Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 22 Oct 1880, p. 3

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 -^y 7 iMtik. U9, Hot Down. Life to lomr ia fall of tonow â€" Half ia rwl, baH ibey borrow Fall of rockt ard full of ledgrf, Coin^'ta (harp and eatUng cugra, TbM^ the joy beib ma; be rinfpag. Not a aorg yoa'tl hear them ainging Seeing never mak- a them wiar, Looking cat fr m downcaat eyea. All in vain the aan i~ abin ng, Watr8 sparkling, bloaaoma twining Tbty lut aea ibroagb theae same aonowa 8ad ta^aya and wofae to m rrvwa 9ee tbe c*oorfa that moat paM ov«r See the wet da am ng the clover â€" EverytbiDS and anything But the gold the tanleama bring. Driukifig fr«a tbe batter foontain, \m 1 yonr ta'-ta Mil leflma a mountaio. Dri'pa of dtw ard drops of ram Swell into the miehty main. All in vain the bleating abowar, And tbe meiciea fall with power. Oathtring chaff, ye tread the whiat, K cb and royal, 'neath your faet. Let it ni t be ao, my oeighboar Look up, aa yoa love and labour. Not for one alone wce'a viU Eviry one haa cares and trials. ' Joy and pain are linked together. Like the fair nd cloudy weather. May «e I av«, oh, let us pray, Kaith acd patieaoa far to^lay. ONLY A WOMAN'S HAIB. B» lilt Au'l or ul " A Srwuft Kricnilsliil-, ' ic CHAITEK \. !;• se was standing before the fereat mrror in w r 'l^n'ng-ro) m, fastening a spray of for- get-me nota in the stft thick coi'a of l.er beautiful goMen Lair aid I waa seated in my favouiite oo ner of the ctuch, le.-.n nu agamnt a l^e?p of piledup tuiiliions, and watching her witn ii do'ent ailmiiation. K'.r II' "e wis the Ltauty of our f. mily, the h ni»u.ei.t girl X lie met with far tnd wide m •â- i.r nti;hbourLotd. I used to call her my " white Rose of all tl e worM." As I Iw k back at th' »c o'd days the years roll aw;.y, and I ate my li.vtly sister, Itose I'clhaiii, as "he jo. kei .n that fair summer afleim ou. i{ 87 Has tall and bcjutifully foimeil, wilhjnagniliceut, onf, ripping, golden hair, jujil^ieaaa blue as the forget ine-i oti" which wire her favourite flijwcr?. Vou did well, K. He, toehoiiie f',ige:-me-not8 for yi ur es- pecial favouiit.-s, nd to have your n.oD' giam forii.ed on tbi m on the ntte-pafer jou alwa' used. It is jears now tiDce I eaw you, darlii'fe '-a^, bnt 1 I ave n. t forgotten yuu The uiioti c'ear aw; y fnm my memory. Mill I Me nijself totj- CaUiie I'elhamâ€" not j W) lall as my tister, with darker 1 air, having j f gild, l.rown ejes, ai.d a ' Ob. noaacaael" I reiuaed. "Tm f«nar nM too mnob.' Bat ia my beart I echoed ber wiab, for Herbert Terapeet was no favoorite (f ndoa. I knew well that tra. Holland tboaght moie of me than ske did of my aiater Bo e e H^d I not aa a baby been committed t* â- Â» e»p cial charge by my dying aiotbert Ab4 bad ahe not alwaya been nnoeaingly {•itbfal to br traat? I tamed away fnm ber and ran out of tbe room, for I remembered that an boar at least moat now have paaeed away ainoe I bad promised to join Roae in tbe garden. Tbe ahadewa bad grown kncer, tbe ana «aa nearer to tbe moantaiaa, bahiad tbe potpb peaka of which he hid himself from oor g^ze each eveoins. Tbe day «aa drawing to a close, when I tet forth acroaa the lawn and among tbe abmba which dotted it here and there to find my aiater Eoee. The lawn waa green and aoft aa Telvet, and a faint cool brt eze fanned my cbeekr. Oppoaite to me was the plantation, in the direction of « hich Rote bad ai antered when I saw ber laat. I aused beneath a tall fir- tree and looked roand me. Not a living ereatore waa in aigbt, lave a few parroU flitting backward acd forwards amoDgst the braocbea of tbe gam-treea. Two or three beds of acarlet eeraoiuma atd veibenaa made bright daah a ol ooloar am ng the vivid green of the turf, ard I could dia- tingniah the frs^nt odonr of tbe large magno'iatree train' d agoinst the aide of the bonae. Aa I write it all cornea back to Me aa •listinetly as f it were yeaUrday. Shotting my eyes I can see apain that fair picture of light and shadow, ai.d in fancy I smell occe more tbe acenta of that dead and gone summ r 'ay; 1 dream of the roaes which faded that bummer, faded with the faireat roae of all, my " Queen Roae tf tbe roeebifd gaidt n of grls." Otce I could^ net bate spoken of that ivin'ng but it la so long ago, and " Tine brings sncb wondri tu eating," tl at I can write of it quite calm'y now. At last, after a few m' menta' waiting, I saw my sister emerge from tbe shadow of the tries at the oppoaite eld of the lawn and advance towards me. I do not thibk she saw ma ^he caa.e tin slowly, her hat in her hanil. Fnm where 1 stood among the tir-treea I could se her most distiLctly witbiut being observed my- self. 1 noted her tall beautiful Kguie with its (jueenly grace, htr white hand clasping ber garden hat. The sunlight caught the l^oU'en bracelet on iier wrist and changed it I into a band of fire. I to-ik heed of the loOg I trailing ivory nlk dra^eriis, which became her clear cjmplexion marvellously we'l 1 could almost disiein the fortet-mc-not» in berg'fdtn hair. 1 thought of K-ntsley'a " Sanda o' IXe.' " A tress o' (;oK'en hair, U' drowned maiam's ha'r \Vi s never saln.on yet, that shone co fair Among the stakes on Dee." Kvir tiling was very quiet; tbe dist;.nt By Ike AiMmt «( "Sseat Doralkl Cafai," nly a gle; in ., j •â€" â€"j i sn.alle'-, rounder face than hers, not (.ink and i j,,^i,.g „£ .. oiiie cows in tbe paddock was the white and b. autifuily cut like KJ«e's „ ^^^i jj,jj i^r^ke the ttillbeas of the Btstue.-|Ue featuies. She was ihe loveliest of all I ur race, •iLd we I'e hama were a family famed fir gmoiatioia for fi-ir wti- tiien. .My iiiothi r 1 ad b en d ad for yi arj past, an'l we wire l.vinj; wiih my father on his .htate in Niw /«al; iid. Our eduoation was nii|po:.d to he liuishid, and Kose I ail just Hp« lit a M' ason in "' she hai^ m-de ma which she I ad ri turned, engaged to be n.ar- n. d, with her f.te ilecidid for life. I was somewhat ditappoiuti d that Roae hail I. iposed f herself si early, and the thu(;ht of her Diariia^e, an.l if her tettliug down into a ledate matron at the aj.c of twenty-one, w^a dis'asterul to me hut then I did not especiai;y fancy the m; n whom my ijstor had chosen. Not that I h:.d any jiar- tiiul r fault tj tind with iliihtrt Timpest â€" for th..t was the i.ame i f the lucky man who hail won niy sstir's heart, and to whom in oi.e i-hirt iiionlh she was to be mairiedâ€" ai J I oould IK t give a reason for my disiike. It wa.i dimply a case of Doc" or Kell. " The rea:on why I cannot tell, I'.ut this I do know very well, I «'o not liko JOU, Dwitor Kel'" Having M-ttle.l the tlowir in her lair to htr own aa'isfactii n, Kose turiinl to me. •• lioes it look nici' Cathie?" she asked. " III. y u like my new ivoiy 'i k dress? I i w; at to look well to-night, for lierbtrt is coining to dinner." " It loi ks liist rate," I ausarirrcd, turvey- ing h* r crilirally. " I'liit 1 don't thii k that dres' ni^'kiir ha.- made ji-ur train lonn en ugh. If llerlieit is coining:, I Mijip' se I shall have to |M.nil loy eviuiiig alone as usual," I ;.dded. With a si iiiiwhat injured air. "No, yi u won't,' sad Itoie ;- and she lurnid Kudildily and put her arms round my I L'i.k .11 il kiHsiil me- "I i ant do without I •my i' ar old Cithie, i\eii though he is hi ro anil I I'ollrse yi u ki ow, d.'ar, jou must live w' .1 us af'er I'm niariinl." Vith hi r soft I'hei k ak..ainst mine, and hi r :.utiful wliit£ ajiiis t iilwjned srouiid me, 1 rituinvil hir^kii^s; ai.d, all unconacous of Ihe diiad fate apiToaohiiig with swift, sti althy st |«i, l!oHL' ai d 1 wisl ed eaih other " Kiirewell. ' The moment lanie and passed, and tbe liut tiider career* whiib waa ever to t.iko I In'ce I etwien my M.-ter ;.|tf myself was ovir, little as we iiiiagintd it at the tiini-. ' " 1.1 e is hut a day at niort, ' S| fuiig from night, in darknes.' lost, II' po I lit sunshine every hour Kear i "t i louds will always lower. " llrr li'vely .I'luo i yi s luukid laughingly i int.' iiiiiii' " I am goinif into the garden, Cathie, ' .- lie 'aid, " tu w hile away the time tUl Hi r- I iKit conn*. Will you tiiiio with me or not?" It was a lowly nfteinm'ii in the I'Cgini.in^ of Hecimlier, the eariy part of i ur New /ca- land suranier. The sun was dichuing, and tin- gariUn, with tlit- i! ailow.i ^-rowing long, III. .kid delightfully coul and teinptii g in the afU-rnoon lgkt. "I am not dres-id Jet, ' I nlsei.vid, wiih a g'ai c of VI .xatiou at n.y oid gray lustre gown, " Kut 1 sliuuld like to go out so iiiucli t 1 hi lieve I must ujake nyself res- I t'ctablr, and then I will follow you, Kose ill .-ir. ' Ou what tritlis do ihe great i vents of our ' liviB hang I If 1 had gone with her then, if I had never left her side that afternoon, this sti.y wtuld never have been written at ' all, for tbire would have Im' ii i one tu tell. She .lid not urge me any fuither she liin.ed away .••nil assed through the open Wiiiih w on to the lawn outside. Her I at ' WHS n her hand, and 1 calletl to her to put it on " N ou will 1)0 buint to â- Â» oicdcr, Kose," l.aiii, "and then what will llei beit say ♦" She- laughid, and placed hi r hat on her hiail at once and, Uugh.ng still, 1 saw hir |.;-ss atro-i^s the 'awn, which was tteckid witli light and shadow, away into the Uafy covert of the tries licyonil. And there I lost sight of her. I lan away hastily, intending to dress for diiiuir as iiuukly aa possible, totbit I might f-illow Ko^e into the ganian at one. My hair, though with a ripp'e in it like my s ster's, was not so long or so thick aa hers; it waa ifuicklj- i rrangid, and then I I I lectcd and put on a while muslin drcas with geranium-coloured liows. I believe that I was rather a pretty girl in my way, but I could not, of ouise, le coinpaicd tor a moment to Kose. I waa just patting a velvet ribbon, with a ailvcr locket attached, rouLd my neck, when some one knixked at the door. " It's only me, .Misa t.'a'hie," aaid a voice. " I should be so uiuih obliged to yt u if yoa wi uld stip here and tell me if I should put two rows or three of this kilting round the cdke I f Misa Kiae's Hue dreaa." In obedience to the call I w ent into the next room, where Mrs. Holland, who had been Roae's ooiae and mine, acd who lif ed w ith us half aa maid and half aa bouseki eper, V kS busy sew'ng at s me of the coatumes belonging to my aiater's wedding outfit. Mra. Holland waa a widow of aSont fifty years of age, and we valued her very macb. She had once seen better days, and wsa .D every way a superior woman for her station in life. J ga"e my opinion about the blue dreaa, and then I lingered aome little time, talking to her about variciaa other it ma e..{|the work on which she w^ engaged, and especially aboat tbe ditbculty of getting Kose to attend to tbe detaUs of her own wardrobe whm ahe waa dreaming about her abaent sweetheart. " leaked her, Mias Cathie, adozm times," Mr*. Holland complained to me, "if she will have her dreaa cat with a polonaiae or a jacket, :ind ahe only starta and looka at me with ber mind quite aatray, and aaya, ' O Mra. Uottand, whatiait?'" " Well, it ia indeed most provoking of ber, I know," I said and then, half Uagh- in^ I added aaucily, " I hope, when I am going to be married, I (hall cot give yoa ao macb troable." She looked at me for a moment with aa odd ezpreaaion in "her eyeo. " When yon are going to be married, Miaa Cathie, " ahe aaid, " the sanlight of thia hooae will bs going away." And then ahe added, " I hope yon will get a nicer g^cnt'e- â- aaa thaa Mr. H«tiart Tampaat." lummer evening; but ovirthe mountains, lesphndentiii w with the purple and gold of the sucsft, hi veied a clusttr of thick dark cli uds, (ossibly the precuisors of a coming gale. Kose advanc. d very slowly j her figure en erged into the light and faded again into thn shvlow of the trees as she walked oo the nuareft town, whire' .^i^. Suddenly a sharp rtpirt broke the my conqueHL" and from r„,ou„j ,J^j^t^ "" " "' ".Someone is shtX'ting at the parrots, " I thou^^ht. Hut almost as ijuickly aa t) e idea patsed across my mind I saw my sister put her hand to her s de, spiing foiwaid a atep or two, and fall upon her face, her silken draperies making a rich confused heap upon the soft eaiira'd turf of the lawn. Had she fainted Or what terrible accident had befallen her I I was by lU). e's s.dc in a few moments. ' She lay just as she had fallen, w ith hi r face hidden. .She had not moveil since. With s me dillieulty I rai.sid her 1 oad, calling piteously to her to tell me w hat waa the matter as I did to. .She did not reply; htr face was veiy white, and, oh, what dreadful mystery was this In her breast was a little wound, and a tiny red stain upon the ivory silk of hir I dress. The horr blc (ruth I'awnid uptn me and stiuck me almost to stone. My sister I was Ijing at my fett shot through the heart ' " t'losed, ever closed, those speaking eyta Where swceti evs beamed, where candcur shone And si'ent that hi art-thrilling voice Which mu.sic lovid and i ailed her own." .Most girls in my sitifation would, I think, have made the lawn echo with theirehiiehs. I did not â€" icdied I cannot cry out louiily whi n reallj' fi ighti ned I became for the time aln.o.-t voicelers with terror. I drop- ped Rote's h.-nd â€" fast growing told â€" from mine, and, wh. n ihe diil not respotd to my agonized appeal, I set off at once to fetch iomc assistance. As I was leaving, I turned and looked at her 01 cc mor' In that ons startled glatcc I noticed that nc of htr long golden curls hail iailen down, and lay trailiig its loote heavy rings acro.^s her shoulder. It was splendid hair; I have seen tone like it aiuce. Htr face waa very ca'm and peaceful, ai d ber blue eyes half doted. I used to think her eyes were the sweetest in the whole world. 1 often wonder now, when I pra sed thi III thus â€" " Hail I f.-ne:cs Kroni their glances That the grave would quickly sen en .Sweetest eyes were ever seen." I turned and hurrieil away. Acros.-i tbe lawn I ran. Mid roui d the corner of the hoin e then, seeing no one, I darted roond anolhir corier, atd found myself in the courtjard, in fiont of tbe stables. .Still no one was in sight, and I became half desperate at the profound aliUnesa and apparent solitude of tbe house and its sur- r undirgs. „ I knew my father was away from home; we exptcted him back to dinner thit very evening, and Herbirt Tcmiast with him. The room in which Mr.' Holland was sewing looked out on to the front a] proach to the house. Suddenly a tur'ous impression of doubt and unreality poesissed my startled senses it seemed to me as if I niust ba n.oving in a dream. It was incredible, impossible, I thought, th.it Kcse should still be lying there ci Id and motii nUss as I hal left ber. If I returned to the tpot, turely I should find that she had risen and walked away That anythirg to\wful aa death, and sncb a sudden I'eath, by son.e murderous and stealthy hand, should have befallen my billliant, beautiful tister, so full of life and gaiety aa I hail seen her only an hour or so ago, appeared to me at that moment an utter impossibility aid, followirg the impulse of my half-stunned, half-bewildertd fancj-, I tumid and hurried back again to the spot where I bad left her. .\t the Hist glance I saw that she was lying just rs before. She bad not moved in the least i nly her features wi re acttl'ng down into the pallor aid rigidity of death. The lovely mouth appeared to wear a dia- dainful imile, aa if in scorn of the crvelmnr- deroaa hand which had lifted I er at one b!ow fiom life to immoitality. But, looking at ber once again, I saw too that something aboot her had changed dur- ing the short interval in which I had been abcent from her side. The ivory ailk of her dress lay in tbe same rich diaordered folds upon the gr.ia!i, the forget-me-nots were still twined in her hair but â€" yeaâ€" that waa the differecce. The long golden curl which had fallen loose anl bad lain in careleaa beauty over ber sboaldcr whaa I taw her laat was gone I Looking more cloecly, I saw that it had been severed r ughly and hastily from her btad The jagged edges of the hair upon her neck showed that it bad been cut awaj' from her in haste, and with a aomewbat blunt in- atramcnt. (TO BK COhTI.NUeO.) Alaeka S«(U Skins. furing one week recently 950 caaka of Alaska seal skins arrived here by the Penn sylvania railroad. They, with 450 caaka more to come were going to London to be dreased for market. Tbe oonaigt.mi nt con- tained about 92,500 akii^a, and waa valced at nearly $1,000,000. The coat of freight to thia point waa almoat $600 for a carload of forty caaka. The akiaa are tied in oblong bandlea and pickled in aalt. It nquirea eight akina to make a fall aack, and they have to be dreaaed and dyed by London for- riaia and thca reahippad to thia country. One of tae few cnrriving officeta a ho fooght nnder Napoleon tbe Great â€" General Oapleiz â€" died aboat a fortnight i^o at PaasT. At the battle of Aoaterlilz he eon- manded a battalion of the Old gnard and captured a brigade of Aaatiian artillery. For thia exploit NMwIeon decorated bim on the field. â- ittU) BY DKBOBAH CABSY. Wen yoa daD while we wa wtf* away T" Letty aaka, aa I batter aoma toaet for bar. " Ho Jadith called." "Jaditht" Letty meaka, bet I aotioe that Wdl'a haad ahakea lo that he eaanot cat very aaooeaaf ally " " Yea, she did not a' ay kmg Who ia thatr S me one ia coming to the hoosp. I apnog fiom my chair. ....,, " Mr. Tborold " I exclaim and the bell ringa loudly. He cornea in, looking thin, worn, ill, yet aingalarly elate lookingâ€" but it aetnu pre- pekteroaa to aay itâ€" a yoonger mtn than when he left a;. I aan him with am: zc- ment very beartely doea he grip Will'a hand and mine. We introdaoe him to Let- ty. After a few commonplacea, she diaap- peara to taperintend baby 'a toilet. "Have vou been ill ' Will interrogater. "Yea, I have had a tonoh ot low fever. I hav» been to America ainoe I waa here." "Amerca 1" " Ay, it waa coming back I waa ilL Miaa Deborah, I have come to beg you to go with me to Elleralie. I have a very important communication to make to Misa Napine. Will jou aaaist me with your prwenoe?" '• Yea, ' I respond d ffidently, " but Ju- dith is not Miaa Napine ahe i» Mta. Thornton." " What " " The Squire ia dead. Judith married, at bia deaire, before he died." " Married," he groana dc«plyâ€" " married to Si'aa Thornton I Judithâ€" my daughter I" " Your daughter r Will ia on ha feet. '•Whoaie you?" " I am Martin Napine. Nay, do not Icok at me aa if I were a leper or madman. I am accuied if a hideous crime, of being a parri- cide but my bands are aa ch an aa yours. Misfortune, mischance, baa dogged me for many yeats, but I have not stained my title of 'gentleman.' My defence will soon be befoie tbe pabl'c. Do you care to hear it pMvatelj?" •' Yes." " tihut your doors and ait down it ia a long sad ttory, and will need patient hear- iri,' Against my fatber'a will, in express detianie of bis commands, I married Cicely Elleralie. I loved her that is my only ixcuse for my lUsobedii nee. We loved eiuh other sincerely, but neither htr people iior mine regarded this we were comt^ain- ed therefore to take mattera into our own bandsâ€" at least I was. We left our homes and marriid. 1 waa threc-aud twenty, ahe a childish girl. Judith is like acd yet un- like htr Cicely had none of Judith's «a»o«r fairt. She waa eminintly a wonisn to be treated caresa ngly. We were very happy for a while Cicely fretted about her fa- ther's displeat ure Lut I persnadid Lertbat time would soften his rcFcii'ment and bia cbdtracy. I believed tbia myaelf, hoped it most eainistly, as the wetka went on. I had not much money my father had vowed to lUt me off without the proverbial shil- ling. We had expensive lodgings, and lived more cxtravagsntly than our means war- ranted. Cicely had never had a wish un- gra titled, and I had hitherto given the reirs to n.y tastes. Therefore we thought not -of poveity till it stexd at our threshold 1 I was forced to see that our halcyon daya ceuld not continue I was nearly ptnnilesa. I had written pleading lettera to my father and mother, letters which bad I ein retained un- opened. I was at my wita' ene*. I was ashamed to beg, and I was not used to work. I sold a few costly jewels, and hid my anxi- ety fiom Cicely. She waa in very delcate health, needing much care and attention. I thought, if we could tide over tbia period, and if a little son ahould be bestowed in us, C.cely in person should ask that we might be retailed fr3m banishment. I cheered my- salfwith the vision of reinstatement, not dreaming of the ava'auche about to destroy the leauty of our home for ever. I remem- ber vividly my last day ef ligbtbeartedniss. I hail sat with Cicely all the morning, touci ing up some sketches of kers. After dinner I went fir a stroll, and, having saan- te etl lound the park, strode homewards, cai ry ing soice flowers for my darling. The cervant who admitted me told me that Mrs. Napine had a lady with her. A wild idea se zed mc â€" my mother I stole n iselesaly up-:taira, hailed coisele^sly at the drawing- ro ra door. No, it w as not her voice. What words did I hear Surely I waa mad 1 " ' You aie not Martin Napine's wife. I am, alas I' " I burst in. Cicely, with a great cry, tlucg herself into my arms. " 'Martin, Martin,' she screamed, 'stop that wom; n she says she is your wife ' "I looked at the intiuder; thaa great drops stood out on my forehead. I shielded my darling's face, afraiil that she would see my terror. " I am his wife ' Oh, how pitiless and cruel was tbe ringing tone ' Martin Na- pine, JOU dare Lot dmy that you recognized M.vian Tyler aa your wife yeara ago in Soot- land.' " I answered not. A thousand memo- ries were crowding upon me. I waa dizzy with fear. Cicely raited herself in righteous wrath. " ' It is a lie,' she said, ber gentle face se»rlet â€" ' a base, wicked lie ' "Is it?' the intruder returned. "Ask him.' " Heaven help me I looaened my loving clasp, and broke down. All her tender af- fection was aatir she sotjtbed me. At length I put her aside and confronted my foe. " It is true th%l 1 said you were my wife, but my words were of no value yoa were then married to Tom Duncombe,' " I was not. 'torn never married me. It suited our purpose to befool you you were VI ry strait-laced in those days. You wouM not have given your bosom friend a third of your income of jou had imagined it waa to su| port one who was not hia wife. When old Sir Rufus (irey met aa in Scotland I saw a grand chance. Did not 1 tell you, with soba, that we should be utterly ruined if be conveyed word of me to Duncombe Hall i.nd did not yi u, to save us, declare yourself my Liibaud Yes by the laws of Scotland 1 the n became yi ur legal wife.' "It was indeed so. C.cely looked at me imploringly but 1 could nnly kiss her again and again. If I tould but get rid of this vile cri aturc By dint of tbreata acd re- moastranccs I managed this. She went, as- auring me that she would be back ere long. Wheo once we were quit of l^er, I told Cioe- yl all â€" how my comrade, Tom Duncombe, had played me false â€" Ti m, in whi m I had trusted all niy life. He and I had been schoolmates, friends, college chums. We had helped each other into many and out of many a scrape. When he told me that be had wedded a pretty, poor girl, aod that he dare not confess the rash act to his father, I assisted him w ith money anel advice. He and the girl profeaaed gratitude. During va- cation, at their earnest solicitation, I con- sented to go with them to the HighlaLda. Ueie unexpectedly an old fiiend of Dun- combe's family diacovered us he smelt mischief, and would have apread disaater, had not I come forward and pretended that Marian was my wife. Thinking aa I did that ahe was "Tom's wife, I avowed tbia a ithoat heaitation. I kcew tbe Scotch mar- riage laws. Tom was wonderfully wary in aiToiding pitfalls. He had pasaed Marian off aa hia siater until Sir Rufus Bppe.Arcd. When Sir Rufus waa gone, the whole affair waa treated aa a bagatelle. I waa aoon aum moned to London to meet my father, and, from then until the moment I beheld Marian Tyler in Cicely's presence, I bad not seen ber. " The woman i-i^turned, aa ahe aaid ahe would. Cicely, shaken and ill, waa in bed. I saw the woman alone. She vowed that ahe would charge me with perjury unleaa I ac- knowledged her or paid her 'to be silent. The former I would not do, the latter I could not. After atormy recriminatiooa, we parted. I reaolved to go to my father, tell him what evil bad lefallen me, and implore hia aid. I ooold not believe that he[woald forsake me in the boar of darkneaa. The landlady i xpreaaed some alarm aboat Cicely, so I ataj ed with her all night. She waa ra- ther deUriooB bat, when moming came, waa better. I ancceaded in allaying her diatreaa aomewhat. I told ber â€" Heaven for- give me the Ue â€" that aoch a marriage aa that into whiefa I had been inveigled coald be no marriage that aha and ahe only waa my wife bat that, aa it waa ia Marian Ty- ler's power to trouble me, I laaat so to my father for ooanael. She did not object. I went to Napine. Shall I aver (orgat mv re- ception I did not aaa my mother. I dia- doaad all tA Sir PardTaL He wai tacriUy ha«4withma. Ha aaid that I had aot oaly blighted my own life, bat an ianooeBtgiri'a, and probably my child'a. I had anaekad my hopaa. One thing he woaU do for me. Ha woald take diarga o( Ciealjr, aad, it tto babe ahoald Ure, a that abo bat oa om ooodition aloaa t hat I want ateaaA. I «» LiwiMi«£K Ckeaiy auatlave a haak 'mA Mi waald ift«M hmr;it«aa Wttar ba allfcghi *ta* Blemlia. I left ooa Haa hr my to ba grod to mm imUma, aad waitirg (or ba r ihe waapayiai via left, to harry ta tha rid* oCbar wmb I lor adaevaU. "I mimtd my train, wmk to Patia, oiOy to SmI I coald not go any farmer a.oraing. It waa Tfaaradar co oatq ataMy are I got hoaae. Ah me t Whari I Mtotad oor apartmanta I knew the wont thai ocaU coma to ma had ebme. Cicaly waa dyiag j and ahe died clinging to mat lat wky aaed I pain yon with my grief T Tbey told me that I bad a little daaghtar. Wtat cared I My I'arBng had flown to nvadita. Tbe white ri^ figure they took fiom me waa not Cicely. I wiat into the itreata, wild, deaperate. Aa I waUed alMig, imMaaa wa the waUs referring to emigiatisa, *iypi% etc, attracted my attentioo, aad I leaolved what I woald do. I lold mf watoh and chain, tnd that night eailed froai the Loadrn docka for New York. Do yoa oonaider that I waa heartlem to leave Cicely inbariad I accounted myaelf her murdeKr, and fled from tbe land of my crime. Whan we reach- ed New York I was ill for arvaral wetkaâ€" iO ill that I roae from my be* of aickneaa an eld man. I beard nothing of my fathrra mnrder. 1 stayed aome tme in America afteiwarda I wandered north, aonth, eaat, "«•*â- " 1... " But Lidy N^nne belere* yoa t« fit dead ' " Ye^ and the atory of n» death waa an- gu'ar. Australia was a liiely place. I went there. On my toad I fel in with a young fellow named John Maitii. L you may be aware, called myself Maitin. Ciroumatancea thiew ua much tegaher. We fraUmiaed. We htd both a few pouida, and we •gi^ed to le parte era. Exceedingly well wo did â€" made money fat t H« thought tnd talk ed of going he me. I had to go a few daya' jonmey into the country, and waa aw ay a fortnight. When I returned be waa dead and buried. Word bad been aent to my mother that 1 wsa dead and buried. My (leak had been prised. -My mother's letten and likecefcea bad been forwarded to Eng- land I waa aatonUhed. Very zealeua bad tbe meddlera leer. However, I let the miatake ie. 1 had «o intention of revisiting the old ceantry. Lata- I felt a strarge de- aiie to see my daughtet I ci uld not over- come it. I gave into il. acd embarked for my native land. I ado|ted anothi r m me â€" called myself Tboiold. My danghter maat not kcow the ir.juiy I hrf done her. I had altered beyond recogbitoa foitunately, I thought, when I found tiat 1 waa suspected of being guilty of my fataer'a death." "Weie you not anxiou to proclaim your innocence " [to bk fOMINCm.] AT SEDA.N. BUUIAKCK A.ND MOLTKB AT lUB .