Ontario Community Newspapers

Ontario Reformer, 18 Aug 1871, p. 2

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| : | The South Ontario Bablsth School 1 | Association will hold their annual conven- JRAND TRUNK TIME TABLE... tion in the W. M. Church, Brooklin, on - | Wednesday and Thursday, 13th and 14th September. On Monday the proceedings will commence at one o'clock, whén the business of the association will be attended to, and reports from schools read. On Thursdsy, the Convention will meet at 10 a.m, for the discussion of 'some very important subjects. OSHAWA STATION. OSHAWA TIME. GOING Wier, | fccommeda™m, OUING RAST, 0 a.m. | Mail, - « 0am, - 300 pan, 8 pom. WHITBY STATION, "Trains going East leave Whithy minutes cartier, and those 'minutes later than the ion fiiNien ; Mass meetings will est fteen | De held of Wednesday evening, at 7.30, and in the M. E. Church on Thursday : evening, at the Same hour, tho meetings ning abd, +! to be addressed by a number of inent | - ONTARIO REFORMER. OSHAWA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 187i. thing but a settled state, and late des- patches indicate trouble ahead. | place, and Marshal McMahon be declared | Regent, followed by a demand for the re- | establishment of the Empire. | epposition is being developed to the con- tinuanes in power of Thiers. It is also | rumored that the Orleanist party | feady to make a strike for place and power. Warm work is expected in Paris, and large numbers of citizens are leaving to avoid | the threatened storm. A change in the | direction of affairs may be locked for shortly. ? Grimio Defornier, J Oshawa, Friday. August 18, 1871. rev. gentlemen. Every Sabbath School in South Ontario is requested 'o send | delegates, : RE i i a a mpe | ; FUBLIC FRAUDS. THE LATE COL. 8. B. FAIRBANKS. A letter which appeared in the Glole of | To-day we are called upon to chronicle Friday last, from aporsen namod Fryer, | the death of Siuas B. Famepax Ks, one of who had besn employed with a Govern- | Oshawa's most honored itizgtia, whith ment surveying party in western C(mtario, sd event Sesurted on the morning wf has directed public attention 40 the extra- Tuesday lust, 15th Jat, In the eutly pa ki manner in which the public of. this year He, Fairbanks was stricken . money has been "'cabbaged" by Gover | don with paralysis, which well nigh ter- mai emplayoes, in the efor of "ecunsl minated his earthly career at that' time , advantages." Mr. Fryer complains that but rallying 'somewhat under medical as Be wm «mployed 'as sceond Satrugn on} sistance, he was subscquantly enabled to the two eys of tho village of Post {appear in public, but was unable to re- sary, ag o ra" : sumo the active duties of his profassion. | 'Carling, and of the Township of Spence, at : e is] 4 | A JUVENILE lacrosse club cama down {from Toronto last Tuesday, to play a | 'match game with the Oshawa *' Predestin- i ated Invincibles." Owing to the rain only | one game was played, which was taken by | Oshawa. Another game was commenced, | and the ball was kept mear the Toronto | goal almost the whole of the time; but & | slight shower coming on, play was stopped, ! the captain of the Toronto club remarking | that they 'wouldn't play any more, as it | would be a disgrace to the club to be | beaten in a little plaeo like Oshawa." { They need not have taken it so much to { heart, as *' that's what's the matter " with ! all clubs that come to our town to play. | Tus Government of France is in any- It is | foared that military coup d'etat will tdke | A Strong PICKERING COUNCIL. SarvrpAY, August th. Members all present. meeting read and approved. y James W Council met pursuant to adjournment. Minutes of last FOUND BY THE MASONS. Strange Story of Girl Kidnapped by Her Unele. From the Detroit Free Press. James H. Barker; a deputy sheriff of Mr. Green presented the petition of | Ingham County, and resident of Lansing etherald and others, praying that | assed through Detroit last week en route the read leading to the Railway Station at | f,r Suspension Bridgo, having in his caro { road division. Mr. Haight presonted the petition of | Robert Secor, asking remuneration for supplying aid to an indigent woman; also the potition of William Wilson and other, praying for aid to John Pollister. | petitions presented this day. left the chair for one hour. chair. sented this day, reported as follows ;:-- 4 | day, would recommend the following ap | | cutting down hill, $15; J. Miller, com. | On side road between lots 2 and 3, in the | 1st con., $40 ; 8. R. Drown, com. Mr. Green moved that John Haight, John Miller,and the mover be appointed a committee to examine the accounts and | On motion of Mr. Haight, the Reeve The Council resumod, the Reeve in the The Committeo appointed to examine the various accounts and petitions pre- We your committee having examined the accounts and petitions presented this stands | Duiin's Creek be sot apart ws a seperate | 4 yiy] 10 years old, fiamed Helen McKib- | bee, who will be restored to her father and friends at that point. The little girl's ad- venttires during the past seven months have been eurious and extended, and she could hardly be persuaded by her protector that they wora shortly t> terminate in happiness and rost. As Mr. Baker states her case, and as little Helen herself relates it, she has been made the tool whereby a vindictive relative struck & most cruel blow at other relatives for the sake of re- venge. About a year and a half ago Helen's father, who was a widower, and residing at Montross, Susquehanna County, | Pa., his present address, was married again, his choice mot at al pleasing his relatives, perticularly a Lrother of the former wife, whose name # Daniel Hay- wood. This Haywood is a single man, promi the citlzen who had been kevping the child, and something of his relatives out of town, Baker and the lawyer hunted pver several certain parties. The great fear was that the girl would be spirited out of the State, and Baker was forced to watch Haywood"s ten or a dc relatives to see that none of them lof Shown on such an errand. He know that the family were stopping in Monrose County, and had learned that they did not take the girl with them when so suddenly shutting up their house at Lansing. What had become of her ? ' One morning last week one of the relatives, a femsle, left the city for the north, and eluded Baker in her getting away. Ho followed on the next train, found that she had stopped at Corunna, picked up 'the girl, who was there secreted by a friend, and then passed on to Detroit, remained here over night, and had next morning taken the .train for Hillsdale, He fol- lowed om, being but a few hours behind her, and sure of/his clue ; but she reached Hillsdale in time to take Helen four miles approptiations for roads: On side road | between lots 14 and 15, in 6th con, for somewhat advanced in age, and was a | into the country, and td go herself three travelling agent up to a fow days ago, being | miles in another direction before he mow * travelling" to escape the vengence | AT¥ived. Halting only' long enough to of the law. Hemmde it his homs with Procurea livery team, Baker begun his McKibbee, and the two had many words | #earch, and in four hours had 'the girl in in regard to-the marriage. At length Me. | his possession, and both were 'eonfronting over th Baker, the Pennsylvania lawyey | A VISIT TO WOOLWICH ARSE NAL. | "Dontwa the your g to hel all he could. Knowing : wars "| 1st of July 154 di Entering the Royal Arsenal by the main | y ores the visitor is at first struck by the {nc nnati. This rivals @ utterly deserted look of the place : the { rumble and rattle of. distant machinery is { q¢ ew [discernible ; butall the great departments | work with closed doors ; and it is not till entering the first great door on the right the Royal Carriage Department --that | standing amid a bewildering hazo of | whirling lathe-bands, with the crash of machinery and the din of hammers ringing on every side of him, tha a chanee visitor can appreciate the fever of industiy--to coin' an expression--into> which ho "has entered. Talk of being bound to the wheel ! Every man herg secms a perfect Lxion, engaged ; for big' wheels of sling carts, medimm wheels of gun-carriages, and all be seen here, fron the rough wood Lor brass to the almost perfected article. Heregre two great sideboards of iron, ap- patently faced by another of the same material. Watch the machinery in this three-sided box as it looks ; it is the great Moncrieff gun carriage in embry. The room on the other side is full of these gi- gantic coffers in every stage of advance- ment, all being finished as fast as skilled labor; stearf and money can finish them. If you are a Britisher and a tax-payer you little wheels for traversing guns, may each |: A Max in Da sagas . through the Venport, counties, and Baker at length went home huge chimnies, itis true, are pouring ont | through the columng of 5 and left the lawyer at Monroe to . watch | smoke, and in the air around the peculiar | £¥¢ $50 to any man whe | his wife. k Dexter is thirteed Fear | Thorn sixteen, Ethan Allen {ye and Flora Temple twentyaiy, 4 Tuer are upwards of S364 of new buildings in course of contracted for in the town 2% The Osborn Sewing cheapest first-class maching the market. Hence its k Tr js decided that thé Brith file are to be armed 'with & Henry rifle, of the same le present sergent's rifle. EarL Russell has been a trator" on behalf of Geneva Conference, with Palmer, as solicitor. clever device to make the B ested in the elections. H every man who abstains be fined H500f. ! NEcortatioxs between many have resulted in w 3 the part of the latter po all the German troops from the end of the year. Tur Dominion Rifle A finally agreed to hold the at the Bedford range, the bth of September. Fo prizes offered. Tae council of the Association on W passed resolutions calling ment to refuse to pay thels army over-Tegilation measures to reform the | About's month ago he was again prostrated, | Tue Port Perry Standard came to hand with disetise; which, despite the utmost | last week printed from new type, and pre- endeavots of medical advisers, terurinated | sented a very neat appearance. The fatally at 4:30 o'clock on Tuesday morning, Standard is a good local paper, and we 60 cents per day, being told that that was all the Government allowed. He says ¢hat when asked to sign a pay-list for the | Port Carling services at the rate of 75 | And your committee would recommend granting ald to the following persons: Robert Hamilton, £1 per week to 31st of December, €. J. Willson, com. ; Andrew ; inate 3). 00 in the fifty-first year of his age. | doubt not will, under the management of | Robb, £1 per woek from 1st June to 31st yo Soy, rein of 9) vesim 8 he For thirty y oars Mr. Fairbanks was | the new firm of Mundy & Nott, meot | of Dec., L. Bentley, cow. ; Octavius Far- wxpected to sign for the larger amount, closely identified with all that. pertained with 'a large local support, such as it | row, £1 per week from 1st June to 3ist but only BE Te the smaller os Being aa: to the advancement of this village and | deserves. sured it was the common practice on all | coqnty; 4nd sesupied Positions of Boner Government surveys. Ile refused to sign | and trust amongst bis fellow men. Yar any false receipt. His name was then severe Yeais le served this village as seratelied out aad another porson'y placid Councillor, and subsequently was elevated leave this part of the establishment with a satisfied grunt, " Come, there's some- { thing being dome here at any rate." Kibbee, turned him out doors one day;and the Lansingite who had furnished a home forbade him to enter the house again. | for ek of Sho instance of Haywood. He | was in Hillsdale Count . i a Ts | i ey 1 ets EibTe ¢/ared Laat no orcunary venggance would | § [the laboratory? To. the unitiated satisfy the insult which he deemed his | had Baker been a fow hours later Helen | countless little urchins scem pi be i, | character had sustained. He remained | "ould have been started for Kansas, She | 0 constantly-working puto ro { about the neighborhood, ' but McKibbee | ¥3$ taken back to Lansing and her father { which they are putting little bits of motal | Dee., 8. J. Green, com. ; Moses Allen, 81 | id very Littl Is : i | telegraphed to, her father telegraphing : " ; 4 » | er verk fiom Tat Jose 10 Sos De 5 | pid very little attention to his threats, | back that Jie' would. meet th 2 he but in reality hurdreds of thousands of AvL Oshawa sporting clubs are going 0 | 5 Groen, com: 3° Widow Smith gl po and Suiryucied his wife and two daughters | ulls, 'Her Nig wy b Shy 4 oe the metal portion of the Snyder cartridge " ap." opi ¢ ' +} i, | to give him no notice. One evening in | * ** g nes eng en route od out & each be . be named ** Alexander," and are weeping | week from 1st June to 8lst of Dec., L. | 5 y hg 1 Shs or, | for home cotld not be concealed, and she | © Yrsied om Syery day, each hoy law for some club to conquer. A 'base-ball | , » Lu | September last, while Holen and her sister, ; ' * | ing marked before him on'a eard the num- club from Bowmanville played a match Bentley: Wis ; John Falmer, §1 per { who is about 16 years old, were returning oud os keep still a moment. Haywood's ber that have passed through his hands . 2 : * the mor alled office of Reev di. y week from date to 21st Dec., Newrick | ju] , 8 rx ing | #0le object was revenge. He meant to | " od . opposite the 75 ccnis instead, while his id : rin - A . A ou ME with an Oshawa club on Tuesday last, but ! Wilson, cont: ; : soe i i Bote from a neighbor's, the 'road being i den) the father 2 mont pot blow jy '¥ | during the current and previous week ; of @ was placed apposite the 60 cents axe-man's Chief Magistrate 30g WL active part In | oro sent home with flags at' half-mast. | 4 lonesomo and unfrequented, they were | Se 3 ' end in mother portion of the same build-| Tae Emperors ! xc wage The Borat fiat 'Was ™ i { the direction of the municipal business of Next 1 3 "| And your committee would recommend | pet by Heywood, who leaped from a|%id- In addition to his own personal | ing thie paper portion of the same cartridge | met on Friday last and & " to : ct ad nt t a + Cs yup | te county, and at ths same time specially | © = paynent of the following accounts : Geo. | buggy and ordered both of them to get in, | transactions' he reocived assistance from a is being turned out as rapidly by young'| dial greetings." "FOU or Lands dn ya sion ™ *n watching the interests of the municij.lity | WE understand thet tho return match | Salton, for work on side road between | being 0 violent in his actions that the | Buber of friends, who watched Me- | women and girls. - As fast as these cdr- | dict a friendly allisé hue mbeting. was coph yl EE ad at, a 1 Ne | which he represented. | between the Bowmanville and Oshawa | lots 2 and 3, in Oth con., $4; James | girls dared not disobey him. Whipping Kis | {ibbec's every action, two or three times | tridges are finished they ars passed on to countries as a result of 3 oye S80 assieant, and ent | od a . i H x : . + | . { " ier bi AR . em i who the & A which the Government | 8 one of those who participated in the | Lacrosse clubs will be played at Bowman- | Irving, for supplying aid to Michael James, | horse into a run, he had taken them about | frustrating his ; lans in securing a clue. I be flled, and are iszued for the service for | A Lrtriz boy three yours old, who } afl CE Fog rr Lis one y SER first formation of the present volunteer ville on Thursday, 24th inst. | 82713 ; William Warder, for gravel for | two miles, when the older girl leaped out | Theo same parties are supposed to have | which they have been made as soon as| Stother of three months, gsves ae yer day. ie I - | hd > i . : alee shed tc Sthe " he | h . : of to Toronto aud laid his Trieste | force of Canada, Mr. Fairbanks has stood | Tae Orangemen have a new legend. for | the reads, £2 ; James Thornton, for work | of the vehicle and made her escape, he be- el raped to Lansing, when they found f possible, asit is » rule mever to retain | oo he ol good conduct: 4 tose} pi in Tits Co Hin the front rank ; and for his devotion to | (peir banners: * Ireland, 1690. New | 0 side road between between Tots 20 and | ing pursued several miles by some farmers | thet 2 cKibbee and his lawyer had at! - doesn't cry tears because he dof ¥r. Richards, who said, "they knew all rtho interests of the forces, was promoted | York, 1871." Ar. A nid, 3 ew all | \ ' . Pr, : | more filled cartridges than are absolutely [ 31, im 8th con., 800 ; Robert Secor, for | on horseback, to whom the girl related the | (SPEth hit the right "place. So well 'did | na wes i ; . from the Captainey of No. 2 Company of about these ting, and permitted the sur- | |, z . : STII | -l os in | Lis place tothat-of Licut. Col.of the 34th, | LT VRIAY next, 24th intuit, will be °* I | or Ontario Battalion, at its formation, He | 2Pserved as a public holiday in the Town ea tn always took a deep interest inthe improve- of Bowmanville. 2, 7, i ment and efficiency of the eorps under his ! command, and the 34th ranked as one of | the finest battaliohs in the Dominion. By the death of Col. Fairbanks Oshawa has lost ong of hier most talented and infln- ential citizens and public servants, and a ! raise funds for the bereaved widow and four children are left chufch at Frenchman's Bay. seyors to make « profit on menu's w order to make up for any deficien sther things." Ile then sued the Govern- weft and cbtaired a verdict for 190 days sok at the Governnient rate of 21 jer ay. HM, as is alleged, the Government . knows all about such doings on the part wl their servants, it but serves as another dustance of the rottonness of the Patent <vneern, and adds andther to the long list of ways which 'the "grinders" have of ""smpporting their supporters." Rest as- sured that not one of those public leeches will ever be found opposing such a govern- ent as that now directing the affairs of is Province, and which hitve only Leon pt in position by the hired support of > hose who had a little grinding to do. DINIARTON. -- Curece or Excraxp Proyie.