Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 Mar 1894, p. 6

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. my «a, GREAT B_RITA_IN. '” new the Yastâ€" Empire is Govâ€" erned. The .‘lnllber of Colonies Has Increased During this Century. A matter of deepest interest to civiliza- tion in general is the manner in which Great Britain governs so extensive and so diverse an em ire, says a writer in the St. Louis Globe- mocrat. Her statesmen reckon three classes of colonies, distinguish- ed according to the type of government assigned to each. In the first class the home Government retains entire control of the legislation and administration of the colony ; in the second class the colony has representative institutions, but the home Government retains a veto on legislation and control of all the public oficers ; in the third class, the colony has, as in the second, representative institutions, but the home Government, while still reserving the veto on legislation, has no control of any public officer eznept the Governor. Here, then, is a sca'e of progressive liberality in the man- ner of governing the colonies, based upon the special characters and conditions of the colonies themselves. Englishmen distinguish there several types of their Colonial Govern- ment as Crown goygrnmonts, representative governments and ré‘s’ponsible governments ; the first being a pretty close approximation to republican government, and the second being intermediate between these two with a tendency to grow into the third rather than to retrograde into the first form. Now, it is a matter of much interest to note the application which England has made of these several forms .of government to her different colonies. STRONGEOLDS LIKE GIBRALTAR “and Aden, naval stations and depots like Bong Kongand Ascension, groups of islands like the Mauritius and Falkland, and col- ouies like Basutoland, British Honduras and Gambia, are very naturally placed in the first class and held under Crown gov- ernment. Colonies, however, like the Bahamas, the Bermudas, British Guiana and Natal, where there are considers ble but relatively small European elements of population, are placed in the second class and accorded representative governments, but with the powerful restraint arising from the veto and the control of all the public officers. But colonies like Canada, Newfoundland, Cape Colony, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia,’ Queensland, New Zealand and New South Wales, where there are strong and controlling European elements, are put in the third class, and accorded responsible governments, with ‘_ only the restraint of the veto on legislation and the appointment of the chief executive officer by the Crown. India, the vast Empire oi India,‘ with a population of ‘221,000,000 exclusive of the feudatory States, and of 287,000,000 where these States are includedâ€"India, when represen- tative political government has not been known for 4,000 years,takes its place in the first classâ€"that is, in the lowest rank of British Colonial Government, and is ruled by the Crown. India is in no sense a colony, and is not regarded as such by English statesmen. Out of all the millions id , , ,/ ITS VAST POPULATION only about 100,000 are British born. It is a conquered empire, acquired by force and held by military occupancy and menace. England basin IndiaaBritish army of about 74,000 men, and a native or sepoy .army of about 145,000, commanded and principally officered by Englishmen. These armies put together amount to about 219,000 men,_and this is the force, side by side with a more handful of British settlers and sojourners, that holds an empire of between 200,000,000 and 300,000,000 Asiatics. But it is right to distinctly add that England,impelled by her native tendency to liberty wherever she sets down her foot, has granted.since 1834, local municipal government throughout In- dia, subject, however, to the control of the imperial provincial ,Governmentsâ€"a seed grain of partially free political life that has a chance to ripen into great results in th future. ‘ It is especially noteworthy that aside from lndia,only about 33,000 British troops are sent out to all the rest of the immense British possessions,and that more than half of these are quartered in the strongholds and stations of Gibraltar, Malta and Hong Kong. Less than 1,500 are kept in the great Dominion of Cauada,for what rational purpose it seems difficult to say. Only about 3,000 are kept in Cape Colony and Natal, with apparent reference to the large African population included in and adjoin- ing these colonies, and none, it seems, are kept in Newfoundland, or in any of the numerous and important colonies of Austra- lasi:i,5iich us Victoria,Tesmania,Quecnsland and the rest. I may add that with the exception of Indin,whieh must be treated as aquantiiy apart, England’s policy in governing the rest of her colonies through- out thc world has reduced the total charge of all these colonies on the treasury of the home Government to about $10,000,000 per nunuin. In all this scheme of diverse colonial and imperial government there is evidently a profound and thoroughly thought-out meth- od on the part of the statesmen of England, pcrhapsLas wise and just on the whole as human nature is at present capable of in connection with such affairs, and certainly more wise and more just than anything of the sort that mankind has ever known be fore. “'ORK ACCO)! l‘l.l$ ll F. D. The amount of solid, practical, civilizing work which Great Britain has accomplis":cd in the course of 275 years is clearly with- out an equivalent elsewhere in all history. Her achievements within this time speak for themselves, and admit of no auswor back. She has made a network of the islands of tits globe by interlacing them with lines of uterine transit, along which the multitudi- Imus barks and steamers dot the oceans and seas of the world. She has put order in the place of chaos, and law in the place of rapscity throughout the great and populous l-Zmpxre of India, and lnfd there the foundation ofa coming au:onomy in which the secret and chronic despotism of Asia will be profoundly lem~ llflii‘t‘il and modified by the open and manly liberty of England. She has laid the col‘ oztzal. foundation and planted the most or" the p ulirical and legal princip'fcs upon Much the United States of America has grown up 2.1) 3 :ch phenomenal proportions U) m mar: : time. She has covered the Dominion of Canada with republican provinces and territories from Cape Breton to Vancouver, and from Lake Superior to the Arctic islandsâ€"n vast and important region which is destined either to ripen into a great commonwealth apart, or to coalesce on terms of equal right and equal honor with our own gigantic re- public. She has laid hold u on thebarbaric conti lines of a spacious group of republican col- onies, destined one day to emerge into the family of nations as the Commonwealth or United States of South Africa, meantime extending her growing influence over a little known, little explored, but immense empire in the interior of that continent, which in its turn only awaits a later day to be led forth by her powerful hand from the darkness of barbarism to the light of civil- ization. She has carried her institutions, her laws, her spirit of freedom to the savage contin- ent of Australia and its insular surround- ings, and established thereâ€"upon a terri- tory larger than the United States aside from Alaskaâ€"a group of colonies which are visibly coming forward as one of the great nations of the earthâ€"a nation which will unite all these colonies into one con- federate republic or commonwealth and dominate the wide expanse of the South Pacific Ocean and its world of tropical arid sub-tropical islands. HAVING THE NOSE BURNBD OUT- The Doctors Call It Rhinomnnin, but Don't Always Recom'ucnd ll. Rhinomania is the medical name of a new craze the doctors are telling about. If a man can’t breathe easily, or if his nasal functions refuse to do the work allotted by Nature, the proper thing to do is to have the nose burned‘out. The people who want this done to their olfactories are known to. the profession as rhinomaniacs. One of the first notable instances of rhinomania was “ Pa" Corbin, a famous Yale oarsman and football player, who, a. few years ago, being unable to breathe easily while in the boat submitted to an operation upon his nose. The operation was performed by a prominent uptown physician, but instead of cauterizing or burning out the nose, part of the bone was cut out, and a larger aper- ture for breathing was the result. Nowadays the same result is obtained by burning away the membraneous tissue near the apex of the nose by means of a. small galvanic battery. As a rule doctors will not recommend so heroic a treatment for nasal obstructions, but will try to find a remedy in another way._ A writer in the Medical Record, however, says that young practitioners do not let an opportunity slip by to saw or burn away a pi'otuberant mem- brane or to drill air-passages into an un- naturally large formation of bone. 01d heads in the profession, on the other hand, are slow to do this, because they recognize that the nasal growth performs the import- ant function of moistening and warming the air inhaled. The operation very often defeats the purpose for which it was in- tended, especially when a large pieze of the membrane is removed. In cutting away the membrane tiny saws and chisols are used and generally the subject is placed under an anaesthetic. But the man whose nasal breathing spaces are choked up will not listen to any other remedy than that afforded by one of these methodsâ€"in other words, he demands im- mediate rolief, and is willing to take his chances on its being successful. When he reaches this stage the doctors put him down as a rhinomaniac. Mr- Ohilds’ Famous Friend- ‘Ve walked about the renovated Ledger building as we chatted, looking at the im- provements, when suddenly we came upon Mr. George W. C. Drexel in close converâ€" sation with a visitor. Mr. Childs’ eyes opened wide as they rested on the pair and he whispered. “ He is an interesting character. Let me introduce you.” ' ' The visitor rose as we approached and greeted Mr. Childs cordially. He was a fine-looking fellow, of good height, sparely built, but sinewy, strong and lithe. He stood straight as an arrow, with