The Sentinel, 1883-06-01, Page 4.4 •
14.
'TO FISHERIES EXWBITION.
'Grand id Glittering Pageant at
the Opening.
IMF CENEHONIES AND THE EXHIBITS.
Of XneMbers of the Vital family whenever
they visit the show.
On. Monday the exhibitten will he thrown
open to the general public "itt" the entrance
fee of a shilling. It is eefe to 'ptediet that
it will he the tomtit° of the London gement
land, Orthe words of the Priuce of N.Yeles'
speech, will " inetrilot the practical fisher -
met so that they will acquaint themselves
With thellateet:improvements in their graft
in all Oats of of the.werld, and mankind in
general how to derive the fulleat .possible
antage :from the bounty of the waters."
Picturesque Catherine*, of .• Royalty and At a banquet in Fishmengera' Hall, given
Foner Lads and Lassies. in hOlior of the IntereaSoual Pisheries
hiltitiou;the Prince of Wales said the con,
•
• A,Saturday'e London eablegramsays: tilbutions of the 'United States to the exhi-
The great international exhibitionof the hition were especially deserving of Credit.
' fisheries was inaugurated to -day by the Mr. Lowell: in replying..to the toast of
Prince of Wales on behalf of Her Majesty, "The Foreign Representatives," thanked
villose health did' not 'permit, her ttftbe the, Duke of Edinburgh for, the kindness
present. All the princes of, the blood with which he had proposed the *est, and
royal, with the princesses, assisted at the, said thelindness which he had • Wet with
brilliant pageant which added this inter- in 'England cenvinced him that he repro-,
fisting exhibition to the shows of .London. Rented the elder daughter of England rather
///' adutiesion to the vast galleriee for the than aloreign country. • . • '
• opening ceremony was -‘ bnly granted to Another cablegram say! At the opening
. builders of tickets and invited guests. A, ceremonies Sir. A. T. Galt; Canadian High
• dense crowd poured through the .entrance Commissioner; Hon. Mr. MOLelail, Minis.
gate all the morning, and by the appointed ter of Marine and Fisheriee ' Mr. Samuel
beur_haid_paelted_tb,e, entire letigth of the Wilmot,.Mr. lemma, and Mr. Honeyman;
rerd route_ through- the exhibition, tie I representing Donainien, anti 16. Shea,
Ward a‘•fisherman appropriately remark, representing Newfoundland, took part in
as elm as herrings in a barrel. . The the royal preoeseion, and occupied positions
gathering was extraordinarily pioturesqee. near. the royal dais, where the ceremony
A vast dark' Massif Londoners formed the was performed. The Canadian 'motion is
background of the brilliant scarlet; blue, wellarranged, contains many exhibits, and
and gold uniforms ot the military and it; muerte attract much attention. The
- naval ahem. Ude and, there along the-Newtoundland Court is well forward, but
line stood out in bold' relief apicked body not quite complete., '
of thirty Yeomen of the Guard, .vulgarly '
known as Beeteaters„ in their quaint cos-
tutne of ' 'Henry time, in scarlet
°bath,. breeches, and stockings, gold ent-
broidered with the English rose, crown, and.
royal cypher, surmounted by black. velvet
▪ bats -and betasselled halberts. At intervals
'other bright SOW of color were furnished
• .by twenty men in ;aimed as 'quaint woos,
• tume ef scarlet, known as "Doggett's oost
• and badge," whieh. is the annual towing
*PARISIAN TRAGE.151i.
„ • .
Serennt. niardered" and iiii40,0i116.
Wernifoi JeWellery 'stolen.
sigkosrfilogoigijiir ituitinkeirritimr.
.Pariscablegrerri • says Alphonse
prize for wigermen '‘fotuided by the !toter, ..Reghreni, and one Blin have been arrested
telieirias Doggett, at tlte aeoestion of King ' in Beighniti for killing 0.0liopwointin here
•:George L. Twenty-one gentlemen -at arms and atealing #10,000 Worth of jewellery.
.and„ thirty • yeomen of the Guard ;added In broad daylight, while the . careless San:
•: their 6plenilid.unifotois to the fine.display day.oroWde were Streaming •up ' and down
of national Saone More .interesting,.. the galleries of .thee Pelee& Royal, , the two.
..riiffiiiiteleneciteded in entering -"the -bttek
• :creatures, whicharecomparatively fami. shop of a..., jewelier named Prestiot„
• litui,to,-the-----London,-,,ptiblior were'lhe tbrottlinip„....Vezariusit.;;Lcirritiriatri-servaint
• tv.onipaigtioftliar-unite& Kingdom, in police witb..feWalacr;saltteratr-620mat-
innewesters,1 .woolen • , jerseys and high Watching their opportunity, they followed
;vete', with • • their • •burley • 'trainee and .0ezatitie through an Outer 1.00m used afi
iesather,becten., 'faces, forming *; ourio4 kitoheninte a small parlor, where,: at the
, . cat to thepalereountenagees and foot of a wtndingetaircase ..leadiiig to the
-71iiii-ni-inablet attire of 14004 sooiev. Deon.,. first ' .,fieor they • 14i:dithered.; and
tationS :Of iiShlglilEt from floOtland, France, . 'straugled. tbeir .helpleae •viotim . With., fa
Belgium and Holland, in bright ,and veiled ,:leatner :belt • Worn: by.. 'one " Of.: them..
•• costumes; to,aoa,appici,prititwiriterci$ to the They got to.Oruesels unmolested.. On .the
•..cPuf,. 'Weed. Rt9raineet. among -these ,yraY, ali'.9bantie or providenca...would.have
•mittens': peranns:., was .. New Btanstriok.:itt,.....thet :met • a friend •• of Berghein's,
•. Indian in tut' •coetrune of :white' leather,' ?employed in a Britesette.dry goods store;
'..ehellsefeatherie. and bow and arrows; who, hadformerly knovintim in his native
. , .
•
bad spades*. all to ,himseltc Their Xtoysl, :,tettin of Ypres, , familiar to oll readete of
thgbnesses tttetit receiVed at the entrance ;•Quidaie• hovels.... The murderers' flashy
bya salute fri)11i the guard Of honor efth manner and magnificent • .display of • jewel,
Royal Naval and • ton:boys. of 'to*. ,vaguely areused. their %phew trayellet'e
• the Arethusa. ..itbe, 'euepitnens, and when in a burst • of stupid
• Guards' .I3eustpleyedthe.NatioinaLAnthem.' :genareeity one*Of them offered to make him
• 'Walking inpaitii,•the Priuoe otreles,:the• .a-tratient Of. , tegergeeus goldwatel2 and
••Dukes7 Edinburgh,. Connaught and bliti111;his iiiiiPicnonsgrew so strong that on
Prei.30.61bY the arehittieb add con. teaching • his destination , hethought it.
tractor, and,fbllewed by the officers of Her. :Orudenit.Ato communicate • :Ahem. to - the.
'Majbety'is houeehold, adVgneed along 13 eigiad.P,Olioe,. and the two. Were iiaptured.
'hundreds of yards of red eaepettethrones The body 01 the victim teafedleitivered by
• On at dais. vogeh .N01404 surttnitided, by a Mthe.:-Berghoil , on returning .',..frota• her
Oentittyot fiehihkeeettelphold.-"litot ,country; excursion on iliesuvato night.
• lionttend flatitio4 by banka,..:t #01tere and For a moment she herself was'iiiispeOted
• banners,,thie port,* gau COnthe by the Orenolt .authorities. ..Mlieter.itt not.
• °Matinee tif the royal party 014 blind and the slightest real ground, however, for the
techOtr of , four';, hundred volose;trOlfe into, ..aiisppion,ee she is of: iteeprottehable char- •
National 'Arithetnikwhile the. Wahine° .aoter„oharming, and onuoh 'belayed by all*
rime' aint..unieovered. The Duko 01•;slitich-, in the Ann. '
,rtiendend Gordon read an:eddies% tO which
the .,gtinceof Waleerespondedi The Aroh,
• *hot of 2 ',Canterbury., offered a apeoial
ayer,::follosiirad.:by ,tlio 'Lo;a:o Prayer.
he choir theneangtha" Old,Bandredth,".
'the,•V,riii00!of W&les deolated the
• othibitiOn: Open -The' *tat trumpeters
• OientideCit f satire and abetter,* of ,artillery
• „stationed 'in #5410 : garlefirod a thntil•
talleOUS saIute. The oboir then sang
• . •Gionnocl'a " Maiehede 'Oertege:4roin the.
"Ben* foliowed by ,Mendelsr.:
..Hynin :of Ptelett," .1thiolt brought
the bereMony tctiornad • -;
• It would)* titieleSs •in thie:Cenipaes. of
letter:th.ratte,Optl to. describe eve
• ladegy thae.eentoritaJa,„the ,ektraordloary
• enbibitiet4-41geh ,cofrete5^..-, twentptbree
• :terse atuf the official tiatalOgue of whioh
consign 0.1 nearby iX htindreclAJages. The
•
gitith and the .,Aetherli,iida. l'Zisides'the
tuitional; Oourtet.',1, are gaharies &Sind to
machinery:in Motion, rmaehittotylot'elec.
. room and 'A fludkatillaritt*, ,In the gardens
are .POnde• StSke4 wttkfleh and tialiiititing
'birds, and.,4thit',7gigtintlotireletoont a whale, .-nitititrWriertietterilteet The delipldiett on
belonging to the 1449.ele- 'f4;* Exeter. . the following mOriling, with no mooneider-
Amntbiehistorical are 'Grace able aunt of money. They were hittiband
DarI_
'At, and .theliciat .Eira and.Wife along atanclihg, and had: pivot.
eilinfit Leigh Smith retreated to the same triok'm many places. .„ •
-NoltiMerelaolit from 'FratiejOttenliland- Rev. T. VT Jeffrey' ot tart Mpo, has
In the W.
UnitedStatee department, whieh decliued the Invitation to beenine pastor
oecupilea 12,000;feet, and;:fully Wars out the Of thititritige Slret Methodist 'Church,
Iorma of theflinstrtaitiOnii4o • thte Citi0thitn Belle+1110, ; •,
ilterier:`Of ;7Sherice that'.1 it tabOuld, -be a
,oamplote ,a64-eyelematicritepreelthitation of
thafisheriesiof the linit*WStatici;themoet'
notaWcithy featttrelL1:04‘,' ..:41#04Wirinit•
•,apparakuck..hott inedelirlaionoetand-
apperatite lot flh aultute and glgantio
icpccit*eiscr* 'oetopUii '&04 l&4 Among
*that ti,;400Iffeatureci ot e . nittedtt4
emotion ,arsi.-.1'is 41, 0011440,1r
.NOW Orleans oolored Werntin is earn-
igloutlaiturh31041.hfithle: bctihiund,t'sP"fiejeelt-is oc., not,' 4ng.an boticel .penny by antitnincing .the
oituedkox oprogeiri., 0,0030:: :00 fis wit earning, a the Stiti, a the worm. She has
impionet4.44 tticos3a4,0, •40-0_46tdow. 'boeit,batkiebed !rain church, but netrerthe
leas, has gained, thousands of followers Who
tion phosi#apenteni crate* imiti4ting :have abandoned •work And are preparing
. torlWoot.h0Olittoitefrtiletithrifito.lignikt figaze .1".off,;. for the final day Under her leadership. It
nek.ene in boost, the0*v:to ,atut ot isetrasOge how. atnuothineme.people' always
the, '.1*),*11 i•weaPion :for -"am he to hasten the end of the world.
•Ittrolsii 'Vile* dm an e, eet4ye entre/ice choice and ;variety of. patterns
to the - , • and cheek* MAO it almoet ithPniiiiible- to
,By universal Opted*,b is'flitiilese tell wheels tint *tett faelikinable. There
thintioh MUM beteilardiedllio of ti :,iteeta 2: Mahon different patterns for
for ooMpleteilase and iasaufit..of u‘'] differsdk.bodie‘though of„.0ourse:
Art Met Afton*** with ibeffelp 1111S'Ihe0kilitrge and orovi,' iota and .
zng iinto‘frii*---nbit, most tharrnlag fltness qtnet. Thy bore them itt all ooloris 'check.
and guabituess, Iteal•Chiliamen ia natural board slat beeitn and pink,brown and
oft_milftlnax 4'.ortocses of the, leiliAte, green tad Atta,,,, *JAL•is
. • the.same
xcj ste-ttftieighe'd; -Theor-irtritiatTe-up-Witicktaititt -bob-et
,se tvhe 0,11.6:theOekt,, aedileing Welitticeb orbeck
taetaillipPerde°14°YilairuLabBle,411,nawahYer act uMulvrt;;
• DOWIINIO.N PARIAAMENT
and would be .ehiniportant feeder to the
Interoolonial. He might pay the smite of
• Ole piopoeed railway frourRaVolook corner
Sirz Leonard Tilley introduced Ilia hitt Petitetdtace, twelve Mile!), to Which it is
• to give bowie to nientlfe-Ototete proposed to grant 088,500. This line
Lug iron, wnion was read a firet tintet would be also a feeder to the Intergolonial
the 'John Metatenald moved a resolution Railwey.' It, with the former
to the effect that it was expedient to intro- would open up a • fine district, and
.duoe bat to regulate the greeting, of would give to : the tetercelonial line a
liquor licenges. He said when especial great deal of freight- He might just here
committee was Struck on this subject midi remark thdt the policy of encouraging and
the. House adopted the ethiciple. of this t4naticially assioting the censtreotion of
resolution, it, was thought necessary Fro feeders to the InteroOlenial wee nenewone.,
forma ttemove this. reselution'. in order to t It ivas one which Ins predecessor (Ur. Mao -
meet the ptinoiple that all matters affect- kenzie) had adopted, when he offered to
ing .trade should commence nt committee.,efUreish such feeders with the %rails for
their construction. For. the • Napanee;
Tatnworth cit Qeebeo Railway, subsidy of
63,200 a mile for 28 miles, or $89,600 in all,
Was proposed. This line would connect the
waters of the lakes and the St. Lawrence
at Nepal:me with the 'Ontario * Quebec
Railway. It would open •up extensive
Water powers, and *mild be a great stiniu-
lus to the manufacturing industries of the
pountrY. The proposol to grant to
the Quebec et Lake St. john
way 1153;20(t a Mile .:for - twenty -Ave
miles, was made in consequence of a mis-
take made in the , grant last year. The
kraut Was ,proposed . last session,' but by
acoident the length of the line Was °aloe-
leted'short 4ty'tiventY-five miles. It wile
intended by this grant to add to the subsidy'
granted last year the grant for the 'tWenty,:
frit Miles accidentally Omitted at that time.
subsidy of $0,000. per Mile was proposed
to lnegtven for 110. miles o! railway from
Ciritvenliuret to Callender. • This was in
addition to the subsidygranted, last session.
When the leader of the, late Governmefit
assumed eentrol of 'affairs he promised to
subsidise lines to connect:the Canada Pact-
fio Railway with the Quebee and •Ontario
Systems of railways, and when he brought
down his 'Canada , pacific Itailway Bill in
1874., ' be said •that be intended to
subsidize. two connecting lines Of .
The subsidy new proposed was
intended to supplement the pledge thatthe
hon. gentleman then gave; thitt not only
should there be. 8c direct of coinniuni- 4ft
oation. with the ,Quebeo railways by the --
Canada. Central, but that there should also
13(11 communication from Callender-,coh-
ireeting'with-7the-Oetario-reyatemt But ,..11
even:it sitchittiledge_hailinot.,heen4given,..,......
Imm;rjtmizie*PoeuttemOwe orP:-..eithow.aidck s
.,thav,-Itexperv.wlatm•-tvzoialfiCeif.'Sti..tha -gov,
07 I
A' OW hoe 'been reported by sthe oommittee,
and on this resolution being adopted•a bill
will be presented and pressed. upon the eon, -
sideration Of the Hoed. .
Sir John Macdonald agreed to peetPoee.
• the ooneideretion of this Matter. Tied. bill
to amend. the Patent ,Alot by alle*ing
patents to be token out for ehorter term
than 15 yore was -;read a sedond time.
The bill to make . further previpion re=,
epeetuig the regulation and collection a
tolls on the Government timber elides was
react at_thirdtiMe; after: being - amended at
the -Government's,. suggestion to meet Mr.
Blake's.' objection. of yesterday, that the
Governor-General Connell should not
have the regulation of finee and the mode
of imposing them. '..The iiiilendment pro -
video that these Shall be colleeted in, a
'court of *competent jnriedietien. • • .,
Sir I;Asonard• Tilley moved a seCend read,
ingiotthe bill to agietid and consolidate the
Liets • relatiiig to :the superannuation of
persons employed in the Civit.Service... Be
explained that the' ohingee made. were.
made necessary' .the dumps in the
Civil Service AO, and that sOme 'Minor
.amendMentiii. Were nottde in the ;•Oottrie of
• too•ConeOlida*n. , • , . .
Sir Charles Tupper,. in presenting a re-
solution Of 'Which he had given notice'. in
faVot of subsidies to various railroads, made
.6, brief, speech 'dealing With each eubsidy
propoied.' He spoke df that Dine
des Clialeure road from Metapedien on the
:InteroOloniel Peer:tined; , Quebec.. . Not
only would this open up.'n very rich timber
and agricultural dietrioti but it was :hoped
(and. he fully expected): that] the company
-Would-extend therciac17807-Mileir Jurther7t0Gaspe. He read .Btatistica to. show the'
agoacxciga:ot-tbo,aacin,fisbeticaamd-seid.
lhat..414,InateacVet. hen* taken,J4t.-Tesnel&
to •Ameriolui ports,. could pais, over this toad proposal was not a tett one .and one the
to the Intercelonial,..and.eo:te the western interest a the country. , It Was. true that
parts Of Canada and the principal `there . was •tin offer t priotieally tient the
of •thotteited.Stetes.... Not only would this 'Grand Trunk Railway tdoonstract this line
givo. traffic to, thebiteroolohial„but it would for the subsidynf 1)6,000 per Mile. granted
add greatly to the value of the fish catch by last year, lint when the great iMpOrtanee
'enabling, the fish in be taken. to market . was considered. having this -cenneeting
fresh., Already'.the :Government had a link independent, he , thought • Parllainent
steep:Ishii). 'subsidised to at. Gaspe. :it a would.. say that ., was infinitely • better
coo' of 012,500 a year, representing the to increase the appropriation and seoure
'interest on, t300;000, and this expenditure this object: Care • would be taken that,
would be Saved. • • . . • . if • any means' this line 'ceased to be inde-
Mr the railway ',.Carry the pendent, s‘the Government'. Would belie a
mails 'terlsnothingf • • • stlien not • only . :upon this line Of road,
Sir Charles Tupper, --No; 'I .. did not Say but they would have anadditional lien upon
that; .butit Will reduce .ths, exp.enditare On the beet spahrity that could begitren•by,the.
this servietS,Very much. The next Subsidy, nompeny with which the line
•
was that of the -Carialtiet- Railway; from Pouted: He submitted the resolutions to
,Bethunit to ,Caracjime, ail in New Bruns.- • the House„.eonfident that the expenditure
'wick, $15;200. : he explained would be. would be regarded as • . warrented by the
another brain* 'Of. the Intercoloniel.. • A growing needs of theeountry, and •Ita
atelier linelied been Surveyed by the GrOv'..: Weds to develop, the ',various geotionsia
ernment, .ancl: preposition to Wait Which it was .
had ,been received. with :great favor, but it The Homo went into ootantittee, On. Sir
was net prOctieded With. Now that e corn= Charles -.Tupper's . resolution :lox give
pany had been. organized to ' build, it the bonuses to tierteln On the drat
Government telt authorizedin.recommend= " Baia dee .Chaleurs, .100 miles—from
ink this bonne, It Would Offer the shortest Metapediae to. Paspebiac, • .4Niebito—
teat, to tide water,. and would not only 0320,000, • Sir Charles .Tupper' explained
opitfik.: a good section : Of ..bOuntry, *but, that the ceinntry • through . the road
would increasethevalue. of the fish Opt& passed trait net specially difficult, and. the
of *large .`seetion, 14 giving quiektranait to road' Would ;cost, equipment,
market,, Further, it. would be geed' &knit 020,000 He was not, aware
fecider to the. Iutercolonial, and in .this ottlie exactiinancial position of the (torn -
way' *yioutd'i make -.ample return to the pauy,' but the Quebec .GlOvecnment had
conntryfOrthieexpenditure: With regard given 10,000 scree te mile subsidy tO the
to the GatineenRailivayt: $160,000, S.ame • reed, and he thought these two.
he said that it now kiloWn that in the together would. secure the construction' of
country north of the line of the old Settle- the rood. On the Rein, is ,Caraquet Rail-'
mei:0)0f 0.quettets Province, there was a new Viity,•86 miles -from Bathurst t� Catatinoth'
Province to be Opened up—aregion of great N. B,": -.Sir Oh:axles' Tupper said the .Glev-
fertility. Prins soMecatied, which hittiould ernment Of New Brunswick had subsidised
nqquite understand, there was a great that road 0000 mile. He knew nothing
imwillingnese on the part of the people:of further Of the reeoutoes of •the company,
QUI-bee:to emigrate to the Nerthwest as He thought, •however, - the road emild be,
peopleef °aerie and other lirovincee'clid. built for less, • than 020;000 a mile. • With
They only left their homes when conipelled. 'regard, to the, GFatinean Valley road :bonne,
to derovanclOhen went as short ,a dietiiitoe '0160,000, Sir Charles Tupper said that the
as 'possible; and that took thena atotebathe line was. located.' The Q:uebee. Govern.
