Ontario Reformer, 22 Mar 1872, p. 1

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1871. ROBINSON & Ca, ment pf ry, Dye Stuffs, LE PRICES. ite Hindes Hote", ER, I PAPER. TO INFORM HIS a England, the First Instal- anging, riority of English Paper Tedged. The eng lls combine to estab. ber being the only ient that no other ras. regards ED STOCK OF and Top! Sewing Machine, he cea . r in the county. ite Hindes' Hotel JAMES F. WILLOX & SON gers, &c. MS, AND LIKEWISE n is extended to all to come xt our Establishmen THE » ARTMENT. JR HIRE. made to order rejved Cheap for Cash Blind fLifter, the best E WAREROOM WA. =' CK~- Brita NES TFACTURING ya Cl ' . r . AIOTAA |Z be > Z . J ( A HIAVYH ONLY ABOUT ONE efore only ONE-FOURTH A positive. It has the nn tothe coarsest of work ine SHUTTLE or CK whility and ) WILL Or RIP, into place 'and not achines. It will FRINGE, ILL, GATHER, fachine will do. RESS MAKERS, 'HEAP. ,and stilcheap but you can buy 1 prices. Now N Y ut. should call blishment. cases. ott, Jr. 1- Machine, Superio reulars and Samples o ther Town where or company. J, General -Agent. 16-41 0) Lend RATES. ARED TO LEND on the security of Good Property, at the ates of Interest, t borrowers. Principal nstalments, or in one Debentures, Mortages, CKS BOUGHT AND D. Fi pply to JAMES HOLDEN, otherwise they may not be taken from or - Post Office. y Bis Outaris Belorurs | PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, aM. SIMCOE STREET, OSHAWA, OONTAINS THE LATEST FOR- EIGN and Provincial News; Local Intelli- Sie Sounty Business, Commervial - Matters, oy Misceilan $1.00 per praens ig in advance -$1.50 Fo Whi six months--2.00 if not paid till the f the year. No paper 'discontinued until all YOL. I OSHAWA ON TARIO, FRIDAY, MARQH 29, 1872. 'NO. 50. are paid, except at the option of the sing Janos without . respo! naib for the sub- os until | they od Toupa with the rale. letters addressed to the Editor must be MARKUS MAY E R, BOWMANVILLE, Invites the attention of his friends in Oshawa and vicinity to his enlarged place of Business and his Superior Stock of Goods. His long experience as a PRACTICAL HATTER AND FURRIER! withou posi lirpctions will Pabished tt forbid an raed ps Buy And his strict attention to io has guaranteed him in Enlarging his Stock, and he is now RATES OF ADVERTISING : Six lines and under, first insertion. ¢. Insertion, oF "line, uent insertion, The number of lines to be reckonpd by the space od, aeasnred by ou scale of selid {lhe space soments must be paid for offering GREAT INDUCEMENTS to buyers. His fall purchases have been ary ee ments must in the heavy, and his assortnient of EER fa Hats, Caps, Furs and Buffalo Robes l >. steer en 2 their first publication. -- oi d others idvertising by the year very I ral Scour will be mad Business Bivectory. Ww. Rr. C limie, SSUER OF MARRIAGE LICENSES | "Pr authority of His Exc: « General. Otfice at the "w. ¥omiry, wor. Li. -- BYS{CIAN. SURGEON. ACCOUCHEUR, King Street | oid and Odfice ency the Gover smanoftice. Oshawa, ( 1.4f 1-41. uN Li : Naud LEERY. e over the Gr cerry Messrs. Simpson -» Oshawa. " ARoperations preformed in a skilful manner. | Residénce in the same building. Veterinary Surgery and Drug Store, ENRY'S Oshawa. Horse and Cattle Medicines of a r quality. All drugs warranted pure. A spenser af always on the premises. Pro- --W. G. AURICE, late of Her ery. FAREWELL & MeGEE, ARRISTERS, ATTORNEYS, SO- LICITORS, Conveyancers and Ni hic, Qshawa, South-East Corner of King and += oo. EY to Lend. Mortgages bought and J. E. FAREWELL. @ R. McGEE. ¥ . S. H. COCHRANE, L. L. B., Erie ATTORNEY-at-LAW, citor in Chancery, Not Public, Re Bigelow's New Buil , Dundas Se ¥. 1 JONN McGILL, CENCED AUCTIONEER, OSHA- wa. ~~ All orders left at this Office will be dy attended to. 12 ¥. R. HOOVER, Issuer of Marriage Licenses WHITEVALE, AND | Nearly oppisite Hobbs | S BLOCK, KING STREET, PAPER COLLARS, NECK TIES, GENTS' FURNISHINGS, &cC., Are well Worthy of Inspection. When You Want a Nico Set of Furs for Your Wife or orgie, . CALL AT XM. MAYERS. Furs Altered and Repaired. for Raw Furs. M. MAYER. Bowmanville, Oct. 5, i871. 1371. (26) NEW FALL coons. 