as The Remaining Debris of Coxey’s Camp-A Queer, Uncanny 01d Structureâ€"Attrac- tions of Piedmont Countyâ€"Handsome Country Estatesâ€"The Hackneyed Cry. [Special Correspondence] SANDY SPRING, Md, June 4.-â€"If ,there is one thing more than another, it is a trump in the coinitry in May or June. From Chaucer down all our poets have told in liquid lines how With the revival of nature the instinct of rimi- jive man revives, how as each growing season is newly born even civilized man ‘ C - I feels a new birth of that vagrant 1m- pulse which stirred the childhood of the world, and so Whan Zt-phirus eel: with his swcte breeth Enspirud hath in every holtc and booth The tendrc ('roppt-s. and the yongc sonne Hath in the Ram his halfe cours i-ronne, And smah- fowles makcn melodie, That slept-n al the night with open yhe, So prikt-th hem nature in here cox-ages: Thanne longrn folk to gun on pilgrimages. Beside Still Waters. There is no Canterbury for me to make a pilgrimage to. but there is a. great deal well worth seeing between Washington and the Pennsylvania line, and so as the sweet scents of mature spring floated down our city streets the bohemian corpuscles in my blood grew riant, and I determined to make the tour of upper Maryland in the good old fashioned way. The morning air was so delightfully crisp and the face of nature looked so fresh and green as I struck out northward that I felt like an old work horse turned out to pastureâ€"had some difï¬culty in holding myself in; wanted to squeal and kick and run away. By the time I reached Bladensbm‘g. how- ever, the coltish spirit had evaporated. I was willing to pause and chat till the cool of the evening. and even at that sliprt distance, from the national capital I found plenty of people. as fresh and green as the aforesaid face of nature. I ha to smile as I looked on the re- maining debris of Coxey’s camp and thought of the ridiculous scare in Wash- ington over that forlcrn battalion of mental physical cripples. What a queer episnde in our social evolution that pil- grimage wasâ€"the perfect flower of p51- temulism! Any government. which ad- vertises that it will take care of its peo- ple and see that they have steady em- ployment at good wages will soon have a good deal of that 501's of thing on its hands. As our government is now avow- ed]; paternal. we may set- it down that AFOOT IX MARYLAND. Um4<<mm2 <<>mI_20._.02 >20 41m Um22m<r<>2_> CZm. Tm; TEAM was ASTOXISHED. the tramp has come to stay. Forty years ago the word as a 11min substantive was not in any American dictionary. A little over a year ago, I interviewed Carl ‘ Browne in his gypsy tent just north of ; the district line; the other day Inlet- him in Washington. and, gazing in his eyes, wondered where on earth I had seen that man. This time he was dressed in the ï¬nest of linen and black cloth. He recognized me, however, and soon convinced me that he was the original Browne. but on a new lay. Of Historic Interest. The Biadensburgers are somewhat ashamed of the little countenance they extended to the Coxeyites and avoid the subject. They eagerly point out the his- toric places about the town, especially the road along which the British ad- vanced on Aug. 2-1, 1814, the alleged battleï¬ech where our militia did better than usual. as they did not run till the British had ï¬red twice, and the old dueling ground where a few good men Were killed and dozens mortally scared. My great uncle was a sprinter in the “Bladensburg races, †as the Federalists called the affair, and I have often heard him tell how they threw their muskets in the creek as they ran over the bridge, and how he (he was the champion run- ner of his county) passed a runaway team which was doing its wildest, and how the said team was so astonished at him that it stopped in sheer mortiï¬ca- tion and was captured by the British. The comedy of the dueling ground has never been written. Every old Bladensburger mentions with pride the fact that the place was once the head of navigation on the Potomac. At high tide there was good 30 feet of water in the eastern branch, and ocean going vessels loaded with flour and tobacco at. the Bladensburg wharves. The country was rapidly cleared of tim- ber, and as the ï¬rst settlers did not un- derstand what that meant. and no prop- Qrmntiogs were taken. the loose. red 0*0-4 lw...