HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-05-04, Page 3C7
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VAPIEMeifirneAMIMAIA ,!•••••ARAPW
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. Wait 4:111 VI* eV PA IA 'a MOO Riga
• • r
ek Ramie et
Hills Meer Mestere*.
'There ia a row rouge otbUabout five
%neared feet abovethe :sea,: level,. half vay.
between, itaira-ittid.'llaseteth.':‘ It is belt*,
ldfally timbered with oak treei, and out up
into the moo oherming vol4eys. Running,
, almost due north' and, south, ts divides: the
plain of Bedraleon train that of Acre. Its
• lioUthern, extremity, terminating. abruptly,
' • forme a email gorge with the tiarmet range,
',through *Weltthe Kithou forties ;it* way
• to the • It wee duriug a hettyy rain-
etorni n week ago that I mop-role:NO tile'
• ford of' this riier from Ba3fu. It -was net
Without , trepidation, Ioribe streamhad
been eo swoliete by recent rams thittpona-
`' municationwith dm iuterior had been,
interrupted. It watt doubtful whether the
• pi,isoese of tbie 'river; which • almost dries'
up ni suwmer, would jiot iuvvive ducking.•
therefare prudeutly., ref:tee-tad my coin-.
pauion. ;6 precede Ma le•M the:Iv/19w, swirl-
ing stream, and, although the water,. came
. up to our eaddle••bage, the horsee managed,
• to get 1143r098 without loiliog their footiog.
Then we gollOpeditiia the 444/4, woods. .The'
• stu3 broke out .ftom. behiiid- the' clouds, and
. We deterMined to 'FirOsequte our search for.
• ',:- eertein ewes of theexistenao, o.f which we,
had heard, and Which, owing to .the etate of
the weather, we had shuost decided to
abandon. • • • • ••• • - •
Leaving the higliread to Nazareth to the
right, we followed s. path for about half
, hour which* took ns to the viliege of ' Sheik
• Abreih. It woe a ibi;iorable eolleotion Of
. rood hovels, in the muddiest ot .whieli dwelt
• the !olient. After tough . palaver and
7.?"---4---1.".--tal4•Z474.1W4i111-14z1/47-4,Y7.1,2414a.-4.1oa.241,.grxZE:
wJioh wowocoin I3Isoh, ..and persuaded
• .!him to.benur guide ^to thtm The 'dist
•s was cidled7.by 4the Arab4 tho,•Caie'zot
• . • Hell." Its en troupe seelbOirtO ju'atify.• the.
.iLl.omenod appellation. •.'' was,. steep,
uloping,tunnei lute the bowele of the eerthi
just large eimugh to admit. the platettge, of a
•alatcnito
hey ram in'itived H.cleatibit sof wud from
Op to toe; After going down a few... .yards;
we found a 'ohttinber in • which we could.
•• 'stand erect. Here we lighted 'or candle
• endilooked about ue;:. We fouod.thas it was
the firstof a series of iitn.W4r chi:inhere
• "'Opening Otte into another.. „BOO contained
, stone Winne hewn ' oUt of the. solid rock.
entrances to theso'were • .itrohod., The'
•pilitatere on eatili tide Of the iintraneelitvere
•
in 'some Ibises -ornainerited with • ;tide
,aculptures mid decorated Withdesigns in
• a yellow:. Pigment. •• These•weie in the form
• .et cur,vps,-.•sprolle awl :enrolee,and were
• Carried over thereof. .Each chatnber was
sheet ten feet long 11 lex 'feet • wide, and
• ou an average ..cooseAued .thiree. .iontbs,
• one across the. :chamber facingtheen:
,.....ztranee,.arid One On each Side: . There de not
seem.evet to have beeli lids to these' stone'
.. • reeeptaolee for tho cOrpeee, • The ..,hadies.
were embalmed; Wrapped in .eloths,las we
• remain spititstal_aceottute •Of burials, note-
bly in that of our .;Saviour..• "Raoh.ixi his
• "Darrow :cell forever the}, reniained
, :•2 undisturbed untilr tide ,hanes, • ogee alter,
••: viord,.. "rolled away. ,,the iitone from the
mouth of the gave," end rifled :the contepte.
'• Bement the entroubse to the. charnhers had
beenetoMpletely' filled up. •In .such °ogee the.
partition. *all. of :.rock broken
through. ...sore°. of I he. chwetuorc Were
'Sager tliall'-others.,and (here wore..two,tiere•
• ofCOffiUH. lir Order p.iogei treio. one'
. charn-
bor to another it wal!i • oiten beetoisary to
: dragyourtwelt 'along .at ;Oki tbe
ground lu bee. ewe-. the; re,it hoti•••stoiteii
•. broken 'through elittrpti..4r above; and
thin probably li4d to tuoi.d, 1 h.l no time
• fully "to••exploi..e inieht • ekirimiii and
,intereeting. !pet • of.this
sort in the middie Of a beig. • dt.,.y"s r,ide • are
• very .fatiguilig' 1.'be Olort of ..soritrnbling
•',ishOut ou Bit fouts•114. alter, the • .fathien of
"YOU
itte•hainted hy the idea of •Lot baibg ohle to•.
. &awe vie uf !4itiee narrow
-i-fiRt-1-741764ed aliOut
fifteen,- difforoit
. • theotherS uid hot d iiie,r in • any • tweet.:
iant particulars. I Alin ..afraid,' however,.
• chat I wasno,. the Mitti (hs(oVet
them, but .thiit toe. honor
I' • Conder," ,itUyst•Bogioefrisi.ilif•
• eip_hiratieu The ..t.hi4.41 .tu4d , us be
• had once"hefOre gbided a,..fog.001:*.0 to ilia
, and no th,eitext ikve, Nte :visited.
we found the..lettete "..11:. E."' edratebed .in
7.1.ed paiiit ou ther&k.w.bleit 'Seder. tbeiteBLr
• eittnetaticee mo11. only rile** Royal•
Engi-
nears." teave was•ii....touch More •'Conl-,•
• !Citable 'one‘,'T diiird, tdoil,„•11 dot nearly
• so.. lintereatiiik. 'You ci)uld walk about it
oonifortablY; but the, e.v.?pv ortutreelittie,
• tion. The eherriohero wi-re .hogvi,' but there
Were only five or . them.' The stone
itiOffiterhad in masiv • Metancee :hem; eem,
• • pletely debtroYetl..",.btia :the • masiiive stohe
•• Oblations, or rather blocks of living rock
• Which oupteitied the reol, were Auer than
• those. In the :" Cave of Hell.' • Perhaps it
I 'owed itts 'more d ale et dated 'c.,.h.i itiot, .to. tbe
•-••• largeiteseiO1 the ell try,. awl itt4 proximity
to another huge oave whish had .evidently
in crusading uulea ht:en 'converted into a
Christian" place .t.,f worship: Acoorclieg to
:rough niette are tt en t ubtitiuiI by poet rig • it,
, •the'pave wee; .7000 ..t ret, the &pee 18:21,
• and twoapoe Shaped trousepis,about 204.18;
• • hiitlhese were. very -Much filled with rub-.
The height of the ottVe wes about 30
feet. 'TO whole .forosed 'a subterinnean.
• ohnich, whieli • in ite: ' perfect condition,
• when entered 'Own the hilieitle, Whet have
preeeeted a very imposiee appearance. • On
, the slope of tine hi fLuoefilifrom-thilt
was the carved pedestal .of a granite col'.
wain and pear it a .bilididine stone ear-.
•liStebORtlo„." . • „II
•• 1hstead of•°10.4i•-g hook, to theNazareth
read after, liniehttig our examination of
thiainterestiug spot, we Miele for e hill on
• the summit of which we. "eaw. .mottat ler-ge
Nook's of stobe betokebiug ruirull Here.we
cattle upon a native exeavation; 'evidently
very recent. V.deed, We • beard later that
it had oniy bin abuudoried tho wee
before. Tho bittirea otalasioitally ',find an
unopened toteb, arid dig into it fOr'trearitire.
Indeed, it vras Uselsiiii • to iiiienipt- to die.
abort° their mingle of the idiet that we wete
treaeure-huntete • Ou -asking them what
they., 'had foutal, they said mom° red glass
• 41 -Jetties: Which they 'had 'broken te dieetiVer
'What they had Oenteined,• - They had Meri.
found three jar& owl oontahiing ashee, tine'
and dim WAS .otopty. Thee° they
,bitd. also Bottled.. Itas ,enciigh to make
onii•ii Mouth Watsr to heat efithe deotrue.
tion ef.theee 011r1011itieS SO Very recently. I
A.A
• ' „
0 • r
iitiPIered them if thoy relied airsy mote not
to break them, but to bring them to me.
They laughed and..prommed to de No. Say-
ing -at the same tiMis: "They are oo very
old, that they are not worth anything." This
°nye well evidently an important one, but
030 natives, finding nothing but the glass
oh4 the We, had blocked up the entrance
again, and I had to piitoff the examination'
Or it for some future. Anne. • On the,top of
the hill there Were several 'tierce-
eethe etlaita „iteW14 out of the
living reek on the 13tirritee, • *Mr . the
stone lid at the side. At Orle plooe
saw * huge atone lid about eight feet long,
two feet six inches broad' at ite hose, and
the same itt height; but ooming pp to a.
ridge, which was evidently still covering
the mol -tat remain" which had origituilly.
been placed beneath it., • The , position of
this I have ale° Marked, and propose; at
some future time, to remove it • by gun.
powder and see • wino is .below. Had it
not beeu neceesaty to push on in order to
real* Nazareth Wore night,.I. would have
lingered longer at theft ruins,which are
ealied Zehda by the hativea; They arc
worthy of, a full examination. , The whole
rocky summit ..of the hill is evidently.
honeycombed. with cave tombs, Many of
which have not yet. been opted. One of
these, setae milesfurther on toward Naza-
reth, especially attratited my attention. A.
huge circular stone about two feet iu
diameter had been 'roiled into the carved
Stelae 'entrance to the cave, and becotee
tightly. wedged: AU the efforts of the
natives to. remove it, and she marks et
such' efforts were visible,. had evidently
been unavailing: • It • needed it eery entail
charge ofatdmaltito.,x*ip.Ttmtiatta.rem7.!nitaillt.e4blimlei,•
.
tazatankas:7477.44W,25.74:
,arranged.to .dor, hutori7 the day died for
:purpose • pereist0t,;rm dthappointed
ae. it." et a :,oreitC in ittore.•
e ‘• first entraneit 'into one • of
`these pld . JetviSh, tomb caverns ' will
be: an, eXciting episode; • but there
Jean amount ef suspieion end jeelouisy
the part of the ttatit'ee whioh• wilt rendex.
pritUence ahd Circumspection' ifecieSary if
any attempt of this eon is to becarried Out
with suocese. The whole plaint Esdkee-
lon; ot.i the verge of which 'this ruin is
situated!..ae well as it ' pert of the hills
behind,lenow all owned by tine 'rich firm
of Arab •bankers, who draw an annuol.
income Of about *200,000 it. year from it
They own practioally ,about five thoueaud
human beings as well, -who fereothe popu,.
lotion of thirty. *Weight *hid* are ib their
hands. I found no • nniret :potent telitumen
in indieing the natives to comply, with my
'request than to mention- the •name of
."`liktrstik," and imply that I had the honer
Of his acquitintnfice. No davit. exerciser'
a more autoOratto power over ' the • libertiee
Or ths' lives of his subjeote , than dots' ,tbie
milliouatro landed 'proprietor, who Oh-
tinues anntially to add . so his .territOry till
the whole of •Galilee seetris, in danger of
failing into his -hands...This: poet of. the
Country;--however,IOU :present 'beginning
toattract the ottention -of foreigners, and
•ikis tole hoped that . before long he may
find rivals in the field who will do more to
improve the condition of 'the peseentry;
:and introduce niethcid s of agriOulture• which
may make .0mi:in:hire independent of this
•trioney4enders who now Make their, profit
by. 'tucking their very life-blood..-1,Cer. New
Yerlt Own.
VANADIUM PAM illrlgso
ifidterientleit
.lanseer 4lhe Mew Xestr7ia.74WOW* 1epttei:a;
„Sir Charles:
-Tepper laid before the Rouse Boni* further
statements reapecting the progress of the
ClanadiadPeodin Raja way Company. The
papers brought down to -day include •it. pro-
file and desoription.of the proposed rents
of -the railway throngli the Roohy.ond
Sol -
kirk Mountitios froth Port • Calgary to the
settend „ crossing •ot the OoltunItia Biqa.
Oilier Superintendent Van Horne reports
*hat in descending from the.filtlinMit Of the
.iliooky Mountains towards Colon:ibis. River
• gradient of 90 feet per mile can be
eecur'od,but that it would involve it largo
loss iu distatice, !navy eurtatures,,enormodii
expense izjd serious lose; ot time in con-
struction. i0 that tbe nee of that gredienik
alMeet impracticable., ,Vhe coulPenY
'hillte therefore decided to adopt the direct
down West elope, of ,niountaine with'a
gradient of 116 feet to the mile for 20 miles;
pracstiokble fine itt also said ttEaboVe been
found directly aorose the Selkirk Biotin -
tains, reaching the stimniit on either side
by gradients of 116 feet per mile and each
20 mhos iu length. The distance across by
thislino ie 63 miles, while by tbe line felm,
lowing the Columbia- valley around the
n3outitainti it would be 140 mule. The
ruling gradient on other portions of the
CelualiOu" keOillo_ Satilway is 53 feet, and
the question to: be considered is whether'
the line long,."with two gradients
of 116 feet, each 20'nnles in length, is:pre-
ferable to it line 140 Miles bong, with Maxi -
Mani gradients of 53 feet. The gradients
:et _11.1Lluctjtu31-4_ramiltutfuTztFrad-te titzlea'
au' ,:ialtil.:==.:FaiirT137i:Lialiit"L'I:n.W
ilta4e-Utaiiseiliti-differeirtparter I* any
case aselitant;'Iteight engiues will he re -
01'0, ..Thek ohortenbI of: t4e:•PitftiE.0?
groat ,importaboe in (100'405ing for through
traffict,.land on passmiger trains *Abed-
tiiticin of heavy. for light l000rootIves on
heavy grades will (teen:tome: all Poesible
,diffieulties. It '10, ,considered that.% gradi-''
in Oen diterstiniintaY;
be moreobjeetioneble than one of '44
:feet .• in another, by reeeon . of • the
greeter vole* Ofj. traffic' itt one direction
onan the Other, ands, gradient of 80 feet to
the Mile dant Of Winnipeg Would be Mere
disadvantageous than one . of 116 on tbe
mountain eeetion,•berenise the toupee° will
be several times as great on the former as
.• • the latter. going - westward
no grade exceeding 52 feet „per Mile will be
encountered to within '•five, mile0 of tho
Winans of theltookies, and frocntbis point
to the staniniit theAtecent.iirbut 70 feet per
mile, and the only placebetween Montreal
and the Pacific, coast where a wesi.bound
'train Vitt! require aseikianee is the secent
of the past stope of the. Selkirlts, whil
east-bOundttams will require' assiiitincie in
only.twoplaces, viz.: theasoent,of the west
skipe Of she :Belkirke and'the. weet 11100 of
the -Rooky: Mountains, 00 inilesin• each.
• The preponderance of through
traffic mitosis the oontinent islargelY met-.
Ward bound, and in considering the.00st of:
construction the company had kept inview
the capitalized value of saving in the, dost
Of operating the road'. by reation of the
shorter distance. .•
. ••
wae neariee Vevey.
/it is tinnecestiarl ;Or * onitd • to the of
• .
the satirlet fever rie it is titect, it. 'haul& be
blied with a eattareet; . Let tie see: As any
time- beftire the body has finiabed its in-
(ffisoLual ' Struggle, we. tire able to 'help • it,
not by wonderfut. 'Medicines,' bat by thb.
koowledge of eitiatmity and the application
of coaduon senile. • we'ociesiolb the ey
thetio nerve' and do what • it..eamintuide us
to44o. .r.M.042arialt. ire/titles }0,41, tkITA
1 "-Wrfabuns r., *e0ui bTLriC1114804.-Wllerl itt
has lever and auxionsly ,eraves
sinegar„,butlenion
Coagulates .frilbainen rait.lie latter
• -oes not, on acootint of the surplus•
-Of • •eenteine.. "To
...imitate the ioothing ininams in .tbe ietes.
whiohitt now wanting,, and to give.
Some respiratory food at the same time, we
add some ,itutei Ibrahim • To restore
relieve the injuireAnitrire' we • apply.,,ntedet •
'Wernith; in.praetiiii4ro «tit fulfil aiithie
•With, the following Simple ••inalliputelkotie:
Uotliciis theehtld and ' bring it to bed Ibt
the very firit sired sickest's.: , • Giettistilif
it halt aidteady, feeef;',.:-fiothitit. hot settraib
we,rin:1' • letnolisdi • with some '• Ora
arshio io • • it., •:Thin etiier itio abdomen'
.with "-lenge dry. •flannel. Take e'.welt
folded bed-eheeb; and :put it in .utijiog
hot water; wring isout dry by to,- s,•esit•Of
drttowels, aud put this Orer tb. flaunei
on the 'child'," .:abdomen; then Od'Yer-the
WhOle and wilt. The hot sloths will per;
hope recteirir repeated heat. Aecordieg to
the severity of the ease and ite stroge of pro:
perspiration will commence in: the
child -in • frbine ten Minute' to two hour&
The ehild then ii owed .; it soon falls to
sleep.. Soon sifter thechild awake., it
eliowe slight eymptilms of returning
°ligation for fond; help its bowele,' if
neoetitiary, with injetitiens of 'oil, soap Ned
Witter, and itit reeovery trill be as •steady
tui 'the growth of a green -house , plant,
well treated, Of eonFec,..it . the, child was
already dying, • nothing eould save it, Or
if it has already -effusions in the hning Of
the heart or brain, it to much bettor that, it
. should, die. But if the above is applied la
due time, tinder the eyet" and direction of a
competent phyeibitin, I will guarantee that
notnbe itt ti hundred children Will 'ever die
of scarlet beer. 1 know Shit; will entitle
sortie of My reader., eepeciallY thorite;mho
have lost • children !greedy, but I shall; go
still further. 1.'maintain that a 'WM will
never get Scarlet fever if PrePerly treated.
If a ohild heti oorreotly•mixed blood, it will
pot catch the diabrder if -put in bed with a
sick ohild. This,ie still Mere Startling,'but
.nothing IS omelet,' of proof. -Good Senn&
,
•„„...wntleja_-,-BestoU • Lord Lorne 1111471Iiii
Prineess Leinee waded th millibar ot Boeton
Otudicei itctiorepanied, by Albert . Blitretadt
toad Herbert Ilerkonier. Governor Butler
'Called and ,Lix %fa urged to remain for .lutieb4
butAeoli*d ma the plea of preening Wei.
nese at the State House. Mayor end Mre.
