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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 26 Feb 1886, p. 7

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to eave a d.runkard You a·li: mo whether I'm High Churoh, . , A poe.t. writing ·0 LippincQtt'a Magazine when his ·habits have driveri him to::mttnia ... · And a. ek me whether rm Low. elllye, ··Give mo th~ moon anjl I will rest b N y · Ii: . · I'lvlii!; ,vou'd· hll'the:dltl'orep~e. contented." An evident lunatic. a-potu, ut a· ew or .pa.per te1 8 01 a For nm sure iliafI diin···knQW;-:..:~.-~..._ E'RIDAY, . FEBRUARY 26,, 1886. . , shoemaker In Angelica, of that State, who I'm ju& t a plain old body, An excrhange a.skis' : "Is cremation becom· miricled the \\'a.ming in tlme to escl\pe. Go- And roy brain works pretty slow ; Ing p<>puls.r ?" It may,_ he, but wo never Ing to hie barn one day, he "saw anakea." So I don't k~owwhether l'mH,lgh Ohuroh, DIARY OF A BURaLAR. heard ol any one trying It but ·onoe, One· was a. crooked stick, '\lld the other a And I don t know whether I m Low. " · STAND :-Town H all Buil d ing, on e door east O n t. B ank. There has been so much talk about zero whipJ11oeh-but they· moved. He t ells the I'm trying be a Ohrletlan De Puts Down the Rlcb ,Placu (If Eart~ as lately $hat a good many people think zero r~et of th'l story l\B follows : . The cold, sweat' Io tho plain, old-b ehlonod way Fast a11 lie Spotted Theno. means something Instead of nothing. of fear 011.me out on ID) forehead ·. .. I wiped Laid down In moUler'e Bible, h dli hi f · · td AndlreadUevery day; ' It ff 'th iii as_ needful to tho Jmaginu.tlon WI my an ere e · a.on su. o~n Our blessed Lord'Hlife In the Goapela, N.. Polle.rd waa arrested . at Pittabu~g-the ;', S9Ht11de other night for burgla.ry. .In his pocket aiufo'oiety ia wholesome for the cha.ructer, on the lower round of the hay-mow ladder, . or a oomforting Paalo:i of old He h as a ll the b e s t grades of for I felt faint. Th11n I stared straight Or a bh hom bbe Rovol..tlons .' , . waa found a queer diary a.nd book of refor-' Husbands ·should show this to their wives. ahead at a corn ata.lk;' It aoon began elowly Of the olty whose elreete are gold; ence. The mind of the writer seemed to An l\wfully homely ma.n at a sociable to wriggle and curve I With bursting eyerun on the rich ('h.Oes of the earth. Dia- where I pray, why, I'm generi.lly praying, kissing games are played looks as balle and all the strength of mind I possess- Then Though I don·1 "1way~ kne~l ot speak out, mond, turquoise, and gold mines ue jum· lonesomo a.a a. stray hat in a snow-storm · that is manufactur ed. .:;d, I foroed that corn·&talk. back from the But I aek the dear Lord, and keep asking bled up curiously with the residences of many Young man, remember the words of the animal to. t, h e vegetable kingdom, and then Till I fear lie le all tired out. He has in s tock all kind s of General Groceries, Coarse and F i n e Salt, rioh men, both na.tlve and foreign. The A pleoe ot tho Litany eom·tlmee, volume, an ordinu.ry looking account book, late lc1mented Josh l:llJliDga: ··If your girl I 11taggered feebly out into the open air. ·I The Oolleot. perhaps, for the day, American a nd Canadi an Coal Oil , B ran, S horts , O ats and Chicken oa.n't ekat:i; lct her elide." leaned against a fence, and for fear I should Or a eorap of a prayer that my mo\ber h prefaced with the iitu.tement : Feed , C r o ckery and Glass ware, Fresh and C u red Meats, Sausages and A little boy sl\ld he would ra.ther have tho see more of those horrible twisting things, I So long ago ~earned mo to say. I have thought it necessary to write my Lard o f h i s own make and rendering. His l ife.time experience in the name and addre88, taking int o consideration ear-ache than the tooth· ache, because .he clung to a poet and closed my eyes. DOW my poor memory'& lalllDll', " Time is called, Jtm," I said to myself. But the uncertainty of human life. I was born wo.sn't; compelled to hu.ve his ea.r pulled out, And often and often I Bod Meat D epartment enables h i m t o supp ly a q uality unequalled. A muff for each hand Is the · newe&t wrin· " Whiskey and you part company to-day ·;" That ~ever a prayer from the Prayer·book in Burgees ville, Oxford county, Canada (the WIJI oeem to come Into my mind. T he Grocery Department, under t h e supervi s i on of Mr. J o hn A llin, is prel!ent realdencco of my father, Alfred Pol· kle, A two-banded muff has been e,. regle, arid · soberer than I had been for many But I know what I want, and I aek It, lard), in the year (9th of March) 1886, and even when ou.oh hand btlonged to a ditl'eriin~ months, though with no more strength than · And I make up the worde ae I go ; of the very best qualit y . N o trash or poor goods k ept in stock, deals p&rson, a baby, I managed to get back to the house. wa.1 christened Norman Ola.rk Polle.rd, Do you thlDk, now, that shows I aln'\ High Church? only in the best g oods, whi ch will b e sold at the lowest possible prices. This la followed by assertions to the effect There was a. figM, thongh I I didn't tell Do you tblnk It means l am Low ? Swallow-tails In the Leglelature a.re not my wife, for· I had ma.de a good many · your vatronage w ill be than kfully r eceived. that in the valley of the Santee River, In 80 l f 0 to the intHesta the peop e as promises that hadn't been kept, · and I My bleeeed old husband lule left me, Peru, le a great graveyard, ve-ry ancient. ·thelnlmioa.l ewaliowlng of cocktails during the BOB· thought I'd go 60 alone for a while. I got 'Tie yeara 1ivce God took htm away. Goods delive_ red to a ll parts of the t o wn on s h o r t notice. Also, the st11otement that Mias Nelly Harri slon. h f I know he le a~le, well and happy, · · A call solicited. Did It ever happen to occur to you wha.t up In t e morning, a ter a terrible night, And yet when I kneel down to pray, eon goes to Boston once a. month from New York. A persona.I experience h related as a tremenaoua a.mount of bliss la conoentra- with the thlret of a chased fox npon me, Pe·h&Jltl ta la wrong. but I never Casll Cor Butter, Eggs, Dide8, Tallow, Beet, Pork and f ollows : ted into the two llhort sticks of the marriage WIa.ter '!fould:'t qlulkench It , anldl Hrdied milk, B~e;~~~'U,~~o~~~·~~~':!of my prayer, In the year 1885 It became neoeseary to .notice column? crept mto t e m ·room, B ppe a straw What 1 would do if I was there. alJ Fa1·m Produce. Into the edge of a crea.m covered pan, a.nil go to a hospital. I found that the different When Fogg heard the landlady below sucked out tho milk until only the crea.ru Of couree He can do It much better ; nations were represented ae follows : Ire· STAND land, 18 ; ·America, 8; Germany, 5 ; Enl(· stairs pounding the beefsteak, he remarked was left, lowered smooth :i.nd unbroken to But ne knows, and He surely won't mind worry about her old husband land, 1 ; So"tla.nd, 1 ; Ca.na.da, 1 ; colored, 1. thilt Mrs, Brown was tenderl1>g a baDquet the bottom. Then I tried another, and 9;. The Of the old womi.n ldl here behind. · other, until the fi erce ora.vlng wp,e somewhat The richest mo.n in the world le Han Qua., to the boarders. So l pray, and l pray, for \he old man, "Pat, what time Is It ?" "01 don't know, dulled, I t wae a household mystery what And I am sure that I shall till I die. living in Co.nton, China, Mike ; but let'o guess at it, and then the became of the milk. No oat oeuld lap It, So may be that proves I ain't Low Onuroh, E'ra.nkfort-on the-Ma.lo has more rich peoman a.a comee furthest off ca.n go out to the my wife ea.id, a.nd leave the sides and cream And may be It ehowe I am High. ple than any other city of the ao.me size, untouchod, and where did it go ? Jo4n W, Clii.rk, Third and Markeutreets, kitohen and look.". old father waa never a Oburchma.n, A unt-"Has any one been at thel!e pre· I let t hem talk, for the struggle wae too Uy McKeeeflort, has a very old book, if he ha.a But a Scotch Presbyterian eald ; serves?" (Dead silence. ) "Eave you touoh- . aore and fearful to be spok,en of, and I went Still hie white head Is ·hlnlng lo Heaven, not disposed of It. I don't care who says tbat 1' ain't; Gold IUld silver bought a.t 1,642 Ninth ed them, Jemmy f' Jemmy- " l'a never on drinking tbe milk. 