p^ ss ^^ liasion Toronto I KK8. QL\Y 1 ot aiiiwoe ON. Stacoe, ' lot. Musicl 'vroiiM." nimlngs, at nic-8 W., ular DongB i centa to music 6c. ta, Uaiiie. t. Igt, ha vine a] states and Piot^^_ prepared for |SI rr.mently sriocur^'" "rench and Q«r address ORMICK Princjp^^ GUARANI .D),OFLOMDON.SI Government Dep^ I St. East, Torowii^I ted in unreprea^^ OKD, ^^" V fur the Dominion FRESH, AND S[^\ to ffrowâ€" Of aH n^l Seieot stock ot AMiI Trees, GrapeTiai leutal Trees, ChoiS Plants, and E) Uouquets, of su^ ty, oil short notica. RYMAN, TOROini.' WUh««nr«haft " 'mm CO. to their advantage make of Files and Specialty. Send QNT, le fanioiis for their style, I c'luenience, durabili^, I r until you .see them. All -b sell them. I w., TORONTO.! TRIAGE GEARS. I ^0% -SPRING GEAe lt any other sideapiing I !iO a 1,'reit favorite. The I â- •.relit';? itllo" the body to J SIlDliT. ri'ies very eia/, rMLK MOTION. Suit- 1 iKxJioj. I'IUCI':S RIOBTI. I rfiilar. .\G n'Vii to. fLdiX avr.LVtt, cuuAkj SHAM, F.MIMERS, HE- le-^ men or cupltaliate, il â- fi^r health or profit, OH IlKK. I'v sending^ your ad- 1 «' ki:v.». liiiiK â- "•• West. ToroBtv. IRTHDAY. i ^rt,.; IJirthJay Card sent ~.' luc .Uier will send ta the loif u'hir b;ibie3, and their j .\l.-o a hand-some Di»- f (Viril to tha mother uud oniijitioii. un iV «'^.. Montreal. E. TORONTO, Mfrs. of Printers' Send tor prices. imoN. en.' A.ovd:lisease b7ltania 3*. kiad Bu I oi Ions itAndfac sirocir li my faith In Ma ' BOTTLKS FREE, t«««tar :.SB on [Ms •llmnat M aaif »11reM. I-0(TM, angdSt,Toraato OME COMPAHY. WARJ), E*)., B, Esq., c $915,000 has b««a rted there will be » ). rer $14,000,000. lefeaslble. NES^ i T S. ID IRON BRACEl: buyers. Send for dM^* j RIFT LOVE AND VENGSAHOE AHOMC^ Ths Mo8x FAflcnrATnra Oosah RoKAVoa Snroa CoOFfB ASS MaKTATT. Blis »tter- kher- [APTER XXX.â€" Th« PoBTADMniAI. ReCKIVBS PKr90fKB3 A»D VlSITOBS. lit was considerably in advance of the party, which compriied his da^hter, ce, in its members, that Captaiir Mor- arrired at the house of Admiral Sir i'omas CUflford, with Mrs. Wagner. jir Thomas was, in fact, pondering over letter he had received from Dolan, and ondered what he had better do in the -for he feared it was a snare alto- f ^vhen Captain Morton was annonnc- to him. ,r^,.~ IThe welcome of Sir Thomas Clifford was Vnn and friendly, and in reply to Morton's ologetic expressions for leaving him so ab- [ptly, he said My dear friend, say not a word about it. 1 were quite right and quite justided, „ I am in hope that you have sometiiing fa B*tisfactory nature to tell me." But little. I am as one in possession of ealed lx)ok, within which may be all the Ifortnatioii he seeks, but which he lacks means of openuig." • How so, Captain " said the admiral. 3upon, Captoin Morton told .Sir liomas Clifford all that had passe I siaca h.; seen him, and of the capture and pres- Iceof Mrs. Wagner. IThe admiral listened with the greatest Brest and then he said It was through the information, Cap- Morton, you have brought me, and tich you had got from that dving man, ntchins, that we have been enal llat we have done against this rang. Read this letter I W another phase of this transaction, one which may possibly be productive Fmportant results. ' .,, ^, L'-aptain Morton read the letter with the «t absorbing interest, and then he said f ' This is from Dolan " y Doubtless, although it is anonymous. is abundance of evidence on that What do yon think of it? ' the rascal intends to make his willinglr acceeded to this sn^^eaitum, and Mrs. Wagner, between t^o m the police, was ushered into the room. The moment she saw CAptmin Morton she called out " My thousand pounds â€" give me my thousand poonda, sir â€" I want my tiMnuand pounds r' "What does she mean 7" said Mr. Tick- ley. " Simply, said Captain Morton, " that I told her I woald give her a thooaend ponnda if she brought me my daughter, of whoee place of retreat or concealment I believe hw to be aware." •• Give me my money " cried Mrs. Wag- ner, "my thousand pounds. Give me my money and let me go." "Silence, womui," said the admiral, sternly. " What you are brought here for is to be committed to prison by myself and brother magisti ate here for your ascertained complicity in the smuggling tranaactiona of Dolan." " Dolan Dolan Who said Dolan " " I did. But if you at once state where Captain Morton's daughter is to be found I will not make out the order of your commit- al, and if she be restored to the captain in safety through your information 1 will let you go free. Eh, Mr. Tickley?" abled to do Dolan and and it will let lere is 'That that he is ad- I of lUgO " Hem! ah, yea " And my thousand pounds " said Mrs. Wagner. "You shall have them " said Captain Morton; " Nay, nay " cried the admiraL " That is too bad " " Permit me," added Captain Morton. " Permit me. I have said that I would give this woman a thousand pound.4 upon the re- storation of my child through her means. And my word having been given she will have the money." " My dear sir," said Mr. Tickley, " will you allow me to shake hands with you I will honor j'ou my dear sir â€" i^em for you must be very well off, indeed." iuau .." 4. J.L I Mrs. Wagner lookel eagerly from one to ,pe, and leave all his companions to the ^j^^ ^^^^^ ^j ^j^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^j^ " Let me fetch the child. I will bring her liere in two hours. Let me go for her t" " The captain will be content if you tell him where to go for her," said the ad- miral. " Yes," cried Captain Morton. " No," said Mrs. Wagner, " you would not get her â€" you could not get her. I only can get her." There was a p itise of doubt. " You failed before," said Captain Mor- ton. " Dolan stopped me he overheard me promise you and he stopped me. That was how it was. And even nowâ€" oh, if you could but catch him Then all would be well. Let me go, though, and I will bring you the girl." " W^hereisshe?" Mrs. Wagner was silent for a moment. " You 3 iid the cavern in the cliff " " No. Well, if I did, and if you think there is a cavern in the cliff go and try and get into it." " She is there â€" my child is there." ' ' She is. Promise me the thousand pound; and I will tell you all. Shall I have the money " "My daughter?" " I will tell all and I will restore the child, too. Dolan has a thousand pounds of powder in the caverns. No one knows where it is but me. If he should find him- self in dangerall will perish. Your daughter, sir, is in the caverns. I will find her and bring her to you if you will let me go, for the more I think the more I feel sure that he will rather kill her than let you take her from him by force. But I will tell you all. I will explain it all to you and then you will give me the money I go and fetch the girl. Her name is Grace. She used to think herself the daughter of Dolan, but his ill- nsage of her " " Good God " cried Captain Morton, as he sprang to his feet. "Has the villain dared to lay a hand on my child " " I have seen him strike her against the rock." " Noâ€" no I Oh, spare me " Do not tell me â€" you will kill me Do not tell me that â€" oh, that I could meet him face to face, the villainâ€" the more than villain " Listen," said Mrs. Wagner, in a solemn tone of voice " Listen and I will tell yo« all. There is a sea-cave in the cliff, where now the cutter Rift rides at anchor. The whole cliff is full of cavema and paaaagea in the chalk, and there is but one entrance from the sea; and another, a small hole among the weeds and shrubs, in the narrow road that leads from the beach to the top of the eliff. There are holes in the face of the cliff high up, which they use aa lookout ata- tiona but those can't be got at in any wa except from within the clin." " But you speak nonsense," said the ad- miraL " How can the cutter lie in a sea- cave and we not know it " "Over the entrance to the cave there is drawn a mass of old sails, all soaked in chalk, and discolored with sea-weedand aea- water. You might sail past them in a boat within fifty feet, and not know the differ- ence beiween them and the rock itself." ' ' Can this be possible " " It is so. Yon may know the jplace, for it is exactly under the old flag-staff on the cliff- top." " ' • • The old staff that has stood so long, be- cause nobody will risk their lives by wing to take it downâ€" the portion of cliff on which it stands is so undercut " " Yea, that is it. Immediately beneath that, springing from the water's e^, »J^« covered entrance to the sea-cave where Do- lan and the Rift and all his crew are now, and where she took refuge from t he Spray. " It most be ao." -^ â- "It is ao air." " And that," added the admiral, "thai at once accounts for the dkappwraace of the cutter amid the smoke of her oym gnna and those of the Spray. WeH, it is not alto- gether so very absurd of Captain Gray to think he lutf sunk herâ€" she s^ped mto her Yes, and the probability is ilready." „ is more than likely. But now, I am a fatherâ€" my heart is riven with ess I have suffered so many shocks of that I am getting weak-hearted, biore you to assist me in the recovery chUd, at once. I think this woman, kener, know.s where she is. Wdl you ire her safety and indemnity, if she closes the secret to me f I will do my utmost for, as I have be- told you, I, too, am a bereaved father. ' You have hinted as much." Yes, my boyâ€" my poor boy I Stolen me, years and years ago, by whom I Bw notâ€" hardly in fact know how, socon- ^1 and heart-stricken am I at times about Believe me. Captain Morton, although lave long since given up all hope of ever j ling my osvn child, I will use every possi- j energy and power I possess to restore -: vours." I Captain Morton thanked the admiral by xessure of the hand, which said much than words could do and then the :iiral rang the bell, and the sailor-servant Lde his appearance. f ' Where have the police placed the pri- her they brought with them " ' North by east." Oh the red room, you mean " .\y, ay, sir She came in under con- sir, and now that Mr. Tickley has come \o port. " ' What, Mr. Tickley, the magistrate " f ' Yes, admiral, you see sir,, the master- |a,rms. " The who " l^rd, don't mind me Whenever I sees policeman, I think o' the master-at-arms I you see, admiral, that's the sort of police- onboard ship; and commonly speaking, lore .sneaking, shore-going lubberly ras- therc isn't bet a een the planks than that master-at-arms. Lord love you, gen- leu, there was a fellow â€" who was mast- it- arms on board of our ship, once, and bore murdering rogue couldn t be." Well, well, that will do. Say to Mr. iley that I should be glad to see hin here." 'Ay, ay, sir." I a few moments a little sharp visaged was shown into the room and having a alia-ity of bowing sideways, it imparted oddity'to his addiess that very much en- ' the attention of strangers, fGlad to see you, admiral. Your ser- \t, sir. In the commission of pestce, sii-, fXo, Mr. Tickley. This is an American Itleman. Mr. Tickley â€" Captain Morton." 'Glad to see you, sir; very glad to see sir, indeed. Well, -admiral, the ser- nt sent for me, I suppose, to make a rtwith you on some mitters " ' OSâ€" no doubt. As we are both magis- ^es, we can act together. There is a wo- in custody chai-ged with complicity in a of smuggling. She is in possession of brmation that this gentleman wants, and ^ant, as the price of that information, to her go." Hem " You know, Mr. Tickley, we always where women and men were jointly erned in smuc^ling affairs, let the wo- go." Tea, but â€" ahem This woman is alone-'" rap came at the door of the room. JCome in." sergeant of police approached and 1 the admiral. ' More prisoners, sir, sent in by LiMien- I Andersor, who took them in a boat in I bay last night. The lieutenant will be sir, in about half an hour." Men Men among them " Yes, admiral." 'Very good. That will do. Mr. Tickley, disposes of your little objection." The iral placed a Stress oa the word "lictle," rhich Captain Morton thanked him by a' I Well, well, admiral* I hAV6 ao pftrtka- bjection â€" none bi tiie woild â€" only one like dangeri^ns preced^El^ .)ivA Via to oblige thugeatiemaa4h«ce ]dl|l,,Tick- 'e one of his odd aide bows,) I would i â€" mnch. ^,SuppoBe you see her here, aad ehe may aa,-^^ ^.oS^'^^t thi»: ' tan (k«^'oaaie anoter of 1^ oblique reqidrea." lerily Tea^Mid.yoor Wagticir-^wbo tceas ef tiie aJtoatioBâ€" **Mr "iMd fewr tmgn^ sir, mad go and ches* tfie ^faklt ahaii- inyoiir ohalk-pits, by making '" " ' " had«Mp waA^aA. 4eai;-T-!aaoQl4 bad oSdles aad M eh«iM,4a I of their wages. Go along, do." "Good graeions!" cried Mr. llcklegr. "What do I hear? Hem O Laid i I ay- peal to yoa, Captaiarâ€" aâ€" aâ€" a»rtenâ€" " ' "Morton." ' I beg yonr pardon. Morbm I vpff^ to yoa, air, as a maa e^deatiy with m ea aa, if thisbtobeb(»ae?" " I know Bothiag about it, rir,'*said Cap- taia Morton. " "niera, woman, you hear. Captain Mor- ton knows nothing about it â€" Captain Mor- ton, a gaatlemaa of eztenava meaas, knows nothing about it." " This isatt irrdevaat," said the AdmiraL "Come in." A tap had come to the door of the room. The sergeant of Police appeared with a slip of pi^er an his hands. ' Beg itardon, genUemen, but this is tiie list of prisoners Lieutenant Andersen has brought in, and he is in the dining-room be- low.*' " Are the priaoners tiiere " « "Yea, air." "Ask Lieutenant Anderson to do me the favor of stepping this way. Let me aee the liat." "Yea, Admind." CHAPTER XXXLâ€" Gbace Moktox Finds Hbr Father. xV^* " She did. •• sae cua. She lies there n^jn^J mere 0^^ti|itfMo««6j|}Mii-i«$|kl(^rC^ And Admiral Sir Thomaa Clifford took the list in his hand, and as he did so a strange faint flutter â€" he knew not why â€" came over the heart of Captain Morton. " Y'ou don't look well, sir," said Mr. Tick- ley "you, sir, a man of means. Really, I often think, do you know, si^ that men of means ought never to be illâ€" %ever Com- mon people, sir â€" low people without meana-" " One moment, if you please," said the admiral. Captain Morton sat down and placed his hand upon his heart, he knew not why. The admiral commenced reading Nominal list of persons arrested in a boat on the high aeaa by Lieutenant Anderson, R. N., and commanding the C. G. at Fal- mouth station. Simon Martin, aeaman. Joseph Ratlin, seaman. Charles Olympus Defeain Suffles, attomey-at-law. Captain Edquarde de Mocqtjet, French merchant service. Gerald (this person refuses to give his surname, on the plea that he does not know it.) He is believed to be a son of Captain Dolan (so-called), the amuggler. The admiral looked up. "That, Captain Morton, ia the young ruffian who is apoken of in Dolan's letter, and now it appears he likewise repudiates him as a son." " Yea, admiraL' Captain Morton spoke faintly and looked very pale "You are not well, my dear friend." " I don't know how it ia, but the air feels thick about me and there ia a strange sensation about my heart, aa though some- thing were about to happen in which I shomd be so largely interested, that it would almost suffice to stop the current of my blood. Only once before I felt like thU." "Once before?" "Yea, and by the moat careful calcula- tions and inqniriea lean make, it muat have been as nearly aa poasible about the preciae time when the vessel was wrecked that had my daughter on board." " That is very singular," said the admiral as he placed the "nominal list of names" on the table, but kept his hand upon it care- lessly. "Very," said Mr. Tickleyâ€" " very and for a man of means, too, to feel ao queer, it is really â€" really a â€" quite a â€" I mean, it don't seem right." " Gro on," said Captain Morton. " Stopr" said Mrs. Wagner. ' ' What would you say " " That boy, Gerald he is a bad boy oh a most wicked boy; and if any one ought to be aent to priaon he ought He is the worst of the lot." " Everybody seems to concur in that," said the admiral. " You may depend upon it, justice shall be done. I think, Mr. Tickley, wehad better go downand ait magis- terially upon all this. 0, Mr. Anderaon, how are you " " I hope you are quite well, admiral, said Lieutenant Anderaon, as he entered the room. "I never in all my experience made so strange a capture as that of Ukst^night and I think we have got hold of a worse man than any smuggler." "Indeed?" "Yes, the receiver of the smuggled goods, Mr. Suffles, a respectable-(?) attorney of the town. Upmi my word, it's past all belief, almost, and we should not now have had him, but for his own imprudence." "I wish to heaven, said the admiral, rising, " that this was a free port. I do detest the constant trouble that these smug- gling cases give us." "So do I, sir, but what would you Duty is duty, you kiuw, admiiaL" "O yes, Mr. Anderson, you are right. I think, Mr. Tickley, our shortest way will be to comnut them all to the assizes." "Very good, admiral, and those who have done worse than smuggle â€" " "Are there any?" " Lord bless you yes. They have fired on theSprayâ€" a Wag's ship. Thafs piracy." "It is. Well, we shall see." "I think, though, admiral," said the lieutenant, "with deference to yoo, sir, that the two girls midit be let go.' "fwogirlsf â- „ "Yes, sir, and the Frsn dim an. He seems a harness man eaoi^, and was in p^ a priMoer of Ae snnigglers." "What two mrla " .,.„.. "ObMoMitlooked iheni. Let me aee. m«ylMiitlE»tt|iDir nam. ___ l»"-lfeaqtetB;. it in Hui of M 4«« .iaaWBstiia* "" "" ' .J j^ rr â- and enrarâ€" my l|aart isUllrâ€" a^ ownâ€" my 'tib* «rfee «r Natara that iqioke tb jBM la tiie ftir n* b reit tt e d I liaTa felt as if her little liaad rested ai '^y heart, Sheishereâ€" ay owalittieoneâ€" vtv duldâ€" long lost â€" Oh, Qod, how long hwt? â€" niy dear one Oh, heaven, have merey hp(m ae, and save me trom tiie oidd chill rf li^pe deferred, now Oraoe|â€" Grace, iqy child -Saj eifld. r '1V year own foad father's Iteartl" (to Hb oonmnrxD.) Thrthqiitktm It is manifest ttiat tiie initial impulse of an earthquake must be due to some sudden and violent origin. Various cattses may be coauieived aa possibly producing the shook. For example when the roof of a subterranean cavity collapses a concussion must be pro- dBoed which may have the effect of an earth- quake at the surface. In limestme coun- tries, such as Camiola, the ground is honey- combed with grottoes and passages, and sliglit slioclu OI earthquake are of frequent oceurrenoe, due, no doubt, to the falliag in of some of these underground caverns. More violent effecte might arise from the collapse of large emptied volcanic reservoirs, as perhaps has occurred at the extinct volcano of Ischia. Again rocks of the cruat are in a atate of continuous atrain due to various causea, and especially to the gradual con- traction that arip«B from the srow eooling of the planet. From time to time there prob- ably come moments when consequently they snap asunder and read just themselves in a new position of equilibrium. A slight dis- location of this kind woidd undoubtedly set in motion a series of earthquake waves that might devastate the country far and wide, while a more extensive fracture might pro- duce such a catastrophe as man has never yet witnessed. Such audden ruptures of rocks are not irapoaaibly the aources of the' earthquake shocks so frequently experienced in mountain ous countries. Along the range of Alps, for instance, subterranean disturbances are of common occurrence, vaCl-ying in' force from hardly perceptible tremors up to'smart and more or less destructive shocks. That mountain chain has a long and most inter- esting history, which takes us back to the European continent. Instead of having been produced by one primeval uplift, the Alps ha e been upheaved again and again, and during intervals of repose their crests and declivitiea have been slowly worn down as they still are to-day by frost and rain, springs and brooka, rivers and glaciers. "Yet the repose has only been comparative. That intense crumpling and contortion, the proofs of which the tourist gazes at with wonder along the mountain sides that plunge down into the Lake of the Four Cantons has left the rocks below in a state of strain from which relief is at intervals obtained by a sudden snap or crack. W^hether or not any logical change of level may be apre- ciable, either in the way of elevation or sub- sidence, these subterranean tremors, "grow- ing pains " we might call them, must be re- garded ats evidence that the building of the Alpa is not yet a complete process. At^in, along the oceanic borders of the continent, earthquakes are of frequent occurrence. Continents are areas that have been uprais- ed oceans lie in basins that have sub- sided. The tracts between these two re- gions of opposite movement may not im- probably be specially liable to be affected by stresses, the sudden relief from which will generate earthquakes. LATBDOmMM riBWB. Vaaeoaver,^CL, k tohav* There are BO«l^ Pfcita. â- â- --- in aae in tpedF a ooal Thfl Truth About Money. A large income will purchase for a man the comfort, the tangible and intangible good which a small income will not. Noth- ing will controvert this bald fact. Not all the preaching and philosophy in the world can persuade a .rational man that money is not a good thii^, which will enable him to educate his children, to give them their choice of work in life, to procure skilled physicians, luxuries and change of air for his wife when death threatens her, to help the poor, to forward the cause of Christian- ity, and, for himself, to rest for a brief sparse before he leaves this beautiful world, to find out what is in it beyond drudgery. There are high spiritual blessings, no doubt, which come to us through poverty but the ex- tremely small number of persons who volun- tarily become hermits or paupers in these later days in order to obtain them show how uncertain the popular faith in them has grown. Money is of value to a man just in proportidn as it buys for him these assured benefits, or anything else which he esteems a benefit. â- Oanadian Fodfio Sailway StatistioE. The firat aod was turned by the company on the 2na May, 1881. The last apike waa driven Kovemlier 7th, 1885. Time occupied in building the road, four years aix montha or on an average rate per day of 2.6 miles. Total length of main line between Quebec, and Vancouver, 3,063 miles. £ vstern divi- sioUj 2.114 miles Western division, l,84o " d|i«6n,'v4«^ilfti; total •Cinpart C t i W dUtaneesc xa Pacific railway, Montr^ to .^an- rattway, rd; (JreTf^'aad shbifteat 235 miles; Union^aipi Cen- New York to San Fran- oonnections, 3,271 miles. ffsff»iiisn Paci^c t^ailway is thus the befwe^i^ae^gn and o^aiia by FMwitB OttwPa,;ia de«4^ %.A^^ wiUkont hsUs thi«a perMMi hm^" been filed ISTsBid oeataeafeh afi Paris. Twdye hunite^d torn of ooal have be«i mined at Edoioiitoii dtiiiog the year paat Amiiaktian to have WindMir eraoled a dty will be made at the apncoadiini eaa- sioBo{«heIgialatare. ' British Columbia squatters ate agitating far Government ceoognition of their titba to the lands on whiA tluy are settied. Joseph Mateyes, a married man with a ftunily, was instantly killed on tiie Pettowa- wa a few days ago by a tree falling upon him. Mr! Samuel Watson, of Amherst Island, fdl from a load of hav one day last week, struck on the hack of us neck, and waa in- stantly kiUed. A coal famine threatens Halifax, unless the etrike of tiie Pictou miners soon ends, l^e cotton factory closed down last week for want of fueL A man in Seymour Township has desert- ed a wife and sixteen children and eloped with a woman who left behind her a hus- band and four children. Maud Williams, a forty-year-old colored woman, was found in a filthy room at Hal- ifax recently, destitute of furniture, fuel or clothing, frozen to death. Antelope are getting pretty numerous in the river bottoms in the vicinity of Leith- bridge, N. W.T., and herds of 30 to 40 ma^ be seen almost any day. It is reported that 6S deaths from mea- sles have oscurred ammg a hand of TmlUiM of 25 lodges living at the Murshy Lake, 100 miles north of Lu; la Biche. An Indian woman at Fort Rupert, B. C, was much disappointed last week when she found she could not prosecute her husband for pawning the blankets. The bakers of Vancouver, B. C, have ad- vanced the price of bread to ten cents per loaf or three loaves for twenty -five centa, and the loaves are to be 1^ pomids in weight. At Calgary recently a man had' his feet badly frozen through two pairs of socks, a pair of moccasins and a pair of overshoes, amd it is believed amputation will be ne- cessary. The tightness of the moccasiiis in- terfered with the cireulation of the blood. Hence the freezing. A man took a k^ of whiskey to an Indian camp at False Creek, B. C, in the hope of being able to dispose of it. The Indians did not feel complimented by the visit, how- ever, and they took the man and forc»d him to sit upon the keg for three days and three nights. Then the end of the keg was knocked out and the liquor spilt. John Albertson, 105 years of age, died at Norton, Kings County, N.S., a short time ago He was an old British soldier, who was present at the battle of the Nile and Trafalgar, and subsequently at the battie of Waterloo and other memorable engage- ments. He was probably the last surrivor of the battle of the Nile, fought 90 years ago. â- A Cornwall constable made an important discovery recmtly. For some time paat he has been on the track of amugglera of coal oU, and during his tour he made up his mind to follow a certain sleigh track which led him to a barn in the old Gordon French property, about one mile north of Maple Grove. Here he found concealed 26 barrels of American coal oil, which he had conveyed at once to Cornwall. A sad accident occurred at one of the Emery Lumbering Company's camps, four miles from Wahnapeta, a, few days ago, causing the death of William Kenan, teamster. He had got on part of the load .and was going to another roll way. to finish his load, when the binder got lose and swinging round it struck him back of the neck, throwing him in front of the sleigh which passed over him, killing him instant- ly. He came from the village of Carp, where he has a brother. He was a single man. im^ admiral and Captain Mwton both axe otiier fish in the seabendeaone worth a sEhd iti^ !!^ ftMiiW|t»t»JWBter^l*" -fliit^ lAa^ipich i^ CTH Sfe yi er Xfsto0er».^rn- 4ui«k^ to^i^oil. e m^^^^^Mdor's VK^^^kttow wni^i qp. wide •x,T"i *tnw one yoa an loddng out «L Mixed Up Baby and Turkey. " Oh, you good-for-nothing, drunken wretch," exclaimed a youthful matron as she reached her hand out from under the bed clothes to feel in the cradle if the baby was covered. " Washer masher " murmured her hus- band, rousing from a drunken doze. " Matter enough," she indignantly shrieked. " Wake up and go down ataira and br'mg baby up here this minute." " Did bring him up he'sh in er cradle." " You did no such thing, you drunken brute. You wrapped the turkey I dreaaed for Snnday'a dinner in baby's blankets and rocked it in the cradle for an hour, you wretch, while baby is freezing to death down stairs on the sofa." Epitliet and Application. A certain Dublin jarvey was driving a very stout citizen whose trade was that of a fur- rier and, when he set hini down, his fare offered him only sixpence. "Is that all ye're giving meV' said the jarvey. " Yes," said the furrier " that's your legal fare, my man, and it's all you'll get from me so take it and go." The jarvey, seeing it was hopeless to expect anything more, was de- termind to have it out of him somehow ao, concentrating all the scorn and contempt he could into his voice and facial expression, he said, " Ah, go lang out o' that, ye ould boa-constructor " Used Glasses Both Wajs- " I want to see one of the editors," said a 'ady, coming into the office. " Which one " -inquired the hone re- porter. " "Die one that wears glasses." "On his-noae or Under his nose " " Both, I think," she replied hesitatingly, and was at occe directed by the startied horse reporter to the rel^ous editor's romn. I I â€" i^.^M^â€" iâ€" â€" ^â€" -â€" Ho Snl^tmction in Johnny's Family. Tpafihw jfio. boy whoM father is aa egg- merehant " Johnny, it yeur father iiad one iwwdsed eagi,ail wâ€" ^yof thsro Ksrebad, how mmSmM b»bs« f ai^kmaj " He hadonea to a restaurant-keeper to makeoea- elettesef."