Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1884-08-29, Page 6Table Etieettette. El See wishes some one to tell her, from their individual experience, what is the vintage of society at dinner par- Ues, more particularly with regard to the artangement at table. In the first place, it is not customary, nor desirable, that the husband should give his arm to his wife on leaving the parlor for the dining room. It is sup- posed they have sufficient occasions for conversation and enjoying each other's company, and the object of a dinner party is to give opportunity for a " feast of reason and, a flow of soul " on the part of those who seldom meet. There- fore in society wedded pairs are mis- matched, since at a large dinner party the enjoyment of each guest depends on those who sit beside him. I remem- ber, however, that at a dinner party I once attended, the hostess was diseon- oerted, the company amused, and the husband all broke up by a woman who insisted on . going out to dinuer with John, although John had already offered his arm to a. lady indicated by the hostess, while her own escort stood by her side with elbow conveniently crooked. It is needless to say the poor woman was from. " Waybaok," and i 1 unhappily that moat pitiable of all objects, a jealous woman without sense enough to control herself in the presence of others. partythe hostess dinner At a small, at her place near the parlor door, in readiness to greet each guess, mentions to each gentleman the lady whom he is to take into dingier, introducing him • if he is unacquainted. At more formal entertainments each gentleman finds in the dressing -room an -envelope with card bearing the name of the lady put in his charge ; at large dinner parties aplan of the table, indicating the seat he is to occupy, is also enclosed. If the gentle- man is unacquainted with the lady whose name is on " the card, he is to inform the hostess as she welcomes him, and she will present him. " My lady is served," was the pomp- ous announcement of the solemn butler of Sir Pitt - Crawley£s establishment. Dinner is served is in better form than dinner is ready. The hostess, even if want of or inexperienced help compels her to leave the parlor for a final glance at her table, should be in the parlor. when this announcement is made. The host gives his arm to the lady in whose honor the feast is spread, or to the oldest or most distinguished. The• guests follow at pleasure, the hostess coming last with the gentleman most to be honored, most frequently the hus- band of the lady who has left the room with the host. The host, if the party is small, indicates by a gesture the place each gentleman is to take, who seats his lady at his right, taking -his seat im=mediately. If place has been indi- cated by cards, each gentleman finds his own seat. It is proper to commence eating as soon as one is helped, without waiting for others. It seems hardly necessary to say that soup should be eaten quietly from the side of the spoon i food conveyed to the mouth with a fork,! and the napkin not used as a baby's bibs but spread in the lap; yet how often some such little nicety of etiquette is disregarded l' When the dinner is over, the hostess looks tie the lady whom her husband has taken to the table, and bows slightly. This is, the signal for the guests all to Lise ; the ladies leave the room, the gen- tlemen' follow, or remain for coffee and cigars. It is always allowable for a gentleman to decline further refresh- ment d passe to the parlor when the ladies o, and none should linger too long in the ining-room.. A'diiener party is the most formal of entertainments, demanding one's best d ess and company manners. An in-. vitatio , once accepted, is to be regarded as a briding obligation. To be late is a great breach of etiquette. The hour is of course always named in an invita- tion, and the guests are supposed to arrive of more than fifteen or `twenty rninuti s before that time. An invita- tion to dine does not imply that you are to ape d. the day. The individual in whose behalf the dinner is given is genera Iy first to leave ; other departuree. are th n in order, a formal leave-taking being-mperative. Etiquette requires each g est to call on the hostess within a few ays after the party ; few people in the country seem to know this is required of them ; it is, however, an at- tention the entertainer has a right to expect! The tact of a hostess is most clearly shown .n • the- arrangement of gaests at her table. It is very uncivil to neglect one's a cort for a more agreeable neigh- bor, so the hostess should take care to put th se together who have tastes in commee, or get on well together. Yet if thro gh ignorance or carelessness two person are seated together who are not on Erie dly terms, they should bury the hatche for that occasion, and at least seem `endly and amiable, even if they never s eak as they pass by in the street, and met as utter strangers next - day. It is t e very height of ill -breeding -to exhibit] animosity or ill -will under such oiroumatances, Guests are expected to converge with each other if occasion serves, even though not formally pre- sented; the meeting at the house of e mutual friend is a sufficient guarantee that bcith are desirable acquaintances ; but snob conversation does not bind. them to recognize each other afterward. Wine is seldom seen on country tables ; less frequently than formerly on those in town. If a guest where wine is served, one refuses by placing the hand carelessly over the wine -glass, the servant who fills the glasses under-. stands ' The old custom of , drinking everybody's health is happily more hon- ored int the breach than the observance nowadays. I am reminded just here of a young, bashful, inexperienced Wolver- ine girl who, at the table of a General and Congressman, the big mail of the village, saw her host raise the dainty shell of tintedglass beaded with rare Moselle, and heard him say Your health, Miss — ." His nephew, a youth of eighteen, her pupil, whom she knew inherited a taste for wine, and who had told her confidentially how hard it was to resist temptation, was at .the table. It was a breach of etiquette to refuse the intended compliment, but she dared not lift the glass, filled through her ignorance of knowing how to refuse it, to her lips in the presence of the young man whom she had urged to abstain, nor was it a time or place to declare principles. Blushing to her finger tips, she lifted the cut glass goblet of water that stood by her plate with " Permit me, General ." A courtly bow from her host, arid the ordeal was HE H OTOR over. She did the proper thing with- out knowing it, as well as the right thing. RE&TRIx. Perth Items. —Some time ago a valuable driving mare belonging to Mr. D. McLaren, of Hibbert, came in contact With a barba wire fence and received some severe cuts on the fore leg, from the effects of which she had to be killed last week. —Wm. Henry, a wealthy, citizen of Stratford, and a Justice of the Peace, who was charged at the police court with the larceny of a pair of slippers, came up for sentence on Monday of last week, but: on the plea sof Henry's coun- sel the ease was adjourned for twos weeks. Bail was accepted for his ap pearance--himself in $1,000 and tw• sureties in $500 each. —One day recently on goin through the train between Bt. Mary: and Stratford, conductor Mark Wade discovered_a man hidden in the closet the door being locked; He - se a brakeman to watch the door, and o coming back a few minutes later, when the . train was agar Stratford, a ma named Gtweli emerged from his hidin r his ' ticket the o lace.Whenasked f o ould-be deadhead made all kinds o.l excuses, saying he had given. it to th conductor of the London train, &o. Mr Wade had had dealings with the same g party before, however, and ttB he refuse. to'pay his fare he called detective Mc- Carthy and gave the man into- custody.. On reaohing Stratford he was taken be- fore Mr. Mowat, J.P., who fined him $5 for the offence, $4,50 costs, and the fare 35 cents, $9.85 in all. Otwell managed to borrow the money from a Stratford friend to save himself from jail, and went back to the stone town sadder and: considerably wiser. He will probably. buy a ticket hereafter, as the jnstioe's charges are considerably higher than the regular tariff on the Grand -Trunk. —A North Easthope correspondent;'. says : In passing through the northern part of this township last week we were very much surprised at the terrible dam- age done by the hail storm which passed,; through this district on the evening of the 12th of July. Messrs. McDonald, :i Carroll, Jones, and John McTavish are the principal sufferers. The hail fell only for about ten minutes, totally de stroying Mr. Carroll's fall wheat, turnips and potatoes. Hardly a geed stalk of fallwheat could be found in a field con- taining The over ten acres. e potatoes were cut clean from the ground in many places as with a scythe. The hail stones could be scooped up in shovelfulls. Mr. Jones was minus a large number of window panes, and his fall wheat 'field was turned into a pasture field next day. Marks made by the hail stones -can yet ;be seen in the fences and we were not astonished at the destruction after seeing these dinges. Farmers not twenty rods from those injuredwere not touched at all by the hail, strange to say. — The following communicated to a contemporary, shows the folly of indulg- ing in the silly practice of " serenading" newly -married people: A- respectable Irish bachelor nareedPatriokDyer,resid- ing a few miles south of Stratford, grew tired of single blessedness" and quite recently took unto himself a wife. No sooner had the happy couple returned from their wedding tour, than a few roughs from an adjoining county, armed with guns, pistols, cow bells, &c., and at • the quiet hour of midnight, assembled in front of Pat's domicile to do . him honor (?) After rousing the whole neigh- borhood with their hideous cries and fiendsh music, they stormed the dwell- ing and finally agreed to raise the siege provided Pat " would give them a V. with which to supply themselves . with, " Old Forty Rod." Our Irish 'friend had no such small change, but promised if they ' would be either labia' him alone," he would give them a " bit of a dance" soon. Next morning Mr. D. lodged a complaint against four of the ringleaders. These" innocents: abroad" were accordingly arrested and brought before the Stratford police magistrate who made them dance to the tune of a fine and pay the fiddler into the bar- gain. • cent , • bringie Can: • a; 1t -is of A erioan $6; per be a .ntlay Can : for ifs+ trap rout v a Cana than vi: New do p 'r, t• Lily Am = 'o = n cattle th Doug allege • 'hat- the tans anile- aline _ wonl' n : t nein and there eta •I ha f that amon t i der bile stock a gha says the t ,300 miles s ort r rny other = tla rope Montan e a is fork• erpool i P S PLOWS TE MIL S. AL. L, GIBS Begs t announce to ithe Public t to operate t? LIEN FACT prepared tc lue in h s comnienoe WHO ETER WOO and th El the w11 be god v � f7 at he a )R1/ give LL OTH , 'WIJi,ps, UNION T BEDS, FLANN LS, PpAID NGS, W1NCEYS, and Varieties in ST )CKIN'G Y O6ToM Spin i g and Fullin ed to - P t' s from a dist possi 1 , have their them nd as he -has good rking order but oient work warr need. Re timber the Wr ilk ESC. L. N . 1 1 �A RDI G I promptly a en ince will, as ar I Rolls home Iwit] put the mi I int nd employs ;non en all wok i • xeter Mills. I BSO ISI, ROPRIE'1 0 News Notes. —Governor Cleveland has at length formally accepted the Democratic nom- ination for President. — A fearful cattle disease has appear- ed in Wasco county, Oregon. It is be- lieved to be " blackleg." — A large number of the storekeepers and barbers, in Kingston, have been summoned for conducting business on Sunday. —So-called sportsmen are caus- ing great destruction among fish in the neighborhood of Kingston, by .exploding dynamite cartridges in the water. — At Lesdale, Pennsylvania, John Donley, a blind: man, murdered John Gartley, a cripple, by choking ;him to death. The blind murderer was sub- sequently run over and killed by the cars. —Kate Smusley is dying at Fort Plain of self -starvation. Her father declares she has not partaken of food for' 160 days. She occasionally takes water in her mouth, but . does not swallow it, as it causes oonvnlsions. —A. D. Sly has been arrested at Min- neapolis for the robbery in September last, at St. Joseph, Missouri, of $10,500 -from the American Express Company while employed as driver. Sly confess• ed and said he had spent the .money. —A sad accident happened the other day to the eldest son of John Lacy, of Greenock. The parents after. - dinner went out to bind, leaving Willie, the eldest, in charge of the three smaller children.. In less than one hour they we`re called in and found that Willie had in some way got the roller .towel fastened round his nook and was strang- led to death. He was only nine -years old and a bright boy. _ —John MaGarrell's little daughtelr Mabel, aged five years, was running along the Canal bank in Brantford the other morning and tripped on a stick, and falling she rolled into the canal and was drowned. t Mr. MoGaraell is em- ployed in the starch works, close to where she fell in, and was notified as soon as the accident happened. He ran and jumped into the canal and found the child, but life had gone. —F. R. Lingham, the great Cana- dian cattle shipper of Montreal;, has re- ceived the agency of Freweri Bros., nephews of Lord Dufferin., of Wyoming, and Montana, who own 250,000 head of cattle in those Territories, and all of which will be brought to Montreal for shipment by the Canadian Pacific Rail- way when the Government gives its con - rn - 11 0 x I 1% 11, I' N • vce tti ti p1-1 174 CAN MA H l :iiD Paid! Beat Pre: '4e SES The Iiiieefort received pos the and favo Draft cin al Canada on - States, e'ggh Office 'Fir 'Hotel. 689' F. Ho TE BANK F COMMEIWE. FF10E TORONTO i tLl, t, Hon. $66,000 ° 1,900; m. McMa ORTH, tc Branch of ts; on which ble terms. the prinoip eat Britain and ;sold. t door=.Bout A. H. Ii, Solicitor RANCH. sBank cont ties to nterest a allowed on 00 00. fer. 1 towns and of teeth and on the nited of the Com jcredal ELAND, Manger. oy T CAR RTH, JAMES to inform his old fri pub is that having miaus h otel 141 Iced and re-fitte sl il! is now one of t eiit hotels in tl tae wants of h •a hare of ipnblic ell firuished and ep supplied with; e ar in attendan, ci5l Tlrairell Iterne ibe and GO eril d trust Worthy e, Good nam era. r the c'Boyal H h Streets, Seal. JAMES Hot CHAEL'S) ONTA 1IO. VEIR - nds and the ravel. purchased th' new ling, he has tho , ugh - it from top t bot- s most comf able e county. By strict s customers he , open atronage. The aims ell heated. a bar he best, and - Sin at - ostler will alw. , iys be e:rooms for Co er- tel," corner of IMAM h. '738 EIR, Prop ietor ISSUED AT HURON EXPOSITOR OFFICE, EAFORTR, ONTARI©I 1�PYITNEBE REQUIRD. H I A Which will 1 import dutie stock, iron or tariff , co sE stook is a ht ferior arta le A ful st Tonto Mo Sharp's R k of all $in before bit in a a Loa ESD- PLrOW 4 --JUST R 6. enutne South Bend 8 SULKY PLOWS, CliI c1 0 's is tural'Implem'ent War �e said at old prices, notwithstanding 8, t • a snbsoriL'ber being determined to ted One !Hun4ired and Fifty of them a qu : • tly, he enabled to Bell them at ins d. 'Call nd see tho e Plows bef . I very Pin guaranteed to give satin ook of Masse Reapers and Massey Ma i dere and ere Torteat Cord. rd B 4 es, all of= whic • will be o d cheap and rlways on ha; a machine. O. C. room, Seaforth, the inorase of 10 per cent. keep thoee valuable Plows in few days before the rise in the former prices until the present re buying a common or in - faction or no sale. Towers, Toronto Reapers and sey's Lo Downn Binder, and on reaonable terms. Repairs airs s.' Don't fail to see my stock d. for the bove machine WILLSON, Man, Street, Seaforth. EW oi cB Ravin bails and best nae And tI Farme and ha e res ra cal ye it MILLIF$G FIRM IN. SE SEAF.ORT H R L..ER MILL.. LATE TI'IE RE RIDE .4E; SM ht the above Aline, and r hinery that oeuld be pt RADUAL REDU tit attained is they haje now get all their GRI tom with thekn the sa TL from fitted't' em through@ cured fo a TION ROLLER one of the best mi ING and (1 OPPIN1 day, and S8tisfactie AFORTH. MILLS, trathroy, t with all the latest MILL, - is in the Province. I I done in Sea orth, Guaranteed. F O R;, PRS ' 'NTT) $ TQR"1' For sale by the t on or in lets quantities—FO CASH. Cath for any qu of Wheat.. - McBRI MR. TH01111AS SMI`"^H will Ips Mills. E rsonalll sulaerintend ntity SMITHI. the Seaforth Roller --- T M Clo all kin s in h to f { -----Mai 0 IT.— Wel able t hs, Table suitable i Embr id M atl br rar•'sols fro I -s is Week a' fl; ap-iis, D'O of Li: en Goods. iitra good v .lue and dream - Muslims arid-Sateens, Csenit Tea for t. ,�� five .Founds of our Sixty or La les and C.h ldren s Dresses. Cent Tea fo 2.50. eries And Insertions for ?'rimming. Five Pounds of our Seventy- five eventy- five Cent Tea for $3.00. and: ' Dxtess Sills cheap. Full stock Our three pound ea for $1 is super- ior/� to any 40o tea in the market. 111 Oc to $4.00r M. A. CHA LESWORTH. if l e range of Table les, Towelsy and SEAFRTH STOVE AND TINWARE EMPoF i JM. C. M. WkiiT(VEY Alvvays beeps on han latest at d a full line of the ales of COOK, BOX AND I ARLOR STOVES. Their beauty shows them and the price sells them. TINWARE Of every descriptio always in stock. We make all :our go ds, and guarantee them goad. and rightin price. A full line of Tale and Pocket Cut- lery at very low pri ea:• We have a fine to of Granite Kettles in stock, for preser ing, &o. All sizes and prices, EAVETROlataHING. All kinds of Jobbng Work promptly N attended, tguaranteed. alt d and satisfaction action line' it Parties w Pa B ilii a ng goin m ods i my will pay them to See my stook and compare: prices. Seaforth Cheap Stove-ct Tin House. O. W ITN Eli', Late Whitney Brothers. THE PIONEER HARDWARE STORE, STONE BLOCK, WING -HAM. HEADQUA TERS FOR Tashbur & Moen TWO-POINT Steel -Barb Fencing Wire. SOLE. AGENTS OR THE WORT- ' MAN 4 WARD CELEBRATED E ARREL OHURN C See them before Bent brands of ENGLISH V� —A .Linseed �iZ--lac you buy any other. H ITE LEAD rD' to and Boiled. "' Farm and Garden Utensils at bottom ,prices; JAS A. OLINE & CO. ---T A S AT WHOLESALE PRICES. AT THE— OST HE OST OFFiQE STORE ;, e havejust received a, large consign- e'nt of Teas, which we intend jobbing off', at wholesale prices. If you have not already tried Charlesworth's Teas, o'so at once. ive Pounds of Young Hy - son. for $ 1: ve Pounds of', our Fifty Immen PRINTS, D DUCKS, D7 STRAW H buyer. s. The balanic Grocori� taken at cas AN IJAL $TOKTAKING: HEAP SALE FOR OA Mcough1in H eaforthr I bargains in t very department all his month. CASHMERE ESS;GOODS] CRETONNES, HOSIERY, GLO VE S, PARASOL N S, COTIONAIES, SHIRTINGS, TWEEDS, FELT .AND TS reduced to pric s that must att act the attention of every II took to be cleared otit regardless of cost. s fr h and g d, an cheap r than eter. Good Butter and Eggs 1 of Millinefy- P ccs dIIuring stocktaking. 1 � . I `y .oLOUG i ,IN, Whitney s Block, Seaforth. WANTED. BUTLER AND EGGS AT THE Grocelry Egepartr lent —0k— AN & DUNCAN, r. Main Street, Seaforth. CHEAP SUCARS i8c CHOICE TEAS —AND A— STOCK OF GROCERIES to select from. Farmers consulting their own interest would do well to bring their Butter nd Eggs to the MON REA I II O I S,E. SEAFOR' H W OLLEN MILLS. T BEG to 'nforin tho manufacwring car b to the entir'�.e.:Idestruction compelled to call on yo meat of your accounts, closed. I hope a econd appe 839 o indebted to me for ok accounts, tiat owing of my mill by fire, I am for a prompt settle - as the booka must be 1 will not be ,necessary. A. G. Vezr•EG}MOND. AUGUST 29, 1 R8 " LIGHT OF ASI .#1 Egret time seen in the New World of the latest g teat, Zoological Wonder on Earth, the 'aac-a iiia ese H I T E�t ELEPHANT!7 /jB I GIRT 0 A�jIA. Exhibited without extra charge. Comp and . of Shin. e symbol v aee silvery,sacred� e - thisry wh re an object of surpassing wonder and un - hot nded admiration. Thousands upon thous• canvas. hells our an s ells an s are dailythronging � see this lily -looking, argent -eyed creature. that in the conntry of its capture is an object of the. most t irxalted reverence and warship; It le believed everywhere in Farther India that the divine Bu dila must delight to abide in the WHITE ELEPHANT, ANT, . Th r own incarnation of purity ; and one guar,- ter of a hundred Trained Elephants coma now on is 20th annual tour of America, and will ex- hibit AFTERNOON and EVENING, at 2 and ll o'clock P M., the Great Forepauyh Show, —AT - 1 ST RATFORD, ON FRIDAY,'SEPT 5TH, 1884 see the Mo Ba` hot Hi; by pe ma fis ro olossal gathering of all nations, and first in America, of the Sultan's Own Childs Desert. Thirty Moslem Mameukes.And ors, accompanied by a real Arabian hf usioal d, with 1,000 wild beasts 1,200 men and es, 8 circuses, 8 rings, 90 aeet, with Doman spodrome, (full half mile race track,) Races Elephants Camels, Horses, Ponies, Men, Dogs, keys, an all kinds of races, and just im- ed 830,000 Stud English Race Horses. Ro- i chariot races. Grand museum of marvels, ts 8 feet high, dwarfs and living winders everywhere ; seats for 20,000 ; four railay e trains ; worth miles of travel to see the gra_ anti gorgeous historical street pageant; 5 ban of usic ; wide open dens of savage monsters; 50 'royally robed processionists ; Venus, goddess of eve; Cleopatra, Lada Rookh. All the wealth, po p and pageantry of the distant Indies. Ab - sol tely larger than Barnum's or any and all the other e mbined shows in existence. AD3iISSIi3i+F only 50 cents ; children under 9 years, 25 cents. Ex zit trains ; low rates 'to and from town to see the Great Forepangh Show. Don't forget the DAY and DATE ; it is never changed. ADAM FOREPAI.TG.B, Sole Proprietor. HE MITCHELL STANDARD PATENTED & MANUFACTURED BY !- : M. MOR -RIS. e simplest, strongest' and most satisfactory. Wdmiil fret made. For pumping water, saw bug wood, chopping graiA or driving any light machinery, it has no e ual. - 1 PUMPS! '':PUMPS. Act give A on I no A che also manufacture Iron Lift and 'Double en Force Pampa, which are guaranteed to satisfaction. Stock of pumps and hose kept constantly and. re me a trial. If I do net give satisfaction ale. orders addressed to the 'undersigned, Mit- l P. 0., promptly attended to. 872-52 TO HAND THISWEEK —AT— , L. SMITECS, A CONSIGNMENT OF 4—AND— DRESS GOODS In all the newest shades. LACES, These goods are extra value, and are sure to ensure saccese. We want room, and are offerin great bargains in all &Miner Goods L. SMIT SE*FORTH. PRACTICAL BOILEA MAKERS= rr Subecribers have; bought the Tools -I- oiler Business ;lately, carried en by the God - °rich Foundry and Manufacturing Company, having had an exp donee of over eight years fa ; that shop, are now prepared to carry on the in all its branches. Any wore entrust d to ns will receive p attention. Firs ss wOrk guarantee& All kinds ef Bo' ens made and repaired,. Smoke Stacks and heet I Iron Work, etc.,st MO. 8°IsTX16ebwieSraalttesians made and old ones repaired 0111 the shortest notice, and at prioes that defy 00.0 CHRZSTA..." BLACK, • gorturs.-4--The Conn 4th pursuant 40 adjoni of last meeting read namely ing erilvert, 55.50 Th „80'; Micbael ff.. Robertson, new cn Buyers; road scraper, lank for culvert, repairing Culvert, $e gravelling, $.114; 3nn, Hill, gravel, 52 84; t7.30 ; John McAtt pairing road, ,5.$3 /rhos. Hine gravO, 51) pairing scraper, $1 and repairiug mad, repairing Scraptif, 378.111813 Tyitiert cedar Nicholson, ! putting $30; John Lake, iliteh: McCracken!, goods V last account, $60 H. Kerr, Moved by W. Wray, down Beira hill, on tb lloYej eeconded by E. Bosme the town hell be grant gm of the Scott Act Council then adjolarnej on the 15tb Septembej Gezr.—the C06.310 to adjournment.; present. Minutes of 1; read and conArtned- tract for;bnilding the Adcock% creek to Th.os bauloreOtfhe"1954te° 410 te Moved by Walttr - :31idmowsmaorfadt4,13parneYraillwasieo't fro instructed to -pay further noticee—Carri read from Hugh cam Umber, 1883, and th bad been living al his keep her any longer lvferihtlerg e6e rtnat ebd fZoar '94.1 tahr e Messsrs. Iiislop and OE to ltait on Tani -Celli further arrangemints of lot 29, concatehiedsioorani. ing the Connell to Dawson, an old residei ship, who is in indiger was read. Moved b! seconded by Wm. Alai of $5 be granted at the treasurer be instri per month regularly *. —Carried. Moved bt onded by John Hi -,2 Milne and Oliver be the contract of cles4 ernment (heir) on lot e by John Hislop, ecoix Bgvans that the een mbeluagthg)oorxitz,esdbtaorolit:,orErro $1,000 for townehtip Kr. Bryans appli4d on: the boundary Gel Moved by Johu Walter Oliver, tbat authorized to confer e Council regarding the The truetees of Sci applied for debelitur way of loan to the be paid in three insta cent., payable Js.tinar' and 1887, for teplirs by-law and debenitnre for next meeting. A.'; mills on the dollar toi one-quarter of a mill waY rate, for the purr tine Foester applied t on road in front of le cession 12. ''efess0. were instructed to at soerroi nu; a et pp 'roes -Seneca, loaded wilth c. bound for Montreal, bdaroogke, wwhasenietalikeiogOrpllta men _down the hold to and one of them 'stru tthenetgnafs twhiae ileeh.elthia Taheee db,ebtlwowiottlthwee: avtec aA vohnihviemee mprrTyearhaaoi nrbe ytag robo IfLaynietaawinni ytat or. yvki lristgrallir. 0Ay, Llariza" tic; places were reprek the Arrtmekayntwadtair Avenue RinU, awaited the topeniijg This Captain WaSs yell° °13 rrt eba.: s- st Gaul 1 Nv, Tull:, us: o,erxm rCp oesro. imecnboo: e,mCoisptthal ltainiartglOo.f3Ohyvvrens -t(3°liek A. matrimonial even' 'Ailici317411:taylKpletethbeainP,61:8PenrjdWilii' dinctaliblielaaret°atillIradve:BnAci