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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1870-08-05, Page 66. The Moaning oftothajr. The real signiticanee Of "Lathan." is not that a retired English prime minister *rites a novel. ' Far from that. You. may think th ' story foolish or delightfnl, .and. its au- to light well he Hamlet's father's 1 th r a genius or a charlatan. But its mot - member me !" For he is remembered. The • Roman Church drove his ancestors from Spain. With defiant pride they chose a name that marked thein Jews ofiews. And • now their desoenda.nt, haying won every prize in the most powerful of Protestant states, turns in the fullness ' of his renown upon his old enemy, and haughtily cries to Rome, "You drove me and mine.from nor- ibuncl, miserable Spain!. e Begone from England !" " Lothair "is the Jew turning Rome out of England. The author skill- fully hints and sketches—for nothing more is artistically possible in a novel—the va- rious methods, intrigues, blandishments, ap- peals, arguments, ooercions„ cajoleries, and falseheeds by which the Roman Church is believed „to entice or entangle, to terrify or subdue, its converts. . , He offers, indeed, no argument which !would deter any young English nobleman, I even were he so very sentimental as Lothair ifrcm going over to Rome, but he very plainly insinuates that these who manage convercions to Rome have the most merce- nary motives in view, and are wholly un- scrupulous as to means. The heroine of the tale—Mrs. Colonel Campiaii, the Italian wife ot an _American, of the Southern Sta tes, who, having lost every thing in the re- bellion has become the spouse of the Pytho- ness dRoman republicanism— Mrs Cam- , pian who lives in delicious ease in England; and falls disguised as a soldier in Garibaldi' assault upon. Rome, is one of the personages who must not be looked for beyond the per- fumed page of Disraeli. The hero is in love with Mrs. Charnpian, the Italian free-, ' tkinker and red re?ablican ; with the Lady detisa.nde, the fair daughter of a proud English ducal house, and devoted to the Low English Church; and with Clare Ar- midel, the loveliest and choicest of Roman maids in. Britain. Not to speak lightly, the hero is and is not in love with all of them at once. He is a kind of "little jolt- er "of a lover. But as there may be those who have not read the story, the Easy Chair will not tell whom theenueh -wandering Lo- thair marries at last. Let them be assured that here is a novel as different as possible from the stern actual story of every -day life to which we are accustomed. It is a kind of firy tale. Even its approaches to reali- ty are so remote as to be glimmering and - soothine0It is an aromatic reverie in a boudoir. . But if, upon the publication of this story, Blackwood, the mossy warder of ancient, Toryism, turns and rends the most brilliant and able of living English Tories, in an Or tide which restores the old lustre to its .pages, it is simply because .the feeling of Mr. Bull upon the Hamburg steamer has been always the latent feeling of " his party. It could not refuse to follow its only cepa- ble and audacious leader, but it only chafed, and felt with scorn that an outcast had come ta the throne. The cardinals of the blue blood were kneeling and kissing the foot af a pope who was born a muleteer. That is merely to say that Disraeli, in all these forty-five astonishing and picturesque years, has not inspired confidence. In -the idst of his most dazzling political triumphs as in the best of his books, there was al- ways the same feeling that he wore a maske The same distrust stole in and asked, "Does he really believe what he ;says? Has he any principles? Is he a Toty from convic- tion, or a soldier ot fertame, with his sword at the service of the longest purse? The cy- nic strain, the exquisitely airy persiflage of - the stories—what do, the mean? Was that the courtly smile cf Mephistopheles? Is the man mocking us ?" _ Yes, it is impossible not toyeel that - the - son of the ancient race has repaid this dis- :trust with- superb disdain. __ His genius is alien in England. He is essentially lonely in the country. which he has iuled, and -all whose prizes that he sought he -has seized. His is the air of a man who has solyed "the Arian ystery," and who can show, the proudest airistocracy and the most finished civilizati4 'a splendor and an antiquity Which dwarf and deride them. He feels that the Hebraic tradition is the foundation of Christian developement. He sees all Christendom named from the incarnatien in _the elder tace. He finds the genius of that race unworn and conspicuously efficient in the life of to -day. He mused, like- his Tan- crecl and 9ontarini Fleming, until the busy West dissolves, and the East seems to him the sole fourA of art and wisdom and pro- gress fiincl repose, and all else a garnish mod- _ ern hubbufi. GO • He sees and finds and feels all this—or he seems to. He is a consummate artist in politics and literature, and themfore many ways inscrutable. It is true that his Toryisin is suspected; but it would be eery remarkable if he were not a Tory: He abandoned the traditionary pOlicy of his party—but it was to save hs party.: The English Liberals did not, and do not, ti ost him. Why should they? In this very book he flouts and insults them, And if the Tories suspect- that he is satirizing them —is it their faalt?-e-EmToit's EASY CHAIR, in Harper's Atagazine /Or August. . SAFETY PETROLEUX LaatP.—A. new lamp• for burning petroleum has recently been in- troduced in Germany, which is said to have many important peculiarities. The essen- tial feature of the lamp consists in a reser- voir of water in, the upper, portion nearest the flame, so that the body of the oil is not exposed to the danger of being heated by proximity to the burning wick. The petro- leum is in a reservoir below, and the pres- .„„ THE HURON EXPOSITOR. sure of the watet forces it, drop by drop' through a tube to the wick, supplying it ex- actly in proportion to the rapidity of com- bustion. • The arrangement of the lamp is such that if overturned by any accident, the water overflows the burning wick and puts out the flame immediately. It is claimed that when filled with two pounds of petro- leum, and having a wick three-fourths of an inchin width, it will burn from sixty to eigh- ty hou rs; consequently, n.eeding to be filled on- ly once in from ten to fourteen days. Anoth- er alleged advantage is,the wick can be turn - 'en down very low without emitting any of that offensive smell which always char- acterizes the ordinary petroleum lamps un- der similar circumstances, Lady Franklin in oincinnati. A REVIEW OF THE PROMINENT EXPEDITIONS SENT OUT BY HER. • t ,From, the Cincin Chxonicle- of Saturday. Lady Franklin, of England, widow of Sir John Franklin, the great Arctic Explorer, accompanied by her neice, Mrs. Cracroft, arrived in the city at half -past 6 o'clock this morning, from California. She was met at the depot and conducted to the Bur- net House by Capt. C. F. Hall, the well known explorer, of our city. Lady Franklin comes to Cincinnati with the sole purpose of seeing and thanking the man who has devoted so many years of his life to the search for tidings of Sir John Franklin and his ill-fated Axpedition, She was hastening with all speed to New York, where it was expected Captain Hall would be awaiting her, but learning that he had arrived in this city; she changed her route and proceeddirectly from Chicago here, ar- riving as stated above. The long and tiresome journey from the Pacific has greatly exhausted her, and this morning at her specialrequest, she was not disturbed. Arrangements are being made for conveyance to the leading suburbs, where it is though she will pass to -morrow. Lady Franklin is now about eighty years of age, and since the loss of Sir John's expe- dition her life has been an active one. Every- thing about the Northwest Passage ship of Sir John's expedition is well known. The vessel was found by Ook-goo-lik natives, near O'Reilly Island, latitude 68 degrees 30 minutes north, longitude 99 degrees 8 minutes WeSt; early in the spring of 1849, four years after the expedition commenced, it being frozen in the midtt of a smooth and unbroken flow of ice of only one minter's formation. When iu be came known that the expedition was really lost, Lady Frank- lin put forth efforts to gain some tidings of it, but for a long time with little or no suc- cess. Fully resolved, however, to accOm- pliish her purpose, she gradually surmount- ed the difficulties, and has caused the way to be opened for valuable discoverios. EXPEDITIONS- OF DISCOVERY. While glancing at Lady Franklin's sion to this city, it may not be out of pl to give a hasty review of some of the 'ex dittions caused to be sent out by her in sea ofisome tidings of Sir Johnl Franklin a his little band of followers. It will be reramnbered by our read that Captain C. F. Hall has already ma two journeys into the frozen regions, search of tidings of Sir John aii7Cl his . ex dition, In the latter part of March, 186 thetjouiney to 'King William's Land w made, and on the 20th day of June he turned, after many severe trials. Th p ex clition went by way of Am -i-toke, Dog -1 Isle, Ig-lob-lik, etc., in the hope of r'escui alive some of Sir John Franklin's lalet co panions. The resulrof the Journey, it w be remembered, was the finding of the ten ing place of a few white men, and a sto pines they had erected close by it, at t bottom of Pairy Bay, which is some fif miles southof the the westerzioutiet of Fu ry and Heela straits, and the. visiting of se eral places whele white men and their tra es had been seen by the natives of Ig-loo-li and vicinity in or about the years 1866-6 • He also gained much information from th natives of Ig-loo-lik, North Oeglit Isle, an thereabouts. - He does not believe that an of Sir. John's- compacions ever reached o died on Montreal Island. To gain any th in like a fairsinsight of the matter, -which ha so lopg been an uncertainty, one must spen a summer in King William's Land, with considerable party, whose only busines should be to make searches for records which, sbeyond doubt, he buried on the is land. , The Captain feels certain from what b saw that little or nothing can be gained b making searches thiere while the *land i covered in its winter garb • for the Esqni maux have made search all ova the coast of King William's Land, on either side, from its southern extreme .up to Cape Fe- lix, the northern tpoint, for anything and everything that belonged to the companions of Sir John Franklin, and these searches have been made when the snow had nearly disappeared from the land. In this expedi- tion the Captain tried to accompliali much more than he succeeded in doing, Vut those accompanying him. would not, un any ac - °opt whatever, consent to remain with him and make a summer search over that island which, from information gained of the na- tives, he had reason to suppose would be re- warded by the discoVeiy of the whole of the Manuscript records that had accumulated in that great expedition, and had been deposi- ted in a vault a little way inland or east- ward of Cape Victory. But although. the mein object was not 'gained, the expedition accomplished much, and to Captain Hall is due the credit. He is a man of strong nerve and endurance, and once , an object aimed at, no' manner of difficulties can stay him' 'CAPT. 'HALL'S PRESENT PROJECT. a our readers will rernembhr that in the lat- mis- ace pe- rch nd ers de in pe - 9, as re- pe- ik ng m- ill t- ne he ty r- v- c - 7. a y s ter part of the session of Congress an appro- priation of $50,000 was voted the Cap- tain to continue his explorations in a third journey of thirty months. This time the expedition will be planned and executed Solely with aview to the promotion of`science and general knowledge. -0 • •• A Beautiful Passage. _Artesian wells are sunk through the sod af the prairies, through the loam, through the gravel, through the hard -pan, which is almost pranite, until at last, 1000 or 1500 feet beneath the surface, the hand of man, reveals a deep and rapid river coursing; through those solitary, sunless depths at a speed of ten:miles an hour, swifter than the Ohio or Mississippi or Huthon, or any of the bountiful and irrperial streanis of this country i flowing as they do through pictur- esque mountain scenery, stately forest, or enamelled meadow, amid towered cities or cultivated fields. And when the shaft has reached that inwrisoned river, and the rent for the first time has been made thro' its dungeon wall, the waters, remembering the august source on far distant mountain- tops, whence ages ago they fell, leap upward to the light, with terrible energy, rising in an instant far above the surface of the earth and pouring fourth their healthful and fer- tilizing current to delight and refresh man- kind. And with even such an awakening are we gladdened when half-forgotten humanity bursts from time to time out of the depths in which it has pursued its joy- less, sunless course, moaning and murmur- ing through long centuries, bat never quite forgetting its divine and distant origin. Such was the upward movement OUE of in- tellectual thraldom which we call. the Re: formation, when the shaft of Luther struck tho captive stream ; such too an awakening but a more significant and hopeful one, has been heralded for this whole Republic. East and West, North and South, and for all hu- manity, by the triumph of the right in the recent four years' conflict which in all have been the COD querors.—J. L. _Motley's Address before the:N. Y. Historical Society. Boy's Rights. By a Boy. Talk about the women, and the dark thLthe—all the rest or 'em ; none of. ' are half so badly used at boys are. kn a lot; and can give you all their nam Ask 'em all. They'll tell you to,be a b is to be someboby without a right in t world, You're to take all the sass that's given. you, and give none bacte, 'cause yoa're a be You are to pay full fares in the cars a omnibuses, 'cause yOu're a boy, and not child; and never have a seat, 'cause your boy, and not a man. Fat lady gets in aft it's all full, and looks about her; everybo looks at her. Old gentleman says, M son,' reprovingly. Conductor says, Com now, you boy !' You've paid your siespen No matter, that's nothing. You have bee on your legs with bundles all day. Wh cares ?—you're a boy. Now a horse h such a load given to him as Ie can carr and a man won't take any more than he ca walk under. Ask boys what grown folk think they can (fariy. There's DO limit t them. - ies, em OW es. oy he to y. id a • a er dy 37 e, ce11 11 as Who doesn'tknow a boy who does a man's work, and does it well, for the tenthAbf whlt a man would get for it? Who hasn't seen an advertigment for a boy who writes a good vhand understands accounts, is willing to make himself useful, boards with his pa- rents, is trustworthy, no objections to him sitting up all night, no impudence about lien, the best recommendations required and two dollars a week wages? Ask oys whether old folks don't make as much fuss about such places as if they were doing you a favor that would set you up in life. Who wants a boy anywhere 71 Your sis- ters don't in the parlor. Your father don't he always asks if you're not wanted to do something somewhere. You make your mother's head ache every time you come near her. Old ladies snap you up. Young ladies late boys. Young men tease you, and give it to you ifyou t,ease back. Other fellow—it's because they're aggravated so, know --always want to fight, if they don't now yon; and when you get a ,black eye and a torn jacket you hear °fit at home. You look back and wonder if you ever were that pretty litte fellow in petticoats, that everybody stuffed with candy ; and you wonder whether you'll ever be a man, to be liked by the girls, and treated ' polite- ly by the other fellows, paid for your work, and allowed to do as you choose And You, make rp your mind every day not to he a boy any longer than you can help it; and when yeur grandfather or somebody complain that there are "no boys now," you wonder if he remembers the life he led LOGIC CYT.,TT FOR, BARGAINS! NEW GOODS JUST RECEIVED, EMBRACING THE LATEST STYLES In English and Canadian TWEEDS, BY WM. !CAMPBELL, Merchant Tailors eur York onse, SEAFORTH, ONT. CENTLEIVIEN AT T EN -n-0 yats that are IIATS • A Fine Assortment of GENTS'.HATS! OF THE VERY LATEST FASHIONS, JUST RE- CEIVED AT THE NEW YORK HOUSE WM. CAMPBELL. SEAFORTH, July 1870. 54 --- EXAMINATION OF SCHOOL TEACHERS., THE Board of Public Instruction for the Conn- ty of Huron, will meet in the the • CENTRAL SCHOOL, GODERICH, ' ON Wednesday and Thursday the 10thand llth days of August next, FOR the examination of School Teachers, each da atten clockA. Candidates wanting Eirst-Class certificates -will be examined on both , Wednesday and Thiirsday, Third Class on Wed- nesday, ands‘Second Class on Thursday. Candidates before being admitted to an exam- ination are required to present certificates of good moral character, signed by a clergyman or a Justice of the Peace. - D. H. RITCHIE. Secretary. Bayfield, 23rd July. 1870. FARM FOR SALE. IN the County af Perth, Township of Hibbert, 1 being a reserved 50 acres of choice land; all wood co d AuGusT 5, 1870. MORDEN'S PATENT PER HARVESTER WILL raise the peas from the groundno mat- ter how they may be laying. The price of the Pea Harvester is $26 It can be attached to . any machine. in ordering, state the name of your machine, the distance +the teeth are apart, and length of cutting bar, and you can have one to suit 124.4ins. GEO. BUNCE, Brumfield P. 0. Agent for Huron. _ to FARM FOR SALE. vditsale—'an excellent farm of 25 acres, 21 cleared, well fenced, with a good log house, frame stable, young bearing orchard, and a first class well and pump, being the east corner of lot No. 6, 1st Con. Township of Hullett, Co. Huron. Gne h.alf mile from the Huron Road, 5 miles from Clinton. and 4 from Seaforth. This farm is well situated for a gardener. Will be sold either with the present crop or without. For furtherparticu- lars apply to the Proprietor on the premises. ENOS MORTON. Seaforth, June 17, 1870. I31-tf. Sirayed Horses. TRAYED from the premises of the sub (r Lot 20, con 14, Stephen, on the 25th nit, a black horse, with white spot on the back, and a slit; n one ear, also a white mare with a lump on the left sidb ; and a yearling grey eolt. Any person giving such information as will lead to the recovery of the above will be, liberally re - 'Warded. JOHN PREETOR, Serepter P.O. Stephen, July 8th, 1870, 1-35-tf. M'GREGOR & SON, BOOKBINDERS, ITULLETT - ARE prepared to execute binding in every style. Persons residing at a distance by leaving their books at the Sigial Book Store, Goderieh, t the ExPosIT0)1 office, Seaforth. stating style, ta&y )tly por. them Icsing we ruana. AT T.1 -1E .LO 1 PRI CLS. And returned. without delay. Seaforth, Jan'y. 21 1870. 8if-tf. FARM FOR SALE. MHE Subscriber offers for sale, on easy terms, .1._ the following property : A:good. Farm of 51 acres of land; 43 acres cleared, and well watered with a living stream .)lose to the barn yard. A good. well and pump—also a young Orchard, bear- ing. A good. hewed log house, well finished—a new frame barn, 50 by 34, with Stable and Gran- ary, Situated on East half of.Lot 22, 5th Con- . cession McKillop, within three quarters of a Imile of the Northern ' Gravel Road leading to ' Seaforth, and a little over three miles from S e& - forth. Church and school house within a quar- ter of a mile. For further particulars apply to. the undersigned, on the premises. JOIEN SPA.RLING. IVIcKatrioP, April 22,1870. 129-3m— The National Ella areanewdiscovery in medicine. They are composed of purely -vegetable. extract prepared by newlycliscov: erect process, and. are sugar coated. They are the great. blood and stomach purifier. They act on the liver with ma,gical effect, are mild, searehing, yet a thorough purgative, & have no equal. as a first class family pill. See circuIa.rs with each box Sold by R LUMSDEN and E. BICKSON CO., Seaforth. and. medicine dealers generally. WOODRUFF, BENTLY dt Co., Proprietors, Brougham, 711-25j. Ont NATIONAL PILLS. NATIONAL PILLS. NATIONAL PILLS. NATIONALPILLS. NATIONAL PILLS. LUMBER! L.UMBER MHE undersigned have on hand at their Mills, half,aruile North from the Village of Ain- leyville, 500;000 feet of Good DRY PINE LUMBER, of the following different kinds; viz - —inch, inch and. a half, and two ineh, clear. A large lot, (over 100,000,) inch and a quarter, and inch and a half flooring, both dres.sed and under- dressed; half iiich siding, common boards and plank, 12, 14 and 16 feet long. .Board and strip LATH, all of which will be sold at redad prices. , mpose of Beech, Maple and Elm with They have lately added a first- 1 c as 1 n.ver mg creek running through it West machine, to their other machinery, and intend half of Lot No. 19; in the 2nd Con. within keeping dressed lumber of all kinds constantly miles of the Gravel Road, one mile -from the vil- lage o 'at ronbrook, and o miles from Seaforth. Also 50 acres, the East half of Lot 21, in the 1st Con. said Township, 34 acres cleared and well seeded down, the remainder being -well timbered with good hard wood, being nearly the same dis- tance from the above flourishing villages; andone hall mile from the Catholic Church. The above lands will be sold' either separktely or both to- gether to suit purchasers; - Terms of sale made known by applying to the subscriber, or on the an hand. The public may rely upon being able toprocure any of the above articles of Lumber at their Mills. so long as it is here adve•tised. Parties sending lumber to :the mill can have it dressed on the shortest notice and lowest possible terms. - M. & T. SMITH. Ainleyviile, Feb. 11, 1870. 1I4-tf pretaises. 11.11_,RG.H AN b, EDWIN DOWNEY. • T° ' ' T- tc. Ate. Hibbert, July 27th, 1870. DISSOLUTION ,C±IF:._ PARTNERSHIP. OTICE .1S HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE 13 *p or some time past carried on by 13t. he don't consider it as a subject of re- James Edward Britrgs Ze George Henry. Harland, joicmg. Under the name, style, and form of Briggs & Har - There is only one comfort in it all. • b 1 , o will ()Tow up, and. when they do, the gene- rallyforgetall they went through. in their youth, and make the boys of their day tuf- fer just as they did. THE wheat crop of the world will fall considerably short of 1869. In the United States it is estimated that the average yield will not exceed twelve bushels per acre., Il- linois, the leading wheat -growing State, wi.,11, it is thought, fall short by 17 per cent. dalifornia, which produces more according to population than any other Sate in the Union, -will yield from 15 to 20 per cent less than_ last year. In G-ermany, and the centre and south of France, the prospects are such as to have caused considerable alarm. A German in Milwaukee lately kicked the leg off a table, and found that thestancl- ard contained about seventy-five ten -dollar , cold pieces - • , at the Village of Bracefield, in the County of Huron, as Shoen.akers, was this day dissolved by mutual COD sent, :and the business will, from henceforth, be carried On by James EdwardBriggs only, and the said James Edwa,rd. Briggs is autho- rized to -receive all credits on a,ceount of the said Partnership. Dated at Brucefield this 22nd July, A.D. 1870. Witness. J. E. B.RIGGS. H. W. C. MEYER. G. H. HARLAND. Brucefield, JulY- 22nd, 1870. 138-3— HOU8E TO RENT,' ADWELLING HOUSE consisting of 81X or seven rooms in the New York Rouse: two rooms down stairs and the balance up stairs, all in good condition. For terms &c., apply to the proprietor, NV CAMPBELL. Seaforth, July 27t1i, 1870. 138-tf- OFFICES TO LET. TWO The offices on the second fiat in Scott's 13lock. beat, and most conved t rooms the Apply to IsIaCAUciREY & HOLMESTED Seaforth, April 14, 1870. 123-tf. TRADERS, The subscriber has just received a, large assort- ment of - DAY BOOKS, LEDGERS, JOURNALS, Blank Books, Bill Books, CcuntinkHouse Dipies; Pocket .Diaries for 1870, • Bibles, Prayer Books, Psahn Books—and a large assortment ofmiscellaneaus books in splend- did. gilt bindings, ";:.-sititable for Christmas and New Year's Gifts. Sabbath School Books! ! - Reward Tickets, &c. Plain and Fancy Note Paper and Envelopes Peng, Ink, Pencils, School Books, etc. Musical Iu8trumentsi! Accordeons, Concertinas, Violins, Vio& Strin s. Rosin, Bridges, &c, GoBordisarof aalilldkinMdser.escha,una Pipes, A large assortment of TOYS and. Pa For Giris and. Boys, At LUMSDEN'S Corner Drug and Book Stor Seaforth, Jarev. 2Ist,11870. 53- • - =4 AuGusT 811110momemssosselemmies 33W. The city extends • river-, here very nar ten, 1 should third pears to be as poul river forme the pr. surf -ace is Covered t morning till night, descriptions of wate canoe, propelled by al barge with .ope from the native sai foreign ship or the id extends entirely numerous cross eai =water to all -portiont are but few h.orees,4 grounds of the kint at the hotels; there or more in length, v. etructed for thetett dents. There are 131 Very narrow ; but t temples generally b which they are app. There are alknit t in the -city, princit merchant; With th of police, the _ hai several captaine of A, sefficers, are foreigne American: A Fret ,the array. There mainly from the (1., Swatow, who are b -Gus people in the p all trades, and the p forms no inconsidera revenue. 'The entir ly estimated at from on; froininformatio sionaries and from schould conclude tha hood of a quarter 9 twenty-fifti of the p kingdom. . A `large namber water, the poorer Illore wealth in Haat riaas edifiees are buil about live teet thick devoid efpretence to terial of which they .erally tea -wood, with usually have a vera -areexposed for eale pant, et it used Its -children. I visited er'itr'and was shown In'the veranda was sters ; the front root a tentre-tableand several photographs bedrooms opened oft and the kitchen ope Of water. The river purposes, and it is -common sewer of ti moored with bansbo -driven in the bed o can rise ald fall wit be errried away by i sess one advantage,t ed; the ,occupant de cation has only to . advantage of the t' stream just as he c sight to. see one of ing -down the Stream laminated, and -with apparent. Most of t on piles near the lex laces being built ef Spiritualism • Arehteelagy find surviving among n of all in our welds days) ; next in On orientation of chur Vitravius, a relic e our customs. Our ga. of -chance, are tracea and among many te still used for divin cards 'to their pri ling. But perhaps stance of this kind Spiritualism. lately shown how of Spiritualism ha most ancient times. for ages a familiar Chinese for receivin their sustestors, w most the only gods. ings in cabinets we to the Tartars and A -distinguished biql ly designated Mi. evening dress." 13 lated to the -ancient .ancient Celts, great hald to be frequen _ cal elevation, and soaring in. the air,: shipers of Britain Christian Church. T ard, on of the early berry, was surpri.sec ing in the air. I -match most of the Spiritualism, from t city. Once a friar, Proper care of the visited by a spirit, c monished lihn, and spirit -raps, they time of the -witches, been repeatedly imit have used them to e to cell—one rap mea peculiar noises ag "Yes" and "No." the ancient observan us through the ailk the religions it fou " South CO land," by M. D. Cots gazine for Avast,