Grimsby Independent, 21 Jun 1888, p. 5

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; of Goods at T must Go se reductions in the prices of long lists es of Millinery, Mantles, Jackets. Jerseys, is, Bonnets, Gloves, Hosiery, eftc., aTC attri M be marked down next Monday so & i styles of Bonnet and sash Ribbons, Ladie te.; ull marked aw ay down in many cases 1 \pestry Down, Wilton Down, and remnants I goods arrived this weel=â€"Pink Cha mb ictoria Lawns in Black and in White, J bts, Gimps, Dress Linings, Button Hooks. cS s i5le.. tPaltiand AY nA M ABAUD ELE LEA 3 ) 1i instant, to purchase war is declared by Rus woods of which he has uve a great sale this se 5 will not buy Carpets FTiveâ€"frame when the ind of Housc Furnis! is‘ goods and suit the [of the Carpet Windown VI U pfect pmmegnectennits *vjml,",.-.‘;s‘i‘e&( NEs i9R R mE CTID T a â€"Handâ€" esidence ? + sell Vilâ€" to nR ETD TD :uraé OE m the ity, or 1 AERS rou tolnet o Aline whatntonie s lt d 4 3 9l atly agcquired. In short. the spri Farns in consequence. Scientific w ) in ascribing to the effects of sel prurder their notice. If you aro acitated for the enjoyments of 1i If you are advanced in years, No ‘ken down, physically and morally olly, send your addreEs and 10 cont 1 on Diseases of Man. â€" Sen tions to RM. V. LUZON, 4 ‘inafool‘s paradise. _ CURES iss ,, B â€" S e val tss x Enfi“wn y ‘mq U nGuig) es y Choice ly to gâ€"iiv the prinpiâ€" esterm Ontario, able ~to dispose ing the season. ril Mete: 9 :&; h ng& aA A 2 1 AS 1o any.paP IDD, xC EL TD 11 C t 7 «& sw t.s: xRIMSBY Lp t : 19y black and it SY tE} Chtol oo eppnorters ress Linings, Button Hooks, Hose Supporters urchase his Fall and Winter Supplies. Hse d by Russia and France against Austria and i he has too much. Just see the Velveteens, le this season; the styles are new and beautiâ€" Carpets except fromâ€" houses who make them en they are,. nof,OveT Fourâ€"framé. Ladies Furnishing Goods at the Right HOuse. ThE tssOe l Semiek »xactiy." iing, btrees East Tin t BPe db t In short, the 51 mence. Scientific to the effects of U 4 Io B $Or J s U W l reste VC is E19. tss SS N S o eP ogiery, etc., are attracting thousands i next Monday so as to tun them off sSash Ribbouns, Ladiesg‘ and children‘s own in many cases less than hbalf the Down, and remnants of Carpets going weekâ€"â€"Pink Chambreys, Cottonades, k and in White, TLinen Collars and ings, Button Hooks, Hose Supporters e his Fall and Winter Supplies. He ussia and France «gainst Austria and s too much.. Just see the Velveteens, season; the styles are now and beautiâ€" o S o l oasae" iWw Almmake the in Ve at Remeomb proprictors fhey can DC woT EOX gtrictly. . cht&m'c C mredicine derf FRENOH REGQULL Far _ supserior to Exgot. T; Oxide. Eamdorsed bytho th: use&lng%[@fl THLY. . Kewve INBUR 8 BEGUEARFTY, P1 Price $ Toromto Medioi: & NEVR the attention o memory, excit of selfâ€"abuse or tion ‘of the her , eftc., aro all syn the spring of vit ntific writers an s of selfâ€"abusée you aro incomyp ats of life, No. & ears, No. 8 will & morally, from i 110 coents in stan he spring of vital foreo having lost :: ntific writers and the superintenden : s of selfâ€"abuse the great majority c you are incompetentfor the arducn ts of life, No. S offersan escape fror ars, No. 8 will give you full vigor an morally, from early indiscretion, t» 10 conts in stamps for M. V. LUuBox® ecaled _ and secure from observatior 47 Wellington St, E. Toronmio :8 CUARANTEED,. â€" HEAL THE sick. Pleasant Cure zeromio Mcedicine C 2 19 1e ‘ew Ca Pm : i “" laP ez i it of goods lateiy? Mantle Cloths, fedicine and S she botfle. To A ME N tC TvYO At8 Wwonâ€" 6 K doesg Tororto [ 1 & n nt [\ )1 @, C or L That same night, as the Squn Meysey sat by themsalves towalr hoursâ€"after the girls had 1 evacuated the drawingâ€"room the affairs of the universe gener and there envisaged, over a gla That same night, as the Squire and Mrs. Meysey sat by themselves towards the small hoursâ€"after the girls had nnanimounsly evacuated the drawing-roomâ€"discussing the affairs of the universe generally, as then and there envisaged, over a glass of claretâ€" cup, the mother looked up at last with a sudden glance iato the father‘s face and said, in a tone halfâ€"anxious, halfâ€"timid s "‘‘Tom, did it happen to strike you this afternoon that that handsome cousin of Eilsie Challoner‘s seemed to take a great fancy to our Winifred ?" The Squire stirred his claret.cup idly with his spoon,. * I suppose the fellow h as eyes in his heal," he answered blantly. «‘ No man in his senses could ever look at our little Winnic, I shoald think, Enily, aad not fall over his ears in love with her." Mrs. Meysey wuited a minute or two more in silent suspense before she spoke again ; then she said once more, very netâ€" TDR C L2,. t te seems a tolerably nice you;sg LCOLLHE, ACES CA O COR C 0 l a6g 0T * Never heard so in my life before," the Squire grunted qut. © !‘ There ‘are : barristers and barristers. . Hs gété no. briefs." / Lives on literature, by what he tells: me : next door to living upen your wits, I call it." 1 * Bur I mean, it‘s & gentlernan s. profesâ€" sion, anyhow, Tom, the bar." Rligs 4 «"Oh, the.roan‘s & gentleman,.of gourse, if it comes to thatâ€"a perfect gentleman ; and an Oxford man, and a person of culture, and all that sort of thingâ€"1I don‘t deny it. ~He‘s PI PWE 4 oui i CE uk cocamintay 9 Y a very presentable fellow way ; and most intelligent i. XSL Y . AaXF omcs .. mrer mt i _ uitesktan way ; and most intelligent : understands the riparian proprietors‘ question ‘as easy‘ as anything.â€"You can .ask chim . to dinner whenever you choose, if that‘s what you‘re duvingal.";atporne" .c 2 _ PBESE ' hrode e e c in e tiate taw a fow _.Mrs. Meysey called another ha second‘s before she reopened fire timidly than ever. .‘Tom, do you k1 fancy he really likes Jur Winifred mured, gasping. o AAWEVUGCBSONRCOOCE* «* Of course he‘likes our Winifred," the Squire reperged, with profound conviction in every tone dg his voice. "*I should like to know who on earth there is that dosen‘t like o . Â¥ PR PC T NKE Y SSE e id css en suan every tone o? His voice. "**I should like‘to ' know who on earth there is that dogen‘t like | our Winifred ! . Nothing: new in that.. l could have told you that myself. _ Go ghead: with it, then.â€"What next, now, Emily ?" _ « Well, I think;;Fom, if {‘m not mistakâ€" en, Winifred seemed rather inclined to take a fancy to him too, somehow." Thomas Wyville Meysey laid down his glass incredulously on the small sideâ€"table. He didn‘t explode, but he hung fire for a moâ€" ment. _"" You women are.always fancying" things," hesaid at last, with a slight, frowp.. «¢ You think you‘re so precious quick, yOU do, as reading other people‘s faces, I don‘t deny you often &Lthem right when 1t0 Bat sghne tmess‘minyrrsw. ewes _ """ sead whgbien‘t in them.~ Thatt‘s know Tok y ‘Mecipherers of heirogly &A with all, cip .%:y[ y th‘? y YThey‘ sef great deal more in upB@Et" chan ever was puts there. ,',Yfll;,fe' AEC VY 2L / . st Yg;:“;:; I remember," Mrs. Mey_s.ey admitted, Shecking M at the outses with an astute conces0C> She had cause to reâ€" member " thoetrcts, indeed, for the Squire yemindeâ€"mer of that one obvions and pal: pable mistake about the young foxâ€"cubs at {,ast three times a week, the year round, on &n average, "1I was wrong that time ; I know I was, of course. You weren‘t in the leastâ€"~anneyed with Mr. Hillier. â€" But I thinkâ€"I don‘t say I‘m sure, observe, dear â€"but I think Winifred‘s likely to take! a fancy to himâ€"a scr.ous fancyâ€"and he;to herâ€"what are you and I to do about it ? ‘ As she spoke, Mrs. Meysey looked hard at the lamp and then at her husband, wonâ€" dering with what sort of grace he would receive this very revolutionary and upsgiâ€" ting suggestion. Forhergelfâ€"though mothers are hard to pleaseâ€"it may as well be adâ€" mitted offâ€"hand, she has fallen a ready victim at once to Hugh Massinger‘s charms and brilliancy and blandishments. Such a nice young man, so handsome and gentleâ€" manly, so adroit in his talk, so admirable in his principles, and though far from rich, yet, in his way, distinguised ! A better young man,g darling Winifred was hardly likely to meet with. But what would dear Tom think about him? she wondered. Dear Tom had such very expansive not to say utopian ideas for Winifredâ€"thought r obody busa Duke or a Prince of the blood half good enough for her: though to be sure, experience would seem to suggest that Dukes and Princes, after all, are only human, and not originally very much better than other psople. Whatever superior moral excellence we usually detect in the finished product may no doubt be safely set down in ultimate analysis to the exceptional pains bestowed by societéy upon their ethical education. The Squire looked into his claretâ€"cup profoundly for a few secoads before anâ€" swering as if he expected to find it a perfect Dr. Dee‘s divining crystal, big .with hints as to his daughter‘s future; and then «he ~burst out abruptly with a grunt; "® suppose we must leave the answering of that question entirely to Winnie. * Mrs, Meysey did not dare to let her inâ€" ternal sigh of relief escape her throat ; that would have been too compromising, and would have alarmed dear Tom. So she stified it quietly. : Then dear Tom was not wholly averse, after all, to this young Mr. Massinggr. He, too, had fallen a victim to the poet‘s wiles. â€" That was well ; for Mrs. Meysey, with a mother‘s eye, had read Winifred‘s heart through and through. But we must not seem to give in too soon, A show of¢refistance runs in the grain with women. "He‘s got no money," she murmured suggestively. j ; serP The Squire flared. up. «"*Money !" he cried, with infinite cohtempt, * mohey ! money ! Who the dickens says anything to ‘me about money ? {£ believe that‘s all on earth you women think aboutâ€"Money indeed ! Much I care about money, Emily. I daresay the young fellow hasn‘t gog money. _ What then? Who cares for that? He‘s got money‘s worth.. He‘s gok brains ; he‘s got principles; he‘s got the luat L w d vorvud ut OeWwOl CÂ¥ )h, the.roan‘s & gentleman,.of gourse, if mes to thatâ€"a perfect gentleman ; ‘and xford man, and a person of culture, and at sort of thingâ€"1 don‘t deny it. (He‘s y presentable fellow, too, in his own < and most intelligent : understands the b ©EIENDS IN COUNCIL SHAPTER VII. stir;;d. his claret.cup idly «* I suppose the fellow h as a1," he answered blantly. SUNSHINE if wits, I call i6." ; [ /. Mrs, Meysey JOVORTCC â€"7"ta oo sc ooanatinge Lavellâ€"known firm W gentletpan s profesâ€" | persistently for twenty minutes, insinuating wellâ€"known firm of watchm$8® by toâ€"morrow e bar." )65 .\ every possible hint against Hugh, and leadâ€"/| Hill, * Could you send m below, a lady‘s ntleman, of course, if | ing the Squire deeper and deeper into a evening‘s post, to address @lth initials * E. rfect gentleman ; and | hopeless slough of unqualified commendation. gold and enamal watch, wilh shield on back, person of culture, and | At the end of, that time she said”qule‘tly“ :| C., from H. M." engraved OMrecisely similar I don‘t deny it. ~He‘s| ‘Then I understand, Tom, that if Winniâ€" | but in every other respecuil) Mr, Meysey, of low, too, in his own | fred and this young Massinger take & fancy | to No. 2479 just supplied t telegraph back rent : understands the | to one another, you don‘t put an absolute | Whitestrand Hall? If s0lque for amount question ‘as easy© as | veto on the. idea of their ‘getting engaged, | cash price at once, and ch&,) _ R:ply paid. ask \him | to dinner |«do you@l, 00 4 shall be sent immediatelÂ¥;,‘s Rest, White if that‘s what you‘re | * I only want Winnie to choose for herâ€" | Hugh Massinger, Pisherm®â€" _ ; > _ YEny BJ C coaas self,". the Squire answered with prompt de:â€" ; strand, Saffolk."" . â€"_â€" Eply had duly ar: another halt for a few cision. . *‘ Not that I suppose for a moment i _ Before lunchâ€"time, the »8ing on receipt of opened fire, still more there‘s‘dnything in this young fellow‘s talkâ€" | rived : 5* Watch shall be §8 . guineas." â€" So m, doyouknow Irather | ing a bit to her. Men will flirt, and | cheque, â€" Price twentyâ€"8Â¥qount for a jourâ€" r Winifred ?‘she murâ€" girls | will let jem. Getting: engaged | far, good. It was a fair 28} for a present ; ' § indeed ! . You ‘count yoar chickens before | neyman., journalist wg] PMfiected, it would es our Winifred," the \the eggs are laid. A man.can‘t look at a | but, as Hugh shrewdly *M.tone. Day after profound conviction in | girl uowadays, but you women must take it | kill two birds vglth one Inday. The watch e. "*I should like to | into your precious heads at once he wants | toâ€"morrow was Elsie‘s bir? ang Hugh, to do ere is that dosen‘t like ' to go straight of to church and marry her. w5>u1_d give Elaie Plé’&su“? ea giving pleasâ€" ning: new in that.. oL l However, for my part, I‘m not going to inâ€" | him just1CE, thoroughly 109, pretty girl, and es o_ C us aca snaaati t="tera in the inather one way or the other. | ure to agynl‘)lof_lY: G%Qf:l? buld also do him . a T se cot cay Plera: M d e e rie. whh a 4 m. o 'Th_a,xs f heirogl y 1. more in , / YÂ¥ou reâ€" old Hillier AND SHADE. ._oomereonamemmsnemimiey will to work and to get on. He‘ll be s Judge in time, £ don‘s doubt.. If a man like that were to marry our Winifred, with the aid we could give him and the frisnds we could ind him, he ought to rise by quick stages to beâ€"anything you likeâ€"Lord Chancellor, â€"_or â€" Postmaster General, Or Archbishop of Canterbury, for the matter of that, if your tastes happen to run in that dirsction." _ « He hasn‘t done much at the bar yet," NMrs. Meysey continued, playing her fish dexterously before landing it. <©Hasn‘s done much | Of course he hasa‘t done much1 How the dickens could he ? Cana man make briefs for himfelf, do yon lsuppose',’ He‘s given himselfi up, he tells me, to carning a livelihood by writing for the papers, He had to do it. It‘s a pity,. upon my word, a clever young fellow like thatâ€"he understands the riparian proprie: tors‘ question down to the very ground* should be compelied to tura aside from his proper work at the bar to serve tables, so to speakâ€"to gain his daily bread by peany aâ€" \ lining. If Winifred were to take a fancy to | a young man like that, now "â€"â€"The Squire ‘ paused, and eyed the light through his glass reflectively. M L. om in n ds NK sromsr «*He‘s very presentaDic, . went on, reâ€"arranging. her V still angling cleverly for dear nation. g * J ©# He‘s a man any woman might be perâ€" fect‘y proud of," the .Squire retorted in a thunderous yvoice with firm conviction. W G0L0s 60 goo Ves Cns Acaita in UA CEEDLEVE C DEDENS SimB C OUl c ge ns gos. 499 ... Mrs. Meysey followed up. her advantage persistently for twenty minutes, insinuating every possible hint against Hugh, and leadâ€" ing the Squire deeper and deeper into a hopeless slough o‘f unqualified commendation. At the end of, that time she said quietly‘ : *« ‘Then I understand, Tom, that if Winniâ€" fred and this young Massinger take a fancy to one another, you don‘t put an absolute veto on the idea of their ‘getting engaged, d myadt‘| wo@ $ T . Aup gen Oe suve roudleain meuiar Nip Apen pan® c . c l P.1 0. / Mrs. Meysey bad carried her poiny W*b" honours. _ " Perhaps. you‘re. right, dear," she said diplomatically, as who should yield t6o auperior"’w,isdom. ~"lt was her policy not to appear too eager. t . KE wl â€""0~"‘. nkhi. daatee cchoeds So, ixom unat day forth, if it was Hugh Massinger‘s intention or Gesire to prosecute his projected military ‘operations against Winnifred Meysey‘s hand and heart, he found at least a benevolent néeutral in the old Squire, and a secret,msitlent, but noue "the less domestic ally in Mrs, Meysey. It is not oftenâ€"that a penniless suitor thus enâ€" lists the sympathies of the parental authorâ€" ities, who ought by precedent to form the central portion of the defensive forces, on his ow n side in such an aggressive enterprise. But with Hugh Massinger, uchody ever even noticed it as a singuiar exception. .He was so clever, so handsome, so full of promise, so courteous ard courtly in his demeanour to young and old, so nich in future hopes and ambitions, that not the Squire alone, but everybody else who came in contact with his easy.smile, accepted him beforeâ€" hard as almost already a Lord Chancellor, or a Post Laureate, or an Archbishop of Canterbury, according as he might choose to direct his talents into this channe! or that ; and failel to be surprised that the Meyseys or anybody else on earth should accept him with effusion as a favoured postulant for the hand of their only daughâ€" ter and heiress. There are a few such unâ€" iversal favorites here and. there in the world : whenever you meet one, smile with the rest, but remember that his recipe is a simple oneâ€"Humbug. e ‘rr]:ferhwaps I‘m right 1‘ th hailf in complacency and ha course I‘m right. I know C marriages in future to please Mamnta, and more to suit ‘the tastes of the parties conâ€" cerned, and subserve the good of coming generations. I think it was an article in one of the magazines. It‘s the right way, I‘m sure of that ; and in Winifred‘s case I mean to stick to it." t 4 ‘ HEugh stopped for two months or more at Whitestrand, and during all that time ke saw much both of Eisie and of Winifred. The Meyseys introduced him with cordial pleasure to all the melancholy gaieties of the sleepy little peninsula. He duly attended with them the somnolent gardenâ€"parties on the smooth lawns of neighboring Squires : the monotonous picnics up the tidal stream of the meandering Char : the heavy dinners at every local rector‘s and Vicar‘s and resiâ€" dent baronet‘s ; with all the othcr deadâ€" alive entertainments of the dullest and most â€" stickâ€"inâ€"the mud â€" cornerâ€" ofâ€" all England. .. The London poet . enlivenâ€" ed them all, however, with hkis neverâ€"failâ€" ing flow of languid humor, and his slow, drawledâ€"out readiness of Pall Mali repartee. It was a ‘comfort to him, indeed, to get among these unspoiled and unsophisticated children of nature; he could palm off upon them as original the last good thing of that fellow Hatherley‘s from the smokingâ€"room of the Cheyne Row Club, or fire back upon them, â€" undetected.. dim ~reminiscences of pungent chaff overneard in brilliant Westâ€" end drawingâ€"rooms. And then, there were Elsie and fWinifred ~to amuse him ;â€" and Hugh, luxurious, easyâ€"going epicurean philâ€" osopher that he was, took no trouble to deâ€" cide in his own mind even what might be his ultimate intentions towards:either fair lady, saticfied only,; as he phrased.it to his inner self,;to take the goodsg the,gods proâ€" vided him for the . passing: moment, .and to keep them both well in hand together. * How happy could I be with either," sings ‘Captain Macheath in the oftâ€" quoted coupâ€" ‘let, ""were t‘other dear charmer away." Hughâ€"taok & still more lenient view of his personal responsibilities than the happyâ€"goâ€" was reading in a table," Mrs. Meysey . her work box, and or dear Tom‘s indigâ€" " the Squire echoed, d half in anger. " Of ow I‘m right, Emily. a bock the other day 8 «* You must returns of the looking up frox them. * It‘s see what a 1 Meysey‘s give one like it myself cally. * Did you thing 1 It‘s keyle finished. OIt rei ashamed of my 0 one." Hugh took the watch ande fully. He noted the maker dial, and opening the back. memorandum of the num thought had flashed across ment." He waited only afe Hall, and then asked the t\ could walk down into the 1 He had a telegram to 8 which he had oaly just tha bered. Would they mir with him as far as the post _ They strolled together ‘ High Street. At the office, sent off his telegram. It w gl Mago a Yorkshire -gent eman 0w1}§§a k“f promifing twoâ€" yearâ€"old colt. On theâ€"lky he was to make his debut the jockey engiged wadE ungsble to ride. The old trainer Picked out a promis: ing stable lad who could ride the weight and promised him five SOrercigns if he won. The saddle, bridle, whip and boy barely turned the scales ; ‘W} fact there was not half an ounce £0 spare, |It being the boy‘s first race in public helfelt anxious , ana nervous. The result, lowever, confirmed the trainer‘s good judgmimt. ~‘The boy rode a brilliant finish and> heg the favorite by a neck, On returning to he paddock he was congratulated by the traner and the owner promgsed him that he spuld do his riding first race in public helfelt anxious , ana nervous. The result, lowever, confirmed the trainer‘s good judgmint. The boy rode a brilliant finish and> heg the favorite by a neck, On retiurning to he paddock he was congratulated by the traner and the owner promised him that he sipuld do his ridin for the future. The was elated ang' overjoyed at this. Catcling up his saddle, bridie and whip, he wentimiling and laughâ€" ing into the Weighing roim along with the trainer. And: to. their dsmay he was unâ€" able to pull down the tle scales. ‘The old trainer took in the situétion .at a glance and said to the weighmaiter : "Excuse me a second." Heé ‘catight holdof the boy, kicked him round the wighingâ€"room and boxed his ears‘soundly, saying : **You young scoundrel, you have sold the race ; never come round the stabl:s again.‘" â€" Hedumped him again into the scales, the boy crying as though his heart would bréak. The saddle, bridle and whip was pitched on his lap, and strange to say he pulled down the scales, with a trifle to spare. Théincident was reâ€" lated to the officials, and the race was saved by the old trainer‘s presente of mind. The boy became a celebrated jockey and erjoyed the confidence of his trainer and master for many years. re was a good deal of discussion at the timg amongst medâ€" ical men and others‘as to how the boy‘s.state of mind affected his bodily weight. The colt won by a neck. The biy nearly lost by an ounceâ€"and the trainer inatched it by a box un the ear. LoxDpox, June 11.â€"The fiding hopes ot the warmongers now centre in Turkey as a last resort. â€" Russia has, lik@a polite tailor, sent a note sta.ting that she has been very patient, that she is pressed for money herâ€" self, and that Turkey has not kept her proâ€" mise. â€" She is earnestly requsited, therefore, to send forthwith £700,000 Turkish, repreâ€" senting two delinquent annÂ¥Ual instalments of the thirtyâ€"two million war idemnity agreed upon by the treaty Of 1879. The Sultan not only has no mONgy, but has a Finance Minister who just How is accused by the Vienna correspondents of amassing £300,000 by metPOdS which would affront the sensitive feelings of & PAWh broker, If Russia is ruthless in her deMand she will proceed to scissor off a slice of Turkey‘s territory. . England agreed a5 the Cyprus convention to protect Turkey‘$ Asjan "fron. tier, and she must ;?.q it., .. * Moreover, Eaglish diplomatic circles are not a little ill at ease over Russian railway building, and if there is to be trouble they would prefer to have itb COMS this year, With a Unionist majority in Parliament and the railway through the Caucasus ye; int complete, making the Bl&@k,5°@ still a com. mercial and strategic necessity, is perhaps one reason why Lord Enutsford is laboring so hard to fix up the trouble concerning a Chinese invasion of Australia and a Brisish invasion of Thibet. on by a N€ pid you ever see su t‘s keyless too, and "It really makes of my own poor 01d] (To BE The War Scare. ~UF Bisie crl »+nrnd a Box on Mr. Meysey, 0| telegraph back O# que for amount h$,, _ R:ply paid. ;, m‘s Rest, White RBply had duly ar "Sint on receipt of S â€"guineas." Sc Mount for : a jour: & for a present scted, it would tone. Day afte Andiay. The watc} and Hugh, to d f ea giving pleas a pretty girl, anc uld also do hin o girls if they llaige. with him. d off, he said, moment rememâ€" stepping over office ? ; into the sleepy Huge wrote and s addressed to a Akkers in Ludgate ramined it careâ€" ; name upon the made a mental e. _A sudden him at the moâ€" mirutes at the by toâ€"morrow below, a lady‘s h initials *E. shield on back, recisely similar Mr. Meysey, of telegraph back que for amount sgent at arm‘s was a pretty mel, with her k on a broad I should love d enthusiastiâ€" ch a dear little go exauisitely me feel qguite battered silver arrival at ae morning inifred were the big tree, etween them. man, happy ed out gaily, h approached gh ; and just present Mr. e was quite could, with ns, for con:â€" disposition, one or the £ of his maâ€" , or chance, Travellers who feel disposed 1O UICAD lC way cfficials must in future treat only with courtesy.: The peoalty for giving them liquer while on duty is a fine of $50 with imâ€" prigonment for a month at hard labour. â€" The State of Mississippi is rejoicing beâ€" cause some residents of Dakota, driven away by the blizzards, have gone south to try farming, â€" It is said that the fleeing farmers all tell the same storyâ€"the blizzard has been too much for them. «New York Tribune:s: The English Gov erument never abandons its colonists when their commercial interests are at stake. It protects them, makes ‘their interests its own, and devotes all the energies and the finesse of its diplomacy to their service. Philadelphia having made sad havoc in the list of its saloons is now employed in waging war against vice. The moral wave is at its height, and under the pressure of public opinion the police are having a busy 1 F L0 1 C4 a MX in 2o med CPoUml ardee time in raiding the haunts of disorderly characters. . * Sunday newsparer, and it is reported that in spite of the prophecies of ill, the city is prospering as never it prospered before. We hope some of that kind of leaven will be imâ€" ported into the States. C Hochelaga, now called Maisonneuve, will not sufer from too much commerce if the Legislature of Quebec grants it the power for which it is asking. â€" The town asks for authority to compel every man, of whatever trade or profession he may be,, to take out a license, paying not more than $100 for it, before he‘ can open a shop or hang out his shingle within the municipality.. _= Christian World : " Toronto is a city conâ€" taining a population of 140,000,;and yet they have neither Sunday horseâ€"cars nor a single Buffalo, being a much more populous city than Toronto, has suffered to a greater deâ€" gree from the evils of grads railway crossâ€" ings. ;It is stated that at least a life a day is lost.on these crossings,. and it is no wonâ€" der that the people of Buff«lo have, during the past‘ twelve months, persistently and vigorously agitated for the removal of so great an evil. . â€" § ‘London is not to have a free library, the electors baving voted by a large majority against it. It is satisfactory to learn that the oppositian to the enterprise was based solely upon the condition§ attaching to it. The Library Board wished the city to buy a lot of old books and to take possession of an unsuitable building, and to this the people were advised not to consent. Lo Anew thing in the way of subsidies is proposed in Quebec. On the plea that in a cold country like this some kind of stimulant is necessary", and on the assumption that if people drink good Canadian wine drunkenâ€" nesy will be decreased, a wine making firm is asking‘ for a bonus from. the provinces. Of course if we bonus railway companies and manufacturers, why not wine producers ? The latest evidence of this fact is found in the appointment of fiftsen Negroes to posiâ€" tions on the police force of mew Orleans. The city council for three weeks refused to confirm the nominations of the colored men, hut finally they gave way to the pressure of public opinion. > Disasters are not always without redeemâ€" ing features. ‘The Baptist church in Charâ€" lottetown, P. E. I., was burnéd down and it is related that " the Roman Catholics were among the first to offer their afflicted fellowâ€"citizens the use of their hall in which to bold their services, and are not at all backward about teridering donations of money to the building fund.:"‘ Here is a case in which troublse kas produced sympathy, ‘olgration and friendship. i Southern prejudices against the Negro race are evidently .being softened by time. ‘Spontancous combustion having , brought to ruin several buildings in the neighbour hood‘of Fredericton, N. B., the populace ‘has arrived at the conclusion .that the spirits of departed enemies are at the bottom of the disasters. Unfortunately punishmeat for arson does not lie in these cases, nor were such punishment possible would the insurance companies prosecute, for it hapâ€" pens. in every instance that. an uninsured building bhas béen burned. The series:of calamities certainly forms an argument in favour of insurance. 8 | xoTEs ox CUi Phough thoroughbred cattle may be imâ€" ported free of duty into the United Statesâ€" the American Customs authorities have levieéd duties upon animals sent there by Canadians for sale at auction. Through the intervention of Sir Charles Tupper catile of this kind, whether a‘ready sold ‘or consigned to be sold at auction, may now pass the froa: tier without paying toll. Sir Charles deâ€" serves credit for the part he took in securing the removal of the tax. It has always been a source of wonder to Canradians that mob law is so constantly reâ€" sorted to in the United States. I t appears in comprehensible to us that in a country where there are regularly organized courts of justice so many lynching outrages should occur, and that no sericus attempt should ever be made to punish the perpetrators. It does not reâ€" quire any great capacity for moral reasoning to come to the conclusion that a number of men who, taking for granted the guilt of a person suspected of crime, proceed to conâ€" stitute themselves jury, judges and execuâ€" tioners are themselves guilty of murder. The boating ‘season has been opened in earnest, and with it have come the dangers which beset pleasureâ€"seekers on the water. Last year several calamities occurred, bringâ€" ing sorrow into formerly happy family circles, and it is only truth to say that some of these resulted from inexperience in the apparently easily acquired arts of sailing and rowing. The trouble in past years, and it may be repeated this year, has been that people who do not know how to manageâ€"a poat are too ready to trust their lives to one. The United States fishery experts have made one attempt to transplant the lobster from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast, but they have failed owing to the circumstance that the crustacean has not been able to stand the long overland journey. A second Attempt is to be made, and the Canadian Government is about to make an experiment in the same direction with a view to giving the Britisa Columbians fresh instead of canned lobsters. It is rather strange that ‘the lobster, so popular in the East, is not to be found in the Pacific;}; but «probably the explanation is to be found in the cirâ€" eamstance that lobsters had contracted the | absird habit of walking backwards. : who feel disposed to treat railâ€" ; must in future treat only with The peoalty for giving them on duty is a fine of $50 with im RREXT TfOPEICOS. mer, \ And sweetest smiles would greet the sweet newâ€"comer, : And on young lips grow kisses for the takâ€" f lDQ, * When all the summer buds to bloom are breakingâ€" ‘ How lorg, dear love, how long ? To the dim land where sadâ€"eyed ghosts walk only, Where lips are col1, and waiting hearts are lonely, : . I would not call you from your youth‘s warm blisses, Fill up your glass and crown it with new kissesâ€" How long, dear love, how long ? Too gay, in June, you might be to regreb me, And living lips might woo you to forget me ; But ah, sweetheart, I think you would reâ€" Or heedless winter winds across it blq\sé Through joyous June or desolate Dec How long, sweetheart, how long woul rememberâ€" Â¥ How long, dear love, how long ? How Long. If on my grave the summer grass w member When winds were weary in your life‘s Deâ€" » ecamberâ€" § So long, dear love, so long,. Sir Edward Baines is said to be the oldest active journalist in EKurope. Heis 88 years old, and his paper is the Leeds Mercury. He began his career as a journalist three years after the battle of Waterloo, but was pr esent as a reporter for the‘Mercury at the battle of Peterloo in 1819, and has been continuously in newspaper life ever since. _ & â€"â€" 38 KingStreeteast, Hamilton.Gas Vitalized Airand other Anesthetics, House Blake 8St. East Hamilton. > or brightest eyes would open to the sum Cor King & MceNab 81s. Hamilton Ont : Nha.s revolutionized the !NVENTIO world during the last half century. Not least among the wonders of inventive progress is a method and system of work that can be performed all over the country without separating the workers from their homes.. Pay liberal; any one can do the work ; either sex, young or old ; no special ability required.. Capital. not needed ; you are started free. Cut this out and return to us and we will send you free, something of great value and importance to you, that will start you in business, whiclh will bring you in more money right away, than anything in the world. ~Grand ouift free. â€" Address, Trumn & Co., â€" Augusta, Maine.. Beamsville, Ont., > Will visit Smithville every Saturday,and Jordan every Tuesday where he will be preâ€" pared to do Dental work in all its branches. Vitalized Air for Painless Extraction. J. H. InxnaERrsoLL. Bartisters, Solicitors, &e., &e. ST. CATHARINES, ONT. B. B. OSLER, Q.C. J;.Y..,TEEKTZLEL, DEEPSea Wonders exist in thousands of forms, but are surpassed by the marvels of invention. Those who are in need of profitable work that can be done while living at home should at once send their address to Hallett & Co., Portland, Maine, and receive free, full information how either sex, of all ages, can earn from $5 to $25 per day and upwards wherever they live. _ You are started free. Capital not required. . Some have made over $50 in a single day at this work. All succeed. Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Hardware, Earthonâ€" ware, Crockery, Class, Smoked Hams, Shoulders and Side Meat, Lard, Butter and HKggs. American and Canadian Coal Oil, Machine Oils, etc., etc., ab lowest cash prices. Highest Market Prices paid for Butter and Eggs. Just received Car load of new Salt in batrels and 56 1b. sacks. Selling choap. Feubaas w (Aublel Aamic® ~tudntieaie s 5 thk Encie‘ tarriat n ght â€"I s pos s Either sex, young or old ; capital not needâ€" ed ; we start you. â€" Everything new. No special ability required ; you, reader,° can do it as well as any one, _ Write to us at once for full particulars, which we mail free. Address Stinson & Co., Portland, Maine, OrFICEâ€"Station Street, Beamsville, HAMILTON School Books, Patent Medicines, H. McDONALD, Surgeon Dentist, R. 8. ZIMMERMAN, YKERT & INGERSOLL SLER, â€"TEETZEL. . HARRISON & â€" OSLER, W . K. SECORD, MoxEy To Loax on Easy TEerms. ZIMMERMAN, DENTIST, U S. CHITTENDEN D. D. S. PRACTICAL DENTIST â€" Over No. 8 King Stree East, Ham{ilt Barristers, Solicitors, etc., ‘Vitalized Air WINONA, ONT. DENTIST. Dealer in d.:C,. RYEKERT,.q.0 JOHN HARRISON. H. S. OSLER. ONT. ton.

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