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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1897-03-19, Page 2.,.......,., _« �.•...a • SONG. I would that ety love were a lily fair ,And X would that I were a satabe en bold, Still to bo dressing her flowery hair .All day long with my airy gold. Or would that she wore the dew that lies In tit` rose and 1 the rose tree were, To told my red leaves over her eyes And make my ewootnesa a part of her. Would I were a breeze that is where it will t And she a leaf in some lonely place. Row l would cling to her, sing to her, tin She gathered me up in her green embrace. Or would,tllat she woro,a fawn so gay And 1 within some lowly bud Where eft her slivery feet would stray ,Anil al?••:+.1,r 1he turf above me snread. Nay, leave tit' sunbeam the light that's his And leave the lily her airy gold, And give tae lily maiden, just ai she IS. To kiss and in to, to keep and bald, —Now York Ledger. PUZZLERS IN COURT. POINTS THAT HAVE KEPT THE LAW- The Episode Closed, "ERS GUESSING. •Ho is a young lawyer, and she live which he to to the jeweler, who ex- tracted a precious stone and substituted a worthless imitation. On this being diecove1ecl, the ,jeweler replied to the sw'eep's demand for tiro return of hips stone that the stone slid not belong to the sweep, as he had found it, the infer- ence being that he could, therefore, steal it with impunity. The court, how- ever, held otherwise, and the sweep re• neared his jewel. Eastern superstititiou gave rise to a Singular argument in a Chinese court not long ago. A Chinaman had been sent to prism, and, according to cus- tom, the authorities proceeded tonal oi'f r, iieivcllou the l,rieoner ap- plied for an hijuil0tiou on the ground that without his pigtail he could not en- ter the kingdom of heaven, After ouch legal quarreling the court decided that there is no religion in prisou, and that tate prisoner must share the fate of his comrades, whatever the result in the world to colpo. --London Tit -Bits. Cur!ons Questions Erased In Courts of Law.. .111 Cot:mitres Contribute a Share or what Wo::ltl make an Interesting Vol. nine -several Examples. An interesting volume might be writ- ten on the curious points of law that are eonstautly arising in the courts. The most expert lawyers and judges are frequently puzzled by the novel situa- time in which they are placed. One of the most curiouspoitits of law 1n record arose recently in a court at Jersey, in America. The question was whether egge, after reaching a certain stage of incubation, were to be regarded as eggs or chickens. After quarreling about the matter. for sometime, counsel offered to break one of the eggs to sat- isfy the law that it contained achicken, in which case, of course, the eggs would have been coesiderably enhanced in value,. ] at there was a general demur to this suggestion, and the justice re- served his decision till he had consulted his colleagues. Tho result had not come to hand at the time of writiug. A remarkable case in France excited a great deal of attention some time ago. • A gentleman dining an the terrace of a Narbonzle restaurant Iet a haul: note fall into his soup. He laid it down on the table to dry and a. gust of wind blow it away. A'sassing clog swallowed the note, aid the gentleman detained the animal, whose collar happened to bear its ma:-. ter' •:„ a name. e. Indignant .taut ,� at his loss, the owuer;of the note .e ted the 1 do - log•s master for 100 francs, the value iv *meet.. of the rctc. There was much legal hair splitting, hut at length the court ordered pe the osvltcr of the dog to pay the money. t 1 Atlntber• French, case was that against pati a Paris .t_.rdrcssc:r, who teas suer, by a lady for :0'30, uuii,q tho price of her 5n: danage 1 looks. The fair claimant had cat used the ba:- ::^r.._ . t.::sit, which was it i said tile: ,;Orof::lien leeks but the cu �� , d result in thi cwse was to hero the hair cff corn• to p1et:.'1., `':. putut Nvus the liability . .n of the 1 irth.. escr, and the court awarded the 1..:,y £.git Appiir.. ue for injunctions often 5hi raise cur:•.