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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1886-02-10, Page 2riteitreiss "Evel'If Wednesday rit orning AN 'mum. •et.Pteu, /.4.160.rt. nreet, 0./M•t0.11, Ont. t!•tt, oapance ; $2. laot $o ppid: ,.The proprietorsof Tau Gout:mon NEwa, having: parcliaaea the business mid plant '01.Tuu•liettex Anomie, will ie fatale oritilish the amalgamated papers in glint° it, niler the title of °rue livtanx News- lamoltn." . •• . • Oliaton is the funk 'prosperous town 1» Western On tatio,..is the twat of ettnisiderable utanufacturing„-and ilk centre of the lineit tgrieultnral section 'itt Ontario. . • • The combined circulationofTau NEWs- Y.Ttacenu• exceeds . that Or .vay repot 'pub, rished in the County..of Karon. It is,. therefore unsurpassed. as ast advertising I tnedinum it?ritates of advertising,nborat and 'Tarnished. oti•application• • AtIvOrtisoments„ witbott instructions as 'to spaceaudtiuto1 will he left to theajudg- Inept of. the compositor in the display, ;a, Iterted. until forbidden, meaained by. a • 'snide of -solid nonpareil (12. lines to the 'inch); and charged 1.0.eents a ilia for first • inaertion and.. 3. costae line for tiaeli sub- isequent insertion) 'Orders to 'discontinue ativertisentents•must he in whine. qtdr Notices .aet aa tut:Aim:4 mArrint, ..(measut ed by a scale or oolo.:Noop,i.0,1 lines to theiitidt) • charged at the ra .10 centa'a line for each •msertion. • JOB'WORK./. We have one- of the best'appointed job 'Offices west ot' Toronto. Our facilities'in this department enable us to ao, all kinds 'or work -rein a call•ing card tea.matemoill poster,' In • the best styie known to the :craft, and at the lowest posaible rates.. 'Orders by mail iirompt"ttendedlo. • .' •Addre ° • ' • •• ' The News -Record , • • .• . Clinton. Ont • 'December, 180; .'. . • .•..NEWSPAPER • LAWS We _call the special attention of Post .nasters• and subscribers. to •the following tynopsia or the newspaper laws , • 1-A .pciatraniter is required to, give crotice-Mr-Tuftw-mt (returnittg ••••• not andwer the lav) whom a sultscrlber does laot take his paper out of the ollice, And . state the yeason l'ot its not being taken. .Any neglect to-do 'so makes the poitmaste: re81o6iole to the publishers .for payment. 2 -If any person (whys Ids paper (Hs, continued, he must • pay all il'IlNirageon• the 'publigher 'may. contintte to send' it until•payment . is, made, sala collect the whole amount.. whether it be taken trimi thmollice or not. Therecan he no legal -discontinuance taitil.tke ist:ymeilt is made. 41...paper:front po8t-b thee, whether dii"ected, to 'his name or anothcr, or .whether lie has .sub-- •seribed or not,.is rkspoitaible for the: psy. • 4 -If a subscriber- orders his Paper to be :-stoppea at 'a eertabi time publish- er colitinuos to 'send, it!the subserilter 18 .1.pund' to pay for it if hetakes:it out 'or the, post:Office. •This prooftedattPolt•tlio.gtollad that a man must pay for what he ties. , ; ' ' ; ...Oar -firth." Dr% better-Genst-in Goderiell, fit the:Nov:either sitting a. newspaperirb ' luther sued for pay of"paper. The defend:- ut Objected paying -on. the ground that he bad ordered A former .proprieter, of the paper to discontinue: it. Tite,•41 nage' Irehl 'that that. WiS not a .Valid defence. The plahittlf, 'the' Mtesent- Proprietor, had no. .notice to discontinue and cousentumtly .c9tird-co1leeti• alther•igl. it was- not denied that 'defendant bad notifietl. former pro- .• •prietor to disCoutinne. In any event • tiefeinl»nt te1Us:booth-1' t.6,. pay for tlin thoo • he had receivedthe paper. and until he . had paid 1111 criTars dee fur subscript hal. -4 - • - 'OW . • at. titai SChttreli..-Sprvicos• Sundit.y tie 25 • it.m. lull p. tn. 0041G ,Claso.• 10 Ram Auivlriv n. bervive on-wednesday, a p.m 'Rev: W11.14.VM NAM, B..1).: Hector - ' • , 41cm:rotary street netlasiist.-Serylves atln.31) • a, in. ,An1 7.00 p. 111.', Sabhoth- Setioal va. 430 p. REV. Ma. Rymer, 'Pastor. . , • Canad'a Pred*tOriati.- Sereieee at 11 etan an 6110 o. Sabbath Retool, p. • line MANG KI'MVA HT, Pastor. •• • . -OntaliclIntiet•-111.0thnflist.,SurA1ica8-10;10,110-iu, on.. an 7.00 n. 0b 01 be}4001., 2.3p R.'s...-. W l'astor. • • Repast nharem-Serilee ftfi0 Sah. bath Ripr.1, GRAY,' Posto,.. . • • The Huron. News4e0ord. wed•rtemlar, rebraary lOth fl is kept 00 • • • • filo IS tlao 4,011.41 • A. cormtek aloek, Chicago in • Easy & Profitable Employment, vecy Agents have 'made rannoy meivassitig for MAN. Canotilital ibite vs, Blake et1 al1 posseas' tinder confederation ;shut I have no hesitation in saying, I hope siueerely, that whatever government may he iit power at Ottawa, every' bill of a provincial 1eg,i6latere which assumes for that legielature func- tions, anii undertakes, to.settle tines - tions: whieh are before the courts, renal_ a Speegh by the Eon. will be disallowed. (Chhers,) But Thomas White, Minister of the. curious fad in regard to this •• the, Interior. • Streamsbill is that on the question , itself between Mr. MeLaren and 8114 JOHN' AS A, coNsttrUTIONAtist. Mt. Caldweil, it is 14r.1.11ake ho •Then - Btake, indulged in 1ia:4 been defeated and Teat Sir John what,. under . the Oireplistances, Macdonald, Mr. Blake having eat - m ight, Ise regarded ---asr,-a-som what- dlY argued -Mr, McLaten's _ ease_ ungenerous bit of criticism, upon as :his 0011nSel hefore the court of recent decisions by the pixy cOunapp al in Ontario. That he should, 'ell, and Orion Sir John Maedonald's after having taken Mr, McLaren' alleged loss of prestige aa. a consti. Money to argue that he Was right, tutipuil lawYet. `.010 five subjeets altempt to make a point against a whiet just now are doing duty with political opponent when the (Mr. the opposition as evidences ef. Sii• Blake) turned out to be wrong, J,ohn 'Macdonald's want of knowl- certainly does not .argue 'much' for .edge of constitutional law, are the Mr. Blake's sensitivenes's in matters decision, in the insurance ease, n. of this kind, .(Citeers), the escheat caie,' in the rivers and ..' • ••,•••••,• ease and on , thn Boer* question. streams bill case, in the boundary _ ••ruen, Re 0 . . •- P • ME BOUM:WM QUESTION. . • - t the boundary* clues - Let me briefly ..r.efer to„these, As• -hien. ...The d%ecision. et othr,i! ,ri,N.T to • . . . council WAS In 'favor CI .Sir a cum . ........• THE 41.78.kis.." • c' A's'A" . . 'Macdonald, not of 11r. Mowat. Ix- ' • ''• . There- \'01'0 two questions involved Sit .....Tohn..Macdonakt had ' nothing in it, .Tkerewee first the .1(1ga:tit-A' wInttever to de with it. The' local: governthent passed an not requiring o_fhtloi,e1 award Which bed been niiide, certain conditions in.sit,• coritraet of " "1 ' .utay' be • called the Colisti,-- ,,.,. tutional ,questions and there was ed; the, ease vas: earri•er eines 'at)4bjee'TC. text the geographioal boundaries ins.urauce, Private n dinary suit to. theprivy council', and which had been liked by .the Arlyi- traters.,, ., Sir. John -Mricdenald cons the'right of the local government to tended that the...award- was. not A oleal With such matters was confiriu- 1 eital and binding' .award , mid that ed; but the- gOvernment, of Canada was not, a party to the Snit in any large it was prepee that -„ii:: question Mowat,ityou will, and I have net of that kind Should -be Settled where. it, alone Wild I be, „settiled, by the the slightest objection to edve 'hint. tlie .futrarreilitfot it, but it •.doet0.19t lt.litliest judicial tribunal., That Was at all fellow froin that, .•.tha4.ii . was ti question in issite butUreen Sir . John. Macdonald,; J0lin Mnehlini'l: li.ri'l Mr, • MOvati a defeat for Sir and the first, question S who had no More to do with it than .ithtnitted to: the'eourt Was O. to •the. :legality ' of the • man in .,.the- moot... (Cheera,) • theiriVaid, and the decisioiPWas in So with- - ' •• '•.. ' • ' 'iver.cini M f•Sir.JUiacilenald:. that . irtig EscitEaT ' " "il CASE. • . Ale iiwhrd wiis net legal. i (Clicers,) .. The -local government passed an Having decidedthat, the court thee, act claiming . the Poiret to , escheat, heard ingument. upon, the •bott miary- :and that not .was disallowed, net *).,.. itself, a COQ1140.. that, .iyOuld hav'e 'Sir Olin Macdonald, . but by Mr. . been entirely unnee.essary .had :Mr. Mack eitiie's .government,.under': the .:Areliat4s_ecin.teution:_barir_froxi--wwi--- astiiiiiiaiT_M-1.,-Xotasnieri,-then-arri .- Ilia _Foram Of' the : arbitrators _was , istor of j•ustice,and noW.A. judge Of ...him:141m- 01,1d they..deeided the pe_. . the supremecourt by appointniett. govoical :of Me. Mackenzie. • The deeision question . not. in, accord, am with the views of' Mr. Mewat, which Dem. -red . in England, .was a •who in an not Of the legislature 41e- Ie6isiQn :arising1-.04.°1:•#19,:. th Merc..,ex. elated that. the arbitrators hadgiven- casev-a-lnirelY 1-trivitte•-•.iitig, *tie% :Ontario. 11)001) losa than she W$IS III.- With 'illiell : Li Milian:ion govern- 'titled to, hut sebstantially in ac-- thent ihad nothing:t0 do,_,,itith?tigh cordatice 411 h...the. sleeislentirrived, the 'ThillitiOn .goyerinitehtt"'agia'd at by ilTef-tti.b ttrat ors. ., . . • • , •t0 1)4 eounsel• taargue it, in. •- order hat •theonnstitutional point -raised• T1JJ 1'1.'"Ns 948P' hy:Mr; Mackenzielsjdisial e ranee nf There: remains then thh ,license. Idr.ltitowat's act Mightbishinutled, ,eas'e, ' Upon -that •Utere bay& •beee The :decision' being inrfayor of the great differenees.:of - ()pin iot among ,local geverunient, • waa a,defetit.' for, Teavvers..,..ever .since. eonfederatien, 'Mr: Fournier, who had i4isail(Med The late Julin Hi llyard :Cameron, it. .the fiat of theairevinci il legialittere; iswell known, held the opinion lett it was More .th'n,1.i. that --1f, w is a very Strongly. that- the pro.viticea had: defeat .for Mr•‘..11.14.ke .bileSelf,.• 'Me' not the .1,0e/er. 0; .rpg 1.1114 the, trst... ...round iihion which ..Mr...: .1Tottrniet ne. in .iwciiaiiiiirig : ticric•pt. ,T.ii.,„ 1b4ieol'inutaided .,the''' disallewatace,-,of hie at,. 11,thume,4001,-„that-a' round . , :Bead:Of-the provincial logisiattne, - very .istron.gif-in a. • deb ite. in the :WAS, that the. ClOWII, 111 itS Pr6Pag3s. LOgisititil re:, . 111)01.1,,, thq, CrOf*S Act. tive . 'eh-if:1-60'106S not • represented Mr. Lash; the deputy .iiriniSter un - in theimovinces.. That was a•poaite. der •Mi..•B1 40, in a.teport iipon.'ilie taken Mr. Blake in the first legislation 01. 01;0,140, „inzg0.s.te,1 session of. the Je.gielatureof Ontario.. •/hat- were gras,0,.. tioniits. to^.. The first bit Is• intiiidteed there. IlY he, le.rality,•of .act the. government . of • Saiellield this Jbje.•,t.. , The: ,40,440!..1...* -the ALacdonald wait in the form : "ller :caSh Itusseil and the Queen '.ftt- .Niti,jt.sty by end With the kOVicq and . p eared' to•le,ti3O no winitev cuusent Of the legislatige' Asseieb13.' that the power of. regulating • the of Ontario .einictS,", etc., and' • Mr. t.ntfyie .was in the Dominion. and 1101 13.1alt win a vety 'learned ;. argument; in the provinces, • and it 11.118:011.13: kohl. that the ..14;islature conlit not after that tleciaion had been given legislate in the naule of the 'Queen, that .8 i r °lin Macdonald , although tie had expressed • opinions that direction before; took .thepreeitetiOn _of 'passing,,Alloin,inion..,04,_in...0.1;der •111111' the traffic •Anight at-, least •be' subject • to •legal restria,tions: • no' argument before the-Suprerne court in 011neal shoWed that the co.urt* there loft titeinselves grattly clithat-• .rassed by the •Manifest. corad,ie-- • • tiOns in the decisions of Flo o and. 'the Queen and . Ressell • ' the Queen, and the decision which hag' redently been given. leaves.the ques- tion of the 800tt Act in such doubt that serieus einbarraSsment is likely .ti) arise it. 'EV1'11, Blake; in .the diaeusslim Which • took •Place in.Parlialnen t, held that tlierc•M igh 1)0.8m:ions oubts • ort subjeet of' where the, jutisilietion rested, „ and ilia arguinent was that• before • legis- lation took,. place by tho Dominion. a -case shteild be submitted to the cettit for decision, venture to . that, the raise oft tea would be„plit think: that •had that ease been. sitb- low. that shipperti wonld prefer mittiat ,decided hefore the the Canadian •Pacifie to any Amieri- Hodge case, the verdiet of the can transtontinentalt prelim courr-would have been that . • • Russell and the. Queen .settled the ' • • A.11tEttliVAN. eptestion in favor of the power Of the Ante:kiln 8etiate laat Wedoesda,y, .Fryo, bann the° t:loin- anitnes un Foreign Relations, report- ed• a. n oftnimous resolution declaring that Congres-----------------vide .for a Joint (lominission of ...Great. • Britain the :United Statesin 're- lation to the fisheries. Placed on the valendat. • (011001e.) •Then, Its . • • • . • VIIE RIVERS AND STREAMS BILL , ease,. they -is was tie defearof 84,10alin .:MacdOnald iii •that. The grJetid • , )011 which the rivere.And stream's 'hill wits' disallowed, WU that -the 1 • ,-ltluli3i 41 fit Claus and, decide cases •• by act • Of Parlianient were then the subject of litigation Eutile; courts.- That le ..a priteiple.embod: led in inQiit of the state.constitut ions Of a10' l'Opnbli0, and til0 and.• StV0a1118 co u Id nut have been pasSed huge -wordier of thosh stateS,•tecause of that wise , prtMaion, .• The Dominion. govern - silent never assumed to dem& the point, in •litigation between Mr. Caldwell and Mr, :McLaren ; they. • simply' held that that question be- ' : local ION attire anight nate assmne lug be,fore the coults, it siumild. be lett tothe oeurts to.decide, and their right to db this waienot• in 'questioir at all beibre the Priv,y Goittleil) for the simple reason was a right Which could ,noti tiliesti oiled, -That Mr. Caldwell succeeded be 'ore the Pi•ivy Council did not justify Moirat in having attempted to. deliver judgment through.1110 .,the. lieminion, 8o niticli for thfit laturer and did not renitisr 1.38E. wise linostiOn of hir. John 'Alaciloirald's 24017 10AS proper the action of Ow pOSition• as a ConStitUtional 'Dominion. governs/lent disollow- (Cheere.) •jug the River and Stream:a bill. • (Cheerts,) am it strong 1110'wir • • our federal iiyateni ; I• believe that Hetet be lheeetvo:d. • the int(wost. .01,14,tit will best lye subservedby allowing to the provin- . - THE WEEK'S DOINGS. 041CADIAtt -,-There are sail tobe a very gaishod, 410sprta .8aerotary Fuller's large number of c ises of diphtheria order in Oetebie:, 1.884, opening in Montreal. Several .medical au-, tlesos lande, and their subsequent thorities have stated that tlipb,Anvia settlement by 20,000 people, • and scarletina are rapidly sprat i ug. -A valuable horse was stolen from the stable of M. 11-14tV,ent near Milton., on 'I'uesdity; a large black marc, four yeare old, in foal, diseovery that the Indian title to about ton milliewstores Of hind in North. Daltut1. hae not been -extin -A Kingston despatch. says M. 5. Duny, father of a 15 year-old bride, • laid an information against -her" ifusliamli -charging. • him with - stealing his daughter. • The husband • lias skipped out and the bride • is with her father, -At the Annual meeting of the Ontario Erewei:s' Association; held, in Ottawa; proposed amendments to the lig aor law permitting the sale of ale and beer in Scott A..ct counties „were discussed, and it was decided to bring the matter before 3iirlia- ment at theapproachine. sessitin. ,. • the farewell •meeting 1.11 Lyndon, Eng.,. with Canadian High • Commissioner Sir, Charles Tupper, Col, Stanley, Secretary of. State for the Colonies, stated that his col- leagime before ',ping, 04 of office had placed on record their decision, to use the •Cainidian Pacific' Railway • as the moans of .counininication be- tween Thigland.and the East. --Mrs. Blake (mother of Hon.. 'Edward- Blake) received suchsevere injuries from a fall that she died , last day, just one week after.the accident.• She was aged .82. De - chased' was the,cheighter of William Hume, • of Humewood, Wicklow County,. Ireland, and . married Wil- liam 'Hurtle Blake.. In July. 1832, • • the then young • couple sailed otor Catiela, ,tecom pitied tytheir mot h- et awl sisters,' the late .A.rchileacot Brough;•- the late Bialiop .cornyn, Ilis Honor Judge Rubinson, ;o• f Sarnia., and several others: -iti,insWer to int] u ivies by fish or - 'anon Of auipOtiel lorand other limas of.. the Maritime Provinces, the officers of the Jaskeriesr_Departusett-Te. , -that-the arrangement . entered into between • Canada, • and.:*0 United -States. jest 'sum MO con cerni ng the • • *!,--George Waterhouse, of Cohoes, New Yerk, was bitten by a dugsix yeara ago, which w is not known or suspected to he. mad, • After •four'. • years he began to act strangely at, times, betraying an abhorrence of water and bakin,..; like a dog. These attacks were iight and. Woulii occur .4 intervals of several months. On Staidly night last lie waftt Aipd . wit4 the must violent convid ions, ' -The type of hydroplinbitt was of the , niust . horrifying kind. • Any at- ' .teaterits at relict...were utterly 1111110, • and it was almost impossible to hold- • lain and prevent hint biting o hers The case was more dreadful and un- governable than -anything ever acen before by the attending, •physieiaps. , • A coneultataon Was heli last night and it was deeided thatas relief was impossible it would be a mockery on the art of metlicitle • to 'allow • the poor fellow to writhe in such ter- rible tortures any longer, Death •Was the only" relief; and all present .ektreme measures. in a case • where al ciins,eidi. itil:lat.:01111.11.6sh,oy 1,1;11 0 iilivii;,tost hdeorleliel they - were. jUstified in using soh • the • selfering was so intense and beyond, all 'medical Oont6.• last night, The ° physicians , feel • ... DEN l'OCRA.TIC • CUSSEDNESS. - - , . The following -.excerpts rite taken from the d dly.,•papers to silo* that one American ftiendS can "beat all ,.. creation" in ivickeduessif in nothing else. : . As a., recerd of one day's crime it is monionentel and yet we must. presume that ,not 'oven .one . . , • half is• told. .-1'elqinAltill, ov tl'E'.,tbLEe' To feii1:1;111;' b eairt l'ea2.-The11 found; a • dynamite cartridge • in ..the st. ei8toI'f1ii-ir1wsnpposecl that some in isereant ihiended to liluiv• up 'the steamer. • .She carries about 2;000 passengers a day. Ann° rtA, Ill.; Feb. 2, -Clifford C. • fisheries :is at -eas *end, 'and that .all : • Atom:hem vessels %found 'fishing in.SteVens lost night :discovered ChM. L. :Ross,' aged 1 8, of a City Canadian waters, within the :three - :nein,' :0u-tidal:inn.. • his are now Co be. 'new4irel: seized'. and 00nlikated. 11 '•iS not etore• Steveps started him ounsidered -likely,. however,. that any for..tlio torn" 4111:1 'aria 11'4 :Rees *shot .11 seizures rn tde untirthe au- trIevIcolvr(3.41,41.0ti.111.9re *len killed was iin tioll.of,ti;ou+Aresa. oft the..:President!ii • moot of a: Dc6-4,;,'' Ind:, • Feb. 2. --Two Years_ reCourniendatiOn for., the appoint- • , • , , . -*as. adopted hy, ,ago 'Ida Pavey eloped With Wm. the Ontario branin of the:V.000ot .4ecently they returned and Alliiince while' in session in Toronto, '3(011:d- en-% 'a 1.8'1114 .Tha. PaVtlyS ,Ontes, • and Iitat last' :week :,-;-"Whereas,we . ha:vs • night .Chhrli.s.‘PaVey •entered. a hall learned from the. public prints that the 0111111.0 Brewers'. Associ•itiOniti. lr'fli•Eqr.4C rrir-8•1: wits. being. held and' shot" Oates In the .eert-:. anneal nrouting *assembled 'decided, to apply to tlionext sessido of Pa 1- thi0ii Mis. th-t.t(%§. 6-19.P 1)(141 •ligr, halo Ilan ten t to -amend. the 'Scott' Act st".) on'01e. iis..fOr its to attior ale and heer • ':1qatil,. :.1.10:03t in Scott Act 0011111 i('8 therefore, 2.-A Man •MOM' seltek that this Dominion Alliance tiny" Giugrais grew enraged 41 the lydenouncessuch a pro-. refuSal of a girtto tiVe with itim and' itosit I, • which . would totally destroy eliether,..•..He then tried to 'escape :the esefillitese'of 'the, Soott Act., and but was pursued by a .crowd. liprebY calls oPon.....all • trienshi at fired, several ,shotS: at his ptirsimrs 'tem peranee, thrOligliOUt.. the •Dondie.-. 31111 WOunded .tivo 'ion to:resist. to thq Utmostsuch re-. crvjliaii..•.Giiigrais than took refuge -tregrade niotiOn,2, ' • iu his loclerings; Where lie wee 141, -Ex-Goii ether , Of Cali- •rest'M 'at*: 'ile8Par4P. figli.t.• • The gird:MAI five men'. 'whom he phot are .1:ornia, who 'is the 'principal Oivner the Pacific Coast Steamship Coiti.••. me •sev'ProlY .w9i.ipae'd. • • piny (American), has- jUst left Ion- SoPiotac,,Va.,.Feb, yes- treil -where ins -hail :a conference terday Morning 13. Parker, a respect - With Sir George Stephen, President able farmer, initcle•a .d.eadly.-assatilt ,of the :Canadien .:Piteifie Railroad With an axe open hiSavifeitn,rsigtor. Gompans,, . Governor Perkins- Says tatter-waS inStantly killed and he• Was infortnedLlay_aii::GeOiate Inc, Wife fittallir Wounded.. : parker Stephen that the', :English'Clovern saye lie had no qinarrel-withhis Wife Mont nitended.t6 subsidize a line of Or 'sister, ...but cauld 1201 resist the. St:edit:W.1 ips • froni -Vaticutiver, • the POwer that....proilipted him • to the; western.. terminus .o.f• tho .Canadiat deed. Ile was lodged in Jail and is Pacific, to China. and Japan. , 'By belieVed Co he insane,: . • • , establishing Aloha line of SteamerS'. • Pooiwor'ou,.' Tenn., Feb, the' English 'Government would day 'night •three men :attempted' to., have more direct and . quieleer . -burglarize the. dm 'Of J.N. Han* initeication with :the Orient than liy at 01,eniriary: They. were :detected the way of the:Suez Canal, and In by IIanleyrand..taventy, Shots were the.ease of war in the East could .exchanged betweenthe storekeeper trans,ant troops across the Atlantic and , the bureders. but. no one wee .0.ve1 the.011.11adiall: Pacific,. and by' Wounded.' 'Hanley. and A posse fol - this proposed Iinh to China. Gov., • towed the..hurglara,thisJuorn ing . 1st. 'Perkins thinks the Stew line Of ves-; 'Knoxville junetion, • Where, they AAIA will divert a large portion Of were entrimmitleil to eurrender,and the sllipnlonla, Wil:eh no* go 'Whefl. they refused' the:posse fired, east • by. way .of San.Frandieco and:7 killiug tiro of the , bin:glare instant - i1,, • Chicago -to . Canadian Pacific. ly. 'The -third escaped. No, clue Sir George Stephen • •' ••' him was foinid lead, to their Multi- fieation. ' ' • , -^ get rid of what he called persecu Lion, weer leifure the commissiouers aug n, above al logeal facts. . i‘rEsr ,W110:11Sti, O., Feb. 2,-- Yeeterday afternoon a Polish potter •11. uned why intti., the teputa tion et •ing religiuna enthusiaSf, laid dunto aleep. Ms wife Was •engaged in her household duties, • and,his twu children were playing OJt the floor. Alter sleePinp'" for arl- hour, Kutner sprang mit oi' bed awl '41 told his that he had beets com- mantled by Cod in a vision to kill' ' her and the He seized a. hatchet • end dealt her three blows bn and; thinkiug . he 114 finished her, turn- ed his attentioo to the children. l'Iwy • bad run nut • of dowel and while lie was searching for them his wife managed to make hel. way' to a. neighbins house, A number of men . soon sitrroinided and captured 'Kef-- tier •after a severe struggle. Mrs. ' Keffier is in „a caller. condition.. Kefficr • last 'ininimer attempted •to. . cremate one of hie_ children. in a „pottery oven, • Part, ‘eeLrufA,e Feb. 2, - Mrs. Punne .11rewt, (hie i)oin ing went to a liense near Ninth. • and Vine streets ;timed •With a long dirk -knife, and calling Miss Julia, •Cliirry out charged her • with . alienating the" . affections of herchusband from her) mnd crying with an '0/41.111--"I spoil yont pretty 'Nee," slashed •her. right and left and thou' 1)1111%0 the linife into her neck. Miss Curry _ • Id) t ho. floor fatally': wo.nodod: 'After pulling the • knife from the• . ere end Misre-nrown lifted it h igh Above heir head iind would have 'hurled the blade in the girl's 1)8(18 but it vae caught by. another we - man, wlio, lit struggling. with the • • • inftirial elf mature, hint four fingia, . of hey, right hand:cut tilt The Im- p ri Areas of „kink:Time 'final y d is • Aril -led, wotpart, but nut befoti• she 11'A' 11180 1/0011 S1,1.1.11.161.. in S110,111.161% When'. taken lb •the :1111.• 0)11 trown • ,only regret I 11 ill not cut heart our ••2.• -•-Gee rge • W• Ph ill IPS; 3 C.OltiAiisSi.011 inerohant of Clifeigh, in. JOY LiSt inn:tied, a handeoine: WOmen 'here, • wh6 (bad • nursed him ,when-lie,avas siek at a, , hOtel •Chierge. Soule weelt ago • • 1 i ps ppenred Ivith $10•- 000 of -hor husband's, money,. and Phillips -follirwed • her; to 'reoledo,. • whin.° lie- learned- :that silo eloped with former hueband, (to. • 11 Kioe:The; pair hate. not• yet . boon found,• ' FURIOUS ,NOW , Cairo, I1 1, , Feb.- 3.-A sovorc:: Anew storm 'Prevailed' *bore all day , yesteialay, nearly ten inches falling: RailrOad tiainleare delayed'. • . Parson, LIS.; furfouS snow •storin,': whieh commenced en Monday,etnitioited all day.Yesterclay. Railroads.: are 'experiencing: ,41:i.,at qr.:gilds:In:moving. trains. : • ,KansaS City, Ado., Stivoi.e.s.n* Stormeare reported ill Soutlmern and Westhrn. Kansas.: . Nash•Ville, Tenn., Feb. anowed here ,00ntiniturei y esterday andthe viOlenco Of -tile SP:Wit 21111S 'almted. 11 has already. reached depth of 10 inches, midis the ho 44) est, snOv•fitll for 'years.• ; • ' OalrestUn, Tex., Feb.'3..-A hisavy snow storm is prevai 1 i over Iudian territory, extending, Bondi and west and:: into Texas, Harrold reports it • is summing •in ,1 unhand le. • county. • Great sulferieg and loss of stook will. follow. . Ilarriaburg, :Va.; Feb. 3. -The heityieSt4stlowstorm ainec•1857begart, at' 1 o'cluek this rniornieg and con-• United all day..• the snow • ia now.. eighteen inclose deep on a level and ;• Hi drifted ;from .six. to •Teet. . Travel un the 'country , road8. is al, inest itiipessilile. The Mei:eery is .12 degrees. below Zero.- • Orr? ote MExtoo, 3.---Fow: • inches' of snoW . loiii ,,,nos.troni-11,is 011 y, yesterday'. • This is the- first Snow that has fal len in this vicinity sinno. 1856. . • • PRESBYTERIAXISM IN CAN'ADA. ' 'Some recebtly publislikk ligttres.,4 in Canada shew that the Presbyter. •icat church has taken a firm hold arm the people of Canada and that; • it makes 1110841 enconmgine. proeress. • N. teeth rem and,Popitter Setentee. •• SilICA. 1817 it itas increasiTd 607) oer Publle awl Individual itygiehe. • 00111. in Primal Edward Island, and , ,soctai e,empemestie Eicanothy: .NEW Feh, arty TIM and his wife, -a. barmaid and' ft bar, tettdco-tlay -appeared befete-the-• poi ice oitu tu issioners of the, city. and: •swore that IIill, who had no Itemise to sell liquor in his notorious re- sort:, bad been paying since last .8uninier sums of money running from $50 to $100 to noteistive Moran who stated' that the money must be paid to Captiv.ltlutpliy and the higher pollee officriala oe placell would be 'raided. Hill says he "kicked" reeentiv when it000 in New Brunswick the increase has Ai*, Randsomeraild • Twe'ttellar-Merithly. ,Agents _Traded Bur/miter& --Isserrsevenfoirb Irr-Nova 8sofia it has multiplied itself by six. 11) Quebec the inareams of members is • from 16)0() to 50,000 and the 0011.• , nolleitedheoribore for MAN. • gregations lillVe ina011804 fl'OTr) 3 to Largo Coneraemion Given. 60, In r817 OntatiO had 32,009 Mao' young wotseu es well 48 teen nave doer Presbyterians and nine m :rosters, Atoll ict. taw work in their cm neighborhood. .11ANDS0118 Alld 110W it 1118 41 8,000 Presbyteri ans and 550 ininistera, In the North 141110 west there .1Vt18 in 1882 only• ene ltiemidet: the Conitnigtedon, givini ehOte tiending the helmet. nu:tater anhiteribere hetn eon the reinistor, now there are 328 eongre- ;vomit .t,1010 an4 April, 1.885. gations and „stationa, with 44:154) Au weatne• employment, mai wining" to work, tune lot pa rtioular4 to A 'Huron, Dakota, special Wlyti: WU demanded in a I amp, 044 1111811 Minn:MA and 94 ministers, The ees the free and tutoring ex- with-eit ti. eat, (hi vivo. (let nvnreget 4Tha tlommiasioner of the General money, 'Then on Saturday slight a money raised in. 1 875 was $98,672. ' ist-gLiiszicits naltf PtIket RIO 11,1 4,1 onlv ose) bo. ( 01.147 t13 Lif Om 1 ights 111.'11 they ' • . Ofilim lets alartling b irmalit 141 11 and 11111 to 1 it 1881 it wan 558 2 Pi irat. • rt. " 4, (3444' CUMUS. It tha marvei heafing fee soros outs Ruins efe 140 mink' • to.