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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 25 Oct 1883, p. 2

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 « wmimmi umiitLMi^iiLiMii, FAKMEE'S CORNER Paeldiix and Stozins Apples. In the majority of cases the reason why an apple orchard is not profitable is fre- (|aently because sufficient care is not exer- cised in harvesting and storing the fmit, ^iside from the general precautions regard- ing knocking off applet, picking when too green or too ripe, and mixing different vari- eties in one barrel, there are other and more Important points in regard to the harvest- ing to which the attention should be often called. The sorting of apples is a matter upon which many farmers are either ignorant or negligent. If a crop is worth raising at all it is worth sorting properly at the harvest. All apples should be carefully graded into three grades. The first or A gi^e should contain fruit of the finest quality, fit to he put upon good markets and to be kept until spring. The second grade may be disposed of in the fall and early winter sales, may supply the local market, or be need largely for home consumptson. The third grade includes those popularly known as "cider apples," but which should be used more pro- perly for drying and immediate consump- tion. There are always plenty of neighbors who are ready to pay a fair price for the "culls." If these are to be used for cider they should be again sorted, and the parti- ally decayed or very wormy ones thrown to the hogs. "V' ery few farmers know what constitutes a first-grade apple in city markets. In gen- eral, it may be said, that first grades should not be over-ripe, neither very green and un- developed as those which often grow in the centre of a thick tree, should not be one- sided or "scabby," not jammed or dirty, and, above all. not wormy. There are cer- tain worm-holes, however, which do not make an apple second class, but they are not common. If the worm .hole be recent, small and through the apple from end to end, it does not usually lessen the keeping qualities or appearance. If the "blow end" or "stem end" of the apple be filled with chips, however and the portions adjacent to the openings of the worm hole be red and dif colored, or if an opening is made any- where in the side of the fruit, then the apple is second class. Apples apparently sound, but which have lain under the tree until they have become withered or dirty, are not rirst- class. Some uniformity in size among first-class fruit should be secured. Very small apples aJe apt to be green and imma- ture very large ones, especially if highly colored, are usually o\ er-ripc and will not keep long. t Jdwins and others which are attacked by e dry rot are second or third class. No .jiit, spongy apples should be packed with ihe first grade. As far as pos- sible tirt grades should have the stuns on, and shoulu be free from all rust and Isaves. It may be true that very few of the sppks in an average orchard are first-diss Iruit, but it pavs to pack those few by themselves, nevertht less. If not sorted the whole crop will sell ror second class fruit. The fruit put upon the market by farmers as first class fruit often tootains much that will rank as third class. In making the second prade the apple grower is lefc more to his own liking. He should know how long he wishes this fruit to keep and should sjrt and pack according- ly, being guided by experience and good sense as to how good or bad an apple must be to keep in good condition for a certain length of time, it is a mistaken notion that commission men and apple dealers take the packer's word for the contents of the barrel, unless indeed the packer has established his reputation. IJirrels are opened and the con- tsnts examined. The fruit stlh upon its merits. When the apples are packed in the barrels the lower head should be faced with two or three layers of average sample apples placed in circles and with the stem end down. The fruit may then be put in in small quantities at a time, taking care that it is settled down tirnily. The barrel thould be lightly shaken two or three times at intervals during thp packing. On the upper end alse place a facing of fruit with stem ends up. The bar- rel should be a little more than full. Squeeze it down with a screw press and put the head in neatly. A neat, clean barrel is worth ten per cent, more than a dirty and bungling one. Use new, clean apple barrels. The barrel should be so tightly packed that its contents will not rattle when it is rolled. It is not a good plan to pile apples in heaps or to cart them into the barn to "sweat" before they are packed. The extra handling is expensive and injures the fruit. IJefore being stcred for winter, however, the barrels hhduld be put under an open shed, or turned on their sides and left in the orchard. They wil need a rough protection of canvas or boards during a heavy rain. Having lain a tev davs they are ready to be stored. The tnird-class fruit, which will not be barrelled, may be left in piles under the trees until the remainder of the fruit is disposed of. It is a good plan to bury Golden Ruf sets. Unless the cellar is an exceptionally good one, they will wither and become almost worthless by sprit g. Bury in much the same way as po- tatoes are buried, using plenty of straw. They will keep till April, when they will be fresh, plump and crisp, and worth the high- est price. Apples should not be stored too soon. If barreled for "3, couple of weeks or more be- fore storing shey will keep as well or better. The only secrets in storing are to keep the fruit dry and cold. Few cellars are cool enough to keep winter apples well. The colder they can be kept and not freeze the better. A cellar with stone walls built in gravel soil, and with a good ventilation, is the best for keeping apples. Few cellars which have to be drained keep them well. Il the bottom of the cellar is the natural gravel, and is never wet, so much the better. Cement floors are not usually desirable. Next to a good natural gravel floor, a brick floor laid without mortar is best. If the walla and articles in the cellar get mouldv, it is no fit place for storing apples. If the fruit is kept dry but warm, it loses its crisp- ness and flavor and keeps poorly. The tem- perature should be even. If the temperature of the cellar can be regulated by letting in or excluding air, a thermometer should be had, and it should be kept aa near freezing as possible. If apples are to be kept for very late spring and early summer markets, ice shoold be supplied to the cellar after tbe weather becomes warm. Set the barre ^a bricks or blo;;ks, two or three inches from the floor, keep the cellar dry and cold, and if the applen are \tell packed they will keep until April or 'Mij.â€" American Cultivator. Apparltloiis of SylBR Persons. A correspondent writes Twenty-six years ago, during the siege of Delhi, there was a bandsman in the same regiment as myself, remarkable as bein? the second tall- est man in it, and a very good Christian of the Roman Catholic faith. On the day I refer to our regiment was off picquet duty, and taking a much needed rest in camp. The bandsman â€" who, like his fellow musi- cians at the siege, had to use a rifle instead ot a musical instrument â€" suddenly awoke from a disturbed sleep, sat up in his bed and exclaimed, "Oh, dear! what a dream I have had " Our camp color man and myself were in the same tent with him, and the fjimer asked him what he had been dreaming of. He replied, "I have just dreamt that we were engaged and that I was hit fair in the throat with a bullet I'll take it as a warn- ing, for I feel confident the first skirmish we have that I shall be done for." The camp color-man remarked, "Why, man, there is no use taking notice of dreams." The bands- man replied that he would take notice and go at once to the priest, which he accord- ingly did. The next morning about 4 o'clock the alarm sounded to arms, as the enemy had made a sortie from the city in force, and a determined one it was (9th July, 1847). The bandsman was in the same company as myself, and went through the day's work safely until about three o'clock in the after- noon. My company at that time had retir- ed back to our own position,and were stand- ing formed in close order, each man falling out as hifi name was called to drink a glass of grog, and then taking his place in the ranks again. The bandsman had just resum- ep his place again on the right of the com- dany when a bullet struck him in the apple of the throat and he fell dead. During the siege, which lasted from the 8th of June till the 14th of September, we used to send our wounded and sick men every month to the depot on the hills where the wives and ohild- ren of the regiment had been left when the mutiny broke out. Strange to say the wife of the bandsman had told the other wives that she knew her husband was killed, as he had appeared at her bedside on a certain date, and that he was pointing to his throat, which seemed to be covered with blood. She was so convinced that her husband was amongst the slain that while waiting for news from headquarters she donned widow's weeds at once. When she received the usu=l monthly letter she found by it that the time of the appearance of the apparition and the date of her husband's fall corresponded. Found By a Dream. Recently, says the Memphis Avalanche, Samuel Dreyfus, for many years deputy sheriff in charge of the Criminal Court, died at his residence in this city of an affection of the luugs. Three days afterwards one of his sons visited Dr. Goodyear and inquired if his father had left any ot his private papers with him, as it was well known the deceased had been a member of several benevolent institutions in Mem- phis, and a look over those papers found at home revealed but one policy on his life, and that was in the order of the Knights and Ladies of honor. It was known to his family and relatives that he had left policies in other organizations of a similar order to the amount of $10,000. Dr. Goodyear, who had been on intimate terms with the deceased, did not remember his having left any papers with him, but to be certain, carefully examin- ed the contents of his safe, but failed to find any. Benjamin K. Pullen, formerly chief clerk in the sheriff's oflSce, was also question- ed by the son of the deceased, bii " did not remember any papers being his care. Three days afterward the in-law of the deceased called on year, and made the same statement regard- ing the missing policies as had the son. An- other search was made, but it, too, proved fruitless. )ae recent afternoon, so relates Benjamin K. Pullen, he fell asleep in his office and dreamei that Samuel Dreyfus appeared before him and asked â€" " What has become of my papers which I gave you while you were in charge of the sheriffs office?" He answered, "They are safe where I placed them," and, suddenly awak- ing, proceeded at once to the sheriffs office, which is on the floor above, and found the missing package intact, where he had place- ed it many months ago. The package was without delay turned over to the family of the deceased, and in it were the missing policies. A Boy of tbe Period cHooses bis Profession. A yonng Austin man recently married a rich widow, who died shortly after the cere- mony, and left a bereaved widower and a large amount of property. One day he was visiting at the house of a friend who had a family of four little boys, and the widower began quizzing them. " Well, George, what are you going to be when you grow up " he inquired. "I guess I'll be a poet, ' answered the little fellow. " And what are you going to try and do Willie?" " I'm going to be an artist." «' An artist, ah And what do you think you will adopt as a profession, Eddie " " Pa says he is going to make a minister out of me." " That's good, very good. Now, Frankie, let me hear what yon intend to be." "I'm going in tor money," "Going into a money-making business Well, what is it " " I'm going to be a rich widower, I am." â€" ^. â-  M â-  *^m- WHO Were Tbere. Two dogs, which onght to have known better, got into a fight in the alley m the rear of a hotel yesterday, and m two minutes there was a jam of people around them. A servant in the third-story window raised the sash and upset a pan of flonr with such aim that not over four or five of the crowd escaped marking. Amonjt the " floury " afterward indentified on the street were two judges, two 'doctors, three lawyers, four city officials, five merchants, two insurance men, and a banker. Canines havmg a mill in prospect will be reasonably sure of a respectable crowd in attendance. TIM B»1W W«tt». I received a very important I©**" *Jj" week It contained the annonnceBwnt tha« â- â€¢The baby walks. " It U with no deure to pun that I say that this is a great step for- w^d for the baby. *-...«i_ Of course this event has not be«i entirely unexpected in our family. I l«ve been l(»k- ing every day for the news for some time PMt. Our baby has been a remarkable baby from the very first, ahd a large number of his immediate rehtives have been waiting with bated breath for the tidmgs that his long journey had commenced. The par- ticulars of the auspicious event are nc t to ban 1 but I can see in my mind's eye just how the wonderful occurrence took place. Tne baby is out in the country staying with hw "sisters and his cousins and his aunts" and I suppose if they had been near enough to a telegraph office they would have sent me a dispatch about the supreme event. Although the baby's fat legs are ridiculously sturdy, he has had all along a great diffidence m trust- ing to them. Now, last Sunday I held, and till maintain that the baby took one distinct step towards his devoted father. The news was incredulously received as being too good to be true, and the whole family, from his grandmother to the kitchen girl, collected around to see if he would take another, but the little rascal seemed to think it was the biggest kind of a joke to bring his father's reputation for veracity into question by laughing and holding on to a chair, but re- fusing all the while to move away froih it. It was all in vain that I held out my hands and all the endearing inducements I could to get him to take the necessary steps to come to me. He would keep one hand on the chair and reach out with the other but not until he had clenched his pudgy hand around my finger would he let go the chair. Oace I had enticed him in this manner to quit the chair, and then suddenly withdrew my hands from his, leaving him standing alone. He hovered a moment in wavering indetision and then instead of stepping forward set emphatically down and resumed his favorite style of locomotion. He never crept as an ordinary baby would have done, but sort of hitched along. He would sit down, and, putting a hand now one side of him and again on the other, his fat little body sway- ing this way and that would hitch along with his little dumplings of feet ahead of him like a railway cowcatcher, and in this way he moved over the floor in a sitting posture at a speed that was wonderful. Practice had made him so perfect at this sort of movement that he evidently came to look on walking as an ornamental superfluity. It was most comical to see him forge ahead, as the boat racers call it, with both hands full holding them up from the floor and sway- ing forward without aay help from them. He occasionally took to his feet, and with breathless haste would work his way along the wall in a hand in hand fashion until getting too elated at his new excitement, would upsed and roll helplessly over on the carpet. These accidents shook his confidence for the time being in the stability of things but happily a baby's memory is as short as a baby, and the perils of pedestrianism were braved again and again. Often the poor little fellow looked like a battle-scarred veteran after his tumbles, but it is a lucky thing that babies are exceedingly elastic, otherwise the population of this country would not be as great as it is now. Any- how, another competitor has entered into the great walking match " The baby wa.\ks.'-â€"Betroit Free Press. Mr. Tennyson has been leaiiog his poems to the Cztt at Copenhagen. A Boot-Blaok's KulOKT. "Brandy is dead " So the men said, so the women said, and so the children called to each other as a piece of news. A drunken, good-for-nothing. A so-called man whose brain had become dissolved in liiuor, whose mind was enfeebled, and who had disappointed everybody by not dying in the gutter, instead ot having the roof of a tenement house over his head. Why should anyone grieve' when such a vagabond passes away The world may owe him room for his bones to rest, but nothing further. So in " Brandy's" case men said that he was weM out of the way, and women clattered their dishes in the rooma below and cared not for the presence of the dead! U hen the undertaker came to bear the body away a dozen people crowded into the room, and among them was a boot-black Some said that "Brandy" looked well in coffin; others spoke lightly about his face having at last lost its ruby color, and the dead pauper was no more than a dog in their mmds, and why should he have been ' One can be a man or he can be a vagabond If he becomes a vagabond let him lose the re- spect of men All had a heartless remark except the boot-black. He stood at the head of the coflia and looked fron face to face and said "Brandy was low-down, and he died like a ^t, and you are all sneering at him a boy ' Did men try to encourage him and guide him aright? Is there a man in this room who ever took him by the hand and spoke one kind word? Didn't everybody abuse and ill-treat him Didn't everVb^v look npon hin^ as a dog " everybody There was no answer. " Aye I Brandy was low down 1" whianpr ed the boy as he laid his hand'^on th^^K He was ragged and hungry, and noor and uTt"' "" '^**'°'^* o^e^'sbKrd \S hat man among you could have stood out agamst It any better Poor old manVThey know all about it in Heaven I Let me he^n to carry him down. " P .n^f J 'f^^.f^! ^^ "" ^««° driven away man i°d :°^ ^^^ disappeared, more than Ilk "After all, -we might have made it easier for the poor old man. J wonder that s^me of us never sought to make a man of hi^ instead of helping him down." ' Paris Pavements. »T,f"^fc^"i""°f "" ®^P'""«°*" with differ, ent kinds of pavement in Paris the nSn fiually adopted is to form a bed of lime o^ Crete for base, and then deposit onS Z' row Bide blocks of pinewood, ^^T^vto^; bncks. Between every row an intersticei^ left, one-quarter of an inch wide, fiUed un by^avel and sand, weU rammU in ih« whole bemg coated oyer with aSthwcon Crete where tar is the binding medSm E " pence ha. tested this p,A K„f Itvis $a encoorsging iiiKoation to notice that many of the great ipdhistrial cornora- tions of tbe country, '•with no souls to saye," are ewnestly wurking for tbe prohibi- lion of the drink timffio, from pnrely busj. ness considerations. The hard logic of fad a has demonstrated to them that it does not pay to employ men who drink, if abstamers San be obtained. The only wender is that any business man, employing labor, should ignore this fact. The Grand Trunk railway encourages all its employees to sign the pledge, and all are prohibited from drinking at all while on duty. The Hon. Minister of Railways fir the Dominion issued an order to discharge any employee of the Intercolonial railway found intoxicated at any time, whether on duty or not. Several of the leading Ameri- can raUways require total abstinance of all those in their service. The Grand Trunk officials prohibit the sale of spirituous liquors at all the refreshment rooms under it con- trol, and they are using all the influence they can to prevent the License boards in the Province from granting any liquor licenses near any of their stations, because of the increased danger to the passengers and to the road. The Kingston and Pembroke railway com- pany have, this year, set themselves earnest- ly at work to prevent any tavern licenses being issued along their line, but have not been, as yet, entirely successful. Within a mile or so of one licensed house on this line two unfortunate men have laid down on the track while inebriated, within a few weeks. One of them was badly maimed for life and the other was killed. In both cases there are wives and children left in poverty, un- provided for. Surely such causes, produc- ing such effects, must yet be removed by the strong arm of the law. I â-  i a^M â-  I â-  A Wonderful Street. Ex-Secretary of the Treasury Windom is now in London trying to raise money for building an arcade under the whole length of Broadway, New York. If he succeeds, that will be the most extraordinary thoroughfare known to the history of cities. The scheme is to make a new street under the present surface of Broadway, extending to the houses on each side, and lit by electric lights at night and glass reflectors in the daytime. The middle of the street would hold railway tracks, not only for city travel, but to ac- commodate in-coming trains from every part of the country. The traveller in SanFrar- cisco or St. Paul would not or.ly buy his ticket for New York, but the hotel on Broad- way where he intended to stop. Freight and baggage would be conveyed directly to the warehouse or be received by the express car which was to convey it to any part of the country. Then traffic of all kinds could be carried on on each side of the arcade. There would thus be a double tier of stores. Provision could be made for sewers, water mams, gas pipes, and heating tubes. In short, it would become a double street and the value of the property quadrupled along the route. Engineers say the scheme is en- tirely practicable. There is business enough now on Broadway for two thoroughfares. Wbere to see tbe Great Trotters ol New Yor^. (Cincinnati Times-Star. No two men in America have had more experience with fine trotting stock, and none are better judges than Calvin M. Priest, of the New York Club Stables, 28th street near Fifth avenue and Dan Mace, of the Excelsior Stables, West 29 th street. New York the champion double-team driver of the United States. Both of these gentlemen say, that for painful ailments in horses, such as cute, bruises, swellings, lameness, stiffness, St! •Tacobi Oil is superior to anything they have ever used or heard of. This is sho the opinion of Prof. David Robarge, the cele- brated horse-shoer of the metropolis, and thousands of stock-owners throughout tho country. As a pain cure for man and bea- 1 St. Jacobs Oil has no equal. Mr. Priest re- cites the case of a valuable trotter, so stiff from rheumatif m, that he could not move an inch. By one thorough application of St. Jacobs Oilatpight, the animal was complete- ly cured, and was fit for the racetrack the next day. The " Woman's Kingdom " is what George Augustus Sila calls the United States. The use of Pilis, Salts, Castor Oil, ij., and other nauseous, griping Cathartics is un- necessary, as a pleasant subs»4!ute is found m Dr. Carson's Bitters, which acts as a Cathartic without griping or nausea. All Druggists sell it. 50 cents a Bottle. Madame Albani and her husband, Mr. Ernest Gye, were recently " received " by the Queen at Balmoral. FromBIB.WIl.I.IAM MAGRATH. Enndale, Credit P. O., Jan. 8ch, 1S83. My Dear Sutherland Some two months since I became so afflicted with Rheumatism of the neck and right shoulder as to render my right arm nearly powerless. I deter- mmed to try your " Rheumatine," and the and enjoy the full use of my arm. My gen- eral health is also much improved by the UM of the medicine. The first two bottles rdxeved »^-the third bottle /reed mT/ro^ J. N. Sutherland, St. Catharines. Ph'tipf^'" '""""an the Spanish Queen Chr^tina s gray water-proof a^d simple pokS fe.K "'*^ "" *° mistaken f o? an iinghsh governess,, J«d BtopareaA^DUNfoN HOTRTâ- ^«.5if^ f»eiot. 450 ,elegant_ rooms. Giand roads to all denoS. »?miH*°* elevated raU- tor less iSSi^y^t the (aS^f"TT°f" ""e better at any other 1^1^^^"^^^^^^^^^^ net fco'^diS-^ter '" '^1°^^' ' ing a law to prTCt the^U n? -n* ^^ P'"" liquors to mmors w^thnn! it°^ intoxicating â- ^t cf theb^S"" *^* V"^^"" "°- husbands X^nm„°' guardians, or to their wiveT^^vwK ?â„¢'*° drunkards unless tion" oT thi,^ Uw •' "^:'^LJ^P^-- terest. Cor new dZ!;„- '^^*'*^ **"» i'" Wbits the «le to te'SdSrirJ?" """• of age. but we wSiik" t^ !^*^y""5 restriotiona in that dSreS^!^ "'""' A. Book containinif %. ., 'â- ^' making secrets, seut tT .^^"'aliaM and sealed on rece^pt'^fj';;**' iiijy- Boyd Rv WM PAYNE, LOND-\ Send2c.sta,.pJorCatSe^ Lieatner Beltih » Klne Strtet, Eait rZ^\ Large double Driving BpU^ "• 1 for Price Lists an d Discount^ '""«'l. Blacksmith's Bellows Anvils, YiJ Portable Forges, Babbet Mel The Largest h ssoWment in the h, WILLIAM DARLING HARDWARE MERCHANis] MOXTRE AL. ]• Q mmm To Painters and those Paintij Ramsay's Concentrated has three times the bodv of lead andrcj years. One pound will cover more mrtJ three pounds of best English Lead Tm teed and manufactured by ' A. RAMSAY t SON, Montrj Should be Sold by AU VaXu Detla BILIOUS HEADACH ;^^j CONSTIPATION., THEY HAVE NO EQUAL, GONSUMPl Asthma, Bronchitis, Throat I eases, and Catarrh. Toijether with diseases of the Eve, £u| Heart, successf ully treated at m Ontario PuImoDary InstitDte,i| S*6 and '^;s .larvis §trret. ToroiM,! M. HILTON WILLIAMS, M.D., M,C.Pi.| PROPRIETOR. Oi^r system of practice is by Medicated I ations. combined with proper constimt remedies. Over 40,000 cases treated imi\ past 18 years. If impossible to call personally for ue ination, write for list of Questions and a co our new Medical Treatise. Address. OXTA PULMOXARY INSTITUTE. 2:i, 'I6 Jarvis Street. Toronto. Ontaria Dominion LineofSteamsti] Runnine in connecticn with the Grand Tl Railway of Canada. Sailing fromQnebecfl Saturday during the summer month8,udIl| Portland every alternate Thursday dnnny winter monthi trailing dates from Queues On ,irl "iid Scpl. I Toronfo, I31M 'Oi -son. "iXh • iirnla, JJJJ Dominion, ctli «l I Monircal, .-« Ratesof passage Cabin. Quebec to Li«rj $50, §6" Sai. ?8(): return, S!90. »10i f" accoriiinvr to steanicrHnd bertn. 1"'^™™ $40. StCf-raKe, $24. The saloons and stawra in steanii^i-s iti;ir'.)ii thu-: ' are aaio-" where hat litf;.? motion is fe't. andnoamq sheep HPf oHnied on them. Forfurtnerpf lar ,viiply to auv Grand Trunk Eaii«ar- or loc«I ajrents of th,' Company, or to l»4ViD T«KK4i«E«K»" General Azents. jWEi OAKLAWN FARM, The Greatest Importing and Bre« Establislimeut in the Mom. Percheron-Xoriuan Hor WORTH $2,500,000.00 J Imported rroBrr"»"""1 flow IS!-' 31. W. DUHJ I IN A HUT |«t0rt*»* SKiECT „ciV-»-' Priceslo"'"' jtyot stock" GllAR*in£E»| â- - ,ni BREEI)£«-r " 3©0 importftd t^o Pas* Th^^ cOMlBtlnK of finest »°'"»'!;„ stod Book A Keistered In the P««^l'««'St„d Book »"" ' â- od the Percheron-horman Stnoi^j^ eotea. Write for Free lllustriteOL";;; An Internal Remedy "id a *l» 'Orallkincsof RHEUMATIC CONK 0f foreiRn. Domesi T-PW^y- Conolse aid Vatican is arranging "prtisaia f'T the imprcve ' I and the restoration o fcLr» despatch says tl flU ia Stjria have been anent for 2*2 jews f jrf of the Jews. .Bt»ndj"y have return v«rffiBll Donnell with 'jfT^Not Guilty." aud Jjjed till Nov. 21st. C W Mackey and James G( d^ed at Paris a coni 'Initio c»W«8. The first Jpablic June 1st. 1SS4 Vitre, editor of the Dra ' Y^ been arrested, chai J" the workingmen to vie â-  diary articles in his pape: ilUvan says he will not un d .1 defence unless time i the witnesses and Russe fijig counsel, to reach Engl •he Grand Trunk report si leceipts for the past six r ^crease over the same peri irly 10 per ce***- ^^® ^^* ' m\ 19 per cent. |Aj felegraph says the pol lobtaiD any evidence showi Lveen O'Donnell and the Ii Lported that the Governme L^jgtponement of the trial. Dn the " Ada Atkinson mj s Jacob Nelling, accused c liio Ada Atkinson, his emp r has confessed the crim â-  e charge implicating Jicob |ad enquiry is to be made ii BOf the working classes oi «Und, with the view of asi ay would feel disponed t i to emigrate to the North [a Durban dispatch says th; I Gateway o's party, whoasse ntion of rescuing Geteway where he has been hid by Chief Usibepu'i fatered half of them. ^the meeting of the Du lito Poor recently, a letter K) of Toronto was read u I of Irish immigrants to bishop says that Cinada ith pauper immigrants. fcmong the villages destroy lir a in the (Grecian Archip Iili» were Katopania, Reis, I latter celebrated for its nks are srill felt on the ii I British Admiral has sei De and Chios. I One hundred and tifty Am icting a lighthouse on the jidor, 120 miles east of P isd belonging to Frt-nch (J jcl murdered a Frenchmj jrarden, and seriously ii .«nchman. Sixty of them ;ore8 and decamped in boat; othe ^oods. The vessel reported embar ck was the English tchooi B captured while trespasi ves of the American A' Company. Her cargo of 1 confiscated. Tbe sjho |etropaulovski. Tte crew AKlishmen and fifteen J a Vladivostock. A St. Petersburg despatc lunounced officially that th lly institute numerous refoi Jiailway service. It is i lanthority that he will issue lace to the affairs of Jews i phich will place them on oth as regards their citiz Oi interests, and to a gi b«n less liable to the mut fhich they have been si jlower classes of Russian? (year. Sir Stafford Northcote el 111 Ireland recently witn a I He said to develop her •eaded order, repose, and Government, not offering t •enaational legislation the violent repression. He I Act a btneficial measure â- tered. There should be "•tional disturbers who ttole through new measu Itnunent, and he warned JEaanl against them. A Conatantinople despatc *nt earthquake was mos **, being particularly cl portion ot the coast which ^the inland of Chios jtween Chesmeh and Vou •recked. At least 2,000 rf ** hy being buried und « their dwellings. An i: 'Pfoperty haa been destrc I Jraioh is at present iinpo **e«nieh was badly dam: *«fe lost. At Smyrna tl '•'ere. A regular pan tae continuance of the **age was slight. On '*e shock was also severe ••• abort and little dam IH^orts received from p i ^^^euneh and south-east lHr« that an extensive a elected. A IfyouaresufTeringfW"' Kidney ComF'" j^The latest productions *etureis of Munich are ^e aixteenth-century gl ^, Spanih. and Vene ^•••n of oms, chalices, p' "â- ea, the originals of ••nt only in the Art â„¢-l the Louvre in Paris, "eae pieces cobsist of Colored gbus on wbi S^glio traceries betwee ^* effect ia artistic, ma W«lly bwbarc. ^.

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