--The and affectionate father. : | collected. to the amount of about $80. A | The funeral will take place this aftor- | picnic was held on Wednesday, the 9th | noon, at 2 o'clock, with masonic and inst, inn grove belonging to Mr. Gard- military honors. ner, in connection with the above object. | ETT errr srry | 1 he day being fine and the locality attrac- | . | tive, about 250 people assembled to enjoy | | OSHAWA COUNCIL CHAMBER. the games, and, to partake of the goed | | Avoust 16,1871 | things provided by the ladics for the oc- | [Extracts of minutes of a meeting held | "19 " The aflertioon wis Spent In play- on the 16th day of Angust, 1871. Bg wicket, uct lull, 3d * tripping the -- * It mow appears that the Camydizn marks- Present--The D'y-Reove, and Messrs. light fantastic foe," the latter being the } 4 ®en who went to the mother country to | Wall, Cameron and Luke. The Deputy favanite amusement. 4 large four-story try conclusions with the riflemen of the Reeve in the chair. cake made by Mr. Whiteside was disposed ** tight little island," have not had'such a | On motian of Mr. Luke, 'seconded by | of by lottery, bringing the Yandsome zum | "Aappy time as was generally supposed. | Mr. Cameron, it was unanimously of 'about #20--the fortunate winner being f Capt. McCleneghan, one of the team, in a | Resolved : "That this. Council has learn- the same lady, he-Sabbath school chil | lotter recently published in his paper | ** with deep regret.of the death of 8. B. dren of P » Bay and Duffin's | the Woodstock Times --udcuses Col. Skin- | * Fairbanks, Esq., the late, and for many | CTo¢k were a. The penoeutly | ner, cxptain "of the team; with hav ing |' years Reeve of the village. | of the whole about $70. { treated his companions, since their arrival ** Thoroughly identified from the first | . in Erigland, in the most miserly manner, | establistiment of municipal institutions | VOTE BY BALLOT IN ENGLAND. making them travel third class and put up | * in 1850 down to the present time, with | es with inferior accomodations. All this was +* every improvement that has affected the | The Bill providing for voting by ballot submitted +> without a minrmur, on the "material and other interests of the vil- | in England rassed the House of Commons f assurance that the unexpended balance of "lage, his loss is felt, 'not only by the by a large majority, but it has been | public money, with the winnings, would | * members of the Council who have been | defeated in: the House: of Lords by a | be equal'y divided. When division came | "associated with him, but also by the | majority of forty-nine. Thus the House however, the mien were surprised to find a | *' community at large, amongst whom he of Lords have onge more determined to | very small sum coining, and on asking for | "" has so long resided, as well as inthe | thwart the wishes of the representatives of an explanation were told thet the expenses |' wider and more extended field where his | the peopl: of England. The House of | of a German va'ct of the Colgnel's were | " usefulness has been frequently felt and | Lords is eompesed of 25 Lords, Spiritual, [ deducted from the generul fund. his | "acknowledged. ; | mamely : Two archbishops, | English, and with other grievances of-a persomal nature prove This Council desires to. tender to his ; twenty-four bishops, all English ; four _form the grgund-work of the prevalent "family its expression of sympathy in | princes, of Royal blood ; tarenty dukes, dinsati ion. * Capt. McCleneghan forth. | *" their,great affliction and bereavement." | twenty-one marquesses; one hundred and Pe 2: Subscrip- | to mourn the loss of a faithful husband |tiond for this purpose have been already | Green, for supplying aid to Mrs. Wright- | supplying'aid to an indigent woman, §10; | Casper Stotts, for work on the Brock ropd, {8100 ; John Panus, for work on Aide | 1088 between lots 2 and 3, in. Gti eon., 1 #15 50 ; William Hubbard, for work on | road leading to the fair ground, £12; S | J. Green, for aid supplied to Octavius | members and 'adherents of the Church of i Farrow, $15; William P. Owis, for work | hold any conversation wi | England hive been making an effort to | on side road between lots 2 and 3, in lst | life should be the forfeit. purposo of building a [con, $10; McBrady and Walters; for | to "flatter her, { repairing road scraper, $3 77}; S. J. man, £1 50 ; W. H, Higgins, for printing and advertising, 264 75; T. P White, for procuring 40 Benches for use of Town Hall, 8562 ; Pat Cosgrove, fur loss sustained on contract on northern Townline, $25; William Smith; for work on Tth con.,at lot No.6,825 ; Hay King for work on base line in front of dots 15 and 16, £109. And we recommend that John Haight be appointed to oversee and let the fillin g up the sides of a culvert on lot No. 20, in Ist con. ; . And your coramittee would also recom- mend that the petition of James Wether- ald and others be granted, so far as re- lates; to setting apart a separate road division, and 'that Moses Smith be ap- pointed overseer for the year 1872. Report received, and on motion of the adoption of the raport, Mr. Brown moved that the clause recommending payment o | 825 to Pat Cosgrove be struck oat. Motion lost on the following division : Yeas-- Messrs, Brown and Miller. Nays--Messrs. Haight and Green--the Reeve voting with the Nays. Mr. Miller introduced a by-law which { was read three several times and passed, to asscss the township for providing funds for the improvement of roads and bridges and other expenses of the corporation. Mr. Brown gave notice that he will, at the next meeting of the Council, move for leave to introduce a by-law to appoint a collecter. er charges Maurison with having sald the | Mr. Brown introduced's MA which matter of kidnapping. Just how far they | these conspirators watch the postoffice at | rode Helen does not remember, but it was | for many hours, and then they stopped | only for a short time, and ¢ho was taken | { on boatd the cars. Haywood impressed | - Lit upon her 'mind that if she cal'ed him by | | that name, wade any alarm, or dared to | th strangers; hay | He also tried and between his ferocious | | threats and his promise of new clothes and | | fine jewelry the little 'girl rendered him obedience. Helen remembers = passing through Cleveland and her steamboat ride to Detroit, and then she found herself in | Lansing, and was informed by Haywood | | that her home would henceforth be there. | During the evening of her arrival she was | taken to the north end of the city, and to | | the house of a. resident whose character | for integrity, honesty and manly worth | has never been questioned until now. She | was there told that her name had been changed to Gage, and that she must never | tell any person a word abeut her other | | name, parents or home. The citizen had | several relatives in Laming, and this Hay- woods is distinctly related to each one, the | fact probably inducing him to put the | stolen girl into the hands he did. In a few days Helen was provided with books and | sent to the Fourth Ward Union School, | her name being upon the records as Gage. | { When the oldest daughter reached home | and related her story, there was immediate | excitement. The officers of the law started | out in every direction, neighbors turned | | cut on the hunt, and the search was not | discontinued until it became apparent that | | the kid-nipper had rémoved his victing | far beyond the reach of the ordinary | officers, Then the Police Superintendents | of the principal 'cities, and the Conuty | Sheriffs of all Pennsylvania were appealed to, and the father expended a'large. sum of money within the month endeavoring to gain a clue. The girl had had her Montrose that th name. cluded the search for Haywood. He was at Lansimg several times, but this was before the right clue had been gained, and he is now supposed to be in Kansas. He was discovered in Massachusetts last winter, and a requisition made on the Governor 'of that State, but before he could be reached he had fled, having been warned by his friends at Montrose. If caught, and he will be, his punishment cannot be too severe. As for several Lan- singites who assisted him in secreting the girl knowing, as the chief one has confessed, that she was kidnapped, there is only one excuse. They claim that Haywood inform- ed them that the girl was maltreated at | home, and that he had stolen her away | to save her from bad treatment. This as- | sertion is denied by the father, the elder sister and by little Helen, herself, who | could not remember that her father ever 1 struck her a blow. - She is a bright-eyed ! good-looking girl, and informé&d our re- | porter that her keepers kept a constant | watch over to prevent her writing a letter, | which she is advanced enough to do, and | to seo that she did not divulge the secret | to any of tes, "But I. knew | that pa would come," she added, and was | therefore content to koep thé secret until | such a time as divulging it would redound | to her benefit. . The method used to secure a trace of the child was not original, although the Ma- | sonic lodges not a channel for commniu- | nicatiors of Ahis kind. When a whole | state and its daily and weekly papers were | interested in the fate of a stolen child the » fraternity were glad to extend all assist- { ance to furcher a successful search. Only | for the circular which went to Lansing the | girl might not have been discovered for | months, or even years. The detective | The search for the child also in- | | either for home or foreign service. required in the arsenal. = Turning round | ike thousands and thousands of their | brethren, they are resting in peaceful | quiet, till some emergency may call the ; smoke and flame from their throats. Be- | hind three or four immense heaps of Pal- liscr shot and shell, is the shell foundry, | the interior ef which at once brings to the | mind of the visitor a subterannean scene | in a pantomime before the transformation. Amid the roaring, crackling furnaces, | which, when open, seem almost to shrivel | up the eyes of those unaccustomed to look upon them, dusky figures flit to and fro, | stoking, hammering, or wheeling masses of dull, blue-looking metal, which seem cool enough, but throwing out, in passing, a fierce ved heat, which makes one involun- tarily shrink ond draw back. the eentr®" of the circle a row of . men stand, each. stirring up a mould of white hot motal, which throws a weird lurid light upon the workers' faces and hands, making the whole place lock as if some grand incantation scene was going on with- init. This is the liquid pretal now being worked free from air-bubbles, and which, poured into a mould, will, half an hour hence, form th® rough conigal shot and shell so rapidly being wheeled away on all | sides of us to cool in the open air. When @#% 1 $0 the right, an'imihense row of guns at- © lawyers had to hive |g is iho attention. These aro all obso- letters directed to them under anothér !Jote patterns--serviceable still, but not of the present-approved pattern of issue; and milk." any water, and he ¢ ut ory ANOTHER riot is expe on the 25th inst. Thy It intend celebrating . the | of Jtalian unity by m streets ; and it is feared | will interfere with them, THE estate presented by § Bismarck has an aresef il ising the. vil zenbeck, Hohenhorn, two corn mills, nineteen and near 7,008 ihabital annual income of $25,000. © AND now it appears that the Westfield was asleep at explosion, in a chair » the engine room, with his on the top of a'barrel ! How the forces of natare--to killso nocent people, vhen that was within reath, Ror " Now, yowg people," said | of natural hiffory to his class, {as to hens./A hen has fhe | laying just fix hundred eggh {and she fishes the job ip | five years; 'Now what is to her after that? * Cuboff sell her for = spring chicken an urchin whose father ; Hussaxps ought out of the dk cool, the studs are taken to the finishi room to have their studs fixed, and have all the final touches put to them before they are wheeled out to the gigantic piles already standing in the centre of the arse nal, waiting till they are sent away to be filled at the laboratcry, and shipped off Fur- ther down is the gun-foundry, where, from the rolling of the long rail-like bags of iron forming the first-coil, to the perfected weapon, rifled, poli , and fitted with | sights, every description of gun-making honor of the team by taking £35 from $ And on motion of Mr. Wall, seconded | twenty-eight earls, 'thirty viscounts and wes read three several times and passed, photograph 'taken a few weekp before, and ability displayed by Mr. Baker certainly may be seen. The rapidity with which a kitch 'A husband who did not, thus of the consequemnes : 1 found some time ago with Jutia Aung ie, and tried to tellher how my moth Maas custard pie. Maria made G6 7 .after my receipt. It lasted longer any other pie we der hnd. Maris sof on the table everyday for dinner, and see I could not ot it because 'I forgot tell her to put i any eggs or . It 'was economeal, 'but in a fit of gene ity I stole it fom the pantry snd give to a poor litth boy in the neighbor The boy's fureral was largely attended ; entitles him to much credit. { by Mr. 'Cameron, the Clerk was instructed | two hundred and thirty-one barons, | to assess School sections Nos. 1 and § for Henry Halford, whom he "tied" in the' to send to each of the village papers, and | making four hundred and sixty members. | | school purposes. Mr. Brown moved that one of them was re-coried and a specmien ar sent to every point and to every official d former playmates. 1did not go | gun is made here is perfectly astonishing. nh . | One day one sees a gigantic strip of white match for the Association Cup, to allow | to the widow of the lato Rieve, a copy of 4 These men are not, in any sense, the re- | him-to win first prize. This, it is alleged, | the shove rescluticn. . presentatives of the nation, each really | all 'parties having obstructions on the where|i there was the slightest hope: of | succest ; but every effort failed to track Jory McWain, cousin of Mrs. Campbell, | was released from custody on Saturday | hot metal (perhaps 180 feet long) dazzling Woxbrrrol Bacacrry oF A Uga=--1 following story, strange as it may he did with the Nation of Col. Skin { allowance for road between lots 30 and 31, approvation of Col. Skin- > : - | the eyes 23 it is rolled into a coil like some -------------- | representing himself and his own interests | | the villian further then to thé point where | "PORAIS own T v | gr Pw rary hr ye na mer. These are accusations which require | | explanation 3 and if found true, visited made public. The editor of the Whitby | with the public condemnation deserved. { Chronicle i$ one of them, occasionally. | Col. Skinner will nolL JEW 40 Canada | When he disproves what we have advanced | for some time, having gon : |i will be time enough to occupy space | shirough Europe. Await ue wrival, and | Loy, o reply thereto. Poor fellow, he has | defence, eomment upon the charges would | 80 long been subject to the manipulation | is unjust. Capt. Me i "of "overscers™ that he' evidentiy can- | sived home, and again I not cr>aj:shizal hye tha proprietor of | what the charges Preyions'y made by him |, newspaper can publish an article without | aginst Skinner aud Murison are tras. first submitting it to the inspection of some | | outside lord and master. We have here- | | tofore answered the Chronicle on this point, | { but we may again inform him--for some- | | times he is forgetful --that the Rurosuer | bas no "owner" ner "overseer" nor | " proprictor " other than he whose name | appears in the proper placa as publisher. | Our contemporary hopes to create a little | sympathy for himself, but. the Reformers | of South Ontario will not thank him for | | the courze hie is pursuing to effect that | Soxz people don't like to have facts | | The Prize List of the twenty-sixth ex- hibition of the Agricnltural and Arts Association of this Province has been issded. The exliibition will take plac 27th, 28th, and 29th of September next. All entries of animals cr articles for coui- petition must be made on printed forms, which may be obtained of Scerctaries of » ies | throughout the Province, free of charge, | ""and must be forwarded to the 8 cretary of the' Association at Torunto, with one Tue Markham Lodge of Orange Young | Britons intend holding a ic-nie. in | g Pp { dollar as membership fee, By the f.llo g | the Agricualaral' Grounds, Markham Vil- | dates : horses, cattle, swine, | lage, on Friday, Sept. 1st. On the arrival | poultry, implements, on dr before 26th of | of the différent lodyee, a processipn will | August ; grain, field Toots, and other farm | be formed, and headed by the Markham | products, mechinery and manufactures | Brass Band will proceed to the grounds, generally, on or befors the 2nd of Beptem- | where a dinner will be provided. = After | ber; horticultural products, ladies' work, | dinner, speeches will be deliversd by O. | sheep, asa landed proprietor alone, and they | should not, therefore, except when their own constitutional rights and privileges are endangered, exercise the power given them by the constitution to annul the proceedings of the people's representatives in the House of Commons--a body which really snd truly represonis ths nation. The House of Lords is not, by any means, the popular body, and, unless they are willing to act in concert with the Com- mons, they may endanger their own ekist- ence as one of the co-ordinate branches of the Legislature. The Bill will, of course, be brought up again at the next session of Parliament, and the interim between the closd of the present session and the opening of the next will give rise to much agitation and discussion. The Lords will be com- pelled to yield in the end, and they might just as well have submitted gracefully at once, and saved, to some extent, their popularity. England requires the vote by ballot, and it will assuredly be ultimately | carried by both Houses. ee -- ~~ ------ en We have Leen requested to give notice that a full attendance of the lady visitors of the Oshawa Division is particularly re. quested at' the regular meeting of the Division, on_Monday evening, 28th inst., for the purpose of expressing their opinions on the matter of their being admitted to the fine arts, &e., on or befors the 16th | R. Gowan, D'Arcy Boulton, W. F. Met-.| ll Hvaliorghip inthe Sick; en fo Soe September. Properly certilied herd book | ealfe, Capt. Bonnett, and the Revd. j Micron, bk sto Shed | wd pedigrees of all pure bred animals must Messrs. Hutchinson av McCullough. | connected with the vision | a fs accompany the entry of such. No excep- | Amusementsof all kindswill ba introduced. | astendguce, as their votes w Sessa tion will bs made to ths above rules | A first-class quadrille' band will be in at | Whether or not they 'are to become ' regarding dates of entries. -- Only one | tenddnce, and a large platform erected for | members. Don't forget, Monday night, specimen $0 be entered in any section of a | those wishing to dunce. Admission-- | 28th inst. class, unless of a distinct variety or pattern. | single tickets, 40cts.; double tickets Tocts. | All specimens in the fue arts class to be ! All Orangs Lodges and the friends of the delivered on the-ground not later than | order are invited-to attend. . 22nd September ; and other articles, with | the exception of live stock, id the Hoth: {| Goop news for the 'million! Rejoice, broad Juusk al be oi 2a A : O ye inhabitants of . the Dominion, at the r e . No a Exhibitors to be | 'Whitby and Port Perry Railroad ! The solely responsible for' the delivery of | writer actually saw, with his own eyes; ticles at exhibition building. ick * | two Jive men and a cross-cut saw vigorously wags and. sigauinaia to, Souter oe 4 prosicuting the completion of said road on dates will mot - be | prospect of the. speedy completion of the | | - At the Buffalo races, on Friday last, the trotting horse ** Brigham " was sold to Geo. C. Hall, for Jag Gould, for the nice little sum of $30,000. On the above day * Brigham " trotted a mile in 2.22; and {in the first heat trotted a half-mile at the | rato of 2.12, The purchaser says $100,000 won't buy * Brigham" to-day. On the same day, the '"Goldsmith Maid" made the fastest three consecutive heats, by one sceond, now on record, trotting a mile in i k Wednesday last. -- Coxe. der to bo provided for live stock at cost y ; . 12.103, 2.19}, 2.19, wixning $3,000, in 6th concession, be and are hereby neti- | fied and required to remove, or cause to | be removed, all such obstructions en or | before the tenth day of September next, and that the clerk notifiy tho parties of the paasing of the resolution. , - On the motion of Mr. Green the Coun- cil stands adjourned till Saturday, the 16th day of September next. _ Tae gown the Archbishop of Paris wore at his execution has been cut into small pieces, and distributed among the Parisian clergy. The principal fart has been de- posited in Notre Dams, where there are Tus Messrs. John Taylor & Son, of mining firm in the world; and the largest employers of labor in that department, baving mines in every quarter of the globe. IM Great Britain alone the num- ber of men employed by them is 56,000. A rarer near Roanoke, N.C., re- cently discovered on cutting his wheat, eleven stalks in such close proximity that upon examination he found they were all from one grain. The number of grains of wheat in the heads of these stalks were counted and amounted to 950. i Ax UNPLE4IANT SITUATION, A short time since two gentlemen dreve down to the Lake Shore, and one of them concluded to go in for a swim, while the other amused himeelf in gathering shells and curious stones on the beach. The swimmer de- posited his clothes in the carriage, and the horse was left standing unfied near made a great splash in the water, and struck out, making fully as much noise as a sidewheel steamer at full rate of speed. The horse snorted and started off. By this time the geological genius was too far away to render assistance, and it remained only for the swimmer to overtate the horse and bring him back, which he did in a very short time." He says ho wouldn't wind it half so much only he was com- pelled to meet quite a number of people going to evening service at Stoney Creck. --Hemilton Times, also relics of Archbishop Affre and Sibour. England, "are ssid to ibe. the greatest | he took the ears. A fifm of lawyers, all of the partners noted for being equally good detectives, was then secured by the ! father, and they got out handbills, ' adver- ! tisoment§, circulars, and sought in every | i's parents were half crazed with grief, thejease gained notoriety: throughout the whole State, and, as a last hope, the lawyers determined to appeal to the | Masonic fraternity throughout the United States for assistance. This: was in May last, after seven months weary and fruit- less search. A circular, containing a close description of -the girl and detailing the circumstances of the case, was made to that st North Lansing. George H. Green, WwW. NM, geading the circular over, it was passed to some of the brethren, and the neighbors of the man who had the girl in charge came to the conclusion that Helen was the one sought after. If-uot, she was | a stranger whose histery had never been told, and about whose past! life no word was ever dropped. Determined to proceed | entiously, one of the brothers wrote to the firm of attorneys, stating his suspio- its, and aa soon as steam could bring m the father and one of the firm arrived at Lansing. The father remained shut up in his room at the Lansing House, fearing that if he were seen on the streets his child might be hurried out of the city. Securing the help of an attorney named Wiley, the lawyer was granted a writ of habeas'éorpus, procured the assistance of Sheriff Baker, and the three walked down the North Lansing, firmly believing that the girl was found at last. Arriving at the house they found it locked up, cur- tains down, and the neighbors stated that the family had suddenly gone off on a " visit." spite of all the care taken, it had become kmown that the child's frignds werdlin town, and she was spirited { away. This was onthe 8th of June. When |. the father wag inforwed of the circumstance | he broke down and. wept like a child, having had his mind: fully made up that his long search was at an end. The matter of working up the ease was then given several hundred lodges--one of them to] whe® called for -- good evidence the | autharities do not believe the sworn state- | ment of Mrs. Campbell charging with the murder of her husband. Mrs. | Campbell and Thomas Boyle are the only | persons now in custody in-connection with | | the murder. The probability is that she | murdered her husband herself. | Sixce the publication of the Isst num. | ber of Harper's Weekly with ths riot car- | toons, the firm, it is reported, have received numbers of violent letters threat- | ening to burn their publication house, inate the bers and do all sorts of direful things, The Harpers are said to be prepared for all hostile Contingencies and to keep a strong nightly guard on their premises. A. T. Stewart's new hotel for women, at the corner of Fourth avenue and Thirty- second street, New York, is rapidly pro- | gressing towards completion. Two mil lion dollars have been appropriated for it, { and another million will be required to | complete it. This is the largest sum ever | given by a single individual for any edifice for benevolent purposes. 4 A ravorize amusement of the belles of New Bedford in winter is sliding down hill on a codfish. On a moonlight night hundreds of young ladies belonging to the oldest and most respected families of that ancient town may be seen participating in this healthy and innocent recreation. Tae Toronto Telegraph and the London Advertiser have presented their readers vith "wood-¢ut ™ pictures of the murder- ed man, Campbell, and his wife the sup- posed murderess. They are murderous looking pictures, both of them. {would think it had hordly time to cool, huge snake throwing its heated breath around. A little while after, before one we Soe it turning slowly around, gradually growing into shape beneath the sharp cutting instruments applied to its sides. Before it has advanced a stage further,and is being stained and fitted with sights, and very soon after it is proved, and run on the tramway, which goes through all the manufacturing departments and store- houses, to' be shipped in one of the War Department vessels nearly always lying at: the Arsenal pier, to the station at which it may be required. Ax-article on the famine in Persia, in the New Vork Herald has the following : "The writer was in India in 1868, and witnessed some eof the horrors. of the terrible famine which prevailed in Ajmere, and which, according to official statistics, caused two millions of deaths. No sight on earth can be pictured more terrible than a crowd of miserable creatures frenzied by hunger. Spectral forms stretch forth long, thin arms, with the elbow- joint standing ou in bold relief, like a huge ball, and the hand spreading like-the roots of a tree, and demands in shrill accents the means of life. And such eyes and faces as glare at you! Years hence they haunt you in dreams, like some hideous picture of a madhouse, or a battle- field, or an execution. And if you have courage to calmly examime, in all their minutiae these revolting forms of misery, the most callous heart may well turn sick with a disgust which is strangely mingled with terror. In many cases the victim of starvation takes a peculiar furm of fever-- A TERRIBLE volcanic catastrophe, it is reported has occurred in one of the islands in the Malay archipelago, by which a wave forty yards high swept all the people and everything movable into the ses, causing the loss of 416 lives. Ax express train Between Plymouth and London, England, makes the distance, 194 miles, in four and a quarter hours, including &f minutes' stoppage. This the famine fever. His body breaks out in ulcers from head to foot, and his blood burns in the tortures of a living fire. Better far the quick though - repulsive famine." . horrors of the plague than the prolonged torments that hang in the wake of a great In New York, one day last week, a Toronto, ; Frenchmah swallowed his artificial teeth | jes, is probably ¢ fastest travelling. in the while eating, and was world. an » - saecor arrived.' strangled before is vouched for by several witnesses Wi testimony is unimpeachable. A tie ago a female Newfoundland, dog in the habit of coming to the lady in this city, who would 3 piecés of cold meat, which the | would eat, and having satisfied its ) 89 away again. So confirmed did this habit become, that, at a certain hour daily, the ; house of 8 throw do lady would expect the dog, and the E would put m ap appearance. A few days = ago, before feeding ' her, the lady ssid #0 her, "why don't you bring me one of several times as she stood at the wind the dog leoking her in the face with expression of intelligence, as if it um stood every word the lady ssid. The nest day, to the lady's. great astonishment, oe the usual hour the dog returned, and, and behold ! was accompanied by & 3 puppy. The lady fed both dogs and thes = took up the puppy into the window, whem the old dog scampered off and did mob return for three days. At the end of thed » And yesterday morning, enough, the dog returned, accompanied three Newfoundland pups. Several of neighbors saw the whole transactions, thie most wonderful proof of the 5 of the dog they have ever knows. 'Where. the dog came from, and to whom it is not known ; but we have the name In Oshawa, on Tuesday, the 15th Silas Benjamin Fairbanks, Esq, years. ] D. HOLLIDAY, 5 N, ONT., AGENT ROOKLIN, a Fics b . ] vines Hocety atlow rates of lntere

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