187}. "ANE QUFPFLLO i Ek 3 | VE RY» A Most Comprehensive Stock of Staple Dry Goods, ae $50 siiff to sgine one ju JUST TO HAND! Two Cases of Beautiful MANTLES, made expressly for our Fall Trade, | "in Silks, Velvet, Plain - and Satire Cloths, Velveteens; together with an asssortment of very Elegant 'Waterproof Suits. MILLINERY. MILLINERY. The patrons of the Temple of Fashion (who are legion) will be pleased to learn that MRS. REDMAN (late Miss' M. J. Thomas) continues to superintend the Millinery Department, and that great pains have been Uispiayed } in the selection of our Fancy Goods, Ribbons, Flowers, Feathers, mmings, &ec., so as to render this "Eestablishment the Great Fashionable Emporium for all who desire Stylish Goods. E Frome of Fashion, Corner Xing and Simcoe Strects, Oshawa. S. TR EWIN. | face as she stood by the brook-willows 3 oefry. HOPE. Never despair! The darkest cloud That ever loomed will pass away, The longest night wi'l yield to dawn The dawn will kind'e into day. What if around thy lonely bark Break flerce and high the waves of sorrow, Stretch every oar! theig's land ahead! And thou will gain the port to-morrow. When fortune frowns, and summer friends, Like birds that fear a storm, depatt, Some,' if the heart hath tropic warmth, Wiil stay and nestle around thy heart. If thou art poor, no joy is won, No good is gained by sad repining, | Gems buried in the darkened carth, May yet be gathered for the mining. | There is no lot, however sad, There is no roof, however low, | | B uit has some joy to make it glad, OSHAWA LIVERY STABLE, SEPTEMBER 14, 1871. H. THOMAS, PROPRIETOR. -- | "irst Class Horses and Carriages always { WM. DICKIE'S Span CF ALL AN D WI N T E R STOCK Fro TY 7 Deséri MILLINERY! nd Mourning Caps, Fur d Cole W HITBY GENCY. J. H, M CLELLAN, B. SHERIN & Co, \ FHOLESAL a MANUFACTUR ERS plied on best terms, Bowman ile. 3 dent variety, very cheap. Dress a Kid Gloves, Two Buttons, in Black a TAILORING ! a Good Fit | In greai D. HOLLIDAY, * ROOKLIN, ONT., AGENT FOR | the Isolated "Risk Fire Insurance C omipany Canada, Toronto, a purely Canadian Institu- {= Also, for Queen's and fal £2,000,000 cach. Also. dor ihe Ti to, for | - f ding Savings ety, Toronto, for loans of m at low rates of in Intencst, 18-1y DR. CARSON'S MEDICINES. The Greatest Public Bemefit of the Age ND FOR WHICH, NOTICE THE around 3 Sh nad peer qual who testify to rq of his various Compounds, Lug Byrup, Clothing made to wRDER by Firstcclass Workmen, and (Guaranteed. | Overcoats and Pea Jackets, Pants and Vests, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AND PRICE. Fancy Flannel Shirts and Drawers, all Colors. Collars, Ties, Umbrellas, Carpet Bags, Valises, and Trunks, from $1.50 to $16. Hats and Caps Cheaper than Ever. BOOTS AND SHOES f description for Fall and Winter. Overshoes, Rubbers A large assortment of every Cog Pood a Buy the Lockman Sewing Machine and the Self-Baser from Ww. DICKIE. B. Stock's Celebrated Extra Machine 0il 8 NOW USED IN ALL THE PRIN- CIPAL Manufactories and Mills in Oiltarie and is giving entire salisfetion, and all unite there is from 2 to three hun per A bch over all other Oils, and as the quality of this Of 1s is well nown, it nso for me to state the reasons why Jupeiced other Oil, as it is a well known is that it 'will neither gum nor get thick in the coldest weather, TESTIMONIALS: Tux Josern HaLL Macmine Wonks, Oshawa, Ont., April 14, 1870 STOCK, Esq., Brougham, ORO Sir, We have been using your Lubri- cating Oil for the and can say without hesitation, that it is the best oil we wo hay e ever used. Itis cheap, and lasts lc r than any other oil ; we have run our large 14 foot Iron Planer 7 days with one oiling. It keeps the tools We do not' want anything F. W, GLEN, Pres't, 1 will run Stock's Oil gainst an other oil in the Dominion, and I prefer it to either Sperin or Olive oil, or any other used on machinery, A HENDERSON, Foreman Joseph Hall Works, "AUCTION |& AND Commission Business. SUBSCRIBER IN RETURNING | this dd thanks for the many favors be- eRe 5s hw Oe Sours that he is still pre, pared toaiend to Sa Sales Jon Sr teal hd pond 'Ris0 state leased ey, for ihe longing A an A. Farewell il. at Harmoney, MACHINERY]: AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, : SUCH AS THE CLIMAX DOUBLE CYLI NDER THRESHING MACHINE, .d by Macpherson, Glasgow & Co. | ohn the "host Machine ever introduced into | | Ontario, also the LITTLE GIANT THRES SHER Jatest Styles in Whiteol Cid Shirts | SEPARATOR, | for a Farmer's own use, made by Joseph Shar i man, Stratford, als :0 the . . ' - | JOHNSTON SELF-RAKE REAPER, THE BUCKEYE COMBINED, Men's Under-Clothing | {THE OHIO COMBINED W 00D'S SELF-RAKE, [ | THE CAUGA CHIEF JUNIOR MOWER, x THE FAR FAMED PARIS GRAIN DRILL, Pain Reliever, Golden Oistmnent, &o. pis Jove Medicines can be obtained