HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1882-06-22, Page 9June 2,1882„1
EITROPEAN GOSSIP.
Grand Oaribaldian Procession in
OTHER INTERESTING • CHIT.CFIA.T.
_ •
London cablegrams say Some people
can evidently regard the dreary • seenes of
British politics from a comic point of view.
Such a one is that of an anonymous poet
in the St. James' Gazette; who thus assails
Mr. Gladstone's supposed tergiversation in
approving the Turkish expedition to Egypt:
Vile but much required barbarian,
Wicked but convenient Turk, .
Come and purge your crimes Bulgarian
By a piece of useful work.
Nay, though this is Confidential, !
When you come, if come you do,
You must. 'tis indeed essential,
Bring your bag and baggage to.
. ,
The Lords will divide .on Manday on the
Deceased Wife's Sister Bill. it is expected
that the Prince of Wales wil1 vote on the
second reading, as he andthe puke ,of
Edinburgh did when the Bill was before
the House, and when it was rumored that
the influence of .court was -exercised in its
favor owing to an eligible royal naatchavith
a deceased wife's sister being on the tapis:
Society has hit upon a new thing ittfairs,
namely, "a Liliputian.fair," to beheld at
the end of • the month. at, the Duke Of
Wellington's riding school, under the
patronage of several royal ladiee. The stalls
will be occupied by'claildren in fancy cos-
tumes. Several actors. have voltinteered
their sersices for the entertainments ; the
sons of M. Henry Irving Will act in &each°
from the " School for Scandal." The object
of the fair is to raise funds for the Chelsea.
- Hospital for Children. Anotherprofffieed'
bazaar will be held in the coisservatoty of
the Horticultural Gardens, also ,under
exteneive royal auspices, in aid. of theisfund
for ladiee in distrese through the, non-pay-
ment of rents in Ireland. . •
Garibaldi's death is still 'of course a uni-
versal topic of .conversation. Several of
the English obituaries are exceedingly in-
teresting and historically valuable, con-
taining many personal reminiscences. Lon-
doners recall hie visit to London :fled the
overwhelming ovation which put into the.
shade even • royal welcomes, and they re-
member also his mysterious and hasty idea
parture, whiela was generally Rupposed t6
have been suggested by Lord Palmerston, •
who feared the awakening power .of 'the
democracy. Mr. John Bright,' wise- 'wit.'
nessed the clensonstration from a 'window
on Parliament street, remarked that if the
English people would combine kir political
purposee as they consbined. to 'welcome.
Garibaldi .something could. be done for
them. Mr. Haweis, the popular clergy:
man, writes giving • intereetieg reiuinis-
cences. He also mattes loans of .relics of
:----the-revolution of 1860 -for exhibition . .
his vestry after evening service next•Sun-
day, thus helping to fixen•the publiomipd
"some of those grand moral aspects Of life,
duty, sacrifice, patriotism, and noblest
faith iu hutnanity which are Presen•ted. to
tia in the life of Italy's great -hero ea he
stands and will stand for ever, t'he eentre
figure of the sacred war of her independ-
ence." .
Speaking of Mr. Ilaweie reminds me to
mention aeother still more popular rev._
gentleruan, viz., Mr. Spurgeon, whose ser -
mous are being translated into the dialect
of North Russia and into Tamil, and who
has new attained the.additional dignity of
having niantlee and corsets named after
. him in shop windows in South Lend,oh.
Truth says that the Salvation Army bonnet
does very' well with the' Spurgeon cloak.
Litearary items are scatree.. • I-trterest-
seems to have been monepolized by the •
frequent book. sales. A first edition .of
Burns fetched.£67, and an -editicas of 1787
16, the other day. "And all this time," •
exclaims Truth," the only surviving mem-
ber of the. poet's family is passing his last'
years in the Glasgow pocir-lionse.". .
In additicia, to the draWing-rcionameet-
ings, pamphlets and other means whereby'
Lady Harberton's National Dress' Society.
seeks to Ventilate its objects„ it now
threatens irrational ladies with eamontlily
Anti -Fashionable ,Tourna/. . .
A unique thing in museums has jastbeezi
presented to the nation by ,Mies Marianne,
North. It is a collection of paintings of
plants and their homes by herself, the
result of travels in Many parts of the world',.
undertaken for the purpose. She ,has built
an annexe in Kew Gardens • for the conk- .
tion, which has • been inaugurated' ,by a*
pleasant garden .party. . • '
Social circles, and specially the male'
section, are fluttered by the automat:meat
that Mrs. _Langtry is studying the- part. of
Rosalind in " As You' Like- -It. -p‘olap,raater
which will give an opportunity, fdr pro-
nouncing .a more decided opinion on the
vaunted beauty of her figure. a
. Rome, June 11. -:-The Corso was crowded
toalay ; mourning draperiea ,were every-
where displayed, and the national flags.
were at half mast in memory of General
Garibaldi. At 4 o'clock the precession froicif
the Piazza del Popolo to 'the Capitol took
place in the five followingadiVialons •,.
First Chaision-The m unieipal authorities,
trumpeters, committees, iiittiontil flags, the
municipal schools. • •
Second divieion-The mianieipal baud,
the university, the superior schools, artists
of the International ASsocp,tion, With flag,
the Anti -clerical Clubs. .
Third division ---A band, the operative and
political societies, iu alahabetical order.
Fourth division --The veterans 'with
trumpets and flags, military • as'sociations,
the Freemasons' committee, .banners of
Itaiitu ej tjoH.
Fifth division -A chariot With Six horses,
•
bearing a statue of Liberty crowning Geri-
baldi's'bust ; a chariot decorated to repre-
sent Garibaldi's triumphant entries of
Palermo, Naples and Rome, and surrounded
by forty flags and inseription§ and nausea
. .
of battle.
The chariot ascended the Roman forum
to. the Capitol, where the Mayor and Com-
mon Council placed the bust' in the Sena-
torial Hall, and invited the band to play
Garibaldi's hymn. The great UR of the
Capitol tolled. The membered Parliament
marched with the different asacidiatious,
and tiot in a separate body. Garibaldi's'
veterans wbare red shirts and were unarmed.
There were no red flags in- the preoessiop.,
The police were oti baud witaiaTeTiifOree.
manta to preserve order. the Carainale
Vicar closed the churches this afternoon.
Many foreign deputations have arrived. The
procession was ?nest imposing.' •• In'. the
above order tt loft the Piazza, headed by
five hansls °aka black banner, with - the
inscription "Rothe to Garibaldi." The'
red-shirted veterans were splendid types of
old soldiers ; atnong themavere neany wear-
ing humorous medals. There wore -repro-'
sented aboub. two hundred aseeciationa.
with banners. The Most varied iLlia inter-
esting display was that of the internation'al'
artists; there was a fine group of flags,
Two ladies took part, one for the, Phillrar-
'monic Society and ono 'for the Meledra-
made. The latter appeared to be Adelaide
Ristoxi. At 5 O'clock the procession was
interruptedly a panic caused by the fall-
ing of al liefi.vy banner opposite the Vise
Vittoria ; a number of persons were tram-
pled on and plundered by the anckpockOts,
and several' arrests were made; After
erder was restored the procession was
resumed, but a second panic occurred oppo-
site the Hospital an Giacomos, Order
was again-- restored " and s confidence
inspired by the cheerful notes of
the Garibaldi trumpeters heading
the Generld's staff officers and
privates, the surviving companies
of Graribaldian campaigns. Next came
the Hungarian General Haugh and
other foreigners •, then came a colossal oar
of eight white horses vsith black plumes,
and Garibaldi's bust crowned by Liberty.
There were on this car numerous ornaments,
a beautiful one from the Italian workmen
of Parisi, and two from Trent and Trieste.
This was followed by 100 ladies -in black
veils. The weather was splendid. The
Austrian and Russian flags were floating
at the embassies. About a huadred thou-
sand persons lined the route of the cortege.
The ceremony. was concluded about sunset;
it was a sublime spectacleTthe Capitol
illuminated by the rays of the setting sun,
the &stable flight of etairs ascending to the
senatorial palace adorned with two hundred
banners, GraribaldPesymbolical oar opposite
the fountain, surrounded by its followers,
the denee crowd covering the ample piazza,
the staircasee, the colonnadda, and even
the.pedetaal oftle statue of Maxims Aure-
lius. There was 'perfect apider. The first
speech from the car was that of Deputy
Bovio reviewing Garibaldi's achievements ;
the second was that of the President of the
Municipal Council of Paris, who predicted,
a lasting union between Prance and Italy,
notwithstanding .some apparent discord.
The third was a very enthusieetio ()ration
by Deputy Cavallati, and the fourth was
by Borboni, who only spoke a few words.
Then Garibaldi's veterans in red shirts car-
ried the colossal bust from the car up thee
ascent to tbe senatorial hall amid immense
applause, the flageettluting aucl the bands
playing the Graribaldian hymn, the Capitol
bell tolling during the formal consigunient
to the municipality.
(P.F 111711C1C SCHOOLS.
Ilion: and, Wheat NI0P101 Is 11/"O'ilfbed—
' Monte IThieful Watt,
At the meeting of the Ontario Meilioal
Association in Toronto on Thursday Dr.
'Palmer -read tt paper, on "Lighting of,
Public Schools." He said that it was
generally observed that school weilt fre-
quently impairs the vision, and that it was
-an-evil which should be fipeolally -gutirddd-
against. :goat children up to 5 or 6 years
of age have normal vision, and from this
age up to 15 is the period of developmeist
of nyopia. Froin 6 to 20 --the school
life of children -is the period' when
nyopia becomes developed, and it is alias
established by , careful and extensive
statistics that the defect increased nameri-
°idly as the pupil advanced through- differ-
ent grades of the school. A bad light is
one of the most. certain causes, situated as
it often is in front of the pupil or at his
side; shining with a ,glare on a level with
his eye and producmg, great irritation.
