Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1883-11-23, Page 10• THE MEN OF '37. The r'reustsee lanae N Them' Nave a Seen •'.latter – A eclients sea+se 1 e sine *gest len. To the 'data of The Niguel. tlawn.amee,—Aa the following is • purely so -)A HIT metp►r, but one is which I know many of both of your readies will take a lively'ntermit, 1 now take the liberty of addressing you simultaneously, and would respectfully atlteit your sup. port in the cause of /vales to old set- tlers, or tarn families. I may, perhaps, as well at once explain toy reason kir putting myself forward in this matter. • At the organization of the militia in Huron, I think a year or two before the rebellion, Doctor Dunlop, as colonel, appointed me seuior lieutenant ; end en theoutbreak in 1837, before startles; for the St Clair, he named me as quarter- master—a position which I can assure you was no sinecure in thole days when there were nu droves of fat cattle ever seen passing uur doors, as we now sz'e every week or to. The only other com- missioned officer of that:period in Huron, now in existence, is our townsman, Mr. George Fraser, then lieuteuaat and ad- jutant ; and frum whoa, I have received much assistance in refreshing my memory on the subject. I now, therefure, deem it my duty as the senior officer of the time now alive, to make niy old friends, whoa, I know to have suffered so much, aware of the promise made to them in the name of our Gracious Queen in the first year of her reign, but flet tin/Welled / In the Toronto .Mil ut 31st March last, there appeared a long letter from a Mr. Gilpin, of Port Hope, under the above head, wherein he begins with a quotation from a previous tissue. as fol- lows : "The Queen has been pleased to approve of a MEDAL being granted to all the officers, son -commissioned officers and men of Her Majesty's forces, in the recent operations in Egypt. Her Majes- ty has also approved of au issue of a CLASP, inscribed ' Tel-el-Kebir,' to those troops who took part in the night parch frim KASSA.IN." He then, indignantly exclaims, "\t hat a c000mmentary stn the I this !ratter than to brine it before the attitude assumed by the authorities in 1 patties interested, I take the liberty of THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIA Y . NOV. 23, 1883. nor arms. and ufteutiues scant of food Wu spite of our utmost endeavors to pre - cure it. Mr. Gilpin, iu the &bora, eisratogive particulars if remind ; nod, es we can- 13:1=1 an- n0: any ode perapadly enac- ts the taett tt, a e.•t11 tq Plead our pause, either an Parliaedeut of elsewhere I purp*e of anutrer tom you u paragglar of the natures of her. In my w you that 1 &pares frons proof of the Imulttcaties' to and swine an oar trettMles as I ealr' urea amu I think I cif had ountiry prier' death, and $Ives you same ; but, un the meantime, I merely wish to call attention to the subject, and would beg id your contemporaries, se- recially iu Clinton mud Seaturth, for the sake of many of titres• readers, to take suave 'notice of the' same. I would also respectfully beg of the reeves and deputy - reeves, as a favor to at least some of their constituents, to collect the names of such parties as soy be in their several neigh- borhoods having claims under the above named PROMISE- or any of their descend- ants, so that we may arrive at to SUMO idea of the number of clsimauts still in exist- ence ; always beariug in mind that it we •amid succe:d in uur attempt to obtain even late justile, every 100 acres of laud, even at the Government's present price, represents TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS, and will very soon, if it has not already done so, double that suieunt or more; a shall go farther in the matter and ap- sutn of some importance to any family, point a committee to act for us, or give and I would be very sorry that any one it up altogether 1 have given my opin- ehould be overlooked. ion ss the subject, but manor others may - It is much to be regretted that this think otherwise. I, therefore, propose promise was not known in Huron at the that we meet in the the court -room at time it was given, when the most India- 2 o'clock p.m., on Wednesday the 5th putable evidence of our hardships and December, (the second day of County claims could have been given. But, it Council meeting), and I would earnestly would seem, that because we were so far urgc upon every one interested in the from the centre of operations, and our matter, or one of the sons of those who quarters so inacceesable,that the General are now dead, or thew who were ap- Order referred to by Mr. Gilpin had pointed to attend families; to attend this overlooked us. Had we known of it at meeting if at all in their p'wer to do so. the time, I think the matter would have And as I am quite aware there will be been up long before this. As Iam quite parties present who were ou duty in unable, however willing, to do more in Quebec, Prescott and the Wind Mill, Kingston and A mherst Island, Toronto, Ambentburg, R'tudsor,aud the Hurons; the committee if one is appointed; could at once obtain some information as to whom it would be advisable to Redress on the subject in any of these places. 1 would also, ask all outsiders who may sympathize with us in this attempt to get late justice ; or, who may wish to learn something of these Alden times, to attene also and give us their counten- ance and advice in the matter. I now beg to thank you, gentlemee, for this extensive use of your columns, and re- main, of the Haan armed and equipped with eves/ modern invention, and feeling that he is shoulder to shoulder with men as hly trained as himself, than in suddenly called from the plough opt axe—hie bre•it:winners for j ing assetse, iiewl the$ped hem of wisher jlra=chased to al Mouths eildieipaNeg atm w hour after reel some sew& mid from screen the river of ewelt a holder as poor Groep segued frebejese pelie o«oertsin NOW how messy of hie eugweilaie bight of a sudden be released front 1il� hada ground to join him in his bear K treed, with their ouly wsapanh a two foot pike -pole in their hands. There is yet another Faint of view in which I would place this subject ; sup- posing that each of those ,J.en out on the St. Clair, over 300 Wren, h•td then received their promised huudred acres of land, the whole would not have amounted to within 4,000 ac -ea of the size of Colborne, the smallest township in Huron ! And, alas, what will it be now 1 not needy one-third ; a mere speck in the North-west ; and yet I have been told that the French will never al- low it ! But now, in ounolusiun for the present, I am glad to inform all loyalists of 1837, in whatever locality they may have served ; that our County Council through the warden anJ clerk have kindly granted us the use of the court- room for a consultation as to whether we Mosley. ee• AeeeIDRNT.—This Jemima Thowpeon of the Hayfield Road, Stanley, was taking an armful of w. od from the wood shed, a pilo of wood fell on her cutting her head somewhat severely an• 'therein breis•. hast. Bre will, how- ever, goon be all right agate. Aar —The hand of death hes been id tidavliy of tha northers por- tion of the NOM. reitley daring the three of the OM NOOK 4 fief' •esus dos have hese `caged strw fit were H. McGregor he Judy, Thos. Baird in Septeal►er, ani es the 16tb, inst. John MoFwsn departed this lite at the residence of his nen Malcolm McEwen lot 90, 9rd ton. Stanley, in the 794h year of his ape. He was Me" st Oap Rannoch, Icor Tayside, in 1106, and re- ceived his edaeati.n at the pariah auitoul in that place. He spent his youth as a farm servant, and married in 1834, his married life extending over the long pal d el of forty-nine years. He emigrat- ed to America with his wife and family in 1842 and remained two •ears in the township ofOsgoode Russel Co., when be moved west and settled in the town- ship of Stanley. After living a year on the Bayfield road, he settled on the farm at present oocu,tied by his only remain- ing son, Malcom McEwen. It was then all woods, but by dint of perseverance and mare he soon had a comfortable home, and was long in easy circum- stances. For the last few years he lived retired iu the village of Eaucensiti with his wife, who survives him. He was a constant member of the Presbyterian church, and without taking any active part in politics a staunch Reformer, all his life, and was a firm ftiend of educa- tion. Kind, courteous, honest, upright and outspoken, he was well and widely known and highly respected. WE toot aitas bi•, atteilelt Oat time this country with respect to the loyal survivors of the Canadian Rebellion I shall now. with your permission, give suggesting to then, the apptnttment of a cr.rrespending committee, (say of three members) to communicate with out three some rather- extensive quotations from Dominion representatives on the sub - this gentleman's letter, to slow your I jeet, whose assistance in this claim for readers the feeling of the people in other justice, of so lone standing, cannot be localities upon this enhject. In speaking of the rebellion, heseye: '1 is JIwre than forty-five years since the Canadian Rebellion broke out in Lowes CANADA ; Lieut. \Veir was murdered and e great mow! nfr.•citirs were eonmitfc.l. As tho rebels for a brief period were suc- cessful in various localities, the alarm ie 1838 ; and, failing the receipt of some became general in many quarters that satisfaction in that quarter, I would at they might succeed, with the assistanc'6 once memorialize His Excellency the of the sympathisers across the border ; Governor General on the subject, or per - besides, the formidable organization cal- haps do both at the same time ; fur, I 13d "Htutter'eL'ol;es," inside the United feel perfectly certain that no Bsitieh States line, was a very considerable nobleman will willingly see Her Majes- source of anxiety., and the absence of a ty's good name stifled in her old age by sufficient body of regular trop to quell the non -fulfilment of a promise of so doubted ; and to communicate also with parties in other localities wherever the militia had been called out ; and, if pos- sible, ersible, to organize a united appeal to Parliament, from every quarter, at the coming session, for the fulfilment of the promise of Her Majesty's representative the disturbances awoke in theloyalists of Upper Canada a desire to assist the Gov- ernment to the utmost of their power." As to the march of the Cobourg, Port Hope and Cavan volunteers to Toronto, he says: "They ,parched over fearful roads, braving incredible hardships they were not accustomed to, sleeping at night on bare boards in their clothes, often- times without fire are sufficient food, and suffering everything but death. The Royalists rose everywhere in the hour of danger, to defend the ccuntry from traitor, at home and sympathizers abroad, and had it not been fcr those devoted paltry an amount made in her name, just as she atept on the Throne. But, since 1 have begun this movement 1 have been told that the French party in the House of Commons will never allow "Dominion lands" to be granted for such s purpose ! Now, just let ns look at this idea of the Frenchmen of Lower Canada having the power at the present day to forbid our receiving what was promised us in our Queen's name, half a century ago, for the sufferings we endured in saving this very Dotninion to Her Majesty's Crown from these very Lower Canadian French- men ! for, as Mr. Gilpin has truly said, patriots NO DOUBT THE LAND WOULD HAVE had not the Loyalists turned out at once, BEEN Lost FOREVER TO THE BRITISH land suffered a5 *0 many of them did, Caoww. I do not intend to recall ratI Canada would have then been lost for - present the tnemery of the sufferinrs that ever to the British Crown. The rebel - those loyal sten underwent in their en- I lion in Lower Canada broke out some deavour to protect and save their country from home and foreign enemies—If re- ynired that will be forthcoming— but I do desire, humbly, in the interest of the few survivors, .to entreat the Government rand their atap- porrters in the Hoo,e''f ('ontelmts enol Sen- ate, to carry out the promises made in 1838. After the cutting out of the . steamer CAhOLINE, Sir Francis Ilond Head, under authority we were lead to believe, made a speech to the volunteers on the Niagara frontier, in which he said that every loyalist that had taken up arms in defence of his country in the rebellion would be rewarded with ONE HUNDRED At'RE. OF LAND. "I remember well this speech. Furth r more a general or.ler to the same effect was read at the head of many, if not every regiment wherever tluartered. I met on llte 7t11 411 Dec., the anniversary of the breaklnr out 441 the rebellion in Upper Canada. by accident, seven veter- ans 'f '37, decrepit 1'ld men, who had fought in different Parte of the country, and 1 took oceesi it to gnestion them on this subject, mei I fnntd that all remem- bered the cif( in &stance distinctly. 1f such a promise was made, and there is no doubt Irhateree obmit that fact, why has it not been fulfilled ? \Vhy should a na- tion, or its representatives, OR THE at"- eltSs'RS OF THOSE. THAI MADE THR PROM- IREe. any more thee all tndiViduat, be al- lowed to withdran from -much a premise, made in goal let.' at the :i tie, and with authority, and ;, • h'oe's to be true and sincere ? I am et ;t position to say, for I have fr.•queetly head the murmurs, that the utotle th,• li„venomcnt Inas adopted Inas leer their feeding* more than tha lose of the 100 acres of land : and for myself, i civ that i have been urged for years to brine the thing before the people. in the hope the while bell is st plentiful in the North-west Terri- tory. that sat the tievernulent romper - (direly reoth"t!l, some 05 mire of justice and relief should I'e accorded Di the sor- vivorw of 1837 it '38 and their 'airings, and in sense instances, oheeeb-(w .&sussed& /meth e. (The italics mei small cap's, in the above are twine ; Now, Geuts. whilst i folly concur and believe in every word of the above, I esenot admit that the suffent.ya ..t the pert k's referral to will, c•unpere with these of THE IIs!t or grao� i• their journeying..., noel front the Re Clair, sed t'te heard il.e and ttriya't..e. the underwent for over two mouths oft Sts they intik, is n,:J-winter, long at night on the has A.w.r, whether of wood or clay. hiving only a angle Nlanitet 'ter them, oar, perhaps novo at all ; TIIY had neithei eosd* neer bridies, Clothes eight or ten days before the outbreak in Upper Canada ; they fyught the First Royals at St. Eustace, woundicg Captain Markham and killing a number cf his men : they intercepted Lieut. Weir with some dispatches at St. Dennis, mur- dered him, and, in the words of my in- formant, (within the last few weeks), all but chopped him into inches, throwinlr the pieces into the river,, Chambly ! Could the most heathen of savages have done more, unless they had broilnl and eaten him ? But, by this fiendish act, they gave the example to the ruffians and Loafers t,f Detroit and neighborhood, at a later period ; when some fifteen hundred of them eunounded the house of our old friend, Peter Green, then in Windsor. aroused him and hie family from their slumbers at three o'clock of a December morning, by repeated volleys of musketry through and through Me house, shooting him through the ancle, and on }ft, attempting to get his youngest child out of the house, stabbed him through the hand in warding off a bayonet -thrust aimed et the infant nn his ether arm. They then unfortunate- ly got hold of Doctor Hutne of the 34th regiment, murdered him ; and, in French fashion, chopped his legs and arms off with an axe found in a wood shed. Just as if they supposed that the slaughter of a few infants, and the mutil- ation of two or three British ofllcers would ensure them the possession of Canada ! Will British or Canadian born members support this French faction in op Bing the claims of the Loyalists of 1837 and '38 to the fulfilment of her Ma- jesty s representative s promise in her name, ween they see and cousider, as above remindeei of by Mr. Gilpin, that the participators in a sine night's enrage meat in Egypt, a tributary 'of Turkey,an expensive ally of England, have been re war•led with tangible honors, which may 1 loo h.,n led down es heir hems in their fautliee, while we, who certainly sided in saving this noble dominion to her Majesty's