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Huron Record, 1880-12-03, Page 3PL. • 1i in t st ell over trao fxo wra secti was one dark don head 44 11 light 14 writt from tram dem kent evap don don. InOol forte 44 meet coral forge knigli bleu the p Fell Hint to st with his onee tura thou to ke Soot° and el 11 mint and that would didn tem!) Struo menu as it not e per& my b B life o "-T clear _ flfty away tram posts, whet was a I kno all rot said Fitt that'll your forked on hi in the •Told t old m with i fifty. aroun wasn't town.' Th laugh frame 44 ,. T. Don't the lo •" T bath for br " H G • The Cap raven St. of Jun Island of the lage and serted paddl in eve probe we su the isl numb the n fifty. north lages we fou lifet r bodies males died. died been ix sleds dragg until t ertion Sheen many to fo fotind house she ha rible s had The b age, w down sonde numb fifteen anothe Here males. and oh saw no Cie pl a• • • .&N" ITH/totu • . ••••• r ft Traveling. Gentlemen of Yeeleure '4 Played '? a Ileirmer. 5 Wass a tramp,•andevisleiatly "away up" .. .0 fraternitY. Rio faee was coveredwith tegy heard, An old hat elouohed down hie eyes, an, hie raiment was a.moat ex. 'dinary 011estion of garmentsculled mth many a. re' areorow. His feet were pectin a pins of' gunnysacks, hound vdth can; of Clothes line, and his rout ensemble, nttremely picturesque and dirty. A.bent 'clookMondaYinellinghe tumhledup the eteirway at the night entrance shuffled ; the dinilY /it corridore, aliestuelt his in at thedoor of the repotter'e rooni, - load evenin"-I--" 3mt out." big pardon, but I-" tou're going to get /hen stairs quieker'n eing will therch a feather I." • lold on, now, mister -I've got an item." .. . •they , item is an item, no matter if' it comae en on initialled and perfumed paper, or the whiskey end onion odored lino • of A p. Henee the change in the reporter's leaser. Thetramp walked M. Noll?"' . . Vell ; I've been • thootire around the 7 a good deal, and don't you permit it to nate from yourpomory. I suppose you want te-goenstrferder hack than Lon- That's a IntrtY • good place -cops sy-Cadi ehuok•full of mercy for the um- sate, and-" .. . ut-the item r • . , . • ni, don't Permit your internal improve- 8 to get into, a eiolopt commotion,. l'ra V. to the item all. right, and don't you t it. Berlin is the hanky pleee ha Its of. the road. • Nice: ,warta fire- .ets-and grub, Sociable old. snoozer; :dice; there. •• Name's Con something. islee.p and I sampled his bottle. It was n Walker's best. Guelph'sa poor town ike. Police duty strucktall Ohief an eye like it hawk -wouldn't believe other if she wile on tremp-Magistrate tale -thmetinies ' dismiss with • a leo- -sometimes jail. Jail's pretty soft rinse, . . h, nothing to do tint saw wcv.4 enough. m warm. Galt's good nurTfor ma- h town -swallow most . any- raoket, ,-,, , oming to that itom pretty toon•?.? ; reserve your eganimity for a few mo- i of precious time. Started, from Gelt, ot duwn pretty near Dundas. Guess lead's been purty well worked. ' Earnmet lel give no grub -didn't give no grub -,York } want no work doner-all seemed to Ie. Got hungry as an offieeeteeker. X a benevolent lookin' old farneez piths' re onto his roet.house, Sendai, and, all vas. Wouldn't give .1), tramp anything, ,en if he Was starvint. •ses he. 'An idea ated-that's a good word• ain't it -into sin, and -sez Is- ---•----e------------ --- Lich bothered With tramps ??. ,. - . ithered 1 hech mon, but they tash the 't 0' me'' • • •• • . * •• )1d hiin I would fix it-so's tliey'd-•steer • af him it he'd give me. fifty cents. • The sent -hirsiii-eis no -0Y -1061C. 'IMF BMW ,. but he asked ' llow. -'Why,' sea T -- •-' pa has slaps whice they .put• .on gate to tell the next ging as etinies along er to strike that place or :not.' That double-barreled lie, but I' was hungty, ved people think tramptelas a eiorteof on the northweet end of tbe•Teland, Whiele we next visited, we found about three hundred natives alive. • • They confirnsthe reports of the wholesale starvation, and say that the uthabitante of the villages wished by us (male north gide of the island all died, not oneescaping, At this eettlement 200 had died, and the entire num. bo r had barely eeeaped starvation by eating their dogs and. the walrus hides. covering their boats arid houses, At a settlexpent on the liouthweet end, they said, a large num- ber bad died, but how many they could not tell, Thie general etervation 0. oared a. year ego last winter: . But few had died last winter- The entire nitinber, how ever, were• again reduced to the neoessity .of eating their boat covers, dogs, etc. • ' These people say the weather was cold and stormy for a long time, With great quantities , a ire and snow, so that