The Sentinel, 1881-03-25, Page 6Westward Ho 1
A SAD STORY.
The Downward Road of Dinnkenness
j —What a Respected and Pretty
Woman Came To.
A despatch from Halifax, N.S., says:
A couple of years ago a well-known arid
highly popular Dominion official of this
city died, leaving a young widow and seven
children. fie had accumulated some little
property, and at the time of his death
owned a nice little cottage in one of the
best quarters of the city, and had been
with his pretty young wife and family
living a life of comparative ease and. com-
fort. His children—so neatly dressed,
clean and gentle -looking ---were the
admiration of the neighborhood. His
widow had the amount of a life insurance
policy and the little property left by her
husband. The property was sold and the
family moved to another part of the city.
Times began to get hard with
them, the money slipped away,
and, worse than all, the mother
had become a drunkard. The children
were growing up in ignorance and want.
Bailiffs' and sheriff's officers' visits. soon
.
decimate a the little furniture they had.
Theyreoved to a few rooms in a tene-
ment house on Grafton- street. Here one
by one *e few remaining articles of furni-
ture were disposed of, and the amount
realized used by the drunken mother to
satisfy the craving of her appetite,
Drunkenness seldom comes alone, and it
came out that the mother, who is about 30
years of age, had a parahaour of 17. 11er
children, one of whom was a cripple: were
BO neglected and dirty, ignorant and bfilf.
starved, that the S'1, P. C. C..interfereiand
had her arrested for cruelty to children.
The above facts came - out in evidence c_n
-Friday morning, when the woman was
examined. The St.. Vincent de Paul Soci-
ety have undertaken to have the children
looked after, and. will provide the mother
• with ahome.
• . . .
. Tut violent deaths of rulers during the
• last thir.ty years form a startling list. Thal,'
begin with. the Duke of Parma., Ferdinand
Charles 111., who was mortally stabbed by
an unknown man in March, 1854;. dying a
' day later. In April, 1865, President _Lin-
coln. was murderectizty John W. Booth. In
• June, 1868, Prince Michael of Servia. wa,s
-aisassinated. ,In-1-8,70,-Qem Prim,who oc-
cupied so Controlling an influence in. -Spatn-.
_-_- tliktehilhlialfeacei`-tikl'ail-sT‘ iliale.4,:i girl' -katy"7-9,:
:- r.was assassinated; In 171, Gen. Melgatijo,
Dictator of Bolivia, anctin---1872, President
Balta„ of Peru-, were murdered; while the
• same fate, in August, 1.875,befel :President
-.- Moreno, of - Ecuador, at Quito. - Shortly
:
after, in 1877, President- Gill, of Paraguay,
. perished. - Prince ara.petkine,_Governer of
•_ Itharkoff, W83- assassinated in ..1.879, and
now the Czar of --ithseia is added to the
catalogue. . -Many more haineS- including
those of rulers of England, Prance, Prussia;
Austria, Spain, :Germany, ..Itsly,- Greece,
"- Egypt: ,and japan, wohld have -to- be- added,
were the unsuccessful .attempts at itssassi;
- nation in -the last thirty years to be -also
enumerated-. ' -- ' - •- -: -_-_-' ' :- - , -
• The Wisconsin Legtelattire has a right
' cOneeption of the impossibility-- of news-
paper _publishers' instituting_ a rigid, hives-
tigaticin or -inquest upon . every item...of.
new's- before:giving it currency ; atid in the
' construction of a libel law recently enacted
has proceeded upentbd correct and reason-
.
-. able theory that publishershave as a rule
• no desire teetiniustly asperse the character
of an citizen; and. ;hold thenaselves in
cheerful readiness to make suitable amends
for all ertore in feet_ or. judgment restating
' 'fromtheir enterprise - in...the .collection of
newe.- With this idea in A'ew. they have/ k
. -
passed -11.1aW providing that v thepublica:
_ tion of it -correction . or retraetkion of =-
article shown to be:false; intwoeuccessiie
• issues of anewspaper; the ‘ publisher shall
- not be liable, except for actual 'damages
sustained by :the offended. person. '- The -
-Legislature of Illinois has before it &bill of
similar. character. -
„ The power of the new -forty -light niachme
of the Brush -Company, in New -.York, was
illustrated last week atthe-expense of a
--French electrician; Who made top free with
spine of the! uncovered Wires running -from
it, and reeeiv.ed the whole. force of the •eur-
rent. for more than a second. The superin-.
. tendent of the Company, kvhO happened to
be standing -Iv at the tirhe, seizedthe-man,
who was entirely' ParaIyied and by a, pow.
erful effort tore him iromthe wires. . The
. man appeared to be dead, but .was revived
' 'hy plenty of cold Water,-- and went home
MOWED DOWN LIKE GRASS.
How the British Fought and Died, at
Mount BIajuba.
