Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 30 Oct 1879, p. 2

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nothing In tho {oplor .11., of his mud. mum amid), Ito-hood“, with Mo hondl mu him Ind his hood mm on him brunt. lh. how hooutuol ho mi IO toll, I0 duh, Iotlkoolollon not. And 110101} him no; no" hit] qnnmllod. Ihod boon mm:- IN. P“ tortpoight hon". It land to no that hut amt] boon hogpy. I. bod loot my youth; I m old; 1‘ Id come into tho Mow. Thom won another young gm," tho sold, otter I moment‘s pun-o, u it «on In 30mm of youth hid their owntnou hot it won good now to tomombor, “thot Pour: whammy hod phonon {or him to} any. I mo, spook shout it now, I luppou; In long lino. pond to one; the wu, the in, I, donut Mood, one Poul hu om" loud m- u o brothn. 8h. bu hnd mun, Inflorl Inoo ; with one 0! them tho plightod faith. a the hu kept her trutt with duth. 'But I -Ithought thgt boom-o I odorod Paul an tho mm um ot hu toot; um! when hl- gaudy Mu: utd this other wu to In his 0139' , rlth hot glut tortnno ot oommund, In ‘I’ pomp" ttnt I bod only thin homo ond ltl « “And we in nothing more.” the aid, “ than to he laid in one grave when the long - “ And the ondleu morning.”he murmured. “ And even the endieae morning can hardly be brighter than none oi the morninge oi our youthâ€"than themorninga when we first made iha pot-ponrgi. Pan]. You romember that rning, Paul 2" “ Do you remembor it, Aunt Pei-ail 2" asked ’Boeamond. ‘ , “ Shall I ever forget it 2" ahe laid. with a 1 w aweet laugh. “ Why. when i am dead remembrance at that morning will bloom out Mag gran like a flower! And at it was In anoh a morning as any day t month â€"oniy ao gloriou. I0 gilded, so tail of eun- el But what a gray and lowering. ehow- eting dawn it had l I! we had never had that pun. quarrel. Paul! Ah. I wan no and when! , . the curtains that daybreak. I thought wae done with my iiieâ€"and it wae a pityâ€" ! to young." ‘ Hete Boeamond pinehod Bettnm’a arm. “ 8o young. And might have been bleued." laid her old aunt Penis. " Ii 1 gave that morning jnet ‘the_awiiteot glance I“- .L‘ _--.I-_ A- n,, ,-__-- -_ â€"J n: wu hound. The run gudon wu jun n It in twhy, ‘on a bum higher than the m of tho and“. ‘ And whoa I “mud moans" Paul In}! conga doyp. nu! ma “ILI-‘ 1.. n A -_- -w--w-u onus-W mono tho gordon to Poui'o window. ond low hot ho-ut thou our bio book. ho could not oil. And thon I drouod no, ond I thought ii I o young girl boing drouodin ho: gnu. ind a 1 pinned on my whito {rookâ€"a la acme. you all it now, BoooInondâ€"o‘nd rout Iowa to tho role and”: to pick tho lowou with tho dow on than [91:33” pot.‘ in.“ 6|... m_:_-__‘- I ,o b. for my own fortune. why. then-I M] M“: my tour. You. no wu my m. “1:“.le 01 um. ulthongh ho a maid Io. no": anon) and Iain m; but we do no! :1qu mod words. ul now. .1: u on». :11 In I twinkling. u u DMWMI on. M noon. he m the 'nolnotlmaltl. naxmm your mum." out 13:11:, Paul 2’7 fl - " I an out. 0! than now. st my ate.” “1d flu hmbmd. “ I luv. them. Nothing «I: ah _thu_m "when an.” . ‘It wee juet eiter the roeee hed done blowing. :They were ell eltting by twilight in the yellow 3drewlng-roomâ€"eomehow it elweye seemed twilight there when it wee derk everywhere ",eleeâ€"eud Boeemond got up end etirred her :7 t-pourrl in the old oleret-oolored Oheleee » orbetween the window; end euoh‘e eweet. eint odor of roee leeree etolo through the . m thet the old people felt in it they were ung m the time we! June ngeln. ‘ "It In too wetlul.” eeid Mlle Ellinghem. ,weving her b peeoook leether ten. r “ Too powerlul 1 " eeld Mn. Penn, putting , ewey the eilrer enrl thet the neighboring ten ‘ bruehed. lnto her etlll eolt brown eyee. “ Not [or me. Nothing le eo plee‘eent to me no the pot-pou‘rrl. end in the old jer. too. It in not the rate. but It in the memory of the roee. It _, hrlnge beck ell my youth. And elthough ege ‘le pleeeent enough u it eomee to me. yet