-ifK.N* Ot rUlUJt'U lll.silSTER. eFrum a New Freict Pamphlet The followicg converaiticn (somewhat ab- breviattd in the transUtion), which took p'ace tetween Count B snarck, Gen. Molt ke, and Gen. de Wimiffim prior to tbe tar- render of Sedan, istakec fnm a forthcom- ing psmphlet by .M. GeoJ^ea BaaUrd, entitl- ed "Baztilles." Gen. Wimpffenâ€" I am anxious to know upon what term* his majesty the king of Prussia demanda cur capttulatior. Gen. Moltke- They aie very simple. He desires your whole army to be surrendered, w ith arms and baggage. Aa a mark of »p- prcciation of their valor, tbe i fficera will be allowed to retain their swords, but they will remain pria^ntrs of war, like the rark and file. (Jen. W.â€" Thete terms are hard, indeed, general. It aeema to me that after the cour- age it haa disilayed, the French army de- serves better treatment than thit. Would not tbe following terms be acceptable to you Tbe surrender of the town of Sedan with allita artilleiy the French army, in- cluding the emperor and hi generals, to be allowed to retire with its arms, its baggage, and its colourr, upon the cocdition of not seiving againat Prussia diring the preaent w ar that army to be transferred to a cer- tain part of France â€" at the option of Praasia â€" or to Algeria, until the conclasirn of the t reaty of peace Gen. Moltke declared these terms could not p: ssibly be accepted lien. Wimpffen â€" I hi»e just arriv.d from the deserts of Africa. Till the preaent mo- n.ent my rccoiel has b«on above rppmaoh, but now, in the midst i f an engagement, I rm suddenly intrusted with tbe command of an army and find myself involved in a diaaa- trous capitulation, of which I am forced to bear tbe whole respoatibility. I have not even had the satisfaction of directing tbe battle whit'i preceded thia capitulation. You who like myself are a general commander, will readily understand the bitteruees of my lot. It lies in your pawer to leasen the gaU by granting more honorable termr. For n.y Dirt 1 cannot accept the teims you demani^. By appealing to my army I shall either suc- ceed in forcing my way through your liuea or in defending mysel! in Sedan. Gen. Moltkeâ€" I bold you in great esteem, and I fully apprcc'ate your position bat yet I c;annot acquieicj to your request. Your chances of making a succeesful sortie are very alim, Tiue, your troops are excellent your crack infantry reginents are excellent your cavalry is bold and hardy, and your artillery is well served and haa done much damage. Bat, on the other band, a great portion of your infantry is demoral zed, and we have taken 30,(X)() unwounded priaonera Yon have only ti0,000 muo remaining, and with tbim you will not be able to cut through our lines, I have surrounded you with an army of l'tO,UOO mtn, and ijOO cannons, of which 3J0 are already (.ointed againat the city. The rest will be in their respective poeitiona to-morrow morning. If yon want to con- vince yourself aa to the tiuth of my aaaer- tions, I will allow one of your i thoars to in- spect tbe potitions occupied by my trcopa, Aa far as a defense of Sedan is concerned, that is impossible you have provisiona for only forty -eight hoars, and year mnnitiors have run out. Gen. W. â€" Even from a political point of view, I think it would be mote ia your in- terest to nccede to the hoadurable capitula- tion which the army I command has a right to expect. Ytuundoubtedly wiahto:oi.clude an early peace. France being the noat gen- trousand cbivalious 'of nations, ii conae- ({uently tbe most (grateful for any oonaidera- tion shown it. H yoa grant such tanna aa will Hatter the vanity of the army, the whole nation rill thereby feel flattered. The bittemesa of defeat will be diminished in the eyes of the people, and peace once conclud ed nnder such lavoarable circumstancea will offer every guaranty e f durability. By pur- suing your rigorous measures, however, yoa will turely excite anger and hatred in the breasta of our soldiera and yoa riak kindling the flame of an interminablo. war between France and Prussia. Count Bismarck â€" Your argnmtnts aeem forcible at tint sight, general, but they will not endure close examination. Little confi- dence should be placed in gratitude, and eapecially that of a nation. Olo may be- lieve in the gratitude of a monarch, or the thankfulneaa of hia family. There are even occasions when the latter may be implicitly tniated in thia reapect. But, I repeat no- thing is to be expected from a nation'a grat- itude. If the French people were like other pcoi.Ie if tbty had durable instilutiona, and, I ke us Germans, respected them if they had a aovereign well seated on bis throne, then we could, perhaps pla» faith in the gratitude of ita emperor and in that of bia son. But for the last eighty yeara the changea ot government have been so frequent that for a neighbouring power to build hopea upon the friendahip ot a French monarch i^ould be sheer madness it would be " buildins ufwn air." Beeidea, itia folly to imagine that France oould ever forgive aa oar victoriea yoa re an irritable, and en- vioaa, a jealoaa, and a proud people. Yoa have alwaya made war upon aa oat «f jealousy, and tbia time yoa attacked aa be- cause you w ere envious i f our victory at Sadowa, althe ugh that victory coat yoa i:» thing. And yon woold forgive lu for tha disaster of Sedan Never! Gt n. W. â€" Your exoeUcney ia miataken in 'oar opinion of tbe French people. France u ready to proclaim fraternity among na- tiona. What haa become for inatanoe, of that inveterate hatred which divided France and England Are cot tbe Engl ah oor beet friecda at preaent? Thaa it will be with Germany if you act generoaaly, and if dormant paaaiona are not aronaed by naro- lenting aevority on yoar part. To thia reaaoning Cooat Biamark oppoaed hia uaoal strong argamenta, and ooocluded by flatly refusing to grant other tatma thaa those he had at first propoaed. Gen. Wimi ffenâ€" WeU, I am totally an- able to aignsach a capttolation aa you de- mand we will thexafore reopen hoatilitiea. Gen. Caatelaaaâ€" The time haa come I think, for me to deliver the emperor'a mea- aa^e. He inatiaetad mo to iafotm hi* m-jeaty the King d Praaaia that bo oaly •BRaatead bia ai â€" «-- • • ki^ oruifttliMilB it ba«ai^ ^*^aat BbHMt-Wkkh aword did tba ampaiaraarraadarr Hkawaor that of hia a^aatryT Oea. Câ€" Hia own, oaly. Coaot B.â€" Ia ttat oiaa wa caoaot i«iafi oar tarma. Gob. W. to Ota, MoKkaâ€" I wiU t«l"*J; vantage of yoar fiiat tJbr, gaBaMI, •ad^ Mod an oAoor to view tbcoa foraaid^ coaitioaa a yoar*. Wbaa bo rotaraa I wiU decie'e wbotbor to aooopt or f»Joot yoar Geo. M.â€" It ia oseleaa to do that Yoa bare bat little t^me left for refleotioB. it bo- faut now midnight. Tbe armiatioa iaoTer at 4 o'clock. Gear W.â€" You maat, however, oadar- at acd that I cannot take ao important a atop upon my own reaponaibility. I maat niat cooanlt wilb.Bsy aalleagaaa. Upon Coaait Biaaaank's advice, Gen. Moltke conaentod to wait for Gen. Wimpf- fan'a anawer until 9 o'olook tha ae^t mora- '"%., le reralt ia known. The Fnaeli Orown Jewsls- BOMS MAORinOKMT OBMB â€" RIVAUiNO THB EOH-i irooaâ€" imioB valuabli btdhu â€" TBEJta AM MIl-UOKS IH IT. Tbe cable bringa nawa that at the next meeting of the French obambera a bill will be introduced, providinn for the aale of the French crown jewela. Not all of the prcci- oiu atonea will be diarosed of, Lat on'y anoh aa are merely valaab'e from their intrinaio worth. The atonea about which there i« a history, or which are of intereat to atadeota of such aubjects, will be placed in one of tbe national mnacuma, but thoae brought to tbe hammer will doubtless real ze son.e 12,000,- COO, a sum which will be a godaend to the department of fine arta. There will be a favourable oppt-rtnnity offered to American purcha'era â€" who, indeed, of late yeara have been foimidable competitora in the jewel marketa of Europe, â€" to secure sp'endid dia- monda at reaaonable prices, for the sales of Queen laabella'a jewela and thoae of Madame Muaard indicated that the buyera bad it all their own way. From 1476 till 1774 the number of diamonds formally inventoried as belonging to the crown was 7,482, and they were valued at $4,000,000. Louia XV. aold 1,471 of them, but bought even more, aince briUianta were all the rage for buttons, buckles, and sword-biltr, so that when Louis XVL came to the throne he bad 9,547 dia- monda of all sizea. August 16, 1792, just as the coDveLtion had concladcd the work of taking a new inventory, a band of forty thieves broke into the hoaae, Place Louia XIV., where the jewela were atored, and carried moat of them i ff. Two of tbe thieves were caught, but the others escaped, and could not be found. How the jewe'a w-ere restored co one seema to know precise- ly. According to one story, Lamieville, a barber, who had been eeutonced to death for coining, but had escaped from tbe Concier- geiie, purchased his pardon, and a oommiasion 10 a regimint cf the line, by revealing to an e fficial who had treated him kirdly, the fact which he had accidentolly overheard â€" that the thievea bad hidden their plunder in the hollow of a beam in a lonely house till the ardour ot pursuit bad abated. Accord- irg to another story, however, the fact that the diamonds were hidde n in a hole dug in an alleyway of tbe Champa Elyseea waa re- vealed to the government by an aaonymoiu letter. At any rate, most of tbe atonea were recovered. After the XVIII. Brumaire Napoleon pledged tbe famoua ' Resent" diamond to the DuteH^, fer fnnda to aielhim in consolidating hia power when he re- deemed it, it went into the pommel of his sword, 1 nd ia still in tbe collection. In 1810 bia inventory i bowed that the crown waa poeaeased of 37,393 brillianta and precioua atoLes,and a value of 18.92*2,477 fn., or about three and three-quarter milliocs of doUara. Louia XVIII. took another inventory after tbe Restoration, when there were enumerated 64,000 stonea and objects, weiKhing 18,751 carats and va'ued at $4,l80,a')2. The crown, which containa the Regent diamond and 5,360 other atones, is valued at '2,940,- 400 there ia a aword worth $48, 140; an order of the Holy Ghost in brilliants appraised at $77,200; a croaa of the Legion of Honour worth $90,000; a aet of pearla valued at $233,- 000 another of brillianta and aapphirea worth $o6, 000, etc., etc. The famous Regent, or "Pits" diamond ranked fifth in the liat of the world's precioua stones, though eb«r« u air'-Df^ en0|jictou thaS tho BrMgan- which atanda unapproacdiably alone in a ze at the head of tbe liat ia really a white topaz, colour being lent to the suspicion by the fact that tbe Portuguese government re- fuses to allow it to be inspected. In the rough this jewel weighed 410 c.rats. A slave found it near W'azulipatam in 1702, and hid- ing it in a gaab cut in hia leg offered it to an Engliab tailor if h- would aid him to ea- ca;e. The sailor got the stone and threw the the Hindoo oj^rboard, drowning him then sold it to a merchant named Jamchund for .£1,000, waated tbe money in a gigantic spree and hanged himself. Jamchund sold it to Thomaa Pitt, governor of the Fort of St. Georges for £12.500, and Pitt had it cut into a fine brilliant, the operation taking two years' time and coating £6,000, bnt the fiagments split/ ffwere werth £3,000 or£4.- (KX). Tbe stone waa reduced in size to 136^ carats â€" the Koh-i-Noor ia 102^ â€" bat became and continnea to thia day, tbe moat perfect brilliaat in txiatence, being without a rival aa to ahape and water. The diamond came near kilbng its new owner with anxiety. So fearful was he of robbery that he never made known beforehand his intentionof travelling, or tbe route be would take, and nc^ver slept consecutively two nights in the same house, while so many atoriea were invented ra to the way in which he had obtained the stone that be had to write and publish a pamphlet giving ita history. In 1717 he diaposed of the diamond to the duke of Orleaoa for $675,000. Curioualy enough, however, Saint Simon tel'a us quite another atory â€" that he induced the regent to buy it, and that it waa bought from a man who bad atolen it in India, and who bought it the rough. Whatever the truth, the Regent waa thereafter literally" the brigbteat orna- ment of the French crown." It waa stolen with the other crowm diamotda in 1792, but recovered. Napoleon wore it in the pommel of his sword, but loet it at Waterloo, whereof the Prussians looted bis carriage after tbe peace it was realored to France. The Sancy diamond bad a more sinEularand interesting history attached to it. It waa a brilliant of 54 carats, and ia aaid to have been woin by Charles the Bold aa a taliamsn. When he was killed by a Swiss halberdier at the 1 attle of Nancy, January, 1477, a at Idier who alripped the corpse aold the diamond to a priest for 2^ fratca, the priest disposing I f it at a profit of 12 centf It passed over to the King of Portugal, who pawned it to Harlay de S ncy for 40,000 livree, Sanoy afterward buyring it catright for $100,000. One of bia deaoendanta sent it by a faithful aervant to raise funda upon its pledge for the asaistance of Heury IV., but the setvant was attacked by robbers aware if hia mis- dcn, and killed. The king felt aure that tbe servant would never have parti d with the treasure, even in death, and had hia body Oi£ned, when the atone waa recovered. Japea II., of Ensland, into whose handa it pmaad, afterward ao'd it to Louia XIV. for £25,009. It waa atolsn in 1792, with the Regent, and, ifterita recovery, ao!d by the ducheta of Berry to the D.ifuJofis. Count Paul Demidiff lost i*-, while at a fancy ball given by Count Walewaki, but it waa found again, and, we believe, fioslly disposed of, in 1865, to Sir Jamaetjee Jet jeebhoy for £20,00a Tbe famoua "Blue Diamond,' atolen in 1792, never waa heard of again lawordaadbia ia tba Alnatiho «( drag^ata. aUiMafacareelybaU- by ter thaa aay iilaaty bialJaw. Tb othcHL a^abora all to tbom. Britain tbay ai« a wLoUr asaaUaat, thoagh â- â- â- k abaaad laoa. Penodieal panaoatiana d Ifca fraiamity oocar aboat aa ragateriy aa aiiaatiiilinaa of tho early Cbiiatiaaa. or Jowa ai tba Middia Afaa aad tboagb aot ao aaa- mkmty, ara ia uair owa wv V" tarribla. It ia with ao aatpriaa, tberrforo, that wo baar ol a toij rinilaot paraaeatioa takiag plaoa ia Now York. A reporter has been m^h^ oortrfa domiciliary viaita, leading to ratbar rasnarkabla diaooveriea. Ha took with bim tte bowing preooription, and aot oat OM a Toyaca of diicovary Soda Biborato, 1 draehm. Sq. aa ordered. Tbia meaaa that he waa toaataaadraobmcf ordinary borax, powdered »b aB paobabiUty, and oae aa he had been told. Ha waa ohaifad aa follows, and from the price at whioa borax can be booght in New York, be oalealatcd the perocatoge of profit the aereral drnmiato probablj made. At one plaoa thay obBigeahim 10 oenta, making a profit of nearly 9^600 per cent.; at another 15 oen'a, with 14.900 par cent, profit; at another, 20 oenta, with a profit of 19.040 per oent, while at a fourth aotobliahmeBt the profit reached the comfortoble amount of 23.000 per oen^ tbe druggist feeling himrelf justified in chairging 25 canto. "No won- der" thought the repi rtor, " that ao many go into tbe buaineaa." The loweat charge, as it happened, waa made by the beat abop, at least the most faabionable, one under Fifth Avenue Hotel. Tbia would hardly have been expected. If a aimilar axpen- ment acre tned in Toronto, we traet that our own druggiate would come through the ordeal in a manner very much more credit- able to themaelver, and aatiafactory to others. Making all iOBsible allowanoea for the druggist being a profcaaional man, and, therefore, justified ir charging for bia rer- vioea aa well aa for hia mere drnga, tbei e ia no exooae fi r prieea being extortionate. Of course no one in hia senaca believes that such profits aa thoae tbia repoiter acented out are anything but a wondeiful except'on, but there la a very ^^eoeral suapicion that the chargea are often much higber than they need be. Whether the cuatom of paying heavy peroentagea to dcotora bo a common oce or not we cannot aay. It ia at aiy rate a wholly bad one, and ahould be given up. The drctora anrely make enough by their proferaional feea without trying to accure more in a second-hand si rt of a way. If they think they have a light to more than tbe aaual oharges,let them openly inaiat on more, bnt not eeek to n ake druggiste their collect- ing ageota, or instruments of extortion. Principal OaTem on Dogmatic Preach- ing. Had our space permitted we ahould gladly have piven a veiy fall leport of the lecture delivered by Principal Cave n at the opening of Knox College on Wednesday laat. ft waa an exceedingly clearableand timely dis- cuasion of a very important and interesting quest ion, and showed very distinctly, that the outcry against dogma, ai d in favour of the practxal, in preaching, is simply absurd 11 rational and without excuse. That in thort there can be no ground for practical preaci ing, or anything like practical well doing, unle.-s it ia versed on dogma, or in other words, on fac^.or what ia auppoaed to le such. Indeed, it la not only in religion, but in every other department of life and work, that there must be dogma, understood and believed, befi re there can be anything like reasonably correct or intelligent conduct. One man says,not," obey God," but " Obey the law," and unleta he be an absolute fool, he bases this advice or commacd which he gives, up- on aome conaide ration, which he thinks ought to have w eight. " Obey, or I ahall Eut you in prison " or " I ahall cut your ead I ff " Vou will find youraelf very miser- able " 4" c. Why, all that ia| dogma- Fifty other reaaona may be given for tbe obedii nee required, and every one of them would be of the aame character. The same thing is true of every practical advice or command which could be thought of. Aod why not of religion, the moat important of all as well "Be good," " ba kind, " le sweet," " be gentroiu " many are crying. Why They may give any reason they like, but whatever they mi.y happen to urge, that will be their dogma just aa much as all those considerationa and facts, urged in the Bible, at.t iyy lc«4.-anftl pr. A.?hf.|-* mr^ tM^ir flogma- ta. 'The true order both in theory and prac- tice, with everything, whether politics, mer- chandizing, or social life â€" ia firat, correct thinking, or the reception of dogma, doctrine or f.^ct, real or auppoaed, whatever one lite to call it Then aecondly, correct feeling, aa the result of tbe thinking and lastly, aa the natural tnd neceaaary reault of tbe two preeeding, correct acting, at practice. Acd the man wcnld be a fool (though there are many auch, who fancy themaelvea wise) who could even expect the practice to be what it ought to be, while tbe thinking and feeling are all aat ay, or utterly ignored. " Opinion ia nothing" cry soiite, "prac- tice all in all." Why, in the very statement of such a thine, he is enunciating dogma aa he underatoniu it, and bow a man'a piactice can be correct with nothing to stand upon, even the conviction that this coarse is right, and that other wrong,for that too is dogma, paaaea any reaaonable comprehension, and ita cuckoo repitition by many who fancy them telvea authorities.intimates a depth of folly aa amp zing aa it ia inexplicable. We com- mend to all auch Dr. Caven'a, clear, ai.d cogent reasoning, and aak them for their own saKe8,and in order to keep up their self re- spect to drop the nonaenae implied in the peraiatent quotation of Pe pe'a ailly licea " For forms ot taith let graceless zealots light. He can t be wrong wheae life is in the right." Aa a man r«o//y not fro/etted'f thinks, so ia he, and so doea he act, whether in the mat- ter of buying or aelling, or in that of w or- shipping and aerving God. though aome dealera believe that it found ita way into tbe collection of a very rich Ea){lith ^-r .u i. nobleman, who atill owta it The fate o'J^;. „^" *^ ^^ '" "" atolen precioua atones ia often emrious^ «»• •• Twelve diamonda of the French orown jew- els, known as "the Mazarine*," from the fact that they were cut at the cardinal'a or- der, vaoiahod myaterioualy during the revo- Intioa 1890, bat tomed up aa myateriooaly i.t Madrid, three years ago, when Kmg Alfonio porchaaing jewela for hia first wife, Qneen Mercedes, and it waa only tbe other day that some black pearls, tto'en from the Aiutrian crown in the la:t century, were found at a small shop in Hangary. Waokek's goat is the moaic sent. of tha pro- Thb body ia tbe ahell of the aoal aad tha drem u the busk of the body, but tbe husk often mdioa'ea what the kernel ia. No man or woman of aanse would devote more care or atteatioa to tha huak tkan to tha kernel. Thb true wealth of a community lieein the Mtagnty of ito dUsena, and ito ckief honor £^,^5° **^ P'" ' "'i ""Kraat»i«baa. bat f raaa tba pn miiai un of great and traa .^."»?y 'y *» ««• » â- Â«Â« of eat'ag witb knkaifemtoipTahim rawoys'oia. Wh»B that itaaa waa shown to a man of that per- â- aaaioahe aaid i-Sappoaa yoa give biiTa fork sad IBM dMH â- oap." B. Youn«'a Wldowa. Thirteen of tbe widows of Brigbam Young atill live in the Lion- Hooae at Salt Lake. Their abarea of the eateto were $21,000 each, according to the will, bat by threatening litigation they obtoined about $10,000 more. "They receive, however, only tbe income from their propeity but that is sutficient to give them excellent fare in the old home, with servants, bor- ea, aod $75 a month in money. Louiae, one of tbe daughters of the Prophet by Emeline Foe, the moat Intel lectual and intelligent of tbe wrivea, aays that all of her full brothers and aiaters have renounced polygamy but a majority of Young's forty-seven children are Mormons. Speaking of the household as it oaed to be, she aays " We lived very bappaly. My fatber'a ruling hand bad a good deal to do w-ith it. He tought lu to love one another. Every moming wives and children met in the parlor, where we had prayers acd sing- ing. People have often asked me how in the world father knew all hia children and wives, but I can teU you if a single one was missing at prayers he knew it, and found out where he or the wras. Our booses wefe like a great hotel, and we tbe guesto. Our father waa 4 great manager, and very practical in aoperintending hu houaebold kffaira. Our rooms opened on to a long hall, like tbe one in the hotel here, bat larger, aod when wo wranted anything from aiaters, brothers, or wives, we went into this room or that at will." m â- â- â-  m Oraaa Stain Bemovad. have aaked experienced people several tiu^e- if aoytUjig wonld take the stain o^ green grass ffom children's clothes, but without gaining the desited nformation until within the laat month. Lo 1 boiling water will re- move the colour. Pour boiling water through the atain and it seU the green col- ouring matter loose, rinsing it away. I tried It (Ml a large atain npon the front of my bt' le girl's white dreaa, and eaaily removed every trace of tbe graaa, rubbing it a little in ihe hot water. Graaa atain, after waabirg with aoap-inds, makea a dirt coloured mark, aad remaina an u^y bkt on ehildrea'a white clothing.' A FaaaciDiAii named Aium Iwa iMida ex- perimaats on bimaslf witb rmid to tbe ef- fecto of iahaliag ozygaa, aadhe makoa the statement that oca may abaorb 100 litrea, and even aaore, c'aily wititoot inoonvari- Thx boam of Saapbanie aad Radolpb of Aoatria ia to bo aa aaaiaaA OMtlr, oaa of tba iartJaKaa^a, that riaaafw tba Mai- «^ tmmt n ont Fnna. Tba gift of Hanaaa aohka to tba Pdaoa ia to la an Sran, «Hk aaly 17,O0lkOM af iahafait' a*t% taiM out raarij twiea .rwMk wb«« a« doaa Italy aitb a(000.000 ol idMbilaBta. Ths 9tm»tt Koranunoot arc abaat to daa- patbib fMir oOean to Sana^al to aqpaiat toyag r aphical anivaya witb a view to tba formatioB o'tkraaaawpoatiteyoBAMadiaa, aa^'tba oho aa for the twat n 9m fortf^td- way latwaaa that plaea and ^JfigC^ by way of Bafalaba aad Fj " -^^"" Falaba aad Fingaj^' I pooltiy of aa|p^ii itrartal ia CJf^ baa, aborarar fV^' ind pr other ia fbe pooraat Ito part -i_^ ""i^ F«»*n», oprting about aixty thoasaad doOaia^ Paiautm Guty, who ia abooting in tha J«^ baa reoaiTsid a prwant from tha Prinoa • WalM «l a fn wjl fMT bMitifd Mtti A Kaaroa .T '•*"'•! f oook aad three or foor loan bona, whioh Kalk hnngrOy in aad oat f tha mad abaaty ia aaarob of anything eatable that no 000 eiae of tho family may bappin to be able to digaatL Oir tba lllh of Janaaiy. 1M7. tbara ax- iatad raly tavanteo a daily newapapars ia Paria, whilo oa the l*t of aofitombar, 1880. tlHN ware alsty-a«a dafly aatiayaipoiB ia oiraalatioa. A a otber ooriotaa fact la that tho number of daily jouinals aold at one aon each amouoto to aaventeen, or exactly tbe number of daily nowapap era exiating in 1867. AMOMa tha reooat diaaovorita of valoable works ia the library of the Convent of Monte Caaaino ia a treatiae written by one of tbe first discirles of S. Tbomaa Aquinac. This may be said to form the first traditional link of the Thomistie doctrines. Tbe sut- ^oct is the 'Creationof the World;" and it ia now published, with notes, and dedi- cated to Cardinal Zigliars. All reports from Pracce and Italy agree that tbe fiik crop in thoee ooantriia will be more abundant tbia season than for tbe past ton years. Advicea from different districts in Japan, announces that only about four hundred and fifth thousand cartooa will be nunnfactured this year, and, as a oonaideis. able quantity whll be required for home use, it ia expected that tbe cards available for exportotion will real'zs very remunerative pi icea. TuK forthcoming namber of the ^ifra- phiieh Mittkeilungtn contains Dr. Hegel's ae^ount of a trip from Kuldja to TuKan, in Chioeee Turkeaton, which no European traveller appeara to have viaited aioce Father Goea did fo in the seventeenth cen- tury. The new town oonsitto of two for- ttesaes, inhabited by Several thousand Tar- antebis, Djngans anil Cbineae. It lies in the midst of tbe desert, ita fields being irrigated by water conveyed through underground canals from the foot of tl e Thianshan. TuK fMMM has the following information from Rome â€" " The monument of the holy memory of Pius IX., which the Cardinals nominated by him have agreed to erect, will be placed in tbe Confeaaion of the Basilica of S^inta Maria Maggiore. Themonummt will cost the aum of 0,(XK) francs. The number of caidinals contributing to it ia fifty-one." It may be remembered that tbe Confession of this Bsailica ia that whioh was to ber.utifnily restored with tbe richest maibUs by tbe late Pont'ff over twenty years ago. Divorces are becoming alarmingly fre- quent in Switzerland.and according to lately published statistici-, there are relatively more divorced people in Switzerland than in any other civilzed country. Experiecoed advi-catea aay that among the working class- es of towns it is quite a common thing for people to marry in order to '.ry how they like each other. If tbe reault is satitfactory they go on living to;{ether aa long as it may please them if not, an interview with a lawyer and an application to tbe Tribunal Civil, w hich in ordinary caaes costa only a few francs, releases them from their bondr. The Glaagow Herald atates that..'while aome workmen were engaged about half a mile east from Fort William in deepening the dum which supplies the Nevis Distillery with wator, one of the men came upc.n a large shell in a complete ateto. It was em- bedded in tbe moss, snd waa found to I e fiftem inches in diameter, and weighed about one hundred pounds. Tbe powder was quite fresh looking, mly the portion of it near the fuae being damp. Tho fuse it- aelf waa burned out. The ahell ia supposed to be one of those fired from tbe fort in April, 1746, at a battery raised by " Prince Charlie's" mm at the Craigs, within five hundred yards rf the fort. It waa found io a straight line with the fort and tbe battery. An Iriab correspondent to the Manchester Courier writes concerning the land league' â€""The Roman Catholic biahops, aaa body, do not coontenacce the anti-rent agitation but the local priests as a rule je.in the popu- lar movement, ard do not rerm to he check- ed by tbe biabopa. Many of tbe prieata, however, I believe, toke ffioe that it mav not get into w oraa handa, and that by their poaition tb«y may regulate the proceedingi. of the local organization and take legitimate action in cases of real injustice and baid ship, some of which I may give in my next lettor. The hotheaded young priests an generally thoae w ho use the violent language, and when they go tbe length of telling the tenants not to pay their rents there' is littlt doubt tbe maaa of the people are ndoctrin- ated with that idea." ".\ good many military authorit:eii are," .1 L'UiJoii journal states, " in favour of the abolition of n g'mental colors. The e;i-y was started after tbe Isandlana diaaster.'and has again been raised since the Khusk-i^Nakhud affair. It is ny no means certain that these authoiitiea are light. There is, of course, nothing perfect in thia world, and the uae of the flag has doubtless its draw backa but, Sutting one thing againat another, it is oubtful whether the odds are not in favour of ita adotition. An Eukilish officer relates how-, an I ik'-rmann, soon after the French had come to relieve tbe Englisn, the men of the two nationalities became badly mixed atd I'.st .-\ll acmblance of method in their lighting. A yi ung French porte-drapeau theienp n raiaed bia tricolor on high and aboutal, ' Au drapfou met garton* v The Eu^li|ni officer.* took the bint, and directed their men to rally around the English stan- I'anl, and the confusion waa quickly at an end. In 6ucb a e:a8e as thia the value of a flug aa a rallying point ia evident," "Onardians of the Peace." (From tlie Toronto Truth. Our city policemen are fine-looking men. Everybody acknowledges that. We are all proud of them, and if Hamilton, or L')idon. or any other city in Her Majeaty'a Loyal Dominion, ventnrea to claim a more magnifi- cent aet of civic dignitoriea, then no one will heaitate to do d ughtv battle for the honour of Toronto. They fitly repreaent tbe grand- eur of that Law which ahould ever be a ter- ror to the multitude of evil doers, while at the aame time it showra itelf a praise to such as do well. All aenaible people r« joce when civil functionaries ilraw as goexi pay, and do as little work aa ia at all consistent writh the eternal titneaa of thinga. But, at the aame time, we may venture gently to hint to the gentlemen In question, that they are not pUced ou duty nmply to be looked at, or to help ladies across the street, or to give clear and civil direotioDs to heaitatiog at anger*. Nor is every little disturbance between ha'f- drunken rowdiea, incapable of doing much injury to ihemielvea or to other pjop'e, the only oocaaiou on whi. h their preaeuce a:id arai.tance may become in any w;.e u.edful. Nor are servant girls, who steal pettiooato from their 1 liatrwse;, or newaboys whose moutha wattr for tha cool and aoothing melof), and w'lose consciences are not aa yet sufficiently developed to permit quito scou- rato dist' notions bsing made between mtum aod tmcn. the only culprits whom the oiti- zei 8 • t Toronto wonld be glad to see in du- rance V le. All thaa things, of course, should l done, bat not to the leaving other things, fully as impe.rtant, undone. Now there IS a very prevalent understanding in tbe city, that aa soon as there is any real need for a policeman, there are none to be had. We have heard of grntleioen running ap one street, and down another, in fact making quito a lengthened tour of obaervation in aearch of a blue-coat- ed protector, but without success. There have been too many borglariea in Toronto for some time baek. Nothing has been done of any tccount. One or two fellowa may have been arreated on snapicion. but that ia about the laat anyone hears of it. Mnoh more determined and persevering efforto aboold be made than have hitherto been put forth to bring bolder and more nnacrapuloaa feloDB to justice. There are other (iniqai tiaa Uaidaa bouaebraakiag, whioh an pratty maipaot ia tba city jaat bow, aad wbioB might profitably ba looked after. We do not for a moment hint that our polioenan are ^ftmd of aaytbiag aariooa, or that any of them are in league with tbe eriminala, aa waa the oaaa in Sootland Yard aoma years affo, but aomething soana wrong somawbara. Thar* may ba tratb in tba atfapicion that ear- vaat |iria ara at tba bottom of much of the miaohief. Tba "boys in bine " ahould aot allow their faoaltiea to be dimmed by baiag brooght too strongly ander female innnaBca. A MAM baiaf tormantod by ooma, kicked bia foot threap a window, and tho paae VM inataatlygoBa. a 0«nrt /nojroa plead n.Hty, ,., a»kcdtlia Jt,:.,,. .d..nil,gsr««*» "Idoeaii'tpltad »t fll. i j,?; yer. Yar ««'t ketch -e wiS " ' S "Look oat, yoa impudent ,IJ5^' yaa gailty or aot aniltyT- " Now yer'a grttia' at da facta boaoar tor atote dit I s not f.n,|,v "Yia he u, Jedge," excUnii " Ha bit me in de muut wid his fiiTi. " I aeber totcbcd d« man." "Didn't yon bit him in aaked tbe Jadfe, IS pcaLuuep Y PBI^AF MORNINOT *^*w«iiBi «i.i\^iaciJ1| I luieilgJeiKe, Cr-:nty Buaiaam. the Local 'al Matters an.l y- •6 iu adv,.noe, $1 50 not paid tdj en.l oi. tti^ ..».-.... diajootiiiQ^l until all " No, aah I didn t pat my haa' P"*** exccat at the 01 In fact, neber tetched ftm. ' '" ••^ Siarfii refnataS -nty an Insto ncaraw^^op^ " Jadgo, I ho bit ma? awear on de uct« "Now, look a hoah, • aaid gj omrta of dia lan' am't tcbni, When yer jerk a man up ou a cbaii"' got ter atantiate de charge. g(*7) moah eddycaticn 'mong de sibbbJ^^ white folka dar wouldn't be WiT,*** ia de cenrts. Is my h^n' tetchia' Jedge ?â- â€¢ And he 1 laoed bis hsM* " desk. •» "Yea, air." " D it's wbar yer'a S. Case why ' dir" !cr de flosofy what lae U. n »•,' yiri-au't teteh i.o*.hiu' Da^. is air iiiii' au' do table. Et my li refoaiac ;?^.{:r"« â- r^ihehew ••PM until they ^^ RATES OF ADVERTISING iMjnp- the rulea. and under, hrat iiiaertion.. su l isenBaa t iaaertioo ^â-  to tcu" lioua. first iniertiuo cb aubae|kent Jiaeltion The aamboaof .$50 00' aooo 18 00 10 00 4 60 50 15 75 25 8 my i.v,' au' do table. Et my I. .„ t,„ flA""*^ .**â-  **~» *» ^be 'eokoned by dethkhtw^uUaackdar. lio» 1 ..U f^H f'^^Jl^^^P'H .J"""'*^ ^^ • •**!' " Anfhy." ,„d the rnaoner tomed t.TrZiHo nte" .Tl'"'"Kl'"if-.i 'n^"" "is er gwiu to pufyervelf in -u^h s' K t^°^I"J..^„,P""i"'l^: '"l" I bid and charged accordingly. ett :ig!.t' Yer'sbeei a stugen' to rr:;;^:«rtU"T° •"^^"'y- A" '""""tory kno* better den dia. fs yer boL'i.*^:,^"'\°""" must be in the ofh.e of pub- town branded widijnorance?^Y,K'**'°" "Lii °'*^~=" ?? "« Thursday tor add yer weight U bolin' de i,a\UiT " preceding their puWication. of L tils R ck ter de groun Now, ,,, C. ^V. RLTLE IXJE. Proprietir. gent an" a man what unteratan's HosJ,' ""' J*""" â- â- -;â€" -^â€" ^^»^.^ ^^r^'nu..* 1.,,,. ' "»«"»i »»»'"»« "I doaa believe yer did. ' W€CTORY. "Now, Ant'ny, ez a alugent an' » ^^ """ â€" ' r^ =^ LSde'm "ullf o^utS"â„¢" ^^^ ' •^^^^ .- _J. I uK-l'f d^'i*"'"' '" ' -i^tificl. DnC 8»nN.le €«,«*, "An- now, Ant'ny, asastugentaa'.j ^y""*»»'SargeoiiB,AccoucheurB ed man, won't yer withdraw tiiscaw,,.' ,,ec.» sgin me, in which yer«olf is de ,SJfr,,^â€" Medical HaH-, reaidanee at plaint, r, an' in what I ia de tcienttT' ?i^ "' H""««- dent?" " ' Markdale. Sept. 17. im). \-y " Ye#, I wilL Jedoa, dia man tebci ^^^^^" ^â„¢'^*"^*^^^" me. au' I hereby widdrawade miaukt' "Dat wa^ '"• kly right, "aaid .Sinui,--- the two men w 0U down together, -g, C?hna. R. 'WilkeK, de men of acienoe would bang tergeddo JarriRtAP =♦ t â„¢,^ n-^^-^ a„ j way. dar wouldn't be half de trouliH^*^"?.^ l^^\ \a » " eatineaa in de worl'" ^I'l'^ItE.-M.llers's budding, over Eobin- III! 77 OFFICE.- •n' store, Poolet Street. 1-v MUUonaira Crioninal. Frsat Froai. {Loneton-^^iW^Ph-) B"^!""?^^' AND«XOKNKTS.AT ..... ,, *-•' "iw, Solicitors in Chancer*-. Convev NoteverycriminelwboiDcai,tl„|^,Ker,.4e.. Oweu Seund, have le^mii*! at ment to Sibena u on that accoui, v Icli.rlon, Office open «erv Tlmrsdav a. compaaaionated, if wemay belifie ,i,e,i.tof,re. ccunta ef Mr. Jachai zeff'a se.jiaru v „' recently published by a St. I'ete'aV.ur.,^'"'^^" ^»°«' ,^ •»â-  W- al. Thi eminent malefactor, knovrnt.,, "^^tyCrown Attorney, out Russia by tbe aigoiticaut soubriitt a J 1 bmo " The Stealer of Million.." has conti,,f, „„ ' " "'»â- Â«' retain poeaeaaion of the enormous fo,ttJ •? ^nnlSTERaudATTOKNEVAT-L.WV, aequired by bighc'aaa swindliiur. w/ Sohcitor iu Cliaucorv. Ac. • â-  t7iv.JK"""-EH-at " â€" " • forhii.'\l*â€" Offlc FBoar; LL. u. 1 authon;'a"'»J" i-K. cont^emned to deportation, be Kraanojarsk, the town selected residence by tbe imperial princely style, attended by a suite gf vanto, carnages and horses, and it vrt' pear that he is to beiome taabion in that Siberian fumers acd toba»xnisU adveitut '^i^nx, wares under his name he has lueii u- a memi er of tbe leaeling club, anl m^ to contract an aUiarce with a you- TTOliS'PV axr.w belonging to one of Ihe brat f»n!,.\^ ""^^"'-AT-L.WV Owen Sound mid Maikdil, Office at .Markdale, jver W. .1. Mo- store, open on Tbuisdav of every 1 y Jaiii lVil8l»Oit, ::";."'-?a,l':;i'.]^ii^,«T^i^-dATTORNEYAT-LAW, HU ad vei liK -if „: '" '" bancerj- Owou Sound. 17. 1880. Jamea l.a l- BUIoum:, ThoEc:t] VO.Ol'D 9.00 ft •limiii w*iM-|i r«nvH rood liiin :-j4 rii:i..-, \\ ,â-  •i'...i.h. n â- â€¢rl nOrr i pn-e ,-„(,,) 1 1 nria 11^ *» n.-l» iT|,J I' !(•£â- . 't Il Pqn:,. 1 1 (tu« T. Il ";-id.:-t Il N::nri-. It '-nrrif-^ It opi'i.H i;-| n.-3iiii It e i:i-t. V -:* •; r TllT^- ' .nil. irr (••I SOLICITOli IN â€"• â€" ou |M.-riuUHl e«tate. Laud-^ Umelit and x.ld. and gcMcr lutrodiiciil fnc of commit Kiaanojank. His dinner patties "-^WMor^ev^^^L^Vr^' '"""'"â- â€¢ -^^ ed by tbe chief oflicial oeJsonates .-k ,, "^f '"•' "» '"»"'» 'ate.-^ nobilities ladiea of the beat society Vvn his evening receptions, and acesept thttju. did pre sente with which he judiciouil; TiiTKinAT tbeir favour and social countenance. 'JNDAIjK. proposed by a committee e.{ Ktin^^'l"^^'"""' tl'-t, 1H80. " Ofi«et " to present bim, upon bu vb day, w ith a w reath of laurel, oak iWe tftttiett aacnr* $[ Cattb Xatttt* roB a. Altogether, for a convicted n s^^* t*9^'**9, meanant, undi rg ing aentence of bii Win. Brow u foii iy .Ali- bis handa. One Hundred and Th rty Years oli. .. executed. tJ.â€" Money to Lend on Real EnUte Sept. i7. 18«o. F. 'WcKaer EAE .EST.\TE AGENT. l-.v The Rev. Mr. Collins, a naturaliit, ty-five years resident in Ceyl. n, uvi eW»its there live shout 13.J veirt, ,^p"^.*'^^'^^' AGENT. DURHAM •' come of ace " at 40. The re- are three „^y "' *^"'y- of them in the same hcid' aid »li«i'i,g« " "' "'"""""I'le iuUiot, pay- are young, ihe s 2e they will atUin l:^"3â- fcli:^'" " "'"" "' ' "'« end tf. ac;y known bj llie nuoil of u-r i.«f.tgL r^^" '^*- â€" prti««4jm» iav»U Thoei which gt«w to the jar^csl «'«i„t_-, .-ea,]v iT ,nf Vf"""" Princi,.«) eiabteen toes, five on each of the two .TtXi .»«'«"-^/' "'t Uorrowors. feSt, aod four on each of the hitd 0' "S? it, '"'â- '8'»«^-' ""«»BblttnJ m.IJ. Thoae which.grow to a medium »»:' "'â-  '"^- i.y hevint-.en toes, (ive on each of thcf t AI»«m..^.«» d^- and four ou one hind toot, and three ot,""""*^*^ Brown, other. The le.iat aize of elephau' ha'^Fl^of Marntt»,'e Licenbo~, Fire un.i teen toe», five on each fore foot, aU â- â- "» fc«uiaiico A»{ent. C.iinmiio)M r on each hind fiiot. NoSiughnle^e ele' ^l. Ac. Conveyancer .md Liceu~id haa a fewer nun. ber than aizteeu toes, ionoer for the Coimty of Grey. Fuiiu. 1 mahout, or elephant dr.ver, luk-s hibanta, and Lund Sales, I'tmcttyiUv ,11.' phant by means of an iron lienik, witb ^^ to#ud eliaines made vei-v moUeruto he touches a most accsitivc art lieh ii.eevi^. Sept. 17, 1880. ' i.y ear, which causes the mott uniuly e'.e: â€" to become submissive. Wheu Mr. 'â-  tivtHTfft C-orbet, Jr. was "in Kandy, rn elephant which hai.NU, LOA.N ASD GENERAL AGEN'T ci ils keeper, and wl ich had been tcOwanSo^t' •- "^•' 'â-  â-  the head before it could be captned, Lof imuryet. Money to Loan ot l..w J 4. f u .1, .. Principal jiavablc at tin. undergo the operation of having the f ivlmm cf years, and int, rest half v., extracted which wa. performeel by tiiyaaii* o» principal and interest rei.av-' irve doctors, the elephant lying â- ]'"'j|y'Ttit ' down while the ""bout kept ht b»-Anumhar of desirable Improved Farms this sensitive part. The elephant 1,.. "^n'oveu ranus ate a drunken set if men, aud s.'iii 1 ' whi.'e drunk, will tre^t their chai^t s: " 't. C. Sins' cifuUy, and the elephaui iself is d uMINlON AND PROVINCIAL I AVn which bears grudgM-the result beit sm-vayor. Dra,„;htsm«n' and Val,m."or ?«"'y.»ll.e'ephant keepers a-e «i»rd .^y^Markdale. Having purchased dAiaiid " J»e;.r your vjiiii.n lias lieliofilci ami Livi r i L-iiie 1 c-vei SA\1 poar .Sii- iliiCVTh ii.ii eigfit yc.ii tllJlt I liHVi. Alter UMiii: for a bn. f t,u leil tu (!.i ,,II iiove it u.i (J hfr. CI i;h^) »( lK*l Sli: W.i;, Hfllie-t. .11 whii-U f»reâ- ^^ luy fill. Ill, ai.-- ini.'uiabli Iiv 1B77, I eoiuu ilJoixl Syrup niiilfed (o pail a Nfiort till), fair il.iy wor cuiirclv gou, ISA.il later killetl. â- cWland Survo^-or CharW Kankiira stiji^ ol original Field NoteK, l'laiiK„ «»i_^»tijctions, Ac, of aaUia Surv. vh He last fifty-live years, I am e Siir\eyi, in strict aecrd highly curioaa. ai well aa very cr.uc.! '^j^jl^'^Xi,, Plan '^^ ""' '""""""" Tnrkey. Tl e present aapect of affairs ii. '"'"tlH ittlcboy. and a aick one at trial, *i. ..^^l^T^j""^,';*"' Spwibcation- refuaing to hold out hia hand aiid ' on applioH K.Jai I " 1" ""• ilitore,..t not appear either, as if the haif-doW.^HT^" '"" «""' pies, with all the moot imprortc, thoda of flagellation at their coae, to succeed 17, 1«80. •J. BLVTll. promptly attended let. I V were joing to succeed in " com him. There ia great power eviilci. paaaive resiatenex. What mav be th: cutoome of the trouble, it is imioKi' lay. Turkey may, even yet, con e rf flying colours, after aetting all her w« reformera by the ears, "rae .Sul'ao very well that th ae Europe n p wir f ^. „^ James J. White, jealous of one another as draw iiig-ronirt»'t to_ Dr. Cameron. Oweu .Sound ties, and that by a little judic.oi s dir.l.L BE AT THK UKVEKE HOCSF he can at any rate ho!d hia own. •: Markdido, on the last Wedues.Iav in probably tbe very game he u pUynjonth.^fcen he will 1* prepared toi»r propo-ition here, rn.l a piop.sition I operations n-qiiro,! uiwn the-miaTtl. he keeps up the appearance of Iwinfmost satiafactorv mauuei an'l n.....i much alarmed by auch a eiiyplay 01 ible terms force, and of a .praiseworthy wi lia^ to any reasonable unierttn and upuii 1 i^tel*. c'ii;i:«| .Mt. fo We Dkah Sim-- I 'lirysi|i«.|u. f,|- nv.J your lii.liau l;j.., me. Mii I. IV 1.1; I Mt. F.io-t. W.f l»i n .sii, I li Hl.-«1 Sviii|. f..i |1 lii-eiv.-.l t'lMat l«n\ IU Ud it- 11-. •.. :|j|| I'lSI.VSI .. Mt.T..i. -t. W. Dun Sii: 1. valuable lii.Ii.n; lii raui|.- Ill tiM- S Disi;.\si: nil I .- ll l'i;Mi Sii; 1 w I'liill- III my Sli.iii.-i .\|.|Htll. :in.| «.i- 1 n-lieve m. imt,! 8yiiipMlii.-.hitl. !•â-  al«li i;i\, yoiii I, ju»lly eli-im come while all the time he holds the apjlt cord, which may prove tejo much in t:~- for amy naval demonstration. SU'^-^IO^ JK^I^tj^j^ f!;•'°iVT'""'°"J""""' MARKDALE. than by breaking hia neck, is c^rtat *â- â€¢ imposing fpectocle. .The fnrs e^-iug leaae-d tlio above hotel and flmr 1**^^"' toH.l.Tt.i course, la naturally to try an) et rcfuraklie.1 and 1. titli-d it, the JZ:,' I '"«" â- !"' "o ji"Hl .St.\i:ii1 DcAli Sill Me airti I WHS uii;il,|, I.I one another s throate m order ly .ublio will lind every uccummodation that important part of his own ai.at. t tbe best ef li.,u„r-. and cipars kept' »'^â€"' tabling. Careful li.,^tlir. Bill of Fare in a Monasteil .."^^ van houn, Proprietor Here are aome culinary mcmoraniU j-«^ y VT«arri-'a from a mooaalic account-book of tb*:-' .^VX.j aif_ M. Lid 1 ^« Henry VIII The Hems brinj; vi.* S^AFORD, Ont. fore US the abundant and excellent ur -.J- vided in theae monaatic ebUblrehaien" "COIKH, i'sorainoBs. peruaal of tho list ,1 dainties bete » will at leoat aatiafy ua that in tte J^Jwaunodatioii for the tiavellint; Agts "the monka, tie muoh-alu«' .i^^JJ is well ktixked with tho muchmiatake(t monka. fanned tbe ^^^T^^^T '^^ '"1""' ° '"'l ^^^ be-t rom all trains CusUniy*, 8utte^.;t08T HOiV Hf STORED uiuwa*-aaaaat«M»vu lUUUKB, lauucil " t- ^f fti â€" â€" of a naacent litoratnre, anel «-'"»""*;.' r^JSt flame of a new oookery. Die corpon"""",*^^ «â- ' Apud Boston, ffyrrt Cowrte. f' ' podage, Chewtes. (a small pie.) Sj' ^___^_____ Carpettea of Venyfon. Capons. B^^AB^UOrf-wi-w wye, (baken Capons.) rn.tArdvt. ^-"«s-r^x^ damask, fruttea. A Ceifrw. Cremball to poUce- â-  _^ .-, Scbufi^ard. peyons. Baken VeD««»Jfc *• bave reeent^ puWi.i,ed a byttos. Yorwholpa, Icche viall. .*!;W new edition of rr Cnlv«r to. Tkvrd CowriT Cere jelly t» r^-«(reU'8 Celebrated B«l^ Crane bettem, fTesande, Knotw^diaal and permanent cure (witho^ Tail Stynt,lechelombar.l. A «») ♦Nervous Debditv, Mental and, Irxv mints. The bill of fare '*J, «Oa|)apty, impediments to M«r- from excesses. ft] a sealed envelope, only six yeata^c stamps. ' author, in thiii admuable " demonstrati's, from tliirty lee, that alarming con- radically cured without the internal medicine or the fe pointing ont a mode of ' nartain and effectual, by every saffcrer, no matter may be, mAy curs liimaelf .aatfaadieaUy,- Id be in the handsof every in the land. laznriou dinner on a tiah day,*kK* « on tba aame page, is not auigo^^, preoiae date, but wa» certainly t^ the number of the " me as " beiog the foot: Ffyche, /yrf cmrM. potage, lying and rait fyscbe. ButUa ft place, ffireabe Salmon- ,^. Baken Breme. Tieuch. l""' C. Suttelt^e. S»c«nd Co^t. C«i»«.?° do?. Byrt, (a kind of tnrht. Dory. Bremys. Soolya Cong, pordie, lecbe Damask. Root eki. ffrecha porpoase. kaabard. A Sutoltye. Baktf Crab** your Ineiiaii HI 1 •^ only a short tiini ed, and now n,\ |.„»„j I can safolv r.c.ii remedy. DYSPEPSIA AND W.sti Ukau Sin I )„ yoaii. with Dyhiwjjua Kkliiey Complaint, mauy rtiueilief but e-aiue v.-iy Viol :iii.l I SI 111 to .\.ui .\;.. ^xJtfle of your Imliun not hesitate ti ^:lv \\r, am tompletely cui-e.l man. Last urrk inyl with sovoio lloii.iae-i I your valuable uie-dicmJ CIKES DV.SI'El'SlJ Tins \V.st|...lt. Dehk Sib: 1 hav. I Dys|N..pia for about llndiiiH /.'„„/ S/^i,i/.i- I ever Mped me. I w uj from tbia disease to err trial. f op and Lyman. No 21I Toronto. !«, ^,^,, f Healini; Syrup, as Kd* ia well known as Blood Purifier throu^o^ ttsn: Tn Argyll ia a thrifty tba shooting OB tbe estates isw-j, orofit, andbnt a limited portion »V family a m naom ont Sct;" --* j, ^rt •••OLffcWELL MEDICAL 41 AxM St., itfM. CO., New Yob7. Wly TuK widow of the Coanteaa vun Wraogtl, aia, after having oeleb wedding. Mr. MAi'Kjtv, the Boi aaid to have become leor ao many adventurers pracliceid on him that human nature. ,V •i-"i;i:;'

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