they, could not hunt . wairlis and sea, awl' as they Make no pro- vision for the future, but depend upon what oan get from day to day, of thurse fait- tire means starvation. . They live directly in the •traelt of vessels bound into the Armes ooean for the purpose of whalingor trading ; they subsist upon Whales, walrus and seals, taking, as already stated. only•asenuch-as theYnotnallYneedediortheir immediate wants, never providing for the fu tun: They make. houses, Whets, • clothing, etc., of the skies of walrus and seals, and sell the bone end ivory to traders for eum, and breoeh-loadine armee As bong as the •rum lasts they do nothing but drink and fight. They had, a few fin:8.80mo , of• which we tried obuy to make Arctic clothing, hut, notwith standing then terrible experience in the past, they refused to gen foe anything but .*Inekey, breech -loading rifles or .cartri•dees, • ' .;• • IZIO.S# Tot NTKEIES PULL TEETH. • - : Some Experiences of an Englishrama Di . . the United States. arrem an acultess bY Robert 43011Yer4 I know a men, whose nettle I shall net mention, who stood at the shag) tarn 01 a road to take a bet long look at his old home. He is now tio far along in years that he feels quite obliged to any who may flaY, "HOW young yen look," though lie knotfs it is• not true. But be was a YOUng nnln then, and the best years of his life lay before him, if he should be spared andehould .make seoh fair use of them as loY in /Ito Power. It was. in England where this old booth lay, but he had made. np his mind to leave England, became he thought there was no fair chance tot him there or for his children after him, if he should ; be, aa be meant to be, the father of a fain.1Y; and where he Ulu:led that sharp angle of the road and lost sight of the pretty dale framed in . great Moors, he would be heading straight as he could go to these UnitedStates. So you will know what that look meant to him, apd I have been taken so far inteshisexon, confidence asto know what was in his mind, He was saying to himself: "1 wonder if I shall eve; stand here again, and if I do, what -will- have sonneto me between now and then? 'Will my life have come to .anything, so that I shell be glad for it and for this great adventure, or will it be -. a mere flesh into the pan? Shan . meet any old comrades, again, and will they be gladto see nth, .and eon 'Poor fellow, he made a grertennetake re ", And- it )vae.'„really ap, •adeenture Which might mightwell have toadied a steadier nerve .. than this 'young man poesessed. He • had never been forty .miles•fixim the spot on which he was stand. ing 7 -. he did not know a living Heel on this 094in/hit he could go to for aavice or a shake of the hand,. Re. had been to Bee a Sort of 'a 'kinsman, who had been. three theme to the States and said to him, " Is there a .good chance for a man over there and are the poo- ple kind to a stranger ?" and. the answer he got was, "You met do a great deabetter here, and then:a/MI/6es • are. so keen • :end ' herd. thee they will take . the very teeth out of your head .if you don't . keep your Moth .b„,,; "`"*"." ........was But I think this young man had the , first in what I shall venture -to •call kat& d that watemeertain power to hotel on Pant"- • • . . . - . • • to Ns purpose. a touch of . determination . tois Bee a thing through When he had once made ,,, 1,;. "P ."'' mind. And se he said, "I will go all, the sapse and take care ormy..teeth the hest- I- know bow,''- He came te this part of New. and meant to stay for a day or two , at A taveni kept by an Englishman, where he felt he • might . be safe, A form some sort' of- judgment of an''' thete hard:keen Yankees. '. He needed some • feting at a 'drug store very soon, and went to one on Broadway to learn' his:first lesson,a :rough -looking fellow in. a ., plaid. He found theonew woreivileandindeed friendlyeasking • him if he had Jett come. ever, and what he menet to do. .• It would have been very Pleas' ant to hear •th. kindly a maii,iriE,egland,..bat here he was on his guard and was saying te • • , • - . . • • .. • • inmselfee I shaleknow what you mean when said, when the package was. puttied over.' Yen ;are very welcome," Hie 4g•ood .fellow said; ". keep Your money ;you will need it.", 'menthe Them he *held oat his inind and said,: ,` Come, : • again, I shall he glad •to . see yeti." :Arid so. _ he-,•-wenti•-baok. to4Aie:tavertkeitli.,that.,--fire lesson. lying. veret waren - and. swept in 'his heart and soraothing liken nfiet .•iii his -eyes, . • •• thinking,of these hord. keen:Yankees' end,. the iwaY.thesesy first one he -had inetled drawn .,. . his teeth. ' ' . • •.