-o§.~~¢..«o- -"" One of the last ï¬ghts tehre was be- tween two congressmen who were so nervous that they ï¬red seven shots at each other without getting a scratch. The seconds stopped the duel on the ground of danger to themselves, and the next day Hon. Cost Johnson of Mary- land moved in the house to exempt the tract from the land laws on the ground that it contained a mineral deposit. lars, halls wide enough for company drill and rooms so very large that one feels as if sleeping in a warehouse, and it would seem that no amount of ï¬re. could warm them in winter. The whole building has grown yellow with age, the lower part of the pillars shades off in dull red and green, patches of ï¬ne moss adorn the lower walls and loose tiling. cracks and mold combine to pro- duce a depressing air of gloom and de- cay. Yet in this house, if the unani- mous local testimony is to be accepted, the Union was saved, for the room in which I lodged was occupied by Henry Clay during the summers of 1820-1, in it the second Missouri compromise was drawn up, and in an arbor which then stood out in front the heads of factions agreed to it one Sunday morning over their after breakfast cigars. It will be remembered that the orig- inal Missouri compromise was devised by Senator Jesse B. Thomas of Illinois, but the Free Soil members bolted when the state constitution was presented, 5011 'waancu' 1380 Cam sum, ECU-(L do 1.9 now rather a nuisance than a conven- ience in times of flood. The backwater covers the lower part of town, and only the negroes can stand the resulting ma- laria. Hyattsville, a mile or so farther north, is high and healthful, handsome alike in location and buildings and one of the prettiest suburbs of Washington. I passed my ï¬rst night out in Riverdale and in a building of more historic in- terest probably, and certainly more va- ried interest, than any other in the vicin- ity of Washington. It is the once fa- mous Calvert mansion, now a lodging house, and a queer, uncanny 01d struc- ture it is. I would as soon live in a stone quarry or dismantled Greek tem- ple. Henry Clay’s Room. It was built 127 years ago, they say, and, if they had said that many years B. C., I should have thought it likely. In style it shows like a. rude imitation of the old time western state capitol, with vast porches fronted by Doric pil- and then Henry Clay, Senator Hulmes of Maine and two or three others devised a new compromiso, and this one was perfected in this building. In this room, I say, the Union was saved. for the com- promise and<mbtcdly did that, as i_t gave the needed time for national senti- ment to grow, and by the end of the next 40 yea-Ls the sections adhering to the Union contained three times as many people and eight. times as much wealth as the others. Had the struggle bemm even ten years before it did we should now have, been two nations if not mo*e. No doubt of that. The average visitor to Washington learns about as. much of rural Maryland as a western visitor to New York city does of the Adirondacks or Cattaraugns county. As one goes straight northward the rise is so rapid that in two days‘ easy walking he is in a Piedmont counâ€" try and certa inly one of the most health- ful gogiv‘i'tvries in the \\ orld, if_ I may judge from the looks of the people. They are such a ï¬ne and sturdy 1-,ace with such bright eyes and ruddy faces and such a self reliant swing in their mo- tions, that it is a. pleasure to look at them. From this high central region the land falls off so rapidly each way that- the uï¬luents of