HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-10-5, Page 3THE
How Would,
atedvx.,trA
apPe
Sega Act hie
every:county v.,
been -taken, th
have made up ;
and try othee ra
be more sucoes
preeent attitud
awe worker*, I
looking to pro
jederaent the
;be with whio
evils of the liqu„
ble in the move
this cometry will
plank in their
that the peson
eider whether,
practical, wove
Moat we wait
On every hand t
are apparent,
forth in litany q
redeeing the n
securing the bet
ntill the evil goe
said is than in a
bein in theen.
moot be oceetent
lege welL admini
goes on the nem
temperance part
coneroimity to
extent ef enactin
Or, if 11216 1a the
ehoidd be satied
willing to wait e
twiny wriest to
Rider, whether
Methods than pr
adopted, and wh
nein} tO meet the
peratioe peeple,
practioal effeat
ehort period, auti
ticallY serve tb
thia point, there
'my remarks, an
of treating the
eimply to broadl
hope that it re
provoke CliOensai
mined that if
were ouly unite
Peeeingtry
but, in nay opini
this paint. The
the teroperenee
veuienee, may
or entire p
other the modcra
Now, while these
are uninerOna
divided, there
and auCeelisitil A
temperanoe, T
therefore, Should
this cau only bo
method which w
of both. To eec
what point they
8. coaree which
meet the vituve
yet will be each
tioo, if only as
amine their co.o
time will be uk
otia support of t
la well Rumen
where prohibitio
bas been a tool>
lame not been
Jaw, and, moue
way or another,
arm to those wh
break it, and for
their private ri
consequently if t
in the illicit trail
as they would
• poaed to do,
mune roothod a
*bile it would
olaaa of tbe ooni
liquora in an
would on the o
those who were i
control themeelve
that the use of
way be promoted
ally under the
be pardoned in
think it would
other way, so
.the consumption
ing habits of t
license ayatem,
to a party gt a hi
is simply the bra
give that you exp
.and thua secure
One of the roes°
moderate atheme
letter imposeihili
I have already
thi)
s namely, tbe
andthe other is t
raent must exper
revenue derived f
very well to ea
government won
through the le
make up for the 1
some precedents,
onr legielaturee
faith to warrant
ment. If it is t
places and the lic
largely responsibl
of the people, the
prove that these s
any substitute fo
vide for tbie. It
tioned that all cla
away with places
where the indivi
were involved, p
bad with reason
other way. Then
surely be well sa
derived frora a tr
rnelenthe normal
The plan I would
away with all pn
sales shops, and
exclusively in ' th
meet. Let the G
many stores as w
ply a reasonable
own official, who
interest in the sa
public) as any ot
employ. By thi
roper persons o
but not to be co
course) without
ary or deception,
oder a prohibito
ime, the Geyer
heir power to say
emcees to be eery
Hien. The Go
'ght and power t
r the liqu
Ink right and p
wive as much r
bile the cense
kindly be great
m the liquors w
ly two parties
porter isnd the
ey ale° tlse purl
mired. As the
_.,,....... ........ . .
"mtroil TRADE.,
con.vow ordy net his, goent on on bond ea
the Government Officer PerMitk, it.. SO this.
soMeregulation .would: preyeo, thole), eating
,, , ,.
.to any, pereon eetaide the ,GOYernment: I
Week' Permit, the mannfooturer tO port
'nit .he °Qtila ,abe )03• iOV9r$ Ill
'htmreoemagot.:1:::aerde,Qce,wairdokegtuf .,teerv:kipt...4ioteht:Gabeletria.a, aB-
0 e page or mut
Goveromoot neenbanen wen tre 41,4!
,, ,
ernmentea Steck of lilr, A's liquors needed
to be rePleoiehed let' thew buy frem hinix
end etl on with all the Other treitOlifeettirere
clipa importers, T1 the 4 00744'3'1%30 %Ad
Otiatinieeturer •Shoold And out, todefen
MI with then), Oa that coold be seta 'amid
be the delOond ia.fell7 met; and theretOto
neither party could comploin. This, there.
ftgtlf`dil4 parogpeignteral'eaetaledirenott9ttritPlleaelle.e.
Sary,, at tiiill p.,M33t, to go into all tbe v[044114
recioired io am practical oroxiong oe ote
toneme• If the PrfneiPlo cnn ko Proved to
be tbe true one, tbe aetailo required ie
cortSieg St °et PrOosieollY eon ilosilY
eeeng'br be wveagbt °I"' eell• 4. 0151 Wr)alcl'
not he fonnd to obeehdelY free the coun,t,rY
from all the evile eanten might arise from eise
too free eels of lktoore in *ha booms, bet the
some Pan poe.sibly be said of entiro probibi,
niont With the eale 0 linnfira placed in the
hands of the GoVernment alone, you make
tbe Oovernment. responsible for tbe welfare
of the poopethe Same as the bead of the
hoesehold vs reaponsible for the welfaM of
Itis tdIllitY• Mia4qqqatlY 4 17°414 "°ab,e"
come Apparent what restrictiona wordo oe,
neeee4arY ln.a/IPPlYb4g the public. It Irpigh
be well at toe same time to consider the
propriety of placing gm sale of taba0e0 ,e---
the same henna, end thee woes a lerge
revenue from that tiellreo olerN in talking
thin metter over with Weeds 1 iiin told
that in, one or Iwo of the miller eeeetries
14 rope the Gown:mans aeatvala Abo
eele of liqoor and tolatimo,aud thatit works
well. If that 16 tbe fact then we h8lmium:1e
Precedent% for Vile Plent but PereertAnn 1
ene net fatililiir With the fectii.
Ati27.$4TAMie
—
TH18. ALI.X0.(0t 114If SIIVR/41611.0,
'114 wimp no,
•-----.--,---..
