Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 24 Jul 1890, p. 7

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 n Veddinff. ,ssa the other d»- blushing bride s preparing to P^^ /went out tt.g| ,uld return m» .sence, bov^f"^be ;f hfrn. andthei-^ »«^^%"Sr^rmei ^redT^f%io:;5 l.„ri"'" BBUSSELS IS JUNE, 1885. in Waterloo jtalp of the Town • *•» His tap. "fct ' of 1886," sai,l o « other day 1.n" '^^^ Railways 11," .*^« '"Btm.. ?;eX^f -^ -^rneysofar^onefr « v-o«tof Yuma V"» » the midsT^f ir^^ 'leet and rain V " line, and there l^" "Pany's stron' W- f St 'Hsturbance of ;â-  '^k the jour„: S "-^s. where ac every S, shneking ,hroui W cluster of huts a t the locomotive to tS .s, however, ^,-ere „.,. ""«. an.l there !,„„' of repeating carbinest "f the Yuma stror... two hundred pounds .ntain §50,000 in go!, nes. I looked agam hat the safe contained turned me out of the tliat, and save me the Wk • said theburlv i tuK liardly a doUaV ^toodoff the rustlers let-ted. wliat will the witli SlfJO,000 on my sage, listed bdls and fcsasthe train flew and iw the route so well owns and tanks as tlie pped. ht, a5 at midnight the to sound. 'We pa^s Xo, by Ceorge ' were enough to see a lan.- 11 .station and a little sun-oi!Tidii)g aboxar.d ' put it on bca,rd. ick, "I said, iicr, â-  replied a man on iitiin. ' I v.as alone witli the -cure as a tomb, while iioatli aiuV the storm nerv(.ns and couldn't ciittin. I fancied tlut ly rising up on end, or ui on.slauglit :then that !sc the dead, unions â€" tliattheoce;:- it lilierate herself â€" cot l!i"t shake it off. the ize and exceptionally .IS rough, warped and knot-iioles. All this II due to the limited town. 1 don't know esist turning it over, ti me to roll horribly. lieard a noise at th.e ins nif)me!it a move- knew it was foohsh, (inipany's strong-box. gold, to the cottin and irds the larger end, pipe, I noticed after- ti ink of it at th.e knot-holes towards ere covered and seal- ttom of the strong- ssed and the engine lalloa " at a wayside enl}" sounds began to here, was no doubt ;re was a scutHing. a linst the sides, horrified doesn't ex- n the box continued, ack, tore do-«Tiacar- 1 fired it through the X mintrled with the ' in th" box. I tired Tre re.loubled. I l'"" .•kcd like a lunatie ain and again at n/.ino was exhausted t anotlier. ivas split and torn: V crushing it »lown d blood was stream- ever issued from tue uroan escaped from " a man's voice, i the- shattered M- iside, but only the th a dozen terrible ,f the froJitier, with ' belt, and a loa^ai iide. He was con- f^:S'?aidthenian '^^S^er-tankK^ hedule time. Jhou cab of the locoffl^ as the train dashea â- as buried without ul-boaril, • 't •. -c ny easy ta.sk to reconstruct the pic- ll'-i Brussels on the eve of the " glorious â-  ?-eenth." The changes which have taken '"I since tiien are as numerous as they are .1-pini' the contemporary joumals seem .--.ve "dealt in everything except news, .: after the lapse of three-quarters of a '^- rv very few eye-witnesses remain who ' -ill enciowed with " sound mind, mem- â- â€¢ur.d understanding." In a word, the fr'-?5cl3 of 1S90 has little or nothing in "..on v.ith the Brussels of 1815. In a •rd chamber high up in the tower of the y -.[de Vilie, M. Alphonse Wauters, the â- , iichitect, whose career began with the " ties." uneartlied for my edication a V rile f'f the Journal de la Bel'jique and ' irf evident from a cursory perusal of ,;r L-ontents tliat the Belgian world dnr- â-  -i,it evi-.itful Spring wagged much as ;..i in .spite of the din of war, the presence •Miign ii'.^ops, and tlie preparations for :iiiii_' contiict. Xapoleon " had many ,.:.,i;iiizer.s in Brussels, the I DNKH'.KNCK IN ins DE.STINY ,. .. 'te.-i)i'c id, and iie was generally spok- 1- the K:n[)eror till Wollingtou retui-ned â-  ')r,.s, when he became simple " Bona- or something worse. It will be a ;.' lise to inaiiy to learn that the great ;!;..