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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 19 Oct 1883, p. 3

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:j Jack Sullivan's V.181on, held out to immigrants and accouuts were aent to the " Yis, sor, mother has been dead sivin Now is the time when the chubby recd Old ·world ·to induce the surplus monr,hs next Thursday," said brawny Jack "ALL IS FOR THE BEST;" bird diea game. population to migrate that way. Times Sullivan as he threw a cabbage leaf to an OR,·' fi!E ADVENTURES OF RABB I .AKIBA are fast changing in this respect, however. expcPtant goat tethered on the hillside of Our babies-With all their faults we love In the great manufacturing centres the "As contented as Rabbi Akiba " t was .a Stuu1py Field. proverb among'the 'Jews cif his time: through- them still, not noisy. . working classes feel pretty keenly the efThe afternoon sun sh<me upon a very com- Beg~ to announce that he has again secured a License and is now preout the whole length and breadth of Syria, A niece of John Keats, the poet, Mrs. fects of more competition in labor, as the and certainly not ·without ' reason. .What Emma Keats Speed, lately died at Cobourg, supply is evidei!tly' i>bout· equal to the . de- mo::;place picture, the one street of "Cooney Island," flanked on . either hand by strng- pared to furn!sh the p\ 1blic with strictly first clas£ Unadulterated thing it was that could ruffie the ;wise old .Miss Sarah Jewett, the actress, writes po· 'mand, so much so that in many branches of teacher's calm -good· nature no one could ever ems, and alse models v:ery creditably. Her industry all the wages a good operative <Jan ling shanties, and under the bill Brown's Liquors, :md respectfully invites the inhabitants of Town and Country stagnant and discolored, fidoo~ . mother, Mrs. S. W. Jewett, writes not oll'ly commancl barely suffices to keep the wolf millpond, Geographically considered, the name of Once upon a .time.it happened·that a merry poetry, but stories. from the door, where families have to· be Cvoney Island ia a misnomer. The locality to give him a call when they require any of the following goods, either youth, with a good deal more fun than A young man began his first ~etter to his fed. T he :Labor Unions will .probably soon politeness about him, pledged himself to sweetheart nfter this fashion. ·' My dear organize themselvecl against the importation derive:i its title froni Thomas C)oney, the Medici:Q,ally or as a Beverage, viz. :.....:. make the Rabbi .lose bis temper. This he Julh: W henever I am tempted to do wrong of mechanics or operatives of any krnd, The first adventurous spirit· to leave the crowded I tenement district of the Plank road, and, tried to do by rushing into hi~ study three I think of you, und I say : ·Get thee be- cry so potent against the cheap Chinese Pure Jamaica Rum. l John Btlll Bitters in quarts and pints. with the help of Micky Dillon and a wheel· or four times in succession, just when the hind me S,9.t an, · " labor is gro w:ing .st!"Onger and stronger barrow, to remove the household goods to De Kuypers Holland Gin on draught and Raspberry, Strawberry and LemonSyrupii" old man wa~ busiest, and asking him such against all imp0rted labor. The finale may tho breezy heights of the loc"lity which has in bottles. Scotch and Irish Whiskies in bottles. questions as, "Why are there m'lSquitoes on The sh1p-owner Donald Currie took late- be a policy of p1~otection against the impor· the Nile ?" "Hew come the African negroes ly a.n extensive crmse · 1f the west of Scot· tation of laborers, as well as against the im- since bonie his name. Among those who Bernard's Ginger Wine on draught and in Bass & Co's. All3 in quart and pint bottleei( followed. the examplt> c.f this sturuy pioneer b l to have round heads?" and so 0n. land, with Mr. Tu11nys .. n and Mr. Gladstone portat1on of manufacured goods. ' ot. t ell. was the h<'mse of Sullivan, consisting of Guinness Porter " " " But do what he would, he could not pro- for companion" ; and later Mr. Gladstone · l JUYENILE!NEBRIErY.