8°13113 ri°714°41- Cr 113 /fb
_ , op, , gnrieg - 0
'wornra wheat stock,
The Ontario B r a ''
ditatag,.-aabilvtinu.aei.voi4do.. aarReBatale128.4)4va;
, . .,e, crops for 1889. Tba eett-
ret4lea et Yield et "one %re oomPoted irOrn
report men on 13th Sept, by 520 corre,
epundents of the Betean, ' r
Io meal &Wet of the Brovine, the rain-
fiti Igee below the averages of last year aud
tkle ?In 1Ye4r4 bt 18$2'8'. altheeg4 the
woo, 0.,.' .,,y was nearly up to the average,
In elm 'northwest aztd eerth and east a,a
129Sbeeet 41°4(44 the '1111Y r4i1;14411 W" 44.
ecee" et the average ; e)sd tbu- Auguut an
frot it, thosf3.. diektiete, oithoug4 below the.
averages of former years, was ice.a, rly three
timeaae inugh as in tile obelc districts ,
Th b a
3 1 O A nA_nt rainfall el May, Alan and
14 Y °.'ned a rank growth pf hay and oil
Cereal "or, and xef'otte model to the
SeTeee " 2"1 et jhlY avel'entiee et 4
heriatifel harvest. Toe boy %seep was at
;ha sinie iyell saved, lmt wboat, bats and
grain crope Were SellaqueloSIT
et le
ettte en . With 11'81. and were, Ogotdes*
effected to *be ripeniog etege by eiteeileive
ile" 1113e anlY eatimete ot len whet la
otoW *Q14'"ft h7 oeattt wee butthele Per
lte11;rost oggregtite ef 5,60%000 buthele,
and,''. e.'' ' c't a VeY "441"Y aa411Ple"
8En1.3g 97 'eat We° let's eff"te4 and ;be
quality fat the grain is finer, but the eati-
Amite bail beea reduced y near y four
ttO4h.. elO Pec t..wtef. TbeiletAitinieki el -Wheat;
as tiolv Wilireated, i4 10,772,981 boohoo,
bqat; 71"1"(41/aabCila lees shatt tile Pte"
mule of the crop oo the 20th of Jely,
OW° buthele leae S1234 leeS YM lied
8,250,000 buthele lege then the Average of
the seven Yer.tOl$8'80
Atiti.kV,
Th. e yield of barley is rein Ann it is gen-
;golly plump and el A good lerigbt Mon tet
the 1;aatere emtisa, however, where the
gm.) bulk of our ingeoleenteble barley ie
grOWil. orrespoudente state that it was
gained, lin tem 0 the berveetiog mown.
The yield 'la 14$$ thare the Jely estimate by
$„e"D't3t* b"hele' b" the a#gregate le
°4750,000 ab9" the average el tn'' seven
entre 1082.e, Tee eon len been aeueretly
• *, ,. „. , ; i 0 • •
14e9"eu, Ae -'44444"" C"4"°12"
0426. '
many parts of the Erovium the .04.ta
wits noccuallY beevY And l'aOo lo
w, but it Wfle effeeted by then and
1 . op.& housed lo good condition and the
AIM eettromect Yield large, the grain itt
light in wejght. The Veld ' as now WI-
te4 - - • " •
ma , va a Mete below the everegeper are
Of ttlerlitt iiiiiit131yeere, butin the at;gtegme
it is greeter by 11,670,00D buthela, awn
greater ;hap lest year'e crop by 2,200,009
Weibel%
PM.
The MOM unfavorable accounts are re-
ceivod from-ilie enteral section ot the
r govIo00, where the rains math:ma to a
Ater period than in the western (notion,
Still the yield per acre ia only 14 buebele
less thin the everage of the past seven
years, and -the aggregate in greater than
tbe overage of those yeora by half a million
boshele-the area in *Thep being greaten by
ee 400 acres
-'--- —Tin' wozra$ wng,vr cum.
Theo eatimatea Of tbe Enropean grain
crop ennueny made public at the °netting
°nue iuteruetienei greet nentnctinenannner
are othelly riceepted as tbe out relieble
ea that Continent. The reerket opened
essta year 0 b AI tb 4,40.1144. when eon
""
4E4 . ‘,.._:. .. .uto ,o‘i far ettob, of the
countriee of Europe, 'being outdo in per.
°outages of the !Mirage bervebts of the
verione want -ries. For the *ix yeern MC,
80, tho averoge wheat oral, of Buralm woo
1,211,072,192 beebels, and in 1891 it was
1,240,389,925 buabehl. For ibis year the
estimates are about 15 per cent. less than
last year, or an aggregate or 1,051,322,036
bushels.
At the Paris Millers' Congreee, Prof.
Grandeau preeented 'a statistical report of
the wbeat crop of the world putting the
yield of the great wheat growing countries
as follows:
united States ,,,. , .. 44100.000 hus,hele
Frauce..,......... .."" " '''''''' 1:76,'W4,000
.R112,1'1117 '''''' .".." '''''' "".." '''''' ". g4?1145b.'00-10G°0 "
-------""!"----- -- "
Canada ranked thirteenth, with a sbow,
ing of 30,800,000 bushels. Prof. Grandean
geve figures of wheat' yield per acre in
(efferent countries as follows: Great
Britain, 28 bushels; Germany., 17.2; Ans.
trellis, 17.; France, 10.6; Austria-Hungary,
15; Spain, 14; Canada, 12.3;. Italy an d
the United States, 10,8; Algeria, 10.6, and
India, 10. The Canadian figure is much
too low, even if Quebec and the Maritime
Provinces are inoluded.
OR Tifirso cANADrAlvs..
4,- gU8BANIP'8. 4601XSZ"
... .
t , de. , ao . anorocen
UtinePeiY ?
Pr. 0,0444, 'not lt, woli Tarn 94 to. be a
.
Huge Hea-T.
ReT orhe8eP°1-47 hrrhdleorr711; w"olY:YO'XII-PuLetaag
, . . . ,
bbae eat ,go. Qiettarintlry,ye Va. . t. i ft i:riti wel2nrohpeateleoterrthi:
now in Brookville 4ail, awoiting hia trial, is,
lihelYtoturu out the bignes;nind Clo-foree
froM beginning' 0 extee-ne wea betineeten
ia yestetday•s", issue, two mop interevea in
the sum °reseed Ow river, be fa search
ot the otd, bow, III' libiob, De,yrs body wee
geld. to .hav'e been Plf*.Ced giet Ile had trait
, ,.,_ ,. ,..,, , , ,
'1,14,ered&ty:brer. ti:ttr b4 „Tilboeyn47,texe:;Ertmh;
partienlais 0 the. Murder and unoigt whose
atory the wbolp cam originated,;44 rested,
Zeort,134.t,efieotgetet414(:11,Attalitietigoaitiotetht,
being um itobeeco. Day, „rite (4 rno man
po'a, to hove bath mordered, He la a bare.'MEAT.
footed rirellin Wont, IQ yeors old, sharp
aalaeateeltert6Aillnelbt;otrIX%rae41:ana 1'1'101
the essential ra oieltep . forTfirea2t-les
book ageot, or ga liglittniQn d nt
Robert Doy, brether ' f thegmrige* pe . er,
is the artyboheadeXi the seOreciTfoll3Z1`
a 1..
oli4 uPilee yesterday andhe Seeree m:dest
and reneeten.eerenet- ceenteetnaen tie
retell) home ' th Vatter the'
owed on, the
crease:I the eiver theyproceedone oY
-ost is known as .0Z dawenencilier noaa
from Arortfetow4 *0 a .poiaa 46Qat miacmy
hetWeen ;bet village wen 0 denebur
They hod. no &facility in. A --g ' ' g:
noitig tne old
Tense deeerthed, and -neon came non a
vtleriTietry, wb4erneatibtleiea berect1210 giraw133dalikte--
the stimy be gave Piot 4-0.4g hi 44 tnicl.,
hie tbat no body woutd bEOI f"rnd
A the cellar, tor' th - 011t,
ia 4110 Am' nlaaa rile reteoeuta 4iirlaal
40 cellar and Itzt 4.0, inotwa ettle ex- .
pinned oorpee tree miming' placeeeocwages in
the envo0 y q tamer about a mile fur.
neer emu the reint sere' eueug4 a- iBit
to this niece reveette4 in,,y, wit 0 AO oniy ie
eoroiog a goon. living, .bot alaa saoafied
wine ins ot, Tbe memento en that eeo,
Oleo, however( hew the Whele let of Daya
and nem and wenn not at aii. awry when
they lefe no money, one en them /mid
that Carr bad Threatened to take Dare
bin read elweee carried A hatcher knife ao
hie R b, 4 I) 411 t
pereon. 0 .r ay now seya t .it
Cern will be held on several other neUnts,
ineluding stealing- The boy baa been
treated to gene an moireiog and now Biqa
that he wati inatrUeted by lite mother to
tell the any And that them was no troth
in it.
-----q"----
History ,in Wier -Official Acts zeoding
Up to Coorederatiari.
In 1008, -the 'go' e.S.tion Of-tnion„. ot the
Britieh Proviecea of NOrth Atnerolti Was
brou let before. the Legislature of Nova
871418)74 .0tio-eir ar4a..sfic.e.ostwo:.;,.., a , 9.40,0
• , ... . e _ . . _ • . . t
PrOPosen to neern /4.othtlreS tbe elploSse° Qt
certain Governmental dculties on the
time ny the formathin Pt a eelon of Eritieh
lurth 44,41€1ican. Cglezdeq' .r, „ '
In IBA jobn BeverlY rw„c.tnee,°4
Attothey-General for Upper vanamt,
formed. A Plan for the 00ofederetten of
British North Americo.,
ofIt‘lbelloiateMIL ,Vreuellq-l'grile+4,therroollreetluPer•
ported A similar iiebenue, and in 183e,
plobterett 6tizeetitslegeY; jainen21•44. tien' Bitted a
In I.839, 140rel Durham, in bis repert to
the British -Government, recotumendett
that. the provinces be confederated.
In 1854, Hon. j, W. aohoetoo placed A
resolution levering onfederetion before
the NeVe 8a(nia Le7.181ature.
In len, the Pomo gontlemoO. °X3d th
YeoleniaAtesG.6oAMrctlilliebaNiclovviraeSaterTiol(negglian144es
to- Mare the attentiore of tbe Beitieh
authoritiea for the seheme.
In 1857, lien.A. 'T. Galt ie said to have
alluded tevorably to the Oen, aua ow florae
year he, with *be Hen. G. E.Certier end
Roo. •Totan Roue, being in Englend on
lensinosa concerning She eelenies* dio's*useed
tbe proposal for onion with Sir Etilwer
Lv ton ben Coloreal ecretary.
"Ile 1:86t1,' the ' 4riet ligielatii; atep Was
taken by Nova Beetia, the Ageembly there
having ulienimOttelY teflelVed ha tovOr ot o
confederation.. '
ln aroae.„ leo, the MA. aoorge Prowtn
theunCbenenseneer ,A,Soleot Coalmine° ra,
the c apeman. engietatare, matte A report
fltVoring a federation ha be applied either *0
BgenteednI,Vont;41 Se0riell. tbe 'ravinees 01
.rt 112 " t° "
In September of tbe same year theChar•
lottetown Oonferentle RAO hekl to disetuie a
etrAltrtstitne uoien ef New Brileswiok, Nova.
,?,cetl% :Ad thoctea Edwarad bland. i Dele.
Wee ^toto Qr‘oo•*° "lie,' Perroboa.on to
4"41;ta' and "on it being grantedPreP°3°41
tbe larger ileum to the couterence on the
12tht of Septeinber.
QO tbe Ulth of October, 1864, the cele
butted Qiethee Conference was held; .6
wisiole ae1optoa tram OaliadAR NOVA beetta.
Princ,e Edward lehnul and Newfoundland
Atteildtd, and the famons Qiiebeo resole. -
lion*, the baste of the preeent Coofedsra-
tion were rumen in seveuteen daye,
On the 3rd of Rebruary, 1$65, the Cane.
elan learnatnenter
met at Quebece and tbe
Quebeo resolutione were thirodaeed. They
were placed before tne Bone of Aasembly
by on, John A. lgaodoeelo. and before
the Ilegialative Council by Ilan. E. E.
Timbe, The rootion epprovuigot them was
carried by a large .ntatoritn.
On the 24t1* of APril. 180, Netv Oruns.
wick having returned a Rouse opposed to
Cenfeneratien, on Charles Topper cis.
ri-4 a tootion le the Nova Stadia Legilia.
tura favoring the renewal of negotiotione
for e maritirae avian,
Oa tbe 17th of April, UK Mr. Tupper
moved A regoltitiOn in the NOVA Scotia
Legislature enipOWeriog the Lientetilint.
Goveraor to appoint delegates who would
confer with the Imperial Government and
11344e "X"PrneMe i" tit° eatrY of the
Proviuce hit° Confederation in nth a way
thet its iistereste would be protected, The
resolution wag oterried, an n on the 30t12 of
a000, 1896, a like zeaolution applying eo
New Brouswick was carried in the Lev.
lature ot tbat Province.
On the 4th of December 1866 depots.
tins trove the two Proves* cei a of, -Canada,
and from Ism Brunswick and ova Scotia
met in London, and organized the London
Conference at which tbe question wee aw.
a°841ea with her lakieutY's legal °Mee"' th0
interview° beginning 04 the 2'ith °f /nun
.1807.
The Act of Union was made Jew by tbe
e9th of Merelx
Imperial Parliament on the - ,l,
1,807, and on tbe 22nd of May the Boy; ,
Proolamation was iseued from Windsor
Cactic•
On the ist of July, 1807, Confeneration
9 nroolaitned through tbefourProvincsa,
l'zug"ci the Dominion of Canada was an ae.'
complished fact.
On the 23r4 of June, 1870, Rupert's Land
and the Northwest Territory. were, epee
the joint addresses of tbeDominion Houses
of Parliament admitted to Confederation
by an Imperial Order•in•Connail.
On the 15t12 of July, 1870, Manitoba be. i
came a Province in the Union. • . i
On the Oth f y, 1 7 ,
• e 2 o nal 8 1 British
Columbia was added.
On the let of July, 1872, Prince Edward
Island joined in the awirn.
--,-
ye atrives in Valli to Save ins IN
Peotb.
The New ye* nrerod of There6
.Mr. and Mrs. M Ef h l*v a in oo
. 0 eg i e
- T •
to;/ntelimeetii.htToutlece, opt atie.iya7,4wihabtoo/
wee oblige to be op early to r4
worh on. time, and Mrs. ilfoUtigl
rose drat „ lighted the fire and prep
hreeirfeet while be aniebere iala ajp,
Wea OP before 4 o'eleen yesterday 1
Bhe had tiet oat the dithes and nal
pared Darden breakfast. • Joel
calling him she stepped th the t
took op 0 kerosene lamp, light(
Iteefteteeridetootglehheacelliteeergy4ceawllekwefthb°171
was went te wenn° hen be -woo
itohlpot,i°e:Ivue%bgettsabayve-regher,,Ipeka'12';„ ,
first words be distinctly undertitooi
oame just after what bad seemed t,
his sleep like the dull, foreway i
gun. It wae really the report of
pieding hereseee lamp,
Leaping from bed iill bia wife a
oet again bicangb darted 71"Q th'
ing
garhooinmg s*blindelywabsagowraerathaanild ill
winee ehe beet the air with her ba
shrieked with pain, was big wife. St
ahiaze from heod to form. The
eonot ill her apron and thsu iu- b,
literally envelopieg her hi a sheet (
Thee it bad rue. quiokly to her art
end se to bee hair, which neaten
her theeldete iiite a ,,,,„„ 0. oxe,„
. . ..
Doniel at eigai eeized he 'wife mg
weiet and forcibly bore her to nee 1
the while trying $0 beat the nettle,
her clothieg and heir with big hare
Vier* be rwed the blazing dress fi
bony, and rolled her over aod over.
not entii be was eevereiy nerebed
Amoy extieguiebed the elm," we
enwrapped, Ina wife, axle tbert It
lane to eeve ber life. Anent every
her body wail blistered and blaekez
her bead and 4tee4 were as mach as
tharooel
The police Called an arobillance
terribly bonne, woman was taken
Bresbyterien goopital. $belost co
e3 onLbsway,and died
41ed in the he
Atwell inieutee eeter 7, eeeleugio
were armed et tbe hospital and he
0 bed fe rem of the worde, go
aufally through all *lee internee pa
news of hie wife'e death was '
- , Then lee grornied in enguith
time, They are Said to bove
couple.
devoted l'bey bad
a '3.fro. Me/Ugh Was 29 ye
miliaria ia severof yeara yeinat
e and the hesnitel doctins $
• Mall Of remarkable coat
ll 12*6 g time before he coo 14
1 1
,_,
, ecirfliN3lIftQ f3Y8T8g,.
kre te Me horn the way im
been nelenten in ob4toot,
(ere. 'tile vote • has reeently
it the teMPOranoe OSOple
Mir plibtIll tP abandoia it
)ans whiali they hope may
efol, anagiog from the
o of many of the temper-
wonid infer that they are
tiWt1011 as being io their
'11301Yee:::incliry eZwro. left ibt:
nt traffen This le pntices,.
mot toe a third lyarkx In
i Peohihition as a PrineMal
platform. I take it then
t is .a proper time to ooe-
%Mr BHA Prokibition Se a
aeot, aod if BO, how Wee
for it censtenreatiee ?
ne evila of theliquor trafne
in d .efforts are being pot
tarterd te atem the tine, by
amber 0 licensee, awl
;er enforcement of the law.
a on, and all *bat can he
risel reppecte, it is being
4 sVaai4 ags7 1°°It'aa it we
with a Now low more or
tered, Wbile the greltS Side
, as ever, or till the ultra
r „Lwaod jA2 "whoa. the
think witle them re. the
g A prohibitory law. Well
beet that 1444,1 be acme, we
, het 1 or elle un no
) long, 14 Surely becomes
operatic* Advegeta to nee.
there may ATiot be other
ohibition ithich. %mid be
:ch, from their &rover nt,
views Pt all *Klee or tem-
*mid be brought tete
witbio a comparatively
at the gam time, prim,
I eaule flurlloce. It le tel
fore, that I wish to direct
, in doing ao X beiveno ince
iitibjeot ezthaustively, bat
y tate my viewa, with the
ty atioeuntte thought and
an I thiele it wilt be ad •
11, the temperance people
1 they could get ail the
lea they woold reAnire ;
et, the trouble lies peg A;
;e are two dimes among
ne‘Ple•none whiebtfor eon-
be wino tua extome
ohibitioniate, and the
te on entietnobibitionenn
two PottieOl both *1 whioh
tune reapectebte, remain
r, ba no bop) eV, any great
blevement lit tlie, cent' 01
o unite these two cline%
be the great effort, end
i done by adoption° Mu&
thid fAirly meet the views
lure Vele, we ebould see at
differ. and then try te Lind
, While it might not fully
of tho Rrobihition Party,
a etep in the right dime.
A atarting point, ao to
peration, and at the game
Ily to gain the aympathe
o more moderate churn. It
that even ia countring
t bast been tinected there
eeble eleaa of persons wbo
in sympathy with. Abe
iliently, they have Jo one
two more (idea:counts:a.
0, tor . gain, were ready to
the reeson that they felt
:hte were infringed, and
hey did not actually mist
lo, they' did not °ppm it,
itherwiee have been die-
Ey idea is, therefore, that
mold he adopted whieh,
swum to the temperate
ninny the right to protium
*operable and open way,
iher hand, provide that
nemperate and unable to
a could be prohibited; also
nioota wooid not in any
no is now clones° affecta.
license system, 1 may
digreseing to eay that I
not be possible be any
gifeatually to stimulate
of liquore and the drink-
be people, as by a high
When yen grant a license
tb rate to sell liquors, it
iciest intimation yon can
set biro to eon an h„tei
6 return for hie money.
La why 1 advacate a more
, is becanae of the eiroost
y to secure probibition.
entioned one reason for
divided public sentiment,
he difficulty any govern.
ience in abandoning the
rom the trade. It is all
y that the expensea of
.d soon be so reduced,
gsening of crime, as to
ma, but even in the face of
that has to be tested, and
mild need a good deal of
hem in trying the experi.
me that publio drinking
gnsed sales shops are so
e for the drinking habita
x it needs no argument to
honld be swept away, and
r prohibition mast pro-
will soarcely be ques
saes would unite in doing
for the sale of liquors,
dual's personal interests
rovided liquors could be
ble restriction in some
the Government would
tiatled with the revenue
de which was mint:sleet to
demands of the people.
propose, therefore, is to do
Dlic drinking places and
put the sale of liquors
hands of the Govern-,
wernmeet open only en
'tad be necessary to elm-
lemand, putting in their
wonlde nave no personal
Les beyond serving the
ter civil servant in. its
[ memos all f3tbe! 'and
lila secure their liquors
Burned on the rprerniges,
the teeopettion to ..per-
as would be the case
fy law, end, at the sante
araent would have it in
. .
who were fit and ProPet
3d; and under What con-
ernment would'have the
o charge jug saoh prices
ne ' as they might
epee and thus they might
ivenne as they do now,
option of 'ignore would
Ly reamed. By thie syn.
mild be ,. in the hands of
. , .
, ,the mantdaoterer or
aovernment, and in *hie
y of the liquors would be'
aanufaciterer or importer
n
DisuninrrroN or agintimitlialtIP.
Tbe AMerigftop admit teen the Regusb
An Wei tb_em in bantihng fenight. One
aid to ;hie is The very effiCient 'warehenee
ayetem 'in Oexinetetien, With All, tbe leading
freight depois. Tide is en nub e 8u616
that the task of (hest/Oleg merchandise
and ellotting it to ite respective cere is
greatly eimpiined ; wbilst the vetent of
gr000d covered by the geode yerde them-
eelvee **Attlee *be conmeitive to morabol
the cars int0 train with the greateet pont.
ble ;Teed, Some /nee Of the extent to
width' efforts to ;Amplify and a* aeneleritte
freight nettle bine been carried may be
termed /rem An6 n.„ in., .,.....p.., ,,,,.,,..
London nnnbenontinnnecanntna eionnanryerannute
Edge Env* Liverpool. ceatairte frni vanes
ot line, costing S10,000,000 ; and. in addi.
tiou tbia oompeny has ill, the num city
five other freight depatat twO Of them
reeched by tennele Geo a vslic wad
a nnerter in length. eenettheted tee
their use alone. There are also in Iliver.
pool twelve other goods depote beinging to
otber companion eet envoi Another
London 4.7 Northwestern depot, the tires
covered by elanga and ehnneiug lines ia
200 *creek with 31 miles of running lino
end eitling.room for 0,900 care. 1.1flut; has
been dm by the premier company bect
been done on a relative 80414 by °Chem
Comparisons could be oonstently drewn to
our disacivantege betweee the oeleritY with
whieh goods ooneigned from the United
Stntea to interior points in Great Britain
reach their deetination and the tardy
movement in the dietribution oe merobrin-
able ooneigned from Englend to polets min
skis of NOW York or other receiving Portn
Apart fore. the questlon of speed ot tram,
theta is no doubt that the advautage inIndeed,
England i i i a t I,
ei ,argety eau to tbe auperior
working ot the preliminerlea before atarn
ing treine on their journeys, rendered pole
able by the facilities bore rutmed.
The eiteeset la tne tiflot Outdone..
At •
a recent meettng of tbe neon*
toclemy Dt. Lippineuri presented a ptne
thy Igi10-..1fuercitet,t1 '41103,4 is euggeuted
and4Y 1 ° "rn In ..nais of a ph000graph
an apparatus for metentatteoue photo.
graphy and re rod egoop et ;he enure°
'We' ed 1 Pid be ibl P
Q. Prl .t 1 would PC" 0 to teProduce
" *IV xoture tfrco not only the Imre
It of a person, but Quo bring beton
dieope.v, vy.id picture of the persou'e
pasitit .
0-74--e li'eo tacsis' "Pregsieno
The procedure would be aomawbat se
fesblwe 1 A Perm eegtbing or eluging into
the phonograph wouid he photographed by
anIIPP"Idue geared "11 the
would fox, the Phonograph. The Pictures
inate-nianeoni, and taken -at the
rate or eav ten pictures' per 8 CO a Tim
Id th- 'bend eee e a • -Y
evetopedeand arrenged fa a
iiiwpeenejal litennte_ro ler reprodnetion on e semen
tehoetierouisly with the phonograpb, ethen
etre ter s. eepreduaing the ispeeth. An
at lima be enab ed not only
bear112*
aeotorrbuteagoletlareetnerl'f enetYl' I; tree
ons
represented one. omen. lbout let tland
a bele u A. ,1) a t E )3 year) .
na.riensligtn goM.
w'itt, k tY-1 14eP 1 ° "tete a' ex.
n-- ---- - - *- —Irel'ae ePilare"4-
rs
$ e be a
ter part of month tbat bas
stuee • arveat began tbot tbo mien
0 throe extent the quantity, of tt
=pet have euffered. lime wh
apeouted, but Pot very ranch. Bea
been badly stained, go thet fine
serflike will be lime% The wins
still ge.nerally elitirmned itt about
000 binthele or a little trader, but
surely be safe to role= on 72
biluibehkater 411°w• rag 1"-°'eedi °a
noel; and west! ;Mug to damage i
the zeins. Probably about 68
buehele evill be all that 741 beitmee
and 16 that casetwo_aball reqhu eh*:
during the next twelve mom a a _
'00000 hetheiee. . _
The hop orop :a nearly all gathe
t leas been bat little injured by t
xce t for hops bran d
tt P l'tr • l' e I
Winds!. . _ e qua i y is _exCeptionat
The yield is now geraliy put.rei
°Wte. per ?ere' whi ' ml 13e '7,7
grown, -Iv g me to 402,082 owti
weenthez weeeatber was brilliaet
enabling mealy farmers to stack tbe
notagrhaailtil overin dryintliecondition, iate a 2.338 41 0 the&
fortunately we bans had more ri$
week. Most of the new wheat brc
market has been damp; but dry .
weigh well, some it8 llallell as 05 pot
immured bushel. Tleinis e good si
it may be that the yield will prove
exPootAtiorz
- '
What the Weather.witio VroxilostIcate.
"An Old Settler" then that ho bee
reathen tbe conclusion "we are to• nave an
early fall and a long, cold, hard 'winter,"
and figures it out as followe : "In *be first
piece try the akin of any of your fruit.
You will find your ap,plea, peaobes and
grapes, and all your i".ruit, for that :natter,
ninth is horategrown, with a thinker and
tougher skin then you have emu !In. -several
years. That is POO Of the indications.
Vint la the Vey nature tithes care of her
orodints. Lent winter apples and other
lruits were so thin•akinned and tender thee
it was hard to gather them without bruin.
ing them, if you will remember, and we
lied an extraordieary mild winter. Corn
is anotber of nature's signboards. The
eareensis year are protected by thickerand
stronger husks than I have seen before for
years. Wheat and rye straw are tougher,
hay is wirier and the seed pods are better
protected than -usual. These are old
lamer& signe,e
_
Josh Illilletne l'iillosonity.
I never bon e man whom time WAZ
George Waehington Lafayette Goodritele
Esq., and wbo aliV138 sighned biz name for
lb* f" mn"cti but what woz a bigger
man on ;paper then be waz by eater.
Az it enteral thing, an individual who iz
tent in hiz pereen az neat in hies morale.
Mn lz rm. brother, and i konsider that i
am nearer refitted tew him tine biz vices
than 1 am thru 1216 virtows•
There iz nothing about -which the world
manes so few blenders, aria the individual
ao roomy, ez a mon% aktuol importanse
among hiz fellow-krittera.
A man with a very email head iz like a
pin without many -very apt taw git into
thinga beyond his depth.
The pashnns ov an old man are often
like hiz teeth- they cease to trouble him,
simply bekauze the nerve iz ded.
The only pedigree worth trenamitting iz
virtew ; and, this iz the very thing that
kant be transmitted.
Affeektashun haz made more phools than
the Lord haz.
About the nearest tew absolute in-
'
solvency that semen kan git in this world,
and think he iz dieing Atoll, iz tew leave
nothing but a pedigree tew biz family.
She Was afraid of the DoCt01
las. Elizabeth Harper, wife of
Harper a jeweller at Hackenead
comralited suicide Sunday night b
ing herself to a door -knob in her 1
apartment with a strip of white
Urn Harper bad been ill for
montbs and was attended by a pro
mime. Recently her physician a
family had discussed the advisal
removing her to a hospital for an op,
This had a dep '
reseing effectupon
weakened by long einem. eh,.
was well known and highly respectei
community, and was a leading we
First Reformed Church, of 1
sant,
The Wartnth of Italian Courtship.
All court circles delight in gossip, and
.
nowhere is more material furnished than
in Italy. Italians think of nothing else
but making love. Flirtation is unknown ;
it is alway.a desperate eereest there. The
chaperon is a necessity. Women speak of
their lovers with a frankness that would
amaze us here. In the family circle, at
dinner, in the presence of the children,
subjects are disoussed and stories told that
never be mentioned even in private
with us. If Mrs. Chamberlain finds it
necessary t k • t f 11
o see a retrea from po i e
drawing.rooms in London abe would fly
quickly from Rome.-Butfalo News,
_
Paste This ort Tour Gunstock.
The 906800 18 now at hand when hunters
of all ages get their guns and go forth to
bag the shy and secluded game. It is not
impertinent, therefore, to advise the sports.
-the
roan not to blow down the muzzle of his
gun, not to playfully point an " unloaaed "
weapon at a friend, and to take due care
tbat when he aims at a mark it be not a
human beingtransforroed by the leaves and
shadows of the woods into the semblance
of a deer. Eternal vigilance in the price of
safety on the part of gunners.
Mexico's Liquor Licen.se System.
In the city of Mexico the income from.
the taxation of liquors and the license on
saloons is very lam' indeed. Every ligaor
d i • n o
an prt que shop pays a monthly license.
In addition to the license fees on saloons,
an octroi, or entry tax, is collected on all
pnlque coming within the oity limits. For
the fiscal year just ended this gate tax
amounted to the sum of $500,000 or more
00 a day.would
than 31,5 h I
T e pn eine shops open
at 6 o'clock in the morning and oloee at 5
o'olock in the afternoon, and not one of
them has a back door. ,
.1. Iloay of Rost.
Sneday School Superintendent -
any of you tell me why Sunday 1*
theLaitetyleeDe iOeket(Llding up his hani
,. It's . „
inn' cause we get up earlY ana
through breakfael son to dress in ti
Sunday School, and then hurry to
School, so we won't be late, and thi
linter church 'fore the bell stops rim
teen go home to dinner and get B
for afternoon service, and then get
go to bed so pa and ma can ge;
for evening service. That's all we d
Yellow Fever m 'Venezuela.
The U. S. Consul at enaroaino V ri n
' ..."'....
zuela, writes to New York papers:
ing at heart the interests of humanity, at
least as regards my own countrymen, I
take this way of notifying the health with-
°rake to be very careful of any shipping
arriving from Ibis port, The yellow fever
is raging fiercely here, and there are two
barques here loaded whose crews have all.
died and which cannot sail until arrival of
new crews. All the shipping here is ire
feoted and there are many cases in this
city. Not long ago two American 'electrical
engineers died here, and while at no time
does it appear to be particularly epidemin,
there are many eases at all times of the
year and everybody not ttoolimated seems
to take it." ,
Probably Had.
First Dry Goods Clerk (at Long Branch)
_say, Jack, didn't you bow to that lady
who just passed? .,
Second Clerkl-e•s.
"She didn't recognize you in any way.
Are you sure yon know her 2"
"012, yes; ehe's ears. Fourundred. I've
waited on her at the store many a 'time;
but I guess she's mad about something.
Maybe the last stockings I sold her didn't
wathe;
____......._
Or Rig Natural Water Rower.
The amount of water passing over
iagara Falis varies we. e eig t o e
Nn F II, ' nh Oa h • h 1 th
.river. Prof. W. D. Gunning estimates the
average amount at 18,000,000 cubic feet peran'
minheso the n
ute. Allowing G2e d t h b•
foot, this would gives&1optoa1 ofee2,50Ocle
tetts
per minute, or 25,312,500 tons in forty.five
minutes, of whine somewhat' more than
two-thirde pasees over the Horseshoe Falls. ,
0th9r estimittes place the total amount
peening over both falls as high as 100,000,•
000 tons per hour. In comparison, the
recent flood -at Johnstown was a gill.
t
A flinto the Fraternity.
First Country Editor -How are you
-coming on with your paper?
Second Countr D • F' t
y , chtor- ire rate. Got
seventy.five subacribers last week.
Do they pay up.
ou e ey o
Y bt th d.
How do you manage to make them pay?
I issue phrenological charts to every
subscriber, and those who in advance
pay
hahve finely developed heaas. It's a great
so erre.
---
Eindness Appreciated.
Old Lady -Doctor, please let re
my bill.
Doctor -Illy good woman, I kim
are not in the 'best of oircumstat
want nothing for my trouble.
Old Lady -Oh, that's kind of you
who will pay the druggist?
,
At a Paris Rote/.
French Dame (in Paris)--" OW, oui, dat
Eiffel Tower eee cane off thunder -storm,
it ees eo bigh. ing hal many of zem lately.
Hear 1 Dere is anozzer. Hear zee terrifeek
IloiSe."
Friend (listening) -n A meestake. Zet is
zee Amerioain in ze next room looking over
bees board bill." '
Reassuring. '
Gotham lady (shooked)-Pardon me, sir
but I overheard yon remark that you were
going fishing ill the reservoir. Ara I to
understand that people are allowed to nth
with horrid worms' in the , reservoir from
w he% we get our drinking water ?
city employee -Oh, no,-mnro, I don't use
worms; I, use big hooks with nothin' on
them. Yen see, I fish for bodice; of enioides.
-New York Rreekly. '
. — , ,
- Christian Charity.
' Clerk" Lady out there with a flashy
paste necklace wants to know wbether it's
pure diaraoed or not."
Jeweller -"Look 'like a married woman 2"
"Yes." ' . . '
n Tell her itis. No use makm' trouble
for poor husbands these bard times.
--e--- '
Freddy's Candid Reply.
Little Freddy (aged 0 -Mamma's the
nicest lady in the whole world, papa's
the nicest man and sister Ethel is the
nicest girl.
Mr. Stickney (who is courting sister
Ethel) -What am I, Freddy? •
• Little Feeddenn-Youn nobody.
,
- From the Lexicon of rife.
Dowry7-A sauce that enable(' one to
worry the fish down.
Look out -An expression used by cabbies
just after they've run over somebody.
Guillotine -A. window looking out into
eternity.-
Illusions-The spectacles of bop°,
. Tears -The blood of the heart.
n ' ' -.. . ''
Another JECIttO. of a Shave.
Barber -Close shave, sir?
Digsby (thinking of something f
ferent)-You bet it was 1 I had
dedged the old man's foot when t
made a Snri 2 f0 • e and if I bad
excuse me in`No,ljteust, ge over it onn
----e—
In the Front Rank. ,.
Customer (trying on bis netv pantaloons .
-"Dernisli
Great snakes 1 Thee things seem to nal: .
A 1 arca e S r .
b'f t d ki t I'll look like a ' if I
guy .
wear these." ,
Conoiention titilor-" Can't help it sir
If faabion stVe men .must look like g'nys,
they'll:have to look like gays if they dein
with me." e .
,
et is esid to. be very probable that the
Quebec Government will take ripen. itself
to atithoritatieely and definitely solve 'the
Mistaseini myeter • byBending t
.Y on , a Pre-
perly equipped and thoroughly competent
expedition early next spring, with - intim-
tions , to examine • and report upon , the
region beyond the Height onLend whit% is
claimed ini part of the terr't r - f th
, logo e
',mince. .
. ,, . clambered the mountains on ra ma
g -
eft' I've been heaved and tossed;
iiitniaalitlede.ancriTec ifeeorrZeoligrobsal "urke''' •
-
-Jay • Gould's daughter Helen 'giVea
..liberated.
litineteyMnBie lessons, bather notes are net
e° bigtaIYMPreeiated a°7612°8P9f berfother,
' TAKIA A4 REAr ' . r. . : . ' ' .
all out," the pants, •
' E9 el
1 ve been so rotighliotreated, .,
1 wisla 801130 one would aorne along
And ask 020 to be seated," ,
-
'''. "means "one who lies at the
door." ,It is bon ereper to call a returned
.
fisherman a dervish, for he begins it as
eoon as he gets on the ferryboat.
' The one of the Qti n v . Marshall C.
Twitchell Mine up for e trill' at Ringsto.n
yesterday. The defendant was present in
court and desired to alter the tribtmal and
to be tried by a jury instead of the Judge.
The Jndge allowed him to elege to bo tried
by a•jury and granted tne application for a
poseponement of the trial till next assizes.
efendant was
Ben weengrantenn and the d , . ,
again , , .
-Maiden-What cane woman do when
a "man that has won her affection refuses se
marry here? Lawyer-eIs he rich? No;,ll
lumen n cent. ' She can appoint a dity of
general thanksgiving and invite both fami„
,...s. 4.. •••...1.:..2.- 1.- . ,
A Donhle-JoInted little.
'' Laurae--I tell you, Eraily, I will
marry a men who doesn't love me1
Emily -And I will never love a nel
d.oesn't marry me. •
' '
The great ambition of S. S. Cox
the int twenty years of his life we
chosen. Speaker of the House of Rem.,
tives.
Mrs. •enpeck-Do you notice 1
. . ,
- ;eat majority of the new8PaP
to e • r
oPP08 - esti divo cis laws? Mr.
pebk (wearily) -Yes, I wonder how 1
pens, that editors get such good ,wivel
. , . , .
-Lady of the house to tramp -Y
as if you never had seen a meel of v
before 1 Tramp-ndadam, you must
me. I ensue I do eat' awkward. 1
,
They Hurried the Walters.
Dr. Pullen -How does that sat of teeth',
made for you work? . . .' ,'
Drunimern_Greae gricoess. When 1 erafie
theyk
4t The Waiter girl° new,' take
' -e 41Y order
at once. ' . . .
, . ---e-e-e-4
--Simone-I tell you they can say n11
' ' t
they please about woman e ex ravagance,
but she eau dress well on a sum that would
''ed
keep . a man looking shabby. Brown
(dryly)-Thatel just it e sum a my
Th . tli v• ,
le dresses well on keeps me 'looking
Nu , ,' , ,
&lobby.
"How no yen feel now, Sue 2" asked,
one Chicago woman of another who had.
juet secured a divorce. "1 feel unmanned,"
. •
Pompons Petty -So you are the ex-,
,
change editor, 'young man. 'Nautically
spealling,•you are a ;eloper ? Searnelle-n
Liasmuch •as I ply the SMS801111 for a living,
I aM a revenue cutter. , ‘
ife front
ay trays:
y MOMS
is a big
er, ie
• bia
nstiallY
and hie
p. She
ernieg.
rly pre.
before
edroota,
d it and
usband,
ich she
startled
were the
. They
212300 222
oar 0 a,
the en --
reamed
°trifled,
orward,
da and
eraingly
dre bad
r dress,
f
es waist
04* OVer
rind the
oor, all
t of
de
her
It VMS
that he
tab hint
was too
blob of
ea, Aoa
burned
and the
tp22*01008
the
epital at
borne
waa put
ze up
16
tettii
taken to
for the
been a
• obit.
re old.
er. The
ALT Of
ge, 16
ave the
for the
elapsed
ty, and
• grain
eat boa
ley ha
manias
crop Is
80,000. -
it will
,000,000
er farne
one by
,000,000
keta'ble,
Import
tU 140,.
ea, and
he rain.
y high
y fine.
About 8
4 aores
. Las;
y fine,
ir crepe
vest 38
and un.
*10 this
nght to
emples
da per
go, and
beyond
Se
w.w.
,
hang-
leeping
muslin.
several
ssional
nd the
ility of
ration.
a mind
Harper
in the
rker zo
a °ken -
Can
called
Is)-" I
hurry
e for
Sunday
n skip
in' and
ed up
supper
ready
0.”•
e have
w you
me.
I But
ar
hardly
e dog
't- 0,
never
n who.
during
s to be
ciente-
r. H.,
ers are.
Hen-
bap -
o0 'eat.
ietTIBIS
fact is 1 ain't bed much prao ice lately.,