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The Sentinel, 1884-10-24, Page 30. e.• . ,41111114141111111._ 1111INIF., „ :•• • TEE uettALGEitY .•AitT nil ILES rowel. eempeenst: Version ot the lintel 110Nio Men identi4ed. A Iast -Friday) night's London deepetch Bays: Loreezo Stephens, sibo i t* jail SWhitIlag triel as ati hecessory to the inur- _ der of hia brother. in-lavi, Rdtus _Eldridge, et Nile:down three- weeks 'ago, in-ade VrittiiireifitintThyorcenkakti.• • cht that aboUt half an _hour after dusk on• the of -September 16th, iearrivedat Itleltobertie tavern in Necstown Tun DOG'S INTELLIG113Pitme • lie Begging' Excitement and fa Very " Curious: . dog reqeires• excitement; and has a .araving for tee iaterest of outward objects. Feed hii well, and shut bun UP alone in an apartment, and he will suffer under. ennui like a ,fine gentles man and it -atm -me will find -resource.- in looking out er..its. and *ill diver t himself with the passing Eldndge, having' si lumber waggon with. and ne,Ile, and taking a lively itoncern in the double teem, . and after gcling into • the adjoining store he went into -'11.1e barroom. He. had been -drinking', end -1 had • won the • drill -Ise tco aLcitLeneett na bet • Soon after - : they we tElato the bar Eldrillge (lame in, . ilia thee, a good dehl, of titinking. took place. After a While`they went' Over to t Byer.% taeeen and hadmore4rinks. There . was no „'iltirttelling, but eOrbe talk about whgelin bricks and what each - Man Could - do- Alter half or three-qt.arterti of an bour he'weet bade' to MoRobtrtii. Eldridge • ;.,041 bad gone ver 4 lit$le before Siim, and when haTeent in,.s standing atthe bar -with several -More, and Stephens I thenglit flieV were going to 'hurt hire. - {Eldridge.) -The *ilk was ibud and ' abgry, - anti • he joined' .the crowd, thinking to quiet them down. - Stepliene had ,tiot been there . long before some one knOcked. hint over and he was knocked down eeveral times, Borne- -greet& with e blow and scineitimete,jerked down. , There. had been a struggle between Nouley and another man, but, this had no conneotien with what pointriel afterviards. - Stiphents got 'away _and ve),,nt behind the ' bar.. :neett waecoming iteir the bar,.atici • Sit ptiens picked:hp a bottle and -knocked. him back•of the' bar, the bitty being given in self. &tepee. He could net, tell whether i! Eldridge was fighting, but hi*ia afterwards tits* he walk The landlord wad_ some others go him and Eldridge shut tip- in aback room . opening into tee paid? where they remained for a little, whilei the - landlord • telling theta' to keep quiet. as the ()diem. were watching them- Eldridge got- anxieus to go home, and went out pinto the back. yard, Stephens following Elm,. and they " went around a waggoti sht)p- to the shed .. where his horses were, Eldqidge "told him toga into the waggon and take the limit, and he did so.. Then Eldridge untied the • horses andtheybegan to bac*, and Stephens 'saw two persons running acioss the street, coming from t3yer's hotel, They got.up to _the .waggpe, - and one carte -sue grabbed Stephens by the arm and tried to pull him < eut-On tbe right bend side, Tehile the other disappeared,. going_ as he taought behind. the waggon, the horses beteg op the mOve all the time. Steens -wat, palled off the waggon and, struck on their head, .whether in falling or by the man he °odd not -say. He did not remembei., oiearly whet octurred elver that,. until he found -.1lioif --, self running by Wilson's blacksmith . shop after the horses, whichhadiget away. and ran towards home- He ha an . an lipdistinot reaellecition -of getting up after he: vies &ticked:down; but could net - be sure. ,When they were emoting item, the house, or while going from the hotel tothe waggon, •-Eldridge said heves going limit°, andwould- • untie the horses, and told S iephens that he - 'lied better get- out his knife ‘ .seid rise it in defending himself if attaokeI, as the men meant to: kill them if they iuld.