Flesherton Advance, 20 Dec 1883, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

NaiW t illoi K i>l<-> I tttl t ~ I le A London X.III. has a* Papal representative B**rcsrsail v r* uaJu u.l ISM n IMI. .. oablegvam says : Pops Lao appointed Don* Bmulden in Canada UK riCIUI ITUCITltl A Teacher's Owllv TewsJM a l.lnl. Ulri ~b<> WoaMa'l sUt. wMk ifcc Ho,, A Cleveland. U., telegram says: Tony Lavmiller is a tsaaher iu A country ubool in Stark county, live miles south of Canton. Lie wa arrested yesterday charged with uis*alt aod battery. Mrs. M. Oglethorpe is tbe plaintiff. She allege* that hat daughter Mary, 11 year* old, was a pupil in and Mgr. Seppiaoi M 1'apal repre- sentative ill tha United States, The satter appointment has been hinted at in despatches from Home. It is now asnotally announced. The appointment of Dom Smuldere has not heretofore been ao- 1 ^ fling vloUt ion o , ^ rulM , Lay miller, as a nounoed. The two appointments, though punl . menti o^,^ u . r w Ieluov e her Mat samilar in nature, are entirely disoonneoted | ^ thebo , .^ rf AonotOf This she from each other. The Utter is one of the fujwd ,J a o> wbeu Laymiller threw her result, of tb* visit of tha American ( ^ flgor and Ued \ ^ aboa , buhops to Rome while the former is the b wrl8to . Ue then drs^ed the girl to the result of a P.pal investigation, of .the i>ecu M d u ^ ^ over , B WO O j the bar condition of attain to the Gbnrob in Canada. Tbe official title of both of these Papal representative* *ill probably be tbat of " Apostolic Commissioner." Their office and their miaaioa are entirely eocleaiaatioal. The n | >ri that a " nuncio" wa* to be eent to the lulled State* was absurd. Th* experiment WM tried onoe and failed. Neither L)om bmulden nor Seppiaoi baa any muwion to the OovernmeU of Canada or tne I' cited State*. To the Catholic Church in tboee territories tbey will, doubt lass, bear the power* of bsagaat. Dam Bvnlders i* a Belgian and i* a member of the Ohterofan Order. Among other thing* he will settle the old controversy in Can ads ia regard to tbe Laval 1'uiveniity. and inquire into tbe assertion that numbers of French Canadian Catholic* are members of tbe Masonic Society. Mgr. Beppiaei ia a prominent member of tbe Augustinian Order aod hM held several important l in the Charob. lie hae considerable acquaintance with tbe English language, and is fairly well read in Amari aan history and literature. H* will be acconspanied by several score tarie*, th* chief of whom has already been arned, aod i* Dr. Stouten. OS.A., of Philadelphia. Mgr. Seppiaci will preside over tbe Council of the Church in America, which will be held io Baltimore or New York in 18e>4, and which will settle im- portant question* of discipline. To pro- perly understand tha matter it should be remembered that tbe United Htatea ia missionary country , tbat the lines of discipline are not so tightly drawn M they are in countries where canon laws and ths decree* of tbe Council of Trent an strictly enforced ; that the relation* between bishop* and pri**t* have been denned, and stipend mainly mpon toe will and disposi- tion of th* bishop*. Tbe report that tbe American bishop* wen considering tbe Irish queetion bM only tbe foundation tbat i Ancient Order of Irish secret societies. Hibernians and other are tolerated in some eUoocses aod condemned in other*. Tbi* wa* a matter of consultation. TUB! -.nANIHTKat." re oi ih, rum- "i ihr rvl- t or. I r < pl>lu Krnln. d Krklnil A Duluth despatch says : A letter ban received from a survivor of the loot ner Mauislee. He says they en countered a very heavy gale from the southwest, and about 90 mile* oat the v< el broke in two. The life boat* were taktrn oat, bat before tbey were launched all but one were swept away in the storm aod only nine persons who were on the boat allowed to get in the remaining boat. They bad a terrible time after the neamrr went down. Ibere WM nothing but the wide expanse of water before them. The; rolled around oo ibe turbulent waters, old, wet, and hungry, three days, aod one by one dropped off, death having oome to their relief. Same froxe to death, some died from exhaustion and exposure. They ay Captain McKay never left the beat, but remarked. I am oapWin of this boat, and if she is a ocffio for anybody she will be my coffin." After the men lelt the boat they aw the Manistee make one plunge under the wave*, and that WM the last of bar. There were ten of the) crew and seven pan angers on board when she went down, and oat of those who started oat in the boat anly three were savtd and reached Hough too. The wreck occurred off Eagle Harbor. INsvfAN AN f*t~ IT IBM. J..r. mmm i.i-rd ire* tfce Male* kv I ndln I i A Buffalo deepatoh lay* : Before the Court of Claims yustas-day morn inn On. i 0. 3troog was present to argue the claim of a portion of the) Caynga Nations of Indians living in Canada for a share of the 9,800 annuity promised the Cayugas by the State in 1810. The amount claimed with inUrent makes a formidable Mm. The Canada Cayngas bold that as the chief of the nation, Aysgegbti (fish carrier), liven with them and they are a majority of the nation, a large part of the annuity ibould have been paid from the State. for a decision. to them and is DOW due The matter was held over A l-'-rmll.r. .TS.n . Fallsrr. A Montreal despatch say* : J. A. Craig, the large furniture manufacturer oo Bona- venture street, baa assigned. Mr. Craig failed two or three years ago, hut sine* bat time ban been doing a vary large bum new' amounting to about MOO.OOO a year. A abort time ago he bee* me interested in the electric light and claims that bis invan UOQB were so roooeiieful tbat be last year pot 990,000 derived from them into bii business. Hi* liabilities now amount to something like 136,000, and he claim a large surplus looked up in land, machinery, ate. hooka lined for holding wraps, dr*w the girl op until her toe* barely touched the floor. In this condition, she hung from 'J o'clock in the morning until 3. SO o'clock in the afternoon, wheu her mother, having bean told by on* of the pupils, hastened to the school and ordered the teacher to out her down, which he did. The girl when released w*a unable to walk, and it i* feared has lustained serious injury. Laymiller gave bail for his appearance on Saturday next for a hearing. Lateaf IMIUI IM luiitl. Tba Royal Agricultural Society of Ire- land have decided to hold next year'- Itoval show in Kilkenny. Lord Devon bM addressed a letter to his Limerick tenantry offering them facilities for the purchase of their holdings, allowing any balance of the money not provided by the L*tiii oou. mission to remain on mort- gage at 4 per cent, per annum. Tba story abo it tb* projected wholesale expatriation of the Irish torn* out to be false after all. Tbe Castle authorities took no uotio* of the rumor, until the Arch- bishop of Tuam became indiguant aid de- nouuood tbe scheme, when h* was informed tbat no such project bad been either dm- or contemplated by the Irish Gov- ernment Mrs. Alexander bullivan, the wife of the President of tb* American Irish National League, wbo ha* travelled over tbe whole of Ireland M an observer, say* tbat she i* con- vinced that the soil of Ireland is incapable of more than comfortably supporting the tiller, and utterly incapable of supporting both the tiller and th* superimposed land- lord system ; that the nation's needs require abolition of tbe hereditary land tenure ; that every obetaale to a division of tbe pro- tita of agriculture entirely among the tillers of the soil should be removed . tbat so long M tbe tillers of Irish soil have to support a noo- producing landlord class they will remain too poor to support manufacturers ; tbat emigration ha* been a miifortune because it baa removed so many thousands of tine, deserving peasant* ; and that thu miifortun* is doe to the landlord ijitam wbiob, without any return to tbe country, ban for every landlord it has supported crowded out score* of tiller*. Home curious episodes occasionally occur when .be Land Commissioners io Iraland take evidence forth* purpose of establish- ing a fair nnt. Th* other day a farmer Lear Bkibbereen, in Countv Cork, applied for a reduction. It was found that he kept two cows. Ba pleaded, however, tbat the land wa* too poor to feed them, and that they were " hand. kept," on which be was called to produce evidence to tbat effect. 1'addy brought out a grocer's account, which, said hs, was for food given to tb* oow. Th* first item was a pint of paraffin. Did you give that to th* oow 7 " asked a Commissioner. " Rhure and I did, *or," was the answer. " I gave it to the poor baste for medicine." The next item was a pound of blasting powder. " Did you give that to tb* oow?" Mked the Commissioner gain. " Begorra, enure and the grocer has sold we, yer honor," exclaimed the man. It i* hardly necessary to add that his olaim WM struck off. Another man demanded a reduction, when it was pointed out to him that hi* father bad paid tbe rent before him for 80 yean without grumbling. " But me father uivar told yer booner," answered tbe tenant, that be had to borrow ths money to bay himself a ooffin aod basent paid it yet." JOY TURNED TO GRIEF. Very Remarkable Breuub of Pro mice Butt Won hjr a Witlow. SUE GETS NEARLY $12,000. WHVTB* . IK.K*. I lov el DeMliai* fr.pi. Press I r, IP..H HrSJI M I fcl. ouu< r of Tha following persons from Ontario during the present table shows the number Ireland asaieted oat to in ad FlRi rlrnc r. in Ih. Flnlu- tlsT* Chri|u< rrd rrr r. Tb/ action for breach of promise of mar- riage, which, says tbe London xt foulard, hM formed tbe chief attraction to the unoccupied at tbe royal courts of justice daring the past four day*, baa terminated aa such actions usually do. One might wonder, it-deed, that they are aver defended, except for the same reasons that some times cause tbe most timid of creatures to show light when driven into a corner. The plaintiff in actions for breach of pronaue is, in nine case* out of ten, a witness eminently calculated to make a favorable impression upon the British juryman. Tbe same attractive exterior which enabled her to ensnare the affections of the defendant in the first instance again doee her excellent service when allowed a wider range of operation in a court of justice. Without hurting any- body'* feelings, we may aay that the plaintiff in " Miller vs. Joy " WM endowed, notwithstanding bar age, witb a fall share of these elements of luces**. Go the other hand, the defendant in actions for breach of promise is generally something either of a knave or a fool, or, at any rate, is placed in snob a position that h* appears to be one or both. A* a rule, a man i* not mad* defendant in a breach of promise case unleM be hM been in some degree in fault a notable example m fiction not with standing. Of tb* defendant in " Millar v*. Joy " there can ba no harm in saying what his own counsel said that he bad, at any rate, been exceedingly foolish. If Ih* ver dial of the jury is to be taken M logically implying that the jury disbelieved bim whenever his evidence WM at variance witb that of th* plaintiff, h* was something more ; though it is by no means necessary to assume a* much M this. Nevertheless, even allowing for a preposaeasing plaintiff and a culpable defendant, 2,350 i* a vary ocuoiderable amount to award M dao.ages, and those person* wbo like to regard juries a* infallible will ba anxious to understand tbe motive* which induced so very decided a verdict. Tbe case took a long time to try. but the main facts wen simple enough. The plaintiff wa* a woman with a hittory. Ten or eleven yean ago ibs brought another action for breach of promise againit a very rich American gentleman, who had seduced her while she WM a sbopwomao at True- Alt'* and with whom >b* bad lived for four or five yean. The defendant in that action bad married two or three years before she sued bim, and she admitted that she bad reoeived bis visits, aod that be bad continued an allowance to her for some time after hia marriage. Th* action resulted iu her receiving a sum of 1,500, which wa* certainly not exorbitant, inasmucb as that defendant had onquei- tlonably betrayed bar, and waa tbe father of her child. All these fact* she admitted . bat in order to appreciate tbe motives of ths jury io awarding her now a much larger sum oat of the puek*t of Mr. Joy, her sub eqaent history must, of course, be con sidsred, and it is right to aay at once that no impropriety of conduct subaequent to her final rsparation from tbe American gentle- man was alleged agaiuit her. In 1875 she went to Bournemouth and started busiuea* M a milliner under the name of kf me. Revillton. The basins** did oot saooeed, aod so* left th* place for a time, morning some six yean afterward. Mr. Joy, ths defendant, ia s builder at ttouruemovtb.own ing a considerable amount of property there, but be swore in the witness box tbat it WM all mortgaged, aud thai