Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 8 Jul 1882, p. 2

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

won aw. i M ! MARTIN a: HOPKINS, i .tRillSTBRS. ‘Somcnors. kc. Hoâ€"' no; to Loan at 8 per cent. Ofice.‘ Kent “reel, Lindsay, Out. Its. “.0933. G. B. Huntst P, D. MOORE-I, ).\BBISTBR, ATTORNEY, & SOLICITR ) nod Notary Public. Money to Loan.‘ Office, Kent street, Lindsay. l HUDSPETH dz JACKSON, l I I)ARRISTERS. SOLIL‘ITORS, he. 01’- ) fice, William Itreet, Lindsay. A. llcosrnn. A. Jucxsox. i U'LEAllY it: O'LI‘IARY. i )Al’lRISTERS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.: } Solicitor-:1 in Chancery, he. 03311,! Dulleny Block. Kent street. Lindmy. .tnrucz: O'Lzur. .‘Ich’I‘YRE .e srmvnnr. i ).\ltlllSTI-IRES, ATTtJlth'E‘t'S-AT-LAW. ) SUIIL'lIOYi in Chancery. kc, Lindsay; Office over Ontario hunk. Kent. street. 310-} my to Lonn nt 25 per cent. on real estate i securitirg. l I). J. 31ch”an Tuos. Srzwnnr. I, l llcon O’sznv. ALEX. A. MCDONALD, , TTOllb'I-Z‘t'-AT-L.’t\'v', Solicitorin Chun- 1 very. Convq'unccr, kc.,&c. Strict at-i ten'iun given to applications for Pntent5; nibandt from Crown Land's Depnrtmcnt. l Blunt-y to Loan on Mortgage Security oni terms to suit borrowers. Utlice, Colhornc ,1 street,1~'vuclun Falls. 1 i { MEDICAL.” 7 JOHN A. BARRON, i )AtarnS'rnn-A'r-I..iw. Lindsay. once 1 lot: Kent Street. next door \v~_~-:t of Keith's ;' Agricultural and lznplernu'tt Store. ‘ A. W. .J. lltltlllASSI. .11. 1)., -ono.\'i:n, l'hyéiciun, Surgeon, (kc. .kc. , / Residence. liriek (Jottnge, Wellingtonl street, Lindmy,” : i l l l l -. .. e -_.__. _,..-_...._.._._._-_., x t WM. Kl'ill PT. .11. 17., C. 11., llt.\ltl.’.\1‘fi of .‘lcflill l'nivcrsity, Mon 1 trcnl. uud Provincial Licentiate. 1’hysi-, clan, .‘inrgmn und ()hztetricinn. .‘lcdicnl . llcferec to the Stunrlnrtl. I’hu-nix. Connecti- e'xt .\lutu:il. nud I‘lquiluhlc lnsurnnce Coth panic-3. (mm and residence. in the house i litely occupied by Rev. Futhcr Stitffot'd.:1t I the curnerol‘ Lindsay and ltus streets, 1 Liuvlsny. I Du. A. WILSON, 1‘ 15.1'Nll'l’lltf‘l'l‘1' of Trinity ('nllege. 1 . .\I.ll.l..='uivrr5ity of Toronto. .‘It‘lllll. Col. l’liyri. null Surg., (mt. Physician, Surgeon null Acuout'lter. Ollicc,Colbornc retreet, bent-Ion Falls. Du. .1. ll. LOWE, )llYSlCIAN k SURGEON. (lnroner fur 1 tln- l'rovisiunnl County of llnlilnirtou. Oflicc next door to the .\lc.â€"\rthur; llnusc. t-tâ€"‘itlcuee on Francis Street linst, i l . l-‘encluu Fullw‘. SURVEYORS. - ,. ._ . . . .. | JAMES DICKSUN, i ) 1.. Surveyor, Commissioner in thc'Q. 11., , , (huweyanct-r, .kc. IltESltIOllCl},fllltI ud- tlrcss, l"t:tlt‘lott Falls. 1 MISCELLANEOUS. ‘Ft‘icfldox of mm; ix chit-1951 N D TIIE COUNTY OI" VICTORIA. The next sitting; of this Court will be held on l-‘ridny, July ch, 15482. GEO. CUNNINGHAM. Clerk. JAMES .1. POWER, Ifll'ZNSlll) Alu-tiouevr, Accountant and J (lrnerul Commisuion Agent. Collect- ing uncuunts IL speeinlty. Ullivt‘, Fencinn Falls, Out. "'6. 155%: GENT. 6. DION 1‘} ‘i' 'L‘() LICNI) l at '1, oil nud 7 per ccttt.. accordng to sccn- rity, on llcnl Estate mortgages. Apply to .lttllN A. BARRON, Solicitor, Lindsay l l l l I J. NEELAwns, l) LIN ’l‘IS'P. LlNDSxXX’. One of the firm will be ill the .‘lt'AuTut'u “HUSH, Fi:.\'v.t.o.\’ FALLS, on the third Monthly ol‘cnrh month. Teeth extracted by laughing gas; without puiu or injury. or no Clut‘gc will he made. 343‘ Ullit'u e.«tnhlished in Lindsay hourly fifteen )‘t-ztl‘s. :41 ,( HD() l“() l{ 1"1‘J1'.L‘. lumix Cnncvrlfurt- lh~pot.L‘oaticook,1‘.Q.. Unnudit. CANCER (HIRED! without the use of the knife. The Only l’crnlnnt-ut (“me la the World. For purlivttlurs \‘Ilf‘Itlil‘ two It t‘cttl dumps to S. l‘. Sunth. Collier-wk. 1'. Q..i‘uu:uln. l l l Highest lleferrnccd.â€"â€" 3 I: u‘t‘l'lllIS r1\\'li*“l' .\.‘\'l1 t'l'liiT.\l.\'.“{fia l.\u_\’ pun: tutu pubic-ll the xkltluYt‘ fur ; ' ' . . l_ . .t)‘.'-|l‘,\\ill1Il.l5|1nlt‘.til~l tutpvrtzgumtl) } JUST RECEIVED, .t l.tr;l; "Ui‘l‘i‘ut-rn'. of Fans and. Croquets prailqllitlili5$21!):l51)'i0$.\\lllt'll I will «fill At the Lowest Prices. Don‘t furgvt our )1 ['51 CA I i I NST llIiM ENTS mid 5310“. “rule. '4in our i'it‘tnrx- Fume. BOOK 8: STATIONERY ’ tram-hrs, .tt the .llusicul Emporiump opposite the Ringliélt Church, Kent Strum; Ltud '. j a! t‘». A. .\l WHEN-ILLS INSbnANCEJ GEORGE CUNNINGHAM, General Insurance and Loan Agent. FENELDN FALLS. 0NT., rev-mien!) the following hr-t class compa- nies, with Hurt: husinns can be transacted upon the most advantageous terms. 1-: Canad- Permanent Loan 4; Savings Co. The lmperlxl {nuance Company, of Lon- don. Buglund, Th: Cztiunr‘ insunnn- Ccmp‘ny, o.’ Cana- da. Farr .m .i:'»'tr.i: r..'. , Tim Lam-Ashlee lnsunnc.