- Stephens ' did BO, and had his knife open in his hand_ •. when he got into the waggoi4 and when the man ettecked and :tried to pili him out he struck m him with the knife. till - he. was dragged out. Stephene is pita positive it - ,..was Noulty who attacked:hicii, and .tbet. it : was Lausett who ran behind the waggon. He never BEiVi. Eldridge - ilive after being-, • dragged out of the - waggiin. When. they • were in the back room he: heard Lansett • and Noulty threatenin-g, to ikill bin:teal! and • Shitidge„ and using very' ii)rong /anguage, and it was thie. that niediegient expect they would be attacked. : .1. .. : The -principal- point in tie statement ii the. pOsitive identification I of Noulty and Lamest& as the men ' who I committed the assailt, during which Eldrtdge lost bis life.. - mugs of the other dogs on the .street. This. is a pleestire _which We trace in no, -othei animals and it is 11061 indeed, observ- able in all dogs. Newfoundlands appear - peculiarly • prone to, it. They are enimentry• social: We shall never . forget a . Newfaundland _dog belonging* 'to a provision •-dealet, with . whom we had a street acquaintance.. It was his business to go about in the waggon aa a protector of the good things therein, and asherode along streotti moat Manifest exid most lively was the interest he took in the moving, scene, No ' duchess in the- land ever lounged in her carriage' with a, more luxurious or a, more graceful air than our friend exhibited in. the - waggon. His favorite- attitude was lying with _ his foes- i'lliV7e3 dangling over the front, and his great "head lolling -on theta. Any long at ppage we remarked Made hint Uneasy, anti ne dis- played nis- plea,sure. when, his carriage was again in 'motion by dancing from side -40 side likea, parrot on its perch, and uttering a quick bark of satisfaction; • The curiosity -Of dogs is another quality which they have in col:ninon with our kind. NO matter hew fatigued a dog -may be, if he is taken into a orange apartment he will nob lie down to rest until tie has taken it survey,. of the 'room and- smelled every article in it. • Dogs,- as Ave have . before attempted to prove, ere rogues and °beats like men, and they are also mur3cierii, with a consciousness of their oriminality. Iii Packs or hounds it isnot yetY uncommon: to Mid a dog killed by his comrades, and. we once- 'heard a fox .hunter - describe his visit tO a kennel after one of these assassinations. HalLa:dozen , Of the long-eared bow -wows were squatting, on their haunohes in one -corner:with per- tioularly irate • faces, Which meant :to speak an innocence • that Was - unluckily belied by the spots of blood' on their °eats. While het was examining the body of the deceased they :kept yawning :and licking their °hope with their long red tongues, as if they bad no mannetof -concern in what was -going on; but it was evident that they were no meanseasy in their minds. The dogs vehich here 'no invite -of thefray, and whicili.were presumed to be innooent„-_ moitid alinit as usual,- With quite a differ. ent air.--BostortBudgeti Teets bettentarirAettee. Sonia Advice_ boa! Maitication: - 'Very .-few people,. -unfortunately, think enough of the dinner -table for. theit good.. I is the idea of too . many: persons- that dinner should be diecussed politios—: hurriedly, passionately, •or as a, . pure matter of -business. Eatin is - of more 'nary nuottertremtwuer UL - teed to noble thoughts.-- and heroio deeds. Napoleon. is, said to have lost-- one of his battlei because of an ill -cooked potato. It may net really have - been the unsavory potato which disturbed his mind. .Ile probably _did not takb time enough to dis- antis itproperly. Time is a greet. .eseentiat at the dinner -table. Good digestion 0101 never wait on appetite-uuless .the mind. is undisthrbed-and the molars eau operate free from thoughts- which. interfere- with their • satisfactory action. -The - way to anitly dinner is to sit -down to table alter shaking off the • cares of the world. -Let the soup come add.timoking. Take it with a joyouti heert. Converse witb your. family while ;. you toy with the bread which should always accompany it. Cenvelteation is an .aid- todigeetion, and bread helps down the _soup. DO not be in a hurry for your fish.