• . . . . , . . • ave ear 1., • e . • I li •• -h ' d h'in't 11 hi Children how he • :. was plodding along•the road 100 milesefrom. "here si•few digs after this in koarch of • work • then about a, year ago you would have mimed the man end would guess he had gone horn.. It Was the man and woman who thirty year ago had taught my friend the bet lemon he needed to learn about the way they draw• teeth in this new world. They WOO Presby. terians, The man I am speaking .4 is„ 1 imagine, a hopelees heretie, and that church is sacred to him becattseetheY Oat gier0, and Howard Croslay is in some. amuse hie minis- ter, Jimmie they loved him. And when this man feels like saying hard things about Cal- Nen iam something whispers," Mr. Thentaeon and his wife were Calvinists," and then he gays, " The 'tree that could. bear suah fruit May not be of niy ,cleoice, but it must -'be after . all a noble tree," - ; ._„,.. _ - . - : A BONAPARTE'S MARRIAGE. - • • • • - - A. Great Nephew of the. First Napoleon Marries the Dauglater of a G bler. - ' -.Penni, Nov, 18.-Prinise Roland Bonaparte, affrolethe well.ltnowne Prince Pierre Napol- yeree in.1870 shot Victor Noir and wile aerplitioai was yesterday married. to Mlle. Blanerthe •thoond daughter 'Qf .the late Fran- cols Blanc,proprietor of the Meath Carlo ganung•estahliehment.' The bride ha1unit/3h fourth of her father's immense wealth. Prince Boland Bonaperteiaesubdieutenant. • in the :Thirty-sixth 'French regiment of in- fanny, and is not otherwise known to fame than as the son of his notorious father, who, long before the escaped° with Pascal Grousset's friend, had married s.weamstress, without the. oonsent of Napoleon III„ and had to eubmit to having his marriage dthlarednull and void Pierre is the third in the true order of Bona, Partist enthession, being only preceded by Prince Napolean,- commonly called Napoleon Charles, brother of, the Cardinal, and. by Prince Louis•Lticien, the, eldest living son of Lucien, brother.of Napelecin. I. He is the eeeond 41/mien's sons, andbas boon distin- . ?untied. since the days when he saw riervice• in Columbia, under General Santander far the 'fierce and • eangeinary contests into which hie Ooreicon temper has led him. Ho was at one time expelled from Corfu, , at another dismissed from theFreneh army and seldom without a duel on. his hands. .Alter shooting Victor Noir he and his wife, who had been remarried; opened a millinery shop hi Bond street, Loudon-, and the Prince devoted h• t* t th translationf t di inie o e o rage es and the educa.tion of his children: One of his daughters developed a very fair talent for sculpture, and Roland, the bridegroom of to- 'dey, pursued his Studies at St. CYr With .11:mei' eutisfectien to hie parents and no very great profit to himself. Mile. ;Blanc, mean - 'while, was growing to weinenhood under the oleander shades. of Monte (bile.- In the welt - ordered garden of the Casino, sweetwith the breath of roses andlieliotrepe, her :deter had been wooed and won -by Prince Badzivill, Be- side the undimmed blue of the • Mediterran- -. an' She • -woeld -go -on ..her •itaily •-errands-of charity, , carry -food to the poor, • hil w ---e. thd' crenplers were raking itt.s.orao poor devil's,. .1,a.stqapoleon, endthe.eoho_of a .suieide's pis tol would break•tlimealm of MO 'slimmer day, 81 - - . She grew to be.as pretty as she was good, and 1Ykkase her., father died sbe was• deemed • the.. best.liutilmOilisl" "'Oh '4.1172(11'46; • Hai mother's. w,edeling present is .nothing less Sian 'the:famous paleekof San Bonito. There are. .seveilty-five acres in:PrinceDemideff'destateL the palace haat Marble. terrace and a. gilded deme-,,,:there--are-itables--for-fifty-horses; . . . .eoleihhoieles 'ler thirty canlages, a riding school; het, tompeeateeand cold greenhoesee; . . . . .. • • orangeries ;. a pigeon. shociteag• lawn ; ,steani . baths ;:lawns, hikes, bridges,•aviaiies,grottost . . •swireming schools, orchards, olive greyes„ •kitcheti gardens 'vineyards.- and deirind No . , •. . • princess could, -desire a ' fairer wedding gift, 'and•ne...B.lano 18 to be really. a princess, for the .11ing of Italy, Who is always lavish of his. patents -of nobility, has created her hisband the Prime of San Donate.. , '. • . . , • ' • . . A. TAL.111 ' Or HORROR. -. Secrete of a Ruselan Prleon Roune-W1e • • • .. Priscneent Confess, • . atom the At. Petersburg Geloat From the 4th to. the 14thof Oot be bit , o r . * the Military court of Itharkoff was eperenee in . trying fourteen pereons moused of belonging e to a theret theiety the purpose of. which wee • to overthrow tlee existing Government and eocial sYstern of Unssia. In thecouthe of the trial it was ;Shown that A. f geteianim and Legky had distributed Pamphlets. and pre- clemetione inciting the people to imams.- tion ; that Philipoff had forged poses ; that . Daniloff bad Moulted the -officers who went to arrest him ; that Prof, Elytzianko had not reported to the authorities the critnee of his eini, Alexander, a youth o 19 years. he f T'• accusations manna the other pritoners were . - comparatively. , a detensa significant Th d f . ensa • was conducted v ry poorly, all the counsel being appointh by the Cons from among the •inifitary conissel, The trial of the youth Sytzianko produced an unusual . excitement in the thurt. Dr. Sytzianko had all the sympathy of ' the .publioe • being esteemed both as au able professor of • - University -'"--- . - • the of Kharkoffend-tha phytithirtn. Eight nsonths of prison life had made him • almost unrecognizable; hisfaite was deadly pale. Still when rem teed: lb defended him- • • • ' • • - - ' • self ably. His son, A exander, h gymnasium. • pupil, was undoubted; the -most remarkable - . • - . of all the accused. '• His beautifel face, his •• . , • clear and charming voice, and his eloquence • ' . PIO:aimed a very favorable impression On Ole . . ' ';'- public:, The most striking mozne'nt of the - • - . trial was this. The attorney for the State '• . . • .. asked •Alexander why, on the preliminary in.. • -• veetigation, he bad made certain statements. - which on the trial he recalled. In explanation • ' •the youth described most eloquently all the ' - ' ' ' • ' . horrors of the prison life hp had been sub- .• . - ratted to. His physieal suffering and moral tortures hbad d d' 1 ' 't • 4' e said,re uce tun o a lion, ditien in whickno •persou ean.he respoissible either for his words or for his actions. He . . told how he felt when during the whiter he was •shuten a small, dark, damp, underground • . 011, and misstated for a time .9n one glass • .0, . water that Was given. to him once • . , . in twenty four • home'. The , lather of the youth could not stand such a dreadful talo; he fainted and so put an end to the -e-xposi- . e - • ion of the stheets of the. pelitioal prison. • A - - • ' excithig scene followed. All theladies present. in the court there cried and sobbed,' • and teeth were then on the faces of the stout- ' . • • est MM. Tbe court adjourned. When it re- • • ' appeared the attorney far the •presecution• re- ' .. - quested' that the prison authorities and guard- . lens •should be zummoned , as witnesses.. On '. • • ' . • . • • thg) next day they were bronght. Alexander .• Aytalankeeewasereguested to repeat what 'he - • ' • ---••••••-•---•-,-- • • Loin& IN IA anus*. _ Row H '. 1.. te ler.7- . A ii V ' B13111011 E t °rat Ttle °a. 'are °fl • e r e urn et .D. Ca. . e ' .y • - " ' , ( romehe New . ork Sun.) • ' .., Last May three persons well known in Li- . be • • yd • • thisit • I' rut. arrived in e y. These Were t le ex President. of the Republie, James Payne, Bishop Pinney and Mr. W. EL Johnson, The latter, a rialiplanter on the St. Paulai•River hi et • t - • e 1.• • . . ' a corne e procureimprove arming trope. meets .and machinery, He lodged in the house of his friend, Mr. Peter Downing ee • f• t • t' •C• • Prquality prietor o the res,aurentin ne. ustomHouse. • A ehort time since he died. Parkulan,, a native bay whom Mr, Johnson had broughtmost , is s 1 with eo is Out *with him ' I'll th friend•f h' om toyer.. Parkulau is theson of the King of the Pone a native trbe, which like the Garth hlt•the and ' ,. s, t e roce, eys an the epees under the jurisdiotion of the republic.- ••His benefactor, Mr. DoWningehatt posed fieveral • •reb • a xi. . years in t aria, and rater s on aecount ex the a,Pproaching death . of his father. • • By means 44 series of intelligentinterirogatories addressed to hint by Mr. Downing Parkulau vestal*, • described the.. condition n of • the 'AreeriertYn titacks as now eidati . This i the, eaehiiiaii-&-; --- - -- --I1g, --e-e-e---- * When ' the colored. min' and "hie family ter, rive at 'Monrovia ...they are at once taken charae ofhv the coionizatfan saat .11'nder • •• -• • - -- * •• • .. • • I Y'•-. •the ore °Ellie 'latter 'they -remain for • six - th . ,. : - .• - thethoyhav - a • - throughthe b limiting feviii.""'''ln -''''' " -I•-•,:r•see-whet.you-eharge.1•1."