‘ Co. of England. , he Confeder no: Life Asserixtzanmfum ah. i i 1 30 day, 8 day and 3'?) hour. Alarm strikekc, 1'1 SILVER AND 00L!) CASES . out unwrupnluns Administration are : keenly felt by all and come home to every i Premier of the Dominion appears. how- J maker-ox; WATCHMAKER. 'Jlllllllll 8: llllilllllll, dealer in Clocks, All Kinds, AMERICAN WATCHES, the Best and Cheapest, in the newest styles and at lowest prices. a Penons sending watches from a. dis- ; lance for repairs. can have the amount all work and price reported on for their consitl- ' Iprntiorv. and as I do the work myself, can depend on having it done satisfactorily. l Britton's Block. foot ofKentSt.. Lindsay. l HTARIO BANK. Capital - - - - - - $3,000,000. President . . . . . . . . . . . . Sir. W. P. llowlnnd. Vice-President . . . . . . . .C. S. Gzowski, Esq. General Manager . . . . . . . . .. D. Fisher, Esq. LINDSAY BRA NCII. Drafts bought nnd sold on all points in Canada. United States and Great Britaiu.l and general banking business trunsncted. =Suvings Depnrtxnentl [IE-OPENED. Interest nllowcd on deposits of five dol- lar: and upwards. S. A. MCML’RTRY, Jill/timer. Lindzav, Feb. 161b,1881. 50-t.f. Dill-SUN, WESTlflll t. u, ls‘XNliEIZS. FENELON FALLS - - ONTARIO. General Banking Business Done. Collec- tions Made at Usual Bank Rates. Interest Allowed on Deposits. II. T. Dsnxsos, Late of ltoynl Cnnndinn Bank nnd Cunsoliduted Bunk. F. Wcsrcorr, Lute of Canadian Bank of Commerce. E. J. L. Cnmsn, Late of Consolidated Bunk. Elicfcncluu fttllfi (limits Saturday, July 8th, 1332. Good ews from Manitoba. The elections for the House of Com- mons took place in Manitoba on Tues- day the 4th inst., and although in Win- nipeg, the only constituency in which the exact result is known, the Conserv- 1 ntive candidate, Mr. Scott, was elected by a majority of 105, enough has been heard from Selkirk, Lisgnr and Marâ€" quettc to render it certain that. in all the Liberals have triumphed, and it is a significant fact that in the districts occupied by genuine settlers the vote has gone strongly “ngin the Govern- ment." thux unequivocally condemning Sir John A. )lacdonnld's pernicious land policy. In Winnipeg there is some talk of protesting the election, for not only were the ballot papers printed with the Conservative candidate’s name first. contrary to the alphabetical order pre- scribed by law; but in one of the poll- ing booths was :1 placard Calling upon the electors to “’ Vote for: Scott,” and facsimiles of the ballots, with a cross opposite Mr. Scott’s name, were also ostentatiously displayed; and at. anoth- cr polling place the Returning-Officer arbitrarily destroyed twelve ballots cast for Mr. Conkliu, the Liberal candidate. But, giving Mr. Scott his reduced ma- jority, Sir John, who predicted that he would make “ a clean sweep of Munitov ha,” must feel uotn little startled by the result of the elections, which shows pretty plainly the low degree of esteem in which he and his colleagues are held by the people of the Prairie Province. Ontario menâ€"nod some of them strong Conscrvativesâ€"who have lately return- cd from the North-West, say there is going to be a " big row " out. there be- forc long in consequence of the railway monopoly, and the fact that the Gov- ernmcnt which created that monopoly hasjust been condemned may be looked upon as a pretty large sized straw which shows which Way the wind blows. 1n Ontario and other provinces, where the money taken from the pockets of the people to swell the enormous surplus is so insidiously cxtructcd that the losers do not perceive when it goes. Sir John A. )lnedounld has manang to bribe and blnrucy them into giving him it fresh louse of ofliec; but in Manitoba, where the injuries inflicted by the pres- tn‘tu's door, the .sufl'ercrs scornfully rtjvct the soothing applications so suc- ve-st'ully employed elsewhere, and are being gradually wrought up to the state of exasperation neveisary to commence ‘ the predicted “big row," which may be confidently exptctcd at no distant date. l l l l | Ontario Threatened. The rcmnrk of Sir John .