- Have the releves served .promptly When -the remove is made.. Meanwhile conversation. should animated. ' Nothing. helps the (lige/Welt or whets the appetite or is more *provocative of good feeling at thetable than an honest, hearty,.talkative mood, Dyspepsia and all its horrors readily give place le good-humored talk, vrhich is. the best itondiment that the *told has known. The Caterer, a magazine whit% devotes a, great deal otattention to this .sobjeot, says the pleasureeof the table are not confined to the act Of eating,.enct that it Might be "laid -down - as . the axiom that . *goo& humored fast will brighten the brain and - lighten the heart more than an ill-humored feast." `Do net trouble yourself about the threatened extinction of terrapin or the predicted. decline of the " Oysters. Both these deleotable articles' of 'bed will last the, lifetime of the ordinary man. Think only about the dinner—have othet care, 'it care that be. . Let the service be simple, but ample, Many -a - dinner has -been. spoiled by a. combination of dishes.- Above all things,. recemimends writer - in the Caterer, strive to have . a ohange from the usual sterotyped.rdinner of wines, peculiar dishes and names in Ftenoli - which eyen few waiters can understand. •QPQ,. Q •e' • -Dead Head Advertising trom-the Most ministers, and others as well, Will agree. with 'the pastor 'cit Zion Church, Brantford... A contemporary inforins us . -that the Rev. Dr. Cechrane, .the otheriSab," bed; on making the usual announcements- frodi the pulpit, made statue excellent and practice' comments on theetubtect. of pulpit . advertising and also in teptrancia to BOMB - other I:nettersof practical 1:importance: He stated that if he were to rel.4 all the-mitt:3es • and invitations handed to tiim to be pub, • lished, the congregation • wtiuld need about fourteen days -in the week,tinstead of seven, to ettendell these demaids made: upon: tatelf time. Some of thes0 noticeshe did toe telieVe in, but there were othere(whioh Were cOnsisteet.withthiwtrkof the church. Still he thought that all ailuollnOomen0 outside of the special business of _the -church • should be made publio thenigh the adver- tising oditunns of t presei and be -paid brl as other tidvertise eats are, and iihould ixtt be -made from t e Welt as the. saored . . „ • desk could hardly be oontedered a . fitting and appritpiate.platie front.which to, issue adversieementle-e-,aatutctz.rhestyterian: - 'The -making Of quartz jewellery.iii pecu- liarly .a Calitornie indiisery, Its manuttlei- tura was begun in. the ettzly days tollovhci the geld dieoovery; . It is not often that miners come across- rook Which may be used in the manufacture; of jewellery: The gold baiter be evenly distributed and not LUMPY,- BO that after ithas paseed. through the necessary stages which prepare it for betting the spas and 'seams • ot gold are: well seattertd through the rook.- . The quartz as taken by the jeweller; is 'brought an limps weighing !tom olio to ten pounds,- and in this conditien it is handed over to a mechaei° for tbe- purpose of being out into slabs. The proliees is an easy one and nearly similar to that followed by tbe marble outters„ The saw 'by whit& this operation is pefikormed is °framer and made Of [Mao tin and charged- with water and emery". The quartz nelteld upto it. and:in ite rev°, lutions it divides the queue. The slabs th into whioh e rook is out do not generally exceed one-eighth Of in ineh thpikness. The preliminary work is then over. It is not till