HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1875-9-2, Page 1M.1),,
I, ) kbl of LII(10411Yoriti
tr'n1 prsystensit,„ tarpon, tic°.
.110) OnlreSidpnee-Exotert Ok1).
Oihee ktetIVS-8 to 40 etansAfid 7 tO 10 MIL
'. BROWNING rk
ishysteetes, &uncoils, seereeoreurs. °Ake
)(minion Medical liabOratOry, One door 11.mith
)avis' blaeltsinith shOp, Mein Sts Exeter. ltet
ideliee, pr. 13resvning'3, IlUren St' W. 111WWN,
jug, S,,j,13.,.Hradtiato 'Victoria (1ollego,, Affstuber,1:01-
1ege PhYsiciaus0 SurgeonS, WU, 1.1SVINO, /K. 11.
Graduate University Trinity College, Afenitter Col.
loge PhysiciAns and Surgeons: 09-tf.
rt, MORDEN, Homeeopathlti
RhySLOiatt and Surgo0n.
lifncX-4`10X0 400r to Bawdefi's marble wer141(.
Ittestnntseis-Central
Pe.rticular attention paid to eliroulo cliSeeses,
V ll %silk; promptly attended, advice free.
BXetert MarOli W. 1876 132-y
"FIR. LANG It. B., M. Da L, R, C.
S . 0. Graduate of Trinity C011ege, MOM.
ber of the College Of Physieittlis and Surf4p0it13 of
Ontario. ottlice-Drug Store, Mein $t. Wanton
said is abio proprietor oftb Drag store, and eon-
stantly keeps on bend large stock of pure drugs
Patenatedieines, and Dye stiffs.
Grttotten, June 18,1874. 45-8m,
4111-11.
A'UDING & HARDING, Bands
L. Lem, ttorneys, SolieitOrs, OPMmissiOnors
13, B.,&o.
Oknou-s-lInTrosf'S. Er.001t, Water Street, St,
Al ry'S.
/01114 HAnDiNcs. B. W. FEAUDINO
'1/1-14`SSIIS. JONES & MoDOUGALL,
-Tie Barristers, A.ttorneys-at-law, Solicitors in
f.'lls acorn. Conveyancers, Oommissionere in Q.B,
Intl Notaries Public), St, May',
s'smnl-HuttOn's Bieck: Watcr Bt.+ St. narY's
1-1.y.
MoDIARMID, B.A., -
1S,11.11et.STIllt, NOTARY CONVEYANER,
• &Ca,
LUCAN, ONT,
AAT G. WILSON, ISSUER OF
Y . Marriage Licenses under the new Ac
t the Post Oftiee store, Zurich, Oat, '4,G-tf.
• e*
gUlttiOntitilq •
J_JBROWN, Public Auctioneer,
. Winclielsoas Sales promptly attended to,
Terms reasonable,
Oet. 15, 1873.
j. SPA CKIIIII N,
ICENSED AUCTIONEER
.
For the County of Huron.
itES !MENU, EXETER, On
SALES ,PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
CHARGES MODERATE.
ANSION HOUSE, EXETER
ONt., W. IlAWESHAW, Proprietor. Thi
new and commodious hof ells now cotepleted, and
ntted up throngifout with. first-farulture. The
best of Liquors and the choicest of Cigars at the
Bar, The house is capable of a000mmoda Ulm 85
cgaesti. Excellent stables and an attentive hea-
tless. (54-17.)
•
()UBE N'S HOTEL, LUCAN. W
`04.f, I30WEY„Proprietor. This first -elm hotel
hes lately ohniuged hands (from W. E. WW us to
W. Bowen, and is fitted with new fur Nitre
throng mut. Fre 'bus to awl from the`Mation
Office .for tie new line of 'busses to T (-mum- The
bar is 1:11plka witx tne oh ei eetti st2O5jd imp -
rant Havatta t. Pour cotemoreial sample room.
Good stabling and attentive hostlors. 004 y
'ITJBLIN* .HOUSE CORNER OF
Prank ftsul William Streets, Lama. The
above 'Mt -4 has heels rented by Mr. Isaac White,
and thoroughly refitted for the comfort of the
traveling foil-dio. Good liquom and einars at the
bar. Attentive hostler always iu titteuclance.
Is.A.AC WHITE, Prop,
Lucan, April 15,1'875, 85-001.
$5 'I° &IV ellanseR of working remrle, of ryri PrIlDA
t Y.—Ageuts IV-to:teal Ap
el -
nor soN, young or old, maim more *annoy at worls
fer as in their spnro momentq, or all che time
. lien at anything else. Pn.rticnlars free. Post
card to States cogs but ono cent. Address G,
STINSON & CO.. Portland, Maine. 62-11-.
-ARM FOR SALE-LOT12, CON'
2, Hay, abont 5 miles from Exeter. oentain
aertss,...t..11)43XILP-7
and wel on premisesk Good brick house and
frame born fund stable. Iror further nerti
Apply oft prentises or by letter to D ON ALI, TA
LOR, Roclgerville P. 0.
e
Ti-SARreet FOR i)ALE.---THE SUB-
soriber offers for sale the N.W. 4 of lot 8.
ecu. 3, Usborne, containing 50 acres of excellent
laud, 40 acres cleared, bah:Ince well timbered, a
dwellisg house, barn and statne the premises,
Mao ft. good young oret,ard of graft huit and a ue
ver -failing spring. Distant from Exeter four
tailes. Per further particulars apply to DE SIP
SET', oroprieror, Exeter P.O. 78 -ti.
BIS SE T TS'
'Livery and. Sale. Stables,
tin connection with tbe Central Hotel).
11-.441RY
1911-k--"ofic
sts
ir
• -
st OOD HORSES AND COMFORT.
-r
ABLE vehicles always on hand. Favorable
trrengeraelits male with commercial travelers.
All orders .left at ,Bissetb's Tinshop will bo
sromptly attended to.
31 & T. BISSETT; Prop. •
Exeter, Se5is.1. 1878. • 2-1y.
irrIl FAVORITE LINE,
Of-LANGE OF PROPRIETORSHIP
• CISLOWLEY AND .121SASSIGAN
Having bought. eIt Jliusvkslutw, :lave
Good Horses, Comfortable Stages and
Fast Time. _
—0—
rhea° ht./I ,1,Jfil are driven by the most aceommo-
• ,14,ting of drivers, and leave
TIflY,YESTE!?.N HOTEL, LONDON,
evsry ftesnoon, et p.in„ arriving in Liman in
timet', connostwith t *Mos for bits oat t itIld Wefit
vUetillg 10 .nhIeter With 1.11(3 Clinton and se
atMCIO.S.
LEAVE EXETEHAEOUT
0015 .to,, conneeting in L110311 London
taps Alta tra.'112K.
••
•
TV.4) ClIOWLID'Y
BROOKS, • PAT FLANAGAN,
' Driver. Pronrioto,
•
c 13EDiToN
'W 0 OVAIT
:WILL S.
4,511g0libers, in. returning thanks to tbo
4art:141g nubile for the liberal patronage be:
• gow ed. upon them in tile ps,4-year 151 1110 Cred
itou Wiolon Mills, would. beg to statettivit they
purpobo continuing to work them during .tho
oeietagsitromor. having • leased them for a
' uumbpr of years, Loping 10 give in the future
the s,unc satisfaction 558 10 a past.
C 'di/121111e/ Waving,
Mannfact tiring
ss ki.nTh of TWO 1)'10,991101E4, cte, done on the
oliorto.it notice, and at lowest rates.
T, & JOHNSTON
Pager, of Zenith Mille
F4.ree
rah/SS, allilN'TOR having removed to
k,) the :4- etoly ououpled by Mr. C. South.
oats, tailor,. has eompietely TeJauVatacl the prom-
Ak." and thi:ranged lib, studio so as • to coMmAnd
CAO of the But Liglits in Canada
tg
P1 003111 to exe4,t5f',6 Wurk 111 firstsclass. tir
,,wleiffil.ec,pant patronage, fin begs ft Oa-
Oti..kft ravore of Ow Me. Attention
55 11 dud to Its stock Cri P.$10170', &e,, 'having 01
Waal 2Lylt:bLical,o. Itlea14lingR, micti bob. g
a to mats) IN Mei' at Moderate 5atel,--
11,e,"-ttlet,ec ofOILOIRG Pilol10(044410 when re.
fl• ,,er doz..;5 al,ine 4,1; itnperialS.
VO
InT1-10LB 1\sT a 105
TE. C)1\1111A,
H. TROTT
Fashionable
• Boot ce 'Shoe
zscazcmlet,
WoUltlinform the people that he has conunen.
cod business in the above line next door toBell's
Bilker), and Coefeetionery. He as on hand A
sploneid stook of Loather of all kindo, and from
bis general knowledge of the btuiness, and do-
ing first claps werkhupes to obtain cLicirge ouo-
tom. .• v
Sewed,' work will receive his
special attention.
Repairing done with neatness and GOS
pftt011, and moderate charges.
W. H. TROTT.
Exeter, May 3, 187. 88-mt3.
TO P A. R 1VT. E S
And Stock -Breeders,
M SWEET S.,
tiraduitte Veteri.
of the
uary
•Ontario 1'^f -" . College.
Has removed his office to one door north of c.
Bacrert's harness shop, and nearly opposite John
TMsinith shop. Veterinary Medicines al-
ways on hand, Calls promptly attended to,
Horses examined as to their soundness .
Angus-V.18th. 1873.
Woodham
arness Shop
n'Ell\TIV7
moian..ai•er ut Light and Heavy Hitrness, would
inform the inhabitants of Usborne and Blom hard
that he lies on hand and is prepared to nianufac-
ure
T AND HEAVY HARNF.SS,
and those in want of anything in bis line will
study their own inter°, ts 1)7 giving him a call be-
fore pluton, slug elsewhere. Repairing prompttY
attended to. Carriage trimming done. 75-001.
& S. GIDLEY, EXEU.'ER,
• BINETOSIA1CF,31 & U5$D91RTAKEIRS, take
•this opportunity to inform the inhabitants of this
and surroundingseetions that their New Hearse
4
, .
OM' UNIVIITAKIN 1111P,l'tal6rit as heretofore;
will be found in a very efficient eondition.
Colans-plain and ornamental, also, shrouds,
ote, Funerals furnished cm the shortest notice
ancl most rea.sonable terms.
• N.11, -A. good assortment of FURNITURE al-
ways in stock August 28, '71 52-ly
IVERPOOTS, LONDONDERRY (35,
GLASGOW.
Alia»ine!
Carrying the Canadian and 'United States Mails.
Inc of We first-class, fiTlispowerecl Clydo-built
steamships of the above (Inc, constricted 0550-
eiti,lly for the navigation of tho Atlantic, averag-
ing iron/ 3,050 to 4,200 toes. willleave Quebec every
Saturday for Liverpool and t.ondonclarry, as fol-
lows - •
• Polynesian
• Sean dinevian
• Sarmatian
1:oravien
,.. Aug. 4th
" 2ist
" 28th
Sept,
Prussian
" lith
• Peruvian ... ', ... " ,18th
• Prepaid passage dertideates issued at lowest
rates to persons wishing to bring out friends.
