
much money in them. The Fallow Water was Pri
not a good bearer and had not muchquality. 10,
There is more money in American Golden reel
russets than any other mama but there is ! son
of so much demand for them. Sweet j T
e e
neesa Alice, since dead, but then age
dressed to represent Spring, and eh
ted some verses from Thomson's " Sea
s."
n
a
a
wa
to
le
as
G
H
a
fo
of
d
e
e
n
•
y
pples are not in great demand. ! aga
Mr. A. M. Smith read a paper on the ! a c
` Necessity of a Fruit Experimental Farm." i Prim
Mr. Smith said the amount spent in the ! elle
ountry in worthless fruite, and fruits not with
dapted to the climate and wants to the cite
,th
onntry, and the cost of'eir cultivation, In
e greater than the price many were able burg
get for large quantities of these Worth• years
as varieties.
This afternoon the officers were elected
follows : Pleaident, A. P. Pettit,
rimeby, re-elected ; Vice -President, T.
• Race, Mitchell, re-elected ; Secretary
nd Treasurer, L. Woolverton, Grimsby.,
Peterboro' was selected as the next place
r the annual meeting, andthe proceedings
the gathering terminated.
he scene changed and the curtain ros
in upon the Princess Royal, aged 13, i
costume designed to signify summer
ce Arthur, as a harvester, aged ' 3, re
ed upon some sheaves of corn as if wear
bis toil and his eldest Rioter also re
d verses.
the next scene, the Duke of Edin
h, then Prince Alfred, and aged 9
, appeared as Autumn, and wa
1 Poo Marksman.
" Why don't you go shooting any more,
Herr Parzell ?"
" Because I've become a philanthropist."
" And you don't want to hurt any of yOur
fellow creatures ? I understand."
Rather Discouraging.
She -I think we will be very happy, dear,
when we ar
e married.
He -Yes, pet.
She -And I'll have eomeene I can talk to
all the time.
Husband -It in your fault, anyway.
Wife -Nothing of the sort. It in yours.
Husband -Well, .what's mine is yours
Footpad -I want your watch. Cholly-
estate he would receive a bequest of $10,000. 1 Oh, 1 knew that. Gimme the ticket.
cost
vine
beard
icicle
met
Eat w
Fi
and
Princ
feet,
noun
moth
timed in a tigerhi skin and a crown of
leaves. Next came the Prince of
es, aged 12, as Winter, wearing a white
and a cloak covered with araficial
a. His sister, Louiee, aged 5, was
hered in winter clothing and Aural and
atching the fire.
nally all the characters were grouped
behind and above them all was seen
ess Helena, 7 years old, veiled to her
a long crow] in her hand, and she pro-
ced a blessing on her royal father and
er in the name of the " Seasons."
YOUNG PRINCE APRIL FOol..
The only son of the Duke of Edinburgh,
who is juet 18 years of age, has been ap-
pointed by' the German Emperor te the
lientenancy in the firet iagiment of Pins -
elan Foot Guards etationed at Berlin, which
regiment be is to join on April let next.
Prince Alfred will have to swear
allegiance to the German Sovereign. How
can he then be a British subject ?
The young Prince's tutor, Major Von
Balow will very soon Germanize him and
teach 'him how to live on German fare.
The Duchess of Edinburgh; as Grand
Duchess Marie of Russia; wanted her son
to join the 2,151,000 men in her brother's
lInsaian army, but the Prince's grand-
r.
rpilimmimmIMMOMMIMINI
mother, the Queen of England, would not
consent to such an arrangement at any
price. 6 s
April the 1st seems to be a very singular
day to select for the promotion of the young
Prince to his new regiment.
The Kaiser is too fond of upholding the
dignity and importance of Princes in gen-
eral to be capable of playing practical jokes
at their expense, or it might be imagined
that he had selected this date in order to
jeer at the uselessness of honorary princely
officers in general ; how also to suggest
that if.. _An young_- .Pr -ince- -inherits-'` "hitt
ther'e traits of character the appointment
ill be little better than an April foolery,
for he will never be at his poet. •
Seldom, if ever, has the ratepayer, whose
name bi Death, gathered in such a heavy
harvest of the strawberry leaves within so
short a space of time as he has lately done.
Three Dukes -Manchester, .Sutherland,
Ror{,burghe-withifl seven weeke ! Strangely
math, two'out of the three are succeeded
by minors of nearly the same age ; the
young Duke of Manchester is. 15, and the
new Grace of Roxburgh° 16 years old.
Minorities of five and she years should do
good to both estates.
AN ARISTOCRATIC DUELLIST HANDS IN Iii
CHECKS. .
A rather remarkable Englishman has
just died at Davao Platz, in Switzerland,
where ha had gone for the benefit of his
health, viz., Mr. Harry Vane Milbank, son
of the the well-known Baronet, Sir Fred-
erick Milbank.
The money he got through with 'in his
time must have been at least what would
have constituted two handsotne fortunes,
and he began the art of extravagance when
quite a youngster in the Life Guards. He
wasone time engaged to be married to
the notorious Mabel Gray, but, luckily,
that mad step was prevented in time. - Hie
affeire with the best-known moneylenders
of London and elsewhere have, during the
past twenty years, furnished much food for
chroniques scandaleuses, but the Jews always
liked Harry Milbank, for if he made them
wait he always paid them in full in the
long run.
As a modern duellist Harry Milbank was
facile princeps, and it was in this particular
branch of manlyscience that he per•ticularly
distinguished himself.. In one of his many
duels, where he had, according to all the
accepted rules, been challenged by and d
killed the man whose domestic hone. .is
impossible to de»y he had violated, he.
couple of years later, was quietly sitting
a cafe, in Paris, when a stranger, to who.
he had been pointed out, came deliberately
up to him, asked him if he were not M.
Milbank, and, coram publico, slapped his
gloves across his face. After such an affront
there could be but one issue.' The insulter
waa the lady's brother, who the following
morning shared the fate of her husband, for
Milbank was a dead shot.
HE COOLLY RILLS HIS MAN.
Illustrative of his pluck is another
instance wherein an encounter he had re-
ceived his opponent's first fire full in the
chest, he contrived to raise birheelf on ,.his
elbow, and calmly aiming at his man, sent'
him to kingdom come.
And yet with all hie deadly power with
the duelling pistol and the gun -for on the
moors with his father his bags were phe-
nomenal -none could call Harry Milbank a
fire-eater or a ,bully. He belonged to a fine
old stock. The blood of his seventeenth
century ancestor, Sir Harry Vane -from
whom, by the way, he received his surname
-flowed in hie veins, and the manly, inde-
pendence even to so commanding a spirit
Cromwell breathed in his descendant, Ha
Vane. Milbank, whose lose will be ind
deplored in the circle of intimates he has
gathered about him in his letter days.
on the other people's consent, it in not
insisted on, only advised.
NORFOL1 GOES FADDY ON BLOTTING PAD$.
The Duke of Norfolk is a connoisseur
in blotting pada. He accumulates then
almost as if he, were studying the question
scientifically. He is always interested in
the aubjeet, moreover, and will converse on•
it with much enjoyment. Another of hie
peculiarities ie that he never opens a. letter
or a parcel. There is a room in Norfolk
House crammed nearly full of things which
Q has nrlercd,, _which_ have- -been -sent and-
renrained unt ouched. Some day, when this
room is cleared out, valuable pictures will
be found lying cheek and jowl with curiosi-
ties in the way of blotting pada.
SHIBBOLETHS AND TONG LIE TWISTERS.
One of the most puzzling conundrums to.
the benighted stranger who visits British
shores is the pronunciation of some of the
pt oper names of both place a and individuale.
For example, Glamis Castle is correctly
spoken of as •' Gloms.". Scotland poesesa
specialty of such social ahibbolethe as, for
example, Menzies pronounced as if written
"1llynjes"; Ruthven, as if *Ashton
"Riven"• Charteris, as if "Chaarrters"
,
Bethune, as if " Beaton "; Clanranald, aa if .y
written "t lenroland'' ;° Duchenne, as if
"Dukard" ; " "
C ,Iquhoun, Gohoun ; Majori-
banke,��as "Marehbenka"; and Ker, as
Kar.
In the title of Blyth, again, the " th " is
dropped in smart society ; while the
Monsons must be univeraaly Spoken of as .
" Munsona." Beauvoir is "Beevor,"'
Wemyae is " Weems."
Sir Francis Knollvs, the Prince of Wales'
private secretary, is known to his intimates
as "Knowles," and the equally popular
equerry Du Flats spoken of as " Du Fiah'';
while Tyrwhitt ia." Tirritt.' And so the
list is carried on.
1 ROUBLE. BUILDER. •
Cruel Butchery of a Countess f and Mir
Maid by the Latter's. Loveicit..
A Rome cable Bays : 'The' Ocuritees
Pieconti and her maid Marie Previati were
murdered in the Countess' villa at Ferrara
on Friday.
The deed was • done with peculiar blood-
thirstiness. The Countess was strangled
and stabbed eighteen times in the stomach,
breastand _shoulders. One breast was cut
almost off, and when found her body was
almost bloodless, as besides stabbing her
body the murderer. had cut the veins in her
wrists. The maid was nearly hacked to
pieces. The stabs all over her breast and
stomach were hardly an inch apart. Her
neck had been cut all around and there was
gaping wound in her throat. Both women
ad been aseaulted before or after death.
Fitch lay in a large pool of blood, and every
tIing near the bodies was spattered with
blrod.
The murders were committed evidently
ear 1R on Friday evening, but were not die -
coveted until the next morning. Suspicion
fell uges a German named Schumann, who '
was a:.'heerseer in a tannery in the city.
He h•.d been intimate with the Countess',
maid; and from her . was known to have
learned the ways of the house, and the
Cc•antess' habits. He was not at work on
Saturday morning, and sighed a hasty de-
parture -were found in hie aleepiogrooni. A
dezacription. and request for his arrest were
telegraphed to all Italian cities, with thee
result that last evening he was caught - in a
saloon of this city. When arrested be
struggled hard to escape, and tried to throw
a purse out the window. This purse bore
the Countesscrest in silver, and in it the
as detectives found her card • and several
rry I hundred francs in notes. At the police-
GGu
station bchurnann at first denied his ghilt.
After he hed been locked up an hour he
called the turnkey and eonfeesed both
LONDON'S SORCERESS.
It may be interesting to those who medi-
tate visiting this side to know that right in -
the very heart of the fashionable quarter of
London there exists a High Priestess of that
fickle goddeses fortune. This person is daily
consulted by members of some of England's
oldest and noblest families '
For the paltry sum of $1, she-efor it is a
Fate's darkest mysteries and lift the veil
from the portentous future. She settles that
interesting, and to many vital, point
fair ; whether the inevitable stock " jour-
ney " will have to be undertaken ; she holds
'• Disappearance of the'Sardine.
" Where, oh, ivhere is the little sardine,
where, oh, whsre he gone ?' This slight
modification of a once popular ditty seems
to ei:press, the feeling of thekScottish fisher-
men; for the sardine, which is simply the
young of the pilchard, and was certainly at
one time quite a cpmmon 'fish on the, east
coast of Scotland, is not now a regular in-
habitant of .the Scottish seas.
In response to inquiry the fishery efficers
of 14 the 17 east ettin-t districts say that
pileha,ids are never landed in their districts,
althotigh a stray specimen may be got occa-
sionally in the Moray Firth, off the Firth of
out a luring hopes of a probabable-some- orth/ r in the Firth of Clyde. As late as
times certain -fortune ; and geeerally the be Ding of the present century they
throws in a death in order to strike the were khundant at some places as the her -
golden mean. ring, r this gave rise to complaints by
By the aid of the white of an egg and, a • thP ig-curers when 'quantities of the
simple glees of water she probes the secrets pitch, .were delivered to thorn mixed with
which the Awful Three strive to guard Sol
closely. Indeed, so successful has this Pe'c • the pilchard is get Mg •starce
Sibyl been in her mystic art that her office i for large quantities ther fish
hours, whiCh are 10 to 4, are 'fully occu- a'e ()ed on the corAinent an in Amer -
pied in consultations with her many
clients. icai hues and sold ati such, and this. is
esr,110 uso with the sprat and young
her
BARONETS ON THE WARPATH.
Apropos of the snobism which is rampant d have led to the suggestion
at the present day, jt is proposed that 'she mien should turn their at -
some fresh style sball beintroduced in order curing and tinning of the
to enable persons to diatinguish at once h aro eo abundant on their
whether a new asquaintance is a knight or Gib u Daily News.
a baronet.
It is felt by a great number of illuetrice Alm we itomach p0830SECS
)f a,daptation to circ imstances.
ere is a considerable chance of a 4RANBligh and •
is eighteen men
being made , between a man who has jt- ,
knighted beeause he is a successful nu om the Bounty by the rnuti-
The Stomach.,
baronets to be a very great hardship tl
most won -
now, and another whose ancestors
baroueted for successfully toadying
one or other of the Stuarts.
. Again, it is manifestly not right
.en boat they subsisted forty-
lii of biseutt per man, and a
int of water. Dr. Tanner in
or -10 days, Subsistieg, it is
baronetcy by expending money in • -
the demands of the communityN 1. "---e WApi have since excelled this. Kai -
should be confused with a mode America.n Indians and the " fat
whose knighthood was purchv
some similar plebeian institur-4.. ./,j2- AG Eskimo, who will daily eat
wheri he heppened to" be ma '4'
Inds of flesh, and 'oil if he has the
Pickwick " may well be fi.:14
expenditure of money on a wat oat
orn:c feats are expeeded by the •
!xampies of voracity, bu
town. ee, ENcTimS71:ine,
on the authority of Admiral
The importance of preve '4•Shae:.414.
a I'faltitt, of Siberia has been
takes,which strike at the r •••70
social system, is simply ,p, 164c U S tltr
therefore proposed by team, L •quarter of a ra,rge ox, twenty
•
Baronets for the hi jlain,Zor,
fat, and a quantity of meltdd
answer to the style ad '
toward Sir Leicester Nei
tions are to be m
Wvarieties
Dedlock, Baronet," tals to offer, wan She salt' that you were the •
ments are to be
name " Derllock "1.
libeled that the word is to pereoral appearance WAS
used as freely with reg -.I to •• the 0ing.
people:' As this how ia al,: ut en f
ro
le
once for terms, anent spratz the truth. Marie --
We pay commies. 8.1e 11;14 ever met. I told
MAY Biglea7' Nruld--t reminded her
c- ourth as large as
04,