HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1880-03-11, Page 3•
Inarest•
Like St OM in the OM, liken AY DI the Mgeb,
bte
' Irdhe a boat that le °helmet to More
Ih.otrend nuresent the haavtliteel- di '.
*tures mo more end more. --- - ,
g know not why it should well and cry.
Ielte a anted ths.tes lost at Ment I
leow it neon% no grief, but has sound re et
nted 10 1. not toughed witile blight,
hao had of pleasure full navy a =cagoule
dt hes thrilled with lovelered wine;
44 halt hope end_ wealth end eounne rue
weannee
0 rick is tiais heart of mine I • :
Tee it le not enidd-u fa wild and mad,
Like a blflow before it broke;
dind 1t maseleee pain tit worse than Tata,
Ahem Snot °My knots ite aches, •
along:Ito be like the waves of the Ina,
That brat* froni control tka beat.
411d dee% and lunge, and many, and plunge,
And die at the gray rook's feet.
wearies oflife, and 'amens of strife;
And yet it tires eirest.
veer know not why it ebould ache and cry, -
Vie atroublesome heart at beet.
Thieriot understood, I think 'tie a good '•
And goddike discontent.
It springs from the Boni that burlier its3 goal -
The source nom which it was tent,
o Then surge, 0 krautl with thy wild 'count -
Cry, heart I like a child at night -
Till the mystic shore el the Evermore,
Oben, dawn on the emirs glad sight. -
• THE LADIES' COLON.
reminine Curiosities and Chit*
Chat.
inompued by Ann% Kato
A Warning to Ladies, -I have a word to
the ladies,tead I hope it will be taken seriously,
• • e but as it rehire to an article of dregs t don't
euppon for a moment 'that it will. I am
✓ ery eorry toAsy, lanai, that you are boom.
Inge/ray-Much like -the .0hineoge -Youare-
• zapidlY loeineethe graceful-ewalk which 'Atari
acterisee, or ought to characterise, you by.
wearing ahem and boots that 'do not at all
_ palm. Arte.yen awe. that out of a hun-
-- diedwonien yoti- wilt -not fin& one WO oiii---
exttibit a darted foot? Instead of the toes
' being, straight and ehapelye the great toe
. b,eing line with the rest of the foot on its
nide, they are all equeszed together so as to.
make the great toe press on to an uneightly
• bunion! Wind le theresult of this? Why, you
• have painful coma all over your feet, and
_ .."-_,:+awalkine.-haeomes-salahar--0_401111.--.41Lthie
arises from high Melo, and lately becalf
is the °fashion to have your boots. and (deem
•
xnade to come' to a point 1 I wieh Her,
- Majesty the Queen or . the Princess cif Wales
Would set a different fashion. To walk in
' Mantua you require a boot with a broad aria
• and with -plenty of eoom , for, the toes. But
I know I might just • as well ask the ladiee
to wears bonnet of the fashion of 1876, as.tO
ask them tower anything, no matterhow
,eoral °Mettle, that itu not precisely as Mr.
Worth or Mi. Somebody else known to fashion
ordains it. I have done my part, however, in
warning youl dear ladies.
• Low-necked Dresetni.--There ia a annuising
• reaction againet low•neeked inner, andthis
. ' time it comers froin abroad.. Even the toilet?
for ballets° made high or cut egnaree and are
. accompanied by ehort or lace atom; or,
• sleeves which are ansixture of, lace, embroid-
ery and bandit of contrading fabrie. , Painted
Ammo are becombireoramonewsittbartabli
o ften ohoWing a charming deeign in ntixe-d-
, -grams. and flower,. n ehaded..peach .and
• apple blonsome, or the Marrs, white flowering
almond. • Of cones° thedeeign' is repisated,
upon mane portion .of the bodiest, but it
Must lealoneierneduslieionalyd and st,prettY.,
idea lb- to mom a large bouquet, of real or
artificial bloosoms cerreeponding to litho°.
' that are painted upon the ;folds . or gath-
ering Of theiraii. Not SO deserving of praise
• • -la the sensehes fashion .of dangling alittle
Muff of lace and ribbon • • at the side otthe
sikt. -It hi litithaps not more,absurd than
the affectation of a flower-baeket, ivhiali had-
= relation Jo the .dress, occupation or habito.
of he wester, and ie ItimplYa litlifail200,
. tolerated on account orthe eelat of sphrting a
new fashion., • But the muffidea is cortainiy
• . more inconvenient to the ciwner, for eo few'
know what to do with them. Some 'carry
them, having'them suspended by ribbons;
others kit them hang as &chatelaine, and pin
• a little laee handketohief inside of them, the
cornet of .which just shows at the top ; • for of
course they cannot even be put to the use of
a dainty lace pocket.' .
•
•
Economical Dressing. -People aro to apt to,
buy cheap thing bedause they are (*cap,
forgetting they aro hardly worth the coot of
reeking up, forgetting they will not bear rain,
will not bear bruiting, will not boar creasing;
and that the new dress boomer' an old one
.before it lam been worn a dozen times; whilot
a really good material. is good to the leet•
• bolo ladylike to the tut. .We .mean, of
noun°, good 01 110 kind. A Se. per yard.sergia
is as abourd in it way. ao a But eve.
Wirth to impress 'upon our readers that. to
.drem well upon very little, to look a lady in
'mite of ehabbiness, two dresses which are
good of their kind are worth atozen /limey, •
• eauspioiOnsly cheap coetutnes, which are
draggled and woe.begone at the firet shower.,
and at, their best werebut a feeble imitation
of onelt Servant's. . • .
The Henry II. Ituff,-" And (speaking of
toilets," writes Luny lloOper, ' let inc re-
- 0°mi:cloud to my dear countrywomenthe
speedy 'adoption of the Henry II. ruff, now so
• popular ill Pais. , Made al passementerie to
match the dread and ,otiffened with invleible
• wire, it forme when worn With a aguare-orit
dues, the opening whereof is filled in with lace
and tulle, the moat charming effect imagin-
. , • able. In fact,' do not think that faehicatable
liadiee ever dressed More becomingly than
they are tieing at •pmsent. • What with the
Mose, low,severely Minnie coiffured that Ile
the, ohape of eying wommdo head and, the
color of her -heir, and the Abilene° of enag.
geration intim .pietereggem Millets that are
• now in vogue,' beauty neves lOoked more
• • beautiftile nee wad uglinersel ever MoM Mi-
• . durable." , " .
r -A
. •
Of oreinne Wog Pettletill$ to but OP tb.0
Wove stir in au Molt powdered rot 0$
laY Ma diree ; Mao sta dove; p t
another Mimi i teacuplMot boiling wetter ;
lat"Ovii 0010 ; .1,013r the flour Xeizturetsto
it. Mining well all the 040 ; it will Poo be
like mush; when cool, ay n cover on it ; keep
it cool. For use, soften it with wenn water,
It will keep twelve. menthe, and will not ostler
the paper. Ilk
A 101)100 Mace for Agit may be made of
canned temodon, with moor, ealt, ait of
onion, 1 bit ol Finley and a clove gr two,
stewed and premed- through a oetve, and
pouredinto a saumpan in which ooze butter
bee previouilly been iihnotered with 4vez7
little flour. Canna tomatoes may be very
nieoI eciexabled with egga end Bons lard or
butter.
Fondn-A Canadian relish. -Two ounces
of butter,. four ounces of bread annals, eight
mune of rloneheeee, one cup otliwet milk,
three egg.. Cut the butter and cheerio into
email pieoes and put into a large bowl with
the broad omens, and pour on them the
milk, melding hot, after which add the yolks
of the eggs, well beaten, and a pinch of
mix well together, cover and set back on the.
dove or range, stirring ocestsionallY, until all
• are dissolved, when add the whites beaten to
-
a stiff froth. Plasm in a buttered dish or pie
plate, and •bake in aquick oven for twenty
minders. Serve the Moment it le out of the
oven. A nice dish for eupper, whible some
• prefer to eat with mustard.
nuomminous e'er noes;
• The new Ishadee of brown are plaeasant,
coachman% drab, and argent et or-eilver and
gold.
Oetrioh Ups and target, showy artificial'
flowers vein bo usod to exeme in spring mil-
linery.
• Tne loyeelte dent ePeing,colomytell ma-
rine bluest, larownieh rode, daik, dull greine
and redieh,purplee. •
•
gloves are .worn very long, and immolate
are placed over them upon the nide, not on
he owelhottherarendee_ • '
A now way of making a tidy ie to embroider
or paint pretty designs on three strips ot Satin
• ribbon, and fasten them together with bands
og velvet. and lmoto di ribbon, •'
How dors courtehlp look? She looks and
he looks; that le how it looks. What le it
like r She hightt and he eighs-that io about
ethelealghtigriden—'eeed-e.e.
Lady Alice Howard, who was idarriecilid
Lord Loudoun in Chelsea, England, ,a few
days ago, wore a very reit white eatin dress,
trained, but , not immoderately so ; and al-
though the ingin foundation was not elaborate
the trimming of tinted point -de gaze, of won-
derfully fine quality, made it tea. The lace
flounce was • dotted , with a tuft or two of
&Mega flowers, and the head dreea was a
cermet of diamonds and orange flowers,while
the veil, of lovely design in point de gaze,was
• placed on tho head so that one corner made.
a Marie Stuart point, and the reel was
gathered together, and trooped over the
beck of the drose and train, none failing over
Scolob gingham are now imported in mild
ostlers of the styliele dark red wine shade's,
peacock bine; and olive green: to go with
theee in combination costumes are half-inch
stripes of the guaint abler in two ehades.
_Them met forty canto a yard, and are excel-
lent for service; though the cohere are
-0-high,e)-therees-no danger of failing briber).
holiest Scotch gingham% ' • The alternate
stripers of pink with 'blue; and bars of the
• same colors, are again largely imported.
- '
nir.
:AktleSt ePinb and the Cockfight.
An Ottawa correspondent of the New York
World gives Rome, intereating and•annieing
reminiscences of attempto to establish Court.
ceremonials, whielf iversi, however, a seriong
thing under the old Fumes military regime,
• when two boys were ooundly whipped for _
offending the bishop by wilding . the Gover-
nor before•they did the lord spiritual. About
twenty-five years.since the Governor-General,
Bit Edmund Head, undertook to Mtn:niece
the regulations whioh govern the intercourse
of Ministers with the crown of England. Ms
first order was that when Ministers left the
.capital they should inform him' of the fact.
Sir Allen MoNahlad ocoasion to go away the
.next day, and sent this moue :
• 6‘ The MoNak-begs to inform His Excellency
that he has gone down the river as for as.
GMBH Ile to a cockfight, And if thilioNah
'does not retum to town to -morrow or . the
next day Hie Egoelleney will be justified in
concluding that the MoNab hoe fallen into
the hinds of the pollee, in Windt ease Hie
Excellency will doubtless .be good enough to
intercede for the release Al the MeNab."
The letter got into print, and then and
there ended the attempt to imitate the old
country refoims. •'
alfluottiali and Comonercial Jottings.
Hastward-bound freighte front Chicago to
New York wae reduced from 40 cents to 85
cents on grain *o -da, . •
• The elevators at Detroit are unable to
redeive any more grain. ••.
' Lateen information from the' F3ouria Biver.
coal fields,looated 150 miles weskof Emerson,
N.W.T.,,bringsthe aliening intelligence that
at a depth of sixty fed the miners, struck a
vain of coanseven feet thick, which is candy
the mime thiekness as the vein now being
worked in the "Baby Mine'! forty miles west
• of Biemarok, Dakota, and about 150 mileo
oouth of the Bowie River coal field,. and
coals from winch is lacing used in thel000mo-
noes on the Yellowatoneand Dakota Division
df the Northern Pacific Itailtedy. .
• AIMPICIAN Looms az Finne-The amount
-1
The Ribbon Denise -The latest 'Meaty* itt.
Pertleir is the' ribbon denten Which: is often
takenlora ootilIiofl figure and lo eontetitnite
danced' •by :Obildren at ,their partida And at
fancy dress belle: . Eight ribbene 'of different
itelere ire attached to a ring in" the ceiling.
Four balm •and four gentlemen /sold the
Mide.0.1 the ribbond.• The Oreheetra okrikeo
•'ifp and they dance a Meature which' enableir
•• theneto plait the 'fibbone, The firoheetra
, then Marie another measure, the .dancere
• another otep and the plait is unplaited. Each
• Of the denote •inay be dreseed according M
. the Colter of theribbon that he or ilia Wilde
. the mingling.ot the Colors be en -the
•• more brilliant. • ,
• riesittm Micanks.
g George's Ptidding.deOne pintof breed -
0, bell -pint "Of flour, tempooriful °of
MAIM (liftedin flour, a little ealt,
quarter,of a Porind of
rim of it ponttd of chopped net,
intik, one egg ; tied tiglatly in
• Oace hOUra ; to be enthin
Fer. 0 family Of eight
all beet) enp of tapioca
to mak, and kept Warne
, then add feta emit
•, butter the' HIM of a
Mpoonful Of Salt ; When
e quarto of Milk and
or .letherri 'bake' the
o teaspoonful Of
; When obit stir in
ti it the, Conmeteney
• scorica young*
Dr. Oilskin, of Large, died on, the 61h intl.
In WO 78th year.
The deethle ennotenled of the Be, Immo
Cement, .01 Oomrie hi the 640 year of his
age.
Leta Colin Campbell, Ma., addreesed
Giallo Mission concert in Glaegow ehe other
night. ,
The Town 00=011 01 Inverness has eleeted
afr. Wm. Meekintoeh, of Plebes Roue, to
the ofilee ol Provoot, Sheriff and Coroner.
Jame Irvine, a farmer in Sandwich pariale,
left Otrominiese for home the Other day and
hao not since been heard of.
Mr. Jamee Cowan, M. P., has twined an,
addrens to the electors of Edininurgh n.
=unclog • Ina willingneeo to stand ior ree
election,
Tim Duke of Sutherland has arrived in
Egypt. Hie Grace gave a banquet at Calm
to Prof. Nordenslijold, the famous Ando
explorer.
The death occurred lately of Mr, M. For.
Petit, architect, Airdie. For some Nears pad
he carried on an extensive bueinees in Gies-
gow.
The death is announced at Vortrolle of the
Rev, George Tulloch, minister ol the Free
Church of Eddraohillis. In the 87111year of
his age, and 51st of his ministry.
The Shetland Flohing Company, of Glass-
gow, which, was dusted some years ago to
Prosecute the Faroe and Iceland cod Alining/
le about to be wound up by liquidations
Tho improvement in the tweed trade at
Hawk* is bang -well oustained, and, the
orders for hoeiery are plentiful already for
next wineer,
.The Illatorinedloffeeneauseathe first:of the
drinklege publics bonen promoted by the
Dundee Coffee house Company, was formally
opened on Thurecley.
Mr. Alex. Mackenzie, the well known land-
maefengardenerr-Londenrwhe- eppeentind
superintendent of Epping Forest, under the
Corporation of London, ig a native of Rohn.
The gmenein 'consideration of the frosted
ebbe)t loor year's oat o crop, has inetruoted
her Commbeioner, .Dr. Profit, to give peed So
the tenants on the Aborgeldie estate.
' Mr. • Sohn Skelton,' tbe " Shirley " of
..Frazer:a IlLagaginh remarks in the February
number -that •the Sidite-tinigtmeddlinenow.
hardlyto be met with in its purity out of a
few Ayrshire villageo."
Lord A.berdeen hao lately becalm an en-
thueiset in the game of, ;mien; During the
• last frosty vreather nert of the lower leke
near Haddo Ileum wee utilised is a curling
pond.
Rev. T. R. Andereon'Sefftonhall U. P.
Churob, Hamilton, hao declined a call to a
Bristol congregation and his congregation
have resolved to add £100 a year 20 leis
otipend.„
The body of Jane Lindsay, of Cumber-
neadd, 'was found lying in a deep dool on
Fanneide Moor lately. It bore traces of foul
play, the face being much 'bruised, and the
neck compressed with a tartan ecarf tightly
knotted. . •
• Mr. Win, Galbraith, svho hite. juat retired
from the firm of „Charted Tennant., & Oo„ qf
Bolton, Glasgow, after a conflation' extend-
ing over forty. four Yeers, has boon Ontiortsined
to a eompltnientary dinner by a fume number'
of Mende., . , .•
•
•
The late Rev. David R.Loneom Minister of
the -Scotch •Chumh, dartisle, •ytho was -a
native of Arbmath, has bequeathed 2500 do
the Arbroath InfirmarY; and £500 to the
Town Council, for A echolarship in the Ar- •
broeth nigh School.. . •
-The lodge "William EwartGladstone," o1.
theLoeal•Order of Ancient- Shepherde, has.
_jnet been fornied at Glaegow with ' the per-
miesion of the ex -Premier, who wrcio that he
_
i'vas."excieh lionored " by the request to allow
-the lodge to be named after him.
Wore/owe domino Predictu a lereene ee
Themes Ironic compremteed et 60
'Leveler Bututree Oyer:edit --.13raMplon,
cents on the dollar, olteh; Gansuegne, Ames
sixteen Theenand leeenrete
aeied/Wdrill otangfeeturer of clothes: wrieeers.
_ -11111,91ber evertillit,At Plitt
View, In., Peet. POP developed, Roamed *Deny
Other strong theorier, the rapl4 growing
beltet thot the great toe period that gvound
he reckainto soli had been Attributed to A
Uwe too remote' in the eettlee hietory. He
sof it bed been the gaits unlventallYageented
opimon that the grist fee eltPli Wilde formed
• te climate rendered cold by reageefol changed
oolutilo reletions. It wee known that the
eceentriolty 'tithe earnest path around the sun
wee pubject, M long perkide, to coneiderable
ehange, reeulting in °prying the earth' out
from the gun eoMe 15,000,000 a mike farther
at time than now. The °settler great is a cripple. Jiiir profeesion is that of an
aphelion, together with elienged conditions mullet and ouriet.
WAVE Ott vacs ungx...tiv soma%
cold out_to 0. D, (Iowan; Gronenhurste P
arthelomedid (*end snore, attlethed ;
• Leamingtoit, George E. Pepew, roilhinery and
dry goods, failed; Newinatket, W. IL Asti.
worth, silk bat menufecturer, aseiddida '
Peterborot J.I. Davideon, bolo and station-
ery, aseigned ; Toronto, J. F. Eby
wholmale tea merehante, Hugh Blain ad.
mitted-style Rby,Blaio & (Jo; R. 7f, Taylor
& Son, (wine) merchant tallore, atkeehed ;
,Mte. Trotter, hotel, attached.
The husband Of 2irg. -Emcee Hoililson About 1770 there wao living be London
Burnett, the author of Tnet Lem
Lewereee,,, who le a deeicied4 01 Washington, trackman who hod dimmed of eleven •
• daughtero in marriage, with each of whomint
gave their weight in' halfpence ari a JoAnne.
The young ladies must have been bulky, for
$ l,� lighteet ot them weighed 260 2s. 84.
Motto for every well -ordered dinner talble--
.
Petornaineel Nalsgoe.
UMW, Mirth 8.-A. terming an named
Mberli gale, living about eremites WM hem,
in the Townsialp of Teondon,00mMitted KOWA
legteljelit ettitkeneerningla hanfildg
in lib barn, where his body waa found by
!tome of tbe members of the homily. Ho WM
quite oold, ass il be hod been ettepended for
tannetime. The etterapt Made wag Very ,
determined, he bevies put severed *lege on
the rope When Plash:1g It around his AO**.
No caws 14 seeigned for the rosh. sot. He
leaves a wife and entail femiitt, COMA;
Egonseottactit; hat jest lett forthe place to hold a
inn.
attributable to -the preemeion of the equinox,
was belleVed to have produced the groat •
periode of be In the pad. From this fitand.
Point of reckoning Clifford °bins man to
have been on earth 2,000,000 years. Tho
profaner said he 1301143°W the modem ten-
dency of thought wale in favor of a different
view, Paring the winter in our northern
hemisphere, we are as,00il000 miles nearer
to the min than in summer, 'Thie helps to
:equalize our climate, rendering the winters
much more mild, and the stuntner's heat far
less than it would be if the conditions wee°
irevereed. In the gouthern leerolepheM the
exact reverse state of conditions exist& They
are nearer the sun in outwear and farther off
in winter. They have cold winters and hot
Bummer& At the Muth pole there is a vast
expels of ice over that of the &nth pole.
The vast accumulation of toe at tho nouns
pole attracts the waters of the ocean, °hang -
Mg the equilibrium of the earth's centre,
moving the equator to the 'tenth, drawing ole.
the evaterse Orthel north pokelditiard the
south pole. This accounts for the clearly
noticeable otibsidentie of watera in the north,
and for the foot thet there io but little dry
land in the Southern hemisphere. Hills ages
-01-iddhaithe einerliCrideuPatn-dhedineers-
glacial Period ie approathing in, the southern
hemisphere, and will be at ite greatest height
in about 5,500 years. The lastperiod of, ice
in the northern hemisphereis aim of 'equally
reOent date, occurring probably about 6,000
years ago. The lecturer was of opinion that,
if, them regent VieWe proved correct, /here
would be a recurrence of the ice period in
about 16,000 years in the northern hemi-
trialiereee-Thire vieviaMuld:•ralsoashorten, the .
time of niall'a 'existence on thdglohe. di
prObebly este to say that man had not existed'
more than 50,000 or a 100,000 yeare.
•• _ ,
•
A $6ti,o'oci SW.IPIPLE.
_
.of Ione in the United Skates by fire during
e879, sis reportedto inmirance oompanielinime
677,703,700 ; Add to this the•unineured looms
that are net reported, and it will fall but
„little ahort of 'the Q100,000;000 elidmed as
the annual loes in thig country. • 'Canada is
Dot included in these reports. In tho four
years, • 1875.67 and. 8; therewere burned'
Wholly Or in parte in the United Stater! :
1,654 hotele, 263 &mho, 182 tiehool homage
40 court houpeo, 42 altar' houses, hoepttals
and asylums -1,8p. • in' ' all. It .would"
naturally be 'Monona that buildings of
the character named walla be built with more
than ordinary care, but the reeord does. not
ehOW. Buell to be the one. • :Indeed, •the more
pretentious the building, the more meters
eeene to be theownere. . .-
% - ..... _ .
ItAILIMAii 011001SCill.-Mr. qameel Torranne,
Of Troy, N.Y., punters the bellowing methed
of shollehingthe danger attending. the •prin
Bent style of railway ormeinge. , fle would
nee for ettok 'oroodinge'a rail Of Riedel form,
Mika; in one pima of the usual lengthNith
a groove wide etiougli,-, for the flouglket the
•ear wheelto run in ; the groove -to
be . • wedge.shapea .. and wideet .at the
top, with plain sideis, oo ari *olio catch the
feet ,of men Or animate. . In Maio way he
• Would -get rid of the usual. trap between the
planking and the mile. Ouch a grooved rail
could easily he kept clear of mew and •iost;
and the extra eon Of rolling venial be
nothing, he think% compared with Ito adletn-
tage in doing away with the risk to life and
limb attending the preeent 'style Of croisiego.
Me. 3. A. Ointment, Conant of the Gerinan
,
Empire at Toronto,-' has. Piet had bedewed
upon him lief the Emperor William the Order
of the Crean in recognition of his gervicee aft
Ilentini.. .
.., Shako/team make e Canine Inky.- "The
clock has ;thicken three ," forgetful of the
foot that olintko Word not invented for mote
than eight lautdred 'yearetnfter Codes WM
dead. , " • - - . .
I
The Scotsman publiehed a list of 260 Tory
faggots for Mid.Lothian, whose qualificatIone
were recorded up to January 81st. A remark-
able feature in the list lo the number of
Durafriesehire taxmen; moetiS Irani the
instates of the Duke of lincoleuch.
A Committee of the Aberdeen Teem
Council bada: conference in Aberdeen on
Monday with the trueness of the late Mr.
Steele, Edinburgh, and who belonged to
Arbroath, ipregind to the oeleetion of a site
in Aberdeen for a monument toBir William
:Wallace, provided for in Mr. titeele's
Thi JialittiOS, barque, of Glasgow, from
Calcutta, arrived at Havre on Wednesday
week With. the whole of her crew laid up with
!scurvy, and muter and steward dead. Whilet
.off Falmouth, elle fell in with the Trinity
House cutter, the pilot of whose crew beought
her into port. •
•
•
• The death is announced of' Mr. Gilkisou,
lately a citizen and magietrate of Glaegove.
Ho resided in' Tullibody House for oeveral
yeare, emigrated to New Zealand Orient
'menthe agoevith hio family, and settled in
Dunedin with' the vievetsf commencing boon
nem there. • Mo. Gitlin= is a daughter of
Jamee Eng, the lemons " EttrickeShepa
herd." • -'
' In May last' Mr. William Marshall, of
Holehonse, bequeathed a large one for -the
endowment of an Induitrial Training Insti-
tution for destitute boys and giro belonging
to the Counties of Lanark and Stirling. Mr.
Marshalre eister Was liferented in the estate,
and by her donee a few days ago at Bridge
of Allan, and deed of settleinent executed by
her, about 1200,000 is 110W available for the
' peeper!, aimed at by her late brother. ,
, Andrew Greig, the last M the Paisley
veterans resident in town who fought' at the
battle Of Waterloo, tied •the other day.. At
• the tinee of the battle he Wag a sergeant in
the 7let Regiment which honor. he retained
till- he left the army. • He was over eighty-
• seven year's of ego, and up till a few, cleya
, before he diedwao haler and hearty, and ablo
to walk about. ,
• Mr; A. B. Whyte, of the 'firm of Simpdon &
olothierto Aberdeen, died tately m the
aeventioth year of his age. He took a promi-'
• nent part in Municipal affairs, wall a dieector
of the Deende %Relay, of the Northern
-Agrioultural Company, the • CutterMille
Company; the Asylum for the Blind, eti.' He
• waa a juetiee of the Peace for the county and
An older of the We'd Pariah (Muth.
Two beautiful tabling' have toot been erected
in the Free Church, Woodelde,• Aberdeen.
Ono is to the Memory of the Rev. AndreW
Gray, the first rainieter of., the church, tind
who was afterwards translated to the West
Church, Perth. The other tablet kin memory
of Mr. Irvine ICempt, who wasi atm °lonely
asociated with the early hietory of the Corti
,gregatioa. The tablets 'are the gift in Sir.
John Anderson, Eit.Leonardenon•Bea, who b
a native Of _ .
The ravages of what to eommcinly 'known
es " rot " or 4' bane " ate enameling Wet
appalling preportions in •the Midland and
Western counties oftngland, in consequence,
12 10 generally supposed, of the excessive and
long continued wet weather last year, Use
of thotleanda of (loop, prinelpally °wee, are
dead and dying, In some Withers in Glen.
meter, Oxon, and Wariedok there are co10.
paratively apeaking leery few sheep left, and
in Somerset there are only 5,600 left he one,
diettiet, Which tistially winters 50,000, Hun,
drab, if not thdneandtf, IA (sheep have boon
Hold off in the Bristol dietelet at front
to 100,a need, •
. • ;
The congregation of Zion Chereh, ?Ion -
treat (Bev. ,Mr. cBray'), beve voted to sell
their church, se they are nobble to pay the
, debt upon it.
emeetamemateteemat
•-Ayer's Cathartic Pills,
Far all the purposes of a Family Physte,
and for otirinK Coetiveness,. Jaundice,
Indigestion,vein stomach, Breath,
Headache,- Erysinelati, Rheumatism,
Eruptions and snineDiseases,
loneness, Dropsy, Tumors,Worms,
Neuralgia,as a Dinner Pill,
• B
for urifying the Blood,
Are the most ef-
- fective and conge-
nial purgative ever
discover -ed. They
are mild, but ef-
fectual in their
*-3 Operation/ 0 movine
the bowels surely
and without pain.
A) thougle gentle
in their operation,
e` they are still the
most theratigh and
eeed-,searchinndee &the
tic medicine that can be employed : cleans-
ing the stOmeeli and bowels, and even the
blood. In small doses of one pill a day,
they stimulate the Affestive organs and
promote vigorous health. ,
• Aznit's Peiee have been known for
moreethan-squarter of a centpey, and have
obtained a world-wide reputation for their
evirtues...-T1My TrPO.k..,illeedded action
_the several assimilativeorgiiiiidiiie
body, and are Co composed that Obstruc-
tions within their ,range can rarely with-.
stand or evade them. Not only do they
cure the every -day complaints of : every-
• body, but also formidable and dengerous.
diseases that have balled the 'beet of
human skill. While they produce power-
ful effects they are at the same time the
safest and best physic for: children. By
thnir aperient action they gripe much less
than the common purgatives, and never.
give pain when the bowels are not inflamed.
They reach the vital fenntains Of the blood,
ena strengthen the system by: freeing • it
frofn the•elements of weakness.
• Adapted to all ages and conditions' in
all clifnates, containing neither calomel
nor any deleterious drug, these Pills may-
be •taken, with safety by enybedy. Their
segar-coating preserves them evOr. fresh,
and neakee _them pleasant to take; while.
• being purety veg.etable, eaii arise• '
from- their use m ,any quanetty.
• Dr, J. C. AYER & co:, L�eII,Mass4
Pr:tiniest:MA Anaivficot Chemists. _
SOLD BX ALL DSIJGOIS'XS DVERYWKEity..
W. M. Jnocfaulting City Clerfi Arrested near
• London..
Lotman, Margit 3. -Chief of Pollee rer.
rings, of en. Thomas, and a detective of this
olty -have juin arrested the defaulting city
clerk of Urbana, Ohio, on a charge of stealing
• 660,609 belongiog to that corporation. The
defaulter laasheen living here for ocanctime,
and Wall overhauled at the One Home Tavern,
Hoath,. Road. BOMB tiMe Sine° he
suddenly distappeared from the eity
smog the lake, and everybody stood aghast
at the allegations which those in authority
• fearleeely made against him as he had always
been held In high °deem. The Board of
Auditors investigateddhe bode and reported
everything oatiefactog. The popular
distrust; howevei. -was not- quieted, -and a
optician Board of Auditors woe appoint-
ed to • ; complete the tedious task.
After many days' hard work they diecovered
that through We medium the defaulting
olerk ' had • etolen 460,000 in hard
cash previous to hie • departtire • for
Canadian mil. 1 It • is alleged that he'
forged . the- debenturee in- the -name of the
pity, and, having received mush therefor at a
reasonable dieoennt, forsook hie 'intuition
and came to London. In this respect he only
followed in the footsteps of the notorious
Feeder, of Canton, in the same State. The
defaulter was Wetly .remanded to• . St.
Thomas, where application bas been, made*
before judge Hughes for the usual examine -
non to, ammo extradition patient.
A. Monkey Pulls a ,Tooth.
;WelInvite the attention of Mr. Derwin, to
the following very singular anecdote regard.
ing the monkey "Dat," belonging to Mr.Jas.
Wardlaw, of this town, as so peculiar an
illustration of the ingenuity of the monkey.
-has rarely, if over, been recorded. The monkey
was brought' to Galt from Deccan, India, in
• the fall of 1878, by Mr., %valeta, who had
been residingin Hyderabad for !leveret yeare.
12 10 one of the smallest:6f the monkey tribe,.
and, we understand, goes by the name of the
Himalaya - monkey. Its remarkable Woks
and aimed human expression have made
'it a source of much entertainment to the
family and visitors. But it .1 ir1y. eclipsed.
Until On •Sunday `before lept. • The little
creature had been Buffering from toothache
for Wend deys, and • evidenny suffered
severely. On, Sunday the pain was more'
• than Ordinarily Revere,. and the rawakey,.like
Ita human type, meolved attest to undergo a
dental operation. But the dentist,' Wang° to
say, Wag itself.. • "Dot" found a string,
listened it round the aching tooth, oeized the
end of the string with ite fore feet, drew up
one of its hind lege between it fore feet and
gave a sudden shelve which jerked the tooth
out and sent it fining half way across the
room. This having been accomplished, the
monkey•was at ems and rammed its natural'
cheerfulness and 'Tho story may
mem aimed incredible, but we have it ,frorn
the Masers. Wardbw, .whoge charaeter is
-such that there is no Mom.for doubting its.
mouretey.-Gait-4eformer.
. ' THE LATES'i!
What are to be the ' steins et the 'near.
A cable deepatoli from Paris, dated March
2, says; -The "high art" craze in dress .00
12111011 the.vogue in leindon ties been aceepted
With certain iraprovemeote in Paris. The
tante is for really heautiful designs, and the
more piottiresq.ue a lady, the more behionable.
The correct thing 10 to look as though you had
just denied down from an ohd canvas, and
only wanted o triune tp be a complete picture.
• The frightens of our anceetors are revived, and
we new oao our great grandmothers as inhere
OW them. In the matter 'of dram. the
Medici balm are revived, open, 'rifler) in.
front, with high chum° collar. The ekirts
behind are ell ehirred lengthwise: Elaborate
talks are Wern in front puffed' en gueule de
They- are made to imitate foxglove.
Petal casaquins ere retained, abio vote,
seamie115 bodice and tuniqu.e front Veen..
Sondem bodice and tunique front are eat in
one. The sleeves ate made very flat and wide
in the armhole, tapering at the waiet.
Tournares are indispensible tor round 13kito
not gored. No ',skirt ehould be leo than two
-metree, Imply centimetries ennui loweet.
10 oirodinderenee. Fold and. draperies' Oro
• put On hill, which gives the tiled of full
eltirt0 without the weight. '
•
"No leek's •
•.
4111111111111111111111MOINISINIIIIIIINIMIN
Ayt3r's
Sarsaparilla
• For Scrofula, and all
scrofulous diseases Brysi-
'
poles Rose, or St.,Anthoe
ny's Fire, Eruptions and. '
Eruptive diseases of the -
skin, Ulcerations of the,
Liver, Stomach, Ididneys,
Lungs, Pimples, Plistulese
- oileteXilieteheeeeaTananOre,
etterrS4Wltli10in, Scald
• Head, Ringworm, :Ulcers, ,.
SoresAlleurnatism, Neuralgia, Pain in• •
the Bones, Side and Read, Female
Weaknelis, Sterility, Leticoerhoett, arising
front .-internal. ,,nloeratimi 'Uterine- --- ..- „-
diecese, Syphilitic and. Mercurial died
eases, . Dropsy, Dfspepsia, Emaciation,
BGleonoear.al Debility, and for .1',nrifying the
Ilas Sarsaparilla is a combination a
vegetable alteratives - Stillingia, Mane •
drake, l'y.low Dock --with 'the Icidideei
.a Potassium and Iron, and is the most
efficacioue medicine yet known for
-the-cligeases Ras intended.:UtaRe: • , .
__Its ingredients 'axe so skilfully anti-. ' •- 7- -
hined, thee the full alterative effect of •
each as assured, and while it is so mild_ ,
as to be harmless even to children-, it is's Is '
"111
still so effeeetual asto purge out from the
system those impurities and corruptions '
which develop into loathsome disease.• •
The reputation itenjoys is 'derrved "
from its cures, and the confidence which '
prominent in
• all over the coun-
try repose m it prove their experience
of its usefulness.
• Certificates attesting its virtued hive.I
accumulated, end are constantly being
received, and as xnany of these cases are
publicly known they f urnish• convincing' 4
evidence of the superiority of this Sar-
dsaparillkee Over eveey . other ' alterative
medicine, Sod generally. is its auperin ,
ority to any, other Medicine known, that
pwuebni iece dthdaof nth% mb eoarte i qtuhaarni t Ito so in: shuzthe :
possessed are strictly maintained.• .
Dr. C. AYER. & CO.., Lowell., Mass.,
• . Praolioal and 4.1tatyticaL CAeiniets. '
SOLD BY ALL DRII.GGIST$ ByERYSYSIBRE.
TheHandlton police have just drug upon
the plan of keeping a black lid of persona
viewers in the habit of frequenting home's of
ill -fame. 11 MaY not be generally known that
O similar list has been in existence eta -114h
for a year, and -that it oontaina the names of
tomb people whose friendo are ready to wear
are patterns of prodriety.-edleraid,
Four hundred and seven dollen have bun
celletited in the Donlan Catludie Mirada of
Mount Vadat for the suffering poor of Ire.
'land,
‘co
ONE OF THE OLDEST' AND MOST RELIABLE
REMEDIES, IN THE .WORLD FOR
.THE CURE OF • .
Coughs, Colds, Floarsenebs, SOO 1:
Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza,.
Croup, Whooping Cough,
AathrilfrVand every
affectionof the •
Throat, Lungs, anci Chest,
4 • •
including • - •
•. CONSUMPTIQN. •
WELL-NNOWN PHYSICIANWRITESa :
" Itdoes not drrup a cough, and leave the cattle' :
'behind, cis is the case 'with mdse preparations,
• but loosens it, cleanses the tangs ancg .
thus rem9ning ad cause of. complaint."
DQ NOT BE DECE/VED by articles
• bearing it similar name. • Be sure you get DR.
• WISTAR'S BALSAM OF Wil,t) CHERRY,
• with the signature of "L BIITTS.„" on the
wrapper. 50 Cents and s1.00 a Bottle. Free
• pared by 'Sean W. FOwLE .&-Soles, Boston,
. Mass; Sold by druggists and dealers geocallya • •
I TO!
11
,
A rrotectod Solution of the Protozido of-Ireis; . . .
Is as easily digested and assimilated with tho •
blood as the simplettiood. When the blood
does not contain the/hewn. quantity.Of Iron, tho '
deficieney can be supplied by the lideeof the , a
PEW VLIN SYRUP. It cures a "thousand •
ills " simply by TO$INar Ur, InVioonkriNo, and
Yin:mimeo the syetetn. The enriched arid i
vitalized blood permeates 'every pert Of tho
body, repairing damages and waste, searching •
ont morbid secretions, and leaning nothing for
dieease to feed upon. This is the secret of the . .
Wondorfursuccess of this remedy in curing • • •
- Dyspepsia; Liftee-Colthiptaint1BOirs;--- - -
,
Dropsy o , CliPonio Diarrhcaa,
c,
NOPVOUS Affections Female 0
Complaints, • .,
And all dieeasee Originating le a bad state of
the blood, or aceotapanied by debility, or a loin
state of the system,
OAITTION.--Be- sure you get the
" RUVIAN SYRU.P." Sold by druggists gener-
ally. . Pamphlets sent free to any address by • ,
SETH W. Few= et aox_s, Proptictorer.86 Her..
• rison Ay emlo) Boston, Hags. j
,
Z1