Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 12 Oct 1882, p. 5

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

 Ij t If i I:; â- P CANADIAN QLEANINGS. lVIUUIilK*I«|KM -CUl ss He BxekaBceHâ€" Tke best PoWo digging ii now progre »ing through- oat the province. An Irisiman named McHugh has just diei atQaebeciaged 107 year*. Bishop Cleary is now looking forward to the re-opening » Beoiopolis college at King- ston. Oliver Crosrman, a section foreman on the Intercolonial ailw^ at Dalhocs e, N. B., was fonnd dead on the track. Delphas Blannette, a too confiding lum- berman, jost from the shanties, waa robbed of $800 ia the Hotel da Peaple, Montreal. The Rev. Mr. Scrinu^eoar, of St. Joseph- street Presbyterian Church, was installed as Professor of Greek in Montreal Presbyterian College. A number of Americans have associated themselves with some Quebec capitalists to st rt an asbestos factory in the ancient cap- tal. A young lad named Dumont, aged fifteen years, is to be tried for placing obstructions en the track of the Intercolonial railway at t. Arsene. The Grand Trunk talks of building a new station at Guelph, between the G. W. K. and the present station. This is not so con- venient as at present. The Mercury wants connection w ith the Credit Valley. The potato cop iu Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island being exceeding large this season, prices are exp cted to be very low. From the present outlook the export trade in them does not promise profitable returns. A young man named Milton Winger, in 1 he employ of Messrs. Beatty §on3, ma- chinists, of Welland, waa instantly killed by the falling of an iron pillar which he, with s number of others, was raising into position on the premises. The Bishop of Huron has appointed Rev. Mr. GoUraer, late of England, to be assist- ant minister at the Chapter house in Lon- don, and Rev. Mr. Uniake of the Chapter house to be incumbent of Cbesley and adja- cent parts of the County of Bruce. The Government steamer Napoleoa III. has left wilh supplies for the ligbts in the Gulf, including the Bird Rocks. On her re- turn she will take o£f and bring up fiom Anticosti such of the settlers and fishermen as are threatened with want this winter. The Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Good Templars ia in annual session at Halifax. There are sixtythree lodges in operation in the Province, with a member- ship of 2, 100, being 700 less than a year ago. The R. W. Lodge of the World meets in June next. It is expected that the flagship North- ampton will remain at Halifax until Decem- ber, when a new crew will arrive from England for her, and the present crew will go home, their term of service having ex- pired. The new Commander-in-Chief will be Vice-Admiral Sir John Edmund Com- mercU. One of the largest deposits of phosphate ever discovered in the viciu ity of Ottawa has been found on lot 7, uin e miles from East Templeton. The earth has been removed from the r jck for over 103 feet in length and 30 inches in wiith, Jshowin^ pure -phosphate. Superintendent Lynskey has received a telegram from Ottawa announcing that the Government telegrpph line between Selkirk and Prince Arthur's Landing is now placed under the control of Manning, McDonald Co., and men wi 1 at once remove the tele- graph line from the old route to the line of iTilwaj Three warehouses at Prince Arthur's Landing contain about a thouiand tons of freight lor Winnipeg and other points west. Two hundred and fifty t- ns of steel rails ar- rived there last night for the C. P. R, Strenous efforts will be made to relieve the freight blockade th.t now exists at the Lake Superior terminus. The firm of Messrs. Lee and Newport are now investigating throaeh their solicitors some alleged irregularity cliarged against C. L, Hunter, an insurance broker, and son of the notary who has recently caivsed bo much talk. It appears he took a risk for the com- pany in the Citizens' Insurance Company, and the letter has no record of $127 premium having been paid. cliffe-rorkd, about two miles from London, «M on TaoMiaT ai^ aeeodkid i»y aatrauar near Westminster Pridf^ «1m demMded to know the tiib^. Mr. weldon took ont^kis watch, when the stranger aimed a blow at htm with a dagger, whioh Mr. Weldon sue* ceasfolly