crown, half a century ago sumalaW the •resew rat the atrnnrok and 11or1e7K have not as yet reoeived "thank you r' all pain, interval, external and local, ars andeheeskye seek, the egotism ..totn twist and over. But, to come nearer' home, it is a well subdued in • few minutes l3o at me* „as1e tM sultana alt. nr.saso, rr+l► known fad tbst the survivor' of oke to J. Wilson's drug store and get a trial 1, r £*M, alyr.,,,naw, (isssvA, Owerwt troubles of 1812 and than families n°n et bottle. It will only et you ten cents, !gaiter, toad •n disorders „matins from pots or cei red grants of land in the county of and you can at a small cost test the great eogwl Wool and • low state of the system. Norfolk on Lake Eriea►nd that the town- 1aain cure, Poison's Norville& �e nPAMPA ZED NY ships of Adelaide, Warwick, Plympton, bot ties only 25 cents (Dr. J. C. Arg & Co., Lowell, Mem Your respectfully, Teomes Ki nu. 1 Icireugkaee 5. HUGH DUNLOP, Fashionable Tailor, WZET ST RIS E T, Has the nicest A eerttaent of Good* for Fall Wear to Choose boo. IF 1 t111 Wltlir Nobby Suit ata b1e Price, ('ALL u\ IIUG-x D ij Ni op. BOOTS AND SHOES At the Oldest EstablishedShoe Store in Town, In Endless variety, tt Suit the most fastidious and t b most economic buyer MY WINTER STACK Is now oomplcw, and I take pleasure in informing my customers that at no pre veins time have I had such a In the history of medicines no, preps ration has received such universal eunt- mendatiou for the alleviation it affords, and the permanent cure it effects in kid- ney diseases, as Dr Van Buren.* Kinney Cure. Its action in these distressing complaints is aimply wonderful. Sold by J, ^_ill They all tell the •nue story. W. Thompson, jeweler, Delhi. suffered for years from Dyspepsia, got no relief until he used Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitten. He says it was just the medicine I need- ed. It has cured me. Large & Varied Stock As at present. I have raised the Standard et Quality and Lowered the Price ant it is a positive fact that no such value in fcot wear can be got elsewhere. No household should be considered a•mplete without a bottle of Dr. Van Buren's Kidney Cure is in the closet. It is the only remedy that will positively, permanently and promptly cure all forms of kidney diseases. Sold by J. Wilson 2m A young New Englander, whose knowledge was mere showy than deep, went many Mean ago, to teach a district school in r irginia. Among his pupils was a small, rather dull, and insignificant looking boy, who annoyed him by his questions. No matter what the subject under discussion, this lad apparently never could get near enough to the bot- tom of it to be content. One very warm August morning, the teacher,with no little vanity in a knowl- edge not universal in those days, began to lecture the boys on the habits and characteristics of a fish which one cf them had caught during recess. He finished, and was about to dismiss the school, when his inquisitive pupil asked some questions about their gills and their use. MINN — The question answered, others follow- ed, concerning the scales, skin and flesh. The poor teacher struggled to reply with all the information at his command. But that was small, and the day grew warmer, and the Saturday afternoon 's holiday was rapidly slipping away. 'The school will now be dismissed," he said at last. 'But the bones ! You have told us nothing about the bones !' said the anx- ious boy. Mr. Dash smothered hie annoyance and rave all the information he could command on the shape, strutcture, and use of the bones. 'And now the Echoer—he began. 'What is inside of the bones 1' stolidly came from the corner where the quiet boy was sitting. Mr. Dash never remembered what answer he gave, but the question rind his despair fixed themselves in his mem- ery. Thirty-five years after he visited Washington, and entered the noon where the Justices of the Supreme Court were sitting. The Chief Justice, the most learned wrist of his day, was is man like St. Paul, whose bodily presence was con- temptible. The stranger regarded him at. first with an awe, then with amazement. 'It is the boy who went inside the fish's bones !' he exclaimed. If he had not tried to go inside of every 'fish's bones,' he would never have reached the lofty position which he held. - It is the boy who penetrates to the heart of the neater who is the successfal scholar, and afterwards lawyer,physician, plilospher, or statesman. it is the man whose axe is laid to the root, not the outer branches, whose re- ligion is a solid ft undation for his life here and beyond. a'as i be Beale*. It in a fact that Nerviline cannot he surpassed by any cr,inhinati..n for the relief of pain. The reveal is • good one. Nerviline contains the heat, most power- ful, and the latest disc .vered remedies. It is a maertc pain cure. Rheumatism, stiff neck, cramps, neuraljia,aolic, i = fart Clain fates. CUSTOM W ORK of every krade still receives my prompt and careful attention, and will be made us_ in the most approved styles by first-class workmen, sad of the very best materiel obtainable. We have made arrangements to club Tim SIGNAL with city papers at the rates given below :— Signal ane Daily World .... Weekly Globe 2.25 " Mail . 2.25 " Advertiser .. 2.25 _ D0 -w NING- CIGARS. CIGARS. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC THE BEST ASSORTMENT IN TOWN U NA Rae mala. CHATTRR I. "1 was taken seek • year ago With bilious fever." "My doctor pronounced um cured, but I got sick agnut, with terrible pains in my back and sides, and I gut so bad that Could not mote : I shrunk ! From 228 las to 120 ! I had been doctoring for sty liver, lout it did me no good. 1 did not expect to live more than three months. 1 began to use Hop Bit- ters. Directly my appetite returned,my pains left me, my entire system seemed renewed as if by rmtgic, and after usind several betties I ate not only as sound as a sovereign, but weieh more than I did befdre. To Hop Bitters I we my life." R. FITZPATRICK. Dublin, June 6, '81. How To GRT SICK. —Expose yourself day and night ; est too much wilh.'utex- ercise ; work t..0 hand without rest ; doc- tor all the time ; take all the t ile nest - rums edserti..ed, a;nd then you will want to know how to get well, which is an- swered ion three words—Take Hop Bit- ers!imminismenstmemsemw lino Rev. Father Wilds' EXPERIENCE. A full line of all the Leading Patent Medicines always kept on hand (Physicians ,Prescriptions a:Specialty.) The Res. Z. P. Wilds, well -knew* city misalonary In New York. and brother of the iate eminent Judge Wilds, of the Mamma' o. setts Supreme Court. write* as follows : "7e R. 541A St, New Pdrk May 16, 1882. Mxseas. J. C. ria Co., Gentlemen : Lest winter rwas troubled with • most uncom- fortable Itching humor affecting more especially my limbs, wkleh itched eo Intolerably at night, and burned so Intensely, that I could scarcely Mar any clothing over them. i was also • sufferer from • severe catarrh and catarrhal cough ; m y appetite was poor, and my system • good deal run down. Knowing the value of AYER'a SARSAPA- RILLA, by obeervatlon of many other eases and from personal use In former years. I M s taking It for the above-named ditorders. My appetite mproved allhoat from the Graf those. After • short time the fever and itching were allayed, and all signs of Irritation of the skin disappeared. My catarrh and Bough were els° cured by the same MOW, and my general health greatly Improved, until t is now excellent. I feel a hundred per sent stronger, and 1 attrtbnte these results to the see of the SAsaArARILLA, wbfah I recommend with all eoeadenee as the Met blondmedicine ever devised. I took It In small doses three times a day, and used, In all, less thea two bottles. I plass these facts at year service, hoping their publication may An gond. Yours respe.tfully, Z. P. Wlt.ns." The above Maumee L but one of the many con- stantly coming to our notice, which prove the per - 1 fret adaptability of Avales S*a*APARILI.A 10 the cure of all diseases arising from Impure or tns- povertshed blood. and a weakened vitality. Ayer's Sarsaparilla cleanses, enriches, and strengthens the klee/► Sarnia, &e., were largely filled up. abowt the very tiros t1 at