HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1880-03-25, Page 3. •
Wanes; felowent.
BX Alratia Ondavolotassit.
Due of the worker % (IRMO world
Idving toiled -and oiling :lied;
Bat othem verged e.nd the .werid went on -
And Was -not ohauged when he Vise one.
A strong arto striogen, a wide oat furled
And only', few men eighed.
One of the lieroce ef tlie world
. /fought to conquer, then foneht to fail,
And fell down slain in hts biood.staintd rneil
And ever hie form -MET etept;
Rio oanee was lost awl nki intoner furled; '
oidy a woman wept.
One of the eingere among mankind
Ian g neging eonga from so o'erwratielit
But ere men iietened the erase and wind -
Wore wasting me rest uosuog like a wave:
And pow of his fame teat will :neer depart
Be Mei never heard M hie grave.
One of the women who only love,
Loved and grieved and faded away—
Ah mo 1 are them gone to the Gee above?
what more of each, can
03,,,y are human %towers that dower and
Tins Ls the SQL g and the end °ilium ait.
•
TUE itioNit'a•MA.
Reamer raritamare oil the threatener.
Dorsett, illargh 14.—Twenty paisengers of
the stranded dimmer Montana, her purger
mod a portion of her, erew have. resoled
Liverpool in a tug. The tenoning is a pm-
eengetn-account of the disaster :
Friday ninnt wati beautifully clear until
Beinnight, bet a fog rose at $ 30 on Saturday
morning-. When the Montana amok Captain
Gadd and oescond officer O'Neill were on the
bridge. She etrnek, with a heavy grating
mound, whittle aroneed the saloon paseengers.
Dr. Gardner, who ran on deck, was fold by
the captain to arouse -the passengers, end
boate were at once got out. There wag no
gonfusion, net the slightest pante, the captain
tolling the pessengero that if ,they obesed
ordere all would Wedeln filx female* with
the third Minster, William* end the pilot, were
plead in one boat. and six males in another
with the fourth ufdoer. Them were pulled to
Holyhead. In the meantime guns weretred
' and blue lights burned, showing the locality
of the; dietister. Oberon Bay is four mile
from Holyhead. • . .
• The tights of theItentana were seen by a
_tag which- was: in. the :neighborhood, and --11
immediately went ti the aseistanoe of the
steamer, arriving alongside at tve o'clock.
The mails and luggage were got up, and at
iix the tug otarted for Holyhead with the
doctor and part Of the crew and the remaining
passengers, and taking on 'board other pas
gangers who landed at Holyhead, she returned
to Liverpool. • The pilot was asleep,, below
when the ohip (Amok. The passengera Sputa
in the highest terms M trio conduct ot the
officer* At last aceetnets the fore pert of this
need' Was last on the rooks and the after
part afloat. The fore compartments were lull
of meter., Three tugs have been sent from
Liverpool to amid the Montana. , The paper.
hatendent Of the Onion- Line is at the mune
of the disaster, and will endeavor to float the
Mesmer, She will liSednienni tidal wreck, but
it ire hoped that all the cargo.will be saved, au
the beef certainly will be.
Raw Yonn.litareh 14.—The wreaked steamer
Montana is an hem vessel at 4,800tone, with,
—1thebruntodation-f5e2100 "passengers. •Her
eargeenompriest .3,..1900. bushels ot Wheat;
.1,100 hales Of cotto1it.dtlTh &�t
ment of provisions and merchandiee. Her
eapteinis coneidered ono M the most treat.
worthy officera of the linek The orew number
100. Iri1875 the Montana attempted*race
7-with4he-Republic imaeleaverstormeandewase
obliged to return to Queenstown disabled. In
1878 an Unusually 'Ong. • voyage .geye
rise to it belief that the vensol had tom-
detad, • • '
• niettem..and.imrnmette.
Meta Granger goes to Europe in Jane and
thence.to Altamaha. ' • .•
F. 0, Bangs appearsin Philedelphia next
week in the romantio dra,'''The Illuminati,"
Sir junto B.enediet has been compelled by
sickness to reeign his position as conductor
in London. ,
Fashion has no prejudices. Barden' play,
"Daniel Rothat," is hiesed by the 'Menem*
damned by the critics, and abused by every-
body, but all the, women in Paris. have
adopted the " apillure Lea," which is the
named the etyle in which- Mlle-. Bartell, the
jeune preniicie of the'. pieoe, areisges. ber hair.
In theladiesegallery in the English House
of Commons ;there:ie. an inscription to be
limn by all Upon them •entranee, Silence is
requested," which Is rarely disregarded, and
Deny Pollock, writing in the • Theatre for
February, euggatte that eimilar inscriptions
should be placed upon the walls of our
theatres. •
Mho Emma. Abbe% having been told of
• some criticism tipifii the waintthollerading
•' in lone mind, responded,: "Ielettist.the cone
• ventioriat dam; duplhl lovemaking scene*
• so often depicted by women who wore never
in hive, and knownothing of tire passion.
I think the • more vivid and lifelike the
representation is the better; I have been in
• love, and know what Dam acting. .1 forget
Emma Abbott in vivifying niy ohitracters."
In order to obtainen approximate estimate
of the prospeats of the' winter 'wheat strop in
the Northwestern State* the Chicago Times
has niade spatial enquiries in eleven States,.
the result being generally favorable reports
. as to the mitlooln . The vino throughout
• Illinoie, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Memoir!
and Kangas promise very well, and in most,
if not all of these States, a great Morgue in
the wheat aioreage is reportee,comiegtient upon
last • yeaelebountiful harvest. The limeade in
tho yield in Mint& is animated at 50 per
cont. and in Mbhigan at 75 per cent. In
Iowa, 'Wisconsin, Kentuoky and . Nebraska
the.00ndition of the crop is not so good, the
weather having been • unfavorable, but the
inereasectarea devoted to wheat griming will
probably make up . any defielehoy. Taken
. altogether the Times foreshadows that. the
'augmentation of the total prodnotion
throughout the eleven States inoluded in the
estimate•will be Menet 60 per cent. unless
Nevem 'flanges in the weather should Opium
of a cherader to damage the (trope.
' An inquest has been held at Iblaritheeter on
John Atherton Bestrew. . The'rother night
; the demand 'gentleman was in the upper
circle of the Mentehester Theatre littyal, .and
jun before the commencement of the pan -
tombola he WAS Mon tolean forward, and
when he Weal:Token to he • was found to be
. dead. A verdict of death from natural maim
Was returned: The de'esaged had often oent.
• plained of pain M the heath .
• The Oakville Tannery Conipetteo have an
cemular demonstration in the difforenoo Of
peon in inoproved American machinery that
they -were desirous on introdueing _into their
eistablielonlont, They , alp paying eenie 0700
mote now than Whet et)11 thing cost before
theseld.P."
Rao an English writer: "Wo crowd our
Irtioine, beeanse we Wien to Me our friend*
but to show the extent of our 'acquaintance,
became the greatest misery of the greatest
weather is a imolai degree at belle and robin
ibis* Whitth intiet not to Mooted."
A...00*er pitcher, worth 5806, ha ti been
sent from Now York to the Oblicom Embassy
fit Washington as a meant from Gene Grant
SO 74 Hung Chang, .Vieeroy of `a province
Which royally entettained Grant while the
eilattervies itt Ohina.
The hens will 'Mop begirt 10 fling mertity
`. their Easterley.
JESSE ei,ws nai4oxis
,
ilatr ate Rev, Gentleman Appltes 11 ref
the Wounded Worts 'et the doedliene.
mune VCrY, Queer Contentions by the
Alleged Clerical Dead Mean
"Rev." J.. T. Breen feels much aggrieved
at tho remark' whielt have been reaee by the
papers anent his mount pilgrimage through
the province, and More particularly doeg he
feel the abet* made on him by otir London
contemporaries,. A reporter of the Advertiser
intenuowed his memo* whine erldanation0
given below will probably account kr hie
failure to pay his legitimete debta in Hamel.:
eeee.Ruedas and elsewhere, asivie'll as in Lon-
don. We copy: • ,,
Bsporter—n You aro accused of' very oeri.
Quo misconduct during Yonrinite" at Yenc
boddi13(1 tolne in this city. Tbero eurely
eanbe no truth ln thin repreeentation of ecnie
behaviour."
at Bev." Breeee-." None 'whetever. I
stayed a while when I arrived at it large
hotel, but, as I ootild not afford, to do go long,
I Bought another place. I saw it boarding
house" on their window, and engaged board
by the Oay, not knowing how long I might
day. * ,* * SIAS wept her sorrow freely
to moasa ;minister of Christ, I oneoled
her and weans it poem, meet and Under, to
pour oil on her wounded spirit, I lenove it
was the highest typo of goodness, Ordinary
natures would be More minnow, but 1 am
generous mad kind to all in advoreien' to it
fault."
RspOrter—The dory of improper advancer'
to the servant girl? . What about that?
