Ontario Community Newspapers

Dundalk Guide (1877), 8 Nov 1877, p. 1

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lDulululk Guido Medium for Advertisers. . "r. "tirtoB" "1sz um, - "DONDALE GUIDE,” LEST STYLE OF THE ART FOREIGN AND fOS'l' APPROVED KINDS- I)Inululk Guido» tt depend own being satidUd by It." In their cordon. The STATION, NEW 'ossesses Great Facilities ob Department. JOE WORK READING xxx-1'31. cuutainl a vast MO " M Promptitude Thoodies in FAMILY NEWSPAPER LOCAL NEWS. Ts" I't 'STAGE FREE COLUMN PAPER up want-I GREATEST iitt T ll E ge Circulation Parties win-hing should sub-tail» for he ""f DIR Ii. Pun; 01.00 at Ann Gr daring " “all 0] wakes it u null-m q )ppusito MARKET 113mm, PRESSES, m an. Allwhomugood slouch: tho vary I up In {In very belintylo, Ill DUN DALE, IN ADVANCE. AND " III THE E mronuzm. THE RATES OF ADVERTISING. t?etttetuaau-car,u, peryurJQ Qum- eolI-l, per paw " {kneel-In. " s............." Dali-[y notice. of hinha, Inning". deaths. 'e all kind: of Iced newt, inaerted free uluhugc. ,__ MeV __-r- T"' .......... STRAY ANIMAL“. la, advarrtined three tech for 8t, the adverti-t not te ax- eoevl 8 lim Bari-m. Sulicim in Chmery & Insolvency, Notary Public. otbm.--NoAh Bmlway. Drug-villa. own“ Pan-out Hardware Shop. Proving-H Land Surveyor. Civil Engineer. 2rt,',,'gttft laud Agent. Couveyaneer, or... huh“. At ttte 09“., Do. C's-oath“... ............N Do. thm-tha.............-." (and Hindi-onen- charged 8 at... par Line hat the timt "nation. and 2 eta. per hm fer oaah lab-toque“ i-rtio-brovie"r mm- tegtT:tl,T; Solicitor in Notary uNic. f'orveyamser,ae, micleneo-Dnmldk. Univonity Silver Menlalitrt. Trinity College. Toronto, And M miner of the Grunge of Phyuieunl amlSnrxeonl a! Ont-no. 015cc --.DuMnlh, thtt. Cupid" and Frnmtsr. ‘Rewiriug lone at his liq). Sash and panel doors made to or. deer. in. Remand-er the "and-two doom “In. the Putt (Mice, Mam than. .. . . .. .. . . .. . .Dl'umu. Marriage tkrtifieates and Licenses, tu-tarmy on hand at the POST OFFICE, DUNDALK. Price only $2.00. 'rERMB:--tt in: you in Advance. " SL5. af not paid within two months. 'il Adana-Ink. any» when manta-aim! by written hummu- to the century. an banned until inhalant. Ind chased " my- nlu rum, J. TOWNSEND. Fired Life lmnnnce, Manny, Loan and (non-I'll Agent, Main Street, [)nnulalk. Builder's and Contractor‘s N()'I‘I(?IC. All kinds of timber tor building purposes constantly on hand " the lowest prices. T. B. GRADY, D. C. w. Bil-M. March, 15th 1877. y-T The lab-crib" in prepared to offer his oer- virus Stone Manon to any one rm uiring the “Inc. All Work Juno in n 2'lil"ll,'c'r't' Every 'l‘hursday. Banister, Ammey-nt-an, Solieitor in Chunk-cry. Gmveytuteer, ten, Poulett St. Owen Sound. hn 87 [int-du- ae.eomm?oation for the public. Tho but Vinni- nu hand Late of Guelph. mmER AND DRESSWR Opposite the Pelt Otfiieo, Mars 81“.". . . DUNDALK. February 8. 1877. DIVISION SONS OF TEMPERANCE N0. 410. n3” attention ppm to the Dinpcuing Physicians’Prescriptions AND FAMILY RECIPES Mall, Jun. go, 1877. - v-I2 Inner. The Dundalk Division Sons M Temperance - every Tuesday evening at half-past un- o'clock. in he Orange Hall. T. Bunny. W. P: J. Towsend, B. ti. m All Guano! Hour comma, fut Sal. a the DUN DALE GEM MILL AboCon Meat, 3503“.” It. It law Ran such plea-Ire in informing his [net-m ad the public genunlly, that he u t'igr"d todo althistds M General Blacksmn ing. " tho bow worn a his nun] low rates “Ming . spoeialitr. Dmstm, Chemicals. Iain". Dyes, Patent Median”. . and Proprietary Artitt1etr Medical Hall ! BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Paul-r, I. 1877, _..... HENRY scumxx, Corner of Queen and Vietorsa Stream “whit. May 3, 1877. . cf. THE VULCAN WORKS, 1hmalb. Aug!“ 2 WT Miss Gokey, OWEN SOC N D ANGLO' AMERICAN HOTEL, DC N DALK. a! maiden» quality, " Iowa: who. Flour! Flour! Notice to the Public. GEORGE BUTHE RFOR D, MAITIAN D MCCARTHY. I. W. FROST. LL. B. RICHARD CLA RE, JAMES HANNA ISAAC TRAYNOR, Dll. MCWXLLIAM. A consul» app" ot JAMES LAMON, DUNDALK ' Inuu’l swoon, lowly op- Railway Pun-cor 8tatioat, NORTH 51D. or Snu'n. McCcttocse, Prop J. J. MIDDLE“ tN, GUIDE " toe 8th. J. J. MIDDLETON. a inftrmteyr yu Mend; th. ' DUNDALK Gunnery, Ottiee and Issuer, ".10 A. G. HUNTER, Coxxxsszoxn m DWELLINGS & SHOPS TO RENT I will he " all times. ready to fill all orders in that department entrusted to me, or tsster.d .Auctiun Bales of Farm Property in Proton, Artemesia, Osprey, Melanethon or any Township in the County of Grey, at very moderate rates 31111 on short notice. To Rent, in the Town of Dumllnk. a first. elass Blacksmith Shop, in the m-ntre of the Village, only tifty yards from the Station. Applyto - - __--- - W I have a number of good Farms for sale. on any terms. Send your address and get my catalogue and prions, or call at the Farmers, and Mechanics' Loan, Lsud, and General Agency 19ttice, Dumlnlk. The but Companies in the Province "pro saluted. I hive now established in connection with the Farmers and Mechanics' Agency, of Dundnlk. an J. W. MORBOW. Licensed Auctioneer. One door South of the Anglo-American Hotel, Dundalk, Aug. M, 1877. y3l Cknn'vyn ll('(‘l', &:c. Tux Ounrm- Fun: lssrmxl'r. and MONEY Lou Auzm'v in the Tuwsxmr. J OS. MCARDLE, “Engine" done strictly private. Residence trnd mlnlrusa June 21, 1877, Gwen] Mangers. 38 King Show. East, Toronto. North of Scotland Canadian Mortgage Co. Expenm reduced . to the lowest possible tigum, uni the loan. put through. in the abort- to Initovgmhino. an] my “tie-lo in that line- lgoiin Mk.‘yrill_ be ordered $1,500,000 to lend in Canada at 8 per cent Interest. You the following advantages t You can " your own time for repayment. You can repay the loan by inatalment or by for your DRUGS, PATENT MEDICINES. Pam and OILS, MACHINE OILS, BRUSHES of All Kinds, . FANCY TOYS and TOILET ARTICLES. Biscuits and Confectionery. Teas, Tobmcoa, Ind pipes, inlays variety. The Proprietor is making thereto linen I speeiality and consequently can do better for his customers than: mm a: moral mambl-ndiu. a . est pemaibhr" space of time. Fume" if you want Money apply to one payment. You can pay otf the whole or any portion of the loan at any time hy givmg native and Interest " once cannon the portion paid. If you hue arranged to pay by instalment you will not be Iuhjecl to I heavy tine if you use not prepared to make the pay- ment and will amply be charged the Intern: on the arena. An Henge yemly payment of $147 torhn vents pays off a lotus of Go To Bolster's Auctioneering Department. 83tf Dundnlk. Sept. 13. 187T Notice to Blacksmiths. Sewing Machine Needles Auction Sales. 'rp' LL,” Books and stationery, MESSRS. PELLATT & OSLER, MONEY! Commissioner in the Queen's Bench, Vol. I. No. 41. ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS. GEO. RUTHERFORD. Town Lots for Sale and Village Lots For Sale GEO. RUTHERFORD. Agent, Main Street. Ihu1aalk Farms for Sale. qua-11y on application. HOPEVILLH, Co. off Grey. Plesherton, n: m Qunu‘n Bums, DUNDALK. --Br-- -BY- A. G. HUNTER, .. NE A. G. HUNTER. A. G. HUNTER. A. ll. IH'NTER, A. G. HUNTER. General Agent, y38 87 '21 Ah, yes, I know his spirit came, And told us not to weep When we should hear that he had gone Forever, gone to sleep. His comrades loved him, every one. Him they did not forsake; They did all things that could be done, B it him they could not keep. For his dear sake oh, let me pray That encn and every one Away, or home, may feel and any, "God's holy will he done." And if it is their late to tall, Away from home and friends, Oh, God, to every noble heart. Give wisdom from above. That they may love thy holy name, And keep thy holy laws t And he prepared to leave this world To meet their King and God. . Still comfort those they leave behind, And blessings to them give; Teach every one to look above Where reigns their God and King. Oh, God, his lonely sisters keep. From every danger free, And now in this athlete-d hour Bring back their thoughts to Thee. For thou art he who will console All those that sadly mourn, And will now trust in Thee, their Lord, Shall not be left forlorn. Oh, sweet wild flosvtrrsarmurt1 him well, Let not a stranger tread Too hasty near the lonely spot Where lays the dear one's head. Oh, winds, wait gently o'er the grave, Disturb his almnhers not; And tell him as you hurry on He ne'er shall he forgot. But sorrow now must reach our home- A brother dear is gune-- He left and, loving ones behind, His mission here was done. Amid the struggles of this life He bravely worked and fell; Away from every kindred heart That loved him, oh, so well. Strangers have laid him in the gran, There in a foreign land. ou, how I wonder if he came To bid us all farewell. For the Guide. IN MEMORY OF PETER hieWIEE, My broth-r! Oh my dear! I um now left alone In trouble. in . foreign land, For you I weep and mourn. If I had been there when he died, To dress him for his grave! Me thinks I would be sustirdUd In a. certain part of Ireland. a. long time ago, liveda wealthy old farmer whose mime was Brian Taafe. His three suns, Guil. liaum, Slramus and Garrett, worked on the farm. The old mun had a. great affection for them all; and, finding hirusclfuntit for work, he resolved to hand his farm over to them and sit quiet by the fires/tde. But as that was not a thing to be done lightly, he thought he would just put them to their trial. He Would take the "insure of their intelligence and then of their affec- tum. Preceding this order, he gave each £100 and quietly waited to see what they would do with it. Well, Guilliaum and Shawn: put their S100 ontat interest,every penny; but when the Md man questioned Garrett where his £100 was, the young man said. “I spent it, father." “Spent it?" said the old man, aghast. "Is it the whale £100 t" “In this the reason yell waste the whole of it in a. your, ye prodigal Ir" cried the old man, and he trembled at the idea of his substance ever falling into such hands. “Sure I thought you told us we might lay it out as we pleased." Some months after this he upplied the lecund test. He convened his sons and addressed them solemnly I "I am an old mun, my children, my hair is white on my head, and it's time I was giving over trade and making peace with my sol," The two elders overflowed with sympathy. He then gave the dairy farm and hill to Shamus, and the meadows to Guilliaum. Thereupon these two vied with ouch other in expressions of love and gratitude. But Garrett sid never a word, and this, coupled with his hehnviour about the 2100, so mad. dened the old man that he gave Garrett‘s portion, namely. the home and the home farm. to his elder brothers to hold in com- mon. Garrett he disinherited on the spot and in due form. That is to say, he did not overlook him, nor pats him by; but even as spiteful testntors used to leave the disinherited a shilling, that he might not be able to say he had been inadvertently omitted, and it was all B mistake, Brian Tanfe solemnly presented young Garrett Taafe with a hazel stat! and a small bag. Poor Garrett knew very well what that meant. He shouldered the bag and went forth into the wide world with a and heart but a silent tongue. His dog Lurcher m for following him, but he drove him back with a stone. On the strength of the new Arrangement. Guillinum Ind Shauna married directly and brought their wives homo, for it w" . Inga house and room for all. But the old farmer wee not contented to be quite e cipher. and he kept finding fault with this and that. The. young men be. anie more end more impatient of this in- terference, and their wives fanned the times with {exude pertinaeity. So that the home Wes ditided and the very home of discord. This went on getting worse and tone. till It has one winter efternoon, Shunt“ iufied his father before the not, end aid: "I'd like to - whet would plain ye. If I had seen his face Brian Taafe’s Will. POETRY. DUNDALK, NOVEMBER 8, 1877. $1 per year in Advance. Maybe you’d like to turn us All out no you did Garrett." The old farmer replied with sudden dig. nity: "If I did m uk’. no more nun I gave." "What good was your giving it t" aid Guilliaum. "We get no comfort of it while you are in the house." "Do you talk in that wuy too?" laid the father deeply grieved. "If it was poor Gar- rett I had, he wouldn't use me so." "Much thanks the poor boy ever got from you!" said one of the women with venomuua tongue. Then the other woman, iinding she could count on male support, suggested to her father~iu-law to take his luck and follow his beloved Garrett, add. At the women's tongues the wounded parent turned at bay, "I don't wonder at anything I hear you say. You never heard of any good that a. Woman had th ltVid in-only mischief al. ways. If ye " who made such a. road, or built a bridge, or wrote a great history, or did a great notion, you‘ll never hear it's a. Woman did it; but if there's a duel with swords or guns, or two boys cracking each ,other‘a crowns with shillahtha, or a. secret let out, or a. character ruined, or a man brought to the gallows. or mischief made between a father and his own tled: and blood, I'll engage you‘ll hear a wumnn had some call in it. We needn't have rccuurse to history to know your doin's; ith, uudher our eyes; 'twas the likes o' ye two burned Troy, and made the king o' Leicester rebel against Brian Burn." "Oh, Shamus, will ye sit and hear me compared to the rebels? Would I rebel against Brian Born l" But she would not be paeifUd. "Oh, vol vol It ever I thought the like Ul be said of me, that Ill rebel Against Brian Born l" "Cauilliaum," said she. “I'll never stay a day undhor yam roof with them as would say I'd burn Throy. Does he forget that he ever had a mothér himself? Ah t tin a bad apple that despises the tree it sprung from." ing: “Sure LAI find him begging about the country." These shafts of eIOquence struck home; the women set up a screaming and pulled the caps " their heads, which in that part was equivalent to the gentle folks drawing their swords. "Dou't heed him avourneen," said Shawna: "he is an old man." As for the other, aha prepared to leave the house. All this hunted Slmmus, so that he told the wmuun sternly to sit. down, for the " fender would go; and upon that. to show they were of one mind, Guillimun deliber- ately opened the door. Lurcher ran out, and the wind and rain rushed in. It was a. stormy night. Then the old man took fright and humbled himself. "Oh, murther! murther! was it for this I married you, Gnilliuum Tuife t" “Ah! Shumus. Gailliattm, achreo, let ye do as ye will. I'm sorry for what I said. B're gal. Don't turn me out on the high- road in my old days, Guillianm, and I'll engage 1'll never open my mouth against. one o' ye the longest day I live. Ah, Slmmus, it isn't long I have tontay wid ye, anyway. Your own hair will be as wlnte as mine yet, plaise God t and ye'llbe thunk- ing Him yo showed respect to mine this night. But they were all young and of one mind. and may turned him out and barred the door. He crept away. shivering in the wind and rain, till he got to the lee side of a atone wall, and there he stopped and asked himself whether he could live through the night. Presently something cold and smooth poked against his hand; it was; large dog that had followed him uuuhsen'ed until he stopped. By a. white mark on his breast he saw it was Lureher, Garrett's dog, "Ah," said the poor wanderer, "you are not as wise in dog as I thought, to follow me." When he spoke the dog fondled him. Then he burst out sobbing and crying: Ah, Lurcher! Garrett was not wise either; but he would never have turned me to the door this bitter night, nor even thee." And so he moaned and lamented. But Lumber pulled his coat. and by this movemeutcon- veyed to him that he should not stay there all night; so he crept on and knocked at more than one door, but did not gain ad- mittanee, it was so tompestuous. At last he lay down exhausted on some straw in the corner of an outbouse; but Lumber lay close to him, and it is probable the warmth of the dog saved his life that night. - The next day the wind and rain eluted, I but this aged man had other ills to iUlttl against besides winter and rough weather. The sense of his sons' iugratitude, and his own folly, drove him almost mad. Some- times he would curse and thirst " ven- geance; sometimes he would shed tom that seemed to burn his withered cheeks. He got into another county and begged from door to door. As for Lurcher, he did not beg. He used to disappear, often for an hour " I. time, but dwsys returned, and with . rabbit or even I hate in his imouth. Sometimes the friends excthgsd ‘them for A gallon of milk, sometimes they ' roasted them in the woods. Lnrcher was! B. civilized dog, and did not like nw nest. _ Wandering hither and thither, Brian! Taste, came st hut within I few miles of! hishouse, but he soonhnd tttMIN) of wishing himsel! further " homit; harsh. met his first downright "tmir, and, molto say, he owed it to his had-heated Iona. Ono recognized him so thc'bthor of that rogue, Guillisum (Nah, who had cheated him in (Ill':",":'.', at shone. and another “the father of that thief Shunul, who had sold him A diseased cow, which had died the week after. Bo, for we frat time line. he we: out of hi- home. be M the night nupperlese, for hum did not lie close to. gether in that put. By and by the men went out into the yard and then the wife could not rennin her curiosity. "Why, good man," slid she, “sure you are too decent 3. mm to be ashamed of your name." Cold, hungry, homeless, and dUtmetod with grief " what he. had been and not was. mture gave way " hurt, and, unable to outlast the weary, bitter night, he lost his senses just before dawn, Ind hy mo~ tionless on the herd road. The chance: were he must die; but just at death's door his luck turned. LuI‘fr put his feet over him and his chin upon is breast. to guard him as he had often guarded Gareth coat. mud that kept up a little warnith in his heart. and at the very dawn of (by the door "Aht don't oh me that." he said pits pusly. It's a bad name I have, and ituned to be a good one, too. Don't is}: me, or maybe youll put me out as the others did for the fault of my two sons. It is hard to be turned from my own door, Llano from other honest men's doors, through the vil. lains," said he. "I'm too decent to be ashamed of it," said Brian. "Yes you are right; an honest man should tell his name, though they draw him out of Heaven for it. Inn Brian Taafe--ttmt was." of a farmhouse opened, Ind the mute: came out upon his busmeu, tnd saw nome- thiug unusual lying in the road, a good way off. Bo he went towards it, and found Brian 'l‘nafe in that conditioe. This fann- er was very well-to-do, but he had known trouble, and it had made him gharitable. He soon hallooed to his men, Brad had the old man taken in; he called his wife, too, and bade her observe an: it won I reverend face. though he was allin utters. They laid him in hot blankets, and when he had come to a bit gave him I warm drink, and at last a, good meal. He re- covered his spirits, and thanked them with a certain dignity. When he was comfor- table, and not before, they asked him his name. So the farmer was kmdly and said, "Never mind your name; fill your belly." "Not Brian Tnafe. the strong farmer at Comma $" “Have you a 5011 called Garrett t" "I had one," he replied. The women spoke no more to him but ran screaming to the door. "Here Tom! Tom t" As Lumber, a sympathetic Jog, tlew to the door and yelled and barked tivrecly in support of this invoeUioh, the hulluboloo soon brought the farmer runn~ ing in. "Oh, Tom, tuOore," cried the, “its Mister Tunic, the father of Garrett Tufe himself." (To he Concluded next week.) Of course there is a natural sympathy m--------------. with Sturdy's family. They are the inno- suicide in Btanler cent suffers for their fathers crime, but - , the result in all such cases is the same. The Huron Signal says t--A very and As regards the son we believe he had no affair occurred on the Babylon line in the definite ' of his fathers purpose, and township of Stanley on Tuesday of last we should like to say that of the daughter, week A young man named James Tem. butforthe fart that she was ins senses pany piston committed suicile by hanging him. to the whole tragedy, and showed by her self in a barn. On the morning in ques- coundnct that she lacked the common feel- tion young Templeton partook of breakfast ings of a woman in dealing with one ' f with the other members of the family as of her own sex. It is hard to say this, usual. After breakfast a younger brother but the facts lead to this inexorable con- went to a neiglsbor's to thresh, and it was lclusion. We can understand what the supposed that James had gone to the fUshl authority-even the tyranny of a father- to plough. When noon arrived the usual I would extend to, but wecannot understand warning for dinner was given, and tatteriwhy any daughter who had come to the waiting a considerable time, and the young years of understanding. should do a moral man not making his appeueance, his sister wrong. or be a party to an outrage. even ‘went out to the stable to see what was though acting under the instructions of a lkeeping him. After looking around for a father or under his threats. We respect time and not seeing anything of him, she parental authoritv in all things lawful and went to the barn to look for him there. I right, but there is no law human or devine 1 She found, however that the barn door 1 which excuses a child from doing wrong. l" securely fastened on the inside. This even at the dictation of a father. “or l circumstance ttroused her fears that 501119 l sense of what was right and wrong. and thing WM wrong. and she at ottee sent for I above all the feeling which is supposed to her brother to where he WBli threshiug. On _ exist in the female. should have revoltep arriving tlse brother burst open the door, _ agrinst the actions of which she has been and was horriiied to see James suspended [found guilty. It is a sad case but it ir from a beans in the Grit by a rope which l nevei'theless true. was around his neck. He was quite dead. l As to Lowes' complicity. the jury took He had pt into a buggy which was stand. I . lenient View of his case, and from the ing on the barn floor, had tied one end of fact that he refused to be a pnrtv to any the rope around " beam and the other ‘violenee to Miss Carr they were perhaps around his neck, and had jumped from the right. m, believe he had no proper idea brvcgy, thus letsvtng himself suspended in of the crime he was aiding and abbettinks mid azr. The deceased was a remarkably and this is pretty "mum; when his con- intelligent and steady young man, and no science mote him when he was asked to cause car. be assigned for his having tenni- be ., more active participator in it. The nated his existence in so deliberate and ordeal whigh he 1... passed willbe a warn. terrible a manner. Nothing unusual in ing to him all his life, and the lesson he his conduct had ever previously been no- has received ought to make him a better ticed. and he had never been heard mak- mm in; any remarks which would lead to the We have no with to dwell longer on this supposition that he cook-new my cane. In whatever aspect it is a moat pain. and: aist. 39 W ntritttl twenty-hum In! one. but in its result we feel that jus- of-cm |tieehuhecndono. Theverdictisajust The North Star says :-The number of I settlers uriving " Pu'ry' Sound thin fall far exceeds that of any of the previous year: since settlement commenced. In addition to the large increue, we my also Iddthet most of those who have "rived ere pmeti. cel Canadian who mwell qualified to sub- due the forest and can out homee for ¢henneln and their families in the Free Grant Territory. The number of Mono in the Perry Sound Am the you in l very le-alert twice the number ofUat "Ay, madam; I'm all that's left of you. It is truly grudting to notice the number wd sterling quantity of the men vho we now pouring into our settlement 5nd than is still room to: thouaaads moron Prom the Guelph Here-erg. We give to any the el min; report of this one. which occupied the whole of Thursday And the greater pert of Friday. We have refrained from making any remake on this extnordinnry one until the trill In over and the jury had returned their ver- diet The whole (not: the now before the public end we venture to any that noaimil- It cue has ever occurred in our erimin. nl Auntie. We need not go over the de. teile. but we may any in the words of the Counsel for the prosecution that it has no pusllel in Cum. or in Britain. The prisoner until he committed this crime, WM, to All annual tsppetmstMse,arepuuble citizen, n tirst elnaa mechnnic, nnd the father of n nume‘rons family. His relntiuns with Miss Cur, until . certain 'stage, Ip- peared to be honorable, um] it was only till she had finally declined to have my- thing to do with him that he seems to have formed the diabolical purpose of fore. ing her to be his wife. From that point " it is shown in the evidence. he laid his piana to trireet his purpose, and did it with a cunning. a foresight and determination that showed the character of the man, and proved him to be unscrupulous, unfeelmg and revengeful to the last degree. It was not the "mst of deep "eetion-it was not an insane infutution of love-bat it was a determined resolution to effect his purpose that led him to take the steps that he did and that urged him to commit all the dis. graceful acts that he did in the accomplish- ment of his purpose. We do not require to go over these. They have already been deeply engraven on the mind of the public. Sutfitse it to any that in eold-bloodeduetis, cruelty and pre-eoneeived brutality-and 1n the carrying out of these-tliere is no l similar cave in the reeordsoferime. What- ever the relations between the parties may l have been, when she positively rMuriel to u his wife, I high minded and honorable man would have Set rned to take any advan- tage of a poor, Weak woman, end would have left her to pun-‘ue her course. as he was free to pursue his own. But inst“ d of this we find there is adeep laid scheme for her abduction. which “u successfully carried out, and a enlmequont record of outrege which in all its shameful and dis. gusting details has never been equalled in the annals of crime in this or any other civilized country. The manner in which Miss Carr gave her evidence astonished everybody. It bore the impress of truth throughout her prolonged and exhaustive cross exumin- ations, and the learned and acute counsel for the defence could scarcely detect tsfiaw in it. This was conclusive evidwuce of the truthfulness, and even those who were in . elined to aympothise with the prisoner we e forced to admit that her story was consis- tent coherent, and in accordance with the fieta. It was such n tail of wrong doing " we hope never to he“ again. As to Lowee' complicity. the jury took . lenient view of his case, mm! tban the fut that he refused to be a pnrtv to Amy violence to Miss Carr they were perhnpa right. m, believe he had no proper idea of the crime he use siding Ind uhhetting, end this in pretty appurent when his con- science mote him when he we: Inked to be a more active participator in it. The ordeal which he he: planed will be I worn. ing to him 311 his life, end the lesson he ha received ought to make him . better We heve no with to dwell longer on this cute. In whatever espect it is a most pain- ful one, bat in it: result we feel that jus- tice he! been done. The verdict is u just and righteous one. and while we cannot but sympathise with the innocent 'sufferers, l yet in the interest of kw end justice end a proven outngo on humanity, we must my that the puninhmont meted outwthe nim- indn in only mm“. with their Till! is trouble on the line otthec1rul River Raiiwst, in Vermont, . brunch of the South-elm mad. tho President Bud Buperintettdetrst of the Pmmpdc Why Inning torn up the (nth, out the “blurb wins. And. it ia aid. demand I bridge " Mun rte-pint. wires. The Sturdy Case. In Mr. Gordon's uldnu before Ste hi1; ny meeting d Omgenlle may. In auctioned moduli. you“ to the toqm. shit, of “into, which the people a! diver" townships any profitabir can“. “no tbetestued,heudhmrtth_ofmrc listen. who told him {but Minto. stun... in: sin- mm to nil-tr. “I paint nmdl'lnillntlulm ya. “my" tn. now mull-l to ply all, 0 -m. on in Artur he d! Pete. We in t. “w. inothorwanlmtlntthon-tu nil vulva of property it! now My that timolwlnt it In: helm Ilium had mil. nyu; or. to put the ma tltitseitt “can: 'm.r; that I (an which helm. the allay- -irttotutommhitormtid_atr tMoo Mantis“ M}. will mall " M.0tto (tttme limo- 'Mom. Well my “into he eatled the haunt-r why town- ship MOntlno. The tut in. thnt Hinto' bu become rich on railways. all the' people as now reaping tho benMt of their entemrlze Ind fommitdst. la there no chance of doing name Mirtbt basilica in the County of Grey , We with them may he. liter all. The bonefit from the Toronto. Grey, And Bruce railway uit in ha been grout. but it might be mutt-r; our pearl. can hue thin greater benefit if they will pay for it, and it will, beyond doubt, pr them hack again several times over. The mud must have new rails nml rolling stock won. that in certain, out it in proposed that when the trark is romml it be at the same time mule of the four feet eight III . half inch gauge. Were that done, - would quickly we the dill'erenoe. We on“ rend our grain to the most distant market. reached by railway. Ind huyona would be emsbled to pay better prices. hemulna they would be uhle to ship din-ct to my point required. lat ttw rvtiert . little on Mintn'n experience. and profit hy the lesson it cou- veys.-Duferin Standard. ----_------- mor Loomt.-On Saturday evening Inst the nit-when; of the h'itelbume Temple drove out to the tsehool h lune on the ttis Contention. Melnnethon, when they we" met by . large number of the midni- of that handily, who were Eleni-mu of having a temperance lodge farmed in their midnt. Afar installing the one"; of the new lodge Ind lining. upon. " enjoyable ovu- ing, the meeting dispersed l the party“ this Village arriving home about ll o‘clock. -ti'tandard. The County of Frontenac bemta the finmt "Court Home in the Province or0utario. A Guelph manufu'tumr hut shipped . handsome phmeton for the Paris Expo-i- tion. Shoddy cloth peddhrn hue hmly vie. timized some of the tumor» in the county of Esau. Hon. Mr. Blake gave . 'urlrseription of 0100 in lid of the Walkertou Norman: Ex. hibition. . The Newfoundhnd eodfuher, in . mu:- plete mum. tusd I terrible winter in in store for the i'ttihertuett. June- Powers, the Merrichille burgh: vu sentenced to three yum in an Peni- teuury by J mine MeitouOi. Hon. A. B. Foster died suddenly in How “an! shortly after three o‘clock on Tum- day morniug,of hem dew-u. 'mttasitUrd by excitement. The tritl of Weldon for the murder d Mush “an: Wade at Castleton In“. on the spplicution of the prisoner's mun-cl, been postponed till the next Maxims. A Dawn-Woman who for many yen: bu sold the daily papers in the strum of New York, died recently Worth "EM result of I frugal life, and formant. Incl ostate investments. Walker Amos, In unlicensed Intuition“ of n inghuu. was fined "li by Thom" Holmes, J. l'., It the instance of Detective Smith gf London. John Jerome of Luck- now bu also been fined "o for the an. oftersmr. At t meeting of the wttlon held lately in the Pembina Mountain county. Maui. tou, it was resolved that to my person - rocting a grist mid within four Ntocifiu township: I bonus “H.000 in grain and twenty time scre- of wood land would in given. On Saturday. Wm. Brown. who set in to the barn of Mr. I Liek, was tried at Whitby. He pleaded guilty. but aid as at the “minutes Court, he did untiutend to burn the barn. 'He mu sentenced to two you: in the l'eneteuury. the lowest. punishment for arson. The Duke of Argyll will be obliged to [ spend between 075.000 um] 5 9100.000 in muting Inverury Cutie. The building Ind its minimum were insured " 35%.“ of which 400,000 applies to the building. The Duke attributes the origin of the bo to lightning. Oukey Hull bu returned to Near York. An wamnt of an interview given in: New York evening paper makes him any that the Bing Troubles had nothing to do with " aim. and that" can: that [Invi- oul to his dere" be “lull not“ Min- At Collingwood on Wuhan-Jay manning it (:50. u young nun nunod Jon-oh Me. IAnn. bukesmnn on the Northvm Bail. Iuy. v“ midway killed. Whih Ill- ooupling tome can he bind in the od- tle-gunl. And In {awfully Ill-dd by the tmin pacing (we: hill. . will On Wednendny. October Mth, while, Mr. Puriek Buchanan VII working a Mr. Forbe- Iowa'- cum. " the Play Sound Lumber Compsuy, ho V“ hovered, injund by s idling tree, from the OM otqrtgetruaiutl-sevetsigta" lulf put” o'clock He leave. I widow and . lug. family to mourn hi. In”. _ hmiomaueirmnde"hurmouth, N. 8.,bydmt twmtty-ti" Magiatmus Bad “in; “an! of the '01")an the liquor "tu-ho-iii-U, owl-min: M Me. 8"ch won visited and quite . lug-sum! oniq-tudmdor iugeatmetisme1-otth. “an. Inn With emu). pun-Hod. A Railway Township.- Miscellaneous. w

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