The special correspondent of the London
Times, after giving the details of the earlier
fight on Mount Majuba, says:
At 1 o'clock a terrific fire came from
•tb.e left. All the available reserves wore
hurried up, and they answered the fire
well for ten minutes. There were 5.Q men
of the Naval Brigade, the Highlanders, wads
the 58th firing against 200 Beers. The
Boer firing became very telling, and our
men were shot down right and left. At
this point all were exposed; no man could
show his head without a dozen shots
being fired at him. thir men broke
in fifteen minutes. The officers shouted,
"Rally on your right," which weuld
bring them to the left rear, near
the general -with about fifty men.
They did rally, and came to the crest of
the hill, where Colonel Stewart, Major
Fraser, Captain McGregor, staff officers,
and indeed every officer present, with
revolver and sword in hand, encouraged
the Men by word and action. The whole
Boer fire was concentrated on the last
point of defence on the left rear. The
men were crowded behind a clump of
stones, but the officers called and directed.
them to deploy slightly right and left to
prevent our being flanked. Our rear on
the other side of the basin was only held
by fifteen or twenty men, our direct front
by a score more, but they said there were
not many Boers there. In the direct rear
the ground was very precipitous, and
none could scale it. It was also free to a
certain extent from cover for the enemy.
The Boers -evidently reselved to take the
points and the crest in detail, and all their
efforts sere concentrated on the left.
Alajor Fraser sang out, "Men of the 92nd,
don't forget Syour bayonets !" • Colonel
Stewart called to the 58th, and Captain
McGregor called to the Naval Brigade.
• G eneral Colley was directing the movement
as coolly .a,s if at a review. The men fixed
bayonets, and standing • shoulder, to
shoulder in a semi-cirele poured a volley
back for each et the enemy's volleys.
Numbers fell, but -there wae no shelter to
which thpy could( be removed. This last
stand cthatinued for ten minutes, and the
Men then ran short of ammunition. They
only had the 70 rounds which they earned
41., arivit4ug. 4.0.ar.ettnitt;„inc
men charged .with bayenets„ but•did not get
within striking -diStance. 7,A11- were shot
down: hilt_ three' or four; Wtth, the . general
and the mail:LIN:ay-. there .Were not more
than 100 men left The officers encouraged
their - men to #re low and only when the
Boers, pinaped -up to fire a Volley, atd. to
give thetathebay-enet next, - This. vas the
last Command I heard. 'In emoment Our.
poor-fellciws broke and rushed for the Creat
in the rear. 'I ran with thern.• How any.
one., gained the ',ridge:. at, the rear . and
. _
eiicaped-to the camp down a preciiiice;. a
Tut The Departure ot the Emigrants.
The Attemi .4131-4,e, woe and lamentation !
What a piteuns cry was there !
Widawe, maidens,
IJIflI
rjiing,
the recess oi 0 f_ Tuesdav. the any (in whi.-11 the party
weMerty.houittl emigrants weresubbiag in despair 1"
her, children,
LONDON,
regarding t
der says th
DI
1 .ave 11by special tr•-i it,- -Nes one of un:
George str
private apai
i-
which the b -,r 1 I u•a-tivity. All fluriuL!
ing. The bq I
coarse gun t1(' Ly e,-owds ettint, g in irom
soon. At tl
1 e eueetry, briir„rittg wi11 thettt titthk,
hole in the
close to tr nti pare, ls ot v.o.1;,11711:111t1S, an=l
iitilY
explosion a
PORTING
F
Niven, of London, IDOL, has
ted one of the judges at the
York dog show.
ents have been made by the
ight Club for a state draught
to be held, at theiti rooms
vards the end of the hltonth.
Id a reporter in Mpntteal that
for a trip to Australiel in the
:ow a match, but to [see the
le country. .,
trsman has given Wiliams, of
der for aboat to be ibuilt as
n make it, and the ,iiarsman
Et weighing between !eighteen
Dunds.
G
St. John Rowing Club, of New
10 to run a regatta in ihat city
3t the club has $1,00 in the
the boat house 'and litoats are
!
$10,000. The fleet consists
first-classboats. •
Tiking, of New York, has been
o parties, and will, make a
.ition to the fleet of ': 1
achts on
ie five ton yacht VliCi?".: Awake,
the safety oi aas been sold to a fish dealer
since the die, twat.; h, foie ti:e 1 r.tli; 1.‘ as tf--) • .= • •_,
It .t 111e, itt looses. A_ ounther .Nt;11.
itoh jeureexdptlhoseioa- e-Feitty-, in *.o atten,1 like uleeliw.; ot the
damaged Eg - -
of life. He N 1, ),"-ibvit:.1.Y' which v"-tii held ill K'Inx
pwoawsdfeorund a frtee.ls, 0 oitititig"t':-‘Iticitql";i --Pei'L.I..::-'...11::.1:-t1;- a./1•1(,,i--.
One account ' '' ‘v el:"
Great -prec. the 1..11 ort:=)=,11 1.V.1' ' ay. -ay the. er.m=is
- > =1,.(1 0•0.'1- \\ ay li., OP walic,..,, au.'
