HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1890-6-27, Page 4ram BR ussELs POS'I
;NNE 27, .189
New Advertisements.
Looal—B. Gerry.
Local --Geo. Gooa.
Shorthend—Mary Calder.
Notioe—E. R. C, Clarkson,
Looel—W. Nightingale re Co.
Paris Green -0, A, Deeciman,
Trecal—Listowel Tool A1300Cn.
^
1;)c Mrius5ri$ 'post.
FRIDAY, JUNE 27,1890.
QUEBIE VICTORIA MIA completed her 7114
year. Only three of her predeoessore
have exceeded her in age, viz., her uncle,
William IV., who was 71 years and 10
months when he died; George II., who
lacked only 5 days of 77 years, and her
grandfather, who was ia his 82nd year
wbeu he died, On June 20 she comple.
ted her 53rd year, as Queen and in this
length of reign she has been exceeded by
only two, viz., Henry III., who reigned 50
years, and. George III., who reigned ese
years.
"Prineipel Grant's amendment to
strike out the deliverance altogether woe
seconded by Mr, Herrldge and teat by 27
to 148.
"Mr. Iffaedonnel moved to Mike out
the words "Contrary to the teachings of ,
Soripture,"—lot by 42 to 150,"
Washington Letter.
(From our neanier Oorrespoudente
W4131111NOTOE. Ines 20. TO.
It is not often that there is a quorum
in the House and 'Serrate these hot dye.
The press gallery is about the only plane
in the building 01180 10 uenally cool, and
the average member cannot afford to
spend much time there if he bas any
morets he does not want to disclose, lie
would as soon think of entering a lion's
oage as to spend half as hour among the
newspaper men where they are ell as-
sembed together. While a, cool south
wind blows through the press gallery the
industrious correspondent team; over his
desk and watches the statesmen swelter.
It is 11 hut place ou the floor of the time.
The Lumbers present a mull less digni-
fied and impressive body when the ther-
mometer is up into the nineties. .A
statesman always looks better in his
winter attitude and attire. On a cool
d he ens in a more upright position
1,7
and looks brisker ; his step is Mort and
FOR AND AGAINST PROHIBITION. 1)5 10 demonstrative and vigorous in his
speech and gestures. During the past
THE increasiogaml united efforts made week one in the galleries lute looked down
by the various churches in the Dominion up01)011 a lot of vacant seats anti a few
for the abolitiou of the liquor traffic hag to sit upright and almear dignified with
been a matter of congratulation to every perspiration running from their Intel.
person interested in the cause of Probi• . leveed. brows and collars collapsing slow.
bitten, but the actiou oi certain members ' Is'. In order to make the air of the
use as pleasing as possible EL quantity
of oue of the Synods and the Presbyter- of ice is placed in the channel through
San Assembly would indicate that there which the air pnsses on the way from the
fens to the Honse. Beside this Mr. Reid
has taken every step possible to make the
chamber more endurable, but with all
this the hall of the House is a hot place,
and there is 110 hotter place in Washing-
ton, not directly in the sun, than the
Senate ohatnber. In the lobbies of the
House and Senate are hung weather
bureau maps, which show the tempera.
tura wind, rain and general condition of
the weather in all parts of tho country.
On a very hot day half a dozen or more
statesmen may often be seen standing in
front of these maps looking to see what
the temperature ia at their homes, while
they mop their brows with a handkerchief
in one hand and languidly wave a fan in
the other. It gives a, man a well defined
ease of homasickness to observe that it
is, as the num shows, about ten degrees
cooler at the place where he lives than it
is in Washington, and at mice there is a
man who is ready to predict an early ad -
weary looking men making a vein effort
are still men in the pulpits of our land
who are averse, to say nothing stronger,
to the triumphant waroh of Temperance,
and who will even undertake to publicity
express their opinions in the face of the
strongest resolutions of every Christian
body in Ontario. It is a matter of regret
that such leading divines as Dr. Grant
and Mr, efacdonnell should be among the
first to place obstacles in the way of the
Prohibitionists of this conntry. The ex.
pression of disapproval, as evidenced by
the vote, should be calmly considered
by these gentlemen before they again
undertake to champion the fres use of
intoxicants. To substantiate what we
have said we subjoin the report of the
Assembly on the gustiest as given in
the daily press : journment.
'The amendment moved in the Pre's. ,The passage of a free coinage silver
byterian Assembly, at Ottawa, by rev. ?ill by the Senate practically insures
D. J. Macdonnell to the report 'of the its adoption by the House and places the
administration 10 1011 etnbarrassing pore.
tem. If the bill comes to him or IiiS
approval, the President is sure to make
powerful enemies whatever he does. A.
voto is expected of him, but there is a
faction to be offended whatever ahem°,
tive he selects. From the administration
pane of view a grave error in tactics
was made by the Senate finance com-
mittee. The committee took the atti-
tude of favoring the conservative policy
of the administration and in their
amendments to the House bill carried
out that idea. But they plated their
friends, it is claimed, in the power of the
silver men when they reported the House
bill and made that the basis of their
tuition by amending it. The Senate was
already considering a silver bill when the
Renee bill earns into the hands of the
finance committee. Had the House bill
not been reported and had the Senate
amended its own bill so as to provide for
free coinnee, the matter would have
gone to the House as a Senate pro-
position and would have been referred to
a committee which might have held it
indefinitely or killed it in the dark
closet of the committee room. But as
the finance committee reported the House
bill with amendments, thus transferring
the consideration from the Senate bill to
that of the House, the bill goes baok to
the House as a House bill with Senate
amendments, end as such the question
001131113 up at mice upon concurrence in
the Senate amendments. Thus the bill
has a clear right of way and cannot be
defeated or delayed except by a direct
vote.
In a recent letter to the House com-
mittee on poetoffioes depreoiating the
postal telegraph hill. President Green,
of the Western Union Telegraph Com-
pany, argues that if the Government
must have a telegraph as part of the
postal service it should take the existing
properties rather than create a new
company, backed by the power and sup.
port of the Government, to damage and
destroy the old ones. The answer from
certain interested quarters will be that
the Western Union is a gigantic monopo-
ly that should have no mercy at the
hands of the Government, but Doctor
Green bolds that 10 10 the function of the
Government to protect property, and not
to destroy it. The promoters of the
postal telegraph scheme, however, ftp.
peer to think e, private enterprise like
the Western Union is excepted from this
rule, and that it is the Government's
fellation to relieve the people by destroy-
ing it and setting up business on its own
account.
Congressman Vaux seems bound to
sustain his reputation as a political
novelty. lis is making quite a repute -
tion as a patient listener to the Con•
gressional debates.
Committee on Temperance MS taken op.
The fight which followed was entirely
over the deliverance, which read as fol-
lows :—"The Assembly believes that the
general traffic in intoxicating liquors is
the source of terrible and enormous evils;
that it blights the prospects, destroys the
health and character aud ruins the soul
of the individual ; that it mere the hap-
piness, wastes the resources ancl degrades
the life of the family ; that it lowers the
moral sentiment and endangers the peace
and safety of society ; that it greatly in.
creases the number of the 'lapsed mass-
es,' intensifies every evil, and Is a, fruit-
ful source of crime ; that it not only
hinders most seriously and in marry
ways, but antagonizes the cherish in her
work of uplifting the race and winning
souls for Christ, and that it is contrary
to the teaching of the Soripture and the
spirit of the Christian religion.'
"Mr, Maedonnell's amendment simply
offered a substitute for the first two lines,
so that it wonld read es follows: 'This
Assembly believes that the general tratlio
in intoxicating liquor, especially the in-
discriminate sale of liquor in barrooms
and saloons, is accompanied by enormous
evils, etc.,' the rest of the paragraph re-
maining unchanged.
"Rev. Principal Grant made the speech
of the debate, so far as the interest it ex.
cited was concerned. He said he could
vote for neither main motion nor amend-
ment. He moved that the preamble of
the recommendations—that is, the de.
iiverance—be struck out. He objected
to the statement in the deliverance that
the liquor traffic was 'contrary to the
teachings of Scripture,' and advised the
committee to read from Deuteronomy
xive where men were recommended
Mien going on a long journey to buy
sheep, or oxen, or wine, or strong drink.
He had ascertained from the committee
that they regarded this traffic as a sin.
1510 was a sin, he submitted that it VMS
wrong to license a sin. If, then, it was a
sin to try to regulate a sin. (Cries of 'No,
no" and "Yes, yes.") Itmust be a wrong
to regulate that which was a wrong.
That assembly, for example, would re-
fuse to try and regulate the social evil by
reducing the number, limiting the houses
of visiting and so on. They would say
Soothing was wrong and refuse to tem-
porise with it. "I say," continued Dr,
Grant, 'that it is not wrong to license
the liquor businese. Let ue try and
minimise in every way the evils arising
from it. If you pass this without pro-
test you can not etop there. The force
of reason and login will drag yon to a
conalusion, If it is wrong to lieenee, if
the tariff is wrong, you must put out of
the church all who sell liquor, The re.
ceiver is as bad as the thief. No man
will sell if there is no one to buy. You
must oast out of the church all who
buy."
"A. member—"Put him out,"
"De. Grant—"Yes that just shows:
that we should look itilly at this matter.
Moreover, if [Ole wrong to sell and wrong
to buy, it must be wrong to give, and,
therefore, if you go, as 01)10 9055011)17 ditl,
last year to an entertainment where wine
was offered and taken by a nember, the
others should have walked out. It you
acreept an invitation to a Melon; house
and he offers liquor, some rise ep and
leave the room, But we are all in es.
sence at one." AR to the attitude of the
minority, Dr. (Irene told of a remark
he heard going out of the aesembly 'Mon-
day evening by te man who explained the
attitude of the Mandonnel wing by my ,
ink, first, 'They're juet 1111050," 0.1111
eecondly, "They lilted it." Dr, Grant
misled 0100 110 often stayed with Mr,
Macdonnel its Termite, end he did not
treat him as well in this respect as some
who voted with the tuajority. (Levelly.
ter.)
Mr. MactIonneler tootrochnent wee put
and lost by :12 to 112,
Huron County.
Exeter defeated Clinton at base ball
on Wednesday by 18 to 10
A. Bishop, M. P.P., and Mrs. Bishop,
will non 50 00 a visit to Sootiend.
James Turnbull, of Clinton Collegiate
has been regeosted by the Miniater of
Eduoation, to act EIS one of the Provincial
Examinera this year. Mr. Ternbull per.
formed tho duties last yeee.
A Clinton anemic thief dole the thers
morneter that has so long been exposed
onteitle of the Meehaniore institute for
the solo beuelit of the public. Those
Clinlonians need watching or they will ,
be, perloming the weneher helloing' next
tool melting e inix.up in the elements, :
One of 0110 Clinton eitizene, who, lent I
Acids attended the London 11101001115 of the
Ilindoo contingent rif the Salvation
Army, hare we undoretand, agreed to pay
the paesege out of six miseionaries, and
thsir living expenene for one yettr. Tide
redly metes 11 danation of nearly e1,01 0.
--Centel) Now Ent.
A. little son of Robert Biggard, of Clim
too, met with a severe and painful au-
cident on Monday efternoon. Ile was
running along the etreet, when he tripped
on a loose board, and fell, a large (diver
eatohing him just et the knee reap and
tearing the flesh olean through to the
bone. ',rho Wound was so bad that it had
to be sewed up.
Perth County.
John A, 'Morrison of Newry, has a hive
of bees tbat swarmed five times al.
ready.
The Sonth Perth Agrionitnral Soolety
will spend 2100 on the erection 00 8. new
grand stand.
While swinging in a hammock, Hattie
Weight, daughter of George Weight,
Mitchell, fell. out and broke her collar
bone.
A. friendly game of base ball was
played between Monkton and Milverton
on Saturday, resulting in favor of the
home team,
The Silver Corner cheese factory dis-
posed of their May cheese, 124 boxes,
last Thursday to a Listowel buyer at
See, About 5700 was realized for the
lot.
Mr. Ryan, of Mitchell, has had a law
suit agaiust the Kidd estate going from
court to court for over eleven years, Mr.
Ryan winning the saes in every court in -
emoted the amouut from $700 to $5,000.
Rev. B. W. Day of Stratford has 0000.
opted a call to the Congregational church
Belleville, and enters upon the duties of
the pastorate about Joly let, Mr. Day
hes been on the retired list for a year
and a half, recruiting his health.
The Mitchell Advertiser says :—It is
generally understood for a fact that the
great law suit for slander—T. 11. Race
vs. W. R. Davis and Fred. Davis—has
been settled, as usual. out of court. eVe
nuclerstaud that ths accusers have healed
the wound with a plaster of bank notes,
and a promise to apologise, withdrawing
the statement that Bro. Ram has more
wivee than the law allows him to
have.
The death of Samuel Monteith recalls
a fact to the attention of the Stratford
Herald, Mr. Monteith ground the first
grist ever ground in Stratford. The work
was done at the Canada Company's mill,
that stood where the Mowat mill NEn-s
afterwards erected. He was not a miller
by trade, but he WRS well enough ac-
quainted with the process to be able to
attend to it eatisfaotorily until a regular
miller could be got.
Sporting News.
John L. Sullivan pleaded emilty at
Purvis, Miss., to the &ergs of prize
fighting, and the wart fined him $500.
Owing to the dispute over Monday's
boat race, in which O'Connor was defea-
ted by Stansbury, the two oarsmen will
row again on Monday next.
The gold medals offered by the Russian
Government to the breeder deny Ameri-
can horse that oould beat their Russian
horses in long-distance trotting races
have been received by Col. Jay La Due,
of Levet ne, Minn.
The Manitoba cricket team have left
for Toronto. The personnel of the team
is as follows :—Page, Cannington, Manor,
Jukes, Kirohoffer'Brandon ; President
Holmes, Smith, Plum Creek ; James,
Portage ; Tuokfiell. Rokeby ; Bain,
Spred° ; Dryson, Crossthwait, Cameron,
Winnipeg ; J. G. Moore, umpire; A. E.
Wilkes, scorer.
O'Conner, who wee beaten by Stans•
bury last Monday, has protested against
the payment of the stakes to the latter.
O'Connor claims the race on the ground
that Stansbury took hie water a quarter
of a mile from the start and that a foul
ensued. The umpires deny that there
was a foul. The Sydney Metered states
that O'Connor has claimed the ohampion•
ship beoauso Kemp would not accept his
challenge. He will challenge Hemp to
row on the Thames for £500 a aide.
J. L. Soules, North Muskegon, Mich.,
and S. Smith, Lewiston, N. Y., have
made alb necessary arrangements to
swim the whirlpool rapids on the 4011
July, as announced some weeks ago, for
a parse of $800, the first out of the whirl-
pool to get the purse. They will enter
the water with small row boats at the
old 'Maid o' the Miet' landing under the
cantilever bridge. They will both be
well attired in bathing suite and vests
made of cork. They will make the start
between 2 and 4 p. m.
Kansas City's population is between
190,000 and 200,000.
Eight strawberries pioked in Lancas-
ter, Pa., recently, weighed a pound.
Appearances indicate that the hay
crop will be the largest gathered in On-
tario for yeras,
The three ohildren of John Kujewa
were drowned in the river at Medford,
Mine., on Tuesday.
At Yates Centre Kase a man celled
Ooe shot hie two brothers-imlaw and his
wife and then shot himself.
The alleged revolution in Mexico is
said to have been only an,effort of a grog
of banditti to do wholesale robbery.
A Port Arthur despatch says a fishing
party naught 815 brook trout in an after.
noon in Carp river and lake TIttzeaseeket.
ohewagamog.
Sarah Bernhardt is said to have fallen
in love with Henry M. Stanley, and ex.
premed eagerness to aocompany him to
the heart of Africa.
Mrs Henry Leaoh is truing the Grand
Trunk railway for 210e000 damages for
the death of her husband, who was killed
at a crossing in Toronto.
A. boy named Drews performed re
dangerous feat in Weal) Orange, N. 7.,
the other day. The contraotot for a
drain wanted to determine whether or
not it was free front obstruction and off.
ered the lad a email sum to go through it.
The pipe is eighteen inches in diameter
is laid eight feet under ground and is
1,200 feet long. The boy Demoted the
offer and 111111SECE1 1110 pipit, Half an
hour latter he emerged safely from tho
otliem ond.
The St, Catharines Gazette says :—
The disoovery that it fee person am be
pane down to reasonable dimensions by
the sergeon's knife 110.0 just been mule
by a Parieian surgeon, who ;debts to
have reduced by judicious carving an
erect:relive mesettline stem:roll to a thane,
ly degree oS leanness. Hereafter, if a
meet has too mull stennush 911 130 lute to
do is to out it oil and east it from him.
['1118 01107 seem at lint eight food news
to middle aged men who lied deeming an
exhrouiting exercise, but the dirreovery
0051110 to be limited in its application on.
elusively to the abdominal regio,
The Diamond Button
Be broke the silence that had con-
tinued for 800110 dale:
"I beg you will excuse me, Miss
Templeton. I know 10 18 not the proper
thing to do, but I am suffering greatly
with my oyes this morning. Have I
your permission to apply a lotion to
them?"
Wondering at the strangeness of the
request, she nevertheless murmured her
permission, and turned again to the
streets
He drew his handkerchief from his
pocket and then a bottle, with the con-
tents of which he plentifully saturated
the handkerchief,
Before she could realize what was be-
ing done the young man snapped a spring,
the curtain shot up over the window in
front of her, she was forced back ou the
cushions with a vigorous push on her
shoulder, the handkerchief was closely
pressed on her nose and mouth, and,
though mho struggled ineffectually for a
time, unable to make a noise, she soon
loot all conscionsuess.
CHAPTER XXX.
.03021111 MAKES AN ACQUAINTANCE,
eV/
-11,5:E7
LIEN Annie
/next was
conscious of
external
things, she
was lying
upon a
se' rough bed.
Sharp pains were shooting through her
head and an intolerable thirst consumed
her.
"Water," she nnumured.
"She's coming to," said a voice, Nein-
ingly from a great distance, which nev-
ertheless fell upon her ear with a
strangely familiar sound.
A cup was pressed to her lips, and she
drank eagerly.
"She'll do now, and I'll go," said the
same 3'0100. A moment later she beard
a few stops, and a door open and close.
She opened her eyes. A man of rough
exterior stood over her. She closed
them again in fright, and nearly
swooned.
When next she opened them she was
aloue.
Unable to collect her thoughts, she
lay still a few moments. By and by the
experiences of the morning rushed over
her.
"For heaven's sake, where am I?" she
cried. Then she sprang from her couch,
forgetful of her sufferings.
She was dazed. The room she found
herself in was evidently an attic room.
The roof sloped down low and close to
the floor on one side. There was neither
ceiling nor walls; the rafters and stud-
ding wore bare of plaster. The floor
was uncarpeted. A dormer window
broke through the roof and gave light
to the room. She flew to it, but could
not reach it; a strong iron grating set in
the timbers and floor barred herway.
She shook 01 10 the desperation of de-
spair. .As well might she have tried to
move one of the Brooklyn bridge towers.
She flew to the door at the foot of the
bed; it was locked and bolted from the
outside.
There was a strong board partition
running up to the roof, and in it was a
door; she flow to that. It opened, and
she entered a similar room. Another
dormer window, and another iron grat-
ing, and another door leading to the
stairs; that also was locked and bolted
on the outside.
She was like a frightened bird, with
throbbing breast, beating the bare of a
cage.
Then for the first time she realized
that her dress appeared strange.
She examined it. It was a coarse cal-
ico garment of vulgar figure.
She was bewildered. Then she found
it had been slipped over the other dress.
How? She could not comprehend.
Her head began to whirl, and before
she could reach the other room darkness
overcame her.
When she awoke to consciousness
again she was lying upon the floor. She
staggered to her feet,
How long she had lain there she could
not tell. It was still bright day, but
whether it had been five minutes or five
hours, she was unable to determine.
Her eyes f ell again upon the calico dress
which cerement her. She stripped it off
with hurried action.
She stood a moment, her souses numbed
—utterly confused.
13y and by the events of the day began
to pass before her vividly. She traced
them one by one, to the final scone in the
ceach,
"It was chlorotorm," she said aloud,
Theshe thought of her mother, of her
alarm because Antic had not returned,
arid 01 1/0 mOther's distress over theism
enlamity, falling so closely on tho mur
der of her brother,
Thisetthotight touched a tender chord,
and she wept viole»tly.
The storm of tears acted liko a amen
on a sultry day; it cleared the atmos -
pliers!.
'When she recovered herself she began
to think.
She made e emeo exam/11111km of the
room; it 3080 einvitar in st ere aryl nopears
Once to tne ono she had first fetimi her.
self in.
A. mattress lay, in the corner with a
pillory and a. lime blanket tumbled on
it, 100 40 some one had sieve there. Two
chairs stood near the dormer window.
On one WAS a newspaper. She picked it
tip. It was of the date of the 14th of
September. That was the day she was
last at home. It must etill bo that day.
The newspaper MS new and fresh; it
had not been opened,
A small, round table stood in the ems
ter of the room, a plain, wooden top
table, not particularly clean. .A plate, a
cup, both dirty, and some crumbs,
showed that not long before some one
had eaten there,
A stump of a lead pencil lay on the
table,
She went into the other room,
It was bare of everything save a chair
and the bed on which she had lain.
Apparently there WWI 110 hope of 1"'
01090. She listened. She could hear no
sounds in the :heelers. Only the noises
from the street—the cries of hawkers,
the shouts of children at play, the roll of
3'0h)//'1/30—all these came to her deadened
by 010 d ist ;Ince,
1VIIELI ons the meaning of her seizuro
and confinement, She asked herself.
Who was the enemy of her family who
firotldllod her brother and. then alslum
her? Whv were these calamities so sill-
denly precipitated upon them, who had
aliweistys lived such quiet and uneventful
hi?
It was a problem too deep for her to
solve; she Was not oven aware of 10)1
enemy.
Her thoughts instinctively turned to
Holbrook. He would assist her if he
knew of hordistress, and he would kuow
because of her failure to meet him ELS re-
qucstecl.
Ah,athoughtl She had been trapped
by forged notes from him. She grew the ,
more frightened by the thought,
Oh, if SIM could but connnuilicate
with Holbrook! She prayed heaven to
open 10 N111130%7, bit"
A. voice startled her. She looked in
every direction but the right one.
"Hi, mistry, look up."
She did. In the roof there was a slcy-
light. Through a broken pane the very
dirty face of a boy looked down upon
Lter.
If it had been the face of an angel it
could not have appeprol more beautiful
to her.
"I seed them when they brung you
up here. Was you sick?"
"No, de winder is nailed tight. 'Sielee,
he'd 11101,11 me. He kicked too dowu
stairs onct,"
"Who's he?"
"De feller 'wot's got yer locked up.
Oh, he's a tuff!"
"He's a bad man?"
"He's an orful bad man, I'm tellin'
yea., missy."
"Do you want to help tne?"
"You'd tell on me."
"No, indeed I won't. If you would
only help me, I could get a badman pun-
ished."
"What, trashed? What, walloped right
up and down, his eyes blackened and his
teeth knocked out—say, missy, would
yer if rd help yer?"
His eyes danced with glee at the pros-
pect.
"Indeed, I would," said Annie; and
she was quite sincere,
"I golly! dat would be good. Yer
wouldn't tell on me, sure?"
"No, indeed,"
"Den I will if I kin."
"I want you to go to Mr. Holbrook"—
and she gave him the o-ddress—'and 081
him where I am, that I am locked up
here."
"Write it down, missy."
"I haveno paper. Wait," she said, as
she ran hastily into the other room. She
snatched up the paper and tore a steip
from the margin, and catching up the
pencil on the table she wrote hurriedly;
"laelp. I am locked up on the top floor
of a house"—
But where?
She looked up at the boy.
"Where am tr
The boy snickered. "Why, right down
dere, missy."
"No, no, but in what street?"
"Oh, in Moth street, tree doors from
Bayard."
Shewrote;
"In Mott street, three doors from Bay-
ard street. Come quickly and help me.
"Arnim TEMPLETON."
She folded it up. But how to get it to
the boy?
He put his arm through the broken
pane and she tried to throw it to him.
Several ineffectual attempts showed her
the futility of this effort.
She thought a moment.
"Wait," the cried. She ran into the
other room and dragged the table after
her and put it directly under the sky-
light, and then climbed to its top and
reached up.
She was still too far away, stretching
as she did on her tiptoes.
She clambered down and brought in a
chair, which she placed on the table.
Climbing up on it at the risk of a
tumble, she found her face on a level
With the dowbstrotched hand of the
gaSnilhell.
put the paper in his hand, and
holding it gave him direetionshow togo,
'70011g/0001' as ho promised to bo fleet of
over felt moved the little vagabond.
'T
roor01.10 touch of the softest hand he had
hen rho kissed the dirty paw of the
in a 11101101(0 0)13000 she leenrcl the patter
of his bare feet on the elate root
Sho eliinteel clown and restore the
table and chair to the places where the
1 round them.
She tritt down on the bed to think,
1. nut 07a8 000 1)111011 disturbed 00
! thinit or to sit.
(co n10 10001011100.)
"Yes. Can't you come down here?"
'n0Al0 FOR SEBVIC,N,—TEIB
undersigned will keep for service cot
LOG 0, 00U, 11, 0 rey, a Thombred Berkshire
hour. 'Pomo, 41.00, to he paid At 11118 01
service with privilege of returning if lieRelf-
Sary, WAL 1.1414(1414, rraprictor. 47.4
JERSEY /HILL FOR SERVICE.
For toms and other uarticulare ask for
(limier at Illy Drug and Book Kora. Should
you wish to sell his heifer calves J. aux pro.
1/1181 5.0 pay 1111 Melt Pa els, according to
milli/4 qualities of their dame.
2041whe (0. A. I/MADMAN, B tustele.
FARMS FOR SALE.
Lot 0, con. 1, Saugeen, 100 acres,
Part of lots 1 and 0, 000.1, Kinloss,
El lot 15, eon. 1, Wawanosb,100 aortal
NI lot 25, con, 8, Wont Ws wanash, 100 come.
Lot 14 and 'WI lot 13, con. 0, Kincardine
305110000,
E4 lots 8 and 0, oon. 14, Peel, 100 norm
14I lot 8 and Wi lot% eon, 11, Pool, 0.00 acres.
84 lot 0, eon, A, alloto, 00 acres.
Lot 11, eon. 111,100,1001 1/0 torus,
001 21, eon. N ormanby , 100 oorot.
All the above 10'011%01 improved farms in
flue loeulites, ore very cheap and CRC be
bought on °say 0001110, Also a store and
dwelling in Brussels for sale. Apply to
mcc.ci,
40:100 lietomox,
Private Funds to Loan.
$20,000
•
Have been placed in my hands
for Investment on real estate.
'LOWEST RATE OF INTEREST. 4E11
• No Commission.
Borrowers can have loans com-
pleted in Three Days if title
satisfactory.
W. M. SINCLAIR,
Solicitor, Brussels.
,FJeUo2'
1-1'e tiou,
Trtoflie
ble
jr-bil et
it is expaisite.
Oa 1
Money to Loan, •
Money to Loan on Farm Pro-
perty at
LOTPEST RITES.
Private and Company Funds.
DICKSON & HAYS,
Solicitors,
BRUSSnLS, ONT,
PHOTOS.
TINTYPE S
- For - 3.0 - Cent s-.
work [EOM the Smallest to Life size
done In a first...class manner.
NV 5
of Resitlenees, nt Reasonable
Rotes,
W. J: Fairfield.
-YOU-
A
la AL ECT T
"..0.7.0N" NIS
Is Prepared to supply you with a
,lland.soine Carriage
At a Slight Advance on Cost.
Call in and Make a Selection or
Leave your Order.
If you 1100 intending to travel
Dennis' is Headquarters for
VALISES,
SATC1IIELS sec
A Large and Well -Assorted
Stock to choose from.
IL DENNIS.