-TheLondonLancet- Granny, Japk, and the goat. Granny's age ,'vV. F. Lewis & Co'a Year O ld Rye, very Labatt's Ale " " " voke-the Rabbi, who answered all his annoy. visited Denmark . fine. . the leading English medical journal, recent, was uncertain. Hei:· appearance, however, ingquestio.ns llO quietly arid kindly that at These fearful long lessons both in and out ly published the following editorial article. went far toward streng ohening her assel"tion Gooderham & Wort's Old Bourbon Old O'K.eefe & Co's.Ale on draught in 10 gal·r· last the youn11:: fellow was :fairly ashamed of. 1011 kegs, 30 g-allon barrels and in hogs1 Rye and Old Malt Whiskeys. himself, and oegged·to be forgiven. The old of ·t he wllpol is playing the very mischief in The new license law of Canada contains the that she was "near a hun'erd,." although heads. man laid his hand upon the youth's head Ontario and elsewhere, with· Education. prohibition the Lpincet recommends: There the nearest approach to statistics upon the Cockburn's Old Port ·wine, very line. O'Keefe & Co's. Porter in 10 gallon kegs. aRd blessed him.· Have t eachers no sense? Apparently a great can be no question but that some change is walls of her feeble mGmory was the "big do do And as he was in this case, so be seemed many of them have nol.le, The work to be urgently necessary in relation to the facili· wind in Ireland" on her 15th birthday. She Sandeman's Pale Sherry Hennessy Brandy on draught and in to be in every other. If a passing horseman' done at home is often ·so outrageous both in tie~ publicly offered for juYenile drinking, was like a ' belated oak leaf that has with- Alciante Wine. bottles. stood the blasts of winter, and ::,till feebly splashed him with dirt, or a spiteful camel its diffic"~ty ;md leI?gtb as to justify almost and, consequentlv juvenile inebriety. J:!:v.-n Martell's Brandy in bottles. ordin11rily observant persons must have tlutters in t be breezes of spring. There was Sacrament al Wine. bit a piece out of his new robe, or a rude "an aith or twa." J ules Robin & Co's. Braudy in bottles. Another process of impregnating wood for noticed the increasing f~e9u~ncy of tt~at ~©mething uncanny about her, and little S. Joy & Co's Native Wine. fellow ran against him and almost knoc~ed him down, or a mischievous pulf of wrnd its preser,vation has been patented in Ger- most mclanchol~ and hum~hatrn~ of s 1:et cllil<lren peered fearfully out from the she!.. Canada Vine Growers Native Wine, SazsracBrandy on Draught a!ltl in bottles ~ ter of materoal skirts as she tottered mutwhisked awa.y his parchment just as he was many. . This consi~ts in first treating the spectacl~s-a drunken child .. A dru.nken DeMullin & Co's. Brandy on draught. in the midst of his writing, the ·dear old man wootl with 'l. solution of zinc vitriol, and woman 1a a deplorable presc~t1ment of hu· tering &long the ·treet. "Tii1 as fine b'vs Burgundy Port Wine. I would stroke his long white beard, and aay then with a solution of chloride .0 f calcium, man nat1;1re, but a drun.ken girl or bo.y is a as iver ate a potaty," was her descrif,ltiou of 'c hampagne in quarts a'ud pints. so that the preservative coating ~s formed more p1t1[ul creature still. -W:e have reoent- ber sons, of whom Jack, the youn11est, was with a quiet smile : "All is for the best; what God wills can upon the wood by the chemical action of ly seen gtrls cf aI>parei;itly thir~een or fo~tr- the only survivor. There were persons who meanly insinuated that Jack inherited· his both substances 011 each other. . J teen years of age mtoxwatcd with alarmmg not be wrong." frtquency. Surely a short Act should be bibulous instinct~, but whenever <.;\ranny And this seemed to be an aB-suffic. i ent Lord Coleridge is evidently bei.lg dined pa·~ed to render the supply of spirits, wine heard this she consoled herself wi1h the medicine for him against a'riy trouble whatand wined and ieasted to his henrt's content, or beer·' to be drunk on the premises" by a rdlection: "Divil's the wan o' thim but'll take a. sup e-ver. ' R bb,We are .very boy or gfrl ·under sixteen y_ears of age . a 1 among. .hts Y_ank~e friends. Now it bappened i:ine day that , a gbd of 1t. Had it pleased Ju~ Lordship to misdemeanor. 'A ll woulll umte m exped1t- behint the <l.oor ! " Akiba had t(;) take a journey across on.e of. cross the border, he should have had as ing such a measure, At present, as it ap· As Granny devoutly cr0ssed herself and the Sy><ian deserts, ana· ne -.i rnnt about it in hearty a welcome as it lay in the po¥.'er of pears to us, evenrespectabler-ublicansh'a veno told J:ier beatls while watcbingthe mysteries a very different way from tLe excursionists ""mere colonists," ·" you know," ,to give him, objection to supply drink to mere children, at the altar of St. Marv's her hali articulate who go over the same ground n'Owadays. but he has J"ot chosen to do so, and--cwell, although they are conspicuously zealous in utterance might have 'been translated into His entire baggage censisted of a small fa,np we have survived, and mean to. tl.rustin2'. thesepoorcrea.tures into the streets "Me b'y Jack" and " Holy 'Virgin." Her an:l a foll of pal'Jhment rn11nuscript (fo_r there waa no printing in those gays) contarnmg the St. Louis ia cv!dently an unsafe place for as ~oon .:.1$ the first indication of drunkenness thel'llogy was inc!Uded in the single sen· tence: five bebks of Moses.in.1;l:ebrew, . As for com- girls, First, one lassiH mysteriously disap· 18· !lfJ>:M:~~:HonJS1 , Gmrnclf.-The Ha~ilton ·'Sure the good God wouldn't hurt a poor ·pany, all he had was the donkey on which pears, then another, , and then another. . Th U . dM th d · tCh h ould 'ooman like meself !" We beg to announce that our stock of Dry Goods and Clothing is now he rode, and a small rooster, which he carried After a lull of a week-or two, the same old Tri~une says : · e mte e 0 · is . ur~ In return for a slight service rendered to abo'i!t with him everywhere to 1nake sure of story repeq.ts its.elf. It 'ia getting mono'ton- ?f Canada, we. are proud t? believe, is goJack when quite mello· ; v one night, Granny Full and Complete m every department. We ar'e opening the 0 being- aroused· punctually at daybreak, for ous. And the strange thing is that many mg to he a mighty P :W?X: Ill the cause ?f our Rabbi was ii. very early riser. · of the m11;idcns who act in this unaccount· terpperance and prohibition. Not only 18 ca.lJed on tile reporter with a propitatorv season with a splendid assortment of the newest and most The first day's ride was a long and a hard able way, belong to the .better circles of So- every Methodist .household to .be .orga1:uzed offering of go1t's milk, The milk was dr~nk with certaia inward qualms, and the friend· one, and the poor old Ral)bi was very gl:;Ld ciety. ·we don't wonder at any one wish· into ·a te~totpJ .soci1ty, bi~t the c~ildren are Fa.Shionable Dry Goodf, and an immense sto~k of to come in sight, toward sunset, of one of in" to leave St. Louis but why be . so quiet to be trained mtQ working Bands of Hof~· ship of Mrs. Sullivan was thcrc\Jy gained. Mens' Youths' and .Boys' Clothing, wliich those little Arab villages which lay dotted ab~ut it? ' · · and t~esch_ools.and churches arn to ?e u11e .m One year elapsed and the reporter stood be· ' . the d1saemmat10n of temperance literature, side Jack, leaning on the fence around here and there upon the few fruitful spots in Mungo Park, the -:lfrwan traveller, used soienee and practical lessons. The church stumpy ]'ield. While the goat placidly we intend to offer at prices that will the desert. But the people of the village to say th~t he never IQ any quarter of ti;le encourages and recommends members who munched tbe cabbage ltiaves, Jack told the · were a rough set, and when he rode in among worl.d'. ~ddressed a woma:i in the languag_e are voters to support the Scott Act as the closing scelles of his little tragedy. them on his donk!ly.to ap)dor a.night's loag- of .civ~hty and kmdoees, but ~e got a c1v1l only form of prohibition on the statute book "Me mother was very feeble, and gettin' ing he aoon found that he had come to the and ~md :i:n~'Ytt.r· Perhaps thrn could .not of the Dominjon. It is believed that great waker hery uay, Mrs. O'Brien says to -me, we are right in earnest in saying that wrong..place for that. ......... ...... · be said mnversally, but as a general thmg, crood to the cause of ultimate prohibitioq says she, 'J aok,' says ~he, ' ye'd bdther be ·r "Do you thiftk, then," cried one, "that it ~oth ~ould' and c~.. As a rule, . women ~an be wrought from it. Local option is watchin' yer mother ; aure she'll be goin' we :MEAN BUSiNESS, and that we will offer we've nothing to do with our house~ but to. ar~ cons1derat~ and c1v1l, when th~y are not not accepted by this great body o1 church· off liklll the snuff of a candle l' So, sor, 1 tuk opm them to ev'e ry ..old vagal)ond that they are specially the other thing. Men going people as the last best thing that can me shlap on a· tick on the floor forninst me Tempting Bargains in every department. We are PW:~eAs ?p"retty i"dle 'fel!Oiv'lie iil'ust have been," never be~<:m1e so thoro~gh_lv base as women be done for prohibition: They accept it as mother's b~d, and gov ·h er a bit of a sthick Outting Down the Prices at the beginning instead of the do-:-poss1bly on the pnnc1plc that the finest an expedient only, and register their de. to welt m&1 wid if annything hal!lpened her. said another, "to have, lived till his beard's fruit whe~ rotten has the mi>st offensive claratioo·of war al.'(ainst the ~raffic in liquor Ose bitther cold night, an' it freezin' that end of the season. TAILORING AND CLOTHING THE white without having earned enough to keep smell, and is absolutely u~elese, until alL laws protecting an.d licensing its hard I couldn't sleep, I heerd me mother himself !" · l d T ·n b · fi d say, very feebly like: LEADING DEPARTMENT. Childrens' and Youths' Suits a specialty "·why don't you get dowa ?.ft :i-our Is it after all worth while to be continu- sale are rnpea e . hey w1 e satJS. e '"Jack!" brother's back, and let him have a ride u~on ally fitting out new expeditions to the Arctic ~ith nothing ~hort of its utter exte~n;n;ia "' YiE, mother.' 'l/OU ?" sneered a third ; "every don.ttey regions, and sacrificing more valuable iives tion and nothrng less than total proh1bit10n N. B.-Parties asking for Bargains 'will not be disappointed. '"Jack, b'y, me feet a.re cold.' should have his turn !" tor all that . is ,gained? It miiy appear· fro.m t.he State. 'l:he ·Church has bken the "So I raised her up and gev her a drap "Look here, Us.cle W'hite-beard," shout- a~fully barbainan and stupid, yet we sort of st~nd that b~com_ea a great~ndstrong ed a fourth, "there are some nice damp hold thaJ it i,s not. · The game is not worth ?rgamz!l.hon on thrn v1t~l question. .May from the ould black bottle, and then I caves among the rocks yonder that '11. m~ke the caindle, even though the work brings its :Panda be n;iade valiant · foT. the good wrapped the quilt a.xound her and tuk her a fiimous lo(lgizig. for: a .grave pld hermit like out a great deal of bravery; and helps to de- ":ork, a:Qd may its heart never fail from its in me arrums ind rocked her in the rockin' chair like a little babbey, Ye mind, she you." velop courage ·a nd muscle of no ordinary high en.deavor 1 was a wee bit iv a woman. She was very And then soµie ..mi~9Jli~vou.s. boys began to kind. ~ Other enterpris!)s could do all that quite, aor, an: I fell asleep. 'Twas a. bright throw dirt over him, and a spiteful-dog tore without .. being either so expensive or so The Work Young Girls Might Do. the skirt of his robe1 and anotl1er dog s·prang risky. But this is awfu1, some will say, so I wish it were J.;;: my power to -persuade mo0nlit night-mebl:le ye'll be laffin' at me, up and gave hfm 'a Finch in the leg that ' TRUTII will not eillarga. · · young girls who wonder what they shall do sor-but 1 dreamed that I saw a wee boat, a tiny little sail, comin' out o' the made ' im jump, till at last the J>Oor old If Chicago people have any sense of to earn their living, that it is really better with clouds. It kem down very fa~t, the sail teacher was glad to make off as fast as he humor left, it must. surely strike them as to choose some business that is in the line of shinin' like silver in the moonlight, an' then could, very sad at heart to think that there somewhat whimsica.1 that after they have a woman's natural work, There is a great a ---MANUFACTURER 0 ] ' - cloud wud come over the moon, an' I were any men · in the world who could be shown their distinguished visiters the mys- repugnance at tlie thought of bein~ a ser· see the b0at for a minit ; an' all at mean enouoh to treat an old mall so Ahabbily. teries of the Stock yards, and revealed to vant, but a girl is no leas a serv"nt to the cudn't ""Vell,'j' said he to himself, '·'it's all for them all the r.e alistic witchcraft of pig.stick· man who owns the shop where she stands once it sailed through the branches of the the best, no doubt; and since there's nothing ing and cattle,killing, there is really nothing all day behind the counter than she is wh~re pine tree illtO the windy. An -0uld, ould KING STREET. DOWMANVILLE, else to be done, I may 3:/il well take shelter else to he seen. That ~laughtering process she waits upon the table or · cooks the ~m man, with long white hair, stepped out o' the boat n pou the floor. fl e tuk somethin' among the rocks, as that mischievous fellow 1s the great attraction. Show the Stock· ner in a pleasant house; and to my mmd on hand a number of vehicles (and is manufacturing a great many more) of the newest; in his arrnm.s and laid it in th' boat, h'istecl Has· now p.<tterns and best finish. which I am oft'.,ring for sale ·t the lowest. prices consistent advisea me." Yards, after that--The Deluge, if need there would not be a minute's question bewith due regard to workmanship and quality. 'l'he f()llowing is a list of ._ lt '"as not J~ng befvre he found a cave dry be~ or nothing, which · is more likely. Chi· tween the two ways of going out ·to service. the sail, an' out o' the windy he wint, up a the principal vehicles manufactured by me : beam o' moonlight, into the clouus. wide enough, to suit him, and _in he wen~, leaving cago people never seem to tire of .those pigs The wages are better, the honie is better,. . his donkey i:o graze outside. Having eaten of theirs. They revel in recounting exactly the freedom and libertv are double in one Whin I woke up, Eor, me mother was very the few wheaten cakes left in ·his wallet, how inany porkers "cease from troubling " what they a.re in the other, If, instead of heavy, an'-she was dead, sor." Double Covered Carriages ...... . ...... . ............................ . .... . .... $200 l:pwards. taken -a drhil.i; . .f:~om ..a tiny spring that within the miaute, and how the boiling and the sham servise that is given by ignorant Single Phretons . ................................................................ 100 11 bubbled from the rock; wd 'w rappedhimself the scraping, and the disembowelling, and and really over-paid servants to-day, sensi· The DM'd.lihlpe or Actre88ea, Open Buggy.......................... ........................................... 70 11 snugly in his mantle, the old ·man began to the quartering, and all the ·other etceteras ble New England girls who are anxious to During the long nine or ten months of the 1'op Buggy............. ...... .. .. : ....................... . .................. ... .. . 90 11 feel more comfortable, and thought he would of the process are completely over before the · be taking care of themselves and earning season married actresses can have no comfort Democrat Wagon., .................................................. . ... ....... , 65 11 amuse himself by reading ll( little before he unfort~nate p;runter has fully recovered good wages would fit themseles at the coo~- with their children, no intercourse with Lumber Wagons................... ....................................... ....... 55 11 went to sleep. " , · · · ' · from his surprise at the first stroke. " ings schools, or any way they iound avail- them, can take no care of them: I read a Light Wagon.............. .. ..... .. .................. .. ......... ................. 40 11 He lighted his lamp, and set it upon a Th S . h Ki Al h h b able, they would not long wait for employ- day or two ago a story of a girl who was Express Wagon.......... . ................................ . ...................... 75 u e panis · n~" P onso, as e~n ment and would be vaiutd immensely by ca.lled to a Sunday night rehearsal. Her ledge just over· his head; " But scarcely had . Skeleton .............. .. ............ .. .... . ............. ....... .......... .......... 50 11 he pulled out his book, 1vhcn lo! a violent msult~d ~y th.e .Parisian mob, and there ~8 their employers. 'When one realizes how father wa.s very ill, but the rental of their 11 iU~t of wind blew the lamp out, and, worse grea~ mdignatiop..consequent all over Spam ' hard it is to find good women fo1· every kind rOOPlS, the fees for the doctor and. money fpr ·sulky ............................................ ~.................................. 40 still, tumbl.od it down off the kdge on to the and m -some et!ier qaarters. It ee~ms the of work in our houses, and what prices many the drugs depended upon her attending to Possessing superior facilities for manufacturing car.riag~s. I intend to sell very cheap for ca.ab or approved credit. and by so doing I hope to greatly rncrease my. number of salea. Would" ground, spiHing all the oil, ·so tha.t ~t could old <[crman Emperor to~k very kmdly to rich people are more than wiliing to pay if her business. It was imj>erative that she sell the woo\i parts only, or the gearings of buggies ironed. not be li~hted again. t~e y-0qng ~nig, and of his own proper mo· they can be well suited, it is a wonder more ·should be in the theatre at half·pafjt 7. Hav· "Ha I' said the Rabbi, "not much read· ho~ made him ·Colonel of one .o f· the :U~la:n i;irls are not ready to seize the chances, It ing· arranged the room as wom"n only can, ing for me to-night, I see. Well, no matter; regim~nts. The French mo~ with idu~lb 1s because such work ha11 been almost always having placed upon a table by the bedside of doubtless it is all for the best." touchn~ess .took offence at this and gratuit· so carelessly _and b~dly done, that it has her father his medicine, she kissed him good· At the Shortest Notice, Painted and Trimmed ii Desired, But it seemed to be, all for the worst just o.usly rnsulted and ho.o ted th~ .young m~n fallen into disrepute, and the doers of it bye, and, with a loving touch, i)romised to A.t the Factory I also do Planing, Matching, Turning a.nd Sawing with Cir.cl~, Band or Scroll thea,. for at that very momenta terrible out· when he came on a friendly vmt .to P~is. have ·taken auch low rank, .Nobody takes be back as ea.rly as possible. You know i'!a.wa and prepare all kinds of lumber tor carpenters and others for bmldmg purposes. cry,. and .fl.appi1"g . .of ..w.ings . .was heard.from Jt was a mean,. contem~tible proceectmg, · p,he trouble tp fit herself properly but what Sunday night rehearsals mean. They and Plain B!ckets f!Jr fences in every style required. made to orde':" :MS Ornapiental the nook in which the rooster had perched ~orse than. 'a .crime,_ a mist~ke. Of 0 ?urse "women trust to be~i;c taug!it and findi~g out mean I, 2, 3. 4o'clock next day. rhat is what 8 itself~ and Akiba. ruahii.d.to..the. mouth 0.f th'e ~t !w as pla:png into "Bismarc.k, ' hand qmte as their duties after they assume such positions, this one meant. The girl hastened home, cavern just in time ta see a huge gray wolf if that emissary of all unnght~ousneB11. sup· not .before -Sara O. Jewett in Boslon Oon· The candle.light had gone, the cold gray of .n<> o·f f .'vi.-. ··. "P.~."..O\l.A·l,l. ~.i·pleer ..iii its posed to be, had actually exmted the out' 'onal';st ' h th . . th SCUA,.. 1 "'" ., ,. ··,,.. ... ~, .. ' break. It seems a bad look out for the qregavi · ·· t e ear1y mornmg was m e room, e month. Id . . peace of Europe when even the " rascal father was dead upon the bed.-Philadelphia ' ~Poor fellow: .!" ~aid -~he.·<! · .~an, pitying:·_ mob" can act in such a senaeleas fa~hion, The Doctor..Pre88. ly; "Isha.11 miss liim s0rely, though 1 am not · ,.. -------------likely to·aleep too long on such a couch as How 'terribly .fixecl some people are in The doctors, Gc.d bless them, are our very this. W,f,;tl,., well, I dare say it is all for the their own opinions! Not for a moment can good friends. They ~re thll first who we!