• Ili"
tahroeuoMdatnbseiobno ,-•1:1-1.1e.2:1., 0111 tail ' plat t din of tit:.
.wa1.,;,,,..1-1111,7-;:::•1:. ‘(‘,'.ir'll',,,,,:2,;,-'iloti.:Itu.-1,*(i t:tlePliasits,teettdy, swhheo wwiaisimithuet-Pufipiresat
ars has not yet been re 1. d.
I t,roposition to row l plaited
panapcletrhse wceelrlaers2 11.1:.iti ri ' 7. ,
- It ifl stated "`" ' • - - 1- r - *
discovered nea in --tf)til::;:; i.iviia ttitly: .i. I. it; ,pu ,i.,,,: .1:10 ru 0 w i , ti..„
reward for th • ' - ' - - -
lty ' .1114- lt \Val..; Simie ti=h,:---.._11:-er 111.11
Council to -i
NOTE.
4--
private residt Churel.i bat after- 0-1-1, but 11: the, main
Steep fall of thirty - feet,-: and, then ' over.
enornieus boulders,' stones a,nd :bush fu a
it:natter of -a mile, under a Sterto of btiliets
raining from alisides,.-IidOnot know. Four
men dropped by DaY.Nicle as I raniterosathe,
basin.-- The. Boers - were all rouial, and
bullets came from all-directione.---"Ont brave
fellows, panting and bleeding while retreat-,
were shot-. down.- The -sound_.-of ifuns-
fttiog fr.oin._the Cainp. Was heartf,:and.we
took :hope -•ffoin."• the; thought that -_.the
Artillery Were „ coining. .The Beet
firing eerteed_ after - .:half -a -dozen gun
sitota. ' A .' dozen --of::us shelterine111 a
-
dotage, several -wounded; were discovered
by the ..Bbers;. 7*116--fiaid they Wouhl-,inot-
shoDt us .if we -laid-- 'down out • rifles. 'We:
diCso,•and wentwith the Boers- tip to
crest Of the hill. 1 saw Lieutenant..Bill;-
58th, lying with owounded arm. -,11e'speke
to tae cheerfully.' -He . had dietin-guiehed
hifuself by:Carrying the wounded at 1,4ings-
NelL. The, -Boer general•gaye:lime a pass to
the 'cattip on condition- that:I:Would-8110W
him_ my aceonnt _before I sent it::: .He said.,-..
1 Who iatheefficer killed?" . Take'
me to .We Went' to wherethe:final
gaud was made,- and there lay a body with.-
the.faCe covered by 'l-tho heIrciet.- 'By the
elothirig I recognized the bOdy,and htting
the. heithet, saw the lanc:. of our poor
general, - the bravest -soldier of the
day, a -. cohanander -loved ad-
inircd by every Man item . the -highest;
to .tho' 1-47est. -The -Beets '.dolibted "trie,
and -questioned." hie again- and -E,Lgadh - as to.
Whether -it Was -really the general:- i -.gave.
, -
my word: of honor - that' . it was -General"
Colley, and they were satisfied: No mord.
of exultation escaped their .lips. _I said,
spoit aftefwardneworso for his accident, "You haVe„killed the:bravest gentleman 011
•- eXcept-that the•skin--- was --taken drom, the -the They :said; fought,
- • -
- -7, - tiisideef-hiohands.---:7Themachinowaft not Ono_inith_eaid.itadid not think we
-- -7-- -Were-•wrong; but ivias-a_soldier .andl,hauet-
_dent7would haveprovedfatal.... •• - .1 ,- - obey orders.- Similarremarksrwere 'Made
-by others.----Nearthegeneral lajteortinian
Montreal- restail: der ROnailiy,- of the :BOadicee,,.ancl Lieut.
_ -4844 keeper lately &rail:Sad frorn habi:
taut-on:the market -a Iot -• of frezen -
Mande-, 58"th-; but I hurried back to carnp.
•.geeee_by7. Weight.......04- taking, them hoine foliows,
'.-and PreParing--.them- for-ceekiOg, •Woundedand dead; lying'. dotted
116 161111c1 about. The -Boers fired shots Pn thellight:
that underAliewhigoLeaell'gooseilicisittna hindere laager at the foot of 'the bill;but-
h4a been -iiirtclef Which: were filled theghns stopped them. ' Vajor Fraser hoe
waterand then frozen,. -adding -frond jut come in slightly .bruised. and haVing:
pound to pound and it half to each lane M- been:forty-eight hours •without food.: lie.
weight, Thepueltes_e_rWas_detertninedto .states :" I escaped by the rear and ol..1ted m v
-catch the- swindler, and has been- 011the.waYat nightfall 'through the; Boers' lines
look -out for huh ever .Since he was taken in
• but without stiecesanntil-Wedneeda3,r..i.*1104 at the Nek." - He- had, seen ..:nOthing: of:
• be -foutd.--..- the-. party again in tha market. Celonel Stewatt. says, as an-
eYe-witness : The general first
1-.1e liad, hinearreated„-bdt let him off onhis_ WoUnded;- then a Beer., at lour :paces blew
refunding the. amount'. he fraudulently- his htitine otit',71• -• ,' •
• ; lobtained._ -
- 'ter says that at the 'Critical
er wri• . . .
Henry Filkins of Clifton Park, N.Y., Moment a panioseiied the EngliSh troops,.
-gentleman of some 60 years,..ia:rejoicing And &few minutee :mete settled the tate 9f.
over the fact that lie has now nearly -a full the .-day.- -" The deadly 'eye:. Of the-
. get' of teeth for the: thittl enemy - decimated Our numbers. By By .ten.
'kiwi, _previous to last ft*inmert had been. minutes paat.-1, iv, the .:afteruottn.all that.
toothless for some.' years,- but -novi- the, was left, of our ...gallant .treope.-wae.a feW
teeth are•Showing-thetOelvesene ,by one.:, flying: .etddiers madly-dpwn.•the
Children .are -• generally troubleseme while rocky ravine ta escape the reinorseleeShail.•
• teething;but- Xt. Filkinkfeels very jolly- of the bullets. ..Then -s our -,-Wounded- Were ,
While coming from the -half saw ont poor
- a match whenever Courtney
r'
sted made a good tace with
tiley during two milts of their
V, a Aug. 14th, 1'7, having
n during the firs mile and
Corporation 11 e 11.1i t ' have 141 at
- • 't yam-- fr nm 1'6 i•arlific.
tors of the crit '
Bank Of -Engi hotts-1,01d. go ds anti ot
• I leen confined to 11 is lout :since
1 ('"' '
been stationed •
Ilo buildings.. • ,,-u.i2.1.,itt• ittad,•(1 4)11 .1'w York. His feclt, are in a
tort t V. For 1 'alit-, a it 1 iwre t -n. The last fiftg miles of
v. t.„ , c3,s, gont,,ining 5 3 to; ered great agony. Taughan,
-
rs called on him esterday
The new Ma' , , 1 4 41:1 '4'..1"ed hi. on his- I ameness.
11\7iFkitlift
plains that Alber with -
m J'Et no :if t
- of Lincoln, Ill., 1t1'4 -"s 1001 .iy., tary-will_tose abo t $1,500
s ar.e paid.
'mice Caudidates
WINTER'S AWFUL SEVERITY
Stories of Almost Incredible Hardships
in the West—Fears that the Spring
will 1Fieveal that Many Persons have
Perished in Inaccessible Regions—
Cattle Dying by the Thousand.
County Attorn F, ',, N e, I, -vta,2, ,'( : for .1)alr.i)t-o. 1 race complete13. :crushed
ii,
stable of count ,0,,,,,i ., 'ow 1, at, N% „Is NI 411 i ,),• t,,,,..St.„ ) had no heart o make a
\
Hon. D. H.
, .ptit put 9f their pain, and the last I StINV df
:The women seem inclined to beard the the poor deneral was standing Coolly facing
lion' in its den,and •polygarny. its hall. the deadly fire that poured from'ali sides
They have started an anti -polygamy paper on his little band of flying :and • wotinded_
in 5 -alt Lake City._ It is entitled, "The men, and which afterwards finished lam,
Anti;:Polygamy Standard," and. it for his face to the foe." .•
its motto, " Let every man have his own -
• wife and let every woreanhave her .oxiqn -A poor, neglected little othirchin Wash -
husband," -I, Cor. . •-• .ingthn; With a, congregation tiCarcely1.• able
In Carlyle's latestPUblished werkappears to -keep it open; has_ suddenly bloomed inte-
-, this peculiar etimate of Charles Dickens: 'the niost fashionable and crowded placeof
_
essential -faculty,. I Often say, is viorship at the capital. This pheitortienon
-that of a first-rate play -actor. " Had he
'been born twenty or forty years sooner, we
•• ,should inost-Probabliliave had a -isecond
and greater -Mathews, Inclecloni or -the like,
7 and- noWriting . •
•
,f ury were. • .
f.1 iii flo t• ol_den.Wedding.
le"v4 1.! v r‘. iu.th„ c1„.q.
x,.s icord (or Uniclteh and
At Her Br.aje4 tc:".1-x.e::11:r1";:111,1" tot ef4;.1.1-"t';';
_ „fa .v a
1 attd. melt. rownsend, reCQ11
Sara Bernha,r
in- Toledo, thou
any part of the
25th ult. Miss ttprottot, e -ilere,%., o well. to
1Ds In the 10"0"e-i-!;hny -. .1 '1 V C it. 'If. C I 4. .1% (1 , °C4.1rr6d .on
go .en
) ' neor•-, anniversary
. 1 i -.'s ' ' *II ,-1 11-tter ti.e, -1r.: tht6Liatsst.
I
already yieidY.O t - • • . ‘I.111-,' 11‘ • wt,„itt:: _ 1 ' , 1 Yrr. Seeoid asitil-YleTl.al
1Gutbarye eB,, pair/. Ny ere P. -1:c), k e :), f i• I - 1.' (2 i‘ ' ':reNY.P1k lvifNe'enw.el:ell 'Illfurer.i.led11-e
battle
e.,dietnhe_r Et.,1 Jearnak se tel -,11, I.,,,.( Ili:, 1. : c; "I =s4,.=;1..,_,-„• N: i a , t' .N:191.11 I 11;'; :S t_t,.1.17t1; ' c,..,e3 years 01
, Ill
e colors ' ` • ' ' "'flied Hit/ W1‘1 f ' " 'e al‘ - 1 agelltild'N1 '
-key; mr
attle ef T.' of stitiio:•;, einid141m ay, always calk.' . d -1 I's,
A representative of the Chicago Times
who has just returned from a tour through
the cattle ranges lying between the Mis-
souri River and the B.ocky Mountains
reports that the winter in that section has
been the severest ever experienced. and
that the loss of cattle will exceed 400,000
head, valued at from $8,000,000 to $10,000,-
000. The poor brutes have died in myriads,
whole herds being wiped out in a night.
He,says the death rate among the cattle
in that tract, which is embraced within
lines extending north and south through
Sidney and North Platte, towns on
the Union Pacific railroad., in Ne-_
braska, 125 miles- apart, is in all proba-
bility larger than anywhere else in the
entire grazing country. The cattle men
have designated this and the dry belt in
Colorado as the " burnt district.", The
Nebraska burnt district is 200 miles one
way by 125 miles across on the south, and
175 on the north. There- is an immense
number of cattle in this area—a half a
million or more. There is a succession of
mammoth herds on the North Platte, Loup,
and Niobrara rivers, and the mortality
among them is believed to be between 25
and 40 per ceiat., according to location.
West of the Black Hills stage route from
SidneY the loss will not be great, but east
of that line they have died by the thousands.
On the Niobrara ranges, ea,st of Antelope
Creek, owners themselves _adniit a loss
of 50- per cent., and south of that
there, is a bovine temeterY until the .PP' -
Platte is crossed. The great Loss in this
partieular region is due to the heavy snow
storms, which were preceded by sleet and
rain, ,that converted the . earth's surface
into a. sheet of ice. Even had. there been
no snOw the cattle could not have gotten •
at the grass, which was under a- coat of
ice, but the snow aggravated the trouble
soinewhat; and -for weeks the cattle endured -
the liorrible• torture' of slow ' starvation. Thousands ;Mon thousands drifted 41O -wit- _
-upon pe • South- Platte after grass -and -
water„ but, as the river was frozen, they
cohldiget neither. The -.recent 'heavy .'snow -
_sterbls, Which Visited- Eastern 1Stelatidika-i -
and the Northwest -Aia -not trouble the '
burirediatriet, kindly Veering off in-andther
-direction, and so_ there is, a- prospect of
brighter days._ Thousands. of _dead cattle
,ceVeAltegtound between -Sydney and North,. L
Platte within sight, of the railroad. track.
Mani them.haVe been ifitied by the tars, -
but by tar the -larger nuraber :died. of ,cold -..
and starvation. They were massedbetween ,
the two forka-of :the -Platte -Which- ',come
together •at North Platte,:and-the- suffering ..
Of tille poor brutes iPS said by -those -Whosaw
thein to to --,- have -been, frightful: . 'Theyfilled . -. .
the- Air with .-their cries Of: :ex:Fon-v. - .and
% f ' - • 1.) - -,' ' •
wandered about mita leo weak that when,
they .-! ay down to rest they could -not get ,
titi:_agaiia. Nothing _Could _be done., 'foi ,
theirirelief, . It would have been a hope.' -
leee'task te, haVe_ :tried to feed Ahem.. A -
-thOu4ana- tons of.. hay would net Lave-
cOD0 -1 ATOlind, The ,pbi4., things, - 'oVer...
r, -I . .
comet -. by - -the :cold,- - could - not be.
driven -hack on the snowy ranges. They
,resisted force. by -sullen refusal to budge-,
preigring to -remain where theywere-and'.
die than to . move: :They ,devoured - every; -
-.Vest* Of grass that could be --seen; -.4nd-
wieOClieWed the hi,-,tr ,ontheir tails, The
seende that -.-Were' witheseed by the ,settlers .
'aredeseribed•as heartrending:- The losses '
in. other districts, while not -so heavy, are
verypevere. : .Over-prodnetion is -one catiee '
of thr calaiiiitT whichhisbeen visited upon . ''• -
the . cattle . interest, -the -resources -of tho.
country having for some years been taxed ---
to - the utmost by the -enor.mohe herds
which have reamed-. over the 'plains .tinil'in,' ,
the ---iodthille: -- -Great ,-euffering has also
taken plate 'among 'the ,settlers,.and ib is
feared:that many in back - eettleinentslave,'-
perished through cold. and :liunget.,.._-_:
. • . _
--marine Notes. . ,.
- The ice in Torontolarbor is 1.broken .up"
tronr!the Queen's wharf aefar as .the-Crrand'.
.Trunk elevator. -" --, '- .•-• • - -
Cpbourg barber gets $10;000 :Of -Govern. '
..-rueritl grant to nake the harbor better li.e'a
shelter for vessels. This'Will be spent on. :
the pier to protect the bather:fro-1h sofitli--
Westetottes. This will be a.,pp,rgeiated by. -
vessel men._ -: .•" -2- ,
. The": iamount - for distribution 'ariaong -
marine hospitals - for sick and distressed
,eeatnenii&-plaCed at 1.64;OCC This Govern.,
Ment grant la.--_confined.alinost- exclusively
.-:tti-tiiseiaspi.oeritise.a. -:oGn,etertaslci,lailoosispiataiolaugecto4ineinufrea.;;._
-= -A -reporter 4:itthe :Buffalo -Courier' got ..a__: -__-____-_•.___ __
:good 'deal of Opinion. :tint of likikke,1 '
.-preeident-,of-thi3'..tinien ,iii- that :-clty.-: -A: -
convention of :vessel Owners at Cleveland
.had been held; and ElOkke Was -Certain the%
vessel - owners .tneant no. good to the sailors. ,
Ele-imi4.Sailora had as pinch right :aii Any
other men- to tet a price en their _labor.
'They -had -also a -right to that a Vessel'
shOuld carry so many :men that they could .
manage her.- Ile -denied that.unionsailora
.hadevei.interterect with .the rights of vessel
captain.s Or owners,or threatenednon4inion,
_nien,:or detained vessels with. .non-union
men on board, or'hindered union :inenfroni:
shipping with non-union:men. - To this the
Chicago Tribune says: f.; When Mr: 'Moltke .
said that he _ had never ' known of an 7...
instance Where -non-tutieta; crews ,had. been
threatene& or _ vessels .shippiug notruniPn -
Men been detained;.byth.e action of union •
men, .1.1e.- Vias either 'guilty, of a wilful -rdis
"stateDaent. or he must have referred to his
hemp port solely. : It-otinnot be that he is
i*blissful ignora-nce. of the outrageous pte.
te-edings enadted.here flizt at -Cleveland toil •
'Intitnerous . occasions last Season. • If _he-, A I
reallyreferted to the whole chain. of -. lakes,.
then.h.e either stated an untruth or made -a .1 :
'pOint.blitiak admission that he did-uotiteep
jliimsell posted :concerning -what was going
on --oritside of his jurisdiction." •••• ''', ' . ..
..litiosTox Mat& 1L---To-day Capt. J. P.
..0.04,13apro tlie_ county:judge, present4a .
claim for savage due bin' by the schooner
Flora Carveth. -W.hile on a trip 'demi the
lake the -sChopner-lrait .ashere. -at the -
Brothers,. and wootakenoffby-Capt.Alleifse-
tug.:• The opposing counsel Said. that he.-
-was Only entitled to towage. - Allen's -claim
was acknowledged by the .jpdge,-Imd: V100
. _ . . -..
-granted him. - - - -' •
- ..,
rhahly-th-eroid-e,st,4...(:"1,..•d -tu.tter"---• 1' • -I i I- '-'--T -3 f., ---,r- 1-• l't. 'ti:hantlySit.,11:44C°.it,:torocntni-tet-:
\',;.• In 1808
siml.i., --;g a-oBf ,-1,11--ii: f 1-1' i .,;:i.:;:a. 17.1t.::1114-11-1.fl't1,11°.: 'i.f„-f'....___.__ %v\-...41--1[,,: ,,,,,n_atteo:rsitIlegfs,s, tvi,-.h.e_iiip4.. 1 t_ . ..
. le7STy.e'713r t'o.li ';'. i-ItIl sl-qi,l.', :PP. 1314
' be--Riri--- .. . i 4 t -V-.81-- 7. '1- - - :- --:-;1:111:0_e•-:111-4 .111---.1e.- '• -
or -1.)-ati'il , litein .- ... ... ,. ,1-- • (10•-lcit es: „tli1.:,14 - i - • -1 * -Canad•-. - ..,..-ildr thus
\
til:eTeotintry, -
tic S cei s., t„..eti.,. • and eveI-; • - 4
Ne•Y th -
,11,E e wieittwanonl°d\rr-sao-1tj‘le' '.1,- ' l':''.:-:;::'1(:' 11' It141Fs:''-- : ' '13(.. ''...1‘ '1 f a:1' few aln-ii.etttsInlYne1;11.e
s,‘1.„.,,•, r. . , I' . _.... ' 14,'"t/ i ,F• 1 father w.'„, -, ...-as
h -R1•10„ ti,(,•.1, I 1 in _1783 la • near
I hurel '
ao,.. f- 8 vaterlo t.to 101.1d et, - - - marriage fife e i Pod
,,- 0 C, . — AV ...V — IIP V IS .41, g lo. V .. (,,,
recent' ,•'11-- 1,t1s 0 tve ,..- "--.21 1- asset/1bl d- • --Ars itoo
_ is hed•f - F• 12 - • t. o'xil.. Aft- % 1 II - ' e It' tb ' '
roin ci - ill -tysoli v, t , , . . :".- ...1..re_ i. -Le plicliti e loci
31
_ Bi 1 , ed 1-4 ;.wany e....;"• r_.. ,..„
_ legy 7.m. Lr.11),,, ill tl .
\lt'IL -11g nflthe; •
- - „ VOWs
• . _
Th. 10 eli-er the droop- no he- 1['? (./"P -tht
beredeitaRrev•ellhieenfr-1 einigni..11131. %-"‘r
President of the_ (;-•,„1,..-11, ‘V. ingli-111 that -ttig'it
-mad missionary of •-p , .
tinental:Church Q a P (-9.1S" '1111' 11.1.ggacr'e c'1.1 "ill
Ontario, .(_,,twada, hf 180 )311z:se s. The parly - were
a short visit. E"ieti -tt)
froeueT°nhtdnolmaAtet
d, has co
John pinsent, a j .011i t so ix ge• a-1663°1'1' v of °1111g1 ants
Doctor
Court of Newton di 1 I S' a ("4 olit of 100 -We
owf 11111: di_aesatthEctrifgltilisiel '.7-t,';‘0711e1:-Je-tri-laatt, - 114110,t-yg I g tirit
slti-clAN);jadSrfOr.;11eary
.1141 u patti. 01 1:es.ni161i:e‘ t‘itt tit t°111,Itli
f, 411 the nu. iber on y
hus a tini..,,e, O. - sadriess
refleet-ion aw lieried "by.
311ent-ainner w.ite Served
tia_ -•/..,iid 'Jam :-. read iin,
ated gold- ..spe tacjes to
, aged, couple,twere the
8 number .of4pr'eSents.
en -a life-leng liefernier,
tetive part in be irebel:
it
fathily naitie. is Mi_tner-
this . mity.-11;301.int - in
factthat "Oaltlatid and
s are solid hat Reform.
s c that -1\i-iiiti-'1)--1-1'1)°-'111)4
a
past three years hi sc
I 1 I
minister of St. Audi thrt w 1- in the_weitto-oute, c .1E11
lino S d f
ion. • that Ir(tland, will
it of all othqr •gOvern-
Inited ' State , llow ?
1
t to Orrtifip teptice. , 1
tisttas.a've davvf t(rrrie thchtaentao:
onb)arteerrienllallneoisrty'
,.. c_otian „.. .. ,., bpi: „c nti,:e. an • d s(ii.;,1 ar_e---fully. 1,:eicin.al .11 11,e6s.w.ofh the, via pi a
p,•rior -to that of 1)alola or tin.)._ 'squalorucitizen TI miss .h.ate binitlicttnot hit
containing 55,552 i,i' 111° - end /nay g 0, fiowever, we a cominun
three years' labor,-- ha"t11(‘'
' 1 6.c, n the. Union, . -'11,-,terevey tiliance for -(
Home for 0141Ladies
needle
fhreormsei fin, afitindeyu,siatitotnl: ih•I:ii• td-h,:rawi•i-.1 ex. i id :s,-)..,-...,t.,eq.: r. - .... ...Leland' e,nd e
t else.- .By the -throne' of the Eter
assert it, that truth and liberty"
of thread in the Work.
. . .•" . - • : • • .
-. Miss - Genevieve Ward;the actress,- says
that a crnsadeought.to.- be.madel--against
palace car ConipanieS for not having special
cars for -ladies. - -The .'present hoding.' to-
gether,- she says, is:shocking to a modest
woman and.is a Violation of dece Cy' and
eelf-respect: - - - - ,. _
-The; Paris Figaro statesthat-the "-rich..-
.
-.,iseinae 7- American, Mr.-James,Gordon,13enf
il
-nett; _ proprietor of the- New York Herald
haa-- recently- engaged Johann -St dines to
give: private ' concerts- toiMr, ennett'e_
-friends_ at Pail for a-month,-.ferllieh Mr:i
Strauss is to receive the SrC.19.41 811.. of --140,-`
000 franca.
• ' Rev:- Dr.,-,-Cutritning,_- so well known
'through - hie writings. ...tor _inan _ year's,
miaister.ot the Scottish NatiOna church,
- . , - . . - . _
Croivii, Court, , Covent -gardens,. London,
whilst phYsically well, is said to be. enta4
in such- a .conditio4 as to ;be pr Otically
dead the World.
.Wil- call attention to theadvertiseineut-of
the Detroit,fMackinac -and Marcpiette R. R.
CO:, relating to lands inNorthern Michigan.
The- ' company are offering --land4. atelow
prices:to attract-settlemente.' In • this
con-
nectionWercannotdo better than -quote the:
following frond- the Toronto .Weelily•Globe
.of Pebruarv 18th: Our advice o Cana,
:diane-js to stay at liothe, but it they will go
to the United States they had -be ter -go to
Noithetit.MiChiga;n; where they t, will -. find.
floprislting Canadian eettlemen s,--,-. good
markete, geed seil,abundanee of W od, well-
:paid_work and ti,blimate to 'which they are
accustomed.. The -3r. will not,run ti e risk of
freezing in winterfor *ant of filet; nor of
haying theircio.ps destreyed in sumrner by
drouth orinsects, tis is:likely to heithecase
_in Kansas. and -Dakota. And then, it does
not cost niuchto - go. te.-.Michigait and if
they: do not -like it they earl retur home::
.Thal)ettoit, Mackinac and MarquAtte-B.R.
-itt a link 7.0f . the Qteat Northern , Pacific,-
. and on its conipleficon, 'which -is, iltomiSed
thia.yeAr, the lanthi Will be rapidIT settled
. , - .
and theit -vane greatly enhatieed.'„ -
. . ,
. .
'The Massaehusetts Ins ---------' h
is' not ()Wing, as some pious„people may nology at -Boston has an unusual pupil in
I
think, to a grebt-spipitual revival;. it is ex -Judge Grant, who is nearly 70 Tears 01,1
accounted for by the fac that President and has a large law practice in-Jor. - _ He
Garfield belongs to the- hitherto despised is accpuring a knowledge of chemistry for
seat. - - - - ' - - l',- -i use in Mining litigation-.
'ljta.;E'.'"V6errl-yd
•
-as
37. Yht. ge. hi et 1
al G.od..I.
-t1;jhetice
'shall yet be triumphant overall lifieivioesl
dive my salutation to the, /heating aild tell,
them to pitch their tents toward4,the, z -min '
rising.—Rev. T. de Witt Tarmac+
--_. Mr.., Fry's _ New.. York . experiMent Of. it
telephone .froin the-,Cfpera - Ilonge to hie
chamber_has-beett: imitated 'by tiii,invitlid.
gentleman in Edinburgh, who is ik, inenaber
of a -United Presbyterian conoregytion, but
hasbeentinablefroin-illness7to 'ttend• the
-servieeeottlie-chureh Iwitlirwhf, h be has
,. , .. .:
.been:-_-itssoeiathd•Tao-att---elderit ir twelve:
years. He has now. established -pleplionie
'cominuflicatiorl betweenibiS houSt ', and 4.1.6
churell In qbestion:_" Sounding c!ltrbberti".
are --..place'd - Un -...either side of -.1iie pulpit
through Which the Voice of the; Reacher is
coitVeyed„' while by -means' _ of • another'
ehamber.in thef.gallery 71the singtag Of the
-.choir and Cang,regationis transnu ted. -The
sounds- ::alilw of -preaehitag: and:worship,
although teavellitig over three :miles of
wire, aro, it is stated;diatinctly : Card, not
Oword b'eing missed. •
•
--- -A license :_sye-tern that will saIiip out
."-Idoggeries ":- where then 'are-enedir ped to
lounge, punish' dealers_ who selliliquer to
_driindards; -drunken, men • and oys, and
-compel them to keep orderly hoIs Seal, may
be maintained in,efficient 'operation through
the -self interest of 'license- holtlets, and
public opinion: is prepared to .14Stitin it:
Restraint thus put upon theWorer features
Of the: traffic may bb depended ifon
' l -to go
II
_ . 1
muoh farther in -eradicating -tip ling ten-
dencies among the -people that an • prohibi-
.
'tory Statute yet invented. --Chicago Fp Tin3es.
. I
- .,--N\re db not - consiider, says:, he. , New
I
York Sun, that anybnis ,odypattozi ' -ainews-
•1
paper when he buys it, or that,. heineWs-
I
-paper- is ' -under any obligation V . any one
who either:purebases 0. copy or ijasetts an
advertisement. 'fit is a wise- f414 •iound
newspaper,,the ptirohiser or the Avertiser
gets 'the full value for his money 1-uid the
account • is even between _their.;These-
worde'will;b/e endorsed by every oninalist,
, •
in the world. ' - 1.• "• - - ; •
-- A young man in a parish adjoh ng: Que-
bec has just levanted --With his' mOther's
-cash-box,-containing" $200. He ; 'leo took
withliiin the young and. atniaiblefidatighter
,
Of -a . neighboring 'colonel Of Militia. It
seems there:had beenionie diffictjtylabout
_petnaitting_these two -, young healts•which
beat as. one tci:$et United. •=
-
•
youtig lady at_it '-a-1-1,ed: her beati,
an Indian, because -he was on her trail all
the time. .
1_
7;7