Whitby Chronicle, 6 Sep 1895, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

p, lu ni John Btepbensgon. Boti 1; P-iva ?terson, daughter of Mi > P atiéenon, QO., of Toronto, vieil "d là-'Tjdg$ Mhisweek. Lm i uday mornin man calied a lb. esieno ofMr i. Ge. Armstrong Taumseth Street, and aaked ta havei a" .dollar nOte obiaged. Mi. Armotroni made the change for the strauger au( thought 11o More of the incident. Thi ferilY wer Out wibe afternoon and ci rOturniin thîe evaning ,disoovered tli Borne peron hid Qfterd the premisei snd examiwed the. contente of a obeat oc dr-wr in a down stairs room. Noth. ing, however, wus missed.* At night, shordly after retiring, Mr. Armistron@ heard"noises from below and went dowia Staire ta inveetigate. Hore ha discover- ed two men testing tb. fastes ings of a Window. The interruption was unwel- corne ta the. viaitoris and tbay escaped tbrough a patch of corn in the lzardes Mr. Armtronir believes that he bas toi thank the calber for wheui h. changed the five dollar nota' in the morn ng for the afternooan d evening'g visit@. Ab. Greer as a marksman Constable Albert Greer, of Parry Sound, weil known about town, and brother of Mr. Alex. Greer, is in jail up north on a charge of trying to kilia whiskay peddlar named Harvey Hender son. Greer had a warrant for Hender- son and the latter endeavor to get away freni tha constable by running. The lat ter flred three abota, and by a miracle Henderson was flot killed, but enly badIy wennded. The Osuadian says of the af- fau :-"So mnch rsystery biangs about aset week's shooting aifair that il appeare wise, and perbaps ueoessary, in fairness to tha prisoer Greer, to forego any ex tended comment. We trust, howevar, that smre stops may be taken by the Goverrzuent to weed out froni the liet of constables ail men who are so ignorant of their duty as t suppose that tbey are justified in firing at a man who obeys a very naturaf-izpnîse to efcape when a chance offers. That Hendesson was sot killed was due, apparently, Le nothing but chance, andthe'extent of bis injuries dosflot in any way alter the. moral of- fonce. We understand that this man Greer bas proviously dispiayed marked Prepeusities for the usi.ng d~i revolvers in the disoharga cf bis duties8 as const.able, and snob beiug the case we cannot un-. derstand why ha should have beau re- tained in snch a position, especially wheu the facta were weIl known te the authori. tLes. At any rate this latter occurrence conveys a lesson whieli the authorities should profit by, and we hope that souic- tbing may be doue toe-ceure the corn- munity froni any repetit ion of this out- rageons affair. " Tue @tory cf Wm Gibuey The mystery cencerning the where- aboutis of Wm. Gibney, insurance agent, who disappeared suddenly on Thnrsday, August 15, a nd was upposed te have been lest in the wilds of Muskoka, bas; been cleared rap, and the. gentleman is snngly housed np at home with hie mother ou the cerner ef Smithb and Nùt- tawasaga streets. The missing mati wu boated on a faima near Wyevale, wbera b. had eugaRed as a faim laborar. The carde played false ou Madani Hicks, for- tus e-teUler, alias Orillia's %itch of Endor, etc., wben se foîeteid that tb. missing man was dead, and the resul f behr-lu. came ta, town ta aid bis employer in dis posing of a load of produce. The name of bis employer wus given as Thas. Dan - dao, wio lives about 16 miles south-west of Midlsnd, sud two miles- rom Wye-, val,. Monday aS midnigiit Messis. Wright and Davis, after a diligent Lire. bourg' inqufry smong other-Midland peo- ple, vers uantimoas ini the bolief that if tbe Dunda. faim could b. located they wauld b. rewarded by flndhag their man. At 4.80 Tuesday moruithe officer àud hia assistant eset ont an after a drive of four houri came upon tii. place to whicb they had been direole. 3Men voi work- ing in the. bainsd th. 9rillias s ent irn niiannounoed. l'h. flri t mmthey s pled inuide vswu illiam Guey engagd a baggiug wheaî, whoata once reeognize< -h ia fa i o 9 tl e a b.icti ~ a ackwafid-for dbn.y, Whose color Micame sud vent. The, I»dgnstion and ir priseoôf'th,<rm, oWîler, n. beiaid o the îdentity of histnw faM h an spb. botterisuj. *>, snu. runawayOuI1iau, fo haI' what h.wu and ls u waimwudiate of bJi employer s*d tstl. compazay isbW r Wgbt Md Dvi& At Wyevalê lron wgaw'., .d lo*uv Wn tôleph#ou4 ant ý r >w C * lax MiTdlAt 44Ma 4b* I f 4son* é 0 sh$ dld.-NèW&.M &sauatt i.F. A,.ousrêî,L Mowe Bokîin, at ,iE. Htng Mi.Jas, McLean, town; a lr John COIe 8; Mar. Richardson, Bethanyad Mr. and Mis, WIHiams, Eniakien, at Mar. JseSle' Ohurch Drcrn'ines. THE CAUSE 0F SLEEP DTJRING SERMONS EXPLAINED IN A NEW WAY. 1 havre a scientific explanation of the ~somnolence which Overtakes people in ,g churci. I used to think that it was Îthe dulhiess of the sermon which pro- r.voked the. aleep of the congregation. a One remembers the acter who gave 1a private reading of his play to bis a friends, and when he was done asked 1their opinion. At last when one began 0 to speak, the playwright interrupted: d "You can have no opinion; you were rasleep." "Ah,"' replied the critic, d you not know that sleep is an opini' And sleep is certainly an opinion, Bunt especially fiattering one. mont d ma no mean thýat the ser- P mn s raly dll 1have se people .sieèp in church under ail circumstan- -ces, and in the hearing of the most ad- mirable preachers, preacbing the most eloquent sermons. I saw a man sleep Bwhen Mr. Spurgeon preached. Mr. Moody bas more than once called out -te have a window opened to wake a, tsomnolent member of bis audience. 9Canon Knox-Little is accounted a s preacher of more than usual earnest- ness and power, yet 1 remember once in Worcester seeing a minister, clad in surplice and stole, and seated in the fchancel, go straight to sleep while the canon preached, disregarding tbe eyes of the congregation. And once wben Mr. Gore delivered a sermon in that *greàt abbey where he is now canon, people who sat in my neighborbood went to sleep in shoals. No; my theory is that most times when the congregation sieep during the sermon they are simply hypnotized. For, consider the situation. Most of the conditions which the hypnotist de- sires are present. There is a dim and subdued light in the room; tbe atmos- phere is somewbat close, the tem- perature is h 1gb: somewbere behind the speaker, in a position which compels the eyes of the congrega- tion, is a jet of gas or a sharp gleamn of electricity, into wbich they look as the sermon proceeds, and the preacher goes on and on, in a gen- tIe and monotonous voice, and down and up like a mother's Iullaby: and be- hold our eyelids are pressed down against our will by soft, invisible fingers, and everything is deliciously vague and far away, and suddenly people stand up witb an awakening sound about us, and the preacher is pronouncing the ascrip- tion at the end of is sermon, duringi wbose wise and eloquent paragrapis we bave humiliatingly slept. This is hypnotic sleep. And it is the fanît, not only of the preacher, but of the whole construction ot our ill-ventilated and absurdly lighted churches. Now Look Out Fe>«5h Duvw6o ki amon*," poeUi".-oe *bt larr-e Whny= tai.m «eje. s, ta". 1h.b" laT Seatt » milfla » » are <*e Mac" Wavoh aiblood purM~rS md "e uobnUMe known-othesa wifl not do as yod, becauso th" do not omtin 5h...properties- there 10 nàotb4ingto take ilb ItpIaoe Wlien You Compare lSM, IeSUM$ ITRE LwATIDCN Beau. you-aresen ad uuhtla E~vnland R.ataurant4:Th Guéat MnWh 1 t IgeL hère 7 The~' tîoUn-W. have cfe smti~~4~ make 1:. Tho fstWU~~~~tlà . Rie-Do you thiù* bloxaduýhaemore admitrr. han br#Wit.ts 1 he--'Idon'î know. Why notsuk some' of-"-' egi vho have had experieuce ln boîli capaci. ies 1 Peddl.r-That littie book on.'"How tb Préserve the, Hair" le Lthe key ho Lthe en- tire situation. Baldy-I amn very borry ; but I haveu't a single look that il would fit. FirsL Tramp-What would y au do if Zoau iad a iiundred thaumau dodllarsI Second Tramp-In LhaL case I Lhixak I'd faci it absolutely uecemmary ta go La waîk to niake it a million. A mortal can neyer tell wbere he's going to be next in this life," said the moralist. -"No," replied the man with a bandage over his eye, -"especially if he's learning to ride a bicycle." -I think," said the unsophisticated man, "that Groggins must be quit& a power in city politics; 1 was passing his place yesterday, and I noticed in his letters the word 'pull' on bis door" -She bas learned all she knows," said the mother of the musical infant prod igy, -"in four bessons. " 1"Yes, " replied the eminent musician; " but tbink ef the hundreds of lessons it -will loci lown li te f&Wtby , IIegiat I itt aity natielsb nuvt h uttt a l ast ments. A ctae zl,,vtyer n = 'st w yul h. formedIf rqutie Speclal tteu.-, tlan v I.eglen7 as in the past, to piysi cal cgultr, suÏd ta comlmercia work jîy a' specialoin lubathL. The Instte thIs 'eea was veyaucceseful tu the exam=utiôajs. 15 hasa P, rdug room sudeafrst iý4assyua sium. Te fees aie $2 per termù ar$6 a ycar for toma upuils;, sud 7e. ae;"orpup.- outoide. Aibpplssh ,ld.presentthée first day, -sd tos- ntudngttak"e auy, eau natannet yearsd, if Posai Wht~' .i. T»x , PiniA, . in co.Anectlôj With pipes- bardy~ ~iysubstance. with 4the exception of the frýgrnt weed Is flowin, general use, la ciývllized ctoun tries, at lest; but-it l -fc wlwot Pasting ln everysinokero hat -that, taking the. World..altogether f rôný lis' dawniig to the present- tietbco as it iW known. to-da' m a e t e. least favored substance of ail for filling the pipe bowi. Innuerale are the substances that have been adopted at various times by nat ions on the boundaries of civiliza- tion or in far-away parts of the globe for pipe fillings. Here, however, is a Partial list, and one that bas a good deal of aovelty about it. The bark of the willow tree, the leaves of roses, wild thyme, lavender, tea, beet roots, maize, the roots of the walnut tree, rush, wood dust, hemp and opium. And when it cornes to pipes the variety of these consoling articles would make a list too long to be print- ed. Bamboo is used for almost every- thing in China, and the Chinese pipe stems are naturally of bamboo. In India leather takes the place of bam- boo. Jasmine is used for pipe stems in Persia, and in Asia Minor cherr wood is a favorite material. Russian pipes are generally envelop-. ed with a metallic tissue to guard against fire, and nearly ail have covers, these bein.g precautions that are ad- visable in a country where s0 lawe a proportion of the houses are buîlt of wood. -Perhaps the most curious pipe bowls in the world are to be found in the Phillippine islands, where, gold being the only metal handy,, the inhabitants hollow out the nuggets and make use of them for their pipes. The pipes of old Rome, as antiquarians know, were made of bronze and iron, and the American Indians-, it is needless to say, used stone. EXÈiJO TORU ALE -0d Vill.ageL without reserve. Pursuant te the powers and directions centained in the last will sud testament cf Francis Jordan, deceased, there will be affered fer sale by Public Auc- tien, by Thos. Poucher, auctioneer, at Wil- son's hetel, Claremout, at 2 o'clock, p.=., on TUEDAY, SEPT. l7th, 1895), the following valuable farm, namiely: West -y4cf the west 34 of Lot No. 2, and the west 3'y cf the west % of Lot No. 3, all in the 3rd Cou. in the Township of Uxbridge, in the County of Ontario, coutaining i15o acres be the samie more or less. On the prenaises there are a jood frame oeeasd a haif storyr dwelling, kîtchen sud woodshed attached 2 good barns witht stene stabling uder- neath. iBoth lots are watered by a running stream ; 2 orchards ; aise a quantity cf good cedar, 8 or xc acres, sud about 8 or xc acres ùf bârdwood. -The property 18 eligibly situatedl about 3 miles froua Claremout- sta- tlr4# C P H. sund'S miles front Stouffville, G. ER, $oil - "a god tay 1loam;- faily feuced >forming a maut deâiiable property for anyoue -desiriug te purclase a fim. Aiea a bouse sud lot bu - the -Village -of Term's,-xo per "cent. ý at, the time cf sale ,ud oaer catit. additional wi urodays Sbreaftr;balancet .scirdb =fl aeonthae pr*ýenaie;With iînterestat' 5per ceut. ;orthe whole parchase mone may be -paid iica..Pin htlier>terms ud- paitbclarswill-bemade knowaaaStu itue cf-sale or may bejiad oc .appIcifon So the vendais'solicitors,,the, *siùaeer,, P. Me mont .O. Uezecutars'. VeadQrs' SolicatarsAuctioneer. Dated 6th August,_ îr89, Notièe Ç Ttdfr-fTVn <Public -notice is- hereby gîven that I bwýe; rnade'applicasaan forý the, trausfeý'af tovua tivrn ccu N,- b-,ùow bIaed hy Jolant Smith.of the Rahlroaà aose, Withy, ta niê, M. j. FOY~ Wbitlay OnL. Auguatt , 8Q57-35-ui. r rOR IVIN~G SLes Dreses% For Sale by leading Dry Good5D1eu qulls.it1àsMft d ielding,..-éonfbînnIng esdlly tio foldsjr, 4'igivj iproper ihaji.ta Tii. oply- 'Sklrt Bone that ýMa*Y h. w. wlthout lnjqrye The Celebl-ated Fetherbone Oorsete" are oorded WM h this What~'is~ Castorila s Dr.Samuel ptch«e's p leÀptkm aud Obildren. it contansneither Oiýum, 2 other lNarcotto substa>ce. I ja -~i for Paregore, Drops, 0Sooting *u,tanD> ii laPlessant. -ilsgaanel hry- lilions ofMXothem a$rldsryWor] feverhhess. Castorlaprvtsùdsa cures Dlarrhoe andm Wind <Jii.Cash teething troubleio, cures eoalaon" am CasIons asslrniates the. foo. egàlae sud boweIo# givIng healthy ad sua Castoria& Camorla asu eoeelelïna edcieie for .- dieu. Kothorahave rePeatedly told me of Its good eifetupon thefrcbldren." Du. G. C. OsGooD, LioweD, Mm_ "Castorlals the bestremedy for chldren of 'whichlamacqnaited. hhopetheday Isuot fardiststwheumotherwlflconslderthereal lnterest of thlr chdre, aud use Csstorla lu- stead of thevarfaaquacknostrunîwhlchae destraylng thelr boVed eues, by'torelgoplum, morphine, sootblug syrp sd other hurtf i agents davu theïr throats, thereby aunln Uhm to prematuregravesf" Di. J. Y'. KINmoHEO, Conway, Ârk. TieOetu Copry i kuown to'lge." lilBo. Olit metb&ve spakea hi eu-la Shh utld sud tmhw b w o prodààètsyweto b mmaits aicastcia haý îgovrm*podcUaci tIb fias A.Sc S. R tives hi Little Elsie looking at the giraffe at the Zoo-Oh, mamma! They have made that poor thing stand in the sun, havent they ? Mamma-Why do you say that my dear ? Little Elsie-Look at ail its freckles. Mrs. White-I told Mrs. Green about my troubles last evening. You do net think she will tell themn to anybodyl else do you ? Mrs. Gray-I don't know. She mnakes no secret of her age. you know, and a woman who will tell her age will tell anything. Landowner (to party bobbing in the .stream)-HalIo, there, don't you see that sign, -"-No fishing here ?" Angler -Yes; ain't it ridiculous ? Fine fish- ing here; just look at that for a string (holding up a dozen or twenty big fel- lows) beauties ain't they ? The chap who stuck up that sign evidently didn't know what he was talking about. The firet 'boat& were locked tbrough the Canadian Sauit Ste Marie canal. Ask for Minards sund Sale no ather Mr. W 8 Cbapman, a Young drnggist of Hamilton, wis drowned. Why suifer' frorn weak nerves, want cf ap- petite, and general dobility ? letting tb. loua Of sloop »Ind rest impoverish the systom sud thin the blaoui, when suoh a .re#d4 m Wti one remedy au Nonbrep & Lniea'QuAà u Wine may ho Lad at- any dru4 stois-'This article is r.oomrnonded bW thebighoat mem- bers of the medical faculty mincassa 0< fiudiý, gestion, general d.bility, lots-a'o appetil& so speoiaily beneficisltao hildren q.nd deli- cate females, and- ta business men, student9, and thoso who have mach brain work. e would say, "'Nover b. wlthout it." 15 wli strenÉthepi yon, keep your system in regular order, and enable yan toasuooasfuqlly grapple with the work you have ta do. Itle splea- saut ta the taste. snd couis nothinî in- ~o - o eMost. deiaeconstitution.l be oask for the 'Quinine Wlne, pry ared by Northrop & Lyman, Torouto, have ure you liel be satiafied thàt,ý youn-âv ù Ival ne for yonr alnoney. Drug. 41. erace, . mles. tiemani ; Iad-. on fer 0e an ebthe deivep 1 limâts by saUme- horst It la FoR Iparm Property 1 STYLE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy