Loading...
Exeter Times, 1874-10-22, Page 1ler very I hursday Afornng ovvieu, PPP0SVII, ')Vi-OLSONS ANN ,--.4'F,:R4t,,$' ,f s',1,0 Sr Anatrin, payable strictly in advance. I No stib lption takoill'or 108s than kin,: montha. , I2 4 T khc, OF' ..e1.1)TE2C1.'4121'G . . '1.'irst insertien per line., .....„„ ... . . .,.........„,.....,. ^:..klachribeequent ineertiml.peripo,:, ,pt•,;,.1\,1,,"2 d rtisemouts of stra7poic,a 'to,. ortietes,torn or .'4,4,,, not ostecam.4022, 1$41134.1i,:',M0.2;th h subsceine4404040.0, 94.1*.;..s.N44, ' :". to f births, )4atylageii:00.44214tha A45t,i(1 AdVertitemente vithont spoello dirocti, ons iuserted till 'forbid, and charged accerdInglY, Advertisements to be oleos uted bY 4 seale ,`of poljd noupariel, E EL A, 012E .2;';:141,Th' S The followiturvates will be charged for yearly Act verf isements oxn run, aro% 3 ',WS One Column ... .. .. $35 il,alf , 05 25 15 4nel:ter " . 8 Eighth " . . ... .. 5 B1151110SS car* 1,1110,Setad Mipr, ; six to ten ines, SO, 7 .1. WHXTE1 Stages leave Exter daily far Luton 'and London at 4a.M.; arriving in Lucian at 0 aan„ ; in London at 9 a. iu. Leaves London for Exeter at ;2 pan .; Entail, at 5 p. ariving in Exeter at 7 pan. stages b.3.ave Exetey daily for Clinton thr 5 ; arriving in Clinton at 10 am, ',cave Cllnton at 3130 1), na arrive in. Exeter, at 5;80 pan . st agesleaVe :cater on Tuesdays, Thurpdays and, Saturdays for t. Mary!s, tit 4 ana.,LirriN2110 timefer fidou treble going. oust and 'west, Leave St. Mary's at 2,50 P.M.; arrive in Exeter at OSI) oin.e.q.5. • ...000,11. e41.01.: HYNDMAN, EXETER, AS- A KKZED by Dr. Mines. Night calls pronytly attended tp, Office hours as usual. ;(' 0. MOORE, M.D., 0.-Af. , '0 GRADUATE of McGill 'University. Mon - *eat Phyeticima, surgeon, &c. . Odle° anlrosidenee-Exeter. CoiA. Offico bours---8 to 10 am.,,and 7 to 10 p.m. 'VAT GRACEY kr. D., GrRADI.T- v . tau off Trinity 17niversity Toronte, Physician Surgeon ete„ Oillee Main lit, 'West, two doors north of liaerett's harnesg shop, Exeter Ont. 52-1y. TO, M. B., M. D., L. R. C P. S. 0. Grittluate of Trinity College, Mem- ber of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Office -Drug Store, Mein Granton and is also proprietor of the Drug store, ad con- stantly. keeps on halide, large stock of pure drugs Patent 'Medicines, Dyo stuffs. Urea: to it, J two 18, 1874. 45 -am. 1V1 RS ELIZA ANN MARRIOTT, 1.1.1.. haspermanemly settled in Luc - nu, on George -Kt Cala ,p101.11.ptly attended to Inquire ut Walkers hotel • ' ea-Gire, '1 I A ilDING. & HARDING, Barris- ters, ttornays, Solieitors, Commissioners .‘,18;t443&-2IIcrrox's 11coex, Wator Street, St. #11.1iy's. VOTIN E. HAIWING. E. W. 11.n.norso . ;JONES & AlcDOUGALL, Barristers, Attorneys -at -law, Solicitors in 11he ucery, Conve vancers, Commissioners ix; Q.B, otl.Notaries Public, St. Marv'f.;„ elm on-Hutto:4 Illnek, U. -Liter St., St. Mary's Ont. 1-1y. r RON M. CLENCH, BARRISTER and Attorney -et -Law, Solicitor in Chancery and bisoitem?,), and Lecturs Patent, home mid for- eign, Plans hml dial:slugs exectrivil, and specific°, !ions drawn pursuant to rules of pat( maces on recei‘ ing imtructIons or productioit mo'del. OFnen-Hatton's Block, (e110.111 Strea, St .2.rtry's, Ont. 1-1y. • INT" lieDIARAIID, B.A., 1 V • !13 R1STER, N'OTIRT, 'CONITYANE11, LOGAN% ONT. TOHN MACDON'ELL, *SUER OF marrisao Licenses. Dxeter, (W. 1-ly Nanka G. WILSON, It'SUER 01? Licenses undei7 the now A t thE Past Ogioe store, 2.writ Ont. 40-t-f,c Auttiontin. tif• IBViiilte(r)o\l\s;c1Nar 'S a l cis tlAy autctotuiti,ei etiot "Annus reusonable. ' Winchelseti, Out. 15, 1875. f. SPA CK N, .ICENSED skUCTIpie4EER L...t For the County of Huron. RES1DENCE, - pp7ITR, Cn LES PROAOTLY ATTENDED TO PHARG1'IS RIODERATE. 2-1 e ..S=CE!attitiViMMOZ6=2",=.3 Oft15. 71AJANSION HO USE, EX ETER O'ct., W. TIAWKS'IlAW, Propriet or. new and comennlions Ito lioNv completed, and fitted up tfiro'ngitout with first -furniture. The best of Liquors and tho choicest of Cigars at the to-. ,The Leen e 'is capable of acemninodatinu 35 gl s. Excellent stables and au attentive hos- (Oen s. 'itairAPLE LEAF HOTEL, 'LAMER This hotel has been lately built and turn by the Subscriber mid affords every mo• dern cum 'art for tho traveling and farmingpublic. First-class Minors at the bar. An attentive host, er and need stabling. M. NEVILLE, 1 •opriotor. rale Wagon :end Carriage. Making, 331 cksmith- &c., in CO:1110X1011. First-elass work t moder- ato priees.. Call early and ofpcn. 14-1v. (VEEN'S HOL LUCAN. :IV na WE Y, Prom:fete:: This first-elfn hOtel oa,glately chaug.20.12ands.(from .W. 11. Wilt na to W. Belvoyl, and "is fitted with new fni iture taironlimilt. Free. 'bus, te and. from the station °flied for the now line of ;InisCes to rmidon. The bar le replete with' the 'ffli•fit iquors and frag- rant flovanal. Pour CO'al/prOial sanaple room, Good stabling and 'attentird'hOStler$, 32-1.y EVERE HUUSTI, LIJOART, A. _LC Ll?.VIT"17, Proprietor:. This Hotel has lately changdd hands„ andthe present ) roprietor feels satisfied in saying he cite givethe best of accom- modation to man and beast Choice LIquora and fargment, Cigars at the bar. Attentive 1104102' Plnployed, 97 -am OENTRALI1OTEL,LUOAN,ROBT. arcinuaant, proprietor. 'bus ru ns in con- aexion with this hotel to said from all trains. The .thoicest liquors and cigars kept cOnstantly at the liar ; also sample rooms for Commercial Travel- lers, . Good stabling and atteni,ive Moaners. 14-ly YAL HOTEL, LUCAN. J. W. moraistor. The hest attention paid to tee travelling public,' First-clitaff liquors and cigars ?2., the her. Good stabliagiand attent. i V4, hestlers ged thoaera o. ' ONNYBit'-)01(. _HOTEL, CREDI- TON' Banal; 'one mile' east Crediton, Tho7 Mas,j. Hodgins, proprietor. This hotel has re'. antly Changed hands, and IA non'' fitted up for the *CcommodatiOn of the travelling Aroblic. Choice WI ostler always in attendance, 50.ern, 14 qua and the finest brands of cigars at -the bar. IIARLES SENIOR HAS LATELY overbatiled his.phetograph studio and built of extension, , arranging the light so us to make bettor offeets on his work, Having 'Startled wi th eilligence for sonle,thne paet the different °fleets rif, light Ado, anti having taken instructions f rani some of tlie bekt artiele in the Dominion and the adjoining shafies he is 1101v firepsred to execute lit/rit in first-010AS style irprri the suni 'lest tin typo tdift life-siSe photograph, Reteitebing and enlarg,, ifig.fnade a Speciality, Crial.."Ii;11,2nitnli of different. Fl1gdelk8158 dbtlAttienti...V on hand, ri"100F,",-$1.35P ririSh11:1 reteneized, Per dOSen, Iterticewnilimg 8110ii reSitionces plmtograpTieti Weida d9 Welt t& giya kiln a call, as Ilona blit good w'ork 11 1.)e p'Ped lertVe lii8 1,00110. ' 01.01110110ildtt1t0;, • t S. GIDLE'YLEXETED, CA - BINE T-IdAKEI1,33. ONDEItTAKIM15.. take bin opportunity to inform the inhabiter:It Of this surrounding seetlons that. tbeir NeW ,Hsarfie PI now completed, end they de not, Inn:di-Ate in ear IV that it isono tile best, thin Westorfr part, (Mr TINDERTA,Ki NG l'.)'0)ti..ritri ofit, an hero frp-O, "Will 110'1.0110d Ina yr efficient COnditieli. CoilliliP-,plitirt aft .0.thrtMentary--- 9180, slitende, (38e. Videtirakatirli 0,1 tho. illiOrtes notiCo ttnd ihOtifiVettShilabis tdenis. N, Pod aegorttnent 'of FtiltNITOItE WaYig Steels. • , Aufgast 28, '74 52-1y, sov:TIT VOL. 2, NO. 9.—W.T1014 NO, e PERT NQA,-aff. • ...E.X.VT"...)::..9.117,4RIOW11.-q,g.$15,44.Y.',.:.O.OT013.171413: 22 2.$74,. A a- .c.RAN:oki0F.,••••OusiNgt.t% le tin tusIgned hay g pureltioefl tlig t 1-4,9 interest ocf the late Dr, Hi. B. Winanis at tito business, is now prepared to accommodate the public with a well selected stock of DRUGS, TOILE,T ARTICLES, TRU S SE S, SHOULDER BRAC S, 'DYE STKFFS, PATENT gEDICINE S, PRICESNtmein),nr. Co, . D gist, AN 'USEN, Exeter April 1.1871 Chemist it DruLtf. 0, Z‘COP...t1iLLITM, NiVhOloSalQ" Druggist, MAIM; Ili DRUGS, OIL 8, DYESTUFFS, Perfumery, Lamp Chimneys, Wicks &Taunters, 'latent Medicines, Essences, Hair Oils, oto. 'REPORTER of Pie). GARDEN Seeds RW11310101 STREET, LOT1L1,011, 04 Orders Filled iu the Most Reliable Manner. 54,3ro A PUBLIC CAUTION. Holloway's Pills and Ointment are, neither maimfactured nor sold 111 any part of the 'United States, altliough -they may be oLtained ill the B. N. A.111131'letLY1 PXOVinceSe Each Pot and Box bears the British (icrop, moat Stamp, with tho)voras, "Rollo, way's Pills and Ointment, Loudon, einielyie'cl on., Ithas bectune nodes:my to makcf- tine'annotin- cement, because the New York CheMlearep.puiatiy (who pay nobody), Antling at 1/10 t1114 thew nalne has been so exposed, 'have assumed the title of "Holloway arid t1o. ;,"-blit, even now, no one will buy their medicin esilirect front them, so that they have made arrangements ttt supply exclusively tho firm of Messrs. Henry and Go., of New ' York, with their so called "Holloway's Pills .and inent." It is presumed that from the large eon.: neXion Messrs. Henry end Co. have in the -British Provinces and elsewhere, the public is very likely to be imposed upon by unseimpulous vendors and others unless they exercise great caution to pre- vent their being misled, by finding these inediclues bearing a stamp with the name of ';',ILlrewaS, and Co., New York," print el tenare011. Many respect- able firms in the 33ritish Provinces, who obtainmy medicines direct from here, have very properly snggestecl that I should, for the benefit of them- selves and the public, insert their 1111.1110S 111 the PaPers, that it may be known that medicines eun be had genuine from them. The following is a. list of the firms alluded to ; and 'particularly re- commended those who desire to get my medicines to apply to some of the Houses hamed:-Messrs. AVERY, 33Z.OWN &Co., Halifax, N. S. Messrs. 1`011- SYTH ek Halifax., N. 8. 'Messrs. T. B. B.e.mant & Se5s, St. John. N. B. Mr. T. DES Char- lotte Town, P. 33.1. 'Messrs. LANOVRY Lt GO., Vic- toria, B, C. Messrs. Naomi Co., Victoria B. C. Dr. JonNPALLIM, Chatam, N.B.. Dressrs. kin -situ d: Cm, Montreal. Messrs. J. '1Vixan Co., Heirdb. tou, Ont. Mr.H. J. liosE,U.'oronto. Mr. ..t• MAX St. John; N. 13. Mr. JO/MI.1, li'D, erich,Ont. Messrs. L't.thor & Co., Toronto. Mr. J. CliALONE11; st. john N. 33. Mescalf. Ilaxixot,mx BnoTTranS,.'st,, John, N.. 13. Mr. s. Prtinnr. WindcoriOnt.7Mrs. Ounizr, Norden, N. R. . GEORGE c. Hunt, Jun„ Fredericton, N. 33. mr. W. H. Tztosznsox,Harbor Grace, N. F. L. arr. J. at WILY; Frederieton, N. sressrs, W, D, 'roma zmntrenl. 'rile medicines are sold at the lowest wholesale net prices, in quantities of not loss than X20 worth -viz., Bs. ad., 22s., and 34s, per dozen boxes of Pills orpots of Ointment, for which re- mittances must be sent in advance. THOMAs NOLL 31VA.Y, Chemists and other vendors of "'"olloway's genu- ine Pills and Oin talent may Intve their names in- serted h; the local vapers if they will please apply here- 593 Oxford street, W.C. London. March 31st. 1874 DOMINION LABORATORY,. A. choice assortment of pure drugs and chemi- cals, and where will be freind all toe iatest and most populu.r patents of the day, a few of whieh we may mention. Tonics, I/yspesiela Remedies, &e. Buoini Bitters, Vinegar Bittors, Planets' "litters, Calclwell's Celebrated Dyspepsia Reinecly, %rap- s u's Alteratiyes, &c. Ayers sarsaporilln, Bristol's sarsaparilla Rad - way's Resolvent. lodo B ratnid Calcpm Compound, Kennedy's Medical Discovery, Dep.: w's Medical Victory, Shoshonocs Beinody, 4.0.abolcre Buena Modicamontuin. &e. (Highs, Celifs,, yonsinulifete, &e. Ayer's cherry Pectoral, Allen's Lung Balsam, Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry, Itansom's Hive syrup and Tolu, Bryan's Pulmonic Wafers, 13ro ten's Bronebial Troches, Whiers Hoarbound and Ele- cab-inane, Fellow's Compound Hypophosphites, Parrish:ft Chemical Food, Heaton's syrup, Fir. cmir. et Struet Plies., Peruvian syrup, Campbell's Coclliver Oil. with Pancreatic Fahulsion. Pills. 01.t7e. .. Dandelion Pilig, Aeon's, Herrick's, Bristors, Mo se's, Indian:Root, Ji.decki's Mountain Herb, Hag yard's, Itadway's, 33ranclithhs, National, McLefin's Shoshonees, sir James Clarke's,-Sweet Castor Oil Castor 0i1iihnullion, &e. Trask's and Wilson's klagnetic ointments Pettit's Eye salve, Vittoria Carbolic anti Soper'S salve, Holloway's eintments,Depew's Humor and. Kennedy's Hiunor Ointinents. , . .. Panirkillers 'Pte. - Perry DoXis' Pain Killer, Radway's R. 11,,Boyer's Galvanic Fluid, 'Victoria. Electric Liniment, Thomas' Electric till, Winslow's soothing syrup, Depow's Rheum:eta Comfort, Kennedy's Linament Dolorieide, tte. Worm Medici/tee etc ./ • McKenzio's Dead shot, MeLean's Vermifuge, Winslow's Wffixt syrup,Freeman'sWorrn Powders Worm Tea, One door North of R. Davis' Blacksmith shop, Main -street Exeter. A call solicited, satisfaction and value i or money orient guaranteed. Come one come alt. Diarrohcaa anti Dysentery 1VIedicines, Hair Dressing, Plasters, &c., Caterrh Riedicines; /Horse Medicines, Pure Dye, Stuff ,Aneline Dyes, &c., at the )0 Wines and ' uors for Medicinal use, , 6=111,1.0 11,. WI edical Laboratory. ' .1;2r0/41,3,i0Veal e--(Z-Ce4/42 le e—• Ceziceito ZZaaii e, °?1°- 17,1fectilprrif Zi-OetW, c=0.2112 it ell late; a/q(reii, i) 0 0 0)0 0 0 g.cd.vOsp 11;0)(00 e ..ere:/aor4454 ales ileetcleti /le 0 0 Ce 6 66. e 4e11€4, =431424641.r.' id4zr,eel at do , iato alfri " eeld. /4„0 annecoi4 feee6iiriG4, mart 6404 %./. em.01";;V ...agoAer ..4'„,?1?4,:!_i oite,7 elide 008, tele. 1-04-y1 THE DISCARDED LOVER and with the white nightcap on his Soren Qvist was the'pestor ef the little village of Yeilby situated a few miles from Grenaee, in the Jnthind peninsula, Ile was a Man of excellentamoral char: acter, generous, hoepitable, and diligent in the performanao of his eiteeedeltities but he was ale9"tilaialr Cionstitutiene ally violent temPer, whichhe lacked the tia'reStrain, and waS consequent- ly §uhjeet times to fierce ontbreaks Of wrath, which were a scourge ten his household when they ocdurred, and a humiliation to himself. Like moat Danish clergyman of that clay, he was tiller of the soil as well as a preacher of the word : and from the produce of his -tithes, and the cultivation of his farm, realized a comfortable compe- tence. He was a widower with two childrea-a deaglitee who kept house for him, aud a son holding an officer's commission m the army, At Ingvor- strup, village not fer feoM dwelt a cattle fitrmela One Morten Burns, .who, by means Anything bilt honest' and' honoralk liad .acquired considerable property, andavho was in repute Ek 4 reckless self-seeker end .01)Press9 9f 41leeree. 4biee man .Mor, ten theaght fit to pay coart te the pas- tor's °daughter, hut the suit Wes rejected by both father arid child .4 either the refusel or the manner Of it so 4004 the enitor the. he swore secretly. to be revenged ou both. Some months later, e lieu the short- lived suit had been fbrgotteu, the pas- tor, being in want of a farm servant, engaged ,Niels Burns, a poor brother al the rich Meetent the discarded lever, Niels soon showed himself to be 1.3„n ut- terly worthless fellow, lazy, impudent, and' overbearing ; aud the result was trenetant recurronee ef .gnariels and reneiminatithis hetAeen himadli and his magter. Soren, on more their beta P'ce. amen, gave the fellow thrashnig, which did not at all tend tO improVe the relations between theM. These re - 'Miens, however, were destined to mime to, a speedy close% The pastor had set Niels, to dig a pieee groUnd in the gaatien, but on coining, out he found Linn not digging, but leisurely resting on his erade, tom cracking nuts which he Int'd plucked, his work being left un- done. The pastor scoldedhim angrily - the man retorted that it was no busit nese, 9f ji.j the garden; a: Soren structt him twice in the feet), and the fellow, throwing.down the spade; retaliated with a volley 4 f abuee. Thereupon the old man lost self- control,'and. seizing the spade, he' dealt felloiv several btows with it. Niels fell to the earth,like one dead ; but when his maeter, in great alarm, raised him up, be hcolse away, leaped through lhe hedge, and made uff into the neighbor- ing wood. From that time he was seen no more, and all inquiries after him. proved vain. The above was the pas- tor's account of the facets. Ere long strange rnmoes hegan to circulate in the neighborhood, and, as a matter of course, they reached the pas- tor's ears. Morten 13urns was knowu to haveseaid that " he would make the parsou produce his brother, even if he had to dig him out of the eartch.'t Sor- en was iutensely pained at the calumny implied, and instituted at his own ex- pense a quiet search. after the miSsinee mau-a eciarch which failed altogether. EVen before that failure wee known, Morten Burns, in fulfilment of his threat, applied to the district magis- trate, taking with him as witnesees one Larsen.. it cottager, and a laborer's wid- ow and daughter; on the strength of whos testim.ony he declared his suspi- cion that the pastor had slain his bro- ther. The magistrate represented to him the risk he ran in making so seri- ous a charge egaiust the clergyman, and advised him tu weigh the matter well before it was too late. But Mor- ten persisted in his. assign, and the statoMents of the witnesses were taken down.' The widow Karstern deposed that cm the very day when Niels Burns Burne Oas.gaid to, have fled. from the pareepages she and her daughter Else had Passednby the Pastor's giteden about the of Oen. When, they were nearly in. front of the hedge which en- closes it„onthe eestern side, they heard some, one calling Else. It was Niels, who was on the other side of the hazel buehes, and who now beet back the branches, and asked 1,1!'lse if she would have, some nuts. She teek a handful, and then asked him what Ile eyes doing there ? Ho answered that the pastor had ordered him to dig, but that the job did not suit him, and he preferred cracking Ellt§. '141!.lt then they heard a door in the hOnse open, and Niel's eaid "NoW listen, and yon shall heat a sermon." : Three* after they heard (they could not sae, because the hedge Was tbohigh 'and too thick) how the two quarrelled, and how the one paid the other in kind. At last they heard the pastor cry : ' "I will beat thee, dog, until thou h- est dead at my feet 1" . Whereupon there Wel'O sounds as of blows, and then they heard Neils cal- ling the pastor a roesne and a hangman. Tiy this the pastor made no reply ; but they'heard two blows, and they eaW the iron blade of a spade and part of the handle C-Otig twice aboVe the hedge- row, but in 4ose hands they could not tliseean, After this, all was quiet in the gotten, and, somewhat alarmed mad kilted the widew ahd her demo- terhureieel on their Way. Lateen, the potta„gee, deposed that Oti evening of the day fellowing that of the "disalipe4antie, of Niele, es he was retinenig ,hoiiirs very late froth -Tol, strup, and Was passing along the foot. path Wilieh 'flanks the SOUtiler/1 Sid& Of ti1C: pastor's garden2 he heard from :within the gaddeti the sound of' SOrfle- olio digging the earth; 'At first he was rather'stattlea ; but seeing that it was clear moorilighW, he dst6.inined to find out Who it Was that WitSioriting in the garden at that late hoer ; whereupon he 'sliched oft his webdoir shoes, elhnbed up the 116o, arid parted4-the tope of the hazel bushes se as to onitble him to Sce. Then he saw the pastor in the greple deeeeing-gown 4.6 ustaq Woe, $1.50 PER ANNUM. distriet une\gistrete Who lied first ar-1 was Ao overcome by the terrible narria. head busied in levelling the earth with restellum the followmg eteaege con - a spade; tint melte than this he did not seo fur the pes'tor turned suddeal ratind. as if some sound had strUck, his ear, and Witness beingetfraid of tiptoe- tien,'lent himself down, and ean When' the WalleS'SeS 'liad thus &pee - ed, Merton demanded 'Viet' 'the'parson should: be arrested. Vishing to eyoid such, 'a scandal if possible; the Magis- trate, Who was a friend of Sorel's; pro- posed that they should go together' to the parsona,ge, where they would proL bably receive a satisfactory explanation of the facts deposed to. Morten' con- sented to this, and the party set opt. On approaphing the house, they saw Soren coming to meat theim-when Morten ran forward, and bluntly acmes - ed him of murdering his brother, Itcl- ding that he was come with the meals - trate to make search for the body. The pester made lum no, reply, but' go-MU- ously greeting the magistrate, gave di- rections tO the farm servants, eylio noW gathered ronnd, to , , by all the hibans in their POWer, the'sparbh that was about to be made.- Marten led the way into the garden; cs' rid after leokhig round, for ,some time, pointed to a per.; tain spot, end palled upon the men to dig there. The men fell to and Morten Seined them, working. wIth show of frantic eageruess. Viten the, had dug te e littla depth, the groand eroved ego bard that it was evident it had net been broken up for a long while. Buren bad looked on quite at ease, arid now he said to Morten: " Slanderer, what have you got for your paine.." Instead of replying., Morten turned to La. rson, and iisked, him where it -was that he had seen tha parson digging. Larsen painted. to se liea,p of ca,bbage etalks mid other refuse, and said be thoualit that was the place: Theyub, kph wee soon removed, and the .men begaa digging at the soil beneath, They had mete dug long, when one of them cried 'eat.: " Heaven preserve ns 1" and all pres- ent crowded to look, The crown of. a hat was visible above the earth. , That is ;slid's hat !" cried Morten. "I 1o:ow et well. Here es a secuyety we shall find him! Dig away ha shout-, ed, with fierce energy, and was almost as eagerly obeyed. Soon an arm appeared, and in a few minutes the entire corpse was disinter- red. There could he no donbt that it was the missing Inen. Th,e face could not be recognized, because clecomposi- don llad commenced, and the features .had. Leen. injured by blows ; hut all his ;clothes, even nnto his shirt with his n name on it, were identified by his fel- low -servants ; and even a leaden ring in the left ear of the corpse was recog- !nized ae ems which Niels had worn for years. There was no alternative but to ar- rest the pastor on the s,pot-indeed, he willingly surrendered himself, merely protesting his innocence. " Appearances are against me," he said ; surely this must be the work of Satan and his ministry; but He still lives who will, at His pleasure, make my innocence manifest. Take me to prison ; solitude and in chains I will await what He, in His Wisdors, shall decree." The pastor was reale-Val td the 'jail. Greneee the' same night, and,on the following day came the judicial exami- nation. The first thme witnesses con -- firmed their former statement§ on oath. Moreover, there now appeared. three addiaamil witeesses, viz., the pastor's two i'itrin servants and the dairymaid. The two former explained how, on the day of the murder, they had been sit - tine near the open window in the ser- vants' room, and led heard distinctly how the man Niels were quarrelling, and how flio formed had cried out : "I will slay thee,, dog I thon shalt lie dead at my, leet They added that Ahoy had twice be - fere heard the pastor ,threaten Niels ,with the like. The dairymaid deposed that on the night -when Laesen saw the person ,in the garden she, was lying, awake in hed, and hearh the door lead- ing from the passage it:An the. garden creak e and that when she.: rase and pe ped out, she saw the pastor, in his dreseingegown and nightcap, go out in- to the garden. What he did there she saw not; but an hour afterwards she again heard the creaking of the door. When asked what he had to say in ins defence, the pastor replied solemn- ly : " So help me God, I say nothing but the truth, I struck the deceased with the spade, but he was able to run away from me, and oat of the garden ; what became' of him afterward, or 'how he' came to be buried in my garden; I know not, As for the evidence of Lar- sen and the dairYmaid, who say: they 88,W 111Q, in the garden in the night, it is a foul lie or it a hellish delusion. Mieerable men that I ain, I have no pne on earta te §peak in rey defense,- . that I see clearly ; if He in Heaven likewise remains silent, I have only to submit to His inscrutable will." 'When; Seime two weeks later the trial came on two moreafresh witnes- SOS were produced. They (teetered that on the oft -mentioned night they were proceeding along the road which rune from the pastor s garden io the wood, wher they met a man earryintg a sack on his back, who pessed them, and Walked on in the direetion erthe gar- den. Ilts face they contd. tot seek hi- tismuch. as was doneeated hy the ever - hanging sack ; tte the moon wee shining on his baelt, they mild plain. ly descry that he wag °fad in a pale coat and a white night-cap. • He dis- appeared near the pastor's garden hedge, Ne sooner did the pastor }mat aille evidence of the witness- to ' this effect, than his face ttirfied an ashy line, ho'cried in.A faltering " I sainting l" and was so prosteated liody that lie had b be taken back tO priElon, There, after it. period of severe- suf, feting, the intense astonishment of Cyory One, he Madel to his felend, the fession ; " From my Aildhood as far back as I Call Iernenalier, I have ever hcon. passionate, quarrelsome, wed proud -- impatient. of contradiction, and eyer ready with a:blow. Yet have I seldom let the sten go' down an my wrath, nor have I borne ill -will to anyone. , ,When but a lad slewin .anger a dog which, oneday ate my ;dinner, which lied left in his way. When., ae a student, I went on travel, 3 entered on slight pro- vocation, into a broil, with a German youth in Leipsic, challenged him, and gave him a wound that endangered his life. For that deed, I felt 18, merited \‘ hien hos now come upon me af- ter years ; but flee papiehment falls up - oil niv sinful head With tenfold weight now that 1 eau bro'ke1n down with age, a clergyman, end es father, Oh, Fa - 4@.r in Heaven ! it is here that the waund ie eoreet," After. a pepee of anguish° lie°centinti- ; aan awe eoafees t e crime which no doubt key? , ,tted, but of I tun, neyeetheless, lot fully emeseiovis. That I struck the unheppy man with the sPede I knew full well, end leeve already confessed ; whether it WOr0 with the fiat ei,da pr with the sharp edge I could not in My passion descent ; that lip then fell down, and afterward again rose up and ran Davey -that is all I know to a surety. "What follows -Heaven help me 1-feur wit- nesses have seen; namely, that I fetch- ed the corpse from the wood and buti- ed it ; and that this must be sustanti- ,ally.true I am obliged te believe, and I will tell yea -Wherefore. Three or four limes /AV' V,fe,. that I knuw of, it has happened tb me to walk in my sleep., The last time ("about nine years ago) I: wae next day to preach a funeral ser-, mcn over the remains of, a man ,ev119 hatlennexpeetedly met' with a -dreadfill death. I was at a loss for a text, when the words of a wise. man among the ancient (*welts snddenly occurred to ma Oalf no man happy until he be in his grave.'. To use theeverds of a hea thole:for the, lest of Qhristian dis- couree wee not„ neetheug-ht, seemly; hitt I then remembered that the same thought,lexpressecl:inwell-nighlthe:sa,me terms, was to be met with somewhere in the Apocrypit. I sought, and sou,glit tout could not find the passaae. was late -I WU wearied hy innal previous labor ; I therefore went to *bed, and soon feel asleep. Greatly did 'marvel the next morning when, an arising and seating Myself at my writing -desk, sav before me, written in large letters eepieee et paper, Let no man be deemed happy before his end cometh. (Syrach 80' hut not this alone ; I found likewise a; funeral. discourse - short, but as well -written as any had ever composed -and all in my own handwritma. I knew, therefore, who it was thatt)had written the discourse ; and that it was no other than myself. Not more that half a year previetks had, in the same marvelous itate, gone in the night dine into the church, and fetched. away a handkerchief which I had left in the chair behind the altar. Mark now -when. the two witnesses this morning delivered their evidente before the eourt, then ray previous sleep-walkings suddenly fleshed, .across rnea and I likewise called ta mind thet in the morning after the nigh.t during which tile corpse.musthavo'been butt ed, I had been surprised to see my dressing -gown lying on the floor inside the door, whereas it .was always my custom to hang it on a chair by my bedside. The unhappy victim of my ciabridlecl pension must, in all likeli- hood, have fallen clewn dead in tilt wood ; and I must in my sleep -walk- ing have followed him thither. Yes - the Lord have inceey 1 -s -so it was, so it must have been," Ze()..n the following,day:sentonce:ofdeath was passed apon the prisoner -a sen- tence which. many felt to be t oo.severe, and which led to a. friendly consptiey on his behalf ; and' had it not been for :his ownrefusal to be a. peaty to any- thing , nnlawfel; he might halt 0 QsGaPed. The Jailer was gained over, and ,a fish- erman had his boat in readiness for a flight to the Sweedish coast, where lie would have been beyond the reach of danger. Ent Soren Qvest refused too flee. He longed, he s'aid, for death ; and he would not add a new stain to 'his reputation by a furtive flight. He maintained his strength of nand to the lai)t, and from the scaffold lie address- ed to the bystanders discourse of 'math. eowera which he had composed in prison dewing his last days, It treated of anger and its direful cense- etioneee, with touching allusions te himself and the dreadful crime to which his anger misled him. Therefore, he doffed his coat, tionnd to histown hands the napkin before his eyes, and sub- mittedahis sleek to the executioner's Sword. One-antit twenty years arta the pat. tor, Swot) Qvest, of Veilhy, led been accrieed, tided, condemned and execut, ed for tho' riunder of hie serving 1119,11. all old heggarmen applied for alms to the people of Arlan, the parish ad• oining to Suspicions were aroused by the exact likeness he bore to Morten Berne, of Ingveretrup, who had lately died, iind also' by the curious and anxious inquiries the inan made concerning events long past, The pas- tor' of Avlsoe,: who had buried 111Orten. Beans, took the vagabond to his Par- sonage, and there the fellow; all tin - conscious of -the portentous' nature of the admission, fteknowledged that. he was 'Niels Burns, the very wai for• whoeestippoeed murdea the: pitstor ehffered the shameful death of ask:in:1- nel 1 Had his hrether Mortaa survived him, it is prettY perk& the truth, con. coaled so long, had noyerheen knOwn, as 1\1'0118 had only rotnrned to the dis- 'Wet in the hops of profiting. by Nfor tori's death, the neWs of which had ace eidentally teached him, He profeeeed and; indeed, plainly merle:need-the tan horror on hearing the deeadful )ry of tlic pastor's eruel fate. It was fill.Uortenlid*ge he said; but he tore that he could scarcely gather eteength to reply to iuestions put to him. The result of hie examination and confession may be sunned up very briefly. Morten had conceived a mortal hatred of Soren Qvest front the time ,that he refused 'hint his daughter, and lad determined on yevenge. It' was be whoa eompelled Neils to take service with the paetor ; he 'had spurred him to the ° repealcd offices, in the expecta- tion that violence would resalt, owing to the pastor's haety temper ; and had carefully nursed the feud which` SOOO arose betweeu maetee and man. Neils told him daily all that t000k place, On leaVing the garden ore the fatal day, he had ,eam over to Ingvorstrap te ac- quaint hts brother with what had hap- pened. Morton shut him np in a pri- vate room that no one might eee Shortly after midnight, when the whole of the village was, ashien, the two bro., thers went to e, Ow where tho roads gross eech other, and where, two days previously, a suicide had been buried - a young man of about Neil's age and. stature, In spite ,of Neil's reladance and remonstrance they dug up the corpse, and took it Mortou'r house. Neils was made to striv and don a suit of Alorton's and the corpse was clad, piece by piece, in Neil's cast-off elothes 'even to the very earring. Then Mor- ton bettered the dead face with a spade ik,in a sack until tnenextnight, when they carried it into the wood by Veilby parsonage. Neils asked what all these preparations meant. Morton told him to mind his own business, and go and fetch theparsou's dressing gowu and ear. This Neils refused to do, whereupon Morton caiefully en tered the parson's building and fetched them himself. " And now " he said to his brother, y,p,If go your way,,, Here is a purse With a' himdred dollars -make for the frantiee, where no one knows thee ; pass tslietYsttl ftionot480nDotahneirshnamsoefi aintgdainne vae sr though woulci answer it with thy lifer Neils did as he wascommanded, and departed from Morten for ever. He had enlisted for a soldier, and suffeeed great hardships, bad lost a limb, tend had returned to his native place a mere wreck. .16 Qranary et.lrorth America. The American section of the Inter- national Boundary Survey, recently rea.ched Biamark, Daltotah Territory, from the Far West , operations having been snepended until next Spring. A correspoadent of the New York Bismark, interviewed the leadors- of the party for the purpose of gathering information as to the diameter of the country passed titre*. Accordl,ing to the report of the smeyors the great far 'West must ha one of the most charming lands under the sun in Sum, mer, whatever it may be in Winter. The brooks, cool mountain streams, ef- ford rich sport and many a delicate morsel, for the surveying patty. They were filled with trout, and from them one could take ten pounds an hour. The country swarmed, with black -tailed deer; the celebrated mountain sheep were found in abnndance, and, though Q, hard animal to bring down, several were secured. The soil is said to be exceedingly fertile, and eapable of sns- Wiling a large population. As it is well known, south of the boundary line comeintatively short distance, the great American desert -a vast waste of sand, sage, and desert grass -com- mences. That immense tract eau never be brought under cultivation. North of the boundary, however, the land is of the very Etna quality, and the elirnete mild and salubrious. This is admitted even by the American sur- veyors and engineers, persons not like- ly to speak in too favorable terms of our territory; In, speaking to the Wor/d corredpendent about the eastern slope of the Rooky Mountains, the veyors said: " The dietance from the Sweet Grass Hills to the Rocky *mitt - airs is 120 . The country lying along the edge of the mountains and eastward to the Hills, Major Twining pronounces the finest be ever saw, and susceptible to cultivation, though, probably, too cold for corn. This re- gion, 1,500 miles northward of Bis - mark, and from there northward throughout the Saskatchewan region, may yet become the granary of Yorth .A.merica, for cereals of all: kinds will certainly thrive and Mature, even hundreds of !Mtge north of• the forty- ninth parallel, This, probably, bacau se of the modifying influence of the Paci: fic on the cliniete," This accOunt eenfirms 411 we have already heard re§peeting the won- derful richness of our far west. gom: ing frcni such a source as a Party of American engineers and surveyors, its value canno t be over-estimated. -Sun. PrOSPerffy of' Ireland. At nlittit it seems as if the affairs of Ireland had come to the worst and be- gun to mend: On a recent public 00- casion statemeuts were made irom sueli sources ite entitle them to belief, that for the litet six yeaxs Ireland has been improving in itgrieultural wealth, in superiority of stock, in the character of the helloes inhabited hy the tenant C111,8S in many parts of the (301lE 47, WO ill fall6 weath of every icipq, tho )1iEt4rio lloopree§ are nrenenneed t� be ' aniore satisfactory condition than at any preyiquS #,17(10, The de- ereasein emigration is attributed in part to the inecteved .eonditien of the people at home. There is aleo 11, most gratifyitaN diminution of pftuperieira 01ttne,61874, the money represented by stoeks in batiks end fends amount- ed dellare to tilitli,000,00,0. eempar- eti with ihelreeeding years. an in- CreaSe ef 1245(0,11011 The estimated value ceeitttle, sheep and hogs show0,1 '`cIV4iltilitl6tiriee4tis6v:f44CeIi?;g()°ayetri-tf,Pilic„PrTri'el(! ha§ generally deCre4sedl irt is ea - sorted as the belief a a well' linowe nebleman, that Ireland t,f recent years has advanced in matters of agricelture much more eapidly than either Scot- land or England. hniike its Railroad Car A letter from Genesee te the SYra- 01150, Standard, ander date of Sept. 24, relates the following :- " Yesterday, on the train on the Erie Railroad, which runs from Rechester to Dansville, and reaches here at 10 a. tn. a mast sin - gale): eirctunstance occurred. When the train was about three miles from the village, the pessengereiu one of the coaches were alarmed by the eingalar action of a lady, who gave her nameas Mary•l?. Rhoades, of Adrian, Mich., aud a relative of Rev. 0. T. Seibt, of Olean, N. Y. She wee, leaniug over a, seat, uttering the moet piercing cries. A gentleman rushed to her mid asked the trouble. She made no answer but continued to swam the leader. Nithen the train reached this village she. was helped into the waiting=room, and a gentleman present procured a glass of brandy, which being given to the ,ady she appeared to recover some. A lady standing near at this juncture gave a scream, and, poiating to the head of Miss Rhoades, fainted. On examina- tion a large striped snake was observed coiled around the chignon of the lady. 1:(QW QI11110 t110133 was a mystery, and only explained by the theory that it - had got into the ear and took refuae under the cushions of the car -sea. Miss Rhoades stated she felt something crawling up her head, but could on/ty give vent to her feelings in screams, and until it was taken off did not her- self know what the matter wile. The snake was killed, and the affairproducs ed no little exeitement for the time. a Remarkable 'Masonic Inci- dent. The first Masouic funeral that ever occurred in California took place in 1849, and was performed over a bro- ther found drowned in the Bay of San Francisco. Au account of the cere- monies states, that on the body of de- ceased, ware fband a silver mark of a Mason,: %scan whicle were engraved the initials. of his name. 4: little further investigation revealed to the bekoleter the most singular exhibition of Masonic emblems that ever was' drawn- by theiu- genuity ef a inun uponehe human skin. There is nothing in the hiStory of tra- ditions of Freemasonry. equal to it. Beautifully dotted on his left arm, in red mid blue ipk, which time could not effitae, appeared. all. the amblenes of the exiteee apprenticeship, There was a Holy Bible, squave and compasi, the twenty -four -inch gnage and common gravel. There was also 41,0 Masonic Pavemon,t,,. represnting the gra. und.,floor of Xing Solomon's Temple, the identil qal tassel. which .sureounds it, arid, the blazing. star 'in the centre. On hie right arm, artistically executed in the same indelible liquid, were the eM- blems pertaining to the fellowcraft's degree, viz :. The square; tie level, eked the plareb, the five orders of archi- tectitre-e4leta teescan, •Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, and oomPasife. In removing his garments from leis body, the troTel presented itself 'with all the other -tools of operative Masony. Over his heart' was the pot of incense. On Oleg, put§ of his body was the bee- hive', the book .of eonstitctiens,. guard- ed by the Tyler's sword, no4nting to the naked heart ; the.; All -seeing eYe, the anchor and ark, the hour glass, the scythe, the forth -seventh problem of Euclid, the sun, moon, stars, and oom. ets : the three steps which are emble- matical of youth; ne, enhood, and age, ailtsrably dxectited was the weeping virgin, reclining on a broken eolition, upou which lay the book of eamstitu, tions. In her right hand she heal the pot of incense, the Magonic- emblem: of a pure heart, and in 44! left hand' a spring of accacia, the emhlem of the intraortality of the soul. Immediately beifeath her stood winged Time, with his scythe: by his side, which outs the brittle thread of and the heer-glass at his feet, which is evet mindieg ns that our lives are withering Rainy. The withered:and attenuated figure ef the DestoYer was placed amid the long and flowing ring- lets of' tbe disconsolate mourner. Thus were striking emblems of immortality blended in one pictorial reipeesentee, tion. It was a spectacle such as Masons never saw before, and in all probability such es a fraternity Will' never witneSs again, The brother's uitnne was never known, Elopeniept and what Caine o young nian about twenty-five' yeRrs 'of age,' living in Randolph Tow :l- etup, Btplington County, N. J„ some months ago beetune deeply attached to a neighboring farmer'e daughter, who, tat! 0°111°Y1:legiiiir al ft (4 PlPire atg•pop'ip‘tvOcsalle°dt love, mid he agreed to wait five years mote, if necessary, before wedding her; iltit when be made preparations to ge into the adjoining county to werk sho Wf18 SO heartbroken that an elopethent was deeided upon, and, meeting him ac- cording to promise, they trudged arm -in ,arm 'for seVen miles tu We father's hedge, where Ole was received and tak- en cart, ef until the morrow, when they Went to Philadelphia and were married, the girl telling the 'officiating alderman that she was years of age. They returned 16' the 'house of, the groom's sister at liaddentleld, whore they Were almost immediately confronts ed. by the enraged father of the bride, armed with a warrant for the groom's arrest for abdactinghisdanghter, The acc,use41 was seized, taken. before a Magistrate and committed to jail, froth Whieh he Wits finally bailed. The Grand Jury indieted under the. twelfth section Of the Jaw relating to 100„ taking afx7iI temale under the Age lifteeu, 'without the consent of her father. Lttet week tbe case was called foe trial la the Earlington 4-,ourt of Oyer lettere tludgb Wc ceihull, the euttet room betne oisteeied with a deep, ly ititeroeted au 'icatee, /the eni, la her eross.exaniination, declared her love her share of blame 14 the mutter, expreeeing her belief in his honorable intentions, a Delia in winch the spectators seamed to share. Col. G. Ovalo)1, rorworly General of the State, inade an eloquent defence ; bet the Jude° chaeged the ary that inc. 1)41 LACV,bmi vielated, , and that the Membere nOt lee beflueeced 'by any epaeale to their sym- pathy, The. j ury were out the cif tiro aight, arid emit° 1:1 several tune") for instruetieus. Finally they rendered their verdict of guilty, united :with a rt. counnendetion to mercy of the Court. As seen as the verdict, was ennouncedee the yoting man was seized with cenvul- shine, which lasted so long that w49 thought best not to eeateeee hint, ana bail was eccordingly given for his ap- pearance at the uext Lorin, in DeE!.em. ber. BE 'LATEST lunar- surr---WileLLABle V5. , THE " MAIL" -A LITTLE ,T,AlILEATZ- VERDICT PROSECU'rION, &C:' Edito: National% Oae of the numerous libel suits which , have been pending foi: some time has' latietlywea0sMa0 siouiat ibile.oaudgit by cril WhOlIitinS- again St the et ail., Creasy was an emigration agent, and his 'career of usefulness was premature- ly nipped ill the bud by the expoeuree of the Tory organ. Strange as it may appear, consider- ing thet he was one of Mcliellar's emi- gratioa agents, this mau claimed , to have a character, and that the Mail has misrepresented him. In other words his character wasn't a. bit like the Mait's caricature. And so he attainpted to rehabilitate it in a court of law. I never could see exactly what injury he bad to complain' of. True, he lost his character, but it was sueli that any man who owned it might mightyxlitd to get rid of it. sleould have been rather grateful than otherwise to thosewhp helpeithine to eel; quit of it so easy. kowever, thejury regarded the mat- ter from a different point of view. They were all good Grits and natur- ally gloeted over the chance of crush- ing the hated Tory. McKelher was an hand and a nice little tableau bad been fixed up to eli- cit the sympathies of the jury. Whellaeas had his wife and four or five children chhaud to weep, at the. rightinoment, over the wrongs inflict- ed on the head of the family. Mac. entered the crowded court -room and. shook bands with them inquiring after their healths, etc. They wept copiously and said -that the &Anders of the Nai,,1 had. rendered life a burden to '91Ale " Never mind," said Mite.,„ ic There is another Burton who will do yen Na- tice." Not a first•class joke but ab,ove ..gqt Kellar's average standard, ' Whellams squirmed a little on hear- ing that the judge was likely to -do him juatice. Ho seemed toilet like thepros- peel he hes been them ' Several tal:ente'd Bonemians taneously remarke'd, " It °Versa/ohne, him." I heard that humorism about forty. times a day, I think. lyIcEellar, \I/fie:11;111S and myself went into the Barrister'sroomancl Mac. pro- duced a flask of corn -juice with the remerk, " Let us encourage native in- dustry." And we did. Then he said to Whellams, " I guesa that little talsAtetne ought to rather fetch 'the jury," IYt'ess," g t1b1.- b"'e7vrOnugl,G; r.iotsn hi:117 feelings ;" though," said WhellainsV being putto, the expense of bringing my wife' and family out, just to figure in that scene.' " Yes, what an infernal feol to do it" said McKellar, gazing at a chrome( on the wall as through a glass darkly, " Why it was you who suggested it anyway," replied the talantecl dead he -emigration agent I mean-sama thing 'piety, not so libellous. " Oh, no, I suggested that it would leave a good menet effect if yop, eoald, get ep stieb. tabelau as we haVe just enaeted„ hut I never supposed you would he fool enough to bring your real iwite and family ont, when you might haye procured some other -wo- man and ehildren, to assume the part pro tem, al a great saving of "expnse. The geod old° inesn'a'head is, as level 118 ever; " A weel aweel," said Kenneth Mac: kenzie, entering, and look at the flask,. " It disna' seem tae me, that thees ap- . pairtinent was intended fat Kenn pur: poses ava though I suppose it maim. be allooed on thees occasion." 4:etpOlitetar p„i1ings, f,ire strictly legal," " Hood'ye mak thai pot noo" " I know that is a cenmon practice amens', lawyers to take refresher," observed, passing him the--flati&-- Mole. He didn't take, I mean he didn't take the joke; But he took the drink. And shortly afterwards the j ury came in with a verdict of guilty. We weren't a bit interested in that, beetle -Ise awo knew how I,hinge were fixed in advance But it was 'a mean thing the way Jlidgde Button went' baek on us. guess Wellaim,' race 18 about run 101:(,triiitnaicnia. But Carlton l'fiC08 will not be run y and Satinday aeats BRIGGS 1), B.. (3/actuate 'Pr po.)090nk Univc rsity. Toronto 00i. latii; A little boy was recently presented with a toy triennia, to whielt he became greatly attached, cane nrght; when he wits abotit to be put in hie little bed, and was ready to say his. prayers, he handed the trumpet to his grandmother seethe " Here, ,erandmit, yott blow while I prey. A new cute for consumption has been diicevered by it Ituseitte 1 hysnnan, Dr: P'eartileolf, of Samara, on 'the y'olga, Having observed that consinnpti6n and its pognate fliSOrd01.8 \Vrii among the Tartar tribes who habitual, ' drink koti,ins, or fern:id-dad Mares' milk, both ft8 a beverage and its a poist Lion et then! daily food, it occurred to that ltotunis'rnight possesS medical 070)30040S. 11'0, accerdingly startbd a, kotintis establishment at Samara; and tried the mares' nnik with eonsnuiptiVe patients with highly konefielni eeettite.