The Sentinel, 1880-10-22, Page 7A REMARKABLE CASE.
• Death of a Man from Hydropho-
• bia Eleven Years after
Being Bit.
iNow York World, Oct ee
Before daylight yesterday morning the
wife of I lenty A. Greene, ex -postmaster of
Jersee• Cay, went downstairs to the base-
ment of her residence, No. 145 Grand
'street, and found a young man lying in
the area, apparently suffering great pain.
Sher called her husband and recogniziag
the man as Henry I. Martinette, their
daughter Annie's -accepted suitor, they
carried him into the house and laid him
ou a sofa. . Dr. Abercrombie and Dr. You-
th', who are heneeopathic physicians, wore
called in, but •Martihette died about 9
o'clock—of hydrophobia, both physicians
say. He was 26. Eleven years ago a
small pe t dog belonging to young Martineae
•
was attacked and bitten by a rabid dog.
A policeman endeaored to kill both, but
the pet dog escaped with a wound. Young
Martinette founi it, bleeding and covered
with mud and dirt, and took it Mins arms.
It bit his thumb. Ile ran home and told
his -parents what had happened
• to . and he had the wound
caute7zed. The next day the deg
deveIaped symptoms ef: madness and
he wa killed. The ineideut Was long ago
forgotten. On Thursday evening he took
to hie bed, and Dr: Abeeerombie was sum-
moned to' attend him. The patient was
seized with a succession of :spasms,. tiring
which he is said to .'tave• foamed at the
moutit and ..snepped his teeth together. In-
formation of his illness was .sent etc; Miss
- Greene and her parents, wh ova:Hod him and
found him delirious and extremely violent.
• At the.sound of Miss Greehe's voice, how-
aver;he became rational and talked. with her.
It a related that he immediately became
-
Violent again when the visitors left the
room and that, thee .spaems were e renewed.
On Sunday Dr. Abernrombie pronounced
,it aecese of hydrophobia and- so informed
• . Martinette's parents. One the following
morning he went into violent spasms. -Hie
- face and .neck grea- Ilackiand boaiea
Convuls• ions. • Dr. .--Xoulia bq
T Yesucru
-afternoon tlia.b neyea before heard
ar or hydrophobia deveIoPed eleven
• - years after the lute, but he had heard of
case inaneKieli the disease Made RS appear-
ance latpr ee.ven years4e-This ease wgseun-
enietake.hly hydrophobia, hOWever;
Canadian :11tinirea': otes. •
• Arrangeinents have been completed fq
the -working Of McKelhei's Island this fall.
The .stipendiary magistrate at • Prince
Arthur's Lanclihe iseinteeested in. Rat
kertage coal fieha •- • •
• ..
. Miners are getting -Very scarce. 'A large
number are wanted at Silver Islet, -Dun-
can; and other works there.; • •-•
Mr. E. A. -Arnestr6ng, Of Detroit, is
making arrangement's fer Workine • sonee
.
property m Ine Island en•. whichp- he is
interested.
• • Fire . clay has been feand to exist •iii
small quautities -under the -water of Thun-
der Bay; this Was disclosed bythetate
surveys that- have been - nag4e. • -
A gentleman offered to „ het that Silver
Islet- stock would reach, 0500 before next
June, but-coiild find no one ta take him up --e.
• •that stock is valuable property.
t Silver Isletthere iS now opportunity
.
for working a larger force,but the company
are unable- to. find miners enough to piali
Le work forward as feet ,ab they could
• wish. • - - •
• Tha recent developmentat Silver Islet
- are --causing considerable Attention to -be
paicl to that district,- -and ednring the past
law weeks. Chicago, CietC[Meati, Detroit,'
and Philadelphia, capitalists - have been in
,aorrespoudeuce with parties there.
l'oniuterciat and Industrial.
Jarvis merchants are . paying SI er
-*bushel for dried. apples. Over 200 bushels
were taken in by.them. on Saturday.
All reports from France. and ItalY agree
that thie eilk crop in thope- countries will
be More eleundant this season than for the
'Past ten yeare. Advice from different
• districts in Japan announce tbat only about
450,000 cartous will be manufactured this
year, and; as a, considerable 'quantity will
be required for home Ilene it is „expected_
-that the cards- -available --for exportation
_ will Eettliee very re-iinineratiVe Prices.
Tbie crop of apples in.the Vnited States
e
this trear was probably never before so
;large
or of such splendid. quality. The
apple erOp is an uncertain one, but when it
. is good it is gond all over. The production
this ear is put down at 200,000,000 barrehe
-Large shipments are being made, principal-
- ly to 'England, from .13eston - and ether
eitiees. A large quantity will be worked up.
into vinegar and'eiciee.
_
•_a:The Saturday Review_ chesee a review of
.the English harvest as follOws : "„Tha
farenees must make up their Minds to ac-
-eeptlew prices, which; hoa-ever unsatisfac-
tory t� thein and to their landlords; will Mr- Gia
be regarded with equanimity and iiatisface church is :
tton by Peepie.evho are noti. landowners or
as. illuet
farmera. But in the result the' depreciation mlegh. d°
in the value of arable laud' which has- al- people' r
ready taken place will he confirmed - and- Jean Ing
generalized. There is nothing in prospect showers tha
to yttract dapitaliSts to invest in farming lead some of
.opelrattons in the corn -growing iine." the crops ar
Nev
more
Tru
heave
Not
tern h
The'
name,1
One'
you p
she.
The
cats
look a
Has
that a
catche
The
Austra
yeeers
Phei
a soig
twelve
The
opened
county
The
into W
busb I
Si
:Ile was
amptp
! Collin
a hods
and bo
Publi
during
warm
,An
-silkdre
people
Whe
will rev;
expects.
• In th
a:'.1 Mon
the man
Neyer
•are gen
prodigip
• 'The iii
Mother
Clothing
tarY.
There
that- he
so Of 1
Brevities.
r as the applejack crop said to be
o ising.
Lin to chants—Expecting to get to
by singing.
in is wholly bad. Even a dark tan-
s bright side.
a -Slavists, notwithstanding their
re always getting into a broil.
io ewife was asking another, "Do
se .ve pears?" "Not long," said
not much danger when it rains
dogs;' but when it Spitz dogs,
it ver occurred to baseball men
il -pitcher is generally a good fly -
of Melbourne, the Chicago of
• was selected only forty-five
o.
n the village of Romney, Kent,
molaSses factory established
e sago.
o treat Telegraph Company has
a Office at Cameron, Victoria
0
eta grain is commencing to pour
nnag. Wheat a quoted at•75c per
nd ats at 43c.
•
rt Frere has arrived in London.
aer ally received both at South,
an ieL9ndon:
wo d ToVenship Council have rented
n tot, in which they lodge, clothe
41 air indigets. . •• •
eitkera. who sip cold water.
6 ."remarks" are advised to use
r mucilaginous drinks.
1 nge • speaks of a slieevy black
t t can standalone. Still most
Father.see a dress parade. .
th heirs pit- :domed. to hear the
t re is scimotitues mournfully
feP isinenp Of Mouths: -
ha r of gloom the thought that
tecipi: is evarii,a0..O.Inoext,Vrto
ariA aihing done, but do it Men
ti31et like waggons; they • rattle
ben there is nothing in them.
o liet a boy begins to - think his
ps kin?* enough • to select .his
a dangerous Pegod in. his, hise
nice 'a
bor's. tan
It an
called e
falsehoo
-ealled a 1 ei•d. . •
The 1 t • it Free Pres cannot under:
'stand ewle E4 'egg should be wasted on a -
lecturer vlru he ratty be nearly ekilled
with a th i
.0.11 Se h the therrnpmeter in Englancl.
reached t ighest point this, year, 87;2 0 .
Such t r tire is. almost uhprededented-
there in S- mho.• • . - •
. • - •
- • Sarah er hardt -intends to reappear in
Paris die_ tl after her return fneen Amer•
-ice. She a eigned a three years' engage-
ment'viit Vaudeville.
-• The et e f Cardinal ,Manning`s .health
causes g a arikietere-'-: He • has been pare
eraptorily o dered to rest- but -persists* in
disregardi g he manda to. -
iNuttin p tiesarebeing formed in the.
• .
eity,. and in trespassers allowed' will be
disregae ec injunction on the, property.
