Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 2 Jun 1892, p. 7

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[KINDS . (or 1892. `The eoutjcil. met to-day, May 23rd, at sNicoItoh7`H7`otel, according to adjournment. The roe'1e"in the chair. All members present The minutes of last session were read. The reeve laid several documents before [the counoil which were read. .._~_-:-_ .-r u_. \xn.:4.....:.:.. ..........A...l I116 couucu wuwu wan: rcau. On mbtion of Mr. Whiteside, seconded by Mr. Be1l-Ordered, that the following accounts bepaid : V . . . T `A nrntnn 9.: Jnhn nrnnnnn 85. W. 5000111118 D6 _ _ pmu : . l J M. Brown $5, John Drennan $5, W. J.- Erlgai $8.40 and William Alderson $3. TX. .` T.nnnnv':.1nanl1h IRE J.` .|.`Jflg&l.' $G.`.!U BBO. VV uuulu n1\1c|'auu qpu. DI1'- Lennox'--JQseph Martin was paid $6.55 tor removing Albert Martin. an indi- gent, to the Collingwood Marine Hospital, m.1I_.Whin =.nide_'l`he followimz accounts gent, 60 Due uuuxugvvuuu. ;u.-:u.u_ap uvur-..u., Bell--Whiteside-The following were paid: Jnhn Muhv RA. m Mnnnrsx. Naif & Tezzartv were palu 6 John Muir $4.00, Messrs. Netf &_Tegarty $10, Sa.m l' Irwin $14, George Kearns $13 n..u u..n (1 (1 Qmihh undertaker- 'a >1U, Dam: .|.rw1u in-2, Uvulsv ucu...., v. . Du--,-Bell--G.T G Smith, undertaker, was paid $12 for coin and case for one Thos.` Taylor, an indigent. ,` Whiteside-Du'-The following accounts were paid : ,Tn|'nr`\nc| I-Tnmlun 321, Frank Aitcheson $3. ` UCNIIIUD 1.;vJ `Inna: qyu.-, .. -----_ .___, __,_ , Wm, Irwin $4. _ .Bell----Lennox-The clerk was refunded $5;l5 for cash, paid for search of title and re- gist-ration of bonds, &c., re Page Bridge. - nun` _VVhitp_uide---The sum .of $25 was gtstranon or bonus, oLc., re rugs m._u.5u. Duff -Whiteside--The sum $25 was granted to No. 13 Union School Section, for n 1 Q0`) v 1892. Duff --Lennox-The reeve was/' appointed in conjunction with a. representative from Tecumseth in the matter of a disputed fence. put up by Mr. John Nicol, on south townline. to see that the same be removed to its roper place - Du -Whiteside--The sum of $18 was granted to'Mr. Thos. Elliott for the use of Mrs Griin, an indigent. Lennox-Dut'f-The reeve was authorized to purchase 15 road scrapers for the town- ship of Essa. ' 'I'\._@ 13-11 VIVI... lIl\I'I'l`I(I:I nrd;t\I1I`TII3.l'] Ilntil I Kllul UV :5 1892. A ` ship 0: 5383.. . . ` Du'--Bell.--The council adjourned until Monday, the 30th inst., then to meet at Stewart's Hotel, Thornton, at 10 o clock The ceiuus. Bulletin No. 9 of the census of the Domin- ion has been received. It deals chiey with the religious denominations. The way in which the members forming the denomina- tions are tabulated and numbered is very advantageot this -system is the accuracy with which the statistics are compiled. The instrument is not lazy. It is not made headless by the state of the atmosphere in register a Presbyterian as a Roman Catholic, nor an Armenian as` a Calvinist, from any of these` causes. It is absolutely impartial. .'.l_`he total; increase of population in Can- adaduring the ten years is 507,865. [As a constituent -in that increase. we have the regions in the orth West, the returns for which " `have not been received in their entirety. Leaving out of consideration this estimated population of 32,168, we. have an increase of,475,70l for which we have com- plete returns. The increase is thus divided among the denominations as follows :- Roman Catholics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298,483 W Methodists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 104,488 Presbyterians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79,034 Church of "England . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66,692 Lutherans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17,629 Baptists . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. 7,224 All others . . . . . . . . . . .` . . . . . . . . . . . 2,151 1-,, 1\__ ...._:.. 4.1.... :nnIInnI nf nnnlilfinn WEB ingeniously done byelectricalmachines. One `; the room. It is not dishonest. Jtwill not estimated po ulation of` `the unorganized rere/paw J atnes Heydan $31, Frank Aitchebsqn $3, All others . .. In Ontario the increase of population Accordgng to denominations is thus divided:- Methodists . . . . Roman Catholics . . . . . . . . . . . . . Presby terians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Church of England . . . . . . . . Lutherans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 All others . . . . . . . . . . . jj-:-O VIII]! Dllu dunno . ``I think it is t'_r00 bad. said Mrs. Brown- smith, that I have to slave all day Sunday just the same as any other day in the week, while you just sit around the house and do nothing but smoke and read. H'D..o-, vnn fnrant. mv dear. replied Ml`. nothing but smoke and reau. - But you forget, my dear, replied Brownsmith, in his blandest tones, that thesabbath was made for man. Customer (in a -restaurant)--See here, waiter, I ve'found abutton in this salad. Waiter-That is all right, sir, it is a part of the dressing. _ . What penance are you doing in this Len- ten season, Mrs. Mcsimper ? asked the Rev. Dr. Thirdly. 4 Oh, I come to hear you preach every Sunday,. was the cheerful reply. Would you be just? Please do not pun- ish a child for a fault learned from yourself l on 1 ,l_ --1:51.!` Lit {nut #11:; ` um la Uuuu Ava - ----- ----_- W , _ Did your wife look a._ little, bit, inst least little bit croasthis mornipg? Was kindling wood ne and dry Y. Don t p`.a.y offmean tricks; on,,the st boy ; he has an excellent memory for in ice as well as forlbenets conferred. In l 'respect he isliko a dog. '1' -- A-- --......s 1.... lumn nhnfnoranl | The new comet has. been photographed. It is like the Grit. party faoliticians at. Oc- ta.wa.--a.ll ta.il.and n'o hem . A Bloobumner Pei"e- -Amy, who is this Mr. Wacker whocalls on you so fmquentlv ? Amy---He : Q polipical physician, Pa. , ' ` What on `earth's that ? I don't know. `I heard brother J ack say ` - -f-_ . \`\nA1A!` his door, (11 less of a `bu have been. When, ' ' 1 Au , ".1 (1011 U A now` he was a. ward healer. Goaih oftho G`:-cit sou-V"V'a.vu. V T`l\b[Xcl,%_ihg`p'x':':erie:noe` .o_f th .s; 3leq`did, Hamburg u_tan_mer,No1f;nannialut week suggests `"aom`-e~~ launch: "of "immense practical xn_9In,,en'. _',I,eaman when expected to tile.`-`R758! -Ilfio `196 vof ..9ce.In guigou. ' `Th6"sivado `wave. which ..nh-`nick ,~ the proud .9rsi.l=wdqmagin J19! ...oum.-d- 119;! 9991 ii}! .91: 99=zenln i>9:-0;;-..-cuts: (me of those |en_u-ooomonnl oollihgoncig ~"to1`be` * `iifoildiblel ilg " ` rhnpozomt .. ~.-'IClI!i'!I.`I,. :of such peonl` Ill. houomnuncy afford ,5 olow -to1.tlioir- crap and Funny-` 1, - J 99 ......1 I5 IIBU 3 V5: has. n_:.. ...._a... nnlhininnu At. 01:. 0B................ land.....v......... coon.-ocu---one:-v 090000-outnnoouuou nu. oolaovoillvcvtl ' 3A --`o\:\v\u1`u' R. T. BANTING, Clerk. this increase inst the VVasthe 62,439 37,461 35,397 18,471 7,128 30.097 ze small 1' injur- this ha\\$h}:len'1av_,Uy, Lord `---'-- s collnctidn mum] 1; home in the %.jc11ery of the na.t1on_; . lm.h_.disv11:4Se1 _~.\ orales drew less at- W U m than miwht have been expected. :{{t::;(,l.11,\- of :t(1?l1ll`atiOn as it was, it stood 1I,e.a;;(ftl1 who sought to makes a. H 5u'ison hetween it and that other of can-`}.}`, rumor had spoken were disa.gpoint.- Ed? For no other was ever seen. u ti. Ce- ,.m3*5 cm11m`rpm`b _diSa1)peared ent,irely.._ VOW kmw Ought of it, mad _fewA inqui_rpd; ;nd chose few soon forgot its very elt: _'nCe- . ` ` 'n__nI$lln"D worn. however. WhO dld. not l30YlliB,b!;n,elert oommsndetn. , .. '.Diie'eio g these miht-j_,bill,o_ws_ _of all iisbnlons : loroe ' and ex sggerated pxqportions T given them` by . romantic writers, end viewing them only in the `cold colorless `light of mathematical measurement, they are still terrible phenomena, representing the energy of the upper atmospheric currents, rushinu with `almost incredible speed. Hocd`s famous: lines," Ah, go !`,it wae_a.hd1-eery mount ! its base as 1 LIID may VI. rust: wuu aavau atvvaa, now wavy V- awful white. admirablyvpicture the cyclone r- 11 ~.r" of the deep sea, so to speak`, but all poetry belittles its real grandeur and prowess as determined by scientific seamen. In October, 1888, the Italian bark Rasina was visited by a sea which swept every man on board to destruction except one sailor lyin; sick in his bunk below. The steamer Umb is live years ago was swept by a wave which reached her masthead, fty feet high Dmbtless many ne vessels on the missing" list have succumbed to such ponderous billows, and numerous records exist of captains washed overboard or crew decimated by the ravages of.,a single wave. A single see, it was -reported, swept from the steamer San Francisco, in December, 1OE0 ___... - I..--.4:-nap` -Aa- Rn}. Ih Ill 6 3 In 1103 II \-ILUCIJ usvuuv . I.u_w I tllack` a_.s night. In top of pale and livid green, its eyes` nnrfn I mhrn' I59`m9r 3ll IPFIHUIIUU, In Jlcvvuavua, 1853, over a hundred souls. But the countless fatalities due to this specic cause fall far short of what we might expect when a trained mariner like Captain Kiddie, of the Celtic, reports that ` in January, 1875, he measured several. Atlantic waves nearly seventy feet high moving at the rate of twenty- pve miles an hour. In a recent` and admirable paper in the L vndon Nautical Magazine Mr. William Allingham, citing all these facts and many more equally striking, recalls Admiral Fuzroy s personal observations of exceptional waves attaining the blinding height of seventy feet (ff the Cape of Good Hope, and Dumont d Urville s report of a Southern sea ways about one hundred feet from trough to crest- . nn_-1_ _.--1. .....:a...... .. Mn Allinahnm from trougn to 0l'8B6.- While such writers as Mr. Allingham -have added much to the literature of ocean-waves. and mathematicians, as 3, Froude, Lord R ayleigh. Airy andRankine have done much to elucidate wave dyna- mics, one novel, and perhaps the most intensely interesting and practically important. part of the inquiry has been, so far as we know, untouched` What is the precise atmospheric movement to which the genesisjand propagation of the Normannia s and similar waves are due 1 To solve this dark, but vital, element of the problem it must be premised that this specic class of `the most elevated and disastrous waves is not met with in the polar or tropical oceans. They are almost, if not altogether, conned to the extra- trop`cal and middle latitudes. This fact is the key to the whole problem of their genesis and grogressive motion. No mere surface-wind, though belonging to the most violent hurricane, can alone raise a water wave seventy feet high, the weight of which would amount almost to that of_ two atmospheres ! Ordinary ocean waves "rarely exceed twenty-ve feet-the maximum height measured by the Challenger was only twenty four fi et. The celebrated "storm waves of the `Indian Ocean. one of which in 1864 inundated the mouth of the Ganges and destroyed forty thousand people, are not mountainous billows. Causedby the air pressure around the outer storm-circle exceeding the pressure in the storm-centre, they can never" be ten feet high, and must be reinforced by other undulations before they can acquire overwhelming force. The giant wave of the type encountered by the Umbria and Norman- nia and measured by Kiddie and Fitzroy ' cannot be originated, therefore, by a mere conjunction of the ordinary wind-wave and storm wave, and we seem compell- ed to nd another factor. The appulse or impact on the sea of the swift and powerful descending upper current of the atmosphere appears to be indispensable to the genesis of a wave at all approaching fty feet in height. The special areas in which such gigantic pulsations of the sea are observed lieprecisely in the zones, and only `in the zones, upon which it is well ascertained _ that this current descends. We may therefore conclude, _ that the exceptional surges in question are due not alone to cyclones, however \ violent but mainly to the prolonged appulse of the descending air-current. NOW IaX||lIll'QI.avu us an ...-.- An exploring party is about to under- take a very interesting mission in Central Africa. The Dnc d Uzes will lead the party, and will He accompanied by four white comrades and fty Senegalese soldiers. "They are to be taken up the Congo River as far as Stanley Falls on one of the steamers of the Free State. At Stanley Falls they expect to hire from Tippo Tib and his nephew, Rschid, 250 porters, and then they will plunge. into the great forest east of Stanley Falls with the intentionof making their way to Lake Albert Edward. nu. -:_ .._.-a... ...:II N... g annrl wnv smith of Lake Albert nawaru. Their route will lie a good way south of Stanley s route when `he suffered so many hardships in the same great forest, on his way to Albert Nyanza. Undoubtedly the party will nd tribes of natives that have never been heard of before. . The most interesting part of their work, how- ever, will be in` the . basins where Lake Albert `Edward. gathers the streams. that are among the headwaters of the Nile. This lake is as yet known only on its north and east sides. Stanley solved the, question which so long puzzled geogra- phers, as to whether the lake owed into Albert Nyanza and was-therefore a Nile tributary, or whether. its waters fed the Congo. He found that the Semliki River. carries the waters of the lake into Albert Nyanzaand the Nile. and along the. east banlt1'of this"little.river he discovered the wonderful snow clad mountain range of which the now famous R.uwenz)ri- is the v crowning feature. a _:n. 4. .m.-Ima`uvn as i-Jet. however. . how crowning tenure. It is not~kn'o'wn as :yet, however, how large Lake Albert Eiward really is, and this "will'"he `one of the questions for the present exploring I party to settle. They also expect to make a thorough study of the hydrography of `this region, so that it may be known how far south and went the basin of the Nile extends. .- It ieprobablq that the great forest hides in its gladly demha more than one of the sou;-qeof*the Nile. In a geo;'zrTaphi- ' cal Ienegzthe` vioik which this expedition :..-.4.-.....nI..t-`I-n'*`ir"n'nn `of In monk` New Exploration in Africa. -_ :- _k`4.-; 4... IlCe- Two there were, however, forget; two, eachuf_ whom shared in the mystery smroundmg 1?, ieach knowing something, but not all. And these two did not seek to make their kndwledg greater. ' V \fn.ri0n's rm-muse to make a copy of-the Q 1" A stairot emixient American Physician; gsnd Surgeons have onened an office or medical and surgical attendance st L_'p. 2313 st. (`atherlno .~n.u-out Mnntl-An}. 'I`hp.v give ea Bl`ViOcI! $0 2313 (`athermo :lt.l1e9t, Mont:-ea`. They give faee BrViOc:I! all who call upon them bet 1- ~ August Int. 1892. and frankly tell you it your cvse is oursble or rot. Alli curable cases are rejected. peoial attention is mid to every one. Invalids living outside of Montreal. sh-ru d a ress `heir letters to Mr. J )HN M URRA . Manager. andinclose two 3 cent Stamps for symptom nlnnlv and nnnatinn Ihnl, 14-39, .-TIJEYAMERICAN ooc1'oBIj Inn 17..-. Jo-fa;-ti :-A In Rural: aldailfi. ` ` . B I Ell I IIIIIIII his physical powers f Puma. The will res1 physical an mental. -n-nu lung]; physical and meuuu. ` should take them. vnnun IFII .s::..`2}.:-::`,EP,?.".%I:,`;:: h uld take nnep rzuuu. .m1V.3.a!',!'u9mu'1`.!5a!`hb%`%ga:3*s;:;;.;2: 5:: sys e . YOIIIIB WOIIEII "m i e`:`. `1`g`.?.J: .`&'i make them regular. LMON$OON Marion's pronnse makeacopv picture, which, for her sake, her husbangj parted \1th,\vaLs not torgotten. So it he- fell one hay that, having some little time at their disposal, she set) her easel up beside the St. Cecilia. and commenced to work. While she was so engaged it happened `that Mr, Pomfrct strolled into the room. Pausing now and again to watch a student, he at last "found himself lose to Marion, glanced at her ca_.nva.s, Ihenau her; and, knowing who she was, fl`lg1llf ll(_`(] her with an au1gry- look before he Ull'llU(1 on his heel. When in course of limeshe l'H.l'I'it`,(1 hex` [nished copy home, and, with a loving look, ave it to her husbanll, she told him 0 the keeper : strange lwhavior and asked him the mezmmguf it. ~ 1:... \1.. \\'rn\' sh.-ml: his head and was` I UUIIU II VI make them regular. I ~-`|A I... -11 2-..: make men: regunt. For sale by all druggists, or will be sent upon receipt of price (we. per box), by addressing THE DR. WILLIAMS MED. CO. Brockville. OM. I ITIQ riivuzuuuvru-w -wwv - v.. (Q Year: in Euro}: and L PURE 'visTII\u' n nhvaiml nowers } Strength, |J.M.BOIHWEll, The chezipest and choicest stock of Teas, Co'ees, plain and fancy Groceries in town. QUALITY HIGH. * \/ WE CAK'N'OT N-l B%E~-f.l.R$I,._1 S1ocum s Oxygenized Emulsion Of Pure Cod Liver Oil. No preparation of the kind has ever met with the same success in the same timeand the testimonials in its favor are all from the most authentic sources. Every drug- gist sell it. PRICE 35 CENTS PER BOTTLE. 12289. 101089 Cw-I a cunt. cus- : and quest!-vn aheeis. ,`scRoo9IE 3. S_}_dITl-l : -.._ . ..__-_`... - Us mnsv THE FINEST TEA IN THE WORLD ` FOR INSURANCE AGENTS-AND cox- VEYA CER8. Represent the 10110 ng Companies :- THE SUN FIRE INSURANCE OFFICE OF - LONDON. ENG. The oldest purely Fire Ins. Co. in the world THE INSURANCE C0'Y OF NORTH AMER- ICA. Capital, $3,000,000. THE MERCANTILE FIRE INSURANCE CO Oopital 3500.000: Government deposit mule. rune wumnnoo MUTUAL 3-mm INSUR- Aunm an. (`.nnitn.l- I500.000. THE WATERIAJU MU'1'UAu Inna. snounr ANCE 00. `Capital. 8500. . THE ECONOMIC AL FIRE INSURANCE CO. ` ' . - I . . Totalfassbta. 8340.0l!0`. Mona .to~ ' loan on _ wmortages. Con~ veyanc done, Acco Kcollepte .. 8&0. l\-In'l'.i'fl`i*l1I n`.___ -mxrhninunwrsa UI .'l-Ullullu 1` u l Ba 1'16. Ont.. veyancmg, none, Accounts cuucpuuu. `:90: OFFICE}. g- Over HEN DERSON S B.'qrd.vn41-e;_S.org.. I . sonoaam & smrrn, maurunce Agnta. Ila:-I-In nf , . m... rotww axoollanttlzrlnliuli, outddoAhcl1ll.I' Illliirlf . A. nnnawlntm rmw, Qonaltr mrsna INDIAN . ' `. .` " " 7"` lo or-tvROllf- o ' A~ > _ '-NL7` T '`)o:. H SOLE AGENT FOR BARRIF. ` Lessons given in all Branches ot Painting. $0.. on Terms on application. 4:. n p g 1 . t~r_. _A-.I_.. -....--lb- anus: van suyy-yu-v-w-ug `U --U - tail` . to 8'-ruthoe |#efl1ngtpoan nu3,??ne lvn Dnintn Rn!-I-in But T. A. SLOCUM of 186 VVest Adelaide St., Toronto, Ont., must feel more than ordinary pride in the success of his valuable repara- tion, for the cure of lung iseases, v1z.: TIIIIIII `SERVICES An; -PiIrIty rats; meamngm IL. But Mr. Wrex shook his head and was .~llent, unly tlumked her uietly and lllFll(`ll a\\a_\'. . And ever aterward -it gl'ie\'cl f\lzu'ir>n to notice that John VVrex r~ll0W8ll lo.-s interest, tlxau formerly in the works of the OM masters. that he refused to go \\'ll(,`l`l.`\'(`,l` they might be exhibited, and, lastly, that the mention of El Divino Morales 8(.'(.`ln(.`d to give him pain. 7 IOIDI `CD6 31] DHIEIHOOI BY Bnoon. or from V1'ru'rx:p Htmons in the Bnoon, and also vigorate and Bruno UP the Bloc!) and down by overwork, mental worry disease. excesses and {ndiaore- tions. They have 9. Srncrno Aonou on EUPPREBSIONB. Who nds his mental fac- ulties dull or failin , or ers agging, should take t ese . restore his lost energies, both `to! Sysrnu, when broken V me W emnglon now: Five Points Barrie ARE NOT a. Pur- gativo Medl- oine. They no 5 Bnoon Bumnnn. Tome and Bxooxv s'moo'1-on, as th supply in a. oonden form the substances l\`,l1II1`I7 nnnn tnnno "and Flavor. PRICES LOW. -Attired in the tasteful mode V that --bettiad, .\Ir. Pzuil Gentry was contnt,.- as he - strolled down the avenue on that faultless ' May imn-uiiig. He had arisen early that he might oiijuy the day at its freshest and best. one of his fnrtune and social station, he, looked it pt-1'fv.ct type of the modernma.n"`of leisure, gifted with masculine beauty, with a renuizmt of ezi.rly`y0uth still left to him; and with as nearly absolute freedom {from ])llySlt'ill or mentttl pain as is V possible to iuiiiitttikiml. The sunlight of 8. May day was nut ('S.'~'('l1tlHl:tO his happiness; tempera- ment and ('lI`tJlllIlSl.d.IlCS had provided Vfqr that. lint he was none the less appreciat- we of the vernal sun, bright, but not V\'aFll1lIl_'._f. As he walked on and one,-seeing; hut not lllllilllg, the jpasserby, he mused" again :ui ztgziiu to this elfe`: ' 'l'l.,...,...\.. 1... nil-..s.n ail-or 11111 A. .`,l)I'lllg1llU|'IllHgl It huppcllcnl Lhat, as he wandered along,` with lmlc crms.~iousness of his immediate surronndlnggs, he turned Whither: hehhought not, auul mus he came into a. narrow street, \\'hnsc f;.1v-1 nnd almost squalid appearance was in sharp wntrast with the clean J-Dd glxld 2l>l)(`<`L of the avenue. . 7 In this :1rc:(:t his eye was caught by it \V`ezLthcl`-1n,-atull 1itt.lcAsign nailed upon the 4001` of :1 grimy` brick house of three stories. The 11<)HI` ms Ext the head of a. ight of W911" 3 worn stmm steps, guarded on either side by` a rusty irun railing. The Sign read: ' :.'l~-v,.:1u vxv 1'\vn1-111's 'l\'I'(\rl'\'l"bI'i`C`d dows ubunl mun ll:b'(l.Ill I4 Sprixng morning There can be .9: If `|'|v\nnnn.l 0 H .v -- ~ ------..,- ---- --.,-- f""" _ ,'I 1viH.\`}. IN DEEP DISTRESS` .\l;\ Y ]{ERE FIND MEANS T ()F SOLACE. Mr. Puifl Centry was so far from being in '1fr<:p Lhab the. sign amused {him-L Thei'In'n11gL'L1it`y oi distress with _such I-._ nmrning moved his sense of -`humor-. `H6 st(>plc :m noted "the tomb-like `look of the lwn.'~'+. `}au`1_ed yllmv blinds were_ drawn ('1<>`C within all the windows. 7 ' " uh _,\.u -s . . 1: . n-__'L.__ ......J - unnul ('l<.<(: wmnn all me VVIIIUDWS. 2 I)m1MlL:ss, thought, IMI`; Gentry, read-" ing the sign uguixn, it is some evan elical (yr n1is.~iu11 post, or it, may be by distpi utmg Plaure of some chamitalrle organization. - ' ]{(~1:n'.-u- Mme g-uni. o'.~.hmau avial'm],'h1'. he I'""`-' U1 -3`HHU CHa.l'lL3.lHe Orgiilllzlihllllla ` ' ]Ic hm-w that such things exisL'ed,'b_lI 119 had 11-wr thuught of them. VH8. was ignor- ant of their Immner of operation, and"u'o'w, strangr-1y, his curiosity was aroused. There seemcrl ~s01no hidden suggestion in the Words Deep Distress, as they fdced him"~ from the sign. If there were '9. deob J... n ' rn-rrnnlq...) . .`:;_ L _ L`. _.__,I_; Q L... ....h.. tl1e_$;1l1 . `lJ:e rewvUvt;'.evJ 8:('1`e" oiicff Organized chu.I`it,y, he thought, he mig ta d to hi3 R("nf.:nfiufnnlnn 1'11? 1!`!-nItiv.`COntI'i.` organized charity, thought, he migmaaaa his scif-satisfaction bv niaking=8r'0Ylt1'1-` huuon and thus bestowig upon himself the Neasureable consciousness of ha;vmg_.done I `L eI`18\'01 act. Rn 11,, 1. u 1 .21, `._L-..`A `......I ""cVUH5HL HCI-. So Mr. Gentry ascended - the Staffs nd. 7` Dulled the loose and cracked knob `of L'th'e M1, for this old-fashioned door was `devoid f an electric button. ' ' .`r\r\\n ...Z._.-L_, _ I ,.;- LIL---- .o.-n n"df_',` '1 gdl UICCLITIC Dl1LI.0n. V sogfsle n%}1nutes.P8.ssed -_ere `there \ was 8- 5 mches. .\ ulddenlv nl.1e door op_ex}ed for a. few I Sem1efaI}< a. c1}n}ung, a.va.r1c1ous,_ `almost; A pair iekwas vxsxble nhroughgxthe a rto ll'.: I My {F010 h een grey eyes surveyed 1'. Gen- Ms M n ead to foot-, and then tl}e do9_r M` _`F0wn so far open as ,to permzbjof his ltermg. . ., . A. \ . we .nwm 5.. vs .._:_1 .1-.. ;1'_1 ....... -a.-"...1'...~.fn{_.4-_`l{` Cmne in, said the old man .t.o.M_l'l10l_T`|, .-W.` face belonged-a. penurioitsly-`cla.d'old mung Who stooped and nut_tn,l)le d3 ;9.!"h,"W, .5-n'3.`5`,i-v'\ The words came With` t,l,19A.V 61T18 ,-!`i[`)11,3;9":g..." .f" mandate. and ` .Mr.';.G6ii'h1`y~-:"ni9':htnic01l flbeyed. Through `the->:da,;rk ivpsgibiiig , 3}}. the old man neg; mo w lch had the ,a,ppeg,i-ghge` pf a. shop, _o , ` _0lmt.er ran a.c!,'oB;l`fit` mi dle. Bolund "315 counter,went1'.l1k`e_b1'dLn$In',` d he leaned h" Qlbows upon it1.nd3"`hii 1 (`I{A.\'(:ED NOTHING. , and the secret. g.ccor_dingly became uhurdcnj than 1t. mlght. otherwise rlo s\\"FEE'r 1iEA'rH. ` \'(,`I'I)iLl Ullll, Uflglll.-, uuu IIUII vvv ' on,-s'eei ng', mticillg, I effe b: a be nothing etter than a- ........~I i;$uu,.` ``u`M|wt.' LEI"-'__\1 . W? 540 _-`}_ _'_,;;!`,-;}..svo___A _ '..' o_ qyngt-A..nng;ig6n;ed;JL:::sni m mined` .~yQu-.;|q}ua1y, :; an nib. .~ s.:.a.......' n.:...1" ` to discover the ingredients of the .composi- Oh, you must-n t mind my patroniuin , mantxr toward- people ewhooome to d W'- - with me,- `returned "thejold`Inb.n,' naiscon`-3" Astra g. GVeutry s words.` . You -see.-\ t}h_g:_; - perilous nature` of~~ -my business-renders! it 3 V `unecessavryv that Ibo nore oiromnspect.:_abont., u vzliom I retinas to tell "my w'a.'res to.~. It'i u.' ' really 9. great service I doto men xlikeiiyou, sir, a.nd__whe_n, you consider the risk~I}u.1der`-A 3 go in serving you, you cannot reasonably co'in p`lain if nryjrates are high. But I'Aho,ve_ ' nodoubt we can arrive at a." bargain. You - must consider,` too, that I have` given yes.rs' "to the ac uisition of the secret` which any -man who uys my compound might discover by analyzing the stuff, Therefore,` you will not thing`me discourteous in demanding {Oi you an sssurancethat. you will -notatteinpt tion, and that you will take. precautions? that. H`. Rh!`-I." 1 HA nnnunnnnrl kafnmi Ivnnn `wag. ,-..v.'_-.~- ,7. 1.2 -- y` .. -.-.1... .;..~_.- . .4.~.., ,3 `.1; f . r, . ..,w _ ` hand: was hclmacrlitiniied M . G T. % [ Md niu;vee:amkaira.;mnmr::-.=?.f." in an with . 5` hideaui kind %. ....I `...`.n.v m.|...; :;.g.. ._ _-:4L_. aagv J am! .'it3 :il,'-% `.`[t.1_In;ti;u are neither a decent. W0. 11!` 3 ; lior a. fool ivlio believeas (blho.tbu'\a.n s _ifef=inot his owngo g, wg can o-- uidsstd` th". \1` ' . customse:'l. 9' `opp-t you "I don't Anita nn}d-..-o......| -.-.- -:.. u Ls cuuwmer." ' 5* * "1 d.on t__qm1:e understand you, sir, fal- tcrcd Mr...Gentry. V .. I 2 .. v - Oh, must-n IKQQIIQI` DAQRUJA -oL`.----4 A- vnvu, uuu uuny Jvu W_|_I_ 13150`. PFEUQUDIIDDU that it shall all be consttined before your body is discove1`ed." ' V A light .dayvned on the mind . of Mr, Gentr . He understood now the signic- ance t atutvhis remarkable tridesman . de- sired to convey by mea.nsA of the words, Deep Distyess a.nd,Solace. But he was I nlnninlfa no In vusnl-vnn1n--n your Llsuvllvnn uuu, y |DUll.|UUn Dub I10 W38 ' curious _a.s_to particulars. V - * | I ve no dpub '-I ll find , your `terms. fair enough, said * r. Gentr But first let me .as_k whether ou n " this, 9.. rofitable business 2 Sure y very few peop e divine, as I did, the real meaning of your sign. . "Few. of them, indeed,` divine at once ' its true meaning-- :1 I am not sure that you did, at once. ~ '- ut n W and then 3 men ` whois tasting the full itt rness}. of life, _i and who sees that sign, is le , in sheer,des- peration, to the point of inquiry. I fancy that such is your case, despite your cheer- T ful exterior. In you it is not despair, it is. `ennui, that`- has; brou ht :me a. customer. When the ma.n,knoc s at my door and -successfull'y:_po.sses m`y`brif but exhaustive visual examination, he is admitted radua.l- ly rintodthe kuowle_dge_ of What, m usiness . is. You` may be sure that'- escertein whether" he has come to the point of preferrin_g- death to life, before I re- veal myself full . If he shivers at the ideaof ;_de9.-t-h," give him one of these religious tracks~ entitled _`Live. and Ho e and}; sninll sum of money, if starvation e the form of his distress, and he goes away ' thinkin me-an eccentric evangelist end` _`L:I-.l.e .... ...4. FFL... T .....-....... .l-s....L..... uuunui 'uLv'lu uuuvuuxu vvaugwuuv auu hi_la.ht iropist. Thus I escape detection, tlrough my knowledge of men and their moods. When, however, as happens per- chance three or four times a. year, there comes to me one like you, one ` above" the _ silly prejudice against suicide, `I hasten at once to business, and la. , as I do to you, 1 how many thousand do laws will you give me for the means of an easy and deli htful `essage from this hollow `and toxsomee life? How many? Come! What do you } .C....9 ' `L19 6 offer?` um DUDE`! Then, observed Mr. Gentry, heedless of the dea.ler s impatience to begin ba.rgo.in- I ing, since your customers are few, you otrtnlpgnsate yourself by making your prices 1 . `As I said before, re lied the `old man sharply, liq risks "an the value of my wares compel high rates. Do you expect to buy such a. unique commodity use delicious death for a day's income? V ith what ob- ject in view, do you think, did I dovote my ' youth and m9.hhoo`di `to making myself a. connoisseur in suicide? Is there another of_ my trade in ` the world? `Suicide um. W.nnv. _..1'.hnt n mv trade-mark. and Of, trade In U18 wonu : Du:-uuu Made .Ea.sy -thet. s my trade~mark, tbat s the problem I have solved. It is no false repfesetetion, either; for I have seen my preparation at work. Ah, such blissful ` death ! I shall take it myself some day- when I have ma.deen_'on )1` money. Do you know, sin, tha.t;:thiI_l;x` ib j_a_ Q only discovered -.-..... At...` noun n_n}l arannfnlsnlcide? HERE'- QOIUII 1 .1 uuuu uunu nu nu_y:m... .au...v ......_, `when thatrbhiz means of an easy and graceful suxcide? Hang`- ing is not so bad, but think of the 9. pear- ance in whiclf it leaves your body, an what horriblealiociationnithasj The other forms ofoviolenb Itranguulation are hardly less re- p_ugna.nt, not to say ungentlemanly. Drown- in -not 9. hard dose to. take, but what a. sig: t,it mglgesgf one! Shooting--wou1d you put 0. blooi_1~;lba`inu on your memory and the n9.me"of*y6ur'family? _ Poison is abom- inable, and gives '-you such [frightful puma -- A- -....I..' mm mnunt. nf vour deed before 1113013, EHO EIVBB `yuu sun: as 120 maps` you reptentyof V it`! nll` olfect arrives. '] coa.1*`are 'Igot;jno:gbjegtionul not p1e_a`se the nostrils. I ` E _..-Z -341- -A&lII inable, and gives `you such Irlguuux Pusan rep3entV,ofour ns} he fumes of char- '- coal"are 'Igofso;gbjegtionable, but they do please will confess that m method of suicide resembles that of those w o stiel themselves with burning char- coal; I will even 0 so far as to admlv that charcoal is one of t e elements of my com- _, -_:.:-.. .i....n...- nf them is mvrrh. But Ch&l`CO&l 18 0118 UL nun ou............ -- ' position, Another of them is m I there are a. dozen mo_re,a.d e man, with _a. smile. _ _ AA. Lhacilikf. nf haa dole Oi n cnarcouu us uuu u; vuv .......-----_ V , _ rrh`. there dozen more, ad ed the old man, with; smile. T A 3 h At, thought of the` odor of myrrh, the" ; mind of Gentry was `swept -by memories of Vesper services and, cathedral organs. _~~`He liked that odor. So he `stood medittihg, K while the merchant contimed to examine L}- ........4-nannl B-I3 Wunnv v-aw ----_ . his countenance. '11 174-- `A- -M his You see, resumed the old dealer, it i _is_ as much in the" sweetness of the death I sell you as in its facility that itsvvqlue lies. Death is to each man as he receives it. To } him who dies unwillingly, death is 1:; van- ,_-=_1_:.... ...:....+. an imnlacable foe who, as a dies unwunngny, ucuvu ..... ..... quishin giant, an implacable rule, ex aunts your resource: slowly before he ma.1e_vo1ent.ly crushes out the last life'__ that ` iilett in you. 7 To-`tho -suicide "who seeks death by: violent means, ded.th_`is 3 ` dragon into whose gaging s,ncI terrib1e.-ja_w ' "one hurls himself wit c osed 6 es,'= deIpera.te~e'orb of the. will. - o him who uses my prepa.ra.tion-`-at>1dV the old man s ..;r`X. -- u 7- ., i efe burned Vwith J i`a.~I')_'igI`i ti7' rd, 3:515"; ` ruiqed t.heAm `i.1_1 6.11 "ex'p 1`-e`ssion .o'f drq.ti1y"en`3 \ thusia.sm-_tjdhim _ fcqmes _ " de'a.th as `it Vllll-` - -A 1,.--- `...`.:a-* nmrrn `arms , PIIBOQ Dn8ll|_ gu nu vnr. -..-,` thu'sia.sm-'--_t`u` him` "cqmes,_'de'ath a.`si`s [Emil- ingmistress, into whose soft, warmarms one sinks d1`-owsily and: fall; .a.sleep..:. - ' -The old man-%_ uuppd. Gnmry,* whose cu1;iosit.y_.wa.s_. in y. sa}tibpd ,.`;npw_" pought ` ' of .rma.kin"g' ghis ..-defxatituxo withbut incurrm ..*.he suicide-dealer : anger. wxmouu uwunu. .....- -..---., - I;cmnqt e`asiTy_` have `m ormjof hi .??abar9?19:e. ?,-.-9% _ .__Lml , Ln-;Ra'\~1spd. ~ ueum-y, Wuvuv ,V . npw % nought .o_f >ma.king' :his .-deanturo win y f lave ` w'it.ho`uli .huying[ '9m`r9ti9,n,s{, .thisin`=r`, 1?-"- *.".;'= UUIIUIJ, Dfhim. ` Waugh hsv-q '::.f.hbgan tho I 1. .1: .I___ 11.1. val-|_yI.u VII 3 IINIBUII Wll-ll DUB WIIC DI an gmalii h ixu,t.)1e .goy.grx1mI1t. ';_`She kept ~.,V s.{`3l !.!";.13.-'.i Q1` .uBbKni1~,a{udfTaughl the pair to other in _a house in ,t1_1e _ Quzu-ter nroire: 5 C : .. _ L . .Th wife forked open the door u.nd- draw-_` . a"'rV'0'h'r`"8l'ie .'1"l(lvnned _up0fI the W0- 3 Thain, whdfflidd croifcluell iii abjet fem` in '8 --gcorner.-agid-photo. ",'.l`h'e `b`ull.-;t;'s.t.r11ck` }in'm e and oh`Vvaunded`wom`a.n begged piteously -to-b'"e ypgred, but she ~--a'ppeo.lelf in-vain. '.AUn:ili nl_It`4l|daI.-vt`"t` -lhn hn\-n`\n\r `alkali ` wounnw 33 : ':.!l;.f(:,.,; . ..'- J.` ` M "'0 _1\'c;un': of :3 \\'eAlI-knnuwiiu I r_,g1|;h,;Kna.n. suspected that her husband was <:ii.`l"i"`y1n on a. liaison with the wnfe of an ..a:..:..1: : __ - _'_|,_ ;_ `L- ______.______-.__L -cu I, IIU HPGIULI UILII Ell-" NPPUGIVH Ill \'i"l:llI. 7 VA am ahd ngaixt5did -the rex-o1mna`su. ...unti ve..bul1etshad.- been buried 1'1;--.. plug V_woinan s'.bodv. ' 1-` ~ During" (3115 s,hootin'g..,t.|1e' ht1sba`d;1 .sAt.ep. 1 5`ped fb1`w`ard_ to .diab.rm ;.his `wife; 3biit2 _she 'f1\infnnn1` On |':;vn :` I\A nrlunnnnri .1055 IUI_VY| \l_ .II\l -IILQHI III _aJIIH VV IIVQ V II. _OllU thiwagenvegi po kil_l_h him _if D be a(jvanc<;d unothr Step. Ql;he_1:"peo%`.e in ',tl1'e_," l_ioix_s_e rushed to the af>urt'm`ents, ut, none dared to place _a`*ha.nd`-upo`h the w`o_man. ` V 1 ' A"I*I\ FHA on -Oh=t`nn:n {In f`-an U-tivnrxrnr ill-or. "placp `D3-nu` POI! LDC WOIDED. _ ' After the eartridgs in the rvolver were exhausted the woman quietly awaited the coining of the police, who had been sum- .mone`d, and thei1ca.lm}y signiedher desire ` to be taken away; ' ' \ "'l"l'| 1aV\xr;v\|u|-S.-`gva;-1 nfnrnnn nun:-nu` 1'n` nrnnl . vv nu vgusvu uyrny.` . 1 .`The fwomided woman lingered in great. ypain fdra few hour's and thendied. I IIIV|A IYIIIFAQPQEQ II iual WI`! IVI -C IUW IIUIIID Gllll IaIIUlI |.|lV\lu 5 Theiname ofjthe: murderess; Ls ;Mado.me lBeymond"a.nd' the name of `her victnn wDeIa.por,t_e` . Laasinionne.` "1`he*' ; pmurde red woman was .3 niece of Casimir-Perier; Madojme Reymdnd, who is ja. refty bmuet. and and only 24i`y,en.rs 013, says` '_.t.ha.t Madame -Delaporte was-an -.intinm.t_.e friend of hers, who had` -separated` from`- her hus- *band._ She `Herself introduced, Mzulame Dela. ante to` M. Re nond and; son; after |~ wardpdisovered -thgt they `were meeting `secretly. ` V` ~ ' , ~ Afr. ahnntina her victim the murderess I secretly. After shootln her victim the lrepeatedlvi `stabbed her. She iifterwards surretidqred to the police. . 4. The`\'1ctima.lso'ha.'d'j dagger wounds on :the hand, breast, mid` arm." Mme. Rey- mond s father says he and his wife were opposed to their d-.uxghter s marriage with Raymond. _' L` ' V ` AMme. Reymond s suspicions were aroused on Saburduygby her l1usba;nd s postponing e. promised v'isit.*t-o[Ll1e salon with her. She then searched his papers and` soon dis covered letters to Mme. Lassinnornne and` her address in the Rue Rocher. . : The murderous says she became enraged . because only 10 days ago she gave her hus- band some'va.lua.ble jewelry to sell,. ostensi- V bly to pay a debt but really to furnish an nnnrfrnnnf. in tho Run Rmzher. bya Dly U0 ll KIUUII puu |\"u.lI_y \.\ I apartment in the Rue Roclwr. Cholera`; Frightful Rtxvngon. `LONDON, May '25;--A dcspatch from India reports an epidemic-of cholera in the Cashmere Valley... There were `.296 new cases and 146 deaths from the disease re- ported in Serina.ga.r yesterday. H 1 -.= .*';=~=..-"."`~!x:'1-.*.'vV:r':xa'-`-T ~*"v- ("T : upon. .4l.I.~:.w.`_3.54-._t"..`;}f+ I .... from omcc Ior abusing ms pun U1. Among the oences proved against the Judge was that he had caused nine meh and women accused of trivial offences to be ogged with switches until the blood {lowed rmm Hunirhndien in st.rea.ms. A-Cruel Judge Depnsnd. ST. PETERSBURG, May 25.--Ju(lge Her mann Koehlbrandt. of Wenden, near Riga, has been fined 200 rotiblea and removed ` from ofcc for abusing his power. ` 1 ----- ALA ,.u`...m.. ru-nvnr` n.0n.iflt uu cu vvuau Bvvlvunnvu ......-- --_ i from their-bodies in, at-reams. SOPQI. Selunnz -l.uInluu.n ,`|||\I\|v. BERLIN, May '25.-Sergt. Schmitz of the artillery garrisoned Tat Soert,' \Vestphaiia., shot himself dead inthe guard room _ while under arreutfor bullying private: and in- citing them to swear falsely on his trial. . Death of Baron Bouonsqrn Lehn, COPENHAGEN, May- 25. -Bm`on Rosenaern i Lehn, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, died here Monday. Business Transacted and Prices Quoted ` for Grain In the Queen City. . TORONTO, May 24. -Recei ts of grain on the street were represented y 100 bushel-1 of wheat at 83c for fall, and 730 for goose. One load of oats sold at 33J;c. Hay was in light supply at unchanged prices. On call board: No. '2. full..wheat was wanted at 85c and No 2 white *0 arrive *winter was. wanted `at 90c and No.2 at 850. "No; 1*: hard`-North Ba.y.o`ered at ' $l.0Of.witli 99c bid, [Land the same Toronto and west," Winnipeg` ins ection, oervedvst 98cWitb 97c bid. No. hard Nortlf Bay oered at 95c without bids, and the same *=Mon.treal freiglits` offered at 930 with 90c bid. ` No. 3 hard offered at 86c with 840 bid. No. 1 regular at Fort William o`er- ed at 64c without bids,` . and. the same to arrive at North Bay `offered at 73c with 72c bid. One car` of No. 2 regular to arriverat fNerth'-`Bay sold _.at. 63c. Oats are steady,'mixod quoted at 32c on track and '00:. "An ".`I`I`f`A offered at 90c wit.h..86c bid.. Nu. 1 red_ aceauy, muwx 29c `outside. collapsed in 1890 leaving creuuuns ~w...... losses of several hundred thousands of dol- lure,--died suddenly in\ this city Monday of hea.rt._jdiaease.V V V. ; V ' Dajrling, who assed in Montreal under the name of Hilton, has lived here ever since the collapse of the "rm. His wife and family lived in New_ York. Several `members of the faiiiiily arrived here to- .night and took char e of the remains, ;whichwil1*be cenveye to New York for s_;-..........o So: Lived and Died Hearing a Name Tlmt . L Was Not . Bu 0_wn. ` ` , Mqm'RE:gu.,`May 25 -Wi11'fa.)n' S. Dar- ~' lihg, who was:a-partner in , thou /York rm of J ohu F. Pl\1mm`er_ & Co. ,.whibh 1890 leaving" crdntors `.with 1...... Ar several hundred of dol-_ V"lll\'lL u .-- . ` interment. citcheof `3.4.8;6.24. .55?-|f|,...W.Igmng uvq--J uvv aswcompareda with 319' steamers in l89L,=.-with i nearly " 6722 tens. The ';st,`a4`rivalfom 0 1' dz Aves; ..t-he Labrador, March 23, and the lasttbho Esuimaux, `M-.\y32."*-` 0 ,V - V I __ teh was over 270,000. The `heavjiest weight. was lauded by the steam- p D ., flick t_u_t:ned,`out_]0?.1 tons" of '4. fur, h`er men making $184.30 each. ..,, g>,_ . u ;tota.l __ca.tch;- of 543,503 _s`euId,"'eighig" ' fwhili niiklo two` `trips dug-ihg this season, -3- Largo Wa8i7_5g `ado ` Sealer - ting; eet,` -:wAl_1icv1; Lsailed March. .;0Vlg.st,A_ is. 56816!` ' '- `liluilu, Sr; Jo nN s,`N.F.[,% May 25. - -A'I.h e r`eg_ix1 of theiicatch of the N` wfoundlaxid }stea.m=sez.-. fairly; atisfactot~y.,a_nd hows ,an_in`cren.se`; 2' o'v'et _bha'b` of. last: s,eaqon' pf 5I2=l- seals.` Tliis - season t.h'r e. ,v[drb j20"gt.mers,V with a "total oatch`of"3,48;1i24: ie1_=...w.e' hit-"s'ne'}rIy 7736 L - .......'1 mn-.H- of 543.503 Sea.-lei,"'Av'e_ig!a{i1'i_g' Elllr fur,1 Five-Year Limit To Continue. : ab_.".. May; 25_'_-f'Eh_87M thOd`iBt, ;Gbnera .l tqreiaee by*"|.*vo`td6f 298 66162 1113: decided ntr- to ve-year limit ontpnt61`he'i.' 59,33. slcnntz-CoI11In!t.s ulcide. _____- ~u..... or.' ummt .Qr-l'nr.H'.7. of TORONTO GRAIN MARKET3. p Dianaj,"vgn1cq uug. . h`er makmg $1 g . ' A " A DEFAULTR S DEATH. moat-:AsEo_ SEAL CATCH. gs? u deby the Men of the settler ~-Diana." *- 0"" ,,'~___`_`1]'_ _'g ` ;_AIl_I ,j II. P; P.`, ' 0nt|no | 1 ' `Iv ,njL'~l51`1_ 1.;_ .r_--w-'-J -_ .6. .h;vo.1.a=.Vm:;{[1..; to stock -andfdthera to} in tion at the: great .fair. Anplicationa are already pouring` in no rapidlyfthat Mr. Ariia ndiv `mafia: arrangement: In Chicago for largely increased since Gredivtable an the exhibit made by thia Province at the Centennial was in 1876, it will hear no comparison to what Mr. Awrey expects to do in 1893, But to do thll he. must have the hearty co-operation of the citizens uf the Province at large, and it in to be hoped that this will be forthcoming, so that citizens of this Pro- vince viaiting Chicagonext year will have juetcanee to point with pride to what Outariotae done. nnn}uceg" orrbum: semen of run co'nn_cu -__ OAAA

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