Ontario Community Newspapers

Atwood Bee, 6 Mar 1896, p. 3

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the first woman I ever loved. 'Replied | Eve--I suppose I shall have you; but this is so sudden. "By George, if I were in your place, said the officious friend, Bill- met fair Kitty in the tane-- wink A Or blink, I think She winked again! " * bhbbiet 7 'itenphone -_ enna you from + ' 4 | the central 0 i od * + WON KINGDOM, : : Jokes About the Sex. pe 4 He--Why do they call women the! ee ee ee oe ee ee ee fair sex? She--To distinguish them iit Patd. from the unfair sex, no doub Said Adam--I swear to you, you are to believe | "I would ap- i AROTHER MAP OF GUIANA. | dary. { DUTCH POSSESSIONS IN 1725, i i | | } : | j thé transtator was I scholar, and has ver} misunderstoc cerning which it shonid be s While it gives substantia of ee original, the western extent of the Dutch ter- | ee titory are found in the work of Al- a flies the eminent Spanish historian | 4 Beever seo erapher. referred to in myi + ; Previons article, As in that ee} = 'Judge Daly on the Venezuela Boun- |L now make the references to'G. A" | ta | Thompsons English transfation, con- | aid ally the Sp } efenfeote <% eee senfonteeonle ee wodte KNEE CAPS. Many persons in Belg | leu knet-caps, Which are Bose woollen wristbunmds worn | school children in rural districts his country. The knee-caps are de- that | BOOS | lum war exact aul Dy es- iD anish | 4 | | eres | we r ta volume 4 of the English > ns ; F ly for a divorcee." * { me sien j Signet to protect the knees fron Haat ate arm around aie weulntes | Diy, 0 ae Yor ies Pd ti = won't | NoMiiE aia ker bes cas 'sce Ciatar? tnkcee: cs ee page So7, is the follow- ; eold, ee they are era rie a) A pout; j " ose ore lable than any part of the lower No doubt | ports dirt si t | Paes ee NCSA ; ta a Smal river of the Pro- | ibe, except the feet ut out - | 1e difference between a str Vers to Stop to American Colonies | vince. anc oes of oatt 12m, Or part | SA ING: 7 At«such good. taste. | and a woman," said the Cheerful Idiot | --Another Kyglishman's Map Sustains on Guay: th ' : siya 1 . 1+ | WASTE ae . LEAKING FAUCET | to the assembled and un-to-that-tim the Contention as to the Proper Boun- | ee various others aaa enters 'the | Interestin ults ure arrived at Her little hand caught 'his so quick-- yePDy boarders, besten that the Cross | dary Lines. ; Cuyuri [Cuynnij by the s. if it is ligured 'ow out how ng h Hs + s ak ' reets are quietest | as 6 2, 4 a fauce ! - q ae tints tie ME ChE H. | his river, as ; ppears from Cotazzi's | is lost by the lea ing oO : SrA re catch What is the matter with Gus West- | n article ¥ r. 1arles Laat of Coimbtia. flows into the Cuv- from which water escapes in dror a 4s ern's tongue Oh, he's courting a Boston' girl, and has been Samad kissing a frozen trolley pole. he doctor thinks he ean patch him up." They were talking about the we ight of different perecoe' in a certain fam- ily, ha other evening, and the Canee. | His match And lose the trick. Then with her other hand she cave-- A cuff! ae a 8 rough ough, ies. a ter youn man, who was prese Yet showed: her brave. spoke up batore he thought, and mith i "f tell you that Jenny isn't so very | She said: "I won't!" then light either, although she looks so.' still, ; And then he looked suddenly oun scious A kiss! jand blushed, and Jenny became 'ab- Ah, this rede in studying a chromo ri the Sweet Dliss | Wall. Paid every ill-- | Ted re ae Paid Bill! THE ROPE ERKOKE. THEATRi. si TOILETS. ¢ The Terrible Setne nt the Hanglog James Fitzgerald in St. Loute, Louis despatch says: J. Fitzzer- ald was hanged in the Four Courts | jail yard this morning. Two reprieves | had lengthened the misery the | Sketches of Costnnas Woes in Paria Thea- St res. : : Mile. Yahne.