shoulders well back and the air of a Life Guards man at “attention.” His hair was brown and cut with military precision ; his eyesâ€" as well as I could see themâ€"were of a steel gray-blue and very penetrating, and impressed me with a sense of his coolness and nerve. His complexion was pink and ruddy, like that of a man accustomed to plain diet and out-of-door life where the sun does not shine often and the climate is mild and somewhat damp. He wore no whiskers, but a close-cropped brown mus- tache. llis dress was very simple and In good taste, and he wore a long ulster of modern cut. His hand, which shook mine, was soft but firm. We had a few minutes’ conversation be- fore going on,aud as Mr. Childs and I pass- ed into the next room I remarked : “ Mr. Bidwell is a very agreeable man.” ” Yes indeed,” answored Mr. Childs, “a highly accomplished man. He speaks sev- eral languages and is a clever writer.” “Then it is as an author th at I probably recall him,” said 1. “His name is perfectly familiar to me, but I cannot now complete the association in my mind." Mr. Childs chuckled. “Perhaps I can help you out," he sug- gestcd. “llidwell was the most brilliant forger the World probably ever knew. He victimized the Bink of England to the ex- tent of nearly e3,000,000 and spent fourteen years in a British prison to pay for it. Oh, he is a good citizen now,” he added, as henotcd the look of astonishment which involuntarily crossed my face. “He was given a ticket-of-leave in response to the earnest intercession of a number of persons who believed that he had learned his lesson and that a man of his parts ought to be turning his powers to some proper use outside. I don’t know that I should want to include him in the same category with the eminent diviues and statesmen and generals whom we have been idlking of to-day, but he belongs to the class of legitimate calc- briiics ; he has done his one thing better than anybody else ever did it. If he had accom- plished a success equal in degree, but for the promotion of some noble end, he would 10-day rank among the groatmenof the age." ~{Kare Field’s Washington. Mrs. Hudsonâ€"u” I am much intercst~ ed in the poor." Mrs. Slummer~“ In- deed 3" Mrs. Hudsonâ€"" Yes, I read all I can find about them." i P nent of Africa, and marked out there the \“.' Trouble “In Berna", on “men GOLD mine or Tilli- nis or on sous. An Important Industry Now Being De- velopsd- improved machinery is Rapidly Over- coming. For over twenty years it has been the opinion of many who might be considered competent judges, that the rocks on the islands and mainland around the Lake of the Woods contained numerous ariferous veins, which the prospector, the miner and the capitalist would in time develop into a number of profitable gold mines. We say for over twenty years, for explorers and prospectors had picked up, as early as 1872, pieces of rock containing proportions of free gold visible to the naked eye, and in a few instances small nuggets, bedded in the rock, have been picked up. It seems that all over the world, a gold producing region when it is first discover- ed is sure to be in more or less of an inac- cessible locality, and the ’Lake of the Woods gold region was no exception to the rule. Up to the year 1881, no railway com- munication from the answers or CIVILIZATION reached the shores of the Lake of the Woods, from either the Canadian or the United States side, although from 1875, steainboats from the northwest. angle on the United States side made trips over a large portion of the navigable portion of the lake. These boats were, however, en- gaged in lumbering or in the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and no ruin- ing effort was for many years made, backed by sufficient resources to employ steam navigation in connection therewith. The visitor to the lake, if he will only view in passing there by rail the terrible cuts through rock, dumps over almost bot- tomless swamps and muskogs, bridges and trestles over gorges, chasms and deep valleys and tunnels through hills impossible to he climbed by the locomotive, will have some idea of how truly inaccessible the Lake of the Woods was, before millions were expended in successfully opening up the country by railway construction. Before the advent of the iron horse, the only at- tempts at opening up the gold bearing resources of the lake were made by the mining prospector with his pick, his canoe or boat, and if he could afford it, his Indian guide. The perseverance of some of those early prospectors, and the labor and priva- tious thatjell to their lot in their lonely wanderings, furnish records of indomitable courage, will power and endurance, which will compare favorably with those of the first explorers and pioneers of the early part of the eighteenth century. It was not, therefore, until the Canadian Pacific Rail- way construction neared the shores of the lake in 1830 that any effort beyond that made by the lonely prospector was possible, and not until regular communication was opened in 1881, did the usual swarm of gold hunters enter the lake country, and com- mence their wanderings and search along its shores and among its islands. It might reasonably be expected, that with railway communication into the heart ‘ of the gold bearing district of the Lake of the Woods, mining progress would have MADE RAPID STBIDES during the past decade. But people who were sanguine upon this point were doom- ed to disappointment. A combination of circumstances effectually blocked any real progress, and until'about three years ago the only evidences of any mining move- ment around the lake was the presence in numbers of that personage, the successful mining prospector, who is ever ready to open the doorway to millions to the capita- list with a few thousand dollars, and open the door on the ground floor too. It Would be harsh as well as unjust to rate all men of the above class as frauds or scheming loafers, for many of them had expended their resources and earnings for several years in their search for gold, as well as having en- dured much hardship and privation in their wanderings. Besides, not a few of them had discovered and looated gold hearing claims,which the experiences of the past three years have shown to be very valuable properties. Even these adventur- ous spirits, irresponsible as they were in many instances, were made, along with outsiders of a. speculative inclination, dupes of a lot of unprincipled speculators, mossly from the city of \Yinnipeg, and nearly all from that freebooter gang who figured prominently in the great Manitoba real estate boom, which collapsed in the begin- ning of 1832. Not afew of those reckless and unprincipled gamblers wore members of Provincial or Dominion Parliaments, and a tsmall number were the title of Honorable, a title which has been so disgraced and be- aggled by many Canadian politicians during the past twenty years that a scrub pig, in a pound for deprcdating, might be ashamed to wear it. Companies were clnrtered and stocks sold by organizations headed by such men, in mines which exist- ed only in the prospector's location, and a title to which could not be obtained, even if a valid claim were made, and in some instances these companies had no right to any title to the claims they pretended to own. As might be expected, such compan- ies, organized With one view, namely, sell- ing their stock to dupes, soon went to pieces and left among their dupes many a poorer and wiser min. Such action was the means of preventing capital from coming TO AID MINING DEVELOPMEN! and many men of stimina and some means got thoroughly disgusted with the Lake of the Wools mining, and withdrew from the field altogether, although they had shown quite a little interest and were pre- pared to invest considerable means in its development. - There areascore or more of locations 0:1 which investments of from a few hun- dred to a few score thousand of dollars havebcen expended in the direction of deve- lopmcnt. In the Lake of the Woods, asiu other mining countries, all the work done has not been wisely directed, and some are realizing that they have spent their a very large number of the murmur ms ions. t Remarkable Surgical Opcri ' tion in the Toronto Gen- eral Hospital- Wllllarn Foster Was 50 Ugly That lie Be- cause llelnnclioly and Tried to 8nd Ills lifeâ€"But Up at the llospltni Re Is Undergoing a Change. and “1" Prob ably Emerge from It a Very Present. able Person. the Sultana Mine, located about nine or ten miles southeast of Rat Portage. Mr. J. F. Cald well is the sole proprietor of this mine. and since be commenced oper- atious there, he has silently, and without consulting any outsider, ushed forward the work ofdevelopmcut. sing a practi- cal chemist by profession, be has carefully studied out different methods of treating theore taken from the mine, and has now reached very satisfactory results. He has taken out SEVERAL HUNDREDS OF TONS of ore, a large portion of which he has milled right on the ground, and extracted the gold therefrom, which has been shipped from time to time to New York. After the work of concentrating he has shipped quantities of his ore to centres in America and Europe, where it could be more oiro~ fully treated than he could with his stamp- ing mill. In this, and in other ways, he gradually discovered what he thought the best process for treating the ore of the Sul- tana Mine, and decided upon the Cyanide process He has accordingly secured a full outfit for treating by that process,and with his former mill he carries on the work of concentrating and preparing for tho Cyan- ide treatment. At the Sultana, Mr. Caldwell has sunk two shafts and followed three drifts, and in all five places he has struck pay rock in abundance. Work is going on steadily at the mine, and with results of the most satisfactory character. Mr. Caldwell did not state, nor Were we inquisitive to ask, the product in gold of the mine for any given time, ,but we learned that he had taken out quite a few thousand dollars worth ; that the mine was now paying him liberally on all the funds be had invested therein ; and that it was not for sale as it was now down to the position of a paying industry, and as he was still comparatively a young man, and had no desire to retire from business, he felt as much at home at the head of a mining industry as at the head of a business in any other field, Altogether Mr. Caldwell has done more at the Sultana mine for the real develop- ment of gold mining on the Lake of the Woods than any other man engaged therein, and it is satisfactory to know that his efforts are proving profitable. At the Gold Hill mine, some sixteen to eighteen miles southeast of Rat Portager mining operations of an extensive characte, have been carried on during the past two years, under the management _of Colonel Burdette, one of a syndicate of ' On November ‘25 last a young man of ‘24, named William Foster, was admitted to the Toronto General Hospital, suffering from the effects of an unsuccessful attempt to end his life with opium. Foster lived «lit 36 Division street, and his story is pecu- far. He was a man of unique and somewhat homely appearance. He had a very large nose, very wide and flat at the bridge, and having an unlovely, tapering end. His mouth was uncommonly small, and the con- junction of the two features produced such a peculiar effect that Foster. like Richard “L, was not made to court the amorous looking-glass. He grew so sensitive about his personal appearance that he docrded to end his earthly existence and pass to the undiscov- ered country, where most of us hope to Wear a fairer shape than that which envelope our spirits in this life. After the young man was taken to the hospital his case was brought to the notice of Dr. James Tliorburn, jr., a successful surgeon, who has the combined experience born of study in England and Germany. Dr. Thorbnrn decided that the unique features which wore such a grief to Foster could be rebuilt and moulded to a more conventional form. He first operated on the young man’s mouth, and widequ it by cutt ng into the cheeks at either corner. To produce a proper curve for the lengthened lips he made a few temporary stitches, and let ped up the delicate flesh until it was solidified in the proper position. He next set to work on the nose, cutting flesh from the wide portion of it at the bridge and grafting it on the pinched and narrow apex. This portion of the opera- ation is still in progress, but complete suc- cess is anticipated, and Foster will emerge from the hospital with a lace entirely al- tered for the better in form and oxpreision and itis hoped will make no more attempts on his own life. a Dr. Thorburu, when interviewed by The Emprie on the matter, refused to talk aboutit. In his opinion it was a case for discussion solely among medical men. The operation is unique in Canadian sur- gical annals, although similar feats have been performed in Germany, and it is Dr. Thorburn’s German experience that is re- sponsible for his inspiration in this instance. \VI LI. BE SUCCESSFUL. A well-known medical ahthority said: “I am thoroughly of the opinion that the operation which Dr. Thorburn is said to have under way can be brought to a success- ful issue. Fifty years ago such an experi- ment would have been looked upon as pre- posterous, but in the light of modern surgical research it has become entirely possible. No man need be ugly nowadays ” MINNEAPOLIS CAPITALISng who own this mine. Some of the member, of this syndicate are veteran gold miners who have had experience in Californias Montana and Colorado, and consequently work at the Gold Hill has been pushed along with intelligence and vigor, and lat- terly with profitable results. At present an additional outfit of machinery is being added to that already located at this mine, and in a few weeks work will be pushed with even greater vigor than in the past. The proprietors are now satisfied that they have a. large vein of ore, which is not re- fractory, but can be easily and cheaply milled. A number of other mines could be in- stanced, at which thousands of dollars have been expanded in development, and where paying results have been reached. The two above named are sufficient, however, as they demonstrate clearly that gold min- ing in many of the locations in the'Lake of the Woods can be made profitable in any instance, when the expenditure and work is directed with intelligence and a know- ledge of mining. The trouble with the gold bearing rocks of the lake has not been that they did not contain a large enough proportion of the precious metal, but that the process of ex- tracting it from the rock has been so far a matter ofexparimentouly in many instances. Most of the ore is undoubtedly refractory, and cannot be treated in the primitive methodssocommon even amongminers who arelacking scientific knowledge. Alltheore is not refractory however and hundreds of tons of high grade, free milling ore have been taken from THE DIFFERENT MINES on the lake. Still, mining will not develop with the rapidity it ought to display, until gold-bearing veins are handled and studied in a practical and scientific manner, in order to discover the most economical method for their work- ing. There is no trouble about securing a high and an honest assay of ore from scores of locations, but the study of economy in the treatment is the vital point. That some cheap method of treating the refrac~ tory ores, to be found in such abundance around the lake, will be discovored in the Prominent People. The controller of Lord IJOFIIO'S household in Canada was Colonel, now Sir Frederick, De Wiutou. Sir Frederick was to have taken charge of the Duke of Clarence's household ; but, on the death of the Duke he was transferred to Prince George. whose affairs he now manages. The Knight has tak- en u. deep interest in African affairs and has been connected with the Congo country. It will be learned with regret that his son Fenwick recently died in Africa. Fonwick was far from civdization, and there were no whites near him when the fatil fever seized him. Norman Munro, the millionaire publisher who has just died in New York, was a Canadian. He was born in Millbrook, l’ictou county, .‘ova Scotia, fifty-one years ago, and was the son of a Nova Scotia farmer, and when he went to New York, in 1861,110 possessed only a few hundred dollars. After getting employed in n. pub- lishing office he saved enough money to start himself in a small way as the publisher- ofu weekly family paper, which soon bed came a mine of Wealth to him. He ownes fast steam yachts and fast horses, and is said to have been worth from three to live millions of dollars. Norman Munro has a brother George who is also a millionair- publisher. George passed through ox pcricn very near future, is amstter beyond doubt. “5 simghif‘? “‘05” 0f Norm‘m- H“ 1““ Once that method is discovered scores of """‘3- ‘V-W‘m‘m “" "3W" “W's chairs at Dalhousie College, Hilliard .14.; endowed by him, and In addition he has given $45,003) to the same college for anal- bitions and bursaries. The long and happy wedded life of Gan. Lew Wallace is, it seems, founded un-‘una pretty romance. He was but nineteen years old when serving his country in the Mexican war. A comrade talked much of acortain Susan Elston, who lived in his home town, Crawfordsvillo, Ind., and young llieut. Wallace in consequence became enamored of a girl whom he had never seen. As soon as he left Mexico he journeyed to Crawfordsville, made Mics Elston's ao- quaintancc, and three years later they were married. Mrs. \Vallacc is described as slight and of medium height, with regular features and beautiful brown hair, which is now tinged with gray. She has been all her life an omnivorous reader, and at her best is a witty and brilliant conversationalist. Dr.\Volfrcd Nelson,formcrly of Montreal, but now of of New York, has been mvle a memberof thoroan Geographical Society of London. He comes of a medical family, ten members having been graduated in sur- gery and medicine. He is a son of the late Dr. Horace Nelson,of Montrea1,a grandson of the late Dr. Wolfrcd Nelson, a former Mayor of that city and Member of Parlia- ment. AmongtheEnglishfamiliesinCanada, the Nelson family is one of the oldest. Its founder was \Villism Nelson of Newsham, Yorkshire, England. In 1??” he settled in the Royal Borough of William Henry,to- day Sore]. His father, George Nelson,was an officer in the royal navy and a cousin of locations now lying idle will be worked, and mining as an industry will become one of the great powers in building up the Lake oft he Woods country. There is no reason why goll mining on the Lake of the Woods should not, .within a very few years, assume large proportions. The day of rascally speculation and fraudulent stock peddling is past. The day of uncertainty as to titles to locations is also past and gone. The day when trouble with the treatment of refractory ores will be over cannot be for distant, and once that is reached, It only requires capital, and not in huge accumula, tions either, to set scoreeof mines at work- nearly all of which will prove sources of wealth to their owners, and will give em- ployment to thousands of industrious work- men all over the lake. -_-â€"â€"â€".â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"_ Summarizing His angst; caution- Atnight the weary old doctor sat down and noted, as usual, the condition of his patients : The ragman, picking up ; the editor, rapidly declining ; the dentist, may pull through; the postmaster. must go ; the deaf mute, still complaining; the painter, more bad signs ; the miser, barely living; the mijor, rallying; the cashier, gone ; the actor, on the last stage; the butcher, less fat on bones; the cobbler, mending: the jail prisoner, will soon be out; the lavvyer,speeohless; the twa grocers, on the verge of dissolution : the musician, toning up : the carpenterdmproviug; Jones' boy, had and growing worse ; the harbor, saved by a close shave; the banker, failing ; money in vain. On the other hand, some have expended money and work wisely, and ass result have begun to reap a good return. W Among the mines of the Lake of the When marriage is . {gum-e the chief Woods where intelligent investment and bankrupt ‘sually puts it all in his wife's work have been most liberally expended is name, the beetmaker, will not last long; the pugi- ist, striking improvement. Lord Nelson. The Heads,cousins by blood, furnished Canada with two Governors- Gcneral, Sir Edmund Head and \‘ir Francis Bond Head. Tin; new F.R.C.S. left Can- ada in 1870 owing to ill'health. and spent some years in Mexico and at Panama. He settled in New York in 1350. ’R u A‘sâ€"mâ€" “s N.

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