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Ottawa Times (1865), 3 Oct 1872, p. 2

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A terrible accident happened this mornâ€" ing to a passeager train frem London for Edinburgh. While running st a very rapid speed it came into collision near Kertle Bridge with a freight train, causing the instant death of nine persons. Many . Others are injured and it is fesred several of them will die. Later deteils are recei, ved, and all despatches agree in stating That the train was behind time and was running aAt a furious rate to miake it up. ) The scene of the disaster is not far from Carlisle, capital of: Cumberlsnd County, and a train has been sent from town to though not seriously. P The publc debt of the United States has been reduced ten millions of dollars 7-.&."“&. ‘The timé granted to the inhabitants of Alsace and Lorraine to choose between German and French citisenship has exâ€" pired. The exodus during the last few diys was immenseâ€"tully 1,200 men, women and children left this city on Sunâ€" _ »day for French territory. Trains on the Railways leading into France were crowded, and were insufficient to carry all that Music Hallâ€"Hogan & Mudge‘s Minstrels, Music Hallâ€"Roea D‘Erine _ Invest Your Moneyâ€"W N Coler. $100 to $250 per monthâ€"Hudson River Auction Sale of Timber Limitsâ€"A Rowe Wiy* See first Sag stigs. pa‘p for interesting readâ€" It is understood that the Honorable Mr. Pearce, of Victoria, B.0., will be the reeiâ€" dent engineer of the Department of Public Works of Canada, in that province. way, is in town Mr. Livingstone, of 8t Jokn, N. B., formerly proprietor of the 3%. Joim Tric= graphÂ¥, is in town. They know that every emerituency in that province would give a large sisjority in favour of the Ministerial cxandidates, sind that they could not hops for success by legitimate means. But if they could manage to destroy the polling books and create confusion ofall kinds, they would be able to misrepresent the aft.ir in the columms of their organs, and to « eate the Impression that, if they had not been inâ€" terfered with by the authorities, they would have won the â€"elections. This was the @little game" proposed, awl Mr. Cornish was the man appoinied to wanted Bto go. French journals to day appear in mourning. Now that the facts connected with the late rict in Manitobs are being brought to light, there appears litile resson to doubt that it was the resuls of sn organâ€" ized scheme on the pert of the Grits. Mr. Chisholm, M.P., for Hamilion, was in town yesterday. brirgâ€"in the dead and wounded. Cor Oftaba Cimes. / A Paris despatch says it is probable the Germans will evacuate the occupied disâ€" trites in France sooner than was expecied. It is rumored that Gambetta will be a eandidate for the Presidency of the French Republic. â€" for the Grits, however, all their efforts have been of no avail. The mob whom they managed to get togethe:, exâ€" gited _by drink, snccseded in destroying two newspaper offices and tried to rob a bank. So much they managed to effect, but ‘this was all. The great fact that the people of Manitoba are overwhelm« Ingly in favour of the Government reâ€" mains unaltered, nor havre the Grits for one moment succeeded in making is ap» pear otherwise. which the people of this country are more : generally agreed than upon the imporâ€" M tance of consiructing the Pacific Reilway o with all possible speed. Government and 1 people alike recognise the necessity of the | . work,and understand that the magnificent s territory, larger than half of Burope, which P lies in the centre of the Dominion, can t never be proparly seitled or its resources a adrquately developed without a nihny j As we have often pointed out, and as we | . think it must be evident to everyone, if| | British Columbis had not yet been admitâ€" | ted into our Union, railway communicaâ€" : tion from the Atlantico seaboard through | | British territory to the foot of. the Rocky , Mountains was an â€" absolute necessity. P When the Dominion Govrersment frst| proposed to build the road, she â€"«pposiâ€" | tion at once did all they could to prevent, | or at all events to defer its eonstruction. Last session they did mot seruple to declare that there were insurmountalls engineering difficulties in tre way, and one of the Opposition leadere . Â¥r. Mills, of Bothwell, a gentiemas wio by nature and education appears to hare beega thorâ€" oughly imbued mth Amerieaa proclirities, has not besitated to declare thas we ought not to trouble abous build tig a Oanadian Pacifc Railway, but be sonieat to use the American line. The Govevament and the people of Canada. however, are perfectly well aware that the rich prairies of the Northâ€" West cannos be settlied and ren« dered fruitful until a Canadian Railway crosses those boundless plains, and lands the settler with his foot upor the very ground which be intends to cultivate. 1t is gratifying to know that the assartion made by the Opposition ss to there beting | , #ingirmountable . engineering diffi.ulâ€" ties" in the way, like most of the sta teâ€" ments which emanate frem the sanre source, is -lh.‘bor untroe, cand thist there is every hope of the construction of the road being commenced almost imme» â€" diately, and pushed forward with the ut most rapidity, lf the same energy is @displared in building theâ€"line which has characterized the prosecution of the surâ€" vey, the public will hive good *reason to Mr.. Hickson of the Grand Tronk Rxilâ€" NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. THE LATS RIOT iN KANTTOBA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1872 LATEST TELEGRA PHIC ITEMX Wire Co THE PACIFI RAILWAY. it into effect. Unfortunately yesterday, We have lately had our attention nl tracted by a series of papers which have | appeared in the Lance/, written by Dr.| Cornelius Black, in which the{importance of free ventilation and fresit air is set forth im a very striking manner. The | subject is an important one, and although in Canadian towns we have J, ag a gonâ€" eral thing, many of those ed 1Scaliâ€" ties which are met with in Epgland, it is very certain that sufficient attention is not paid to providing for a cohnstant and perâ€" fect ventilation . of our dwelling houses. More especially in ‘winter, when the snow is knee deep and the weather cold, people are naturally apt to gather round their great wood fires, to close every aperture through which a breath of air might enter, and to spend the night and day in apart â€" ments where the air is foul and vitiated, and where there sare no effectual means for removing the foul air discharged from the lungs. To illustrate the case in some measure, we â€"may suppose four or five persons to be sitting in a warm, snug room, the storm roars wildly without, 4# And the good logs of Algidus Roar louder yet within." . The lamp is lit, and the fumes of tobac co smoke, perhaps, are added to the more deadly gases which arise from the preâ€" breathed air. Go to the window and the panes will be found covered w ith mois ture, which trickles ;down r'n frames, a certain sign that all pure dir is used up, and that the occupants are inhaling each other‘s breath, or, as Dr. Black expresses it, actually "living upon another." At public entertainments, rts, &o., the same thing may be feen. A vast quantity of noxious gas is generated, and people complain of herdache, faintâ€" ness, sleepiness, coughing, &¢ , while very frequently the seeds of fatal diseases are Diseases of the heart and lungs are to a far larger extent than any| one supposes attributable to bad ventilation and an inâ€" sufficient supply of pure air, The cgrboniec .aidpn,dinhrpdm) lungs with every breath we take, is of a ly::lwn- ous nature. By inbaling |it i8 and again the blood becomes the vital organs sufler accordingly. Dr} Black says that disease of the l¢ft ven of mm'omni-mndin.’m- He mhm“:finm tlib left side may arise and progress to ® cer« ;ain point, when :treatment subd it, and the patient resovers, though a i amount of mischief is left behind. fifler- theless, years pass on, the patient appear» img none the worse fer the previous illâ€" mess ; but at length puilmonary symptoms suddenly manifest themselves, and then the physician disupvers that the co@dition of the langs of which W-EQ plains is traceable to this The importance of the heart the fullest share of oxygenated blood is PPArâ€" -cwhnl)r.m:xhulu“:â€" It would be well for us‘all to bear in mind that every grown up man and woman requires a bulk of air equal to two hogskeads per hour to keep them in perâ€" fect health. fealthy vitality can ouly be preserved by a free and unchecked circuâ€" lstion of the blood. Let the blood cease to circulate and vitality ceases. proper circulation of the blood can ufibo in« sured by a sufficient amount of gene â€" tion being supplied by, the lungs, and this is, of course, dependent upon the supply of fresh air. A deficiency of fresh air, therefore, must result in a defiâ€" clency of vitality. i "The blood reaching the adlb heart from the l has , with all the d:::u growth of the tissues ; it has been > o e faige on s m m it is the highest degree stimulating to the left heart, The blood reaching the right side ammn”"m.mm -ymh.h;-f been depri uireme® growth, ofunolz ion of its nutrient materials ; it has been z the debris of tissueâ€"waste ; it been Ehand by its impregnation with egrbonâ€" acid gas ; it is there a de nt, rather than a healthy itant, ie right heart." Of course it is not ble within the limits of a newspaper artidle to treat this important subject at leng . OUur object will be fully answered if *o succeel in arousing public attention to the necessity of good rentilation and to direful reâ€" sults which spring from a of a sufliâ€" cient supply of fresh . _ At this season of the year in Canada wo believe the subject 1s especially worthy of notice, because, as we before remarked, people during the Autumn and Winter months are so exceedingly prone |to shut themâ€" selves up in close rooms to excluae fresh air from their dweliing houses. They shrink from a draught as a pestilâ€" ence, but we may rely upor} it that more seâ€" rious diseases of the lungsiand other vital organs have been caused by foul ain and by living in close rooms, than have ever been occasioned by cold. Thg simple law of nature which declares thatin ord»r to keep the body in perfect health the biood must be daily oxygenated is| an undeniable one, and one .which mot be too implicitly respected. ‘vital | stream must constantly be elic d of carbonie acid and as constantly retiu dts supply of oxygen. This is not, it must be reâ€" membered, a matter in which doctors and scientific men are alone i.l“t‘erm.d, or one with which they alone can deal.‘ [t is one which affects the health of all, and which every man can, to a greater or less éxtent, deal with for ‘himself. Nor is it the .physical bealth which alone is affected but the moralicondition also. Meas sana in corpore is a moral the truth of which few will be dis« posed to question. Let then every houseâ€" holder, every father of a ily, and inâ€" deed every.man and who has any regard for their own well being and the welfare of those around, them, bear in mind the importance of ventilation amd of obtaining an adgquate supply of pure air, and let them ("govern themâ€" selves according‘y." _ 7 A Toronto contempotary in a rather pequliar mantier announcgs . the close of the Provincial Exhibition|of 187 2. The Hamilton Provincial Exh:bition, nursing mother of agriqulture, mechanics and the fine arts, to say nothing of ot her. matters, has by this into the limbo of things past, and numbered. amongst the " have ,"‘ at any rate so far as the general public is concernel. For the exhivitors and numersus funcâ€" tionaries there will still |remain an unâ€" =Qn-nt period of mn:l.‘:onl and trouble the way of removal eleararice genâ€" eraily, seeing that an zl.ofluuu law of mature ordains that i matter, . once located, is, of itself, 'fi-., and the t is not as skilled ait Cominq mhfiomoh * Vril force.‘ This same business of Arthering up and w.';he thousand} and one items . which go to make up an |+<Exhibition,".is a tedious amd thnkf- for there is HEALTH AND VENTILATION no longer the sweet uncertainty of hope, the anticipation of praise. As, however, the outside worl1 is not personally affect~ ed by this trouble, its sympathy will not be rery deep, and those who made. Cosmos out of Chaos, may set about réturning Coâ€"mos to Chaos once more. _ The _ Kingston â€"* Nacs _ "says .â€" On Saturday afterncon a convict named Jokn Graham, a tall lithe fellow, measurâ€" ing over six feet, eluded the vigilance of the guards for a moment, and made good his escape. Search was made for the runâ€" away, but without success. ’ The Brockville & Ottawa, and;Canada Central Bnilnd, under the able manage« ment of Mr. Harry Abbott is gaming a bigh reputation for punctuality, speed, and safety. â€" The Kingston| News says: The Poniâ€" tentiary Directors left town on Saturday for a visit to the St. Vincent.de Paul Reâ€" formatory, Montreal, The Kingston Yacht Club are to have a race on or about the 10th of Uctober. The receipts at the Provincial Exhibiâ€"« tion at Hamilton this Tm‘wero as folâ€" lows : Monday and y, $801.87 ; Wednesday, $5,059 57 ; Thursday, $5,925; Friday, $777.523, miking a total of $12,â€" 563.96. At Kingston last year the receipts were $6,236.33, only about half asâ€" great as at Hamilton.. The Gueiph Advertiser, ol Siturday evening, says: . "As we go to press, a desâ€" fi‘tch has been received, announcing that is Excellency the Governorâ€"General will visit the Exhibition in Guelph on next ‘Thursday. We â€"believe steps are to be taken for the erection of an arch, and the reception ‘of His Excellency with military honors. * ; A sailor at Quebec has inaugurated a cure for crimping which we trust will prove more effectual than those heretofore in practice. The story, as told by the teleâ€" graph, is beautifuily simple: ‘Two crimps went on board the ship Thorndean, and commenced to beat one of the men. He drew a knife and stabbed both of them, afterwards making goo i his escape. Gananoque is to be shortly in possession of a public Hall, styled "Dufferin Hall." The size is 40 x by 60 feet, with a stage 14 x 20 feet: it will be the second flat of a three storey bulding. + Mr. Mathieson, fermerly of the Clinton New Era, has commenced the publication of a daily ypor in St. Catharines, called the Daily News. It is the opinion of most of the seitiers and visitors to this district, says the Braceâ€" bridge Advocate, that Muskoka is not a wheategrowing section, but Mr. Alexander Barron, who owns a farm within a mile of this village, sowed three andâ€"aâ€"half bushels of wheat last fall, and a few days since threshed out more than eighty bushels of wheat of a -urrior quality, which the three«andâ€"aâ€"half bushels produced. And now it appears that Napanee is about entering the list of competitors for a branch Normal School. The Beaver n‘r‘r the Mayor to call a public meeting to take lto}n with the view of securing the institution for that rising town.. Rumours are again current as to the reâ€" tirement of thevord Chancellor. ~The conâ€" templated arrangements aro said to be as follows :â€"Sir Roundell Paimer is to be Lord Chancellor, Sir A. Cockburn is to receive a gmp,Six J. Coleridge is to be Lord Chief ustice, Sir G. Jessel is to be Attorneyâ€" General, and‘ Mr. Henry James is to be Solicitor General. The Hamilton Spectatr remarks that "the Hon. George Brown has been defeatâ€" ed at the polis half a dozen times, Sir Geo. E. Caryer once, and tir John ‘A. Macdonald never." » Cardinal Cullen has publisbed a letter he has received from Pius IX., acknowledging the receipt of £1,000 (Peter‘s &om) reâ€" ceived from the Diocese of Dublin. The Pope praises the Irish in the warmest way, lauding theirp unshaken faith, and many uofimi:n":l of filial affection M:fdg them e present tion Papacy, and above Khw“boundod liberality, which leads them out of their poverty to relieve ththol the distresâ€" The Barmaids muster daily at the North Woolwich Gardens, and compete, under the eye of mwuc, for the medal of honour. People at took theâ€"contest for a hoax, but it is nothing of the kind. The girls who mrummnpuhomon respectable of their class, one of them being the daughter of a wealthy fishmonger, and anâ€" other a young lady who preferred serving Bacchus wmfi'r or, in other words, had abandoned the vocal ballet stage for the decorous and industrial bar. The W’m-!agbu Guardian announces the arrival of 80 Jésuits at Diltonâ€"Hall, near Warrington, a spacious residence placed at Mrdhpaduahnmo,mdfoudgafioul purposes by Mrs. Stapleton, of Rainhill, Cholera is reported to be prevalent at Bombay as well as at Simla, and in many parts of the Northâ€" West. > The Forest of Dn;‘ropthm have again advanced their 22. per ton. Coal is now more than double the price it was in Yorkshire twelve months ago. With respect to the London and North Western Railway officials who J:t their employment in consequence of recent strike at the Broad:street station, two batches have been sent out to Quetec by the Am:lrmatod Bociety ot. Railway Serâ€" vants, and a third party of emigrants are preparing for departure to the same desti: nation. . It is a curious fact, says the Atkereum . that the morning and evening journals who claim to have the largest circulation â€"the Daily Telegraph and the Echoâ€"are at present conducted by two brothers, Mesers: Edwin and Arthur Arnold. Stanley will lecture this winter on © What l know about Livingstone." John Horton, millwright, chnrd at Birmingham, upon his own confession, with the murder of a child: in Glasgow, has been sent to Glasgow.. {t appears he has before accused hituself of anotber murder. [ s« It is proposed that the Corporation of Newcastle shall become possessors of the Town Moor, to convert it into a public park, the large sum of £75,000 teing paid to the "freemen‘" to abolish their privilâ€" ego of herbage. § A contemporary has taken the trouble to " cast up‘"‘ from official documents the amount Mr. Disrseli has received for his great services to the oounz The folâ€" lowinhh the l;;t::fl bill: In effice, salary, £22,517;, out ce, pensic £21,346 ; total, £43,863. oo *‘ KLRMARY OF NXE Owing to the high price of coal the deâ€" pression at Liverpool in the.trade done by ocean &o.ing steamers continues. It is stated that the cost of working a large steamer is now £45 more per day than it was a few months ago. The Norwick Marcury hears on wd authority that on the 28th ult., Lord Walâ€" singham, who has moors at Bluberhouse, Yorkshire, killed with his own gun the astounding number of 842 head of grouse. Uf these 550 were brought to bag before 1 e‘clock in the day. . "I am no alarmist," says Mr. Mechi, summing up the results of the harvest in a letter in Mum- Times " but 1 believe thit we ~have to pay for foreign corn, in quantity and prh&f:h.n to twenty muliions sterling more in a good wheat season." The manufacture of doll‘s \shoes has become quite a business within a fow years past. A unfi concern in «New York manufactures 5),000 pairs per anâ€" num, using nbouut 20,000 fm mmm and mostly scraps, cutti ooumb whole stock ofail the fashion. able colors. dnel Xusdomy Tor atoring whent in por. French A w table sheot iron granaries, in which .P:: GREAT BRITAIN DOMINION FOREIGN. O K. icmuni-minhinedeqml to at um three to four inches of mercury,this being | found sufficient to destroy all insect life and to insure the evsporation of aDY moisture in the grain. No less than eight lines of railroad arg in course of comstruction in NortherD Texas. & » »â€" A telegram from Memphis informs us that a terrible tornado has swept over & portion of Arkanas, levelling churches sod private residences, and futroyint the The San Francisco News Letter says: We have this season received from LO# Angelos about 5,000,000 cranges, against 2,000,000 h&t’ope‘r. Of lemons 500,000. :flinl'. 150,000 the season previous. We so received 31,500 limes," The varieties of wood produced in diffterâ€" ent parts of the world is far more numer» ous than most people are aware of. At the Paris Exhibition of 1%57 there were from 45 differnt countries, no less than 3,769 different kinds of wood exhibited. Mr. Wnd Yates, the novelist, bad an audi of twentyâ€"five hundred perâ€" soné at his opening lecture in New York, Friday night. > se The health of the exâ€"Empress Carloita, who was so seriously ill a short time ago that ber death was hourly expected, is impreving. 4 . § Santa Anna, about the only hero whom the Mexicans have failed to massacre, has turned up again, this time as a candidate for the Presidency of that nation. If an otherrevolution does not turn the country into a monarchy between this and voting time he msy be elected. The Czar made himself quite at home while attending the recent conference of Emperors at Berlin, and drove about alone in an bpen carriage, making visits to places of interestâ€" Alexander possesses, as did his father before him, the right of citizenship at Berlin, â€"a privilege which Nicholas was in the habit of alluging to in ;ofumliu way as a reason for feeling at me. in, together with the walls of Roynane & Co‘s boot and shoe store.. At six o‘clock, 6 streams were got in play, and the steam fire engine was brought on the scene, but not before the piano warehou«s of Hill & Co‘s furniture store, of Hilton and Co, and another had been completely desâ€" troyed. Three of the fire brigade were inâ€" jured by the fall of St. Patrick‘s Hall wall, but it is thought not seriously. Nothing remains of the latter splendid building and the entire corner, but tottering walls and debris. The following were occuâ€" pants of the burned building :sâ€"â€"Messrs. Jones & Toomey, painters ; w & w. Moxtzsar, Oct. 2. A firebroke out at 2:30 this morning in Shaw‘s auction premises, fronting on Fortiâ€" fication Lane and Craig street, proving the most destructive conflagration that has happened for many years. The total loss is estimated at not less than $165,000. The hose was out of, order, and the flames spread rapidly, a brisk breeze blowing. Within twenty minutes, the enâ€" tire block, including nine stores and St. Patrick‘s Hall, was in a blaze. At half past three the iron roof of St. Patrick‘s Hall fell in with a tremendous crash,, while _ about ‘the satme moment Stewart‘s wine celler adjoining ~took fire, rendering the scene truly appalling. Shortly atter the back wall of the hall fell Higgins, Wine & Spirit Merchantse Devany & Co., Auction and Furnitur; Wareâ€"rooms ; H. Tuggey, Real Estate, Agency ; H. Whiteside, Patent Spring Bed and Mattrass Manufacturer, no insurance ; J. & W. Hilton, Cabinet«makers and Up« holsterers ; L. F,. Stewart, Wholesale Wine and Liquor store. The building and conâ€" tents adjoining the Hall, occupied by H. J. Shaw and M. Ronayne & Co.,are insured as follows : Mr. Ronayne & Co, Boot and Bhoe Manufacturets, are, Atoa $10,500, Northern $7,500, Scotch Iniperial $10,000, Phcenix $5,000, Commercial Union $10,000; Mr. Chabot, jobber, in the employ of M. Ronayme & Co., Phoon:xz, $8,00;; Henry J. Shaw, Auction and _ Furniture Wareâ€"rooms, . British American, $12,000 ; Citizens, $8,000 ; an American Company, $40,000. Thé Catholio Young Men as sured on Regalia, &0., Queen, $1,000. Et. Patrick‘s; Hall, Northern, $20,000; British American, $10,000; Cirizens, $3,â€" 000 ; 1mperial, $10,000 ; Queen‘s, 5,000. A now building in course of erection on Fortification Lane, and adjoininy Mr. Shaw‘s store, was damaged to the amount of about $400, and the telegraph wires and poles in {the,vicinity of the fire were broken and fburned. A posse of men have been employed this morning in re« pairing themfor present use." ~ _ _ _ the shaft of a rmn"“bono entering its neck. The drivers otf both vehicles were both injured, it is supposed, past recovery. Prof. Sterry Hunt, of ‘McGill Cou;ga was toâ€"day presented with a spleni watch and shain on his departure for Bos. ton, to take a chair in Cambridge Univer= at AN AMERICAN‘$ ENCUUNTER WITH \ BANDITS. _‘ ‘ La Patria ot Florence, dated September 3, gives a long and interesting account of an encounter between an American travel. ler snd two robbers in sn infamous resort known as the Leone d‘Ure, whither the American was lured by an accidental acâ€" quaintance formed in a railroad coach while running from Ancons to Foggia. The American, whose name is Stuyvesant, foumd the Leone d‘Ore to be peopled by rouga looking persons, who impressed him with grave suspicions. After rodrin(f he was aroused by a noise at the fdd.mgl.oon which separated his sleeping from his sit â€" ting ;%Arh?au. Mr. B:ayn-nt m:i,. adjus i taloons, and, revolrer ...f': pair of be:m.lu. Nearly an hour elapsed without further THE OTTAWA TIMES, â€"OCTIOBER 3, 182. was bzhhd. Two robbers of hu vesant‘s gare, examined valise, and, ‘having mn‘od his coat pooks eta, were about to take a package Of bed and demanded an expianation. A dagger was instantly aimed at him ; but unm&pondo(hhu-ihmb‘p a shot which penetrated the latter‘s shoulder blade. The other robber brandâ€"| ished his stiletto furiously and aimed & terrible blow at the stranger‘s heart, which he parried with his right arrg, rgaivil&l simple fSesh wound. A blow from the brass knuckles and another brought th* villain to the floor. After a number of m*hhdpwm Mr. Stuyveâ€" sant‘s door, the latter insisted on no 008 entering exsept the master of the hotel. The American, having locked his dgy presented his tols at the landlord, ordmn(hmb{‘-w while he unâ€" locked a 'hdo;tu. the window ; jamped upon a wooden building escaped to the street, whence he hastened .to inform the police. One of the wound: ed men is named Erberto Bonaccio, % mionlpflbudmm'.m who was at one time intimately associated with hh‘rggo&mbuulndm W"‘b‘,fld'Omfi‘bmoon- fiscated and many important arrests made. papers with them, when the heroic m" bounded _ from _ his A horse was instantly killed to day by % is yery cold RY TELEGRAPH ~ â€"MONTREAL The waning moon shines pale and still ; The winds in russet branches die ; Day faints upon the darkening hill, And melts into the days gone by. The vanished days ! now dim and far, _ Yet none so dead they cannot wake Ant stir me, as yon high star _ _._ They glimmer down the moon‘s long beam, They rustle in the russet tree ; They fade in twilight‘s melting dream,, <And slide in starlight down to me. But 0 most sweet, and () most sad, Of all these lost delights that thrillâ€" T «e blessings that Ialmost had But life cin never more fulsi. 1 feel the hushrof brooding wings,â€" The warmth of tender joys far flown, And little flights and flutterings And yet ‘tis strange, but these are more My own, to night, than all besideâ€" Glad stars upon a distant shore, _ Fade golden evenings, fade and sink ! [Burn, crimson leaves, burn eut and fall ! For life is greater than we think, And death the surest life of alt. ‘ Which of the reptiles it a ~mathematiâ€" cian? The adder. Thare ain‘t mutch phiin in phisick, but thare iz a good deal of phisick in phun.â€" Josh Billings. â€" I like a good hater, but i want him able tew givo good reazons for it.â€"Joskh Bilâ€" To Correspondentsâ€"Postmaster Generâ€" als are generally burie1 in a post crypt.â€" Josh Billings. * tew lings The man whom forgiveness won‘t hum ble is a brute.â€"Josh Hillings, " Matchless ‘misery". has been defined to be having a cigar and nothing to light it with. 6 Men will for%i't' injurys ensier thap k tempt; they hhd rather be W not noticed.â€"Josh Billings. "Wake up, here, and pay for your lodg. ing," said the deacon, as he nudged a »leepy stranger with the contribution box. &4 £" Josh Billings says, "If a . man has got eighty thousand dol‘ars at interest, and owns the house he lives in, it ain‘t much trouble to be a philosopher.‘" Josh Bilings saysabhgt slan tin kettle tied to a s tail fun as long as it isn‘t our dog A lady placed the following letters in the bottom of her flour barrel and asked her husband to read them :â€"OIC U R A "celebrated" :“t at one time adverâ€" tised that he would supply * Lines for any Occasion.‘"‘ _ A fisherman‘ oo':ght him shortly afterwards, and wan "a line strong énough to catch a porpoise.". © Did\ the ~â€"defendant approach the plaintiff scriatim?" inquired aun attorney, in a case of assault and battery the other day. "No, sir," was the reply, "he went at ‘em with a poker !" ‘ It is not very common for any one to die merely of old age ; but 1 have known this w'-hnopfen, and a inppy conclusion it has seemed to be of worldly cares and joys.â€"Sir B. C. Brodie. Goethe was no great fr and to concerts or music in a general way, and once at court, when a pianoâ€"forte player ‘was in the middle of a very long sonata, he got up, and"~to the horror Of all â€"the oounfi:- dies and gentlemen, said, . "If it lasts three minutes longer, I .confess everyâ€" thing." . An evil custom, ora dubious one, or a disease, mental moral or physic~l, how rapidly it spreads over the earth ! â€"Evil is winged. How slowly any contrivance for cleaniliness, or decorum, or good order, makes its way. lf it werenot that good by its nature is enduring, and evil by its nature transitory, there would be but little chance for the welfare of the world. â€"Helps. 4 _ PepestRiANsâ€"Axorext axo Mopery.â€" Phillipides, who was sent from Athens to Sparta, is stated to have run 150 Roman miles in two days. In October, 1811, Mr. Rivington, a farmer near Dorchester, walked 560 miles in seven days; and a atill more‘temarkable feat was performed by Mr. Glanville, a native of Shropshire, who in 1806 walked 122 miles on the Bath road in 29 hours and three quarters. « A glince at a railway map will show running from Indianapolis through Illiâ€" nois and Western Nebraska, one of the most direct and well«conceived system« of railroads in this conntry. This long. conâ€" tinuous line is formed by the Indianapolis, bloomington and Western, the Missouri, lowa and Nebraska, and the Midland Pacitic Railways. The Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western commences at Indi..napolis, runs westward to Clampaign, and thence to Pekin, in Illinois. From Champaign & direct extension line is now being con« structed to Keokuk, on the Mississippi, where it will join the, Missouri, Iowa and ::'pruka, making a total length of 420 iles. The latter road runs in an almost straight line from Keokuk, partly through the Siate of Missouri and partly throuili lowa to its westera boundary at Nebraska® City, on the Mississippi River, a distance %l' 230 miles. Here it joins the Midland acific Kailway, running through the State of Nebraska from ju eastern terminus at Nebraska C ty t gh one of the richest and: most populous sections of that thrifty State to a junction with the Union Pacific at Kearny, thus forming a new route to ‘ Han Francisco shorter by about 150 miles than any existing route of connected . lines. Peculiarly situated, as it is the Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western extension, now in course of construction, must prove of considerable impor:ance.~ Coming in contact at Indiauspolis with the great traffic of the Atlantic seaboard, which converges there through the Pennâ€" sylvania Central, the Baitimore and Ohio, the Bellefontaine, the Lake Shore and New York Central Railroads, it torms the direct connecting link with all the traffic fromâ€"the Pacific coast, through the Misâ€" souri, Iowa and Nebraska and the Miiland Pacific Railroads. In addition to this, the Peoria and Rock Islandâ€"90 miles in l‘_ng'.h â€"and the Davenport and St Paulâ€"300 milesâ€"act as tributaries to it, and these several roads, although separate corporaâ€" â€"tions, are all controlled in the interest of the Ind anapolis, Bloomington and Westâ€" | ern Railway, which possesses the further great admufi:f having #o parallel comâ€" peting line. portion of the country Ithyough which it passes is one of unsurâ€" ; passed fertility, with an enterprising poâ€" The New York World, of August 29th, in its financial article, says : M es Quirers, deep visioned, in the lake Of bleesings thatâ€"were once my own That draw my sails across the tide i;uh_t.ion of nearly threeâ€"quarters of a milâ€" ion sndr prope: ty valuation of $400,000,â€" 000. Although completed only in 1870, this road has already grown into a wealthy and successful corporation, with a large revenue from its constantly increasing business. W. N. Coler & Co., bankers, No. 22 Nassau street, New York, advertise the bonds of the above road in another column of our paper, and parties having money to invest bad better write _ them for circulars and information. They also advertise municipal bonds, which are issued by virâ€" tue of the State Constitution, granting the Legislatures the right to enact laws auâ€" thorizing cities, counties and towns to ijssue securities in accordance with such laws for certain internal improvements, and when so issued there is no power that can legally defeat them. States may reâ€" udiate; municipalities cannot. . These gm are a first lien upon all the property of the municipality, Shrewd, farâ€"seeing investors are oh:mm their Government and other securities into these desira®le THE PILGRIM‘S REVERIE. VARILETIES t slander is like a s tailâ€"very good =~â€" _ Takes this opportunity of informing the public and his numerâ€" ous customers at large, thit he is about to remove his establishment from f = Duke Street, Chaudiâ€"+re, to the central part of the city, in TITUS‘ Block, SPARKS STREET, next door to Mr. S. GOLDIHRITE‘S, Hardware Store. > _ ‘Phanking them for the liberal patronage bestowed upon him. during the {mt. be now invites one and all to come and inspect his Stock of goods, consisting of all the latest NOVELTIES of the season, such as is only found in a first class HE DISCOVERS A STRANGE RACE OF ANIMALS, Our visit to the Galapagos has been full of geological and zoological interest. It is most impressive to see an extensive archiâ€" pelago, of modern origin, inhabited by creaâ€" tures so different from any known in other parts of the world. Here we have a posiâ€" tive limit to the length of time that may be granted for the transformation of these animals,: if they are in any way derived trom others dwelling in digerent, parts of t .e world. The Galapagos are so recent that some of theee islands are barely covered with the most scanty vegetationâ€"itself peculiar to these islands. Some parts of their surface are entirely bare, and a great many of the crater and lava streams aro so fresh that the atmospheric agents have not yet made an impression upon them. Their age does: not, therefore, go back to earlier geological periods; they belong to our time, geologiâ€" cally speaking. Whence, then, do their inhabitants comre from, animals as well as plants? If descended from some other iype telonging to some neighboring land. then it does not require such unspeaksbly long periods for the transformation of species as the modern advocates of transâ€" mutation claim, and the mystery of change, with such marked and characterietic difierâ€" ences between existing species, ‘is only inâ€" creased and brought to a level with that of creation. If they are not autochthones, from what germs did they start into exâ€" isterce? 1 think that careful observers, in view of there facts, will have to acknow: ledge that our science is not yet ripe fora fair discussion of the origin of organized beings.> From a letter written by Prof. Agassiz to his friend, Prof. Pierce, while on the voyâ€" age from Panama up the Pacific Coast, we make the following interesting extract :â€" A lady had a custom of saying to a fa=â€" vourite little dog to make him follow her, «Come along, sir." _A would beâ€"wit stepped up to her one day, and accosted her with, "Is it me,. madame, you gvlled?" ©"Ohk no, sir,‘ said the lady, it was another puppy I spoke to." kxtensive stock of Wool Car, pets, in two and three ply; alsoâ€" ex. Super, which we are ofl"ering' at last season‘s prices. Call an examine: _ RUSSELL & WATSON‘8 Our stock of Carpets is now complete, and is one of the largest ind best assorted ever offered in the city, having placed our orders early last autumn, we are enabled to sell much unde; present prices. RUSSELL & W,ATS%N. Hearth Rugs, Coca and Wool Mats, of every kind, shown in great variety, at RUSSELL & WATSONS. At Ottaws, 2nd October, the wife of J B. Harington Neeve, of a daughter. ‘ On the .]st instant, by the Rev. Mr. Stephens, Mr. John Taylor, to Miss Elien Murphy, both of this city. . Dr. Wheeler‘s Compound Elixit of Phosâ€" ghbtol and Calisaya is called a Chemical ‘ood and Nutritive Tonic, because Phosâ€" phats constitute more than half the maâ€" terial of the human Body, and are abso« lutely essential to the growth of Bone, Muscle and Ner?:,,whioh cannot attain full development without them. They promote a good e:firfiw, perfect digestion, create pure, h y, viralizing blood, and. supply the waste constantly going on in the system as the result of mental and physical exertion. Being combined with Calisaya, the Peruvian Bark. the only speâ€" cific for Chills and Fever, and that condiâ€" tion of Nervous Prostration and General Debility arising from low vitality and exâ€" haustive diseases, it forms an elegant and agreeable, invigorating Tonic, purely phyâ€" siological in its astion, that may‘ be taken safely under all circumstances, and all diseased conditions of the body, as it builds up the constifution in the same manner as our daily food. Sold by all Druggists at $1. Burlesque Troupe: POR TWO NIGHTS ONZY, SATURDAY & MONDAY, OCT., & 5th and 7th 20 STAR PERFORMERS. mE 25 __ HOG.XN & MUDSC3 MINS T REL $ In a programme we challâ€"nge the world to compete with. 2 > _ PRICES AS USUAL. Doors open at 7 o‘clock. Trouble to commence at 8 o‘clock. Tuesday and Wednesday EVENINGS, OCT. 8th AND 9th. will appear as above in her popular MU SICAL EVENING3, iflustrating the ROSA DERINA, Rouriodunhbln be secured at Nordâ€" heimer‘s Music Store, where a plan of the Hall can be seen. â€" PDoors open 7.30 ; commence at 8 ; carâ€" riages for 10. _ â€" « USIC HALL $100:00 Erin‘s Prima Ponna, Oitawa, Oct 2 187 Ottawas, Oct 3, 1872. J. T. MORSE, Agent. Admission 500. ; Reserved Seats T5e Ottaws, Oot. 3, Will open on MUSIC OF MANY LANDS. MR. T. LAWVRENCE, THE REASON WHY ! NMOTN DAY, the 7th instant. TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT, MARRIED. AGASSIZ BIRTH. HOGAN & MUDGE, Proprietors. A M D 1812. PER â€" MONTH sure GOLD BO N DS Maps, Pamphlets and Circulars furnish &4 upon application. W.N. COLER & Co., Bankers, INVEST M O N EY The Subscriber will sell at the Uxtio® Hovss, in the City of Ottawa, on Thursday, October 10th., 1872,. immediately after the Coulten "Limit Sale, License. No. 121, of 1872 & ‘73. Fifty square miles on the Coâ€" logne River, and known a« the Rice Limit. Terms and Conditions made known at the time of Sale. Bale at 12 noon. Beautiful collections of Bulbous Roots, consisting of :â€" 2 Double and Single Hyacinths, Double and Single Tulips, __Crocus, Jonquils, Snow Drope, Polyanthus, Narcisus, Crown Imperials, Lillies, &6. At the office of T. F. FORFAR, York Street, dealer is all kinds of Agricultural Implements and Machines, Field and Gar« den Seeds, Fruit Trees. Fertilizers, &c. . Addross, T. F. FORFAR, i Box 245, Ottawa. Ottawa Oct 2 1872 2.89 6 doing business as Merchant Tailors, in the city of Ottawa, under the name, style and firm of P. A.EGLESON & CU,, is this day dissolved by mutusl consent. All debts due the said firm to be paid to P. A. Egleâ€" son, who will continue ‘the business, and who will be reeponsihle for any indebtedâ€" ‘ness of said firm. The Eutnership heretofore existing beâ€" tween P. A. EGLES )N & P. J. EGLESON, N. B â€"All accounts outstanding on and after 3!st instant, will be handed into Court fuor eollection. S s Astronomy and Geology, compared by c N eecicey Sod ‘Thes Scottish logy an logians, by James Walker, D. D. Broadus on Prepsration and Delivery o Rermons. _ > [ Brooks‘ 500 Plans of Sermons. Business Success, by John Macdonald. Florence Marryate‘ Novels, English edition Little Folks, volume IIL, s Hope Deterred, by Eliza E. Pollard. Maid of Aker, by R. D. Blackmore. TTirst NMortg 7 PER CENT Imported this Season from Holland. IXDIAXOPOLIS, _ BLOOMINGTO)\, Ottawa, October 3, 1872 NLOWERINGâ€"BULBS AND ROOTS OR IN â€" 10 PER CENT MUNICIPAL BONDS. Ottawa, Oct 2, 1872 _ _ 2.89 6 RISSULUTION OF PARTNERSHIP. No 96, RudeauStreet, Oftawa. Oct 2, 1872., 0 2089 3 prience.an enture rNeUtt. RECRUTZ! aeirreial chiriet io moiin meâ€"mrrons £da; 0 useâ€"so ® o that mmgkes’cnn n'oL be nmo in Bl:la‘ them ; «o hmbe d“ to m-!rr-;eb fiszlmmdmgen T. a k;’o 'zmflz:s as to ways relinble, Th ve ral e eat eommem{nuon from ail, and will always renâ€" der satiifection. Ottawa, Oct 1, 1872 SIMILIA SQZLISUS CURANTUK U MPHREYS HoOMEOPA:ZTIIC SPECIFIC§ HA\'E PRO\E}). FROM THE MOST AMPLE ~1 experience.an entire encese: Simpleâ€" Pmmfc M mt e d o tcancdhs : 10, 11, i 14 18, 16, 18, 19, UCTION SALE HENRSON & 00 ‘S 4 20, . " Seve Mo«ari. 4 DKOT. .e 20c 6e n« ++2 +. ©H 3, . " Unfanry Woukmess, wetting bed. 50 31. _ " Painful Periods, with Sgulm ... . 80 2, _ " Sufferings at . :umirofll bat + »» 4n «4 W# * * grllopcy.srm.. t.Vitas‘ Dance..1 00 34, * Diphtheric, ulcerated sore throgt.. L ~ FAMJILY CASES Of 35 large vials, containing a sporific for every a\!lnlr{ discase a family is eabâ€" jeet to, with boo! of direction#........... $10 or vials, with book, Merce Case..... _ 6 fiu&ur( lsulan (finid), for cure of discases of all Domesiic Animais, with amplete Case. with Jarge Manual. 10 m oge Rosews 1i Care of g& via}s, cor usining ali our #peciics, Inc ing Votâ€" | eâ€"inary and others oi enumerated xom- 35 amplete Case. with Jarge Manual. 10 m oge Rasews+ i Care of 69 vials, cor sining ali our #pecifics, indudkx:’ob | eâ€"inary and others oi enumerated ve. 35 POXD‘$ EXTRACT Cures Burns, Bruices, Lamenest, Sore« ness, Sore Throat, Sprains, Toothache, Karache, . Nomraig!a, Rheumatism, ) L.3 cite Wncs Kara Stomach, or Old Sores. Price, 6 oz. Quarts, $1.75 nepRmPRe 2X 20. en 1 Karache, Nonrnx’;:. Rheumatism, t-b-‘o. Piles, its, Stings, Sore yes, hed£n7 of the Lungs, Nose, Stomach, or of Filcs; Corns Ulcers, Old Sores. s Price, 6 oz., CO cit« Pints, $1.501 Quarts, $1.75. Tg ‘These Rewedies, except POND‘S EX CT. and «ingle viale of Veterinary Medicine, are gent by the caso or single box, to M‘Lpnn of the country, free of charg®, OD rwdptol price Specif Ham: f o Medicine Co. Office and Depot, o. M3 Bnoanwar, New Yory. 22 CR Sn o on nc : and Western Railway Exiension EW BOOKS imber Limits. 22 Nassau St., New York Fevers, Conzestion, Inflommations. W orins, Worh Fever, Worm Colic. Crytmgâ€"Colic or Teething of Infants Diarrhcea, of Chiidren or Adults... Dysentery, Griping, Bilions Colic. (:mx. Cougzh, Diffcalt Breathing.. . Salt Rheuwn, Eazniw:u. lrlm.gnl Rbcnmatisu, Ricumatic Pains... Fever and A ga#,Chil Fever, Agues Piies, blind dr bleeding......... ... Ophthalmy, and Sore or Wenk Eyes Catarrh, scute or chronic, Inflgenza. Whooping=Cough:,violept coughs Asthima, oppresse: Breathing.. ... Kar Discha rges, impaired hearing. Seroft:in. enlarcod plands, Ewellings Genoral Deb!1 y-.!’rryfkd Woakness Dropsy sod «carty Recretione ... .. fSeaâ€"Sickne«s, +ickness from riding Kidney~â€"Dis=â€"a«*. Gravel.......... Nervou: _ Debiiily, beminal KAVIRCURCIELOIIELIS Wes id Depot, Eo. 562 BroapwaY. Nsw Yory. For Sale by all Druggists. NMos. !‘} and 28. EITHER IN B OF P. A. EGLESON P. J. EGLESON. P. A. EGLESON, No. 39, Sparks St. A. ROWE, Auctioneer. 2089 3mw ary io sarieus *ag@e 1¢ D 00 Clearing Sal Watches, Clock Electro â€" Pla ONE MONTH ONL Monday,. Sept. 3 M CiNT DD T0\ way~ NO DISCOUNT OX WORL cOL0URED GOL0 + CRA And as all Goods are marked is | FIGURES, each person can see fof selves. For Cash Onl Clearing S AMERICAN CLOCK * 88¢ Sparks Str Ottawa, Feph 38, 1812. 418 Fancy Goods, JEW ELLERY BEST BARGA] AT ALLOWED ON ALL GQO008 ~GEREATP TBIS I% A BONA FIDE TOUKG & RADFORD‘$, :M IFOl COMMENCING TO BE HAD !X K â€" EXCEPT AND AT eE C m beg to inform th that they have secured | Madame Dubois, late of feel convinced, from, her 1 in cutting and making Mantle Houses in the and from the style of t produced by her, and that they will be able patrons in this depirtment, setisfactiqn. & ud . M with _Kheui Person® t, Dmpels. Dise W‘ or der, shou Bs M CU C . Caledonia Wat Btreots, OtiAWS A & supply of the 04° of the tor supp$ C and prompt * PC Hotels and Saloon -”-'l supplied with Ca WhaWuter, Ask jor it. GasnoX $ s Sole Agents tor Ot rOom.â€"Wodwdd-â€"T' were fined $10 and costs for as would be friendâ€" in an hotel i Waiarser.â€"The weather Eb sold, and many pe out in the morning in ligh it necessmy to their com turm and don fiannels and gr But for the wind, however. the « Money ro Lax® takes place toâ€"night in t ‘The biges and Quadrille b and therefore a Ego.d music may be counted 01 Eiozxn Coxonet.â€"1It is more =“ Ross D‘ wrine will soncert in aid of the St. M e. > *** _ Imo® Fouwanpme & RAWC® o‘.'.“sg.m. P'U"' ofil""‘o"m -!fl”mAyh_nor at 4 ®Y® * i. jessie CaSs® e |". e in merasce.â€"Hogan & Mudge‘s 1 perform in the Music Hall its of the 5th and 7th inste., | Monday next. rit* C._â€"We understand that Al at the Carleton Assises whi Poh _ in 8t. _ Joseph‘s dy Hill. Application for 1 been made, and no doubt be tavorable. dear througtiout the y for from $17 to $20 per on first page. £.6. A.â€"The 0. B.G. A. pr _ icpms bUID Lm"nlgr; awia RALW ‘ ton OB Fueed ®f people: "The whole tr its are the most acoursed, â€" * and sabanfoned race that Bitted to plague mankind. Obtsin bumper LOCAL_* “m st ind ) peculiar style eite laughter among "_, sand we fully expect Karcer has been very well‘ the last month, but prices pretty stationery. Hay t Â¥Of 8 o‘giock in the :"'il.auit is L?“*b C been very agreeable «Touis® gives a concert here on T exday evenings next. I essary to say a single FBweet singer, Her abili ulehm, ber fine Sre sufficient ind e comppporp wndegg o. â€" Comme Mummrsic.â€" iges, the celevrated * the "Dominion Guide" wd“(‘“ T * Itleontains much inte | information, besides / "‘-tu-u. ® them to decide upo “.hnr,-a we &m‘fiu- K.o,. Young 100°""â€" 100 Ar Leaves every dny Poskes as» Dersonyrs Desan Swift thus ept °DP (\“"A u,,..c&dJufioonyu will presmde at the F«ll mmences toâ€"day in th u. euesday even 'fil& the M thread or ; .“"‘ etter SprIDE d be without it, 4, no poctor n Gmsox & C y Carminstive 1 * * ; remedy for Dis in children and grc ~ W. HEARN â€" Pruggist, Sappe D‘ Eares â€" @ly bound. It 1s a tra “‘Q'fiieluy l!huha.p..a p#aerext. â€" 615 Cgyr®®! Cuouxs.â€"The mee 10.00 at .p,_Alo?ly to K. A. corner of Nparks an Corner Sparks L £ 0s Goe.â€"We 30 1030 â€"At the an Men‘s Clric to all J rakers ,0""" X1vigATIO® of a few pe â€"é.‘s e3'4 L mu.WAY m. * pm px This talen Forw aAl ng resul yard of that ng m noou have W a Y nUua 45

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