Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 18 Aug 1892, p. 1

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iLING SYSTEM is!) ‘ manufactured while , which removes the the gums or jaw, the W days, and 11°C ssened on all the roved styles and applmncsl fort. Numbers of p650“5 Mr. N eclands ovar 20 Price: from $10 to $65 31 Ball‘s Local Anesthetici lydro-Carbogngas m e porcelain 1385 gefh to their oljiginalw E G_as. HeI§tudiedi :he mvemor of gas 'en 2: to over 160,000! . 03088, Iis process 01:? :00. an had ; consequently _ istry. including an d durable Zver 30 years expel“ xennedy’s store. 09' ;. Kent Street- rstered for nearly 23‘ mds of persons Int ,he_ Iatestflapproxeq Agents wanted; '9 s to the right M Patent P10w SW 423 Spadim A's" >w using a new ‘e, 0!- William /. PAmmm will convince you that this is a bona-fide Teacher of Instr \ om! Music, Eduction prior to receivmg our fall goods. will slease send _8 Kent .Suezz, an DENTIST, on ABENTS M. R. B. D. S. imnsm! Lindsay. 3431.1. PE'TTY, 5w. Kent St, Lindsay. tk For Lardine! Beware of Imitations I icCOLL BROS 00., Toronto. dime YLEY’S HARDWARE Bargains in everything in the Jewellry line for the next thirty days. OB PRINTING. â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"FOB- U/LDERS ’ c"1113327.: ATCHES, CLOCKS, J EWELâ€" RY. SILVERVERE, AND aMIXTTJREKE- USE MCGOLL’S For sale by all Leading Dealers. ARGAI/VS. AND-â€" Number 33. We don’t give any ichro- mos with our Baking at Higinbotham’s Drug tee you Will get the Rur- est article in the market store just try it once. Powder, but Eg_guara.n- SPECTACLES. CYLINDER OILS LARDINE MACHINE OIL, JEW MA TERI/4L5. ELLER” â€"AN D: Next the Daly House“ Committed For Trial. LONDON, Aug. l7.â€"At the Bradford Petty Sessmns yesterday the Rev. Robert Baync»: was: onmmitted‘fm' trial on the chat-4v .; _, ; .31!ng two IiLIT ;, LONDON, Aug. l7.â€"-Mr. Keir Hardie has sent as a. contribution to the Homestead atrikers’ fund the £100 given him by Mr. Carnegie for his expenses in the recent election. LONDON, Aug. l7.â€"â€"Mr. Gladstone, who Monday visited the Queen at Osborne House. returned to London yesterday. He is in excellent health. The enthusiasm manifested yesterday at various points along the route of Mr. Gladstone’s journey was repeated to-day. Everywhere, parti- culurly at Southampton and the Waterloo Station, he was surrounded by a. good- natured crowd, who heartily cheered him and then greeted him With cries of “Bravo William,” “Drop it into them, old man,” etc. Baron Houghton’s appointment as Vice- roy of Ireland amazed even Mr. Gladstone’s intimate friends. \Vhen an inkling of the appointment reached Dublin this mornin it was held to be without foundation mm. the appointment was officially announced. Apart from Radical opinion theCnbinet is really composed of eminently reputable men. Mr. Gladstone has preferred collect- ing around him tried colleagues accustomed to subordination and certain not to deviate int-o strange ways. His three new Cabinet Ministersâ€"Asquith, Arnold Morley and Aclandâ€"are sound Liberals. LONDON, Aug. 17.â€"Despite the falling rain a. large crowd waited for hours to re‘ ceive Mr. Gladstone in the vicinity of Stuart Rendle’s house in Carleton Gardens, where Mr. Gladstone is stopping un- til he takes up his oflicial residence in Downing-street. When he drove to the house the crowd cheered him. He smilinglv bowed his thanks for the reception. After the lapse of a brief interval he emerged again. accompanied by his wife and daughter. Th1 party were driven to Kensington to attend a wedding. Upon his return Mr. Gladstone met the members of the new ministry and a conference took place. AThe oflicial list when scanned to-night at the National Liberal Club awoke vehement protests. Was it for this undiluted list of old men associated with the traditions of VVhiggery, from the territorial and aristocratic class, that Radicals had given their money and their time? Baron Houghton is a lifelong protege of Mr. Gladstone’s. He is likely to spend much beyond his whole ofiicial income in lavish entertainments. Still, everybody questions the wisdom of putting an un- known and untried young man of 34 years in the highest post in Ireland, though only as a figure- head. The informant of the Associated Press representative predicts that Baron Houghton will soon gain popularity among the Irish, that he will not interfere in politics, but will support Irish sports, eep an open table and win good w ill. LONDON, Aug. l7â€"The composition 0; the new Government causes intense disap- pointment among the radicals. Not a single man, except John Morley prominent- ly identified with the Radicals has been appointeda cabinet minister and among the ex-cabinet posts few members, of the new set have any but the remotest chance of getting a place. The old set are masters of the situation and representatives of old \Vhig families and Liberal medio- crity having aristocratic connections and never associated with extreme views have been Mr. Gladstone’s exclusive choice. Even Mr. Stansfeld, who, in the latest Gladstone cabinet represented democratic opinion, has been shelved. The announcement of the appointment of Baron Houghton to the position of Vice- my of Ireland was so incredible that the representative of the Associated Press made inquiries about it, when he found that the appointment had been made as announced. LONDON, Aug. 17.â€"The new Govern- ment officially announced last evening is as follows: Mr. Gladstone, Lord Privy Seal and First Lord of the Treasury; Earl Rose- bery, Foreign Secretary. Baron Herschell, Lord Chancellor; Sir \Villiarn Vernon- Harcourt, Chancellor of the Exchequer; Herbert Asquith, Home Secretary; the Right Hon. Henry H. Fowler, President of the Local Government Board; the Right. Hon. :H. Campbell-Bannerman, Secretary of State for \Var; Earl Spencer, First Lord of the Admiralty; the Right Hon. John Morley, Chief Secretary for Ireland; the Right Hon. A. J. Mundella, President of the Board of Trade; Sir Charles Russell, Attorney Gen.; John Rigby, Solicitor-Gen; the Right Hon. Samuel \Valker, Lord Chan- cellor of Ireland; Mr. McDermott, Attor- ney-General for Ireland; the Right Hon. Edward P. C. Marjoribanks, Patronage Secretary to the Treasury; Alexander Asher, Solicitor - General for Scotland; the Right Honorable J. B. Balfour, Lord Advocate of Scotland; the Earl of Kimberley, Secretary of State for India and Vice-President of the Council. Th: Marquis of Ripon, Secretary of State for the Colonies; Sir George 0. Trevelyan, Secretary for Scotland; Mr. Arnold Mor- ley, Postmaster-General: Mr. Arthur Her- bert Dyke Acland, Vice-President of the Council on Education; Baron Houghton Viceroy of Ireland withouta seat in the Cabinet. Earl Bosebery Will 3016 the Position of Foreign Secretaryâ€"The Appointment of Baron Houghton as Viceroy 01' Ireâ€" land Causes Surprise. BRITAIN'S NEW MINISTRY IT ISNOT POPULAR WITH THE RADI- CALS. Radicals Amazed And Angel-ed. )Ir. Hardie Squares Himself‘ Crowds Cheer the Premier. The Crowd Cries “Bravo.” LINDSAY, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18th 1892. a Walk or a drive of half an hour in the Vatican gardens. Leo XIII. dines at I o’clockin the old Roman style. The dinner is composed of a soup, generally pated’It- alie, a roast, a vegetable, very often fried potatoes and fruit. The only wine served is old Bordeaux. The Pope is very apt to glance over the journals at meal times. He dines alone generally, waited upon, in addition to the valet, by his scalco segreto or carver, Commendatore Giulio Sterbina. This official is a gentleman of refined tastes and artistic culture. owning a good collection of pre-Raphaelite pictures. An invitation to take coffee and milk after the Pope’s mass is considered a great honor, and it is only extended to those who have heard the mass and taken Holy Communion from the Pope’s hands. After dinner Leo XIII takes a short rest on a chaise lounge. the siesta never lasting be- yond the hour. Then follows a drive in the Belvedere gardens, through which an avenue more than a mile long has lately been opened, affording many lovely points of view over the city and its suburbs. The crowd at Grimsby park on Sunday was the largest of the season. In summer as in winter Leo XIII. is awakened at 6 by his private servant. Francesco Centra, from Carpeneto. At 7 o’clozk he says his mass. attended by two cappellanogsegreti, and hears a second mass celebrated by one of the same attendants, who act also as private secretary. It happens sometimes that the Pope. having been troubled With sleeplessness. gets up with a piece of Latin or Italian poetry composed during the wakeful hours. The verses are generally dictated to one of the secretaries before the mass. The break- fast of the Pope consists of coffee, milk, and bread Without butter. Soon after the oflicial reception begins. The first one. as a rule, is given to the cardinal secretary of state. His audi- ence lasts more than an hour, and takes place every day except Tuesdays and Fridays, which are set apart for the re- ception of the diplomatic body. Cardinals, heads of congregations, generals of mon- astic orders. strangers of destinction, are received later in the day The North American Review thinks it is to be regret- ted that Leo XIII. does not accord private audiences as often as his predecessor did. Many strangers are obliged to leave Rome without having been able to see the holy father. In winter, if the sun shines, the receptions are interrupted for a while for The big combiners in the States did their best to circumvent and defeat the Ontario Government’s efforts to establish a binder twine factory in the Central prison. When the Hon. J. M. Gibson went to the States for machinery his foot- steps were dogged by agents of the combine. They tried to prevent the manufacturers from selling, but finally the machinery was secured and much of the twine used in binding the sheaves of the next harvest will be supplied at alow price by the Central prison factory. The trades crgan- izations are opposed to this because they say it is bringing prison labor into com- petition with free labor. On motion of Mr. Connolly, seconded by Mr. Kylie that when this council adjourns it stands adjourned till Monday 22 inst for the purpose of striking a. rate for the current year and for the reception from the chairman of each committee of a report estimating as near as possible the amount that will be required for the remainder of the current year. On motion of Mr. Finley, seconded by Mr. Kylie the chief of police wasinstruct- ed to see that the by-lnw 1n reference to the cutting of noxious weeds be carried out at once. On motion of Mr. Mellon, seconded by Capt. Crandcll, an electric light was ordered on the corner of St. Patrick and Bertie street, in the east ward. On motion of Capt. Crandell, seconded by Mr. Robson, the chairman of the Street and bridge committee was authoriz- ed to place a crossmg on Lindsay street leading to the steam boat wharf. Mr. Robson read the report of the street and bridge committee which was adopted. Mr. John Dovey was heard in reference to the placing of a hydrant on the corner of Queen and Lindsay streets. The matter was referred to the committee on fire and water. From P_. Tully, and others asking for two crossmgs. Referxed to street and bridge committee. From J. H. Lennon in reference to to market fees. Referred to town prOperty committee. A petition from P. Nicholl and others praying for an electric light on Sussex and Francis Street. Referred to the commit- tee on fire and water. From the arbitrators in the matter of Mr. Wm. McDonnell’s prOperty on the Queen’ 3 square. The amount allow ed Mr. McDonnell was $32 The regular meeting of the town council W38 held on Monday evening. Present the MaYOI‘, Reeve Kylie, Dy-reeve Crandell, and Councillors. Lack, Robson, Mallon, Touchburn, Finley, Connolly. Minutes of last meeting; were read and approved. Convicts Making Binder Twine. Daily Life of Pope Leo. TOWN COUNCIL. COMMUN ICATION S. Maitfihmum. “At length it was decided to send a messenger to Baronscourt, where the Duke and Duchess of Abercorn are at present stavinm After considering the situation, her Grace, with a woman’s readiness of resource, suggested that two farm horses, ploughing in a field close by, should be requisitioned, and the great state coach used by the late duke when Lord Lieutenant of Ireland should be pressed into service. The horses were brought in, the coach wheeled out, and then it was discovered there was no har- ness. Woman’s wit, however, again came to the rescue, and, with, silver- mounted state harness which ornamented the mantlepiece of one of the principal apartments of the castle, the equipage was ready to start.” But all the difficul- ties has not been surmounted yet. “There was no one but the duke to drive, and the law was too plain on the subject of peers taking part in elections. The law, how- ever, said nothing about peeresses, and the duchess, seeing the state of affairs, at once volunteered her servmes, mounted the dickey, and drove off amid the cheers of the assembled servants. The first man was polled at 6.30, and 7.57 the second man, although he lived over four miles distant from the polling station, was brought into the booth and his vote recorded.” ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 15.â€"An official report just issued shows that there were 154 cases of cholera and 31 deaths from it in this city On August 1st and 2nd. Thus far only Working people have been attack- ed by the scourge. The conditions under which they live invite attacks of the disease and through ignorance ' they passively resist the endeavors of the authorities to improve the sanitary condition of their dwellings. Everything possible is being done to prevent the spread of the disease and the sanitary regulations are being,r enforced with unprecedented strictness. There is no excitement attending the visitation, but some of the wealthier residents have already left the city. The cholera returns from the whole of Russia for the 11th instant show a large increase in the number of new cases as well as in the mortality. There were reported 9177 new cases and 5009 deaths. Archbishop'Cleary Sends Home Rulers the Donation of His People. KINGSTON, Ont., Aug. 10.â€"Yesterday Archbishop Cleary sent a draft for four hundred pounds sterling to Mr. Justin McCarty, M.P.. London Eng, to aid in defraying the expenses of the recent electoral campaign. His Grace adds: “It is their voluntary and absolutely free offering to the land of their fathers, the early home of many amongst us, in sus- tainment of Ireland’s efforts to regain by peaceful and constitutional methods her native legislature, of which she was de- prived nigh a century ago, by fraud and violence, combined with shameless cor- ruption. My people are chiefly of Irish origin in loyalty to the Crown and ready submission to the Government and laws under which they live, in the secure en. joyment nf the fruits of their industry, they cherish ardent. attachment to the dear Old Country, and their liveliest sympathies are with her in all her vicissi- tudes of fortune, in her sorrows and her joys, her reverses and her triumphs. They are at present full of hope. and are equally looking forward to a day when they shall send a delegation form Kingston of the Archbishop and others to assist at the solem inauguration of the revised Irish Parliament in College Green. May God speed the day." DECLINE OF CRIME. The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland had not too early removed the special provisions of the Crime Act from the last of the Irish counties. Agrarian crime has for many months past, on the official returns, shown a. steady and gratifying decline. For thc quarter ended with June the Royal Irish constabulary report 134 cases, but more than half of them took the form of threat- ening letters, which do not appear to have been followed up by actual crime. Maim~ ing and killing of cattle, the vilest form of agrarian ofl'ence,unhappily has nothuite died out ; there have been 16 cases. Seventeen incendiary fires are reported, and nine cases of injury to property. Clare. and no longer Kerry, suffers under the worst reputation. But the returns on the whole are highly satisfactory, and go far to justify the claim that there is less crime in Ireland than in other parts of the kingdom. The Streets of DUblll] were lit early on the morning of July 27 for the first tune by electricity. The new nlant was being tried, and the experiment was a complete success. THE DUCHESS IN THE DICKEY. The best story of the general election comes from Ireland and is told by The Belfast Telegraph on “most reliable au- thority.” In the Newton-n Stewart district of North Tyrone, in which Lord Frederick Hamilton, brother of the First Lord of the Admiralty, and also of the Duke of Aber- corn, defeated the Rev. Prof. Dougherty, by only 49 votes, it was ascertained at 6 on the evening of the polling day that two invalid Unionists voters were unpolled. Every available vehicle suitable for the purpose had been pressed into service, and Lord Frederick’s agent was in a dilemma, knowing that the fight would be an ex- tremely, close one. Dublin Strgets Lighted by Electricity The Cholera in St. Petersburg. IRELAND 50 Cents per Year in Advance Capture of the Man Who Escaped When Officer Steadman Was Shot. ST. JOHX, Aug. l2.â€"Ten days ago the Moncton police surrounded a house con- taining two supposed burglars, one of whom escaped, while Officer Steadman, with a. fatal bullet in his heart, held the other till help came. Steadman died on the spot and ever since then diligent search has been kept up for the missing man J 1m. Yesterday a man named Carroll of Pictou came to Moncton and offered his service to‘the pclice. He proceeded to-day to Kent county in disguise with a com- panion pretending to be surveying railway ties. They got trace of their man, found where he haa stolen a hat and boots, and finally brought up at a cottage to make enquiries, when, looking in, he saw his man sitting not five feet away. Carroll accosted him suddenly, and was quick enough to catch the hand of his prisoner when the latter had half pulled a revolver from his hip pocket. In an instant he had knocked his man dewn, hustled him out of the house and handcufl‘ed him. The prisoner admits that he was in the Mom- LONDON August l2.â€"A special from Tientsen says : “The extreme gravity of the anir question is beginning to be recognized here. A force of infantry and horsemen have been ordered tu proceed from Kashgar to Rankue in the Chinese province of Sarikol." Russia Moving her- Troops to the Fron- tierâ€"Chinese Takiug Precautions. LONDON. August 13.â€"A despatch to the News from Odessa says that Russian troops are being rapidly moved from Turkestan to the Afghan frontier. The Chronicle’s Odessa correspondant says that Ishak Khan and his son, Ismail. pretenders to the Afghan throne have taken refuge at Sam- ark, and with 200 adherents all are receiv- ing handsome allowances from the Russian treasuary and are actively intriguing against the present ruler of Afghanistan. The Daily Telegram says :-â€"“It is under- stood that Lord Roseberrv will not join the new Cabinet should this prove true. Lord Kimberly will probably accept the foreign portfolio with the leadership of the House of Lords.” LONDON, August 13.â€"The Sunla cor- respondent of the Times says :â€"“A sign of the anti-English feeling in Russia is that all Hindoos have been ordered to quit Turkestan within 31x months. Many bankers and traders who heav been settl- ed for generations in Bokhara, Samarcand and elsewhere have thus been virtually ruined. Fresh centres of disturbance have appeared in Afghan and Turkestan, probably due to emissaries of the Russian Government. ton affair, and says he fired four gigs there. He declares that Carroll is the quickest man he has met yet, and that he would have been a dead man if he had been a. second slower. After pausing for a moment Re“. Mr. French announced the withdraw! of the banns, and the author of the startling in- cident left the church. After the service she met Rev. Mr. French in the vestry and produced a certificate to the eflect that the man Morrin had been married to her sister some years ago, in St. Pat- rick’s church, by the Reverend Father Quinlivan. Premier DeBoucherville has spoken against all lotteries, including the Provin- cial one. A deputation from St. Jean Bap- tiste Society, consisting of Ald. Rolland, Ald. Harteau, and Mr. L. 0. David. waited on the Provincial Cabinet yesterday after- noon in reference to the Province of Quebec lottery. The deputation was anxious to ascertain what the Governments intention was in regard to the lottery question. Premier de Boucherville spoke very strong- ly on the subject. He frankly informed the deputation that he was, and always had been, strongly opposed to lotteries of all kinds and in whatever shape they were presented to the public. He sympathized with the St. Jean Baptiste Society in its efforts to raise money for the completion of the Monument National, but even that sym athy would not permit him to give the eputation any hOpe that the Govern- ment would allow the Province of Quebec lottery to exist. It would have to go. so would every lottery in the Province. The Government had agreed on that. However as the society was placed in a peouliar posi- tion the premier said he would for the present allow the lottery to be continued for a short time in order to give the society a chanceof finding some other-better means by which to raise money to pay for the monument. The deputation will report the result of the conference with the Govern- ment at an early meeting of the Society. SIMLA. Ausust 12.â€"Anothec collision has occured on the Nazatafh Pamir be- tween the Afghanas and Russians. No particulars have been received. a A peculiar incident, and one that creat- ed Considerable excitement for the moment took place in the Church of St. John the Evangelist Monday in Montreal. At the 11 o’clock service Rev. Mr. French was reading the balms in the awe of a number of candidates for matrimory. The names of two couples had been read, but when Rev. Mr. French came to those of William Morrin, bachelor, and Anastasis Baker, spinster, a lady, evidently laboring under great excitement, rose in the body of the church and said in a distinct voice : “I forbid the bonus I” Rev. Mr. French asked: “[ p011 what around do you forbid the banns !” “On the grt: und that the man is already mar- lied 1” was the reply. The Berlin burglars have been arrested H I GINBOTHiMS REE UMATISM 8 Cl]: A 'I'I CA. â€"Al\'Dâ€"- Forbade the Banns POSITIVELY CU RED BY Lotteries Must Go. % MIXTURE €â€"

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