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Ottawa Times (1865), 27 Sep 1872, p. 2

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Afew days since, in alluding to the Globe‘s remarks concerning Sir George Cartier‘s election for Provencher we said ; * The Globe is dreadfully incensed be« cause Sir George Cartier has been unaniâ€" mously returned for Provencher. We all know why. After the Grit Association had spent $3.400 to secure Riel‘s election, it is too bad to find that the money has veen all thown away." The Hamilton Spectator says : Now, Mr. fl-:‘xh is too bad. You should not heve the poor «* ‘s" Wbyfl-‘-_flbgyu]m:b -unlr of the public the peccaâ€" dillos l.?ny. It 5 bad enough to lose the money, but to be taunted about it bnhcbo.u&?mn:‘k:lâ€"-- ::tmh bear. Do have immercy, friend Times. s We do not want to be hard upon iny one, even upon the Glo+e. We thought it only fair that people should understand tbat it was not batred of Sir George alone that mude our Toronto contemporary so angry, but the loss of money aiso. The memibers of the. Grit Association are -uh* be commiserated. but if they will upon running such candid\tes as Rie} and U‘ Donokios they must expect to come to grief, . A Quebec contemporary usually opposed to the Domnion Government discusses the political position. He regards Sir Georg» Curtier‘s forced retirement from public life as a great misfortune to the Dominion Cabinet, and no one will more readily confess thin we that the absence of the Minister of Militia from his post is not only a misfortune to the Administra» tim but to the comatry at large. Then the reported intention of Sir F. Hincks to retire into private life is spoken of, and whe difficulty which Sir John Maitdonald wuuld meet with in replacing these two eminent men is alluded to in a somewhat lugubrious manner. The impose.bility of finding spyone in the Ministâ€"rial ranks eipable of performing their duties in an equally able manmer is discoursed upon at length, but although among the supporters of the Government their equals are not to be found, it is a remarkable fact that out contemporary does not pretend to say that the (Opposition are any better off. It is not evren hinted that among the There was quite a considerable run upon the Ontirio Bank yesterday, a number of small depositors withdrawing their money. We understand that it was the result of a foolish rema:k made by a very small busiâ€" ness man in the city which was uiterly unâ€" founded on fact. We havre ascertained that there is not the slightest cause for uncasiness, the Ontario Bank being in a perfectly sound condition, and several of our leading merchants paid in large amounts to their credit in that Bank Grits of Ontario, the Kouges of Quebec, or the Antiâ€"Uaionists of the Maritime Provinces, a financier like Sir Francis Hincks, or. such aa able and patriotic leader of the Freach Canadians as Sir Geo Cartier, can be found. * . It is a notewoâ€"thy fact that the journal in question, when discussing the probaâ€" bilities of the future, and evidently deter~ mined upon making matters look rather gloomy for Sir John Macdonald‘s Adminâ€" istration, should find it impossible to name one man among the Upposition ranks worthy to wear the mantles which it asâ€" _ NMr. Beaty, M. P., arrived here yester day. . PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION Firstâ€"class Board Wanted. Two Boys Wanted at this office. Wanted by a Telegraph Operator an cftice New Books at?Henderson & Co‘s. Insolvent Act of 1$69â€"L J Lajoie. Male Teacher Wantedâ€"8 Howard P‘)"m“‘ gx_fl'_mn!?X K AB BTL 7 sames are about to <fall from of the m to strangers, Still, the influences shoulders of the two statesmen hqnu.‘ ch centre in Toronto, and its facilities tion. It affords an indication of the deâ€" (or furthering the projects of all classes cided mferiority of the members of the | muist ever attract very great interest. wmamu&umul r dull a place is generally, the talented leaders.© The blio generally | Ajutumn may be safely considered as the recognize this fact, and :.'yhnnmm'li eliest season in a social point of view, that they do so by their action at the late | #2 side seekers and the frequenters of elections. They cannot help pqmivin‘|_ ourite country resorts have w‘ that those men â€" who are so persistently hed and invigorated, and the winter angaged in abusing and ficding fault with | pÂ¥rties are looked torward to by the fair Sir John Macdonald and his colleagues with happy expectation. Certainly arte not by any means fit to take their | Canadian scenery possesses more charms places or to be entrusted with the reins of | atithis period of the year than any other; Gorernment. It is not only lack of ability, d there is ample opportunity for grati= bus lack of real political principle, which | fying the esthetic ficulty in this respect renders the leaders of the Opposition unâ€" | in|Toranto. The besutiful Queen‘s Park trustworthy. Mr. Blake, fer instance, is, | pr¢sents a succéssion of varying hues as we all know, a man of considerable tal. | Which it is simply impossible to portray ent, and full of energy and vigor, but how | by| pencil or pen The city is very forâ€" can people feel any real iespect for or confiâ€" | tukate in haviny places of this kind which dence in him, while he keeps up a factious | affprd so grateful a retreas from the dust > to the Gorernment, uoppal-‘ nd turmoil of the streets. The bands of &xmu’u principle but upon | the various voluntser regiments play in prejudice, and in order to mâ€"«int«in which | th¢ Horticultural Gardens every week, he siligs mmseif with politicians in the , and these open air concer:s are attended provinces to whose ideas »nd aspirations | by|hundreds. Oue institution seems to he has more than once declared himsel! ha dec.ye!, and that is the Saturday to be «liametric«lly opposed. Mr. Macâ€" aiternoon performance of the band in kenzie is a pertinacious debater, but we th¢ Park. It is decidedly a great pity do not believe there .are many peopla in for| one great humanizing influence is this country who lh-.hlhpohgi hedreby lost. Music in Toronto has many would reallâ€" like to see him Premier ot | wojshipp and were a united effort the Dominion. Neither "skim milk" Bodwell, nor Mr. Mills, who tikes a week or two‘s time to prepaze a ten migcutes‘ HAMILTON, Judge Johnson, of Manitoba, is in town. Opposite the Russell House, Elgin St Rept 23. 