HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-4-5, Page 6MAMIE IS A RUSHER,
.1A*g Church Corner ones and Getting
Married Her Business.
NOW SHE Is IN TROUBLE,
.d. Ta'respert, N, ;Y., despatch says: The
oomplieabed domestic affairs of Mrs, Mamie
Varreil-Bloh.V•an Riper, over whom barge
,Dire throat of a bigamy suit, bas given local
asoandal-mongers plenty of food for discus -
Dr. Walter Carroll, of Philadelphia,
who claims to be the first busband of
the dashingMamie, came to Freeport
Monday and conferred with Justice
fpeorge. Wallace regarding a snit for
Ngsmy. He said he was married to
-Mamie Egan In Philadelphia in 1886. She
represented that she had been previously
married to a man named Franklin, who was
stead. A month later his wife went to
:New York, mot a man named Rich and did
;rant return to him. Carrell did not sae bis
,wife after bar desertion until recently.
Mr,, Van Riper has been in Fteeporb
about three Te%ro. She came as the wife of
James W. Mah, who said he was a com-
xnerolal traveller frsm Boston mud married
;leer In Phlladalphia. Rich died about a
:year ago. He was a member of the Mam-
2sattan Athletlo Club, and was a champion
jumper. His wife seemed to show much
$err O w.
Soon afterward, however, she began to
take an interest In young Mr. Van Riper.
.Who latter was paying attention to Mies Ida
'Smith, but the little widow out her out,
undo after a short courtship, the two were
warded. The newly -married couple went
rant trip to the World's Fair. On their re-
turn they were parted by qu%rrols, buthave
olnce been recor.elled.
Mrs. Van Riper is an attractive woman,
about 30 year, old. She has always taken
,an active part In church affairs. A year
ago she laid the corner -stone of the new
Baptiat Church, and has made liberal dora-
Mens to that church. Her friends say she
eansidered herself free Pram Dr. Carrell
liecauee ate had not heard from him for
five years.
AN IOWA MESSIAH,
Rz6bably to Religious Maniac, but Likes
Money Just the Raine.
HE HAS A BIG JOB AHEAD.
A Dubuque, Ia., despatch says: A new
Messiah has sprung up in the land and his
heaven an earth in Boat -yard Hollow, a
Wisconsin valley, opposite the city. The
ammo of tbia new redeemer of the peeple.of
telae earth is Gus Ihm, and he recently oan-
:daoted people acro3a the Mississippi River
at this paint In a very rink eby beat at to
sauoh ahead. He bas written a book, in
which be calls himself the 11 Messiah of
Nature." In it he relates that one stermy
alight the wind toyed with his boathouse,
wrecked it and left him a beggar. That
might he packed what remained • of his
belong!ngp. an a heras and journeyed 1
'to Beat -yard Hollow, entered a deserted
zabin and fall asleep. Re dreamed
a dream In which his mother appsared to
.him and commanded him to arise and can-'
+quer the world. She said she meant by thin
'fhe extermination of .ry the Pops and
-Omtholicisui, the Sages and Vanderbilts.
One of the suggestions made by his mother,
be says, was, 11Give the Irish Home Rule
omd they will murder themselves." He de-
mands from Boat -yard Hollow the grandest
temple on earth, filled with diamonds and
grreeloua abonee.
mhe new Messiah has tome business ideas
do cemnecbion with his work of saving the
world, and has prepared a badge of his
Order of Freeman, which be will mail for
2. It to surrounded with what he calls a
picture of the sun looking for eniighten-
'menb. The illustration reveals the fact tbab
tha sun wears whiskers. ' A large,numbor
of people went to Ibm'o heaven on earth i
today out of curiosity. He hat made no 1
,converts as yet, but expects hundreds are I
xanny weeks elapse.
THE TERM `• HOUSE•POWER."
APlea, for the Adoption of the Hlla w&U as
the Measuring Limit.
It Is a feet which is, or at least ought
to be, well known to onginaors that.4ho'
'berm 41 heroe-power," as signifying a car-
11ain rate of doing work, Is absolutely
rneauingleseI except as an arbitrary con-
ventional term which has been adapted by
r+ommon consent, says the Engineering
Magazine. The tradition In that James
Wa,at, by experiments with a good average
Clydesdale draft horse, found that auoh an
animal could do work, day in and day sub,
at a rate approximating 22,000 pounds
],Wood one foot in one minute, and then,
distrusting the results of his own experi-
mental he arbitrarily ralped the value of his
horse -power unit to 33,000 feat -pounds.
IDI labs years the distribution of power Is
,obviounly falling largely Into the do
anaim of electricity, hnd,henoe in more
and more naming to be commonly spoken
of in berms of the accepted electrical units,
which, an is well known, are based on the
decimal or metric system. Of the elootrfcrl
°unit of the rate of work, the watt, 746 go to
ithe horse -power, bat any considerable
amount of power In more conveniently
measured in ktlo-watto, of 1,000 watts snob,
ordimrily abbreviated an 11 k: W." Now,
^why should not mechanical as well as
-electrical engineers agree to drop, once for
call, the meaningless term 11 horse -power "
sae a relic of dark ages, and henceforth
datermine to use the far more convenient as
%yell an more scientific unit, the kilowatt?
Fortunately the relation of the old and new
emits happens to be such that they may be
converted Into each other, with onfficienb
accuracy for most purposes, by a very
Is me &I caloulation, the borne -power
' oing tbree-gaartero, or, In exact berms,
'y4 6 per cent. of the kilowatt. The time Is
prephesled when the horse, except an a
,74olegical museum curiosity, will be un-
&newn, but the horse -power has already
'become, at learnt among electrical engineers,
& madams anacbroolam.
Conundrums.
What bird was alwaya seen in old Puritan
Frounehelds? A orano.
What season is ,often made by a small
toy? Spring.
Whom is a walking stick like a tornado ?
VFhen It is a hurricane.
Why abeuld we expect to vee wild on.
lmals about the streets In winter ? Because
there are so many baro (bear) trees every-
wlaore. _
Mauh&Uatr AXIrozomay.
According to a new astronomy published
In the town At the western extremity of the
:Brooklyn bridge, the orbits nesreoh the .son
Ave those of Mercury, Venae, Greater New
Terkand Mars, I .
iOklahoma, with Its 683,000 appplIe trees
&1B;00D pencil trees, Iaype longer' a
derlOMe.
LoxDoNUREsr SlUsa
DOMINION PARDIAMENI
""
!D1ltYTlme Neeti claire in with a Rush—
Sir Richard Cartwright said he presume(
that the Minister of Finance hardly nen
riAbe+l Materials the Coruin¢ Favorite—
delivering his budget speech ei
Irrcruatatod 'Velvet sued Lace $11e Last
Wednesday.
Novelly—Daluty Scotek Jae)kets all the
Mr. Foster—Searoely.
Inge--wafry Dreams in slur Bkirta--
Sir John Tbompsou said it was impoasi
lyartar simplicity In snits and lLe'velY
ble to toll how long the debate on th
bane, Cloth skirts,
address might continue,
LONDON, Mmob.—Several London mff' -
lair. Laurier said It would not do to bavi
liners are trying to introduce the regular
the budget delivered on private membera
1830 poke bonnet, but It is doubtlul if they
day, anyway,
will obtain much success r as a matter of fact
Sir John Thompson said the membort
herniate are much larger this spring than
business would, of course, have prooedanoa
they have been for a great many years past.
The Government did not propose to super
It seems hardly oledible that women of the
node that businese on private member",' day
present period accept them. A seaiety
Who following Bills were introduced -,woman'a
idea ' of a bonnet has
We secure the batter observance of the
hitherto been a dainty piece of
Lord's Day—Mr. Charlton.
millinery thab must only just
To repeal the Dominion Framohlae Act—
cover the beof the head. One tbing to
Mr. Charlton,
note is that trimmings no longer rise in
To distranchhe voters who have taker
migrottem over the bonnet, butspread out on
bribas—Mr. Weldom
each aide, Very large howe, tulle, winge
[Co extend the ballot to the Northwet
smd flowers are placed on the top of tho
1101ritorlos—Mr- Martin.
bonnets and nothing at the back, except in
Mr. Daly explained, In Introducing a B1
a few casks where a 'soupoon of the old
to amend the Northwest Territories Act
fashion 11 curtain " made In lace or jf woled
Bud to make further provision for represen
tulle to introduced. Large toclaes eavexing
tation, that the measure was in the exao
all the top of the head are also very fashion-
terms at a similar Bill latteduoed rest sen
able. The novelty to to otrew them all
sion. It prepcsed to extend the ballet t1
over wibh flowers. One of the Pimento
tbo Northwest Territories. Last year the
straw, covered with Parmene vielets falling
Bill was vrithdtawn, tegether with anotho:
about in all directions, was very noticeable.
Bill relating to the Northwest Territories
Upon another of maroon openwork straw,
'in order to facilitate the business of the
there wore clusters of wood -violets, with a
Rouee, '
large bow of turquoise blue ribbon spread-
Mr, Martin—I rise to a point of order
Ing out. In front. Another .levely bonmeb
No notice has been given of this Bill.
bad % soft crown of cloud -gray Bengaline
The Speaker, on the suggestlort of Mr
with tufts of old-reee velvet and small
Daly, made the Acte in ardor by striking
bunches of roses faetoned to it here and
the reference to rt presentation cut of the
there.
title.
NECK CHAINS ALL THD RAGE.
Who Bill was read a first time.
No woman's toilette in row ceneldered
Mr. Laurier asked what was the poliel
at the Goverzment with regard to thi
complete without one of these lou chains
that wind several times round the neck Bud
French treaty ?
fall almost to the walot. Those chains are
Mr. Footer—In reply, I beg to any tbai
two important delegations have asked to ba
quite the smartest form of jewelry and
figure largely In wedding presents. When
heard with reference to the treaty. Th(
old area cannot be bought, all Hods of do-
Government bas, therefore, decided not to
sigma are made n to suit'the tastes of Indl.
give their answer until after the Easter
11
viduale. One of magnificent pearls was
worn at the last drawing room, aloe a Iovoly
holidays—(Opposftien Hear, hear," ane
laughter)—in order that the deputation to as
one of slender long bare of geld enamelled
red, and encrusted at elther end with small.
first be beard.
