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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 19 Oct 1887, p. 4

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· I · STREET IMPROVEMENTS. since lived with his son Mr. H. Maynard ing on the walls of these sacred odilices. from its top a magnific·mt sea. co&st and at whose house he died. Up to a fe~ The Poughill parish register dal ~l~ fro~n inland view may be obtained. 'fwentymonths since he was able to get about 1537. William of Worcester writn~g m eight church towers can be seen from its It is a subject of general remark that and retain his faculties and phv>'ical ·1478. states that in the year1457. Nic~lis summit. About two miles from the vil- never before in one season has there been lage, through some lovely wooded scenery ':ltreogth to a wonderful de<rree but an Radford, counsel for Lord Bonv1l. e such great improvements made in our accident on his leg, occasion~d by a fall, against Thowas Earl of De_von, was slam is the ancient Manor House of East Or- streets, andit would uot be easy, we fapcy, chard, now used as a farm housd. Itwa., t o find a town anywhere with streets in a For a short time I shall make laid him aside and no doubt hastened his in his own house at Poughill, by Thomas built in the reign of Charles I. and sta.nds better state of repair than ours are just death. Deceased will be remembered for ( eldest son of the .Earl, who after:wards a,. great reduction in the his long connection with the belfry. He ~ucceeded to thil ti.ties, ~nd w:u_ 111mself in a beautifully seq uestAred spot. Sever- now. The present Roa.ds and Str eets had been a ringer for 70 years. For 50 . beht1aded at Yor~ m 1~62. We g1:ve th~se al of the old mulliuned windows and other Oommittee certainly deserve great credit price of consecutive years he helped to "ring out little scraps of history iu couuect10n with relics of former grandeur still remain. for thP.ir services, especially the Chairthe old, ring in the new " year on the theseplaces for. the benefit of our youug The rooms contain beautiful ceilings and mim, :Mr. Thomas Burden, who has spent Stratton church bells. At his funeral, reac ere who will, we kn~w from. our own wall decorations, the ceiling of the draw- much time in superintending the work. which tonk place on Trn;sday afternoon, experience, fin~ them mteresti~g. Al- iag room being frescoed with all kinds of To give some idea of the work accom· --OR-a muffled peal was rung as a token of most any Canadtan b?y, aye, a~~ ,;rl, to?, fruit and flowers in white plaster, formin~ plished, we hav< 1 ascertained from the one of the finest works (lf a.rt executed respect. 'l'he burial service was conduct- would walk many miles to see mth their Committee a memoranda of the repairs ed by the Rev. F. J. Bone, There was own eyes" what we saw at Bur~b1ll Farm by the lralian artists who were brought and new layings on the several streets : a good attendance. th7ou~h the special favor _and kmdness of to the .:ountry by noblemen about 200 King St. has been thoroughly rapaired Among the bllsiness men and old Miss Jewell, the accomplished. and very years since. Near here is another old aud new walks laid ; l~ueen St. generally residents of Stra tton, may be mentioned ladylike daui?hter of the pr?pnetor of tho manor cqlled Goacot in the vicinity of repaired and stretches of new walk laid ; I the following: N;cholas Saunders; boots estate, John Jewel!, Esquire. On _this which are thres ancient places of sepul- Ontario street, very extensive repairs and and shoes ; Wm. Cory, builder ; '\V"m. farm is a yery _ancient but commod10us chre. portiolls of new walks ; Chllrch St. has ' The finest selections will, of Perry chemist and druogist· Peter Bray, residence m whtch are preserved a handbeen thoroughly repaired and new walks ; MANITOBA'S FUTURE. printe0r, auctioneer; Pickard, lawyer; somely carved ai:id ~ilded bedste11d on L iberty St., extensive new walks and new courBe, be the best. so don't delay. B. Pickard, grocer. ; T. Pickard, farwer which Charles I. is said to havd sle_Pt, an stone culvert; Station St. repaired enat '"Pollard"; Fred Rattenbury, jeweller; arm chair of the E!tzabethan per10d.. a DEAR Srn.- Some time ago l promi1<ed tire length and Manvera Road extensive Thomas Woodley, grocer, etc.; J. H. very old clock and some other ancient to give my impressions of .Manitoba, but new walks; Sougog St., repaired and new Treleven, dry goods draper ; A. Bndcock, relics. 'l'he chair is said to have belong- the longer I have thought on the subject culvert 62 feet long at the Jlloction of boots aDd shoes · Wm. Yeo boots and ed to tl1e Grenv1lles of Stowe.. the morn diHicult do I find it to form Scugo~ and King. which has been dangershoes ; John Je~ell, dry go~ds draper ; Our excursions in this d!strict included anything like a Judgement. When the ous for years, but, is now made perfectly J, R. Edgcombe & Son, ironmoogera ; a viait to Launcells, a fertile an~ ~retty people of. the country are themselves un- safe ; Duke and Argyle Streets repaired VERY LOV\T. Sam. Olde, harness maker ; J. Bau bury, parish a short distance off w~ere IS s1t~1at· settled aud divided in sentiment it seams throughollt; Wellington St. very exten· ha.messmaker and ironmonger ; J.Brown, ed a neat church and manorial mn:ns10n, presumptuous for a stranger to express si ve ne w walks and repairs ; Concession proprietor of "The Commercial Inn"; B. Launcells Ho:1se~ formerly occupied by an opinion. Indeed, one of the gi·eateat Street wit1ks repaired and 60 rods of new STA.TIO NERY, &c, as usual. Ballamy, proprietor of "Kings Ar·m s "; Robert de Monta1gue ·. E.arl of Cornwall.' drawbacks to the ~ountry is that so many stone pa.ved gutter, 6 feet wide, with new Isaac Barrett, florist ; James H. Barton, and half-brother of Wilham the Con~:ier- people look upon it in the light of an ex- culvert-a very complete aud sensible principal schools; W.A. Weeks, butcher; or. 'In the church yard here we VISlted periment, and you know cautious men are J. Saunder&, merchant tailor ; W, J . the tombs of the Broads, uncles and n ot likely to embark their all in a ship job ; Centre Street, walks repaired ; Pridham, host' of '"Tree Inn"; William friends of the Jolls at Hampton, and the that is just making its trial trip, or George Street repaired and gravelled ; St George St. n ew walks and repaired; Moyse, fashionable hair dresser ; Wm. tomb of Sir Goldsworthy Gurney, the em- to put all thdr weight upon a bridge of Division St. new 6 ft. walk from King to Woodley, blacksmith; Nicholas '£releven, inent scientist. In the church we noted whose stability they are still in doub t . Church and r epaired full length ; Temcarriage builder; J. Balsdon, gentleman; this peculiar epitaph: So long as there is this feeling of uncer- perance Street repaired and ne w crossings; Thos. Bromell, farrier; E. F. Qhamier, "Life la an Inn (think now thl11 tru~lt upo~) . tainty and indecision, the progress of the ~t.. .. ~~-"'l'l'Att11~ ilt.ntitdtWtttt· man·iger for Lord Thynne· N; s Davies Some only breakfo.st and. at·e quickly go 0 , country must of necessity be very limited. McClellan's A venue new walk ; Nelson VJIU.-" ~""""JIM~ Of" "' "'ii"m~" ' ,. ' . ' Olhel'B to dinner stay and are l'ull ted!::lt. from Ontario to Dllke new walk ; the undertaker ; J. F . Ji mucane, customs 'l'he oldest man but sups and goee to bed. 'fhe g1eat question is this and is fundaofficer; Jas. Houey, builder; J. .l:Sryant Lal!ge ie his debt who lingers out the day, mental: Is this country fit to be the bridge on King Street at Vanstone's Mill which ha.s received the mud and water BowMANVILLE, OcT'R 19, 1887. Jewell, draper; T. Medland, Manager of Who g_oes the soo~est ~a.a ·he lee.al to pa;r. home of a pi>oplt:1 ? Is it a place in which a Union ; R . Peardon, County inspector; These lmes were mscr1bed on the Oelfry man has a chance to develope, and into from the hills east and weet for yearsDe:t.th of Rev. Dr. Nelles. W. Rowe, lawyer; Jno. Roberts, mer· floor to the "memory of William Tuck;r. which he may wisely thro.v all his force was found on ex:amination to be dangerchant; J . Woodley, sr., builder; and S. son of John and Mary Tucker, who d10d and enthusiasm ? When that question has ously r otten ; the top has been remov ed, the centre raised, the top r eplaced with 4 .Banbury, F . J. Bone, vicar; W .·Tolliffe, 31May,1789, aged 4 years." been decided in the afiirmativt:J then will At 4:30 o'clock on Monday afternoon of \V. Kinsman, W. Penfound, N. Rodd, The Uhurch bells were tolled, for our the door be open for a great and golden inch plank, the bridge now resembling a this week, Rev. Dr. Samuel Sobieski W . Shephard, J as. Trewin, R. Yeo are special benefit. . Th~re are Ao me rnre future, and through the door tho young pitched roof; The bridt(e at MacKay's Mill has been new timber ed and t()pped. :Nelles, Cha.ncollor of Victoria University so:ne "ortby representatives of o ld and specimens of ca.rvm~ m oak on the ends and vigorous 11re su ro to pr es~. Many other improvements are still under well-known families. of the seats, and there are some of the old For my own part I am disposed to take way. With such ~ood roads and streets .Cobourg, died of typhoid fever after only The town of Stratton has the appear- box pewa rema_ining,. pr?served no doubt, the affirmative vidw, and to b.;lieve_in tho and plenty of electric light Ollr citizens aix days illness, retaini ng consciousness to ance of being a very ancient place, many beci,.use of t heir anhqmty an~ oddness, c_ o untry. I cannot but feel t iiat here in the last. He died on his 64th birthday. of the buildings being in a more or less that resemble amall rooms so high are tho Manitoba alone there is room for a.1111tion should feel perfectly safe to predestinate Dl·. Nelles has bee n iit. the h ead of Victo- delapidated conditiou. Could the r esid- casements around them, for a short per· having all the elements of stability- and on the darkest night, feeling as safe as over t he great11ess. In the first place there is here during the day light. ria University for 37 years. H e was a son eots see some of our Canadian towns with son standing could · not · see out t their beautiful wide streets, modern sides, and in a s1ttmg pos ure no one a magnificent of William and Mary Nelles, and was born brick buildings, with ornamental fronts could possibly see the preacher. \Yhy To Avom BALDNESS OR. GitEY HAIR.CLIMATE. Use Dr. Dorenwend's Grerit German Hair ~t Mouut Pleasant, near Bmntford, Ont. , and plate glass windows and many other they were so co~.~tructed we c.an~;ot thmk, So at least it seems to me. Of course, Od. 17, 1823. His paternal ancestors . \\ttractions of our average towns, we unless tu keep m durance vile ~ome remy experience is of the summer season wcre originally from Germany, and were think they would never want tc. return to fractory c.hllrch membe~s as a pum~hment only. Of that I can speak in terms borof the ba1r. It prevents premature greythe gloomy, crooked and narrow streets for breakmg some portion of the D zcaamong the early settlers in the l\'lohawk and otherwistl ancient lookin!l town of logue. The present popular rector of bermg on enthusiasm. What glorious ness and stops all falling out of the hail'. Valley, N. Y. ln 183!:1 h o went to Lewis- Stratton. Launoells Churah ia the erudite scholar suushiue this is 1 What cool breezes per- On bald heads, where the roots have not ton Acadomy, N. Y., where John G. s.11xe, The first eveninrr of our visit to Strat- and prolific writer hose trenchant arti- · fume-luden coming to temper the heat of· perished, it will invigorate them and 1 ton, we strolled Ul~ the road northward to c1es against the modern abuses and bur- noon-day ! What delicibus nights i uvitiug force a new growth of hair. · Ask for Hair · the poet, WM his tutor. Stamford Hill, so called after the E.irl of dens that the'.English people are compelled to slumber while poor humauity in thtl Magic. It is the only reliable. For sale In J unc, 1842, Dr. N ellc8 was one of Stamford, the Parliamentary Ganeral. It to endure have been read with so . much East lay groaning and sweltering ! With by all drQggists. the £rst two students m1itriculated at Vic- was here that the Parliamentary army, inferest in the journals of Corn wall- - the hut few exceptions day afte1· day it has been a delight to h ve. . B ut what of t he toria College Cobonrg. After spending numberiug 4,000 men, fought such a I~ev. J. W. Illack, M. A. two years in this institution he finished bloody battlo with the Royalists. '.l'he From Launcel!s we drove. to M:at"ham- other seasons 'I Well they t ell me that site was well suited for a point of de- church, the home of the sa1i:ted Welsh from now on to the end of November the his undcrgradunte' course at t he W'esleytm feuce. A large earthwork, the remains family, "Morwonna" fron;i wln~h the par- weather will be continllally fine, that University, Middletown, Conn., and r e- of which may yet be seen, was thrown ish of Morwenstow derives tts name. there is but little rain in the autumn, and ceived the degree of Il. A . in 1846. Re - up round the brow of t he hill, while the The farm house a~ Whal es~orough m arks that when winter d oes come it is clear, turning to Canadii Dr. Nelles was appoint- back was guarded by a thick wood which the site of an anc1~nt mansxon and chapel dry and most ex hiliarating. The colrl is · runs p ercipitously down t o th0 river, of the family bearmg that name and now severe, no doubt, but for those who have crl to the presidency of Victoria. Col- which i s said t o have literally run with held by Lord Chnrston. T.he other pl~ccs learned how to d ress suirably and how f,ive" c~.01i1j>io,,lnt, 1Jy~Jtelll8 la, legc, and since September, l850, has h eld blood. · The student of ·.R 'nglish history of interest are Laugford :liill, the ancient to build wisely and substantially it is 'IUllons ncs~ · quite tolembie and even enjoyable. If that responsible position. Under his ad- will remember that the Roundheads oc- seat of the Langfords, said to be one of Sid< llc1ulnd1c, Kidney 'J'ro nb.les, ministr;tion Victoria Oniv.ersity lrns great- cupied the hill, b~t were charged with the Langeur of t he Domesday Book ; there is any fault at all .it is that under U.hcnnutl.ism. such spirit by the Cavaliers consisting of Wood-knole, formerly a. seat of a branah such clear skies and in so bracing an atSl·in Dlscnse,; ly prosp ered. 'l'he d cgl'ee of D. D. was 2,400 foot - who took the 'defenders by of the Itollea, arid Bere said by Morden mosphere men should be stimulated t o and all IJ11p111·ltlcs of tbc conferre<l. upon l1im by Queen's Universi- surprise by sea.ling the hill at the backto be "the House of Bugh Speak," now live at too high a rate. IUOOll frOlll whlll· But climate is not the only condition ty in 1860 an~l t lrnt of L,L. D. by Victoria and 500 horse, under t he command of Sir the property of Lord Churston. 'l'he parever cuusc i·Lrlsi 11g: University in 1873. Ralph Hopton and Bir Beville Oren ville, ish is intersected by the B ud? Ca.nal, and to be regarded. What of the soil? What Fe male Weak· 1esses and Genera.I d t hat they at length gave way, fell into a it is noted for the beauty ana eoft.n~ss of vf the agricultural resources, which h ere 1 lebility. He w as held in high es.teem by the e · panic and fled iu great disorder. A me- its pastoral scenery and the fertility of if anywhere in the world must be 1·urcly l ·cget nbl e . 1 ,,.. ucators of the province, and was Jovecl moria.l column formerly stood on this hill, its land : THE IlASIS OF THE COUNTRY S GREAT:s'ESS, Higltly concentrntccl. ph·ns:mtcllcet1,1al nse and revered by all who knew him. As a erected in 1713 by the Earl of L ansdowne Abollt three. miles from Marhamchu~ch Here I speak for Manitoba. As yet I ASK :FOR l ecturer and preacher on educational sub- - a name familiar to Canadians- arand . towards the coast lies Poundstock wluch l1ave uut eet foot bey!Jnd. The impression DR. HODDER'S COMPOUND. lion of l:'ir Bwille, but it wa:! des~royed in addition to P .ossessing the love _ ly. lanes f t t f made at once on the mind as it looks at ,· ectivcs he had but few peers in the Do. Tnke no other. Sold evcl'ywltere. l'rke , ·' iaany years sgo but the brass tablet for· and other delight u1 c1iarac eris ics o the soil turned up by the plow, or revealed 75 cents uer bottle~ . minion. merly affixed to its base was afterwards Marhamchurch, forms an excellent rest- by exposure on the river banks, is of imIn JD ly, 1851, he married l\iiss Mary placed against the wall of the Trne Inti ing place from which excursions are. made mense fertility. 