we were on duty, by grants to old sddiers and tailors who had served in the French war, the officers re- ceiving two hundred acnes without regard as to whether they bad suffered personal injury or not 1 protein not to compere the rebellion In Canada with the all but interminable European war of the first part of the esntmry ; hut I have yet to [tare that share ie more moral courage, ge4irttlSm or bravery in the tepid rush The {Wootton wawa, a'ewseew*4 I Sold by an Duu, , r, 'dee $1,141 bottles 'Or 10. is a preparation of oarbohic acid. varmints and conte called Metlregor & Parke's Carbolic Cev.te. It will care any more, cot, burn or bruise when all other pre- parations fail. Cell at G. Rhyne drug store. and tot a package. 25 cents is all i s costs. b Why safer from nervosa prostration* whim you ear bey a guaranteed rare at Wthnae dreg etoar. ,1 AYER'S CATHARTIC PILLS -- Oast MMNdna — egw lets4.cke. sal ars sea ywherm Affray& sell*al.. GEORGE R MUS, BLAKE'S BLOCK. THE SQUARE, OOTS&SHOES 1:74o-7.7ir+g aWted.cl ' Beg '-e announce to the Public that theyhave opened buainess in the above Store in the store lately occupied by Horage ewton. Having purchased $ large and well assorted stock of Spring and Summer Goods at close figures, we are determine • neeee.li. to give the Public the_benetit. QUICK SIBS SEL PROFITS WILL BE OUR !LOTTO, pa -Please call and examine our goods before purchasing elsewhere. etfeRemember tho place, next door to 3. Wilson's Drug Store. }1rCustom work will receive our special attention. fie -None but.ehe heat of material used and tint -class workmen employed. fire -Repairing neatly done on the shortest notice Goderich, March 9 1882. DOWNING & W E D D U F S N F' R O 1�i T AGA21�T ABRAI-IAM SMITH CALLS ATTENTION TO THE FOLLOWING : CLOTHING, r'v LARGE AS?ORTAND NTTHE IfiA.TE T DESIGNS.V. grA FINE A8130` Kis ENDLESS V ARIET�•FURNISHING GOODS HATS, arALL THE LATEST STYLES. AND EVERY SIZEZt BALL PATTERNS. YANID A FIT GUP IN UARANTEED RANTEED OR NO `'ALE.'161CLOTHS NEW G -ODDS, NEW PR.iCES. CHEAP FOR CASH. TALK ABOUT FRUIT. CHAS. A. NAIRN HAS THE FiNEST BRAND OF CANNED PEACHES iN THE MARKET. AND HiS - CANNED TOMATOES AND CORN ARE DKucIOUS. • .A TRIAL WILL CONVINO114. , COURT HOl'OR SQUARE. OODERICM, * O Art Designs ill \U__11Paperg. _ – Now l• the tine. it you wish one or two nice rooms at bogie, to mea Butler's room paper He ball over 20,000 Rolls of the Latest Designs S.saattfnl colon. and at perces lea than very much inferior goods Call and nes them thee etre the host vales is Iowa, sail nest bene'/. The 1tsi Bazaar Paltms Fhions, AT BUTLE It'El. t PROM TIC 01 & OMs! eta IS And she like a bird, 1 doses differ& thing iu s the fulluwiu; MY DEAi silence c f tie forced Ou your mottle' delicacy I .I with a trei priyilege of this evenint this city a p in yourself only friend. kindness to disregardiuti and speech, ticienctes u ignorance t society in enuugh to your howe might hive your patient ptdly selfish franc auu fa friend, Mr. assistance, courage in t longer the member twc man able t educated p: his own too ing his friers To -day 11 jectofwy11 tuns from through the procured for I hope that happy to n ning of a pe us ? I sha calling at my dear Let son. Your As the 0 which she h was a suapit she said, on "He has at any rate. At that rang, and E and cried o 'Oh, the ing ! I'ni i She dash ‘ir,of haste, a title me, whom ab "Don't 1e sight, Kitt; Then she of the land and peeped door opens light from and dise',os men, • to and pat •lar with a ativ. She heat young ratan 'Is Mrs. strong wish Then sha though no bled all on ed into the left her nu As for J perfectly c guests with with some 'Mr. Al mit, I sho I am very your fathe much ! N son to be 'Thank ed the yen was ellen good mea away 'Indy for *skit.' 111 Gunnel M tea -eight, The ol. him. 'Yea Harry r '1 tats' madam, a zee out fc on the cu old man, . cannel, 1 from kills to see y0 be so.' And t once awa ,reserve s cp[iil it • *nm, ter ' .4.udden 'Md not 'had bow, first rice But Z mediate lady's wi Her b first on1 Ella the mor and the t h', u�11 ever ah ter.' Thee she for, her, in young., figure awkwe