Palnier.dined With the Marquis and ,Prin-
ceein •„ •
; Itis rumored that the ASV. John VW,
Pastor Of Charles Street PresbYterien
Church, Toronto4wull, owing to. ill -health,
shortly, retire.,
Always under • a rins.10 rtiteheow
.4
, • . The paliCess in Besten.
Der Royal Highness the Prineese:Louise
admires Boston. . She told Mayor Pali**,
at a quiet little lunch at the Bruuawiek,.
that She thought Boston' "the Moat beauti-
ful of Arttericein chit/Wand added that she
liked tine Hub becausii it vitseltuit &edit&
enough '! to make her feel quite sallower)
withiu Its:testis: No patrietiii Boiitonien
cap help liknig the .gracious k'riiIcebsallihe
betterlor thisbit of conimendation• uttered
tinder nO More potent ibspiiittion the,b it
oup of . mocha: We are used to compli-
ments from ..distinguiehed male.visitora in
atter,ditaretPpeeches .tylintt*e_Pheattm,
Vg*Whligefreelf,'Uli .this eintere Oomph.*
lineurfroin': an ?reathetic Princess,, paid 'to
our...,..official-representative-at irconnote"?'
place lancliteit7t•preudot,---Wo-osu-d
no more...than repay the royal lady by assur
hat ireraf --Four eoroial admiration for her
gitaciOnsself. And the Princess ; rounded
Of her compliment in the Mold iihartning
Wanner by " And I like the
people of Beaton, too.' If ,the fair daugh-
ter of the English Qieep will take upher'
residence: hit'e we will certainly eledt her
to the Mayoralty; itesuritigher of entire
safety- froth the maginnationis of "dyne.'
'niters" and ,giving her ttie folio; rieopefor
the exeiCiee Of her intiliatic testestlif the
ornitaientatiOu •of •Otir pubilo ,parke: the
ettension of Our Atr6 museum and the
oarrytng out' of all the Mathetki plena of the
Memorial ' Spoiety. 'Let the Prince as. ex:
change dull Ottawa for brilliant Boston.--
:Naito's, Herald.
• Sonseshluss Like•it•Vallt 1• ' •
A Waggon °obtaining 0..calf in a cage, with
it 'farmer's wife in-- charge, wee .on, the
Detroit market. recently,. &wording to the.
FreA,Preasi and a ' butcher with an eye to
veal stopped up and hiquired : ,” Madam,
iethat calf for sale ?'-! '• "Yes, sir.” "Is
he it Durham ?" "'He' may be," :." len't
Ay'rehireofe he?" Like enough." lA Don't
you •know his breed ?" he asked in a
surprised •voice, "No, I does." "Then
how do you expect to gall him?" "Ali that
knOw about:the calf is that .hie father
litieked it justice of the p,eaca to death ond
his mother chased a femalelecturer two
miles, and if that ain't breed enough to tisk
54 on you needn't take him."' The butcher
said the breed was all right. • '
RAMS IN MAK
a
000040111WOMMIS•bb••••,,7,17in
The_ Staines* DOM Run
. and Profit Won.
WHAT LAST YEAR'8 DEATH ROLL WAIL
.1..."`^-1-4anarmanane.a.
An Ottawa despatth esti: The, • rallwity
statistios laid before the House to -day thew
that the OW mileage of railways in Opera-
tion in Canada on Aunt 80th list Was, 7,580,
Three hundred and thirty-five railer' were
under construction, the tiller beieg Itud
and 2 910 miles were under oopeteaotion,
no track being yet -aid. The Inereese of
milesge in labs year was 269. The Mintitee
reports that lanalgametienhint yreCeeded
elflike and that traffic has riot tlagged. It is
sologiigftscrenbtyf NADI tinha:antbse,inincprroTorttontbtoo
that in the triffio, whether poosenger or
frellthtf the increeee in the,- number ot,.
passengers carried being $4 per 'oenthnd
that in receipts only 22 per cent., while the
.freigbt truffle shows au increase of 12, per
cent. in tonnage and at the same time au
actual diminution of 0, per oentin receipts.
This isprohably due to eompetitiOn. Most
of the companieshave omitted to furnish
the information necessary, and: the'' tune
has, in the opinion of the Violater, arrived;
when it would be expedient to extend the
potters ot the Railway Conienittee of the
Privy Council, so as to enabletheni to deal
with ougnarded level crossings on all rail -
'ways in the Dominion and also to regulate
,the height of all overhead' bridges. .
•
oi.4.7,V4-7:a31.411,-ZzirW-4,-,00-14--
.pp,tries doing busitiees.in. Canada ..on 30th
JOAO wee :01'; NOY'S.: ;• • •
net/ Bletrii,elteltst • ' .V42,936,104
erdrenee /ball) Capital 71,631,941
Bonded debt 92,487,,932.
T. Beauregard; thiC'fainefei
Contederate datietaii who ie only, 62 years,
old, is now visiting Mobile. ,
• William Leadhaoi Bright, iletiond eon of
Sohn Bright, was married a few days agb
toldise Isabella MoIvor Taylor. The cere-
mony Was performed by Canon Farrar, and
in tibe Clireheitooparish church., although
the bride and groom and tient laminae
and friends are Quakers'.
• John Brown Is to-haioe died rich.
He:had, received a great -number or 06144
presents in his time; and hie appointinents
Were large and ' nu inerou s. • His health had
• been impaired by the life of ease and Ina-
ury which he led. andhe had often' been
warned' insvitin that he hooded more exer,
Oise aiid a eiltpl:erdiet: Claret Was room-
• mended to him in plaice of Lochengar whis-
key, . •. • . •.
Large 'numbers of dead cormoranti,
eliego; and razorbill'are coming. aeltore
• along most Of the oaks: in the Orkney),
supposed to have been killed. by 'starvation.
owing tothe sOareity of food (cod.fieh.)
All front Potnintoit;,Goveritment ,.60,70t066
Aid-froroOritarbi.t4Overihnent., 3206,530
Aid from 44ospe_ruo Goveriin.nront.1.., . 111:45006097AId from 1.w 5:
Cloverinnent 822.
'Aid from•rannieiPailtiea••,, $108,412
)8.665809,91
in
'Capital froother sources.... • • 2,43,279
' ..
•
,
,I.Rotai nominal eapitai..,.,....,.....$4.15;611,810.
•The nominal eapital a the CIAO Of the
pretioue year tvas . '
OrdtivirT shareeailtel. . $128,061,520
Preference share'.capiut14.# - 4 .4. 74108,400
Bonded' debt.. .• • : st.sto.otc
Government a;i4.'inOnioiPal lid' ' ' 104•30,459
Other SOnraes.,,.. •6e1se47
' Toted 5:985753
• ?Amnia:line AND iliartaiT• . • 9.
The number. of passengers carried Wes
9,852,335, agabiet 6,948,971, an *arena of
.2.408,664e, Or.84.68 per gent, the torinage
Of Ireight handled was 10;575,787 . tains,
•agamit 12,085;823, an inerease of 1,510,1364
tens,. or 12.51 per oent. .
The f011owingie a comparative statement
.„of passenger trafRii of the peincipal.lines in
1881 and 1882: •.• . ' •
18e1,)81.•:.
52,170,793
it8331;.,g445788,
•47.747
118,5/54'
Grand' Tranli andIeiaed _ '
lines • ' • 12;nacce
Great Western and leased '
- Melee. . . ... 9,289.028
Intereolonial'a ,779,994
Canada Southern • • 819,331
Northern ,th'Northwest-
_ern.s,. '' 476,978 ..
Midland
326,111
Termite, Grey* Bruce... 1.45,60' 111;076
' The statiniisit of freight •carried on the
sante railways by tons ivas follows-:
-Grand Trunk and leased 4 '
., lines . , . . , .. • 3,695,192 . 3,295,288!
Great Western and lensed. ' • .
2.741,166 2;572t052
Intereoloniar " ' .. . • . .
. ,
577
Canada Alonthern • 2428,783' 8,136,811
Northtrn A Nurthwodern.614,042 • .662,309
Aildiand • •237845 '202.095
:Toronto, Grey & Musa . 124. 414487
• lilt:flans AND nierstoon •.,. •
The coroperatire4tateinent-a-,eurnings
,..a....r.n.—--,..itgltp,...,--4-zregz.,---------.-
' • •i881432. • mon
,
Passengers' . - • -, 410,018,476 - 4. 8.228,261,
limighp:-.--7... ,..`:".".t.-.:.7.7.:....--17,720,045 18,666,982
"litailsandLiipres.i...»...,....,--,11037-4130 ... egote-
Cither sources... . .•. ........ • 234857. , 146.832
Not giren-itidetiflui7.4:-------8,049-i- - -1,7811
'Total 11.294027 789 60171967.609
• The eareioge of the railways show a net
increase 'id *Loso,!po ever." these Of ,tbo
Ort;otions year,kand the Workiwexpernies of
K269,220. The, net - profiti, of the • two
• , •
•
Ye{.417•°*6,1,44'. ii• 81..