-.Hew...letteb.2.!Lhii to.beeauseif•tn°4 by the heat: but Imo Lasmeemt e, a a cif the origin and &erecter of : which littleis•"; . known: e The first symptoms of the sickness aro heailache, painsih the back, loss of appe- tite and more or lest( st i de- m nt ' v - • • iga .be 9 range. e , 1 • rfaPi. - If' ld t 'Id' - ' eyer. this yie a 0 mt _. tz.catment, the patient is prepared' to endure ordinary. es- posure s o . es ihinia ,9.. orifie Imes .. .e,- 8, t tli el' t ' El • t• • •th .ai easo of • - • • - • • ' • • • • . : auttent fever ethernet:fined by bilious vomit- - •s• - • • • . . • • • . • • a• mill expression of the eye, and, in the ifile&ile paroxysms ...iiitense: headaehe and • . .. . • - • ... . •• .. . . had said on the previous day aliont the abuse ' received by him at the hands of the prison_ '• ' . afitherities. This be did, • 'and added memo • ' . • details even more -shocking. Againhis father, • • •felt tiek.,"inidreitiiiiiitedtheUedittribeallaited, " • •'• . ' ' • - -- te leave the • court rooms This petition was , granted.. The prisou.authorities were unable. -.: fritaxitirlidiet the' aditlinfrivelitiOnsMiide by . ' ' •• • • • • • • tho youthful poner • : .'• ••• ' . • - ' . ' ' • ' ,Ori Oct. 14 the judgmentof the • court was • . . • .• .' • anzionica to..the accused. • Alexander Sytz- I • • . •.•_ •'.. - • . tankohnd Legky, being deirived of tiff rights--''''''''.'"'",`";"""-;[-'''"--"' were met . to Siberia for etwo 'years arid eight - •• • . • •• - .-• • • • • • . ••.• at • hard • labor.;-• • Philipoff,•being de- . • '''• ' • ' • • .. • priveclnt certain special rights, was exiled tO • • ' • ''.. ' Siberia for twb yet,rift,Thno aricLEnenetessff ' ., . . , Fatiiih -biz to guide Om anothies-ebut its -and I worked iton•the old man. .1Ie le wouldn't give -me but ten eon*, cents, ses I, ' or I'll ,put on. a mark fetch every mother's son .of • 'eni into , ., .... - , souse.' That settlea the wing, and he out. I Made some. sortof a heireglyphic _gatetpost. and started hack to the crimp bueli, where there were t ir eeili-l-iffite. ho boys, =drained 'em a down to the. one by One -regular procession.- - astreetions not to take a.'oent less'n- I d have given A geed •deal to • waitend I. and see the fun,. but the weather i suttry, and I wanted to strike this . ' tramp- rolled off • his chair with er at the diseomaturo fif the'hetieVOlent e . , . - •• • • sentto f • four. th D ' " ' '' •• • • * . were sen o afortress or mon se an- • . • e• . • - • . iloff •elsO *got four menthe, and ' •G011ibeff two •• • . • •'• • . • . e.. 14011 9: .• a res o. e •accuse , ino u nig th Th • t the '' • : ' d ' 1 d" ' • ' .' Dr. Sytziatiko, were. aequitted. On. Oet. 25. • the slime, mirk Will try a burgher, julisoff ; • " • ' a Ishreese JulisOff • the sOn• of the nritist Ko ..• ' " • . .. - ' ' • • . ••• - .. • . , jin ' d ii hter of tffe,p e t K ' the • f ., a a .g ri s opn, . 0. son..o ,. State Coinsolor 13alabuch, i)r. Rudalcoff;eind - I the daughter of the •thrgeant, Gangozoff, all . • . ;. Moused of political 'crimes. ' • : • • • - ' - :. . ... . , . .,..._..„....___.., .... - ., •• •••• - .!.. .., . •• " ... CLEVER. OOLLECTION; . . . . • • . , How a Wentworth Farmer' Paid a Note. • • • ' COnatable Thomae • 'Ingrain, jr., of Aber- . • • : • ' •foyle .will be rentemberecl as' being the • con- . ' ,.. • • • . . - ... • - • 11 • d t • x it n and sta ) e who ha . he e e i re .. dangerous ,. • chase after the Mlle,' the Black's.. Corners • burglar.: Mr: Ingram subsequently gave' • • • • • h • , h p • . • • . e. ohoe Court - evidence. in , t, e ease. at .t . , At the ex iration of ail months the' colon' he e• • P I nd..t 'KC t .Here• a b• - s are given a .o eu ve e:. 18 y, e •a grown IIMIZO.and riceeand on the highlands of the interior Wheat, barley,and otitis Cot- ton flourbithe a 1 . s -' ' talOffee -• • la sugar ,,,Line a c , are easily produced.., The esculent end ,ftteinace- ous ihote chiefly cultivated . • h -' ' '-' ere t e notato,•the " - • • cassava, the yard; the teniaretiembling the noiato=inad. the arrowroot.' 'Ned* Alt' the- - b , • • -' vegeta les grown in America, may be profit, ebly,oultiested. Althongli.Amex•fean;Engliele: to-d•o• ou .8:Piping -hotrelaye-when-he_got his second lesson, He was tireel,poor fellow, and little sad, when a gentleman passed him the „ . • him ' d h 11 A ' i'' ' • • said :. " Get in and have, e ride." . New 4,43 had pleaded alotig"the road ever einee he '''' • • - could remember when the humor Welk ina, h' • - •• •• • d. a great many gentlemenhad- nassed ' him aa• e • - •-• • • e - - • • in •caiiiitg°8; b11.• '1°. all his.life. notnne of b ' 1.1. d • " . h' " • . , h' , . d• : a' -• be 1 sure it' wits • • .thenethi. you en/ . eg:.lastnight H t• into• 'tli. - ' " of a won er. . e .0 a °arm - ' ' . t . ey got in 9 re• kindly talk. Being Of the .curione kindwe reise•in this New World; the Jean wanted to know of course. and get tole/m.0, . held ' out hit hand' when they • • • came to the end of the route after saying alt sorts Of cheerful things about America, and said ii" I am- very:glad to . have met . you," and so my .friend.went hia. Way 'thinking of, • . • • • • - • •• t d what he had.laeardabout them " hard -hoer e -- . - • • • . ' • • . • . • tankees." . • • e • . • e • . 'His' third lesson Waren° great matter, but still it lies in his heart with the sweetness .of a "June -rose:" -He had turned- down le .lane near the end of ins journey that, day, when all. et. mice. he • eanie to a little gekaen all abloom With lilacs: ths.blossoni lteloved best. Ho could not resist reaching over: ,gethering a whole wealth of them.within hie tirnia;bury-' Jog Ins face in them and sobbing Just, a little, as .I. always . tell him, for another garden of miles away, when beleard a step and taw a -Woman contingent of the cob- .caused tage, and said. hi' hinisell'e " There, now •I shall get the rough 'side- of that. women's tongue. She Will want to know what 1 -am doiue at her . lilacs." Whathedidsay in her eheexiest way _Was 1 "Would you like...This_ancient some ?" . And Whet Abe.. die was. to make •a* bunch about as big as a broom • end hand it , over,' with aramile 4 and •What .he said • he he wont down -the. lane Waif:. ',' Nether mill. 'hired stone's are :nothing• to -the hardness of the heart, mut how•theti do draw one's teeth 1" • . . . - . • ' • -The only lesson ,besidee 1 Shall 'Mention 'they Was the noblest, and boat, My • friend had brought with him a, young Wife. They were married _. the week • they left hone°, aid she, being about the beet Woman in the world', esid, -".1 Will ge tO work too." • . Ana eo elle took to sewing by for a lady near by, and Viraa taken with a fever sheprobahly catight'on the phip, and it was at once al:natter of lite and death. It waslair to limos° ttatthese people to whone.' she was a total stranger would send -her to the hospital, but they did . no such thing: .They nutted and .attended her as if she had beet their own daughter night mid day, and when she was well. and the young huebarid said, "We Can never pay you for your kindnelis,but•youliaVe been: pet to a great expense • for tis, and we weeld like to make this. good," haw do you think these hard, keen -people made out their bill ? It was not in. figures but in words, and the porde-were : •teWe are glad to hale been ablo to do this. Gail blessing en yen end be mire • i, • you always wine to see.us. , Li lloWard Orosbee church a few years • • • • • - - ago you might have seen a white haired men woman sitting. quietly side by side • then you would havemissed the woman tted Mated how the man gre* very old, and • . . .... . . • • • :•• t - PROBABLE- MURDER'. ... - . ' • . • . -- • •. • • A Man•Mas Els Head Snlit . - Open -Strang. • • , • stork Of• His 'Wife ' ' e .. 1 - • „. .., . • NitANEE,. NOV. p.. -A sad affair took.plaee two-x-13110E4*nm B.rueston, on a farm .owned b ...Fred Hem irflP p9TiiPillara ' Pr i . 0f '' • II f • • ' h' h i • n the arna is a sine ratne house,. NV 18 s .occupied by Ed. Navin,'119.111'S . hired man, with his wiffs•atel four children. This mOrn- itig his wife went out to one of. the neighbors ' •that het hu band endinformedethem them , „.. . s . .lay dead in the house, andstated.that ho had, fellen on to' the •atove and hone that en to the AXO and split his skull open. .. - ..,, • ,,, . They procee o e e ti un Th proceeded to t th-hoini-le d fe d a • 12 • • N rin lying 4 the floor on his face, •erith hid.. head split open,. as .stated, and quite .dead; Both•had• been drinking.. during the night,. and are said to 'have a baa reputation. Ham has been •trying -to get rid of his ,family for thelast EiliX .333.onthil; but is not implicated in pie •affairin anyway. .; Thit...eorener holds an nuttiest this afternoon. . , , .• •i .. .• • • ee. ' , hat-1111-4er.usa4d04-shilill'ustrg" ' yeti think that's ' an iteni ? • Haw ere'. Igine at the police station ?"gentle ip top -first floor• -hot and cold water .cocktail in the morning -fried oysters iakfast-wine"----, . • • • • old on-taffy.is for infants-taeta." .. pod morning."' • • and Frencluseeneyeleetn he libel;-the-..inhab•. •• *4 t thei business• • ti tants, as a rule,hcon conduct Thus r.on ie charm 'a quarter Of data for its equiValtint'ln eat - 've - ' Th • ' • ' b ' ' • ee,• eana, &a. ere• are. no eggars. When. once a colored roangets a . good foot.. hold in Liberia -he is nrettv sure togetalong • all . h / - - .- • .- - - - •rig t., t is azere thing • to find • persons • after being acclimated, show a desire to re- • . • turret° America- .• . •.• , • •-• - ---- • • • .' ' ' • • e_e_ e- • e_ ' ,.