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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1885-07-01, Page 1*s MM utMHM I« PUBLISIIED -^-by— AT THEIR OFFICE, Albert Street, Clinton, Ont. $Z.2oi aduance; if not so paid. The prcprietcraol’TiiR Goderich News,* having purchased the business and plant '<yf Tub Huron Record, will in future publish tlie amalgamated papers in Clinton, under the title of “The'Huron News- Record. ’’ (. Cfiuton is the most prosperous town in Western Ontario, is, the seat of considerable manufacturing, and the centre of the finest agricultural section in Ontario. This combined circulation-of The News Record exceeds that of any paper pub­ lished in the County of Huron. It is, therefore,'."unsurpassed as an advertising medium. Our rates for advertising/aro ? I column 1 year, 890 1 4 4 4 • t .<-< cc <( << 6 mos, 50. 3 inqs, 30 1 year, 50 6 inos, 30 3 mos, 18' 30 1 column 1 year, $30 i " " i J 4 s- << « c< < if ’ 18 12 6 .mes, 3 mos 1 year, 18 (j nios, ' " 3 jnos, 12 8 * TERMS t $1.25 per Annum, in Advanoe. 'J VOL. VIL—NO.- 30._ MONEY TO LOAN At low nitoH pf Interest gnd upon toruis to suit borrptygjg. - '• MANNING & SCOTT, Beaver Block, Clinton Clinton, May 17th, 1882. 20 1/TONEY to lend in largo or small suing, on l» L good mortgages or pers- nal eeprity, at tlia lowest current rates. II. HALE lluron-St. V Clinton i r Chfltan^FebrftSrlSftlt—-—— * ■ ■fit' ^INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS, NEUTRAL IN NOTHING? CLINTON, HURON COUNTY, ONT., WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1885. COX & co., STOCK BROKERS, TORONTO. MEMBERS TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE, . Have independent direct wire, by which New. j-OYk continuous Stock quotations are received more rapid­ ly than by any other source. Buy and sell on commission, for cash, or on margin nil securities dealt in on,41m Toronto* Montreal, and New York Stock Exchanges. Also execute orders in Grain and Provisions .on tlic Chicago Board pf Trade, •—Diiily eiible quotutions. .of IIudson’fL Buy and of her stocks. W TORONTO 8tTJ$J31ST. remember Mr. Gladstone for a long time.” WHITBLY & TODD, Publishers WHOLE no. :H5 Advertisements, without, instructions as to space and time, will be loft to the judg­ ment of the compositor in the display, in­ serted until' forbiddon,. measured by a scale of solid nonpareil (12 lines to the. inch), and charged-10 cents a line for.first insertion and 3 cents a lino for each sub­ sequent insertion. B Qrflcrs to discontinue advertiseyienta must be in writing. Notices set as READING MATTER, (measiued by a' scale of solid Nonpariel; 12 lines to the inch) charge’d’Tlt tho rate of 10 cents a line for each'insertion. JOB WORK. We liavo^one of the best appoilitod Job Oni.ces' w£5t ot' Toronto, OiLEAeilLties in this department enable us to* do all kinds of work—from a calling card to a mammoth poster, in the best,styie known to the craft, and at the lowest possible rates. Orders by mail-’ promptly attended to. Address, . 77/^ News-Record, f Clinton. Ont December, 1882. * . Incorporated by Actof Parliament, 1855, • CAPITAL, ■ ,$2,000,000 REST, . - - $500,000 Head Office, - MONTREAL. THOMAS WORKMAN, President. J. II. R. MOLSON, Vice-President. F. WOLVERSTAN THOMAS,'General Manager. Notes discounted, Collections made, Drafts issued,'- Sterling and American ex­ change pouglit and sold at low­ est current rates; INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS ZH’-A.ZRZLEEIRS.. Money advanced to farmers bn their own notgf withone or.more endorsers. No mortgage re­ quired as security. February. 1884,, H, C. BREWER, Manager, Clinton. Av T A tAPX IN THE CASE. One jright a deputation from the political'committee of the Camber­ well radical club waited upon their, honorary president, M fe« Helen Taylor, at her reaidence in Harting- ton road, south Kensington, London, Rug., to invite her to become a Parliamentary candidate in radical interest for North Camberwell at the general flection. Mr. C. Am- mon, the“ secretary *~6f theclulr pointed out that there Was no stat­ utory law against a lady sitting and voting in the House of Commonftjp and he was cm tain that Miss Taylor, if «lre was willing to come forward, would receive a large amount of support, especially from the working classes. In reply Miss Helen T«ys lor said that'lt was true that there was rjo law in existence to prevent \ woman sitting in’ Parliament. ~~Sne would feel it an honor,to contest the constituency as* an earnest'sup­ porter of woman suffrage as well as on other political grounds. If, how­ ever, there was a fair chance of a genuine workingman candidate being . returned by the radicals, she would ! not like to oppose him. This point was discussed for some time, and eventually Miss Taylor consented to accept the ’-invitation .and go to the poll. •.................. ■ ------ - . 6 ------- BUSINESS DIRECTORY * gotrfu. gentistry.- . - g^EDWIN..KEEEER,'gi^% dewtist, Late of Toronto, Honor Graduate Royal College ” of Dental Sucgeon§, . Coats’s Block, - Clinton. ' ■ All Work Registered. ' Charges Moderate. commercial hotel1. This Hotel Is furnished throughout with great care to meet the wants, of the* travelling public. Commodious sample rooms,. The bent of liquors and .cigars aro aiwuvs kept at tho bar. Good table. Best situated Hotel in Clinton, Give us a call. ■ J-AS. MOORE, Proprietor. Clinton. June 7th, 1882, CURRENT--TOPICS ALWAYS SOMETHING TO DO. .In former days a doctor who Ind nothing to do generally purchased a barrel qf calomel-and started for the West Indies. In these days his cor­ rect and immediate course will.neces­ sarily be to purchase a hogshead of whiskey and start for. a Scott Act County. / . £A1LD EMIGRANTS. DR. REEVE. Olllcc—“Palace” Brick Block/ Rattenbury Street, Residence opposite tlie Temperance Hall, Huron Street. Coroner for the County of Huron. Oiiice Hours from 8 a.m. to 6 p. m. • » . .. 7 Clinton, Jan. 14,1881, ? 1-y ■ /•^LINTON Lodge, No. 84, A. F. &.A. m\ hi’eets every Friday, ’ on dr'after the full moon. ‘ Visiting brethren cordially invited. . ,J. YOUNG, w. M.”,.. - -J. CALLANDER,.Sec . Clinton, Jan. 11, 1881, ; ' - 1- • - . NO SYMPATHY FOR RIEL. . . • The Regina Leader says We had a conversation with a' Catholic gentleman,down from the Saskatch­ ewan, and he told us that Riel was '"esTrangeirfrom all intelligent Cath­ olic French -sympathy "in cons’e*. quence of his religious views, the kil­ ling of the priests, and his contemp­ tuous reference to Archbishop Taqlie aS “the little blond.’’ ./ NICE NAUGHTINESS. . MANNING & SCOTT, Barristers, Solicitors,- Conveyancers, &c Com- misiloticrs for Ontario and MtuHto'ba. jg^ OdHce—Town JIall. Clinton,/ ; L. O.L.No.710, ■ <D.ILITSI'TQTSr,-". Meets .sBCorn Monday pf every, month. . Hall upstairs, opposite the Town- Hall. Visiting brethren always made Welcome. • • P. OANTELON," W. M. A. M. TODD, Secy, . C. TWEEDY, D. 51. • Mr. Beecher in his Sunday night discourse to young men, said he hail revised his early opinion in regard ' to the use of tobacco. He didn't believe -anything was gained by a wholesale denunciation of tobacco, but he would urge the young men of his charge not to foriii.the hat»itQpf using it. “I am not saying,” said- he. “that t.nbneen will lea.l_tn nnx»_- Clinton, May 17th, 1S82. T ' o. 20 SEAOER & MORTON, Barriste;rs, <0c., <t: , God- . udclLtuid_Wiug^mi^^G-Se.ig.er,_Jr,,Ijreile.r.iclL J..A- Morton Wiiijfluun. lJ_y. DAVISON & .IOHNSTON, Law, c,lvaneery,and Conveyancing. Oilice—West Street, -Hext do jr to Post Office, Goderich, Out. 57. •" RC. IIAYS, Solicitor, .frev Olfice, comer of • Square nml West Street; over -Buller’s Book Store, Goderich, Ont.-. • 67. . .ts;’ Money to lend at lowest rates of.interest, .PEDDLING WAGGON FOR SALE. FIT FOR DRY.GOODS OR GROCERY busi­ ness, In good order; only been in use two seasons. Apply to . °R. CO ATS X* SON. Clinton, March 25tb, 1SS5.’ ' ' 331 . and rum to sheol; It isn’t a good thing; especially for the young. They don’t need it. But if you do smoke, or if you (thoose.to smoke J7! CAMPION, Barrister,Attorney, Solicitor-in J J* Chancery, Ujuvcya'ncer,- &e. . Cilice over JonUn’s'Drng St'ore, the rooms 'formbrly .oepu- • pigd by Judge Doyle. . Any amount of mbheyHnTloan at lowest, rales'ofj interest. ' ■ l-ly. FARM FOR SAYS. rnilE subscriber offers for sale his farm, being -.1. lot CO,, .Bayfield concession', Godei-ieh town­ ship, containing 109-acres (uetually Ila), about 100 acres cieafed and free from stumps. ..Good, fa rm l>tf?lilings,,thi-ee acres of prcli^d and good water. Good cla-.v soil. Thefarm'-is one-of tbe.bost in the county” of,Huron.. About five* miles from, Cllntofi. Half cash, ‘ balance on easy terms. Apply.on the premises, ov.at TUB News-Rbcobd office, dr addtess ■ ■ ■ ., JACOB SHEPPARD, _ 3-26 3in : •'s, Clinton P. O. later in life, Lha\>ff”hp nmled-ictionB, but see to it that'the ’prixesjc.e.shall ■take on as little, that is offensive as possiblo.- There is' a great choice in tlie selection. Man may be justified in smoking, but charity hasn’t got a mantle that is broad; enough, to cov-T er a man who uses bad tobacco^ Mr. Beecher spoke at length, and- in a severely critical way, of the .diss „agji(ie;diIeTeatjims~.Qt the-use - of tos - bacco, aiid urged his young men to cultivate, politeness, and avoid the dulling of the moral sensibilities tliat often ,follows th? use of stimulants. In the London* Standard of 4th June we (find the following account of the departure of 74 cliil.d . em­ igrants from* the Barnardo Village .Hohie, in Bssex, for Canada,’for tlie refuge at Peterborough.. The^y have all arrived safely and some few have reached Clinton and the adjacent country, where homes have been provided for them in domestic service Seventy-four female child­ ren; ail orphans, ranging from three to fourteen'years of age, who have been brought up in Dr. Barnardo’s •Village i Homes, ye-t ’rday. left Euston; Station on their way to Canaria. • Since r the ^migration scheme was.started, as many as 1,608 i children—including those who left yesterday—have been sent to t.lie Dominioii, and out of the whole number not.one has belied-the hope with which he or she was sent. The children over twelve are sent to service, and all below that age are sent for adoption_by childless pdbple; from. whom conditions are exacted which have a binding force acccord- ing to the Canadian. Jaw. For the. seventy-four children who left Eus­ ton yesterday, three hundred applica- that-altogether this year nearly 500 children will be seiiLto the Domin­ ion, and of this number 227 have already go.ne. lThe pai'Liiig cercmoiiy yesterday afternoon w.a,s held.in one of tlie”'waiting rooms at Euston. . Station, and was attended by a con­ siderable? number of persons who. trke an interest in the work of the .Homes—two, however, the 'Mar quess of. Larne ..and Bir‘ Charles Tupper, Commissioner General—fbr ’Canafla, being unavoidably prevent­ ed from coming. •/ ■ 1 T ‘.....'' 1 'T* 11.............. ....................... ■ • ■ • ■ faith and endear them to him by something but little short of fanati­ cism. I heard ,tlmt Riel said that lie was supported by the Rope in his crusade, and cited his old claim of Rope Pitfft’ friendship for him during the Red river rebellion. Of course this tulk is ell bosh, but any number of fools will be found who will credit it. There is no doubt, however, but that the artful devil succeeded in his object to excite re­ ligious feelihg, and that, as a conse­ quence, he even now has the sympa­ thy of a large class of ignorant pea-. ple,wliolookupon.I limp ret tyuiucli in the light of a martyr. He studied for the priesthood once, and has -always managed to keep that fact, together with his connection with the clergy, prominent before his people, which, as I remarked before, is doubtless the reason for a large, part of his following.” “Al! of the, fighting is over now, 'I presume T* “Oil, yes, I tliink so.” \ ., BIG BEAR”' ' will scarcely cause much trouble, and ^General' Middleton, 1 understand, will retire from tthe field. Middle­ ton, I guess, will receive the usual honqrs, from the Canadian parlia­ ment and be made a > hero of by the people upon his return;; ’Tis true the man deserves a grliat deal. By the way,' I notice from the latest accounts from Winhipeg,that colons ial military .posts will lie established- throughout the Northwest. „ The idea is not a bad one'and could be 'successfully carried out with little difficulty. In the'Mennonite settle­ ments in Manitoba, ;for instance, such a sy-tem of defence would be excellent. The people all live in villages and operate, farms in the ■neighborhood. Strange,-but nine' of them live on their' farms, and a few soldiers would afford an effect­ ive garrison." | “Riel will be. hnngj will ho not ?” “Don’t be too sure of that. He. Jias a good many friends left yet, ^and they will make a hard fight for him.” ' Lord lyolsclcy’s Protest. The following is the conclusion-of Lord Wolseley's letter “to the Mar­ quis of Huntington protesting agaih- -st tjijfr withdrawal frorii tim'Souda’n: “It must never be forgotten that the question whether this War sliall - or sli’all not go on does not rest with us unless we’are prepared to give up Egypt..to the False Prophet. .’ We shall not bring about a quiet state of Egypt, A New Treaty, H. W. BALL, A UCTrONEER for Huroii County. Sales at- eV teivio'l-to in any part of the County. Ad­ dress orders'to Godkiiich 1’. O. V-17, ANOTHER FANATIC. CHAS. HAMILTON, A *UCTIONEER, land, loan and insurance agent /V- Bly th. Snlus.iLtteiulcd in town and country, ?n reasonable terms. A list of farms and village lots for sale. Money to . loan on real estate; at low rates of interest. Insurance'effected on all cl isses-of property. Notos.and debts collected. Goods appraised; and sold-on commission.- Bank­ rupt stocks bought afid sold. . Blvth. Dec. 10,1880 , ....... ---------- HOUSE AHU-LOT FOR SALE. • -ta#- ' - .milEundctsigued offers for sale his ILmsc and L Lot oir Queen street, Clinton0. The house is neiVl.v built; six rooms, three upstairs and three down; hard and soft water; good cellar. Sitmitc in rising and healthy locality. Terms easy. Apply on tlie premises or address Clinton P O. 327-tf-- . ,„. ._JjosHUA Hamner. ^/fninury.. J. E. BLACK ALL, ’ Veterinary Surgeoii, Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, To­ ronto, h ivilig opened,nil olliee in Clinton, is- prepared to treat all diseases o^.dOniestie animals on tiic liiost imJncrii prin­ ciples. All operations euroftiuy . * . p'orfornwd* mid ealjs prompt­ ly attended to by <by or niglit; Ftes inoderuto. “ Office,—1st door. West of .Ken- ~Wy’8“HaTcff,-e " • House to Rent or for Sale.” rpwo STORY BRICK HOUSE on Victoria-St., F occupied sit present by Mr. John Robertson, itennsistsof 3'good lar^e rGotbs'dCiWii stairs nnd Refreshment room in front, recently used syi ft 1 , Restaurant, and '7 good sized rooms up'stairs, summer kitchciV, cellar, stable, hard and t-oft . water, and quartet* acre lot. For any further partieularEr.-lipply-ib-WTW. -FARRAN or JAS. BIGGIN^, the owner, . ’330 * WANTED, G'OOD GENERAL SERVAN'I' wanted. : Ap- ' ply to Mils. J. Rbbvb, opposite Tcmperanse Hall. • . Apr!) 1st, 1885.- ' . - 333 .PhotogfapWs CLINTON. .Life SizeJPortaits a. Specialty.' GIRLS WANTED. - f\NE cliainbci'inaid and one dining room - X/^arl^ihi nwdLatdy^Go.OLLAViigeS-AVilJL .be paid. Apply at the Oonimereial IIoteL., • * * ", JAMES ALOORE, - ' * / * • -.:32Z-tfr:T ~( -' ' Rrotirietpr.; TO THE-PUBLIC. A ihember o'FthqSalvation Arniy in Wilkesb'arre, Pennsylvania, nain-' ed Da*vid .Williams,'created quite "an uproar in his neighborhood- by rushing out 6f“lnF~Hou8o into £ne street with a butcher knife in one hand and . a. revolver in the other. People fled before him,' . terror- .stricken.. .Ari aged woman, named Davids, who was unable to get out of his way, was severely stabbed, and a little, girl playing on lier, parents’ stoop, was ‘k.nocked over aiid tramped on. The maniac tried toTHTIYEis .little granddaughter^by. tying heF to a bed. post and hacking her with a knife. She was rescued by her mother before.. the murderer could carry out? his threats.- Wil­ liams,.'who had heretofore been a hard-working,' industrious miner, joined the.' Salvation Army last mohlh.^ He “says the"Lord, came fr) him one rright an’d told him that, to to be a,successful worker in God’s cause, lie musti make a Iiuman.sa,- crifice. With that object "tn-**view ’he.started out to kill some one, . It “took-eiglit-poiieenmiF-to-captirreHIre-- lunatic, who defied , the 200 persons surrounding him to touch li.um • ’ ■ i < * $ . GLADSTONE AS A BURR, -........... HURON STREET, CLINTON. T HAVE appointed MR. .ROBERT GORDON, ns JL General Agent of the Goderich Marblo Works for the County of Huron JOSEPH VANSTONE - •" ' , Proprietor , Goderich, Tob .«,'!< rW. H. \C00P-ER, Jr. Manufacturer ot and dealer in all kinds of Marble & Granite for Cemetery Work at figures that defy competition. Also manufacturer oLtho’Celebrated Artificial Stone lot Building pur- !loses and Cemetery Wotk, which must ie soon to lie appreciated.—All work warranted to give satisfaction, CITY PAINT SHOP COPP & LOGAN. HTO _ All* kinds ot HOUSE, SION AND CHINA* MENTAL PAINTING, TMpor Hangingaml Decor­ ating done in the Latest Style, •Frescoing, Kalsomining, Flags, - Banners, Etc., Artistically got up. 'Orders promptly attended to. Shop -ISAAC-ST., CLINTON, March 30th, 1885, 332-3t WIW H umiuMWi SMsw If jfr ,n- ilEO, POTT'S, House, Sign, ^AnntAaii <r MixiniAt painthh. H.lttd-iirt'ia wafk, sowed and bogged, nt prices to suit ovory purse, , Tliedinsf work,’ lowest prices, nnd'Mlswtldn guanmtood. As* I have flrst-.oliiss city workmen om- ployed, entire satisfaction is a certainty, Give md'ft’Cftlh From six to twelve montlm’ credit on^ood, reliable mon. * If. REA OOM. Piiprr Hfimina nnd KalxiiiHlniif/i fitrnnd fn no’fUf. Nchoot mrmltbMi'dx if xpi>c.i(Mi/< idafi/i- fffclinu tHUtranletd wul wltst with iki timet, Ibsidrnei Mai-)/ fi/mi, CLINTON. J REMOVED. "pOYALSItAVINO EAnim."-' IL HARRY FISHER linn removed twd..... west of Kennedy’s hotel, Where he will bn pleased to ftivoa nif-o clean nhavo and a stylish hair-cut to all hwiMO t pa Won; and a£ iftAfty new ones as ladies hnW ertHIftff ■ ' —1... JLV HARRY FISHER ha* removed IwhIw* : ....„j to JV? £152?-.^^ a*|d AAf>lish Mihcnt jDMt" favair Wm'of An American journal said, that the name of Gladstone will be re­ membered long after Victoria, lias Ceased to be thought of, except as nominal Queen pf England, to which the N. Y. 'Herald replies that ‘the name of Gladstone would stick to English affaire like a burr.in woollen cloth. His ability to get things in­ to ajnuddle, and hisi genius for slip*, ping away just as the structure is about to tumble down, aro really re­ markable enough to keep his memory green for hianv generations. His consistency has been that of' a weathercock, and as for his states- maiisinp, \ve_.. can_tel 1. be11er 'about That when wo see something \f it4 Ho made a terrible onset upon the Mahdj, intending to abolish tho slave trade-And bring the people of tlie- desert into subjection to British ideas.—Thh • scheme was a magnifi­ cent. piece ot'fireworlis, but it some' how got wot and wouldn’t go off.* Dead soldiers and de feat--those are Gladstone’s trophies. Then ho pro* pbfted to, give the Russian bear such a shaking up that ho would scuttle away with a, wild foar of fear, and never dream again of turning his nose towards ‘ ‘ .. did he do ull, Illis’?^ ^Vell, it must JbAadmitted that someone did scuttle away., but it was the other party, queerly enbugb. The hunter was hunted,•’’.and forthwith took to the woods. Yes, our neighbor is quite riflht in cjAvLw. 111 e «a I t, 3vn tor. ‘ But ■ ' Ricl‘s Tricks- St. Louis I’ost-DMpa-teii. ■ . ..’ .. Monsieur Pierre Proett,. of. Paris, a French gentleman. Of elegant leis­ ure, with sportsmanlike 'propensfe- ties, .who has been’ spending" the past . winter- and spring in'.the North­ western British possesions hunting -the niooso and the bear, sojourned, a portion of his time in Winnipeg. Speaking to a Post-Dispatch report­ er the other morning about the Can­ ucks and their country, he said :— “I have lived among the Canadians, the half-breeds and; Indians.for the last six'-months, and while I nifty not. be thoroughly posted upon the affairs of their .government, I think l: am well enough informed about them individually to be safe in says iiig thata great majority of the par-’ . ticipants in the Riel, rebellion were poor, half-starved squatters and ig-‘ norant Indians who were misled and deceived by that arch fiend. Riel, and a handfukof-disappointed- poll* ticians. That the Indians were hot moved by malice against the govern- 'nient is shown by tlie absence, to a bus li&tred" which’ characterizes their states in their campaigns,* and,by their comparatively, humane treat­ ment of their prisoners. Tliis little 'fact was attested tp by the prisoners who escaped fftoih "Big'Beaf’s camp- last week. This opinion is not or­ iginal with me, I, acknowledge, for ‘it is shared by a very large portion of the thinking population of East­ ern Canada, who find its greatest Yecommehdation in .the fact that there was an utter absence of any cause for an outbreak. , - T1IE INDIANS AND THE SETTLERS have always been Well treated by the’government, so far as *1 know, I am incliiud to believe tho reports that Gen. Middleton has evidence in his possession to1 provo that Riel was induced to return to Canada from Montana by Liberal politicians who made him profuso and enticing promises to bring him over. They never dreamed once ho .had shown' himself among, his friends, the old French squatters, that ho would take the bit in liis tooth and resort to extreme 'measures. Tliolr idea was to have him re elected to the Dominion parhamoht and Then gain the French and Catholic vote by espousing his cause, but ft rebellion was out of thp quefttion so far as they *wore cbncer.nmi. . All this that 1 speak of now Was gathered from conversations- with leadiiig settlers,- and can bo relied upon to a great extent. A considerable portion of RieFs strength* came fro iff the Catholic population, and he did ndt scruple to tnake all sorts of outrage- oust and eten foolish representations icy? -The Mahdi has repeatedly de­ clared it to be his full and settled intention to.~ possess ^himself of ancl“iris^fol lower s' ldok'Ti jTo n’ themselves as engagpd in a war, the object of which is not to rest conten­ ded. with the. capture of Khartoum or Berber, but to drive the infidels, into' ‘.the . soar- Mabdiism having.:, once obtained a good”, foothold in Egypt, the death of Mohamed Ah- ffned would make no very^greartrdTfc- ferencei' Another holy man woiild soon be found in his place. Neit-h> et the present nor any future Mahdi will-be overcome^ Dy -merely repuls­ ing attacks on Egypt proper. ..If: any minor expeditions he may send forward are.beaten, they will simply fail back, into' the .desert, to ..return again in a few months. His power and his hold over the natives will hot be shaken by the fact, that a jamall party, Jed,by .one of his follow’- ers, has been roughly handled .byt- The English at Haifa or J. Korosko._ . We must try conclusions witb^ him personally, and in such a way that there may be no doubt„i.lL_t,ke_DALb’JL mind that, he bas’puf forth his full strength and been defeated. We can defeat him next win ter, or We can defeat his- troops, some years hence, when they come to attack Egypt. I see no reason to believe- that to do so then will cost us much less than to advance on KJiartoum this autumn. I see every reason to believe that the intervening, years of disturbance will cost us both men and moiieyj,that would be‘saved“I)y an adherence to- the original deter miration of the^^yei’D»»ont, and I r am sure ,tliat ouin!^wance-.to«.Berbeii. or the neighborhood of Khftrto’um, and the defeat .of life -forces under "KifTown eyesj will have a far greater "effect and be regarded in a very dif--: ferent light from what would be thought of the defeat of any army he might send here to attack us. “To sum”up.. Tile struggle with the Mahdi, or rather, ’perhaps, with Mabdiism, must, cbm’e - sooner or later; We can accept it now and have done with it'once-and for alL or we can allow all the military re­ putation wo have gained at the cost of sO much toil and . hard lighting, all the bloodshed^nd all the expen­ diture of the past campaign to go for nothing, and try and stave the final struggle off lor a few yftarp.. These years will be years of trouble- and " disturbance for Egypt, of burden and strain to our military resources, and the contest that will coms in the'etid will’be no lass than that which is in front- of us now. This is all we shalbgain by a defensive policy. ' , <‘10 .CQUolusien I will only observe that’ I liaveTiiltins dispatch carefully abstained frbm entering upon gener­ al matters ot policy or of touching upon tho question which of tho two courses is most’ befitting to bur nats ionol dignity and honor. To do so wotild bo abeye my province, and wore it not it would bo hardly neces­ sary. Detroit Free Freed. Ear years the imperfect extradn tion treaties between the United States and foreign countries have hampered the courts of justice. The extraditable crimes have been few, and the long course of pioceedure necessary to extradite a criminal has often been the means of baffling justice. Detroit,- probably more th»n any other place on the contin- - entj kas sufi’ered from ihinstate of things. The euse with which crimin­ als can cross the river not only mak es the local crooks bolder, but it also attracts criminals’frqrn other p'aces as a spot where the penalty of crime ■ caa best be escaped. It was for this reason that iii February, 1884, Ed win F. Copely, then superintendent of police, and .Prosecuting Attorney Rol ins’on, then assistant prosecut­ ing attorney,, visited Washington to urge upon the Department of State the pressing need for a new and more liberal treaty. Senator Edmunds, who l.ins a particular interest as the representative of a border State, Warmly seconded the efforts of the Detroit gentlemen,' anff. Secretary Frelinghuysen gave them assurance that negotiations woulh be made as soon as piacticable,. ’ Mr. Conely lias received a letter .from Secretary Bayard conveying the information that- the treaty is practically settled. The substantial features have been agreed upon, and the scope of the . treaty has been much ‘enlarged. The only .matter tliat_delays .tlm acceptance of the r treaty proposed'by the United States authorities is one point, which will require an act of parliament. Every­ thing which tlio Privy- Council is authorized to do has been done, and . "only the formal action of. parliament remains. , • ' Mr. Conely stated-yesterday tp a reporter that abtion has been hasten­ ed heyond his expectations, and the assurances of-the Secretary of State concerning the nature of tlie treaty, are pevfectly*satisfactory toffiim. * * Prosecuting Attorney Robinson \yas asked about the treaty last even­ ing. He said: . ' ’ ■'VWIien l was in Ottawa in con**' nection with the extradition cases of the escaped Ionia convicts, the Min­ ister of Justice showed me a draft of , a treaty . which had been sent from Secretary •'Bayard. The Minister warmly favored the treaty and said that-it vyould be updoubtedly adopt- ed. The consideration of treaties is ; necessarLiys low,* Irut^ff’PnfWij'At^tlfe*’ Secretary of State writes I seeT no reason to doubt its acceptance.” ■ v ?“Will its results be beneficial ?” - “The -ripbd of a new treaty has. been felt for years, especially in Detroit, and the results of a . more.. liberal treaty esnnot but be of great .aid in punishing crime.” ' the core, and may safely be trusted against the Russians, In conclus ion, X say the princes and people of India will stand like a wall pf lire around their good and grabious Em­ press, our Queen, God bless-her. . “J. G., “Late H. M. 78th Highlanders.’' Kiel and hb guilty Partner^. Battlc-foril Horalil. The removal of Riel from the scene of his atrocities to a place so seelud** jedLaS-Reg inaisauotl rer’Trf~tirrnris- takes that have characterized the treatment of that demagogue. Out­ side of the districts laid in ruins by his orders he is .pertain to be made the hero of mawkish sentimentalists 1 who look with horror on the hanging: of this one criminal, but pass, over the manifolffgreater crime that filled nearly a bundled, graves on the plains with men who. were his super­ iors in every sense of’the* worct^ ^ Biel laid Waste and brought desol­ ation to hundreds of Imines, robbing the industrious pioneers of their hardly earned possessions and de­ priving them of . the means of hank­ ing a livelihood for the future, inasmuch as he burned their houses, wasted tlietr.grain, stole theip cattle broke their implements, ami so caused them to spend the timeftbey should have employed in planting their farms in defending their lives. AVe say Riel did those things be­ cause the Indians tell us lie hade them. They tell us when asked for a reason for their wad, unreasoning^ conduct; .that they were only obeying Riel’s orders, which were to rob all the farmsand stores in the neighbor hood as he had done at Batoche, to kill all the white men they could, and then hasten back in a body . to Puundmaker’s reserve, whore lie would meet them,. We agree with the eastern pre«s that the3 men who caused all tlie bloodshed and distress.must be he'd accountable* for -it; but ave. differ from them as to who the guilty ones are, and charge the committee of the citizens of Prince -Albert, .who sent for Riel to come into t.he country, and* every one .who contributed to. the fund raised to defray his e.x- penses hither, as equally ginlt'y with RieJ, and juore guilty, than the sav­ ages they set on the warpath. 7 THE WEEK’S DOINGS ■' .(CANADIAN ' Of ■ the h ii nd red ■’ emigran ts to Kritaia’sSlilit.ary Strength. . Toronto News. sary, There can bo but little differ* once ofbpinion as to which lino of n< * ‘ ' Ii tion is tho more worthy of the nglisli nation.” A Double ihirftose. j The, popular remedy, itagyard’s Yellow Oil, jifts,used both internally and externally. for aches, pains, colds, croup, rlreumatism, deifftioss ‘Tn YQ»r issue of the 18th I see Gol.dwin Smith has been croaking about England’s decline or downfall. If.it. is England he means,’.any schoolboy ili.Toronto can tell him her drum-beats never circled the earth nor never could 1 but if it is Great, Britain- Goldwin Smith means, her drum-be’ats circling the world is no hoax: and let me tell Goldwin Smith also that there is no sign of' decay in Great Britain. . It seems when- -ever any ot the great powers, Rus-' sia for instance, makes a . move in • the direction of any of our colonies, the united ■ cry of croakers is tliat Britian is doomed, and off they rtfsh, like Goldwin Smith, to otherc lands to tell that Great .Britain is doomgjl to disaster, our'ship’s are rotten, our army • has gone To the dogs, with othor complaints. My only fear is a. rise in the-price of bread, aa 1 firmly’ believe Great Britain, single handed,- backed by «iier^coloni’esj^is a match. Tor Gormany and Russia comldiiffd ; jour fleo'jt alone-could sweep'the seas of-their fleets, blockade their ports, ’"auaV’witfiqurlAWngWsfiigle hiaifon“ their shores’ force them Tn^a few Toon tTis to “8ue for peace. Does' : Goldwin Smith-know the population of the British empire—four hundred,, and twenty millions 1 The popular tion of Russia is seventy-six'"“ miK lions, that, of Gernmffy^seventy mii-1 lions, France .fift^^xffixfdnR,’ throw in Austria, and the four powers have nothing like the British ompit'e. Our colonial soldierrf have proved themselves as good as the rest of the British‘soldiers in the Soudan. As to India, knowing a little about that, country, I, as an’ old'Soldier, feel in­ clined to smile at tho fear of tiro- croakers, and at the idea of Russia getting into India. Do they think the ministers of", othor powers know nothing qf oqr. strength there 1 • Wo could in a few weeks put into the field fifty British regiments,brigaded, viz, : One British regiment with two of Sepoys, one battory of artill­ ery, and half a'battalion of.horso as scouts. Then we have fifty brigades, three thousand to each brigade—a hundred and fifty thousand of the finest troops in tho world—who would soon make short work of any troops Germany or Russia could send. OF keep in the field so far from tlioli* biiso of operations. It may also ch'-er Goldwin Smith to know that behind this great army there is an­ other in India, a force of which* Ye,ry- little is known in this country, num­ bering some* hundreds of thousands, hold by its princes for tho Queen whenever she may call onThom. Tiro r ijih of Simla has about 40,000 of them, He has adopted our system of short service in the army with «uc<iofis. I wish Goldwin Smith and||||||—g—| K-msas or Iowa would do well to cut out the following, they will find it useful in preparing the staple art icle or diet-iu those states .* Material—One bushels of grasshop­ pers; ope half gallon brine .pork pre­ ferred),. * Preliminary—Mix and steep £wo hours. Preparation - Boil together in crimp kettle for twenty minutes;, rinse in lukewarm water and dish up, Before eating divest of heads and tails, &c ,g la shrimp, and take the regulation biscuit. Result— Delicious. .There wai< a' (tetiglitfyr funDTn^ urge in a Texan’ r days ago. Tire defence and the r in a murder trial and were pegging g for the otherUn—ciauM-U'i produce h's pistol, and the audience, ’1Ht' as is usual at the South, fl.y>‘ug..frnm - the scene of-the fight, and not, as in Other countries, toward it. Tin re Upon the Judge protiTprly sprang from I*° reached the floor, gfit astinging blow under teresting scrim nr court room a few counsel for the prosecuting nilieer came to blows, away each wait} • -J c- n Athe ear from one of the counsel in the case, which he repaid with h clean .knockdown. , lie then sum? inoned the*jury as a posse to quell jthe liot, and with their assistance separated-and arrested the eo’niliat- ants. Ho, lined them $50 each for contempt, except the man he had himself floored, and vwlio had prob- ably completely got over ariy con­ tempt of court he had ever felr, ’ BRITISH—FOREIGN. • Information through Italian niiliA tary channels at the Rod S<*a has just readied, the Italian government at Rome that Nusftedaglia Bey, a former governor- of Upper Egypt, has written to tlie Italian command*- er there that he had recently seen a ’Syrian- who had passed three months at the residence of the Madlii after the fall of Khartoum. He. says the Madlii has Gordon in secret keeping, having discovered him severely, wounded, but not dead, and that Gordon recovered. The story is credited at Msssowah, and forms tlie subject of an official dispatch. ’ The Dublin jFree)nan»\<}f Joui'ital publishes a long interview with Bis •hop O'Connor, 'of Nebraska and Wyoming, in which’the-prelate'des- precates extensive Irish einigratioq. ..He.takes..the ground that for. two- thirds of the people who leave Ire­ land as emigrants to America the change .meajis misfortune and physi­ cal harsliip of a msst terrible’ kind, besides deyralation still more ap pealing.^ In’ the.great, ^cities q,f the East, says Bishop. O’Connor, Jrisli new. comers sink.daily uutrl they~ six wei$ deafaml dumb, . # .-. The total vote cast in the county \of Perth for the'Scott Act was 6,901, out of a .v,o.te; of Over 12,000. • / Tlye c.rops in Southern Manitoba are in^excellent^cqudition, aqd niagy’ nififfent ’ilY'tfppeftr’an'cb. Haying is yvfull blast. ■ . • . Sir LeonardxTiIley continues to iniprove in health since he-under;** went the surgical operation. It is ■ expected that lie wi I f leave England for Canada, on-the'9th i^f^July. The beer and wine amendment to the Scott Act Voted on in therfflouse of Commons, was . supported :.by, 73 Conservatives and 5 Liberals, ahd opposed by .37 Conservatives and'' 49 Liberals. • • “A large- number of Scotch farmers- ■from' the-Easton townships, With their families’, left SlierlfrookT), Que-, irec,, last "week, by special - train for Calgary . their -intention being to take up iirndTn”*A71bei£ti[7Northwest Territory. . ? A serious accident occurred at Mimico station, near Toronto, the •victim being an Irishniair about 35 yearspf age, named William Mur-, *ray. He was jumping on tlie train while it was in motion, and slipping, he was thrown forward, his- right .hand falling in front- of- the wheel, which passed ovorjt^crushing the baud clear off.’ He was taken to the city and is be.ing treatedTb the hospital, • Another fff those’ fatal frog ftccid- entshappened in Xonilon the other dsy. A brakeman namedOade alrght> eddn.order.lo pull out a coupling pin, and while walking..on the’track .naught bis £oqt injiJh-pg. ajid was unable tp.nxtriict it in time to get out of the 'way"‘,'qf tlio approaching traib. The cars • struck Link^jrorii “belriud,11 throwing lffttrmir h is J^iiuu righfaqross the’track, aiffl the whole, ■'■i^iillpftase^pVnrMrixS^bodyy'HmrriiTg” off.his legs (it the thighs^ and mangl­ ing him in a terrible manuiff, He was between 39 aii'd 40 years of age,, and leaves a widow and twb'orphans behind* him, Ilis • *TUTnatiiB' "were takeii to Hamilton. Listen to 1’onr Wife, The JDivhi’str’ir Gr limits .Inn; fitl^ lXv',h 8‘ryn t At om* id t he “TViudowt" L tokiu;'on tho w t sll-ni*! way, ’ W. hi flunips ofrhod<jilen'hi‘!u> :iii<l givar su^ * scs'of May blussoius 11' “Tiom.* «aui t *•« teit-hling group. It iuelnded om* wh>>h’<l >• -. tj-a ”t' >tt- g .spilini'T,” l'llt wqs Jri*ft -•! r.ualyzvd!'! I That he Could only Lvu L- Ii--in 1 i* - [ clinittg This'leli'ni to my i*ii-'* < I I Was Atta-lii'J twelve y<‘-trs a r - wuh | •Izrotihitei’ Ataxy” (A piral>tic disciJi->t nefvi-fibre rif i-nri.-di -aud was Ibr seri'nl jtai-t bat'-Jv sl,L-a-? get all -lit. iml 1t,r the'last Five y.-ars riot jl-i :--a atti nd to my busiues-s, altiio’igli M-uti things trivu been d 'uef'.-r n.e. The h<t evperimi'ii* being S. ne -.tr< * -1 ■■ g ' Twi ivarsago 1 was rotM-inr > tm- ifiinte lor lui'UiuMr.*-' N Mu.-’h : t i, lit Mav, L8S2. ! Limaro “A*Iv<><';ite” ; •» ,u miytlun* iur I the shape of •‘patent" M - ! I And iitaile m uiy nhp-mi-iii-, to Jib. dj ir I wifiii-iistnut mTin i t*y U->p ILft j hot litmlly to imaT-fy Jo i < ’ nisrljtml ! t „ 1 L i-l not quite Lui-Im! th- t.ijt l-.,*rs . when I Itdt ii elrmt'e .-mm* i t. i m >. 'f:.; was Hrtm-iUy, N*n»*ii:b*r ■>!. in Sun ' muniiiiql felt Vistron** i ui-i; - ih? eompanii »is, ‘1 was -mu* I ‘•Walls ‘ So ntaiit'd re-toss t! •• fl -,•••.! |.*j.-I- j I iiardi.v k-ra-w h-.-w ti» emmi., m.-mii. i -re- ! fin , and <-Jn w ilk q lit.-Mt,,- t.-pl,.,. t .s". -bri.-'i" Or Support. - I am mm at my own ht-nsv, »nd top. n>.,r t s< able to eanr my own living ag.iiu. i W,.- st-n a member nt tlm Mam-he-ster „ . “Royal Exclvuigc" For nearly thirty rears, ami w-vsnmst -Jiitai-tm r '....itulated <>n going into the i.. m .»« 'i'}, is Veryuratefoily yours;Joiis im'ie-ur ;.sJlAscitHsrsH (Fmr ) I>-a., as. l-.s/.. Two years latif,ji,mjierU!-.ti.r y.u , <> J T^Nbhe genuine withwu .a -bm.-Ti «>f green Hops on the white l-ibel. .’s';>;n a:l the vile, poisonous stuff with "IL.-p" <-i ‘.‘Hops" in their mune*. if ' tliu horse was liable,to 'nru rw.v. She' * <- . • NEVER II ID ANY INTENTION pl’ MAU- ’ HYING RO’BlNSON, nor did she promise ludo so. wouldn't marry him for all (Aina, la,v she said. The last time she saw hnn was wli?n he came with tiro sheriff to takeaway the goods. She invited • him into the house on that oreasron, ' but, he prrfmred to ronmin imtsivL-. -Dun said to h<*r Gf you will marry me and go to Michigan J will send* x the. sheriff ho uro.’ \\ In’n she saw Dan prior to tiro above tiwniioTied visit there were no liul-cations nf any ill feeling betwemi I bin and ( lie family. The folloyviug cliut.se in iro.^ • ofdror-.Iettors to tlie , D ui don’t’be.lonely, everyt'liing ii Hi bo all right, 1-wmi'-t, fui'i’i't ion,' referred only to-the latter’s .imsitu-.-H troubles. ’ ; The jury found for Dan, uud iu-t-. will get back-his property; |yA-Lbpeome-tlie»8cunr-pt-the--popubvtion,. | without mopey or. friends. In this ’ condition they, are compelled to^ do the hardest, and most menial labor, and -from-v this position, .they can seldom rise If. they go West, con- Jiinues the bishop, their propeets are scarcely* any better., In the Wekt~ tirere- is, of course, land in abund­ ance,.but this land most now be pur- chasedj.and tbe-'Irish immigrant has- no money. In commenting on tlitr surprising declaration, the . Jdurnal exfiresses the hope that Bis hop O’Gonnor’s statanioiit may save' Irish men and w.oman from, misery and ,ruin'beyond the Atlantic. . : A Weddingflight in a Church * ’ , 7 yard. * ’ ‘ 'xj*w YorkHvarhi. -.—*■— Allan lA Travisj of Peekskill.; wooed and won Miss Annie, Fisher., an -18 year-old belle rof - tlie same village, Last Sunday "they made up t’h'“ir iniilds. to adopt the holy—s.UUo5-' of matiimony, and started »in a carriage for the residence of Rea. Dr..Taylor, nt Shrub Oak, miles away from Peekskill. Arriv<- ed at Shrub Oak, they found • the parsqn was.at his church, and .there ■ .they followed liim. When the ” AMERICAN. Illundrods of hogs aro dying, in- Pennsylvuina. and’ Illinois - of a strango disease, jVfWr death the animals bqcomo black. Twenty-ono persons "living , in Meriden, Connecticut, liave-been poisoned by eating ice cream bought of street vendors. Some of tho sick are in a critical condition. Charles A.. Bqddunsiek, the skin builder, of New York, whose flimsy constructed .houses collupsmi, -killing scores of people, was sentenced to ton years’ imprisonment and a fine •of ,^65,000. Under the joint (vosoltition t>f March 3, 1883, ahd proclamation of the president of tho.ffTn.ited States of tho 31st of January. 1885, cerptin articles of treaty at Washington of 1871, including article 21 terminate 1st July 1885. T11 view of such terminaliOh Of the provisions of ar­ ticle 21, collectors of customs ^aro instructed that “Fish oil ami lish of all kinds," the produeo of the fishoi’- ins of tlm Dominion of Canada, 1’iinde Edward' Island and Xew* foundland, which may bo impovtod into the -United States from and1 af< ter 1st day of J.uly, 1885, will bo liable to duty undof the existing tar­ ifflaws without regard to their ori- -x'* Dan Loses Ilis Pei But Gets - MBIis Property. * A-base of rather an unusual anti ' amusingXpature was begun at the . Civil Assizes in Toronto on, Friday, in which figured as defendant. ft, young married lady,' ’Mrs. Burke-nee Willbughby. * The - ’pjaintiff is^ft robust; lookitrg“feliow of. aboutr 28 named Daniel Robinson, w^ho./form­ erly lived at Sarnia. . The coyleferid. ants’ are Mrs. -Burke's father, David Willoughby, and George Torn linsonF The defendant, ’Mrs. Btyke,. who Was married »in July last, ’taught “ muScWri “ED5I la ncl'Tja n <l’i fig, 'where7 her parents resided, She had also pupils .in the district surrounding the Landing, to whose homes she was accustomed to travel on foot to teach. She was’wooed by “Dan”-. Robinson,- and it is stated,, won. She complained of the exertion of ’ walking to her ;plipils, and her sweetlroart very considerately, f,ur-'- ' TTrslral hurrwttlfff'.hoFRff an’d-buggy," wlvicrj-.KufUped' for js,*;tiuroq- .but, tire the buggy good enough. The love flame burned brighter .in “Dtili’s” breast, and she needed only to make known her' desires ^.nil they would hr? “gmtt fieri,*■ ’A"u.eor< I i i > g 1 y "Tfe i n ■“ structed’ her to. select a suitaldp vehj^^njrgi'onto, -which htL. would, pay for. 7it Dixon’s she selected a handsome phaeton worth 8150, and in .Biitrip.purchased a.835 .set of harness-— all ut .Dan’s, expense. A buffalo robe was alj that was tieces- stry to complete the turn out. This. Was also furnishedjftiid “Ada,’/ seated in tin* pliaet jDj was the admired of ■ tlw-villa^n^ “Dan’, also furnished the prospectWoi Mrs, R ibinson with • : a cow for the family’s Use. - Ilis 'fondest, hopes, however, were Dever ’ ‘ .................. L. L- makes tins heart grow ...........................Ada ■r lover ami married -a Mr,. Kohinson, (lie re-* as defendant , ft. ^eermon-was-over Dr. Taylor.tojd .the young couple he . would -be glad ’to tie the nuptieal knot, at his' homes, and accordingly, having hitched Hid- -hprse > n a+;b. e-. 1' i n-Q I i e c hw<4i -y ard, t.hey went to tlie'.parsonagp.and wf!?* made one. Air, and Mrs Tr.avid- ■Returned fortheir carriage and ho'r-.s<’?' but they Jiad so .many, sweet- 'no.h- ings to whisper’ to one .another Bm‘ ■the shaded.of eve were falling before they entereiLthe carriage and start,; U I on their drive home. \Vtiffh, .they I jreaehe.d the eburch-yarfl’s- ii.on gab■*« I they vfound tli’e-m Ibeki-d. ‘ J'hey I Shouted for- assistance, Tut as the I church'was sit uated in a lonesome I spot their cTies wero of no ai’ail.l The'u al Is around the chimney a rd I were- too high* to scale, anti tbc, iron I spikes of tile: gate forbade any'.'f as’ll I fooling with' .their -points. Finallyl they decided 'to 'make the "best of al bad job^’affd spent the night ‘ unilorl the. shed;' hungry, cold and. ,t-ired.l Next morning the sexton discoyoredl thorn during his morning rounds,I and Liberated the: bride, and biidol grooiff.____ _ • .... '" ~ '__LB , KriKldcr Gardner Sizes up llnB “Soleiiin Rooty” of,MGI . ‘I nfibber see a-mffn-whp—beli-ev(xH Tt ana his solemn dooty to' be fesponB si fele,fur iis fellow-n.ian1 widout ft*e; I ' i n g sa imy-fu Hri nfy^fiiVHT-Broti fS r-GfarffH ner; as’.tni\voice of the triangle call.■ ed the Linroldln Club toiorder. MB must be uncoiqCortable to bft sich'« m ith It must give a pusso-n ii-paitB ■ to go to bed nig I IF under de feaB dat somebody . may goSyrong in, d'iB world afore daylight, anQ. it .inusH stir up his bile, to riz iip.in^Q j.nawB nil? an’realize dat-lie can’t -pbasiblB .ciiiitroTcle ackvihuns of all liisTellowB • men .frewqjit,J • ‘VyiLJiuk"-one ’oh two,8ic,h men iB "’d-is'cl'irb;* an1.1 wai)t. to - say to ’rtM ql^ d oyghrntlyunemstlnwteWemffFH her,uf-yardsof doth required toiimlH ’em n. shirt. ' What dev calls a h.aH ter of dooty am mrias* alwayssimplH pfyin’ iiffp a na.ybiir’s bizness ; wLM to be realized, fur as Mr. Bigelow, the plaintiff's counsel, expressed it “Absence fonder—f. discarded M,r. Burlc jeered,,demanded his horsi phaeton, buffalo r cow, but Mrs, Bur to‘part with them, the horsp was trad ant, Tvmliuson, wl it up, Mr. .Hobim •deed in Ihe mitne i loughby and David Willoughby for sumo property in 'Michigan for bis goods, but declined to accept it and ropleviffed the goods. The plaintiff claims tln/t Im only loaned the prop­ erty, while the defendants contend that Xtr. Willoughby, mother of Mrs./Burke, purchased it for a eon- si’dorixtfon.'i ,. n ioas’ nUzays an at.t pt to in t” limi ters dat’donn’ton.*-nil ’<,»m in do least. ■ ‘It am bo more on nmn ’s de>ot t(o go aboiit pleadrn’ ’iviii1 ev■cryb t<oseek d<i Lawd dan it am anolJu n mu’s de>oty to go- ■ab<Hit war P oople noit, to broitk di i la,W,We a 1»uilt on common-sei mo pr'inciq \Ve am scipposed to k 110'v rif,‘hb fi M•roog. ■ 'Wedrov laion ven iCo Siflen’eoft a n’ convjcth , anr’ if II mn cleet s to lib a Gl irisj;niu Iii a n’ itnode r to feller in du wak 0 le King'fSpliet, dat’s a mat tor ii o| r another follow.” Ii •bo, Imrii :n was tui Ho du d to the o refuses f ( nf us kin settlo. De gaud man w makes it.blip gits sich a kick from 1 own eonscieneo dal any nagyin’ his fellow man am mo* airfin tn rd his bile dan lo mnke hire weep/ • ‘Erdar 'roots am tint responsible! S.tmnel Shin lias L/ hbin.wives, a] de ivifv'.PeusffK'h urn Iihii’neless I (rivjadani dmies am sent m LtckH for wicalin’ a pitta glass windcl Mind y<mr (ovnlii2ne-a urn ez.gd 'a mdfo <’Z' 'God Bless our Hom#’.sl •\ , • I Nervous. DebilHated Mert Yon are allowed ft frit trial af /// of Hie use of hr Iiyo's Ceiohrd Voltaic Belt with Electric Stitqieiif AppliiWcesi for (lift speedy rellot I elite of Nor Vonn Debility. I of Vitality and Manhood, nnd till kind trembles. Ab/', for nmuv o»hor diao.nl (’ontplotn restoration to h»tilth, vl and iivinTwod gu-i raft med. Nu risil ibcntt'd. ninstQAiivL ^anihlAL-iJ