t 19 Potomac and eastern brunch mn 1i 9 mountain torrents. The result is that in every direction there are scores of hidden and romantic dens where the crystal water roars among the granite r« wits and the dense timber hangs over the stream in such masses of foliage that the sun ‘9. rays are entirely excluded. At almost any point on the valley road one may turn aside and in ten minutes be in a shaded hollow where the bab- bling of a stream from the hills and. the soft sighing of the wind in the tree tops bring sweet repose to mind and body. There are. however. some unpleasant features in the level upland and some really startling contrasts. The Pessimistic Farmer. Here and the-re one may see a country gentleman's place as elegant as the es- tate of a British nobleman. There are beautiful groves and ï¬ne avenues,smooth shaven lawns and pastures of splendid clover and grasses in which blooded cat- tle give a bucolic charm to the landscape. There are a few of these residences which are really palatial and many of the best style of country cottage. There are alsoi a few regular farms and farmhouses‘ which compare favorably with the best in the northwest. Aside from these,how- ever. a large part of the country presents ‘ a distressing aspect of shiftlessness and neglect. The antebellum log cabins and queer frame houses are still_occupied, the former by the blacks and the latter by the whites, though many of both look as if they were slowly sinking into the ground; the fences are a wretched com- bination of old planks set “witch wise, " old rails turned into stakes and even logs and brush in a few places, for since the law forbidding stock to run at large was put in force anything will serve. I was not surprised, therefore, to learn that a very large portion of the land was for sale and that prices were sur- prisingly low, some tolerably good land being offered for $25 per acre and really ï¬ne land for $40. The complaint is the same there as everywhere else, “All the enterprising young men have gone to the cities. " In addition there was a de- structive drought last summer, a dis- tressingly severe snowstorm and cold spell last winter and the middle of this May the worst ‘frost known at that peri- od since 1859. “It was no good to put the sheet hurdles over our truck, for it friz right under ’em, †said the truck farmers. And yet the fruit is not killed, for the leaves were large enough to shield it. which surprises me very much. for the ï¬rst thing I usually hear when I go into the country in the spring is that the mi: in ï¬lls-killed â€Mixes“! t 'paper, making it a sort of stenci-l.‘ The writing was made in 1833, not so long ago, considering the average age of our records, and it is now impossible to de- cipher it. Mr. Swan has marriage cer- tiï¬e-“es written so recently as 1860 and \Jstl 186-1, which are Way 11011115‘ fildt d 01 1t, and w hich in ten or a dozen yams 111010 will probably be wholly illegible. â€"-Bos- ton Transcript. Poor Ink For Oflicial Records. If any doubt the need of ofï¬cial ink for use in legal matters, he should see the document in the hands of Mr. Swan, the record commissioner, in which the ink has burned through the rause 'Irun; nero any more like they am when I was young. †Improved Corn Culture. It appears to have been proved that the modern method of planting in drills gives a larger yield of both grain and stover than when crowded into hills. Less seed is required for drill planting; and the use of right tools is necessary for best results. The progressive farmer uses a planter ‘ which leaves a track Showing where the row of corn lies. This is followed before the corn sprouts with a cultivator. with teeth or pads very narrow and run it as near the. row as possible without disturbing the com. This mellows the. soil, throws a little. earth over the corn row, and when fol- lowed in a couple of days with a smm )th- ing harrow, the whole surface will be stirred and left clean. The corn will be up in a day or two, and get a good start before weeds appear. As soon as the ï¬rst leaves of the corn are fully un- rolled again go over the ï¬eld with the smoothing harrow crosswise of the ï¬rst. harrowing. Again in a week give it an- other harrowing. and often a fourth and ï¬fth with several days intervening. The aim. is to harrow so often that no weeds can start. and so often that if, in going over one way any corn is covered, the next time will uncover it before it is smothered. A Good \Veeder. The hardware stores afford a Yurim' of useful hand weedcrs, but; a. practical A HAND WEEDING IMPLEMENT. correspondent of Amerimn Cultivator. who likvs simple tools best, describes the device hvre illustmted. It consists of a piece of hoop from an old kerosene barrel, about 8 or 9 inches long and cut: to shape as shown in pic- turv. Then bend it in the shape of the dotted lines, Fig. 1, and use it as shown in Fig. 2. Drill Planting For Corn. A marked instance was the experi- ment made. aft the Cornell experiment station. Planted in hills three feet apart each way, with three kernels in a hill, the pi cduct “as 101.~ tons of green com or 4.4†1 pounds of dly mutter. Planted in drills three feet apart with one kernel to each foot of drill, thus making the same number of stalks to the acre. the product was 12 tons of green, or 5,291. ’ pounds of dry matter. Here was an in- crease due to drill culture of over 1-1 per cent in the green product- and of nearly 20 per cent in the dry matter and an equal increase in the feeding value. Ex- periments made elsewhere agree sub- stantially with this. working Up a. Climax. As he entered the barber shop (he was a. prominent oï¬icial of the Duluth road, very prominent, so near the top that he might be described as the top itself), he sat down in the chair and the barber went to work on his well domed p011. The barber was a cheerful man, fond of social intercourse and rather prided himself on his powers as a conversation- ist. So when he felt the head of the Duluth oï¬icial with his taper ï¬ngers, he thought he would astonish and please him with some conversation and per- haps the oï¬icial would in turn write out a. ten years’ pass on a piece of shaving So the barber was light and merry, learned and philosophical by turns, and was well pleased with the expression that stole over the ofl'icial’s face, so full of approbation was it. He knew that he would handle a pour boire of a quarter, if he did not get the pass. He was de- termined to please, and when the oï¬icial asked him if he had any cotton handy the barber said he thought he had. He sent quickly to a store and secured a small supply of the cotton, and giving it to the oï¬icial that gentleman took two small fragments and put them in his Then the barber thought of Casey at the batâ€"St. Paul Dispatch. A Distinguished Female Clergymn. In all probability the most distin- guished female clergyman in this coun- try is Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, at present a. resident of Gotham. She is not occupying a pulpit, however, and it is hardly possible she ever will again. Rev. Hanaford for almost 30 years has been an ordained minister in successful charge of a number of congregations. Dr. Hanaford is a. member of Sorosis and a. well known Writer and lecturer as well as minister. She has the honor to be the pioneer of women in the sacred desk in this country, as she was the ï¬rst ordained woman minister in America and the fourth in the world. ~Philsdel- :hiaPi-ess. ,. .o , .-. . A. THE WATCHMAN. LINDSAY, THURSDAY. JULY 18TH.1895 J. H. BEADLE- He Quickly Ruented the Imputation That H“ Was Lazy. “I’m a. pretty ebcv going kind of a fel- 10W, " he said as he naked his head in- to an Illinois Centra'. suburban ticket oï¬ice \VilldOVV, “but i1: seems to me you’re sort of rubbing itin.†“What’s the matter?’ ’ askeL the ticket seller. “Oh, I suppose I ought not t. com- plain, but I always get the worst \f it everywhere, and I thought maybe I coud get this one matter ï¬xed just for . change. ’ ’ “It’s the same way at Randolph street. †‘ I Yes. ’1 “And you put the smoking car at the north end of each train, no matter which way it is running. †“Well, what of it?†“What of it! Can’t you see that I have to walk the whole length of the train to reach the smoker and the whole length back again when I get down town. It isn’t fair. I ought- to get the best of it at least at one end of the line. You can’t change it? Well, then, would you advise me to move or give up smok- “IUthink the company is anxious to do anything it; can to please its patrons, ’ ’ said the agent. “W1_1at is your trouble?†“Wellfyou see, I am an inveterate smoker. †5 ‘Yes. 7 ) “And out Where I live the entrance to the station is at the south end of the platform.†)) “Smoking. “Well, I don’t know. If it wasn’t for the work, I‘d move. By the way, you don’t think I’m lazy, do you? Of course not. I’m only justiï¬ably indignant over an adverse fate. â€â€"Chicago Times-Her- ald. Just What Happened When Information Was Sought From the Commander. “Once on an ocean steamer,†said a traveler, “we had a heated shaft. bear- ing, or something of that sort, so that the engines stopped for ï¬ve or six hours. I had often read and heard about how the captain was the great mogul aboard ship, how about all things pertaining to the affairs of the ship he held aloof and must not be approached by the pas- sengers, and that it x 'as a sort of viola- tion of the unwritten rules of the sea for a passenger to ask‘the captain any- thing. And there may be some reason in all this; if one passenger might as]: him, 40 might, and surely the command- er of the ship ought not to be unnecesâ€" sarily disturbed by useless questions. We had been lying there three or four hours waiting. There was no danger whatever, but it was a delay and an in- cident. of interest, and of course all the passengers talked about nothing elseâ€" the common information was that the delay was due to a heated bearing. “I was standing on the upper deck by the door to the main companionway leading to the deck below. The captain came along the upper deck from the after part of the ship and went below by that companionway. He must pass within a foot of me, and under the cir- cumstances it did not seem like a vio- lently unreasonable breach of salt water etiquette to ask him what was the mat- ter, which I did. A passenger who stood on the other side of the doorway looked at me with the amused smile of an older traveler. The captain said nothing. He simply passed on, to all outw-ard ap- pearances quite unconscious of my ques- tion or even my presence. "â€"New York ‘l‘ho Tree Killer. One of the curious forest growths of the isthmus of Panama and lower Cen- tral America in general is the vine which the Spaniards call matapalo, or “tree killer.†This vine ï¬rst starts in, life as a climber upon the trunks of the large trees, and, owing to its marvel- ously rapid growth, soon reaches the lower branches. At this point it ï¬rst be- gins to put out its “feelersâ€â€"tender, harmless looking root shoots, which soon reach the ground and become as ï¬rmly ï¬xed as the parent stem. These hundreds of additional sap tubes give the whole vine a renewed lease of life, and it begins to send out its aerial ten- drils in all directions. These intwine themselves tightly around every limb of the tree, even creeping to the very far- thermost tips and squeezing the life out of both bark and leaf. Things go on at this rate but a short while before the forest giant is compelled to succumb to the gigantic parasite which is sapping its life’s blood. Within avery few years the tree rots and falls away, leaving the matapalo 'standing erect and hollow, like a monster vegetable devilï¬sh lying upon its back with its horrid tentacles clasped together high in the air. Mor- The Chattahoochee river in Georgia is so called from an Indian expression meaning “painted rods.†At-severul placeaon itshanketheoliï¬shmpeculâ€" iar markings that resemble artiï¬cial gan, â€Central America Afoot,†says, “Corelike arbors of matapalo are to be seen in all directions, each testifying to the lingering death of some sylvan giant that formerly supported it. â€â€"St. Louis Republic. Plaster casts in'th‘eir ï¬Ã©tural state are best freed from dust by covering them with a. thick layer of starch. When the starch is dry, brush thoroughly with a stiï¬ brush, and it will be found that the dust has been removed with the starch. In 1870 candles were ï¬rst made from ozokerit. GRiEVAHCE OF A SUBURBANITE. ‘ ‘ Yes‘ ASKING THE CAPTAIN. To write a'convincing advertisment about clothing nowadays, all dealers claim too much for the discriminating reader to believe. All I do is totry and get you to look at my stock, it is easy to sell then, my constant aim is to put i“o clothes all the attractiveness of artlsic fashion and careful making at the lowest possible price; this is why I retain my old customers and am CORStantlY receiving new ones. Ask those who Rave worn our make of clothing during the past year and they \Vill tell you the thce to get a good suit is at ARMITAGE, IC’S QUITE N ERICK I In orJér to wind up my business afl‘uirs all out standing accounts due me muss be setmd at nncc. IS. A. DORAN. Mr. A. Duran, wine and liquor merchant, in return- in" thanks to his numerous custmners for their liberal patronage would respectfully intimate that lie ins disposcdll his business to the ï¬rm of Messm. (-ralium it (.30., and bespcaks a continuance, of their patronage for the new fnni. LOT 10, CON. 6. T’P of FENELON. Lindmy and r'enelon Falls. Lind~ay Oiiicc, Baker's Block, Kent-st, We are loaning money on zeal estate ï¬rst mortgage in sum» large and small, to wit borrowers, on the heat erms and at the very lowest, rah-s nf intercet. We‘do not. lend on notes or c! atth Security. TEE DALY HOUSE Corner of Simcoe and Front Sts. Toronto, now under the propriership of Mr. Joe.- Daly. late of Lindsay. Refined and re- furnished throughoutand isnne of the best equipped and Conducted hotels in the city. The wine room is unexcelled and cuisine Cannot be surpxssed. Terms 81 and $1.50 per day. Corner of Simcoe and N‘rout-Q‘x. Foronto. R- J- M'LAUCHLIN, It is superior to all other wire fences, and is suit- able for farm, lawn, carden and cemetery fencing. It will turn all kinds of stock. The Leek Wire Fence makes a most attractive fence for pm‘ate residences. Spock racks and farm gates alspecialt). Recommem daticns furnished. â€":3‘2. J. A. FITZPATRICK. Also agent for the Improved Fire Esmpe Ladder. The property of WM. WEI-ESE. No. 8 Melbourne- st., will make a limited season cf ‘20 approved mares at his own stable, No. S Melbourne-st... Lindsay. Batsman is a rich crest'mt in color, and was fouled in 1889. He was sired hv Enquirer. by Importâ€" ed Leamington, by Faughabnllah: iby Sir Hercules. by \Yhalehone; by Waxy, etc, etc. Dam lirila. by \‘ergil; L’nd dnm lnc’plty, by King Lear; 3rd dam by Imp. Scythian. etc. In tonformation he is all that can be desired. As a performer he has demonstrated that he possesses the qualities that go to make a great race horse, and has won several notable events. As stwo- your-old he defeated a. ï¬eld of 15 contestants at Gut- tenberg, beating the most noted performers of that day. As a three-year-old he won a great stake for that age at Coney Island. Full particulars of pedigree and performances can be had on enquiry. TO PROPERTY OWNERS. In this locality there are a. large number of mares suitable to cross with a. thoroughbred sire. and their owner's will consult them own interest by using Batsmm. The popularity of the thoroughbred horse cannot be dis; uted when only last week from 10000 to 12000 spectators witnessed the races at Toronto each day. WM. WEESE. 28 WELLINGTON STREET, LINDSAY. BATS MA N, TELEPHONE NO. .3. ADMINISTRATORS’ ~ NOTICE TO CREDITORS Re Estate John Welsh. Notice is hereby given pursuant to Chap. 110 R. s. 0., 1887. that all persons having claims agelnst the Estate of John Welsh, lute or the Town of andeay, County of Victorie, pedlar. who died on or about the 218:. day of December, 1885, are required todeliver their claims Ind full particulars of such chime to the undersigned Administrators. at their ofï¬ce, corner King and Jordan streets. Toronto. before the mtnbute the assets of the Ewes entitled thereto. ha 1 1 at which they hue THE musrs commuou or outAmo A. E. ann, Hunger. FIRST DAY OF $10 to insureâ€"less than half price for such a high- y.bred horse. ‘ Sell cheap. (me hundred acres, more or less LOCK WIRE FENCE? 00D FARM FOR SALE 02 HANG E OF BUSINESS. DR- JEFFERS; (‘LAl'GHLIN and ML‘DIARM B.-uuus'II-:1zs, SOLICITUXS. c., \RENT.; PEDIGâ€"REE- Have you seen the Apply to M. H. h'LAUCHLIN. F. A. M DIARMID TERMS. THE TAILOR ALEX. FLACK, _10 Brunswick-st" Montreal BY I:- II. HOPKINS, AUGUST, 1395 Proprietor MID, a-xy CALL PARLOR, BOX“ COOKING STOYEs made by the best InanUfaCtn in Canada. Also a 1111111He PRICES TO SUITTHETIM PLUMBIN The season is now 03 getting in the water sen Remember that ue my ï¬rst class men in Oh r v. rooms and the qualitx of work IS the best. Sign of the Blue rrom flcymtpas been Art Designs in all Branches 76 PEEL STREET, LINDSAY- G“. M. McFadd DECORATIVE PAINTi FRESCOING GRAINING KALSOMINI STAINED GLASS. KENNY V. S. .Gmduatecf' . Veterinary College rams: member of Ontario ‘merman' Mei Association. Oï¬ice and residence Wllliam-st., Lindsay TWO REGISTERED HOLSW'" Vlctxon. ‘ by not?†demandedClam, ~isn'z 510m all we know about? \Vna: “PM we Pattern aftex? Do We nice people? Have we been e“i.“m‘mel's? Do I know how to 1a pxanny‘ Or read a book. or War}; ' HOW do vou know but what I‘d A thorough bred HOYstcin Cow. two'ycsrs 04%: thf’m‘Ighbl'ed Holstein Bull, 5cm: months 0w thh registered pedigree, :1}\ply to r THOS. mm; Owen!" ALLAN s. MACDONEhL H A uum'rnk SOLU'H'OR AND Planing Sash. Doors, Blinds. M0111 ings, Newells Balastel‘i HOUSE, SIGN AND When a. man builds a house therg'L' things he wants, good dry mawji‘ ï¬rst-class work. Having over ‘1‘.“ experience in the factorv line. anaem; ing only ï¬rst-class workmen and the! pr0per,mode for drying lumber. 1 w to give my customers the best 058‘ thing in the shape of andleverything in the buildinz line meacall and inspect our work. OFFICES. North- streets, Lindsay. For a short time I will be in a POW†:0 v I“ loans of $3,000 and upwards on farm)!“ ‘0‘: h, I know P, rty where the value is unquestlombk; 6d ' , exceptionally low rate of ï¬n‘ P'~'r cent._P';fl,‘ up’ Wlbh ‘ It. will be necessary that interest 1‘3 Pa'dedd 3' Straw bed " :nd np rivileges of repayment 63“ 13“?wa Beam . . . -- ' I! ~ Den of the years. “1th a imageryâ€, Se you the interest desirable pm new “in FOR SALE. That an application will be made to the W7, ct Camdt, a the nen session thert‘O‘vv {or 2;†inoqrporate a. company to be “fled ‘ egv‘d Haliburton and Mnttam Rsi “LCâ€? Pa“ _ wet to construct, equip. mam†‘ me of railway from a point on the M T» at the 03nd Trunk Ram-av. non“ °‘ Wm Lmdlly m the Province of OntariO. ‘0 ' P0113! ' Ottawa. River. at or no†Wm?" m1 “ prom. and also a branch line 0:110“ ob ' copnect with the said ' “‘1‘ -' “ Mattaw: Mlmy, or the said 313 . Gmd Trunk railway: and '3'"! amalgam or nuke agreement“ “13h- on. Company or Companies {or the mum}, aim“ Inca. lone or use of the aid Comwpfl usual and n ‘ brunchadwtth dl other of A! .tginazg'muda t“ 9““ w 03505.1 1895. A loom? 5' J ‘A‘nld’ money T0 LOAN- "monnlm‘ N OTICE TWO REGISTERED HOLSTEINS 6.6 b th V e r. wâ€" y best manUfact wenty-Olle! she must- have been an when she ï¬rst came, Ca nada Also a full t. in arms ‘ 11115 ' taut doctor, Who xx as ' the Reformamry. ' her ï¬fteenth year†said me c matrqn. n we in as drunk and incorrigible GIVE us A cm W. (3. Will and see our US BARRISTER, Sum SIONER 15‘ H. L‘. J LINDSAY IS HEREBY ._..-- west corner 0f 6E0. INc StOCk of G13. { akimbo- . ï¬fth tune she has been {3:8 is the in here, on sentences from sn and she 15 omy i551 t . Rd Pa ° whose dxrty me i so small and shapely and 5 were . ;e uncombed ban was long find “You might well sa.)_y ‘an mtam 1115’" she said, turning Po we lgdoc'or. “I was born 1n tne my jail. and my mother served a rears’ sentence here, and vyent ‘ Cut amonths after I came 1 ï¬rst; :1; she matron 2†#34,â€: “no ;ar~t< [at m‘l!.C1-131 I """ J . rs; dldn’t. she, now ? 1 Dean 3P9 . . say as much to the supermtemx- Didn’t I, now?†gain the matron nodded. md you’re surprised at my being doctor! \Vhere else would yU-j ct me to be? I reckon your mumâ€" Lnd your chance in life was prec- diï¬eren t.†1e young doctor granted the (Lu-er- ; He was a. child of a gx‘aciOus aer,reared in a reï¬ned Christian 3, graduate of a. state uniVersity of a. medical SChOO‘h “\thlt mur: iIhwe done for my vineym-f;7 ;I have not done for it" - -ng_ Le matron 8011â€â€œ :ne of the 1133’!“ 1 unvv Ilvv T-†n: what has been done at all Mr other vineyard, this Clara, child 1e prison and the cximinal .‘ Where is your father I": the do.» asked Clara. he girl laughed hardly. Never see him.â€_ Don‘t 1mm who .1. ,, - . v - Fhen you'll be put in the dung Lon." [‘hen I’ll kick and yell till I'm 1. You’ll have to take me out ezime, and then I’ll be just awful." Couldn't you turn over :1 new leaf be £003 iusb for a change, Clam. iEM'ironments count for much.’ doctor. ‘What’s environment? Some! to see see how 1: woum scum the deputy. HOW’d ldo it? I never had no nplvs Shall I copx aftex he or 01‘ she?†indicating with 119!- er the unions oflicers standing '3and strlking theix pose m tip: 1:..." “hm.†Ina “n iike em and er the various oï¬icers stand: ?. and striking their pose in A “7â€" “Dress me up like ‘em, :1 tme their innings, and maybe 3†I; she suit )3 3 How 30 you know but what I'd emin as nice as other fn‘ks if m Come, said the matron, “it's your 3â€)" to get your. bath and your Because You Won't do anything. In. I’d give Y0“ sewing or ripâ€" For knitting: if you would do it." “locum, You mean. \Vho ever ght me?†Lt 01‘ “'03.! 1†fyou tmk gids like Clara. nn elegant clothea, and s There it is,†laid the matron, Eyou took girls like C 1am. dressed Lin elegant clotbe=, and set them palace, they would reduce it to a m a, week†said the matron with ’h: I knpw, and all the rest 0f it link with not-hing to do but. 2 ’ve Spent, hours trying to teach .†said Clara, admitted the facts. reg’lar bad ones, wasn‘t tricks and always in a r life out of you with Ln’t. she, now? I heard :11 to the superintend- and Native ’|u WI] 1 you never be God and Home Don’t kngw who ft counL much COLUMN. setting her i Something said Clara was :1 a ï¬end; and geOn, and i choke herse: over into tli out her yeq shirt or sevl‘ thing by W} living. Aq either. WI months’ 5811 she said: ‘1 much whis three daysEl tenced for s twenty-on as; of (W1 “Nursed‘ fed gin irq‘ tor; "all hi} her inherit Back of 1:114 mothers of say how been intros that crimi birth and fort, to ha industry? not society these chil the slums, cy and their bibl “There 315 in hig said the su turn over % servants; no immedi of their ch unrestrain er, though I know tw who are 1 decent soci ery, the 1 And 6301 eighteen t1] days spent day to sin 1 high ambit no deep mc fevered, n6 out: 0! opened by escape to l and man mg are p6! ï¬rst case, ‘ in number, of outsider XIIOI “You ti! in the W said the the middl‘ “I ï¬nd 1 6V6! children, t P8111“ UIEIT blmd to t‘ Feitl‘al he ll 1116 {I} be m L'l'llll 1H envir interestm Independ‘ t' 1e mnnd tions for: missxoner mot. who board WI accented. 1744. Mn the I] ever raw Excellenc erunr-Gel nf an inn! their frie‘ stvries I fraternal The Pure J unc. am the must the ordel has bee members month oi ml the nd have of wha! ls. open .Thm 5-1292 ilh‘ea likeiv‘ the m an "Id are 514