--_-' • • -UM.O.II': SPAS WI'Ell IIE BEM IC. . ,.., ' -• '• ' - ''" - • • . exofesior Roberttion. Smith's enemieriin the Free Ohurch of,Seotland have:at lila got the 'better othim. .1.Ietves brought up beforethe Ecclesiastical Court more thann year ago, our readers may rememberefor unsonadness le an petiole' on,the Bibla. in the " Enoyeloppadia-• but got off eying to going mis, management On the part of the prosecution. Boon afterwards a new volnme of the '.'Exicy. :thousands oloprodia " appeared inewhieh he had an article on the HebreW languageaud literature,. which Appeared 'to be woree than the , first, and *as eagerly sethed ou as an•excuse for re- the Proceedings against him. In Au gust lett. a .commission. was appointed- by the General Assembly to ,examine tine last article, and it has just made its, report ttt. a pieeting, It finds him guilty of irrev, •erence in his treatment of the Seriptutes ; of speaking of them in such manner. as to .give theimpresion that God is not the author •of :Yankees' them, that • their narrative; . 'portion' • is' not alithentic, andlhat their. prophetia . por- untrue. . He talltS of Ezra and Nehe. miah asinine "singularly destitute of literary merit" ; .alleges that two chapters of Isaiah g' seercilo haste boon first published as literary broadsides" ;. ;speaks of the Song of Solomon as a " lyrie_draina." and the story' of • Jonah aft " a parable"; and desoribeeBberas simply •• an ethoological or geographicagabstmetion. • He defended himself in a speech of an hour and a balf, in which he is reported to have great have° with.the report and its. outliers, over whore, Of course; • lie has an immense advantage in point of learning and dialectical skill, but hijaredhimisetthomewhot by the inipettiosity of hie attacks ' /nether . It availed him nothing, however, as he Was suspended . front the proteesorship for 'six mentlis by a vete a 270to 202. He denies, the validity of the whole prooteding,on'tech. nioal grounde, and itis now Possible that the ease may make its way into the court/ of law, -,The Nation. '. • . .. - . s here. The other day ae•eatmer living this . • , side of Pthelton was •suftleiently iintiressed, . . with 'Ingram's ingenuity and stretegio .. . • ability:. This fernier had made a note which • ' : • . he•rehised to meet when it became dtie. ' 'The ', • • • " • • holder of the . note, which was.. payable to. . - . bearer, handed lt - to Ibgrion for collection. , ' • • , • Thecoestable woe in no, hefty about the 'col- ' - • '•••',.e. - lection arid nationtiv bided his tithe A IONT ' • " ' ' • • ' '• - • • • • '' - . • - • ..• . • -.0 clays silica the maker .4 the note .arrived.at e. - • , Aberfoyle, on hie way -to Guelph, with a load • • ' . -' '' I of potatoes.. ' He .did not know' that Ingram ••• •• , held his note: - The'Const bl •bar 'ned with. - .• . „ 9, 8 gm the,fardier tor the .potateet,. and purchased- • the load for a.•sum -Slightly above' the -face • value of the note. 'The • potatoes were Anly .'. • delivered, .anditteeFarmer sought his pay, • .. when the eenstable produced and tenderen - . the note, tind the small balance in cash: The , • farmer was exceesively wroth, and refused the. , ' ' , . . tort of quid'pro• quo point blank. , Ile. went ' , . • ' • . ;to Guelph and eontirilted .a• • lawyer, mid the . • • • result otitis interview was that he altered . • his Mind, aeeepted the. note in payment for • . the potatoes,.andwent home a trifle sulky, . • • . . • . but thoroughly 'posted in anew Wrinkle,. .. ' . . . .. . . ' • WHOLKSILEi STARVATTON. , - - • . . • - ., • • Satire. Population of. Several lill- /ogee .Starved to Death. . , - tain C. L. blooper, of the United States Le cutter Corioin, writes as follows: Islashael's was'left behind on the 23rd e and a course made for St. Lawrence. to inveetigatethe,wholesale starvation natives. We stopped off the. first vil. .Britennica," about midnight. ' of • • June' 25, found the . village •• entirely • do- , with abide, ,. boat '• . frames, s, spears, bo.ws and arrOwe, dm., strewn 7 direction. We found no dead bodies; oly missed them in the faint twilight,. as ssequently learned atthe. west , end of. .vieing and that they .had all died. • lerom the a of henries, boats,. /Ito., we estimated tither of those Who had died to he about On' the 2fith we followed •along the .special side of the itland,. 'examining the •vil- is we came to them, -At cape Sieperme nd the village deserted, not a sign Of matting. I counted •fifty...four• dead , and as theseverenearly all hill grOYM there can bo -no doubt that many more •tion.wes The women and children douhtless list' and : were buried. Most , of those •ere just Outside the village, with their beside them, evidently having been ,d out by the survivors, as they 'died, hey, becoming too weak forlurther ex- Went into their hottses arid covering fives with skins laid down and•died. In of the homes we • saw from. one sr dead bodies. • One woman. was •reedo . face down,just outside tho debt Of the '. Probably one of the ' ladt survivors, d gone out to find relief from her ter. Ifferings, and, overcome by Weakness alleie,' and found that relief in death: idy of a boy, of perhaps siktee,n years of is found in the village, about half way 1 small hill, he having fallen as he • de- d and died as he fell. I estimate the r at dead at this pkeeat 150. ' About miles west of Cape Siepermo we found r village almost entirely deserted. o sate twelve dead bodies', all full gown As tAt the other village% the Women [Wren had probably been buried, as we ' no. The number of dead estimated at :th woe/bitty. At a largo settlement . . • . . . 4.: . - • - ' ' A SUPPOSED' ELOPEMENT . • • • • e , .._ . . Quite • a, 'ripple. of excitement has" been in.the city over a• wise of supposed .olopeineetswhieleiris alleged took place from' this city' .)a• Sunday twit. The maniti .the ease is Capt. Sheldeni an 91d resident of the aity, and.captain of the- schooner Manzanillo. merinetis welinp ln yearg,_inid for a long time has been in the employ d NOto , Jaes, Mairay.' All that is atpresent known•of the ease is that on Sunday last he a horse and buggy at• a. livery ttable: fie drovelO theinternational Hotel, where .8. vonlan joined hint. '• The twit then drove off, ' beading towards the fhispension•Bridge,. and are reported to havearessed the river, , Bending -the conVeyance back'to the•eity. No. thing has been heard of 'the parties time. ()apt, Sheldon leaeres behind him a, wife and three young thildren, to-whom".he harterilwaye ,. . . apparently been most , deVoted. • His ' NV1f0 19 left via bad way • She is said to be entirely • without mums of •• sithsistence, • with rout amounting to 00 overdue mi thit. dwelling,. •t On Saturday last Sheldon is said • to have drawn all Ilia aruti ft.nrn Iii, Mina, ' Tr the ...-. -- 4-.' - - ---. ----aY'' - "-e ease 18.58 'reported it is a'very heartless affair ;.:...St. ,Catharines Touvnal.- - - • - ,- ' _A'DEMENTED OUTH - .. • -. - • • Y • • • - . , _ . e . , , ' • . .. to • Desperatioxr by , s ., weet' _ DrivenMs - : ' hearts . Coldneen • , . • MONniztr; NoV. 18.e -Two ' Months ago a. . • • ' ' ' • • . , named J S Muldone came here • . young man n J. J. , .. .. .. . .. . s.. , froth Lynn, Mass. and secured employment ' .. • , . ... , the le th w • Mass., 'of. S. H. Mbene•'. tt • .. .. • m , a er ay , .. . y . „ . .. . Son He kept himself aloof from . hie • cont. • ., ' • •h - • panions and seemed to be brooding overeome . - • , imble • • Oriday evening last he an- .*. . " " - • thn' F • . - • • • . . nounoed•intemtention of returning ome an . . a ' . • ., . • paid0 ff b the•cashier f the ft - - 11 - • • wo -o • y o e rm. e. . • secured a ticket for' Beaton. Before atarting las amo orielied Mr. Well" •df the Vigor (iettle • , - • • I. - • ' • "e• • •1. . • . ". • . Market,and informed host that IC was gong , • • • li h t ' If h t h h d . • • o ynn to s oo is sweet ear , NV o. a . g one back on hien. ,Mr. Kielly coniniuniOrtted . • this to the notice who telearapbed to•the•ati- , . . . . - • • ..- ' • - ., Ai la . - • thoritlea "%in Boston. Meanwhile n one • . . - . • - • • - -. - - • ' .- • • ' arriveden Lynn and had an interview with • • Sarah Moran, his sweetheart, who. treated • • • . , . . • him so. coolly that he =deep. hie mind' to • ---- t 1 • id H eordin I • rocured a rmeei e eettt e* of einrei regg Pend took argo . qua% y. ...1 ,a • s If 8d ven• mon, but ' • enough, of i lo. kill ha e o es ,, s. . . . was disco.vere m. into to save his lif ,.. ... , . • . " .1t1 . ' fpoker betweeh ' • -Tho ilits_10 0 a genie 0 ___,_ . M deft Va. was that , , _ _ . e Popper and Muse, at his fntmor leveled his gun clt the latter, . b a iteeusi for his 1 fa but Pep'•• ' Minx egg p , y i , • • or Was so murderous that whee the g un . • P 1 d h• fr d tit h • i would. het stay tee te .. 0 mpe 0 ample , • With his thumb, an rt. eent a brillet throug it . his vietites heart. i . . .. • ,,,,. • • . , . il aasairarclin the so,calloa prima -ate nini--0 . . 0. of 'Wigan journalists,wheseettner as awriter has been rearke.d.by brillieney- ratlee,r than by unvarying consisteney, iI disgusted with the language of the. neyegep7of ultra-llepablierin lourrlais. a • " I o Sill., confese that 1 and say . . P Y , de not feerlirotul of reY eolineetkal With jour- Winn wheal vead all that is being priiited ince the liberty. of the pros has existed de. t40 facto. Tlia" freedom whieh certain papers use a A• Ini e I not the freedom of (lithe aims ' 11- a- 8 0 bnt of ealumnY rl ' outrage Mid insult. It is onotig h te disgustone at belonging to a pro- . • f se •• t,. , Mission rie destitute o If rettnec . . • . . .. • - . . . . -I is eatimeted that '8,000 wildenexa were . . • . . mg. e nna s bear ary ° ali the - 0 e do Ortieg, on the firrit day Of the duck ehoot, ng' 3113ge ' "araleaVa ras aanal11°11°11 e ° -rat the l-ayere ' • • • . • "4• ,444.44