at all 22-3m E------ SPRING STYLES In great profusion at the Dominion Outfitting STORE. Latoet Styles in Hats and Caps. clean and bri ht, better as a In bor, Y ours truly, Latest Styles in Neckties & Collars. | 1 find Stocks Oil to be the best cil I have ever AND | pad in my: Flonring Mill for lubricating pr poses, ns, | | I had used olive previous to Stock', and 1 find { to be the best. Stocks 19. Moses Sari, Dufline Creek, Ont, I would rather tave Stocks Oil than ay ever used in ny ex ce of 20 years. . EORGE. BLAKE, Foreman for Brown & Paterson, \\ [ithy,. Ont. A LARGE STOCK OF | 1 have used Stock' Oil and I'find it to excel used in 40 years all oil Fhave over in Castor and Ove. OF rience, and have da VERY CHEAP. , . BR neiplly ghd 7 ig i awoud, A ergo sudfattzastive stock of Nen'sd Boys' Ready-made CLOTHING. - WUBRELLAS, CARPET-BAGS, SATCHELS OMURET and LACROSSE BELTS, CHEAP at HODDER'S. -@. HODDER, __ &r%ue door North of McLean's Cheap Grocery . Bore, Simcoe Stroet, Oshawa. Apri ®, 19% 21 refer Stock's Oil to il to either 8 , Olive, 'or oils ever used, for e ce shows it, SralonT & § & Sox, Markham, Ont. k's Oil on my my machinery, wich re- Ate se and it thatgive tion, ~ the only J. CHURCHELL, Bangor, Ont. Oshawa, Feb, 7, 1871. og B PEA Ea Ba comes Searerio pa Ee CULTIVATORS, GANG PLOWS, ye AND ALL OTHER PLOWS. CLIFTS PATTNT LOOM MANGLES THAT TOOR THE FIRST PRIZE AT TORONTO, . AND FANNING MILLS, {And a hogt.af other Hn JOHN McDONALD'S TOMB STONES | peciiion AND MARBLE, HAVE AX NEW. ETE EET DAVID BISHOP. - a = than and hw SOLE PROPRIETOR : GEO. B. STOCK, Broveman, Oxr. AGENT FOR THE DOMINION : STOCK & WEBSTER, Box i814, P.GIBBS, Obawa,0Ont | fased all legal help. | o'clock, all the surrounding country had Some latent bliss to soothe its woe. Highest Price Paid | The light of hope will linger near, When wildest beats the heart's emotion ; A talisman when breakers roar, wi LEAT GN, lice 11d and Home. XK VILL '0 H: ink!" shouted Bud from the top the creek be- "be sure to look!'at the Spring-in- esty s 7th Tdi Guards and Horse Artil { Flannels} Blankets, Wi inceys, Dress Goods, Linens, Damasks, arpetings | | rock--1 think he's there." Hy Curtains, Towelings, Hosiery, Gloves, &e., &ec. This hint was not lost on Ralph, who speedily changed his quarters by climbing | up to a secluded, shelf-like ledge above the spring. He was none too soon, for Pete { Jones and Hank Banta were soon looking | all around the spring for him, while he { held a twenty-paund stone over their { heads ready to drop upon them in case they should think of looking on the ledge above. When the crowd were gone Ralph knew that one road was open to him. He could follow down the creek to Clifty, and thence he might escape. But, traveling down to Clifty, he debated whether it was best to escape. To flee was to confess his guilt, to make himself an outlaw, to put an in- surmountable barrier between himself and | Hannah, whose terror-stricken and anxious { haunted him now, and was an involun- | tary witness to her love. Long before he reached Clifty his mind | was made up not to flee another mile. He knocked at the door of Squire Under. | 304 told her that she must not tell her "quire" Underwood wi as, also | suspicions, but facts. wood d had been called away. ' He ®iun Dol ywerless to prevent, ds that you, Mr. Hartsook?" ' Yes, and I want you to arrest ine and which hie-was i Pe | try me here in Chf CHAPTER XXIX. THE TRIAL, THe ** prosecuting attorney" (for =o the State's attorney is called in Indiana) bad been sent for the night before. Ralph re- It was not wise to re- ject counsel, but all his blood was up,and he declared that he would not be cleared by legal quibbles. If his innocence were not made ovident to everybody, he would rather not be acquitted on a preliminary examination. He would go over to the circuit court and have the matter sifted te the bottom. But "he would have been leased had his uncle offered him coun- 2 though he would have declined it.-- He would have felt better to have had a letter from home soméwhat different from the one he received from his Aunt Ma- tilda by the hand of the prosecuting at- torney. It was not very emcouraging or very sympathetic, though it was very char- " Dear Ralph: "" This is what I have always been afraid of. I warned you faithfully the last timo LI saw you. My skirts are clear of your blood: I can not consent for your uncle to appear as your counsel or to go your bail. You know how much it would in= jure him in the county,and he has no right to suffer for your evil acts. © my dear nephew! for the sake of your poor, dead mother ---" We never shall know what the rest of that I¢iter was. Whenever Aunt Matilda got tof Ralph's poor, dead mother, in her conversation, Ralph ran out of the house. alr young man------ And now that his poor, dead mother was aunt's | pious rhetoric, he landed the letter on the hot coals before him, aud watched it van- | 12h bito sraoke again made to do serviee in his yith a grim satisfaction, Ralph was a Liitle afraid of amob. But | Clifty was better than Flat Creek, and Squire Hawkins, with all his faults, loved | justice, and had a profound respect' for the majesty of the law, and a profound respect for his own majesty when sitting as a court representing the law, What ever maneuvers he might resort to in business affairs in order to avoid a conflict with his lawless neighbors, he was cour- ageous end inflexible on the bench. The Squire was the better part of him. With the co-operation of the table, he had organized a posse of men who could = be depended on to enforeo the law against o mob. By the time the trial opened in the large school-house in Clifty at eleven emptied its population into Olifty, and all Flat Creek was on hand ready to testify to something. 'Those who know the least appeared to know the most, | ost, land were prodigal of theirsignificant winks and nods. Mrs, Means had always suspected him.-- She seed some mighty suspicious things about him from the word go. She'd allers had her doubts whether he was jist the thing, and ef her ole man had axed her, liker-n nothe never'd a been hi She'd seed things with her own livin' eyes that beat all she ever seed in all her born days. , And Pete Jones said hé'd allers knowed ther warn't no good in sech a feller.-- Couldn't stay abed when he got there. And Granny Sandeis said, Law's sakes! nobody'd ever a-found him out ef it hadn't been fer her, Didn't she go all over the | neighborhood a-warnin' people? Fer her part, she sced straight through that piece | of goods. He was fond of the gals, too! Nothing was so great a crime in her eyes 1 85% be fond of the gals. cold, and how he rolled off the crate and went on towards home, and how when he got up to the top of Means's hi'l he met Pete Jones and Bill Jones, and a slim sort of a young man, a r'din'; and how he know'd the Joneses by ther hosses,and | some more things of that kyind about "em; but he didn't know the slin young man, tho' he tho't he might tell him of he seed him agin, kaso he was dressed up 0 slick and town-like. But blamed ef he didn't think it hard that a passel of thieves sech as the Joneses should try to put ther mean things on t0 a man like the master, thai was 80 kyind to him and to Shocky, the', fer that matter, blamed ef he didn't think we was all selfish, akordin to his tell -- Had seed somebody that night a crossin' over the blue-grass paster. Didn't know who in thunder 'twas, but it was some: body a makin' straight fer Pete Jones's, The constable paid unwitting tribute tv | - William the Cotyueros by erying Squire (Wg! *O yes! and the Tiderwood, who came in at vith him From the m a iguish plsell, very anxious to * have Squire | with' much Flat Creek influence on his side in politics; | and, consequently, he was very deiermin- | ed to send Ralph Hartsook to State prison, | justly or unjustly, by fair means or foul. To his professional cyes this was not a | question of right and wrong, not a ques- tion of life or death to such a man as Ralph. It was George H. Bronson's op- portunity to distinguish himself. And so, with many knowing and confident nods and hints, and with much deference to the two squires, he opened the case, affecting great indignation at Ralph's wickedness, and uttering Delphic hints about striped pants and shaven head, and the grating of prison-doors at Jeffersonville. '" And, now, if the court please, I am about to call a witness whose testimony is very important indeed. Mrs. Sarah Means will please step forward and be sworn." This Mrs. Means did with alacrity. She had met the prt tor, and imp d him with her dark hints. She wassworn. "" Now, Mrs. Means, have the goodness to tell us what you know of the robbery at thé house of Peter Schroeder, and: the part defendant had in it." '" Well, you see, I allers suspected that " Here Squire Underwood stopped hor, | * Well, it's facts T am a-going to tell." iad indirnantly. "It's facts AL | wa or 10 Hus, * Well, fer ome thing, what kod of gals did he go with? Hey? Why, with my bound gal, Hanrer, a loafin' along through | the ble: -grass paster at ten o'cldck, and | keepin' that gal that's got no protector but {me out that a-way, and destroyin' her character by his company, that amt fer nobody." Here Bronson saw that he had caught a tartar. He said he had no more questions to ask of Mrs. Means, and that, unlezs the defendant wished to cross-question her, she could stand aside. Ralph said he would like to ask her one question. "Did I ever go with your daughter Miranda?" | "No, you didn't," answered the wit- ness, with a tone and a toss of the head that let the cat out, and set the court/room ina giggle. Bronson saw that he was gaining nothing, and now resolved to fol- low the line which Small had indicated. Pete Jones was called, and swore point- blank that he heard Ralph go out of the house soon after he went to bed, and that he heard him return at two in the morn- ing. This testimony was given without hesitation, and made a. great impression agpinst Ralph in the minds of the justices. Mrs, Jones, a poor, brow-beaten woman, came on the stand in a frightened way, and swore to the same lies as hor husband, Ralph cross-questioned her, but her part had been well Joarned. There secmed now little hope for Ralph. Bat just at this moment who should stride into the school-house but Pearson, the one-legged, old soldier basket-maker? He had cropt home the night before, "to see of the ole woman didn't want some- thin'," and hearing of Ralph's arrest, he concluded that the time for him to make '* a forrard movement" had come, and so! he determined to face the foe. } 1 from the ** Looky here, Squar," he said, the perspiration from his brow, . 'looky {here I jest want to say that I can tell as auch abont this case as o : Yoda Fa vas 14, then," said B who thought he would nail Ralph : | certain, So, with many allusions to the time he fit at Lundy's Lane, and some indignant remerks about the peck of thieves that driv him off, and a passing tribute to Miss Martha Hawkins, and sundry other di- gressions, in which he had to be checked, the old man told how he'd drunk whisky at Welch's store that night, and how Welch's whisky was all-fired mean, and how it allers went straight to his head, and how he had got a lestle too much, and how he had felt kyinder gin aout by the, time he got to the blacksmith's shop, an' how he bad laid down to rest, and how as he s'posed the-boys had erated him, and how he thought it war all-fired mean to crate a old soldier what fit the Britishers and lost his leg by one of the blamed crit- ters a punchin' his bagonet through it; and how when he wokedn 'it was all-fired ow for wiping | { hius wife perjure her Aadu't seed nobody olee, his Dr. Small, : Hani was now brought on "the stand Sue was greatly agitated, and answered reluctance. Means's. 'Was eighteen years of age in Mi. pr d by a 'sug. § n that came had overheard when he listened in the barn) asked her if Mr. Hartsook had ever said anything to her about the matter after- wad. After some hesitation, Hannah said that he had said that he crossed the pasture. Of his own accord? No, * she spoke of it first. Had Mr. Hartsook offered any explanations? No, he hadn't. Had he ever paid her any attention after- ward! No. Ralph declined to cross-ques- tion Hannah. | To him she never seemed so fair as when telling the truth so sub- limely. Bronson now informed the court that this little trick of having the old soldier happen in, in the nick of time, wouldn't save the prisoner at the bar from the just punishment which an outraged law visited upon such crimes 1s' his. He regretted that his dutyas a public prosecutor caused it to fall to x to marshal the evidence that was to blight the prospects and blast the character, and annihilate for ever, so bale and promifing a young man, but that the law knew Bo difference. between the educated and the uneducated, and that for his part he thought Hartsook a most dangerous foe to the peace of society. -- The evidence already given fastened sus- picion on him. The prisoner had not yet been able to break its force at all. The prisoner had not even dared to try to ex- plafn the reason for his being out at night to a young lady. He would now conclude by giving the last touch lo the dark evidedCe that wonld sink the once fair | oi Kaiph Hartsook in a hundred | vy. He wuld from what" Smidll had AM ow aE yp adil Jr al Lived abut a hundred yar aa house that was rohbed. He seen ole Pearson and the master and one other feller that he didn't know come away from there togétherabout ong o'clock. He heerd the horses kickin', and went out to the stable to see about them. He seed t#o men come out of Schroeder's back- door and met one man standing st the gate. When they got closter he knowed Pearson by his wooden leg and the mas- ter by his hat. On cross-examination he was a little confused when asked why he hadn't told of it before, but said that he. was afraid to say much, bekase' the folks was a taikin' about-hanging. the master, and he didn't want no lynchin', 3 The prosecution here rested, Bronson maintaining that there. was enough evid- ence to justify Ralph's committal to await trial. But the court thought that as the defendant had no counsel and offered no rebutting testimony, it would be only fair to haar what the prisoner had to. say in his own defense. All this while poor Ralph was looking about the room for Bud. Bud's actions had of late been strangely contradictory. But had he turned coward and deserted his friend? Why else did he avoid the ses- sion of the court] After asking himself such questions as these, Ralph would won- der at his own folly. What could Bud do if he were there/ There was no h Sra -- T1 cam wok grows " Iiyow the men | have to deal with. I srall not escape with State prison. They wil not spare my I'e. But the people of Clifty will che day find out who are the thisves." Ralph then proceeded to tell how he had left Pete Jones's, M~. Jones's bed be- ing uncomfortable; how he had wa'ked throvgh the pastvre ; how he had seen three men on horsebsck; - how he had noticed the sorrel with the white left fore- foot ard white nose; how he had seen Dr. Small ; how, after his recrrn, he had some one enter the house, sad how he had recosrized the horse the next morang. *"" here," said E.'ph despe:- alely, leveliag his finger at Tee, * thee is a men who will yet ses the inside of a peritentia~y. I shal! not live to sect, but the reet of you wl." Pete quai'éed. Ralph's speech could not of course break the force of the testimony against him. -- Dat it had its effect, and it had effect enough to alarm Bronson, who rose and said: Lived at Mr. ! | swer this qnestion traly Ask chat | LE . " | har one question, 1 yo PLE 1 § aking more like a enmmal, COTTAM FY Me ortanl . owe take the direction nm that evening This sho br nght Rabi wonid friendless Hannah Thompson so! | disgrace that belonzed to him. ""T decline to answer," said R: oh, "Of course to criminate himeeM; Yai Bromson sig- nificantly. ! During this last passage Bad had come | in, but, 'o Ralph's disappointment he re¢- mained near the door, talking 'to Walter Johnson, who had come with him. The maglstrates put their heeds togesher to fix the amount of bail, and, as they differed, talked for scme minutes. Small"now fcr the first time thought. best to make a move in his own proper person. He could hard- ly have been afraid of Ralph's fioquittal He may have beon a little axxious at the manner iit which ho hafl been mentioned, and at the significant look of Ralph; and he probably mesnt to excite indignation enough against the school-master to break the force of his speech, and secure the lynching of the prisoner, chiefly by peo- ple outside his gang. He rose, and asked the court in gentlest tones to hear him.-- He had no personal interest in this trial, except his interest in the welfare of his old school-mate, Mr. Hartsook. He was grieved and disappointed to find the evi- dence against him so damaging, and he would not for the world add a feather to it, if it were not that his own name had bacn twice alluded to by the defendant, and by his friend, and perhaps his con- federate, John Pearson. He was prepared Acs for the peoteciion of Proviecs of Ontario Acco Act the lege! Lsreons for wis, Sol a ing the vatious animals ard binds men- tioned therein r+ py follows: . Deer, Moore, Elk, boo, between the first day of and the first day of Decombe September Pe: aidges, between the Int! lr 4 of Sep- tember and the first day of J aad the first day of January. ipe, between the 15th day of A and the 1st day of May. = i Mallard, grey duck, black | duck, weod, or summer duck and ll kinds of seal be- tween the fifteenth day of August and the 1st day of March. Except in the =counties of Essex, Lamb- ton, and Middlesex, no quail shall be tak- en or killed for two years, fra the pass: ing of the Act, No perzon shall have in oy i a ers a or: any portions of them, during the seasons, or periods during which they are protect- ed.. They may be exposed for sale, never- theless, for one month and no longer after such periods, or had in at any time "for family use, but in all the cases the proof of the time of killing or taking shall be upon the party so in| possession. ~Nene of the animals or birds above rientioned shall at any time bo taken by possession "1 should like to askthe prisonerat the | J | person may destroy any such traps. snares, | &eo., which he | erring any haoihity for so doing. 'down To ny: | §oese 0 ttach to | we of the | i | killed 'only between the first day of No- | vember and the first day of , I do not want the prisoner { | season, shall not be less than to swoar that he was' not over in Flat Creek the night of the robbery later than | ten o'clock, and tha twa yarns all 14a Aq 45 whe ther or ma- | + Ve lyin $03 Aw lack of veracity 1a their statements might | be of we ght in determiaing some other points, He therefore suggested--he could | only suggest, as he was not a party to the | case In any way--+that his student, Walier | Johnson, be called to testify as to his-- Dr. Small's+exact whereabou's on the night in question. They were together in his office until two, when ho went *o the tavern and went to bed. Squire Hawkins, Miving adjusted his teeth, his wig, and his glass eye. thanked Dr. Small for a suggestion sa valuable, and thoughs best to put John Pearson un- der arrest bef: ding farther. -- Mr. Pearson was therefore arrested, and was heard to mutter something about a '" passel of thieves," when the court warn- ed him to be quiet. Walter Johnsowr was then called. Bat before giving his testimony, I must crave the reader's patience while I go hack to 'some things which happened nearly a week before, and which will serve tomake it intelligible. | CHAPTER XXX. '" Broraex Soponm." In order to explain Walter Johnson's testimony and his state of mind, I musi carry the reader back nearly a week. The scene was Dr. Bmall's office. Bud and Walter Johnson had been having some ¢ tial ec power that could prevent the victim 'of so vile a conspiracy as this, lodging in that worst of State prisons at Jeffersonville, a place too bad for criminals, But when there was no human power to help, how naturally does the, human mind look for some intervention of God on the side of Right! And Ralph's faith in Providence looked im the directicn of Bud. But since no Bud came, he shut down the valves and rose to his feet, proudly, de- fiantly, ercely calm. "It's no use for | we to sa Peter Jones has sworn to a 1 4 mything leliberate , and he kdowx it. He hasmude poor soul that she dare not cell her own." Here Pete's fists clenched, but Ralph in his present hamor Cid not care for mobs. The spirit of the bull-Gog had complete possession of him. + It is of no use for'me to tell you that Henry Bonta has swora to a Le, partly to revenge himself on me for sundry punish- ments | have given him, 'and partly, per- haps, for meney. The real thieves i" in this court-room. TI could put my finger on them." . "To be sure," responded the old bask-~ et-miaker. Ralph looked at Pete Jones, then at.small. Tha fiercely calm look at- tracted the attention of the people. He knew that this look would probably cost him his life before the next morning. -- Bat he did not care for life, "' The testi- mony of Miss Hannah Thompson is word true. I believe that of Mr. Pear | he shi- L, apd hia fid vation that evening, and Bud had gotten more out of his com- panion than that exquisite bul weak young man had intended. He looked round in ao frightened way. "" You see said Walter, "if Smal! know I had told yott that, T'd get a bullet from somebody. But when you're initiated it will be all right. Sometimes I wish Iwas out of it. But, you know, Small's this kind oj a man, He sees through you.-- He can look throh tH 4 door™ ~and "hére vieg broke down in- to a whisper. Dud was pyrfectly cool,aad doubtless it was the stronr. coolness of Bud urs made Waligr. who shuddered at a shadow, vowe to him for, sympathy andi unbosom himself of one of his gunilly se- crots. é 'Lez go end hear Brother Sodom preach to-night," seid Bud. A '"No, I don't like to." " He don't scare you I" There was just a touch of ridicule in Buds, voice. He knew Walter, and he had "not cognted amiss when he used this little goad to prick a skin so sensitive. " Brother Sod- "om" wes the nickname given by scoffers to the preacher--Mr, whosé manner of preaching had so Bud's com- bativeness, and whose saddle-stirrips Bud had helped to smputate. For reasons of his own, Bud. "thought best to subject young Johnson to the heat of Mr. Sodon's furnace. Tunss two lives will be read with much son {0 bedtne. The rest is false. But fautenk our sany Soadems hile the statements of | | gentle, lines, or other similar contrivances. Any may discover without in- No one shall have in possession the eggs 2 hipds meunonei Av any time. 18. sunken punts or might 1 in the killing] of swans, 2 hg g ly skrat, mink, mfirtin, rac- coon, otter and fisher may be Hunted and Beaver, The fine for killing deer, &c., out of dollars nor more than fifty dollars for| jon ani- xy > 7 For having in possession the birds or - eggs of any of the birds protected at any time, no' less than five dollars | nor more than twenty-five dollars for each bird or egg. ; For killing any of the fur bearing ani- mals out of season, not less than five dol- lars nor more than twenty-five, and a sim* ilar fine for any other breach of the Act In all cases the whole of the fine is to be paid to the prosecutor. b wis A 010 dog -<inte whe taeis long at his whine. WHAT class of men give ane Society} Musicians. Wao are the self possessed people of this world? Old maids. WHEN women are in arms they mover oppose the liberty of the press. | : Way is a sloop emblematic of the past and future! Because it's afore-and-after. No wonder all lawyers are so much alike. They poss their lives in "' follow- ing suit." Graok GREENWOOD acknbwladges that 'man is a grand creatnre, een if he is 'a little stingy abou" tho franch! Horye Toor ITI, why he never when asked } Crngo played at e cpr, re- Amott al a king | from a I CAVGHT her nt; EE arm, wy blue-eyed Kate. She i "Let go you cussed fool, you Ture my | vaccinate!" {plied: "1 A DRUNKEN man, by ieason of the fre quency of his falls on the pavement, may be said to be much giving to saluting flags, A Nzw Yorx justice told a, witness "Young man, if yeu speak in that way again. this court will forget iia dightny 'and punch you in the snoot." Isx'r it a rather disagroeable A when a young man's suspenders give way, while he dances a schottische with witha young lddy who never wants to sit down, A Kaxsas lady went to a theatre and handed the man in the box a fine tooth comb, having mistaken it her ticket, which she left at home, door koeper told her sho could not in, A worms, who had with her little of a what it was sn emiblom of, There was nothing to explain it in the ihsdription. "Mamma," said the little O16 as they moved away, "I should'nt wonder if sho died with the nightmare." 1 Is A NORWEGIAN, 70 yoars old,{living at White Bar lake, a singylar fight with a wolf. fought him first with a club, then with'a - piteh- fork, and finally. got a rope the neck of the beast, drew him to ter's vise, screwed his head into |it and then got a gun and shot him. | | Have you a cough, Cold, Pain in the Chest, or Bronchitis? Th fact, the premonitory symptoms of the *! insat- iate archer," Consumption 1 "If so, know that relief is within yoidrreach in thi shape of Dr. Wistar's Batsam o¥ Win Ci REY, which, in raany cases where hope had lad has snatched the vietim from the y {wing grave, T Taz Intest dodge of a parent 4 yor come his son's aversion to medicige and "doctor" him at the tame lie, occu: red inCleveland, wherea croupy Younger was induced to make quite a hearty of buckwheat cakes and *' maple th but the latter proved to be mice syrup of squills. The boy said he thonght some- thing ailed the molasses the min : father told him to eat all he A sioRy is told of an editor who died, went to Heaven, but was denied tance, lest he should meet some deli sabeeribers, and. engender. ed in that peaceful clime. Having to go somewhere, the editor next in regions of darkness, bat was positi re- fused admittance, as the place was of delinquent subscribers. Wearily tor turned back to the celestial city, and was met by the watchman of the portals, with a sinile,who said : "1 was mistaken, 'you can enter, there is not a delinquent had subscriber in Heayen," pri S| THE GAME TI TR 4 Jie Act introduced Ly Mr. F since of Essex, which is now law, répeals all other enme in the Wild Turkeys, Grouse, | Phase on Woodeock, hetwoen the 10¢ day o day of Juty | = i - , J vrl - wt At CS Lr menns of traps, nets, snares, gins, baited © ni rests FT RE EN

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