boundary. The .opening of this great ment gave o subsidy of 6;000ocres per mile:
country, deletion*. its vast resourceof
forest,.farni ;lands and Mines, would be
seettred gyillie road, and bYttnether from
„ •
*ahpuige. IorPutdug stirravelter
A Philadelphia te1i3
*short -travelling eelosman, '!,t0day ob.•
Of45,(Kiti aganitittlo
Peuh-
�y1vnia Rsitway. Skilket Prettetited the,
oonduotor n reentn: ailip of an etoursion
tiek.elykoM.V1)1,1sThetiOrt to
Theoefidtiotiotdeelinglo gioctOt-thretiakec
and ejented•SpillterAlithe open cotititrY on
l'kjortherii pent* Railway . above
*_rieburg itt thii.:,104tit of a. ' drenching
ram'The, ootiOnrfOlaiC3h, at! $ the
ti-oiret,leatiourohneed‘itito yeataltclere tula
the .oopauy ..lied endeavoreclAci:da.11..in
1161104, The Midge ohargerkt,be.„Jury
t1fat7:ejectiogunder the oirou teneeit was
etitrtege. •
ram Ilaytt_:, 'Mark
10'0a tIthat
etranger,iihose acquaintance liebu.d coati -
ally madOiould not withirilne..'hitits woo,
win, andraarry a young wonialf-ivho had
test arrivad;st the same hotel(2 'The., _suitor
introduced'himself to herti
-sheaMled-upon
•
him,s, minister was called in, And the etre-
•• —.AttenittOttgiri, who bad refused • a
gonitMiokidg--idlegrapb-tepair man three
fillnea within oil months, gave as °a reason
that his was too .Muoh of a wanderer.
Mhitt he wanderedlrom pole to pole, from
One Ohne to another,"and if he did 00Me
Mule hal be insulate that the neighbors
'retilfi be aura to talk. •
,
Children ,Heloire ,QUE1111 Victoria% .
'
, .
Mist/ ;Hobo ,Stretton, writing in the
• April number of the 01 tiouday oeXonteit'
aays:" Before the reign of our Queen Vic-
toria very little thought had been bestowed
.onehildren, Tu, State left Ahern almost,
eutircly to the care and mercy of their
parents, plaoieg theni, praetioally itt the
position (a relic) of Roman law), ot being'
theirtosoaptureellytwtiterpersoopiedrtuys-oITimbenyv.woeurnlebeeernst;
they were driven in to factories and ° buried
,PudergroUnd "k in mime at an age
when they would now hardly be
out ef the infant school. Itt agris
eultural ooUntiegi the children of laborers
were taken from their liemee at age of
8, and apprenticed to the ratepayers as ser-
vants, 'and those who have spent their oink
childhood in the country can recall the
memory of little creatures employed froth
dawn to dark ie • k caring birds' from the
growing corn, their inonotonus and meurn-
ful ory being as familiar to the ear as the
cuckpo'e two -fold 'Mout.' It is trim the
children of thedecent workmen Ware being •
taught in British and National schools; but
in the ohms and foal • slums of onr•great
cities thousands:pponthoueaeds Of ohildrert*
swarmed, whO i2ever beard a word of hind=
nese, or knew en hours respite' from terror.
They Were tinted, upwasited and unclad,
growing up in ignorance and crime, a race
Of untutored pat/ages, as Lord Shaftesbury'
sorrowfully called them." ; • .• • . '
"Dr. Day, of Boston, says there is ncidatee
ger inatopping a; man's 'alcohol' abruptly.",
The • doctor • knows not ' whereof he •
affirms. • A man went into a saloon the
othezday, and 'when the barkeeper fold
him he couldn't ,liscie another drop of
whiskey until he paid 'oft the old score, he ,
piolted up a porter bottle and 'struck' the •
dispenser eteloohohe iluidS on the head, '
from the effects of which be ,was laid up -
tone weeks. This shows filet there is dan-
ger in stopping a man's alcohol abruptly.
oseamemeeemeeeeme
The Whining That mato hien.
it is not the best, things—that
• ,-vt.';',1',3`'•tr-3'717. • •
-40 ' - is bc
1301.1htgy;tyaiidt-stibiieqinnitlitti-bieitelide-4 thir diPerienee et lite; it is .
totheMattetta, Already a wove of mitin- rugged experiences, its tempests, its trials.
gration had .113et* itt toward this 00itritry, The discipline f life is here geed and there
under the energetic, gindande Of rather evil, here trouble and there joy, here rude-
Labeller--knoten to 'these who had the iiestiand there smoothness, one working
advantage of his acquaintance as whole- with the other. and the alternations of the
tended enthusiast and a 'patriot of the one and the other, which necessitate adap.
purest type—alreadylitiliad 10,000 people tations, constitute a part of that education'
settled) there,. who ..,.0"jitherteina would which makes'a man a'man, indistinction
eithehi: have . been • Atruggling with from . an animal,, which has no education.
poverty hi their .Old, homes or be The successful man invariably bears on his
now Under the AnieriOatiftag. 4 point had brow the markaof the struggles which he
been treaohed at which railway oommuni- has had to undergo. •'
cation. was Cbscilutply„,nehiseary, and it was
believed that theaebubsidies to the Gatineau
'Montreal and Western Com -
tallith* IWO,* ear& Jwould give it. A'
shriller fl,mountyrer Mileages proposed to be
given 'WI the Great American (44 European
•Sharttine Railway Company for eighty
miles of their railway, hem Canso to Louis -
Sydney, .Scotia. This
gran• t'iviteintended tti extend theeitisting
railway stitem to the ebiterindost.shrt Of
the Dohlinkon, 'ThecieitOtion -of QS'S ime
writtld -extend. the great ihieirOcelinio syetem
a railways front Pert Moak on the Plea%
by ahnosten air line Of iikitumunioation, to
the netted port the'411siitio armlet to
Liverpool, This *Mgt also feria the
ishorteittline of conithanicatien that cetild
A Terrible. irevenge.,
• • Remember •Tisis.
• Major John B. Throckinorton Wasburied
. .1f you are dick Eton .Bitters will Surely Aid
at Leuisville the other day, • and in. redid,
Nature in making you well when all else fails.
big the evelitthe Atlanta Journal says:
It you are cOstiveror dylipeptio;tir are suffering
" He died some tame ago in s- lonely but
from any other of the numerous diseases of tho.
on a ktieeissippi .plantation. laiit me- stonasoh or bowels, It is your own fault if you
Metite were haunted by the thought that , remain ill, or Hdp. BitterS are a soVerdign re1311;
Ellen. Goodwin was etill shadowing him,: e_clyf !pa, astitoelivzcartipllgalanwtty with iny.torra•
For 25 years the wonimi felloWed Kiianey DiseasK.stop tempting Death this mo -
and was known in Louisville as 'Throok- meat, and turn for a mire to Hopliitters.
reorton's ghost. The reason f cir this' was It you are sick with that terrible sickness
never known. , xt Was the popular beief
in the unie of Hee Bitters.
NervOtiSileSS; .Y011 Will find a BLUM in. Gilead"
that Throckraiirton had wronged her -in: yoli are a frequienter, or rebident Of a •
her youth. In storm awl, nunoidoo, at raiksroatie dtStrietbarrieade your System agaititt
borne and astos‘ the *tient figure in. the Scourge of alt counttiee-malariat epidenile
bilious and Intermittent fevers -by 'the 7.010 01
61940k rbovered.abOut him and blightea his Hoc Bitters.
be. 01)140ml:between thef, western potions life. Elbe died litime years age and ordered f
you have a rough, piniply,- or dallew gain,
11211156814t:itmlittallinilifo'iniraft.2V.,-;.v7 *mlivillithwaftls2 vhesintitdiloelait;r11:wring 'ktehtets infinaieadetwairtiitatuloitints, :17 4.)`:,1:to.12, canada• 'sold Tor 611.'2111%r*
'110Sedg ft4kii Aecterett0n. ,,gid primrose&
fitioztalrotarv grdditrottlitp!effso.oro toll! wm'eawkeetritIabelifiazng yea& long. She wears it two braids,:
*Olga he conferred iton the. Pitt:allit, 4.'0.4/4 maroelea Instead of theta/14 aid voglitabreS.--ItTanuficturidi b7 S. a &
pert for the„ Dcaniiiione and
neerertognfingritog ,1&20 :tinning tineougit the, tiitri-fashionable_ Tannaren :tre*111;,vcifin
Mcoltri4114'Zkeitool /tc.tild be brotigh,t • oolors worn by the brideeMaid at .oile of •
isted On the , Subject of a Winter
lately, and 'the- dresses, were. described AS
mit Willtet togtql0 ille'aohortiet•route to It.__00t.- would
ton or t-Vortiand., 07- the proposed tine
$he history
ber
yette. Oonsiderable agitation, bad ex -
of Cioada twat, .the .tutstern Atlantic .4.jf h
it was eitAy.olfesItc.annolursyhoitfttahottakrtitOwWolt.tidtinaghtahiet. f°1113heiti, they cute all diseaseS °fib° Stomaeh, *
all& has a page .to carry the elide aa he. Tat poor, bedridden, invalid wife; alder.
—Dark brown and ,prinitorieti Were the
e.arkse-Cret t° b° buried generally, Boo Bitters, will giVe• yon fair skin, "
a •
• motheror datighter, !can be made the pictureof
V 14 44, tetile.".1151/1=esttoRtigititillicethtl'
btlt e. Will ,ychriet themeoffer2
health b a few bottles,of noll Bitters, !totting
not etre Or ladil). •
rich bloOd,. and Sweeteet breath, healthAnd cora-
thawebi,B1006, Liver • Nerves, EidneyS, Bright's'
DIsettsA $500 will Ve paid fbi r a casi3. therWill
for the preserVation all kind* Of *Una.:
p
bad breath, pains and debts, and' feel Inkier/age •
'Pi N. A*711:
7EGM. JU,02....1POUND.
s Is a Positive•Cnro
Eor nil thoie lininfulCoMpinints and Weaknesses ;
\ sweemmim to our best &Male popidation. •
• 1 Medicine for )179ra:tn.'. Invented by a Woman...
i'ho. Go' eat:: et' 51. ried1111alirlWiscavi:rYyjii*,SincYle'ilan
in:te D1;11 of Arettiry..
Vint roviiree the droapluilkiplrits, invigorates and ,
haxinon!zas the Organic' functions,•givis elasticity and
firm-044sta., the step,. restores the natUrathistie tatho ,
eye, and plants On the pale bhook of, woman': the fresh
rosedibf life's Spring:and early sannner Vine. .•
rarphySiolins U.se it and Prescribe it Freely.
nremovot faintness, flatulency, destroys engraving •
Lor stimulant, and relieves weaknesS.of tno StoMaeh.
, 'That feeling pt bearing down, causing pain, weight,
and backache, is alwaye permanently Mired by 03 use.
'or tho. euro or Kidney Clionplaints or either sem
' thIS COMponnd'it unsurPassed., , •
LYDIA E.. OINK-GA.74% 1I1400D
• *HU, eradicate every vestige . of • Munors f▪ rom. the
Blood, ahd givetmie and strength to thesystem, of
Intin wo,nnta or child. •Insist on having it.. •
Both the Comp:1.11nd and OloodPurifier are prepared
. at 253 Mid 2,15 Weet-orn Avenue, Tann, Mass. Prim 9t-
Ither, 34 .Six bottles for $o. dent by inail In the Soria ••
otitis, Or otlesenies, On receipt of price,' $1 per tier
for either. Mrsi... Pink. hamfreely answers 011:Um's or
inquitY. Enclose Sct.'stamP.• fimidrornatiiplikt,
No family should be withoutLY.I.A.
LIVER, PILLS. They cure constipation', b:X▪ eusuctuf,
and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per Vox. ,
1" Agr'SOYall tirtaggints.'t.51.
AL'S
i.
..,.„ie.
., r.....,4.4
,
• )0,,
_
fpr all diseases of the :kidneys and
., it has ispeOille action on this most important
organ, -enabling it to thra* elf torpidity and
iiisotieti, stimulating the healthy sedretibirot
the Bile, and by'keepini the towels in: free
conditioneffecting itaregulni discharge. •
Malaria. 1..nf47 suffe
vetihilegeht=
are bilious, dyspeptic, or constipated, sidner.e,
Wort will irately relieve and quickly cure. .
' Th the Opting to cleanse the dyistem. ever7
one 'should take 4 therOugh course Of it.
41. 44:301:0 I3V DRUCCISTS: Prl
;WORT• •
,•1
, . •
• 4.