----
GLASGOW DIRECT.
Tho steamships of the Glasgow Line will be
despatched from Quebec as iollo-ws :--
Phconicien, from Quebec, on or about 18th. Aug'
Waldeasian " " 20th .dug
Corinthian o 2z Sept
Canadian • " " ' Oth Sept
Matitoban ' " ' " 22rd Sept
,
For tickets and every information apply to
• 301fIN 'WHITE & -SONS,
Times oface, Exeter.
75). SPRING (75
Gents Furnish'ng
'AND GIIIIMIAL
UvtfltEstiblishmoni,
assortment of
CA1M1AN8 SCOTCH & ENGLISH
En
BLACK BROADCLOTHS &
DOESKINS, ETC.,
which for
ST7LE an) ovAtrm6*J
WUJIr J3B .HARD TO BEAT
TAI f.A 0 11 :\l" G
1)eparbrnont teplete with every itioaerit Jut-
• provemeitt, 55504Surnislied monthly with
34414z -now 'VLAZZIS
oJ
American Styles -and Oats,
Az work gamatoot, :ana oar, in taxa most
fashionable style.
Call early and toe one 0f the choicest and best
selected etockrs m 1OW11, Alut offering at low
prices for cash. 0, SOUTHOOT`r.
roT to TO TRESPASSERti ON
T3515 0A1.1.A.M c0,111PANVii LINDS,
/hereby ettestort all eeesoes 1550 (71141 etttitv.
removing 'timber from the lands of the Canada
Conipany, 117 I ttm autnorltect tO prosecute all
trespassers with tjuy UtMost rigor Of •thiY
' ABACI:NI/UN*,
ThUber A gem t
ter,Ittay tat!,
ITAINDUSEN 4
'
CO.
'rz-nnr ocustantix an band the La est am
• Boot Assortment of
PURE DRUGS,
aRmiviicA.Ls.
DYE -STUFFS
Patent Medicines!
•II0BS1 & CATTLE
'MEDICINES,
Tooth,' Nail, Hair, and Moth
41
air .SRES
PE1UPUMER1'7TOILET-80APS
&c.
STATIONERY
School J3oolis, Toy I3ooks,
BlankoBooks, Megazines,
A lbumsFanoy Goods
Pencil Slates, Lead Pen -
elle, &e.
0 OLE Agoal IL... LAZARUS, MORB1S,
t.) CO.'s 1. c cc:rated Peifected Spectacles an
Eye -glass( r.
• Prescriptions and Recipes quickly and accu-
rately dispensed. Remember the Place -Di -
redly opposite the "Central hotel," /11ain-s1.,
Exetec. C. VANDUSEN tt Co.
Exeter, January 7, 1874. • 71 -yl.
LOOK!
TO YOUB OWN
INTEREST
AND PURCHASE THE
BEST oR,GAN
057 Ty»
CONTINENT.
ICS,TIEP, LER AND 'WJLLlE Qt
,
Two brown needs with -t05.8ing 01
Red lips shu tting over pearls,
19,441:01g .bwxialiotke, (s,?:1404 wtwo,ot r.;ii,tohs ld,,Q 0
Ltii0To auSi w
10 aiiitzeGrot6by.
neyes.
'They wore standing Where a brook'
Bonding like IL 0301/11130;f} OtOcgtil
seesetta as savor, and tidelc rattics
04 g1'eenswi11ow,fri1ige554the banks;
Ralf in thought and half ii pia)r-
Iioe and Willi% Grey.
They had shooks like oherrtuti re 1;
Tife was taller--'auVit 11 held;
She, wiS11 arms lilte wreathsoof snow,
Swung a basket to and fro
As She loitered, 111115 50 pear,
°bet belies with 'wane Grey.
" Pretty Retie," Williesaid--
:1".11r4otulgilar°the"4b;o';;Iinn'eall*s0 jf'UhiAs Leekei
" ,BleyS are strong anti airls are I70s4.
,
And ra carry, so 1 1011,
Natio's basket up the"hill."
Natio answezed with a
You shall carry only half
And then teasing back her eurls,
"Boys are -weak as well as girls,"
3)0 you think that Natio guessed.
Half the vie= she expresSed ?
It is strange that Witlio amid-,
While again the dash axed
Crossed the brownness +Vials
"ria strong 15110 .7(30 are weals;
Life is but a slippery atuep,
:Lung NI Ith kalkItiOM B 50155 11.1111 steep;
'Will you trust ine 1s51 dear ?
Walk beside me Withent fear ?
May I carry, if 1 will,
All your burdens up the 15511 1"
Aucl she answere,1 with a laugh,
" No, but you may carry half."
Close beside the little brook,
Bending like a sheltherd's crook,
'Washing with its silver hands
Lato and early at the sands,
Is a cottage, whore toglay
Natie lives with Willie Grey.
10 15 pourch she sits audio I/
Swinging a basket to and
Not the (31551(59 011.) cold /6111'
That she swung in,' a ugmle ;
This felon g, and r"P' Wida'
Ana has -21)444 at slie side.
1110 ftiptiLI• .
`Spnr9d,
vxxxxbil-off. •
411)43 box had aroppa
held theorolime
' ' 'full of ft
ree that the
a itts a pansy, and
aid her father,
'IMO'S' exit,
Jane-- that 01.11"40 y
15
after
e inan--is working, 1 fear. But
lYisiianas, will bailie daughter shall war',
4tAro were r7O'bud that bofore I.eaohes 11011
twentieth birthday. l'..swear this, by
the soul ,
1115
si en of the first Oarlyeni"
granted' 4,1 Then 1 e ){4ieed. „ Pd,o 1118,55ed t, latteie
or tQP ranfilensandlt imat that expres-
4411. r
arnake
555 tho sunk
a sioll •,i); Softel4is &se
`1\l'Isers„
f
1. a Ves' e
the, thoughtlev nr
flectiog, the 'ill-itifo)ined, WSUtwitaurso
ft nation'a war s?ower tby.:the,...uotfiklor,
zaon, tbo send
that: measure even.,..ttaiy oxigbt'
othultod tIie oqual/:4"flngbi041 Tlso,
tailz;!„.1;allYheatiQj :11:ait'8,1ji.,:r1f4064.t.i.1:::,14, tiffIkr.`11
factor, now itti i111/$.11:i
ObOfitlkir t.4.0t tlAe last, eoiii1:404x1lifollb
6di'dotillitl: 111)04%1Nlvyft,,t;\;t:tfi,itillk.0.0 ),ly :oa,tiglie,ohl;t!11,417,0104
of
te'belgiiiii (1400104; lihigland: WOtild
tiliblyltold. the last'ilellar,'41.4a.h:
amanyta sPare after' '
tuthea .422.41or'e1)q hantin
191.1
WEGOING.
on.
CARLYON'6 CURSE.
• BY oAPT CBABLES IlOWATtD.
I propose to relate the st..,yy of 04 -
ism' House from 'data scrupulous
collected fifteen years ago.' .
Evetybudy within thirty nnlet' r
Manchester knew old.. Elisha• Caisliol'
...„,
He outlived. three tentiratioirqr
erosIld tip.etenjitz„ tlitile' of a estirtu
TOAltronk in body, iits d', . n',
eservation 'of ,pltysiettl, aud, inentg
-P, te",, ntratirre Tail-rdiTir-ii.'n,
-vrennytosnenteee-- a 1,-1..,Tv-11,-Cu'a-Walw.A.,-. -.1....' .4,4 .
'aneous with Ahasuers, the Wandering
Jew. His eyes were bright on the day
of his death, and he wrote a firm, bold
hand within ao hoer of his demise.
The lamp of his y., . Nvas extinguish-
ed in the midst of westerns. The sun
should have bathed in glory his dying
couch, for he had lived au honorable
life's...end there were many who shudder
ed when they heard that the eentene-
rian was dying in the wilaest storm
that ever swept over Manchester.
Three generatious of descondauts
stood about, his death -bed ---his son, an
old man. whose hair was white as snow,
his grandson, who had. lived for half a
century, and a daughter of tho latter,
a beatitiful girl aged nineteen. During
his longlife,Eliella tearlyon had aectun-
dieted great riches, and it was estimet-
el that his estate would aggregate sev-
eral millions.
'Wilfred Carlyon, the baler of the
daughter referred to above, was a man
of the world -bold, schonaing, asloser
of wines, hereof', and song. lie doted
on the beauty of his only child, Vora,
and vowed that she should become the
wife of some titled lovor who 'ma not,
as e -et, put hie foot on American soil.
His grandfather for many years had
witnessed his round of dissiration, and
tile repeated sighs and groans that fell
from his lips, told that tne watching,
pained Lan. More than one night,
during the last year of Ids life, the
conteuariau wandered from his room
to the park attached to the estate.
''There goes granfather again,'' Wil-
Carlyou had said a liundrektinies.,"1
wonder what.takes him to theipark so
.often ? The deer will Jail him some
niglet in their rest time." .
But he never warned the old man.
He stood between him. and a million iii
money and lands.
Four months after Elistia Carlyon's
death -excuse these dry facts, reader
--a farioas thunder stortn burst over
Manchester. The strong gala that ao,
compatied it tiprooted giant trees, and
almost blew the river from its, I was
going to Say, pre-adamite bed,
The mornmeaftet the Storm, Wil-
fred Carlyon wont, forth, to view • the
damage done to the ostabe---Carlyon
House, as it was milled. Ile farina a
number of deer dead on the drenched
ground,and the giant elm that had stood
for centuries la3r proStrate.
Beneath the umbrageous boughs of
this tre,e his 'grand -father had. learned.
the iunocent prattle of his childhood.
and the grandson, for his sake, had
venerated it. o
I curse this teen," he said. "It
hati defaced one of the landmatke of
my life. liereaftelf i Will -Hal What
is this r
Hie eye had fallen upon a sinall tin
box, svincli had apparently been hurled
from the tree in its rending. Tbo na
had been soldered tioib, end lat saw
his grandsire's initials traeed op. the
surface. .,
1,
"This id vim or his eeeentri ties,"
lie said, examinii. g the box, "Per aps it
will explain his frequent noetarna visits
to the park. I will see,"
1I155 etiong bladed knife seen poned
the strange box, s.nd a *ea of %roll
went, sttelt as the'oenteettidesi h d used
for ninety yeare, hist his eyes. This
he SOOli drew forth and began, o
()Ia''*ficitAcs Writing,. 11.8 T. &illAll66 ,e
0 murmured; hilt it moment later
0
sEr, THE
er onga
AND ALSO MB
Clough & Warren
AT
Senior's Photograph Gallery
• MAIN STREET, EXETER
'FRANZ WHITLOCE,
SOLE AGENT
NOTICE!• NOTICE !
GEORGE KEMP
Begs to inform nis kind friends and supporters
that he has taken part of tho store lately occupied
by Thompson,
Next Store South of Treble's
and tales this opportunity of thanking them foi
past favors.
FirstaOlass,• 'rob acoo
• Smoking ancl Chewing', Fino Cut,
&c.
i. -a" Also a great variety of PIPES always on
hand.
Exeter, Aug 0, 1875%
4
GEORGE KEMP.
if_TOUSE AND LOT l'OR SALE. -
ALL A. good one -storey frame house, cootaining
5 rooms; also acre of land, adjoining the Market
• (Dare, Exeter. On the lot is an exoellent well of
ater. Por partichlars atpply to IsA.A0 HAW -
DEN, Exeter. • 774f.
FOR SALE
--
A desirable frame cottage for sale on Huron
street, Exeter, accompnying the cottage is a
frame carpenter shop, ancl stable, o or
four one-fifth Imre lots, to suit I. u chaeer. The
cottage contains ten 1:001T18, ood well on
the premises. For 'further paatieulars apply to
TJ. S. ,TOItYNn the premises ; or to J. V.
CROCKER, Prop., Seaforth P.
Exater, July 14th, 1875. 98-14.
•
___Atee;:ite 64 ageeal
---Vatet;ea6E
•.`,,Z7Ze•en,a4.€6*
;,:_qiive:Itys &la ".r.-efiedon eat
AZ7e))4eif.:"
eneatt:*„,
O
esieleee iterasze‘ 0
•agei/c44t414. ecto 4640ieti
6,c ,...4a4)04.4ed
eiAtteteaf etaeiried
„
ate e .elfAtet /et ecot4
Set 40904)05
rtotettakr et net
,-oeyAd.
a..01,W000nit.
ereeepe€4,
•f Of CV
4,1 c
455,5
tAi. 5'00 ° 6004%
11
il
and the sun stealing into the apart -
And then her voieo became silent,
meat, foundsher asleep.
Wilfred. Carly on ref mated from. the park.
looking pale and haggard. He tried to
aestune his -wonted giviety of manner,
imb failed. `Vora said nothing about
her -visit to the enclosure, junta no
iloolit be was glad to believe that she
knew nothing of the secret ot the tin
1)°Ixt his chamber that night. Wilfred
Carlyon melted the box on the coals of
the grate, and buried the parchment.
Ile wasefilone, fol. his wife had beed
?delta ten years. and there was no one
in that wing, of the mansion to -watch
.111,dtrdevi5itliuTbbaftlbieintile enrse.ef.
t'41
the a0111 of the first Carlynn, my hild
marry before lier twentieth birth-
day and as feirthat portion of the
cnrso that e-e'ete;es to me, I will outlite
it. Poor oleaSsAnan I did not drs,yen
Stoat he had much demonism in '45:8
1301514!"
That a handsome young' man
whose voice and =inners ber'es'solre of a
foreign clime stepped froiwgie train in
Manchester, and inquired the way
to CarIyou House.
• Some people will tell you to -day that
the spirit of Elisha Carlyon was upon
him. ,
After learning the way, he put up at
a Manchester hotel. but did not retire
till twelve o'clock. Ile spent much of
his time in writitig letters. In one of
these, which he stebsequdntly addressed
to "General Montgerald, Princess'
Strand, London," he said, "The Wild-
eet reports sank into insiginficanee be-
fore the truth, She is his only child,
and he is worth- a million. Father and
daughter are ambitious. ' I will catch
the golden bird."
The following dayhe reached Carlyon
House, and announced himself as Ar-
norlcl Montgerald, the sole heir to
Montgerald Manor, one of the richest
estates in England. 1 -lis father was a
baronet, old an infirm, and he would
shortly succeed to his title and his
wealth. He beought letters of intro-
duction to Wilfred. Carlyoti from sever-
al well-known Landoll hankers, and
the freedom ef Carlyon lIouse was ex-
tended him.
He pleased Vora Carlyon and she
did not try to avoid him. while he, re-
mained in the house ; Fit site was bare -
fol nob to praise him before her father,
for the corse of the centeuarien neyer
lett her mind.
"I know why lie carnet hither," she
said ono day to the metronly house-
keeper, to whom she confided many of
her soerat,x. "He seeks my hand;
but 1 03aisll siolelvitittri.igasivOorair,t, to ohri6m. no s
the only gootleman whose appearance I
ever liked, Your father Winks a great
deal of him."• •
'Yes hilt I cannot' give him. my
hand. I will never marry.
The last sentence, spoken with a
man's determination, eansed the house-
keeper to stare into Vora Carlyon'e
face.
"What do you mean, ?"
"Do riot press the question. I
cannot tell you."
Against her will the lioasekeeper was
silent.
Vot a long time eilence reigned over
the two, and it heolten by a call
for the worn= front a distant, part- of
the 11 MISO,
She hntried away and confronted
'Wilfred Carlyon in his elaborate
li-
brary . There was fear and anxiety on
hit face, end tile tone ()this voice start.
tea the housekeeper,
"Well, true, what (lid you say V"
"She has dde1arc,1 emphatically that
she would never marry,
A palene8s. came to Carlyon's face,
"Did she assign. any reasons for sueli
a, declaration r
" She said she could not tell ine,"
"Could not Aha I tho girls Att) get-
ting mysterions," said Carlson. "'That
will do, Imo ;" and the honsolteeper
wal,stiostiglittsyst7d;h0 win tioor mitrty,
,001,44,90:;t : 18551! faoo.ior" th
1Yon'i ,11,akr,
viheit Tiler eyes :.feliJ;11).0.1i • WitrxeCt: Qitr-
Tt is tathor ! ' :Owe et'
:Ifeoartv13pLortl?;,;,e, "0 GIO1.1
\ motionless, Wilfred ns. Jict,
ow\ the. -:iiPlinter:.eovered. -geSintid„ •at.
hislangliter noticed -the PaPar.:10012:-L
io ,,,T1104 eyos,w411er-,,
ed to ,the box, 151111 'she seemed
it portion Of 'fild BlYSteiy. kit041118)S
he hand atole towards her father's face',
when a:Werd.on the paper 151110850(1 her
atiention lvtis blie word '!accused,"
Theo Vora Carlyon, without
ng her father, read the writing on the
parchtnent.
Ono, eurielt -welled from her throat as
she finishetl, and with hands pressed
ageditst her wildly throbbing lemples
she iltd from the park, lea,ving her
fa er s' on the ground. 8118 did not
pause omit she reached her boucleir,
whete she locked the door and throw
,aerself on a CO11(111,
"Oh, Heaven 1 was I born under the
wings of a terrible curse ?" she cried,
in a voice of despair. ",111y poor fath-
er what• a life he must henceforth
livo 1"
deer
E., `I411,
j140fr?"L---tledher treinble4
-'--"Gilbert, My heart., 'breaking,: '1
•
ou
, stained, s,biit 4;44,4., th
4411411o;
" ,are ko„
ho oljOet;', 'L.!‘0011'e, awaken, aO,t1 let us
aboht,,the
SW"Akefi,.' she said,
1.40:v0 0914.4r fiem-dreitinland an at
tixto mair$,
,
Ire ,,Witet.oilent,. and'aii,e turned 1.1,9k
4,4gigkyLtain,($2*-41i4j1f
e,NesiosaeeelileavetatitettveSai„.t,'whP,trs
1114 ,
4
"SoinethIng dreadful • :hilt li,.011 e.
explain.
"Vors,---"
"Do not seelc, explalatioi,1:,"
interrupted. "Tinie may expliii
"Time will be lost till eterni..
gins." '
"True, Gilbert."
"Vora, this a,luioet'drites inironaid
but I begin to see light. TIseenian
who calls himself Arnold ItIontgereilde".
"He has not influenced my decisien.
He could TIOVOr du it 1" --
Gilbert Haven was puzzlec ,
"Vora," he sa,ill. at length, os you
Want to retuen the 'ring e"
She did nos speak, but extended a;
little hand on tShicli. glittered a gold
ring. ' Lee'
(Co luctecM em( week).
ENGLAND'S PRESENT
:
NO PERCEPTIBLE .DECAY•IN THE
OLD BRITISH EMPIRE. !
THE mramsn PROP AIM NOW axonal?,
SI:BONGED., WISER AND MORE' PBOGILBS-
SIVE THAN' EVER -THE CITIES .05 LON-
DON AND PARIS COMPARED.
K-ta.,---4.1y1WWW150-$111Crr
Britain. does' not Maintain a ;.standing•
army, She does not need ono. Her
situation is. very much like ours. We
.have our Indians to look after, and she
has hers. We keep force enough afoot
to overawe Red Cloud and his fellows.
She has enough to 'keep the Mug of
Burmah on his good behavior. Her
army, unlike those of the continental
powers, is mainly an active one --that
is it is always employed on some use-
ful. prapose, although not actually in
the field. The 40,000 men at home
are a user° reserve for the forces in In-
dia and the colonies and an auxiliary
poi* force for, homo duty. On the
other hand, with a less population than
the British Isleseshas an available
force of 400,000 men. Germauy,
France, Russia and. Austria have more
than a million each. Go where you
will, the armed cap atUthe drill master
cenfron't you. The bugle call of France
diee away, on your or at Menton° ere
the trumpet of Italy salutes you af,
Ventimiglia. Even little Hotland must
'needs put her best foot in the mire of
military expenditure. I was at the
Hague the other (lay. The beautiful
park in front of my hotel was twice a
day the muster ground for troops learn -
leg the manual of arm s I drove out
to Schieveningen, a pretty watering
place two or three miles distant, and
here tho only dry, ground in the neigh-
borhoodwas covered with soldiers en-
gaged in a mock skirmish. The ex-
pense of these vast armaments, if not
sapping the strength of the continental
conutries, is clearly preventingt he rap-
id accumoIation of melba among them,
which is so marked a feature of the civ-
ization of England.
Nobody 01141 111iX. 111110h with the En-
glish people on their own sell withont
feeling that they are the same people
in feeling and tenacity that fought un-
der Oro ID well, 'Marlborough, Wellington
and Nelson. It is my belief that En-
glano, in any great emergency, can
raise more teoope in proportion to Eer
population than any continental power,
and maintain them. longer. No coun-
try in the world would submiu more
cheerfully to a draft if one were teeded,
became no other people hold the law-
making and the law.executing power SO
SOCUrely thtir hands.
Though not republic:an in form, En-
gland is more republican in fact than
the 'United Statue for the reason that
148 executive and legisletive powers ore
mose easily, surely and speedily reaehed
by publio opinion. The people are not
trammelled by any four years' term of
office, or airy ether term of office. The
Exteutive is 1106 unduly fenced against
pnblic opinion at ono time, nor unduly
exposed to it eb ftnaildr. IT/Uhl
111 pOWOr OA long „as he gives satisfae.
two, end . no longer. It may be four
years, or' fourteen, or it may be only 55
fortnight, As no draft for troops could
be triad() in thigland Withottt the Owl,
cuarenee of the plUTIN n, &al once
ordered would be submitted to in the
same spirit as among Otieselvea,
110SoUitorlS.,
I have remarked that the resourses
of Great .Britain, are enormously greater
now th'in, they WOM during the struggle
with Napoleon, , As fal, as faindon
needs any other Puropoon capital in
population, Wealth; and eornmeteiat
portanoe, so far does the 'ability of En.
gland to etlittlinle a War 01166 begun
,P54410::4631
Opey:
A to 13-
3)1 r. E.41to
, „me OW12.1-1
dire
eispital 11,53i iitllIs1-
OStTh
etimistioniee-.
4:--oiv§y1'4,10
•
-41.44144,i So
rich
.03u1,,1xt-;,f- it4q1u0ee4l0ionra' r:tkoit.1 put .t
ohiWn 1a61h1cr1mt 4t4heePt4rIpyeleglereheltindigehteir,.p,pimspeets, pm001faVt?Ontt2400O64ArOcTif440g1OPti: :4eres
aisssts ot;gib 409110'o4:9-ftOniti)ttoi‘t ogvicleCT1
yporttotht
4911$)i4sattlpOintfalani;
-
.iii,:enipipe,yisihre,' to,44§: ..2)514,',,(1,:4,el11, ,Ine.Opolist,I.' Whe did; hal;smi)- 0. $(1,q4):
.a,,i,,r, tr49:_v,,ti.:);:loc,41,0..tivh.,60.`ilv eV:: o't.t.4,v143,e());. a tftitti tliiit!,', ti,litili.easiit.i.11,01, ,:ofsifieitta,gfitvear,i244.8,ft:triim4a, i4otitto9::2:',#,,,,ili:-eryeoget;ret
geeSekve'ghtirc ealt `willein:inerktrq,;, ?i,hg,' the ,40,y,P'oxj„e4,, -ivbeif.:;', .it.iiit 'other -'
years Age tlegrep.nitepS: on. lits .ferueS.,:.This .4'604.'114d.
4644t6t1114g;; i14. 14.1°4 ll QA)11.94• sP '?)3(tilia.'' ro41,-tegli.''siftIrlis' 4'. ffr):PgAins Y,'tAlil'ila.e,':111)1*. 6ftIlliEinetO°P:,41; l'I....tr'.'s,''
'4° 611eL'Ortitiiireet eSottsos 'L. srerteer- '6' 44Irtlqquirt)ct:'1iF,',..41470,14:, As :46 40Tullt:.,
,' P14'0,11',, anaa# OP ole.j.;)".to;:.00 blfshldss
n-ppeetitation.'..11htting',50, 'a 'Woriting. ,
Pf.4O13,40O, 'Avb41.11::',1G-V6Q1'4*
*here thq;*Ii6le tin*..,Ortheantigistrate
Parent rpt axoig,„dbmitet
Provided the 1110GDS
ocludafibix;'' , „Ingiell,lly sees. to ,11,11(.1 Wages is regnired to carry it oir
le,Lehea. these "116a.11e are empi6yed, successfully, it is 'ide to oay that the -
here she as overtaken and passed tenant I a rIPPres8ecti t e
OhrCateo. 'asked how compulsory 1.11.aatodklovrityle.rItisisiiltitkbelesatyoi,ibner tohpAittnet:iese:rebyli
who wants to 'manufacture paperla
the water power company—that •
that he hi incapalde of making his own
bargain. :Latta le worth, for purp, OSeS
Of culti.vation, in England, a eertahl
stun per (tore, according to location,
fertility, &c.. and that sum will be
paid for it, whether it be owned by .A.;
B, or C, and 'Whether it be ow t ed in ten-
,
acre tracts or tlIonerturl-acre tracte.
The accumulittion of capital in En- .
gland has b eisssoo g4riegatti,y ast;tdsetmlie. '
ownership of laucl
ed, that if all the land were
ARBITILARIL'Y orerrinn
among the heade of families pro -rat
to -morrow, the process:of dispossessing
the mass and coocer.tratingstbeir hold-
ings in the hands of few 'would be-
ngititlt ut5hael adreatiYona.fr°T.' hnetlitliehbYwollurhell:hfectegtatslY.
08.
P;Pittttl'''704 Rio 416.4a acre.: is
„ nakii „ 0414 hikes ,:bina'„wht)
stand betweek pool: 'man'. end any
"isatnetebip.oriiiikii;e$t !the soil. Wheu
fariniogLitasroadecl poiitt Whore a
easn'taleef to.475 per acre hams- •
"chinery, buillingS, cattle, :manures,
edueation4,works in Illinois, and wit;
obliged to say that WO had not gone so
far_tid that.
condition` 6£: tlie working clauses
iinglatiii ie ntuele hatter than I had
supposed, and was assured by persons
,Avkloae espeeial duty it is to look after
.the- poor that pauperism has been
niuoix diminished thei past ten years,
and the' contfort of the laborers very
Much Culittuied. There is still wide
room. for insprovemeut, brit the chari-
table and reformatory ifforts of the
large titles are noble bothin magnitude
ased spirit, and ibis most gratifying to
,perceive that tliey are steadily gaining
L13023 tha area held by eteit 1153-, diSease,
drunleenness• and Vi0e. Thera is less
envy of the poor toward the rich in
England than in the United States, aDd
Ceunnti lias Smaller faotheld ther,e
thanswith us.
The great inereaso 01 17e551511 En- to buy ,ont, the poor) After roaohinr
gland has nob been aecompanied by in- this eenalusien thrOugh mY own'obse
creased ex enditere, biit rather the con- littOmas,1-1. asked sa.nia of thaee Englis
, , ,
ee 061.110C 1 . s
'trucl . 5,1418 tbe planless elf 'furniture
tIna the modesty 04 5-11.0 town houses of
wealthy and titled persons in London.
A. rich Englishman is much more likely
to spend money extravagantly on his
bit of garden than en his domicil or on
the aatire of his -wife and daughters. 'A
lady who OWDS a hundred aeres of land
just outside of London complained to a
friend of mine that she could not com-
pete with the American ladies she com-
monly met on the Continent it person-
al expenditure! In short, public opin-
ion in England not ouly deos not re-
quite display and extrava ;miceon the
part.of the rich, but essentially frowns
upon it.
• THE FORCES or SOCIETY
run in the direction of economy. Lon,
don, with her 4,000,000 inhabitants,
her overrunning wealth, her commerce
sprawling over miles end miles of the
Thames and artificial clocks on either
eide of it, has a squatty look as compar-
ed with American cities. It is • only
lately that high buildings with showy
fronts have come into yogue, and now
only for the purposes of railway station -
hotels and exceptional uses. Utility,
oonvenience, economy, shent-per-shent,
have been the prime considerations in
her private areiritecture ; • show /'as
counted for little or nothing.' 13e1gravia
looks like a lot of respectable boarding -
h011803. • But that -which really distin-
guishes London above all other cities is
her great mulatade of parks and squares.
Most Americans have a false idea of
She relative attractiveness of London
mild Paris. They hate devoured no
end of flamboyant description of the
Champs Elysees and the Bois de'Boul-
ogne, but they know :the parks of Lon
don only by name, and only two or
three of them at most. Hence they
rash off to the Continent, tiro them-
selves- with sight-seeing, anli straggle
home without seeing the one city which
•outvies Paris in the n3aguificence 'and
abundance of its •parks tend public
,rounds more than Patio outvies the
land, supPoeing 'such a etes
practieable. • The reply a as invariat
In the aflirtna,tive. What le wanted:its
the way of land reform in England is
mainly a change in the laws of natio-
geniture, entail and trusts, and a suit-
able admiuistration of the commons.
and waste lands, of which there is stiW
a very large aMornt scattered all over
-
the kingdom. Surely no division of
land is wantel which would result
merely in substituting one set of large
proprietors for another set -Baron
Rothschild, for instance, in the place ot
the Marquis of Ripon. Witatever may
have been the evils of land 51e15055043'
in the past, they have been swallowed
up in the generat amelirration of the
times, and " 1151311 monopoly' is 110 lone
ger a SOUrCO of danger or decay. Un -
tier this heall it should be remarked
that
AORIODETURP.
has improved greatly in England of
late years, and has reached a stage of
perfection far beyond anything 1 have
ever seen in the United States. • The
only place on the Continent where ITO
have seen an equal luxiniance of crops
is in Belgium. English cultivators,
however, contend that egricolture has
not yet reached its maximtun of effi-
ciency among them, and they are inter-
rogating the earth with new experi-
ments all the time. If Illinois wants
to train a really capable corps of in-
structors for her agricultural College,
would advise sending them to England
for a year or two. In this way we
might not only learn something abont
farming, but also get rid of 901110 Of thO
self-oonceit for which our ag.ricultural
professors'are justly celebrated.
There it still much to be seid about
the union of Church and State, the co-
lonial system, the cash question, and
Catholic question, as possible germs of
decay ; but this letter. has 'been
drawn out to unreasonable length al-
ready. I have written enough to show,
I think, that the British empire is not
in a state of decline. xonat want,
a_
A LIVELY MAN 1N A BABVEST rTELD.
-William Pratt, about twenty-one
years of age, of Linden, Michigan, the,
Detroit Free Press says, offered to bet
twenty-five dollars that he coeld out
with a eomuinn,sized cradle, between
sunrise and sunset eight acres of wheat
that, would average twenty bushels to
an acre. Vie ON/. VMS accepted, and
two good judge; wee ellosen to select
the field, and -Pratt started in on
day's work, 'Wednesday, July ,i2,8thy at
a quartet to fire a,m. He had necom-
plished hie work at eiehteen miontes
ing in the meantime. Ile then want:ea
past five pan, taking an hour's nOon-
to bet $60 that he could out mother
Aere before his time would he up. It.
WO net taken, Two men followed him
op in his 4.03,, work, Nuking arid bind-
ing, hot found thetneeltee behind When
it111(), vas th
tiaboutyctlgbe* 500 A01(1rowd °
1 h(yi
financier, " is a mere bagatelle, which
householders pay more than that oh
their ftirni titre alone, The indirect
imposed for local purposes in London
was por anntlin, Many Chicago
learning that the tetal adnount of taxes
tames ate correspondingly light. Cite,
55 dosion attic:lee, nettle is free, atil
ttilileGsiemtirtelbfit'llieTtlegVi601561)Iiri°E0blitt,ti baii,16,16:613130.01111etIcIrloetalAttiN8:11g:01;::
a two.sCoroy brick house thereon, in
loet by 110 016g8 ftntl, 4tilttilitted II 1)0 fete he whet his teethe. 1-t6 aid Dot
f onig &Aloe arc imposed onl/ on ten or
54111011105 sss 113. be
paid by him on a lot of 70 feet front end
8j1. vn enTgTrvgieji)yAel7hessii.igient;toinfeenitta'yist.ie°nin'sl health and
nation and comparison that the " rates"
ing. " Our taxation," says a Landon
the -vicinity of Tuttle' Park, London,
Church rates are included this show -
borne by the people. dna by exami.
5130 trivial
fourth whet they are in. Chieraeo. The
mid diminishing
which correspond to our etiete and mu -
nobody, feels," So ,t thought, upon.
theism!. taxes are not more than OM-
BATID TAIATtON
1h1'()ngh,, 555141 the
1101(1, tOtilied ti4 smooth tts if mit by it
Machine.
betinties.,
I have reinarked that the Govern -
111.0554 of tngland 45 'MOM topabliesti 111
filet (Morelli not in ftwm) than
ema heve, given My reatonifl for toying
0. I dit het that it, wits loot°
tratisoend 51314 3)1 any eentitantal pett. d
have bottght my first but,'
th[o tottarit of's cobbteV whelk hp set
einectatio., eet/1114 it, country bt181Tlegg tOt 111000t,