youth wee very eweetâ€"eo very eweet. my ,deer." end the eilrer voiee penned wine e ,elender hend went eeerohing through the purple gloom {or another hend. end found itâ€"the bend of the epeeker‘e huebend. -“ People think it no end to grow old." ehe eeld. “But every yeer hee been to me like Mother etep to en upwerd peth to perediee: One'e wluge ere growing ell the wey. And one hee eo mueh to remember, to look on zwhen one peueee, to eee in new llghte. Do ”you eugpoee thet either at In would ohenge pleeee with Boeemond end Bertrem there. ,who heve'lile before them 2" ? “Not I." eeid the volee thet reeponded. . " Not thet you would no_t be gled to live â€"-..._ A.__m_ , as anm. hall under his bruth. ' “ And I plucked than an my huh: on_n'ay m -n- h-n-AJ ML- _-__ -4, um: um mamnfig'iifi "Email '33 m: to lots» In tho “no of IOIM." ' V,___- _ __,- ”- mw‘u unu- wwvm III-I“ Iii-360 1m tho phoo. When the pawl droop and fade she'll bur them to the YNOI'I bunk. Ma 31339]! thompg the waves and wonder if Elna!» throw them on the waves and wonder if tfi’eyfu am or link. Will she hear “my to-night 3 bunch of lover: role-hearuâ€"puy ? I“ them in her use 3 weekâ€"then throw them with he: flowers sway ? m .throu htbo "don. nun O'utho uni-brink. B 8 P M“: um tn old bou not and wonden it 'ownl fig“ orunk R. q M tun! than I: tho udon round and ”and “Flum- 0 goes3 ' yin.“ all: e out. Ito-h rout-I ho hand! he could 'turn to“; In tho tan-u, b mmma. the queen o! 3,. 1,013ng Egg-ply“. 7 pup. lotto". “diam with ',‘ J‘vau the time 6! thin. o plnokod them an we wont." ' 'h'oI-ifi'n'xii 31}? THE POT-POURBI. â€"Harpcr’c Magaflna for November. Blondin'e deflng exploit: on the rope in Vienne ere juet now the telk end wonder oi the town. He oelle hllneeli the "‘ Hero 0! Niegere," end perionnl et the building which wee rated in 1873 to: the exhibition. The leteet thing reported oi hint in walking elong y the rope on etilte. blindlolded end beokwerds. M e height oi 250 ieet. No net in etxetohed below him, end when hell-we, eerou he ielgnl toloee hie nerve, end, putting hie head to hie ioteheed, weveu. leene. end then ellpe end neoure hinueli. "A geep oi enxlet ."eeye e report. “ in head through the hub euembln women eereent end at «tried out in an.” The Emperor end Empreu heve both been. to eee the extreot- dlnety periomeneeâ€"but neithei at then .mâ€"A‘ E, Boeelnond lingered to loom: he: dreu from Mm Eflinghnm’e eheir which detained it. Mien Eflinghnni was crying loitiy to hone". " Ah, tee," ehe murmured, working the knobby flngen in the leee mitten. end iorgetting who“ oontetnponry ehe weeâ€" " see how eelfleh nae lei She remembeu all her own put in it; the forgete mine. For I eieoâ€"it in so long egoâ€"I loved Paul." “ ' author yo mo buds II yo mu, Old Tune in nu: n-flyln‘; And thin nmo flower thou unfloo to~doy To-monow will be dying; ' nag Bomom. stopping through the long window into the low light of tho rising moon. the rich otroln of the tenor mining to roll upon tho dunk ”not on baron” from n flower. ell in e bresth, es 1! the eerth hed rolled round under s new heeven. the sun seemed to be shining es it never shone heiore. the birds to be singing. flowers were lull of life end irsgrenee, the world wes the most beeuti- iul plsee. end we were on our knees shredding roses together with the old potpourri jer. end the gerden ringing with our lenghter. And every once in e while Psul wss lilting my chin with his fingerto mete me look him in the ieee with my eyes thet eliet once dered not. end seying my mouth wee the sweetest rose oi them ellâ€"sh. yes. youdid. Pealâ€"end ‘then he wes plunging his heed into the jer to stir the petels. And suddenly his fingers were touching something like no hesp of rose leeves.end he wes bringing ups peper, e let- terâ€"tint very letter whieh- he hed given John 1 just us the old iellow wes coming up from ‘ emptying the in iron lest yeer's leeves end spices; end he hed dropped it there, end lor- gotten it. John is so iorgetiulâ€"I meen, oi course. he wee. Ah the! whet e dey thet wee i We trod on sir. we wslked in the midhehvens. Es," you gone sound ssleep, Pen! 2 To be sure. a And Bosemond. it you went the other role for potpourriâ€"the English. you know, cell it hotoh patch-1 Ah, whet music thst is 2" end she psused to listen. ___v .â€"vâ€"' “ '1 heve broken your heart? ’ he “Id. in eueh e grove end tender volee. ' I have not broken your eplrtt. Tell me why you spurned my letter 2 ’ " ' 1â€"! never had your letter.’ I robbed. " ‘ Never hed e letter telling youâ€"telling you ell you knew without it, but teeming you ths. grendtether or no grendtether, only you ehmld be my wile ; end it not you, then no one: It I: mleleid then ; end we hove had all thle Inleery tor nothingâ€"we who wor- ehtp «eh other.’ “ “Hadâ€"well. never mind ebout the rut. There wee nobody to lee no two young ore-tutu etending in the gerden u the flnt young lover. did. I don't know thet we should hove outed i! there hed been. And ' “Bat ho Ind «Ham mind be hold me by them. Ind 30: my bud. and kept then sold. 1091a apt let an hidp my 1m. “ ' 1 pretend to any nothing.’ I rotumod. in I atom and lury o! inopnuiblo tom. uprlng ing to my loot and stating to run any 3nd hide my (so. out 0! light and pny thot "cry tml flood of tom might drown my very balm. ' I pretend to any nothing but um youy‘uvo- brpkgn my part I ' “ ' Whit ham: 2" hi Med. ‘ Are you play- lng with me um: Hun you received no lam: tom moâ€"no mm thus I gun J 0111:? ”9.19“ mm .0 --:â€"2 i '" ' Whatâ€"uh“ letter? ’ .I ltnmmorod, throwing buck my head, with the tom “1:99:11” 9";- my boo. " ' Wins-don It moon 7’ cried Paul. ‘ I dommd to know. I will have no more of lhll. Who: no you unhappy shout? Booms. you show! me, beomu you have outraged :11 my Kaunas, bacon-o you hon aloud to name: my lagerâ€"- hed been going to meke grendrnemme’e pot-pound together. But I aethered them with my beek turned to thet gerden eerou thet high box hedge. end the dew on than were wee eelt. John. the old home eervent (he hee been gone thle meny e yeer), eelne logging out the big Oheleee jer â€"the some jet, Boeemond. It hee never hed e nlok. I wonder it you een eey ee much {or it elter hell e century! John lelt It. with : the eplee boxee end e dish of eelt, on the merble etep, to be hendy tor me. end I begen to ehred the tone into it. And ee I eeettered ‘ the velvet petele. lt ewept over me in e large thet jnet lo the deye of my life hed gone, and I too wee e withered flower; end ee I knelt before the jer, ell et onee my erme tell eeroee it. end my need tell between then. end I wee erylng each I etonn o: lobe thet I wonder no one heerd me. But some one did heer. Directly e ehedow tell between me end the nu ehlne. end e volee mede my heert etend etill e_n_d_ my_eobe‘eeeee. hovo boliovod or droomod thot tho iortnno wouldhoro-odoony diiloronoo with Pool. or tho gtondlothor‘o wioh, or hoovon'o thundorbolto evon. boioro I oow it tor my~ oeli. I oow it myoolt. I oow him so and turn the muoie oo ohe ployod upon tho horn. and bend over it withtho color on hio ohooh ondouongry fire in hlo eye when tho on tell oohonoe on me. I low him liit her irom her ooddlo ot hor gote, foot down tho otreot ; ond coin with her ond otoy till. on honr oiterword. o groom come ond lodl tho horoo 06. I oow him loitering with her ot the lone but they did not know I oow. ond I hoord hio ; miooroblo old anndiothor oomo hobbling up ‘ our otopo. rubbing hio hondo ond toiliing tm my tother oi Poul'o luehy hit. And oo 1‘ know tnot ho hod ionokon meâ€"me. the child thot hod wouhippod him irom tho orodlo. And I meant to die or ooon u I could : but in tho meontime. it it killed mo itooli to hido it. they ohonld never know I oored. Yet I woo not mm; in oomo woy, oomo otrongo woy. it woo Poul who woo onzry, who would not opeoh to me. would not alone. ot me. would not come neor me. ooid ohorp ond hitter, oimoot lnoolent, thingo in my proooneo ond oeomod to try to hurt mo oll he could. It woo not in hio monnor, ooii he had found oomo one otiii deoror to him than I. but no ii he hotod me. I thought, iorjnot oxlotlng now. Ah. well. it broke my hoort 1 And no I sothered thou roo_oI_thot morning I remembered that we Blondln’. "you count. Inluu melancholy 2" uk- AppMon Journal. From «(I npumm‘wo on II] It do... 1 Omamo. Gotchaâ€"Tho ulo of Shorthoml Ind Olydudolu ol the Bow Pork Condo AI- Iooloflon. at Donor Puk.0hlougo, God”. was the but no]. nude in thoUnmd mm or On:- Id. for two youu put. Tho bull. won in snot domond. 1nd Avenged 8318, “though two of the moat nimbl- woro withdnwnâ€"ano of Oxford 30, ond Boron Phallus. ptm Booth. The con Md helm: "or-god 8304. Thu Clyde-do!“ told very well. The nulllon Duke 0! Olydoldolo brought 31,800. and tho‘ mom Mr prion. Tho ton! manual 0! the III. won About 017,000. The Committee recommend e bridge be. «me they deem the ooet o! e tunnel would be l0 greet u to be prohibltory. The Committee hue edjonmed to meet egeln in November. when Genenl Meneget Broughton. ot the G. W. 3., will she evi- denoe. Grout Sale at Canadian Live. Bteek In finial.- v.v"'v" "Towhieh we edd the pmiieetlon 0! ton- nege tram the Oenede Southern. which would meke, u we heve laid, ebont 6.400.000 tone per eunum. All this in exolueive of plum- 8°ng mail: engexprou.” - 18744 1875. 1857; ‘ “ To give eome idee oi the volume oi the treflio peuing to end iron our Miehlgen reil- roedl centering in Detroit we eppend the ioilowing etatement oi eere ierried to. end from the Greet Weetern Bellwey elipe. end it the bridge is eonetruoted here you oen eon-intently edd one-hell of. the figure- oi 1879. ee e low eetimete of the treme thet would et onoe erou. Tbet wonid be at leeet 6.400.000 tone, beeenee we ere eeeured the Oenede Southern Beiiroed tremo from Detroit end it: dietrietl. in piece at crou- ing et Groue hie end reeehing Detroit by we: of Trenton. eighteen mliee ,dietent. would oome’ to Windsor end Detroit by we, oi the propoud Euex Centre line end bridge: - ' Gene [Ilene-til. F-cte Anon: the Pre- poecd Bridge or Tun-cl. The Oilizeue' Committee oi Detroit, de- ‘puted to enquire into the eubjeot oi btidglug the river for relive, purpoeee. hue mede en exheuetive report to the Boetd oi United Stetee Eugineere. The membere oi the Committee ere Menu. W. K. Muir. J. Me- Milleu. J. F. Joy, Aleneon 8heley eud G. V. N. Lethrop. The number 0! one tended et thet point during the your will be ebout 800.000. representing e tonnage of 8.600.000 tone. exeiueive o! ebout 180,000 pueeugere. end the United Stetee through end looel meile end expreee. Thle Mo ie lugely on the lumen. endvii the bridge atoning ie grented it. ie eeie to eey thie tonnege end bueineee will be quickly doubled. The zepo'rt eeye on thin point r’ "Dan «1th Inluu moganoholy 2" __!-A-_ 9 _____ l0 noon be bolmirohed. It in to be hoped the whole am: will be probed to the bottom. ond the truth. however unpolotablo. lold bore. 1! we hove to ohoou hotwoon dll- honut sport and no sport. by oll mun. lot no hon tho knobâ€"Hamilton Tim". 86,000 noonped him and been nun] thou-um donor-in poem. W. m nix-id It in the growing undonoy to somblo on the "In“. of such content. which to 5t tho bottom of on the trouble. At my nu. Ouodiuu moot but deeply regret tho: the {air “no.0! fhoirphamplog cor-mm should -w- vâ€"â€"â€"â€" .vavâ€"vug he finally 30116155 I lugs ohm in the ”teenage o! stumbling tho! took plum-mi if the nu ma conga 0,3, he would hue hod hi- An AA‘ We hove boon truting thot tho Conodion ehomplon or hie heehoro would be oble to give oomo ootioioetory expionotion oi the oeuoeo which led up to the mieerohie fluoo ot Loko Uhoteuquo on Thurodoy loot. Both Honlon ond Courtney hove now been heard Horn. and their beehoro hove mode ouch ototemento oo they deem ht. And how humilieting tho revelotiono ore! The Amerieono thought they hod iolr reooon to believe Courtney guilty in the poet oi "crooked” conduct; ond thereioro there oonuot be the olighteot excuoo for tho eoquotting oi the Conodion P chompion with hie opponent. it Mr. Dovio ’ woo onxiouo ior o ioir roce. why ohould I he. under my circumrtonceo. drow up o ' droit ogreement ior Courtney to oign, ' pledging thot Honlon ohould hove hell the ' otoheo it he (Courtney) won tho roce. There ‘ io reolly no exeuoe tor ouch on intomouo. ' beeouoo eoneoolod propooition. it io not ‘ enough ior thlo broker of Holden to oleert ‘ thot he mode thio diohonoot propoool in . order to get Courtney into hio hoot ot the ’ otort. the belief being thot he would not row ‘ unieoo he woo cortoin he would win. Boneot ' eportomen hod no need to icor each n con- ‘ oummotion. They wiohed to oee the beet ‘ mon win. It Courtney did not row then the prize woo Honlon'e. occordingto recog- nized oeuliing ruloo. Thio woo ouiiioient in my cooe. The rowing in two at Courtney'e booto lo onother oxtroordinory ieoture oi the fizzle. Evidence ie oecumnloting to ohow thot the diegroceiul oct woo committed either by Courtney or hie oupportero. It ie eioimed by Morrio thot Frenehy Johnoon out hio boot in two ot Plttoburg. ond thot he io doubtieoo the guilty one. But ouch o ocheme for preventing the roce could ourely never hove been undertohen without Court- ; ney'o knowledge. The boato were cut oo oo ‘ they could he eooily mended ogoin. leading to T the ooeumption thot totol dcotruction woo ‘ not oimed ot. Token oitogethor. oquotie oporto never received I grooter blow then thot inflicted ot Chotouquo Loho. It io to he re. gretted thot the Conodion champion hoe been mixed up in ouch o disgraceful ofloir ot the outoet oi whot oppeored to be o gioriouo coroer. When he rowed with Frenchy J ohn- eon ond othero on Homilton Boy. in: one“ oi thooe “hippodrome iluloo ” -whieh hove done oo much to lower the tone oi oquotie oporto. and ogoiu when he noted moot diooppointingiy ot Borrie. we {coutioned him ogoinot lending hio none or influence to onything thot could. however dietontiy. heconotrued into “eroohcdneee.” We do not ooy he io peroonoiiy reoponoible for the oction oi hie ogento ot Cnotonquo, but it to herd to believe thot he eon eecope cen- eure, even it they olonobe guilty. ‘Wo truot. however, the ohompion will repudiote their ogoney ond otort out with o eleon olote. The Hop Bittero' Mon now oppeoro in o leeo enviohie pooition thon ever. From the tint only oniono toooooro on odver- tioement b bringing the_ ooromon together. Lâ€" B_-II__ _ huh A Laâ€" EQ Haw-a. Ire-o nun u." nun-noun... 0...," n4... un- DETROIT RIVER CROSSING. ILOW '1‘. [IGNII'I' ll’OI'l‘. Tons. 1.939.544 2.009.760 1380.1“) hfwml 1 $39,104 an 33%.000 , _,,‘---_ .â€" v-u' sun-v. 1-" for John Proctor 6:: Co... hu wuhdnwn from the road for tho present. 3nd “main! It hndqutrun. Mr. Kerb, :- : flunk" ulumm, mud «n shun oomnund 1 good had. on old roam â€"Ml{t¢m 0an£on._ . YA I.--I--I_-g ,d. -.-â€".v v-u-vâ€" lllll , â€" , ._-__. â€" I It hu laid out tint the mnlntoun shoot- ing 0! Ed. A. Fillmore, the young mulled student 0! Btuthroy. Ont , on tho 6th, wu done by an named brother who, in “tempt- In. to menu. ht- ulmr'a wr . bud mu- takon Flllmon tor the long t utter. A soldier at Woolwlo . ulna. bu jut nglntond his taunt non In tho um 01 " “Aim-n N I Number Of comeeetueegeneuneeuudmete 8“ Number of 011nm............................». 11 Number 0! Wm Dome Oomte...;.. 18 Number of B. W High Court... ..... . lo Numberot membmtnume..........; H.674 Amount of Subordinate Conn Funde. 0 33.094 00 Won): 0! Subordlnete Court 70.9w 00 Pad for weekly beneflfi, mm 1870 (except endowment”... . 21.590 00 Plld for “do during yem 1875-76-77. @788 66 Pud {or endowments. Oocoben 187‘. up to and Includmg policy No. 126. 3m 1378 onuuvununuon-u I | O I eeeeeuel ”,2" a PA! for endowmente up to end in- oludlnc No. we. oer 1879............... 103.000 00 Tom amount W for en relief to Ole.m.1879......m..m.......”no"- $333,646 “ Wmmwa. - The hudn’te merohentl fibrougfiout thin uotlbn will be born to learn um . J. Kan-by, who to: name your: bu malted {or 0. 0311131011 .9: Qanpnd of lute l-_ VAL“ n . Meeting at the Supreme (hurtâ€"Intercu- .. , In. alumna. ‘ . - Lama. on. Oct. 225-» the meeting 0! the Supreme Court. I. 0. F.. held hm yelhrdey.’ the M. W. Search!) new In the ennuel report, which ehowed the lollowlng: numeric: or 1m; ORDII. p091. Tho Governor-Gone“! 3nd My rammed to town in the tender .3 11.80 n.m., and Mt lot on". with 8|: John A. Mu-, donfld 3nd thy othor Dominion Minute"; to the Queen. The weethsr wee rether unpieeeent. end owing to the dense mist it wee donhtlnl ii the steemer would sell et the eppointed hour. The royel trein reeched Bonth Quebec shortly before seven o'clock end the Vice-Begei petty hrseklested in their own oer ebont nine o'clock. The Princess left the on end went eboerd the stem yeoht Dolphin, under commend oi Oeptein deell. which immedietely conveyed Her Boyel Highness to the steemship et nchor opposite the Unstom House. The gnerd of honor at B Bettery lined the pontoon, end e bend pleyed ‘ the National Anthem es the Princess peeled to 1 the steem yeeht. A number at oihsers oi the militie end locel digniteries were et the lend- ing. Her Boyel Highness shook heads with Colonels Dnchesney, Strenge, Montixemhert,1 end Bienchet (Speeksr oi the House oi Oom- ‘ mom}, end othe'r gentlemen. Cheers were given 'es the yeeht leit the wheri. A ierge perty oi iedies end gentlemen hed eireedy gone out from thle .side to the Bennetien to wish the Princese but voyage. As soon es Her Boyel Highness emberked on boerd the steemship. which wee geily decanted with flegs, the Boyel Btenderd wee hoisted It the naein meet. end e Boyel selnte new iron the sitedel end the Tonnneline. epert. mente for the Princess were literelly covered with flowers end pleats. presented .hy our lending citizens. About ten o‘clock the Bennetien weighed enehor. end, eecolnpenled by ‘H. 19. Tourmelinel - set sell for Liver- Ilen- Dcnflure for England Bun-clan qunxo.Ootober.â€"Hor Bo,“ Highneu the Pnnoeu Louise [on this morning in the null steamship 8mm}: tor England. on I visit A- AL.â€" A . Lonnol. England.â€"â€"A Shula correspondent ny- sbdloaslon ll probubly the when course {or Yakoob Khm. We mu now pm on the than. 3 mm fit for the position. Ind \ who-o lriondnhip we on rely. " hell-put one o'clock on Bands); the second M tour. Further exploeione ere apprehended The ‘Inegezine. i3 '11 hell‘end. eontnlned 820,000 shot end ehell, n let-3e number 01 Snyder tiflee end In tone 0! powder. One European ”Idler. hunky-one Gootkhu. eix eemp iouowere end men, Alghene were Llll-‘ Au Kn“. Cowmanâ€"Tho «use of the oxplooion o: the msgulno o! the Bah Hlnu is unknown. The (in! ogplmlon occurred at The Ghtlzdl. in the neighborhood of bhutugudm Pun. are still mnkedly hostile. Ten miles of telegraph lino hid been out and ended on: between Paint and Shut-r- uudm, Itopplng commutation with Gen. Roberta. Bole Hie-er ha been blown up; twenty- Ieven Britt-h and men) Atghenl were killed. Fighting hen been renewed. at Birkei Rate]. The ponitlon wee hald by ninety Bepoye eaeimt heevy odds. The enemy left twenty- five deed. Onun. A13. -â€" Goon] Bill, Military Governor of 0.1an ha reported the edunoe 0! three Afghen regiment- of envelry and six regiment. ol intentu tram Turkeeten. There in one one o! cholere nt Cuba]. The Britt-h troops will probebly be quartered during winter in the Bun Burner end Shirpnr Oentonment. , Tho Bump. ”bullion bu entirely col- lapsed. The 13mm: Deputy Commit-loner in ‘ho Nags Hm. was murderod by Nuzomn Nag” on the 14th in”. Ha unllnnu won aub- uquntly dipc‘nbd by . British detachment. An stuck on Kahuna: in oxpooted. Troops 13';th um there tron: Gal-shut and o u. tioi. et All Kheyl by the Alghenl on the 14th : Four thou-end A! hens nude e deeperete etteck upon the rilish ounp. but were repulced st the point of the beyonet. lesving on the field tort: killed. two hundred wounded. end two etsnderds. The British pursued then: two miles. The British lose we: two killed and fourteen wounded. The letest intelligence is thet the combined frontier tribes ere retreating. Emu. Indie.â€"Tbe Aneer. Yekooh Khen. ennouncee hie determinetton to ede cete end ctetel he intended to ebdioete on on but was dissueded. Gen. Roberts sdvised the Ameer to leconelder the mutter 1 but the Arneer firmly ndheree to hie reeo. lution. Gen. Roberto it in consequence msh. lug errengelnents for melnteining order in eighcnisten end. «trying on the edninletre- Stine. Indie.;'i'l;e {allowing detelle heve been received 0! the mm on _§he_eez_np ‘5 All ”LAâ€"I LÂ¥ -I A. n 81am, Ind“. -ln eon-equate. o! the “matching “made of tho mm in flu Kunm v.11» "Monument: ha. been um w the 811“»ng uni-on. Gwen) Go_ugh hu whoa Randal)“. TIIB AFGHAN CAMPAIGN. PBIN CBS! LOUISE mug-nine of the 93,267 as l 103,000 00 0mm 54 manhunt! 8|! 1! Ii 10 " We notice in e eopy oi the Oeleutte Eng- liohetan oi the sin Anguet leet the ennounee- ment oi the deeth oi the Executive Engineer oi the Province oi Beher. Mr. Windle. Thin gentlemen wee e eon~in-lew oi Rev. LO. Wei-he. rector end ehepleln to the troope, Port Boyei, Jemeioe, iometly genieon ehep. lein here when the P. 0. 0. Bide Brlgede wee qnertered tn Hemilton. lit. Windle. it eeeme. hed peld e visit to Gye to eld in inveetigeting the eenee oi the onthreek oi eholere in thet provinee end to word toilet to the enacting inhebitente. On hie return home to Benkipore he wee etteoked by thet duedinl dleeeee end died in e iew home. The Englahman truthinlly etetee thet “ he tell e victim ee much to duty to hie country ee if he hed died in bottle.” Hie widow. whom he hee leit with five young ehildten. wee well known end highly eeteened in Heuilton. end will heve the heutielt lyn- pethy end eondolenee oi e lune eireie o! retired milltery end other loving Meade in thin eity.~Oou. ones: on me- pert will not long remeln undleeovered, tor it le not to he expected thet en income of 8600 yeuly eel he mede to loot blue whleh reeoh to 92.000 in the em period. ‘Any employee who trlee to prove thet-thte le'telee ehonld‘he wetehed end detected ee epeedlly eepoeelble. .for hle own eeke, ee well ee tor the! o! h lrlende end the lnetltutlon whoee money he le dlehoneetly teklng. Yet, tt eomee out in evldenee thet elthough Leneeeter peenleted 82,000 in peleemeel leehlon, over e per elepeed before the deteleetlon wee dleeovered lay-hie enperiore. It eneh thinge ere poul- hle: I! e junior ofiloer. to: lnetenee. on embezzle e terse enm from e beak till end eeeepe deteetton tor eneh e long ported. enrol, It in not nnreeeonehle to eey theme Ie ee greet neeeeelty to: e reform in the method of eupervlelon ee there le (or e return to the fleet prlnelplee o! morellty in reset-ding end pnnlehlng- the crime 0! embeeelemeetâ€" Hamilton Times. __â€"._- w.-v| v. uu- IIIK "Q. III III." In hum, but ho no to [ad may by hlo inlan- ntion ond oo nnxlono to otond won in tho good smo- ot thou ho ndnalxod.‘hot ho otolo tho money of tho honk to enoblo him to buy oxponoivo jowollory to: hlo lovomoo. whilo Inony odonnr woo upon: in hom hmond ontorlolnmont. rolling up hlo oxponooo my beyond tho pom wonontod by his I . It oonnot be too «mostly impmoodon thou holding pooluou of “not, nnd who no tomptod to nool. tho: ooonor or In“: thoir oln will find than: out. I! III onwloyoo _ hu o ohlol who know: â€"- _ aw, i v... inen nbont town looked up to tour hu 3 . He bed to get money none- where. etook it Iron: the bunk nu. end when the enxteln tell on hie career he wee being removed lroln I oriminel dock with his ehnneler ruined end proupeete blunted.- Leneeeter did not teke to tut lumen enhonsn his llkingl were in e d eqnenyjetei to tpe_prolpeeu o! a you: mm with “mud [Room-0:713: “vi; gdgnfildpgmr of thy £91: .03. in Hull Undoubtedly the bank clerk haa hie pecu- liar temptations. He hu to keep up with hla “cet"â€"-or. at leeat. he thiuka co. And when such poor tellowe ac Lenoaeterâ€"whoee mother in a widow not too well on (which may aeeonnt lor hie punishmeni)â€"have to mix with oomradee ,who are the cone ol wealthy and indulgent parenta. come at whom are nintoat certain to be “ faat." there la alwaya danger. provided there [I the inclination to do wrong. Society, ao~oalledâ€"â€" in better phraee. the world in which they moveâ€"ta more or lcaa to blame for ite toolian and lnoonaidetatc encouragement of young men whoae charactere not unitequcntly have not had time to become ionneo. Many at them have a great dog! more time on their ‘ hende than they find it caey to make good uee oi. They are thereiore particularly pmne to temptation. Such an oflioial waa Berber. at Toronto. who hae juet been releaaed from a term in the Penetentiery tor embeuling whilat he wac teller o! the Bank at Montreat. Aarnart, jolly fellow. he found apare bour- lagging heauly on hlahande. he drew on hie aalary to the extent oi getting a iaat hone and outfit. Then he found that waa not euflieient and he bought another. The reeutt yea that hie expenaea ae a gay young on-- -kA-‘ A-__ 1--. S a minor crime. as an ofience not deserving punishment. providing the embeuler or his friends make restitution. And thus many a criminal who ought to be in the Penitentiary today has been allowed to go soot free. Need it be wondered then that young Lancaster ahould have thought it but a small oflence to help himself time and again to the iunda o! the Merchants'Bank. in which he was all- ployed. or that. confident oi leniency. should he be discovered. he communicated his plan 0! “getting along ” to his fellow clerk. who used the information as a means 01 making the peculator. wno thus became his Victim, sink deeper and deeper in crime? Until embezzlement is punished with that degree oi severity which it deserves, Without regard to the social position oi the criminal or bi! relations. we can upter regard the funds oi public corporations as absolutely free from peeula- tion in any great measure. Let till tapping (for that is all it is) be treated as a serious crime and not condoned; let it be held to rank in gravity with burgtary. and let punish- ment be sure and certain. as in the case 0! young Lancaster. and the oiience will be 0! much rarer occurrence than now. u.- â€"â€"v v. â€"v-' I“ m ~77 i cud other monetery ineutuuonl become dchullcu h a mute: which ought to receive most ounces eomldexcuon. To a couch: extent. we believe. Che mungcncnu 0! public lnetltullom Ire $0 blcme lorthll lcmcnteble clue of uflclu. There hue been too great a tendency in the put to condom lotions oflencu so well u I oulloulneu which enable: men to look npog embezzlement II - _8._-_ A i" -â€" â€"-â€"vv v- u- I... WWW|I The treqhe‘ioy will which pot-om en- tmuod wuh the one. “pope: h; but: Ana A‘LA- __‘_A 7 IMUIIILIMINI‘ AND I'I'I FUN- IIIIMN’IH-‘l‘lll CAI)... AND THU UUIII. '1'wo yeere' confinement in the Peniten- tlery is the eentenee which hee been peeeed on Uhuiee Leneuter. the embeullnc belt clerk at London. The eentenee ie eevere. but deeerved. end ehonid prove e werning to all pereone holding poeltione ol trust thet they wiii not be permitted to oerry on diehoneet ‘preotloee with impunity. Very likely the puniehrnent would heve been greater. but tor the not thet it wee proven Lenoeeter bed to e eoneiderebie extent been inelted in hie peenletione by e ioliow-elerk. ten yeere hie eenlor, who eeeme to heve pnreuod e ”etern- etlo eouree oi bleekmeil.elter he once ind the diehoneet ledger-keeper lnhie power. "IL- I...â€".â€" -A on his Bled NON]. and _ duty,“ " ‘ Uri“;

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