-\. Macdon-g l l l l - aid in his speech at Cornwall that. “ The suprcnmcy of the ('entml Government -c.tn :ilouc prottct Canada against ab- Sorpticu by a foreign I’uwor or internal ' strife." may be taken by the Province of Ontario as a threat that the nugrcs-i sivc policy towards her exhibited in the disallowauce of the Streams Bill and the repudiation of the Boundary Award is to be pursued to the bitter end. The ever, to have forgotten one fact. and that is that during the late election can- , vnss thmc two questions were so per-i sistcutly belittled and pmh-poohed byj the Tory papers and speakers that very many of the electors were deceived as, to their importance and voted on other , considerations. They were told that; the. Streams Bill and the Boundary. Award were “side inut-s" which the; Oppoe'ition were endeavouring to make, apolitical capital of; that the Ottawnl Government had not the slightest wish v or intention to deal unjustly or tyrnnui-’ ally with Ontario; :ud that [he tell: question was â€"“ Had or had not the? 1 Friday, the 30th of June. Unfortunately; gmt many persons' be- lieved these statements, and believing ! also that by some inimitable process the present prosperity was the result. of high taxation, they voted in favour of a‘ cor. rnpt Administration which. if thev had 1 - ' i only judged it rightly, they would have strained every nerve to defeat. The victory of Sir John A. Macdonnld on .= the 20th of June is not, therefore. to be taken as no endorsation of his de- Ontario, and when the people of the gsigns upon the rights and privileges of l . l’rovincc become fully awareâ€"as they w ill before longâ€"of all that those de- 03 as exists in Manitoba will prevail here, and the uncrowned’ autocrat at Ottawa will realize the huge mistake he made when, instead of attempting to gain the support of the whole Do- minion by enlightened, judicious and impartial legislation, he adopted the tricky, tortuous, and dishonest policy which has made his namen by-word and n reproach, and which will surely, in the end, lend to his ignominious overthrow. l 4 signs really mean, the same sort of feel~ l l The Execution of Guitean. Charles Jules Guiteau, the murderer of President Garfield, was executed in the court of the Washington jail on The ghast- ly scene was rehearsed during the fore- noon, and the strength of the rope and gallows was tested by putting the noose round a bag of sand weighing 160 lbs and springing the trap. Two or three minutes before half-past 12 Guiteau left the condemned cell and walked without help until he reached the last. step of the flight leading up, to the scaffold, when he faltered and had to be assisted by two officers. He then read in aloud tone and with distinct and deliberate utterance his “ dying prayer on the gallows,” in which he in- sisted that he was inspired to remove Garfield, and predicted that the nation would “go down in blood ” and his ” murderers, from the Executive to the haugman, would go to hell." Then followed some verses he had composed that: morning, entitled “Simplicity, Or Religious Baby Talk,” during the read- ing of which be twice broke down and sobbcd pitifully. As the black cap was being drawn over his head he shouted “ Glory ! Glory ! Glory ! ” and the spring was touched and the drop fell at 12:40. As was afterwards ascertained by the doctors, Guitcau’s neck was broken and his death was instantaneous, the only motion observable being ‘ a. slight muscular contraction of the arms and logs. The crowd outside hurrnhed and cheered, and forced an entrance in to the gnol, and had not the hungmau's. rope been promptly hidden it would no doubt. have been seized upon and cut into inch pieces to serve us relics. Af- ter a past morlcm examination by sev- eral eminent physicians, who found all the vital organs in a healthy condition and nothing about the brain to indicate insanity, the body of the assassin was interred within the precincts of the jail, the only place, probably, where it; would be safe from the attempts of resurer tionists. It is to the credit of the Amer- ican people that Guitcau has at last paid the penalty of his diabolical crime; but the extraordinary and farcical pro- ceedings nt his trial excited the ridicule and condemnation of the civilized world, and it is to be hoped will never be re- pcatcd. *â€" The Rn.an Strucion. The new station being built in this village by the Midland Railway Cont- pnny is rapidly approaching completion. and the carpenters will make way for the painters in about a fortnight from this date. The building is a very neat. and substantial structure, but there are two mistakes about it which it, is sur- prising were not foreseen. Firstly it. is erected so close to Lindsay street that the train will, when brought. to a stand- still, extend right across that. street; and, secondly, the station itself. which only measures 19x41 feet on the out side, is far too small for a place of so much importance as Fcuclon Falls. This limited space is to be divided into four compartments, viz, a ticket office, two waiting rooms and a freight room, each about. 