West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 2 Dec 1880, p. 1

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in New iyeah. basic- in. [jli'iji' " [nun- "rin pm M an It. in ' my loan: Idol. 4 ikso um: port. I win. Hwy " no {no k "and he.) {onu- ru- plo- Tho " 'IQ. " 'tet'. 'm'l ad n El HI: “he Pip] In Ibo-u July 'mu II Agent in Wilson & Co. b T..",t2Wo'dh" hoop tofu-h If,',",',,',", a u no r e on time. rum mun- -qrotietrr.netdtsdgbt, Inland. " tur any 'tratrirtir-rootm. THE snhuriber is {reputed to Receive um In. 1"": the s on“: notice. and In mmuuyk, and Dortmund“. Attood Mann-mum. soup, EN D. Durham. near Cattle. l "" Howl. having tu"ametteed business "I "I. show tiw mutht rmpchlully solicit a an." of tho '5!!!"th at the public . Tho vary heat mate Imprint to mythinu II: who wail in the, mind In. United Shh-I. Ionian" " the ou PM Oitue, DC BEAM . formally In." Simon-k" in Mer Hui-H'- ll mm Minnelli. For Summer Trade. Fine Saved Welling- ton Boots, only 06.00. Laced Blim- ab, Sew-d, only " Low Shoes. Sow-d. only "go. Th. but French Stock and. W. CALDWELL "00 Bush. Fresh Lime. Durham P. o.. Maw Wrth, 1&0. I...“ Unable-u 1.etgohBrty lucked Lumber. Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, Lath * Lime, South End Bakery, Durham. " IQ)! ( " cCYo. “Var I'o-voy-lcrr. _ wm ha at " m “I up! "tsul VETERINARY SURGEON, ar “Hon In (Inn "mo Mind. haw: Ptrmqrtttt “on” That-chm) nut MIN» FRUIT. Cunmy rmwn Ann: I I it UM":- Illl l'ulunmt " B Duddl.lulrh * album-d a nun-h»! n scum ALEXANDER BROWN, " Alexander Robertson, Juno m Boot and Shoemaker, Athena-menu, except when accompanied " . ”inhuman-u to a. coma: an loam mxtil f"rbsddon, and eharged Wrt-i'. Iluuton, __ --_-----e_-----_- STRAY ASYMA UR, 'be., nulvertiletl three "I. tor " the. ulvertiaemam not I. u- cud 8 lilu. ""Nt Do. " monk... .... Do. “Inc montbl. . . . . . Cu“! tvtrortisemettts clams Liu tor the tint martian. and I tor "ek lubuoquont insertion "on". C.IA"AIm.1 halo-inns] and business ctrdb: one inch quantum". per year, 'F...... ' 4 Two inch: or Ntisstra Ann-pork] menu" 7 Thmincboodu. PorY'"br-..-......... " Quito! column, per year.............. " lulled-Inn. " ....... ......82 OIOUolI-I, " ...... .......60 Do. nilmon¢h~... ....-......r2l Ordinary notices of births, uni-goo, Julio, and Bil kinds ollocal newtcinaertad no debuts. STRAY ANIMALS. We., mlrortilcd three In" Town. I R. D. MACMILLAN, A1708): RY . AT - LAW, ".--0rr3cat ' owed“ Pulcr’u Dru“ have, Upper Tor. a, qs$t.2aet In paid within two months.“ BUSINESS DIRECTORY. f; - LEGAL W 335 Iona, I. Loan. Ania olbre,ilururax. Street hm Durham, - - Ont. I)“. KIEHXAN BADUATE of Vietnria THE ROCKVILLE MILLS. Al I‘lvery Front a; Frost. ARRISTICIZS an] Att, rm y 's 'THE REVIEW’ MISCELLANEOUS. c..._o6.M.a TTUHXHY "t Lllw, Sulu'tt‘ McrAYOEN t Ito ARRISTERS. S'olieito, "rtwr.-tt.oo per yeuin Adv-nee Altt TAILOR, In RATES OF ADVERT] 515 G Z. NIX()N MEDICAL. NEVILLE, 0ST titie. _ ,-_, -- Mul and; workman-1p the, county. hum: mud. 1pc] cine» of Cum uni In" iv Human) 101819. Lot 't,Co. Bonunck. W u” Lieonses, Fire and , unmuw-uum-vin " N "te, Illcc-od Link-oer In“ il'l'irirlyy, f i J. A Halsted d; thr., r. w. ll u-mwr, mm " I’d? 53111:." (I; ll,', '4’.) CE3u2sdt:TEr=lEBS3, r'o I ‘1': In . i DURHAM. . CR ll "l? h u rsdny, A. “03511wa Land 3""... huge: nude lit! J . TOW SEEN D ', Lower'l'ovn J. W. FROST. LL.1 AIT FO ll D, tppl PC" removed to Humbug, jun where his will I "we“. Union, ARIN}; and u y p we in the )pliml on tturl uric-m. Puu'y thin opponu Durham. um] mugs Mkwm! lfnivonity Licentiatelonmo opposite McAlistcr's Hotel in Itiit bur fr, , UpparTown d a eta. per and»: lint ytt6 In ti6 very y” ht Xuparcil Ot [In] "t yt0 ] John Bright,hirmwlta conscientious man . . above all things. has been preaching non- Grocery and Provision Store I intervention to England for forty yen-s, i 'urt,e, upon the (scam! ‘that it cost Eng- P i. en mom-y an om without any at . Uppe Town, DURHAM' I untago to them ; And he has been like Another Lot of Splendid one crying in the wildcrneu. Bat when, in 1868, he preached non-intervention in E e c o N American man on the ground that it Was - wicked anal sud "liiish, he carried the - Englilh working clauses with1 him in on; . solid man; When Mr. Ghu stone oppose GBOCERIES, of all kinda ' tin In: with Basin in 1855, on the ground .' that England bu] no interest in prolonging “my. in Stock, and will be sold wimp fo it, he fell iuw a