Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Canadian Post (Lindsay, ONT), 23 Sep 1892, p. 8

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mug-cardinal: (“daring :o 10:63:65 In?! Highlsn". under the ma 0! 14 years, “231! May. 1891. B'Ifn! 1- 1 wool- .nd on m.- m, m qua-moo it h. laugh; wt iota 1h. nous.» and than. u no on. d” shone 0n ‘nced Mo ohodaunmer b ‘9 m .1. .dj nun“: noun. Tm) moth: noon at!!! hum of Mao wax: and ordud in: W to rate up any on 9.3m “3m \ -Goomo Burns of Bailovmo In Amet- d Wednoodsy chm-gm! wit-h hl'lng gluing! kin-Vlad” of ibis stepdgyuhtu, no: yes maniac, but the rule but: been hid down .1» along tho line. nod the road, which 13 Mu mm by - French company, will boom: on the 20m of this month. Ibo Brahma 'brnnflnhnod ; M: will be on tho want at than-cu! ta Beth'c-hem. not hr in thuomh and at tho Mooteflorodnz- â€"‘l‘he first locomotive from Jan" ”rind 3t Tumult-m tome time 530. Lvt era re- ceived from Jerusalem by the Pdegun. animation (and. daod Anzmt 22 announce mu the locomotive had reached that“, on the mvkug dsy._ Train! "'3 -â€"Buuh has sent a note to the Porto .ylng urlous‘conaeqnance-a mu run]: an the relations now exdat'ng between Turkey um Baht-Ha. wh‘ch Rusam holds mantra: t: the provia'oas of dining A7,-A._A â€"'1'ho Align liner Peruvian, with catfle ad freight, which left Mantras! {or Ghago' Wedneadu morning. un’ngrouno on I mud bsnk st Varennes. where the dunno] In very narrow. tobacco: 170w Advertisements T1113 Week. it. CmixJSgp M’I’g Co. French Masons-Prof. Famine. Money to lam-D. R; Anderson. A Fm Propositionâ€"Gong}: Bras. Bow Very Ptovoklng â€"Born Bros. Ere-char Waxed-Henry Doughty. The Unexpectedâ€"E. E. W. McGafley. A Walt to the Linda” (Dental-Warner a: $l§o_to be Given Away In Prizes-Pater- Thrashersâ€"Moo)“ Bros. Two locale-F. C. Taylor. Wantedâ€"Mrs. John Kennedy. I'm-a. Fursâ€"Fairwather 8: Co. _'1'ho Country is Wnking [Tn-Johnston a; Whlle the best for all household uses, has peculiar qualities for casyand quick washing ofclothcs. It does away with that boilmg and scalLllngâ€"the clothes come out sweet, clean and Willie. Harmless to hands and fabricsâ€" lathers freelyâ€"lasts longest. Localâ€"H. Hart. Localâ€"Gonna Bros. LINDSAY. FRIDAY. SEPT. 23‘ Sn Caoxx Sop Km. 00., An. (:20ch SILL Ir. 5: Stephen, N. B EVENTS OF THE WEEK. Lindsay. September 21. 1892â€"24. {avmym Kingston, Belleville, Orillia, Toronto, Brantford. Nothing is more astonfishiiig. in investio gating the slums, than the discovery of the enormous prim the poor are paying for the the most wretched accommoda- tions. One man boasts that he (kiwi 33 r cent. on his tenement investments; 1-. Alfred White’s experiments with im- proved tencmentghnvefibeen carried on for m gmuldhwe been made in the city. ifhldijs'vtio Mhrgest in tfi'e United States. to that he has certain}: You will return from your first visit to the slums with two strong impressions: One, of the utter hopelessness of trying to do any thing ; the other, of the neces- sity for doing something immediately. lest the heavens fall. Perhaps you have evolved in your boudoir some beautiful scheme of amelioration; it has occurred to you that if ten rich men of the city could be persuaded to give $100,000 apiece, not as a charity but as an invest- ment, to build ten tenements each to ac- commodate seventy families, it would be a great and glorious thing. But, as you stand in “the Bend " in Mulberry street and gaze abOut you, it will be to say in despair, “$1,000,000, ten tenements, 700 families 2 Of what possible use to plan such an infinitesimal oasis of relief in this universe of misery and degradation 2” You have never before seen people so hived. Above you, below you, behind you, in front of you, to the right, to the left, in the rear, in the distance, crowded against each other, behind each other, above each other, are human beings. They swarm on the side-walks, they are enter- ing and issuing from the doorways, they lean out the windows. You have always ‘ supposed that in the homes of the r you would be filled with pity for the ha I work you would be seeing them do; women bending over wash-tubs or iron- ing-tables, cobblers cobbling. tailors sew- ing, seamstresses running machines, tinkers mending, children weeping bitter- ly, asthey, too, tm-na machine or try to makes shoe; everybody toiling, for dear life for a mouthful of bread, too busy to look up, even as you pass... :But. the first impression made upon you in the slums is that of ahorripl§lenfigm ; mWhfiergfiese )eople doing ’ ' are ey impable of doing? Bathing. What do they want you to do for them? Nothing. What can you do for them? Nothing. â€"Newa has reached DeeMolnea, Is..ot an attempt of a gang of negro tramps to loot and burn the village of Spencer in the north-western part of the ante. A pltched bettle was fought between the negroee and clt‘zmn. and revolvers were used recklessly. Five negrms are in goel and the maple or the town are intensely excited. 1:115 reperted that 3 number were éeflouaiy Injured- in the melee. â€"Naahviile, Tann.,has a real live king who has juat been coiled to his home to mount the throne. The king's nuns is Momciu Mnsscquoi,nnd his country is Va]. which adjoins Liberia. Momoln has been tor two y_aars_ut9nding .coilego. lung is 20 rears oxd. He has just received letters stating that his tamer, King Balah, bu been killed in battle, and that his mother has died ct starvation. When Burns returned home this week in quest of work, he wsa arrested. â€"‘ ‘J udge” Short, leader of the notorious bend of cattle thieves with headquarters in the Bed Lmds, has been captured and lynched by tenchmsn, and severe! ct his bend have been killed.- ”ICE REXTS PA ID BY NEW YORK’S POOR FOR \VRETCHED TEXEMESTS. Life In The Slums. Wp'wmmmmmwmom‘n;mimefin 206' MW um Wrm-t-‘w warwmm' [pi-open ‘The fact is,’ thus Mr. Cox ‘ sums up his observations on the subject, 1‘duve in Turkeyis but aname. 'The slavestiave nothing to complain of. The white slaves rush to slavery as an al- ternative to some thing else and worse; only the black slaves whom brought from Afr-imbue (in the course of tran- nit) undergone the honor: of the tradi~ lionhl slave trade. Once reeeiv’ed. howb ever, the house alave, tho “flux lo‘oked downn ‘ n sq one .of filth:- «venom flan, in~nev eai, from'mfcncy' to ’ Ige, treated as one of the family. After 5 femalelflave liquefied. Mia'- aghgergwmm According to Mr Cox, ‘there is scarce- ly a. family in Turkey, which has the means, that does not passess a number of Women and girl slaves, black and white. The black are from Central Africa. and Nubia; the white are Circassinns sold by their parents.’ The price of the female slaves varies with their pretensions to good looks, the comely ones being to some extent educated and taught to sing, dance and make themselves agreeable. We learn that a ‘girl under 10 will bring $100, a maiden between 12 and 16 if she be attractive and can play u n the zith- er, from $3.500 to $5,000. the young woman be a blonde, with black eyes and otherwise of rare beauty, she may brin from $4i300fl$ $2,000. fin amateur ‘ . dou e t oracoices ' en, . 57:51,} educated in French and othefemm graces.’ ‘ But Mr. Cox adds that ‘this tarifl‘ by no means applies to the slaves from Africa, the depots for whom are in Scutan’ and in the villages on the Dosperus. The black male slave-will bring $90, the black maiden $75. and a eunuch 8400.’ We are assured by the author that ‘the slave has not a hard lot. The child of the slave bass part of the inheritance of’the father. More than half the marriages in Turkey are with slaves.’ Each < weaned wife of the Sultan,for instsnee,‘ ‘ is a slave, his rank being tooexalwd to permit of his entering into any mgrnage WAT THEYARE WORTH AND HOW THEY ARE TREATED BY THEIR OW'SERS, time even in old Rome, stimulated, no doubt, by the constant stream of tourists, but encouraged also by the wise policy of King Umberto, who loves his people and is idolized by them. ’/‘, Portions of Old Rome are now disap- pearing, notably the Ghetto, or Jewish guarter, and New Rome is increasing so eat that its great uprising buildings look not unlike those of New York, were it not for that poetry of colorâ€"pink, yellow, terra cotta and pale blueâ€"in which the Italians so much delight. Great changes are going on over the Eternal Cityâ€"ex- cavations inthe Forum, and elsewhere, are being liberally pushed, and sanitary measures enforced. Whole streets of fine buildings are replacing ruin and debris, and, as if its three hundred and sixty churches were not enough, St. John Later-an, where all the popes are crown- ed, has been enlarged to a surprising ex- tent, while St. Paul beyond the walls, which to my mind is quite as splendid as St. Peter’s, has now a complete facade. Growth and enterprise are marks of our ‘ slaves 1n runny. modern Rome. Int. itch. Ill muons oo the bee. hoods. noon. ax. leaving the skin oleor. white sod bunny. u- greu bgenuine ”$m$?"'fiu’°"" no poo-used no other . your drug am for SWAYNI'B Oman”. Lyman Son Go . loaned. We Axumâ€"183 "Bur to an All Skin Disc-nu“ Shanty npply "8wnxx‘s W.” No internal medicine nqnlrod- Cm- mm. m -. 5/ , 7 "WWW- %%fi% é '1‘__hisSw1isourtrademark, com WY. Bed mg MW..- u ‘El Padre New Advertmements. PINS- mmlflm Chase and San born. v ana.guarantees perfection of quahty, strength and flavor’.’ ~ The quality of the Coffee we sell um ourttadcmatkisourbcstadmfiscmcnt. -C.p|.. AudNI'. In his 16-h“ duty. ditch «lied from Atlantic Olly. N. 1.. on July so. "rived It 1.132).]: Wodnudu. Tho nomad" H- It'll. m:w.wuuom ”MW mam SOAP baring no and for Puritymonmymttwitheomhtudw (or every homhold pin-pone. Try the summon: MW nyâ€"tbo u my 0! mm, sad 9* sunllght youwfll not be dil- sppolntod. which so many women complain that I. at)” I Whine. is done any with by thoue who use that grant labor 0 . . Saving\ 0\ 'l‘HA'r tired. won: -out fullnx. of Fagged Out! ! Sunlight Soap. We): mum the Dirt drop out. Without 31rd Rubbing Wichout Bolling Without Wlshlnc LINDSAY and PETERBORO. soul} Good: The but bums m deceived. In finding with us, hourer you run no chasm. a we do not handle ehoddy. Honest Goodl 9‘ Low Prices m the inducements we offer our customers, Our I“ of Ym 1- minuteâ€"38 men: use. navy Yarns for M" wear. a good a lone mede. tine Yin. ell shed». To buy ”nothing which appears to be e confine bargain and find it not-e: ell what you expected. Here you ever been served W my thh Woollen Geode ? (Yet-n which did not payjor knittfll' 3mm um turned yellow end herd when washed). 1: £0, you“ resolved to he more omfui in tutni-e. eun.’ with every precanfi‘l end Inge experience you cannot elweye zen shoddy from hon!“ To buy ”nothing HOW VERY PROVOKING A. HIGINBOTHAM, '- b MoCOLL BROS. 00., um. emu-g 31. 1891â€"24 CONDITION POWDER. â€"â€"_â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"__â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€".â€"..â€"â€"â€"nâ€" WEE-'3 mum: mm": mm -â€"-.â€"â€"-- cm and no our Una-u. ”3.13914; The Champion Gold Medal Oil for all Machinery. MCCOLL’S CYLINDER OIL Is the best in the country. Try it. Package. In “OLD ENGLISH” THRESHERS Pound A. Who them. McCall Bags. Jr Go. Horn I'I'NO'I‘? VII Druggist, Lindsay: Rain 0' In FLAVVFL 5M3“; BLANKETSIX‘AR: won t" Qualities and best V Any Am'w been our pleasure to fiCarpets Curtains, B We let you ofi c] 7m learn "11‘ Prices 1 3§You find you {8% 1grows u hen y‘ BOXS and COATS. Here is ju: “it. No trouble to m: We stand squar‘ 9m- Business and say Flannels, Flann our Prices in HOSIE MILLINEIVY. Ma Stock of MILLIN] first-class Millincr in Buel's of 6107/77 Our attractions MANTLES will c Quantities of New 5 be desired. Lflfllfls’ [11' C F’s. Robes, Peer 0. might brag ”I wflicient. The open/r; 8/70” 68 . It, is your Will be abl VVC have the ": blease you in DRE NGS. Notice t Brass Gaufls You will be tic ' ’- rfieadnche. i." 7 complexion 9:? fl .1. Worry. 0 0t ultimatum. THA n. luv. ‘1': ”A? Nervous Discs: I’Mâ€"1-;- A fiend Lily” Re by our n ”tank 22. 11-1 1’8 [EADER Ll

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