West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 8 Oct 1896, p. 6

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K4 There ars signs that the Czar‘s attiâ€" gude toward the Sultan has been modifiâ€" ed, and that, should another massacre take place at Constantinople, Russian French, and English war ships will be sent thither for the purpose of mainâ€" taining order. Such interference would doubtless lead to the deposition of the present Sultan, and it is possible that, instead of permitting a new ruler to be shosen, the powers principally interestâ€" sd may recognize that the time has come w divide the Ottoman possessions. Although, however, the Turk is a sick man, he has abeen in a worse plight four ‘imes in the present century . The Ottoâ€" man Empire was brought to the verge of ruin in 1829, when a Russian army under Diebitsch crossed the Balkans ind reached Adrianople. Again, in 1833, Mahmoud II. consented, at the bidding of the Czar, tosign the treaty of Unkiar Skelessi, which, if France and England would have suffered it to be carried out, would have converted Turkey intoa vasâ€" sal State. That treaty placed the Darâ€" danelles and Constantinople itself under That was a joke which provoked unâ€" restrained _ merriment â€" among _ the benches. _ The Irish members are parâ€" doned many blunders, however, because they are, with few exceptions, humorâ€" ous speakers, who enliven the tedium of debate with merry quips and 'fsts. The bores, who are constantly speaking with ‘"The population of Ireland," said the contentious major in the Commons, "is six millions less than it would be if it were an uninbabited island." the protection of Russian war vessels, and it was plain enough that in such circumstances all of the Sultan‘s official The mathematical absurdity of the statement did not fail to excite amusement, although the bull was less obvious than asimilar one attributed to the Irish member, Major O‘Gorman. ‘"‘The population of Ireland," he exâ€" claimed, with flashing eyes and outâ€" stretched arms, "has been decimated to he extent of twoâ€"thirds!" sots would be dictated from St. Petâ€" arsburg. Again, in 1839, when the Turkâ€" ish army was annihilated by Ibrahim Pasha at Nisib, and when, almost conâ€" temporaneously the Turkish fleet was handed over to Mehemet Ali at Alexâ€" andria, nothing but the interposition of England and France saved the house of Othman from dethronement. Once more, burst of unconscious humor. He was speaking of the ruin and exhaustion wrought by misgovernment jn Ireland, and worked himself up into a fine frenzy of excited declamation. in March, 1878, when a Russian army had reached the suburbs of Constantâ€" inople, nothing savedt he Turkish Emâ€" pire from destruction except the knowâ€" ledge that, ift he invadersentered the capital,a fleet of British ironclads would be ordered to the Bosporus. On every one of the occasions named it seemed improbable that Turkey would survive, yet it continued to exist so it may be that even now the Ottoman Governâ€" ment will be suffered to go on under a new ruler who will make the pretence of instituting some reforms. ow a Slip of the Tongzue is Treated in the British House of Commons. Parliamentary manners are brutal in Westminster when amember in debate is convicted of a bull. A speaker with an expansive oratorical manner recentâ€" ly astanished the Commons with an outâ€" he mercy of a sanguinary despot as ‘peace, with honor." If,to save them, it is necessary to let the Czar take Constantinople, the English people will doubtless authorize: Lord Salisbury to "ace the risk. part have hitherto assumed that their country‘s short line of communication with India would be threatened if a strong power like Russia, whose navy is capable of _ indefinite expansion, hould gain control of the Bosporus. The political and strategic® objections seem is valid now as they ever were, and it mnay be that they will once more avail o postpone the partition of Turkey. But n England, at all events, there are inâ€" lications that public opinion will no onger tolerate the abandonment of the Jultan‘s Christian subjects to butchery, n order that British commerce in the Levant many remain shielded from Rusâ€" ian rivalry. The day has gone by when .ord Beaconsfield could describe an arâ€" ‘angement by which millions of Armenâ€" an and Greek Christians were left at BORES IN PARLIAMENT. A WELCOME CHANGE. UURRENT NOTES 6 Starls on stil on & still hunt Beach Street was in those days much as it is now, the quaintest, saltest, imâ€" aginable thoroughfare on the coast of Great Britain ; littered with anchors of all sizes, with huge coils of hemp cable, with odd fantastic capstans for the windingâ€"up of boats, with tall poles for the spreading of nets, lines from winâ€" dow to window for the easy drying of linen, queer dusky alleys leading at nightâ€"time into a true smuggling blackâ€" ness of atmosphere; beerhouse after beerhouse in friendly juxtaposition, with a perpetual seething and hissing of surf upon the steep shingle, as a regale to " There‘s a bed for me there ; but it‘s too far to reach it on foot toâ€"night. Besides, my sweetheart, Jenny, will not expect me till toâ€"morrow, by noon, or thereabouts. Now, what am I to do for a bed? There will be other houses of entertainment in this town besides those I have visited in this street ?" * There‘s a gentleman," said the landâ€" lady, after a short spell of thought, "lying upâ€"stairs WE) has used my house for some years running. ‘Tis but a bit of &aroom he‘s in, sir; but he rests in a fireat big bed, broad enough to house a large family. If you wouldâ€" n‘t mind sharing it with him, he‘d acâ€" commodate you at my req?uest. I don‘t doubt. What do you say?" â€" . ~t " You are very good, ma‘am; ‘twould be a godsend I assure you. I could not feel more weary had I been trampâ€" ing Deal all day." Kih coe AurKa Hlnas aneh wercvces / Wws W cesA M "I shall have to 1eturn to the ship, then," he exclaimed, " Yet I would rather not. Plying betwixt the Downs and the shore is costly work to a poor manâ€"at least your boatmen make it so. A spare sofa would serve me. I have been ill in South America, and am not yet well, and durst not lie in the open. A pillow and a roof for my head would suffice. I must be up by daybreak, perhaps before. My sweetâ€" heart‘s mother, Mrs. Bax, lives t‘other side of Sandwich, more Minsterway than that town.â€"D‘ye know her, ma‘am ?" * By_ name, sir: a very decent good lady, I‘m sure." _ She ran her bright black eyes over him with an expression as though she found pleasure in the sight of his long womanly hair and pale handsome face and manliness of stature, and answerâ€" ed after a minute‘s thinking: "I‘m afraid not, sir. Every bed in the house is taken. I never remember Deal so full of strangers." one as they, called the Lonely Star, into which he walked. At the end of a tolerably long narrow passage was an open door, out of which floated clouas of tobaccoâ€"smoke along with the incense of the punchâ€"bowl. A little on this side the door was a staircase, and nearer yel to the entrance, a recess, in which sat a plump woman of fifty, with sloe black eyes and red cheeks and treble chins. Over her head hung an oldâ€"fashioned lantern, the light of which was comfortably reflected in rows of bottles on shelves behind her filled with liquors of various dyes. "*Can i have a bed in this house ?" asked York of this plump, goodâ€"humorâ€" ed woman, who at his approach let fall some knitting she was at work upon. * ns o ylc'&flwu ETTE wa d wig for air, and yet looked balf dead with heat, stood behind a little bar or counter drawing ale out of a cask, the top of which was on a level with his hand. York inquired if he could have a bed; the landlord shook his head, with a glance at the tall youth, as though he suspected a kind of imperâ€" tinence in such a question in the lace of the crowd of people smoking and drinking beyond. " Can you 1;;1;1ne me a house in which I‘m likely to obtain a bed for the night ?" said York. gmg of a horse pistol or two, burst into a loud laugh. York walked out, and entered anâ€" other tavern hard by. ‘WThis, too, was full, its five bedrooms crammed, the stateâ€"bed of the place to be occupied by no fewer than four men, to lie heel to heel, whenever it should suit them to withdraw to it; as the perâ€" spiring driedâ€"up little landlord informâ€" ed York with a grin of exquisite satâ€" isfaction. He tried a third, a fourth; tramped on to the Cat o‘ Nine Wails alehouse ; but to no purpose. lHad every house had its forty beds to let, they would not have apparently met the deâ€" mand that night for accommodation from the capisins, mates, passengers, sullors who bad come ashore on speâ€" cial business, or who had deserted, or who had to take the coach next day to London or wherever they might live, couniing (as passengers) upon aays and perhaps weeks of detention it they siuck to the crait lying out in the Downs yonder. a al lb s York had now reached the Sandown extremity of Deal ; he retraced his steps and passing the houses he had visitâ€" ed, he arrived at much such another " No," said the purpleâ€"faced man, conâ€" tinuing to draw ale into thick glass, oneâ€"legged tuimblers, which, as fast as he filled them, he pushed to a couple of fellows, who carried them to the tables. "lt‘ll be odd if ye gits a bed to loie in toâ€"night, mate, in Deal,. Whoy, it‘ll be ending in the boatmen having to turn their boats‘ keel up for lodgâ€" ings;" at which observation a large heavy man in a round hat and a great belt round his waist, fit for the snugâ€" hing Step into the end room, then," said A TALE OF THE SEA sbe, " and call for what you will whilst J find out if the gentleman will reâ€" ceive you." §. * He éntered, and found himself in the company of some score and a half of seamen of all denominations, with & sprinkling of soldiers and a few women. The room was unpleasantly full ; the height of it was no taller than a small ship‘s ‘tweenâ€"decks, and it had something of the look of a ‘tweenâ€"decks, with its substantial joists or rafters, its small portholeâ€"like windows, and walls resembling bulkheads. A few of the nearer folks stared at him on his entrance, and a couple of the women giggled a bit at his gair; but the comâ€" pany were on the whole rather too drunk to give him much heed. It was an oldâ€"world scene that, for its utterâ€" ly vanished qualities of colour, atmosâ€" phere, attire, is scarcely imaginable in these days; unsnuffed Trushlights flarâ€" ing on the tall narrow chimneyâ€"plece and on the tables; men mahoganyâ€" cheeked with weather, some wearing their own hair in tails, some with wigs, with here a threeâ€"cornered hat cocked over its owner‘s nose, there a round tarpaulin perched on nine hairs, with a fathom of ribbon down the back ; most of the people smoking long clay pipes and arguing with drunken aniâ€" mation, with now and again the added hullabaloo of one who would set up his throat for a song; the women iN colours which made one think of & crockery shepherdess; and visions . of copperâ€"nosed salts looming out in posâ€" ltures of wrangling at the tables in smokeâ€"obscured corners. (Pogni w o e on t S Seeemeneeeunty e _ York fell to undressing as expediâ€" tiously as possible. . _ ‘"‘What‘s your calling, may I ask ?" inquired Mr. Worksop, rumbling ou the question with his mouth halt covâ€" ered with bedclothes. "A sailor," was the answer. ‘"What ship, sir t" ‘"Well, I was secondâ€"mate of the Coelia, but sickened at Valparaiso of some {)estilence there, and was left beâ€" hind by the master. I was down six months with the malady, and nearly a dead man. Then the captain of the brig Jane offered to carry me â€" home on condition or my helping him in the navigation of the vesselâ€"I mean, takâ€" ing observations and keeping the reckâ€" oning and the like ; for he had lost his chiefâ€"mate; and his second, who was the shi%'s carpenter, couldn‘t read or write. We brought up in the Downs this evening; and as my sweetheart lives within a few hours‘ walk of this place, 1 came ashore, meaning to start tor her home at dawn toâ€"morrow. Small chance of my disturbing â€" you, Mr. Worksop; you‘ll find me cat-fike, :atmdl wl({m't know I‘m gone till you turn o look." ‘"Right you are, sir; right you are," rumbled the other: ‘"‘there‘s room enough here. Why, boil me alive, Oh! but this must have been in a royal bed of state in its day." "I‘ll blow out this light," said York. â€"â€""But have gou a tinderâ€"box handy, Mr. Worksop? I‘m without that conâ€" venienceâ€"without â€" a good deal that should have been mine but for Valâ€" venienceâ€"without â€" a good deal that should have been mine but for Valâ€" paraiso. It‘s well to be able to strike -11“ light ; one never knows what may appen." ‘" There‘s my {‘%cket on that cheer," answered Mr. orksop ; " you‘ll find ‘"Very _ welcome, very _ welcome," growled Mir. Worksop in a somewhat softened voice, staring over the edge of the bedclothes, with small, windy, deepâ€"set eyes at the long hair and tall figure of the young fellow. ‘"There‘s room enough ; only be so good as to bear a hand and tumble aboard, for I don‘t feel u? to the knocker toâ€"night, and there‘s been row enough going on downâ€"stairs since I‘ve lain here to make a dead man get up and shoulder his co{f'in‘ fo’r _a cruise arter peace." _ _ He found himself in a little room, with the ceiling but a very few inches above his head. The apartment was almost entirely filled by a large, black, funereal fourâ€"poster, undraped, an furnished with a perfect Atlantic Ocean of blanket, mattress, and coverlet. On the left side of this immense bed lay a man, of whom nothing more was visâ€" ible than a curiously elongated face, as though his _ countenance had been stretched, lengthening the lineaments out of all proportion to their breadth. This odd face was crowned with a large red bhandkerchief, so twisted over the head as to serve as a nightcap. _ The clothes of a nautical man of that age lay heaped upon a chair under the very little window which gave light and ventilation to the room. "Sorry to break in upon your rest, Mr. Worksop," exclaimed York ; ‘"but needs must, you know.â€"But for {our kindness, my bed toâ€"night might have been on the cold ground, I fear.â€"Deal‘s amazingly full, certainly." * York took a chair near the GOOT ant called to the drawer for a glass of spirits. _ After a little the landlady came to him and said that she had knocked at Mr. Worksop‘s door and asked if he would object to a bedfellow ; and that his answer was the gentleman was welcome if so be he would contrive to ride with an upâ€"andâ€"down cable ; by which she understood Mr. Worksop to mean that he expected the gentleman to keep to his side of the bed. York thanked her, and said be should be glad to go to rest at once. i o ym oo on ane c en o o nc en t t n t w y * "As you will, sir," said she: "it will be a shilling." He gave her the money. ‘There will be no difficulty," he exâ€" claimed, ‘"in letting myself out in the morning ? I do not wish to disturb the house by a stiff wrestle with harsh bolts and difficult locks." _______ _ The latch of the door appeared to be jammed; York struggled with it for some time, but could not succeed in lifting it. Meanwhile, he bheard Mr. Worksop, who was manifestly a seaâ€" {aring man, calling from the bed sevâ€" eral varieties of seaâ€"blessings upon the eyes and limbs of his disturber, until, losing all patience, he bawled out in the tones of a gale of wind: "Put your shoulder to the latch and heave it up! Thunder and blood! ain‘t . it plair that prising‘s your only tack?" "That‘ll be your door, sir," said she, pointing to the street entrance at the end of the passage. *"There is but one bolt, and it shoots easily. We â€" fear nothing but the foreign invader at Deal, sir. The latch will fall when you pull the door after you." « He thanked her, took his bundle, and followed her upâ€"stairs. She knocked at a little door painted stoneâ€"colour, leanâ€" ing as with age in its frame. A voice answered, "Come in," in a muffled hurâ€" ricane note. _ York did as he was told, and by so doing lifted the crazy old door off its latch, and entered. ul i ib hn ts t nds iihah ie P uce "I shall be quitting your house beâ€" fore you‘re up," said he, "and will pay you for the bed now, if you please.‘"‘ "It‘s the gent, Mr. Worksop, as is to lie with you," responded the landâ€" lady ; and then, putting the rushlight into York‘s hand, she bid him goodâ€" night with a pleasant wish that he would find his sweetheart happy and in gay health next morning. * the door and et." York felt, and found the things, placâ€" ed them near the rushlight, extinguishâ€" ed it, and got into bed. . They lay talking for a while. Mr. Worksop, it seems, had been boatswain of a West Indiaman for three voyages. 1a hasd bean naid off in London & He had been paid OLL 1 week or two before; and born at Deal, had run do a few days at the old spot a short cruise about the was too sleepy to talk n was plain, from the little that he was a man who . One piano lamp is useful, but to multiply that and stand them about as if they had walked out to take their places in a waltz, orto see how many intruders into a halfâ€"darkened room they could trip up in a day, is rather too much. ‘Then, their pagoda tops of monstrous girth deluged the room with boisterous color and put everything else out of countenance. If anything, they are more perverse and ungainly than the corner easel. The banquet lamp modestly rears its light at the right place ‘upon a table or Liano, and may be clothed in a manâ€" ner at once sun})le yet distingue With a standard o Ja‘f.aneee bronze or terra cotta, and a delicate shade, the banquet lamp is beautiful. But a new horror threatens us; that is a tall candlestick, genera.lly made of enameled wood and profusely _ demnv. nim, ated in colors, often of the style. It is made to stand . the floor or on the table. He drank and bathed his hands and face, and felt himself greatly refreshed. There was an inverted tub close to the pump, upon which he rested himself, and here he continued to linger _ for some time, reluctant to quit the sweetâ€" ness and freshness of the cool air that was breathing direct from the sea for the overâ€"like oppressiveness of the litâ€" tle bedroom. Maybe he dozed, for he was suddenlty startled by the near drowsy voice of a watchman calling the hour, two o‘clock. On hearing this, he arose, reâ€"entered the house, quietly bolted the glass door after him and returned to bis bedroom. York took his knife, went to the door, and succeeded in lifting the latch; and this done, he stole forth, leaving the door ajar; then putting the knife in his pocket, he groped his way downâ€" stairs all very quietly, as he did mot wish to disturb the house. The street lamp that had helped him in the bedâ€" room served him below wherever there was a seawardâ€"facing window, and he made his way _ without _ difficulty through the long, _ lowâ€"ceiled public room, reeking and sickening witg the lingering fumes of tobacco and rum punch; and pulling back the single bolt of the glass door he had taken notice of, he found himself in a little backâ€" yard with, sure enough, the outline of a pump in the corner faintly touched by the starlight, . .: }>." . He partially clothed himself; but, on trying the door, found he could not lift the latch with his fingers. _ He felt in his pockets, but was without anything to enable him to pry open the jammed and rusty arrangement. . The boatsâ€" wain snored heavily in the soundest sgleep. York dreading the fellow‘s temâ€" per should he awaken him, _ walked softly to the man‘s clothes, and, by the feeble light that shone upon the litâ€" tle window, groped in the pockets for any contrivance that shouls serve hium as a lever, The jacket pockets conâ€" tained nothing but a tobaccoâ€"case, a pipe, and some papers. _ He felt in the lefthand breeches‘ pocket, and touched a quantity of pieces of money, the weight of which proved them to be gold, apparently guineas and halfâ€"guineas. In the other pocket was a large _ claspâ€" knife, such as sailors carry, with a ring ghrgugh the end of the haft for a lanâ€" iard. LAMPS AND CANDLESTICKS want in the leftâ€"hand pockâ€" (To be Continued.) is, often of the Dresden 1_11:{(:1@ to stand either on and profusely _ decorâ€" out of e winâ€" is the whose aking for a f M â€" e C ‘ e e [ TW & | (ns a fi L\‘ EFORE 0o | 5* ( k~ + M [« v, ‘Lr S‘ a 1; | M E! :B 5 câ€" |§9) _ Cl & | s Thoir N 11 ‘You feel eâ€" case." eâ€" 4 ? €, Capt. / of | PMAt lfi 1 he C of Bem: t Ewore dr k: N 24 und Prisad expc d then cor of | [S®by their. id | s jmy nerv Lo | ioeeix years +.: Juaad Lumber, Shingles and Lath sw In Stock. _â€"__ _ HN._G &J. MeKECHENR Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepary to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLYy We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sas Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differ. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting, Our Btook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orig can be filled. Sash and Door Factoy T mmassdin t inss w Wt AmscteadWe 1c c d d o dnc of these remarkable insects known as "walking sticks," which look like twigs of trees in length. Some of them meaâ€" sure eighteen inches in lengith. They are related to grasshoppers and katyâ€" dids. In tropical America are found certain huge species of bugs that are certain huge species of bugs that are closeiy related to the fsmuifiar electric h%ht bugs of this country. Like the latter, which have been po&t;luly known only since the introduction of the electric light© they llgotlt night living during the day at toms _ of This beetle, like others of its kind, both small and large, is clad in a comâ€" plete suit of armour. This armour is made of a material far more indestructâ€" ible than steelâ€"namely, chitine. Chitâ€" ine cannot be destroyed except by cerâ€" tain mineral acids; in other words, only the artifices of chemistry â€" avail against it. Thus the shells of beetles that died 10,000,000 years ago have been preserved perfectly in the rocks, so that we know toâ€"day just what these insects of antiquity looked like. RATHER RARE FELLOW. In Europe giant beetles have a conâ€" siderable market value, commanding Erioes in proportion to their size. _ In London there are regular auctions of insects, and a single buiterfly has been known to fetch as much as $800. A specimen of the rare and very large goliath beetle is worth $60. This is the larmbeetle of the old world, and it first me known through the misâ€" sionaries in the Congo basin. Though no other insect in existence compares in bulk with the beetle from Venezuela, there are other bugs that exceed it in dimensions. For vxumflle. there is the Atlas silk moth, which has a wingspread of nearly a foot. It spins a cocoon, the silk of which is better, and stronger than that of the ordinary silk worn ; but, unfortunately, it canâ€" not be reeled. A FINE BUTTERFLY. There is a butter{ly of the Malay . Peninsula and Archipelng which has a spread of ten inches. India and tr‘opg_ca.l‘ é@x:gga_ar.n_ found giant forms A Small Country Produces the Bigges Thing of Its Kind. Venezuela is a little republic, but she has one thing that is the biggest of its kind on earth. It is a bugâ€" the largest insect in all the world. The creature is known as the "elephant beetle," and when full grown it weighs nearly half a pound. To be struck in the face by such a bug, flying at full speed, would make a man feel as if a mule had kicked him. Mc q Pm 7'-1&{‘;'01 | . ! * \he : t VÂ¥ 138 vA, * 2 * A > KN% T | & *z _ 4s 83 aSINF § U UL HABITS IN YOUT & IN numl.mn;\:;.;;;E;‘;‘a E LATER EXCESSES JN MANKHOOD K ~â€"MAKE NERVOUS, DISEASED ME § RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. & K. { e Wa. A. WALEERB, Wau. A. WALKER, MRS.CHAS. FERBY, CHAs. FEABY+ ’ Cart, Chas, Forry says:â€"“lmm{llifo to Prs. K. & E. At 14 I learned a bad habit, At21 1 had all the Enr]nptoms of Beminal Weakness and Epermatorshcea, Emissions wore dra.in;y and weakening my vitality. I married at 24 under advice of my family doctor, but it was a lsadexx:»erirx:::a. Ineighteen months wo were divorced. I then consuli Dra.sL & K., who restored me to manhood by their New Method Treatment, Ifoltanew lifethrilithrough * * Wm, A. Walker of 16th Btroet eays:â€""I havo or , SYPH "_'s untold agonies for my "gay life." 1 waosinciscreot , young and ignorant. _ As "Oneof the Doy®" i cont EM'SS'ONS Byphilis unf?)!her Private Giseasoes, 1 had nicers \ mouthand throat, bone pains, hcir looss, pimp | STR|CTUHE face, finger nails cmoo{R emisrions, became U despondent. Beven doctors treated me with M ’ CURED Potash, etc. They helped me but copld »ot cg; | _ CUVUNEU ________ _ | Finali .irl;ndindnce&memtry Ire Ronneoy 41 oir New MethodTreutmcntcurmlmo{n m fow weeks, Their troatment is won ‘You feel yourself gaining every day. I havemover heard of their failing to cursia® P !! Oof ignorance and folly in youth, overerertion 6f mind and bod; TH HE§ lT ed b{ lust and exposure aro c():smntglwruckix t the lives an ; 0 of promising young men, Romefadeand wither at an « at bm:::"nho«lonfi while ult}:ern ; are forcbzct éoddm <l;ut, & weary, fruit 'mehnc e nce. ers reach matrimony nd no selace or comfort the victims are found in all stations of life:â€"The farm, the oflice, the workshop, the fthotndu and the professions, n lt eniieetiearemmmeiee E©peesHs â€" uie rcaltsril + UkWRE S s i 2 + BIGGEST SORT OF A BUG. SYPHILIS EMISSIONS STRICT URE CURED TREATMENT APTERTREEATMENT | 0 Divorced but united again t>"~NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN ConsEnt.@s P"CURES CUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED â€"<<siX%..> () cooppomm~ a nickel into this mfigi::';"?w bi.t:n. out. yut tâ€"If nothing cAm¢ 0"" sbows 188 MPU 1 ouy for my Justiceâ€"You _ are chare failing to provide for yoU children, who are at U starving in your misera‘b‘ much money have you in . Prisonerâ€"Ten dollars. Justiceâ€"I fine you te» : A total lack of sympa eration for others. You have heard her s4 Oh, yes. Well, what do you think denotes?t KNOWLEDGE CosTs MOXN THE LAW‘S MA wWHAT IT DENXO dollars 18 EsTY \, sir. with mo!b‘“ 4 m“" home. o# uC PM 1 dropret mcfll‘ gousit Ne# Mrs. Phillips, a washw xmfinon, was overcome «r bouse during a fire on Lng. and before the fire er she was suffocated. Miss Katherine _ Ry Falls was assaulted by man, and ber bhat pin inch and a half into will recover under medi A man who registered New York, was found de ve @I ueb The Canadian imimiZ T4‘ the end of August shov the extent of about 10 j immigration returns A number of vacancie used in the band of the London, hy an order | ombers to take part ence ompl« Mr. ehool ose * The Hamilton fGUPOCU® * ducing wakes Work on the Grand TrX . London has commenced Seal fiching in the Gu)f Mc during ‘the past ® ntete failure. hat opu Ml ki.n OL n.n.lll!lll.- id aking a holiday in the uebec. A branch of the Canad ociety bas been ar&-mil harines, with Mr. W. J. President. at the Queen‘s hotel, Tor« nesday morning. . The . surrounding his death po The first brick on tl: Trunk car shops in Lon laid on Friday by Mr. J« Hamilton, who laid the 1 the old shops nearly twe ago. is" 23. , CDeâ€"quarter per . is added. d"gshlu mrvivil-ng chi teauguay, Lieutâ€"C. llhberry.ufied on Monda She was Dame Charlott Balaberry widow of Myr. mother of Mr. Hatt, Ushe in the Quebec Legis An influential deputati on Mr. Laurier, on Thuy m;d_mmh‘ to pllaoe £ m the supplemen to emable the Toronto 1 &lgm Afihtim to h xhibi next year said he was much imp Hid atie iiand matter ®nd Give a repip . . "10Te ! By th efforts of Miss Toronto, a wellâ€"execute Sir Isaae Brock has ’:'fhi. and has been place of Mr. Gerald 8. Haywa ie stom se that hlllld on Frida; "&‘:thm the ©or John R f of the British Mu,, td President of 1; h. lldum aview to . ing 12 [f the Prince painter, for repr if 13 . O t« hey 48 . world. !w-l; 'W‘ j M» The NOPWEB" pom Liverpool bout two hundre cril ue â€" A Brantford deputatio regarding the Cemoral or regar remov to Londorn. Mr. Hays s time came the company ::d.h do some repairir H Prim to BJZI:I en l O w-u" Reading. CANADA. Dr. Ridiey, tt The D U T Lt \iam, 35 the town tiime Minister S "limon.l to visi hd_,hl‘!'y or M vERY LATEST FRO wORLD OVER milton 4CC" _glll'-lu‘.d k 1 clubs where vas bush NS N A 1 0 W h Byers H fell t | name« th id of $600 bas alre im &‘rlifl. Q’_\t-' to V« mpi PIQLL Items About Our s from the new Leeâ€" uP nQ with : it 6 GREAT rrppa lmd Oliver 4 between the ¢ Hamilton on instantly kill« artment of M . vranted peri _ j , ~ »eceive t "k‘flmn congraty| :?-'_beco;g Hamilton holiday ing â€" fisbur November. the firt nufactu dian im , caretaker ratford, died janum. license comn reply at «vel was On h fire for a TY 9° continent 'mr one 0‘ i Museum, } of the Br; to nan rk / Streel re PM MAAAE | h those w go comm ampaign liquor | visit the ; ‘ on Satu AC 1x threater _ Ontari Globe old« T Te th piayed n h Niag United mpre l.fnnd *L ore the e Lrs surr ime 1 mj me pt to 4200 ll.ln.au thirt isbuy of whe 189 1¢ the Rs

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