'lows me to talk a.t the table." The road from my house to my shop lay To one ol our ble1111ed Lord's maodone, avenue, third flat, New Yor k. That old man waa cert&ln to go. by the groggery. When I · left my ga.te In Just beyond. ths Lorimer etreet bridge, now do you think I am High Ohuroh ? Boarder-Why is that spring ohIcken Ilk c tho morning, I took the road, and on o. dea.d And in Denver, ls a:ehop for the manufacture of a. favorite Are you eore that I ain't pretty Low ! brand of brandy ? L!l.ndlady- l If u.m sure I don't know, Mr. Tibbs. Boarder run, °'8 pursued, I ma.do the distance, I toele. ran hard a.II the way home to dinner, and Human ha.Ir, bought at 60 Mar ket street, yon 1"a all jue1 a. muddle. -Because It's old hen, I see. ba.ok after that mea.J, never, in fact, t ruet- I tell Too muoh lor a body like me. New York. The men who are runniDg a paper in ing myself to walk or even take to the side· 111 wait till I join my old hueband, George Kabrick, a very rich man, lives And then we sh&ll see what we'll see. en Knobley Mountain, Mineral county, State's Prison will be saved ihe b uther of wa.lk for months, The cure was slow. I Don't aek me again, It you please, elr ; applications for places as editorial writers keep all the brakes hard ~et yet. A single For really It worrlee meao. W. Va. by gre~n college graduates. gfaae of hard cider would undo the work of And I don't care whether I'm High Ohurch, Tejlnco Is the diamond field of B razil. A calico party wa.a recently g!ven In Gin· all these yea.re, but that glass doesn't touch And I don't care whethor I'm Low, Twenty-five miles from Su.nta Fe, N. M., in the Cuillo Mountains is a turquoise mine_. cinnatl, There were few fashionable women my lips while the memory cf thoee little In the empire of Ano.m the Emperor keeps present owing to thdr well known prejud· crawling black reptiles stays with me I Auber. " And did yonr wife finally learn what his money and treo.sure in hollow logs Ip a Ice against appearing in print. became of the milk !" be was a.11ked, Auber, the celebrated French composer, pond with alilgo.tors. . boys in New York turn out to " y 0 81 " and his voice broke, " I told was one of the few people who seem able to The authoritlea think that Pollard ill beTelegraph burglara, T his is encouraging and a de- her on her deathbed." perlorm a maximum !l>lllOUnt of work, and wanted in the east, but not so far east aa an cided improvement on devoting four houre u ·Jim, dear,' she said, when I had fin- yet to take a minimum quant ity of sleep, that, "' to carrying a message twenty blocks. iehed, with her hand cln.epod In mine, 'Jim, His public career was somewhat late In A spring of black ink ha.a been discovered de1J.r, I knew It all tho time.' " beginning ; his firat r eal succesa was attain· German Superstition. in Arkansas, but as ·it is not lntoxicu.ting, The struggle ended in victory, but wh'> ed when he was thirty-eight yea.re old, but As a rule Germane are not gamblers ; 1md therefore unfit to drink, the Arkansans would be willing to enter upon a course he had won t hat reoognltlon by years of that would Impose upon life an experience previous laborpatiently bestowed, Hera.re· but they play 11ometim~s, and when t hey don't know what to do with it. · play they like to win, ao there are charms 1.!f slept more than four hou1s, and once de· " Cog hog t a r oj!;. Jags is not 100." Thia like thio? that secure their aucoeas, Here is one of Iooko funny, and it is to exp ert telegraph olaxed to a frien d that he had praotioally ----~---.....- - -them in rough m1tline. It is by far the operators. What t ried t.o go over the wires done without sleep since his twentieth Too FraDk, worst and most blasphemous we have ever was: "Come home to Rome. James ie not year. Tho Rev, Mark Pattison, who died a few 35. heard of in Central ttermany- a distinct well." lt once happened that Se.inton, a young Bowman ville, Aug u st 28, 1885. monthe ogo, and who was a typicP.l EngliEhpiece of witchcraft, as It seems to us. Tc _ =.,.__,..__,.,......,,.... _.., _ .,..,,,,,. ..,_ ..,_,,,.__..,,,,==~==~=====-....,.==-..., . -_..,_,.,.__,..__~ It is stated that Walt Whitman is about ma.~ and ecbolar, WM once appealed to by a violinist, was invited to play at the F r ench ,,.,.=,,,,,..==--"'-"'-"'""",... the words of t he charm, distinctly noted to publish a volume of poetry. We ha.ve Court, and t hat he consequently asked of down at the time, we regret t hat we can- often wondered why, having secured some volatile American girl, as to whether he .8.ub0r t he privilege of rehearsing the music not refer. The receipt without them reputation as a poet, he never· published thought ehe could writ.a a. bot·k, " I had to before him, "' disappoint her, poor t hing I" he writes. "I stands thus : Catch a toad on Easter Sun- any poetry, "Come at six o'clock," said the composer told her ehe we.a the moat ignorant woman " I n t he evening ?" asked Sainton. ' day morning before sunrise, take a piece of The following Incident h appened in one I h :i.d ever met." "No, 11.t six in the morning." - -- o - -. soft wood- pine, &c., not beech n er oakof the public schools In o. neighboring city : Another yonng woman who had written Tho young mu.n was punctual, but on ar- I beg to announce that my supply of Gran ite and Marble M onument s was never so a little larger than the toad, l\nd then nail Tea.oher"Define the word oxca.vate." some clever es9aye was astonished by hie riving at Auber's house, he wa11 surprised to l arge as at present. the wretched orea.ture upon it In the form of a. oro811, ha.ng it on an inolated pole to- Soholar- "lt mel\nsto holhiwout." Teach- unasked orltlcil'lm t o the effect thathe "con· find the composer alrce.dy at work at hh In Variety of Pattern it is ·most moder n. er " Construct a sentence In which the word eldered her co11ven1ation extremely feeble." ward the sun, thus gradnallv changing lte In Fini sh, far e x cee d in g any you c an see elsew here. position wilih the progress of the day : keep is properly used." Soholar- "The baby ex- While he was dying he comforted hie weep· pi~~~h I" Bald the latter, calmly, when ing wife with the remark,Salnt on expressed his ani~ zement at such In Workmans hip, firs t-cltt.ss. sprinkling -.J; enry now and then with .ca.vates when it ~ets hurt." " Oh yes, my dear! :No doubt !no doubt I lndustr} ; "I ha.Ye been at work sinoe five water, for if It dies before the sun sets A profeeeor who got ver y a11gry at the inAnd price as low as a t any ex perien c ed shop Bllt you'll ~mon marry again. I've arranged · o'clock." yo11r la.bo1 has been tn vain. If, when the terruption of a m11<n while he wu.a expl.i.initlg thnt yon shall be comfort <1ble until you do. " In.dead, lt seemG as if thia man was inca.pI have r ecei ved by S . S. "Indiana," a co_nsignmen t of 8Ul · '{Oes down, he is atill partially alive It the operat!on of a machine in a.:tnct ory, stroll· The lildy e11on, by t he way, fulfilled his &ble of fat igue. Hisphysfoie.n once inform- fl!C.:f,........-.,m,-..e"l!E:n" ill ~ ;ugh ; t ake him to tho nearest fl.Dt-hm ed a.way in lh huff, and aeked imothn man : ~ ~ ~- - u~'ir' ilil""m"1C'"fl provhecy. ' ed hlmthathemuatlea.vo P ;i.riafor a. fort· ~""-'~ ..a..- ~.L-;;JL ~ ~J::i:\ ..ll-""M ...n..-..IL - ~ andoury him in it. On Wnit 8unday dig "Who is t hat fe.low t.hat p1·eteuds to know 'Ille t;errible franknesa la t he t rait which him up. If no one has disturbed the hill more than I do about th at instrument?" night, for rest and change of scene. He at Anoth er lot has ~rrived by S. S . " Nebraska, " and otl1ers are following. most widEily eepat ates t he Eogliehman from once set out for the country, rema.ined you will find the bones q uite clean an d " Oh f he ie the man that inven-ted it," was hill American cousin. The American is thero fi ve days, working from morning t ill I BlJY DIREC'J.' l<~Jl:UUI TH IE Nll A.NlJF ."lC'l.'lJRE H.8 white ; pnt them in a little bag, hang it the a!lB wer, more sen~itlve and:quiok In sympathy. He round your neck, and you will always win night in hie room, and then rushed ha.cit to · in Aberdeen, Scotland, and from l on g exper ience (28 years) at the bes t advantage, )! le, too, taught considerB.t ion fot· his neigh· the city,t havlng t hought of nothing during in gam<l!I of chance, Thin ohar m is, cf intend t h at the pu blic n eedin g work in my line shall be liberally d er.lt with. A Peculiar Accident. bors from his , crndlc, and however candid cour~e, a violat ion of every law of human- · hie u.b2enoe but the ocore which was to fol J , en gage n o A gents. I k eep for sale Henry C. Davis, nssiatant gener al p ashe may be, learns t o keep silent concerning low the o~e he had just finished. ity and religion; a giving one's self t <'> the senger agent of the Northern Pacific, who unpleu.saut t ruths affecting hl.rnseli or others. devil even more form>lly than if one signed He lived to the age of eighty-nine, a a. contract with .him in one·a own blood. returned to St. Paul a day or two ago from Bnt If t he EDgUsh bQy fiude a hole in his young man t o the very last , well deserving the Pacific coast, tells of a rather remarkt1oorer schoolma~e's shceo, he will harry him If we could reproduce the words to be used the title b eeiowed on him by a E'rench crlt· l\t the differ ent hours it would be setm, im- able accident which occurred neg,r Pa.louae incessantly with chaff about it. no, two years pr eviously : " that adorable P 1 L L p Junction. Ao the t.1.:in, west bound, was A noted English author, while tre.velllng youth of eigh ty-seYrn." He never would i o r enc osing ots, a t owest ric es. perfect as our acaount ever t ben would be, pa.ssing Washtuena L'lke a coyote started through this count-:ry, appea.rcd at a large what mysteries are ca.ricatur2d, and thereadmit that "'e we.a old. When oome one AL L W 0 K U R T R G A A N E E D. fore violated. The man who mploys bUCh across t he ice, A Mr. M11ouritz, who sat be- dinner given in his h onor in a. ihnnel bhirt showod him a white hair on his coat-collar, side Mr. Davis in the oar, eaw the animal. and bua?10.C11s 2uit. Glancing round the table, means, simply says, "1 shut myself out of ;:· ~:·:!.~.1:aid, " seme oldmanmusthave · the fold of Christ ; all I want le t o win at He drew his revolver, a 45-or.libre Colt's, he muttered," Ah, evening dreEa ! The custom at cards." The charm was preoerved by an and fired at the ureast. The ball struck "Don't you think," a lady once asked N. B.~I h ave n o connection or interest in the Co wpoaition, P ottery, or Z in4l old man who had served In t he war11 1813 the ice a.nd glanced fu lly a half mile, striK· home. Quite so l quite so I But I did not that lt Is very unplea.ean1i to grow Monumen~a, so .called; I have enquired concerning th eir merits and cann o t r ecomt you dressed like gentlemen and 1812, Another man, a comr ade of hie, fog a Chinaman working on section 3 in the know th& · " Very," he snid; "but until now it h as m end t h em to t he p ublic at any p rice. whom he had carried wounded off a battle- loft shoulder and le 'iictlng a serious wound. ·hare." 25-3m. Canon Klugeley while In this country always beui t hought t he only way of living Bowmanville, June 18, 1885. field, had gi ven '1im, when on the poh1t of The unfortunate Celestial Wa3 taken o.board death, his" lucky b111g," and told him how the train and sent to Walla. Walla for treat- stunned t he chairman of a llterary club, a long time." ~===============================~== to make a. new one, The veteran did not. ment, Mr. Mauritz pa.Id all the expenees who was wdooming him t o a r eception in H e died dnriug thuiege of Paris, brokenVV ., know from what distr ict the man he had consequent upon t he acc.ldent. Mr. Davie, fOmewh1»t florid t erms, by staring a.t h im hearted at being forced out 11f hie habits saved for a. day or two had come; hie on hifl retur n trip, inquired the condition of and ..,u~tly saying, " I consider your re- and separ ated hom his quiet ways of life, knowledgeof the cha.rm Itself wa.a evidently the Chinaman, whose us.me ho learned mark in very b&d t aste." Then, turning Inadequate ; he protested that he had n ever ws.s " Who." He wa.s Informed that the his bitck on him, he walkd away. Truth nquiree \;hat we should keep our A Woman Kills a Panther. tried it: but the bag and the boneB were wound was not dangerous. The ball had - MANU FAC1' UREH OF- there, a little blue silk bag, worn and fray- en tered the left shoulder to the soapnl 111, own he!l,rts pure and upright, and our words Mr. Gecrge Greenleaf, acompanled bv his ed, with a ~l\me worked upon It t hat and then glanced downward four or fivoi honest ; but it does noi ~en.d us t o drag the wife, was returning home from Clayton, in loeked like E liza- a ghl's name who was lnohes Into t he muscles, where it waa out covering from d f our ucigbbor's wee.knees the mountains of Georgia, one night. It young some 90 yea.rs ag9, we may suppose, out, The Chinaman took chloroform as or to jeer !\t the mole on his face, was a.bout nine o'clock and, as ls t he custom and who put a. ring, or perhaps a few gold- meekly as a child, and smiled blandly after of the country, they both walked up ef one KING STREET, B OWMANVILL The Expulsion of the P oles. en pieces, her eoau·~y ea.rnlnge, into the bag, the operat ion wae performed, the hills while the mules and wa.gonascended, Has now on hand a number of veJ:icle5 (and is manufacturing a great many more) of the neWHI· ~.,. ~ u.ud ga.ve It to her lover before hEI went patterns and best finish, which I am offering for safo ~t the lowt·St prices oonsisl;ent By an order which wcmt int o effect recent - their little boy befog t he driver. Suddenly Minerals up the a. p, R. with due regard t o workmanship and quality, 'l 'he following is a list ot away. lt was.full of a toad's bones when ly, the alien Poles of Pru~sia were expelled a rustle wo.s heard in tbe bushee, a.nd pe:ir· the principal vehicles manufactured by me we saw it. In the vicinity of Sudbul'.'y there have re· .fn m t he kingdom. These p eople are na· cut in the darkneas could be s.aen wha.t look· cently been grea.t discoveries of ore of a tives of Rues.ifm and Austrian P oland, who ed Uke two balls of fire. It proved t o be a D ouble Covered Oarriages ... .. ......... ... . ....... ......... ... ...... . ..... ... $200 Upwardo, high grade. T he general character of the settled in tho neigh:.ioring .l:'russian terrl· large p1 m ther. Aa If by in~tlnct Greenleaf Single P h ret ons. ... .· .. · ·. ·· . ·.. . . . ·. . . . . . . .. . ···· ··· ·... .. . ·.. ... ·· .. . · ··· . . ... 100 11 Dreadini; Dead. ore ia very much like the lodes of Butta City, t or y without becoming Ger man citizens, By opened hie knife, and as t he beast sprang Open Buggy........ .... .. .................... . ... ....... . . .......... .. .. ......... 70 u Ka.unitz, the Austrian Minister, who Mont~ntl., some In Colorado, N ew Mexico, the lawe of t he Ge. man Empire every R ub 11.f; him he me,de a. plunge, only to drive the Top Buggy . ... .... .. ...... ... .... ...... ... . .. ...... . ... . ......... ............ ..... 90 11 died, in 1794, h 11>d such a drea.d of aeti.th and other well·defined mining regiona. '.l'he ject capable of bearing arm11 is required t o knife into hla wife a a.rm, she lu:.ving thrown Democrat Wagon.............. ....... ...... ................ ... . .. . ..... . ... ... .. 65 11 that everything which might remind him of "mineral belt" extends aorosB the continent serve seven yeers in the st anding army. herself upon hlm a.t the sight of d!\Dger, He Lumber Wagons... . .. ... ...... ... . ... ...... ... ................... . ...... . .... ... 55 11 dying was carefully kept in the background. fromN ova. Sootia u.nd N ewfoundland t o Van- Thi.a duty the Poles escaped bf. refosing to dropped the k nife and feU under the eeoond Light Wagon. . ......... .. . .. . .. . ....... .. ......... ... . . ......... ... .. . .. . ... .. . .. 40 11 No one waa allowed to utter in his presenae couver Island, and the veios cr osa It dfagon· become ne.turalized, and the I rus~ian gov- spring of the panthe1·. T he b'iaet, evidentthe word "death," to mention his birthday, ally, chiefly at points of change of geolo~ioal er»ment decided that they should no longer ly maddened at the scent of blood, was Expr ess Wagon. .. .... . . . . ·.. . . . ·. . . ·· .. . . . . . ·. . . . . ·· ·. . ·. ·. ... . ·. . . . . . . . ·.. ··· · ·· 75 11 or allude to small-p11x, Ingenious methods formation . The I ron l&lv.nd vein, of nearly enjoy t he advantages of a. cit izenship whose about te insert Its t eeth into Mr. Greenleaf, Skeleton ... .... ... .. . ..... . ..... ... . ... ... ... . ..... . ........ ........ , . . ·. . . .. . . . . . · 50 11 were a.dopted to avoid the pronibited word, pure specular iron, is at r ight angles lio tno~e burdens they would not share. when his wife, who h1 ul picked ttp the knife, Sulky ...... .. .. .... ... . .. . ............ . . . ..... ... . . .. ....... .. . ... ...... ... . .. ...... 40 " while cemmunicating the fact of a deat h : bee.ri11g copper and ot her meta.la. The Sud · T he expulsion of t;be Pol.ea wae acoomo1ml- acting under t he In spiration of deaparatlon, superior facilities for manufacturing carriages, I lntond to sell very cheap for oaelll When the referendary Von Binder, for bur y vein has been 10011.t ed from lot 5, frcnll ed by g~eal; loss u.nd eufferiog. Mimy of ma.do a clean cut!u.t the be1Joat's t hroat. The Possessing or approved credit, and by so doing I hope to greatly increase m y number of sales Would. fifty years hie friend and confidant, diad, of 64, to lot 3.1 front of Suider, a dhta.nco of them were old and poc·r, !lnd had lived long pant her gave a pit iful cry, rolled over, and sell the wood parts only, or the gearings of buggio~ Ironed. · Xa.verius Raidt, the prince's reader, expres- n!ne miles, on wh!ch eight rich cutorcps ~heir adopted countr y ; but the or der waa diad. The cry reached t he ears ot some sed himself In this way : "Baron Binder is have already been opened ; 11.n d on a. side enforced again st all alike. Whole families hunters n ear by and eoon a number of t hem no loDger to be found." vein those of Murray, Falcimer, a.nd McCon- re-entt>r ed t heir native land homeless and were on the spot, to find t hat a woman had The news of the dea.th of Frederick the nell have beeu slightly teated, the latter at peonileBB. Committees were formed in the acoornpl!shed what they ha.d bean six weeks At the Shortest N otice, Painted and T rimmed if Desired, Gr eat reached him in thle way ; His reader, its southern extrem!ty .being very rich in citiea of R urisfa.n .Poln.nd to relieve t heir dis · t rying to do. A.t the Factory I a.loo do Planing, Matching, Turning anO. So.wing with Circle Band or ·soroll wit h a.ppt\ rent ab~enoe of mind, told him th11oi; na.tive copper and pell.cock ore, l t here turns tressed countrymen. In Austrian P ola.ud Saws, and prepare all kinds of lumber for carpenters nd others for building purposes a courier had just arrived from Berlin at eouth-eaat into the main lode, t he most t he actien Iii P russia. pr.ovoked an intc.nse Ornamental and Plain Picket s fo r fenc~s in every style reQuired. made t o order. · The Sacred White Elephant. the P t ussla.n ambassador's, with notifications sout herly point of which abounds in nv.tive foaling of h 01Jtility t o Germany. Ger ma.n of King l!'rederick Wi lliam. A cor respondent writes from M andalo.y copper, grey ore, a.nd some ~pecks of gola. ehop -ke<>pers were boycott ed mad German T_ha-;nylis; says -the N ha.\Jed A. brotiher says ' ""unltz sat for some time stiff and The colored r otten qmut z, ab ounding a.long laborers dismissed, The R11eafan Ozar is- just 11ofter the deposit ion cf Theba.w : " Next n .ionless In his arm-chair, shewing no sign the whole of the veins, will probably prove sued a decree commanding all unnaturalized morning !obtained ad.mission to the palace, cha.m rope le likeiy to become t he drivmg not noisy, y et It frequ en bly orea tes a buar cpe of t he future. It ca.n bti mad·l to fit tie. o( having understood the hint. At laat he ll.t le11.s t 11.s rich as in Mon~an a, The percent· Prussians to lel\ve his dominions at once, and for several hours wended my way any shape of groove a.nd works well over T f rose, walked slowly through the room, thoy ag e of copper in my aeleoted epecimens E ven in Garmany the action .of Prussia through the endless euccession of buildings. pulleys, wh ile it ca.n be put un or shortened " h .e natural gas la a wonderful thing," said, raising his arms to heaven, "Ala.a ! ranged from 14 to 75 per cent . iron, 50 to we.a coneider ed harsh. No sooner had the It ia Impossible to at tempt here:any detailed in a few minutes and p ossesses four t imes remarked Mrs, Fangle, u.a she sat before tee when wUI such a king 11ga.ln ennoble the 60 per cent . sulpha.te antimony, and some Imperial Par liament assembled than this description of t he mingled magnificence and the advantage of the round rope. fire 11.t Mrs. Sn11oggs's. "Yes, indeed it is," llladem I" replied Mrs. Snaggs. "I wonder how they ·tlver, with traceo of arsenic and gold. quest ion ot the t r eatment of t tie P oles cama squalor, filth and 6plendor which I wltnesoThere ia in Auet ra.lia, it Is said, a plant get it, and why we never had It befor e 111 When the Emperor J oseph died, the valet No thorough tee~n have as yet been made. up. Thereupon P r ince B!emar ok, who ie ed. · · · I found myself in the Lord Whlf.e r ;u.rned to Ka~it z a document , which the both Chancellor of the German Empire a.nd Elephant house. He had .~een leH without which in its growth so much resembles a " Indeed, I don't know a t hlog about it ' emperor was ti" ' /'Ve signed, with the words, It la propvsed, on t he· initiative of the P1emier of the K ingdom 0£ Pru~~la, blunt ly food or wa.ter. The magmficont silver vea- sheep t hat in t he days of t he early settle· I nevor studied gastronomy," "The emperor . ., 'lls no more," The do& t h Munioipa.l Council, to hold a. ha.by show In iuformed the delegi;tes tha.t th ey had no seh whioh held his food had been laying ment the pioneers were often surprised by A bird in a cage would h a.ve as good a. &f hfs sister, Cuuntess Queeten berg, Kamutz P aris. 'l'he object of t he exbibitfon is hu· right t o int erfere in a. me.tter which concern- l abvut unprotected. 'r he roJ al monst e1 · the appar1:1tion of flooka of sheep on the dis· only knew when he sii.w hill houeehold In m{l,nitarlalll and Eoirntific, E aoh exhibit or ed Pruasia. alone, 1 1nd was n ot of nalion:>.l seemed in a ver y bad temper (uo wondet·). tant hills. T he plant is of t ho ord er com· stor y. Most of my events, and nearly all m y mourning. will have t o fill up I\ list of queetfons tend· importance· . Th,e Poles t hemsalves denoun- H e wa.s chained by t he fore feet t o a ma.BBive positae and belongs to the genuo R aoulia. lntsnse pleasur e, have passed in m y "'.., likli! manner he once r emained un - Ing t o t hrow light upon the influence of ced t he Pm sslan order a.s wort hy of a place plllar. Unless you were told t h11ot he was It grows in a dense k idney-she.ped me.l!s thou!lhts. I wrote verees- ae I dar e say MAfuaint ed wit h t he recov~ry of one · of his c1.1naa.I1guineous marriage1.1, the hereditary beside such emeltiea as the peraecutlon of white y ou would ~o!; perceive It, In t he about eigl1t feet across a.11.d three feet high. m1my h11ove done who never wrot e any poemil son s from a severe m nosa, until t he conva- principle, climate, and different methods of the Hugu~not~·aod t he expulsion oi t he ducky light h e aeeme<1 muoh lik e any other The leafy branches are densely pa.eked t o· - very easily ; at eight years old a.nd ~arller0 elephllnt. On clonH examinatio!!l he seemed gather an d t he whole mal:ls o[ a snow wh ite But w h11>t ia l eGs. cemmon, :t~e early fancy lescent came in person to c:i,ll on him. nursing, tmd wiU be asked to send in with Moors from Sp ; in, Ka.unitz himself harl never been t o see him the exhibit photographs of ancestors or an· ------~-·-of light mouse co1 or, with large white color. The flowers a.re microscopic and turned Into a mdl, a.ud rema.1ned wi t h me, dudug his !llnesa. To an old aunt of his he ce&trs.l pictur es and of n ear relat~ves. T he There is exp or t eo. from Africa. ever y year blot ches." The s11me correspondent des· hence there le never o.'.n y v<\ritoti··n in the a:id .from that day to thia poetry has been ;r. en oe sent from his table one Gf her favorite ages of t he e:xhibltn will range from ono to 1,875,000 pounds of ilvory, requir ing t he de- cribes a mo·t disgraceful scene of plunder, app earance of the veg11t11.blo aheep at ruiy distinct ohject with me- nn object; to read aeioson, tk lnk. and live for, - R, W. Emerson, ' d ishEJs, four years after her death, five years, The crown jewels na.r;;cwl v escaped. struct ion of 65,000 elephants, ~: Qtaitadian··J fatttsmau.- LITTLE LAUGHS. ; _·_,_ r ·: ~ Pmzled. · · l:t' h 'apt:to .b!l too la.~I! c · ·... O. lfl. CAWKER, Grocer, Butcher and Provision Merchant. '° ° A complete stock always on hand. ~Q~Lg~ Allf~ ~~Q)l'g ~14J~)TJ1flt :-Town Hall B'ld'g. C. M.CAWKER, COAL/COAL! .. -·-. Messrs. McDouGALL & METCALF beg to announce that they have received a large consignment of Celebrated Lehigh Coal, and aret prepared to fill all orders at LowEsT:· PnrcEs. "We intend to keep on hand an assortment of Lumber_, Shingles, Posts, Lath, Cordwood, &c. Office, Old Foundry Lot, corner Church and Division Streets. ROBT. McDOUGALL. HENRY METCALF·. G ran1 ·t e and M arble w ork s.' B OWMANVI LLE. Marble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix them. H ead Stones, Posts, and Metallic Bars 0 C. BQUNSALL, Proprietor. !:at"" HA I NE S ' CARRIAGE "tTTQR KS· GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, -··.. .·----- -·- - CARRIAGES, SLEIGHS, CUTTERS, WAGONS, &O. in All Kinds of Vehicles R e p a ired I Me:h~~ic I edl~r ~ ne~:~:;:-;8 I

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