• " Breeee—The two ladies wentenst,
leaving me andthe girl. V asked her for a
needle and thread to pew a button. She
brought them and then bsgan thumping on
the melodeon. 1 asked hex if she could play
and she paid the had. it felon. 1 exemined
the thumb and said it was a bad cam ; said
felt for poor nide, as I hadone ef ran' own
about her age, without a mether, lAteked
her if she had'anywhere to go. I was going
home in two weeke and the Might.be it niee
componiori for my daughter, as they were
near of an age. The tailor came' then and•
took the needle and finiehed my coat. Nothing
allnded to by the -Free .Pres as to marriage
ever ,ocourred. 1,appeal to the throne of GSA
as my witneme. ' •
_ Beporter—If one nan believe report, you
are living on a °heap plae, :Air, Brame,
Getting board for a few days, end then dew,
'peering. 'Yong boarding house midmost in
town'eomplains it little. •
The rav. gentleman denied the allegation,
and continued get into these difiloultieu
because 1 have it sunny nature, simple and
childlike. God made me so. V answer it
great end in existence. My being
and the life it issues is a protest ,againet
'the' sophistry atid falsehood o .formal
life. I have great powers to eeriy and
to endure, 1 brave the world as it' omen
I have been four times arrested one four
times cleared. I have had several church
trials,' aid alwaye corm ont with pnblio,
sympathy. Society everywhere: learns a
(meat lemon by my lite. I live for a great
purpose. Eternitywill show rats in a' better
Lght than time, and men of broad genius and
wide _culture will alvniiel love me. .I have
lettere from the first minds on this continent.
My ..trenbles aro eniy elm I cote in contact
with jealousy and ole Main Side of hifiniu.
flange, and is alwaye by mine designing
person trying to 'crush truth and build Up
falsehood. • ' •
.
"•Rov." Breese has possibly been reading
Midi:- de Beinibers Menaigirticif
Xi -
and quoted from memory Boned.' exonee for,
hi numeemis infidelitiee. If not, heahould.
do eci at one; and so barn•his lack of origin-
ality fix tho 010000 he offer*
" Rev."' Bieerie—I fight witk Nominees,
gentlemen' and lore.' lt I can master the
situation by subduing. onion , and • bad,
temper, I shall be yet deepty loved and highly
honored by the Congregational body. I
shell work out this problem in London.
This is now the battle ground, and I never
yet fled hem a noble conflict for unth and
right.
Tam czaneetni.. reassume .
What . she.00nvicsa are Doing.
There are &tenant 346 oonviots in the Cen-
tral Priam. Of these there are 135 making
broome,a number are employed in •tbe shoe.
making room, another lot .13 employed in
tailoring, others again are employed in the
;carpenter and machine drop, and thero.. are
about 40 engaged at the big eswer from the
Mercer Reformatory. During February 41
prisoner* arrived' and 40 obtained their die
&large. The Central Faison authorities haye
contracted for 260cote for the Mercer Reforms
tory ; 150 dozen brooms are turned otrt daily
in tho prison. . The brick yatd is alio highly
profitable. Lad year theme employed roade
.2.500,000. Ts year they will make 3,0000
000.. • , •
Lost chud.
Br. Um* March 17.—A little boy, about
two and a hint years' of age, son of G. White,
a farmer residing about five miles from town,
wandered aveayfrom home' onMenday morning
lad. He was not missed till about Illo'olock
the same morning when a oearehwag at once
made, whioliwas continued until the evening
end night and yesterday. Up to eleven o'clock
lad night the little wanderer had not been
found. He has been traced as far as the
bush on hie father's prime; but on account o1.
the mow fall they have lost all trace.
Gam='March 17.—This mth
orning e
child was found in the wood* three mile*
from home, dead, having perished with
fatigue and cold. During hie wanderinge he
had crossed several creek' until le reached
the Root where he was found. ,
Poor prospects far Fall.12Phant.
.UERBIDGE, March 11.—The proepeote for
the fall wheat aro very poor this ,Year itt
townshipti in this distriot, the growth' befog
completely killed out in some' plaeee; and
nowhere looking promising. The variable
weather will alio injure the clover crop.
The New York Bulletin, in announoing that
the Welland Oinal will not be opened until
early In May, says that "owners of veosele
that have been laid itpeeel winter on Lake"
"Ontario complain of the bad management
" which has thus delayed these repairs until-
!' so late in the 'season, and allege that there
"Is no mason why the Canal should not be
"thrown open for businees while the repair°
"are progreating., An the Ede Cold
"will be open early hi lApril, the Ind thbog
ohippete can do is to nee that, and let the
" elovngeing Canadian route take its lime,"
Thus are the interests of 'Canada, and eur
lake shipping in .partioular, 'being sacrificed
through ,the incapacity and blundering
of -*Oise in - authority. - By Rome .the
faint hope le bent .out that Boma slipshod
arrangement ratty be, made whereby the canal
may be °petted at the tided time, but there in
no authoritative deolaration to that effect.
The early ottening of navigation is pos able end
already the Americans are in our. markete,
_making pteparatione for diverting tin trod°
into Vetted States avenues: If 'tho Gana.
Man Government mean to hoc the
canal in running- Order- earlier than
the, them the eentraotord have
peen:deed, whiale Is the 'date mentioned;
they should at Mice contradict the report
punliehed, on tho Misled anthorty Of the
Depute' Minister ot Merin* to the effeet
that there would be no navigation on the
Welland Chataltill May 1st.—Hami/fonTinlee.
CUSTOS MINIMS,
fm•S
SOME OFTREABSURD WSINELBE OR
TED NEW Tam.
Hov lbe 'Hawn Ationertuee Meng&
onatterneerhe Hardware Trade ley 14
*we espilnes ernem..-iffingrimisimemece
ittentilring so be Dome:lied.
A. meeting 01 the hardware trade of
Toronto was held yesterday afternpen.liff.
Wm. Tilompson prodding. The obj del of the
gathering wee fo; ehis diem:mien of matters
afflicting the trade, The theansmen
referred to the extraordinary treatment
which the Government had ordered should
be meted out to importers. They wexelooked
upon an il tneir only object was to defraud
tee memo. In piece of mooring $o the
trade the benefits of the dimounte, the Genn
eminent would fix„.it rate of discouut which
in many instance:1 would be higher than the
'
real one, thereby inereagdog the duty some
12e per cent. It mattered but little what
duty was impend, booms° it ultintdely fell
upon the people; the grievanee was in hav.
leg the duty changed so often. They cold
not estimate what their good's would, goat. In
one instance goods were all sold two weeks
after arrival. Six weeks afterwards he was
galled open- by the Customs Authorities to
euppyreent the entry, white' had tole done,
and ne tideway he suffered a positive lose.
Mr. Jean Imee gaid one el ehe difeeelties.
expecieneed was the feet that they mild' not
understand the discrimination made at the
Onetime House, Oopeolally itt. the matter of
'noel. Again, the rake are that merchants
shalt. give the value of goods at the time of
purehme. Often between the time of pnrohme
end that of .thipment paces would vary. Now
it was .a poor rule that would not work both
ways, but what they,were suffering under at
preeent was, that they.Wete not allowed to
cbenge the entry if peigeohad decreased, but
if there had been an imireatie they were told
that thigobda had not been veined at the
• price paid. The result was that the offielale
altered the valuation. He understood that
the Department at Ottawa wet' determined
to take „*.atand „egehnit Amerlean. Mamas°.
hirer* If that was the Oise; therwere going
&Mut it in a very detrImental way to the
trade and to importers in Canada.
• Mr. Asenew Danmeei referred to the
diffl-
outty in purohasing goods in the English
markets under existing teed(' Wee. •The
csibeials at Ottawa Masted that duties On tho.
increded prices between the time of .buying
and shipping 'Mold ba the velum named. It
was a very•hard thing to tell what market to
go to, and what-tho. goods. odst. The result.
wits that they were forced into the American
reathet, because the time between buying and
untying the geode bought inthat market
was no much shorter than when they went to
Otto English marketeehat the values did not
'vary, as much, Thie was not only unfair to
them bdt oleo to English merchants. "
.Mr. Tell. Lein gene similar teetiniony.
Mr. Bonner Winans denionstrated how
greatly 'smuggling had been increased by the
diseriminating duty On certain articles. -In
-regard 10 snooks, the duty on Connecticut
clocks had been imposed because. a maker at
,Menagtext hed,assnred the •Finanee Mintetei
teat tits !uteri eihild sagely the 'Unified if
he was protected. A duty was impend, and
,what visethe.effeett Sinesthe chenge not
one clock had been Made in Hamilton. An.
_effort natl. been mule torennive the concern
ta-MMstreal; but if 'had oellitnifed; and " Wee
duty of .35 per cent. was .paid all the earn*
Ho had reeently imported some eloolie 'from,
the. United" State* They were Valued at §4
by Dipartmental orders. . The discount
brought them down to 11,2,60. He was .doing'
business in new York, and .all he mixed tor
146°1001m Wits 91.71, and' at that pries...they.
werehigher than hi had *Mr known them
00 have been during' his twenty Years' ex -
patience in the basingea.
JoszenResnamott coniplained of being
badgered and treated .bailty at the Custom
Heine. Importers were no* lboked upon an
it they desired to cheat the Government. He
advocated vending a deputation to Ottawa. .
Aid: Denemosaid the "system now in vogue
developed emugglIng to alarniing•proportions.
There was not proper discrimination at the
Customs Home. A fritind • of . ;TOM
Guelph asked hie advice it shed time ago.
He had enteredinehreoice of look* and after
the,g'oods had been sold the Outtome officiale
called linen him to make it eupplementary
payment of 1160 or 070 on, an order of 0300
or $4.00e. He rebelled at such a demand,. and
on investigating a littlein Toronto he found
Otto sante kind cif looks had been animaat a
muoli lower value. eln the face of that feat
he was forged to pay the additional duty.
111.r. Lre•sitid that he was a etrOng ;supporter
of the present Government, but under the
present Custom:lima amen could gave motion
. goirigtolleilelo if he wanted to' buy a
wateh.' . .
A ijomMillee wan mitiointed to confer with
the trade itt Hamilton, Montreal and else-
.
Where.
• 2.rins CANADIAN " IntrellitTEI-'
• WEST.
•
Larest, Settings from. shit Prairies. ,
From Banton:1rd, N. W. T., we ,have the
following, unnerdate Feb. 9 ' •• •
Lots of ono* to the emit and wallet our
favored valley.
Col. Richardson will arrive hem° Omit
the end of April. ' •
From Duck Lake we learn that everything,
is quiet. °Tho ferment are well eittegfied, with
their crops.
Winnipeg is to have street lamps, which
are *embed to be erectedby the lel .of
April next.
' For the past week it has just been mild
enough to prevent a thaw.. Vehnorni Wel
Februarydoesn'e reapie
• Tho settlers at Tannerei Crossing have
adopted the name. ed MiTineaclea for their
teem.. This is the Siena word eignifying the
ramo an Little .Saskatehewan. _....,.....
One of the•questieng forcing itSolf on the
attention of the People of the plane is—
what Obeli We 'do for bode and sheen
Hitherto the buffalo have furnished leather
Lor moomeins, but they are gone; and icedey
there are 'many oettletnents where not a
dreeaed akindit for the purpose in to be
had.. •
•
Priem Edmonton the news is:
The night of the 22nd was the coldest
ever known . hero: The thermoraster said ,
fifty.eix below zero. Although it did not
prevent out-doot work it was decidedly
chilly.
11r. Brereton, of the Had:Male Bay Com-
pany,- arrived from jasper House on New
Yeat'a Eve, thirteen disyS out, Be ltd it
terrible trip. Three of align -Were -frozen
410 death, . and ',hits two men wore eo badly
frozen that they had to be left at Lae lite,
Anne.
Tonetiro, Maroi lee—It is ended in legal
'diciest that the want° Of the Biddulph murder
cages will be changed from. Lennon to thie-
'oity. 11 thiti ohabge takes place Mr..7Emiling
Trying, Of Hewitt:el, assisted by Mr. Jamee
kidgee' of London, will be ifrownProsecutore,
and itie probable that Maestri. Dalton Mo.
Cattily and bileholae Murphy, Of thio oity,
Will be engaged, with Meson, W. IL Meredith
end Je elellahOn, Of Deaden, for the de -
fent). •
NonirgvvEwi,, rixockams.
Oyer nitro inhoedren -Inereene Leave on.
somo rev mullso., and ararSawad
leardiarlaa gataam lrem Dapoilsen
Asatruic. 11:44:::::::04111:ehl7P.rospecte
Yesterday afternoon the mond G. W. 11.
party for Manhole?, peeped aver thscroati. Tim
;min, which wee wider the supervielon ot Mr.
Itebineon, aseietent to dir. rettereop, G. W.
feioneetreie Agent, ooneimtee of ten coaolzes,
one Wagner 'sleeping ger and two 1MM:ifs
mg, The party watt made up Wetly of
larmore from thio neighborhood and that of
Earle and 'stationi. wed, amounting tp about
lour hundred Houle; At London they were
joined by two /antlered pence's., who lied
previously arrived by imolai train
, Mem Kim:iodine . on the L. 11. de B.
Oran& of the G. W. Re and otationis tied
that place. The party was under
' the direction Ito ouperviaton of Ur; Wm.
Greenway, late of central* The train goeg
right through to St. /3onitatse without change
et stoppage other than for wood and water,
and for ordera. Aft Itebinson goes .througn
to St; Benitece in charge of tbo Vain, Con-
ductor Ryan.ran the train from Paris to De.
troitenAn intoreding incident hoppenede in
the 0. W. E waiting room at London whilst
Otto train was waiting to proceed., Au old
couple on tho car were auxioue to have their
innate ohnd baptized, before leaving Ontario.
A minister was,
therefore, mint for; and' the
child beptized In the presence dt A Iarga-atalki.
mute, Constable Logan etanding, 'sponger for
the MUM.. : • • .
' The following parties..from HaMilton ansi.
vicinity were on board: Mrs, Bobcats, Dun.
G. M. Oarpentee• and tiv,a children,
Winona; Peter 4.wreywile end daughter,
Bugle Urie and John Ode, of Seneca Towne
able; John Banton, Mrs, Benton:, William
Benton and .Gaorge Aehmore, of Shuford ;
A. H. Rennie arid John • Barron, Hamilton t
Wm. Highani and SOD, JaS. Reid, Glenfoed
'Wm. Temyberry, • Efertillion ; Adam Valenti,
Beverly; Peter Geerock, Anomter ;. Andrew
Johnston, John•Robinson, GOO. Renwick, wite
and four thildreni Beverly; David and blot.
Gibson, Jaime Soon and .Mra. jar:notion,
Olyde k--Blre:Bairrigel Bd. CalI,John Harvey
and W. 0. Beane, Guelph U. A. Sineltdr,
Juries McIntyre and wife, Galt.
Tho. freight trains connected withthis
party, titre° in trent:set were made up of 61.,
'oars, 86 Of which were filled . with settler&
effects, and 25 with general merchandise.
They.. preceded the paseengee train by tout.
teen hours, in all, between thirty and forty
Men took .ittseage on the freights for the
purpose of attending to the live Meek on the
way thither. - • • •
The big° numbersgoing by the G. W. R.
route this SeaSort demenetrates its popularity.
Everything.is done' for the comfort of the
pasiengere, to secure the sate and .speedy
transit of those, as well as the livestock ansi.
freight, and the rates are oohs* as to make tt
• a Special advantage to go by the route. •
WEAT A RAW SETTLER TUIRIES.
The nuijority" of 'Otto aten' from this
neighborhood are going to eottlein theneigh-
borhood'of Bird Tail Creek. . Mr.'Yoling,whe
moonipatilee the 'train, has been there fOr. •a,
considerable ..,linte end nle. E9srienoes,
ts given to a reporter, " ere . worthconaidering: As is the , Ottio .through. •
•
out that ':•distrietetlie- -Inner in drtlie roUing
-prairie: variety, aod 'oonsequently is not
encumbered with wafer in the spring time.
twrefeet,,which he leit Confident •mould re.
.quire o manure for severed years' to 'come,
After,'Selecting • his 'farm and !Melting.
ehtee neeerbary stifingemente with the
Gtreernment Macey, ho est .• about the
Work of building a home. Ibe:.had
preencluely purehmed tweiaty eared of tim..
ber—popler and spruce --•-three quarters of
a milt awaj,. and in the manner of all new
settlers, butita log home with the
'Lint members plesteringedeley. At a depth
-of thirteen feet he struck an inexhaustible'
supply of pare spring water, and without
waiting for female,. he found his ,farm ready
for the plough. and- the • grain. He then
returnett-and-orrtne present excursion taken.
with him it brother. and sister, to mast in
beginning life,in.earnest
"Now, you have been- there," said • the re.
Oder, "andwill. be .able to tell the prude°
pesitionli a new settler. What Mit? ".
. said ;Mr. Young, "I think' when
a man ',hue get gentled 'down; his preepecto •
are eneoutegsng. The ;land is wonderfully
leitile,.tind. grain oast be pre:limed in lergo.
finantities. Grain growing and stook raising
of mune, be his -entire work, for
in that (ammo the market =Abe developed
before other products ban be thought of: Let
.us suppose that on the first year he grOte.
several ,hundred bushels of wheat; This- he
will have ground into flour at the neared
andeither sell it to the Miller or trade
it himself to the people, who live. further •
north, or tothe Indiana. The demand' for
'dad grain, however, is sontreat that the.
entire .preduotion of the country than far hits
' been Old to new settlers or ground into flour.
Hbs reaetpte will be fifty onto, or thereabouts,
per build, and if he requires implements Or
other neeemary Whiles he will have to viol%
Portage La Prairie, 150 Miles distant. The
°Intern has been. to Visit this market. plebe
Ona.e it year and lay in the provieione neew
eery for the season. Lumber. and flour min
• be pnrohased at .nearer places • the latter at
from 51.70 to $2 per Owl. Fah. can be pro-.
eared at Shoal Lake, . • • .•
"What are the hardships incident to the
country e" Wei the next broad 'question.. •
• "Welt," maid Mr. Young, "I thlnk .the
:difficulties of long transportations come firet
where slow ox teams have to be employed:
:In the ming the Mud is -very bad in Aimee
Where meek* seemed to have towed at one
time, and occasionally an ' empty waggon
cannot be deewit through. Fuel is Mateo in,
some district's the land is otthrnerged• at
• Masons in low Plietto,' and 'bacon' nand be
lieeepted as the' dole article of meat' diet.
Tho immense .diat anees torearkete and!placies.
of any is .disadvantageous in theca-
. tramp, but it is highly probable that Many
trading note and -stopping pluses will be
built during the present year. Neighboro are
also becoming more nueserinen"
14 What dom it oad ' to get inbo. thorough
farming order? l'.'wels.the lad interrogation. "It will cod' me " anowered Mr; Young,
"about 11,000 Mr land, transportation, int.
plomente.. Need grain, eta.; no -well ,as the
yearei Meek of provisione. I . have known
man to gik along with 5200 and 5800, lent
their lardehips keno bison proportionately
groat. I Mend Weak kir Other loattlikiee."
, .
' • A_
• eisAscislimn Hurts To RROsrEcTum Sen.
evintee.-10r. Gee. Wood, of Preston Post,
-Manitoba,- send* thodolloWing As w greet°
many people are .iniending to entigrate 10
Manitoba the coming Beaton, X thOnght
'NW hints from One who ha's had one yearns
experience here might be of intermit. First
Wale alid Monte your land, ptit in it innall
&Op and Wild a hedge before Mali* your
family, an khallaSS OaRtt b0 had here, and
eattlpieg out -here be the epring is everything
but pletteant for *Men and .ohildrort.
Every one eozahig hote thoild feta a good.
yoke Of Mien end ite Many 00Wit an he can,
a breeding; so* and iettour poultry mid it Well
filled VIVI; barrel, Sitt all the above nettled
attioleit you will have to pay rtiinens pelage
here Ole coming mime. The people here,
as a rule Me% it friendly oi miring thei.ftill
Value fOr everything then have $0 telt •
isesamtnreve
ter of Edueation hoe revieme the regillationg
affeeting intermediate enelainniionli• 11 Si
Candidate in future obteine only BO per cent.
ot the mirk' on mon eubjeet-antt '40 per
Mint. on the group, he or aloe will be mended
te. a non.protedienal third °lam bather's
oertificate; it 60 per eent. of the a711010: RUM+
bit be obtained, * eecond elms B will be
granted; while 40 per cent. on each pubjeet,
40 per cent. on each group, and 60 per omit
of the whole will entitle the candidate to a
second °lase tirade A Matidgate. The eland-
ard will not be raised.
11 ie rumored, says the Quoticlien of lied:,
that the troubbie whit% took place, lagt gem
,between the EronoinCenadian and IAA
Shiplaborers' Sooietlee will probably he re.
Rated this glimmer,
RECKLESS EtTRAVAGANCE,--Tho .village of
fl e
Norwich has d the eatery ot itS Treasurer
.stt 515 per annum. Two members of the
Village tionnoil were appointed a Committee
to BOO that his bonds were heavy enough,
-Ayer's:
-
Sarsaparilia
, For Scrofula, and all
scrofulous diseases Erysi-
pelas ' Rose, or St:Antho-
ny's Fire, Eruptions and
.• Eruptive diseases of ethe
Ulcerations of the
Liver, Stomach, Kidneys,
Lungs, Pimples, PultuleS,
Boils,'Blotches Tumors,
Tetter Salt denim Scaki
Read, 'Ringworm, Ulcers,
Sores, Rheumatism) Neuralgia, Fein in
the Bones, Side and Head, Female
Weakness, Sterility, L'eucorrhoetie arising
from internal; ulceration, and- 'Uterine
disease, Syphilitic and Mercurial , dis-
eases, Dropsy, Dyspepsia, Emaciation,
General Debility, and, for Purifying the
Blood. .
••This Sarsaparilla isa doinhillatien
vegetable alteratives — Stillingia; Man-
drake, *Yellow Dock —with the Iodides
of Votassium and Iron and is the most
efficaciOus medicine yet kiiown .for
the diseases it is intended to mire;
Ite ingredients are so skilfully cone -
biped, that thefull alterative effectof
eaChh isassured, and while ie -ie so mild
as to belairmless even to children, it is
still so effectnal (Leto purge out from the
system those impurities andeorruptions
which develop into loathsome disease.
The reputation it enjoys is derived
from its cures, and the confiderme which
Prominent physicians all over the coun-
tryi repose n it, prove their experience
of its usefulness.
Certificates attesting ' its virtues have
accumulated, and are constantly" being
reheiVed, anc1 as many of theseecases are
• publicly, known, theyfornish cenvineing
^evidence of, the. supeeiorley .of this Sar-
seParilla over :_every otheralterative
medioifie. ' SO generalifie7ifir
superi-
ority to, any.other medicine, knowne-that-
: vie need de poemore than to assure the
public that the best qualities it has ever
--possessed are -strictly theintained.:
. PREFAARD BY ••
Dr.- J. C. AYER & CO., LowelF, MiSsoi
ami dincsiyttea Chemists.
• SOLD MY ALL DRUGGISTS DvEnryidERE.
A 001100WAITO4301000-4110 perpetretor
of the Bermuda triteribtp swleele, whereby .
some three hundred teeabere were defrauded
of a 1110 advance egenev fee. le 0414 by •the;
Wellann 2'ribune lobe J W. Jolty, fleionarer
of Welland High Sebool, let° •an tionete of
Kingston and flt. John penitent:SHOO. HO
Wali butt traced to Chicago. He ie mid Mt
have boon a veg. "hieh.toneci"
Did an Able teaoher, hut 11 seems that bon'
eity was not 'hie forto. We undereend that
several University gradusitee Itt this neigh,*
borhooe were amongst times oWindled.
At Bei:beater the other :ley Judge Dwight .
Tibiae eberriteg Is jury in one of the rooms in
the Pond Hognemeas overcome by sewer
am we aleo the cake with several of the jury.
men, two of whom 'Muted.
Divbion of Labor,—Aunt Ii: Well,
Tommy, obeli I carry your hat and "erloket
stamps for you?" Tommy.; "No, aunty,
tonne I Me tarry bat and lump* '05 tarry
Mt I"
neeseeessinsamet
•
Ayer's
Ira ter Vi:sf o r,
For restoring Gray Hair to
its natural Vitality and Color.
A dressing.
which,is at once
it g r ee obi e,
healthy, and ef-
• fectual for pre-
serving the
hair. Faded or
gray kair is soon
restored . to ite
, ' olor,
with the gloss and freshness
Thin hair is thickened, falling lair
checked, and baldness often, though .
nora1Ways;-Cifital5y-
ing can restore the hair whero the
follicles are destroyed, or the glands
atrophied did decayed.' But Buell as
remaio•can be saved , for usefulness
by this Application. . Indeed of -10111-
ing the hair with a pasty. Sediment, it .
will keepit clean and yigorous. Its ;
occasional use will prevent the hair
from turning gray or falling off, and
consequently prevent baldness. Pree
from those deleterious substances
which make seine preparations den,
gorousi and injitilous to the hair, the
Vigor can only benefit but not harm
it.' If wanted merely for a
• HAIR DRESSING
nothing else can be foundso desk.. .
able. Containing 'neither oil nor
..dye, it does not soil. white-cambrie,..
..and yet lasts-lon,gon-thelaary giving -
it a rich, glossy lustre.'and a grateful
perfume.
. . • .
Prepared by l)r11, c, Aydr& CO4 ,
Practica1andAnaiytbca1Claeinbts,
' . •
, tOWEltai.IVIASS• • '
•
•
ONE OF. THE OLDEST AND. MOST RELIA4g
REMEniEn IN THE vireneie FOR
TH CURE OF
CCH161*, Colds; Hoarseness,. Sore ,
, Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza,
:.•Cl'oup;Whooping Cough,
Asthma, and every •
affection of the
Throat, Lungs, arid Chest,
inclUding . ' —
CONSUMPTION.
A WELL-KNQWN PHYSICIAN WRITES:
"2I does not dry up a cough, and leave the cause
behind, as is the case with most yfrepco'ations,
but loosens it, cleanses the lungs#nd'allaysirri-
- tation, thus rentogiv.the_Cause of_comp1aint2!__. -
DO NOT BE DECkIVED by article's
bearing a similar name. Be sure you get Dlt.
WISTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY, .
with the signaturie of ".1.• BUTTS" on the
wrapper. 50 Cents and $1.00 a. Bottle. •Pre-
: pared by: Sneer W. Fowen ei Sorts, Boston,
Mass. Sold by druggists and dealers generally.
4 tretectoa, Solution of the Protoside o Iran,
Is as easily digestedeand assimilated with the
blood as the simplest food, When the blood
does not contain the Usual quantity of IrOn, tho
deficiency can be supplied by the Use of the
PERU IrIA.Ist S FRU?. It cures a "thousand
ills" simply by Toxixtt '1TY, IsvietniAviso, and
VITALIZING system. The enriched ainf
"vitalizedebloodeperitreatesenvery-part-ofeitier--
body, repairing danoageg and waste, searehinge
out morbid secretions, and. leaving nothing for
-dieease to feed Amon.- This 10 -the-secret-oe.the —
Wonderful sueeees of thin remedy in curing ,
Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Boils,
Dropsy,, Chronic,. DiarrhoAa,
Nervous Afi'ectieinstFeinaka
Complaints,•
And all .diseasea originating in a bad state of
tho blood, or accompailied by debility, or a loW
state of the system;
CIALUTION.—Be sure you get the "PEA
htir1421r SYRUP," Sold by druggists gener-
ally. Pamphlete esent feed to any address by
Sian W• 00Wids 8e 30x8, Proprietors, 60
• risco Avenue, Baton, Naas.