• contrived to combine business with ,,-:ire ilitriiig the time he w.is the guest 1. 'an den Cruyce in the iiKiiision now â- â€¢â- d by .M.- Miitthieu, the tiiiancier, in i;. e Koyale. On Apiil '2S he gave a .; .liiiner at the Hotel IJellevue, (where ;::'-i-ua!-d lodged,) having Admiral Sir [:.â-  V .^Hiith among his guests. 1: .....s I'ollowoil l)y a ball in the hall of isiuid (/iriicert (or Concert Xoble) in the !hicalf. On -May 13 !m entertained ' ii'ne.s' at a bunijuet in the imperial it La â- ken, and on May 1?S he organ- â-  ,: -.rimil and more splendid fete in honor "^i:nai Blucher at the Concert Xoble. •..-iied I'higliien, (dieiit, (where he paid • :- '.lecls to the couriigeous Duchess ' liciiie.) and AlIi lie went with lilucher :v"iiioiit and (irammont he patroiiized :. l.iid's concerts twice at least he v/as ri; jiicsent at tiie jjerformances of the !â-  ;i.iaie" he sat for his bust to lluxtliiel i.Jked to dinner ill the Allee Verte, and ::vll frciiueiit reviews on the plains of I'laisir, now covered with bricks and I):.. |i-.;: V '"(*•;(«.' of June 13 limits its military ::i:eiR-e to the toast proposed ny~ the at dienl, "A I'heroine de France a '..vranee dc la patrio, et a la chute du :. ' aiil an advertisement of '"Fdegant -!i Uoivcs, v.ell w(fitliy the attention '.IS." Xext clay it tells its readers ah ;hc [lainlers' fete at Antwerp and the .: i-ieutiiic tSociety at Haariem. On "'â- ; it makes no mention of the Duchess iiiiond'.s ball, liut reporis that "Le v.:i.s a sncccs.s at tiic Grand Theatre, .it the l'iH-i.sians are singing â- â- (ji'iii!!,! Ii' iirhiteiop-; sera jia.-^.sc, ijMr ile-.'ieni'.ra la vioictte.'" -niy ii-.i ijie ITtii (v.hcu \\'Ldlin;,'ti'n 'ii Jua!tre Bras and v.'as marching :â- ' .Mont St. -Jean) that Brussels was id in print of the crossing of the ' rs â€" and the provluction of '"Lcs Deux • s" at tlie Monnaie. On Sunday, while â- .ttle raged round Hougomont and La Sainto, Brussels learned that Welliug- 1 id slept at (ienappe, but witiiout the •â- â- t iiieiitioii of l^uatre Bras, although .lyor i laron d'Hooghvoist asks urgeiit- '^-jds and mattresses. Monday's edi- â- â- ""nuaiiibula" was being played at tl e '.e wiiile Xaijoleon was tlyiiig to^^alâ- d :iiiier !) omits Waterloo altogetiier, 'lonnccs tiie arrival of Duinoulin and i.cres as prisiniers, and the enibalm- â- :nc Duke of Brunswick's l)ody. On â- ';-a the great triumph i.s proclaimed in line the ;l.i:- niNi;iNc Or' r.El.l.s y ' "'ihc decisive victury " is duly 1. i',ud IJK'i! coinVs. without any "f tyjie- or other ilistini.'tion. the coin- ii;!')i!:i:aiiin tliat ••Hirscli, Corn l.-'-J Xc.v S rcct. formerly attached â- ir.aliiy to her Koyal Higlmess Marie â- . I ••.wnifss ' the Low Countries, is 1 til loliov.- his ail of curing corns, .!nd cliilblaiiis without the least â- .• '..sei. now becomes one vast inhrmary. ;i ;iuiidred wounded Frenchmen are en- •- 1 on he Biace dc la Monnaie, while the ::iations for tiie ajjairt decisir.: d-- la A 'i'tayr, are burning biiglitly, and tlie :â-  !- IS inside are roaring at the drolleries i-Avocat Patalin." 'fhe Church of the â-  â- -â- '.uc and the Sallie des Varietes are 'ill of the sick and dying " Jones, "..•lant Colonel," (the only English :â-  except Wcliiugton ever mentioned .â- â- ./'â- uriini ' asks for .the ' addresses of uii otHcers '"to facilitate the researches :i Is "â-  tent liospitals are erected out- :;•â-  L')uvian and Xaniiir gates; for an v.eck the jieasants arc either burjing -.i.i or lirir.Mijig in ^lie wounded and a I'cnotit â-  is orginizedat tlie Monnaie. ' "11 JuMc 1:4 came the latest news i'arisâ€" a salute of 100 guns has been to celebrate the victory at Ligny ' In â-  c-cediiig week v.e iiave '• Te Deums" le living, and solemn masses for the The wounded Prince of Orange is " take carriage exercise the Comtesse t de (ivc/. holds the plate " tor ti.e â-  ii-d soldiers" at tiie door of .Ste, Gudule; it. the dentist, has changed Lis resi- â-  a consignment of •' excellent port -iid Ixirclay's brown stout, bottleit in '_n, arrives and exactly ten daj's \\'aterloo v.as won MM. Penley (an »"Cis:i.r possibly of •• The Private Secre- "^â- â- \' '• I autl J'ones reopen the English season 'e Park Tlieatrewith " The Clandestine -H.uvlige,- •• Tom Thumb," and " The Jew "••" I ae Doctor'" Deaths were so frequent ;â- â€¢â€¢"-- the months which followed Waterloo .^'it all attempts at registrsitioii were aban- I'r.eil the supplj- of wood for coffins gave ^^â- - .tad a bill still exists for Siickiug used j ";â- .! y the dead soldiers of the Scotch re- j-'iicuts encamped in the fields now occupied "^.iie Luxembourg station, ^â- le Duke of ^Vellington's stay ill Brussels ^- â- .'.!â- - e !y onlj- lasted a lew hours, as he " â- '•â-  â-  â- -' once for Paris. On several sub- ""••'â- '-•- occasions he revisited the scene of ^vunig achievement, and in September, h-j acted as guide to George IV. ^^ j'Uen is so frequently mentioned in con- ';^!0!i with the campaign of 1815 that I â- â- mined to see something of the little ^. which has apparently slumbered tttully thiough the past sevently-five itte I* t:ij; Summers. The house where the Duke lodged with the Mayor, Joseph Parmentier, is absolutely untouched the quarters of the Third Hussars, the First Battalion of the York Regiment, and the gallant Fifty- second, can still be pointed out. The honest Enghienois LOVED THE ENGLISH more thain the Hanoverians and the Prus- sians, though there lives one very old man, the octogenarian Suisse of the church, who saw an English soldier flogged for theft out- 1 side the town gate. Joseph Le Maitre still wears the gold ear-rings in vogue at the beginning of the century, and he has not yet finally resigned his ecclesiastical functions. He saw both Wellington and Blucher in the streets of Enghien, and often heard from the lips of his friend Paternots, the postilion who drove them to Grammont, how the Marshal prod- ded him with his sword when he hesitated to go quickly down a steep slope. Le Maitre, then a boy of fourteen, laid himself down on the turf in the Due d'Arenberg's park to hear the echoes of the cannon, but he says nothing impressed him so much as the pro- found silence which followed the last shot. He M-itnessed the departure of the troops for Braine-le-Conte iu the dead of n ght, and lie used to play with the two soldiers billeted on his father. The survivors anl contemporaries of Waterloo are more difficult to find in Belgium than in England. A solitary Belgian veteran â€" J. Desmedt- of Ghent â€" answered to Gen. Van Merlen's roll call, but I have been fortunate enough to meet with several persons in Brussels, still well and hearty, who have cheerfully given me their reminiscences of that event- ful epoch. I have, however, failed to come across a single combatant, although many were alive ten years ago. M. Louis Spaak was born in. 1804, and I found him busily engaged in his pleasant bouse on the Avenue ties Arts, with sundry plans and iirojectionsfor improving tliccom- luanications between the upper and lower sections of Brussels. He is unwilling even now to give up his work as an architect, and his only enemy is the asthma. In bSlo he lived with his father in tlie Trureidierg, and wlicn THK SUN V.AS iiisiyu on the morning of June 16 he saw the Duke of Brunswick and his suite (preceded by two of the Black Hussars with pistols in their hands) riding out to the battle of Quatre- Bias. "Two of Picton's Scotch soldiers," continued Mr. Spiak, "were billeted on us,' a.s well as an officer named Jackson, whose servant Thomas used to let me ride on his charger. I remember Mr. Jackson return- ing here hurt and telling my father in bad French tliat it had "rained Inillets," as he sho\^ed him