--Dinner dress, composed of embroidered insertion and batiste over pink. Bodice adorned with an fin- | mense collar, falling in a point to the condemned man. The was }&pruns at 10.17 a.m. | shot downw ard. when the rone's sharp lay of rap send was reached there | snap, and Fitzgerald's writhing the had [ to the spot was still con- he groaned. Before the horror-stric en Watchers could touch him he arose. Standing up with the black. ex ap over pe face and the rope instrument of eath dungcling from his neck, bywalked into the morgue, was given stimulants. anxious than his executioners for | death, and begged that the end come | quickly. When a second rope was called for { none was to be had, and Fitzzerald lay mouning on a siab in the morgue, While a messenger was sent:a dis- { ti ince of nine squares for a new rope. | Father McErlane bent over the body |} of Fitzgerald and recited prayers. Once Fitzgerald rnised his hand and pulled the head of the priest to his waist. At the neck, pink choux and | [et "nd whispered earnestly for z drapery balt veiled with lace: pink | hati minute. What that communiea- belt Large rose on the left of 'the | fom, Was) will never be known, but bodice. Short sleeves, siecle p ' n ashy pale, : ° rned searlet : eurs fe r his Mile. Rejane.--Dress of iron-grey | -- rlet and teurs fell from hi aee , ica r > } . . - : : | matelasse. Bodice of gre3 Velvet, At 10.45 the a arrived with m% new rope, which was quickly ad- .| justed, and F iteceraid was carried to | the scaffold. It was ne cessary two Deputy Sheriffs to hold him up | While the noose was plz iced. Fitzger- aid's only words w ere pleas for haste. At 11.02 th was again sprung, and at 11.15 attending physi- cians pronouncdad life extinct. On the night of Sebt. 24, 1891, Fitzzer- nld killed his sweetheart, Annie Mes- sens ind = oatt&mnted suieide, but only infured himee slightly. PRIEST AND PARISBIONER. Miss Margie Melody, off Hamilton, Used Or, Agnew's Celebrate =F are Powder, on Recommendation of Kev. Father for Influenza. Having himself been benefited by Cy 4a the use of Dr. Agnew's--Catarrinil | Ry vt | Powder, hey. Fathe: +r-Hinehey,;- of St. 7 me Joseph's Chureh, Hamilton, Ont., fol- adorned with safiron-tinted guipure | !owed the counsel of the good book, and Carried the good news to others. One of his parishioners, Miss Maggie Melody, had been a sufferer from in- and turquoises: sleeves of the same velvet. Byzantine belt, set with omni- colored gems.--Revue de ia Mode. al fluenza. Father Hinchey knew how GLOVE TERMS. much good this remedy had «lone in ore case of cold in the head with himself, Techvical Phrases Used in Consection pe and recommended it to Miss Melody With Gloves. for her case, who, -_sceor sig- . = 7 , | nature, has writter = have used si ight Kid: "leather™of heavy Jr. Agnew"s Catarrh: nt Powder for in- fiuenza and found it a grand re inedy. Pique Sewn.--A method of sewing bY jin fact, it nave som getan Pasmerarge which one edge of the seam overlaps " . iA eicatmn. Weheniveee ce once. I can With pleasure highly re- the other, and is stitched through and commend it to all who are suffering through, leaving ipper ed ex- ; : aa "eS eee brough, le ing the upp cuge from this malindy. posed to view. Used on heavy-w eight | gloves of all materials. One short puff of the breath throuch erseam, Outseam. -- Synonymous | the Blower, supplied with each bottle | terms applied to a form of sewing in ; 0! Dr. Agnew" S Catarrhal Powder, dif- which the two edges of a seam are | fuses this Powder over the surface of placed together and sewn over and i nasal passages. I ainless and de- over. lightiul to use, it relieves in ten min- Welt or Border.--The bin on the | Nts and permanentiy cures catarrh, wrist of a giove. my fever _coids, headache, sore Bandalette.--Th piece..ol..Jeather throat,..tonsilitis and" "Gea THess GO that sting the ope / of a glove. cents urchette.--The e of leather STATE OF TIBAADI pee i the fingers a glove. Gu --The sma. piece of leather Trade advices for th st week, ; in the (ot ae between the fingers. | cording to Bradstres ire' rathe Nervura (snown in America as Paris | more favorable, Mc -l porting Point).--A form of embro idery, consist- | tie volume of dry Is distributed ing of a singie stitched rollin one, two | about equal o ¢t corresponding or three rows. ti fala year ago, wa the total in Spear Point.--A form of stitching; | some lines heavier than last week. also Known "s crow's-foot: There are fewer failares also report- Ridelle.--A stamp put on the leather from the Dominion, 58, against 70 of) Fitzgerald's body | Instead of stopping | ground. | stious. "* My God, my God, my throat," | Hinchey, and Found tt a Grand Remedy | before the glove is sewn, to indicate | week ago, 38 in the corresponding | the size of the glove. sveek a year ago, 53 two years ago, ---- and 36 tn the like week in 1893. In Why Kissing I< Pleasant. the Province of Ontafio snow on rey: é kiss! . } the country roads restricts interior fs pelt pene aoe adh pleasant, | trade, while snow in New Brunswick eros epee aLOKY ee. of _ | Stimulates lumbering. In Nova Sco- tific tendencies, seca use © tia thé movement of merchandise is jawbones and lips pic full of nerves, | not jarce but remittanees are fair '4 > } Sg ' ; 4 ="? A s wha 84 ne - and Ss hen 3 the ip A4. persons meet | Communication with Prince Edward / 58 an electric current is generated, and, Islanc has been interrupted by | to put it facetiously, you don't ghee storms.. Total bank clearings at to have a dynamo machine, no Vinnipez, Hamilton, Toronto, Mont- battery.in the house, nor a ¢all- "ity | real and Halifax amount to $18,592.- nor a button to touch to ring ap the | | 000. this week. nearly 5 per cent. central office, _and there is no Pa more than a week ago, about 12 per tent on it, and the poorest ion in like e rane : cent. more than in the like week last the world can enjoy the electric eur- | " © % ps t better than the millionai = ; | Year, =O per cent, more than in the it never gets out of order.' "9 | corresponding week of 1894, and a i . i le t in the like riod if Edison had invented kissing TN art emailer than me: pe would cost $100 a year, like the tele- | phone, and then extra kissing would Time flies, except in the case of the be charged up extra, and if-you didn't girl, who remains aced 20 for six pay for it hey would take out your.' years. | Lugrin, in the New York Herald of | Sunday; January 26th, on Guiana's } unl, of which it is an affluent, on the | south side, more than two degrees of | if the washer is not tight. A chem- | ist, Who measured exactly the amount j longitude, or 150 mites, to the west | bed waste, found that about drops | boundary a century ago, the writer | of the Fsvequibo. | fell every minute; within 90 minutes | gives & quotation from a manuscript! In rox 4. of the Enelish trans- | there would be 4.500 drops of water, | history of Guiana, which he says is | lation, nae 216, the River Poumaron | oer is equivalent to a oo ghe 50 | in his possession, and adds that a re- is described : that there would be a loss of four POPeesiOn, And AoE pede: | "Poumaron, a_ river of the Pro- gallons of water every 24 hours. In | ference in the quotation "to the map | yjnee of Gunyana, in the part called | a Sires almost 1,500 gallons of water | sent by the Spanish Government to/ Dutch Gnayana. 'It rises in the Ser- | ¥ will Lave nh wasted uselessly from | D'Anville, the French geographer, on ANOTHER tinued. i of uth America is that by Thomas to trr Pate Sagres, published in London in 1789) (4... ~4 (eaves years before the conquest of h tania of Imataca, ryns n. e. and enters tlast I was prevailed upon American Rheur obtained perfect fore I had taken half a bottle of the relief euch a faucet. It is considered that i e " 07 j leaking faucets are quite frequent, jw hich the lines of Dutch Guiana are | Sree us ores a cae ee atal on ininpane WhAletAicAwater ter | laid down in accordance with a de- | Orinoco. It is the >oundary of Duteh | comes more apparent. Every land- | Scription given herein, seems to be} Guayans | lord shouid, therefore, see that all | important, and the map, if it couid The oricinal text reads as follaws-/! Water faucets about his premises are be found, would be almost conclusive | "Poumaron, Rio de la Provincia de a oo to prevent uselesy loss of Te es ie AS Ladies en fa parte que poseen OVERS MUST REMEMBI The quotation from the peat Taatate aN. <5 in eerrania ue i < or ER ES cE EM ER Which he gives says nothing about arkiniet se rein 3 pewety DOCH That the inbabitants of the earth | any map. The words of the quot: ati 0 le ter de Nav ar, ese wales are more than twe are as follows: With respect to vs ve Sage ecient de Tas posesiones That they can live without eac | the Dutch line, it appears by certain :. ye piss Sct 'ea Warts | other if occasion demands it. y i z ss as ite int Ss BmURCHE one ais Sore j authentic documents transmitted by "DP lene a cited ae & th aed aes 10: a ro nenoacue pa a , . mn > 1 i } € *f . ' 1rod are na uneCLY ) rove fatal poet atl" Bagueee" ge the "a Gulana tu the part which the Puteh mat pairs of very prosaic middle King of France, in which there is a ether . rises in cae ReUEE: of Im age a persons were lovers once distinct and fuil description of the! ris : hag to the cortheast Ts Cnry- That i a kindness to tie Dutch territories, wherein the line | \ cd into "t e sea twenty-five ie feues | munity to hurry on the weddir ; extends to the westward of Lake vs aie 'nt from the great, or ~ eee That a will iguorant pt Amacou, making a distinct curvefor | 0! Ue Orinoco. It is the western! more intereste other thing / aie AK Tevet s ine | uimit of the rosressions of the Puteh." in. Him or Her ) the Lake of Parima and then running In wy former. paper:t ted that poe Bes * | up to the Rio Negro. according to tho Sn is nan r paper 1 state Tis Phat they no right _to PEren the dotted line on the general map | *" paniards hever settied in any. to each other confidence ts f Guiana," part of the now dispnted territory 'them as ind! vidual s. si " does 'not follow from the state- othe iF than that close to the eastert That nothing is so |}ment that certuin authentic docu- ; eve tempiite as love dette r if | ments were transmitted by the Court this his st ace tam Ps aa te on engaeement is ended. rene of Spain to D'Anville that one of eure tas" ateve mentioned, | nay Be Lab the United Stat $ mai; is in- | these documents was a map of Dutch - : different to lovers, and that det: | Guiana, -with a dotted line showing A RECENT HISTORY. letters are not withheld. . ont | the boundarie s of that colony. There | of British Guiana from 1688 to malice.--Minneapolis Journa}. ;} may have been a map, but this is not | by J. Rodway, published three yé JAMES MARTINEAL | Recessarily inferrible from the state-!ago at Georgetown, Deinerara, 4 net} : -- ' iti | ment. cause it contains what I regard as amony Lie GSP ATA ae Stes CAPTAIN THOMPSON'S MAI'. "| 2 carefully prepared and reliable ac- | the constell Sees mean: Gentes I avail myself of this occasion to conn of _the Dutch settlements west ly emit ent as a pr acher, tt write r, . give some udditional important in- | Of the Essequibo, and explains why conversationalist ecturer and 2 | tormation upon the matier in dis- the Spaniards re succeeded in ot thinker he ; "wel "s | pute. Ti is a large map, in si ecting any settlements ir pi ee frenes ah ' | sheets of the coast. of Guiana and puted te 'rritory. while the Dutch did This tr | the interior, from the observations | SU¢¢eed in making them. He says tien aoe ae nga a . apis ace that the Caribs were the most pow- ninets HY Mi j; of Captain Edward 'i hompson, made erful of all the tribes of tropical Am- | i840 Englichman, who bie many ot = tg gery dacs aeons od | erica and abhorred the very name of friends and followers en this s at ages hed sini nie ue f eh , | the Spaniards. He'says that in every | the be His life a ee eraphlc survey Of the astempe the Spaniards made to en- | #¢tive a is | coast of Guiana and the interior | 4.) Guiana they were driven away, | €Poch-making books parts, as fur as they have been smal pi that for nearly a century the ; from his pen, net plored | by the French anid the country was preserted to the na- | cessful pastora tes | Duteh,." 'this is the best map of the | ¢;, intact; that ichen the Dutch | A pumber 'Coast of Guiana and of the inter- came they prociaime d themselves en- | testimont: ; ior, so iar as then explored, that emies of Spain, and were permitted | religio n and phil osophy bs know of, andacopy of it is in the li- | by the Caribs to make small settle- | about 700 of the wor dix- | brary Tne inurider cf thie mee | | native and, as the trade w ith the wpa | ce scholars of et an Papa: ; "i es became more extensive, they ath. o i rf that it oe the soe ggg oe vere allowed to establish posts in HIS SIGHT WAS GOOD the territory cinimed by the e > Whole ex 'y : : | west of the Essequibo, and all the lg Ps os he eRTER A locomotive engineer was to have | posts, settlements and forts that | while effe 'My closed to the Span- | his sight tested by a doctor who lived | have previously mentioned. It shows | iards. wa n to ti: Dutch: that Bip a house facing a large park. The j the Point Barima, at the month of | whi a Spa.iard at that period could | Hapa used 'the 'ty ed plate ee: the Orinoco, which, it staies, is the | not travel in that part of Guiana, Om OFEX SEE an esd Sal Lh "Cape Breme" of the Dut and ; } and | yOu can see." , Wien the engineer ape bas ie | the Dutchmen. on the other hand, learned that his sight was to be itive Sarit wi the name" to the | Were free of the whole region. tested -he had arfanged with his s0n ~} 2A TiN wuich ows into e " ie the mouth of the Orinoecs, FRENCH TESTIMONY to take his bicycle half a mile into e words: "Western boundary of As a further coutt rmati: mn of thee the bark and be oiling it. In due time the Dutch, according to theirclaim." | statements fror sinterested ig oid man Refi foie to the ae The Captain Thompson, from whose | source, I will call attenti m to an aan doctors aan sae usual : eds observations in 1781 this map was! extract from the "Trav in: Souths | 2 SUM Gee Gage LL Nard een k made, Was at that time a naval ¢om- | America During the Weare 1801-2-3 ins ae rset ins young sca stoop- mander under Lord Rodney, and took | and 4, by F. Depons, Late Agent of | ia the docter hin eta pi a vee possession of the mouths of the three | the-French--Government at Caraccas. Feamd the doctor. dont. se> anything rivers Gi Dutch Gujana running in- | Translated a the-Trench. "2 Vos. 1* Hg De tothe sea, the Poumaron, the Esse- | London, 180 rae r took u quibo and the Demerara, in order to M. Deans says, volume 2, page 355: nik Hints € eet cut off any possible assistance by "It is, in fac t, cert: tin that Renae prey Sere sie the Dutch to the Americun colonies, Guiana, which om the map appea atti cba < then struggling for independence, ow- | to cecupy thirty leagues up coast BOR'S gis ing to his belief that the Dutch from the mouths of the Oronoko to ; LABOR PEN traders from these setilements fur- Cape Nassau, does not occupy Dne 1. Th py ena een 2¢ © wh living, nished supplies to the Anfericans. | inch; for the natives have defended and not ive on vent,» pro.its or inter- This, does not diminish the va of | their independence so that, having est, Ed : + this! map, so carefully prepared. and | , never _been converted, ---reduced gi ee Thou shait * Ip other in propor- }so-superior to any that preceded it, | Vanquished, as they are in palo and in | tion to th chess, ignorance and for the possession of the , mouse of | fact as free as they were ret the poverty. ae | these rivers was but oi sige | discovery of the new world. . : hou sh: ae make the highest pos- since the English did m, take {fuil| The Dutch court, with a great a sible use of thy vote, regarding it as session of the Dutch colony by | Of earnestness, the friengship and al-! 4 most aeietae trus acacia Reon years aftr itance of the Caribe. They obtain it! 4. 7 ni the work- COUGHGHL TNT fHitesn yen : with so much the' more facility as SENG Death. ward. ' ap, also in the library | they do not preach to them the in- : of tee ee ies Society, | Convenient aecikeiaey of the ride, r to prevent I Dutch. ean in Surinam, ; but make, on the contrary, an appl- ' a |.of the , nd Berbice, | °8Y for their manners and habits/ It t ate luxur: Det ESAT Te eas ny ed hed i n Loi ndon is asserted that in these political rela- n erly exists by J. , Was an Cant ir 'Thomp- tions they do not fail to nourish the; 7, Thou shalt + anit aterthrae eRe de on < einen from | hatred of the Caribs against the Span- injusti = xoeiat « vil. which "the fo ame San wae complied iards, a. - to scheint \ ee the duties 81. This .map-is-said;Stlxes bye bonds of-intere: at." ee piesent as supre that is, in 17 1 a French All this shows that the Spaniards to hi "4 yee, pe ge einer is not | Bever acquired any of the disputed origina i 3 a 7. oan ae ity rive = t is of equal importance with Pare a oa a Weak, < , yet that of Captain Thompson, as it ination Geo conn x tent Sceiety a gives by a carefully dotted jine the < merican Geograpaiea: Se 7: oo Fe Jouis as " Amacura, ¢ is h 5 ing from. the south into the sea at cae Rbetinatic Core dad Ohisined Fee rd "J Sof dk vers the mouth of the Orinoco. It thus re- fect Kelief"--This Kemedy Gives Kelief arrangcem its tter= nresents the now. disputed territory ina Few Hours, and Usually Cures in ir letters of 1@ Worth trans | as belonging to the Dutch, and is in One to Three Days. posed and read backwards and for- accordance, therefore, with a map ' Ps cs aii '97. | Wards and up and down ceive ie four found In the. atlas of the French; J. Hi. cypasiien : 2a a s Mt Be nd f i and Latin is. 1% geographer Sanson (dated 1669). This | ci: aD a ey net utiie. the " aes naure i in our | is called a map of " Amerique Meri-! the benefit o ps: a ni Baie ares abt A : of =O many | dionale." and represents Caribana as | Statement: __ + was Sec anny Eee eae _ arrangements | divided by a dotted iine from the) With rhe umatic pains for a oe hatiter: | Spanish terri ory°of New Andalusia, | years. -- On several occasions I con | east of the Orinoco, and entirely sep- } not waik, nor even put my feet to the | arated, therefore, from Caribana. floor. Bo! Ps i aggre glen IMPORTANT MAP local phy but my suffering con- atie he- Dutch Guiana). This gives the exact | remedy, and to-day rezard it the only 2) ' il € boundaries of utch Guiana by col- radical care for rheumatism." nd the curious part Fe. is ored lines, showing that ,the edad Psa, wie ; reading them backwards and of the now disputed ter®tory from Srianacnce Raper ereh . wards and up and down zi thethouth of the Amacura (already ae ees DISTINC MION. i game resuik that transposinz mentioned as the river flowing into} Wingle--Why call it a toothbrush ? | letters in the original word the sea at the mouth of the Orinoto) You should say "teeth brush," unless | Their significance ,as Latin w to the mouth yoo? the Essequibo, . was |} you happe n to have but one tooth. jas follows: Time, feaF thou: then Dutch 'territory, and gives also |" W Wangle--Nonsense ; ene does not/ likewise; meti, be mensured ; the names ro the settlements before | say * Shovels sh." | emit, he hays. --St. ants Rernblie. rred to, and shows, the Maroni | Ww refe: River ny 0p Dateh Guiana from French Gui Other qmportaat confirmations of ioe rad ingle-- i one shoe at at angie--But be > Soe No; nee he brusl tim about Ss bu ReSPLLtE The Egyr tian % priests prac a ee air} |putae ons and made artificia arms, B. C. 700. i tr ifgs amd

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