petty minority. When he ' cr hm Product. A denouncod wax with Iiusaia. in 1876, limp- II w Tm "in: nut-low, mu! the good- Iuch an”. cure the patronage ot “I who all. FOR Lsdies', Misses'. Gentleman's and Youth's wear, have just been open- ed out by Business prompt and Prices reasonable Dundalk. Sept. mm. Iwo h.IM. Boots & Shoes J AME S HANNA Spring and Summer Fashions regular) received. Blacksmithing d; Waggon Making. Residenee-0pposite the Canaan Presby- terian Chureh.i JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIER, Bunk“ in (mark) /ulioivfal." -- -_ '" (tollocnonl of note. and account: on remonnblo hum. Eula now P I "will imam-I " Dttrhasn. Sam. 16, 188) ttut Inhmt Mluwml at the raw of To "mun Mm Just to Hand! 60 3'2 l8 Farms For Sale Durham, Feb. 14, 1878 “IE famous Cavalry Honteshoer has __ secured the svrvirus of n Gum! “ileu- ”in. LOWER TOWN, DURHAM‘ BURNET’S Cutting done to Order, Robert Davis” Real Estate CATALOGUE. Ter Proprietor wishes; No, 3. on AHwrtt,'trevt,om ahnxu .'itreet, Loo 1' Town. I‘ Tl'lldi'n to Hate tbttioutst " huh payment and number of yum “unite-d tor bnluneu, um mu: 0 Jitter-mt. lined " Durban thin an: Sept., All. 1800 C. H. JACKEN. Lower Town, Durham. I A M instructed to offer for sale the " lowinn Lots in the Town at Durham on "thO 'erttut " pthymrr.t. In: H, 9, 10 taut 11 on the Fmat “J. " Albert ant,mul tt 'J. lit And ll on the Want side " Hum Hut-ct. tam also authorizml to n-m-ivo undo" for the yurrlnmn I f ba. " and Mg in the 2ndCon.. Fi.U.R.. Por inadm- put whnlu i,'J',1'ti",,',' "th- A? n: m partie ulna and Durham-Jum- For the Fall. J N. E. n! T. R I "my! ', 150 Mr“, lift charm-1‘ Thin in one " the but grain bums in the Town, VERY LARGE STOCK or' PROPERTY FOR House and Lot for Sale in Durham. I“ Division of Lot Twenty-eight in the Pint tHaterirytrrn Wu: of the W“ 1mm), in the Tuwmrhtp of lit-hunch. “0307.009 cloned, and the awn-u welltimbvrcd with Coda; and Hardwood. wanted by u neyttNitipg Creek. This land will be scold I heap [or Cturh, or me out: and ttm Induce secured bs mortgage. it', further puucu- luunpply to 25 Acres of Land For Sale. JAMES WILLEY, the, In Ann-mum. I. the foamy orGrrr. ()TS 11rr,11t;amlil7inthe'2ndllange DU “HAM s'r., DURHAM. FOR 18918, the South Half of the Third Deposits Received, MONEY ADVANCED Town Tow habit Vol. III. No. 42. DURHAM, Co. Grey, DECEMBER 2, 1880 -AT-. N be aura-d upon." i y at ttsr, km um Dulce ' " 1879. 2rerttltreet.ogtc Baum: Hunt " Gar. .mer Town. Durham. ttttthe lot " dwelling Hulls-v: and Suslzlm Thu u- Bere ullnml. A good welt run] mberot truitti'eem,ors '/"ati."11'i't ppm-n the land is unexcel MI. The still be a-vlll clump tot cum. or tty kg awn-ml upon: For lunb't WM. JOHNSTON. Nnmuby. or F'. MACIME, human ‘1 Hank Lots for Sale. ml to rpm-in undo" for the trnd.vgi" the ‘Iml Con., K.0.R., r! (Hun-lg, either “some: a! nqmrntdy. Cr. r, DAVIS, Manage: Mir ty di-tye of Lot I bt (tihtttt (ttttrider. It per cent late en 138 SALi-IJ Im, " all lsmtnm it banner the} hum been mitdo ti) :' i helium that it in for the good of the nation l I at large Sumo of the must determined i ! protectionism are well aware that the sys- 1 tom is injurious to themselves. Men are l c not always to be changed in their courses l iivy a mere conviction of their own "lfisla , interests. Too long has this question been argued only upon grounds of policy sud prudent turlf-interust. It is time to put it 1 i on higher grounds. The idea theta nation I i can benefit itself by making goods " high- j or prices than they csn be bought for else- I whcro is really so absurd as the ettorU I which many a boy makes to raise himself by, pulling at the sides of the bssket in which i l he stsnds. The idea that tho government, l i, which we all know could not guide snyone ( I ot us in our business so well as we can do it l if left alone, can nevertheless regulate all i the business of the country with advantage 1 to us all, is one which contradicts itself. ( l But the mass of men tttut't got free from the I cicada of nonsense in which this subjecthss been envnloped so as to look at it in the! plsin light of common sense. An sppesl] to their conscience: cannot be so easily put l sside. or covered up with such clouds of , words. l 7 l Now tho whole systvm oiprot‘ctiou rents Import a desire to deprive foreigners, of same iadvnntagc and to transfer it to ourselv'ea'. I Franco is stuwesshdly (-n;-:v::ml in tho nianufactutv of silk; and m: n:\_\"'Lct us de. ' struy half the silk lin‘turice in France. and starve half of their wirrkmeu out out of the business. so that we may make the profits of the business in our own country.” So weput on a. heavy duty, far in excess of the needs of tho goverutneut, and after 1"ylte,n, the course of twunty years about W200,000,ooo more for silk than We need to, I we have at last the satisfaction of seeing a; [few poor Frenchmen. who have 1y')redl' l everything short of starvation through our diminished purchases of their work, come lover in the steernge and go to work in our (tcu. sill: mills. This has been done quite I successfully in the use of steel, the manu. ( [ nurture of which has been transplanted by literally starving out tho tihetheld work- i men until enough of them canto here to (iiiii steel for us. Tho men are the some i as over, the steel in the same'; wehuvo paid i I an enormous price to get the work done i here; and then we rejoice that we are no I I longer paying tribute to foreigners! Protection could untoutlive a single Cnn- tttess if the farmers were all opposed to it. They must geuetully be enusciuusthat they make naming directly by it; they only But awn if this picture were exlggeruted [which it is not) how can the protective system be reeoneilerl with Christianity? Can anyone seriously pretend that he Wish- as foreign nations to prevent him selling his goods to their people ' 0n the contrary. are we not, as a people, half only to in. crease our experts ? Is not that one of the great objects of the protective system t Have we not been shouting forjoy because tor the past three years our exports have largely exceeded our imports ? Thom if you would that other nations should not place restrictions upon the sale of your goods to them, yon have no moral right to plaeo restrictions on the sale of thcir goods to you. For ages nntiuns believed that they could make a permanent, profit by stealing from other trations; Men "fue they had learned that theft, ns between man and man. was altumtthcr uniu0table to both sides. i Free-trade does not mean the imports. Urea, ition oftorcign goods free of all duty, but a In” I 1.Tte under which no duty is luvied upon " 0 (imported merchandise for any other pur- Ye ‘puse than the simple collection of such re- to hi [venue as the government requires, under i I 1‘96 Ewhich no yretc:enee is givsn to domestic _ ot I merchants or nit-rclminliw over fun-cign. It [fame ;furbxds, therefore, all protective duties, all “Sig! ‘houmies on exports, all licensing systems i see “i ism“. as the New York ulilerlne'i established 1 in I I: re urine cnrtnmn duing Lusincss in this i this tt City to live here, and nil discrimination in l And 8 taxes or privilogvs of trading lawman reai. I learnt dents and non rusidents, citizens and tor. _ Carly (signers. i nnv n y General Garfuhl'a declaration, that we l legislate for our own country, will probably strike a large portion of his readers as be. ing almost a truism. He is undoubtedly right in making it serve as the basis for protective legislation. 0n the other hand, free-trado assumes as its basis tho doctrine that nations as well as individuals should look not only on their own thinge, but also on the thing-x of others. li'ree-Trade a. Christian Duty. Then Now, ye norms. blow tiegtst, And wild, For me, I lmvo no (out. Oh gentle nun-ups through the night, Sweat luring is tanning no". Best all". my hem. ”mound bo, Though cold and mm the air, rot you And all as world Hutu coma! A happy gludaomo May. And, though lilo be 3 hell of earth, or torrors. strife um ptsin, Have noun-ac, only trust in God, For spring must coma again. What though the will." wind) blow: cold. And threatning beau the blunt, Though ice and new veil everything, The wring will come " Int What though tlm mist. come rm and thick. And hide the sun's bright my, Yet. mining through their gloom once more, Eu union tho World to-dar. POETRY "Opr- all “‘Slge of Chelsea." How could I lmpo toi unis i see "the philosopher of Cheyne Row" now , hell 1 in u xnnumut ' Put I went my wny toward , this l this uutcd abode, In quaint in its simplicity I l in 1 Am] so true in its snug quiet retreat. I 'csi- ‘l lurued from the trusty sen-nut that Mr. l for. ' Carlyle we: very ill, and not able to Beet I i any one. "Take my card. and let him any: wild; through you how he really is," I remarked. I mu , The servant did so, returned, and to my dc-l md ilight I was ushered up stairs to it sort at" ind l setnrlomloir, wheru, seated in a large, lmlfi oth I roeumbent chair, 1 found the great writer, I l Ihinkennnd reformer. We were sconjnnwd i rats l by his niece, a calm and 1lt'y?s.eloek/.turl' me i little Indy, who said I miglighlk, b?/a'ty' 'es'. I must not." Thonms Carlyli’could not be1 llu- ' silont, however, and said :--"Ah, I cannot , do. i,',v,Y,t much morn, and thnt of all grieves I m] mo before going." The same persistentl the ! ' that marked the young Scotch Ind as fits 5 he came into tho world was with the Eur. I _ So lopoan oetcgtmarittn philosopher as he was I J of going out. Work to Citrlyle--true work-l l tor i has been his gospel of life. By his side,on , l rut a little table, also of cane or bamboo strum l 1 to, I lure, like unto the chair in which he re. ' u , cliued. there warn slips ofpnpcr, as if notes ed i on something of the punt. or perltttp, ofthe [ A inn-I future by this brave old man. l The house of refuge on the top of Mount St. Gothnnl, fonndedin the fourteenth cet.. tury, will be permanently closed two years hence. The opening of the tunnel will renderit useless, as not oven baggam will then cross the mountains on foot. At present the Hospice ttifords than“, food and u bed to 20,000 pooplo youly, ad in supported by private and public clarity. The ride through the tunnol will cost only 2 , cents. I saw some law books around, o1tief1y in the German language. A small bust of Willitun of Grunge, and one of Peter the Great were readily discomable, while an charm-mg or two of Scotch scenery made the rest of the ornamentation of the close and well closed room. In taking my leave, of the greet old mm he said feebly t.t.'fel on and work with all your will-uproot error." I shook the feeble and mittencd‘ hand and left Thoma: Carlyle, 1110 in the Besh may soon leave us, but in the spirit] will ever rermsiu.-Baltimore Sun. Carlyle wore tt hle velvet skull cap. i which did not improve his appearance, and round his body hm] his Favorite plaid shawl. “I run not ill-I never was ill," said he, in his emphatic and broad Scotch accent, somewhat pettishly. if not pom'ishly. "l tun only twing-going --going-- going." And his ayes lost their grim tire of expres- sion, his emphatic, rasping voice fell into a lower tone, and I sat Silent before tlnr only living man worthy of my silence-the only man when dead ever worthy of my loud admiration l The room was small, and the fsro made the temperature oppres- sxva, yet the icy manner of the Sago of Chelsea relieved the trtmosplttsritt pressure on our lungs. l He looked from out and under his shag. 'L'y ayehrows With the deep fire of his do. parting ecu], earnestly. seriously, and al. l most savagely. “is thin, muggy, scrawny fuce, With cameo, “my. grizzly beard, his compressed, determined lipa, made :1 dual picture of the inner man of youth fighting with the outer one of decay. His thin, bony, expressive hands minke all his sledge- luunmer "Memes come to my memory, and I mould than and now quote whole pag- es of them by sheer enthusiasm. Present. ly his niece renppemed and mid :--"Ltr me,you've taken off the mittens!" There. l upon she encased those wiryhnnds with woollen mittens so largo and so loose that all the electrical expressiveness of the hand was instentlv gone. I remembered at once all the foreo of what Sir Arthur Helps wrote on "greet hands and their greatness of expremon." NUlarge and luoso binds; great ones. I Years ago 1 had a letter of introduction to him from tt “luxury light of lioston, and I recalled with some misgivings my chane, an at seeing "tho old man of perpetual fame." Then it took me dnys to we the I Lnxnox. Oct. 15.--1 have heard much ‘abuut'l‘homas Carlyle being .1 sufferer from linsomnin. He is not. Ho is gradually go- (ir; down the hill of life and Into "tho val. Iley of the shadow ofllentlx" by slow and lensy stages, with A clear and rested brain. He in approaching 85 years, and may well aftonl ttt look hark, as Dante did, and be proudly remembered in the future as one “who whipped vice with a scourge of steel, ' unmasked stern murder, shamed luscivious l lust, and plucked off the visor from grim l Henson's face." I mndo up my mind to call and personally loan at Cm‘lyle's house I his comlxtion. l llybecanso such a. we: mount the doliver- Cleritsl Puntim 1 nice of Bulgarian women and children to - ltho tender mercies of the "l‘lnlpelklble Ministers are men of wit and humour. Tark," he carried the entire Liberal party Their mind is polished by the processes of and half the ',1hr,ig'e'.gitt him} When the odueltion, “a wit spukles in ”In. I uestion sin sun in come meremone . . . . go could Eat bring one-mitt! the comm; ef. their lontences . with “In!” oiisst, to his support. Now that h... fought I When Whitefield preached in New the foreign policy of "oerysi.iehl upon l York to the sailors he closed with the ful. (high moral grounds. " umChrietisu and glowing bold apostrophe '. "Well, my boys, runmirthy pf an hunonbl nation, helwe have a clear sky, and are mixing fine nus Won the greMesteiet in; er knowniu l this generation, either in mi or in l headway over " smooth "B, be. America. . l fore a light breeze, and we shall hThere is meatbmoral inane 'l..'),',',):,:, i: soon lore sight of land. Bat what means t . oontroversy etwcett ”We “m" an. i this lowerinn ot the heavens and that ark . a . and no “at e tr. ttlo n . . " ' . 'tti/tttg, that arm?!“ ',hir' immught I .ert'a.0 arming from henesth the’ Western withtho unthusiasul 'ttd-ve..--)-,, horizon ' Hark! Dou't you hear distant Union. thunder? Don't you see those flash" of --_------ -." . . lightning? There is a storm gntheringl A Great Man In His, Decline. Every man to his duty! How the waves The cio.s-roGa-,c..t,r.. Irisc and dash against the ship. The air is l -ee-e g dark l The tempest rages t One masts are LONDON, Oct. 15.--I have heard much gone! The ship is on her beam endsl wbuut1'hotntvs Carlyle being; a minim-1‘ from l Wlust next l"' The listening tars, remind. iutiomniU. Jie is not. llc is gradually L'U' Veil of the former perils of the deep, arose, ing down the hill oflife tuul tttio “the vul. and with united voices exclaimed. “Take, ley of the shadow of death" by slow and to the long boat g" There is great mural inur’i!T involved in’ the oomtmveny betwcen p ”dinning Ind boo- traders; and magma»? yrtl:WsbattU ie fought upon th-t gruund m it be fought:' with the enthusiasm 'ttil-Vee.--).-,, I Union. t, 1.--The wit of ministers in regard tuone , atiother.---Dr. Clxnlmcrs was asked by , Willrie, the painter, whether Principal , I Baird would preach before the King. Now 'i Principal Baird had a and habit of crying in the pulpit. "Why," says Chalmers "if , he does it will be George Baird to George Rex, greeting!" l Here, wit is genial and go ulmtnrid " but the criticism of one on another is Milne- times free and easy. When Mr. Hill was I some years ago, in Scotland, he was intro- l duced to an aged minister. somewhat to I semhling himself in piety and eccentricity. l The old man looked at him for some time i very earnestly, and at length mid : "Weel, , I have been looking for some time at the loens of your face." "And what do you think of it'."' asked Mr. Hill, 'Why," I am thinking that if the grace of God hadnn' changed your heart, pm would ha' been a most tremendous rogue." Mr. Hill laugh. ed heartily, and said, "Well, "yon have hit the nail on the head." In the same un- reserved mannermn aged minister, address- ing his assistant. rem vrkori thnt it Wag sin gular how he felt more futigned in heuring him than in preaching himself. The 'ps. ‘ sistant replied that he experienced a rimi. ' lar feeling when his reverend constituent l wu in the pulpit. "Then," rejoined the ' minister, "I pity the folk, that hove toheor 1 us beith." Doubtleu, the eortvorgation is d on both eidoe unrestrnined; but the wit of l the senior gives it a happy turn. It does ', not, however, always turn out so well ; for, ' in youth, many are so full of obtrusive ', unity " to incur the contempt of mature I use. A very vain preacher hinting deliver. J ed a sermon in the hearing of the Rev. J Robert Hull, meted him, with o mixture 1 of self-complacency and indelicoey to cute t what he thought of the sermon. Mr. Hell I remained lilent for some time, hoping that . his nilenee would be rightly interpreted; It but this only 'coused the question to be , . mend 'tith greater cane-tum. Atlanta: . "Tho thiot wh, ytole my ”mom. On whim I Int ur-h " my, Mess safely givu them bark to no. Since they were stole before." Wit they have in every possible variety which let us view under the three upects: Sumo clerical pltwiarist in London, who assumes to be Is frank an he is (realms rs. tnrtnd upon Punch in the following un. blushing quatrnin ' and care; And his exit from out it in no one known wlwro; But if well he does he", t'will be well with him there ', And no more could I tell you by preaching A your." Another surprises us with the nudncityof his wit, bidding defiatum to his opponent. Ono charms us with the vivacity of his wit under difficulties as in the impromptu. A minintcr of the Church of Englnnd, on rising in the pulpit on Sunday morning to preach, discovered that he had forgotten his manuscript, upon which he addressed his iUek as follows: “Man was born into the world poor, naked, Mid lmro. And his progress all through it is trouble ll Humour, too, flows with rich veins in their utterances, and gives a fine geniality _ to their character. The Rev. M----, I Soon-h minister of some humor, was one , day walking through the streets of Edin. i burgh. dressed in his rough country clothes I when a young lady, the leader of a group of fashionable belles, surveyed him through ' her quizzing-g‘ane rather more curiously than he thought consistent with female de- Weep. Scanning suddenly to rccognizeheri he walked up to her briskly, and seizmgl l her by the hand, with the familiarity of an I t old acquaintance. accosted her wiur-"uy l dear Marin, how do you do? How left you your worthy father. and venerable , mother, and when did you come to town T' 3 All this was said with the rapidity and en- ergy of an old familiar triond, and with an} air of equality n little summing visupc-rior- ity. The astonished fair one had mt time to withdraw her hand or to return his friendly greeting, looking her still in the face. The fine looking lady had by thin time recovered from her confusion. and hastily withdrawing her hand, Mid, with Home alarm. "You are mistaken, pair!" "What," replied he, “is it possible, my dear, that you do not know mo t" “Indeed I do not, sir.” “Neither do I you," laid the parser). "Good morning. medium" and making a ceremonious bow, he walked away, She was perfectly cured ofquizzing strangers in the street. Following than are twenty-£11m other individuals Lad tim" who m an“ in mm: from 99.871000 dorm .to I puffy.lu' P. Dotmttue........................ i. Lupin_3_....:................... Kuwait: iTavil.................. Bank of Culifornin............... William Ska-on B................. Juno: G. Pair..................... J. 0. Flood ..e...... Cantu! Paeifie w, Co. ......... J. C. Flood & Co. ............... J. W. Muck-y..................... Sends Bunk ..................... l If"figun" do not lie" than no name persons in San Francisco who Are not in what Mrs. Partington would all "indig. nant circumstances." Tho Auditor of thst city, in the roll which he returned to the Auditor, has plaeed the uncouth]. property of . few of its richest citizen: " follows '.-- Leland Stanford.................. '19,719,000 Curios Cracker.................. 19,187,000 Mu. Mark Hopkuu............ 17.211.000 -.- -u --------- Tim Fncrrs or IsrEttPsnAstat.--hn in. teresting looking woman turned IInrriet McLaughlin, with an intense Ind tragic tture-who strongly reminded the spectator of Miss Butcsinnn's Leah-mu, brought be. fore the Police Magistrate, in Toronto, on Thursday, charged with vugrancy. It up- penrn that this woman. when a young girl, her maiden nnme being Emmi, eloped ’r mi tl seminary in Edinburgh With a British officer named McLauclilin. His regiment, the 16th, was ordered to Humil- tou and thither they came. where the bus- lmn'l took to drink. Shortly after the girl‘s arrival in this country she inherited £2.0(Mfmu her father, bat this sum was quickly expended in drink and dinipntion' and when he died his unlortumte wife wu left destitute. She sought domsoUtion in liquor and quickly tell, Mada short time since was sent to the Penitentiary for lar. ceny. She was condemned to . month's imprisonment in jail. i i One of the narrowest escapee from a. hor- ' I rible death that we have ever heard of took I I place the other day at Victoria. Harbor, . between Weubenshene and Midland. The l largo sew-mill belonging to Mr. Powers is E situated there, and gives employment to a a large number of men. The saw-dust _ and mill-refuse is burned in a. huge kiln, ( made of boiler iron. The kiln in about eighty feet high, end has doom in the side, about forty feet from the ground. To those the mill refuse is taken by en end- lens chum, which throws it into . large (fho that is built in the bottom, and on a. rule thcre u.trout twenty to thirty feet of Inlid ihnne. As 11 general thing there is two men wlnmo duty it in to see that the cerriers are not clogged. and to see that the refuse passes into the kiln ell right. On the dey in question, only one man, named Payne, oblukimith bytrede, who formerly resided in Port Hope. wee looking after the work. He was in the millend stepped into the carriers to ride up to his proper place at the door of the foresee. Everything went all right until he got close to the doors, when he found that hie feet were caught, and he wee un- able to extricate himself, end that he wee greduelly going to meet in euro and hor. rible death. Just in the nick oi time he nttrectod the ettention ot'n couple of the employees of the mill, who at once rushed to hie euistanoe. One rm to stop the mo- chinery end the other up the gengwey and ought Payne by the coller just " he en. tered into the kiln. m held on with both hands until assistance arrived, and the l mechincry having been stopped by this tune, he was extricated from his perilous position, none the worse for his close cell. except that he was terribly frightened and . slightly scorched around his lower extrcm- _ ities, from his close contact with the I fiery furnace. If he had not been ceught l just when he won the probebility is that he would never hove been heard of agein, for if he once fell into the mass of flames he 1 would have been cremated in a few min- , lites or even lem-Port Hope Guide. 1 Again, when a young etselesitustie asked of his bishop permission to preach the re. ply wns so cutting that some of our theolo. gieal students would do well to seriously ponder upon it. The Bishop said :---"My son. I willingly give my permission, but I grim ously fear that nature will not give hers." baking“ but: can“ A, m with I college. After proceeding thus for a few minutes, the Bishop interrupted with the question. "Do I understand thlt the brother tbmlss God for his ignorance t" "Well, yes," was the answer, "you can put it that way if you want to." "Well, all I have to any," laid the Bishop, in his sweet. musical tones, “3111 have to say is that the brother has a grout deal to be thankful for." Mr. Hull admitted “There we: one very tine pangs." " em rejoiced to but you uy no. Prey, sir, which "it,” "Why, sir, it we: the pew. from the Wt to the nutty." He did not, W, know enough to know how llttle he in... end, the greater is the ignorant» or iititemer of a men, the deeper rooted is " ecu-oom- plncency. One ot this kind App-ml u. fore the late Bishop Amel. W? pro-id- ing over a certain conference in Welt. a. member began to tirade extinct the ani. ', versities and edncetion, ueeyT God anti A PORT ROPE MAN NEARLY CIEXAI'ED- Just Saved. 01-9. 19,187,060 17ai1,000 16,120,000 10,600,000 10,680,000 7,600,000 6,900,000 4,470,000 _ 4,230,000 8,680,000 8,M0,000 8,170,“ 8,000,000 Dur-ng the lust five months 600,000 bar. tch of petroleum have ran to mute in tho Bradford Pn., o.l reg-An, “hero than u. 8,00rprotlueing . il MIL, y} 'uling daily 70,000 barrels. This daily domain] In M,. _ 000 bunk. There are 't,fo0,o00 haml- 1ofwmmmllhml trtoek in the “any an: of tho pipe lines. The positively (kind In: of the Bradford nil-pnulueing It" in an" than 65.000 um. and tlterar ir I I." bravery five gensnf land that has: he. he dual. from In oruinari pimple to the want form of Scrnfuln. For mic by all duh-n. Sampl- bottloa lo can". regal-r tin, 'Loo.--" Burdock Blond Bitten " the only modicino that acts upon the Blood, Lint, Kidney. And the Bows-In I at the lame time, while it In." nervous irritntiou,ntrd WI up glue debihufod ”term. It (:an all human, ( Knnuslms non: . little further than any other State in prohibitory legislation by adopting An amendment to the eonui. tution prouibitinz the manufacture and Isle of intoxicating liquors,uct t for med. icnl, seientifie And h"eCl'i','Jdl' puma-n. It is reported tint thin hll been Baioitod bv a majority of 20,000 votes. As a pin ofthe constitution this prohihitory luv can- not My enraged or set Nude, l-xcopl by a two-third- veto of the mambo]: of tho Loci-hum. One dose of Hsgyarul'u Pet-torn! Balsam will relieve a Cough nu promptly u to -ineo the most sceptical of its merits an a 'Throat and Lung healer ', n in the great nmrritie foe alt Pulmonary ccmplaintn tending tmurdn C. '" taxation. The safest. moot wannabe“ an! chemo-t 002$: Care known. For In]. by all dealers m In 'cine. -b.IM. During the put nix mnnlln sixteen [LII- dorl hue been committed in New York and vicinity. sud the Tumbs prison now liolrls lunmml men and two women unit- ing their trial for these cn'm-a. The orim. innl law must be very In in a my when apical offences “crane one in any twelve days. Yellow Oil is the most 'l-Ml.,. popular remody in the make: for Rheumnlun, Nou- nigh, Spruim, “runes. Frost Bit... some Throat, Lame Back, Cutertuetiou of the MID- clea, Croup, Qnimey, and every varnety of Nin, Lamvneu, or htGtnmMioti, For intern- al u well u external use. Yellow Oil will never fail van. Sold by in dealer. in modi- eine.-b.i45 Two brothers named Laughlm from Cum-d. were shot in . "loan in St, Loni: on Sunday by n ruilian named l lama-u. ‘Lucknwmm Valley, 1nd I subterruuootu eouihtgration would have swept under tho whole of West Pittutnu. Minors have worked in the lower drift of the Butler Mine since the iiro broke out, but there is but forty feetof ruck between them and the field offsre above. The water that trickle: through the roof is selling hot. The temperature is so high mu the men can wear but little clothing. The Butler Mine. near Pittston, bu boon burning three _ It wu set on tire by I party of tramps, who built n fire in tho mine in 1877. The fire is in the upper drift. It is confined to an are: of forty ne- res by an immense ditch, forty feet wide, which wu elcnvnted between the burning drift and connecting ones. The digging of the canal cost $50,000. But for that obtsta. do the fire would have communicated to some of the most extensive mines in the The Summi: Hill Mine, new “not Chunk, Lu been burning [or 25 yam. " it believed that this mine WM set an tive by discontentml miners. Thoumudl of dollars. have been expended in fruition at forts to extinguish the fhuno. , wee so thick that two miners, could keep e , Inge breaker supplied. When 400 yerde , of me” had been excavated the heat i from the burning Daugherty Mine beg-n _ to bother the miners. Medinuie attemp. I ted to open on nirhole. The heat bee-me ( so greet that the men ware peid double Inger. to induce them to work. They worked entirely naked, and were relieved every ten minute. Finally the beet be. come so intense that work we: ebeudoned. The mine was Booded. After being pun p ed out men could again work for e few days. The mine was flooded nine timee. McGinnis iinallr failed, and the mine wee then abandoned. The fire hes been reging in the vein ever since. An area of half I mile in every direction hes been burned. No vegetation grows on the surface. In places the ground has caved in. forming chums e hundred feet deep. There is but I. thin shell of earth over the pit of fire. At night, blue eulphuruue thuneis issue from the crevices in the ground. It " danger- ous to walk ncroes the spot. Several per- sons hive mysterious“ disappeared in the vicinity during the put twenty years. It is believed that in I. majority of the cam they here fellcn into the burning mine. Donghu'ty. the oeiginul proprietor of the tune, attempted to go Across once. He unit to his arm-pits through the cruet. and was only saved by courageous friend-I who ventured to his Assistance. The stone on the ground are hot, and show never rests there. Rain turns to vapor an soon " it falls on the roof of the burning mine. Millions of dollars' worth of the beat quell"- ty ofconl have been concunu-d by the tim. on the 'stuirsWruFTi,TeToT Tia; m: Be struck the win at a place where the can! - cums but. The aim nu left. No effort In. and. (amino "trot an 00.1 no" the burning vein, although it moon- siderod the beat and in tho mien nah! the drill "ttgist in from the hm; it; it In. discovered the an had boon ottrried down the Air he]. to eh. In... .h-m. n: down the air hole to the LU. drum-1:! In. beyond contra] we moon otatared do. mine hoping to hoover their tools. The! - -e -___ --v -r per arm of the mine was than at: Incl. "td0ttgshm "hyacin- mum. manth of the mine in the will“: to hop the Inter trom houin; in the “can. One night in the “or. "" the timber. o ( Worm!" Guano.) Tho mum of n" the “tempt- to allu- (aid: the a" which bu boon min; in tho Koch, Bun Colliery. m Pea-vino. It; for nun] weeks, it in feared, will add no other to the perpetually burning DID.“ new ettiat in the I'entmfati_ an“ The greatest of than in My U h the Janin- vein, nu: Cont Club. This In. boon burning Cine. "N. Lewis r. Daugherty opened thi. in 1883. Tho ... GOAL mu “A? IA" DUI!!!) “I III? "attg. Quenchleu Fires.

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