Jiis horse's nose pierced by a ball. I believe tint our guest's name was lasil, and that he died only a very short time ago. I heard the guns firing from the olil ramparts I have never forgotten the endless procession of wounded, and I saw the i)rewer3' drays, laden with beer, rattl- ing over the stones of the chaussee toward Waterloo. On the .Sunday after the battle we drove out to the field wdiere Hougomont was still smoking, and the country people were filling in tlie graves. I remember M. Sivery, a professor of English in the Athenee, one of my old friends, telling me a story about Waterloo which you may care to hear. He iielped, when a youth, to nurse a Scotch- man who was thought to be mortally wounded, during three months, but at last recovered and was furbished l)y M. .Sivery with the means of returning to his home, whence he emigiated to America. Forty- two years after the professor was unexpect- edly sunimoneil to the Hotel Bellevue, and there saw a young man who placed in his hands a gold twenty-dollar piece, handsome- ly mounted in a case. He told him that it was the first money his father; (who had be- come a v,-ealthy timber merchant and a Sena- tor for Massachusetts,) had earned in Amer- ica, and that he had commissioned hisson while making the tour of Europe, to seek out his foimer benefactorat Bru.ssels and place it in his hands. .Sivery was himself a soldier, and wounded with a sabre at the battle of (iroes- bceren. The tv,:; men became inseparable friends. Tiie niemory of Mine. Z. Ijipcrsiel, jre Louise FouUe, whowasborn withtlie century, is as clear as that of a woman of forty. .Sit- ting in lier bright "u/oii overlooking the Rue Beliiai-d. and the tree-lined avenue, this dig- nitied and still handsome lady talked to ine for an hour over her reminiscences, which begin with the firing of the deafening salute which greeted the arrival of the First Con- sul and Mine. Josephine. She was nearly ten when she faw the Emperor with Marie Louise (wearing the Brussels lace shawl just given her) sitting at his side and driving to the gala performance at t4ie Monnaie. Then came the Waterloo days, when her father and mother went to the Wellington fete at the Concert Xoble, but they were not pres- ent at the Duchess of Richmond's ball, which at the lime Mas almost forgotten in the bus- tle of the battle. The.Foidles lived in the Viedle Cour, now tlie Rue du Musee, (where the English Club is at present situated,) and as her father was one of the city notables. Mile. Louise was in the very centre of ail that was going on. Her uncle, M. Alexandre Ponthieure de Berlaere, was an officer of the Seventh Bel- gian Battalion; coniinanded by Col. Vauden- saude, and his niece saw him depart for the war. Like everyljody else, the FouUes went to the ramparts TO IIEAK THE C.-VXKOX on the Sunday afternoon after prajdng in the church, and as they crossed the Place Royale one of their French friends riding past called out gayly, "Demain a Laeken!" She knew Mine. Wesener of Charleroi, and has heard her tell over and o-, er again the story of her coming to Brussels on a common cart under cover of the darkness of the night of the 15th to tell the Duke of Wellington, who was at the Duchess of Richmond's ball, that the French had crossed the frontier and were advancing. Mile. FouUe visited the hospitals of the Montaigne de la Cour, and assisted in look- ing after a dozen wounded soldiers who found an a.sylum in her father's house. She saw the Duke of Wellington frequently, and says he carried an umbrella even when riding in civilian attire. Louis le Desire used to strut about the Pare with a gigantic cane, and the ' Belgian ladies of the period admired kilted Highlanders much more than the "Black Bruuswickers" or any other class of the de- liverers. The hlocv.s Continental mined the popularity of Napoleon, and' caused endless misery in Brussels no grade of society was exempt from the domiciliary visits of the "rats" employed by the fiscal authorities of Dyle, and Mme. Fonlle, when she went HSW shopping with her daughter, paid a louis for a pound of sugar and purchased velvet be- cause it was cheaper than cotton. Mile. Marie Sacre is the daughter of Napo- leon's clookmak^r. She lives with her younger brother, (a robust septuagenarian,) who has carried off countless prizes for the manufacture of mathematical instruments, and is the inventor of the balance used in half the mints of Europe. A coffin clock made by M. Sacre pere toward the close of the last century ticks sonorously in the par- lor behind his son's repository in the Chaus- see de Wavre, where I talked to Mile. Marie of the days when she used to accom- pany her father to Laeken, where she often saw the Emperor while the palace clocks were being wound up and adjusted. While living in the Rue de la CoUegiale, near Ste. Gudule 's, Mile. Sacre looked down on the French troops marching out to the Russian campaignâ€" Xapoleon signed the de- claration of war in a room where on^ of M. Saere's clocks graced the mantelpiece-^and she was seventeen when she watched the Duke of Brunswick and hi.s officers, with their skull and cross-bone helmets, passing under the walls of Ste. Gudule on their way to Quatre Bras. Four yeais previously Marie Louise had patted her on the head in the Laeken (hardens. On the morning of the 19th she st-od Ijy the X'amnr Gate and saw the long o-onvoy of wounded file by. One English officer, who was riding, had lost his arm and the stump was bandaged up in canvas "like a ham." Mile. .Sacre helped to look after the wounded in the Petit Pare, which, like the rest of Brussels, was turned into a liospital for at least six weeks. Though in her ninty-third year, she is very proud of her brother's "successes, and it is certainly a curious coincidence that the son of the man v.ho wound up Napoleon's clocks at Laeken, and repaired his watch before he went to Moscow, should live to make com- passes for the Congo .States, and gain the gold medal for HaJanrcx de precision at the. Paris Exhibition of 187S. It is now just seventy-five years since these things happen- eil, yet M. .Spaak, Mme. Ippersiel, and Mile. .Sacre can speak of them as events of yester- day. Their pLUSonal reminiscences of i;ho.se stirring times will, as far as the coming '^\'aterloo' day is concerned, have much greater interest than the 'latest intelligence' of the forgotten Journal de Bdijique or the laconic sentences of its equally dull colleague tlic Ora' li-. The present has its claims as well as the past, and I must leave the narra- tives of those who actually saw Duke Fred- erick William in his plumed head gear de- part so bravely for liis last battle-field, to go to Genappe, where, forty-eight hours hence, the obelisk de: tined to perpetuate his valor for all time is to be solemnly inauguratetl on the seventy :rifth anniversary of las tragic death." X^o man is so insignificant as to be sure Ilia exanijde can do no hurt.- -[Lord Claren- don. Fancy brings us as many vain hopes as idle fears. Electrical Sopplles Send to the Canadian headquarters for any- thmg you want in the ElectrlcalUne. 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There is nothing like tliein for Strength, Colormg or Fastness. DlIZFaclcaEe EQUALS 17C9:as73'.bert7e!nthomarkit. If you doabt it, try it Your money will be re- fundeil if you are not ctniTincnl after v triaL Fifty- ' fourcolora ar ' made in 1'ni'kiMli nyes nbracing all -cw shades, and other.' are added hs soon as they become fasshioiiable. They are Wiarranvcu to dya m goodsaudduitbcttur than any other Dy â€" Same Frice as Infericr Lye, lO. Cfes. Canada Branch 481 St. Paul Street, HontreaL Sendpostal/or Sample Card and Book of /rutrucftoru: Bermuda Bottledi "You jnust {;« tn BernJHfia. If