'rhat deep black loam IL Wood, daughter of t he Itev. Dr. E noch (the old Manor H ·1use) at Stratton, wher e to Widemouth, the B lack Rock, Bri~well with its sub-soil of clay gives promise of Wood, of 'l'oronto. Mrs. N elles and five it may still be seen. On the crest of the and D azurd Points, and the. very mter· ·abundant harvests. A.nd under conditions hill the remains of a tumulus are to be esting sands a.nd coves of Millbrook and Sold everywhere. Price, 25centa and 50 cents children, two Solls and three dtiughters, seen, and our cotppanion said that bones Trebarfoot whi~h lie between. . 'l'here are a t 1111 favorable the promise is fulfilled. per bottle. Proprietors and manufacturers, This week I have had an opportunity of 1'he UNION !UEDIC:INE c::o., ·· 'J'o1·onto, Can. survive the loss of a husband and ·father of i.he dead, cannon ba.ll a.nd o th er relics several incerestmg old Manora m t~e lo- seeing what the country can do. On who was uniformly kind and good. His of the d~ adly conflict are .e ven yet turn ed cality. The manor of Poundstook 19 the Monday evening a friend drove me out Thie powder never vartee. A mat"vel of fuucntl takes r)lace ,1t Cobourg this after - up by the plowshare, At the time of "Poudestock" of the Domesday Boo~. from Portage L" Prarie into the surround- purity, strength and wholesomeness. More our visit an old cannon was mounted on '.l'wo miles south-east of Poundstock is ing country . Oo our left was the densely economical than the ordinary kinds, and can not be sold in competition with the multitude noon. T he town and college are in deep the top of the hill and underneath it on Week St. Mary, rendered famous in his· wooded valley of the Assinaboine,in front ot low test, short weight, alum or phoaphat.e mourning over an irreparable loss. a slate ebb we re;d these inscribed w~rds tory by being the native place. of Thomas- the sun going down red and full, and be- powders: Sold only in cane, ROYAL BAK .. - the same as were formerly engraved on · ine Bonaventure, who born of po.or par· tween us and it a marvellous expanse of ING POWDER C0.. 106 Wall St.. N. Y, Tim receut numbers of the Canadian the memorial tablet r eferred to above: eats about 1450, W&B shepherdmg ~er ripening and ripened grain. Verily it was Ed f l 1\10 i;thly and School M a"a· i "Jn tnis place ye Army of ye Rebells un- father's small flock of sh~ep on "W,ke the " GoldEln Age" embodied in these 1 der ye Command of ye Earl of Stamford, S t. Mary"l\foors, when a London mercer, . uca lOll'.l . ·" , far-reaching fields. Turning· n orth we zme are excellent. 'Ihe Octobor No. JUSt received a signal Overthrow by the Valor doing business iu that part of the c~untr:i:, d1·ove along an' avenue lined with youtl.i . t o hand contains much food for teachers 0 £Sir Beville Grenville atld ye Cornish w11s so struck by her beauty a nd inte~h ful Manitoba Maples, and on ebher side with' education11l appetit es and good. Army, on Tllesday ye 16th day of May, gence h e found her ~o possess on entermg of us the harvest waved in waiting for the intellectual di··est ive organs. Every pro- 1643." As we stood on th<J site of this into conversation wnh l~e.r, that. he en:i;a~- reaper or stood in thick long lines of 0 · . . noted battle we wondered if the men ed her, under the promise of ·lugh wages gathered shocks. Opening a tidy gate we gres~ive t ea.cher shoul~ sub2cnbe for this who live in that section to-day would win t o go to London with him as his servan.t. found ourselves near a comfortable farm J11mes H. Gilmour. of 'l'. Gilmour & Co. . leadmg monthl y. $1 a year i sample such worldwide glory for valor and strat- She cond ucted h erself so well while m h ouse, with flower -garden in fron t. The Wholesale Grocers, Brookville, says :. I have . cl D · t b es1gn canno e copies, 10 cts. The uddress iii Box 2675, egy did an opportuuity offer. As we r e- his service1 th?'t a few we~ka after, an the owner, soon follow"d by wife and child- used "Tamarac :rmxk" for a. eevera Cold and 1 \Vh1ch for Style an Cough, which it immediately relieved aud j ' surpassed in town, and to which I in · tnrned to the town we climbed the hed<re death of his wife, h e .married her. About r en, came out to greet us. This man was T oront o cured. . h . 1 t· f th 1 d . f ' "' · l d · d th · Hiram Buker. Cumber and Cheese Dealer. I v1~e t . e s.recia atten 10n o e a 1es o · and looking down over a plot of ground two years lat er ~ea so ie , w~ out_ issue accustomed to drive every Sunday to <>'razinnfor their leaving Thomasme a. ve ry rich widow. chu rch i n a covered phaeton . He has 320 North Augnsta, Ont., saye: '"l'ama.rac Elixir" I thlS district. . we saw scores of rabbits " 0 A CANADIAN who crosses t i1e At] · an t 1c h b d · t 11. i· a. wonderful medicine for Coughs and Colds, . , even nr.i meal. A whiaile sra1·tled them, Her wealt , eaut.y .an rn e igence.soon acres of land aud h e told us that he ex- Throat and Lung Complaints. 1t is without' from Europe to America on a passenger I and like the retreat· ng Roundheads in gave her the entree mto the best circles pected this year to market a.t lonst 4000 doubt tbe beat modicina I ever used, and never fails to give immediate relief, We consider it stea.mer c9 .n h ar dly feel proud of the class ' 1643, they tied t o their burrows in tho of society, where she won the heart of bushels of the finest wheat 011 the contin - a. household necessity. King St., Bowma.nville. 40 of forcigne1 ·s whoimmigrateto ourcountry. 1 surroun~ing hedii es in great dis.orde.r. an?ther rlch merchant, HeQr.}'. Gall, who ent. Standing there beside this st llrdy · of "' ()'ame a.~ plentiful h er man and looking 01Jt on all the pleasant Ther e nre many exceptions of course b u t Were tins · species . · . m oymrr "' a · few years "d after t l thehumon, f left d h . . . . . ~ Canada as it ts around Stamford Hill, a far ncher w1 ow ian e oun er. the maJ ority are very und~sxrabl e citizens what sport the boys would have during H e r fame, virtue, wealth and beauty had sceni:i 1 felt that I was seeing Manitoba at its very b est. It is not fair, perhaps, to indeed. the present season, a.nd what nice r abbit now become s.o· w1~0 spread, that per~~ns pr esent such a picture, and yet I believo pirn the writer would enjoy from the of gi·eat digm tv, rn the most d1gm tied that in this man's prosperity we see what presents h e would receive in that line ! city of the world,_ court.ed her ; amon gst is possible for tho'.lsands of men possessTo our t aste and we are an experienced others John Percival, Esq., who won her ing his patience and e nterprise. epicurean, a~ E11glish rabbit pie is as as his wife. Percival ~as in 1498 . m.ade But there are drawbacks and of these I Stratton, Poug h ilJ, Launcells, etc. d aintysome and sweet as a chicken pie. Lord Mayor, ollr herome out-~luttmg must speak in another letter. On Mon· But why make our Canadian readers' toned Whittinl(t.ol'_l, by bec.omm~ Lady day I start for the coast and in the long In connection with our notes on mouths water for what they cannot get 1 Mayoress. Ouohvmg her third husband, level ride of 800 miles bet ween here and Stratton and vicinity, the following curFrom Stratton we mllde a trip t o Po ug- Dame P ercival spent the ~e.st of ~er days the mountains I hope to find time a nd inioua coi a cid~nce, which we firid r ecorded hill, a parish lying to the west and bound- and her w~alth in rep~irmg h1gh~a;Ys, clination, too, for a few mo re of these i n a recent number of the Cornish aud ed on the north by Kilkharnpton parish, bllilding bridges, endowrng or providing somewhat fragmentary and h asty notes. D evon P ost, is worthy of mention: On and on the west by Blld e Bay, of which funds for poor maids. and ab Week St. H {;Gll PEDLEYr Friday afternoon, of last week, there died some grand views wer e obtain ed from the Mary, her native plac.e, she fo~mde(~ a within 20 minutes of each other the two highlamfs. l'oughill Church is the only free school and charity, ii;i connechou with A iwmber of remarkably fine pC'rtraits oldtst inhabitants of this town, in the building of no te in this parish. It i~ ded- which th.ere was a: semmar;r, noted for persons of Messrs. Wm Maynard, aged icated (all English churches are dedicated the excellence of its educat1.on, and re- of well-known .amateur athletes in motion, 91 and Wm. P etherick, aged 90. The to some saint) to S t. Oiave, and the living garded as a centre of ~earnmg for that will illustrat e Dr. Sargent's article in the latter at one time held a clerkship in the (stipend or salary) is a vicara ge in the part of the country until the transfer of November Scribner's, on " The Physical police depar t ment at Dublin Castle, Ire- gift or appointment of the Lord Ch:i-ncel- its pr.1vilege t~ ~aunceston after the s~p Cha racteristics of Athletes." General F rancis A . Walker's article on Twenty-five cents e:xtra will be charged when accounts run limd and had been a pensioner of that lor. Like other not ed ch urches this one press10n of rehg10us hons.es. . A .Port10n "What S hall We Tell the Working ' f or many years, d urmg wh" ' conta1 ·na some relics of antiquitv. T he of an embattled wall, still m existence, service icIl t ime · cl over one month. h o resided in Stratton. He leaves two communion table and poor box are said to and called the "College," is suppose to Classes," in the November Scribner's,, sons, one of whom is the Rev. George be of the time of Edward VI. The ancient be the remains of Dame Thomasme P er - will contain some very vigorous and plain-spoken words on the labor q uestion. Petberick, rector of St. Bartholomews, pe ws have carved oak pannel ends. In cival's clrnrity. Manchest 0r . T he funeral took place at t ~ e SOllth aisle is a copy of Charles I.'s The church dedicated t o St. Mary is a DANGElt.- '.l'here 111·e s:>me who pay the parfoh churchyard on Tuesday. Mr. " Letter of Thanks" to his loyal Corni11h very fine stru~ture dating from the 14th MllJ'nard was :J. imtivo of Stratt on, and subjects. We noticed I.hat it is very com- century. It was restored in 1880 by R ev. but l ittle or no attoot ion to a cough or he-re he spent moat of his life. He was a mon in England tf) preserve trophies and G. H. Hopkins, the rector, who carefully cold and say let nature take its course. beotmak<?r by 1,rado, and for along period mementoes of wars in the churches .and preserved the remains of the famous altar This is juet t he t ime nature should h ave The lungs are threa tened. kept the N ew lun, uatil about 12 months we have seen hundreds of blo?d·stamed of John the Baptist. The tower, 80 ft. assistance. :): ago, when i t was discontinued. He h;i.d, and much -worn banners and eru11gns hang- high, i.e over GOO ft. above sea level and ABlliilt them with Tamarac E lixir. . CHEAT SMASH I Do you want any -W-all PICTURES Paper. FRAMES? If you do, Call at ,v: PICTURES FRAMED P. TREBILCOCK. VARIETY We are selling some new kinds, just received, ~:!itai~r~~~p:n~iep~~~~t~:~hea~~o~~l~ VHBY CHEAP KENNER & Co. · POWDER Absolutely Pure. -4 1ttG DR. HODDER'S COUCH AND LUNC CURE NewGoods Fancy Goods, MRS I · A NDERSQN '.' · EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE. MCDOUGALL & METCALF, EO-W-:M..AN""-VILLE:J are ottering Coal as follows : ' Stove and Chestnut, ........ .......... $6.25 Grate and Egg, .............................. 6.00 LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS, POST & CORD WOOD Always on hand a lowest prices. McDOUGALL & METCALF

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