HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-01-27, Page 3•74-.
r 7 •
• _ .
: Contecued fromieeond page - aat •
. Of this promised joy, r.I Carey Wrote to.
Itayreond jocaselY, as. Men write te.
a -men, and yet With rapturous _wed;
cornet of this aonaing child Of hie old age ;
-while his- wife Wrote to Mildred- in a
• very different strait, renainding her of a,
certain talk they two had. held. together
while,left alone at Pampas Cottage. -" I
thezerefertecl ungratefully enough to that
prematurely autumnallife of Mineacrowned
thotigh it was with love- add pleaty-; .and
'new kind heaven, rewatding„ as its -manner
is, •ingratitude with.' unlooked-for blessing.
,vouchsafes me spripg-tide. In a few weeks -
hope to be a mother.": So when the
Carey's paid their visit to the Hall at hit
they brought with them an irifaiit sop, who
here .the name.of his father's friend and
hest. The:next- year they came again, and
every •year, and: More Than. • Once the
'Clyffards returned their -*fay, but not to
lencay Bay., ••• -
Bernd:taw or other the: lieutenant's
'merits - did get .• acknowledged at
las* and although .he • never get
-
a . ship ' which would have 'aeparated hita
from MS darling child, oat of whose' sight
the affectionate old fellow could scarcely
beer to be, he get promotion and hacrease
-bf ip.concre, euelz-as. Anabled hint to meet his
- growing eheages; and. even tea put by for
• little Ray._ • -; • •
" Lkhow how it all cornea" whisifered
• Mrs.. Carey, With eyes that swain in tear!,
to her beloved frieudaes true- in. .he-r-proe-
Perity as in her days of bitter trial; ." I
• know who jogs the elbows of these gentle-
men in office-. Weight have- waited: long
-
enough for this, but far your husband's
- influence."
a -Bat not - one word!? cried afileired,
sealing hr quivering lips with a dainty
finger; ‘4- If. . aou (aye him ,any
thanks he is best paid . by silence.
Let the lieutenant eredit these people
with it all ; it is always good to thinkwell
of those -ave serve.. To hear at sailor praise
the sea powers That be is rare indeed -and
• By the Lord- Harry,* too No, not-
one -word, dear Marion, if you love Us:'.SO time drew ore touching with reel
and tender tintsthe natures of 'Re:yin
' ahd- of Mildred, bat leaving the cor
youth untouched. As theugh to make
; • for this stormy spring time, the.summe
their lives was weianigh cloudless. :Peril
in the- wife's- seeret heart there may h
• lurkeda desire fox a son, whose
,shoilla have boree.witnessegainst evittr
tioa, and rescued his family lame fr
• superstitious' • slur.-- But this wesnoe to
. -What could. be .doite to chase- away
• shadawafebin-Olaffe awl, ho_weveriwaad
• _ , . and that effectually. - It -was- sa given
hospitality that the :you: mot of an app
• time, the , origin ' of which- cold net
• clearly traced to supper, :would have be
_scouted. At Christmas time inazartidul
• there. reallywas no accomMOdatian- fe
ghost;*the rooms were full. : Mena'
.
glorious game_ off a -Hide and Seek"' h
Milly and Ray Ceuta, with a. host of liep
romping baya and misses, in the on
shunned secret chamber- of the Hall, .wh
tixti. echoes.of their childish laughter fill
• "the.glooncy eorriclors a often . on the- wa
. of the long gallery the frowning Clyffar
were made unwilling 'witnesses. of "Th
the -Hare " and "Blind Aran's: Buff." T
roost favorite place to hide in Wits . I thin
that very ehareber within the chimney -
f . •
the BlneRoorea_Where Grace Olyffard-ha
concealed herself (for it had an eat -ran
. from a without) • and caused- her- broth
Clement to- pass so= uncomfortable ti nigh
•. AS Mil:1y grew up there walf of eour
. festivities. of •another kind, of whioh' ft
• old playmate was.noless. constantly a pa
• taker-" Ray " -,ettIlato - her,: although :
• the World., espeeiitily to the Admirzaty (wh
,kept their eye Upon him, by the Lor
Harry, as they had donenoon his. father
--• he was Lieutenant Rayne:as:I Careyak. N
a very rising young offtcer, whobad, bee
mentioned nedeepatelies , At last the da
arrived -when playmate...and lover led ap-a-
ae- leaf and blossom to f ruit --to ' linSban
-There vete Many, • (if course. to call th
• matoh uneqatel-; same even to. day thataft
all there must be somethiug wroeg in th
Clyffard: blood which led them to all
• , themselves so- strangely. • But sinve ..Mis
Mildred haddecided thus for: herself ; an
since the ' marriage in queetiou had bee
. the •most ' cherished wish of. he
parent? ' hearts for years; . and sine
" the- , ecruplezi of • Abe - bridegroom'
father • (who, was, -however, graft
and obstinate against it. anuCh beyou
: 'hat had been looked. for) were finall
: Vercercie-perhaps, after all the allianc
Ilea not so monstrous and deplorable. f A
• 1 events, it took place„and none_ spire o
those I have understood' who had spoke
• ageapetat. with the greateetareprobation
declined to accept_ the auviatieuathat-wer
"lista for the ball, .
If any gloom still clung to the -family
. ,..
mansion of the Clyffards, ther last shade°
it must havebeen expelled upen that pees --
Stem. %It was observed .by one. old country
fogey (who. made- a reputation out of the
•, remark for the eveuing) that aight- bail
not so been turned into day . ince Rupert
Clyilard's time ; and it was certainty a
-Moat brilliaueand joyous. gathering- The
ancient lieatenant and hie:etill eorciery
'wife,- in spite of the " seheming ". with
Whichathey Were credited, by the greet
folk- who hadmarriageable. seams,. wen all
, a. , , ,
' hearts-. . - .
I Ere thebide hal aepaifea, that:Marriing
fate had embraced the& both With, an affec-
a
tion Eicarce1y. lee& than that , she exhibited
for her ovriaheloved parents. "Look -here,
god-papste",Slieseid, pointing to the bridal
veil, WhiehWas indeed-e-Marecle of bemity;
• and weirtbiez.•„of the fait face it covered.
•"Thieirliresent, eetit-frein. whence do
4
you th'a Now guess. NO, not- aloud;
low,
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ave
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His* Parady of Brutus!' Lainentation Over
Caesar's Body.
, .•.
BELIEk HE WILL BE ACQIII_TTED„
. . ,
WAsnikerox, Jam 171. --Predictions are
freely Made that if the 4.nrylloes not.agree
in the :Opt hour it will never. agree. The
opinion. is said to be growing in Washing-
ton that • Guiteau is- in ane. There ie. an.
,
inigression that justie 'COX believes Gui-
team is insane. " • : •
A distinguished -Isleie England lawyer
his -given, the Opinion, 'feebly as in'areme
respects' it has been mede out, that Guiteau
belongs t� a. class. of criMinals whom-, when
a plea of insanity has „.lieen Set bp, • furies
have - not found- guilty, and have
-confihed as lanatiaaa This is the
-view taken quite • laagelY by laWyers.
• and persoas who vie. -3 as an .ordinary
case.' Lawyers andVethers specially
interested in behalf of tm criminal express
aonsiderable confidericealhat the jury will.
not conviCt. Peewits wieilieve studied the
jurors tend towards thit opinion that a
verdictof twee rendered by
thiejury. : -• . •
• Guiteau-, in the aaldress. t� the jury
_which he has supplied forpgblicatioai says
friend sent him the-followieg adaptation
of the lamentation of Brutus over Cassar :
Ftiends, coantryinezr and lovers! ' :Hear -
me for -my cease and be silent `that you
May hear. RelieVe-- me - for mine honor,
and have respect:to mine; honer that yell
may believe. Censure me inyeur wisdom,
-.ancl make 'year sense:3 that you may the
bettetaudg-e. If there -be in this assembly'
-any dear - friend :of Qariaeld'ea to
him, I . say that Guitean's love
to 'Garfield • was net „less than his.
-If; then, that friend demand why Guiteau
removed Garfield -this is Guiteau's answer
Not that Guiteau loved Garfield less, but
he loved. his country more:- Hid you
rather that Garfield was living and die in
Far than that Garfield Was dead tee live in
peiace.? AeGarfieldloved Guiteau, Guiteau
Weeps for him': - as he_ was , fortunate,
G-niteau rejoices Wit ; be -was a good -
man, Guiteati- honors hiin. But by th-e
DeitY's inspiration Guiteau reinoved Gar-
field for the good of hiscotintry.".-
WasniaaTON, extraor-
' dinary speech yesterday washeard With general
-surprise. -Reed and Dr. AicFarland plainly
*slio-wed dissatisfaction with Reed .afterward
said hedid not:agree with As Guitean Passed
out fornoon recesslie said NOth a. laugh to
"I'm glad he gaye those felle-srS tap. Perhaps
it will make them show wlwre they stand."' It
was the general. feeling- in itkurt-that.Sboville
hadput powerfutz Weapeil. -in Vie hands of
'Porter, which he will not to bile whep._ he
closes the case. - •
-•
Xesterday Scoville's< speechta nzutinly devote&
taan attack on Grant,Arthuikild Conkiing.- He,
said they are morally responWl4le for Guitesn's
crime, and that he Was not *Ming the assassin
shOuid be made the -soap -ego* The Stalwarts,
_ja9 added,wereinfluencing thettial because they
wanted to make the . prisonfl out; iniene to
escaperesponsibilityt '-
Scoville at recesswas stilfoitnid by ladies and -
gentlemen; and congratulated upon his fearless
exposition. One gentle:roan exclaimed, " That's
the correct sentindent„ and four-fifths of the,
-American people are behind you on that." -
• Scoville reoeived a telegram 'statitig that the.
New York Court of Appeals' had just 'decided
that the. prosecution, -where some evidence of
insanity 26 Produced for the defence, must mike
out a ease of sanity beyond reasonable . doubt.
.The defence will call atteatiou to • this decision
and -ask COX to charge .the jury to that 'effect.
THE "
• a -
muet sper it in your -ear. It came last
franiasonce old friends of' papa and
niamma7-24 Sandby."".
"At. Sendby !".cried. the old gentleman,
tbrowiiig,up his haiids. n hor-ror:„ Your
parents-,: my dear, kept very . bad company
-in those parts." -Ire took the delicate
fabric between his fingers- and thumb, and
ruefully delivered himself of this eninion:
" Smuggled, by theLordHarry,arauggled!"
TUE earia
The following exhibitions -and bursaries
are offered by Mr. George. Munro, the.New
. York pitblisher„ .to Dalhousie College,. in
• addition to those already given by him: • In
October? 1882; five - junior exhibitions mid
tea junior -bursaries; inOctobr, I884, five
senior exhibitions aiad tenrseaior bursaries:
_
These exhibitions and buttaries are cif the
:game -nature as thoie of last year. '
Doing* or she)TertOrhit Pi:Arty-The Great-
_
•
, Trial: , .<
- A St. Petersburg despatch :says: Shia°
that arrest at the bridge of Gatchipa on the
2nd of Sanuttry thirty-seven' pereone have
been Captured. Di. Kronek, alias Mart, as -
I tom, you, was taken at his home in the
Madege street, where & trep had been had,
and where en individual who came
with lafs wife- made such a resiata,nce that
be could . only be arrested after `being
wounded- by aball from arevolver. 'After
his death it Was discovered t at he was au
officer of-artilIerv. On the eine _day four
other persons - of the T' rrearist ' Party
were 'arrested at Va,siIioe of, and the
previous evening - eixteen . pereonsa four
of whoni . were womota Were captured
- in a re -union held round a,:OliriStruas tree
covered. ivith:-: seditious. • eatblems. ' • The
Chief of Police, to whom 4n. these arrests
were due, was peorricited stiedessively to the
.rankot Ceptain, thentothat Of major, and
is the- Offidial'.Who arresteit:,.- the 'woman
Lebedoff, oneof the mine:104 accused. it
the great -Nihilist trial: whits* is . semi - to
come off.' TherSernekoWsktgial will corn --
thence to -day (Monday) add [will probably
be finished before night. • kis said that
. General Ignatieff, who is 4cie: powerful
than ever. - with the - pipe -or, will be.
-limited Vice---- ringe -Geri-841e.
koff, -who..rie.retired--- from ectFve•- duty,.
Still ritainipg the nominal.- title of Chan-
cellor,:, , • .
,
Actident in the Hinitink Field.
• .
An unusual -number cif accidents have re-
cently occurred in the hunting fieldin Eng-
land. Lord -ola-n Manners fell .from his
horse while - hunting with:- the Belvoir
hounds, sprained his wrist seriously, and
slightly4njured -his:neck. • Rev. T. Heath.
cote, whiIefollovering the Duke of Rutland%
hounds,. came to • an niusUally foul fence,
his horse at thesame tithe slipping into 'a
ditch and pitchinghim.oer-0 fence' into
an adjoining field. Frora the severe shook
Which Kr. Heathcote received: his limbs'
beeame.paralyaed, and he.remains in a pre-
carious. condition. While Lord -Grey de.
Wilton was out with his hounds ie horse
suddenly threw up its head-, Striking him
On the eye- with great violence.. Mr: Briggs,
Who -for the last seven years leis -hada large
And of hunter's at Whitchnrch, sustained
a g ° fracture: of the collar bane by being
thrown froth his borse while -bunting with
the Cheshire hounds at Tattehhall:
At the recent-deinonstrationatAtearidale
'/Ir.7Parnellaeresidence in 11,(7oklow, there
,were 60Q carts engaged ixy:earting- the
manure and and 183 ploughs in. oaeratiOn, : The
i
pea were decorated . With [Wean ribbons
and. thelorseiwith green b 'Alm. Toward
-the clese a dung cart was • aded, from
which roles the effigy ,Of " Tihti Last Land,
lord "-throughWhroli'wae-dtjtven .e. large
fourprcinged forkaateid great ,iatlitisiaairtc.-
: ',Extract from a. young WY's. letter
"And, do you know, Maud -.and I are quite
:sure Capt. Popple .- had . take ii% too much
champagne 'at -the' ball, for he took- out his
watch and looked hOtd. at the: back Of it,
end -then ratittered,I. ' Mesh thy -soul!' I
,hedn't any idea it Wei Una tinie-o'-night.'
. • .0, fAl7;..
. -
HURD.
. .
..Tee anhoziimin-alleunraerellt Fallen :"Woicitan
A Mentreal•deeetiteb of yesterday says
that a MnaderHivalLoutaais-an adage often
'qUoted, striatly speaking, -- not
correctly applied to every case, yet it tarns
out to be true often enough to -startle :the
guilty etergiVe a-feelipg Of 'greater security
to innocenterlaw-abiding people: Such -a
ease has -just come to light and a oases aof
murder of a revelting-clesorintionit
The :stery. is that :_et a. wornan called
"Yankee- Enama,"-. :She .caft----m---i• frontIthe
United States :--tirneT-in----_18.71,_azid
drifted into .a_Very Unatateinaimanneraat
life, untiLatleegth she becaine a cm-litezen-
Well known to the. pelice authoritieSHer real
name was Emma .11amilton and-r--thvAigo
bore an alias. of Marphy,-haviag _been, it
Was said, one tithe' married tree man of
that name: She wait tall, finely fornted in
figure, dark-ale:had andpretty.-Traces of
these Were "even. when debaUeliety.
had reduced her to a, less than humen
tion.One morning in July, 184O, she itag-
gered into the -petit-41_ Police Station _a_
terrible plight. bicen7-__beatenT:and
kiekedend piiMmelledwithfistaiiiitither:
head was ,:almost----unrecognisehleZI`z--She
bane:drat-014's Rake to be
allowed to sit
•doWn and rest. Her hair wag °Rifted with:
blood; her Clothe* awerezevered with it,
and a inore-- pitiable spectacle never pie-
,
-sented itielf, 'even to the *eke sergeiiita-a.-
• "Who has done this you_r. asked
sergeant: _ -
" Ivizat drunk. andwithsome one. I do
not know their pain -es-," was her reply.
"The lieepiteLls.the-Tileeliafi..f.Ciaiiel
think," said the sergeant.
:He :then _sent her - wok to be Medically
treated. The time for that hed-gene by,
however,_and upon reaching -the: hoePital-
-theaverzan sunk into inseiceibility and died.
in some hours. All that could be :learned
from her at the time Was thet'aeletahad,
fallen from a hayoait.-_Thisa storyshestuck to.; Meantime policia-roadaeata
search for her merderers„-b,elievingthe case
to have been one, of foul play. A giri, who
had been &companion, knew tannethingaot
the affair; but could-notbenaade to meek
as her man Was toneernedin it: The man
havingnow died ,-sheacoMeSaftleayead-and
fella that one eveninginJuly,.-.18K_Bn-iiita-
Hamiltop, with several other girls, was
carousing in _a -Colborne :a-fenue- house.
.Sohie .objeetionable -roughs were present
•and.Emma ordered -.them away,":aShe-wesi
thereupOn,--attaekeia_hy-.-the--ruffianti„_:_and
was Isioked-and-beaten by thein sense-
less and bleeding..- She fell tothe-graiintla
to all appearaiicesi:dead,T.:-Slie±leythere
until the -fifiernang, _when • she teenaged to
be taken tothepalice: officey:_etaggered.:in
and laid her story -before- the '61fideree-h-i
given above. " A.man 'named LiVernOis was
arrested last night, and two ether of the
aitsaihuits-are in the St. Yineent de Peale
Penitentiary serving a term! They be
at encesquestioned.
- .
AXE AND -SCYTHE
• -
-
The Wenpone u-
Choose5-t0 Expedite*i* kids from this
_ _ •
-
• -A Newcastle (1s.T,B.) deepetchsays_IN.eWii-
haebeen. received hereof -the death -1_7.-14
suicide of 'Wiliam Garvey; -atEl3-611e4ine;;
Gloucester -Couety. The effaai. took:gide :a
on. Fridayaand:judginaarafteitathernander-
ie which -it was donea--theanzan-matet have --
been insane. He first -attempted to-Ci.t•Ide -
throat with an ate at i pile of wood • near.
the house,- and _failing in-±-thataway_ ._to ras.
accomplish- designs,-be-weiatato _the
barn, and in the buy loft, -by rneene of .7.a- ;-
scythe; made a frightfui. gash fropi ear :to
gullet, which speedily _terminated his • •'`
.life. His wife -missed him from:the hoiie, -w-
and: -gOing out in -search found the ghestly. -13
corpse of her husband ebotiten-lhohrefter
the deed had -been -donee'aTheunfortunate
Man leavesseveral sml-;
- : 'a
Hots. Mid' Thimiblie.:
IliiR1NE D1SrEJ1SS
;
Destructive Time on eWifosindhini
• Coast -Great
tiliatiering. of the Ct•e
-Record.
• -
StaP101ilititint4
.: A' despatch from. St .1. , . Nfld., 644, :
An express messenger ha rived from Old
Peliettic With. intermatio to -the precise
fate -Of the steamship :Li�l.- The' ortiVie of
eoriiii of the fishing; b�atsiicovered:her on
het beam bads onth_e he: . ' at a depth Of
.h*ty.;five to forty a fit ohne - her .hall
S,PParently - intact, but 0- steamer. Must
have -torn her manCkeel keit en the -reef
-near Which she liee; and en plunged head
foremost to -the bottom-. Inc Lion now
-lies-Oat 200 feet bele* liigh. water . mark,
outside -Puffin. Nand: Reld, neer Racalien
Iiilinkancl not More-tlizifl -e quarter of a
inile.fraria the : mail' 'More f of -the island. -
Slid furnishes a tomb - tat.. at least 'fifty.
hunien beings, . : •-.1 - ..• ; . • ,
'' ii
,1
• .The brigantine- Otilten 1,11as- arrived at-
Aiarber Gracefrom lariet A aftea a etortny
Arciye,ge of -forty dais. In haithde 48:degrees
30mitutes north, longitkI20 degre,es 2
:rminntes Week'sbe . An int441argepack_Of
wreckage consisting ofai ft yardsarial-'
z' paecesa billwarke and . °thee '- ortions Of -a
•iihip!e hull end : !leek &err TWo hundred:
"Stnilealurtizei west - she paett -through -a
a • .
-literal sea of snips' wreckalso alarge
quantity of planks, boards, tls and s4.110,re
deals all fresh: :and app tly- rebeetly.
launched -into the water. • ' ' andlee from -
the -east coast of:Newfouri _. _ the 011494
repeated the ettilke exterieijerapaseipg .dute
--ilia the Whole • day througlt ituantitiee• air
driftwOOd-tted-generel :wreF,k,age. -, . : - '
--Nide Vessels are so long 'Vat due at this
Tort that no. hope.- is entet ained of their
Sttfol4,- • Half pay to •saileit' ', al, endless has
,
been stopped, and they -a; 'planed in the
_cetalogue- of lost- ehipping, .lttie feared 'the
Atlantic wreckage just -r ltedhaa been
-
largely reinforced from the eoarcee.. • a a
:., The steamer Merlin haa' Waived., .eftee
encountering 'S.terrific s th. erly gale' on
_Saturaday eight twelve Mile eff St: „John's'.
-Nith-:_great ' . difficulty :- •the Steanier , kept
'Moat. ---4:t one time her air Was . coin!
,pletely submerged, -- and wl4i: she rase the
jibboona and jib were - cori 4,1,.mvay.-_ The and., everything 'rad able on deck.,
were awept -roverbeeidT1 deck opened
forward -in- .'pla,cesato the -6ateat of two
."._,
inches, and h/fd not :the:ces tain • reselVed,
to riskail on -the run l -
r rt. ,Toln'eehe
tenst a
have -Leith-dared.-. - here was" -a
furious5gale 'Of Wind- from the . southward
on---Saturday-night, tfaiewed by a, strong
-westerly': 0,10,, Aoa- . iotootio -i frost, _tke
.,enaereara felling Ida -below. zeinl'and;lo w-bero-
Meter; the reedilag of which Wee 28 15. On
Saturday morning the naptaili-efthe Merlin;
a large vessel -under aftili-. sea-- tan-
ning in T -the amidst of art Shew .storm
right square on land. ' Tab 4th:sr-atmos-
phere cleared up for a few . Merits thee
was no sign whatevezireit the. easel. a Right
ahead at the time ley :Ore -Wand,- the
.scene - Of. the Flaviitil: ete glcia wreck
deetAtignst. It is so& Ithe. vessel
Alluded-. to struek • this - •_peri aeef - and
Senkaminedietely, 'for tar 1 Atio:-ptesote
ttioto-ifilno trace of •h-etaGr zaand iii
morethanthirty : inflei Zia froin'
. . ..
St ,Johpa, while the Wind b. . e.en.favor.,
,.
tom. that-
.
ble since Saturelay to .co
uarter. . • . r. - ,
-LOrmoN, Jan. 17.. -The b&jiz Capteraa
roin Quebec for Newcastle, 1I een- eban.
ane_d. Fourteen of the ere 've landed
ie-thedoe,st of Norway. _ ., :--
rcat Deinand'for • Corn ,C or Pipes
. • . .
_0iib-WOUld hardly think t herecoula
0: zaa-coineia in porn. aolie 4t there
There eergea in : nor' ` obe_eorne!,
here," said e.Wholesale dea in tobaccO
ipais,---ajor the aeneapds of initaltprern
1•00Tneob-pipes cannot be t,.• even at
daze:teed pticee. There ha fzever been
liCh a scarcity in the supply he
oa_Seena to he In greater and than
_ever._ Many riaeh tun& any Other
kind. 1 know one rich' social': manwho
would . be in = diegreee it '71:1Ba was ',Seen
in .pubhc widh acorn cob izpein ra his
inotith„ but- who keeps his pipe in his bed
reein, endhaejt quiet sinekebefore he pea
to bed -•Theaaart wboinventetthe aieceesi
,or hardening a corn cob has -heconceinde
'pendently rich. Same cob pipes are costly
beca-useTat the silver Menntings„but the
pipe sells -for- five cent a is the Most'
popular Smokers say. 'that ta.- cern cob
pipe is sweeter than any otheaa Southern
negroes, who knew -What is: ad, from a
beeceke taa 'possum, woUldn 've - a cob
_pipe -Tor the • finest meersoh1n4i if they
ccaildn't act nother 1 sUpp the short:
corn crop had had something I a wit the
afcareita.- r The cabs of a''Paor o ae net
fit to mike pipes out of.' -
-
• N.o-man can, liketheaWeriteri'liVe
years without often 'wishing he -had -learned
to us -ea: sewing
-thimble well, in_ his early.
boyhood, eepecially if he. has gode about-
th0. world mudh. Buttons 'wilt come off,
stitches will:break, and haw handy, it is_for.
boysat school; -for men at a ...hotel, etas -
friend's house, indeed,: anywhere -I. -away
from honae-a-eften at -home -to be able --to
Whip on a button, etaip a starting yenta and
do many -other little eeWings withont calling
on a woman, or -perchance sendingfora
-tailor, • before ;lasing awe tte eppearaat-a
hotel table. One seldoee; if ever,leariato-
use re, thimble if thispert of-hisaedacatien-
-has. 'been. negleeted in 'encall boyhood. The
writer lies travelled -a -goo dadealratic daataa
rough guess be his broken threads at least:
500 times in --at:tetr_iptirog -tee worket-neeidle
through a button er_-_-igarinentil-witliout .-atbimble-
. Boys, take our adeldeaaandieverat.
one of you - learn- :to use- a thimble -Well'
before you grew up. _ De__Lit-thia_ferY-Win=-
ter ;- itis not feminine to do Se. Doit,, aud-
it: you live long you-willmany times. -thank
us for this advice.1.- -
•
Ma. Gninsroiri-on-Deceinlier 29,02, earn=
plete.d the yeatatif ,biS age, having
beea born at Liverpobla. on-the---29-t1-.aof
becemlieralea9.- Having-Tbeen-elected_.:0
P:arliaanent Tfor-.Newarkaonathe----Iatha Of_
December, 1832, he has 'entered- npaael the
fiftieth year Of thisa. life. .•
OtTthe-
members of the Cabinet of_EsalaGrey,their,
effice, not one -elfraiyeza :IL -Of -the._ 658-
men:Iberia of _the, Kist RefOrtned Palliameiat--
to-Whoza the speech„of King- Williane-Was
addressed.- on -the -5th- ifTebruerfa-I833,---
the Prune Minister as__ the only*--eice---Whee
With a: seat in that.'essenibly-ndiv--,--then
began hiepohtical:Career.: -----There are in
the present _HOUse 'Amity tvio-reptese-ntativea
Who were in the unreformed Parliament=
PO...Christopher. Talbot, who: has -sateen.
tinumisly for -Glancorgetuibirerasinte-1800„
end' The O'Gorman _Mahotiafirstaeleetea
for Clare in.1830abat fahowaservice2ha,5A0t
beeta unbroken.- - -a —
.- It -has. been arranged thate_SiraAlexa,W
•.Galt,,, High certunisiiini---ter for Canada,ii to
be presentW4en the negotiationsfora:com-
inerciel treaty betWeen Englandend-Frattice_
are resumed in-Pa-4SL There -are -matters
:eanneeted With tatieltattreattywlitaliadireralae
affecttbe DomMn'tif -Canada, and it. Will
-
he Sir Alealenderaeautaato7,.watch .'oveicartied-
defend Canadian---intereste," •-•
-411.-.Fartit9lair Pers.
-------A-coreespandent vouches for.thj follow,
ing:aList Of:iiiiiiitioneatatked,'-' terday.14'.
a young lady trona. the bonze* wanted,
"a situatiou 58 servant in a:nt teak place
ae-`LEaW many are therejn. 'fanaily?"
: Leathe:'-hogse large aaaaaas ie ivaahi4g,
'Ilene in the house?" "Are t'
'large?" "At What hotattaloy -have your
your
Whatde yOu 41040 for:
yogrmeals?" "" Do you - haye linnets
cooked on Sundays?" "What Paddle& 46',
you have ou Sundays?" ".Doefa4his servant -
go•to- church on Sunday-Womb-51er' "Can -
'she have every Stindayeveningb herself?"
"How many Many evenings during thb 'week cab
_shehave?' strange -to saga eheneeer.
asked- if tbe-firaily*is respeet4le, nor, as
another seryant. asked; - if .,ttaitae was te
aaiiihera.:----or: wringer,- Or -a -.bay: in the
•
vitti3 "eneef4enntritab1e
hn
h
SetivityLin te ship-ilding ifidustry- of
. - . . . .
:the. Clyde:: --NO fewer,: .than, -131 :vessels-,
wiath an aggregatenteastrebeetit.of 341,02-
-
Winched.- '" In -1880, which -
'ilia -wed, thelatgeet_total of itaya eel, except
1.1814e -the tonnage reached: 2480&
avithstanding this large outpu theprospecteaare of the brightest des- 'tion, - as it
18 Understood that T-fihiplinild S -":have .
larger number of contractson,'ad:than
they.. had---. at the -beginning o An
unprecedentedly large '1--lbUtu of the
-vesselsAaunehed: during the: were:
--bailta4Steel. •
----a_a_aaa-Parlianient eamild really ss that
1.3illaapermitting Marriage Wit
The project of &-Weirld'S-falfiii---Bostein- Sistea. -No manawantateare than
'deceased
bas beenabandoned. Talk was plenty and one motheiain-law - in a life ti Good
-
money scarce . _
= • old proverb, tnit andcome&gala
•
• .
TENDAIFie
!
_ . . . . Horrible DestituEon Tin -111onikeill• -
. ,
7 4.-bailiff,named:Penia.Gorman was sent ,
yesterday -morning to eject -A wOmannamed :
grintia blerion • and her daughter from 77
• Ste, .Doniinique - street, *entree': ., . He
describes his visit thua': "The room, or
rather. cellar, which the two- Woncep were •'.,;.a.,
lithalcitieg was scarcelyhigh enough for an
ordinary- man:to stand niin,.--. and - being
-long ahd wide leat it -an .additional chilly --
l
appearence... In addition ' he -place was -
dancti, ..aad - the ;:wihdoWs- so - improperly -
fastened -that drifts of .snow -. _ were actually
visible throagh. the cracks , :On entering ...
,Savy the inmates aroaching . a - far corium-. -
Oa-the:room; but partly covered by a- few
rags. One of the women -twat-Old, yellow , . .
:end shiiVelledeethin:thet leer sharp, tate.
elbows - seethed: actually • Opthteatet ta .
euta through :the" skin, -Her hair was ..'..
of the hue of . the purist white,- and hung- -
dishevelled :upon her shaip ishoaldere; her :
clothing was herdly.sulfibielt to cover her ,.
takedeeee„ . As :I approached, horrified et • . - -
, .
the scene of misery and poverty before. nie,
the Woman seemedta elitinlil back in abject ,
-terror. Beside- her ber sat : another womam -.
probably 35 years of.. age 1 also 'ecentily,. .
-clothed, 71.;J:pon- her 'Audited pountenance ,
was every indication of t e 'misery and
. ,:, I.
dwithtehur-
privations through whioh--sli - had lateeed.i-
SheiliqUired what I--wented butI scarcely.-.:
lipid the, heart to tell her,
amid: clause for My.presence " I drOpped-S:-.
Coin, -and inimediatelyproceeded t� apprise -
theenthorities of the sight aiiticessed. The...-
. *:' .
1213
charitable institutions,. the . landlord -Said, . •
refusedto-aid the 'woittaii And it was to - -'
-hole the authorities, notie there that litk -
hadtokenthe extreme mea tires -fat ejecta
MontThe 0588 18 beinglooked into.;
• . . : atossaReencaweilitianie-1*red.,-
- The. Provencal.Wonigh tte- the stateliest, •
sitrOat queenlikespeciteeiat Of their sex that •
I hive -ever seen. Tall, wellk
- ormestrong- :•
. _ .
:with piercing bleak- eyes an4 bronzed faces, -
they Charm the eye .and;atta k the heert-of:.-
theloyerof the- beattitala The is -ever, :
tee,- aa smile apaa their: lips, a reflection of ,
. .
theasan s- rays from their -pretty face -its'
they chatter in their "rich-. old Provencal - -
dialect . In any other coun ry but Fre:nee ...
' ot .-
1,
these floes would phOtegra i1 :theMSelVeS . _
liPcill the -.hearts of- -Mena and Tense . a : -
passion which only its returwcould soothe
Men would loye,live, fight, Or die fthe. .
,
women of Provence -at lei t .ii•glialirnen .
' is,' '. .
would -a- but such things - : ral tniknewli" -
in:Prance, I. do .not say- tiknoWn ' Ilea°
only, but unknown inFrancThe Farit - ,-
exqiiieite:mAyAffoot a tastain women as he
does'ateste in horses. .Helay even spend -
his time and money in _thee pursuit, but ...
.a,sa, nation, and with but rare -eXpeptioni, , ..
the leve of Woman as-TWercan doesnotexist 7 -'
18everythingexcept his hear az love, .: She
bilirande. To the•Frenchinitn- the Wm -Man - •
is his 1:futifiess-partner ; in 1a9t, thenaahag, -
jeg.pattfier of the busihess. -, . Idle The - lives: -,
in his . este. . --In the oounhlry she is his
laboring man, his pursekeeper; hi&eaviser,
often his Master: :To tbe-prOssiOnal map
elm: it the. :mother of. 'hit -ehildren;: the- •
bringer of -a. :certain- ot- tit the family -
store. .In a politics: she . i f thecentiee
around avhica - men _emigre ate.- In- aelia ,
gien the , deputy atdtepi sentatife ef.
all mankind at chureh, But in the -.
'heart of it Frenchman she hai no placeend
no home:- What 1..eaygener lly of:France,
kra4.-..Particulettly -Of this . "lace and all -..-..
*natty -pleceSaapearaiagess .axe Made 'as a
,bneinees- partnerships are.neede; witliae due . .-
aegetrI. to business - arrangernents on all
sides, and %althea any - refer: nee ':Whataa-.
'- , ' r-.; :
ever to the impulses of the h?art - Only
fewdayS Ago one of •our .haad omest young
tellOWeaave up Oneof aurettiest-girls,
-
ard'eash to be handed- Over Ile han on the.
whose parents tierichataicau e -tilt' auth ef
h . -
day :of , Marriage Was not eqaal to: hie .' -
. - 11. - -I k.-
derailn-de; s ..-Ile Will now,- of course, look -
--
out for encther ,Wife, as he .• -thild look for :
'&6:Aber :feria, - With a sale egarcla to . its
inceme;bringing.prostiects: hel.-Iroosy. :
• - . . - -
:
• • What is. Monte- .
€.1?r, Holmes says : .: 01 'neje -Sew a go,t- -
moot,,,too fine for aa men - or Maid, - there .-:- -
:19--1,aluiYaoap.Weregortt.4,.6!ah-anixg.ttoortigeot.oidi:12;fei 'N,aecor babl4eptanspr: . I
-too fine to -shelter iliehainenf ead. . These .
-elements about i us, the gloii us sun, the ‘?
imperial Min, : are not toe oad for.the -
human ride. Elegance fits : STI. 'Mit do . .. :
we not toole it, littlmore -.than :-
;_r_all myself
.-
l
they_ete Worth anasonietinces • mortgage a 7 .
house for the mahogany we blibag- into, it? • •
I had rather. eit-Myaditmei- Off the head Of,
a barrel, or dress after the fashionofJohn a
the Baatistirethe wildetttese-,-lor -sit on -a-
block all-ipy life, than. corigun-
_!?!.31oreigot -to _a borne,aand- -t ke,-eo-.riauch
pains with the outside when the inside was - -
as hollow - as an empty aut. '1113eauty is at.:
gkeitt thing, but heatity -: of garment, home
and furniture ate -tawdry °intents Om.- . -
pa;red with domestic love. e. elegance .
in the world Will not -make a ljome, and I
would.- give niore for a spoo ful .44 real .
;hearty love than for whole, hiploads of .:
furniture and all the gorgeousness all the
upholsterers in the weald can "theraa
Alexander, editor News,
Gt:841:7 sa,yg : " Per -the
niontlis 1 have been suffering-
Matory rlieurnatiern.. - I t
physicians but they failed to r
friend recommended St. Jacob
once pyoaexed half-dozen bo
I have used and find that I aro
thesulffinit;;;;-:4Itetirreilbielepai
Vesnz a
m
me from taending maul, 'sleep
Nothing haadone me so much-
:.
arneaVillk, •
est twelve
ith inflam-
'edi several
lieve
" Oil. I at. -
ties, which % -
-improving-4
once wheat
d prevents ;
ess' nights.
ood."
George W. Bristol has a :wie in Meri-
den, it wife in Worcester•azidia Wife in.
t,
'Peovidenceato- all of vehom h has- been -
regularly married within a'feve . years a As '
tl
his. business was that of a tiay ling:agent,-
he was . for a• time able to . , °Lineal hie
bigamy by visiting eachof his homes in
-turn. . The wives. ere young, uniformly, a
:pretty, and belong te.aetipectable families. •,_
Whey are. united in their :desire! to -punish
him, nevi that they .baVe.- found him' -.but,
44 be ' his been - arrested Juliet ititimeto
prevent his Won with a girl at.Middletoven. :
. In Constantinople the slavdtrade fa
. ,
i
More and more openly carried o i .. - A :Man
!sold -Ida tWo daughtercnot long go. - SfiNfi '
dealers keep alarge assOrtmen of young:
iNOthen on hand: The Government never
interferes with the trade- nr any- of its a
attendant abominations, except hensome .
. .
poor Wretch runs away.