••1s points. Not lout ago un as i� iIt'tall^ti .:: •: sis ] 1 granted to aestrain an the. officer lac,,... act_ from keeping horns i:t 1 nd',n drawing room, the are ground c? objection being the noise por Which rh.i:::lfalels ma::e, which au:ioycd to the rc'v:;; ::.a The efk,tirling cfiicer is of f now i:t : l ,,natio asylum, Clic Thera t. as a t•longfn e fight :.ot ago in one of the .i ;:t• , a coarts between a barrel one organend a 1 h.:no, an injunction being If claim::l to restrain a gentleman u FAi: .keeping an organ. g Ulan from will 3 - , .a It seemed that the ,offender wan e::" Teri by his nest door ire] nei I piano, and to avenge himself .he c t ,-..: 1 , t :rel organ, which the are an played ret ,l times of the day. The bora quest/et; of• the "liberty of flue subject," boor -of co< - -, carne up, but the court de- encu • olden that, if an English:nine's house is thai. his Carole, it ie npt a fit place for a bar- thee rel crates that i.evcr; top,, and the organ Gal! ry receivt;i strict instrections to remain sell silent, o:1 the ground that the owner evi- ery f dently lilt , :ell to create a nuisance. The market value c f n cough was the queen= submitted to the Birmingha county mart. A barrister sued a rail way c = p any for 50 for diseomfor enilerc•d i smoking being allowed in waitii::1 id:edn at a station and in non smoki1 - car.i::ges. The smoking aggra vatctl t barrittcr's cough, and he evi awe- : 1 £10. A cit -r point arose in the revision court et Mottingham. While the cour Was silt;: rt yr.t:ngcollier named All cock Li:lt : !:ie wife in the most delib- erate :::annex. and afterward confessed his crime. Ali application was made that Alice r•k'i name should be struck off do rc >ister. "Why?" queried the barrister, r; ^riving the a answer, "Be- cause he is a annrcierer." "That re- ntable to be proved,"said the barrister, nd.tho name remained on the roll. in the west encl. They were to have bee married in a Month. The other clay the fell to quarreling over the telephone She was petulant. He was angry. Final ly she called him a h-b-bruto and sai that he could consider the engagemeu off, "All right," said he, and then he rang off," as they say in telephou parlance. Arid she—well, she returned the ring —Albany Jonrual. .1.,1 4%6, '31.,‘.11C11 F.•F�.,-.�>•M�+:FaWTMM,.'.:•M.sp 11..'i+•t'.Nd!MY.v!I,+V.W,ae M1R�•MM'�+<s+vn•Y/W +.#f1en+e+w•YM!11TMMww,y,..ea -tttt:tr:ceLe tee ycullgortea. that have. t'i pt•d the ditchers, arcs returning to their clic, flaunts. occupying the old and scratching new rests on 1.1be Ferallone islands. Here the lairds Are praoth:idly unmolested, and it may thus be said, with some basis in reason, that the Cal- ifornie coast is snpnlying the Australian uoaster:i with their alible sea fowl. 1t is true, of course, that the petrol finds other quiet fleeting places besides the islaucls off the California coast, but it is also true that Catalina, the Santa, Barbara chaliuol islands and the Vend - tones aro their chief rookeries on this coast, and that at certain seasons these lel ands aro entirely Ocoee ted by helm, while the islands off Tasnmeih and the southern coast of Australia then swarm with thein,—San Francisco Chronicle. too collection of the Marquis of Lands.. (towni, but it is clearly not Benjamin Franklin It is, in my opinion, the Por- trait cf (fovcrnor William 1'rluticlitt. Charles Henry Hart ill hIcOiure's Maga- zine, The First Steam Power. The power cf steam, was known to He ro of Alexandria, who exhibited what steams front the description to have been n entail steam eugialo to Ptolemy I'ldla- cicipints and his. court about 150 B. (), Puny describes a small boat, built by to "magician" of Bonne, which moved by menus of r1 wheel, ""driven by a pot of lent water," W"tt':m heventi.nt t I; re - tiny tine= engine was patented in 1709, The ill.tt railway locomotive was built by 'Trovithick in 1804. The first pray - deal locomotive was perfected by Ste - The Other Baby, p11c'nson in 1829, As early as 1707 Denys They occupied the seats opposite ane Pallia built a model of a steamboat, iu the railway station. '!'here were Pour wine% was destroyed by a mob of boat- men and one little woman and one v anen The first practical ste tI b t little sick baby. It was not hard to where the iuterest of the group tante d itself, The young father himself scarcely more solicitous for the inf y tlutu was each and everyone of his th - brothers. Ie was quite evident that heart strings of five people lay loos d in the thin, nerveless band of t t young one. They were going west. So the plana said which were pasted here and th o over the baggage. The baby lay motion- less upon a pillow. It was evideutly just snatched from the jaws of death. The eyes were closed, the face eliminated to the point of ugliness, the hands tiny, fleshless claws of a bird. The young wife leaned her head up the shoulder of her husband and elo her eyes. She was very pretty, ciesp the dark circles under her eyes, and ve yonug--about 18. The baby on his p low lay upon her knees. Soddenly, in another portion of waiting room a child laughed. A m tibiae -ens, bubbling sort of laugh, whi made the waiting ones abcut the deli look at each other and smile. Tho little another opened her eyes an el'y t. n Oa wati see built by William Symington in 180'3. red In. 1808 Itobc*rt Fulton, in connection wit1, Cl'•t,te.l1 L'-•' ryas ui Livingston, built a jut steamboat which was tried on the: Seine tee 1n 1807 the Clermont began trips front , the New York to .Albany. 13i,t•t'11 Oa Sun ay n o.'ittng M,'... Salina Poulton, at eche,' of out. old hesideou . pawed away to the greet buy,rn She bad been a great suffe.•er f: o u rho t.Latisni whia:l foul e, n'iva.1 hot to her room for over •l0 ' years. Be ing ut' a cheerful dispuitiuu with n strou.i constitution enab el ler «t• l;e:tr th ough the pilin And suffer 1e was only c,utined to lir bed c lie week. ,:ler ti usbarnl pr'ece.iiet ba,' about three ,years ago. On Mon. day tui remains were taken reoul her son-in-law's (Mr. J, T. (,l trier) residence and deposited. in the cange Bah church for itlternlent, The (1.1 tea e 1 leav:s two sons and a dough ter to m .urn her loss. They have the sympathy of the community.. On Tuesday evening the members of the C. 0. ie. held their regular nieetingin Watson's hall when they added two more members to the roll. Elam Livingstone is running till 12 al night to fill orders on hand. It sa busy place, over twenty ,,amts being employed. During lent .Rev. T. I± liiahle,+ ncumbeat of Trinity church intends holding cottage meetings on Friday evenings at the residences of son-` of the parishioners in Blyth 11,61 iia he usual. Wednesday evenitao see • • ely A Discreet Estimate. 