the jewelleryis made; the fitti1118, th AB it Were, at these slabs are- again out, then filled into the gold and -cemented. It is then ground off level with the gold and finally polished tilt it assumes that bright- ness -as when exposed for sale. . _ -Quartz Jewellervi Latest. News, trona - All Olitett the ' World: The lumber miUs In Quebec . will likely close downiebeuethe-encLuf th e 0 I Opertitions are no; on an extene ve e this year, The contractor of -the oity hallet Winni peg -assigned on fileturdaY, and work on the building has been -stopped. It it expected other parties wt11 poniplete the work. - Orange • dititurbenotie are •again develop- ing .at. Harbor Grabs., Nfid. The: gates of the T convent were tern down and file* into the bee, on Thursday:- One.Rivethead, Man was beaten anion to death by Otinge men. • • - - 1The London Eastliquor dealers _met on Friday and decided not to oppose - the Scott Act movenient in the Ottunty of Middlesex, pending the decision of the Supeeme.Coutt -on the validity of , the Dominion- and Pro- vincial LicenieLaws. • - . Aterribly. sudden death occurred at Bow- nianvalle on Friday aliening, Joseph J. .Monkley, an employee in the Upper Canada Furniture Facitory, while diggingpotatoes in his gazden, was taken all and dropped dead before he oteild be got into the house. His wife was with him at the time- and- aerpatched a messenger for the dootor,.but Dionkley.was dead before the. -doctor came. The cause Of death is supposed to have been some Obititiction-- of the heart result- ing from -.evet-enertierte Deceased was a member Of Wellittgten Lodge of the Sons. of. England.-- Be leaves , a Wife and six snit& children to the oharityof the world, The Tichborne Clainnint'S Finlike- Moine. _ QUarternialif • :Beet.has taken a furnished- house - in Hampshire ::for the TichbOnie claimant onhis release from Dartmoot.. It is not deemed advisable to make the exact epot pfiblio. The claimant will et once take Up his abode there on his - release from prison. - During the imprison-. Mint Of their father, Mr test has taken upon himself the, responsibility_ of 1.main- taining and educating the claimant's two "daiighters. The young girls have bad- all the advantages' enjoyed by. the children ot. their protector, and the elder will, upon her father's release, go to live_witd him said -keep house : Order that the .claizitent may ,not; at any ratefor some time to items, be wOnied about peouniartt matters, Mr. East ptoposes making him an anipte.1weekly allowanee of Monet!, and will further place a: considerable sum ot. money; in his hands 0,11-• the i'day of his release. .Although the claimant will be entitled to his liberty on Oetaber 241h, ;it is by no rneaps certain that he•will be released_ On that day. It is his desire to be left alone with hib"family,:at --lead for a time, and there IS absolutely no-teuth whatever in the "varittui rumors thatate &fleet as to hie f attire Plans and Projectedmovements.— Pall Mall Gazette.,- • Fanny 146,1er. • The • . brief. telegraphio despatch lfroin• Vienna; "Fanny Elssler is dying'," .bas a strange, and ghastly flavor. Stage ode-. brities really die when the curtain -darkens the footlights for them the last time, and any farther removal from the stage of life seems a most anomalous superfluity. Especially is this true in a ease like the Present., where: the glory of the actress is so remote. The • Finny Ellsier - when - matchless grace delighted our fathers earl - not be dying in 'Viennato-day .any mote than she can have been litiog there all these years. - A woman bearing her name, it is true, and even preserving ioniething of .het identity, has been quietly and Malty. existing there, but the Fanny Ellsler—no, it is not easy to make those who have been reared:on traditions of a beauty and grace too inoomperable to be.hidden, believe that 'this old woman who ,is lying at depth's door there m 'Vienna, is the "divine Fanny," whose- :dancing Emerson and Margaret Fuller oaIied " poetry " and " Boston Advertiser. . Children's- Chkistpr. • "When you think twice do you always want a button -hole to button it in ?"- asked a Utile girl. , . - "No, my dear," said hist mother, "but why &Para ask such a st-range question ?" " Welt mamma, 1 alwav heard papa say - 'Button second- thought when be gets cornered in an argument.' "Oh, ma, I fell through a hatohway .and - hurt -me awfully !" sobtieel a little boy, as he came humping into thla house. . "Why there isn't any tlittohway On the premises: that- you. coal fall through," roped his mother. r "Yes, there is, ma, I ifell througiet the • manger where pi set the Week hen." • 0 ••Q QINIP -She Patted itiferaelt. "W1'1 you pullthe bell 2" she asked of a , Man eiorosi the aisle as the car reacheclthe- • < "No, madam," he ausitvered with a bow, "bat 1,:eill be most hapPy to pull the strap wbech rings the bell. , - • ".A.111 but never mind ir TlieStrap is con- i heated with two belle, aid you might etoP ' the monotony of -the pottage, filled as they tee -wrong end of tbe oar:" .I. are With .stories, buriesque telegrams and n hien was jokts by the passengers, and all the drife full of triumph veneeeed with cayenne of eldeY laddentethat happen from week And the look she turned un 01 Another- cese. %fhb* glows the laxity; Of the Provinciel, lunacy laws has , just been brcught to light in Montreal. About two years ago a niap named Owen Firmer was interdicted* at the request of his relatives on the ground of habitual drunkenneas, and immediately afterwards he was :taken to Ltingue.Poibte Asylutii and confined there tiponnO•other power then the certificate of "hie interdiction. Recently:whaling to . Bee his wife, who was very .114 he requested Permissionthe asylum authorities, but this was -refused. • The than, however, cone tritted to make his escape, and found - his way to the bedside of his wife,,from Which in -a fete days he was torn away by the authorities hed again °defined in the asylum. The ease having- been platted by brother_ of the unfortunate' Man in the hand's of a law .;firrce his release was obtained with some diffioulty. The tact Of a men being kept in an insane asylum- for two years solely on *certificate of interdic- tion for dtenkenness has given Pfie t01:11110h cOMMOLIti;%. , The .position' of the French in-Tonquin ha . . said to be vety.gritical.. • • • • England has not been invited to the Bar; lin conference -relative to the .freedem of commerce_of the Congo country. . - • . tered , customers in cone hone° the colleeseot the Gould lines. - • . Thos; Bt, RadiCal abet of Perlis": ment for Morpeth; M has pup ished an arti- cle on labor America. cpinion, as tee, result of a Veit, is -tlaat while the ' Amman working olassel on the whole ate better paid than. tbosteyel Mugland, the _,Cure tor ' iildattea: . , A tethedial.ageney not commonly resorted to has been raptly brought Under not* by, la..Pebove. for the relief -Of neuralgic smaties, -says the -Lancet. - This physician teems. to have Met witb. considerable sue - pass in the tremment ot sciatica, by freezing the - skin,. Itichardeoree etherspray tett proving.satiefactory.'M. Dehove eniplotted. the chloride of methyl, which may give rise to a degree of cold • represented by ;-,-28 degrese C. This agent has the advantage of ,not being _expensiv.e. _• A jet of the ftuid is made to play on the skin along the whole length."et the -limb corresponding to the doutse Of the sciatic "nerve;: and:. its. main brenohei: The good- effects' are -Bald to be instantaneous. The '• operation is ale) .elainted to but little painful ; the trotting. is .not Pio great as..thet °speed by the hot iron. Vesication. has followed the employ; --went of this remedy, but never any slough- ing. The extension- of this enernite to other neuralgia is advocated. - - . . unfavorable. _ The coming session of the 3,ritish Houses promises to•be very lively. ,;• „The prominent • Subjeote ef discussion will 1;;: -the Franchise Bill, the Redietribution i05,,etne, and the condition of the navy, all e which will be made the, subject Of igthy debate, eepecielly the two latter. • lit -addition the • Irish party ititend niovinv TRiendthents to the Queen's Speech censue-'.- ig the G .Verzi- Manz for refusing ta „nto the Ileum- trasna 00UfBSSiOIle and the t! &ruler in which the tele' of the Dublin set.,4,eel oases was _ , -oondueeed. - I The excitement Over tife publication Of the Redistribution scheintkif the .Standard Stitt continuos. It has _lei4the constant theineef diiscussion.at tr,i_ clubs, and the Opinions elicited are on ,t4.:.# Whole not faV- oreitle, The Home Rulett. Otpoile it tooth and nail. They say, it norne*ly gives them no itoreaseto equalize 44.leud's.'propor- -tienatetepresentetioh wit t pbe additional MeMbBiBigiven to Engla.0Jj4ed Scotland, but .it placee them at decided dieadi . . . . - fr • Tentage in the dearameteLmment of the sixteen botougble • Which te::::tiern at present majority of Heine Rulit.:41 and Conserv- - 1 • . - Piince Bismarck. has --Prepared a pre/eot for -the piirchaseby the Empire of all raile *eye- now owned by.. the • different Federal .3-evernment8. •- • • • It is repotted Earl. Granville is pegotiate ing a, treaty with the Dutoh Geeetiimedt pledgtng England • to maintain - the Mdse., pendentie of Holland. • '• The .. Irish Rellultlican - Brotherhood "has] issued a oitoular warning the Dublin Cor--, poration not to use the names el Fantaus in renaniing the streets.. - - • . . • An ultimatum bas has bet.- gent to the - • Transvaal Goveesement :iGreat oalling attentionlo the reteeted violations Pf, treatiee and sots df .vietWattee clomtnitted by tbe Boers. It detne0e, of the Trans- , vaal Government duesetttitiction for thew acits ; thetepreasson of the poer filibusters and a thorough .observaMte 7,,ef the articles .of the lest convention. tit IS reported the - British War Office is pretOttng an expedi- tiOrCiof 8,000 men to .e0Meed to South • Afrioe, a portion of whiOwilt ' be drawn from the ,Eastt India ait4-y.- The with- drawal Of the proelamatien • aunexing the :Monteivati territory _ is 4.41 expieited to - alter the position of afft,tite, as the Boers otintinue to hold the landr,..• .' The announcement Nationalists . are aboUt Amerieantpeakere has elteusect a unex- pected sensittion it; Londe The Conser- vatives and Oratigeme j are organizing meetings, to neutralize ttriel effect of the. imeorted eloquence. Th q are also teking: practical inetteures to te-iet off the Irish- men who are coaling' fro havel secured froin °sr& United- States authentfi- . . A Little oi. All Three: • Judge (to the witness) -7-0, Are you a mere ried woman ?" . • . -• Witeess" Well, no; Sedge, not exactly."' Judge—" Not exactly a married woman. Do you mean that you are a widow ?" • • Witness—" That's_ a little more like' it, jedge, but still I'M not•-exactlY a _widow either." - . . . Judge," You will have to explain yOur- self. You say that.you ate not exactly married WO.Mall nor exactly a widow. . Are -you a single WOMA11?" . • Witness—" I guess I:m ' a. little of all three, Jedge. I've sued sixmen for breach -of promise." ---New York Mercury. - . . . • Lather Pipers and. advocates. . -A:class- of meri have come - into • the .-jotirnaluitio field in -the interest of labor, :the editors coming:front the . ranks of the people, in whose behalf they &republished, and to -day theme :publications are classed' as labor -pspets. We venture to say; and tell the truth, that the then who: condi:tot thole advooates of labor, arenot only ellen* alt .& miserable existence,_but abuse is freely bestowed opt* their heads, becalm they do not suit the ideas of, every - reader, while these Bathe men do not find a word of fault when in the presence of the men who are striving honestly to .present the views - -of those they. represent. - There are to -day being published a -large ntinit et of tabor papers, .and all complain . of the slipped they receive, While. setae have gone down, to be revived again, other's never to. rise., Cleveland Meseenger. Leve, like fear, makes us believe every; thing. -• • • ; - . . „ • Newspapers printed at. lima are not un- cdpicnon.• • The practice of publishing a paper on board ships was inaugurated on the steamer Great- Britain, which ..started for Aiistralie on the.2Ist of August, 1852. T age seaborn journals do much to rtli,;ve p the Irish . -iinpot Irish - America: They -Cities in the d repotts or violent lipeeohes made 5:y Mr. Alexander ' Sullivan,I the. late " Prose-vs/trot. the Irish ' League, -.Mr. Patrick Foril the editor of, the - .Irish Wortd-, and Mr.:, bn Finerty, who was the: 2ghting editere:,4, the .Chicsago - ;Times., AO is..pow a Oonetelieman. These. copies have been foint:Ay oubmitted to• the Dublin -Castle anthe5e4tels with v. view to =clueing Earl Spettette to ..piciolaim tie* meetings at. wh?:;f14 Messrs. Sill- tive,n, Ford and Finer t..i' are expected to speak. All of these geillemen and some other goad speakers 'wilt. arrive in Ireland lloonafter the .generaC 4eations in the - United States. Thei jl'yoices will, of course, , he • raised in f!),eet_r of the Rome . r Rule: party. " - • Eleven Pupils of the Solutoi of Agrioul.i ture, Boroiaux, died from the effect*, of eating fungi, supposed -to he •mushrooms, gathered in the woods heat the school. - 'Capt. Fourier, who was woubded in the duel with M. Rochefort, lost inuch blood, but remained (tenacious. He 'shook hands with big antagonist, oomplimentipg him on hie-skitfuliwordmatiship. -• . - - It isreported that the Duohesi of Albany,, at the termination Of her term of mourn- ing, will marry the Crown Prince of Wiur. tembprg, who is the Widower of the • late Duke of Albany's Sister, the late Pillions Alice. •- - . . • • . • ' There Werenumerous dephonstratiOns on Saturday 'throughout England discussing the" Franchise Bill, • Sir Wiliiani Vernon Harcourt, the the; Marquis of -SilisburY, the Marquis, of --Harlington, Mr. Forster and others delivered. addressee, • Max Orell's new book on the woinen of England 'is full othright things,-, which the Euglish papers are eagerly copying. : Noth- ing could -be hatter than -his. desoription of Roglish courting ; the frankness of thole pubiio andeaemenrc puzzles the American and other foreigners. . . • judge Walter Hayes, 9; Iowa, has made himself talked about by tuliug that, -under 'the liquor law otthat State a nian who plays the spy, ot !tries to indutierneti to sell or drink intoxicating beverages, is as guilty as the aatual culprit.. This will result in the practical annulment of the law, since. no one will dare toltestify .such a ease against the liquor -dealers. , •• 4.RASTEIMIZED." beer is .now being sold in Cateadival says the Rochester Herald The prooese of patiliatirization reqnires the beating of theliquie to a point tuffieient to. destroy tbe vitality of yeatt itud.other. so as to:ms.ke the cOnneotion. Of the new germs This is acooniplished by ateniper- Company _ between- Ireland and . Prato:Di._ attire of -Over -181t1 '.Fahresheit, and tbe This work will he pushed .es tepidly ae-the heat. shotild- be tipplied for a considerable/ weather Will permit, the London effioiels -: to week 012 ship- board, " time. , _ It is rumored that the visit of the Cana.i. than . Premier, Sir John Macdonald, to Eligtend Will result in an arrangement Whereby the 'wed India. Colonies will be admitted into the Dominion of Canada. In an . intermit Saturday Earl. Derby stated that the Home Goveninient would. acquiesce insuch a- proposition. - - • The Paris Gaulois ea34, it to 0011! oeal the fact_ that . Admiral Lespee has failed_before --Tamed. He - was unable to break the line cif torpedoes Or disperse the Chinese' force guarding the tereedopostir Tbis is another instance of attempting tpo much with an inadequate force: The failUre .will _encourage • Chinese Vanity to further resistance. . • .- - The Vnitiersal Gazette, of sat nobody dreams of i, war of theunited flettla •of Europe against the British &made, but it is necessary that. -England should renoinibe the illusion that she holds the empire of seas, and -that she only nettle to put her signature to sheet of paper in order that all the coasts • and islands of the earth shall belting to her: - • Mr. Gladattne's decision to establish' a protelitorate °vet° Noe hie been hastened by the repprts.of a great itioreese of the slave irede on the comet. Labor :vessels frOni.Queensland have been- seizing the natives, : and in one instance . thirtY- eight natives wars shot by the crews. A British gunboat -captured slave -laded schooner and sent. the. crew to Cotiktowp for. - - - ! . - • . The cable steamer Faraday ;s to be employed in layieg the Conimereial 0002• pany's ceble between Waterville and ntili0", A Key to Azte Mingo, VF -7 et • Ajlitexican arobteitoerisb, Senor Don DAMAikiSotomaiyer, devoted years to the study of Azteo m0,e_ Minute and teni, plea, professes to have ir,,a4e important dis- °ovaries in the hieratit's.iWritings of the Aztecs. He -feels .ttoeffel,int that tbe dis- ouvery be has made 0:14. enable him to decipher the Chaldean yettings and other • mysteries of the far Ort;',54, from which he -- traces the emigration the early rates who settled, this countri writes a corres- pondent* from Mexioo. ben Dr. Le Plon- geon of New 'York wat !here, some three years ago, he felt equalkt• confident he had • found a key to the hierela phi; on the tem- ples and -palaces Of Paque and Ihmal. Dr. Le Plongeon and hieepergetio wife, to whose courage anti indeetry tbe Metropoli- tan -Museum of New Xt_tr.k is indebted for -copies Of the mUral dertte of the palaces of -those ruined °Wei, O]ent nine years in hes. We would - "they agree with ties to be solved • the key to the they .believe is Yuoatan maktng real be glad to hear how Sottnnayer as to the m - and revelations made Azteo hieroglyphs, wh theirstet, •,. • Q • Gen' Giordon'ki -tieetrunt. The 'recent oable deseltches 'give us our first real glimpse of kb Gordon's Gordon's oam.p at libartoute. Anton6.,. relsted,that in .a.battle:',. ordered two -native oh put pot to death for treaoh .way. Gordon shares:: Pepper. • • f h 111 ao ara saaarmg many ceps- . bee things it is Much 16th he to be instantly „ This is his old il hardshipit with. his soldiers; but he p ',Blies with death the first sign of cheek- iencee to orders. When suppressing the *„.T'APeping rebellion in China a number of natti'effieers signed te round-robin protest aget_tet an order that • there should -be no paltge: • He instantly commanded all of them Alm put to• death. One old fellow raised ,..--ttch an outcry at this that Gordon conatcled he was the ringleader, and. his ht was off in an • bi heagt:inati for hnit ehreoryest ell on tbeir knees it, proved that Gordon was right in h. mspioions. Ito he 4 -pared their -lives. Thie::teenislike cruelty - .butit is the only wit:Atecipline oan bi; . maintained along the:4 ?r,aple with Whom he is dealing. ••• T e30i mar nothing. but .death.' -New York 'e. - . . Spider•legged pen hip is obsoietef and the tiretori of luau is declared to be the oopper•plate style?.. "as it is done. on the heattot the page school wtiting bookie . • Tbe, Pope - has htp4-1,10 a . Benedictine abbey:in Newark.; N „ Vida iatiadietite from Main to Virgklit.:;i 'ma another in . North Carole*. . • The New York yesterday printed an interview of its tete,Aeentative with Sir John Macdonald at tte. et. Windsor when the Canadian Prieuer atetd : "While the effairs Of the :1)44:-Apion will. engross, . attention tit a -geee,ter Or leas extent When I am in 'Engitted„.still X have no special object in visit, except my health." , -