Mr. Landkerkin—That is very diple.
diamonds and a pearl.
made.
Mr. Macdonald (Huron),' resuming the
BACK To TRI. LAST CENTURY.
adjourned debate on the address, said that
no more prominent the ribs in material, ,Canadiana were loyal to the Mother
the more chic It in considered by fashionable
Country, yet none the less they were loyal
mendsinee, Fer eveningg dretees, to be worn
to Canada The principle of protection, he
at receptions and concerto, Louis NV.•. Bud
continued, was responsible for the high
Louis XVI. materials are tatting the plaeo
pilees that were paid in Canada for oettoar
of those of the Louie XIII. purled, and it
and other products. The other, object of
In predicted that this Is to be the fasblon-
the Government was to see that th'e osanu•
able sort of stuff. The. large drooemtaking.
• facturera were net torched, to preserve the
establishments are already preY,aringmodsle
principle of protection, and to be ooreful be
I with paasiers and retromses, so that before
have, enough money to run the neat
leng, if the rntblese edicts sf thea mode be
election. One of the greatest states -
followed, women will find themselves all at
man of the age, very properly, he thought,
once transformed into grandes dames of the
bad termed protection, robbery. ". Pre.
last century.
teotihn placed 'the laborer 'en the free
FEAINBS AND BROCRES GOING STRONG.
]lot by protecting 'the product' of -Taber.
The whole principle was wrong. It
In the meanwhile pekinot aro new being
oaipoy per Dort. ei the people
worn with broad and narrow atOpes, vel-
tosubsidy the other ten ,per
Pay a enbsom
vets sprinkled with tpsta and other designs,
mad coarse ribbed silks. There is a strong
g
ll
peat , and also compelled teem to soli their
cent.,
prealaCtn itl egi,n'maYket. The ayebem,Wa9
bendenoy to blend plain and broche material
in rho same gown, the latter tieing used
&•blander, and would never develop the Ia-
apeoially far the sleeves, and whenever ars
duoaries of the country. There was scarcely
an industry In the country that was no
underakirt to Indicated; for up to the pre-
controlled by a combine. Again, protan•
sent uaderakirto have been nothing more
tie" dtaerimivahed in laver of the rich man
than a sort of apron upon which the upper
rand against the peer man, and he climl-
gown opens. A greab deal of ifiorumtstion of
velvet and lana '!n being used. It ie quite
longed any one to disprove the etatemeat.
nov,l, and doss the greatest honor lis ttaono
Proceeding, he quoted the tariff on agrical-
rural • implements and common clothing,
who have Invented it. For simple. eventug
such an worn ;by the farmer and working.
attire silk muslin bodgcem hold their own.
Whey are always in ezgnielbo tante, and .dill
iman, showing that on these articles. the tax
go wish anything. Skirts are being made in
was in nearly every case much more tbau
the average tax of 30 per cent. on all im-
two parts ; for example, one in white satin
ports. The tax on ",pictures, valu.
and the other in orange oremeraldvelvet. . The
able sbonea and luxuries was con•
plain classical material is. very little sought'
trasted, showing the tax 'en theme
after. The feminine mind acme ab Fome7
thing chic, and the fashion in this sense
,arbiolem to be leen than 30 per cent, in
chaugeo no rapidly that what was new yen-
every case. Protection was an abomination
of iniquities, becauee It dlstribubsd un-
berday will be old to -marrow. Strlpsd,
shaded and moire velvets, that moire, moire
equally the wealth of the nation.. He wan
antiques and light brached mike are made
sorry that the Government had not seen fib
be promise the House In the speach from the
np with plain materials.
threose a substantial measure of reform.
SCOTLANIDaACKETS IN voatra.
'Mr. MoMillan. (Huron) asked what benefit
Colleen are becoming smaller and smaller,
it would be to the farmers and workingmen
they are now &]meet reduced to a mere
,of Canada to develop trade with Australia
collar. V+ry large Louis XIII.. and Fran-
and subsidize a line of steamers with that
psis 1. collars are worn for visiting can-
country. The •only effect would be. to add
tames' and quite take the place of mantles,
to the burdens of the farmers. So far as
For simple walking dream the abort C»pe to
'tariff reform was concerned, he predicbed
still a great favorite. The '°Scotland
that the Government would do nothing for
Jacket" In all the rage tort in London,
the farmers. He had been much smussd at
It is simply of cloth, either plaided
bhe,advice the Government had given the
or self -colored. The fronts aro crossed over
farmers of the Northwest, The farmers
with two rows of largo paarl buttons. Over
had been told to go Into mixed farming,
each pinch, a narrow bias -bard is stitched
but It wan an account of the action
down twice; another pinch' t&ksm In the
of , the Canadian Government that
part under.the arm, and is covered in the
mixed'farming could nob be made profitable.