1 hat "Papa," Papa," said. young Mr,i. Hunker, rds `"won't you please give (a •orgo and me i ere $10,000?" i THE SOOTY PETREL. 4 Fish Eating Bird That Is Deemed a Delicacy In Australis. Tastes differ in different latitudes, even among English speaking people. Imagine Caucasians dining on. stilted petrels, and with arclish, too, as though that fish eating sea bird were a luxury. Of all the fowls that haunt the barren islands on the California coast none is considered quite so worthless as the sooty petrel. Even the sea gull ,las his usefulness as a scavenger on the bays along the const, but the petrel is truly a despised bird in these waters. Sea gulls' eggs bring a price in the market that snakes it worth while to gather thew at a considerable expense, but no ono thinks it worth while to rob the petrels' nests on the rookeries at• the 'tarailone islands: • It is different in Australia. Is it the cold winds that blow up from the ant- arctic regions or the hot air that sweeps an from tile Ca :ator? No. •iii tter hat the cause, the f..et is that the ap- tites cf cur Australian. cousins lire icnlly different. The sooty petrel is ere an edible fowl, with a decided ^rket value, and a number of men and el] craft are employed each year in ching, saltihlg, i:ackia:g hnd carrying n greet quantities frost the reckarics 1 Trefoil island trod, other ,adjoining , ands tat the north coast of Tasmania 1 Stanley and Mei bct:rne. Muttcu bird is the grncral name en 11:e petrel there, and the men :id f ps csgagrs1 in the t'^.£iness a1.0 lci:awn j Outten biidcrs. To Americans this ' quite a novel irch:sirv, and the fact t caeca common sea l:irefs as the ,etre, i rl T f and , cI salted•�„ : d. o like c .a. o' k is , aauch always a matt,' cf wonderment I straugerg who go there. Dot tho test he pudding is in the eating of it, and se who have dined, off mutton birds - ad of laud mutton pro80ucee the every bit as geed as fbe ether. you leave San Francisco in. August, big westward al.d sootllwtrd, yc',n 1 pass nsany great flecks of birds that be pointed out to Sen as sooty e K—or they will pass p t hey traveling about three timesfasteryou are. And when you reach Mel- ne and have become acclimated I gh to venture it trip acre's to Tias- a in, you may ditto off the young of 1 e very birds that passed you on the p fornix coast, only now they will be ed to you as mutton birds. t nese fowls leave the Farailones ev- 0 civ monops, and once every year they vieit Australia. Trefoil island is 11 " chief roosting piece in the south - hemisphere, so far as is known. they scratch and dig in the barren until they have burrowed a hole ips two feet deep. Into these holes lien in the inhnenso flock deposits 110 egg. The mutton birder inserts m full stretch for his game. Ile act take the egg, but waits a week 1 days after the egg has been hatch hen he finds the young bird almost as the parent, but much more r and fat. On land the petrel is unable to escape from the catchers. not mount into the air from off ru3(1, though its wings are enor- y Jong in proportion to its black and it rises quite gracefully from water. On shore, however, the e bird must hop along at a slow nd can only fly from the top of a Certain points of Trefoil island ttered with thousands of these and it is no difficult task to gall - yearly y' y vest of caul The y mutton 0 n mutton birding season on 1 island lasts! from a month to six and this includes the catching, packing awl shipping. They ked in, casks, and these are.loaded sting schooners that dome after tom Taa man` le and Melbourne. he time the fresh crop of mutton is being eaten at Melbourne the parents, with perhaps a certain What do you want that much money for?" "We want, to bui U v., 0,000 house, " --Harlem Life. the ;ltd Rim a savor. on sed nay life, as it? I was wondering flow I 11 ete d was going to live through this went:.- T Now I won't have to. Very kind of you. 1- Shoot away.—Boston Transcript. • Pedestrian (to footpad)—Money or t. 'ices held in the church. A concert was he Industry hila n ler the aulpilses of the M Lii.t 1 <e ent of this burg. .—^ Curai Weak Back fer 25o For two years 1 was dosed, pilled raid lactated for we.tk bait , ecaidiug urine vela- nd constipation, withuu oeneti-L. Out' eh lily tithe root and become a tree.. box of Chase's kidney -Liver Pelle rel,uv- et ed, three boxes cured. It J. si arca i the The willow is one of the most adapt- able of plants. A willow switch stuck p i8- in the wet ground Will almost iva s glanced uu at her husband- ' Jeck," she said, "I wish our bib conld laugh like •that."—Philadelph Press. In ten days a letter from New York will be delivered in Brussels. '1'or•outo. One pit a diose, prise y ,;,glia. 1 The Alien Labor Bill. is The vet.) ot the bunce.n ,c )Jf' 1 The whipping Post In Boston. , act of title ()envois by tie. (,"; eve A LAD WITHOUT GUILE. • now Grant Impressed Sts Comrades as West Point Cadet. "He was a l.ul without guile," test fees Geuc•ral Longstreet. ''1 ficver her. hills utter a profrozo or vulgar word. H was a boy of good nativo ability, al thou gli by a:o means a hard student. 5 perfect was his sense of honor that, i he numerous cabals which were •ofte formed, his name was never taentioze 1 for he never dict tanvth =t �, ilie•h co 1 be subject fer critic t soon became the most da.::n in the academy." He had a v, -aye rolvtias; lu'oble:Ias cut of rate by the ep plication of icor, h, d r Lad '_h Io( -o 1i,i erns 1' saying: "trig 0(11^ol days were O-• opinion of the incinL•,_.3 c? C c_ ;h:" been t•a':en, cs-c: - c_.a 'd L,. ' ?•-lid 'There is Stull Grant. He i;3 a l; fellow, 0 geed, honesa n:a i 'a ',ti;` -•t _ •t 'S 4 :C'_I: 1 o..lu„ e,tu I :il ii :.'C Ci:r� .IIi J,•,+ 21:1:15 -Le co:en td. ' " 0:_, of t__:' tic: ;,t C�.,e:' i his e-1 , for a ye:.rl:is 1,;e—.u.:t , p t.:ceive d mere ill ,lint that:lA.'s ill!;';' :c tC:' . Lata the I:.:c: t C31u ltac:,:a" 1-: : a fc 1 tenth. Ho never held his • e• t light. IIo never raid an untratl:ful word oven in jest. "lyo was a _reflective mind noel at tildes very reticent 00:l eotuber. So:t e- thin•scc:nocl working deep down in hie hougilts—things no knew as little about a'1 We. Tllcr3 %,'oa1c. be et 4, root weeks, ata t:i:ao whcu he would to �:i- Chat and sOniLcr----not mere:a. elaccrfttl 1:ta1l, and 3'11; nonlent5 when he re:mica to . fo,1 :-u'i:o re rionition cf a trent f::t urcy_wc-'.:r- in i what Ito was to do and what he was o become. He was t cv c lby a velar a ::l- ore motive to join th Di ...:otic: soeicey, which was rho catty literary society wo ^d. I did not belong, butt ('r- t j. incl, t bile Ivo were rooan:n with the , :ant to improve in his I a.: -ler of ex- , pros ing himself. "— icClarcl's. Ilnauthentle Z>ortrait, of Z �aztl:Ii;n, It geom.'s the height cf r,:; : rt t,; to I look upon the so called ";:;a..ac Poe- I trait of Fra- ,din at Twenty, " 1 tic/ :eta:at t to Harvard university, as an authentic attic ' portrait. Where clad rani:i:n, who was grubbing for funds to Barry hila home � at the time this- pictrro i:; 5nlspesecl to : have been painted, get the money for the purple and flue linen" in which ho is arrayed, let alone to pay the artist for his work? Asidct from iia: tulklin'g air- ' &mist:tuces being against its authentic- ity, his "".Autobiography" is silent upon so important a subject its this portrait, .( and its history is purely mythical. Another picture that has no better Claim. to be considered alikeness of ten- jamin Franklin hangs in the MIetropoli- tan Museu au of Art suet wag . p.L1ltt0cl by Stephen Elmer, an English still life 1 painter. There is notliitg to demi thee it Was given the name of Frallktaat until 1824, when septet() engraved by Ityder and published in 1782; as "Tho Politi- t cian," •avis reletteeed and issued with d the u ane ofI'r Franklin. k11i1. The Intpicture be this expurgtorial list is of thetflr. :n portainee as a work of art. 'twits lewd - ed by Thomas Gainsbere g}l and is in to lliln'i tt Te'swate,'s proper custodian till debentures, thin un bond:, or agreements of whit s" may now be in possession. of h 4e proper y entitled to and settlement of railway obligations. Josie l3 J. Jolll`eToi Moved by Reid, SCd1TT, d, seconded by Jayvi;+, that the report of the special committee app lihlted by this cu re settlement with nett T. 0, and 13. Ry, debentures, on the Y plates, inter be adopted and accept on, as we t t ' 411 it nil= °utter to act Un the auggesti•rn of 1[essrs, Blake, Lash l3assels, and Accept an anii,able settlement which is much better .han uncertain titgation,--Cfat•1.ied. Moved by Juhnston, seconded by Jarvis, that as John Thacker has made a proposition to this board to build a snow fence on sideroad at lot 20 and 21, con. 6, that his proposition be accepted, he to furnish posts, build, the fence and do all the work in con- nection therewith. The council furnish the lumber and nails. The motion to be signed by the Reeve and Clerk and sealed with the cor- poration seal. Also to be entered ill the 13ylaw I3ook. Jarvis—Scott—That a by-law be drawn upend passed, that the pay for a man and tete be at the rate of $1,75 for eight hears work and for a elan 75e for eight hours work 1 reeking roads in the winter season. -Carritd. Scott—Iieid—That as an appli- cation has been made to this Coun- cil to have the fences removed of t ;e boundary' line between the 2nd and 4th con. of the Townships off Culross and ICinlois that Mr. Johnston get 11Ir. Stephens to draw up a ay•lay foe that. purpose. --Curried Johnson—,!Alyce—That sl by -.14 be drawn up, pit,sed signed anti sealed in open council limiting all pa [Ministers to five cents }.ear yard Alice Meese Earle, in an article on land fertu.i-itely tells lyes the al bin t ""Punishments of Bygone Days," foandl ground of the sentiment of retolrtatiun I1 in rrl,n i"I br 'ill gravel bought and put on the • (.acts 1' Slatnte Laboi• in the. Tuivn- hip, and the Clerk give the p1' -h. nesters On the road lists this notice S surrounding Municipalities pair about that , tllotlnt, _0 t 'tied. 1 _. Finance Report,—TLolna 1ic•la�itl reeking gravel road i;r J tett cry, 1.75; D. A. Ireland brcakin, gr.i d•el oad in Janaary, :„;10; R,,br. hall salary salary as collector, $50; A Russ xi n;; pitch holds on the gravel roa - .50. ii, . Ic, Thompson !wither ft/e. pie Cringes t`r'l2.11; W. Mundell r caking grovel road, $1; Win. abkirk table for clerks office in all, $8.50; Fred Iltather•ly work on 'flue, rood, fixing pitch holes, -:Z; has Button, express charges and elephoning, tl5e Chas. 13attonfegis. - lilt un �, +n, fees, d3 2• ' 3. *r bt]• 13 o•r Ret n,,..es>er I 1 m d,e, as auditor for 1$911, wS, P tap bcok,aftc1 giving John Tay- We may now hope that no effort will s +► for the Water Poet's rhymed cleserip• be made by the Canadian Pariii- 1 done corporal o loI•al •� -,ni-h 1 p a lnentiu London, ment to strive with our nei; 'hoes a 1- explains clow rapidly flogging came into in discout•tesy. 'A:t ul' •nal. • • t � 1).l �i el nee nn Boston: 0 The whipping post was speedily ill among gzntie-men i3 teal with pat- ' - frill force in Boston. At the 8055108 c.f ienee an 1 reserve and hie per;snno, b o the court held. Nov. 00, 1630, ono span affronts call fn'th n•l retort,: 1'1 kind, $ u was sentenced to be whipped for steal- Whyslioctld flat the some tem peen nee 1' u ing n loaf of bread, another for shootinit, prevail ain/ng ntttLw,? Wiwi t.t,' 5 , fowl on the Sabbath, another for swear- ,patriotic: desire t) ,•eve tit ; ,l it,;, 10•'11 11 d ing, another for leaviug a boat ”"with -l i 1 e out a pylatt." «Thee' we read of John type of nl Le and clot Lcta., fr'r, n h I 1 Pease that for st ykiig his Mother aIl'? I a swam - t. �l h j 1( ,y.t v ;1 ,,f „, deryding her he-rbalbe Zvhipt," ate and iuiit-ria'iflSti:i >✓i1 a ik` �b Lying, swearing, takiete false toll, ' at -least ay,nptt.Gltiz h. due uar av,u. .11 s perjury, selling runs to the Iudiaus--all dathy cannot go out to the resti'iu;i'ai L were puuished .by whipping, Pions re. of tha f e': a nn ne" ee of lall,,r, i gl glad for the Sabbath was fierdelyupheld It is a•IfOir to e:la.lt+'' , hat by the support of the whi iu „� the Wall pp g post. In of these it:rhea'al acts to the wituld T : 1643,' Roger Scott,. for "repeated sleep- • people of the United States.' ti' ing on the Lords day, and for strik- ing Z•ie� h are u theul personevi adid,u ' , who.d,d, wakedof elle him from Y e d ' � se c om hi,slur 9 ctrl godless slumber, was sentenced to be se- growth ot localisln in polities. Signs verely whipped. .�omeu were not are not waiting that illi'. Goldavia spared in public chastisement, "The !Smith's appeal to the intellect and gift of prophecy" was at once subdued conscien_e of the American people in Boston by lashes,. as was unwomanly :met with a hearty and generous irarrittge response. --Weekly Sun. =heir m ' ern tHero soil a peril£ each - t her o a his ar does or tot t i ed. T - I as big t icnde quite 1t can the 1 mous] t body, the steatite Patti a ledge. aro 11 nests, , er the birds. Trofo i weeks, 1111ing his duties as a servant. At fleet salting "epee 'Anent with that arrived at some years I them f agofay a case i n i whcllachimney sweep i B t sued a jeweler for a preeious stone, The ' birds ono bed found a brooch on his rounds, adult sight this decision *appears to be incon- on cos • To EH the Crime. CULROb,. "You don't look like a hard citizen, The C,uncil met in the Town ha t you , ead guilty to the charge of be- Teesiitater, on March. 1SG. ing inflict a fine of a ile st $o"— ing resort. I ought Mem bore all Nraacnt and the Ree "But, your honor, I was intoxicated, orI wouldn't have"— " Tee mil of last m eting of ti Drunk, too, were you? The fine will counted. were road and cul;flrd, be $10 and costs. Call the nest case."' Tee Io).n; t of the special mt colnmf —Chicago Tribune, tee itpptiuted at last meeting of con led for the, Purpose e.f trying to cum The woman tennis champion of New ' ,ealand to somesutt,ellleltt re att.:liltel'ea c left 111 c but cele hand, and that is ' on. ,call w,,y 1). beatures she can Bettie 01)131 1n d.er that is exceedingly difficult to return bet wet o 'intra s anti Teeswat rwa l lead as toiieive: . Ray declares that the seed of a singleI To tilia Manic;l.al Cdiuncil. rpleenwortwill cumber at least 1,000, ArENTL selE ,' 000. I — Your committee be;; d V) report that ace.oeditlg to m0t1011 of Iemitted att .ai. sitting our c ,unit - In the: chis. 11, ve Cork Treasurer, $100; II Penner, repairing culvert, in November, $2; ;.Sunieipa1 World' Assessment Roll tat d Stationary, $6.67. Jarvis—Johnston—That council do now adjourn to meet again TLurs- day Watch the 4th, at the hour of rten ied o'clock in th', forenoon.—Car- CH orenoon._Car- CA s. BJrru:r, Clerk;. Council Met to day as per motion le cf adjournment. Members all pre- sent exeepc Urahttm Scot 00 account t- of siekhe:se. Tie minute; of last u regular meeting read and adopted e Jarvis—Reid—That the Reeve t and Dc 1 uty Reeve ince act the Astess- u n c nt lit 11 Lef'ot e tae as, cssc:t' delivers s it to the Clerk -Carried. Reid--Jervis—That By La w No. 5 18J7 for the regulation of the p'ly for a elan and team when breaking; gt ave, road in winter be blow tesa three times, passed signed wind see led. Carried. Jarvis—Johnston—That 13y 1, tee No 6 1d97 fixing the price of gravel el be now lead three tittles, passed signed salt 6uaied-=;;an cod. J"hn (1011. - Reid,-- 'l'11at as this 00000il has been l.ctitiune:d to f;,rui a polling booth as Braden's School a By Law be prepared by the Clerk for next meeting making p,ailing place No 1 at 111eden 8 ifbuull, ?pleec. No 2 at 1.1 t.Jll,liek s h,,Irte. That. t No 3 be changed. to Nu 4 to Nu I 5 and Nu 5 and 6 to No 7, --- at matt. td et 10 Rneidow t -•-•.r,r evi ---r'P tlit i 1r 13 t't 01(011 • ° aialit r J to m •` , hlld ti,Meondaydin April et 10'L. to --- . CHAS. 13tur roe', tyl r l k, Reason. , tee ne aisle u::ted waned on the "Look at that foolish Mr. Baker, out• •1'0Csiitt;.d.i, coattail In en a clay lade this without :::a umbrella. l,t;Safutl, anti Is he crazy?" 11,,iPy to report that we were "I'm afraid lie is. Let's hurry On. l cou.rtc•ou'It• i ecoivcd with every don't went to meet 111nh," 'Cifsee', la cv ,.n.ttt ces vu1•t,ully "Why 1.10t?" 1 staiedd t a ir ,hisel:in, VIZ:—The settle "Be play recognize this utnbreile. 1 nuent 01 11, ' -' w•ontu. Gt'e • c� his. 1!1e Gp, 1 It's J Bruce ,dal wet debentures, builds and inter t e! ° defter consultation with the Ted w,t,•1• "•-+unci, Board the ILeeve e lbnal u .s a emulation to Conneil ap- pianist 0 e.entnittee to ,deet, confer _ rtncl td a:,:c , ant with your cr.tnlni(tee Yi�lret'b tilt, .1't,,itle aN. 1 illi tYt ,..:, I ,1044th, The committees "It isn't a bit of tr0n1.'lc to got roar- tied," said the Airy young person. .40, sake the " is n being harried that the trouble is,''— udianapolis Jourrhxl, :,;hero am 22 ai?urions in the Bible to he emit wind, 19 cf thele being of a iseereiging cl+araet The largest American fly is a little ver half an inch in leusrtll, Some English erne ;1ogiets pretene that there, 15 a family lino of union con. neetiug Queen V+cions wit) .alfrr'ci the Wait. rtt• ut It $t h and ,d atter U1Ve. • •rl r into the Inueh vexed (1181)11 - i,it:lnent of the railway .•. " t have arrived, at the 0•. Etc .l+ ,nt nil I' ii'at Clllr, 115 run' t .,l:t a cheque of $90 f'rt:,, : we for Connell as final +tiff id d 1,'. +,f' all costs charges inter- est a, ie t. 9 :31U 1 1' 111 CUI 1l1' ` V • 1 s• C IU n r: , 441,r. ` e ,:';r., enameling of the Tor. The oat plant is in Italy tiegrn onto; 1; ill and I3ruet1 Railway inxblematic of music, • ltumbled tic:. : Sununu Vint toe Treasurer elf e'uilc.fas be instructed Cn4• J tits o i a If ob tbr. If lie ndrises. (lo,1 raver Oil, we reefer,. mend %V'nmpu:e's Tratehaa Perpltaeiti p All yeti note is Wild t'11rrry urn -1 that i4 good at lett you get is Reith and etrengtbe. clues coughs, colds and wtltillbg durxrn e. at Chtshuhu's Urate ,stere. g of MI