Badly constructed. desks and seats,
ill -
heated and badly ventilated rooms, wet
feet, cold floors, excessive study without
interruption, all act deleteriously to the
pupil. The doctor concluded an able
address by hoping that the Provincial
Board of Health would give attention to the
matter and bring about such changes as
,were necessary to protect the health of
. , ,
)11V01111(tecumars.
The Squirrel Problesn.
" A squirrel is up a tree and a man on
the ground with a gun is trying to. shoot it;
but the,squirrel persists .in keeping oie the
apposite side of the...tree front the man.
The man walks ,clear aroupd the tree
to the "place of starting, the squirrel
goieg about in thasanTe direction aud keep-
ing the taste all the time between itself and
the man. Nothe problem is, Hits the
man been around the aquirrel?' Ele has
been around the tree with the squirrel ou it,
but has heleen arontid tho squirrel l "
. . The Exp.i•es's invited answers to. this
problena and received twentyeseven; of.
Whiel fifteen say yes, the man does go
around the, squirrel; and twelve. eay no. he
'.does not. A few have sent us their re:tam-ea,
and two ,send figures demonstratiag
problem. ,The- following answers axe,
printed : .
1. Of course: the Mau goes around the
squirrel: He goes; arouucl the tree and
everything cm it. _
2.. Should the squirrel haye the start I
.stru of the opinion tbat the man.goes around
3. Not by a- darn sight doe e the hunter
walk around the squirrel.
, 4. The .man does not go aroand the
squirrel., Might - well- claim that -by.
having a horse attached at A and another
at 13'each describing the same circle, keep-
, big. at opposite sides bf circle -the horse
at A would at every thine going around' the
ring 'go around the inside half of B and that,
B aetarned the compliment •
• A( X )B
• . - •
at -o -A thersame manner simply because
the,eutside of one described a' larger circle_
thau the inside 'of • the other. In:other
--wordssaaman or horse -in -describing --any-
circle goes argund•onelalf 6f ',himself.'
• 5. The nstin goes ardund the squirrel. It
is just like a wheel within a Wheel.
6. The man don't go around the squirrel.
I have tried it and" had I get'around the
squirrel I would' haye'shot it. .
7. If there. was no -tree there and the
squirrel was amming around in a circle on
the grounds and the man was going in a
largerairele • 1. should say 'the man went
aroundthe squirrel:- But when you put a
tree there it is different. The man does -
net goaround the squirrel on the tree. ,
7- The man . doesn't • go around. the
squirrel any ruore. than the squirrel 'goes
around the man. • • •
,
9. Of course, the man doesn't go'. around
the squirrel. • 11 .1 am standing•ori the nigh.
aide of 'a horse and start te walk around'
him, and the horse keeps turning as I go,
I am on the nigla aide of him all the time,
am I not ? . And I don't goaround.him if
I am on the nigh•side all the time, do I ?
The Case is precisely similar to this of the
squirrel:On a tree.-BUO:ctlo E:cpress.
• Try popcorn for nausea.
Try a suisbath for rheuniatism.
Try ginger ale for stomach cramps. .'
- ' Try to cultivate an equable temperaand
don't borrow trouble ahead
Try a dry hotsilanisel over..the seat Of
thsinearalgic.pain and reneW frequently.
Try taking year scodliarer oil in tenant°
eatstip, if you want to make it' palatable:.
Try liftiffing powdered -betas eup . the
nostrils for catarrhal "cold in the head."
Try takitig a hap in the afternoen if yeu
are:going to be out late in the evening. • .
. Try a cloth wrung out.of cold Water.put .
about the neck at night for sorestliroat.• -
Try walking With your•hands'behind you
if you find yourself becominglent forward.
Try a eilk handkerchief over year face' •
wheat Obliged:to go against a cold, piercing -
wind.. '..• . • , • .
Tay a saturated solution of_bicarbonate
of 'soda (baking ,powder) in diarrhoeal
troubles;
troubles.; give freely.' .
Try' a newspaper over -the chest, beneath
your coat, as a chest protector, in extremely
cold weather,: e • '
Oijit, PRAIRIE PUOVXNCE:
whe Iudlan Proialeni-Child Burned to
Oran 0.1 iniageurent.
A telegram from 'Winnipeg, datod .StindaY
night, says: A. letter received by the Indian
Oflice from 'Lieutenant -Governor, Dewdoey s.t
-Qu'Appelle reports nidlteriin a satiefactory con-
dition throughout the Northwest. Four hundred
Ores Indians bad arrived there from the southin
charge of the lane Indian farm instructor at Fort
-Walsh-- They. expressed-a-desire-to:be-placed-on-
the Qu'Appelle reserve. Three or four thousand
Indians at Big Lake, in the vicinity of 'Fort
Walsh, have expressed a desire to go on the re-
serves and quit 'immune -life. It is the illIt31113.011
of the authorities to urge them back from the
frontier to avoid internatiomi I trouble, The ln-
clan farm at Fort Walsh has been absincloned,
anclthat'poSt will ben° longer au Indian agency.
The treaty payments will be made exclusively on
the reserves, and alter the harvest, to avoid the
necessity of suspension of labor during this, to
the aborgines, festive season.
Vice-Zaosiclent Hill is here. asumor connects
hie visit with, changes in the management of the
.1;'acifle Railway. Since the exposure Canadians
axe treated with more caution. Offences which
formerly commanded dismissal are now visited
with short suspension. A railroad man from the
end of the track Bays not a mile of track is yet
laid or grading done under Van Horne's manage -
Slurried Ills Itlotticr-beedasr.
. . ,
,
The Widow of the late Luke Nobles of
bottom, Essex, has gained' an uneuviablo.
notoriety by Marrying, her deceased
daughter's widower '-jusaeleyen Weeks after
the death cialier:hasband.. This is the first,
kno.ii instance in Canada 'her,e nsan
.bas actually married his own mother,in-
lttw.
-Sucha marriage ia .centrary Clio
•lawe of this country,- The ceremony Was
.perfcatnedly Rev.. J. V.- Seeitb, of Wiedser,
• -*au, of course, did riot :know the relation-.
ship the the parties borate each other.. •
afeetiiahia.
Oscar :Wilde bus commenced' at. Rich -
Mend,. Va., a ssenth's lecture . tour. in the
, Southern States; afterwhicli he goes to
. .
Japan, . via San Francisco, to'. study
Japanese art. • • •
' • kr. Arthur Sullivan, the composer, has
lost his rnetheaeto wham he. was devotedly
attached. . , •
The lately deceased Duke of Grafton is
said' to have shown some years ago, to a
physician' who flattered himself he had
cured His Grace, all the bottles of ,medicine
which had been prescribed, but none Of
which had Iseela: taken althciugh the patient
had got well. ,.
-The new comet discovered by the
_
members of the eclipse expedition toEgypt
has been named after the Khedive.
-The Medizin. Neuigh avers that " the'
,
cheruitit reeognizeti no such; thing as dirt ;
it is:only matter out•of place.' . ' '
-A: shipment • frem 'England of silver
coin was received yesterday by the Assist/-
asat Receiver -General, in thirty-six 'capes,
amounting to 300,000.
TUE relative cost in wear and tear of
gold coin as compared with bank votes has
lately_been investigated itt 'England, and
the advantage hag been found to be largely
with the,c6in. To matufacture S million
Of sovereiges COStR 0.0,000, oratbout 'a cent
apiece. In fifteen years they lose in weight
one-half of 1 per dent., or about 325,000,
and become too light for: further use.
This makes their total expense as currency
for the fifteen years 535,000.. The.paper
adacl peinting of a million 81 notes would
coat„it is estimated, four cents. apiece, ,or
540,000 at the. outset, arid during fifteen
years they would •have' to' be replaced' at
least three times, Pr, with active uso, six
-tinsea, thus requiring an outlay ef'certainly ,
3160,000, and perhaiis 3280,000, for the
sante period that it•milltorssovereigns woulcl
remain in circulation. • •
Da. LASEER, the diatinguished Liberal
leader it the German Parliament, Says:
" Gem:taus settled in foreign conntries,
.mast.no6 despair if at times for it little
while in the inner development Germany
Seems to go, against the great current. of
civiliaation. Let OM! faithful ()nee wait
patiently, and may they not be deceived
by that which bccasionally'appears on tlie
surface., Germany will hot perish in in-'
'tolerance and militarism. "Alter some
little heaving .she Will maintain her, old
place among the foremost f nations of
science, of enlightenment, and itidustrial
ability. 'Wo, who stand. in the midst of
the battlefield, but with. clear and calna mid
-unbitteed judgment, may be justified in
exalting such hope in othe,r§Avith fullest
confidence."
. But for his two cold baths daily it is
thought that Darwin might have lived ten
years longer. ' •
..-t-Every Man who begins life by saying
"I can't do anything," ends it by saying
" I haven't done anything."'
Ii,j,chgan a marl a_ged 101 recently
made his will. ' Be said some people were
alwaye putting off this work but be would
not (10so. '
An Italian, who, it is perhaps unneces-
sary to say, has-livecl• some time in Ame-
rica, has come to the. conclusion that it is a
huge basin of petroleum under • Vesuvius
which keeps the bowels of that intereetifig
ineuntain in a constant atate of ebullition,
more, or lees active. He,. therefore, pro-
poses to dig a tunnel at .its •base, tapping
the great 'cauldron, and thus putting the
mountain at rest and securing an unlimited
supply of' petroleum: The chances. are
that he'll let loose a stream of stuff that'll
send the inhabitants of that , region away
on the gallop, and make 'em want to lynch
him•when they get to a safe place.--Bortcat
, .
• TWO ;of . the four horses • whicte the.
Emperor of • Russia has just given to the
Germain Emperor. ,are the . identical ones
that drew the late.Gaar's carriage when he
was -assassinated. • . "•
----Of • the- 564• -new- convicte-whaf' Were
received, into the Ohio 'Penitentiary list
year seventeen had a college education and
fourteen had taken high school courses.
Murat Halstead thinks the inference is
that gerunds and supines have nsore of a
tendency to drive men to the diekens than
the mild analysis of early English liter's -
tare.
utimmu.t'
S ttiOR FOR A. `BM'S _NEST.—
Wrens are -proverbially peculiar in the
choice of a epot for niclification. One 'of
the latest freaks of theselilipatian builders
was the selection of the pump of a gentle-
man residing on Clapperton street as an'
"eligible residential Site: Far SOMO days
bits of straw, etc., -were found in the water,
and an investigation revealed the fact that
these were the waste materials that were
deopped by the feathered architects, in
building their dwelling.. They never
finished-thajob, as the structurewas shaken
to its foundations by an earthquake every
time the pump -handle' was moved. -Barrie
Gazette. -
. The English -civil engineer, Douglas, is to
be knighted for hie successful work in the
erection of the New Eddystone lighthouse.
Mr. Gladstone's f3on, Herbert, a member
Of Parliainent, has` been in ill -health for
:tiorne time. ,
The criminal 'news of fa single week
makes a sad showing of beyish depravity.
A ,boy bf Belleville, Ill., killed the .girl who
rajected his, addresses on account of bis
di ssipatiert. Two Arkansas boys quarrelled
oyer a rabbit hunt, arid one Slew the ether
-with an axe. A St. Louis boy stabbed the
playmatewho teased him for his ignorance
-of English. A West Virginia boy shot lais
rival in a girlIs affectioista A Virginia boy
-,confes§es the pbisening of two persona. A
Texas boy sbot a little girl bedause ebe
refused to put down a pail when he
ordered her to. . A Kansas boy is, on trial
for intentionally drowning it playfellow.
Two Wisconsin boys maltreated a child
nearly to death. Three boys pleaded guilty
to highway robbery, in Chicagria—Alif Iowit
bey is a 'forger. A Miatiouri bey set fire to
alone°. A -New Mexico boy shot it baby.
A Colorado horse thief is aged 8 -years, and
none of. the other criminals mentioned. VMS
over 16. '
• The fattest Man in Maine is dead. His
name was Joel Barry, and he weighed 400
pounds.
A little two year old child named Payne, who
lived on Mutate street, was put to bed yesterday,
and after it ..had gone asleep the father and
mother went out to gather 'firewood. During
their abseheb the child awoke and got :out of bed..
Finding a box of matches, she began to strike
them, and one falling on her night dress set it
ablaze. The father rushed to the house and put
out the flames as quidkly as possible, but not
before the child had been terribly burned. The
poor little child's sufferings were relieved by
(Math last night.
A. ,t15.
Tetupetrte !eolJ vs.Intezuncrate P.co-
• plc EU* Insurance albino.
A despatch from Cincinnati says: The
tenth session oath° Supreme Lodge of .A.
Of ET. W. has recently been held in this
city.. The financial exhibit:of this Order is
very favorable.' There has been a net
increase he' the year of 310 lodgea and 16,;
76.6 rn_embers, and a slight increase of the
death -rate, owing to"the unhealthy Beason.
'The.teporta show. the necessity for, and
aecanamenll the exercise of, great care in
exanainatione into the habits of -life of ap-
plicants for admission to tlie.Order,particti-
larly in the future, to exclade what are
denomitiatechalitily drinkers. They have
cenie to _bis the niost hazardous of all iisks,
'particularly 'beer drinkers. ,The supreme
medical, adviser says: " In making
, rejections on account of habits it
is hard to draw the line between
moderation and intemperance in the *use
of malt and ,clistilied liquors, I have
drawn it on the habitual daily drinker.. A
man *hp drinks liguors as a beverage
daily, or habitually, if Mit actually intem-
perate , in the ordinary. Meaning, of the
. word, is at least putting such a trammel on
the :physiological functions of bis system. as
to render aim a hazardous risk in an insure-.
auce sense. Out of the occupations given;
"it 'T-menis that, iu proportion to 'those
belonging to the Order' in each, the -most
dangerous are saloon -keeping, practicing
tnedicine.e.ead railreading. 'The occupation
of the saloorakeeper is' undoubtedly the
most extriabazardous of any business
generally .etigaged'in." The inquiry was
made of it inember of the Supreme Lodge
whether the • statistics show any
difference M. mortality between beer
-
drinking and temperate cities and commu-
nities: "Yee," cainethe reply, •• tamarked
differeuce. and it is one of .the- difficulties
with which. the Order has to contend. In
proportion to membership the mortality is
vastly greater in, the beer -drinking .States
thaanin others, and Ohio heads the list.". A
-.consultation of the etatistics reveals the
fact that during the. year, in Obio, out of a
metisbership of 2062,,there were fifty-five
death. Indiana comes bext with a death
list of 33, out of 2,201. The nuMber cif
deathiaper. 1,000 members for several States
is as •fellaws : Ohio, 1-9 ; Indiana. 15 ; Ken-
tucky., 12..; Kansas, 8; Michigan,' 7; Tennes-
see, 9a Wisconsin, 8; Minnesota,•9 ; Illinois,
isNvsaYork; 7; Pennsylvania, 8, and Oa-
r
tarifraliere spirituous liquors are chiefly
used,!,
. •
The Supreme Lodge hold 'next year's
meeting at Buffalo.
, Old Maggie Dee had fully her own slake
of Scottish pradenoe and economy. .0ne
bonnet -had served her turn for upward of a
dozen: years, and some ladies who lived in
her neighborhood it offering:to make and
present her with a' hew one, asked whether
she woalil Prefer silk or etraw as material.
" Wool, my leddies," said-Maggiee after
careful deliberation,. "since you insist on
gi'en me a bannet, I think -I'll take ii, strae
ane ; it svill maybe be a niouthful to the
coo when I'm through wi't."
-A number of Canadian residents in
New York met on Saturday night to take
steps for forming a Canadian Club. A
committee was appointed to dtaft a consti-
tution and by-lawS, and a committee of
'arrangements for general- work. The new
club house is to be, a place of welcomefor
Canadian strangers, and it.will be fitted up
'in the most approved istyle. It will proba-
bly be iodated in the neighborhood of
Broadway and Fifty-third street. Several
former Hanaillonians are to be members.
ie wattled beyond -doub that Judgst
Mackenzie, of Termite, will shortly resign
hia•seat on the Bench.. 1.
INSOIL VIE NCI( AIM HIE
Interesting Cuero in the Itligh
The two cases of Benni e ger Vt...Tlarasher
and Forrester vs. Tarather, tried in the
High Court of Justice, are interesting in
themselves, but the points of law arising in
them are still more notesvortby. The
defendaut wee sued in the first action fur
the sedatotioan_e_f_one__ElleathEarrestaaa-of
Belleville, who ilerself brought the second
action, for breach ef promise cif marriage.
The plaintiffs succeedtdiu obtaining large
judgments iu both cases, but as the defendaut was then worth ices, no motley was ever
recovered from him, and he ebtained his
discharge in insolvency. Since that time,
however, he has succeeded in amassing con-
siderable property, and the plaintiffs have
issued new executions to recover the amount
of their judgments.: He now contends that,
as he has received hie insolvency discharge,
he is released from these alainas. The
Master in Chambers has decided agaipst
himin lsotli cases, and be will now have to
pay the penalty of his wrong -doing.
-Messrs. Ricbmond and hoyden, of
Kingston, have purchased' the two -ton safe
formerly in use in the Bank of Montreal
here, in which they intend to etore their
silks for better protection.
1„1.
cal
$ciafloa' , 1.umb all. o,,
Scronesz: of the Chest;
o'ut/ a:111-Ysv, sore. wall -
anti Sprains,..fleiros and
L'.21dz, Geliona! Bodily
• Pains,
Tocfl:,„ Ear and' Headache,' Fiostod
, root -an ECU'S, crnd all other!'
. Pains and Aches.. "
. . .
No 'Preparation on earth equals Sr.••S,Acons Orr,
en a safe, .su're' and cheap External
Remedy, A trial'entails ;but the comparatively
trilling outlay of 50' Cents, and 'every one auffering
.With..pain Cali have cheap and positive proof of it;
Directions in Eloven.tariguages.
BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND_DEAbEAS
•• litEDICHIE, • . •
G1.1,1311/43Eitittw.,4&,,,,ard0...0,.
U
itaaft
ars,41-Sir.
ITTER&
. (A.Ilicilicinci not a Dir.ink;) ...
.• CONTAINS . ,
110PS, DUCT*, DIANDRAIEE,
DtANIDEL.*ON:,, , , '
Alm TITS:Pt.-a' ns,r4nsi-ntisir-m-unie,A-31:'
al 1-7.ii.c.IC
, Qittim-
T11,8 0, Aprl, oTtl ELL BITTSS.All 'Discs sett of tb e Stomach, Boweiti,Plood,,
Liver,Uldneri, and 'Urinary Organs, Nor,
. Vousueig, sleeplessness and especially
F '
- 'o emaleni
:Coplaints. . '
E, . z.
' .1 'IT.,
heln, or for anything, Impure or injurious'
Will be paldtor a ease th.ey Wilt not chre or `.4.
. found in them.. , •
. . , fq4W4
, . ..
ABIC YOI11- druggist forthop 'Bitteirs rind try
them:before you sleep. Take,no Dtbi,Cif,
. . . , . .
D.I.• C. is an abSoltleand irrest shble cure for
, Drunkcacsb, use of npluin, tobaCco 'and • •
$1000 IN COI.
. .
S/..altElEIL'alu, SEN./3'1'0E „Cir.critini
r, All rthOre
'
einitYbitg,'"
Blitea E.,•14Te,ento, Oct
'7g
voftri'ooiont anti otittr q.;avd0
, •
ONEY TO LEND IN LARGE'01'
sunt s on goed roortgage' security, 23ic.xto,te
ato of interest. 11. 1.1A,LE, Oilitaton.
A+.LIS1' OF LANDS '
e Canada Company, may begexi at the't•tfiec
heundersigised. II. HALE Clinton.
• ' '
-DOWSLEM,":31TE"., 111, GrIt7S.-b.ifjCiTr:.
Physician, Surgeon, etc,. Office anti rt,
next Molson's Bank Market square Clint, • •
D'I 1. APPLETON,—OFFICE—All RE S I, I ENC:ritl
'ma Ontario street, Clinton, opposite the Englical
churbb. , Entrande by side gate.
(-1 YOUNG, M. B., (GRADUATE `11)1',ON.T.0
S llrgeon, resii6o cc at .
Mr. ,Manning's, thiiee 'doors east of the Ten,porance
Landesboro, Ont.
,
jy. REEVE,- OFFICE, ALBERT T t
S,EET— — •
JI.limmediately north of Dickson's book swot. Resi.
dence, opposite the Temperance ,hall, Huron Streit
Clinton,. Office liOnrs frora San.. to 6 pan. "
MRS._WHIT'I', TEAQIIiER OF MUSIC, 1
attended at their own riTifilimco,ifneeet, it, 3'. Re-
sidence at Mra. Watterson's, Rattenbury St,
Rice's new method taug,lit if desired. •
DU. STANBURY, GRADUATE OF 9'11 I. '1113)1AT, Departm ent of Viet ori a 'nail, ete,f,,r
reerly of the hospitals and Ditpensarick., NtYerlc
Coroner for the County of auron,Bayfield, Oitt.
11,14/AM3, 13. A., MB, ORA I tl.
•TOTSDIO Univ'ersity; member of the Coller,1 f Pi
ainiana and Surgeons, Ont. OPVICE & RESIIII. N Lt ILO
house formerly occupied by Dr. Reeve, Albrrr ;qrfiet
-FIR. WORTHINGTON, ,PIDISTCIAN,
-1-"Accoueheur,Licentiateol the College ol.Phy,,,i exan-
and Surgeons of Lower canaaa, and. Provin
fiats and Coronorf or th'oCoun ty of Huron. titht opll
' residenee,--The building f orineily oeezipied
Th waites, Huron street.
Clinton, Jan.10,1871.
W. E. CARTWRIGHT , SUI1G EON Et I'M /ST
Graduate, of the Royal College of itentn
Surgeons of Ontario, has opened e in
the Victoria Bloch, Albert Street, Clinton, •,vbire 18
Will constantly be in attendance, and prepanal to per- .
forxn every operation ponnected with Dentistfy Teeth
extracted, or 01151 with gold, arealgam,•or,oth,.r1111,ing“ . •
materiaD Artificial teeth inserted from .1.. to a
rill set.
L. 10:S. ,
/%1' S ,
rem. the, office cif Platten & Caesar, leading 1s
Toronto. Second Honor Graduate Royal iielltuxe
• •Dontal, Surgeons. . • '
OFFICE, BEAVER BLopx, 'cLINTo, OVER On.V.L.Ell
,& SON'S JEWELLEICY STORS: .
:MONEY
MONEY TO LEND, ON REAL ,EST
• • AT LOWESTRATES.•
Apply 'to d: RIDOUT, n
Er.krwoxozogvit4,..
. . .
740/"Ea,„
AND .0 THER
• •
Go0S.p.ctrites Purchaoi
C 0 N ,V E.Y'A'N C I N
W. W. ll'ARR
0 kinto :ov.. 0, 1881.
T11E MOLSOS Bi' K.
• Incorporated by Act of Parliarnent,186.1.
CAPITAL. 82,000,000
Head Offic7 1VIontroa1
THOMAS :\VonEmAN,........Presideut.
J. El. R. ...... Vice -Prue.
F.NVOLVERSTAN THOMAS, Genet .
Notes discounted, Collections,made, P. raps
issued, Sterling and American exChangc
bought and Sold at lowest
current rates.
_
STA LLOWED 0.N_D.EDO
' M. LOUG11,11Ianager,.
Peb.17, 1881.
licHILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANOE
THOS. NEILANS, AGENT,
IIAICLOCIL, ONT.
Farmers wishing to insure will End this Coro
Paissr One of the best and cheapest to insure in
d will be waited on at their hofnes if informn-
' n be sent to the Agents' office. iy
CEPITEFM
(F110111 BRAZIL.)
- Tiro New C0.712100Z1226-,_itS 770.17.
d'arftal affinity, to the Digestiva
. tippa.ratus and the Liver, increas-.
ing the dissolving juices; reliev
ing almost instantly the dreadfUl.
reSultS Dys,pepSia,, Indigestion
and the TORE -IJ? LIVER, Inalwa
Zopesa, an crery day neceSstyr.in
5ve2y house.
It - apts. gently and speedily in
Biliousness; CostiVeness,..
flead-
adhe, Sick Headache, Hist:rags af-
fer Eating,Wind on the Stoinach,
Heartburn, .Pains ifl the •Sido and.
.B.a.ck, Want af App,etite, Want al
Energy, LoW Spirits, IPOTZ7 Starl-
ach. It invigorates the Liier, can
ZieS of 1 all su.r.plus bile, regulates'
the Rowels, and givos tone to tho
whole system, • ,,
Cut th.iS out and take it to .1):-ou.2
.Drukgist and ,t'et a 10'Cb-ilt 4'0,21zpie,
ora large bottle 102,75 cents, aazd
tell evOur .zzeighbox about it., /
,
6,
11111
\\. the leiar
.JOHNSION.t.'t
RSA PA 111 Li
COMF01031,-17,grif',R,,,
„And for lairifying the Blood, s
1p, bas beau, in use for 20 yCarct: tMci• has
proVed•to be the 13est preParn Lite,: In the
market Or SICK- HEADACHE; 1 AIN:IN,
THE • SIDE .011 LIVER; 'COM:.,
PLAINT,. PINL'I,E171. .017 THE FACE, ,
that a'rial) from a Disordered Li -or or 1111
DYSPEPSIA, PILES,' end all • Disent:.0.f4,„
impale) blood. . Thousands of our best.
people take it and give it to their 01411.
droll. Physicians prescribe it daily...Tilos°
Who nses t once, reap nnnend it,te others.
• nisi -nada f rom Yellow:Deck Hondu.-
ras Sarsaparilla, , Wild -Cherry,
Dandelion,' Sassafras, wintergreen, anl
other weasanatim wadable Rents and
Herbs. It is strictly vegetable, and can- et
not hurt the most delicate constitution.
It is one of 'the. best medieines in nse for
Regulating the Bowels. ' _ '
It is_sold by_ all responsible druggists
,at one dollar for a quart bottle, or six
bottles for five dellers.• '
Those who cannot 'obtain a bottle, of
this, medicine 'fromtheir drifggist.'may.
send' us ono dollar, and we will send it
'to them, - ' '
. ,
Valt170I'ff1t ta cp.; Mannfsottetrn,
.A:MIEERSTHEUG.,. •
r
411
#120:;',,r4,14404.mwerotackoptoo.
, wit-aafit's ats CIO ;11...4cnts; irjaraton
GIC.A3PS SII°181:11IVIC 11)1EIDICINIE
. . . .
. . .
TRADE MA Tho Great Eng-vitADB.M TM,
lisb 'Remedy.— • •
44, an nnfailingeure
Rix, seminal weak
, miss, Spormator-
realt, Impotency •
and all Diseases
tut"3"- that follow ,as a
,cmuseozi; caosolfo, Sate olfi
Defer° Taita, a memory, univor- Lmaa„,;
I Lassitude aa• • rat,„asa.6,0,
Pain in the Back, Dimness 61 Visinn,..Prensittnre
Old Age, and. many sitlierdiseases thaltsiesa tc
Isafantty orfOonstusiption and a prereaturearave.
partieu/are in our pamphlet, winch we
dosire to send free by mail to ovorY One. The
Speciilc Medicine is sold by all druggists at SI
addressing ,
Per paclia.goor,s,ix patikage for • $5 ,Or will lo
8Cut free bY mail, on receipt Of the, motidy liy
TIME fl6iR&181 01112.1314.111iSID
TORONTO, Oatisila. Ont.,
IF YOU AliE TRAVELLING
EAST WEST
BUY YOUR TICEETS FROM
Jas, Thompson, Town Agent OiX,R.
& GALE,
•
‘B A IN lc E. R S.,
RATTENETTRY' ST. CLINTON,
rPRAZISAC.r A GENEIIAI, BANKINGBIJSI.Nit'SS.
-11- Money advanced on Mortgages and Nates of ham" •
Drafts issued payable at.par, at all.the offices of the
Merchant's Bank of ',Canada. " New York•exelie,V,e
lionght and soId. PriOmr,r ATTENTION PAID TS COL-
LECTIONS throughont Canada and the United Statee, '
SALE NOTES BOUGHT at close rates, , and ey '
Rdvaneud to farmers on their own notet,fP1:80ylC14111 b
of tinio to snit the borrower. All 'markets:1)1e securi.
ties bought and sold.
Bitrotnns 111 NEW YOETC. AGENTS 05 .0111
• MBECTEANT'S BANK OP ,CANADA. .
. .
INTEREST A 0 WED ,0.217 JJEPOS.IrS
. ,
A. JOHNSTON,' , J. F. TISEALL, T. A. GALE
Stratlaroy:. . Cantina Elora
5..PENTL AND TISDALT.,, Manager.
J. BIDDI_JECOMBE,
'Ichthid Clock 1,1akely
JEWELLER, rac.,
Would respectfuliyannounce to hitt eustornerR and the
public generally, that• he has rornovcd into,bis former
building, on
AfillE11)2 , STREDT, Orrosian an§ Maatitafr
Whero,lie willkeep on htelad'a select astiortaisat o
(Rocks, Watclisaa rrelecllera, flaht Silwohoar
' -- of all kinds. •
Which he will sell at reasOuable rates. Repairing -
' every deseription promptly attended t .
J. l3IDDLECOMBE Arznnm STr:V.I4
.Clinton 5,1878, .•••
•
'INSURANQ
,On All., Descriptions of Propeity,
AT LOWEST RATES.
140 C. iiID0TJT, Clintoa .