· A new and pretty aha.de of pink is llam· beat; and, than.Et Heaven, my faithful donkey you: get them to acknowledge that they can come us to this world of minp:ling tears and ingo. i-8 sti'll left me." . , po,s sibly be in the 'wrong~ 'l'hey,~on't. even y smi'les and when we Mn be of · no Scarcely W ere the words uttered when a li11ten to a statement of any oth er v,1ew. · sunn vm have been About the only troubles that come single 'f h · · th' l'f h · we 18 1 e, w urt er use m en· · · . · . · shrill cry of terror, blended with ·a dea.fe:i- They do not preten d t h at ·the'ir convrntions served, with an imperative summons to quit, are fussy old maids. ing roar, came from without, and by the dim are the fruit of mature deliberations and a summons so imperative tha.t no one has It is c~nfidently asserted by many who light our Re.bbi could just see his donkey, careful comptmaon of differing views. Not ever ventured te disobey--there are general· claim to have aooumte knowledge on' the begs to inform the public that he has. ·leased a s~ore in the Obse'T"IJe' which had atrayed to a little distance, stru11;· they. Their conv1Ctions partake of th!!' na· ly one or more of them at hand to give us a subjec~ and to speak as it were ex cathedra Block, -w;liere he ]las opened ont w1th a splendid assortment of gling in the jaws of a monstrous lion. . .. t?re c;>f reve~at!ons · from ·above,-i°:spira. sympathetio se°;d·O~, cheerf~l. as the nature that never as any time before this have the ' I Al:l gone I" said the poor old mau, \ii a · tions from w~thm .at any rat,e-and chng t:o of the case admits" into t~e life beyqn9. Ill- . Canadian girls looked so pretty as now, faltering voice, for this last blow almost them t~ey w~ll with a tenamty as stron'{, if natured per~ops sometimes,, contend ~ha.t pretty a.a they are at all times, and beautiovercame. · him-,~' all gone, and I am l.eft not aa mtelhg~nt, .as the perseverance of exits from this "va.le of tea~e. .are oocas1on· fully dressed as they are very often, and which he offers for sale at low prices for Cash. alone. But it must all be for the best, for many of the saints.. They are 'as stubborn ally rendered more. exped1t1ous un!ler the· might be more frequently, not by the ex· WFarm Produce taken in exchange, for which the highest market what~Goq wiHs. lll!J!': .n9.t. .lie, 'frong." ; , as mules, and a~ pi'lckly a~ hedge~ogs, -!jet .assidu.o~s attentions o~ these gei:i,tlemen than penditure of more money, but by the deSo saying, Akiba tried to forget his an:y one fall tou~ of ~h!Jir fav~r1~ concep- there 1s any very pr~ssmg neceasi~y for ; but velopement of a little more good ta.ate, and price will be paid. WA special line of TEAS. of excellent flavor. troubl11s in 11leep, an<;l ,haviru: now no rooster ~wns, and. ther w~ll bnstle up Ill a mo~nent we pay no attention to goas1p of th~t a disposition to do fuller justice to the great to arouse 'him, diil ·not wake until the sun mto sunmsed mdignatwn, and 1 ?,ftv, mtol- kind. Other wjseacres s~y tll.at .c~rtam principle of simplex mundihiis, which for the W Also a choice lot of ~UGARS. ~C~FFEE m Cans. ~Canned Goods in great variety, ~A Call is respectfully sohc1ted. was high in the sky, e, r ant con,tempt. Come, now, enormous pilutes, draughts and potions 3ud1cio1;1sly benefit of the uninitiated may be made to " .Now,'" said' lie, after 'finishing liis pray~ sirs,'! d_ o your spµrting gently. administered will su:llice to keep~ patient mean beauty unadorned is adorned the ers, · .:I will,,try these villagers once more; · The Ladies' :Medical College ha11 been for quite a large number of weeks Ill a state most Now virls this is not ffattery, but even they can n:ot·be 80 ' hard-h.earted ,,as to opened under the most favorable auspices. of most mteresting invalidism, o_r stil! m?re the ~ber truth, Honesl lnfun ! .-efuse me help In my present distress. · we are not clear about the co education of imterestiµg convalesoenQe, durmg which · --.A.T-Bu~ as ~e approached t~e village a ' v~ry the sexes either in Medicine or Arts, In· . period the doctor often " drops m" more as 'What a lot of care and attention is expend· ~tartl~g a1gb~ presented itself. Not a hv- deed it is not very clear how medical inatruc- a"friendly acquamtance, you know, than a ed on . ministers and their wants and wa.ys ! m~ thmg was ·to · b~ ·Seen,: but men were· tlon could be imparted to mixed classes physician, and drops out again a dollar or How unmercifully they are criticised I How lying dead Ion every side, while empty ches~s, without something necessary being left out,. two the richer. We have never had any carefully thFly are watched, and all that ! broken boxes, doors torn down or beaten m, or something not very pleasant beivg excited experience of this kind, but has, on the That is all right. But what the mischief YOU GAN BUY hoo_f·prin~s deeply stamped in the clay, told or sugge11ted, However, nature m1,1st be contrary, found the doctqrs to be "jolly have the congregations to do with the poor d~ 1 pla,~nJy of.a mg~t a~tack ~Y ro?~ers. taken as it is, and it is not saying much, to good fellows," aa a rule. There are black wives of these unfortunates? They, at any . I see it al_!, cned Ak1ba, and all was affirm that young men atid women in the sheep among them though, and into some rate, ar~ not official characters. The min· for the beat, mdeed. .Had I ~ound sl:elter same dissecting room would often see and hands we certainly would not like to fall. ister~ married them and them only, and if OU ~ hero I should have pen·.hed with. the rest : hea1· whae would not be for edification. Of Serious . bleeding in more senses than one the husbands are pleased nobody else ought " " s1' and had my lamp remamed burnm~, or my course everybody knows about "<ill things would be to be feared. But what a. paying to say a word. But they do, and it is a rooster happened to crow, or my donkey to being pure to the pure." Yet all the aame profession it must be to. judge by .the bfack burning shame the way in which these b~ay, _I shonld have been "11scovered and it is not well to try tnat too far. But while "style" some of these modern Esculap1ans· poor women are frequently torn to pieces. 0 killed m the cave. Thanks.be 1 t o God w.ho this is the case, th(>re is no reason why there keep up. Do, for pity sake, good Christian people, has saved, me from destruction . but I wish should be no lady doctors and DO medical let them alone. It is better often to be a ~hese poor,.souls could haye ,~een saved too, classes for women, Quite the contrary. minister's horse than to be his wife, though ill thoug~h~y treated ~e. we hold that in a vast majority of cases The Earl of Carnar'l'.on who, at the invita. the horse is often not over blessed with. oats' · S · · · .· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ~hen, takmg possession of an old mule the proper phy'sicians for women are :women, tion of the :Monument Association, is about and other provender. . There never ··was a CJA.L L A:ND EXA.1'Jl:NE. which ~he ~obbers ha~ not cared ~o. steal, and that in certain cases none but women to visit the battle-ground of Sarato~a, will time when . there was leas gossip going in and fillmg his wallet with such prov1a1ons as ought to be allowed to wait upon women alao pay a visit to the spot where, m Sep· Toronto. Tho people are dying for want of A great variety of Fly Sheets, Netts and Lap Dusters on ha.nd~whicb: he could find,· the old man started again to· . · . ' tember, 17i7, his great-aunt embarked at material. Why doesn't some wife run away wardrthe to..y11. JV hither he waa bound,_ an, d , In. the Umted ~tates a_ strong cry _is b~- midnight on the Rudson in a frail canoe to from her husband, or vice versa? Come, a.re offered at Low Figures for Cash reaching it safely more than ever convmced gmnmg to be raised against further 1mm1- go to her husband, a wounded prisener in now, hurry up, or the co11eequence11 ma.y be illat· '·' alri.s for the best." . gration. In former times great inducements General Ga.tee's ca.mp. 1eriou1. ~pposite Darlington's Grocery·. ltlJSCEJ,l..\NEOlJS, OUR YOUNG FOLKS. . were . ~lowin~ J.·B.MARTYN I And Everything !'usually kept in a First Class Grocery, Crockery and Liquor Store. New Dry Goods & Clothing FOR FALL, 1883. u DEFY . ALL C 0 MPE TITORS ELLISON co. GEORGE .C. HAINES, CARRIAGES, SLEIGHS, CUTTERS, WACONS, &c .., All Kinds of Vehicles Repaired I GROCE . RE~&. w .fflWw8TO. t ll. N!W C001J8.~ J .As_. E.LLIOTT:i '~f Groceries; Crockery, Glassware, Flour, Feed, &c. MAY'S Harness Emporiurr.· C 11 4 50 $ O OO Team Harness.. · · · · · · · · · · · ·· 2 ,an upward!.. d bl 26 00 " Carriage Harness, e. · ngle.. · · 12 00 'r Team ars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H a lters ..................... . T k run . 50 1 50 " ' " W.H.MAY ~· _ ,

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