1872, * 2081 AN iNCOMPETENT OPPOSQTION. FRIDAY, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. || Can be had at the Ccarnapa C@ytBRaAL orFicE, THE ONTARIO BANK 4ft rama Cimes. ‘ TUMs 1872 * * ) pulted in a ver Paul May, whe You | be but little 1.n ; d the hag to | fownin, then us pescaâ€" | bou to his owr igh to decided bout it | {aid and abet an naâ€" If, then | ipreg= very clea * . e news Wags on any de ce umits ame a defin ‘8h® it | bxclude this rstand | foji, by the alone t an access ary so | gory to a mus urder himse _ The | P. C t : O a are uid May 1i f they | e gone into. lid«tes | gud their prev mpoct | in naaeht wi : | fact remains, : go t ne who is livi ppose@ | the death of | scussee The Standa de Sir|© are on r o n in the ex: o the | of poisoning, 1 1 more | stinc love bsence | IRedical aid, t is | 3 y " P9S% 18 | thied may sor nistra» | c d a mer ho to | Shut thint t zb": w. Mr. Jus ub in a case o donald m'..l se two ,ck ‘:do-li‘ p m\ ?..'h‘ ng them ility of | . 1__ ney to f ranks | iffluence of t s in an ipon at | m“‘::: hat out d that neit ) remo{ :;’ Be man who * | ment of his f ag the |a btupid and uebec, mdonon avitima | D@Gy. ranks & i it as. | t off the o quesâ€" he deâ€" | for ft mareld wn | liyeliest | ite | side ng | h ite ty ith ies ar l1os with eir i ; of is pe ty, | arid ther ich hg the in~ | in|Toran is, uts talâ€" sh it ow pene n6â€" to it ous so d.‘ turn pon | the varic |idl' Hor t.ho' thes ons | by hund selt | hate dec [ac» . at , we Par » in one int, | r of | k*" to eek co ites® ! The London Telegraph says that, as it ticipated. the coroner‘s inquest has re~ nlwfi.nnntdiuolwmnlmudcrl'iut‘ Paul May, who will, it he survives, be put on his trial. For, although there can poisoning, and where, either inâ€" i bvodbbctholâ€"dy‘m«l mmedical aid, the life of one has been saved. juries by whom such persons have been may sométimes have tiken what is ed a merciful view of the facts, but j@udges have always been careful to let them tliat there was no doubt about the . Mr. Justice Patteson, when summing hucmolflhm-id,m parties mutually agreed to sui ctle, and only one accomplished that ob~ jdet, the survivor will be guilty of murder," The @©Chelsea Tragedy," as it is called, :;I: pxcites great interest in England. facts connected with it we have already described. The prisoner, Paul May, reâ€" mains in a precarious condition, but will, i is believed, eventually recover. . He will be tried for the wilful murder of his mn Nagel. speech, are men likely to be successful }ufimden. Neither would impracticaâ€" ble Mr. John Young of Montreal be able ‘hofilll.hopo.ifm,mymm his arâ€" nevxation friend Mr. Jette would be exactâ€" ly the man for Minister of Militia and Defence. In fact, in the event of the present Ministry being compelled to ,Mhofleo, which we are thankful to say is a most improbable supposition, we do not believe thit thirteen men could be zotk together from the different provinces who would command ‘the confidence of the public or who would hold office for six months. The Opposition organs may «pooh pooh" and sneer at such an assertâ€" ion as this, but we maintain that constitu ted as the Opposition is it cannot be otherwise. 4 political party to be sucâ€" cessful or to hold together for any length of time, must have some stronger bond of union uniting it than the mere lust for office. It cannot be denied that the poli« tical principles professed. by Ontario Grits are diametrically opposed to those held by their alles in the other provinces. The former are on the whole favorable to the maintenance of British connection and to the progress and thorough development of the scheme of Bntish Canadian Unity. The latter openly declare that they are opposed to b.th. A. party thus formed of discordant elements m«y indeed be t.o‘ wome extent held together while in oppo“ sition by the hope of obuinin‘powcrnndl place. But when once they have entered upon office, when once the goal of their ambition is reached, the utter want of all oneness of purpose and ideas will speedily make itself felt, and divisions, consequent upon a lack of mutual sympathy and one common dominant principle, will arise and work their ruin. With but few men of marked ability in their ranks, with still fewer «ho really know anything of states. manship, and, last though not least, deâ€" void as they are of all fixed principle to unite them together, the members of the (Upposition are incapable of forming an Administration which could properly ad~ minister the aftairs of the country. We may add that were they possessed of ten times the ability which they at present can command, the fact that, instead 0; being like the members of the present govâ€" ernment all of one mind on great public questions, they hold exactly contrary opinions, would of itself be sufficient to make their failure certain. 9 ng them at the same time against the W:MMMMM&N influence of temporary insanit;, as "such fiats are whoily unmartanted by the lay this country." The soundness of the i thus enunciated cannot be quesâ€" Laws divine and. in feaynâ€" that misery, + sgleen, remorse, nor despair, will excuse whumhrougyof.lhonldtbjuz n o yat ocz Aameing : 4 “hhkfi.l‘hg i t" Herman tds very 4 l\oh-'rnlydm-ifh shot Nagel xhhmh-d. A suiâ€" ce umite . It is impossible to nn:d:doflmdonolmmni&.hll this axiom ; it uently by the irresistible logic of Lb', t an accessory to a suicide is an accesâ€" to a murder, .adumh‘lnfllyol urder himself, Tboro.':lo& course, h to be considered, much thatâ€" May live to be triedâ€"will have to gone into. . The motives of the twolads, their previous nistory, will neei to be into account, «nd will, no doubt, have weight with the juary. But the broad remains, as far as all the evidence we goes to show, that the brace of misé agreed to die together, and that the who is living is pro tanto responsible for death of the one who is dead. The Standard (Aug. 31) observes that monnechhwflfl:aflw in the extreme of misery ehoived to ttie ogotker oy drovkneg The absolute dearth of novelty in a like Toronto is very perplexing to journalist, © Ho sees evidences of proâ€" and material prosperity on all dnmwthoflh.ciuimh‘v% by striking . evidence year by year. t daily oean‘,ne-mdloflh.. ure and so uninteresting to any but the itants of the place, that it seems a t task to convey any account of to strangers. Still, the influences centre in Toronto, and its facilities for furthering the projects of all classes but lim:flt’ionbt that it wi:vm-:: ed the pistol, and who, aiter i -'-in.tnturnod the muzzsle of the weaâ€" one great humanizing influence is by lost, Music in Toronto has many ppers, and were a united effort to revive the custom it would be a cordially appreciated. The Theatre man who makes himself the instruâ€" e en es e tration of a similar crume npoahhm y. THE CHELSEA TRAGEDY UR TORONTO LETTER. powerful agent for good or oull, The Ontario Rifle Association have had a very successful meeting, unmarred by any accident except in the case of one ‘i‘“::' who w;nfnuckod by u:lom illness, average of shooting was higher than in former years, and anything less than «*centres"‘ scarcely obtained a footing in the prize lists. It is fntlfying to think that Canadians are not lk;lll’w lout::: reputation as Riflenien. an ago w every second man has been or is a soldier it is worse than useles to ignore the value of the confidence which is inspired by the knowledge of a weapon. These Rifle Asâ€" sociations deserve the public support, and it would not be hmiss were Yopultr symâ€" pathy more tangibly displayed. ‘The strangers who were attracted to Toronto seem to have had no reason to complain of any want of attention, and the feeling that the best man should get the best place was u‘:.minglodr w&h:* tincture of energy on part 0/ Torontonians who were unsuccessful. The Ottawa marKsmen showed very creditably and high encomiupss were given to the "teams" sent up by the relpoctiv; Batâ€" talions, _ (One suggestion might be :;b with reference to ;h‘u Bumli:‘n Company Matches, an at is, that as ance 0/ -.u'm'm a named quota. There seeus to hare been no requimte of this nature for these matches. It my have Spests mas in He Safeant: but wow How okt was in its , but now t system has attained a comparative strongth gome condition of this nature might reaâ€" sonably be demanded. Tha great topic of the day at the moâ€" ment is the expected visit of the Governorâ€" General. Preparations have been made for his reception, but as he goes on to Hamilton any formal ceremonies will be m&dufilhfim His visit to a of the country as yet unvisited by hi should prove not unprofitable, and he with feelings of the hoartiest respect and 0 est respect tss nows is l news is yery unimportant, the latest excitement being the fl”"“"‘“‘ to the County Atuorneyship. t it seoms to be generaily regarded that the present eccupant will not retain the position much Inxthhlm. Bome stress in on a statement made by the organ of his party in announcing the appointâ€" ment, to the effect that should duty call the gentleman he would doubtless be wilâ€" ling to resign the " sweets of office‘" for the uncertain tesults ot another election campaign. It is making the most of pat; romage to put a succession of men into the same office and lare them out of it in turn byhnldin%lplhq‘fldod bait of political success,. There is much speculation as to the probabilities of â€"the next Ontario Bession, but party rancour will not enablé men even to pretend to prophecy with abything like certainty. _ 3 Library _ of _ the British _ Museum, and in addition were, it possibleâ€"an House where the people of Toronto t welcome the illustri artists who are coming to the M‘& continent every year in greater n: irs. People wonder that Canada is so often w:;? by these celebrities, but they forget that any city of twenty or thirty thqusand people in the United States has a better Music Hall and Theatre than Toronto, or any other city in Canada can boast ot. A large audience is an absolute necessity for great singers, and who can blame them if they shun or slight Ca::iun towns. Let us hope that we will always be doomed to this cimmerian ob:curity but that some change in this direction will be shortly To the Editor of the OTTAWA TIMES. Bir.â€"BHaving promised that « Workingâ€" man ‘" would give his proper name when #«Canadian‘s" was put forth, allow me to make a few parting remarks in reference to the whole of "Canadian‘s" commun;â€" cations. His last statements are in keeping with his knowledge of facts in all assumpâ€" tions in previous letters. llohnuwtbâ€"' ing as to the percentage of workingmen ; whonndtho!hn;ndno-oofiori-bol answered in one case that he jumps the fence and cries peccaviâ€"and says his mearâ€" ing was something else. There is no one so blind as he who will not see. What Mr. Hiffe‘s purpose was in the first place, I fail tosee. It is hardly necessary to state here that Mr Iliffe is no friend of Trades Unions mor, evidently, of those who constitute them. I know many others who stand in \b-oubm;bnm-zvnhuwfll, I‘hope, live and prosper when the names and acts of their enemies are forgoiten. By the way, who is = Thas, lliffe," or ‘who constituted him censor of the politics of! trades union men. That they will pursue * the even tenor of their way," in politics as well as in all other matters that may affect them as a body, it is hardly neces~ sary to say, notwithstanding the hostility of "Thos. Iliffe," or any other such enemy. Mastiffs never notice the barking of curs. As a lengthened guerilia discusâ€" sior with "Thos. lliffe" on this matter will not serve any apparent good purpose, allow me, in conclusion, to inform him that Trades Union men will always sincere« 1y pray that it may please the Almighty to long spare the Right Hon, Sir Juhn A. Macdonald to labor in the interests both ) of the workingmen and the Dominion at and, alsogether, serves its intended purâ€" pose very inefflectually. Even the Music Hall was too smali. It is simply a disgrace to a city of the size and wealth of Tm\-on-. to that there is not & larger place of pu‘â€" lic entertaioment then there is. (FThe great strength of Toronto lies in its libraâ€" ries, and even here there is room for imâ€" provement. .‘The University Library is composed of between 1,500 and*2 000 volâ€" umes, and is open to all readers who inâ€" sert their names and places of abode in a book kept for the purpase; but it is far from town and out of the way of any one but a person with leisure to walk the disâ€" tance. The Osgoode Hall Library is pureâ€" ly professional, and is only open to the members of the Law Society ; it is, thereâ€" fore, out of the reach of the msjority. The Mechanic‘s Institute has been of use, but its value has been much impaired by the pecuniary difficulties of its promoters. Still these various libraries do exi:t, and are at the service of any person of literary tastes who wiâ€"hes to consult them. What is greatly neaed, howover, is some Pubâ€" lie Library, under the chiurze of a compeâ€" tent man, oponlo every respectable por‘ has apparently been improved. The great defect, however, still remainsâ€"the build â€" ing is too emall, and now that the Music Hall is withdrawn from public use all that is left is the St. Lawrencs Ha‘l. The room used for public entertainments in this building is inconyenient of accese; is arranged with no view to acousticseflect. A Japimese scholar in one of the New Haven schoois, baving been insulted by a schoolmata, recently, sent a note to one of the instructors, requesting permission t > kill the offender. Bismarck is said to be in favor of establishing a penal colony, whither crimâ€" inals may be trausported, on this side of the Atlantic. *# Perspiration of the moon ‘‘ is what the divine affiatus leads a Pennsylvania post to call the dew; whic: is a eupheâ€" mistle way of smying that when the dew talle, it‘s wet. in the same way as _ the "THOS, ILIFRE. Dax. J, O‘Doxcenvs, Journeyman Printer THK ovrawA TIMEs SEPTEMBER 2% 182. red Egypt and Nineveb; astropomy hos multipli the planets ; chemistry has emodelled all arte, and surprisingly gimâ€" while the feats of the mechanical sciences en only be told by the hum of the factor~ ies, the splash of theâ€"steamship, the roar plified and chespened nfani}h&hrfi ; while the feats of the mechanical sciences 6f the locomotives ; by the ce of the tunnels, the shafts, the viaducts, that owe their existence to the ce and skill of the nineteenth century Our stock of Carpets is now com%l:te. and is one of the 1 t ind best assorted ~ever o erfi in the city, having placed our ordérs early last autumn, we are enabled to sell much under present prices. RUSSELL & WATSON: And thus, while on the seasons roll, He wins from the inspiring sod, The brawny arms and noble 10111, That serve his country and his Go# Dean Milman, in his “A:*n'lqtbt. M’-W.‘MM is not generally Sntlin(dun building of the cathedral, say», * The architect himself had the Md thoflntuuo,Jn.?lLlG‘u." mw:l' let which was used by Sir her Wnnmthtofmx o C.o ion is now the property t, J. C. and was recently used by Her Royal H the Privcess Mary Adelaide, of T in the ceremony of laying the foundstion stone of the new church schools at And though upon‘his rustic towefs * | No ancient standard wavesiits wing, Thick, leaty banners flushed | with flowes, From all the fragrant c ents swig. Arfil here, in royal homesgun, bow is natâ€"brown court at night and men Phe bronzed Field Marshal of the Plow, The Chaacellor of Wheat ahd Corn. The Ladies of the New Mown Hay, The Master of the Spade and lHioe, The Minstrels of the Glorious Lay, That all the Sons of F\ know Every year brings its sad tale of some thrilling accident on the Alps. Twoorgr. sous were lately killed by the fail of an wyalanche. One was mir y saved. He says, after describing the sudden fail of the mass : I found myself, when Iâ€"re» turned to consciousness, on a hither 1 had been hurled by .lb avalanche, the mass of whi_«_:h had enn:lfl away my comâ€" The Keeper of the Golden Stacks, The mistress of the Milking Pail, The bold Knight of the Ringing Axe, The Heralds of the Soundipg Flail. Among the fine old kings reign Upon a simple wooden throne, There‘s ove with but a small domain But, mark you, it is all hisown. i The rope by which we were ’uunod must have been reat asimnder, otherwise I should have been hurled to sudden destruction as well as the others. A loud cry trom the mouths of all us, then silenceâ€"â€"and of my unfortunste companâ€" jous I saw and heard no more,. as A literary Englisn mflmn at Dumas‘ table rather the servant by asking, softo voce, but impressively, for "Racine." ‘The quick ear of the attentive host caught at the whispered want of his guest ; he beckoned to the servant, and gave uim instructions, thinking: that the liserary English gentleman wanted to quote something from French classics, and to refresh his memory, <ireat was the Brit n‘s surprise on receiving a large handsomely bound# volume. An exâ€" §n~th-. oon-ecglfind ensued across the le in broken Eaglisaâ€"aud French, wh n it was discovered that h« wanted hors» radish with his stice of beet, and nad exâ€" s hb,“lilm io the best way in E‘.: aking for "micine," or root m‘t be could come to horse~ TIME WORKS WONDERS QLD CuUNTRY ITEMS3 OYAL RACEK German journals just received give a most horrible account of the execution by beheading, with a sword, at Butzow, in Mecklenburg, of three murderersâ€"Henry Scharfer, Peter Kopp, and Francis Newâ€" mann. ‘The crowd present consisted mostly of peasants, their wives and children. Bus for ths scaffold the scene would have looked more like an American barbecue than an execution, for all preâ€" sent were eating and drinking, singing and chatting merrily. There were on the ground numerous venders of pies, cakes, apples and liquor, aud even an Italian with a trained moukey attracted numbers of wondering spectators. ‘The executioner and his assistants hurried somewhat rudeâ€" ly to the rear of the platform. Scharfer, a herculean man, with high shoulders and a very short neck, tried to look indifferent and even defiant.. His companions were evidently almost unmanned by their terâ€" ror. ‘Their faces looked deadly pale, and they were hardly able to stand on their feet at tho moment. The wretched Klein, who had been in the charge of officers unâ€" der the scaffold, was led upon the platform. He wore the gray uniform of the convicts and : was heavily ironed. He was evi« dently terrified â€" and shed copious tears. After he| had been placed near the Judges, in front of the armchair, the executioner approached â€" Scharfer and told him audibly to sit down on the chair. â€" The old murderer stogped almost jauntily to it and sat down. ‘The doomed culprit still tried to die game, bltfll.llfi: of the vast crowd seemed to dazzle eyes. | His breast heaved oonmhivoll and his face turned almost purple. The Presiâ€" dent of the court now stepped forward and read ‘the Aaathâ€"warrant. Scharfer‘s respiration became more ana more spas modic. He cast wistful glances towards the executioner, who, as soon .as the Presiâ€" dent ceased reading, rapidly stepped u to him. The culprit‘s neck was bnuf When the executioner touched his skin Scharfer gave a start and>uttered a low, gurgling sound. ‘Then his eyes were banâ€" daged. One of the assistants seized him by vhe hair and drew .up the head of the struggling criminal, while the executioner took the sword from the Morocco case. He poised the flashing blade closely to the This agrees exactly with our own inforâ€" mation, and with the fact that among Mr. Church‘s most influential supporters were the most ardent Unionists in the county. It appears then that there is not a solitary Grit or Jonesite returned from Nova Scotia. The revolution is complete and overwhelming.â€"British Colonist. This is what the Halifa, Ezpress : It is that the Hon. R. W. Scott will.b{:'c- ceed Mr. Biake as Premier of Ontario. Mr, S, is a clever lawyer, moderate in poli ticg, and a t.homn:fh gentleman. He is a Conservative, and entered the Ontario Government with the full approval of Sir John A. Macdonald, whose personal â€" and Eolifiu“nend Mr, Scott is The Hon. E. Wood will take the Treasurership to be vacated by the Hon. Mr. McKenzie. 4r, Wood held the same office in the late John Sanfield Macdonaid‘s Cabinet. Thus it will be seen that the reconstructed Govâ€" eroment will be a "Coalition" notwithâ€" standing the efforts of the Grits to rule by party. There is not the slightest doubt that if the "Grit‘‘ element was as strong in Untario as represented by the Globe, peither R. W. Scott nor E. B. Wood would hold such responsible positions. right side of the culprit‘s neck, and then deliberately cut into it. At the moment when the sharp edgo out into his flesh Scharfer gave a convulsive start and drew up his J@igs, but it was soon over, for the hudng- sv'votdg.-.d surely through, somewhat alowly, flesh m&' vertebre with a horrible mtm audible to a considerable dis shocked the byâ€" standers to their inmost. ‘When the head fell off a stream of blood l{lmdthm feet into the air from the trunk of the decapi~ tated man. (It was a ghastly sight.. Every one turned pale, while the two wretched culprits, who had witnessed the doom of their sccomplice, turned white in their faces, and cordials had to be administered to them in order to prevent them from fainting away. Next the corpse was unâ€" tied. and together wiih the head put into We have ro&uudly stated that Mr. Church, M. P. for Lunenburg, is not an ()pposition«man in the Ontario sense of the term. Reâ€"repudiated the platform t up by the Jonesâ€"Powerâ€"Vail»Annand ficfiun. His position is defined by & writer in the Christian Messenger :â€" _ The "Anti‘ papers claim, and the Govâ€" ernment organs grant, that Mr. Church is an Uppositionâ€"man. But, victory to the victorious,. + . In his nomination speech, Mr. Church pledged himself to support Sir John‘s Government.whenever he couid honestly cali its measures good ; and C. E. Church is a man whose words and actions agree. launenberg County decided for "Church" «nd State, electing not a Macdonald Govâ€" ernment man, not an (pposition manâ€" but a good â€"Government man,â€"than whom no «Domifion Member" can, well and wisely, be a stronger adtherent of either (Government or Opposition. Let neither party claim an honest "Independent." . BI0CKING INCIDENTS AT ‘ ANâ€" EXHOUTION 1N MECKLENBURG, a ev.on. The blood was wiped of with rig<. 10 beadsman: dW#ied his eword with ® towJ, and> then lhnr{nned it with a. piece of steel. When all was ready he turned with aaimgciom gesture to Kopp, and exclaimed, "Now, you stâ€"p this way." The unfortunate man tottered to the fatal cha‘r more dead than alive, and the same g:t;eu \ings were gone through with as vre. He mosaned audibly during the reading of the death warrant, and when the executioner bared his neck, began to sHo CAUCULIOHOE URPOC NB ue â€" neulfoat scream piteously. His yefl.:';imh made the blood of the hearers freeze, did not cease until the sharp blade of the heads~ m«n cut into the living flesh. He, too, gave a dreadful start when he felt the first sharp touch of the cold steel. The exeâ€" cutioner did not cut very straight, for the blade came out near the shoulder and the head had to be cut off. : Newmin was overpowered by it and fell into a leng swon.. Hartshorn was administered to him, and, when he awakened «o consciousâ€" ness, he, too, was led to the fatal chair and despatched in the s«az= manner as his accomplices. The whole execution lasted 40 minutes. It was stated a day or two szo that ths bodiy of the young woman who‘ drowned herself at Waterloo hid'plbwovnlnf since had been identified, Her name, it appears, was Alice Blanche Oswald, and was within a few days of completing her twentieth year. At the inquest last night before Mr. Langham, the iollowing letter was put in and read : ... 178 Hicu Sreeet, Smaonw#LuL, Loxnox, } September, 3, 1872. ‘The ‘crime that I am about to comunit ivbing sompareny io m prosnnt mestty. g com to my t $ Almni;nlmmnotn penny or a friend to advise or & holm‘ hand, tired and weary with looking something to do, failing in every way, footsore and heartweary, I prefer death to the dawning of another wretched morning. 1 have only been in Britain nine weeks. I came as nursery governess with a lady from discharged me, refusing to pay my pasâ€" as nursery governess with a lady from T uorim o Witk: in Scotiand, where she ' back, giving me my wages, £3 10s. mmyupuuwlom!foudny- ..uhu;i-’rmoh.ywixhonlyss. What was I to do? 1 sold my watch. The palâ€" try sam I obtained for thit soon went in paying for my board and looking fo. a sicuqzion. ‘Now I am destitate, every day is miserable to me. No frend, no hope, no money ; what is left? Oh, God of heaveu, have mercy on‘ a , helpless sinver; thou knowest how ! have striven ag.iinst this, but fats is against me,. F:therless, motherless .home I hare none. i. for the nm{col Christian hearts. . I am pow rmsd ; days I have foreseen Ms:{uww&fi.ud. May all who haar of my me,. apd may 100 Hwigety do sn hofee Tanle s( HOW CRIMINALS ARE BEHEADED ALL NOVA SCOTIA TRUE. (Pal Mail Gazet«, ~; A SAD ST )%\ A Some days since Mr. Hiram Fifield, livâ€" ing in Dorchester, saw a man entering the extensive swamp which lies south of the Hamilton road, in the township of Dorâ€" chester. From the movements of the person, he thought there was something peculiar in the case, and after the lapse of four days he resolved to enter the swamp and search for him He discovered him lying on the ground, and appareatly in a wretched cond:tion. He gave his name as John Kennedy, and said he had been wandering about the country and could get no work. | He had burrowed & hole, in order, as he said, to :gg water, for the marsh at this season is dry. But he had had neither meat nor drink for four days and four nights, during which time he had no shelter, although exposed to heary rains The man stated he had formerly held a commission in the army, but subs> sequently became a private ; but his dis= charge had been purchased, and he came to Americs. (He could not ortain em. ployment, and was disheartened and reckless. It was evident he was of unâ€" sound mind, and as it was evident that he intended to return to the swamps or some other lonely place, where he would die. The proper suthorities committed the uufortunate main to jail until a warrant can be obtained for his transterence to the asyluro. $ Fancy a female life insurance agent, and pity the dwellers in Wisconsin ! A medical statistician asserts that there are only 15,000 habitual drunkards in Chiâ€" Brigham Young is said to have a disâ€" ord«r of the heart. No wonder, considerâ€" ing the number of times he has given it to different ladies. Mr, Bradfor4 has orders for pictures of arctic scenery from Queen Victoris and the Marquis of Lorne. A gentleman farmer in Rassia has half a miliion merino sheep. He has raised them for mereâ€"rhino, of course. It is probably hereditary whiskey which has rendered an Ohio infantâ€"proof against the effect of six rattlesnake bites. The editor of the London Telegraph is to be raised to a baronetcy. Miss Nellie Grant is to sail for koms in the Scofia on the 12th proximo. The price of votes in Calais, Mame, at the recent election, ranged from $2) to $105. Canvassers surrounded the polis, aonbuh in hand, and e demand of voter was promptly m':r{y the Yanâ€" kee Clear Grite. must soon apj . Farewell to to this beautiful amot wretched m::!’ Arics Buakoms Oswaup. I am twonty years of age the 14th of this month. The jury returned a verdict of * Suicide while in a state of temporary insanity. The St. John Telegraph says: Mr. Whelling, of England, wg, for years, has interested himself in the mm‘n&m of farm labourers to Canada, is on a visit to this Province, having arrived here on Saturday. We trust he may be favorably impressed with. the inducements New Brunswick offers to the class of people he is interested in. Never since the Great Western Railway was opened there been such a large amount of bisi done on the road. Some idea may be formed of the extent when it is stated that from Saturday the 14th until Saturday the 21st inst. there were over two hundred special freight trains run over the line, each of which had on an average twentyâ€"six cars attachâ€" ed. Besides these, the thirty regular trains were kept busily employed. The Birmingham Post annsunces that a conference of Nonconformists in reference ‘t:. the qu;t&on of the d:hww of Chur Hngland, and 0 ma fritbe hokd in Birfiinghai in the fret week in October. Mr. Miall, M.P., and other members of Parliament will attend. Alluding to the Chelsea tragedy, the Cologne Gasctie says May and Nagel were both clerks in a Berlin house of business, which they robbot} persistently. Alh. an inquiry was set on foot they escaped, harâ€" ing furnished themselves by a last robbery with the means of travelling. The rains have deepened the St. Laws rence several inches. < Mr. H. M. Stanley was entertained on Saturday night by the members of the Savage Club,. In the course of his speech he referred to the jealousy and animosity that had been shown towards him by the m&:phu'uthmt nudnfno(cho Association He has been invited, it is said, by the Queen‘ to visit her at Balâ€" moral toâ€"day (Saturday). An Alden Fruit Factory has been estabâ€" lished at Fowler, Adams County, Illinois. The building is described by the Western Agriculturist as 36 ft. by 74 fi., four stories besides the basemen thnocv%‘m and a capacity for 400 to bushâ€" els of fruit or vegetables per day. This The potato disease is rapidly in:fldireefioumnnwmut bourhood. Those in the fields are now ginning to suffer very much. Twopriaonenmmodlnda father and son, were tried last week at Middlesex Sessions for cirsulating immoral literature, and the jury convicied the parent, He was sentenced to two years‘ imprisonment with hard latour, and ordered to find guarantees for his good behaviour during twelye months after his release. wfllfln some idea of the scale on which fruit is dried in America. h's:d.n‘i'.hnd,b M h;..m-: t essrs. Oo.withthoedhon{ipof Good Words, in succession of his brother, the late Dr. Norman Macleod. : _ On the occasion of hi-li&hd-: King Louis of Bavaria has instituted s new gold medal to recompense services rendered to science, arts, and manufactures. Mrs. Beecher Stowe is comuing out dur» ing the approaching lecture season in America as a public reader of selections from her own works. Sir Charles W. Dilke is about to become the propâ€"ietor of «* Notes and Queries," and the editorial dcruh.fi of that j>uarnal will, from the 1st of October, be vlaced in the hands of Dr. Doran, F. 8. A. I he 1ife of Charles Lever is to be written A sonnet, composed by Cowper, was recently sold at Messrs. Sotheby‘s. ftwu in the handwriting of thoza-and it is said to have been composed for the benefit of a printer at Laicester, who had got into ru'. for selling the * Age of Reasen.‘" t fetched £4. 14s. 61. ; Mr. Gerald muyhmonnwrk to be entitled "Myth, Mi and Mysâ€" tery," Poriions of the subject will be treated in a series of lectures, which he is preparing jor delivery hnkglnd and America. and they might add, no action, E-.“ sphoro and its compounds are known to fio%; er of he nervous and muscular system. conâ€" ofit-ton_mdnn?:l! the material of the human bonx. sound mw%w is tely esse tial to ur promote mm:%‘&um“u‘m “’nn-.. Thymm'oo‘ua‘l;.‘-l;flnffl'mn Europe a2d Americs in the of Serofulous, Conâ€" sumptive and Veneral diseases, which are cansed j x Dwyer. uy Ma At the ‘recent Portmados Eisteddfod, Sir Watkin Wyunn, M.P , was initiated ass bard. In reply to an address he claimed for Wales that there was no country of its size which had prodused so many illas. trious soldiers and artists. mm-;;-? :a‘mun-fi;hw!b AN% A CHEMICAL FUOD AND NUTRKIFIVE TONIC. PEREPHTE m T Emm s d 023 4n C by imporerished or blood ; and in disâ€" ouud"on’.l ulm‘g‘ h"’lfllfifl‘.b Snintraty m tont oe on t Labtar pammtrs nnl:i: from vad excessive use of stimulants tobaceo, all train of evile known as a life. mm and promptaess in its effects is immediately and permaâ€" Jn «hh Un Parde Ah* ~pr FRESH GLEANINGS DUOMINION NUTES. LITERARY Brooks‘ 500 Plans of Sermons. Business Success, by John Macdonald. Florence Marryate‘ Novels, English edition Little Folks, volume [IL, Hope Deterred, by Eliza K. Pollard. Maid of Aker, br R. D. Blackmore. Astronomy and Geclogy, compared by Lord Ormathwaite. : P* Soottish Theology : and Theologians, by James Walker, D.D. _ _ _ _ B:oadus on Preparation and Delivery of In the matter of JULES BERTRAND,| Trader, Insolvent. l The insolvent has made an assignment of his estate and effects to me, and the creditors are notified to meet at the Court House, in the Insolvency Rooms, in the city of Montreal, on TUESDAY, the Sih day of October, 1872, at 11 o‘tlock &a. m., to receire statements of his aftairs and to appoint an Assign e. _ _ _ _ GAM 67 CONCBT $500,000 The vast salés of tickets already made, and the increasing demmand for them from all S‘MB having determined the trustees that the GRAN GIFT CONCERT for the benefit of the PUBLIC LiBKARY OF KEN KY, advertised for SAâ€" TURDAY, SEPT filsTl}SHALL POSIâ€" TIVELY COME OFF ON THAT DaY, WITHâ€" UUT POSTPONEMENT, the management now recently bought a twoâ€"page letier of | George Washington for two hundred dol. t Hamilton, on the 22nd inst., Walter James Henry, M.D., late of Ottawa, deeply regretted, eldest son of the late Dr.Henry, Inspector (ieneral of Hospital«. mu_' nber 18th, at Dalhousie, N. B , Antonia Rowan, only daughter of D. Simms, Esq , C. E., aged 9 months. notifies all who expect to participate in the drawing that they should buy Ihorr‘:i‘:km at once. Delay for a few ‘l{l“fllfi many who wanted tickets at the concert in December last to without them. Bome living in lmh?uob:dur until ulu"wx closed, expecting, no doubt, a postponemen me oflered Afroen, Avenly and oren toentyâ€"Are a distancee sent thousands of dollars by mail and mvhhfi mhm after sa‘es were closed, and to be sent back. These disappointments need not occur again if the warning now given in due T beqiaming will best isely at 6 o‘clock e wi in isely o‘clock on Suurdz.mov ning, flepummc'lt 1872, in the great hail of the Public Livbrary Building, and continue the.. offered m.on]" t r and ove ’t'-‘x-fl"" five dollars for tickets w lo?g‘h?du b:f'g.: ware of or:: to purchasers at the regular price. Others living at until the one thousand gifts are all drawn. { 0 0 > HIST or GIrTs. One Grand Gift, Cash. One Grand Gift, Cash ‘The Concert.itsolf will be the most brilliant orâ€" chestral dhr.y that ever occurred in the Wost. ts Soiney and from Rutope:, under the direction sountry and from Europe, under the of Prof. Hast, will contribute to this grand musical carnival. And to afford ample room for eve ticketâ€"holder to enjoy such an unusual -’;5 festival, the Concert will be given in Central where arrangements have been made to accommoâ€" date ail who may come. _ __ . 3e will be admitted to both the Concert and Drawing, :‘n&-m without such tickets will be admisted to % PRICB OF TICKETS. Whole tickets, $10; hal t d 11 whole tiokets édm T or b30 io Tor $on ; uuuua.u ‘uzub;murm. No dis* !:ut- thar worth of tickets at s time. aocordance with numerous solicitations, arrange â€" ments mm-“. with all the mn.l and steamboat lines :shbdudvlbrhnhd 'hfi wish t. .m-filtb? nnmhu.“dnwh‘ 0 ashville iirost la-hfi:n :fi En apa Anasm ib e e uartie Railro@d, the Ohio and m«.‘.&.fi'flnl‘o and Cincinasti boat , and the Louisvile, Owensboro and Henderâ€" option of the holder. ‘The tickets must first be preâ€" Pamiuk me Th vikes, Heam "hose Pablic nulnes Nesmm nrioMts ts wfat oBattannr Agent Public Library of ;‘.:.mk.v. Public m:.. *"Tue drawing will bo publisied in The yvillo papers and New York Herald, official sent to purchasers to whom umm been sent by letter. rignons whith Inonmniety bortens taa, oath aspâ€" tain snimal and vegetable parasites, and that the son Mail Boat Line Packets _ All agents are required to close sales and make tnolt rooaves Th Ti tims ‘to rhaon talr vikes o g“" eantnd atoaroet distaneds must sns omcs _ All tickets to which awarded will be parg aithone nlepotnd 17 46e Parmny het Dre iae the Rearch Natioue! Pack n Hew Work "at €ABRIEL‘S 6#A BRL MWPICAL INVESTIGATION has nroved that the decaving su CABALEL® 7 __,m_,;::..., Paisiossly and 15 Interim Assiznee Montreal, Sept 19, 187%2. _ _ 2085 i'(’lt’l’h’(’t’qfifi each 5 do 0M do YOUR TICKETS NOW OR NEVER Persons holdiug whole, half or quarter tickets HEMBRION & (0Ԥ NSULVENT ACT OF 1869 sEPPEMBER 28 THE DAY. Total, 1,000 Gifts, EW BOOKS do micules and sleo proseryo ano beautify the PREPARED ONLY BY Cesh Ristribution, A FIXED FACT ror Willum of Germany use after #% years‘ experience in i omm nammtaes n the nerve n’rla.- m Price is i}d. > r far Touth abhs, 1 aparad tm penotel stopping decayed and tender teeth. decayed. Price is6d. _ _ . _ Mi&'l‘cufi’afi. for cleansâ€" ing and improving the and imparting a natara lnh-f“‘ig& for mastication; no.matter how far toine. mt wand io Tt "Maiostyâ€" Whkent 208 greverves the Teoth: .‘hne:r'%'fn‘a:-ub s nataral redness to the w without % any trace of powder, and gives brilliancy to the 'u”l:d “m;:-rbg‘h“ s 8 "Onies Enamel Stopplng wamssigd Te onl "‘Phis Denutiful Pref enamel. FPrice is 6d. enamel. Price is 64, rnh&m'ww':’: drope w m “M- ’nflo and uhi. Mouth aeh ; it hardens the gums. preâ€" vents the accumulation of tartar, wives toe ‘breath a delightfu! perâ€" fume, removing all traces of to bacco smoke or unpleassot odour arising White Gutts Perchs Enamel for DEK Tis Ts â€"OFâ€"T HEWORL do do do do do do do Wb id T H E DiED. all Cash No. 39, Sparks St L. J. LaJOIE, . LOND ONE lrree . EyOP $25,000Cush . 2,000 do . 15,000 do 10,000 do 15000 do 18,000 do I?MGO 17,500 do 21,000 do 22800 do 2,00) do 18,000 do M ::”)do $100,000 D&s do do do TB]RD ANNXT A1 Ottawa Fire Comp‘y Composed of the following or other first Powerful Iron Steamghips : . Cl SCOTLAND, _ s NILE tl&)’l‘()ll§ NIGER, MEDWA TWEED, THAMES, |________ TEVIOT. St. Patrick‘s Hall D. BEHAN, WM. 1 Secretary. _ Ottawa, Sept 24, 1872 The steamers of this Line are intended to satl Weekly as follows during the serson of navigation of 18372, to and from Wednesday, October 2a¢, 1872 LONDON, QUEBEC London, Quebec and Montreal (Calling at Plymouth outward fJr passer Thames . Emperor Hector _ Medway . Scotland . Medway.........Thursday, 19th Sept‘t Bootland.... .... _ do 26th _ do Thames .... .. . Tnesday, lfll.h Oot‘r. Emperor ........Naturday, 19th do Hector......... .Thursday, 3lst â€" do Rates of Parsageâ€"Quebec to Lonao:â€" Cabin, $60. Steerage, $24. . Through tickets from all points Wert at reducec f.res. Certificates fssued to persons desirous of brirging out thir trends to Cansda, Through‘ Bills of L«ding issued on the continent, and in London for all parts of Canada, and in the United Suates to Detroit, Milwaukee, Chicago and «ther points in the West. _ For Freight or Passage apply to Temperâ€" ley‘s, Carter & Darke, 21 Billiter Street, Lon« don ; Wilcocks & Weeks, Barbican , Plymouth; Bows & Co., Quebec ; or _ _ which we are d to furniâ€"h complete . e nacaae ts ts an our ; & as« i romnt af thik thieee Pats d Parlor Cook Stoves, Double Stoves, &s. Lawson‘s Patent Diamond Coal and Wood BQT AIB FURNAUCRY! to announce that for the ing sem :l.:thq have in stock '-huu:y-:fihn m(,'obAgnle’OVIB of six different sizes, te description of Private and Public Bnild[n‘. H. Meadows & Co. mnmwumm (George Stree G:“l-l:lngmfl: we ‘bave ge Streets, we bave the MORNINCG STAR. .;..‘.'.‘.’1.?;":..‘..."«":..«.. ...“‘..Z;“f.' snd puvlic buildings. _._ ° ___ _ _ N. FAULKNER‘%, York Stroct Fo®s sw Canadian Institute HOMEOPATHIC sSPECIFICEK E::m,mm;.:q’:r_gm i o .uwhmmtuobm That nlistaker can not ...".‘.I’.“.‘.'.g...“.‘.‘"‘l.. as to be “"m"'r-\qn'n'un:u highâ€" q#flnmfifll.u‘fln u-q;‘ der satiefacti Office over Hope and Oo‘s, Sparks strest. _ MAMi y in children and grown S * BMMEAAEGeitniel vere iron .( or 2s 11.« ZAMI*T CaXEA Tc o. hk hauk af dipecriane oo f * s10 l'ira“vhh.flhd. "'"'..?;'.‘.‘a * n c un Domectts Animate, wih _ â€" disesses of all Domestic Animais, with e on teftuere Our . erinary others n« -n.n-mfli 38 POND‘K 1.XTRACT + ®, 1€ Eeiess "Ermmigho im eninames l-h‘.v Piles, Sthimgs, Sore KEves, Bicedinz of the Lunys, l:r: ‘.'-,“...', 6 or., 50 cts.; «Pints, §$1.5 Quarts, §1.75%, _ _ TRA AIY Office and Depot. -unnn.lcgoh- For Sale by all Druggistsâ€" wia. KBAFX 4 ; Obls . TEA M ocm-.s-pc"fx?’z 2068 uf > _â€"___ K. MEADOWS & Co., Oonltd(he?ud!h-um Ottawa, Sept 19, 1872. Stomach, or of Piles; Corus, Vicc‘m ESIMILIA SIMILIBUS OUR/ HUMPHREY$ Tickets or to _ C. B. CUNMNINGHANM American Coil istove, Crienial _ ¢o â€" do Dominion d6 _ ¢o lm Weakness, welling " Urinary Weakness, wetting bod And Montreal. FROM LONDON FROM QUEBEC EMPEROR. WM. MeCAFFREY, 13 and 2 Woednesday, 11th Sept Raturday, 218t do Friday, 4th Uct‘r Wednesday, 16th do Monday, © 28th do SOCIA Tents DAVID sHAW ie box, uo sny vart of ASSEMBL y )0 cents PONDE EX Mont rea! passenigers) Ottaws. XTOR ‘_,,....--- w k# Riow.r Ca " Ortaws at 6 * s =“;'|::='4 s id s had from . o x 4 e wadss . a anrmer bHusseX & ts ies s .'mu'r toal. D., 0t _ 140 6.15 at this office. wanted to carr? P*I i The meeting « in the esiablishm shool at Ottaws will take ;,fim:min‘lbfl rw. untiljÂ¥r. Kin to the relief. ’ 13, 1872 ig this morning, and the . %o secure the extradition no better aod Surm -“&m‘“- d be without it, for whe sed, no Doctor need app! Gmsox & Co, Agen lly large number, for this â€" Of visitors at the Russell [ tss on the Burest Hailway rth ‘ corner â€"of Metoalf a mumerous during the las! affiicted with Rbeuma Hovss.â€"There seemed MoK wwors & McMozaX‘s. 20 Nparks Stre laint, in Discase "wmw' of the Caledonia Water. Gmsox & Co., Corner Sparks and Elgi prnÂ¥wA ’udt-umrsu MoKixnxors & McMonar : 20 Sparks Stre arminative is a safe oft omER, io teach in the -Ml,h~WI -;&E::".!m 4A MES BONFIELD, _ _ â€"W. HEAKK, Fiannels for the Fall at E. E. RODDEN: Â¥. J. KEARNEY «We notie@ the T. Murray, E«q., of taking! prano ks street about no Fu--nm il had his arm passed buxom lass who sat ith him.. ‘They both ap ! luxurions position q " Orri®A -l""""n,d' weniently attend : is also very large and 4 taste praised on ali «â€"As the Agliorer st RUOfraYva.â€"The ente Rorwarding & Roilws Insrecumntas Teaomxe BOW that Mr. Taepke | twats T. Hunton Son establishment. We in town last evening to Ottaws. bopplied Arice Ont A:‘r.. Cizson & ( Agents tor t "m' Arrives ry ‘.’ at.. to hfiu .‘.hhh. t their steamers go as ;bm“j London, who intends 181 1872 Light Prints, at moxs & Mo vonan‘s M 1 2N ‘.“ 84 & RamWwaY ""Tug o° the To ublic improvemen Afeviark Rhe fSnancie! den public life be NEWS ay® Forwarpw®é CO year by year yoege: commn * Â¥) + parke GULDE Ral noon. 1200 $.45 however for snnachy w up before Already alwave 1958t 2085 3 w aY 2086 208 Bri

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