'Province
same way with a bion band. The jacket
Thoof Ontario wan aroused. The
comes halfway dozen -the skirt ; the pocket
patrons, of Industry would not support the
Is no longer on the cress, but length -wise as
Gevernmeab unless bharo was a substantial
In gentlemen's trensers. Bab the great
reduction, and that the Government did not
snoopy in this Is the I.
intend be ve. The farmers did not ask for
our pi ed together
eerier, farmed of four pieces joined together
, eotal rivfle oe but simply that all elaeeas
P P 8 s P Y
by nesma and giving the falness required
ehould.be placed -in a position to reap the
round the lower edges, while the collar is
full rewards of their labore. .Tbe farmers
quite tight sound the neck,
of the country werebeginning to understand
memo cowmunioattons with regard to the
the taWE •,
SUITS, SHMTS AND SKIRTS.
,
Mr. Charlton was earprised , that the
There to tai doubb'that boawever much
'speeches made en the addicts and the
fashions may ohange, coats, whirtua and skirts
arrsiianmenb of the Gsvetnraent ' had pre -
will be warn, and bhab by the smarteot
Amend no reply. , He desired be deal with
people. There will be suits and shirts,
the French treaty • more particularly. It
however, and suite and mhl:.te. Some of
was said that the Government was loath to
them will be of the plainest and coverost
settle the treaty, but he would suggest that
tailor build, and for thoee very plain
the question be disposed of, as the prohlbi-
materiala of fine twill will ba much used
blon question and the Caron charges work+,
rather than the rough -surfaced fabrics that
by the appointment of a Royal Commispion.
were In use last year. On the other hand
Mr. Milts thought It would have been
there are shirts of lovely fancy cloths hay.
well if hen. gentleman on the Govornmenb
Ing portions out round the ham and filled
side had undertaken to I defend some'ef the
in with lace and embroidery, tbreugh which
statements in the speech. It was pointed
a lining in some pale hued allk Is seen. Then
out In the speech that the oauntxy was
the shirt Is an idealized thing In striped silk
prosperous, but tbls bad been proved to be.
of the same coloring as tho lining of the skirt.
untrue. Dopresston provalled largely,
The fronts are bucked In line, following the
,
especially among, the agricultural com-
figure. ,with most becoming effect, and
munity. ' .
having the sleeves arranged in throe large
Sir John Thompson de9lred to may a few
puffs, eaoh one ;tied in with black satin
words oonceining the bible of viceroy, as
ribbon and a bow . showing at the outside.
applied to Him Excellency the Governor -
Over this Is a little pianoforte shaped
General. Ib had been exceedingly common
arrangement of material to match the dress,
In this country for the last twenty years to
with similar embroidery showing a touch of
style the Governor-General of Canada Her
color through. whin can be worn or not ac-
Msjesbyra Viceroy, in consequence of the
Cording to choice, but It In a decidedly
close analogy which, he submitted, did exist,
prebty and becaming addition, bringing the
notwitbabrnding the hen, gentleman's
shirt or bloune lntq clover relationship with
opinion to the contrary, between the funo-
the skirt, for sometimes they appear to be
tions dfnoharged with regard to Canada by
inch perfecb strangers to each other that
they convey an Idea of disoomfsrt.
the, . overner•General for the time geeing and
the lanetions discharged by a'Viceray. Ho
Mr. Davila—Which one?'
"of.
contended that there was a otreig analogy,
Preserving Timber From insects.
In fact, that there was ne substantial die -
Experiments made In France have shown
binnbinn between the functions of the two
that the reason the sap -wood in timber is
officials. A Gloverner-G}eteral wan the im•
worm-eaten fit because of the existence of
mediate representative of Her Majesty.
starch In it. It Im the starch than the Imitate
o,ppofuted by her warrant, just an a Vtoeroy,
are after, and they do nob attack the bard
One was named by Her Majeabya Vioerey0
wood because It contains no starch.
and the ether was named a Govaraor-
T'he experimenters have devised a method
General. ;Nothing had been more common
of preserving timber from such attacks. In
then for Canadians to apply that teem to
the spring they out a ring through the bark
His Excellency. Even no high on authority
around the upper end of the trunk, and
suppress all buds that are developed there.
as Lord Dufferin had used the expresslau
la reference to himself on emsro than one
By autumn the starch has disappeared from
occasion.
the nap -wood and the tree Is ready to be
A.rTax $dance, •
felled. Timber thus preparsaf, It to said,
Aar. Martin asked whether the reply 61
doom not beoeme welrm-eaten,—Youth's Com-
the Premier to the hen. member for
at
pW&
Bathweil was an ad oloslon that the Gov.
- -----
ernmenb had nothing to say in ropiy- It
Auger manages everything kbadly.--Sia.
the serious charges of the hen, geable.
diets,
men of the Opposltion, He bltolism it
no rallootion on the ban. gentleman who
that limitation which the Act lmpeses
preceded biro In the Hause as representative
with reg&rd to education, and which will
for Winnipeg to war that be might nob have
remove the last vestige of the dual lan-
given all his r"seas for taking the soma-
guage clan so far ar the Northwest is
bhab nnutual otop he bad. Ho doolared the
concerned.
Framelilme and Gerrymander Acts were
Mr. Mulack, In moving for correspond-
rosppudble for the unfair representation in
enae roloting to the cemmutation of the
the House, He would remind the hen,
aaatenoos o! McGreevy and Connolly, raid
gentleman that within the past few days
he desired to call the atteatien of the Gov
anotber crimival—in some respects an
ernment to the foot that the commutrbion
offender similar to Mllovrk trlonnolly, and
of the sentences bad given rise to a good
MoGveavy—had fallen • intothe toile of the
deal of fooling in the country. Ho hoped
law, and had been convicted of a sarleus
the rolur.a would be broughb down with
arise,, bbe crime of perjury, and he ex.
promptueos,
peobed for his Province the same kind of
Stv Jobn Thompoon—There will be no un-
.
ustice that was Administered in Ontario.
necessary deloy.
(Hkar, hear.) They were strong upon
Mr. Mulock thought this was not eatis-
Provincial rights in Manitoba, and
factory, This was an urgent case and do -
If it were proper in Ontario to re-
manded the greatest despatch. ,
lease a odminal booanse there were
Sir John Thompnou said he meant exactly
other criminals between him who should
what be had said.
be there also, then he said thab Mr. Cham-
Mr. M&look moved that binder twine be
berlain, who had basen convicted of perjury
plaoed on the free list.
in connection with the election In Wluni-
Mr. Fester bald the kaon. gentleman
peg, should be able, if this was a Correct
had taken time by the forelock and got
prinaiple, to produce supatlors back of him
hismobti&n in as early as poebible, really
who wove really rospomible. Qmtinuing,
a few rs afore he (Mr. Fester) had
be said it was but to be expected tZab the
an opportunity of presenting the Budget,
Government would wait for the tariff ra-
which would have laid this matter before
adjustment of tbo United States before con-
the Rouse, He thought, in view of the
sideting their own, They had sat at the
statement be had mado that he weuld be
foot of the neighboring oenntry for yearn.
proparod to bring down the budget and the
[Cho motion for an address in reply to the
tariff rocamme:rdatiow, to -morrow, that the
opeeeb war declared carried on a division.
bon. gentlemn had better postpone his
Mr. Malock, In inireduclug his Bill to-
metion in the m,antima and allow the
speoting ocean frelght rates on cattle, said
recommendations of tho Government to
that the Impartanouto Caeada of the cattle
be pa;e"ented to the House. If net, he
trade could not be denied. The trade be-
might have to move the adjournment of the
gonia 1875, and in 1891 it reached its
debate.
higheeb point. @.'howe had limon constant
Mr. Muleok said he bad trod but had
[mutterings no to the dif8oulties under
never been ablo to suit the convemienoo of
which the trade labored. From olrourn-
the Wnlater of Finance in the matter.
stances connected with It, there wit prat-
Mr. Foster—Blundering as usual.
tiC%Ily lint one point of export from Canada
Mr. Mulook presumed the Government
to Great Britain. Live cattle oeuld not be
was going to come dawn, and therefore he
shipped through the United States, except
v ouid nolo be compelled to bring them down.
on complying with the regulations imposed
(Laughter.)
by that country, which required ninety
days' quarantine, wbioh was pro ottaslly
CAPTi NED BY UNIGAAD&
__
probibitory. So that Canada was restricted
Baron Arrigo's Adventure la a secret
to the Sb. Lawrance route, the cattle bring
Cavern in the Apennines.
put on board at the head of ocean naviga-
tion, Montreal. Several linea of vessels
The trial of the brigands who carried
plied from that route with appli-
awaq Boron Arrigo from Naples some time
ancos for the trade, but their
Bgo is new proceeding at [Crani, and the
agedts entered Into ezramgementa with
other daytheBaren recounted his adven-
eaeh other, so as to ozeate a
buret before the court.
monepoly with regard to freight rates. He
The mosb interesting part is his stay in
ha&been told by men In the bhipping trade
the mountain oovorn. Ib was running with
that to arbitrary bad the ship owners
water, and he begged to be taken away, but
become that they refused to quote rates
his captors refamd, and he was obliged to
until pracbtoally the cattle' were on board.
stand continually, the ground being so wet,
The rate charged per head fluotuated from
and there being not even a stone to titupon.
a low shillings up to thirty. Ib was no
At last, overcame by fatigue, he lay down
unusual thing for the charges to vary ton
and slept prefeundly for four hour,. ,At
shillings per head between one shgpmenb
.dawn heJelt himself pulled by the legs. His
and another. That rendered .ib. imposnlble ,keeper had awakened him, geing away
for the cattle mon to ,promote the trade
immediately afterward. Arrko, as soon as
with any degree of a itisfaotlen to them-
'ib vrae qutto flight, went tawirdo the en-
seives or to the' farm8ro"who raised rattle.
trance of the onvern, and, not having eaten
In many eases the result of the ayatem had
'anything for forty-eight hour,,, prayed a
been to ruin the shippers., There •ovse
brigand wbe stood thereto give him some
eoanrcel a chi er te,da • who- had .been
food. The nian ordered him to be silent,
able to survive bho dungens connected with.
may 'ng thab In the evening he should wave
the cattle trade. - The Bill proposed that
what he wished.
the Governor-In•Counoil should fix the
A week passed, and Ona day, on a
maximum rato that may be charged, and
Wedneediay, the Baron was told he would
aonbained ponalbitta for Infractions of its
be allowed to go next Saturday. That
provlsioue.
Dight he heard two of the brigands
Mr. McMillan said that during last win-
tslktng. .One said the money bad arrived,
but it was very little, and the other re.
ter, alarge number of cattle had been fed,
Plied
brfy contras to the general ex 'rionc,' no
Never mind if only it has Dome."
buyers bad been out Into the country baa
purobase them for the Old Country market,
."
When Saturday come Arrigo had taken
The reasons were on acoeuub of the schedule
no bread for two diaye, and raid to his
jailers :
in Groat Britain and of the unnktistactery
freight rates. � In some.yeara paab they haat
11 I have not eaten because this aveniug i
.
paid 70 and 75 eltillings a head on cattle
am ba away."
mho brigand replied that lb would be
11)hr
from Mepbreal to Glaxgow, though patinae
were being sent from Boston to' Glasgow for"
�b not
t0 na0, for no would not gob away
and chi a hand., ' He hoped,
that night. Arrigo was with
strong lever, besides which he believed he
a CC
the ed o
bho educiAieen' t the iaa ornm was not ob
be reduced And if the Government
would in the end die of famine, for the bri-
that same
azo their way to give same•relief, bhab some
ganda had no meney, and he himself me
change. He had managed to conceal a Hobe
ce s
a hadhavin
arrangement might be made with the Amer-
loan G3vernmont by, welch Canadian oabtia
'of 1 ,change.
given 300f. Gan
-
could ba shipped .in bond hhrougti the
could
Brune the first day.
Anoter wee
hk passed, and wbon Wed -
United States. Before the eobednio was
Imposed 'same cattle buyers had found it
nesdBy name again Arrigo asked to
profitable to take their cattle from Montreal
tee Lazzara, but was told that he had
gene away with some others • to divide
to Basten for ehipment, finding that they
werwamply; compensated for the slaughter-
the raneom. They were also going to
it "
ing of their animals on. arriving mob the.r
show themoolves In the village. On the
Saturday afternoon the Baran asked if
destination by the lower freight rates ob-
twined. These rates had been so mutable-
he would be released, and was answered in
fac'ory last season that many dealers had
. the affirmative. !,Deward 4 o'clock his
guardian puma and took away all the ob-
nuedambad.
Sir John Thompson said every posoli to
jeete In the cavern, among other btrfoga the
cap and jaekob of a ourabinoer. When
attention would-be given to the BIlI of the
hon, member forNerbh York (Mr. Mulook).
Arrlgo was led out, and tried to determine
The aubjeob had; bees under conmideration
the ofon%tien of the a -vera !n which he bad
se long been confined. When night fall the
for some.bime by the Minister of Agrioal-
ture and the ,Mtnlater of 'Trade and Com -
brigands led him down the mountain and as
mama, and' 1lihe b the cognate
moron,
an they reacted the plain bald him be
go on in front and they would fellow him.
who last
spoke, g rd the hen. gentleman who diet
spoke, regarding the export 1rf Canadian
Arrigo went on, ,but the brigacde remained
cattle from American ports. Hon, gentle-
Whan
men were aware that they must give up &ll
bobind.
ArrlgroGnally reached the town of
hope of having, the s?hedule a" Canadian
oatble removed if they, a` step of that
Termid be found bis wife In an almotlb
dying state and all hie relations worn orb
,took
ki.,d. They could not expect the American
authorities to admit Canadian cattle with-
by anxiety. He was told that of the 120,-
000E ransom, 20,000f. had gone to than
out a reciprocal measure on' this part of
priest namod Quabbrochl for " oeamorra,"
and 10,0003. to the prienb'o brother,
Canada. The whale subject would be cam-
aider,d as fully as possible,
P.rsquale, for tine expenses of preparing his
release.
Sir Richard Cartwright asked If the
lithe trial is still going on.
Government bad received any communica-
tion from the English aubboritien on the
An Overalght.
subjealt within the last few weeks.
Sir John Thempson eiaid there had been
At Goa, as moot pReple know, time, in -
memo cowmunioattons with regard to the
.bead of being raokenvd by hours, In divided
a
watches
into "watches" of fear y ho cinch. From
condition of Canadian cs.tbla, which had
been ' eyed fully by igen Minister of
4 o'clock and from 6 to m theme are
liuT
Agrricui ere
rmlf•divinions, nautically termed a' dog-
Mr. Charlton introduced a Bill to amend
the An re apeodag the dutias of oustomo,
watches."
• In an inmuranoe case the counsel asked
He explained that ib repeals the duty on
an old pallor at what time of day a oar.
omin col ilon occurred, and received the
RAW logs, and enaots that hereafter no duty
eball be impinged by Order -in Council.
reply, "About the middle of the first dog
Mr, McCarthy-movkd the firat reading of
watob."
• In aummtngr, up the owe the barrister en.
a Bill to further amend the Acb reapeobing
larged upon the lnforuaation thus imparted
the Northwest Territories. Ho explained
an follows :
that it dealt with two subjects. It pro-
11 You can imaglee, gentlemen of the
posed to repeal the clause of the NeMi-
jury, the care which existed on thin ooca-
wost Territories Act by which
slon when, an oppowro from one of the
SeparateSchools are impaled open
plaintiff', own witawsom, this valuable sblp
the Territories, and to give to the North-
rend her cargo, and the lives of the passen-
west Council subhorlby to deal with the
gera and crew.- were lntrnatod to what,
subject of education as ib may seem fib. Ib
gentlemen ?—why, to the more watch of a
proposed also to do away with what was
dog."
known ss the dual language claumo. Cont.
tinning, he said . An I have romarked before
she locked Repose.
in making this mopioo, or in bringing inn
"My dmr," sold Mr. Chngwator, "it
Bill to repeal this Clause, I do not de iii
pain" me to moo your look of central In little
from any feeling of hostility to my French-
matters. You aro too easily "barbed by
Canadian follow•oltizsne. I borieve, etr,
briflea. My dmr, I ragrat to may that you
that the Interests of thio country will be
are rulad too much by those trifling domea-
bomb served when the distinoblenbetween
tic it+oldents wbiob are ioevitable,and there.
bheoe Aatienalitlee In done away with ; e.t
fore should be received in the proper spirit.
all eventm.'that,'so far us the Noathweab It
Madam, you nerd ropoee of manner.
conaernedy we ocrtsinly uboulA not porpot-
1`1 am sorry to observe," he Continued,
unto a measure whioh.is oaloulated and age-
S1 ora youm part a growing lack of thab wo
p%renbly destgue6 to continue race distlno.
manly dfgnb y of ---there, I knew It, I. it,
tion, which unhappily oxisto in ane of the
'.C'hat's the result of buying thinge'aff that
older provinces,
fellow Stippn, confound hIm i VII bave his
Mr. Davila—Which one?'
"of.
hoarr,'n blood yet I`
t1 d4nrl" i
Mr. M.oOarthy—ln the Provinoo'
Why, whWe the matter,, asked
Quebeo, if the boon.' gentleman wants to
Mrs. 0.
know. I have no difficulty in answering
"Matter 1" he reared, Hose's another
that question. --
confounded batten aff my east I That man
Mr. Devlin—We will bell you about the
InOh Bb to mako ,Aoal sacks i" —London
other one by -and -bye.
A'nmrmya.
Mr. McCarthy -With regard to the sub-:
0
Judged by Results.
jeot of education, I think that the Henson
and the country must be satisfied just new
She—The letters of Junius I regard an
thwt any attempb to, interfere with a Pre-
the most wonderful compositiona, in the
Vince in the Norbhwoot or the Terxiberles
In
lanpusgo,
tate Nertihwest, on the sabjeot of eduoatton,
Is owoulatod to caned a grs+ab deal of trouble.
H1. • They don'b compare with Jack
Hardy"e. Why, be wrote a lebbor of oon-
I, thsrbfine, bave pleasure fn Introducing dolraw o to a widow, and she took off her
to "Hosea to, ]Ulf which will bake affray!
m000rAing immediately.
" GOING TO THE • DOGS, "
g -n-- T"
By One Who Has Been There and
Book,
VARIOUS STAGES P THE TRIS"
Going down in the world is a very rapid
preceat. As Josh Bilhnga says, " When a -ff
man beglus to go down hill ever.ything;c
seems groaned for the occaolon." And yet
the descent is aeeompliahed by such easy
stage" that it is with scmetbize of a abook
that Son suddenly realize that although
loot night you were drlving to your club,
to-nighb you are walking the street for
want of the neeetssly iourpmoe which
would Irrocure your entry to the coveted
" desshouao,"
First, says London Tit Bits, comes the
fatal annoumctment of the 1ahnro of your
hopes and prespeoto---yen de nob realize the
blow—you have come money, perhaps not -
ro much s" you were went to equardor In a
day, but you will economize, and It must
do. You determine to keep a stiff upper,
lip, and leave the world none the wloer.
[Ube fitat friend you meet immeaiately uokn,
11 Why, what's the matter ? Anything
wrong V
do yen reply In affected surprise.
6,
Why?"
11 Nothing;, only I thought you looked
rather dowse In the dumpn."
This Is a dank of cold water In your face,
and you realize tbat you are ontho first stage
of the 'on
rnoy towards the canines,
You,.,Tond stage commences when your
money is gone, but yen still have clothe"
and credit. You think It to high time to
be doing something. You have a friend In
a splenald poahlom who might pub you into
something. You oall—be rtobiveo you cor-
dl&hy—yon elt and obab in the old familiar „
way; schen you take leave you venture to
mention the real objeob of your vieib ; his
manner suddenly drops to about 10 dt,grsem
below zero. He is etill polxt, and very, ,
very cyiwpathotic ; but yN feel he to net,
andoaan never be again, to you what he has
been up to that moment. He regrets that
he o,.n do nothing for you—ab present;.
if he hours of anything he will let yen
know.
He never hears of anything—at least, he
never late you knew. It you meet after
that he in full of buoineao, and cannot spare
a morumb to speak to you—yea might want
to borrow mo"y. He is sever at home to
you again, for you have ovMmitted the un.
pards:x,ablo offence of havlug solicited hie
assistance.
In the next stage your wardrobe shows
oigns ,f deterioxatien, and your credit is
aoverely strained—in fact, may be said to
exist solely on the cor..deecension of your
landlady, wino euffero your aoconut to run
on for fear of Iesing vahat is already owing,
and who develops hitherto unsuspected
phase" of character which do not certribute
to your comfort.
'Yon grew shabbier day by day. It is
astonishing how perishable wearing apparal :1
becomes under the baneful infloanae of im-
peounimity. Your tromera and boots neem
Morally to rush to their own deebructien,
and when a threadbare spot appaars h to in-
variA;ly in the moat coy, spiouous port' en sf
your attire. Yen flatter yourself the defeat
will not be net.ceable iso the exuremo
respectability of }our general appearance,
but when you encounter your refleotion in a
shop window it is the point that first
catohen your eye. The rest of your get up
seems intended merely an a' background to
sat off the flaw. You meet an acquaiubanoo
and during your convereabion his gaze seems.
riveted upon that fatal spot, .which '
begins to burn into you like a alneplem.
After ,hs.b you shrink fcom meetie.g; ac-
qualwanoae and uuconscioutiy take to back
stmeta and 'byways seeking to ewape' notlee
by sinking yourself av�oug 0o crousd of the
habitually shabby ; bo-. you are made to
realize your failure when a<' ;e sympabhiziug
individual romarks that you''louk like -a
chap woa'a seen better daya."
The remnant of gentility that clicgo to
you Itmeamea distua"teful ; you lose pride,
and do not care how elipahed you IoQh.
V- h 1191 4,"h
en a c ones. an you neve over were
lb by half an irxOb, and y our momeb%a 11,a
takes a dowr.vmrd our.re, with an uncer�
tainty of color, and a raggedue3a of owlino
that no amount of ggr000aiug rill remedy.
Yon are making frantio offtartB to get into
empleyment of some kind, and interview
all torts and conditions of men withoub
avail. You are tt'oated as though you worn
taking a great llberty in asking the faver to
be allowed to work for yeur bread. Yon,
lately of Be proud and Inttepondent a spirit,
learn to Mingo in the presence of seine in-
eonaequenbtai employer of )abar, who for-
merly would have ween proud to scrape
aoquaintan,00 with you.
Your easy, well-bred manners deaertyou;
you oen no longer anter a' room gracetully
and naturally, but oneak in as though
afeaict of the aeuxid of your own fcob-
abeps.
1 will not furbhor indicate your patb,but
you will find: It ever tronding downward.
Every day you will find yourself a step
lower than yesterday, and at every obey you
will encounter beings worse off than your-
tleff--like mileAenaa, to point you the way
you aro going.
You Hover seem bo each the bottom of
the toale. In fact, the meat remarkable
bhlog about It all is that there seems to be
z stopping-plaoe whoayou are going to the,
dogs.
Depressing Uflutnces of aetetwce..
His father—What are you oryicg aboub,,
Tommy ?
Tommy (weeping bitterly)—I just reaad.in
an almanioh (nob) wbare lb omye rv's gain' to,
rain (nob) on tree Fourth of July 1
At the art gaiiery—j1 There, now, do you;:.:
call that a gond picture i" "I dor,'u know' ""
wait till I decipher the axttet'a name."
Noddaro--Wnat's a bsre mot ? Slowitz—
Something you always think of after it's too,
late to nay ta. .
The:, buatoman who brings home the,
antlers proven that he ban hceaabia to get o
hexad at the game.
9g30 XX30.a..3F;-W
Is liable to great,
c@ functional!!s' disturb-
ance ,,through sym-
pathy. Dyspepsiw,
o- Indigraestion, often -
P' . causes it to palpi-
tate in a distrewins
�-` ' way, Nervous Pros•.
tration, Debility and
Impoverished Blood,
also cause Its too
rapid pulsations.
Many times, Spinal
Afrections, cause it
to labor unduly. Sufferers from such Nerv-
emv Affections often imagine themselves the
victims of organic heart disease.
ALL NERVOUS DISEASES, - Ina
rxlvda_ T.nnmm^fnr Atazin. EDUOD". Or
as
tri*
References, and Particulars, on-
to, to stamps for postage. ;tp
Wonzr's Dismig0ART 3UDXCA16
ON, Bufralo, N. Y. .
0
40
-*,o"