you del not I will not iie i'esponsi- ble for the consequences." '• But, doctor, I can atroril neither the time nor the money." "Weil, it that is inipositibic, try SOOTTS EMULSION OF PURE NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL. I sometimes call It Bermuda Bot tied, and many cases of CONSUMPTION, BronchitiSf Cous:h or Severe Cold I Iiaro Ci:REn with it; and the adYanta;?e is that tiic moNt seiiNi- tivc stomach can take it. Another thiiit? which roinn«eni3s it is the stlniulatin;? propcrtlcji of the Hy pos]iosihitcs whicli it contains. You will And it for sale at your Di-ii^Sist's, in Salmon wrapper. Be sure jou set thr sennine." SCOTT A- JBOWXE, Belli-Tllle. WAXTED in every town in the Dominion, reliable men to represent the Dominion Bldg and Loan Ass'n, 65-67 Yonge St. Toronto. B EATER LINE STEAIMSHIPS. Saillng weekly between MO^TKEAK and LIVERPOOL. Saloon Tickets $40, §50 and $60 Return Tickets, $80, $90 and $110, according to steamer and accommodation. Intermediate $25, Steerage $20. Apply to II. E. .IIIJKK.IY, Gen- eral Manager Canadian iiihipplng Co., i Cus- tom House Square, Montreal, or to Local Agents in all Towns and Cities. 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This Company undertakes agencies of every description, and trusts, such as carrying oul) issues of capital for companies and others, conversion of railway and other securities, will give care- ful attention to management of estates, the collection of loans, rents, interest, dividends, debts, mortgages, debentures, bonds, bills, notes, coupons and othersecurities; will act as agentsforissuing or countersigning certificates of stock, bonds or gther obligations. Receives and invests sinking funds and investj? moneys generally for others and offers the best terms therefor. Every dollar invested with or through this Company earns the highest returns and is absolutely safe. All investments an; guaranteed. TIIE IMKST.MKXT BO.M»S of the Company are issued inamounts of ?1IJ0 and upward and offer unparallelled inducements for accumulative investments of small amounts, monthly or at larger periods for terms of years from five upwards and the investor is not only absolutely protected against loss of a single dollar but can rely upon the largest returns consistent with securitv. Correspondence solicited and promptly replied to. wm. !»TO\E, President. «. F. POTTER, Managlne Director First-class General and Local Agents can obtain remunerative contracts by applying to WILLIAM SPAItLIXCi. Saperliitendelit Confederation 3Lffe ORGANIZED 1871. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. REMEMBER AFTER THREE YEARS POLICIES ARE INCONTESTABLE Free from aU restrictions as to residence, travel or occupation. Paid-up Policy and Casta Surrender Valac (iuaranteed In each Policy. AFFORDS ABSOLUTE PROTECTION AGAINST Provides an IXC'OnE in old age, and is a good INVESTMENT. Policies are non-forfeitablc after the payment of two full annual J^emiums^ Profits, whicli are une.Kcelled by any Company doing business in Canada, are allocated every five years from the issue of the policy, or at longer periods as may be selected by the insured. Profits so allocutrd are aifsolnle and not liable to be reduced or recalled at *my future time under »n.v clrcunistanccs. Participating Policy Holders arc entitled to not less than 90 per cent, of the profits earned in the class, and for the past seven years have actiially received 95 per cetU. of the profits so earned W C. MACDOXALD, J. K. MACDONALD, ACTUARY. MaNAGBTG DIRECTOB E'IRE-PROOF GRAHPiONS With Upright or Horizontal Boilers. 12, l6, 20, 25 Suitable for all work, aid 30 H.P 7T'"°"i°gfeS^ ^Sing. Traction Engines 12, 16 and 20 Horse-powei; STRAW-BURNING ENQINIS For the North-West. Waterons Engine WoitsGOL e:?AN r?cns ANo Winnipso. ^-T^ idkiattlii MM

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