his net income did not exceed f 5OO a year. Be i* 62 year* of *ge. with a large grown op family, aod hi* first wife, woo WM alive when Mrs. Miller lint visited Bournemouth, die 1 in January, 1862. In the spring of that; Serbia real acquaintance witb tha plaintiff flnt commenced. According to hia itatement, h* never walked with her or callnd upon her till June ; and two letter* from her of tbat data, inviting him to call upon b*r, ore promptness, in acting he mi^ht have been ISM ation, when he had escaped from the fasci- nation* of th* plaintiff'* presence aud the attractions of the metropolis, wa* that he determined to break loos* from the toils. Had be shewn more upon his roeolv* severely punished ; but even then he dallied with temptation, and a very imprudent visit to Mn. Miller ou a subsequent Son- day, when be *a>t talking to her u her bed- room, undoubtedly eet the current of tn opinion of tbe jury strongly agunet bim. It may at firet light seem singular that a man ahould be condemned to pay so large a sum for refusing to fulfil his engagement with a lady whom none of the jurymen, probably, would have regarded SB a suit- able wife for themselvea. It i* a some" what strange n ileetiou that the plaintiff oould scarcely have been a* arded a larger sum, even if her past history bad been ab- solutely free from stain. It wae certain tbat ahe was an experienced woman of the world, and tbat the defendant had been, . the counsel for the defence urged, like wax in her hand*. Tbe verdict of the jury mutt probably be regarded a* intimating their opinion that Mr Joy had not been influenced by tbe knowledge of her previous fall from virtue, and that tbe freeh publicity given to by this trial ought to increase the amount attends to them at their own of compensation which bis breach of promise entitled her. Then were many incident* in the case to which it i* impossi- ble for us to refer to, and tbat tbe defend- ant exhibited a good deal of stolid etupidity, to *ay tbe leant of it, in giving hi* eviaenoe, is uudoubttd. It ha often been luggeeted in jaat tbat breach of promise oaeee should ba tried by a jury of matrons. While we are not in any way disputing tbe justice of the verdict actually given, there oau belittle doubt tbat a jury of matron* in this case would not have awarded the plaintiff nearly a* much a* she ba* reoeived. Inasmuch M a atay of execution wa* Mked for by the defendant's counsel, and granted by the judge, we may aasume that an appli- cation will bo made to tbe divisional court to review tbe decision. No doubt the main ground will ba that the damagoa most bo regarded M excessive, since we fancy that every one who watched the case had arrived at the conclusion that the defendant would inevitably have to pay something for hi* folly. Whether bis folly WM properly ap praiaed at the sum of 2,850 u, of course, another question, on which it i* highly I robable that the but word has not yet been said. i iii-. % IM tn i i-t.ni-.> i . II o from the workhouse* aod by Tuke's Committee : sent by Take's Food toward wbleb the Imperial Government contribute,! larfslv, Duke of Bedford, President MH sat oat from Union Workhouse,.... > Ml Start emigration of servant Iirls . Out of thii number hav* been Mat To Toronto From I'mon Wo Frum TukeKimd. To Ottawa Krom I'nlon Worknou* Prom TukeFund To Kingston Prom Union Workhou* Krom TuksPnnd.. 4.SSJ 177 A I .H, . P..H It.,, n I. II An inquest WM held in Chicago OB Mon- day over the body of Mn. Mary Hyde, <X) jean old, wbo bM lived a* a recluse for years and died alone. She claimed to be a niece of the Duke of Argyle and a cousin a< the Marqois of Lome. She married below her station, and for that reaaon WM separated from the clan Campbell. Her knsbaodwaa killed by the Indian* on the overland trip to California thirty-five yearn ago, after which Mrs. Hyde returned to Chicago, where she amused considerable property by teaching, but took to Jrink and dissipation. The example of the Marquis of London- . who ha* Woome a retail coal dealer, . is followed by Lord Hudeley , who is going to aell jam. Sloven ton* of turkey and ohioksn spoiled by warm weather war* seised and eon oemned in the nuburbs ..( Washington Mar liet, New York City, before Thanksgiving To Hamilton From I'nlon Workhonses.. From TokePand To London- Prom Union WorkbonMS. From TukeFund. 10 Tbe principal contributor* ire tbe futon* ol Tralee, MK ; Kenmare, 161 ; Klllarcey, 133. Owsjhl * Mel ! ! Ike WorU. An ungrateful son, aod a disgrace to society, recently attempted to drown his mother in a wash-tub, in Brooklyn, for re- fusing to give him money to buy liquor. When a young man has to depend .poo hi* mother for money, especially when *be earns it at the wash tub , when he is too lazy to work and spend* that money for liquor, when his manhood I* so fa/ gone that ho will assault that mother, then it is hi* day* of usefulness are over and th* sooner hs dim th* better it will be for hi* poor mother, the world and himself. A man that will go back on hi* mother, hi* only beet friend, it no man at all. II ow much mot* we might make of our family life and ow friendships if every Mar** thought of lov* ' blossomed into a and signed, " Yours, very truly," were put in evidence. According to her, the intimacy commenced much earlier, aod h* bad Mked her to ba his wife at the end of April. It WM, however, admitted on all sides tbat in the middle of June she bad gone op to London, and that h* had joined her there on receipt of a telegraphic mar- eeg*. It i* equally certain that ah* took him down to Wimbledon, to tbe boos* of a gentleman bearing the same name M her elf, though not connected witb her, and tbat Mr. Miller, of Wimbledon, had then communicated to him a portion, at any rate, of her pMt history, at tbe plaintiff's request. It can hardly be doubted thai the fact of the plaintiff having voluntarily given this information to tb* Bourne mouth builder, before marrying bim, WM tha element in tha case which wsigb'd most heavily in her favor. On th* part of the* defendant it waa said tbat, after all, this WM bat making a virtue) of necessity ; tbat a woman with so notorious a history, recorded in tbe newspapers of tbe day, could not powibly hope to conceal her past, and tbat to tell her intended bus- band something of it wat the only course open to her. Tbe fact nmained that she did tell him, and tbe jury probably thought that ih* might hav* married bim without doing so bad ah* chosen. At Wimbledon Mr. Joy wa* introduced, and WM treated bed husband ; and it is olear r t learned of her previous history did not then deter him from accepting the position. Th* defendant himself insisted strongly that he bad always qualified his position with an "if," io th* virtue* of hioh saving clause he appeared to have placed unbounded confidence. "If" all WM satisfactory to his rnind.be intended to marry her, but it WM indiaputable.on the evidence given, tbat he bad allowed tbe'Mf" to ixist in th* form ol a mental reservation only. lie WM introduced, and he behaved M Mrs. Miller's intended husband, and that be should pay some penalty WM, perhaps, th* inevitable consequence. On his return to Bournemouth strong pressure was put on bim by hi* family to break off the match. Reports about the lady, who bad nodonbt- edly been involved in a good deal of litiga- Mr. Joy was M her bats% that wbatffe SBB> Kron.rU. Trill. v WkSt Io \ fcm >! to !) If yoo have goods to sell, advertise. Hire a man with a lampblack kettle and a brush to paint your name and number oo all the railroad fence*. Tb* cars go whu zing by so fast that no on* can read them, U ba bure, but perhaps th* conductor would stop ths train to accommodate an inquisi- tive passenger. Remember tb* fence* by the roadside M well. Nothing is so attractive to the passer by as a well painted lign : " Millington's Medical Mixture for Mumps." Hav* your card in tbe hotel register by all mean*. Btrangsn stopping at hotel* for a night generally buy a cigar or two before they leave town, and tbey need some inspiring literary food beside*. If an advertising agent want* your buai ness advertised in a fancy frame at the depot, pay bim about 200 par cant, more than it is worth, aod let bim pat it then. Wheu a man has three-quarters of a second io which to aatob a train, h* invariably stop* to read depot advertisements, sod your card might take hi* eye. ' Of course the str**t thermometer dodge U excellent. When a man'* finger* aod ear* an " pbewiog" at the best U the time above all otben when he read* an adver- tisement. Print in the blackest ink a great sprawl- ing card on all your wrapping paper. Ladies returning from a shopping tour like to ba walking bulletin*, and if th* ink robs off sod spoil* som* of their finery, oo matter. They cover will stop at your store again. Don't fail to advertise in every oirou* programme. It will help the circus to pay ite bills, and visitor* can relieve tbe tedium of the clown's jokes by looking over your interesting remark* about " M par cent, below cost," etc. A bo/ witb a big placard oo a pole i* an interesting object on the street, and lends a dignified air to your establishment. Hin about two. Advertise on a calendar. People never look at a calendar to see what day of th* month it i*. Tbey merely glance hurriedly at it so M to be lure that your name i* (polled without a p that's all. When the breeze* blow, wafted by a paper fan in th* bands of lovely women, 'tis well to have th* air redolent with th* perfume of the carmine ink in which your busmen* address ia printed. This will make tb* market for decent fans vary good. PatronUe every agent that shows yon an advertising tablet, card, directory, diction ary or even ar advertising Bible, if one i* offered at a reasonable pries. Tb* man must make a living. But don't think of advertising in a well- established, legitimate newipaper. Mot for a moment. Your advertisement would be nicely printed and would find ite way into all the thrifty household* of the region, where tbe farmer, the maohanio, the trades- man and others live, and into the families of the wealthy and rt lined, all who have arti oles to bay and money witb which to boy tl in, and after the new* of tbe day hM been digested, it would be read and pon- dered, and next day people would oome down to your *ton and patronize yon, and keep coming in increasing numbers, and you might have to hire an extra dark or two, move into a larger block and more favorable location and do a bigger business, bat of coarse it woald be mon expensive and bring greater profit*. Nev> //arm Kegiitet. Wkai ! II nl li Ii fast he AveMed. O. L*air, hM continued his observations on th* nature of premature baldneaa, aod has farther oonvinoea himaelf of the com- inunioability of at leant the form asso- ciated with dandruff. When tbe hain which fall off in BUOO canes are collected, rubbed up with vaeakatv. and tbe ointment BO made i* rubbed among tbe fur of rabbite or white mice, baldneiii rapidly makee itcelf visible on the part* so treated. That this i* not due to the vaseline wa* shown by anointing other animals with the vaseline alone, which produced no effect whatever. He oooeidera that the disease i* spread by hairdresser*, wbo employ combe and brnehes to their customer*, one after another, without any regular oleans- ing to these article* after each time they are used. During frequent visits to the bairdreeeen it can scarcely fail that brushes are used which have been shortly before drawing tbe hair of one affeuted with ao common a complaint M scaly bald- ness. Females, he think*, are lesa often affected with thie form of baldness, be- cause the hairdresser more frequently home*, and there usee their combs and brushes. In order to prevent, as far as possible, tbe commencement of alopecia prematura, the hair ahould be cut aud drtseed at home and with on*'* own implements, and these thoroughly clean. When it ba* begun, the following mod* of treatment is sofgeated : The scalp is to be daily well soaped with tar or fluid glycerine potash soap, which i* to be rubbed in for fifteen ruinate* firmly. Tb* head i* then to be drenched with, first, warm water, and then gradually colder water. A 3 per cent, corrosive tublimate lotion i* next to be pretty freely applied. The head i* then to be dried, and the roots of the hair are to have a } per cent, eola- tion of naptbol in spirit rubbed into them. Finally a pomade of 1$ to a per oent. *f carbolic or salicylic oil i* to be used to tke head. This treatment has now in many oases brought tbe disease not only to a stand, but tbe hair hM been to a considera- ble extent restored. /(olon Uedital Jour- So .l . I. r 10 Hi Id. . Lov* i* blind, but lov* i* not deaf, don't snore. Do not threaten to go home to your mother ofteuer than five time* a week. Aa you don't go he may eventually begin to doubt your sincerity . Do not get angry when your husband tint ask* you to darn h is stocking*. Smil* weetly and suggest that it would be cheaper to boy new on**. Your husband's wardrobe will frequently require repair* in tbe way of button*. Al- ways leave the needle, thread and button- bag where be can get them. If your husband complain* that yon can- not cook M bis mother does, comfort him with the reflection tbat yon probably will by the time you are M old a* *b*i*. If you need a pair of new shoe* My nothing about them, but get tbe money for something else, and then while he ia away slip out and select the shoe* yonnelf . Even a pair of seven* look mall to a man so loog a* be doe* not know the number. Remember that getting married i* no rea- son why you should *hut yourself up in the house. Accept sll invitations just th* same M before, and have a good time. Wheu be comes borne and finds both yon and the fin out h* will realise how cheer- less life would be without you. In tbe course of a month your husband will probably ask why you never go near tbe piano any more. AU men do. An effective r*|Jy is to bunt op an old book of exercises and practice three hour* every week while h* i* at bom*. H* will attend to bis own affairs after that. In tbe days of tbe war a New York junk dealer amassed a fortnoe by baying fin* linen clipping* from shirt makers aod sell ing them to the Government tor the manu- facture of treasury note paper. He bought at C cents a pound and sold at 75 oents. Mow hit family turn up their nose* at itateamen and college president* who do not pat livery oo their xrvants. Lord and Lady their by way of America. They will sail oo Tar S>|M> tt-irr-. l>|.*iilo n . Tb* opium eater is, with respect to dis posftion, a creature of tbe moet variable mood, hi* manner being moulded by the action of tb* drug. In tbe morning h* i* petulant aod ill-tempered, sometime* to brutality, while tb* afternoon of th* eame day will find bim graeioualv considerate. Those wbo have bad experienoe with them know that the most truthful people become the meet daring liar* after long indulgence in the use of opium. The realities of life an so blended with the distorted opium imagining* that ths victim cannot distin- guish between facts and fancy. Bo much is this the case that those who hear tbesn talk, ignorant of their habit, Me positively docked at tbe glaring falsity of their state- ments). Th*v jealously guard their in flrmity, and it would be next to uselaa* to question them concerning their habit. Hugging hi* chain*, tbe rack would hardly draw from tbe victim a true ttatemeat with respect to tbe quantity of opium need by him if be suspected an intention to interfere with hie allowance Always with them, too, i* the dread that by some un- happy combination of circumstance*, lack of money, involuntary confinement, close surveillance, any or all of these obstacles, they may find themselves so situated M not to be able to procure tbe drug, expert- no* having taught them the horror* of abstinenoe. d and Lady Rosebery hav* abandoned intention of returning from Australia tion ID tb* place, wen current in the!town, January 1 Tib for England by wav of the and the upshot of Mr Joy 's calmer consider ' Suez Canal. N* Ho , *>* II. r Tlo.h, r . ,.!. A curious question has just been decided in the Portsmouth County Court between a husband and wife. The husband wa* an engineer on one of Her Majesty ' ihips, ana, finding it beet when on short to live, apart from hi* wit* ho cent her to hi* mother's. Rather than live with her mother-in-law, tbe wife supported herself by her own work. Falling ill. however, she WM obliged to sue her husband for the means of subsistence , and tbe simple re ply to her demand wa* that there was a home for her at her mother in-law's. This h* declined to accept. But, after hearing the case, the judge decided that a husband separated from hi* wife bad a nht to compel her to live with her mother-in-law. Th* convene of this punishment would, io the case of many a man, be considered a very severe one. St. Janut' Gazette. If a nation's civilization i* gauged, as tbe wise declare, by its treatment of women, then America stands head, shoulders, asd heart above all the rest of tbe world. Kate field. Ths worthiest people are th* tnoit in- jured by (lander, a* we usually find that to be the best fruit which the bird* have been ' 1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy