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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-04-28, Page 3• • a •••• e Of IONGLLOV Whittier's, weibute to tlie Dead *timer. ' The May.number Of Wide Awake, issued: yes- terday, contains the following tribute to Long- fellow from the pen of John G. Whittier With a glory of winter combine • _ over I:1e1o01m of gray, /n the oht biStoriornansion.. • lie at orthis last birthday, With his pleasant- pictures„ And his.househola und-hituktir. While- a OUmL as of myriads_ singing From, far awl near stole It came from his awn fair oite, rrorcr the prairie's boundless plain, From the Oolden'Osts of siruset, And tho cedar woods_ of Maine. And his heart greW warm within Itinti .And his moistening_eyeagrewdim, For he knew.that his country's children Were, singing the songs of ; The lays of hisilite`agiad, morning; The psalms of his evening time. Whoseechoes•shall tioat forliver ' Ou.tho winds: of every clime. • All their beautiful consolations, • cent, forth like birds of cheer. Clarde flocking oack to his,wiadews, Alai sang in the poet's ear. Gratefni, but solemn and. tender,. • The music rose anafell, With tt joy akin to sadness - • And a greeting like farewell-. With a senseof awe he listened • To the voices sweet and young, The last of earth and the first of heaven seemed in tile sortgauthey sung Arid; waiting.- Iit/Ie longer For the wonderful change to come, Hehetrd thw sun:mom/lg. angel Who calhl Gods thildren home. And to hilina holier weleortie was tne mystic meaning given Of the words. of .the blessed Easter Of such is the kingdom of heaven."' - WOacataas, • "Removed to Preserve Iter Life Ulla • Mean ty:--Rentattitable aurgeria On Thursday morning::: reporter of the .Miner wee_ permitted, through the courtesy: of Di. F. Hartman, to witness -a reraark-: able and difficult sergiCai operation, eon- , Mating Of the ref:naval of the entire lower jaw. The patient is Miss: Gertrude Hick- man, 'daughter of Mr. W. W. Hickman, of Silver. Plume. On November 27th, 1880, while the -family were living ie Leadville, the extraction of a -tooth , caused some • inconvenience afterward. and an Wank, petent medical attendant administered Mercury, Whieh, produced -salivation.. and. eventually resulted in. necrosis of the whole lower jaw, attended with terrible suffer- ing and areductiou in the weight of the patient from ninety-eight to thirty-three pounds-. Having had charge • of the case several weeks, Dr. Hartman decided on the :course mentioneclaand secured the services. of Dr. Bradleyas assistant. At the timesetferthe operation one table Wascompletalycovered with differently shaped and cruel -looking • latices, pincers, soissera arid other surgical instruments; supplemented- by numerous Materials and appliances intended to meet - any emergency that. could possibly arise, • and another stood ready for the patient when the auseathetie being adininistered in another room had kindly produced When . this Was amyl, the uneonseious girl was placed. -ou the table,. the .. adhesions between the jaw -bone and the =macular tisitie were severed with the. lancet and the jaw was broken at the hin. The left half, clear of the articulation, was first extracted with compa,rative eata. afterward, with a little more difficult '.ing to the hf3m- orthele proceeding n the disrupted blood vessels, the -- side also . The - application of cot by means of a syringe at once_ the parts and atopped the bl- . id in sixteen anatintes_ from he she was laid . OD the table • 0, • was carried beak to bed, •• sanest imme- diately reef ausciousness, so nicely had Di • 4auged the applica- tion of • the co„..totorm,_ and informed her delighje& but trebahling parents that , the operation that they had dreaded. so . muchhad been skilfully and expeditiously performed. Sho. speedily recovered from • the effects of the anmethetie and a marked . improVementis already apparent. Dr. Hart . mania Confident that a plate and a, set of . -teeth may Pupply that placo. of the extracted , Jaw. This is the first time this operation . has been'perforined in the State. Strange t to itel the operation will . cause BO perms- , neti disfigurement.-2acoterado Miner. . . • The Philosophy of Rack Hair. - , . The New York . Tines philosopher is ineredulous as to the existence of that.girl • with_ back hair, permanently attached to her head, that trails on the floor when she walks. He says;. "The - hack hair Of woman is t asserted, in all works oil physiology and by all scientific men who have examined the subject, to be .detaithable. In the free. untrammeled • atmosphere of the west; no woman- thinks for a morneet of pretending that her back hair is permanently attached to her scalp, • and in . the betels Of Chicago, St. 'Louis and • Cincinnati ladies on re- tiring to 'their 'rooms for the night invariably hang their back hair on . the outside knob of the door, -so that it may be • bra ell and braided by the servant ette- plo d for. that purpose. In older and niore " conventional regiona there is not this frank au .knowledgwent of the true character of back hair, but nevertheless_ no one enter- tains any 4911381011 SR to it. Cuvier and • "Won both speak of detachable husk hair as constituting one of the distinguishing ' • characteristies of our species. Prof. Hut- ' ley, in _hie latest contribution to :anthrca pology, eitya that on one occasion he exam- ined - the- back hair of sixty-three girls who were -employed in :a Bfanohester wilt; and found that every one of them: had taken_ off her back hair on Mitering the , mill and, hung it up with her Bonnet and • shaW1 her object -being to avoidthe danger that herhairmight become entangled with-. the machinery-. He further says that 'there • is net a single well-established- example of a woman withVetmanent back_ -hair.' In . the faceofall these well-established facts and this weight of scientific opinion, 'how can We believe in the existence Of the bien,, -,nig' young woman with yermalient back ' hair five feekseVen-iiiehes in length?" ' • —"The p • • NorthweaP ad* ha ette • al' (Whims 'of the- Great itnowleen' Can.. - 'at --.aeecijaarx T UNE BOILER RIPLOSIOk several reeple —1Cill—ed and Injured. A Baltimore despatch says: • Yeeterd ••• „. y afternoon an eipIosion Occurred in. Oe Mill of A H. Sibley dc Co The machinery had - been Idle for some time for repairs, and the fire had Spat been started to resurae. -work when the explosion -Occurred-, •A por. tion of the _boiler _waa-propethedtiorthvia, d, entirely demolishing two brick dwellings :King street, and throwing down the w :of a building, adjoining. At the time , f the explosion john Addlion, engineer, makiHair- 'Cooper, naachinist, who had beebeenag -risen Waters (colored), fireman ; .Andrew the repairs, and Frank Rranig, a boy, were. in -the engine room, . All were killed except -Cooper, saidte wasso badly scalded thitt his life is despaired of. In one house en King street George Pent* aged 19,w.s -killed, and Ida Rese,nburgh had a 1' broken;- Ellen Rawlings, acolored serve, was severely hurt by falling walls. In t e • other King street house Grade Gray, ag al 20, was killed..., In the yard adjoining the factory Abraham ' Henlaron : (colore ); while unloading a waggon, was StrIl ik by -a missile. and his skull fracturel; Janis Roden, -aged 15,. had. his skull ire, tured ; Edward Callahan had a leg brOken ; . :Mrs. Margaret • Ralik living on Ptah 'street, adjoining the factory, was standiiig at a washtub when struck by bricks' d • al killed; C., W. Gates, working in a grara e yard a square distant, was struck in .t e face by a briek and severely hurt; Edward' Kelley; an employee in the•building, had leg broken. Several _others were lees seriously hurt. The building, maehine land dwelling houses were owned by Richard 'Grin:ewe'', jun. _ Several bodies are sus - posed to be still under the ruins, including those of the engineerirfireman and Kraal •. The firemen are working to recover the , There was 9, Siblibir eXpli3f4011 in the sae building twelve years. ago; when. five" per- sons lost their lives. • 11 GEMMING OVER -TSAR QUERN. lier niajetaya: Enthusiastic Reception b ; British .Blaidens. Mentone over the presence there of th Great is the enthusisisg, Of the English Queen. Many:of-WOW" are described as i a state of "pure" ecstasy ..and bliss unu teratfle." " To think- that -there, in the: chalet," writes a French'', corresponden " not half a mile distant, is their love Queen; tothinkthat she is walking abou in thafgarden, of which -they -see thegreert hedge, or sitting under those soft silvery olive trees; to knew almost to acertaint that toward sunset they will: be able gaze on her face for a full _second and quarter as she drives past—all this iajb indeed I:" While Her Majesty was return ing frona a drive one afternoon afortnigh ago along the Monaco road; a group young English ladies had stationed them selves by- the Octroi with bouquets b Violets, with Which as she passed the greeted her by throwing them into her car riage. • So great was their enthusiasm tha they are said to have burst into cries o "My Queen I My Queen!, . „ A liesziad thelffrides. -Nearly every. bridal couple that 'go t Washington — and Washington- is th national bride's Mecca—visit the Treesiir vaults. The young and invariably interest ing couple want to closely inspect Uncl Sam's plentiful shekels. When, they enter the vault the Man in charge of it, after few preliminary words of explanatiou, hands down a packageof notes from a shelf, and tells the bride to take it inher hands. He then explains that this package conta1nsa$20,000,000 in, -United` States Treasury notes. The young lady' is delighted to beable to L.gca away and say that she has held so much money in her own 'hands. They are further told' that the Mates are all of the denomination of 610,000. They _constitute what is known as the "Bridal Package." But it is a fraud on the young people. The Treasury. there does not holdthat aineunt of • money. The lin& Of • the money is in the sub. Treasury at New York. That . "Bridal Package"' is a gardeceiver. It does cora. ram, however,notes of the denomination of 11.10,000, -which Would; in the aggregate, represent 320,006,000 if they were only signed. But they are worth no more in reality, than the paper on which they are '13Kinted, being minus the necessary sigaa. Courier -Journal: • .4 Peculiar Funeral Procession.. .4 somewhat remarkable. funeral took place yesterday in Toronto, the proceed- ings of which, to the uninitiated, Were *it' tainly of a novel character. Miss Lizzie Murphy, a member of the sodality., of St. Patrick, died from consamption, and ex the funeral the young ladies', of the sodahty, dressed. in black with white veils, formed at St. Patrick's Church and marched- to the 'house of 'deceased on Williana -street There Miss Orman, the President of the society, chose six lady pall -bearers, and the deceased's friends chose six gentleman pall, - bearers., While :the ladies harmed. in procession and marched behind, the six lady pall -bearers bore the coffin to St. Patrick's -Church Where mass' was said, the edifice Wirt crowded to the door* After the ceremony in the church the funeral pro; ceeded to St. Michaellicemetary, where the remains were interred. : Suspended Animation. A telegramfrom Cherleetown, W. Va.? says: On Monday evening Miss Jenkins, of Blue Creek, apparently died. She • was dressed for the grave and taken to a chUrbh, where the minister held services. After the services the lid of the coffin was removed for friends to take a last look, when the face of the young lady .revealed signsal_life. She was takmahome, and is said to remain in a- torpid state, with indi- cations of life. At times her limbs are stiff andIfaen limber.. A young man nareed Rowell, Who was employed at the deps:it. at Adrian as tele- graph operator, butwholately resigned or was discharged, went to -the depotin Detroit on Tuesday and created, a disturbance by drawing a revolver and cleaning out,the whole concern, firing a shot whieh paned by the ear of the night watch. .8e finally compelled all present to held up their tight hand* and marched them around lively, for a tirne: He was arrested and lodged in Rev Ddr. Walters has resigned the rector- elurthaity,Church at Montreal. • THE. ENGLISH Patent inialsszeiiER: Graphic Pen -Picture of - the Great - Orator. A 'London 'correspondent thus refers to Mr. Gladstone's appearance in Farhat-. nient : Gladstone:113one orthe clearest; readiest talkers I hails) ever heard.- He sits in the front row of the members'pews, on the left-hand side,: facing the, Speaker, 4:408e-6Y:the end of •the table which stands in front of the white -wigged clerks. - Per- haps I should have eaid he reclined there, fig he doesn't exactly sit. His head is thrown back, and rests ,upon . the; tipper edge of... the • pew -back; his beetle are clasped in his law, his legsare sprawled out in front, and he has the general appearance of a men sound asleep. But heisn't: Now and then the eyelids- half open and a shade of expression crosses the wrinkled features; as . the old man 'mentally notes a point for future use. When his opponent has ceased speaking Mr. Gladstone comes to his feet With sur prising agility, and advances a step or two to the end of the table. There is a little red box here, containing. his documents, and he places the ends • of his right hand fingers upon this box. He litts. his chin . rather above its normal :height; like a min used to -talking, to. a gallery, and, as the Words flow freely:from between hislips, he emphasizes them by prodding the box 'with' the _ tips of his straightened fiegers. As Mr: Gladstone. talks, he grows. In silence and repose you see a thin and _shrivelled old map, with Icing, slender legs, swollen joints,a hooked tinsel awaken eyes, a sparsely -clothed head, rather narrow through' the temples; but broad and high over the ears, strag- gling white Whiskers; which shamble down the sides of his - face • and under his throat,- and . a "general! air of physical decay:that is not altogether teas - miring. But, as • his chin goes up,. and his chest- .protrudes; and the words begin to roll out with rapidity and resonance, ws the eyes kindle. and "the smile of conscious power spreads over the 91d face, you begin to feel thereason of. the Premier's grip upon the politics of 'Great •Britaiiii. He has the perfect eonfidenee of the practiced speaker, and that elo- quence of manner, n6.- ,Aefii3 than of words, Niirhich prof:310163a the orator. He is by all'odds the most admirable talker I have heardin England: He uses tie notes, and as soon as he his finished what he has to say he; slouches back • upon the Seat, apparently in that state of ereeplete physa cal • collapse which Charles Dickens. ascribes to the old paralytic, who is always .throwing his pillow at seine one and immediately falling helpless is his chair. : . The Insincerity Of Fast. Days. -. At their late meeting the Boston Baptist milliliters. passed this resolution; Whiph has been sent to the Governor of Massachusetts: Fastday 18 no longer kept bythnpeople as a -tittle -of penitence and: self-restralet, but is made an occasion Of rest and aninsemente Many -ofthe- recreations of the day are not in themselvesvrong, :bet when thek are -sought under color: of hUreitiatiianaon ree- count.of _sin, ,they constitute, an insincerity. that must be displeasing. to ...God and - dan-, gerous to • public morals.' It is our judgl ment that days of fasting ought to be pro!.. claimed by thecivilanthoritiee only in sea. sons Of great and general solenanity, When-. they will be observed,. and that, 1! there must be a public holiday at this period of. theyear, it should be appointed as a day of joy, and not as • a day of mourning; - . • _Ileizeistional- Notes. Mr.W.H. HOuston;M.A.,who for a ininiber of yearsbaeoceupied a prorninentpohitimi on the editorial staff Of the Toronto globe, has resigned- it to. take charge of • the -" Canada School Journal" and to edit the educational publications of the well-knoWn publishing -.house of , W. J. Gage de Co., - Toronto. •_ - Prof. IL M. Smith; M. A., B. Se • has resigned the -Priecipalslilp of St. Francis conege,.Ricitthuind, 'Que., to accept a posia i tion n the same firm. , • TUB newspapers and periodicals of Elig;,*- laud have recently contained a large number Of statements to the effect that; in the event of a:war with France, England would be worsted in consequence of the relative .weakness of :her ironclad ' -fleet. Official statements have shown that these forebodings- .have been largely due to- in exaggerated fear; but their expression :seems to have aroused & critical spirit in France. • . In an edible in the 1st iminber Of the Revue, do Deux . Manila, Admiral 'Aube, of the French navy,- has pointed out that, while Fraud!, has made andis making rapid 'advances in her • ironclad fleet, she. •has neglected . one important to. this branch of her offensive and ' defensive seriiCe. 'She -• has no seciirta,• naval centre.. 'England . has Chatham; Russia has NieOlaief and, Ger- many has Willielinshaven, ports that are. impregnable, Where the war ships of these three poviers. can be built, equipped--. and repaired in perfect safety, :to which they7 oan retreat; and from.whiekthey can -salty- orth, France, on the contrary, has • not . a . Ingle naval station available for her Wu- laqs.which, could not be readilydestroyed. • herbourg, Lorient and -Toulon' could he destroyed by -bonabardirient while the ves- sels of the enemy lay in the open Sea, While - t would not be .11; difficult matter for a fleet torpedo. ve-seels. to inter'and destroy the. vessels • that lay- in the harbor Of Brest. Ancierding46-thia authority, the 'attention iihoft Prance has Of redent. years given to er:navy may noinit for .very little, if :she oep not immediately set to werk to retnedy. ;his fatal defect.. •, Count Geza Zichy,..the one -tinned . Hun.- tarian pianist, has accepted an invitation • ore the Prince of Wales to appear - in everal * concerts in London -during the - orthcoming season. .The Count,. who is ow in his 32nd year, losthisarid when a •y by an afacident; hilt his mueical_ per- ormaiuses -on the Pianoforte with his left and only are -truly, Wonderful:.. He per- trnas only for Charitable. purposes, and he ,fits earned and distiributed 1180,000 during be laid two year* - . • r , ^ : . --i The result ef the citing o1 Rev.- Father Irettargh, _of Trenton, before •Bishop teary. at Kingston is notfled. The Own: : The kl ifficitilty is over the asiesszne t - of sonae o the -parishes 04am:fount of t ediocesan debt. The matter Will be ration IlishOtt and clergy WINO gene to Trenton to hold an iniestigation. , ., . . ..,. . OBITUARY. . Death of ArchblithOp lasarrax; N. S., April 17.—The Most Bev. Michael- Hannan, Archbishop of Halifax, died at 11 o'filtieltthis morning, In his 62nd Year, The Arelibishilp was barn - in Kn.: mallet*, Lib:feria, Ireland, on the 21st Of • --1-uls4 1820; and was therefore within three _ months of being 62 years of age. In itgo he came tfilleva Scotia and Was appointed teacher in' St, Mary's College; Which had juat previously been established-- by Dean O'Brien. . Five years later he -was •ordained to the priesthood. "Since 1852 he has been senior priest in the Arehdiocese of Halifax, and has labored aniong his people with quiet, but none . the leis -Marked success... He filled various positions in the Church, -among ethers those of administrator, vicar - general and archbishop. .On: the death Of Archbishop - Connolly, in: 1876; Dr. -Hannan :was unaaiiinously recommended to the Pepe _ for appointment to - the. isse Of Halifax. The Appointment Was. inadeathoutiMarch, 1877, and on the 20th of May following His Grace was cense.°rated:About eighteen - months ago" -he went to Rome and • spent the Whiter there. On his return , he was presented with an. 'address and received an. enthusiastio -OVA= tion. The Archbishop had been failing en healthfor sonie time past, but had been able to attend to-his:duties. On Thursday evening he attendedservice- held . by the liedempterist Fathers in ht Joseph and caught more colci-The twit Friday he Was confined to his bed. r Medical aid Was sifirunoned, but was 'ponferfeial to relieve the general prostration with 'complication of diseases that set in.. On Saturday night he was prepared for death. Helingered until abouthalf-past 10 o'clock this Morn- ing; when death relieved his sufferings: =His Grace had taken a; great- interest in the services held le the Catholic ohuroliee daring the past -few weeks by the Retlemp- tor* Fathers, and it is a singularly .strilt. ing coincidence that at _almost the seine moment that their miseion wasbroughtto a close by a -ableinn regniern,• High Mass in St: Mary'salso closed the -mission of the. worthy prelate. . Death of an Oetogettizrinn. Bfr, P. J. -Brown, contractor for the- -con- struction' of the Manitoba Southwestern Railway, who is new revisiting Ontario 013 business,happenedto reach his old home at Brownsville, in the County of Oxford, in time to he present at the funeral - of his mother, who. died a fewdaysago at the ad - Sanded age Of 87. His father who is still alive; is one-year older, and their married life.hasextended oyer • the unusually - king interval of sixty-six years. _ Mrs: Brown. was the mother of eight Bons and three alaughterkall-of Whom- survive her, her -own death being the first break in this almost unique faiiiily ' (Ards; The aged' boupte have livedfor forty-one years • at Brownsville, whicha was named after the head of the fanilly. They celebrated their_ golden weddingsixteen years go, and at the celebration of the sixtieth _anniversary there were present no fewer than 160 of. their lineal descendants. Amongst their children and grand-thildren are -scime forty voters, all of ' whorl:alike Mr. Brown • him- self; are staunch adherents of the Liberal Reatit!,r. Centenarian. _ A mannained. George Hilliard, e native of Trale"e„Kerry, Ireland-, died e few days age at his *residence on .1larift street, in Ottawa, it the age of 110 years. His father, John Billiard, at the time of his death was 115 years -old. - • - • Golden Inforniaticia _ "Awhile :ago," • said Mrs. . Dr.. Jordan, .51._ Lincoln street; . Worcester Mass., •"" one of my frtenditi front the South .spoke to ine very highly Of: St.- Jacobs : Oil: 'I resolved to try. it on My patient* and I 'must confess that.I was surprised at the results. It has never failed to cure all that It.claiine to; and I prescribe it:. Willingly and tionfidently to these Cf any patients Who siiffetwith- rheumatism, sprains and all bodily pains. It iscertainlya weeder fill remedy anal -gain highly.repommend it." • Tim great Overflow, which eothe weeks -ago extended' from - "Helena, Ark., -to Lafonrche in Louisiana, may now be cen- sidered over, as inost of the lands- then flooded are now frei.from Water, and Much - of the ground already pkingbed ;-- some gelatines -already reporting 130 further need of Government _rations Or _private charity. It is now found that the principal lops by thndeod will be in stock and felaCesi-which, though very serious, 18 not -as heavy as Was at 0128 time feared; and thnpeeple of those sections are working With. commendable energy torepair the daniaget While the. outlook is More . Oheering in Arkansas, Mississippi and North Louisiana, the toed is still doing natich _ mischief in . the real "Sugar Bowl" of the latter State; the Whole expanse of wintry bounded by the Lafotirehe,. the .Teche- and the Gulf, with the exception of a few dry spots,- being slab - merged to a depth varying from two to six feet. Truly a nice ()wintry. to live in! A blizzard of a day's duration is. nothing to the weeks of flood and disaster that have .prevailed in the western and southwestern States.AT . . • h.reeeet meeting of the French Acad. emy Of:Science, the ohmage Which seems to have obourred in the French climate dinning the last. few years .forined one of the chief *Tics of ,discussion. • -It was remarked that the sardine fishery, whieh 'regularly brought into the Breton -population 23;000,000 per annum, - had new become a thing of the - past, the sardine having completely die: • appeared from the coasts. M. Blavier at- trilauted the mildnesi of the winter and the precocity _ of the : spring to the -altered direction of the'Gulf•Stream, but no derinite opinion on this subject was pronounced. Before, however, the menthols separated, corninittee composed of -MIL -Faye, Janneen, Dinka* and. Admiral Julien de la Graviere,- Was appointed to study the prob- lem of the Gulf stream. - An ingenious Scotohman has lately die - covered a new criterion of the musicalness of a nation. Hefinds that for one boy found whistling in the streets of a German town; five are so ezhployed in Scotland. We suspect that whistling commends itself to the economic Scotchmen because they have not to sink any money in purchasing an instrument, and need only wet their Whistles occasionally. =1-A000rding to the MMUS in -Canada there are '109,435 widows, and 50,895 Widowers. This is a mad inequality. • LES? SCOTTISH -NEWS. a , At the High Court of Judiciary Alixanr der Simpson, jun., late Procurator -Fiscal for Aberdeenshire, pleaded guilty tia em- - bezzling £650, and was sentenced to Sib 'months' imprisonment—to run from the date of his first incarceration, five -months At a. special meeting- - of the.Masonio Grand Lodge of: Scotland, in ' the. Free- • =sons' Hall; Edinburgh, it . was -resolved to present a,n address to the Queen, ex. pressing heartfelt ',gratitude. at Ma- jesty's Sseape ...-froni /he recent - etteiript at assassination., 4 . _ The ,Stirling Castle, built for Meteors. Skinner, of liondon.and 'Glasgow, by Elder went on the Clyde on a /rid tip, Off EikeltnOrlie, and With three thousS:idt) tons dead-weight attained the -hitherto inapre- _ oadented average speed in ocean ateardinga of eighteen and -a half knots per lunar in a six hours' oruiffe: = '• shed at Pallokshields -Public Glasgow, fell on arecent afternooni"hurY- ing between twenty and .thirty •children in _- , its -riritis. Two were killed instantane;•_ • ously;.and other two were so frightfully : injured that they cinly lived: an hour or BO. A great . nuttiberof others were serionsly - hurt by the faliing.timbef, but • the extent - of their injurjes has net been :definitely itecertained. - • • " • • . Dr. Begg, the UncOMprinnising leidei of the Free Church in the Seottish Highland* ; is preparing -a weapon to use in Mite instru- mental niuele ishoiricl be sanctioned. in ' Public Worship. He Wiligemand that any congregation whose conscience is offended - may separate frOte the Free.Cliirch; and take with it its ohuruh arid manse, and its fair shire -of the 'Wads of the Church. In the 'United Presbyterian Synod Hall, - Edinburgh, the Rev. Dr. Macgregor ere& under the auspteeslof the . St. Cuth- bert' s Literary Association, a" lecture on "Canada and the Northwest." - He _ -dersoribea his journey to the Northwest list sumnier, and spoke in high ternis of • the , proipmats and mode of life in that Country, and -adviziedletanding- settlers not 46 atop at Winnipeg, but to push liar,. ". ther.weat and settle on the A c011itatiOn: of Scottish docutnents, for- merly in . the possessiona Of Mr. James .Grant, the novelist; Was sold the other day in the rooms Of Christie, Manson & Wood, - London. - These , papers; which realized a. Sum of £57 100., contained letters of James, . VL and •Charimi II.; the Regent Mar, and other northern nobles, one from the 'Hag.. Henry Erskine to the father of Sir Walter Scott; also a large nuMber- of _ documents ' - relating to the attainted " Earle of 'Lin- - lithgew. • '••• The London Times- says "Chili has a" struek•itstalons deepintothe body of ?era, . and -cannot disentangle them. The ,con- quest and incorporation of Peruatraightway in the victorious republic . would in the interests of the one as well at of theotherbe preferable to the: intolerable -relation - Which binds them now -together." - Five thousand Jews were recently ex., polled from MOSCOW. During the _Baiter holidays the streets of Odessa werepatrolied- by troops: _ Seven hundrettperione, mostly without passports, have .1 been --arrested within a- few days: • I - - The apothecaries at Moscow have been ordered to cease practising:Medicine: TORMENT INDEED . Lire's vexations do not gendally come on bile like a stormdes.cenclin.g the -Mountain or like a whirlwind; they _come as the Min does -in Zona° sections :of the world—gently, but every day. One of., life's -disecimfort:s is presented herewith: According to popular iniptession,,. hot weather. mosquitoes_ and -rand dogs all flourish at the . same time and are chargeable to Vila malefic influence of the bog Star. Speakingor dogs and the -Deg -Stan* .mindatisofa-hdfsatory of ti deg and the coialet, vihichwe heregive - in a short extract from; ‘, the bey'sletter: ,Gony,* - you ought to ha'*- • -been there last night to a -seen the fun: Tom. -:-Winkins'dorg .Toddles N.was aisettin" at the gthe tt-gazin' tit the Coit, :24- cOnies Sykes durned rat ter- rier and the 2 waltzed over the fenCe .and- the: 2 -fought; .The tarrier-proved too niuch -for Tod,.,. dies, and afOre they could -haul him off the bat - ale ground- he had made a good square meal off' his hide.: Tont was in -.despair. ; A lied looking gentleman in a broad' briniat told hini tb get a bottle of ST.:J'acoss Oil.. an with it, and itwouldcure him in no t' e. : What does Tem do but steal into the chapel at Vesper time and • slide into Father :Jacobs_ confessignal box and. beg Of him a bottle ordiis oil wtli which to:rub - his dorg.- The Father felt of Tota'S.bead,.t. it was het an' afore Tont contd. litter &prayer, two men - were luggin' lainitonie followedby a :vest crowd, who kept at Safe dist:ance, thinking he had been bit by a -mad do:R.. The more he.,kicked and screamed/0 be let free,,the tighter they liclij. on to WM!' In reference to snother.tortient;the . Chicago **akin :Catholic reeently wrote: • f..ar.: Joel b. Harvey, MEL Collector a Internal lteve-, nue, of this city. has spent -over- two thonsand dollars on medicine 'for -his wife, int dreadfully front rheumatism. and - without - 7 'deriving any liefiefit" whatever Yet two bottles of ST. ..TACOSS 0ir accomplished what the most medical men failed in doing. We conld . give the namesof hundreds *hi:On:Lye been cured by this -Wonderful- -rein-ply did Oat& permit US. The . latest man who :has. been niade ;happy - :through the use Of this:valuable liniment's; Mr. -James A. Coulan,libratian of the Union 'catholic - :Library of this city; The following is Mr. Con- - knee indorsement: - - INION CATliOLIC LIBRARY AssocIA.Tro*,. 204 Dearborn - • r. ettid.too, sept. 16,1880. • .1 wish to add iny testimony to the rnerits ili Sr.. JAcons--flit as a cure kir rheumatism One -bot- Ile has cured me Of this troublesome disee,4e. - Which gave mem great -dealof bother .for 11 ]cng . time; but,thanks to -the remedy, lard ented..This Statement is unsolicited by any one in its inter. -est. Very respectfully, • =JAMES A. CONIAN, Librnrjan 'ORMAN'S C_TRIC BEL? INSTITUTION OliSTABLIEltiFID-1874 4 QIIIEJEN -STIMISIIT/IAST TORONTO* NEI:mai:7B DEBILITy, Rhenitatiron, Lame • 13italt,Neura1gia,Paralysis_and all Liver andChest - - Complaints imniedistely reilevea-_ and jpernla- - Zietitly_cured by using these BELT13,• BA.NP! AND ivEIOLES. _ Circulars and -Consultation MEE: