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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1888-11-07, Page 2W iM,-;I .-. ,FF$,wvr,-v--r--sm'prww"--"'�---;�--""*-'F-'V,W--vmp-,--crun--�- . . 1. I . � . I . . 11 I I . I I ,� s I . 'M �7. : I I I . :, .1 . � I . I � � " I . 11 . . � . . . I .. I . . 1, I . _e.l - .. ., d . � , . . I I . I . � �­ I � . . I , I . � . , I , , . . . � �. . , . . , , , - I I I . � , I , I . . I . � I I I I I � I . � I . � I � I . 7, , � . , ­` . I I .� I ; . , I 11 1. ., . I , , . . . I I I A, . . � I � . I I . . I . - . � ., I 1. . . I , : �,' I �� I I . . ''I . I , , I . I I I I I . 1� . � � � . I . I . . I I -, � - I . .. " . � . I . .. �, . I . . � , . ­ I . I . * I . I . � ,� �. I �_ I � I . I . , . , � , , . i . . � - " I , I I N I . . . ': , 1. I . I � I _�, I., . , I I . - , I I I I I I .11 1. . . .1 � - � I . � I t I � . " , ., . , I . " mm - r , I . . OW11111111111111111111011100 - - '" . _w44--.` . ,�;, --"-,--- - I-- i , ''. ­ --11111-1 � 1, .1 - .F!,j- . ��% ­ -117 __ , ,­ ­ � ­:� ... . I . , I i, I ., �, - I � . I e l, A) .�, or tho, , nationI I It U VJ1111, NQ I 'the till.is, Arpu,44 bQif0r*W# Yes.$ 'I -t,Xft, Way,�P, -Jb91 t tlpv�,- r I . I , ' . r I . t , A ! 'A . wor'A � I I A.I)r. lily . � ' ad inikkelf , . I . ,9" F -TO �- 4 P4,64 "Dwo.avorpo in 4144, ;404mod out I . . I , I ft. *v-104"..".0vo X , 11I offouft, 18 WiMe, 10, Ap �ti $4 .h , - I , i'' :­ 11 I I I ­.. I ", �.Ir, . ]R_arR1p�,t9q, Bliky End *,�b*',he , f #41C .gyQ.Tj_.PtsP� *r ,� -1 , _ ' . " .Pek 't1l ., k - t hn4, prg.jid , , .o ., i I i . ,141..o§!�,l�ii'll,����l,!!!!,I!�! ..,,_ I. 1. I ­ , .,r" :­ I � ­­....... � r , A ,Aq Mr� I , bf, '. . "I . I , 0 4 ri $4, 'k *4f`o'0i1QQQ Sir .1,J - ]40the� . --- let . :,I I . qW, .. Then. 11yeA - ht - t��. ablidilkwit" Lok'. 0 - ta n' by ikon pj$ . ap,j,pqrj� um:[111� I , � 8 - Q Store. looked, Opp . .1* , C4 �'k I., . I ,- . . Withjr,it _ .411,n .0 . 0' - QNr Uoul .-I. t.0 - - - , ­ ,,f , 8f " _ r , fl)�vq 4 _ . _ .0 , , , - , , "eigue.'s-clow, Xc, ruixts, 140 I rUitili'l, 1416f.r.11 .111 i . Jailill., ,,, 1!0 1i 'a -0 o d'�� Ajiteri�P'j nifty has b6ba pio- 0 f W140h oculi .ted hii%'�Elttoq. '0� ,V,ve,ry W . I * , Wal r, 09a, Or. .. . i . b_ 4_r,� , � , r I . , , likile, A, � � 0,v r. the West, a .;-. � 1_1 ­­­ 9. K "a I'M . , _ , . - . � . quaitit,ohl, Follow no 4 S!rVDY IN FqEX-140RIPIA opil ot 91 * (O it,obolloyod the 'firet UlVb rney �4. " I , 0 — rito, Qui 9$-theao, kilt the f0 coded,. """' " . , O.ar of the jou, I . ,� , � I -111-04 E:be,p Dill, , ' I r I a steep pri I b .. I�k ,limed . Pciploo, fir hy t6'to1q,a .), R P , - , r 1410, with, Ajwkiiyo ►doluo '04d, oying . r Qil A which, the. ighkf fl� they. BftQ, that , AQ a ' 'Q@_ , , 4I.O.- - ,,14 'Olve _ I . � I . , . . . V. ,N,�NIVIVA .AT_ '�wk& " .. 13911109. of @xPl9pigns were ,often 4 " , *, . , po �F . , ,q V . '� . .11 . . . � .1 _. I � . � Lit I age, Oks t g*vtl Irl'oeliltirk) iaq ighboro chtcago 0�vs& court. 'Ve A Go voriqor of _041,0be Pow tw4lotivithq eu(@Tq4i; . . . beardt Wait e �. * . r 'a,le, 1) em Arfanifq, filited Storms'" - Into -ebuy " jitto ' I � , n, with -him evit4b �fflr .. _ . V th 11 orill ,. . . AT Tplu hoods ato ilogio, lauglikAou . I . I I VA , 01 t 31Y Hor. Thqro neoda no ghost, toy lords V 04,�e $04 coma from the grave. . 0,14 Vi9tVq-i% (the bouse of the devil V. We take next P,, gilles of 04VUR ,'ar . I POWENORM FRINTINC."OUSE 'atbe"' wae a juat"ie 0 1 f aha 1) r)' ,P to their respective abProiltom o(p - � . I , . . . . I I have ofteullf-ird him tell 01%,story To tell its this. At the foot. of a hill near the -Credit gh sor`^Q, WbIQhj for obviate oper. Mr, Oikckbuk I I 111114011. I - . ;a near ., float' 0 oil$ Pon and pariah! . Q-oq ,. � I I 01kitoirlo strealts,43 about Uncloo Ellen, its Ile was called: �Ramlet, I. $c, IV.) village WOO 8 409P III9,10,10 the water, townei are bAr4IY over f040 ip duly ked for M-irs. 'Dol -f � 4 ,the , .�. I . ., - . r @4 1. I 111. ., (Coiltinued from last week.) Here, the IndianR Said, ,a spirit was modeTn f9lk-lore. ' -We children. and remarkQ4 - that he 1 $1.60 is Yamr— 01.',V5 ,in Adwowe-' When well olong in tile middle I I . �, allude to . stag, beat his tales wished its could see them often I& I , ,or at r life Uncle E�beu called. at our house, Now, has this ancient ghost story .often heard to. sin those s I where ghosts make their r r , . � r . I d church. Next be enquired Why 1 and tAIJ rum." 4abut in the form of animals. An I , 'The proprietoraill'TuaGoimilion NEWS, Ing father isajilo, saii-I in a any modern parallel Yes, more I r Amos was going'to London. - .1 having purchaied, the business and plant coubdoutial tone : than one. Lot us now compare We place Side by side with this a animal ghost story is usually a relic .r � � C 1-1 r . . of T4E HURON ,11MORD, Will ill futill-6 "See here, 'Squire, I'm goin' to with this Mexican story of the story told by that renowned traveler, of the Totem stage of oulture,—a "Well, Sir, you see I've saved a . ," � . I r pubAirthe sulaigainated papers in Clinton, . t r , ,it married. Yvs I be. jillk tired "Yovaltepuz91i" a story of the "mid Marco Polo : relic of the time when men traced little bit of money, and I thought I �",' , under the title of "Tu'r Ht nay News. . I ,. I : . .. of goiu' it alone An, r want you to be night -axe" from the Galapagos "Marvellous, indeed," he writes, their descent from a beast, a bird,or would like to Pee Some of the Lour I � . . . Rgcoun. � a M a serpent. when animals wero wur.' don sights. I went to London when . I clintoll is the most prmperotis town ill at home aii'marry itioulf in7aboult— Islands, as told by De Quincey. 66 nd almost passing belief are the o I - t I I I war a lad, but that was nigh on . I - well, say two weeks front tu-night." The gist of the story is as follows : stories reported of these desert phau- shipped and feared as divine spirits, , I Western Ontario, is tile seat of considerable a �r re of the finest as gods. It is now hard to fitilt forty years ago, and the wurld has ., manufacturing, and the cent "Very well," replied father, "but "There was some old tradition—cud toms, whiolli'are said at times to fill '11-� +, � I;" agricultural soutiou in Ontario. . I know not but it was a tradition the air with churat music from all peasants who do not make their jogged on- a bit since tbeu. , Now, 1� wbow are you guib- to tuarry.'.' , , dating from the times of Dampier bogeys something better than oats I've had a sort of fancy that I'd like I . The combined circulation of Tu if NEWS- 1 o;l — kinds of ifiRtrunikents, from drums a .ik : RE001ti) 6xceetiti that of ail -i paper 1-1lb- �'Arujildy Drake, replied Ebou that or an Indian set- to the ulast of arms, so I that oftti c .a Burne'd to see the great place once Again a- , knes and dogs. Yet,' In Mitl - " . , I - . . 110 County of Ill,ron. it is, promptly. "Mighty nicti girl At-- fore I die. And so I told Xuce— .. 11 iialled. in t 0 der in this island had been murder. a w -hole caravan are obli-ed toolose book on "Shropshire Folk -Lore," 11 . ". thererore, unsuri,ass­1 as at? allvorfi,,Ing mildy is, alik't.j,ho I" c is, Sir— and she 1 .4 . . . ad in pure wautoutress by some of tip their open ranks and to proceed there is an odd story of the Squire my old woman, that - " I knoditun, Mitis Drake was such a very nice, the lawless rovers who frequented of'Bagley, who, aftel- his death, said, "'Well, Amos, I suppose you . -,, .. . es of advertising- liberal, and in compact line of march." n . I ,, Z�rltat bright, self-l',11i:011 spillster that this solitary archipelago ...... Attested � came Ran allonstf.0 a bull. His must have your way." But I'm it 1. furnished oil application, M . us'savag .. " father was givial v eurprised that title by generations of sea-vagnbonds, It i,q not necessary to spend much body was laid 'in a church where he careful man, . sit-, and I -don't often 1: swparties making contracts For u speci- had c.)nsented to become Mrs. Dill, time on this class of stories. W bought this 'ere . . , r tied time, who discontinue thoir adverti..4e- fur lillf E'bA .: was gout} enough as that every night, duly as the son content ourselves by citing two wolf- 0 cracked the walls by his strength. travel by rail; so I I I c I- I anent, before the expiry of the saute, will went down and the twilight began known instances. o I- 14TIiere are belidvers in this Story," ticket, which only cost me a poriny; . I .1 be charged fall rates. far its his Moral chUduter Mid uuL'- to previtil, it 6oa6il aroso—aulEble says Aliss Burne, "who offirin that, but the young told me it would I . . . . I corned, Ito was not pi One story is about the Drummer � . Advertisements, without instructions as . articularlY lie-, to other,ist,nds and to every Ship were the Stone to be loosened, the provide'audsome for Nance if ,any- .1 to space and time, will be lelf to the ju-ig- sirablo as it 1111--46"Id b0c",1180 Of his lying quietly at anchor in that of Tedworth. 1 Mr- MORIPessOu Of bull would come forth again by thing happened to me on the journey . luent.or.the compositor in the pisplay, ill- improvidout habits and his inarked neighburhowt--of it, wood -cutter's Tedworth hearing a drum boatOu many degrees worse than he was at I ain't, iaueli� of a Fj(;holar, air, and if � I.. . sorted until forbidden, measured by a ecoe u triui ties. axe ...... Sturdy were the blows and one day, iuqutred what , it meant first." Stories of lycauthropy have you'd be so kind as to read me what I eil (12 lines to the :. scale of solid nonpareil ' they Tile bailiff told him that the people been collec,ed by a number of re- is printed on the back I'd be greatly . I ... inch), andcharged10 ts a line for first After ilivul.-ing his -plmmat great steady the succession in which I 11 I , . I lkit "I'lu. for each sub. . . I . had for Solna days been troubled . I insertion and ,. loljglll, And elljolulng sogrvey on followed; some even fancied they Wilers of the gruesome and need not Obliged-" , "."', ,Nfoin- be rope(ited here. For Delve held ont a railway insur- . .11 . . ,eue,,,,t,insertion. 4,jorik to discontinue fal hoi, Ellon took his depari-ttro. could hear the sort of groaniog res. with till idle drummer. M r. '� . " , , cutouts tianst]f)e fit writitiv. ., . -itor ance ticket, which Mr. Sackbut• .. ; . . . . Two weeks kloill thatuit"ght, about piratio-ii which is undo by nr6ti who pes8on sort ' t for the mail, carried hi"' Fmach wi It as published a . I . itwNotiecs set as itr,AT)I,,Z(, MATI-141t, . befoye a Illarristrate, anti took tile '01""', Of modern Froucii peasant 8 o'clock, Ebou drove up to our dour USe till a\e, like those who Ili the 0 took between his fin -or and thumb ,�. (measured by a scale of'solid Nonparial, 12 drum to his own house. After,that , o " " lines to the inch) charged at the I rate at in it rickot With his town ply the three-man beetle' of stories about ghosts showing then'- and carefully examitted. Having R_ . i y ul,l boggy 'Falstair as paviors ...... The close of Mom,posson's family, were badly selves in the form of beasts. read LILA the holder of the little bit . .1 41 . . 10 eplits a lino tot- each insertion. I br.itle. by his si,lo Thu canio Tutu' . frightebod by nii.(1pight dytimmi' I . ." - tile hutlito limlil iu hall(l.'alill %vil.oll the story w.t..; that ufter, I suppose, o drumming 'Bat -such ghost stories are inter- of paste card would be ei.titled to a 11 I I ' * _.7bunietinies in the room whCA.6 the a !'I , ton or twelve iniontea of backing astin,- only as striking examples of Week allowance in case of paxtial l ., I .0 JOB WORK. the bride reillovoll her veil fit', 61ce druid Ili lay, sometimes on the house- i o . I I . -; 1101, that. of Miss !!rale,, anti hewiag, it horrid crash was . utelldetual llsqrvival." They show or total disablemout, and that the' ' I 1, .We have one of the best appointed July revealed, Wa. % ' tot). � auto insured in case of death was .." .. & Offices west of Toronto. Our facilities fit but that O' Miss Cyfithia Mati . o � I 1,, fleard, tifino'nucing that the tree, if the 1mrsistenee of those low grades I �,- rhe other story tells how Fastitki, ,,�� I . . this department enable us to do all kinds 8 Lo , t, it 1hunit-ly, amid and by Ito tree it were, that never yet %vita of thutialitatid-feelinfo that charac- X300, he returned it to Delve. 11 I 1 �,. o 0 D "... of work—ri-on, a calling cartl to a inatninoth I I ado visible to clay -light suarell ha(i the musician, heard it Spirit play a � , qoule sl)iustol. who.,11s in b Dear me 1 And all that for a 7- 1110,1118 nal)(r, I terize primitive And uncivilized ­ �. poster, in the best styie known to tile . solo or sin'gular beauty on the viulig, '.., - - gaz• - I .1. raft, and &k the lowest possible rates k1loWu to be of a *111 -elvish tolupera- yli'llle', to the old Woodman's per 11111nitio , Just as the refined peony 1" remarked tile latter - ­ . After the spectre vanished, F3811111' ""' S* * . � 1 Orders by inail-twoniRl'y attended to. itient. � secatiou." . Greek would not "let ape and tiger Ing Admiringly at th6 ticket in.his I ' 7 . I. took. his violin 'and conipot;ed o � .. -, �, . a dleo" so the rude peasant on heath paint; who!d ever grudge that penny!- . . . , ; ., 11 . Addross Fathor inarried thein, aud rueet- De Quincisy gilds settle flirther similar piece fill- superior -til all his " . rhq 'No(�s-Record, iug Ebien the next day asked him to, particulars - . . - or by sea. will not willingly let To think that - poor old Nance and :1 . other compositions. Ile called the ghost Rod -oblin die. - Hecan4 , .. . 0 c� " no thechiidreu would be provided for '�. 9111toll. 01kit explaill Inatto.l.s. "The wood -cutter would begin piece the "Devil's Sonata." more help trembling at shades and 'andsome in case anything happened .� Oil. that appish Armildy Drake!" his operatidu soon after the sun had o . " . - I . IV. Again, if the savage ear i.i Tiorse can help, -to Iftd'i A -if - - . he a, .lid, scoilli,tillv, "'ketol. file in . _ set; but unifuruily. at that time his o o shadows than the & a railway accident ' ".. a n01se . preternaturally acute, his vision is tremblitig at the 'sound and suiell of hit' pens in it minute—doosu'r it, '. _-.. ..-..Th-e Huron Dews-Reors,-,i,,' her! I wclk�t rotlud last week 1201se %y4s less, Three hours after unusually keen.' He 'itees. (dozing a wild beast. . p . I . , ­­­ I "'­, and told her 'bout my plans, ;in' do slIlIQet ]till noise had.ineroasod7­aud sit I " . 1 I I 111.50 a Year -41.25 In Advance. . or awake) things which bear "no' ' , 1. I 1, generally at midnight was er (To be continued.) "Yes," asseutbd Mr. Sackbut. I I .,�. . _____ ye.reelloon she'd have tile? Not a o greatest, impression of the thing it was. We I .. . uneasily,, for lie w;i*s of it somewhat I i , . ,�Jt of it! No, air; not "after I'd but not Always. Sometimes the have a class of stories in which ' . I .. -, ' * case varied thus far; that it in.crea-.4od . the A CLERICAL EPLROR. nervous and timid. nature. Then, - - , ' 'oveinVbr6t1h.1S88 g6ne to all the trouble of crettin' "hosts a' a . 1. . Wednclsdiiiky.wi D . saltine the appearance of I . . I towards three or four o'clock in the 11 . remembering his profession he add- I ­ 11 roa&�, " 0 fire or bright li-ht. Some of these c I ' ' b Jeremiah "Thou -ii, of course., Delve, we * ' ' ' he Rev. , ,ill Sackbut was ad— , morning, and as the sound grew r D .. THE 800 ROUTE FOR AMER[- ,111a)"liltlyou'said anything to her 'no stories are well worthy of the aitch- " i .; . anything loader, add thereby seemed to,draw curate -ill -charge of St. Remigias are never safe. "ILI the midst" of I . I . CAN CATTLE about'it. be'fo , rel " Asked father. � poor Pink's ghostly ' i tion of the Psychical Society. In Brickborou-it" The parish wail sit- life we are in death"—and—why, I . . . . ' nearer, p . .y 'Panic his "Tales and 71raditiom of t1te I I . I I Now York Commercial Bulletin. "Naw,', w'Ci I Urield ],'bell, 'If orew inviul�portnble," I bless nip, how the train jolts, lhq I 0 - i . that the Inue .acted on the outskirts of 'the town, . . didn't know aS t -0 Was ally. special I EsA ,ino," Rink says. o consequently, tile Rev. Jeremiah The sentence %vita never finished, . ... The Sioux City Journal publishotl ,�.Cessily.pr that. �Aol Lastly, let as colliparo both the or spirits, "have th.e'R.ppearance ofa . I ,­ I when rho . numbered many agriculturists among The carriage oscillated violently; - . ; a Mexican an Galapagos story with A - . m . I - flareil till till' ordered 'ke out' thinks , C) . . o' -a was a crash, it rondiner it repoi,t of its investi,g, Lions of the , Isi o fire or bright light, and to see them ; I :il ­ . I `midnight-nxii' story current in Cin- his flock. Having no private means then thot . . .1 feasibility of tilt- ])hill to ship cattle I to ulvioir, "All ii�l Arinildy n is very dan-orous." He than adds . I 13 . . " from the northwest to England by I)ifl I,' "itev . I I tt galbse Folk -lore. This story, called that lila y fo"reshadow "the death of to stipplo'mout, his Small 'atipend, anti splitting of wood and iron; and � . .11 it naiderable' "" ", " ­,­ . . I 0 ell Whith )'Ulf U it An ".-Cho mystery Of the Pozazi," is tot(] a *relative., 1, .N11'auv readers of tile lie experienced co diffi- before Mr." Sackbut could' realize I— way of Canada instead of sending, so I put right offau' i6k-c,,�-c� nth . . ": ... . . . . � . . I . ­ I 3. by Mrs. Edwards in Jlfa - culty in keeping his expenditure what had happened, helfoulid him- ;,:.,. them 6 Chicago and New York. Stunt to have 'in,- ?ill'- she i - i m,ped 01181(th'd Odys9ey will remelraber'tbe scene , I r)� '. I for 1880. An abridged %ybc,-eL ,1,01enlachus cries ont, when within the necessary limits ! �unio- self. lying, crusb9d Rod half dead . , ., . The r4ort declares' the', at the - challef" all' Ari'nildy- linte's\ 'llflelz;lle a . times- Ili fact, only a very small suin. h t, � � . I . . posed .route llwoislil be a •great. C3,11.11)3, lik.j iii..;4.11, 1111, i ' ' \account of the mystery (quoted by the goddess' Athena, uulcnown to .1 with frig .- under the debris of the ­ It'll but her ' , I I . �. I ., remained after all his bills bad been carriage. . . I , . 11 119 in and Myth") him, enters the room : "Surely, a I . . .. .; 11 . Advantage ,over shipmout, vitt Chi. like I'my when' she heats Cyndly's 'Ill- . .. , L ' settled to la;t through tile current . . I sago or any other %viofio New York ,,( : 0 a . o � a 1111:4):11111. W,lleli 'it comes to may here be given - "I lay, on., the groat marvol 4s this I beliolkii! Me arter,'and, then Rov. Joretuiah had ' "Ar*e yotuhurt, Delve I' lie called I , out-hoarsol . The old in �- - - , ... . for expert. Intho, fir.,t plitce, this . i lit in qiieatiou tranquilly sloep- s,,1119th that the walls f the 'hall , q , . . I P. spilo work it aiili't easy to git itheall u'g . a b � a practise eODUOM 'With a V9Il,r I y an- was * .,._ . � I route -via Quelme i. 471 runes 01 Ebur-Dil , 1. " ­ ... — . i-lig,blitgra,luallyroused to a per- ,lid tile fair spaces: between the pil- to I - y oo- lying close to him with . his' right. .. . 1. 1, I . _".. And it often happened' that 11.1 . I . . 11 \< - die- tight ' . r I' u x . . . cqptiou �llat iscordant. sounds - ' Rrs, Rod the b�anis or pin6, find . Land and arm extended towards, , .. allorte, . . City and . . . I the ance. . . I . i8twppil , Slu � I I-.----. -.---. turbed ,the sere 't of', nly slumber. ctilunins,that ruk aloft are bright, As ,,Itll!lhg .these -Sflasolli; of .otkf5rc,�d him. ,1N11,r. S'ackbut tobk I the clench- 1. Liverpool than 6etwiloil. the sane . . ' ' I. : . .. 'FE. t were with flarning fire." " 0 r ly I . .1 ... .. points,via New York, saviug it (Ii. -i- . A D [,, NCE OF GOS$fl). * Loth to stir, I sN tAozed on, 'the i . thrift some occasion would arise d hand ; it quivered convu'slsive . m .. , Iwhich. I . . sounds, hoWgver, conning, as it , . which domandod ad--Zillitlay I . . . I . � I Lance about as groat its that front . SoOnled, Tilorer d.ptorriti\ to make NV-ith thin story wo may compare lie could, at the best of 'times, Ill It his for a tupineut, and something m o clergyman's palin. . I .4 En ,li'shnieu, alis Still more E u- the ,scene in Xin- Lear where Glos- Afford. � � . . �: Sioux City to Chicago. But Ll is i. Irs'd . dropped. into the ' I I . not till. This route' via Quebec is l6liwotlion, are by habitso didactic, themselves heard, aiid 1'\k% .voke to ter's torch heiu-"seen in the diit- . It was. the railway insurance . . . q .. I so far north that it affotfls even in so much given to' -titter thoughts the consc-ousDPss that they ft�oceed- " , As ill -luck would have it, the Rev. ticket. • . o ance'. the Fool exclaims :. ',Look ! . . I , . I tile sunitner it cool pns,qage.-for cattle, grari-r than their real opinions, that oil front a belt or the adjacent'��!iii. Jeremiah's purse"was at its lightest .. o liero comes a � walkinfr fire," where- i . . . * . I . female gle,.rind,zescuibled the noise ON k upon -I;,"I"At roplibs I : o "This; the foul I wh4fi.ho was invited -to attend a 'May I . . . __ I.. . .. 11 thas making,it-agreat saving .in the . to1but-the h('qui of .it . great fe. � r, meeting at Exeter Hall. Though 4f Airybody, hurt here V said the .. 1. . matter of a rin ago. a t to lot -test co ego e It( I Ig gosst 'Ines on would be produced by Some person -, o I . 11 o it 'is' felling timber. Shutting my ears kind Flibbertigibbet; lie begins at guard ;."lead a hand, will you fhe . I .. . I Part of the sual ber season s1tills ane with a: shock 61' Surprise. il, I fit he could not by any means 11 afford added to one of the uninjured I a on b coc,',�',',v, ,",nda walks till the oot-�t the expenco of ihe jour e , w . o ' oil() had .stumbled in g co to the disturbance, I made no sign .,v 11 � 0 its 1. 1. 6aded at Quebec ehe the passage .is it. otter until, with an expression' of inipa. " 43 into English poetry resolved to lattice tile Sacrifice in the p`s" agora ; "the I. person seems in a . o . throwth the Straits of Bello Isle book over the text, under tile I I the or of 1. bad way." . . 1; . . -. �. north of - Newfoundland, while 11C," "Chat is tile, carrent coin of tience, E_' suddeply startled tip, . a, � I — hope ofultimately getting eomethin . . . "A wandering fire � I . 9 o . i I '.. ',N I iss Glad- ad - whep I laid a detaining grasp 1111011 KiTill., The Rev. Jeremiah did indeed . I I,* . earlier th;y7pass' to the southeast- ,conversational caljital." I through gitation to it flanie substautial fr9rn the Society for : '-1 - , a late was Which, oft they sa.i, some evil spirit attends;' Succouring. Sons of the Church, at look ghastly ; lie was deadly pate, I . ward, between Newfoundland 'and stone, however', the princip."d of his arm, murniuriner that it has round secure lodgment. IN-filton I one of who w 8 to -and his eyes were glazed and dim. I . ".1 . Cape Bietou Island. But the Cana- North Hall, . Newsham, evideaLly no need to think of rising at pres- " h the so meetings lie it ' ' di {u intend( I'llurs- ant—}t must be quite early, anti the seems to iddiatify I spirit with speak. But be was not dead,- for be mutter- . .. quarantine ,regulations at ud to tie it when on ' kitchen well-known "Will -a• - )'" 811`09-a- . 31.1 ered same incoherent words, 'and - . . fivesent stand in the way of it ready day weok'. site ,related her little -cooly was cutting lantern," . 11 Robir. _�?od low," find Accordingly lie packed It am pointed to the inanimate bad by ­ . 1 use of the now route. It. appears story of tire Neiviihalli students, (Is- fire -wood in good time. E_ re- . valise, anti after'carefully counting . . i .. . I other similar fi-tui es in Eng i It folk- - that oil the plea of the existence of b i te. I sildrided in a tone,of slight contempt n . ever his Slender Stuck of money, and 'i's side- . 11� ;:. . 1� tore. . . . I plouro-ppeunionia in the United The sub,ioct set for'discussion Ili that no one could he cutting firo�By that Little Several men, FL (100t - I aplacing his pqrse in all inner pocket , � o ... . I 'States, American cattle outering tho debating soci' r wood At that hour, and tile sounds The negro story of the goat at 6f or amongst them, were crowding � I I I . AD r, ety .was whothe o —for he had a rooted, horror for the . a Cauada are held subject to a ninotv- life wits worth living? withoutgoi�sil)' ware m �o m n 15 London pick pock ot—li o walked'to around the shattered ,, remains of 11 ' ore itiggostive of felling Jun- the blacksmith hovering as a bright . I ; . ' I � day's quarantine, which restriction and the girls' after an al1iIIl;it(.,l gle ; And he then inquired how Iong, light ill the air will be found ill the Brickborougli Station, intending the carriage, which lay a total wreck I v . . I " 11, practically excludes our cattle from contruVoryt decided alurost ullaili- I had been listening to thein. Mr. Harris's " Uncle Rrmw;." to'travel down by tile' cheap parlia- at the foot of the embankment. The . 1. thatcountry., B.ut lie facts are that ously Chat it wits not. LNIiss Glad- Now, thoroughly aroused. I re- It would be easy to multiply mentiry train. As lie we ' lit to the body of Amos Delve was extricated I . this disease is uuknd%vii %vest of the stone, speaking to the Association plied that I had heard the sortuds sturies of this kind current in the booking office to take his ticket, he with some difficulty, but lifer was . . 0 !. I tir, the Education of for settle time, at first couf extinct. Fu'rtunately the train was .. � . . ill(- Mississippi. The real reason for llrollloti� " usiur, lore of built civilized uncivilizP4 he. saw it 1mriallioner of his,ono Allies .. . 0 fu I k. But we conclude by giving a Delve .engaged in a friendly chat not crowded, and the majority of 1. why the Canadian goveruniant, Girls in Wales, Smilingly defended thein With my dromq, 'but soon o n , , I �, . . I inflitencing the imperial govefunient their vote, and, in spit.o'uf the final-- sufficiently awalioninglo the fact story which, So rar as we know, is -a with the clerk. , the passe ugers'who travelled in, the V . o . ; I o n . 0 . in the matter, maintains 04.. enibar- ly universal opinion of -social mor- that they., Were no ill, -.11- jdkaitfolns quaint hit of superstition. It is Delve wits a farm laborer living third class carriage, which find be-- ' I I . . . go, is to. hold the English -market alists, we incline to SIIApCCt that She of . my imagination, but .,x.. ?-e(djty. printed ill .,(;rallt's "Superstitious, at the ontskirtsofthe towu...-,L sobor, come detached from the rest . of f the 1. for Canadian cattle. It is purely it was right.' Certainly sho was, if by During ourconversaticiii the noises Demonology, and Popular I)OIIIS, 'respectable tivin, with a wife and train, were only Sri" injured. . . .�. . I . 0 it . . � I slightly Inj .1 . .. - . . I , and arbitrary anit: 11 08811) we -a .to understhud the bee;1i�ko.jil ,$,I.i.st.jae1;_!,vu_d W_ ._, ­__ 44wi-�lv----4,4-e-.�-t---,cli%-,,4se+1, �,n­. 6ts - odr Qld P -9j -ye wria, tb�Q"Oilkv �_ ---. . -- '� Ii 8-ei-as, Y_ and d p 0 . � __ _ N . 8 0 of. Its ---ii- r b'fow resounded its of the axe 41 the Sunday clothes, Cal'ried R 6111111le Ill. . . � � - I I I 04 - Tho ant 0 =. 1, - — - - V A, in -ious . . � ' 11 � . . I P* fina-181 chat W1110 I is he rho myst-ei lights in �k__; selfish FIrra fellient. at _ � q,i;q 8, - _r_ ___ - _N lain. � _,Ioud; blo. JD_9:__'___ . " The re I victi I fact in - . anings. descending .upon the tree, followed 0111f Of St- L!'W"Once which al -0 'done till in a spotted blue handke*r- - came to exam- .. . disputably is that there is no many insi, When'the doctor I o hen ,the - , , pleuro -pneumonia or; other infec. Easy conversation,spriijkled with by the crash of falling thuber." 'helievwl by in.triners to be vitro.- chief. iiie the clergyman he pronounced - I a. t. . ,..4 . . lions disease in the northwest. allusions t,04)ersOns, Yet not Conlin- It inay he 4skild : What do you fikgs of' grosit teii-peats ano Ship. 1.211orning, sir," lie Said, civily, hint to be suffering front' a fracture . I � , Then it is the duty of the United ed to personalities, is one of Like make of theses three stories of the wreck, were unuSuftlly brilliant Ill palling Ili.,; fuse -lock in resputire to Oil the left arm, 'R'n injoiry to the ; 11, ' intellectual onjoymenta possible midnight axe I !low (to you ex. 1878. }tis said to be a fact, All. I I States gOVer][Jluellt to press Canada ost, right foot, and "oner-d shock to too I . , Mr. Sneklitit'a salutation Anti ill. n n -4 t to absolutely remove the embargo, only to those who live uudar and plain that, in Ceylon, the noises of lishod by tho experience of a cen- systen). � �_ ' ; "I be . ,quiry whither he was going 11" or -if the latter obstinNtely refuses share, in a developed civilization. midnight tree -cutting are attributed tury, that when these flights blaze is "Good thing you insured your- . I �� . I � ' going up to Lannon. R I I Y, I to consider the northwest as an It is deliberation made piquant �Y to- a Pemzi, or ghost; ilkint, Ili the brightly in the Summer nights, the t4s as %rl travel ' selfi, sir", he Said in a cheery done, a . I o ant I , we tn,,ty I uninfected district, still -tilt remedy brevity of speech and by an under- Galapagos, they are referred to the phenotuena tire invariably followed . couple of hours later, when the Rev, . I I just %Vait while I get my , is easy. Let the (ittarantioe be lying knowledge assumed. on. all spirit of a murdered Spaniard; that, by •great stortus. They give to the together. It, Jaremiah, having been carried to � ., . ticket," re'Joined the Rev. .Jeremiah, .1 I removed from theGanadi,in frontier hands, which of itself indicates at in ancient Hexioo, they areaqcribod spectators oil the Filters the Sight ..of the nearest house, and had his , . . who liked to be thought 11,ifrable" I)v wotinds dressed. "You'll not be 1� ; - to initial shililifin, points in the once the cuitiv ition tind the equal- to airffin witho-it a heso I Frankly it ship ou'lito. The fire il,selfseellIA . D . 0 is paiishiouers. City, St. ity of the tiklko�rs, The uneducated 0 �- . I northwest, say in Sioux C Iticated speaking, I make no explanation. 'I to cunsist of blue and yellow flatnes fit for work for many a week. I . !, #, . Paul -or Alin`neapAs, etc. Quilitan.- never gossip in this sense—they simply leaves ' the explanation to now dar.cing high above the Water, He threw down a sovereign and' found your ticket clutched in votir . _l lk'% .1 . title stations or districts could just, only narrate and argue; nor do those wild heard the sounds of the and then flickering, paling, ai3d dy. Asked for a third-class ticket to hand ; here it is." " 'I" � AS easily here AS On the fir'on.tickr be those whose mental interests are old Woodman's axe. , ing out, only to spring up Again with Loudon. �- Mr. Sackbut flushed slightly, / f " 1, maintdioild, and that, too, tinder continpd to a very narrow circle. III. In this connection I would fresh brilliancy. If a boat "You have given me a shilling opened his lips to speak-, and then . , . m ;. . f - Canadjan officials. In any event, To gossip wall requires, indeed, a briefly call Attention to a class of approaches, It flits' -Away. . moving short," lie said, sharply to the clerk shut them agmia. He thought, all I further out 'I'll o whou lie had counted the change. in a moment, or his debts . I tb(-re would be a reinedy, as the certain quickness of mind, it widish stories in which musical sounds, .ii paraded Ili vain. . and . I s I I . ''•. �. - - cattle could then Ile Shipped in ranges of knowledge, however super- 1,Sotnetiu1vq it thous-ind twaugling lights are plainly visible from the I'llog pardon—miattike—there you difficulties, abd tboh the help even I ;r. - . bond to the embarking point for ficial, and a degree of tolerance for instruments," Are 11SCrillMl LO Rpitit.A. 811010 from midnight until two in are," muttered the man, surlily It small weeldy Allowance wuul,l be - . I . " I I I thil inurningo. They apt) 'ng towards him. to him during export." . �. opposed opini6fis which is, -if not The sivago is keenly alive and Son. . ear to come 'pushing the shill: his illness. The �. , , . . ---..w.w .e. 4111. •- __ impartiality, it verygooil substitute sitive to all the hidden sounds of from sea shoreward, and at dawn re. Mr. SAckbut ginnGed at him temptation to appropriate the ticket . 1, I . . �'� . —Mr, Win. Brownlee,' An old for it. ' . nature, TO Ili$ L'Ar the air is full Of I tire gl�adually, and are lost in the qoi,ckly, and noticed that lie was it was' strong ; no one world ever �I . I .. - A 1.11 � resident of Exeter, who fur sons ' supprilatural Doiseg. Ill the Flarigh. 11101.11ill", Illist. scowiNg, ill -looking follow, with a .suspect him of the theft. Delve , � years past has lived alolke Ili Hama!! ­N[r. Jal , n U . nes Kyle, till old And iug of the tren-lopq lie hears the "Paradis, file French pilot, who aligh't east in one eye, was dead, aud beyond the -need of I '' . ,. * "TJtko oats you don't make such willow And ; tl house aL the north end of the vill- respected resident of �Seaforth, died luoa.iis of a hapless spirit, '%Otilo i� took charge. of tile British fleet inoney. As for ]its . 1 , Age, was found dead iu his dumicile recently after a long illness, aged the lioutiding drops of the waterfall under Admiral Sit flovendon mistakes often, or you will get Your- children—well, he proferred not to I . 11 . . 11 on ThursdVv last, by Constable 43 years. Deceased was a Presby- he boar.s the druill-boats of a war. Walker when it sailed ul� the St. self into trouble some day, the elevic think of them just thou. Didn't 1. I ; 11 Creech, who had been apprisod of t6jiAn in religiou and a Conservative like donlou or Allgry bogey. A Litwi-eiiee to seize Quebec, Ili 1711, said severely, as he pocketed Ivia ho'waut the money quite as mush ,is .1 I . I , , , , , - I , , W 1 'O ' ' Of " into ,n "�o I * g "' 'I l'O I , � ii: � , : . 'I; I I I I * _' 6 aro s I it '"t -ad M I a I I I - tv'i t I" - t s spirit I I "I " V X I I ' " A '"nderh', r l th"o""li .'"tioii to " '. - "it they ., ' ..". . it .P.r I lod, Pound d See ... _ .111, i (ion t t , - I 4 to ir. -pl k n ow U , . Wit 1_,_ 11 " ., - ' " , r rn �, bit. Good (I to"' i to it, , fi"ur j , , - It f a , � e. n I'll., . , , �* � doolstred he RAW one of these lights change And walked off, followed by they 7 , I the occurreirce by sume of the neigh- iln politics, but cans uu6btrusive stoey or this class inay be found lit , ... � The cir(,nu)%tanc(,s Tnitko it, -nipl undemonstrative, hence ffinde the last onniber of the Journal (if' Ili. . , toro I hat Armada shattered by Delve. - ,rhfknk yo,i, doctor," he Said, at I bora. - : I 1. . Appear that hu suffered from hem t '-fetv encillies, while tile friends are it A)II(wiran Falk -litre. ' Nrr. Chamber- 1 tho-dreadful gale on the 22nd of Thcy entered all empty compact- Inst. It is, its you say, lucky that " . N disease. . numerous body indeed. lain writes: I August., Th'e* light, be said,danced mett, and in a few minutes the rain insulted." * I I , .11 I , , . . , � ,. .. 'I . 1. . I I n t . . ... I . . ,-Z...;,J.,-."-,..:h...".;,-..,.-,i8L"-.�,��--.'-."J,.YAj..io.;,,���,,�,�,--, 4C ;"16.�'Yxw:.tl. Ile I . I -, . . . I , ,� : .. .�nL,n:I �l,', . � I�, ­ .. * ,, I_4t1 Z.!..",-::i5I��""�._'. _,__�&a