avoided. The old gentleman then shouted for help, and a team appearing in sight the rafiKan maje good his escape. A yoong man named Paasmore alleged d)ab h« had been reliev^ed of $500 by one Cotterell, with whom he became scqaainted while crossing the ocean about five weeks ago. Cotterell, while his companion was drinking at Kingston, did take some money from Pas more and set off for the old conn- try. He was arrested at Uie depots made to disgorge, and now lies in custody. The detective fonnd $400 more of money in tiie clothing and trunk of Passmorf who is a recklees sort of fellow, and has so much money that he does not knov what to do with it. He claims to be a son of Lord Rat bourne, and says his persooal revenue is 500^. per month. There is, however, no such name as Lord Rathboume to be found iu the peerage. His Excellency arrived at Yale B. C. a 'ew days ago and met with a hearty recep- tion. He visited twenty-three miles of the Canadian Pacific Railway up the Fraz^r river canon, and was much pleased with the work done. He ascertained on theauthority of a contractor thatemploymentcan begivon as follow â€" One hundred and fifty carpen- ters at $3 5u to ;gl a day 100 hewers at $3 50 a day 300 choppers and scorers at $2 50 a day 100 stonecutters at $3 50 a clay. Board and lodging, with three hot meals, at f3 per week. Rates, $65 from Montreal to the works. Probable time of emoloyment three years. The Governor-General is of pinion that this should be circulated by he press. A nelldouB Sonmannlmlist. ]fn the vicinity of Wichita, Kan., there resides with his parents a ycung man whose Christian came is Charles, but whose sur- name is imfortunately not mentioned by the journal which records the following extra- ordinary incident in his career. One night his parents were aroused by singular noises on the roof, and, knowing their son's habits of cutting capers in his sleep, they ran out to the yard and looked up. There sat the young man upon the chimney top, clad in that garment which immemorial usap;e has consecrateft'-to the purposes of slumber. Presently he arose to his feet and, address- i:ig an imaginary audience, gave out the hy-pn, " All hail the power of Jesus' name)," which he forthwith proceeded to eing through from beginning to end to the sonorous tume of •• Coionation." He then selected a te^t from I. John, v. 25, preached a vigoroutls discourse fifteen minutes long, and slid down the lightning rod into a tub of water which his father had hurriedly placed where it w ould do the most good. "The shock arous- ed him and he was escort^.d to his bed. The Qiiebeccrs who took part in the ex- cursion troin Montreal on the Peruvian through tha 25 foot channel, say that the steamer, with a draught of twenty-tliree and a half feet, undoubtedly passed freely, but it should be remembe.ed that, owing to the abundant rains this year, the level of the St. Lawrence is over two feet higher than it has been at any time for years past. Messrs. G. H. Hayes Co., lumber mer- chants, of St. Johns, Quebec, are in trouble over a charge of forgery upon the bank of St. Johns for $6,000. Upwards of twenty- two notes given to the bank as signed by customei-s of the firm are denou; ced as forgeries. The fraud is said to have been very clear, as in some cases signatures were made for men who are unable to write. The affair has caused quite a etir in the little town« The Ottawa City Council have authorised Mayor St. Jean to pommunicate with Mr. John Birkenbine, Secretary of the Charcoal Makers' Association in the United States, inviting the members of said Association to meet in Ottawa at their pr posed annual assembly next year. The Council hope to secure the erection in' the city of an est • blish- ment for coo verting the sawdust of the mills into charcoaL Two Montrealers, named Corville and Wadsworth, who ran a roulette table at the Bell's Comers Fair the other d»y, were in- carcerated in the county {(^ol on a charge of burglarizing the premise^ of Mr. Arnold, general merchant, at that i^ace, and extract- Ing from a safe about $300. On being searched by County Consi3Ule Gordon $247 were found in their possession, including two $20 bills with the comers torn off, $9.25 in shinplasters, and a florin. An old gentleman named Thomas Weld n, A isiting his son, who lives on the Wham. A Pesnlixu* Form of Grief. A painful scene has occured at St. Gluvias, near Falmouth, arising from the difference between our laws and those of most other countries on the subject of mar- riage with a deceased wife's s ster. A Pen- rbyn lady named Brodenshir was married in Switzerland, some twenty years smce, to her brother-in4aw. Dr. Edney, R. N., and a few days since she died at Plymouth. In accordance with her previously expressed de- sire, her remains were conveyed to Pen- rhyn for 'nteror.ent in the family vault at St. Gluvias. Finding, however, that the vault was full, a brick grave was prepared in the new cemetery, but the marriage being ac- cording to English laws illegal, the burial could only take place in the deceased lad '« maiden name, and not that of her husband. Dr. Edney was intensely grieved at this announcement, and so distracted that he at- tired himself in white hat, blue tie, and brown coat, and followed the coaches on foot» The deceased was lowered itto the grave without any ceremony, and the hus- bjnd at once walked away, leaving the moamers behind.â€" i'a/77ioM {Eng.) Letter. «i Batel caarka. A woman m, ia almost aU. qmcs, a pra'tr fannidiiblecre«ta*e toaffinont, and particu larlysowhcn aheis not only wdl dreas^ and tolerahfy jowng and sood looking, but eladita aonw kind « anthoritj. I suppose (said a correa c o u dent of the Uartford Ckmr- only wr.ting from Chester, Englani) that may be one reason why men are unwilling to concede to women their "rights" â€" there would be no such thing as eqna!ity. Ex- oept those bratal persms who would not scruple to disr^^ard all distinctions of sex in their use of physical foroe, tie men would infallibly go to the walL One can not haggle for a penny or m^inf^ iw mny amall oontroTersies with a neatlv-clad, sweet- voiced, and comely women, unless she bapiens to be his wife. We know the dignity, yes, the almost inaccessible divinity in which many a hotel clerk of the masculine gender dwells. With what charmiog inattention he pretends not to notice you With what lofty con- descension he briefly replies to your trem- bling question With what serrae indiffer- ence he beholds your confusipn of face be- fore his dread majesty But here in Eng- land the hotel clerk is a woman, and usually a very bright, tm rt, neat and comely person. She moves within the ramparts of her snug office like Arabi Bey behind his earthworks, bidding defiance to all forms and forces of invasion. She is an authority there, and looks out on you through an em- brasure of her fortification with a serene haughiners which is equally exasperating and overwhelming. In vain one touches his hat and tries the arts of politeness and cajolery. He might as well perform befoi e one of Mme. Tussaud's wax women. Few and short are the answers G'iven. You are made to feel that you are very wearisome if you persist in trying to get a little necessary knowledge. You are snubbed unmercifully if you offer any suggestions touching your personal con- venience. You are commended to the porter and. to •* Boots " a« being quite good enough for such as you. If it were a man you might pluck up spirit to unwisely resent such treatment and " jaw back," as the rustic found it was his privilege to do in the Episcopal service, but one can not get quite to that in the case of a woman and so he retires to plume hin ruffled feathers in secret, and to purchase sixpenny worth of various information from cluunbermaids and porters. These female hotel clerks are the avengers of their sex. And they enjoy their cflBce. I wonder it women ever tremble and cower so before the pride and haughti- ness of men It can hard'y be. mil^mtmiUUItSmm J* Thm Plaaaiiraa- of tt, tha Fond or Snakes. There is one thing about Prof. Bell, Florida agent of the Smithsonian institution, which his neighbors do not like, and that is the pleasure which he takes in the com- panionship of venomous snakes. A coun ry- man called on the professor the other day, and as he entered the room a huge rattle- snake dropped offas'fa pillow which had been placed upon achair forhisaccomodation, glided into a corner, coiled, and waving his heatl back and forth, shook bis rattles viciously at the intruder. " Great jeeswax " exclaimed the countryman. "Come in!' saic the professor, cordially, handing his caller the chair just vacated by the snake; "don't mind him he's not used to strangers, that's all." The snake obeyed an orde/ to "hush that fuss," but still kept vigilant watch over the vieitor, who, under the cir- cumstances, did not care to make a long stay. Doubtless the reptile's fangs had been drawn, but that did not transfol-m him ijto an agreeable object for contemplation. Winnipeg. Ah oil company is being formed at Glad- stone with a capital of $10,000. The pro- posed operaticms will be conducted within the corporation of Gladstore, and indications are that {wtrolenm can be secured at a depth ranginff from 300 to 500 feet. Ar rangements hate almost been concluded with the contractor to sink three wells, if necessary, to a distance of 500 feet, at a cost of $8,000. Mr. Van Home, of the Canadian Paci£c Railway, who has just returned from Mon- treal, states that the whole of the line north of Lake Superior will Le under contract by January 1st, 1883. Surveyors are now out, and before long estimates and measurejieuts as to rock cutting and filling will be got ready. Next week work on tho western division will be completed to the Rockies. Vict(X' de Lesseps, son of his father, tells of the performance of his father " But my august father was not wanting to the occas- ion. He had round his neck a false collar of Eloglish make. He did not heeitate for a moment. He tore it off and danced on it. This was his response to the insolence ofthe invader." Wby He Didn't Explain. Some eight or ten years ago a silvery- tongued chap, who claimed to a fruit tree agent, swindled the farmers of this county in a shamefnl manner, and one resident of Nankin was so mad about it that he came to Detroit, searched the rascal out, and gave him a pounding on the street. After he got through his work, he told the fellow that he would lick him twice as bad if he ever put eyes on him again, and it was a threat to be remembered. About three weeks ago tho Nankin man was 1 ravelling in Washtenaw Coimty, and as he journeyed along the high- way he met a traveller who fo closely re- sembled the fruit tree swind er that he halted and called out "Here you are again, you bold-faced rascal!" "Yes, I'm here," was the calm reply. " Well, so'm I, and I'm going to lick you until you can't holler I said I'd do it, and I always keep my word. Climb down here " The stranger "dumb " without a protest, shedding his coat as ho struck the ground, and a fight began. In about two minutes he had used up the farmer and was coolly re- placing his coat. " See here," said the man from Nankin as he wiped his nose with a burdock, "you fight better than you did eight years ago." " Well, I dunno This is my first affair with you." "Didn't I wollop you in front of the Detroit Post Office eight years ago " " No, sir I was in Australia up to a year ago." "And you never saw me before " •• Never " " And was never in Nankin " "N^.ver!" " Well, I'll be hanged Come to look at you, I can see that you are not the man W^hy on earth didn't you explain or ask me to Y ou must have thought me mistaken. " " Oh, yes, I Unew you were mistaken, but I had just discovered that I had driven seven miles on the WTong road and was wishing some one would come along and give me two words. I didn't want any explanations about it. I feel 50 per cent, better. So long to you !-" â€" Detroit Free Press. Turkey in Ireland. A atartling rumor, says Vanity Fair, comes from Constantinople. It is said that the grand old Turk, seized with a sudden enthusiasm for order and horrified by the tales of massacre and outrage which have reached him from Ireland has countermand- ed the forces destined for Egypt, and has directed them to proceed at once to Dublin Bay. The ships on their arrival will take up positions within easy range of the formi- dable Martello towers which guand, the Irish coast, and their instructions are, on the first appearance of hostile symptoms, to lay Dublin in ashes. Prompt measures, the Turk feels, are alMolutely jjteceasary to curb the rebellious spirit of the Irish and to restore the author- ity of Lord^pencer, wha now finds himself unable to trust even the Pratorian goards assigned for his protection. It is satiifactory to learn hat in all this there is 4p untriendly intent toward the countrv. ^lo far from it, Eng and is to be mvited to^tend a contingent to asftibt in re- storing ot^'r in Ireland, the only condition being tbaft 'buoh contingent must place it- self underlie orders of the Pasha m com. mand. When Ir^d has been thoroughly cow- ed,«i.dMr.Pamell executed, the figure destmies of the country will be arraneed bv a cen treno# of the indifferent P^^^T^^ Zl held in London. Everybody runembers Dr. Johnson's gyiic on the charms of » isapid jporaev aUxng a good road in apbst-ohane. He tmrnght life could afford aotiung bettor, unless it were* walk down Fleetrstreet or unlimited teft-drinking. The speed and the certainty, in the absence of broken wheels, the smooth- ness of the highway and the alaorily of post- boys and Postmasters, delighted him with a sense of perfect adjustment. It would be interesting to leam what excess of encom- iums he oould devise to meet the due of traveling by express were he brought back for an interval io survey this world of steam. A tarain with a* moderate com- pletement of eight cars is appraised at £17,- 000. Each of the three palace cars it commonly includes has cost £3,000 at least, and not seldom £5,000 or £6,000. Whatever can minister to comfort is provided. The smoker can smoke without annoying his neighbors. The hungry and thirsty can eat and drink. The studious can buy libraries of fiction fresh from the Bri ish manufactory, only cheapened. By day the indolent re- pose on splendid divans. At night the tired s eep as softly as at home. Luxuries are supplied for the eye as M^ell as the other physical and intellectual organs. If there be a fault at all, it is some redundance of magoificence. A passenger by one of these cars might, if he were reconciled to mceseant locomotion, live in in the midst of the most gorgeous upholstery, with a fair provinion of conveniences to match, at a ratt of ex- penditure which would barely sufice for the maintenance of a middle-class establishment in a country town. Although English rail- way travelling is not altogether so liberally arranged, the difference is chiefly of degree. For the solid equipments of a railway jour- ney an English company is not less generous than an American. In some essential par- ticulars the comparison may even be in favor of this country. Where there have been shortcomings they are being quickly made good. Passengers by one or two lines can obtain refresbments. On several lines there are Pullman cars. More than one company is commencing the experiment of imitating the United States fashion of conveying the luggage of passengers to their houses or ho- tels. An English first-class carriage as it is would appear a supernatural vision ot ease to the mind of the ei6;hteenth century. On all but a few lines which continue not to distmguish human beings from cattle, a wealthy gentleman of a hundred years ago epu'ited into a humble third-class depart- ment might envy the happy lot of his pos- terity. The modetn world is not yet at the end of its opportunities for making a common stock of its rights that it may receive a larger dividend. Towns-people in this as in other countries do not co-operate at all as har moniously as they might in order to reap the proper gain froni their necessary associa- tion. All their actual corporate adfantages arise from this source. But they} are en- titled to more. If railway passengers were treated as municipalities treat their citizens, they would bewail their wrongs in acceuts beside which complaints from societies for the mutual protection of railway travelers would sound like a serenade iu honor of railway Chairmen. Tliat inhabitants of cities do not derive their rig -.tful profit from their congregation in crowds is not the result of a reluctance in the individuals to give up their personal independence. Residents in town are naturally as docile in that respect as the majority of railway travelers The defect comes rather from the want gene- ally of an authority willing and competent to assume thp l)urden aud the glory of the cor- porate trust. Were it possible to create the same rektiOn between a corporate authority and the residents which exists between a railway board and its passengers, the phrase of the luxuries of civilization would acquire a new significance. Railway companies build branch lines which never pay to ac- como 'ate the minutest traffic. They lavish money on rolling stock with a munificence which more than justifies the doubt whether such sumptuous traveling can be remunera- tive. They are sparing neither of money nor of energy. It is,\ however, on one condition ttiey must have a competitor ready to do as much or more.\UnfortunateIy, or, perhaps, fortunately, it is not practicable to dislocate a town between two rival Governments even for the sake tf lapp ng the townspeople in the splendors of an exist- ence nmde up of palace cars. Great cities must be content with an inferior scale of co-operative convenience. Still, on the most moderate computation, they do not as yet have a just return for the sacrifices they make, it is hard that, to enjoy the full benefit of acting in masses, it should be requisite to cross the o-ean and pasp life in travelling express from NeM'-Yorkto Detroit Wellington a^^d the barmy of Dg^. Wdlealey and Marshal Beresfoi^' crated flxvl Baron Beresfofd of Alboc Snngarrah, and af fetrwa^ Viscount focd of Bevearard. Sir IMpb AbercrrS widow was created Banmess AbercromW Abpukir and Tullibody; Lcvd Hill 1^ Baron Hill of Almares andBawkestone.^ saoondly Viscount Hill of Hawk^^ Lord Comberuiere, Viacount CombermoT Bhnrtoore and Combfsrmsra.; Lmd (i first Saron Gouj^ of C3unkeanfoo i Maharajpore and the Sutlej, and, seci Viscount Goug' t Goojerat and Lin Lord Hardidffe, discount Hardinge of and King's Newton Lord Harris, Harris of Serin^patam and Mysore Be-mont; Lora Keane, Baron KeaiM Ghnznee and Cappoquin, and so forth, the other hand. Lord Clvde was made h»t^ Clyde of Clydesdale; Lord RagUui, W Bi^lan of Raglan Lord Seaton, Baroo^ ton of Beaton Lord Vivian, Baron Vi^ of Glynn and Truro and Lord Airey, B»^ Airey of Killingworth â€" all peaceful' ^^ in the United Kingdom. But in the case » Sir Garnet Wolseley, his peerage should* unquestionably will preserve the memory some of his exploits iLcd the name of Lot, Wolseley of Tel*el-Kebir and Coomassit with the addition of some local designatia- within the Queen's dominions, will, no doubt appear in the next editions of Sir Bernan Burke's and Mr. Foster's elaborate con pilations.â€" 515. James's Gazette. «bA Hvaitlar ratal Hali Irtm* Oi The King and Uneen of Italy. The long road that leads from the Piazj del Quirinale, in Rome, is all upset, am hundreds of workingmen are laying the'pipe for a larger quantity of water. The row^! guest of the Quirinale Palace seems tok'»^ very glad of this change in the street, becanj orders have been given to raise the new levt of the street to such a height as to con; pletely hide the basement windows. Whj They seem to be afraid of dynamite. A fe» months ago the windows had been supplie with a sort of thick iron shutter with holt so small as to give scarcely suflScient passap to the air. During the absence of King Humbert at Queen Margaret, several improvements hav been made in the palace itself. The apar ment of the King has undergone a complet alteration. Indeed, it was in need of i; because when coming from the dining-roor the King had no possible access to his or. apartment other than through the anu chamber, generally crowded with the ladie and gentlemen who were waiting for j; audience. The servants would kindly direc his Majesty to go back to his rooms by th service stairs when the hall was full an when Humbert did not wish to be seen k the people in the ante-chamber. Even Kinf are obliged sometimes to obey the directioc ',«»0l a. f^„Jh' rn Sitn.Hv cf their own servants. '•'At length, on batumay The King is a good sort of a fellow, nc ""^^ "'^^' "'"' ^° such a sportsnian as his father, but « ta Fastâ€" T Prayer, ea faUoB, a young gsntl zaapectability, bookk ,. Lord Munn, of Mont "^^go was aeLSBd with the He explained to his that ha had a reveUtiou fr ^nat aal nothing. AH the p d nwther had no effect up his sister's arguments we igl would aXo^ no nourishment him, *nd beyond moiste: tonally with a sip of water nitted by him to enter his st .inton, the family physician, and endeavored to perpua* but he signally failed m t ard, the expert in mental i led. He toimd no insane s conversed upon every JoDsUy enougb. He couns force to compel U'jkllon to To this Dr. flingston .ngest protest. He believ Himself the desire to eat vo patient, while a resort to f o as by this time he was in ite. The Rev. Canon Baldw m personal friend of Fallo family appealed. Unf out town. Days passed in Ion grew so emaciated and .nds despaired of ever seein; m the condition in which h t time must have been. ALARMING FEAR.S fr was now the fear of Dr. stomach would not bs abl ifficient to nourish him. H _e spent four weeks withou 6 Doctor objected to his p ted either by religious dis presring invitations to tai 1 melancholy seemed to li and he sat most of the tim t week Canon Baldwin ret t been very long in town w e side of his friend. Fall him, and conversed freely ying with the reverend g voutly. By vhis time enty-ninc days in hi** fast. Idwin pointed out that Ithy bodies that they Aeui. Fallon would r..itcri j^mmand, and refused to Sie case waa made the subj e Young Men's Christian fWVV i the prayer meeting of the Cat! Baldwin still continued his ni' /;'tras by the side of Falon at •irity. ' lIALLrOINATlc.V 1 t'»*-4- indifferent Pow«rs,tobe A youn| hidy gave her fellow the mitten for some r^Bon, whereupon he threattm^ to pubbsh herlette.s inrevSge 'v^X^ »id she, "I am ashamed «t »«*k:- ^T* bat their addr^"' "** "°*^"*« "» **»"» One man can deceive anuder in de matter Ob friendship, but it ain't dat way w^SS^^ stSdin^ss'L^'r " " • p^rf^ "^^^^ eJSiSielf '" P°' ' contidcncofn Sir Garnet Wolseley'a Peerace. One result of Su- Garnet WoIscVv'g success m the Egyptian campaign will ... ubtless be that he wiU receive the peerage which rumor has on several occasions always assigned to him. He will be the thirt*eukh militarv commander whom her Maj..* y ^^n have made peers; and few of t .. nave earned the honor by more valuab e services, not only to the country, but also to tho Govern- ment. In 1839 Sir John Colbome and Sir John Keane were created the first Lord Sea- ton *nd the second Lord Keane. In 1840 bur Hussey Vivian was made Lord Vivian and Sir Henry Hardinge and Sir Hugh Gough were raised to the peerage in 1846 Lord" Fitzroy Somerset wJTorStS Lofd Raglan in 1862 Sir Colin CampbdJ L^S Clyde m 1^ Sir Hugh Rose. l5,rd StnSh^ "»"•" l\}^ Sir Robert Nairier, LordNa- giu^'S^'^^' 'H ^^ ' «»' William Miml l^i^Ifl- Sandhurst in 1871 altal Sir ^f^ ^^^* /^' ^^y "» 1876. oTthese thepeerages of the Baronies of Qydeand t^^ V *^' ^^^*^^^«l Str/thnaim and Lord Napier of MagdaU are the only sunnvors among the grantees. tHJE sonar In OP TITLK HE ^^rtUL TAKE. .«i^- *^\ â- Â«^«*^*io'» of titles for eminent !?iif " ^^1 P"**^*^ ««»^y been to in. clu^ m them some one or more of the battles, sieges, or defences in which thev bajadistmguished themselves, "iStnT^ jaj. IS Urd Strathnairn of Strathnaim and Jh^i, and Lord Napier is Lord Napier of Magdala and Carynton. The fitkt pj^es received by the Duke of WeUmgtoTwfre the viscounty of Wellington of TaSveU il" a goo; hunter anynow, and a crack marksman. IL favorite morsel is a boiled chicken or a piec of veal. The son of Victor Emanuel haa hk teeth, and likes food overcooked. He i very fond of a quiet life retires early whe he can get to his own apartments, and rise eaily, generally before 6 takes a cup c coffee and rides for an hour and a half o: horseback in the manege of his own palace very seldom goes out for an early lide. i least now. He receives people of every descriptio; and with great affability. A lew days m two workingmen from Leghorn came t Rome to present a crown of flowers for Vi^ tor Emanuel's grave. The King spent sec: time with them, and was so kind that th poor tcUows were delighted. When drivir his own horse through the new quartets t Rome, where many new buildings are i; progress, it is noticed that King bi.mberti always ready to answer the saluting wort ingmen who bow at him from the hiyh folding, and sometimes he is the first to ca. their attention by taking off his hat. Sine Passanaute's attempt, a mass is celebrate Sunday by the Royal Chaplain Aiizino in th Quinnal. The King regularly attends th: mass after the meeting of the Minister which begins at 10 a.m. Sometimes th meeting is not over until half past 1. Th priest IS obliged to wait, and Mgr. Anzir some Sundays is obliged to say his mass ati or later. The Queeu is patiently waiting- and does not allow any one to have breakfas until the mass is over. It takes Mgr. AdzIh about 17 minutes to go through his inas which is served by the sexton of the Piec montese Church of the Sudario, near S: Andrea della Valle, Mgr. Anzino being t the same lime rector of that church ac^ royal chaplain. During the mass the Quee and the young Prince of Naples kneel dowi but the Kmg keeps on standing all the time Only at the elevation he bends his he». sughtly. 'A'^e King likes to talk Piedmontese, be the Queen never indulges in that c;i lect She talkrf the very best Italian, aud want the young Prince to do tiie same. She gav. him, therefore, from his early childhood iuscan servant from Florence. Florentinfc are supposed to talk the best^Italian, tboui: they may have a strong aspiration. The Queen t.lks with her mother, tir: Duchess of Genoa, almost always iuGermas She can also speak very good Eaclish an- perficS French. De Martini, a skilful Neapolitan, is th: physician attendant on the Queen, and »i ways follows her everywhere, and sits at tiK royal table, directing' her meals. He is ' very temperate man, and has persuaded tb Kmg and Queen to drink water. The Kin; never drinks wine; the Quren sometinwi mixes a little Sardinian wine with wstr The young Priuce is also brought up in ter perate hab ts, yet when he can get it on tt sly he enjoys a good gUss of claret. â- larked, "i believe 1 will Ifce joy of his mot her may be «nt immediately for Or. Hiti| letter ordered such as he be the safest food for tl| rtomach. The late.-«t news t^t he is recovering slowli Baldwin says that the stcadj nb in his belief was wonderf that severe doinestic alHictic llaavily upon Fallon, and ii melancholy that may have hJ leading his mind into such ^He could not account for thl in any other way. Tlie sui the whole affair is that Falj larvive for thirty-three days ti^en an ounce of solid to(] alomach was able to resui nourishing the nearly fauiis grown so thin that hi n him, ani his suit shi s too large for him ar Jdtogether Mr. Fallon's fastj ikft human body can endi "*i||lhout actually permitting j .JM. vitality. '*â- 'â-  "No Cruelty in Oul Is there no beating or wh^ 80 cruel driving, no overloa water and feed at proper j fnrtable and paintul cli of animals for long pc no trying of them in tlj Itered for hours at a tir king of poor, old, haif- d animals? And for ca â- iBrving in your town or cot •fed animals looking over ' fields beyond their reach ' tnuns pass through yc eibwded creatures desper aad thirst and wearines plodding with iron spikes ing of the tail when they tieo Do their groans ot si turb your comfortable jsiviches? Are there no or community who stone biij **for sport," tie tin cans osDse them to run until ly so' Are there no ct cruel by pulling oft the â- ifcts, or imoaling them on ;jrtt science ' If you ea QHpfese inquiries, you certa li â€" *///i /J oif Hu ma h e Jo tt m « l\ Perseontlon. Advices received in Vienna from Pretbnr report the occurrence of anti-Jewish not« that place. The mob broke the windows many houses occupied by Jews. The fiiilit*^ finaUy. restored order after making tort: arrests. The military are confined to tbeiri barracks. The rioters in Presburg decI»i«J that what they have done is merely a P^' lude to what is coming. The shops »«' warehouTOs of Jews were forced open*^ pic iered. The rioters offered oostiJ*" resistence to the military. Similar exc*** w«e committed in the neighboring toin* -^umenthal, where three persons were «[ rested. Several hundred Jews have fled" "^*r, T**® Hungarian Ministry 'â-  placed Presburg under martial law. iliousness, IndijjGStior forms of Dyspepsia yit| s of Zopesa, the ne il. A 10 cent sample JCKEA.siNG Naval Foe| ister of Marine has entation to the Corte t of 300,000,000 piast^ the naval forces. oung, middle-aged, o fttni nervous debility o.- diould address, with two teaatisd. World's Dlsf afcsociATiox, Buffalo, N. i*resburg, Hungary, wl tfetiug against the Jewj "med under martial 11 t Eslohasy has beel ent Commissioner ii isl ravy (Jlark, Drn^„ fJune 3rd. "We ha 3t8 of Wild Straw and find nothin urpoBe for which it ler's Extract of W^ild jrms ot Bowe com; ier and Fall.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy