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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-2-13, Page 2Or The Wooing' ' U{t 1 a Jl " , i 4 3 �C�3k+�+91�?#' �� f cHAPTPIi ,7CX'1 x, said, "X have "va lshlado a aisaovoryl I t , ] "o larva hrtvo found ,r n« o dl 1that 't ' t t i oldie oss'bl h she Ives r v to im toP s1 a in the roan Marden, and O'Grady turned live epithets; either or these Ito -called slowly towards the walk that led to n "Aridfo ,' it, Itis stepwas t r "And for long? Bove 'A a d g n @, you dlscov- and .imp hesitating, It accrued to him a versa orad that, too? Do you think it is Ps}g tltne since last his oyes rested, so easy to deceive one?" said he On her . wi 1 ill -subdued a t r i sub nd he duod frankly acknowledged ; vghomence. to himself that he dreaded the first You .aro not emu, say who. glance, "nay, Ile went through one or the m any "Bow X wish Icould think kedge, a nt °Pollee@ in the old yew returned Ova she softly, "uere g , and presently found himself in theta lssupaSuch d comrombettd e, very wilderness of perfumed rasa_ t leaves, They lav holo and there, nay broke off abruptly: "The. heat everywhere; they Made a carpet of tes ing here site went on agar the grass beneath, Jost fleshly Cal-' ", g hands to iia wan c len, dying, dead; in a -II stages bear- Inn thwiiter, I shalt bo tug on the last td slam," Sad and they d a I l' In struck him with y y Xn the winter you will be in as they a peculiar mel- anchmel- oly; h y were,crushed „Ives if this goes oIea said he b bap • ly ''Xou Zooid leave this pia prod, dead, so were her hopes of hap- 1 is madness your r .m her Places. I—the air doesnt suit you; an Ito wondered if she quite "mow of; Y alio full extent of Varley's inconsian•• life rot him is killing. yont cy. And if so, how was she taking he forgot was elf a little in the ft? I•le had not seen her for ten fear that was consuming him. ? days, ten interminable nays in which said in you consent and look o a he bad schooled himself In vain, and vy ra low tone, with a fancied ho was persuading himself to vy frown, leave her forever, and return t si I She thoughugh For a ee aboutou sho old wandering life. But this. wilds ed as she were utto d sly] passion that bad grown so swift- light from her her eyes; ; and the ly lute a perfect life, "tad conquered �ogrnt dpi statin her eyes; a hirn, and; brought him once more tip expression grew upon her hor feet. ns though she bad said to he Yat he shrunk from meati( her. i It is no user" She clasped touch of cowardice rendered his step hands Lightly and compelled he slow, as he drew ;tear the spot to to" look at him. which he had been directed, and I know what youemvany' she where ho hoped, yet feared Co sue speaking quickly and with uucert her. I breath. Why should X pretend norance of what," biting her .s prayed. 110 hcer4'it, land it utesiien- ed hila, ,Ills right C i cd; sh mind grow warp- the blood .surged. around ills t ,., dPlt , t Tie h tried nd al t vdo back y to keep the we'd t e t P that 4'080 1Q ktia iip9. "There are "e ptl ler c ea-• ho' f3 en pt t al.d 1 0 Said aid do i l l b tial tin- s 'a y� but steadily, ills eyes on tiro igrouud, "And utero Is one who would pray you on his lineee to ba permitted to devote his life for yours. And-•-hap- pinesa must bo SOmewboror" '"Sut'vly, my feiead, but, not for me," replied elle Yet•,Y gently.' There was n daLellninod ignoring of his meaning that roused him, and drove him farther ori 12121 vain quest, "Think," he sold, "think of the life here, and of that other. What hinds ou to this place, Y eAnd all P t ou that I have told you of, "las at your y feet if you would only stoop to Pick thatt", than up,•' „ know that . 1'o stoop" The words wore so 1 No; !low as to he almost a whisper, They She I were, however, clear, and they struck mole_ • a chill to his heart, Involuntarily n put_ he looked et her, but if oho had felt books, • any emotion, sugar, reproach, .or sur- rryselF prise 0n uttering them, it was alt Past, "X hope you will gain that .ties !Arcadia, of which you speak," she itto�isoldlwlt'hla cairn s)nile. For my t ca, It P shall remain neve," She hold e of It out to him her slender hand, She t d the "tad fairt_orned llfs thought, -ho told a Then hiutself but site had L t' cruel n m • v e t ns 1T he could have fallen at her foot and ldssed to t midWhile east It from Mirose r. She her feet, a haughty gesture with her liana, do- sr Ri tiv (leen P Opi: t• . sal-tQntvm t and, , Reins' over to thonearest window, polled the l"v urtni a n a ar , sp t nllt) t a IP l g aotlor" qR HOMO sort wet indispensable to her, A flood of early moonlight rushed 1nt0,tlte room,. - It weaned to come ati•aigltt from bee -vette the heaven where her child dwelt, Xt encon"pas- sed hers and seemedtQ hor; in her unstrung 'state, to have been sent by the little,Rne as a sign, a to'icvn that ho was remembered .there by her, Tp be Continued, n j� JOHN` L �[�,Ti �N ]J�T�CTI 1 M� R 11STGNS HIS I?OSITION ON DUBLIN POLIOE P0ig.CE. se Blade Many Arrests of Famous Irishmen in the Last Fifty Rear , S One of the famous doteotivos of the world has just retired to+private life" after yam's of strenuous set vie + i he employment of the llritisho rnment. The field of operation his colobrated man, John "Mello ante, was Ireland. rrhore•for n ty years he has figured in the leant political and criminal "tat have become part of the ors, of the British Islands. T, or•L•aln extent his exploits have otecd as those of tit@ distingui etoctives of history and roma o Sherlock names, Vidocq, t, Javert, Leoocq or Pink() urs engaged in so litany thrilling t•s and sensational arrests as Mallon who made the capture 1 the famous Irish political lea and agitators in the last forty ye amen, Dillon, Devitt, Stephens, vincibles of tho Phoenix Park ory, the Iranian chiefs .of the d 65 and '67 and the land league. speets, all those at various times th 00, estimated Cif the depth of itis teniptatlon, and so forgive hi II fel in 'Why 'h',...° hem of. her garment. How hadlie : dared to say such a thing to her, his 0 oolc-'sweet saint? what grace was hers, rd rive to bo enabled thus speedily to for- N n rhogive! And no harsh word, no single ke e rose In the trials of the Ionian prison Ors ter` treason -felony, which resulted ins 2 P mL! CprhY 1 14t10rs Mr 1 malty Aa 1 1 r, a 1P nndp • v 4 wee 1 s a as associated, in the exciting ) ' etiod '• u g spit 1 1 e telt sm tin L- fQllotvod" rtrdd in thy days when uuh- lln was "prQohdn100" ewirer Lo the discovery of fton4valed arms, ;lir. A1nll0hi's official lila., �vtt's Autura.Uy not an inactiye 004. Later 00, \viten the city end poen- try y tvote .in the thick of the l'ILrnoll knOr,. t,.m vt h , A�. Ai )00 du6lss brought him into .omit:set With many of the leaders 01 the netionali,et tinder olrputnstancos which go'toward Making uP history, On the 1.8th of October, 1881,- Mr, Parnell was LW - rested by Mallon in Morrison's lie" tai, Dublin, 'Piga historic incident O. HFARM. MANURE; 1'0)1 TREES, 1"or use a+nong young trees w pare a heap of d:ainpoat al seztsian in advaneo, says Mr, 7Uoehan, As "soon as our r s spring' wprk le over WO eo}11 The ' 101(110(0 fraud ani' Own s and Cron" these of many of our hors Who neve no use for it is ed to a large open sluice o grounds used for the purpose, the sump tirne the top' son of has formed the subJect of many f1- being dow is secured and hauled in lustratlons, the Irish leader rcpt•asehited. in his short sleeves, is bedroom, when surmised by Lha arrest. On"the following day Mr, Quinn, secretary to the land league, now 1)r, Quina, Was also taken into stody, his capture being followed Ly that of John Dillon, M,P , and other leaguers: DAVITT IN CUSTODY. 12 Four days later the famous "No Gov- rant manifesto" was issued, and in of the fallowing year the k)ationalist n by leaders woro released from Rilmain- warty hem, Mr. Parnell having been al -1 pro- ready out for a brief' period On i,a- mases role. Mr, Mallon wee also the 0111- his- 00r who arrested Mr. Devitt, and To a another- notable act of his in"' or been about this period was the solaur0 of shed United Ireland," uce. In tlto year 1882 the civil' adminis- Buc- tration of Dublin was temporarily rton upset by the strike of the police, af' when things came to such a pass It that Lord Mayor Dawson was cont -of polled to announce his intention or dors exercising his constitutional right ars. of swearing in special constables for. the the preservation of 'peace. 'Happily but the mutiny did not last more than a aye few days• The year 1882 was memorable in e police annals of Dublinfor s cmc (thing more dire than the strike of fel- the police force. The murders of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and retary, add Mr. Burke, under so ary tory, in the Phoenix Park, on his day when Earl Spencer and L fig Frederick arrived, and were swor ing as viceroy and chief secretary req.) fn- Lively—tho 6th of May, 1882—is nst matter of history. Equally so is unraveling of the invincible cons !unraveling by means of protracted tri resulting in the hangingor the myprisonmont, of most of he accuse uter PROCURED 'CONVICTIONS. a arta Mr. Mallon wast primarily the c ot- o(- son who collected . the y evidence hu note. a on Cs ,pro- na s a Jps0plh it wautd b i t d f l pa d li 1(10 0f .ltav manes. o a populatart as large as that tablea' of the entire Dominion, and wo, neigh- think we are sate in saying that it will Wive such a ut ha -i n Population o alPP u t P . u whir' l to n our 25 .years, Our timtier.,aud mineral r gt ssourcos aro immense,. an'rT ver a#ries. year ought to witrleSH an 1120(033218 to the in the outpat from 1201111 those sources, Wo era Ploasod 10 (oboe that the Government proposes ` to sea, telco stens to Moreno our timber rums reserves, so as to establish a per - sem., manent source of revenue from our °plugiforests• Ontario needs to adopt vents dcompc'ohensive forest policy, One n in- that is commeneuratp with its great . forest Wo ltli and possibill- such ties, Millions of acres of excellent fent timber lands are available for re- Pring f0restrntlou, and this work should bte undertaken 'bit a large scale; with pine_ a view to securing for the province (elms a Permanent revenue.- Ontario is' et ONTARIO A COUi4„(Y., Thu 9 •n ... do 1 u a ch L a rl variety . , td -}3 nntithe 11i44 n,. , eH or 'Mit ' a• n d ova ae, Tho opening of the Legislature (=hide us of the magnitude, the variety and ('iahaeSe .d1 the Pro. video of Ontario, says Tito `Toronto World, Xu Canada, Ontario le merely a provineer' If the Paine extent tR t of territory a tory were 'n r In Euo oP e :FFAs r 02C rL a 1- d e oQttntry,” Ontario alone ought to sa"t"e place, we then. form a'large square compoeed of the - maquee and. ono layer on the other, At into of a few week$, -08 1033t0i•fa•la a ulate, tvo potable() the work, ke it 4p till the cold of winter pre ibet advantage is taken 01 opt tw'vais in winter to add tp the Al the present writing we have a heap GO feet square by four high, which will be used before s is over, Our method of using it is by ing a layer in the bottom of tiro opened for trees, before the tree also by broadcasting It plowing for the reception of rl great deal is used In whiter spreading on the surface of ground, Young blocks of trees w we decide will bo benefited are ed to a surface manuring. Our heap for p h, no punlslurr�yent, save what face lay in the colupelling,of him to re- rsolf: coivo that gentle smile. If i her ( The cooing of the woodquosts in ! w 28011 +the groves below grew louder. The nl 1 peacocks strutted gayly up and down said j upon the stone terrace, where the belt T"_ shadows lay long. 1 i "_ I "You see X prophesied truly " ch }ro went very leisurely, admonish- ing himself as to how he should sharply, "the whore regaras speak tale that is pe k to hor; yet et the last he came told? Besides," avi 'upon her so suddenly, that the start- touch of passion, "I and tired of ed visibly in spite of his determine -tending! When all at once her tion to bo singularly self-possessed, vehemence died from her. and forgot all ho had orrauged to voice sank. Nevertheless, sho s say, with a touch of that simple dig( She was sitting in a low garden- that ever sat so sweetlfy on her, chair, dressed 10'0. simple white woald not have you speak to 1110 gown, and with her hat lying on the of anything that hurts leo. When sward beside her. She was knitting you are gone I shall like to think of some pretty, gaudy bit of fancy allubut plcasantmcmo memoone altogether set ries." f work in a listless, uninterested lash - fon, and .the sun shone gayly on the ""You speak of my going, {4 steel needles, sending tiny glints of do you know of that?" light upwards, as they flashed to and " think you will go. By deg; fro. Ile remembered that when last all things slip from me, You 'a he saw her thus occupied she was friend, I feel, I know; so you,. making a pair o' woo blue silken will fade out of my life. I ho socks, and the remembrance cost him site said with a strange smile, '"t a pang for iter. it will be a short one; but I She was looking v' att'aid—T am afraid notl" g try pale, ve.v ! "Do he thought;not talk like !c that;" her bands a at " 1 a cls were •th[n he sat d roughly. to emaciation. Such lovely little He got'un abruptly, and hands! but too transparent, Loo pushed his chair from him, and be - scud lips at last. "I told. you you would .of short — ere under the keeping of Mallon The last position held by Mr. A • was assistant eommfssioner ay a y go to this Arcadia of yours, Ica th a I trust, I hope." 2,o- 'A vain hope. You can abandon" , P lit as soon -as yots wilt,". I3 is, ser sadly, but the e spoke ne th passion was aid from his moody eyes, and he was ill it}, again calm, Be stooped and pressed au I his lips respectfully to her hand• da or:: "You go, nevertheless?" she asked. tr Yes,' an "And soon?" tom ""Decide that too," ho said bitter- tit e Dublin Metropolitan police, is office - he surrendered Janu last to spend the remainder of ys -beneath his own vino and ee, free from the cares of watch d guarding against political trigue or the meaner offenses agal o . criminal law. RIS PROMOTION RAPID. n his early, days John - Mallon w draper's assistant in `the Cou magh, but life behind a con not appear to bear any ch the future assistant commissi gilt a wider field where g ly. "If you 'bid me go now, this hat Moment, I shall obey you." "What have I to do with it?" she a I es said coldly, She rose to her feet, as Ai re a if to bid him farewell, did too, "Shall I answer you'?" demanded (for all at once he pe ., he, with a stormy look in his eyes, ,e). hat She caught it full, and her e strength I am g th oh s oak her os aro, "ant making substantial headway afore in the development of her mineral. trees. resources. Tho search for gold in for • the Rainy River district has Droved the moe or less visionary, but the ex- hich ploitation of our iron and nickel neat mines has revealed the fact that. Ontario 0ssesaes illy are set wide enough apart to a of a horse and box sled pas along the rows, and In this way whole surface is rnonured in suit weather for the sled in the wi season. No other' manure has tr erns P m table sup dinit plies of these useful minerals, The sing completion of the now railway be - the twoen Lake Superior and Winnipeg able will open up a Jorge'territory (tor that hie hitherto been practically on inaccessible. This district Ron- used for years, and tate results highly satlafaetory, RAISING G AND ;1'"14i1DING• HOG It Is now about thirty years I embarked In 111 been sec ,writes lllr, 0, D. Sinipst,0, I-wa ere" -years old when I owned my first the . and I have been raising and mod n rd ;hogs for profit and pleasure eft eel1 y first hog was a I•"olancl-Cil gilt, Which was presented to rite a it father, We had no swine lite ; oerds then' and 1110 Yoiand-China 113;' i cvas more often called or known ale ' 'the Magee or Smith hog in im- country, d. My sow raised a fine litter of nd my breeding stook inerea cry• rapidly for a while; in fact 1 rd got so large that 1 owned ab u -third of all the hogs on my h ' are tains valuable minerals, timber and agricultural lands, and the coming summer ought to witness a' largo ingress ass of far ars m and miners. Wore S. Legislature m Our puce •gislature ought to grasp the idea that they have a' great country, ass, not a little province, to deal with. s 11 We are not giving sufficient atten- hog Mon to the great undeveloped re- tng gion to tho north. Our railway 1Ga. system should ere tris "taro reacher" I" James' Bay and opened up for set - by tlrtmont the intervening country. re- There has been unanimity of opinion hog" for a decade on the advisability of 08 constructing a railway to James' this_, Dai,, IYe can hardly proceed - too fast 1n the opening up of Greater e�gs Ontat'lo, sod. nY I 1001 urs CArry on Ranching. out deli tool w etor catolytraced with blue veins. She gen to walk with rapid steps up a cod tired to death too, and as a down the velvety .grass, It w omen might who bad bidden an 1110704, is towail, canntnfi and as nal farewell to joy of any kind. !10 n:d, his tall, gaunt figure --cast gigantic shadow that fell across She glanced up quickly as he aP- proached, and, as she saw hint a strange warm flush dyed, her face. It went as it came. so suddenly, that 0a0 might almost doubt Its having been and Iran thro her far WOU • that 111. seat-cely heard het. first words:, She ,., greeted him in her pretty, gentle way, and told hire she was egad to .ce him. Ile had been quite a and let i or give him his tea? Be dropped into a, chair distance from her, and fell into what ae supposed was ordinary converse- tloP, though he could never after- wards recall a word of it. He knew that he was watching her, and not-. 1ng each change lu her face since they last root. .There was no vague - est expectation. as there was no bliss, in his devotion. To hIni "love Was a barren sea, bitter and deep." He mig•ht see her—he dared not touch her, Ile should never be more to her than'he was to -day, unless—un- Presently tea was brought to them and laid upon a gypsy -table. As she poured it out, he once again noticed the white langour of the hands as they moved wearily amougst the gaudy Crown Derby cups and sauc- ers, and the quaint old silver that had been new a hundred years ago; and, as be noticed, a deadly fear grow about his heart. "You are not tvell," he said at last, feeling he could no longer re- frain from speaking of the one thing that possessed hint She looked at him with a faint smile. "Why do you think that?" she said. "Believe me, I am only too weli. There is nothing the matter With rne." "Nothing! Do you sleep? Do yeti eat?" "Let me tell you sonuithing " she "Do not talk like that," he s rougely. gut up abruptly, a pus e his chair from him, and . But O'Grady did not doubt; gan to walk with rapid steps up a sense of happiness extra.va- down the velvety grass. It w growing towards evening, and as tly keen thrilled him through and moved, hls tall, gaunt figure cast "Na Loi no " she entreated faintly. Intl ,•For la e me " Y• clue said g he quickly. . q y A� "And—farewell." fie took her hand Dec and held It between both his own• Met I could find scope for that gra _ se- who was instrumental finally in es -.i tablishing their conviction. It wits 41 of his Labors in connection with the Phoenix Park tragedy that thorough- .'hi ent and ability which ho cub ntly displayed in detecting crime the age of 20 years, on the 1st ember, 1858, he Joined the Dubl ropolitan police. It ls- no rthy to recall that Mr. Mallon, ering the force, only spent sev 0} the recruiting depot, wh usual period of probation in t ot-varies .front three to fo atnst the prisoners, followed at every clew that presented heel t urs farm; and as the old gentle an was furnishing rue and ugs free board and winter geart Pett that he had an elephant s hands. So one day ho called 'halt in my swine business. I tilt nd 'arewell forevert the said broken- we ly, and in another moment he had eat he crossed the plateau and was gone. da a HO ;vas gone!—sho knew that, in a the her dullat -sort of bidding? sgone forever, "and dap nths. The remainder of his '(11101 career fully justified the promise exp An interview with Rev. J, R. ath union, who, accompanied by the 10- Bishop of Saskatchewan, arrived at the Edmonton recently from Onion Lake, ere appears in 'The Edmonton Bulletin, en which says the trig . o1 over two a hundred hales was.made in four days,. 00 by the 11011 north of the river. ed The reserve at Onion Lake is 12 ly , inilcs by SIX ntflesyscivare, and con - id tains some 8(0 -residents, Indians. 11. half-breeds- and'sele es?-. The chief 't- industry of the natives on the re - I serve is ranching. . This enterprise gs was begun several years ago, when cm Mr. G. G, Maun, then agent at the 10 lake, procured a herd of GO cows Y. from the Government. There wire Ld farmed out to the Indians, the orl- 4. tit ginal herd being replaced b,y their!: to produce, and the Indians retaining the mothers of the herd. This ar- i. 9; rangemett has led to a dual naturae' n in the ranching of the reserve, ones 11' heed,' the descendnnte of the cows given to replace those procured froth the Government, now nuntbeein0 ba w•w::wecn 700 and 800 heat", and 13oinq bold in &mem-1 fi*C,v of possession B • `sides this herd .each mer hes c- private ;lord descended - 'cin the 1, socgred 120,0 the :Govern ' @At,....' cm • numbering from 7 to 25 bead. The '.;• nature of the country surrounding land comprising the reserve is ad- mirablyadatlted by nature and lo- ' cation to the needs of the rancher, s cud .this industry alone brings year- ° ly a huge amount of money, to 0-:ly hunt up Mr. Afallon's reputati on and won for him the highest op en ions of the Government, ilo + In the more recent periods of e he citement following upon the exp" ur sion in tho offlees of the Nation a1 Press in Dublin, the Exchange Cou lesion, resulting- in the death etective, and in the explosion 04 the Pour Courts and the murder o- Reed in Cardiff lane, Mr. Mallon w indefatigable in his efforts to fix t ora she seemed to have, escaped her. She nd could noL recall a. word he heed said be- anc the vain struggle to remember Air and only distressed her the more. to as Daylight fatled aS she still sat on :en Which was shown at its outset. a d . Mallon was not long attach the -force when his superiors, r nizing his attainments, tremolo' hint to one of the offices, whe performed clerical duties. 11/10t1011 WaS unusually, if not 01 6, he was raised to the rank 7, acting inspector; in (Detain erintendent; in November, 1888,1 superintendent, as successor to rest Corr, end in January, 1803, ris- nlan nt commissioner. It should be Th° taoned that Mr. Malloy was con- who ed with. the Irish detective de- tIng wont since the 7th of March in Er , and his association with thal in tl on redounded to his credit, as eons unraveled many mysterious 05. ITISTORIC SEIZURE MADE. Since the '60's Mr Mallon Playoen3dcear his e prominent part as a police in many historic incidents connected of P 'th an agi at tan meats in Ireland. In this re- . hie name_ is' perhaps bette n than that' of any other police ✓ in Ireland, and in fact Mal conspicuous ability during his and eventful record fully en - him to be ,regarded as one of oremost detectors of grime 'of ed in that historic event the 6 Of tho Irish People newspa- The seizure tpok place on the of September, 1865, when the of the pe.per on Parliament he there, motionless. But she sr that falls oven into a summer's ; scarcely 'red pro a noticed that, until the vague chill :130 night oppressed and sent a shiver pre, re through her. She rose then heavily, Ilse y, and went in -doors. and up to her ineth or own rooms, and told her woman she 0.86 would not dine New., that night All ugh' 011' that 110 °°°1d• It°°P gigantic shadow that fell across h away from all this misery, how Id it be Nvith hell And to havo _ --- • "You grow morbid sitting he sweet life wesicfd day after day." he said presentl . "you waat change. Entire change 8 thoughts ran so riot, that no scene, as well as of—people." change of scene k came up close to where sho sat, a stood looking down at her. struck her that he was singular colorless and that there was son) thing unusual in his glance. chance for me while life clings t m the week sho had shrunk from that. sup solitary dinner, compelling herself to „aid lee undergo it, and endure the scrutiny jells rid of the men, who doubtless kneiv on- !sista It ly too well where their in st iy at that hour. But to -night she felt fleet e_ she had passed her utmost limit, and tut that she could bear no more. o In her darkened room she paced. up iseSeGt21 o and down, now swiftly as thought he me. There will be only patience, p dance " She repeated the word slowly as trying to impress it on her brain She folded her hands gently upon he knees. Her face was calm to immo hilitY. rind there wove no tears in he promised hini that as long as he me and the hogs film J. would on „: keep a few alter that, which I d es until I went into eusaniss for mys0 al rt ,tis in, but only to show you that. WOM born to be successful with ho or when I half way tried. I have raw of had cholera in iny berd, but m he and I think it was a little bi treathleat and neglect. that caused i‘s to appear that une time. owo II- the hog the greater part or my liN Illg and small worldly "possession e_ and in the past 00 yearo just epone us or I have realized nice money from the sale of 1 , ltice many other mortal fools 1 a sorry Lo say 1 have not a great def The hog and I 01•O personal friends We like each other, 1 ince him gives wo melte, to live on. , uu want to make a bog out of right quick, aa soon as he , Iced Iiim all the sweet mill corn he will clean Up (Mee time ay, aud you will notice his hid telling, °Very time ' preached before the 'most cas ufsbed Prote.s.tant congregations 1,10 ublin, including even viceroyalty Y le chapel royal, caused a great P1(4. ation some fifteen years ago, eat, it- overcame her, now with la-nguid foot- .crim eps. tier maid hacl drawn the cur- l! tains, but she had forbidden her to , light the lamps, and in tho soft dusk r of tho summer night she droed her ✓ There was a very pass' e pair at her heart, an awful sense of 1110ve s loneliness that threatened to rise'and •sP001% ti destroy her. She struggled against t know it with all her might. but it was ;office e hard to light. She would not octet :ion's e permit herself to put her lest grief :long - into a bodily presence; but the vague 1 titles shadow that would not be suppressed ithe Was almost too strong for her. d , And what WEIS there let" her, that lie she should fight so fiercely?. te au ;assist her life, what thing sweet was 'selzur there, to which she might honestly 1)01'. cling? She was standing upon a ;15th desolate shore, where everything office saddest he had ever seen. There WO. no impatience in her tone, only- a abiding sorrow, and it seemed to him that she looked like a sad picture h had seen somewhere, in her whlt clinging gown, adorned with Its som bre bows of morning ribbon. Silence followed her voice. II couicl think of nothing he dared. say though many words were burning On his tongue. There was something in her folded hands, in hor whole aspect that rendered him dumb. She WaS looking earnestly away from him, not upwards, but straight before her into some land unknown to him— farther than eye could pierce. Then all at once she came back to earth. leer clasped hands loosened, and a Long, miserable sigh escaped It broke the bond of reverent si- gro OAPTURFS THE CROOK. led The eloquent swindler flea the a d country, and in some quarters there stre o e um make good feed scape on acebunt of the people D osition that he imposed keep lance that held him, There WIL5 in that sigh, more of cruel despair than that resignation for which she daily that should make life bearable was unknown, IL was a barren spot alio lind been cast upon, bereft of all things desirable. Her child was in heaven: her hus- hed betrayed her. Notning reautin- Grady's face rose before her—gaunt, earnest, imprissioned, For a, while she su e vision, and let her menmey dwell upon it: but after street, Dublin, Was forcibly entered by police. The types and presses .11105t were seized, and those persons 'found in his o not feed biro. any medicine to misapplied zeal of 6118 of 1Ceatinge' clergyman-Wit9 111 LIVOrP001, prompt ly set the -wires in motion and had him arrested. Be was tried in Dub lin and was sentenced. after wards went to Australia and diet Other interesting cases in which Mr, Mallon hady a hand could now be recalled if space permitted, Bis official records woulcl fill many vol- umes, and much of the material would be historical. To members of the press of all sho.dcs of thought Mr. Mallon was corn:toot's. At all timee—evon 111Dat busy hours—the ossistant conirnissioner could bo mcl by reporters who always him willing to volunteer inter- n on every subject, of courae tent with lifit duties to the pub - lid and the higher authorities. e give Air. Porker a dry, warm, clean s house to sleep in durmg the winter. - you can. I have to keep hini with. and without shelter. and I know i - W11 right about this. I have small - houses wiln good tight floors in I them, Just large enough ior four or ;five largo shoates or ono sow and :pigs to sleep in. Give them the run ol a good pasture 10 good weather, unless you are feeding for market. Don't throw their dinner oter the fence into the mud, You would not enJoy yours served in that style. But gIVO them a clean dish, or in other words a trough ur clean board liour to eat trc.i.i. liave your sprieg Inge come in leebruary or 14,1arth for the on the promises were charged with °hie! , being menthers of the Fenian Brotia Prnase' erhood and engaged M treasonable n" reonspiracy. mato . In the same year he was ono o those engaged in apprehending the en an chief, James Stephens, whose death occorred not Jong ago. At thought he would come into slum it wall ,,seee--,,see--ee,-..eseeetetete this time Mr. Mallon was praetleallY an unknown man, and few then ",11n V&A, Baal Ma over Dosorderc- Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. Trier° is no single organ in the human body which exerts such a wide influence over the other organs as fieeS the liver, It has been well named the regulator of the system. Once the liver vows sluggish and fails to filter the bile poisons from the systeln, there eomes pain, disease and death. The head aches, the tongue is coated, the bowels become constipated, tho digestive system is thrown otit of order, and foul impuritico that should be removed from the body, aro thrown back into the blood strewn to find their way to the weak spots cil' the human frame, Dr. -Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills have n direct action on the li-ver, and bring prompt relief and lasting bon- plo of the letters receive(' from weed mune—, ant. Nearly everybody is familiar with the extraordinary virtues of this famous treatment, Here is a tam - Mr. John Skelton, the well-known bridge builder of 101 Sherwood street, Ottawa, stetes; "I have used Dr. Chatie's Xidney-Liver pills for kidney and liver derangements, brought) on by exPosure, and find thom better them emy pill or medicine I have eVer med. '"rhey eleaned my system and made rae, feel healthy and vigorous and bettor in every wny. I can re- commend them as tho best liver and kidney medicine Bleb I knotv of." Mr. jemos Baird, postmaster, Comecon, Ont„ slates: "Tt gives MO and thy wife melt pleasere to recomteend Dr. Chase't Eidney-Liver PIlls as a family med- icine of superior value. Wo use them in preference to all other pills in our family, and / might, here state she Fingered soveroly " that they cured me while suffering front biliousness, and also cured my wife of sick headache, from which Compactly, Toronto. Dr, Obatio's Kiclany-Liver Pills, ono pill a close, 25 eents ft box, at all dealers, or Edmonton, Bates & prominence before the end of Id career as a peace °Meer. A reward of $1,000 had been offered for the capture of Stephens. Ills arrest by Mallon and his colleagues took. place on the 1.0tb of November, 1865. Stephens, of course, was committed for trial, but a sensation WaS soon eauSed throughout the civilized world when on November 24, exactly a fortnight after his arrest, the "Ueaci Center" 'escaped front Elehmond briclewell, In Dublin, tho old "Cease to Do Evil," as it was familiarly called—now the Wellington barracke. ARREST OP FAUN:ELL. -The cutting narrative of his es- cape was retold recently 011 the death of Stephens. A reward of $5,- 000 was offered foe his recapture, and 81,500 for the arrest of any no. complice in his escape, Those re- wards W020 never paid, and years afterward Stepliene returned to his native land, where he remained uz).- molested by the GovertmOrit, until his death, ceived 0 three or four years ego, in -known garrison town, an. of11- f certain line regiment m- a letter from the mothee of a best pront and lall pigs in Septem- ber. Don't feed tile brood solve too much corn %elide in 'arrow, if you don't want to lose them and the , 'Peed them more li.t.Natitte food. it is while the Pigs ,Nro 4112,°1-1 lnolr mother that they need the Ino$1 care, I have bad rhino costly experience ,along that line, The little iellows can ba kitten with kinchines by over- , feeding he mother while they are i (mint a few days old. best fat prod u dim o od for a year or more old and the est I have ever WOW], 0.20 corn, round mita, and shorts.. Peed but don't keep feed lying cl thorn all the time. Make clean up what yeti give them.. pr veto •serving in hie Conipaey to hogs the effect that "she hal, written to ,cheeP her soo somo Ono previous, sending and g .hlin a coke, but sinco then she had , often, 'not heard flora him, itni would 1 Ito aroun to know if ho was stil4 servin " thein After due investigation the oMcer replied :— "Dear Maclam,—Your son received your letter, also cake, quite sale, whieh he ate. Ile DON in hospital but I itin informed that he will soon be eonValeacent." ITER GENTLE 'EMIT. "Yes, I proposed to her by letter," "And what was her reply ?" "Sho simply referred me to a slin- pie chapter, and page in 'Tho Life of Lord Nelson.' " "And what did you, find 1" "Th says 1 'After fruitlessly apply- ing foe command of the ship by let- ter, ho went in person to ore about it, ond then he secured it.' c' I like to hear them beg or squeal I go to give them their mealit. them all the water they win at all times,, I have knoWn people to quit giving their hogs beeause, they said, 11 would them from dyleg with cholera,. do you think of thin method? would you like to try it your - D keep off the emallpox or hing else? Just as roasonablo. loot money raising wheat, but 1. lost on hogs, whon Give drink some water keep , What Bow self t beve Xneve 'raking Woo into consideration, SwItverland lino tho biggest foreign Penn 1 ti on of any .European coun- try. 020,000 foreign residents live n 101 Mits. the nntives. Besides ranching, each native lias a plot on which he farteS to a greater or less degree. Opts, bar- ley end wheat are grown of sOleildi,c1 , quality, the two former being the grains most grown. , reom t, lair-takt Erie Canal. . Details of the proposed "Lake St. Clair-Lake/Erie Canal are given in The Engitmering News. As at pre- sent outlined the Canal will be thir- teen and ono -half miles long, through low-lying' land, with the . underlying. rock more than 20 feet below the bottom of the deepest cut. A uniform depth of 21 feet 18 proposed, with a canal 156 feet wide on the surnice and 7.2 feet wide on the bottom. This canal would enable veSsels to avoid the . fogs, shoals and rapid current of the Detroit. lli-ver, anti week! af- ford a straight couese from the St. Clair .flats canal and an oirmg in Chile to Lake Erie. 'rho course would he unimpeded by locke, and he maintained. The saving in dis- tance by the canal would be 79 miles, between the foot of the St. Clair fats canal and an oiling in Lake Erie, .1.11 time the saving would be slx or seven hours. No estimate of cost is given, but the promoters of the canal clitim that there would be a net .soving of 81.- 000,000 per yeer on the 40,000,000 tons of freight now annually pats - A Priti1)111ir Or 12,201. 110V. John Vendertion, Methodist minittor Minix), Manitoba, has sent an account of the burial of the late James Jock. , The latter, he wrote, was e veteran of the North - watt rebellion. 13e was macle a pri- soner by Louts Rio) along with Scott, but Was released together with some othert, while poor Sootit was shot. Mr, Jock was a very antiVe 'Man and traveled a great deal. Re had a bright niemoey And fitrablis as a raconteur. formed on the banks of the Smelt river, Mid after two years' innese died at the age of 74.. Ito was buriect minto cemetery, Rev, ,11,111, Ilentiertoa fi