Of Many u ty Add. fariners. •
•...
-If you ar.aot say nothing good of any
one say n hig at all, foeirt friendship as
in loyew L often happier .in our igaore
ance than n ur knowledge. •'
. At a; lea •e
ieacon De is
pinta pud ini
the raisin
Man in Dundas So econoniiea,
rshi door path for fear tha
Wit will blow oyer an his neigh
ruth is only a day old • it s
f it is a year old it is called a
. -
t i if It is a century old it is
- HeraFe
Men .are
• scientific"
have au in
Everyth
• daughters,
.noceace its
fore theni
Zinirner.
tion.: Jose
.ceutly-thro
sustained f
- T It is- hot
wise. .` If le
never -Lapp
'iris bedau
for:'
Mr. - Will
Jarviststtee
been 'a,ppoin
genet chure
City.
_,A.Iti. Fens
ow Saturd
mounted bir
Winnipeg t
burg. -
abound. _
Iron Versus Wooza , A French
The question, of ills' relatie.;e' ;cost Of iron neighbor,
ne• eompared. -With wooden neliipe is one
_country ter
which of late years. has ateraeled corisid- horses, shoes
erableaatention. As a contribution to the
el.iectission the followinn fig/it-es ,for the.
. new iron propeller • Ingigh, jitfet• finished
by the Detroit Dry -Deck ComPany for 'the
Anchor' - Lille, are of interest:: Her coat
• camplete; including oitt1t, is e45,000.
flerload on foureeen feet .is '2,000 teas,
making $72.50 per tou oz freight _capacity.
first -bless wo(den -beat, iroaattrapped, It
is claimed,- cannot be letitt and equipped
as the Lehigh foelese. Eeideetlythe eine)
of the fatare L,t,be ee ie. cei aer eed- Melia V
• of iron. ' 7 . •
_ •
- Tire- Talintege searched out the thee f
domestic, happiness °it Sinidaytie and un-
adaatly but fairly" heoright ti r•lighe some
Of evaman's pevn ereating.. V•There, he,. said
hat unwise,. fretful, ',it:ale:is vetenell have
. built one-half the .cleib houses •ilf the day
ho went to one ortheeopts of th d matter.
I •
•
your
The -was
And in tree
. His-occo,
Thatthis
His rqmain
. :Even• the.
'For:example,
spectacles - w
recognize -the
dreams...
-• -Among the
-cPd comes iir.
secimel, the.
menhaden; -
Mgheet.
.
•On thJ
e our
Princess ef W
ulster and a. g
cesses won-) 11
with clarkted
. • _
• honie on a large.peale Arnie;
n giireouneed that his Fie:loci/el
was .theebest one, liedadeer
not,been stoned..
ittand-Hiller says that literary
p•s'i susceptible to music than
e
are, because •litera,ry men
rl3ife of their own. - .
epends on. definitiOn. My
a1 proud . Mother' 'are in
you can say anything be
hey won't blush.'
hill is in a dangerous condi
-
flier, of Nelson, was re
n rom hie-waggon.there and
cure of the thigh bone
to all mortals to.be always
• be those whose folly_ has
tape La. Rochefoucauld,
i has not been diosely-looked
• Lawson, late organist of
ptist _church, Toronto, has
organist of Zion. Congregaa
delaide street, in the gime
if
):
re.
A
Winnipeg; forwarded
copy .of ' a, •. beeutifally
eye view° of the -city of
rd Thiffetin, at St Peters;
reading ofservice. in
te by the London Standard
n of what laymen often
h advantage- to clergy and
saysthat tears are the
llize the world.' This may-
phi-losophers to say -that
aye- large where crocodiles
et
1
0
fee
1
18
31
Cl
• the other day seat) zi.
anaot understand your '
You have shoes t� yetir
your sleighs. and shoes to.
1 boy 1144 spine powder,-
inakoit go louder
SO Well ;
ds-nouldn't tell ' -
a ilish of clam chowder., -
St is sometimes a foal.
philosopher who Wore his:
asleep' that he . might:
ncls he n4glit see in his
of the 'United States. the
/noriey value, the salmon
eel third, and then the
weight the last stands
The half -yearly meeting of the Halton
County Teachers' Association will take
place in the High _School, Oakville, on the
7th, 8th and 9th of October. A good pro-
gramme has been provided.
When summer with her bloom has gone,
And. autumn winds Sound in the wood,
The sportsznan winds his mellow horn—
Then takes a horn in solitude.
If you will consent to my marriage with
your daughter she will be treated as if she
were an angel." That is,' was the matter-
of-fact reply, in a short time she would
not have anything to wear.'
.Tom•Dale,,the Detroit cricketer, who is
now confined at the military prison in
Wandsworth, England, writes that lie will
be releesed May 16th, 1881, unless he -gets
free sooner by the influence of friends.
Any anethrevting old infected bed %tram
out on the common, where the cows may
eat it, ought to be strung up. There is no
surer way of communicating disease. All
useless lumber of that sortshRuld be burnt.
'Sir.' said a dapper young gentleman to
the bookseller, haveyou a late English
magazine with a story picture in it—a
young man making love to a young lady?
I wish to see the • latest London stile of
hat?'
• A northern paper Fiays the proper way to
eat watermelon is with a spoon. This plan
comes rather late in the season, but it
shows an attempt to break up the old man-
ner of going into a melon with the nose and
mouth.
Dr. Holmes' new bciok takes its name
The Irphaatee from the poem read by
him at the famous entertainment given to
the 'Autocrat of the Breakfast Table' by
the publishers pf the Atlantic' nearly a
year ago.
. A deldge of poems on -eutuirnn leaves is
now the order of the day. The tints on
these are sure to set fire to the poets Bettis,
and "filling hp" matter foe the etteri!:
w tre. - ta Thomas
1 lu e d,os.up be at kbi :op; p m!ai nist
tbeusr :be; urlige 1:i gion: .;43ts that he who would:
cure souls canaot neglect bodies, and that
those of our forefathers were-cright Who
said that there -could be no true -rest with •
wit Worship:. ••
-.- A young gentleman was boasting to a
party of ladies. that he could wear one Of:
his mother's slippers: . Aad ono Of • the
youngladies, more al/deo-iota than the rest,
veantedto eknoWa whether- his' mother
Whipped hiMte great'deal.- •• •
•
•
Excellency the Governer -General
paid it visit yesterday to Kingston, • where
-
he ingected•the, newe building connected -
with '. Queen's Uniyersity, the - quarters
of the R-Beittery; and -the Royal, Military -
College, and then returned to Ottawa.
• "le this my traiii?"-. asked a traveller at
- • .
the G. W. It:depet of it lounger. "1 don't
kdoW, but 1guess not," was the replye." I
-see it's got.the mime of the. railroad come
Pany on the . side, and I _expect it belongs.
t� thorn. Have you lost- a _train any. ?" • - - -
I. The worst-. thing about ches-S, says an
able-bodiedexchange, Is that "S. Inean little
nean, With: 4 bulging forehead, a
watery -eye, and spectacles; .04 -whip a
man twice his size ; which is an anoinalk
calculated to disturb the -eqUilibeitinee of -
nature. -• . _ - • • :
'Joseffy is sick.. Inthe ninirse of time it,
will be found that there is scanething very
unhealthy' aboue, piano -playing' - and it is
likely that.in the future the ills of it Well
beyisited on the -player insteadeff-on these
who live next -doer:. Von Bulow is already
paralyzed. • - • . • -
- .
Along:purse is a good belt with which to
catch_ I have the-hanot to ask for
your hand, Miss,' said{ a loner- to a maiden,
I couldn't think o4at,'. wasthe reply.
'Have I, then,: no -interest for you?' he
asked. Interest- e is - nothing,' e- she
answered bluntly,. 'itis capital I want' -
'Introduce me to your intended,' said his
friend: 'She is not my intended, she 18
my wife.' PshaVil, you were hugging and
kissing her ahnoit Yes, but.
We have beenmarried only a month and -I
had forgotten -that she was my Wife.' •
'Ornaments ina,Cle of Chinese: glass have
lately been imported. in considerable
quan-
tities into England. The glass 'contains
more lead and -lees silica than -ordinary
flint glass or heavy optical glass. _It 'ap-
proeehee the stress or paste of iniitative"
gems. -
•
INDIFFARENCa.
o little does the city reek, . •
- . Encompassed with its busy charm, -
_The whistle of the blithe plough boy
At work upon hi father's farni:
. • • _. .
0 little does the whistling boy'
- Keck of the -city's busy- charm ;.
Hp onlythinks of two bright byes,
And works uponlis father% farm..
• r "
- If any of.ont fair readers find difficulty
instippingegetaniums Or other aplants for
winter flowering,:- let them out the slips
diagonally pertly off, then let them remain
seine ten days to callous or harden,- when
they can be .put into the wet sand with
almost a certainty of reeking roote
. . ,
Speaking the other evening,: Mt. 'Brad-.
laugh:- said that in regard to theland re-
form movement, the Lerdswauld. do as
they had done . everything to hinder the
movement, tWell to provoking sedition and
-tibts but in the end they would ' give in,
as they hid alweyecultivatecl the virtue 0!
digestion. .(Laugl-Pter.) •
- • . • e
The Antiquary Antigdary seys that the largest Pak
in England ie that in the; parish of Cow-
therpe, -.west riding of Yoekshire. It is
hollow and some forty 'men -cmild:steen.d
within its trunk.: It is believed to be about
1,500 years old Tho dowthoFpn oak, win&
stands on the land of Andrew Montague, .a.
great proprietor, he larger that the Oreen-
dale oak -at Welbeck. A, few years ago the
boughs extended sixty feet feom the triffik.
. , A pnoPosei, or Tan Pninon• t - -
ree rank and •wealth .; and, lady, here's my
hand ; - - . •
And noVershall my fancy from yon range." -
" Xes ; that'S an offer.I can inidemtand ; •
But what dull to giro -you in oxebadige-1). 7
. . "
in i.e.turir I ask your heart." ." 4.11. me' ,
Ki
id Sir, I now minit Own my helplessness,
Ask Inti for anything but that. You see, -
Its just the -ono thing, that I don't possesS.".
.. • • -
to .• The statue of Robert Burns was unveiled
Scotlaud recently, thp C,entral ParkNew York, on Saturday
lee -
*ore tielit,fitting gra,y The eetenioniee were
hat.' -The -witnessed by a nroVvd of some live thousand
, -
interesting, and wore
bine dreSses and hats
p e, . ite`lee peepartion of Wuom were
minge. -
• feIloW:Couatryhieneel Scall'o.,nd's- peasant.
•
..
bard. Mr. John Paton made the opening
address, Mayor Cooper received the statue
on behalf of the city., and Mr. Gdorge W.
Curtis delivered the oration of the; day.
Mr. William 111nArthur, M. P. or Lam-
beth, who has just been elected Lotd. Mayor
of London, was born in the countATyrone,
Ireland, and was fer sometime a haerchant
in Londonderry. Going to Landon he
became engaged in the Australian trade, in
which he amassed an immenseefortune.
The new Lord Mayor is a cousinei. of Mr.
Samuel Finley, of the firm of Gaigt Bros.
dc Co., Montreal. t't
PA
The statistic fiend, upon learnindthat the
cancelled Bank of England notes rie seven
years number 94,000,000, is sure to seize
e
his pencil and go to work to prave that,
placed in a ,pile, the mass would /ee eight
miles high, or, if joined end to end, would
form a ribbon 15,000 miles long. it. is dis-
coveries like these that reconcile oAS to the
sacrifice of many happy years of e ildhood
on the shrine of arithmetic. 4
It
The punishment of crucifixion, Observes
the Foochow Herald, is 'by no ni•Oatns un-
commoa in China, although it is not,
strictly speaking, legal. Pirates ate occa-
sionally nailed by their hands anti feet to
an X-shaped cross. We met a *,n the
othet day who had seen it himselje The
pirate screamed at first and fainted, but as
soon as he recovered he spat at th,e-- Magis-
trate and abused ' him roundly. The
wretched man was suffered to tinge in the
broiling 011 for three days.' ,
e
A despatch from Toronto says: ' meet-
ing to welcome Dr. Wild to the Bone street
church was held last Monday) even ng and
was a very -pleasant affair. Mr. -Edward
Beckett was in the chair, and theri was a
large attendance. Dr. Wildethinke e wi4-
fi,the Bond street
tidgi:ng
--regth.fmrat'Ennetrhtil.tOanwa4dilieellietzinsleYe-t4ikobentt4rb1C1‘e t'osaydinigts;whe:neo
church withirra
of. Peep sepal-
40vibt. they will likethe good coirinetheense -
. .
Isri: which these.sayings are Ace -value',
_ veryonce in a while :one. me- ts the -
young lady who that the wilt never,
never marry until she ,-.Q.an bestow -, erselff
upon. it Mau who.is Vastly her superikr. She
• says: '1 want . sPnie one so much ;better
than 40RX-that I -can look up tehlth ' If
ehe is an old maid -she Bays: '1 coda Ineie
:married a half-dozen men, but I vvil heeler
i
inarry.- until I ca,n be asked by -one w1io is
,very greatly my superior,' -- Now, w ome,
tiMes think that nothing perhaps cci1d be
superior to the fair lady who say al; that;
iuid again 'Wementally ask, ." Why hmild
A ., an_want a wife _so- very ro.uch is in-
ferior?' • _ - - - ' - - 1:3': ' '
ei 1
At the list .0:eford local examilitiOns
217girlspasSed, the proportion of giOe 'who
9,13104sthe juniors-tand greater a ' O
failed being smaller than -that . oltngatboys
the seniors: The caedidateleat thefeCane-.
bridge lecal examinations numbereg 811,
fiesialy- all of wham, Were women, kied of
theseonly:209 failed to obtain a riltss.,in
one or . another group, while. some iPassed
: in Several. The -divinity prizewaralwarde
- ed ito a 'weinee,e, and another Who tediethe
Italian- prize • passed also in . Grde , and
with distinction :in Latin, Germa" • ahd.
French. • : - : ...-•... . -•
lie year 1881 will bo a nriatheM4ticel
-curiosity, - From -lett to. right Made:from
right ta left it roads_ the:: same;: 18 dttided
by 2 gives 9 as the quotient; 81 diVicl§d by
.. 9 -and 9'is the qUotieht. If 1881 is &Med
by 209, 9 is the quotient;'if ..dtiideedi : y 9;
the quotient contains a.9 ; if .rcniltiph 4 by
9 the product contains two 9's i'1 and are
0, 8 -and 1earn-9. : If the 18be placed ii • der
-the 81 aatateddede the sum is 99: • I '-the
figures be added thine 1, 8, 8,,I, it 4I -be
18.: 4Reading from - left to right is Ile and
reading. from -eight to left is -8I..• Ey
adding, dividing:and Multiplying nin eteene
9's are produced being one 9 for eadhlear
- required to corciplete the-centUry: • - '
-
T1'ae ii)eath of. a. 'Wife.
: Dr; TalMade preached on ••' Meeriag/1" on
.e '
Sunday lest: After counselling 1iui314nds.
to spare their wives and keep good tetapee
the preacher made a' graphic, perierOiona
He pai4 :- 'Remember that- this. relSinn.
will Soon end; .Spare all the hard wt ids,'
oreit all the- slights • for before tang 1 3 'ere'
will be a hearse standing at your front leer
that Will take out. of your presthiCe the•est
friend.- that you have on earth and,
richest _
richest -been which • prod in. His o • ni-
petence and infinity. -. has capaeit to
bestow -.a good -And wife. If. a, 'child' gee
-that edeeolates the nursery. 1f- a vile !
:go, that 'desolates all the house and
all the ' heart and all the World: The
Silences '' are appalling when when her voile is
ip
still—the yaca.ncies•Are so ghastly. A ; tle
'ehilci.runeingionnd the room with a _lint
finger; -- calliag, for Mather, who will not-
cOrrie14 and .st night asking for it drink. nd
I,
Saying, 'No, no, I went Mamma, to'. b. ing
it!' .1th,miniseencei that ruali on the h Etrt
k.w.h7ose lideoVers dowel With a he vy
like a teteuntaiti torrent over which a 4 -0
-has burst.' •Iler jewels; her beaks; her ic-
tures, her dresses; seine of them Saggeg iie
of banquet and Swine of bukial, put Mtnhe
trun
thud, as much 'as to. say, .4bead I - he
Morning dead I The night dead! The air
dead!. • The World dead 17- '- •, - •
'1.A. Matto Dillienity Settled.
4'c ' \ ' " .—
..INIoN,TAEAT.; Out. 5.-711asonic repreee a-
tives have been in :couclave during the st
seven or - eight days, having in view he
settlement. • of differences . between 1 he
Grand Lodge of Quebec and th'e . Scott sh
-Grand LodgeeeTheir •deliberations •aclie se
the three lodges now working in the '• 0-
- vince Of Quebec tinder warrants from- •ei
GeandLodge of Scotland to resign allegi-
ance to that jurisdiction of
body and to under
e ':' . 1
thetipf the Grand Lodge of Qlee-
bee -under. thefollowing e conditions: The
• said lodges to return their present warrants
_(which shall be endorsed by the graled
master for the Grand Lodge ofe.Quebee);
-their Made of work, time rank of their offi-
cers (who will have the same titles as officers'
holding the same rank in the Grand Lodge
Of Quebec);their clothing andlodgep' o--
f
-perey, and _the said lodges shall 'be put •to
no expense in joining :said Grand Lodge of
Quebec:
-Private :Alexander Ferguson, the rec t.
winner pf the Queen'e prize at Winabled
..has ..ju t received from the Go%ernir
(ieneim4 of Canada very.hendspmeSil r
Tho -recipient .iseat ArgYllsh e
• hoinmee.:::ofer• ue:has taken so .enneli notice f
Man an ie proud of 016feet-that the M
THE GENERAL SPEAKS
What ex -President Grant Has
to Say on the .Presenet
Campaign.
Wet an Elevating Opinion ot the Demo.
; crane Candklate for the Presidency--
. ; Why Ile Would Have Accepted Nomi
1 nation at Chicago.
•1NEW YORK, Oct. 5.—A Times Cincinnati
special says the Gazette to -day will print
an interview at Galena, on Sept. -21st,
between the Rev. Dr. Fowler'missionary
sebretary of the Methodist Church, and
GO. Grant, which the latter consented to
bp published. Gen. Grant said that down= •
to 1864 Hancock seemed like a man
atnbitious to do his duty as an officer, but
w en McClellan was nominated Hancock
received One vote and that greatly excited
tidd changed him. After that he would
h dly speak to me. It was on my nomi-
iiation he was made brigadier -general in the
re ular army. I nominated him for the
Va ant inajor-generalehip in the regular
ariny. He acknowledged it manfully. e .
H was a very fair corps commander but
s never thought of f.or any great place.
n Ivnswer to the question whether Hancock
i n sympathy With the south, Grant re-
li d : "He is crazy to be president. He
i trnbitious,vajn and Weak. They will
a ily control him." blunt, then gave
Inimes' history of order No. 40, givingehis a,
e sion of Hancock's doings in the south.. }
After theiscommanders in the eolith were
e oped. i for their action in reference
rt the Le debt, ; of Louisiana, -.Ph°
pr 9' ii:tPVeht I In: :4t e6.111 I n:ina -e'en, 0 9 0;9:1 tfeeer .7reinstated.viemerwYD lYPe a . - II:: ; ee rr dd Yy -
anxious . agreeing to
1.: .
neon cameteene, but I could not be in-
dueed to reappoint them. Andrew Johnson -
•a le d me to reinstate them. I 'refused
Jbhrison and then ireeeaved Sheridan and
epp7iiited Hancock. Hancock went south
an. removed the .governor and pOnarnis;
sio i era that. Sherman appointed: After
ver us explanations; Hancock telegraphed
tlia if he could :not . have :freedom to
44 Izilii : - usOfnlness 'Would be _
des:roved, and - he Would have te ask
t . .erelieved. I: telegraphed lam to re -
V k hie order. He faked Mr: Johnson to
r ,
reli ve him as no one else could. That is
the liner history; of order No. 40. This •
p d ' resulted in the loss of many lives. T.
kno cases and cant glee them. His state-
itli6 .. t that the -civil authorities are i3u-
p ene is 4the truth, achnitted by all in
th ghee of -eatablished . peace, ' but
I c it - demonstrate that . he did not
sul j at military power to 'civil, but that he
lab his- nulitary.pewer to overthrow civil. a
In; peaking of . the. Chicago convention- '
-d. a t said, "There are three reasons why !
I. ould . liaVe accepted the nomina-
tion .' 1. On [aceainit Of 'the: 'char-
gee eOf thertien -who urged it,
s° t ; many lifedpng Democrats in. the •
seat had given the _ strongest assurances
ofs
. ir cordial support,- leflieveng that I
. •• : -'.
2. eheve Iconldh.aVe broken upthe solid
I •
cod: delivfe, i thefrom the evils of a solid •
gant 3.lI belieVei could have induced, '
frail My kkeeveledge- of our consulates, the
ent nientlof eertene laws. tonching -cora-
nie that would have given 3113 Ale control
- of 1iiuch desirable i commerce.
• Tan QUE131g6. DIIIRDEUS
Full r Particular* Tot the Fatal! Frans
. . - Between :Two Sailors.
. • .
. Q liEC, Oct. 8.-:•A reporter crossed to
Leyiithis morning' and obtained the fol-
Iowin details of the:horrid netirder.which
occur ed thereaast ..night: The name of
-the liirdered man is John Latch, of 'Irish ,
ettra, ton, born in England. Theniurderer
is eJehann Davie, zit ePrussian, aged 22,
-130thre Roman -Catholics and. seamen
on b ar4 -the Bosphorus, -lying at the
Foundry wharf, - neat the Grand Trunk '
maw y station- : The two were firm friends
and lih.d slept &gather for. four years paste •
Last iight botlfwent out on it spree in -the
town of Levis, and returning late to 'the -
-vessel jiRs state Of disgraceful intoxication
began jtp.quarrel; when in an instant Davie
drew lUs knife, stabbing his companion in
the oin, causing p,,, mound four inches .
deep. The unfortunate .nean died in _ten
minutes, and before ,Ithe arrival of Dr.
Lacer e. The murderer was ignorant of
the re alt of his crime, and was arrested a.t •
3 o'c1otk this morning fast asleep in his
bed:. poet •mortem examination Was .
-made hn the bodythis morning by Drs.
La�ertb and leedrierea No, additional de- •
tails w re. brought outs°. far •at‘the inquest,
whichrlasted till 6 torneight and was then
adjourned until-. to -morrow;
"1
A 11Tompan's Terrible Fiehewith a Snake.
. Nan* Yosi, Oct; 0 —As Mrs. Rachel.
Deddri k, of Cairo, fe eene county; N.. Y., .
Was •cr seing a field of blackberry brush
she was stopped by •oE queer sound. Her.
acquaintance With :it/lakes soon satisfied
- her 'th ei
, nose was the whistle of a*
.,
blank s ake know ie as the racer, and she
e -
ii
started on a run. • The snake some over-
took he and immediately began coiling i
itself a out her body._ With onlya small
:tin pail. gs it. weapon of defence, she fought
despera ely, but at a disadvantage, and the
'coils were drawn tighter- Amtil the snake •
got one around her neck and throat and
she fain ed. Her husberid, having heard.
herscr tans; hurried ;to her relief, and,
found hr unconscious On the ground. .He'
killed t e snakeand carriea his Wife home,
but she arrie,d fox days a blue Mark about
her thro t. The snake was as large around
as a m n's'sWrist and nearly twelve feet
long. -
• lEttiilway
Suffer rs on our Wagner cars who do-
epair of relief from the miserieii-of night
travel at the hands of Mr. Edison will be,
glad to div that they need net wait on '
that pr maing• eleetrical prophet any
longer: The problem of lighting a rail -
Tray car as easily and well as a ship's -
cabin is n 4 *ay to be solved by "lumi-
nous Pei • t The Builder says the ceilings
•ef earns, es on the Greet Northern, Mid-
land and aucashire and 'Yorkshire eailways.
have bee painted with -Ituninota paint so
, that -pas enger • trams compoteed of these
carriages When - passing in the daytime
through tengettinnele have not now to 1*. '
lightedb. means of oil -lamps, as isusually'
the, ease, there being 'sufficient light
re-
fiectiomi Ir nitheluiniizous paint. .
4.;
•
•