-0.• • 60-1*•‘
Asee‘ts ' • 029.007** 427,0050
... • '•' 22,390,708 2A04s1;4,18,
Net greet.; • 60;057,081 *7,86601
The Aare and bonded liability per mile
ot railway complete aud -under construc-
tion is *27,863; oapitaLliability for shortie
sue' heeds 9f rcilwaye in operation • is ap•
proximately 11803,100,677. The net.earn.
loge of the year would, thus be equal to the
pee:lend of a dividend of' 221 per bent,.
upon the shears, aud•bonded
•.•,.TUB. ABATE( soma
-
The total nurriber of ,•persons ,:)tilled on
our railways laid year' was 14/ and 097
,ware iujured, against 99 killed and 147
injured in the previons. yew'. Of the 'killed
in .1882, 94 fell from epginee or oars, 00
were walking on the tract. 11 died of hi*.
ries Zeoeived itt ooltisiona, 8 were getting on
or off trains; and5 were ellitelled itt making
up trains. Moil last year tibi; Grand
'Trunk Made no return of persons iiijurea,'
and the Qiiebeo, Montreal, .Ottawa &.Oces,
dental Railvtiy has thisyear. omitted to
return either killed or iejured. ''Nevertlie.
lees, making ell dedeotione, aaeieeete nava
ioilreatied 'in a tar higher ratio than the
traffic, the proportion of 'passengers killed
to the number cerried1Wringbeen approxi-
iiiately 1 in 710;061 against 1 in 091,958 in
188081.
LAMS AND notiueli0.
' The amounts of GtoVerninliet and mini.
oipal Mane, bonuses, •* etoi, paid and
promised, including the ;Wet of. the Gov.
erratieut,Iiiilivaye. were ,
tiumtiinioloh poverhounit .. . 114,2i2.442
onl
4,309.144
gushed • , 14,036442
New Briniairick• •• ...... 3431E000
Nere. Scotia • "- • , " 1,000,75• • s
' ' • 137,810,79$
Bfiulielpsalitketa in Ontario 6,136;244
• Quebec b e 414144 014•44 41171,000
Now LirinsiWisk 290,600
a Nova Scotla,... 250.000
• atailitobs 4444444!• 270,000
. • . • ....... .pacsa .... . i•was.$ 1,12.5,144
.0ratid. total. ... .. 1160 OOP, 0.10,180,936,453.
tip to aoth June, 1881, the GOVert meat
and rounioipal aid prainieed was 6152,715,-
806, There wait theretetelvirtualiran
itt-
orease of 62 787,141
.T40touoyting table Showiiihe amounts
. 1
'of subsidies paid, 6.4id to be paid, by. this
vitriol* Governmentsand ninnanpalitiser,'
Paid. Tebepaid
Dominion Offertiment.4 -09./57,56o eau owl
Onterie. e.606,606 _ _1,100,6111
Quebec' - 11•fakOrt AcosAts_
New Bromide* ,wecoes te.,ase
Neve Scotia 4 894880 1,084,1546
• IfIng01110.411/40S, 4999,646 • *WM*
• TOWS-- 111-174164161 .447.141Tii• •4's
ftpas ,:motistuovoo. .ovirikatialic;
thiveiker Evisteare et linteeinate Treat -
eat.
.4. Boston dispatch eayst 'The Tewkes-
bury examivation. was continued yester-
day. Mary Bowen,. ftignierly on impala"
.and mother of an illegitimate child, teed -
ed that thirtY wen:len-bathed itt thireinall
watermany of -the Pktiehte having:had
iskin diWiasee, ren4 41PJaY WCZ0 infested 4Fith
Vermin. OarbOlitroeid Wan One tiht_tipOilre41
on th. heads or °.,enolt petieett. •' rota
were eo, abundant that the patients wo014
nail on She lotuses to drive them swop
ooneuniptive woman woe neebTe %meal, for
helit, and her fee* were bediy -bitten every
nisbt until she died. A large *onion died_
and her. body was crowded into. * box by
Men standing on it. , $he baa tin a bovine,
worn when ehe was alivik ,Another OoinV
pied the bed on which. th_jo .woinatt dle
that night, no ohatigir Of "01001.01C.,being,
made. An old'insane Weenitu Waabeeteet
with stielts and bedropet,
•
Illessee!VIesisfisg.
Wheeeaeitit.bee eonre which itt dreatlea
by worihoteekeierrr,
4,tr•Rti?;44,••••
cOme, theStiddeeltht the yeaty!! o0 aveity.,
Mitd e,zptesston: ottheir ,.sentAtP.".0.1P-0-
hotise-ohteUttef Ofiltefigreat40inati
lie hervdeo inkwaltLas. :the' .inti • ;17.
teni;endit shou1d3hOtheldnr,Of
ful housetfife to seotliut .11 the
:Oita Rerbrine/w04,:itellit.t)le,"74,1SeeinfOrt.
:possible. Mor. than ordinary attlutiou
.0bOuld he given to provision of1.4ntitri
tious food at regular intervils.; It; is7nell
neseiliery: that...there 'halt . web *
genera osterturning`all at °nee ihafrtheits.',
'members of .the boulehold•who do not Sr,
tioipite shell feet, that "dire ,0011,-
foo1911 rope, and • that there,,,- is,
not, even . one room that does not e!itrot
trace's of thediettirbed order of.: Wigs.
-,Do not attempt SOO much at .tineo; but ,
if.posaible,'arridige it so that only , one or
:two room" &pi undertaken at & timei• and$
put them, in orderbeforebeginninganother:
Tha. firetplgioe to receive attention is the •
Throtreitroy everything tliat.ii no
longer:of un. Make your intsrvbioh.should', •
have been tried Out and molted 'into. cake*
soap: It, your aiial-ashee have not
been removed weekly, have thent„oarried."„
out. All onipty„.liOtosinidbl'irrols; and aul
hoardethat you do not *eh to 'twee," hariv--.--
sPlit into kindling *bad.. Then-eweettithe ,
oeffinge aud walls thoroughly, and sprinkle • -
'the Soot, it it be stone er gement, 'before
-yotiaweep it, Examine the malt, and.f.f,,
,soiy• rat -boles are found Alt them with
pounded glass and • *Mint thentover.
hum should b. midtown/14_ avery„:eptinli.
11 pienty„. ot 000king-ult itt Ott into-tha •
Whitewash it will not rub" 6#1.•tincil Gotnoiie
added to it 'Wilt r.eniit, ell venmin Bit cot
eight 1:tOti9de' ofi:oolitionts
•bteiliel, of 'qtrieldiMe will tlet.he too 'Mech. •.
Alter the cellar ielinished: bight the attic or
itoyeroorn, Miterything ohonld be looked
aver and cleanedout::. ,EVerydratter, trunk
box, bag lied bundle minds 'tkinie forth front
its hiding -place! And yield_it.s, contents tes".-
more vigtheit, inepection than that of a' .
oustom-house officer. All wailer' eilicles
,must be 'beaten•and,eXteniedto the sun' and
:nir , before being _cone/geed to ,:,annilliter'
...onarters.:-lit'ftletwatticlos,:4that are out
Tbrown • -
paper or iloWspapere; if midrib! t Clatter, •
thepaper,.ehould.....bir.•double• -fot•-ittioliter7-
and it'eOft,POPeeshoillit be tihoee
ilituorteite • The -edges tan he:pasted
etheri•iiied -When-thitTgooda-aruni,1110--7
it nine% be plaited up tightly.. Unless . •
moth eggs were iti the ,gatinentin you nbed
have nofearsfor their, safety if you put
them away.in bona or *drawer*); andlicetter
a. litthr camphor' and boron Oyer, them.:
The floor of 'tha ,•••staritionizi; ehonld 1*
w.OHlted in ihot kninfOasei. ,*nd 14.50,
thoronghlk cleaned •as ta. pqtectIonaafnit
the eggs of Motheand tither ineeb
'
;Attest treetereleetti',"•
On Bfaroh4letteynolde keyteii; it D.,'
died'attlie • residence of bus see -iii -law,;
Oriel Goodison, .Portrtmli; ' •
Agriculture' operations are prooeeding
With great atridegin Tipperary, ••The price
of labor is tioneually high • • •
Colonel St. George Cake,Ballinit, pulpiest ecu. of the late .Lor&
Tyre/mitt, died On March, 29th,•aged over 190
goalie. • • ,
A -ceremonial of interest took pliant In
Glencolumbkille, Donegal, reeently in the,
Planting of some hundreds of thoniands
gift treek being- inaugurated °tithes lay. ,
During 1882 Ireland .produotid 127,177
tons of coalToshio total, Connaught tiosi.
tributed 6,891 tons ; Leinster, 82,714 tont;
Munetee, 22,968 tone, anal,. Miter, 15,402 •
tote. • Ireland prodnoed 'tale tons of fire-
ele,Y,-Leinster contributing 116 tons, and
Ulster,' 3 500.,tons. .
,
4
:•
• "s., A Mesh ter enusadad
A London cablegram says Owing to,.
the unprecedented demand for passage
&Grope the Atleintio, the Allan Mail 811111111, , •
ship Company Were yesterday coinpelled.
to despatch .three of their fleekthe
Aitstrian and Grecian, carrying two
I thousand lout hundred emigrants for
Canada. ^'A large nninber Also left on the
Dominion Line Mesmer Ontario, milking. •
altogether nearby three ,thoueitrid people.
leaving Liverpool- in one day for the •
Dominion, more than double that 0, any
day on record. Nearlybelf the nhinber are
-*Wild for Manitoba,. -and- .it Iri .esiiniated
that they take away eapital to the
ebootint of upwards of t100,000.'
A DitATilss, WALTZ. -A nieletioholy affair
teak plat* iecently at Damp; Lancashire.,
A private boll was given in the town on
Tuesday night, and daneifig'wei kept bp to
a very late or rather early hour. Duning
,one of-theoe waltzeo a young lady na
Miss Martha Spraggon, Who had' through,
out the evenitigteeh to all eppeerailte is
good health, suddenly Mink into her
mint ar1116 end shortly afftiirwardt
The queen' iromidlately separated...
iten TclqrapJ.