Ontario Community Newspapers

Newmarket Era , May 26, 1893, p. 1

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

NEWMARKET ca Friday HI JACKSON JT PRINTING REACHED iod expect I- In lWv J BAHlCi NORTH YORK AND ADVERTISER A A J- a AV MB- No taper o North York paid adTariw Single Copies Cents Each Newmarket Ont Friday May Terms Strictly in Advance within or J AT aBaTS fiXiTK RAFTS t muff 4 LU6M lO J- Mobile torn To King m I WOODCOCK Main WIDOH-IELD- a J fl JEK or b en 14 DB A TABT 46rJf 48 to 52 MAIN ST A CHURNS BARREL AND DASH Butter Makers can get everything required for milk and cream made of extra heavy material guarantee our own make Wash Tubs Pails Pins Baskets IN your orders for tioughing They will be attended to promptly and properly D a s fin AI EST D Our Coal Oik are the Best Obtainable American A BINNS Telephone No SO to WRIGHT CO Repairing dona MUSICAL Room h IMonou Keck lRVas AND MRS S6 Main DTQII od Goods KEIMAX Ms ibo tain Given Turn receive ifaiQ SlCf Box PO BH- MILLARD Main PAINTING- JOHN HEWITT and JOHNSON Mala Orders j Co Aod prices South A MOSIER- GROOME Park Ave Hour Pointer Paper etc- 1 E WOODiaMi lain WEST Mala WM KENNEDY Main IT WORKS IRWIN Main a w C ALLAN Cor- if DELAY BALSAM THE r tOctrsTatiii- A in Up rr Tea will v allt Tet Voids ftca tiw Richards flrtiffeniM The top of my head was bald or several years I used LINIMENT and now have as good a jrOth of hair as I ever had Mrs Albert McKay River I have used LINI MENT freely on my head and now have good head of hair after having been bald for several years It is the hair restorer ever found Mrs C Anderson Stanley Bridge P E I ST750000 0 19 RICHMOND 1CFOHT0 Photos Photos I G PEPPIATT Mr o ho On I Hon I How grow with long to for ft jot I to you ir In Tain wo wilted ForpnunisetUUd Till At with year studied daisy A ad k hi sod A credit to tba race to inspire frith hope willnigh To the t from luting yoa onr bntha we Well fltrive from memorial to kept in the background while yon were elected To truuet the the fltaU And faopod that would bo Which needed no IraaJUing or debate Oar borne joy are flighted Our hoped blighted Ho longer waU you though to -rclite- not ffiib the ted So long as oar were Rat tbe vampix and made And left In woe Oar where lore centered The dire faa entered With the raftrta THE LEAD Main MAKINO KtSiW the York feli leaded A COKyECTIONERY A Main It vjmd OJ WILSON Main North Hod End 13LACKtiMITUISO A MANNING SON MISS J- wii Ueotle CUrriNG FITTING- Church LATEST STYLES No Kill SEWING And to inra outwork cqnillo to work and Car to the of It- aid lo aq ttlbaiiaed and la Crayon or OIL SPECIALITY Mr aim will not be to flood be neighbor hoot cheap but In to give complete and Old JOHN Ualn ROOMS Hun JKWKLLISUV CLOCK iulnaj p i HPTKL- HOTEL J Prop PIANO TUNING ALL for will be wlc Me Cuh J II A MR A STOUFFEB CONCERT BARITONE Cuaa SEEDS CLOVBR ill oilier Field Seeds In balk 2 St c- lo Culture In Open lo or of INSrllANVK wjintiH4 PBRWNS Music I c It HOTEL cop ROYAL litlsjc IIooju US Vein JarrUto had all Mill AGAIN as usual P KITTO IN CANADA O0LUUBIA MANITOBA maim Old J f w Kb l A FIRE INSURANCE r- of ud Hi lliuK ia I MISS ilule TNtbrr 357 AT SC Wuilr And BACON HAMS IAK J is I ftlilllfitfyand Im- Ufttu jpHOPPINO a li-Ef-com- K of Mill RANTED- to ftur and We In which Are only by Of IVa or tftliry Dial Jo MONEY TO LOAN on eacurfiir DAVID LLOYD for Ak Mar it flf 4itn Mliii1 In ArtvcUtlw In morning Our low in noon their Tbowail of iha widow ajon Id their Cry aloud to God traffic raw hurt that broYsn orpbaDi betoken to In their manifold Can from afar hen a danger ear If approach a cry them to quarantine era appear But the of drink can wick at and blink At the cry that by then If we had the The power to roto well as to pray Oar would reach lion Oar land from drink- on res today Ho policy Or No dodging tha to de lay time la not far In the near looming When women the ehall Tote And that oar blood Shall be weighed in balance by be oat While Id it Will wake from And ahaka off oar with a about P Hill iiay loth Co Wo Our Is that a strange question boys and girls Did you ever think about the real meaning of each word when you kneel down beside mammas knee at night and repeat the prayer be ginning Our Father who art in Heaven The chosen for you to learn this month is one thai may make us all stop and think about this matter Perhaps some of you will say That is too strong a pic ture Drink surely does not work all that harm in the world But the half has never been told of the sor row sin and suffering caused by King it DKNNKS CRIST Mil J VA Mold J AS Main ta tot isacitiNG TbtiMudAfl INHlltKH 1 upward at low LIFE JLY19AN At lb WORTH YORK RKCISTUY- J J Iorwu ACK1KG I I Ave if- ml Alcohol Just this morning I have been reading a story about two little I suppose I for my dinner One boiled potato I but you mustnt tell I always liked you Ill cat your good things seeing its you I never had an orange before- I dont feel as though I ought to take thai Yes indeed sobbed Grace you must eat it and mine too Why have them every day I want you to home with me to dinner tomor row Mamma would be so glad to have you Oh I mustnt said looking frightened and please dont tell folks how we for mother would not have anyone know be cause you see father drinks I wouldnt have the school children find it out for anything- I oughtnt to tell but I feel as if I didnt weigh so much already though Im eating a lot It makes me feel to tell somebody Im so heavy in my heart sometimes it seems as if I couldnt stand it May I carry my orange to mother She never has anything good to eat- Yes indeed said Grace and she prepared her own and compelled to eat it then went with her to the cloakroom and saw the pre cious fruit safely bidden in the pocket of a cloak which said had to be put in a safe place every night or it might get sold for rum Youre awful good to me said the grateful child putting wheT thin hand on her schoolmates shoulder It seems as if Id go somebody be sides God and mother to care for me Sometimes think folks that have good fathers dont drink cant be thankful enough Ju see her I and closing the door she stood against it pulled down her stockings and showed a score or more Of bums some healing others run ning sores that is where father heats the poker hot oh so hot then holds if on till I want to die Some times he has my little sister to do it She cries and begs him not to make her but he says hell kill if she dont You see he hates me because I always take mothers part and guess he hates us all when hes been drinking Oh I why why do the good folks let the bad folks sell rum Mother says of folks who call themselves christians vote far license and thousands of innocent children and mothers have to suffer If the voters had riot pokers held on them for a while I guess theyd want the miserable whiskey put out of the way I wonder how theyd like to have their wives or their nice good mothers dragged round by their hair as my mother or kicked downstairs But they pretend to love the Lord and believe it right to sell liquor Come out quick 1 said Grace She was not used to suffering and sad and the sight of the bums made he feel sick It seemed as though she could not breathe in the cloakroom and it was not much better in the school room She knew her father voted for high license because she had her aunt who wore a white ribbon begging him not to Think of it her dear papa voting for whis key- The more she thought of it the worse it seemed until by the time school was dismissed she was neatly beside herself with grief and shame She only took time to whisper to Pray pray and Im sure something good will happen then she ran all the way home and finding he father and mother togeth er she delivered such a temperance lecture as they had not heard for many a day describing home as she had formed the picture by her schoolmates account of it giving her story of suffering almost word for word and laying the whole blame upon the good men who voted for license Then Grace threw her self into her mothers arms and cried as though her heart would break If a cyclone had struck the house Mr Marshall would not have been more astonished As his only daugh ter who was usually so quiet and loving stood before him with flaming cheeks flashing eyes and clenched hands all his fine theories regarding high license seemed to vanish before her burning words- The united efforts of father and mother were needed to quiet the deli cate child who had taken her first the their throughout and rejoicing that were never to go live with father unless he reformed High- license has no greater enemy than Mr Marshall and the are afraid the town wU soon vote no license Perhaps our boys and girls can try to their fathers story and ask them ail to vote against this drink being sold in our land Will you do thin today Sistbr A Dolls Long Trip Ottawa May The practice of sending post cards around the world is not an unusual one but It is not often that a rubber doll is sent travelling all over the continent Yesterday there arrived from the Pa- chic coast one of these articles of which all kind of- tags and badges were attached in addition to the cus tomary female attire Judging from the history written on the tags tbe little one has undergone considerable travelling Last fall this doll which bears the name of Miss Green was dropped into the mail at Win chester Mass bearing a lag on which were the words The climate of New England is too severe for the child- pass her to the Pacific Coast for winter This began her travels and Since then thedqllhas been continually on the more She attended mail clerks banquet in Denver where she got a complete new outfit in the clothing line On she went a short time in Montana and California then up to British Columbia and from thence Winnipeg and Ottawa Her hundreds of postage marks by the different mail clerks whose hands she his passed through while around her tags bearing the efforts of budding One fit the Ottawa tags is a pais to the House of Commons gallery but House is not sitting it bears the words Come The newspaper badges which she catties are in number arid embrace Kansas City papers Colorado Montana California and British Columbia sheets and on each is printed a kindly greeting to the little one and a fond farewell The maM went home to Win chester on Tuesday Host In World Cud Party The card party In the private par lor may be but a harmless evening diversion to the young lady who gives it an innocent refuge for the and stupidity which cannot con verse because it will trot take the trouble to think but to some of her guests be fatal food for a passion which grows to an insanity not second to the appetite for strong drink and which its victim will gratify at any cost The whole of a game of cards In the parlor or saloon turns upon the chance involved whether it be the mere delight of winning or the substantial stake and what essential difference is there between playing for five dollars in a saloon and play ing for the prize bought with five dollars But the passion acquired and encouraged in case has led many a young man to the other The Golden Rule I USED BY HIS WORSHIP THE JUNIOR OF OUR IN COLE BRATINO MAJESTYS BIRTHDAY via J Jul ITAAHjIt Wiitjij relate ft public It if CO- far bin be Sj of L lion food v fey of w to to Him Li tut MOW Jvtiu 1AKK qtanlky J CO SCOTT- Iiac And CHOW ROOM iddlfltrJfl MASON Brick layer WOOLEN MJIJ4 STORK I ojnJ Coin turn out wU Good Strii if raui Sump or to ERREYNOiOSMANAGER 1 RICHMOND l0 fit llnifil In J Pine Tree Grist MiJls PRACTICAL MASON Win Trlrioutof4 iiiTAftLiunBu -OAPlTAt- AND 10000000 DOLLARS ONK MASON Cor tilt abort HUNTER I1LTCULR8 J- ARMITAO WATSON at j Mil Urn ftddftrj Gristing Chopping Chopping Done Daily At he Per lkro tor it of DEC- frier fa J to In Cbir Emulsion li- j a I I a It 1 M to I in SICKLY CHILDREN i- J COUGHS AND COLDS l irHltlion of the ilirk I Die and ataMdtl4A school girls which you will be fectly true I I do wish you would help me finish my dinner said Grace Marshall You see baby wanted my lunchbox so mamma put my dinner in a paper She said that would save bringing home a box this rainy day but she put up such a lot I cant cat it Come over here and help Thank you youre good replied Trewie but Ive had my dinner I dont care if you have said Grace you might pity me for mamma says I must not throw food and Ill be sick if I eat alt this Ill bring it to desk and put it in your mouth and in iwo minutes she was by Trestles side dividing her and lunch giving each two tongue two square of cake and an orange But now covered her ace with her thin hands and did not even touch the food Grace put her arm around her and said Come now be a good girl You will have to go for the doctor for me if eat it all turned toward her while the tears rolled over her cheeks and asked would you do if you never never in your life had enough to eat What if you felt all gone and empty through the day and woke up in the night and there was something gnawing gnawing inside but you Mustnt even get up and eat the raw potatoes because there wouldnt be anything for next What would you do Why I cannot I think I should die replied Grace and shocked she saw more plainly than ever before how poor and white were hands and face Yes but supposing you couldnt die Then my mother I couldnt leave do lesson in the worlds great sorrow A sad sad yet per- could iheysooihe her until when she cred wildly Will you do it ayain Will my dear papa do it again he replied Never never my child I will not vote for license as long I Then she fell asleep and as her parents watched and heard her moans they looked at our nations great curse In a different light from that by a highlicense stand point Grace was not able to go to school the nest day but her went in hi carriage and brought and another little girl to eat dinner with her He also made enquiries and found that little could be done for Welden family as Mr would sell everything even food sent for liquor The way for assistance was opened in an un expected manner One evening the bell rang violently and Mr Marshall on opening the door found who had run all the way from home and could only gasp Hes killed my dear mother when she seemed about to fall Mr Marshall caught her and grve her to his wife while ho hailed a passing carriage and was soon at home Mrs was lying at the foot of flight of stairs insensible He her to the hos pital where it was found that she was nearly covered with bruises and several bones were broken but life Taking two he returned to the house and took Treaiiea three little sisters whom found bidden in a closet home with while the drunken was under lock and key He was afterwards tried and sen tenced to two yean imprisonment When Mrs was wcil enough to work Mr Marshall took her to his comfortable cottage on a quiet street where she found her four children dressed Id new With Its great boulevards parks squares and gardens Us avenues lined with stupendous lecture its vast hotels and gorgeous cafes its trees and flowers and peat promenades Us shops and its restau rants Paris has become the head quarters of the luxury of Europe and of the whole civilized world For luxury invites luxury and if Paris had remained the picturesque miserable and prodigious city which Victor Hugo had described in his novel Notre Dame Park- the whose narrow streets and mysterious gables were Impressed with the trage dies and struggles of ten centuries of history and with the souvenirs of twenty revolutions It would never have attracted those countless visitors from the Old World and the New who are as a rule neither poets nor thinkers nor artists but who never theless contribute to the wealth and splendor which make Paris what it is the modern Athens or the modem More completely than any other city Paris realizes the conception of the Athenian republic lull of tight and joyous hum sung by the poets sculptured by the statuaries idealized by the painters employing for the happiness of its children all the re sources of the sciences and the aits to all feet alike its staircases of white marble and presenting against the back ground of a tranquil blue sky the pediments of its palaces and in temples The illusion is all the more complete because Paris seems at first sight to be wholly given up to pleasure The number of people of leisure in Paris is so great that unless we made a very thorough and minute examination of the facts we might be lempted to imagine that the emancipation of humanity had reached its apogee that the prole tarian had been forever freed and the iron arms of indefatigable machi nery substituted in place of the feeble arms of man Therefore in the sunnyspring days we see citizens of this modern Athens exclusively employed in watching the bursting of the buds in the ireclined avenues of the city admiring the groups of stat uary that adorn the gardens or examining curiously the graceful movements of rare exotic turds and beans that ate kept for their diver sion in the menageries of the republic We see citizens accompanied by their wives and children strolling through the galleries of Louvre where the masterpieces of art of nil ages and of all countries have been cotleced together for Those who are of a devout turn of mnd find temples open and through the fumes of incense they see the walls decorated with sumptuous paintings On the Seine swift steam- gondolas shoot through the arches of the hridges carrying calm citizens to and fro In ihcgarden of the Tul- Icries the fountains dance in the sun light and their basins are not covered with bits of floating orangepeel nor are they surrounded by dirty and ex pectorating boys In the Champa the black branches are tipped with tender green buds which give to the masses of trees when seen from a distance the delicate powdery appearance of pastel has come Paris has awakened to a new life The city is full of sunshine and flowers and air is redolent with the perfumes of nature and of art of of Harpers Magazine Proper Fool for Invalid When a sick person has a temper ature of lot or over he should be fed upon liquids only writes Elizabeth Robinson in the first of her valuable papers on Life id an Invalids Room in the April Home journal The power Of the stomach to digest food is impaired and there is no use in filling it with a mass solid food which in its weakened state it is not able to take care of properly fleslde this or because of this there is usually little appetite and the sufferer turns away in disgust from delicacies that would seem irresistible in days of health It is a common idea that a person 5 being fed upon fluids is receiving very little nourishment and in fact is in some danger of starving Those who cherish this belief do not know that all foocl is converted Into a liquid slate before it can be absorbed into the system In giving a sick person we are oftly trying to save nature trouble and relieve her from extra exertion when it is accessary for her to husband her strength and resources We do this by presenting the food to the stomach in such a form that it can be easily acted upon by the digestive organs It must be digested and assimilated before it can nourish the body so it useless to give more than can easily be disposed of From a quarter to a half pint of liquid food once in every two hours is ordinarily sufficient Children in the farmers see that their fences are all up before the animals are turned out in the spring and will never fall into bad habits A farmer who has good fences breachy beasts As soon as a child is born the first question which presents itself is its initiation into human family The reigns supreme it is for the father to say whether the little lifebud shall grow up to become a citizen or of the Middle Kingdom In accordance with family law which is supreme in both for the Emperor and for His meanest subject until the child has been lifted up by the father it has theoretically no existence therefore that infanticide or the failure to provide the approval of the As male children are a means of support in old age they are useful and rarely if ever destroyed Daughters how ever responsibility and an ex pense and are frequently exposed Obviously l hey are not overwelcome in the Chinese home Mothers of the poorer class exhibit considerable anxiety as to the matter and frequent ly consult the neighboring josshouse which of course has a panacea for all woes The priest throws up the sticks n in order to ascertain whether tbe tree which represents the woman in the underworld bears white or red flowers If white then some thing must be done to change the earth for as surely as the sun rists to her no male children shall be born But what is to be done The remedy is certainly a curious one It is an illustrattonofthefamiliarhomceopathic principle that like cures like In such a case the child of another family must be adopted in order to ward off the long line of females which threatens the welfare of the house This process is known as grafting Thus it turns out that a girl not wanted in her own home is at least permitted to live in another But even then there is a surplus and the mandarins are at their wits ends to stem the fearful tide of number of benevolent Chinese merchants have devised a plan which is certainly charming considered both from the point of view of ingenuity and charitable intent The little girls are brought up in asylums which are practically female universities Although deserted by the families the authorities take great pains to obtain their pedigrees which are hung up over their cots and are of course invaluable for future use As they grow older these children are carefully trained and elaborately educated Arriving at a marriageable age they have an enormous advantage over the average Chinese woman who never receives any education whatever unless belonging to the wealthy or official class Indeed paradoxical it may seem very few Chinese can even read or write and the little foundling carries to her husband the one great boon which is the ideal however remote of every Chinese heart an education Harpers The absurdity of the Cana dian game protection law says the Pioneer is seen at Niagara where wild ducks are very numerous Tbe South side of liter with American who shoot at every bird within reach while the Canadians are prohibited from both sport and the profit and must content themselves with the spectacle- The unto thing is seen in the fishery regulations Canada does the protection act and the Yankee scoops up the fish Minards liniment etc A large number of people were drowned during a panic on a ferry boat near Russia Sunday The T of T are to have a brass band The town in struments have been granted for use by the new band aA Philadelphia Reading engine exploded on the Lebanon valley Saturday killing the engineer and two A London cable says that it is possible that within a month the present restrictions on Canadian cattle trade will be removed asa A company is being formed with a capital of to prose cute mica mining in Ontario The headquarters will be in Detroit The damage by the freshet in the neighborhood of estimated at Kami ere have given up ploughing until June The news from the over flowed districts of Arkansas and Louisiana shows a distressing state of The crop is said lo be ruined Owing to a collision with the steamer City of Hamburg off the coast of Cornwall Saturday the ship Countess Evelyn sank and lives were lost The residence of Mrs Frank McCabe at Banff was stroyed by fire Sunday night and her children aged and perished the flames Ottawa May An order-in- council has been passed granting the claim of the Northern Pacific Rail way for on account of mail carriage In Manitoba K Salt has taken a drop of cents per barrel at Sagiuaw making the price cents per barrel This is the lowest price the history of the industry in Michigan a The damage by the flood in Cleveland is estimated at The water is now subsiding The railroads in Pennsylvania and Ohio claim to have lost The sublet of the Guelph Cartage Co were burned Satuday night Two houses were burned Loss over aooo Small Insurance- A tramp has been arrested on suspi cion Winnipeg May All wheat seeding throughout Manitoba is now completed and many of the fields are quite green Many reports say that the crop is quite as tar advanced as last year Coldwateh May Early this morning Mrs Jacob living Quincy township committed in suicide by saturating her clothing with kerosene and then setting them on fire She was somewhat de mented About weeks ago Mr Bap- of Victoria Harbor hap pened to sit down on a sewing ma chine oil can that was on a chair The spout ran up into thigh and blood poisoning set in from which he died on Sunday Klcihmjrc May Yesterday while a farmer named William Kurtz was walking past a revolving circular saw his clothes touched saw and before he could extricate himself or assistance arrived the unfortunate man was literally cut to pieces Rock Ark May A box containing was unearthed at Arc Ark yesterday by Dr George E Petty under the house of Charles P an eccentric and miserly old bachelor who died ten years ago The house was bought by Petty Montreal May A couple of rascally card gamblers decoyed a ver dant into betting his money on the game on the Toronto express Ian night They fleeced him out of Among the passengers was Hon Mackenzie Howell Minister of Militia who compelled the rascals to disgorge money they had stolen from the agricultural The Owen Sound Advertiser remarks Between seven and eight hundred tons of freight have accumu lated at the P sheds and in cars ready for shipment on the open ing of navigation The same paper observes The three steam- Manitoba Alberta and A thabasca are all ready for the seasons busi ness and will probably leave next Montreal May StarNews cable All the cattle per Allan line steamship have been slaughtered at Liverpool The lungs of each animal were ex amined by the veterinary experts appointed for that purpose and no irarc of or other diseases has been found A state ment has been given out to that The Mr Robert Gordon of Mono Tp has been missing from home for three weeks and bis friends are exceeding ly anxious to get some clue to bis whereabouts He is about years old about five feet nine inches in height rather ruddy complexion He was last heard of at hotel where he took breakfast about Friday ant and his not been heard of beyond the fact that a stranger has been seen since between this and Cookstown He had on a brown checked coat and vest blue duck pants and black slouch hat He was occasionally more or less Persons knowing his where abouts will please communicate with his father Mr J Gordon PO liniment cuxeaPiHnPi

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy