HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-12-15, Page 4"DE
IBENTIRTIllin M
Illfaria—WY" Of Ite4 Cone
tehatS-
iNtreleEteTINCel 71eletelcIAL. fefee'rPhiNNT.
e • •
. Watupai,corosi.-4T11e President% Message. and
• report of the Secretary of the Treastiry were
..... pent to t,,he printers• last night: 'Pne 'secrecy of
1190Piiniti44rale net eltegether availed in
el0;tvOs it purpose. : The meeSago• leet seher
o&Ored Og laelOPJ of a 14044 pamphlet, 'Wlie
mesaege Of me pi °Sent year will :net ceirer
more then 25 such pages, and.is Orebably a
°anion Itsis ih heespapar ',space. ehe message
reviews the mere impertatit matters, appertain-
ing to our foreign oud -diplopietie intercom -se.
The President ventures tii hope the apparent
°Stec eacoufrohting the efforts of Our Minister
SO Chili in the in tereste of peace may ,.eventually
be ovetAt,..me, to the credit of this GoVet411110nt
and, • the aatisfactiou uf the *nide powers.,
• ,The,"' President does not intimate an un-
favorable ettitude towexds aeembling an
international peace congress, but prefersthat
:Ha cherecter ithd Object shell have been the
. ' Object ot • more thoughtful conaideration
' by, the representatives of the people. The
-
President 'suggests the advisebility, et tak-
Lng ._lnel'sszys , 'Wang. to'. the ,settleinent
,,,A. u4ternational ditheulties by arbitration.
-Tbo- 'Dissintge says • that arrangernente
bleu been progreasing for a commercial
'bratty With 'Mexico, and the dePerttire et 'ttio
‘00aimissionerswill net longbe delayed. Men,
' lion at Made of several copyright and niter;
national treatleanotablYwithaparn andBelgium,
'The -Presideht treats briefly the teener of the
imprisonnieutotAmeticah citizens inEngliehjells
and acknowledges the reparation scetirded by
the Engfisli,' *eminent. The president reit-lewd
i
the operation,of the TreTh
asury. • e eurpluii
:reirenue. Wee'45,544,0(S;- total increase 211 net
' .Iteetioue over tretheyear...$44743,0 Al,t. total net
xereenneseeette esti; the balance Of trade ihour
tinier, despite . Increased imports, was nearly,
twenty-six, Milhous. The President cougraittr.
bites Die? country 0011 its '' ProePeritY
si.nd favors rid economy itt publio expenditeree
ala redinition Of 'internal taxes. '1,1e, eedsriss
, toe reeatninenclatien of the 'fkiiiteterit,etlthe
Treasurythat 'the tax Ondiatilledspitits,tediseen,
-. -404,lerniented liquors heredtioed,toismulimiun
•liOnShitentr with - suftloima revenue, te meet
• largely . in ,part .tlie ordinary deniands .01
- the- llovernment, .114 -favors ottetwia* the:
•-, **anion &of teternel .taxes, 16010g 'spirite,
, Sobliceo end fermented liquore to , hear
burdene, kronl the fact Viet '3 per., cents
' ewe at,, elemiion the Pre. sitleut - suggests.. that ' the time is ripe for legislation.wnich
' irill : enable the Treasiay to further con
amine to round the debt. He aggre(atv8 the
intereas it will take to pay the -4." end, 0
it Ontstandieg • until -itiaturitY.,',kod e cone
- eitidee that wig° statesthansliips otighti ter heti'
, a Means. Of . eseape. from Illeh.:114ewit-
- drafts- 'from, the 'Treasury account _interest
:.Itti retionimende no speeific plan. Ina ddisegie•
- , pinhole of the beetle le net funded, ha favor*
. —* teodffleetioli Of•the lathat w so at the national
. . issexernity'bavallie advantage of, the premium
the--tionint-lielii by 1110 U. S.,-Treasprer to
- wetly* eitteliition. "I'lle President .renews his
maximreendatien that , t•he' tariff 'Uwe need re-
. . vision,. Re expresses the hope that the Tariff
Corornission .znar ._,,facilitate Congrees ", in
dealing_ with, the- - litibieet. ' The Prouidout
also renews hie, recommendation for the
early. retirement -Of silver certificates `on the
.groundthia,theyfoin en unneeessieryaddition to
tne paper eivreney. - 'The itresidene favors the
toPealottheIttyt:whiativeepire. .the trod coin-
age- or. .liver dolleni foreatat month, and ea-
elenineeeda that it be left to -the ,diagrepon*f the
Seereter7 °tee Wre`seurY, The meted& states
-, that over fee bank, have badthertera extended,
-
end cells special attention to the "rtidnetiOns of
the °est Of..thelloittel Service , in 'the -lest fiscal
year. Ile favors the -suggeatione ol the,'Post-
alialiterOinetal_lbr the establishment of a postal
imcdreer system, ,andsdireets the 'attention of
• ("engross to 'the numerous eeconunetieatione
taloulared tee prOineta •eilleiency, and sedum-
.eeehomy in tee stem service. The receipts next
•yeer are estimeted at, attymint:Ms; expenses,
faitYWit :mations; The President joiuB
the Sectettiry'.of War in the lit:lye-that.. coegress
. in the next escatvear will snako.noapproprzation
onecootuit of rivers' and harbors, excepting so
tsr ea maY he necessary: teipreseeute,- the work
alteady'-begunandaPprepriations- for which will
hovebetizt eirlienst;ed at the.: ,epds the fiscal.
yesr.. The President concern, with flip Secretary,
of Abelian, inrectenniendetsona for placing the
utrity ozia better 'fteoteue, hien as 10 sitips and
armament.: He also endorses the, recorroilenda-
; . thirtstliatttherevelititi,1 •Marrrie;.ande:life saying
doestieuvey„ bti tratiliferred from the
-Treiteury,tothe trivaleepent e,eiriteree:The policy-
• thetlecristerYhtthalnterior es'regixds Indian
affeirenteets tbo Preeidont'u spprovab..-'Ettiargee
-• each treatment; ef. thaqndiatie..as will
.,. ChB* thew, and, eititeletenelente the arta and
hese huuniuizing iniineeceeeeehteheheeee-heen
• 'shisiwix'abeiiethene,the.elet yeareeSeeiting lee
stecepitionite-seasen of freedten .from-terbelenc
The iniptatituceofitleir te-allowladiens to hold
•'linen severally, isaltio urged.:!Aliicringratulated
animas ppon til., -Passage of a law fur the.sup-
:„01000811011'of,,poiygenny itt Utab. He says the Utah
otiputdinden ,hes 'madeeeethmetteleibleeeiregreine
arld*011orainende:t4i1000401114100'0I. the 'corn'
..anditit*t
440.Ctliteri, it. nerltin '
--wAha ei,timated,....*hiount.'.1 orthepayMent
li'r• etkiaKier.17*":6 a°446'sAlliht)divejatx
Pre
lth Might' TOM,
Forcible Prehibition et !bilker; .
A New York despatch says- : .About 209
"teepllwere WSW yesterday for breaking
the:0004h. They oelaepriee0 nulkmen,
ithettere, ,Wteherai, 4nvereef veitielee, boot-
blacks, '0,91eshetier vendere, pedleee, barber le
rag-pietters, eigar dealers; dry goods dealers,
Chinese .1aundrymee, hill 'posters • and
ethers- Nearly all,were diseharged with it
reprimand. A number of *Orem store-
keepers were arrested, but dieoherged with
it caution They claimed that the JAW fe)
not applicable to their creed, butwere
informed that it was. Licethr and beer
saloons were not interfered with end were
crowded througheut the ._clay. Druggists
did a driving busineeis. Many ourieue
,plitoards were dispiae ee help:tee of shops,
amoeg them the eollowiug Iieed of ehe
free resorts to Nihilietio Geyernmeet,"
"Down with the peual eede," No else 9f
sotthil or political itelueuees wai arrepted.
The code was enforced in BrOPhiPly Alen
puttieg up it telephoee pole Were, eteopped.
but showed to go On W1412 they Stated, AV
wee a 04.90 of uecessity....
TIIE F.11lATIll ISENT.• NCR
1Pronentreed,Oul'Aitabi but Conniented le
•' Waite tor 1,11e.
A Cairo cablegram tithe ; Arabi pleaded
guilty eo the charge of rehelikin, before the
court-martial yesterday • morning. The
proceedings lasted only it !OW minutes.
This afternoon the court. reassembled and
prenouncedthe sentence Of death against
Arabi. . The Khedive inbaequently Gone -
muted the sentende to exile tor life. It
is believed that Arabi vvill retire to. se,Me
part -of the British dominions. His de -
weenier before the court was Very dignified.
It is reported that Arabi will be sent to
the Ceps of,Good Hope.
The °animal tor the defence stipulated
thetthe other chief pri8Onera should par-
ticipate in the nompeonaise effected.
Arabi will be amenteble to sentence' of
(loathet he ea -enters Egypt or Its depend-
enciesse;
TRAISEDII IN A. TINEA.TRE.
Fatal !Memel le a Williant Telt Trielt.
A last (Thursday) night's Cincinnati
despatch says: At the Coliseum Theatre
hieeeternoen, in the play of "Si Slooem,"
Frank Frayne, in shooting an apple off the
bead of Lucy Skeum, personated by Annie
Von liehren; missed the apple and shot
Mies Ton Behren in the head. She died
in fifteen minutes. Frayne was arrested.
The play was stopped. The audience sup-
posed that ehe 'victim was only slightly
hurt. Frayne used the rifle and was
executing the backward shot, but the eiatob
snap of the„riffe wileimperfect and slipped
as the hammer fell. When the curtain fell
Prayne's cries and lamentation's were so
'violent that he Wali heard before the cur-
tain. Frayne will be released on $3,000 bail.
His mental condition is serious. MiBEI Von
13ehren beloogs toBrooklyn. It is said the
was engaged to be mailed sbortly to
Frayne
11114BIsitA4ie IIELOW sTaius.
Two et 4ite Vice Beast Servants Join
Bands.
joyebells were rung a.t Christ Church Ca-
thedral on Thurede,y morning, when Thomas
Henry Rolfe, the Governor-grenerare
and Miss yieillard, the Princess Louise's
10437% neaid, joined hands' and were made
one flesh. In the morning, amid a shower
of rice and old shoes, the happy pair left
for "England, home and beauty.—Victoria
(B- CO Colonist.
.,
A' $i. Lewis Igeneatioe.
A 51. Louis telegram says: Last night
Frank Ingleleart,, il17110 ie highly connected,
and it lieyoleeely veiled 'came' from nclis-.
reputable /louse. Rush 'Lori?, it wellitnown
merohane, anda. companion had been lying
in waft. Lewis ,fiteet
log -hint, not, dangerously; in the arm. The
,latter fell and the woman helped him Up
and ehe ',aheeilante ran to a ,steble, a block
away, and procuning a nig left there and
to' 0.4411dlY off- • -Iuglehart, supported by
- walked refew• "'Islooker When's 'Mir,
*ailed and they: were driven to
Ortneir's ,residence, -end the lady then
rove away. The '`supposed 'Man with
Ode was a pfiVate 'detective and the lady
WeeLeetise tette.' The' affair --causedIvack
etaitaMetif:'"-z? Mrs. Lewis is a edema of Gene
.niece "Of the latiedge
' father ia a colonel In' the
id States &req.'. Mr. and edreeLewie
:Meeting thee' morning; they separated,
10110g :the' only He will institute
tali*, for divorce, ' Which will be allowed to
o'bP &Janie. ,
int
gbt rtiti-Sr!'0411.-r
here 'ere,
iinoano peopLe itt tho.
Iw nat,tallelteld.0
re notice 10 ers..zY..priople
Mettieg,;, enimo thuti 1swill
etlitentiark, Oh eeliViae:
tenried tti*rte
for two
,
Weie Teetotaler.
eatingyrator roadies this ''sug-
ow, b�ys, if you Want to be
_ treat each other, why not
ther place Inside the liquor
an you. go by the post.
I say, nay dear fellow,
90140 " stall:10e These
you no More than drinks
to the haberdasher's and
come in and take e. box of col
-
hp to a 0:twee, free and
d gay, 'What kind of eoffee
Why not treat to grocaries
Und as well an liquor 14 thittriso
' your comrades to &cutler's and
stand a gena pocket-knife all
1:
A, toseo many, 01430010,hevelinrinlnf
tlefilaWetodelrhoc.;
riatigenertwo ettO melt.
siolittlegfaveli6ld
Illfttrd Lot of is Youthful Quartette
Quebec deepen* dated last (ThuredaY)
night : Last night four little boys, of
whom the eldest 10 only 16 years clime, left
Levies for Chicago to find their father.
Thein history itt it Sad one. Their mother
was forced by the authorities to leave
Levis for keeping a house of doubtful repu-
tation. She Went to St. Josephs, where
the same fate awaited her, thence to St.
Epiphance, near Ile Vere, and finally to
Riviera du Loup. The 'father hearing of
the life to whieh his chiMren were sub.
jected, and working hi'meelf in Chicago,
communicated with Chief,of Police Roy, of
Levis, on the subject, with the view of
having them sent to hini. The Chief gent
for them to Riviera du Loup, and they left
for Chicago last night to rejoin their father,
and two younger one still have been placed
ia the Hisepital of St. Joseph de la Deliver
emcee
The Faith, Cure Closed.
The Buffalo Faith Gore is cloned ort
SOConnts Of its manager's, Miss Carrie -Judd,
inability to pay her bills. Having herself
been cured by prayer, Miss Judd opened
the institution and has had at one time or
another a good number of patients there.
Affairs came to it oriole, however, when
Mies Wright, of Olean, who wag, afflicted
with a spinal complaint, entered and was
pra ed:for Uneessingly and anointed daily
1with eile after. speeding much time and
'money, telt the place uncured and its repute -
tion eerueuely impaired.
genie iltie-speenneni of Connecticut' to
beie00,,grawn In .Q0besi lteroviece, have been
,eXhilteted itt hiontieitte., itio said $200 per
,:aratiain be reilleed by:groWing thin weed.
441Kiiir 1101TAIMWE 4010r4krii
The ft101) RAM fell et Ttegi.49e the 2711i
-NOV, It was heeVY
There are 0%10 1,200pupileib the Pilblio
Scheel at Reeereee-
Deer are Plentiful within from Ogee to
six reties fretle 04110.
Large quantities of pctatotai are cejeg•
'thieved weit from Portage le Prairie.
John Smith, merchant, WWI Ailed/0Q at
Fort McLeod for buying potatoes frclit the
ICnaTai
Calgary Yen. ew‘ve rb"ea: rorPaeleSd 13. ° 11; tt4h: ee N3r'EtWhY;•M'ad.'if'ra.'13,adt
ball. ee
Reports from. flew Riversay that there
are two feet Of eleire Ogre. covered by a
cruet. Wag cattle are 'dying.
There ie talk of ereotiug a large eltainter
betel eeet Year on the „beeh of the elver
below Colville,LandingeePpesite the feland,
Selkirk:
,
Fred. Witchtee haseeed out his entire
'reecho et Stand Off, FOrt. „McLeod, for
110,00P. Masan. Vernon aUfl: Martin are
the purchasers.
Mr, 8, Philips, Elorie Cate I-loe
been appointed ' EfeadMaster of ibe Col-
legiate Department of ',ehe Port* la
Prairie School, which will be opened 011 the
let of Jatillare next.
• Considerable extiiteMent was created in
Oaanah last week by an elk coining into
the valley and quietly taking a survey of
the beildings in that town.
. .
A letter received from At0Ofie Jaw states
that the Syndicate are taying out it town
at that point, on sections; 33 sad 32. ,Large
numbers of people are every day arriving,
looking out town sites ,for betiding pun
poses. The etatioU buil4feg lo TOT ssm-
pieted. Besides Shepherd it Langdon's
establishment, with $1,600,0e0 yeah Of
stook, there are four gtores and two hotele
doing a ,ruehing businees. Settlera.. are
daily arriving. and every quartersection in
it radius of ill teen miles is settled upon.
Building is going on rapidly all theough, the
section. The Weather IS quite mild.
The following "is the correct distance
from Fort McLeod to the entrance to the
Crow's Neat Pass, via Pincher Creek; going
soothwest .
Wes
15.4
20.2
91.5
24.5
251
Crowe Lodge Creek (Scott s coulle)
Freese Out
First Forks to Indian Farm
Springs .
Second Forks to Indian Farm
Kylaken Bridge (Col. Macleod's house).„.. ... . 31.1
Stewart Rancho (Polka Farm) 311
Milton branch road.........
South Fork at mill Creek 49.4
Garnett% Rancho 45.5
Kootenai Brook 49.5
The Crowed Nest Paiie here enters the Foot
Hills.
415
'FIEF MORGAN ItIFDDLIt.
Interesting Illeptiniwrencee ot an Old
Canadian—lkow filoaleatee Kidnappers
Alivid
Ste.--atha'r'in. es tdie'grisni ;3'Iva A gen-
tleman in this city, who his read Thurlove
Weed's' statement regarding the disappear-
ance of Morgan, says that when he walla
boy he well remembers much of the excite.
merit occasioned. He says the men who
kidnapped Morgan tried to get the foliat-
ing Canadian Masons to bring him into
Canada and take charge of him; via:
Colonel Clench, Dr. Muirhead, 4a -
ward MoBeide, John Brant, (the Judith
Chief), Judge Edwards and others wham
names he cannot remember. They
declined to have 'anything to do with the
matter, and some of them never went bade
to ledge meeting Again. Our ieformatt
likewise Mates that those who are reported
to have kidnapped Morgan all came
violent deaths with one excehtion, as below;
Col. King, ot Niagara County, N. Y., sfell
dead in a bar -room ; Whitney, of Rocheeter,
died a miserable death; Howard, of Neve
York, was drowned in Buffalo Creek;
Adams, one of the leaders, was drowned it
Niagara River 4; Garside; of Niagara, lee
from his horse and broke his neck; Colt
Jewitt died in Lookpoet, his last Yeart
being very ,miserable, being unable to sit
still. The "only one who lived out his days
was Mr. Chubbeek, who „died a netting
death in Lewiston not long ago.
hark eititatielhante.
A Heap ot Tremens for Little Lucre -
A Saturday night's London despatch
says: The -safe in the , banking office
of John Shaw & Co., of Wirdsville, was
blown open last .night. ,An entrance was
effected by picking the lock of the back
door, A hole Waii drilled alongside of the
combinatiou, and &charge of powder placed
inside and set off by it fuse. An iron heated'
he the stove waa mato start the fuse. A
blacksmith shop was broken into, and a
sledgehammer and chisel brought to assist
in,breaking open the inside steel chest. The
work must have been done by professional
burglars, as the hole drillpd through the
front plate was justwhere an open' space
was in the look and where the explosion
would do most damage. The heside door
having thus beeh blown open, it only took a
blow or two of a sledgehammer to break
the combination- of the so-called burglar-
proof steel chest. The burglars got ver
little for their trouble—about
change. Mr. Shaw having heard of 0
Glencoe burglaries, thought this place might
be on their way. and took out about 14,500
in bills when closing up for :the day and
placed them in a safer place.
Swine Queer Oaths,.
In it Cage argued yesterday before thO
Common Pleas Division at Osgoode Hall
the question of the proper way of ad-
ministering an oath was brought up. Chief
Justice Wilson explained that any method
of taking an oath was legal which was
binding on the conecience. For instance the
chines° swear on a saucer, dropping abd
breaking it to show how their Boole will be
broken if they swear falsely; the Hindoos,
who consider a cow it sacred animal, are in
the habit of swearing by holding in their
hand the tail of the animal. No doubt, if
an oath was taken make anieno the cow would
kick, and so prevent the breaking of the
nirith commandment.
'A Philadelphia jury gave a .verdice ,of
$e,000 against it street ear company, not
because an injury to Mee of the plaihtiffei
eyes was as yet any damage to him, but
on the ground that at some future time as
it physician testified, inflammation might
be appealed.' "
arid° and destroy the eight. The ease will I
Alta
DEATN, 410 TIRE AIIMIRISII(IP 'op pAriTE*04i.
' A T•04 .40l2 ,deepateh.states thee the Arch.
bieltept of .0thieet4ery. died 94, "Seeteedlti
eiebt 41 P1090499 of the melnhere Pt lite
lelnii.y. }Ie remained in a 'semi -Mere
sisioee state mail ltepen., when he epoe0
hie last worth, " It le coming, it iis coniine."/
Ile ware then seized with a Sheep' *MOM,
end did not speak ,egitiee although it is
believed he Was Partly 00.11901011% The
Dean et Weetneinster, on behalf of the
,Queehe has, dieted burial for the Arch-
bishop's remains in Westminster Abbey.
Arottleishop 'nit, . of 014,09.090., too
1.).iirw, 9f au , gpotod, vats bori.
in Ediaburgh on 'the 22ad Of Decateber,
1811, being the yOungest sou - of the
'gee Sheriff Crawford Tait, of Herviestowtt,
'clackinannanshire, • hie Mother .beiug a
voo
daughter of the late , Si' Islay .0aukebelii
Bert., of Succoth, e tinse Lord Presi,
dentof the Qourt. of $essiou. After his
coin* at the E.Iiitburgh gigh School and
the Academy, he went in 1e27 to the
elnivereity uegleeigotte 801enCe be eutered
at Bellied CoiNe, 'Oxford; .th 1830, haviug
,beeit elected on the Simile fonedation. He
afterwards gaieed a Darnel ectholiteehip and
graduated B.A. iu first-elass elSeticel
homers. lie wee's; Fellow atid Tutor Of his
College -.awl it Publie Examiner of the
University. As e collegetutor )ie, in: emi-
junotten with Dean Stauley, thee titter of
Christ, . Church, and two otheetutors,
eigued it protest against the teaching
'Of. the " 'reects for the ' Times,"
esPeehtliY thee eenveyed in " Tract -PP."-
Ile 1842 be was appointed Head Mester ot
gugby School, in sacceesiou to the oele-
emitted Dr. Arnold. His health having
given evae unclethe arduous- reeponsibili.
ties Of this post, he wasoffered the Deanery:
of Carliele by Lord John (ifterwersie Ear))
Rusetill, where he was dietinguiehed for hie
piety and zeal,. ' D'urinhhis tenure Of the
deetteal office he also efacieutly performed
the duties of a , Meneher . of the Oxford
Univereith Cosaraiseitha, In 1856 he was
eonainated libelee of Lopeon, ill huccieesieu
to the Eight Rev. Dr- RIM:afield, who
resigned the See: Am Bieti,p of this he
initiated in 1863 the Biehep of Loodthiei
Fend— an exteneive scheme for Supplying
the deficiency 'of ohurenewoonimodation iii
the neetropolie. , . In ten years this fund
had reached the sem of , 21,000,000,
and 'is still' as prosperoue as ever.
When the Moat Rev. -Dr. Longley
died . in 1868. Biehop Tait , Wa,,
chotien.to emoceed him as Archlnehopof
Canterbury, au office which he filled with
dignity, constiebtiousness and eftioietuoy
amid troubles and vexatione Of various itirte
Archbishop Tait presided over the Pan
Anglican Synod a,t Lambeth in 1857, the
Church Congress in 1877, and the Confer-
ence of Anglican Itiehops :at les,mbeith,
attended by so &any American, Colonial
and Canadian Bishops, enoludigh the
present Biehop of Toronto and the Biehop
of Ontario (to whom the idea of -the Con-
ference.'was due) in 187$. For mithorehip
Archbishop Tait had no Isieure, Attlee
has given to the ' world of literature are
two volume's of sermons preached at Oxford
and Rugby, "The Dangers and Safeguards
of Modern -Theology,", with . remarks on
the notorious volume of ' lays ' and
Reviews" published in 1861; " The 'Word
of God and the Ground of Faith," in 1863
"Charge to the Clergy," in1866 ; h Soine
Thoughts on the. Duties Of the Church of
England," a. charge to bis clergy in 1876
besides articles to the "Edinbergh " aud
the "North British ,Reviews;" "Good
Words," etee ate. Archbishop Tait mar-
ried a daughter Of the litteVen. Ariffideacon
Spooner, the well linoWie eceentres M.P. for
North Warwickshire aesd Miele to the
Bight* of Oxford: .Mrs. Tait died in 1878,
after being the mother of it large family,.
of *horn -one belt were swept; off at one
swoop by soarlatina at Carlisle; another,
son, the Rev, Crawford Tait, who died
lately; was well known. in :Toronto and the
United States.
The . Archbishop • of Canterbury's bee -
cowl; will probably be the leiehop_ .of
Durham oiTturo, poseibly of Winchester
The New, York World's London letter
says the Bishop of Winchester will proba-
bly be Dr. Tait's successor. Should' he be
elevated, Bishop Mackarness, OteOxfoid,
brother-in-law of Lord Coleridge, to whom
Mr. Gladstone gave the mitre in 1869 as it
reward for his staunch approval of /Nees-
tabijoemeet, in 'Ireland, will probably be
translated to the See of Winchester, and
Arcihdeacon Palmer, youngest brother of
Lord Chancellor Selborne, a very accom-
plished classical scholar, will succeed him
as Bishop of Oxford.
_
Four wholesales Donors for SIX Acres.
At Jamaica South, L. I., lives a farmer
with but SiX acres of ground, yet be has
realized, it is said, $4,000 from it this sea-
son. , Hie crop is celery. He never ploughs,
but epades deeply and manures heavily.
The follnivAinTgaisltofrr;miSztogYld".
011 the very
beet authority: On the morning of the
intended attack at Telelefiebir—it being
above all things necessary that the surprise
should be effected before dawn—Sir Gar-
net Wolseley, while waiting the completion
of preparations, held in hie bend a repeat-
ing chronotheter,given him by the late Lord
Airey, which from time to time he kept
striking. _ It had warned him of half -past
4, and he thought he had yet an hour's
dark, when he saw it ray of light rise above
tho horizon. Turning to Major Butler, he
said, in almost despairing tones, "We are
done this time—there's the dawn! I3ut
the light did not increase; on the contrary,
in a few minutes it vanished. And Sir
Garnet afterwards found that what he had
seen was the tail of the- new comet—its
first appearance in Egypt!
Beecher and Blonopolies.
Thankegiving' wait celebrated in the
usual manner in New York City. Services
were held in all the churches, and various
clubs had parades. Business was totally
suishended. The sleighing was excellent.
In a sermon Henry Ward Beecher Hold
when monopolies became troublesome the
people would rise and sweep them away.
It was for the intereet of everybody
engaged in acounaulating a large (estate to,
know that this land was built for the com-
mon people.
Chief Draper, of Toronto, has obtained
leave of absence froth the Police Commis-
sioners for three months on account of faith
ing health, and will 'spend the winter in
Nana% Neiv,Proyidence.
,
,E10.117,0411101V,Aelh.,
Feepartinehtel etteleilleietleoe oete.. Ohne,
:lectieol 'Teacher!! ceir011eatees
The.telloWitig regulation's were proved
.hy,the'Lioutentint.Ooverunr iti0Ountiil, 4110
44004 day et,Zievemher; 18t(2:
on btl itt r:1 ).? 2 0,r Plee TY: t41';!: 11 40i eteC :jaserdh Catl' Itale jaPi 171 e: 144 rib .41
a.
on each finOjeCt takec by eileb candinatet
and 40 Per cent of the aggregete Otetierkft
of the *hot° of .such ,subjeets.
2. For passing the additional examictir •
ot:llattf4t941 04, 9.0. 44;r. 0%r y: if °)t. tdi 7dulea. t 0: t :it:044,1;r.. •
atiiaivabbe
on each Bubj,i0 tnit09 be ,eecheliandidate, •
es4t4e414P4e9'1184)91t; o.90f4 te.1447017. g t°ef .. 4444' a
3. For Pae44g the examiaatiou for itoe-
professioeal second. ()lase Certificate* every
c.andidatei14 reluired to, obteni, for. greets)
B, 30 pore:gut, of theinerke obtaieable on
talteh by heeil eithdidater aud
40 percent. of, the aggregate of maths of
the whelp *et such eubjecta, or., ter grade. .
A,30 per MAW On eecteeehleet ieed Oft per
ciente( the aggregate, . •
- 4. Any third clessepeblie eleheelteeoher,'
whose certificate was grauttd -siege the
regulations of Joy, 1877, (*Coe iiito teitse
(Compendium, part IV:, chapter 7, page
bean ,ealin4Wdhoedt,hoerr Pare ulox.to ifrtehde, inay phrees. '
.seet himself end 10 eligible, as .peattlidate
at the. uoti-prrifesSiotial examihetieu rn
0..tleys),./-1308h,eitimratybirscieloe,orroo4ticluyolaBoaeu-Odeirorte-
Who .preeented himself (or herself) ett too.
iiitermediate exemipation la July, los%
and whether peptised or not; but hoe others
wieS diesptelieees bit eimilarly'seligible as
it candidate at such examination 'in July,
188e• .
e. A candidate fer.any 'non-prefeSsional,
teacher's certificate, bet -Wit for the inter-
inSdiatet. may -ohdrn. to bare *I1,ie 'Vapor!"
rhieler10411ohlidaeprptet foorlioTvaitguicouut,tit ibtieoeieti:tim •
hs000 of the Mudeter OLi or before the 15th
day of Sentember, and the ground of the
appeal ,or clehn Inuit beapeodioally stated.
- (2.) A deposit, of two dollars mina be
Made with • the departnieut, depoeit -
will • be relearned t,o the cithilidate if Ms.
,appeal or claim ie euetained,- but otherwise
wjii- he forfeited. .
01 The Central Committee of Exitinineri
ehall Meet as eerie as possible after the
ittit of Septeinher, and than divots° ot all
the appeals without delay; "sod no appeal
shell hilbeerlileiltly be aueereehted on any
ground whatever. • '
.05 Inedettlieg: With appeels.the Central
Cominittee of Examieertiithall hese, their
eeconiniendations on .the.. merle, . Oxe
answers 'elone; wielieput takingiuto view
any other ,tioneideeetionie that they bo,
alleged. • , , •
6. Tho e.ttbjeists, „of , phyidology and
hygiene, 'prescribed ''for 'third clime* Pablie
Sobool teiitobe
ohetee'iuomeeinttiup
ottaieoiso,
w
theiCeunty Model School isessien. '
7, At. the ...profeseionel ,exatiduation' of
for seomid cease ciertifitiates the
exaMiners will aubniii,in 14-14epare,te report,
for the, informatthe eit the •Education •
Department, the e:antes of tbli :isaedidetett
„who lithe fail ;at ouch sexenethatieet. aud.
hive not been perroiotiae tneetne, upaguin,-
together with the extent of tbe'failute; the •
-nature of the iitibiecte, and the View taken •
lathe Princileale report in' eiteh, :ewes. '
: 0. Theists-tenon:tor the peofeeseenee traine
lug of firekelasecitedidittes at the Ednoa.-
tion
•
-Department .nett; tiaVing beau yet
eetabliehed,, it prefessiotial'exawiiiation
Will be.. held in 401y.. 1883: for .cithdidates.
who have peseed the tiristoliese, wee-pro-
:N*1100 .exanithationeaud havixig taeght.
'eticeetiefully for two yearn on it seoeudeless ,
illoatO,olity. wiele to quelife ; by • passing. .
such exemieatiOn, fo.r• a full firet-theis.,
Certificate. • . ' • . ' •
9: 11,4 person Wee.. 'caul: furbish satisfite-
bity, proot thut he'has.ienght aueueetif
for two .yeaeie ' a,t. -hetet, ou it aeuend.;eltuis,
certificate, wile elect be permitted' to, present
eimseie.in July, 1e8e; nt secli exawivation
esithe Miuieter may prescribe., in, Order ter
teat hi's fithess for a first- elees Certificate.; . •
end if he pasties suCh exatniriatien be will
be 'eieuiptedleem eettendance. at , the: pro..
posed swig= tar the .prOf essiontil training,"
of firet;elass candidates.+Ansm deoess,.•
Miu ister of ' ucaticin.
- . . .
Toronto,: Novcmber. 1e02.
Wriere Dots" If Belgic ?
To clrink deeply—to be drunk—is it sin ;
this is not denied. At what point does the
'taking of strong driuk' betioine it sin? The
state in which the body is Whell not excited -
be intoxicating .drielt le its proper ; and
natural state, drunkenness is the „etitte
furtheee removed from it. The etate of
drunkenness is a state of she At what
stage does it become ein ? We auppose
Lilac perfectly aoher Who has not tasted
anything which eau intoxicate, one -glass .
exoites him and to some extent disturbs
the ,state of tiobriety, aud BO far deetroys
it ; anothereilass excites him still wore, a
third fires his eye, loosens his tongue,
inflames his passions, a fourth increases
all this; a fifth makes him foolish and
partially insane, a eixth makes him sav-
age ; a seventh or ae eighth makes hind
stupid --a senseless, degraded mass ; his
reation is quenched, his facultiee are for the
time deetroyedEvery no,bleaucl geueroue
and holy principle within him Withers, and
the image of God is polluted and defiled 1'
This eit sin—awful the : for “drunkards , •
shall not inherit the kingdom of Geod."
But where does ,the tin begin?At the
first glass, at the first step toward cern
-
pieta intoxication, or at . the sixth, or •
seventh, or eighth? Is not every step
from the natural state of the systeni toward
the state of stupid iutoxication an e,dvauce
in sin and it yielding to the Unwearied
tempter of the soul joilN Bluour.
A monument to the Confederate dead
was unveiled in the ,Magnolia, Cemetery at
Charleetoii yesterday in presence of an
ratneni3e gathering.
N (YUMAN
ELECTII1C
INSTITUTION (ESTABLISHED 1574
4 glitgiEril Irvin or nes
NERVOUS LEBIL)II, Ilittnuitiire„ La
Bee]. Neural gia, Pei elyPiN Ptd fAILYffltig,(ke
ConsPiaints inanedietely idieted ' fled 1 t3nI
nently cured by rising rinse BEd...TS, ID.
AND INSOLES -
()breeders and 0onsultetioe PRICI3