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The Exeter Advocate, 1890-3-13, Page 6r 0 t w 0 fo ea 1 re 13 re AI el. to 16 re t w H be ch th co co Be a m Co ne a Ao sp an tar An ins tat Ao an ter wa of the Alg rig wb eel to t Dov for B B San Rai M vill Co 11I Ha Act baa resp pro 11I port M of a the 711 mitt ohai ,prof mitt -to t 1, M a bi stir 71l pips Al mat spec vide spin judg Mie t in a the the ma tion pass ferry to. M ing Ho M of t nin bee tain sari of e $57• nano to e tram pow for peer Vag 34,0 poo 3x4,0 also be d conn time gran all g tens T tIf oonstraotion Irate given nutted• morrow. t lee Honse 'der 88amces bat :shed Altorney•Generet aerial's, bill onion mend ]dr. acting ]1Ir. Attorney-General—Bill Illi. d tin certain its ich t Mr.Awrey—To I4 Ir. !lir. e, mp milton party. 11 ntional n morrow. Hees fie e u sfadtotily. Cages elieve' ple If1r. Tp(] �Tm pp jj�� LEGISLATURE DIE ()ME --e•-- Tonorao, Meroh. — Mr. Speaker took the !ha at 3 p, m. Mr. Gibson (Hamilton) presented a re• !urn showiug a copy of the case submitted the Minister of Gduoatton for the o qP•in- On of the Judges of the Chancery Dlvieton the High Court of Justioe as to the of certain provislone of the ?Maio Sohoola Dot relatingto the Sep- p` school supporters, also the answers by the judges to the questions eub• The House then went into committee of he whole, and carried the fallowing bills, Tr. MoLaughlin in the chair : To amend the Aot incorporating the To- onto Young, Men's Christian Aesootatron -Dir. H, E. Clarke (Toronto). To amend the Aot to incorporate the oronto Dairy Company—Mr. Davis. The bills will be read a third time to. m Mr. Balfour moved the second reading e bill to amend the Aot incorporating village of Tilbury Centre. The bill as referred to a oommlttee of the Whole to morrow. Lir. Clarke ( Wellington) moved for an of the House for a return in tabulated rm as to proviaoial revenue from all since Confederation to the close of ' The motion waa allowed to stand at the quest of Mr. Meredith.—It Mr. Meacham moved for an order of the °use for a return showing the amounts mind from the sale of wools and forests td of Crown lends respeotively, in the :storel divisions of Lennon and Adding. u, during each of the years 1886, 1887, •88, and 1889, The motion was oarrie3. Mr. Wool (Hastings) moved the second ad:ng of a hal to provide for the aeorece the ballot at elections of members of the egislative Assembly. Mr. Mowat called Attention to the fastg' the Honse a as extreme! thin. He 9 to know whether the member for tunings intended to press for a vote that Y. Mr. Meredith -a plied that the bill had en for some time before the House. The had a bill of the same erecter before the House. He moved to at the bill of the member for Hastings than me up at the same time as the Attorney- or prior thereto. of 1lIr. Mowat said that it would be mostAlaska, nvenient to have the bate come would n at the p tion me time. The bill was allowed to stand. ing, Mr. Stewart moved the second reading of hmendments to amend the Municipal Aot. The temperance was carried and referred to a of mmittee of the Whole Hones on Tuesday' .suppression at. :Government NOTICES of MOTION. requests. 11r. Fell—Wednesday next — Bill to - the Free Grant and Homesteadmingled t the the Ingram—Wednesday next—Bill re- licensee the relations between employers other 1 workmen. had Mr. Rosa (aliddlesex)—Wednesday neat Bill respecting the ragtime of arahiteo• jurisdiction P g P the e. always Smith (York)—Bill to amend the province. t respecting assignments by pereone in Commissioner eluent circametanees. affirm to eurther facili-g elected e proceedings under the Land Titles'—He system Meredith—Inquiry-1. Whether any,• operating miechievions if so what, steps have been taken to notion minute the leasee now held by the Kee. change Lumber Company or John R. Mather people lands and islands in and near legislation. Lake of the Woods, in the district of mnnity, oma, or to put an end to any of the way claimed by the lessees, and if so, intention of chem, and what hes been the re. stage of the steps. 2. Whether it is intended P position eke anysteps to open upthe territoryendanger P P influences °red by the said leasee for settlement or system. mining purposes.. ills were introduced by : passed incorporate the Hamilton P error Incline RailwayCompany. Hamilton P y preamble Armstrong—To To amend the Parryp g— potation nd Colonization RailwayCompany. P Y• issue Leys—Respecting the Toronto Street amble !way Company. Church, r. Hen:mart—To incorporate the Dunn. P respecting Atteroliffe d S mithville Railway for Harcourt—Respecting the Toronto, amendment r. Life & Buffalo Railway Company. 9 P 9• amble ol. Clarke (Wellington) -To amend the North for the protection of game and fun respecting ing ,animals. without r. Meacham — To amend the Act the soling mortgages and salsa of personal to amendment. r. Gibson (Hamilton) presented a re- of the Committee on Private Bills. Whole r. Gibson ( Hamilton) presented a copy Harcourt report report of the judges wish reference to Law Acts. Ostrom. r. Mowat moved the House into nom• ee of the whole, Mr. Heroonrk in theP loge r, on the bill for the relief of persons seeing the Jewish religion. The cone. ee eared the bill and reported it book will P P he house. he Speaker took the choir. reading r. Mowat moved the second reading of of for expediting the decision of oon- and other provincial questions. Orfllia—Mr• r. Meredith asked what were the prin. I. provisions embodied in the bill. I. Mowat replied that the ill. al pang—Mr. ter was the jar:adient:on:n the ria pe• ting the power of the executive as pro. Bt, works—Mr. d for in clause 6, which reads " The ion of the court shall he deemed a rector went of the court, and an appeal shall hereform as in the case of a judgment Gib provieion'waHe Hereferredto the force in very Eact thatstate of Company—Mr: Union. Ottawa r. Meredith thought the hon. gentle• should inform the House of the par- purposes—Mr. P ler necessity that existed for the Ottawa ing of each a bill. of he bill was read a second time and re- ed to a Committee of the Whole Hodge tear r. Rosa (Huron) moved the second read- eatabliehin of a bill respecting the eatebliehment of model of Refuge. g farming r. Meredith asked if that was in view Hones general eleotion. Government r. Rosa (Huron) said that `thsre. are counties in which poorhouses have model countesteblies i and are n present main- province, of ed, every one of whioh was working same The average poet per rearm part. soh inmate in these institutions was farms, 97. He contended that 'it would be volae h more economical for mnnroipelities reot these buildings: One of the ad. the of a general application of - these manifested ere granted to mnnioipalitiee would be ing oar jails of a number of innocent model who are incarcerated under the Act. The Bill proposed to give the 00 to each municipality establishing a a eapenses. house aided by the manioipalfky. usred:th thought that the grant o! againet wighed )0 ehoald be a question of supply. • He, an -a thought that a distinction should not account raven between grants to cities end to mons ties. The bill mado the grant to one. suggested. only, and allowed them to nee the such 1 for building purposes. At present The eents to aures had to go toward•cam• Chards nee. cost to bill was read it's°°grid rim° and re- t......,;.,....;.,..._ fe red to a Committee of kite. Whole House. lir Drury moved the eeoond reading of the bill to amend the Aot to prevent the g• spread of contagious diseases amonghorses and other domestic animals, He explained that an Act Petiole Similar was in tome dealing with glanders in horses from the year 1879 to toe year 1885. Last year p Soulier disease of a venereal oharaoter broke out among the horses in the south• western kart of the Province. It was ex- tremely neoeseary that` this disease should be stamped oat. The exportation of horses to the United States was a very important item. He, proposed that when the disease broke out' in any motion of the Province inapeotors shall be appointed, and these inspectors have the power to inspect animate and furnish hills of health, and when an animal •fe found infected with the disease the inspector shall at once take charge of it. Mr. Willoughby approved hearlily of the Bill. Mr.. Meredith said that it would be just as well'to have the salary of these inepeo. tore specified. The bill passed its second reading and was referred to a committee oonsistieg of the following hon. members : M secs, Awrey, Blezerd, Bishop, Clanoy, Cruse, Dante, Dryden, Fell, French, Graham, Rayside, Leys, O'Connor, Smith (Fronts• nuc),. Snyder, Sprague, Waters, Willoughby and the mover. Mr. Gibson moved the second reading of the bat to amend the Lignor ,License Laws. The first clause of the Act requires that, where an applicant is not a lioensee, in making bis application for a license he must present a petition signed by at least a maj Jrity of the electors in the polling sub -division where the premises are to be situated, and at Least one-third of the residents in that subdivision. The first important clause in the Bill ie the abolition of bar rooms on vessels. Liquor cin be famished at table or in rooms, out not ata bar, and the fees for the license are accord• in 1 reduced. Another section is aimed at the Bale of liquor in slabs organized ruder the Benevolent Aot, .where snob slabs are organized prinoipally for the sale of liquor. 1 he limit when liquors can be sold to minors is raised from 16 to 18, and after a notice in writing has been given to any liquor seller he cannot sell to any person under 21 years of age without being liable a penalty of not less then $10 or more 320 for each offence. Another clause deems any person who sub -tete any portion the premises which he 000up:es, and when the illicit sale of liquors in 'this per. is carried on, liable to fine. Cantina- he explained that many other had been asked for by ,the people, moil as the suppression the sale of liquor over barrooms and the of sale on holidays, but the had not seen fit to grant these Mr. Meredith, continuing the debate on license laws, said that in proportion to population there were fewer liquor issued in Toronto than in any pleas in ()entree Legal precedents established the right of•the provincial g P to prohibit, as web ae•regnlbte, liquor license. The Opposition had recognized this right of -the The ,Government saw a License in Hamilton prostitating:hie for electioneering purposes, and him again and again to office. The ander whioh hon, gentlemen were this !losers law was a' bad, and one. This was just like the of bon. gentlernenoppoeite. The in the temperance `sentiment of the was not owing to. any provincial It was a change in the com- . •and the Government was in no entitled 'to ,- credit. He declared his of placing on record at the proper of the session the views of the Op- on thio important issue. Partisan were at work ander the resent P The Committee on Private Bills met and the followin bills : Respecting the g P - Patriotio'Polnnteer fund, with emended ; respectingthe ,Cor- of the City of Ottawa and; the of $50,000 debentures, with the pre- amended ; respeoting 8t. Andrew's Ottawa,with several amendments ; oertain lands vested in the reo- of Christ Chnroh Hamilton without ; respecting the New York Insaranoe Oompeny, with the pre- amended ; respecting the town of •Toronto, with amendments ; the Hamilton Gae Company, amendment, and an Act to enable Corporation of the City of St. Thomas matte waterworks debentures, without The House went into Committee of the and passed the following Bills, Mr. in the chair : Respecting the city of Belleville—Mr. To emend the Aok inaorporetios; the vii- of Tilbury Centre—Mr. Balfour. The Biile were reported to the House end PThe receive their third reading to -morrow. 31r. Speaker took the chair. The following Bills passed the second and were referred to a Committee the Whole Honse : To consolidate the debt of the town of Drary, Ree eosin the Hamilton Gas Light Com- P g - Awrey, To enable the corporation of the oily of Thomas to lases debeatnree for water- Ingram. Respecting certain lands vested fn the of - Christ Church,Hamilton—Mr. eon (Hamilton). Reepeoting New York Lite Insaranoe Gibson (Hamilton): To enable the corporation of the city ofher to issue debentures for ,waterworks Bronson. To enable the corporation of the city of to lases debentures to the amount 850,000—Mr. Bronson. onatdram, Reapsot:ng the i3aoh (Hamilton):oVolan- land -Mr. Gibeoh (Hamilton). Mr. Lees moved a regolation)that the of well •oonduotedA g provincial !rime is of rent advantage to the g g interests of the country, and this desires to draw the attention of the to the advisability of such a 9 farm in the eastern section of the so that the farming community that part of the provinoe' may have the benefit as those residing in the western He was a strong believer in model and believed they had been of much to the province. Mr. Drurywas leased with the tone o! P discission in whioh hon. members had their gratification at the work- of the Agricultural College and the farm in operation. He understood member from South Grey to °tate that looking model or experimental feria should pay 'Ihoagh he made no ahargea the, Dominion Government he to state that it requited last year expenditure of $60,000 on as ital r to work this Yarm. It wonid cost to estmblish sash a farm as was It was not to be ea ted that the institationR world pay theta way yet. •restoration great problem of practical farming in at present Was how to cheapen the library. of prodaation, He would request the .-:LV�_i — t..2 - __..._- a tare shown. friend bat the and, from of assizes by . traeteea. eapportere: Inapeotor return registry ' private rector Gibson Oompauy—Mr. unteer time Brampton—Mr. Company Fergueon. the sex)• of Bronson. is face—of alwa with• of arm it pat on and diets! the easier If without cleaning expect and edge. be and taken with surface the pressure whioh strop. razor you strop mastics. private life.sized bat white oat all most pioture similar whole 20,000 graph Photographer—eSometimes. that Photographer some corpse Aaetralia, his good 1 appor'a Behring Lorne ...:at. Mr. Ingram asked for the difference, be. tweeu the seat of students sleeted to the college by the counties and those who were not, sleeked. Mr. Hardy replied that the only differ- enee wee in the enttanee fee. A farmer'a eon paid $20, but in the ease of nominees the County Cannella the tee was remitted Mr. Meteelfe said that he ho ed the hon. P gentleman would establish a model farm the eastern portion of the Province. He thought the Government .ehould pay, more attention to the horse indaatr The farm• y ers of Kentucky were making thousands dollare out of raising horsee, Mr. Lees Bald he would not press the too• tion, but the eetablishmeut, of each an in rotation was of much importance, . Mr. Roue (Huron) said that the Agriaul- tura! °ol:ege woe doing' better work as purely mgr:ouitaral institution than any other institution on the continent. The colleges on the other sided the line were turning the agrioultural departments into industrial eohoole where trades *ere taught, beoaaee they said that the ferment did hot support the agrioultural colleges as they should. He hoped the oritioisms oa the Model Farm in' future would be es moder- ate in tone as all the remarks from all the gentlemen opposite with the. exception' of one (li Awrey lemy). end tier ed the manner in which the Model Farm had been oon- dusted. The hon. leader of the Opposition showed by his remarks that he was disap• pointed in the attitude•.of his followers, as they did not approve of the efforts to discredit the institution in the past. The hon. gentleman was much hart about referenoe to Ottawa, It was a matter of history that when an election was pending plans of public buildings to be ereoted in the constituency were hung up in every country store. Mr. Meredith—Yee ; there wee a plan of the Parliament building hung upin Toronto with " Vote for Mowat and a million dol. for Toronto." (Laughter.) Mr- Awre continuing, said that lane P of a poet -office were hung np i¢ Berrie and other towns, and every time there was an eleotion pending in Heldimand a plan of a bridge across the Grand River was Mr. Meredith—That bridge serried your np Selt Creek at the last election. Mr. Awrey amid it was not the bridge the unknown strangers that bought up voters. The Model farms were nada!, as a consequence, a cry was coming np every eeotion of the oonntry for more them. Bills were introduced by : ' Mhadowat—To provideforholdingwinter in the county of Carleton, • Mr, Meredith—To provideforthe election ballot of Public and Separate school Mr.Meredith—RespectingSeparete school -. 2lr. Gibson presented the report, of the of the Idiot Asylums ; also the asked for by the Hoaee respecting the of the city of Toronto: The House went into committee on bilis and reported the following P g' Respecting certeia !made vested in the of Christ Church, Hamilton—Mr. (Hamilton). Respecting the New York Life Insurance Gibson (Hamilton). Respecting the Hamilton Patriotic Vol. Fand-Mr..Gibsoa (Hamilton). The following Bills were reada second and referred to committee: To consolidate the debt of the town of Chisholm. To ooafer upon the Chatham Waterworks power to borrow $150,000—Mr. To consolidate the debeatnre debt of county of Middlesex—Mr. Rose (Middle- - To authorize the sale of certain lands the First Baptist Chnroh, Ottewa—Mr. • of in of a that in tridgee at hunt own for, hand experiences combine lute as are is entertainer only the of that in is among ample, of determination be not forget Duchess term decidedly paper ber pointed princesses P consists or tend when servants, ser, a or or and part a no oat will take lint spirits into minutes the then month using fats. gas, goodP By sit mold or, cold raise head Thie the the °bgtinate dared ennffed nostrils a physician, blood, way lowed.—Boston tan and tache the seem teresting, have heart just the wrinkles same, „ moth the exoaees The insignia return Persia. La March from Northwest. imposing pedlars, $100 Commercial and are the there sameprofession Two gold, 3,400 IIntted I'oetmester•Genersl •in intention fee plaint ent place who oaletenoe >BNGLISR COVNiRY LIVE. WORDS THAT1S JE Y„ a foe. lgve as doesn't that the his forme realizes min bluff hope grocer sugar world—and logien°. of � gratitude. not acquisitions they have is of daughter arranged, flounced now, hut:wean °n lost seta Po der England Trafalgar, ton, health. miss of oleime dirty. net, tles tie Senator servant Capital. room." think this no finger Bat they braes composed then They the sought music put of children Bill, and and of Y oa hours bogs, "Row timberland The Claims TEA TA$L 1 CI 01:113113 eooial Features of the Groat House of the British Nobtiity, Life at great homes of this kind has been it seems to me, better represented by the pen of Anthony Trollope than any other writer ; and, indeed, while visiting at En lish countr lases m self 1 woe so g y P Y impressed by the feet of his photographic capacity that it seems to me further desoription on my part would be super- flatus. Bak that whish strikes some Americans as ostentatious or as a desire to eimply maintain splendid estate, Bays writer in the New York Herald, fain reality the outcome of snob, tradition ; each long usage that It hue be0otne,ae ordinary and matter of fast to those belonging to it as the oommonplace routine of three times day setting forth a meal on a table for any meohento's family. Therefore, to the guest everything is natural and done with no effort of premeditation, Arriving at country b0uQ9 01 the k,iOd—for:netenee, any of the aeata Of the Duke of Fife—the visitor finds himself expeoted, with.every preparation made for his comfort, from the meetipg him at the train by well•instruoted servants, who, asif by magio,take hie travel. ing mares off his mind, to the reception given him at the threshold of the house by some member of the family or especially deputed person. Forthwith he is shown hie rooms, where every oonsiderarion for his visit and comfort during the period has been ordered. His dressing -room will contain a we11-fur niched writing -table, easy shales, a oebinet replete with whatever he may require for epeoiel refreshment which a long day the hunt in the field or among the par. may entitle him to. Servante are his beck and call, and a card upon his mantel informs him of the hours for the or other sport. If he has brought his horaee they are well stabled and oared but this must be by arrangement before- with his host ; otherwise heir notified what "corers" he o&n have. A sheerer mi ht be written detailingthe fascinating g - of English country life, whish a peculiar informality with abeo- physical luxury and as much repose the guest desires ; but, of coarse, there hosts and horns. The Duke of Fife noted for his faculty . ae an ; and, so far as I can see, the difference likely to be between social methods of his wife and those other ladies of the peerage will be a slight additional degree of seclusion her own house will be permitted her. It hardly probable that she will appear her guests as freely as might, for ea- her eister•in•law, the Marohioneee Townsend. In spite of the Duke of Fife's that his wife's royalty must in a certain measure overlooked, it will be possibie for the Englieh people to it. ' He has stipulated that the shall have no " household "—a not always understood, but whioh is significant to the Englieh tax- 1 Every married or important mem. of the royal family has his or her ap. retinue ; in the case of the junior this "household," as it is called, of a lady•in•waiting, an equerry, gentleman attendant,(thews generally at. for two or three monthe only at a time, they are replaced by others), special such as wardrobe women, a dram who fills the place of a lady's maid, and footman, or page. This list is increased decreased according to the importance rank of the royal personage concerned, in all oases is not only an expensive of coact income, but is maintained as matter of etiquette and state prestige. Justice For eon Scarifies!, w linabandfor ' ringing False aud Hosrlbtp Charges Against els W&[c. In the Court of Chancery at Toronto yea- terday Mr. Justine Ferguson gave judgment in the famous tame of Smart vs. Smart + suit brought by a Port Hope barrister against hie wife for the oastod of their three obildren—two girls and a boy. The came has been o•n on for the better art of - i g part two years, and has attracted a great deal of attention. The end of the matter is that a Mrs Smart retains the oastod of the obit- dean.' be the coarse of the praoeedingis the plaintiff made numerous chargee and soon. tuitions of horrible and disgusting nature a againet his wife. In reply to a contention a that heir of intemperate habits the plain. tiff denied it and claimed that he had long ceased rash habits. The pass, it will be remembered, was tried in oawera. In his a judgment Mr. Justice Ferguson said in part : - " It seemed to be oonoeded at the trial, and I do not see how ii can be otherwise, that all ideas of these two people overcoming together again and living ss roan and wife' moat be abandoned and pub entirely out of the oaee and out of consideration. It is fully proved that the charges and aooaea• tions that I have alluded to were, in fact, made by the petitioner, wantonly, I think, and in the meanest and moat contemptible manner, and that he still persists in mak- ing them." After resiting the sworn denial o! Mee. Smart to these' chargee, the learned Judge oonkinued: "I am unable to understand how it is that any men is found who is so base as to make, and persist in making, such anoint- tions against hie wife in the manner in which this man has made them, even if it were for a. moment assumed that the eoousatione were founded in truth. Even insuoh a Daae I think there are no'adjem• fives or qualifying words in..onr language sufficiently ea receive to properly stem y P n P 9 P' the quality of the mind and character of the man who would do ep, or the degree of his superlative meanness. How mash more is required to describe the oharaoter of the man who does so on oath, when the accuse- tions and chargee are false." After a brief review of the oiroatnetanaes under which the charges were made, the Judge continued what is believed to be the Btrongest•worded judgment evergiveninthe Courts, in this fashion • " To say that •hie oondnot, ss staked by himself, is beastly, would, I think, be a false and foul Blander upon the brute creation. The fact of hie stating it, the oharaoter of the aooneations he makes againet his wife, which socueations are, as I have said, in my opinion false, and the manner in whish he makes the accusations render the matter worse and worse. I was not before aware that the world contained snob a man either in barberous or civilized life. I am astounded and much ata loss to comprehend how it happens that a man, brought up and educated as the plaintiff must have been, has, each a oharaoter as he,apparently without compunction or e, Y P shame, demonstrates that he poaeesees. His habitual use to *mese for years of in- toxioating drink cannot, I think, account for it altogether." At oonetderable length the Judge pro• Deeded to pour the vials of righteous wrath .on the petitioner, and.concluded by giving judgment for Mre. Smart with costs. Smart will be permitted to visit his ohil- dren, but there hie power will comae, and the mother will have full control over them. + etre mom rs tome A ilttlo immigrant arrived last night prow some strange share. Wo never Elaw BO man a mite Como Woot Wore. The lingo ie so very queer That he doth speak, You'd swear, witheut a doubt or feart That it Was Greek. We wonder 30w ho journeyed here, Bat cannot tett , Prom soma whits cloud that floated near Mayhap he teI1.. —Do you wish to die nndisaassed ? Dm no good. —A ring on the finger is worth two in the pawnshop. 'Bad examples are more effective fluter -cod rales. —We Ilweye know oar eftemise better • than our friends. —Sheer nonsense is •more' bearable than• mere common sense. —For the rich God created medicine; for the poor, good health. • in boardingHe b Spenser leer spent his' series life t❑houses. —Desks are a good deal Pito brokers. They live on margins. - —Every ruling monarch in Europe heel German blood in his veins. ' —Gambling is the amusement of the wise and the,passion of the foolish. P ie the busy chimney sweep who appears in a fresh soot every day. —Women are very regular in their shop -- Ping. They•buy by advertisement. , —Nearly 11100,000,000 in English gold found investment in Mexico the past year. —The way to keep children happy and health in Y' the winter, is to keep them on —Oat of 1,000 man there are 200 who women, 201ove woman and one loves a woman. —The man w7io is perpetually hesitating to which of twe things he will do seldorat doom/tither. . —Al old is a good deal like a horse oar. A man 'sen always ostah one when he want it. things to learnwhat —One worldof the is seldom are doinge seldom watching we when w • we good.• —The Sing of Italy personally platted body of his brother, the Duke oh in rte coffin. —The man who leads a fast life in this world may find the time hang heavily OR hands in the next. -Nineteen times in twenty a womaa with one man a dream which she with another. —Men would not care to be,,,wiolied if I did not look on tion. inose with dread and admiration. —There is no nee in the anow making; a now. Everybody has abandoned the of more sleighing thie winter. —" Short and sweet," remarked the ae ho tied up thirteen onnaet at and marked it One pound." —There is a place for every one in the out of it, according to the them Which place is the burning uestion- who complains of the ingratitude men is an imbecile ;der it was neoessary be an imbecile in order to count on their thea —Experience and philosophy whioh do end in charity and indulgence are two whioh ape not worth what cost. . —Women who are absolutely beautiful only that amount of modesty whioh necessary in order to ' make 'the moth their beauty. —It is eefd that the mscrid a of another of the Prince of Wales has bees and that it ;will be publicly&M- in April. —" You got off a brilliant thing jest said the editor to professional as the latter arose from sitting a pair of sharia. —Husband Peskin over his o eh I' (looking 4 )- ve $5 somewhere. Little Herr Mat 9— you. lost 35 when she examined your oltete this morale g• —Joseph Sutherland, who was the' ow- PP boy on the vessel whioh first brought to the news of Nelson's victory at attained his 100th year at Mil- Sittiegbeurne, recently. He ie in good +� —� Are you observing�entY asked Dna of another. Ob, yea ; I always do. told Charleyhe should ate bringing ose P g g the 80 -Dent kibonnd aandto as we're the seer g fasting." g' —A famous Fifth avenue beautifier that valla tea the ladies' fates Dirt lodges in the meshes of dotted and th:e ie absorbed by the rkin, eet- in the pores and feriae what are known black heads. —"Can on tell me where I'll find the ? ' ysaid a wife of a prominent of the public to a page at the Yee, ma'am • he ie in the tinte- "Drat 1 deer ! That man seems ,to of nothing but Garda." —" Oh, no, there ain't any favorites the family 1" soliloquized Johnny ; " oh, ! I guess there ain't. If I bite my Haile I catch it over the knuckles. the baby ren eat ni whole foot, end think it's just tanning 1 "—Pack. —Seven years ago titers was jest one band in the Salvation Army. It was of a •father and hie sone. Since 8,550 other bands have been formed. have been mostly recruited from tthar f tap -Mom (says the War Cry), and have out the theory and practice• of for themselves. _ How to Stop Bleeding. Some pereone have a tendency to bleed, matter how alight the cause. A small eoratoh or the extraction of a tooth cause profuse bleeding, and sometimes life. When from the latter cause, a little powdered chalk, roll it np in in the form of a cork or plug, dip it in of turpentine and peers it firmly the Davit Olean a ft ever 10 or 15 y' g until the bleeding is stopped• Let last ping remain in • over night, and do not pall it oat, bat wash the in tepid water anti! It i° loosened, cold water after the first few month• Bleeding from the nose is seldom seri• except in old persons. It ie often in children, if not too 0o ious. Itunconsciously right u of faintneeg ensue let the person right up, bathe the face and neck with water , or dash sold water in the face better skill, take a sloth or towel, dip in ' water and .bandage .the forehead and the brine as high ee poesfble over the •or cross them firmly behind the back. notion bee the effect of aontraoting muscles of the nook and diminiehing rush of blood to the head. In verI 9 Deese piaabee o! very finely pow- alum may be inhaled, or alum water np the •nostrils. Plugging the should not be resorted to unless by for if not properlydone the instead of being stopped, finds its to the top of the throat and is swat'- Traaumri t Transcript. Quinine and Dr. Lorimer, Dr. Lorimer's quinine episode is not the first one of an unpleasant oharaoter that has marked his career as a alergpmen, Several years ago Mr. Lorimer preached to his congregation in tine city a powerful ser- mon, whioh ft was enbse neat! shown had been prevfone1 delivered by an °min- ant EIIgi' h dfvfne—the Rev. Dt. Parker, of London—and published in pamphlet form. Confronted with these facts, Dr. Loricet was not at a loos for an eaplena- tion• The reports in the Chicago papers showed that be hed.eamply reprodaoed Dr. Parker's sermon. Befog •mani(eetly enable to deny this foot, Dr. Lorimer said that he had read • the pnblfahed sermon of Dr. Parker, and that he had words tie- eimilated it "—in other words it had sunk into his plastic and receptive intellect and end had been reproduced, verbatim et liters- tim, as an original production. .." Uricon- soma assimilation" became a by -word in Chicago, and one citizen, who was arraigned before the Criminal Court on the charge of having stolen a large bay mule, ahem ted to make pmotfos! nee of Dr. Lonmer'a as- tertion. He admitted that the mule was not lets, bat pleaded that he had ninon- smione1 aes"1 ted the •animal, having pre - viously owned a mule that looked exactly like the one in gaeation• Bat tient defence did not avail. The a°afmflation of a ser- mon and the theft of a mule were entirelyP different transactions in the a es o! the law 9 and in the solitude of a penitentiary cell the lover of mules reflected bitterly on his poor judgment when it oametotaking other people's ro rt Chia o News. P y Hint, for shaving. The moment yon leave your bed or bath the best time to shave. Never use warm water, whioh makes the shavers—tender. A neve of soft piste leather should a be ks t •with azore to w: a them Y P P In sold weather lane our razor—closed P y aeries—in year pocket or under your to warm it. Aiwa a wi a our razor clean and °fro 9 P 9 P before putting • it away, and always your deriving on awaywith the lather it. g P Never fail to washyour beard with roe P cold water and to rub it dryimme• before on apply the lather, f whioh moreyou you and rho thfoker it ig the it will shave. you only once put away your razor stropping it or otherwise erfeotl PP Q P 9 the edge, yon mast no longer to shave well and easy,the sa P P dam eo soon rust the fine teeth and g razor, nein onl a fine saw, ehonid - 9 moved in a sloping •or sawing •direction, held nearly flat to your face, care being to draw the skin as tight aspossible the left bend, so as to present n even and draw out the beard. The praakioe •o! preseieg on the edge of razor in afro rn soon rounds it • the PE g ehonid be •directed to the bank, should never be raised from the If you shave 1rom heel to point of strop ik from point to heel ; bat iP begin with the point in shaving then it from heel to point.—Medical • - The DitCerenoe, When things go wrong with a man he neglect hie barber for a dayor two g�� forget the brilliantine for hie mons- endgrow blank and hollow around optica, and ten to one he will simply in female eyes " so Byronio and in- you know." Bat woman may a thousand gnawing devils at her., 'things, and she's obliged to put on so mash pondre de fiz and to pull out gray hairs on her temple and pinch the •the out between her eyes just the or she's handed over to the world by hundred most intimate •friende as „ a wreak, mydear and the -ar on. jury9 case and even her lawyer begin to find for the husband. • Didn't Him Ono•, Wife—Where haveyou been this even- ing,John ? Husband—I went over to see Jack Hardy, who's been laid up for two months •a in the hone. Wife—Well, did you see him ? Hasbaad—No ; he raised me every time so high that.I couldn't stay in. The Most Wonderful Kittens. A moat wonderful toy has been on exhibition in Paris. Fanny seven kittens, covered with real skin with eyes of emerald set in pearly 9 P ? enamel and each playing on a mast- instrament—a flute, a zither, a violin, a a harp, a cornet and an accordion, perfectly harmonized and lain the P Y playing - diffroult operas, then you have the complete. The meohaniam i6 to thea of a maaio box, `and the a pparetus, kittens ethite is valued at franca.—St Louis Republic. Cnrasoo's Fair has fellen foul o! the Lake Front hotelkeepers, who threaten to' take oat an injunction against the authori• ties if the persist in makingthe lake front P the site of the fair. The only secret that a woman should keep from her hueband is that she manages him., The Earl,of Crawford and Belaartee ha closed and dismantled his famous observe- tory at Dun Eoht, so well known to all astronomers for many years, and has pre• rented all the instruments and the Batton- omioal library to the Royal Observatory at Edinburgh. the Professor Sohiparellihas discovered that the planet Mercuryrevolvea around its axis 88 days,the game as its permed of revola- tion around the sun. It is thus always night them one hemisphere end fiery day in the other. Wm. Niokle, President of the St, Law- renoe Steamboat Co., died at Kingston yes. said, tarda The value of his estate is esti- mated at half a million dollars. the Jnetioe-I dislike to interrupt counsel P, Mr. Meflady ; bat it seems aeeless to hear three," further argument from yon. Mr. MoCady —I beg that your honor will hear me the through. This alibi is not the only site my client tan establish. He has another mach etronger et. of - Y It is reported from Rome that Arch- the bishop Fabre is to receive a Cardinal's P struck hat, '• How did the bride look?" asked a killed. in a Market arrest ear to aaokher, returning „ „ from a wedding. Look 1 in was the reply, she looked out of the Ariz. tion She wore a travelling dress oat exactly like an . s pope has sent the shah of Persia, the of the order of Pins IX. ' This is in for the liberty accorded Catholics in Presse, of Montreal, says 'that on 18th, 300 Trench families will go Qaebeo to settle in Manitoba and the Momenta, City Council has passed an Act an simnel tax of $40 on toot $60 on those with hand carts end in on those using a horse and wagon, travellers, newspaper, carriers in hawkers of !tact, °ekes, eta., in basket° not tared. Mies Minerva Parker, 'of Pbiledel hie .i° onlyfemale architect in that cit and deonly two others of her sea in the in the United Skates. thoneand and twere fight ounces of worth $80,700, were crashed from tone of quartz last month in the States, Sa ark announced the House yesterday that it was not the of the Government to reduce the charged for registered lettere, no com• having been made againet the pros- pros - system. lady Advertising emables a business mon to gg ha good° before the ages of theaeands would Otherwise never know of their that t at.- Forgot the Baby: friend of ours, travelling in the west,. np with a former who had a number children, and °eked, "How many have you?" "Well," replied farmer, "there's Mary, and Tom, and Y and Elizabeth, and Jane, and 'Peter, Iamb, and Prieoi la, end Josephine, Heeekiah—ten, ' he Reid, numbering off on his fingers. " I have ten." Ona his daughters cried out,," Why, father, forgot the belma " " face I •did," he g Y " We have eleven. " Abort two afterward the nest, lookingout of � g window, saw the hired man driving. and, turning to the farmer, said, many, hogs have you?" "Eighty- wag the answer, and he lett •it• ri•ght, •• first t•hoAdcocate. Photographing a. Corpse. Waggish Stranger—Db yon ever photo. corpses ? Why ? Waggish Stranger I was going to say the body of McGrn•- (to able bodied ee°ietant, manatee later)—Now, John, set thisg � ap and we'll photograph it." Lord Hopetown, the new governor of •ie described as a small, delicate• man, but not in the all health that appearance • might imply. A London epeoiel °able saes there is reason for believing that Hon. C. R. •mission is ekriotly limited to the Sea qu tation. A special °ebbe Bays the Prince of Wales, Lord Mayor of London and Lords and Carnarvon are assisting. in the of the Toronto University. —The gate of a forest should be seoared •. r...,:-.t....t. - Warren Maybes, a ,young man 21 years age, son of Mr. James Maybes, of North- count while oattiu timber is woods with phis two brotghere was ' on the head by a tree and instantly 'United Skates House Committee knee d- leer decided to report a bill peov d - for the a meat of rho I'reIImh a lia- oleins [t i estimated it ill r require of between eight and toll appropriation w nd • , or. o e owner. million dollars.