10x18 feet, and the latter, especially, will be insufiicient. to give the nccommodation required. The building is entirely of wood, the inside beinglined with narrow boards, tongued, grooved and dressed, and the outside covered with planed lumber buttoned with ogcc strips. There are ten win- dows, with rounded tops. three doors: opening from the platform (which is. 100 feet long by 12.1)- lect. wide.) and the ccilingis 1'2 feet. high. In front the root projects about 7 feet over the platform, and is supported by orna- mental brackets. Externally the sta-, timi will be couth with the usual brick- l . . . . . . I . colored fire-proof fall”, and tustdc “‘Ill be painted a light, drab. The walls of, the various apartments will have neat base-boards along the bottoms and tasty ' l 2 mouldings at the tops; and the build-l ing, in short, would be all that. could be. dc.~ircd if it were a few feet. longer. The head carpenter is Mr. J. L. llughcs, of I’ctcrlmrough, from which town all the materials were brought. Divistos Cot’R'l‘.â€"l"riday, the 14th l inst., will be Division Court Day in ‘ Feuelon Falls, and we are glad to learn from the clerk -â€"tltough it isn't a good 1 thing for him-that. there are very few cases to be disposed of. ' lioner rot: 'rnt: ST.\Tm.â€".\Ir. W. chsc, of Lindsay, shipped a carload ; of seventeen horses to Boston the other , day. The prices ranged from 8330 to,‘ $325~thc latter for a line bay mare, 3 6 years old, raked by .‘lr. John Cullis, l of Fem-loo. l A Blti Findâ€"Mr. John Nugcnt. of? this \‘lll.t;t?. caught a maskiuongc that : weighed 111' lbs. on Tuesday last in Cameron Lake. In these degenerate , days such a fish is considered 1 pretty big one. but it would not hnvc beer thought much of a few years ago, when 3 2t) poundcrs were quite common. ,- Scnoot. M2:nt.vo.â€"- There was a l meeting of the School Board on Wed-l nesdxy evcning, but very little business ; P. been beneficial to the country? " ans transacted. Some amounts were read but. were. not passed, as the trans- nrer is temporarily out of 'funds. Nears. Modal 5: Ellis were appointed a committee to attend to some small repairs which are to be done during the , coming vacation, and the meeting was {then adjourned until Wednesday, the l 19th inst. l Orr 1-0 mg Nonru-Exs'rfiâ€" On Thursday last Mr. James Dickson. P. L. 5.,0f thig village. 1ch with a gang of ten or twelve men for the township of Cnnisbay, which the Ontario Govern- ment, has employed him to survey. Canisbay is on the head waters of the )Iadawaska, immediately east of the township of Peck, and. as it contains about 50,000 acres. Mr. Dickson will probably be kept busy for the next three months. He expects to reach his destination, which is fully a hundred miles from Fenelon Falls, by Wednes- day of next week. .‘ ' Dnowsno.eâ€"Two lads about. 16 years of age, naméd respectively Booth and McDonald, both of Lindény, were drowned in Sturgeon Lake on Saturday last. All the information we have been able to obtain regarding the' accident is that they left Sturgeon i’oint in a sail boat during rough weather with the intention of crossing thedake, and. that nothing was afterwards seen of them until some time on Monday, when a river-driver found Booth lying dead upon the shore, and that up to this (Friday) morning the scnrchJ‘or the body of McDonald has been unavailing. Romanianâ€"Last; Saturday a team of spirited horses, owned by Mr. Thos. Moynes, of Fenclou, took fright at the noise made by a pig in trouble (whether or not it was “a pig in a gate” we don’t know) and ran away. The little affair happened on Mr. Moynes’s form, and as the horses went over or through two or three fences on their way to the barnyard, the waggon to which they were harnessed was so badly damaged that it had to be brought to Mr. Sand- ford's shop in this village for repairs; but fortunately the parts broken were all small and it did not. cost much to replace them. SMITH'S Minxâ€"Mr. R. C. Smith's mill south of the river commenced work- .ing night and day on Monday lost. This was rendered necessary by the reâ€" moval of it part. of the saws and mo- chiucry, which were worn out, and will be continued until new ones have been put in, when the nig work will be discontinued. The 0 mill has been idle since the other e menced opera- tions some weeks ago, but it is to be overhauled and set to work again as soon as possible. A slfict iron roof has been placed on the refuse kiln, the brick archway over which collapsed about a month ago, and, so far, the metal has bravely resisted the fervent heat of the fiery furnace below. DOMINION DAY.â€"Lnst Saturday was Dominion Day, but there was small cv- idcucc of its being a holiday in this vil- lage, nearly all the shops being open as usual ; which was really too bad, as a day could have been spared from busi- nessjust as well ti's'not, if warning- had been given beforehand to country cus- tomers. Unfortunately for us, the first week in July always finds us so busy printing voters" lists that we are not only dcbarrcd from taking a holiday on Dominion Day but have to work over hours into the bargain ; but in future we shall omit. the publication of the Gazette during that week, and shall no doubt be “just; as rich in a hundred years " as if we slnvwl away early and late as we have done hitherto. Tun M L'MPS.â€"â€"Just at present there is a quietness in our village streets be- tween school hom‘s, and an absence of yells in our back yards, and a silence in our homes which are unnatural and 5;)- pressivc, and the cause of which is mumps. The precise number ofjuven- iles afflicted with this complaint (which appears to have it decided preference for boys) we do not know; but every little while we meet one oppressed with melancholy and shoutlcssncss and with his jaws tied up in n handkerchief or some other article of dry goods. If mumps required medical treatment our doctors would be reaping an abundant. harvest, but it is 11 simple affection which will go away ofitsclf if it. does not catch cold, and so costs nothing for physio. A FANCY ll.\ttNEFS.â€"Last week Mr. Joseph Nevison, of this village, turned out a single set of light harness of which he and Messrs. McDougnll S: Brandon, who ordered it, and probably the horse that. has the honour of Wearing it. are all justly proud. It is made of the best oak-tanned leather, funcifully stitched, and the mountings nrc plated with gold and inlaid with a rubber composition that will never l‘llnt and that gives them :1 very rich appearance. The harness, which is certainly by far the best ever made in Fcuelon Falls, cost. $50, and Mr. Nevison says that even at this ap- parently high price he only made a very moderate profit, which may easily be believed, as the materials are all of the ' most expensive kinds and the workman- ship elaborate and nrti:tic. TuxNKs.â€"\\'e have to thank the au- thorities of the Midland Railway for an invitation to the trip to Midland on Thursday of last. week; but as we were very busy and only received the card on Wednesday we had to forego the pleasure of once more seeing the “ city," which must have improved wonderfully since we were there three years ago. The For! snys that the excuraiouists numbered about 250, and that, as guests of the Railway Company. they had a royal time. rapidly, but the great. majority of the buildings arc of a very rough descrip- tion and rents nnd real estate are tre- mendously high. Its natural rival, Pen- milcn distant as the crow files. is fight- ing hard for the supremacy, and has the advantage of possessin: a local pa- per, which aid to prosperity Midland , is uuaccouutably slow in acquiring. l l i l l l i l Abnormally cold weather is being. I ‘ preventative of sickncu use Dr. Canon} . generally experienced throughout Scot- land. Snow lies to the depth at seven inehclI on the Grampinn mountains, the highvlyin; landn in the Upper Dot-side, and other districts in the north of Scot- ,' “1. by .n Druggisu. John Sugcut, Agent laud. . Stomach und Constipation Bitters, .__e..â€".a__.....___. Frightnt Railway Accident. av: usual: ens PthflATXD arm A munâ€"ox: nunnm masons -~ mm‘nn; ' Loxo Bunsen, N. J.. June 29th.â€" While the express train leaving Long Branch at eight o'clock this morning was croming the bridge over the branch of the Shrewsbnry river, near Little Silver station, the rails spread, and four passenger coaches, the smoking car, and parlourcar left the rails, and run over the ties of the bridge. tearing them to pieces. The cars kept on the bridge until‘ the train was half way across, when the four passenger coaches and the smoking car went over into the riv- er with a terrible crash, and landed on their sides in four feet of water. The cars were full of passengers and the scene that followed beggars description. An unknown man from Ocean Beach was taken out dead. and a hundred were hurt, more or less. Those badly wounded were taken to farm houses, where they were promptly attended to by physicians. The engineer used the air brakes promptly but could not stop the train. If the cars had been with- out air brakes all the passengers would most probably have been killed. The accident is attributed to.the fact that the truck was changed for the Mon. mouth races, and the frog at the switch was not properly spiked. A passenger states that the train was going forty miles an hour. The passengers not stupcfied pulled thcmSelves through the car windows, and reached the bridge by planks extended by a large number of laborers. General Grant was precip- itated into the water breast high, and was drawn up through the window still smoking. A more serious accident was averted by n brakesmau running across the trestles to warn another trnin fifteen minutes behind. An inquest was held. and the coroner’s jury found the N. Y. 8: L. B. Railway guilty of culpable negligence. .-. Text of the Assassin’s Will. The following is Guiteau’s will :â€" “ WAsmxorox, D. 0., June 29, 1882. ;“ To Rev. Wm. Hicks : “ I, Charles J. Guitcau, of the City of Washington, in the District of Col- umbia, now under sentence of death, which is to be carried into efi'cct'be- tween the hours of 12 and 2 o’clock on the 30th day of June, A. D. 1882, in the United States guol in said district, do hereby give and grant to you my body after such execution, provided, however, it shall not be used for any mercenary purposes; and I hereby, for good and sufficient consideration, give, transfer and deliver to said [lick my Book entitled “ The Truth and Remov- al,” and the copyright thereof to be used by him in writing a truthful hisâ€" tory of my life and execution, and I direct such history to be entitled “ The Life and Work of Charles Guiteau," nud I hereby solemnly proclaim nud announce to all the world that no per- son or persons shall ever in any manner use my body for any purpose whatso- ever, and if at any time hereafter any person or persons shall desire to honour my remains they can do it: by the crec- tion of a monument, whereupon shall be inscribed these wordn:â€"â€"-“ Ilere lies the body of Charles.Guite:1u,'patriot and Christian. His soul is in glory." (“ Signed) CHARLES Guru-mu. . Cuttth II ann “ ttn ‘ ‘ . ' ‘ ’ W cs3 JAMES Vi oomvnnn." -. The Seizure of Arms in London. The London World says :-â€"Although the task of forming a detective police for Ireland is by no menus complete, and will, no doubt, take some time to accomplish, the appointment of Colonel Brnckcnbury as chief of the department has already borne good fruit. The dis- covery of some four hundred muskets, fifty or sixty revolvers, and several thousand rounds of bull cartridge, which took the town by surprise on Saturday lust, is due to the measures which the above-mentioned officer, and the few subordinates he has gathered round him {13 yet, have taken. The first. “clue” to the affair was given from New York by Feuians, who, it seems, nre not. above “poaching” on their fellow traitors for “ n considcrtn tion.” The arms and ammunition were landed at. Bristol from the States, and were packed in crates so as to avoid suspicion. For the same reason they were sent by driblets to London. whence they were to be exported in like untu- nor to Ireland. So soon as the chief of the Irish detective department. had good information on which he could act, he left Dublin at. an hour's notice. hurried over to Lond'm, and arrived here on Tuesday evening. He at. once put himself in communication with Scotland Yard, and hence the “clue,” for which the London police will, no doubt, take credit to themselves. But, although the district where the arms] were cooeculcd was known, the exact: street and house were only discovcrcdl after an enquiry and careful search, which lasted the best part of two days. It is but fair to say that in this part of. the affair the Scotland Yard dctcetivc‘tl did really good work, although the “ in- formation " received did not originate with them. The discovery of the hiding ' place was made late on Thursday; the ! stable was watched all Friday, and on i Saturday morning very early the seizAl ure was made. The police seem to have i I _ . ‘ committed one blunderâ€"~which was that ; Midland l3 growmg ’ they did not wait and watch a few days} longer, in which case it is probable thrill some of the mi-crcnnts connected with l _ the affair Would have been found outl ' _ . and seized. etaugutshenc, which 15 less than three ‘ A: it is, however, there is 3 no small satisfaction in the fact that; '_ the Irish Detective Department has al- i ,ready done wellâ€"if not in the actual; detection, certainly in the prevention of, . i crime. ‘ v- Changeable weather in trying to the xylâ€" : tern, rendering it liable to disenu. A: A i They purify the Hood. cure III Ililious Stomach 5 and Liver Diiordcu, and give tom: ind; strength to the syntcm. Price .’.-‘J cenu. For . f2: Yenelon Falls. t. r. SANDI‘ORD, Denier in :11 kinds of FARM IMPLEMENTS. â€"â€"â€".--â€"'â€"â€"_._I . PLOUG HS 2' PLOUGH‘S ! A large stock of John Whytc J: Co's No. 3 DIAMONDBTEEL PLOUGBS, gunnnteod to clean, or no sale. Also. two kinds of GANG PLOUGHS. Points cud Sole! of differ- ‘ ent makes always on hand. Agent for The New Brantford Reaper 8t Mower, the best. in the market, and gumuteed to do first class work. or no sale. Also, :1 lll'gu' stoek ot‘ Rrpatnfor tile Kerby Reaper. RAKES, RAKESlâ€"Agent for the Maxwell nnd the “'isner Rakes, which have no equals. Greg Seed Sewer will be given on trial. Muss luvnovm Grain, Plaster. Salt. and SPRING-TOOTH HARROWS and other kinds of llnrrows. Agent for Combined Seeders. WHITEFIELD’S STUMP MACHINE, the best in the market. A large stock of WAGGONS, CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES you hand, all made of well seasoned first clnss material. Horse-Shoeing bbbing a. Specialty. 55}- A good secondmaud Reaper for sale. Price, $20. Hus only cut 25 acres. 1?. The Falls of Niagara. A binssnchusetts professor has dis- covered that the Falls of Niagara have been receding less than half an inch every year. [Io hns culculnted that about 1,267,700 yean have been re quired for them to eat their way up the river to their present location. In that time ten miles of solid rock have been worn away, and the visitors of to-duy behold the effect which water has had upon the tough limestone in the beet- liug cliffs which fringe the narrow river towards the north. The same exact professor believes that in about 3,1538 years more the twenty-five miles of solid rock between the village of Niagara and Luke Erie will have been wnstcd away, and the untich of Buffalo, instead of organizing excursion parties and com- ing down to behold this wonderful cut- aruct, will have it. at their very doors. c-‘o Terrible Storms. COALVILLE, Butler 00., PIL, July 1. â€"â€"-A cyclone struck the village lust even- ing. The principal portion of the town wns wrecked, and the residence of W. Barnes completely swept away. Mrs. Barnes was blown 300 feet. and her son died of his injuries ; another child died this evening frotn injuries received. John Kelly's residence was demolished, and all the inmates injured. Wm. [Iculey has since died, and two others are expected to die. Altogether about fifteen houses were wrecked, and twen- ty-five to thirty killed and injured. OREGON, 11L. July lst..â€"A scvcrc storm broke over here yesterday. The water rose on the flats dividing u doch families from their homes. Fifteen buildings were struck by lightning. Mr. Spoouer was killed. and muny barns and outbuildings carried away by wind and floods. A score of bridges floated off, and thousands of acres of grain were ruined. Horses and cattle were killed by lightnim.r in nearly evot'y pasture. Miles of the Chicagoand [own Railroad Were rendered impassable. -. - .â€"â€"â€"â€" Not So Bad. The Port Hope News says that a young town follow, on jumping from n huyloft the other day, landed on 11 board in which a nail was sticking. 11c im- medintcly doubled up, and van carried into the house by some friends who feared that he was ruined lor lifu. A doctor was sent for, the messenger con- veying the shocking intelligence than the lad had jumped on n wrought. Hall, which had run through his foot, clinch- ing itself on the other side. He hur- riud to the scene of distress, and found the sufferer nursing the foot and hold- ing the board close to his boot, the nail in the board having pierced the sole of his boot in the shock. The doctor wanted the lad to let go the board until he should pull the nail out, but. the cuf- fercr S‘lld he would not. until he would be given it dose of chloroform. lly dint of persuasion the doctor got him to let go the board, and to cverybody’n surprise it dropped, and the null wtth it. The boot W519 then removed, and it. was found the nail had not pierced the foot more than a quarter of an inch, instead of being clinched on the other side. Truly the force of imagination is strong. 9.. The Cotton Crop. With 9. failure of the Egyptian cotton crop and reduced production in the States the prospects are of n short. cot- ton crop. Leaving the Son Inland crop, at all times but a very mnoll one, out of consideration, our Gulf long staple-a is the best substitute for the Egyptian cotton. Some of the Luncnshirc facto- ries work only the long staple cotton, and will have toshut up in case the Egyptian ernp prnvm n total loss. or our hupply is not large or line. enough. The supply from the East Indies shown an increase of 370,000 bales ovcr Inst year, but East Indian cotton cannot .be! worked at all by the European machtn-l cry without an admixture of at least 00 per cent. of American cotton: Yarn made from the short staple India cotton is unsalnblc. of cotton is steadily incrensiug. The European consumption alone was 115,- . l Mute The world a connumptront SANDFORI), Feneloh Falls.‘ Preparing for War. LONDON, July 1.-â€"â€"This week finds: England feverishly preparing for war, the first gun of which mny be the sig- nal for the greatest struggle in which she has engaged since the Crimea. The note of preparation, at. first focblv sounded, now grows louder ; we hear 0T orders sent to arsenals for siege trains to be ready in forty-eight hours, with hospital, telegraphs, torpedo cables and all the paraphernalia of warfare. The authorities of the War Office are busy maturing plans for the invasion of Egypt, despite Arnbi'u assertion in his harangue to the troops at Alexandria that invasion has often been threatened by Europe. but has always come to no- thing, and that. ho is not afraid of Eng- land alone. It. is it strange fuct, how- ever, that even in military circles doubts arc cutcrtniucd whether tho Govern- ment rcnlly menu to fight. As usual when England engages in military op~ ovations the question of calling out the reserves immediately arises. Owing to the impossibility of plnoiug even 20,- 000 rcgulur troops in the field, it. seems as if the I'lgyptinn crisis requires some- thing more thnn more sword-rattling, ‘ and the volunteer force will be used for garrison work. Thc coming \vuck seems pregnant with exuiting events, the dc- velupmunt of which is nwuitcd with gr Int interest and curiouity. ._ ._..g.. . - ...__..._.-_. A Detroit bride. aged 58. died 11 few hours after the marriage. llhlnu oiliccrs, npccinlly selected to protect the Czar, have been arrested while distributing Nihilistic proclaum» tioun. A LiverpOol shopkeeper advertises that. he is able to sell cheaper than his nmrricd competitors. who have to sup- port a wife and children. A watch which on engine driver dropped fifteen years ago was picked up at, North Merchiston a few days ago little the worse of its long ambush on the track. Mr. Lnrrow, ol' Lamar. 1110., has a beard thnt reaches below his knees, and his moustache is twelve inches long. The latter he keeps tied up and packed away under his collar. Sick Ilcnditche, Neurulgin, Dyspepsia and Constipntinn relieved and cured bv the use ofI)r. Carson's Stomuch and Constipation llitters Try them. They are cute uud cf- fccluul. Sold by ull Druggistn. John Nu- gcnt, Agent for It‘enelon Falls. A steamer with five hundred passen- gers aboard was sunk in n collinion on the river at Mingo Junction, Ohio, on‘ Tuesday. It in thought that. from one to two hundred lives were lost. There in u Chinumnu in Sun Francin- co with red hair. Ilia countrymen treat him with superstitious respect. At tho tnblo he has the bent. of everything, and at all ceremonies he takes precedence. The numerous suits for brench of promise recently instituted against old men by young women in having its ofâ€" fcct. “Miss,” said an old man in a crowded Philadelphia street our the oth- or day, “ Misc, I'll get. up and give you. |my sent, ifyou'll swear before all these witnesses that. you don' tconsidcr it my offer ol marriage.” Ar Germuu scientist claims that. he recently saw one fly light on n nuumgc and die from eating the nnnlino with which it was adultcrntcd ; a second died from the alum in n lump of flour; a third drank a drop of milk and was killed by the chalk ; while u fourth made it hourly meal on ndultcratcd fly .poison. and flew away alive and happy. A French photographer renidiug at. 'I‘nngiers has junt been commishioncd by the sultan of Morocco to photograph his 864 wives. The portraits will be contained in an album, of which tho sultan alone will have in key. If the photographer could only manage to strike off some duplicntcu from the Dog- ativen they would probably communal a .counidernblc sale. 56!” Farmer: who want to Ina labour .nnd time would do well to'get one of Bob- lIon k Allan's one-hone Iloc and Wendi-r, icombincd. The hoe in crtlculnted to work potato”, corn and all root mp. that M- V quire billing; the weeder is for turnips and '1” that require weeding. Sold nepnrnto or combined ut the Cameron Luke Foundry, the proprietors of which are agent] for y'l Reaper and Toronto flower and Shurp’l Rake, ncbiowledged to be the but in the market. The new: from British Columbiu 000 bales of Alarmâ€"'0‘ him“ or Wlwutconocrning the flood» in not removing. par Week in 1881. again". 100,000 per Week in 18750. These facts indicate that the demand for American cotton : this year is likely to be greatly increasâ€" ed, while the Cntlmalt'n show that the ~upplv is! likely to tit-creme. .lakmg the lignrm of but your there Wlll l».- a ohurtage of 1,000,000 lulu-rm Oct. 1:21. Laycock defeated Boyd over the Sli'ldluboro' euurue on .‘Iondny by lil- tee.) lensthi. lIu mun, instances homo and boron ilmve been flouth ad, and feucctt, kc” lure. seen floating nbout in all directions. 5A great number of young Muck have lhecn lont, and, in man instancea,ultcr ldrntiluliutt may be 0 served numngut él'iunillet. who. a couple of wwk- ago, icon-idech them-chum in cnwlortnble jclrcuuasluncen. Thomade of turns of ,huy will be dentroyed III" lemon, which will make mutton Mill none for that lumin; alum.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy