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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-03-09, Page 3te- Reseee nee e-e-reeteSeeseeeeefe 4 eneeeeeeeee • AN ENCOBVIVACIEDT/ Murder of A wrfe'„, ana Siv 'Children by aOhgrailit. bushel:4 was fully dressetteveni to his over- coat,.andlie was found lying on the sofa in. the kireiren. .Oonetclerable speculation, hes arisen air to the agent employed in the destruction ofall the lives, and though, several cups wen!, Jnnd upstairs, and (Me on the floor near tc sofa in the Intohen, there Wits no senll togive any clue to the nature of the poison employed.. This dOuht, emoepE OF THE ell3RDEBER: has now ben set at rest by the pose lhortem .„ examination, which was 'Made on ElsiturolaY, A. Manohester •correspondent WOW' the by pt. Wilson, a looal physician. He coin - following particulars cif a ehoolling crime menced with the body. of the man, whichhe '•seltiolt Watt eonimitted in llalferd on Mon- found to, be well nourished and healthy tie day tactile as briefly reported by cable: A far as the trunkorgano wereconberned.When finnily named Derby nooSPierl O. smell but the ettenacer Was opened a strong. Breen of • decent bailees in Garfield Bunt. The family prunes acid was emitted, and the cause 0! oonsisted of Samuel H. Derby, aged about death was at once disclosed. Dr: WilsOn. 35; his wife, apparently & little older; and contented himself with an internalexamina- six chileren-Ernest Llewellyn,aged 13; tion of only one of the other seven bodies. •, Harold, Furey, 11;• Frederick Cecil, 9; Clara In this caselprecleely aimilar symptoms Elizabeth, 7 Florence) Helen, 5, and Were &Vence disirevered. In the ease of the " " Gladys; 3, The lather was's diem* and other six pennies the doctor contented bins- ' • herbalist, and there was no evidence of eel! with an examination, but was able to want of grinding poverty in their surround- declare that the cense of death was the • inge. Nothing of an unusual character fume in all the caries. Derby, as a chemist, took plan in the peoceeciinee of the family was fully inqnainted with the character ' mitil Tueeday, when • it was noticed that and effects of varionspoinne, and he seems , -none of them appeared. On Tuesday and to have seleeted one which, though certain Wednesday nothing. was heard of them, but in its action„ Was quick and gave little or no • AO their neighbors were need to their pain.. There is no dietortion Of features in. absence, little was thought about et.Qn any case and all appear to. have died • Thursday morning the first inquiry' was calmly. In a box in one of the bed -monis -,4 mailehyllerby!e_ sister,who lives in the Was discovered the will and doouniente • adjoining street. She called at her brother's lating to the Irieh" property Whichhave house to inquire este their welfare, and was caused so much trouble, and nnally tine nurprieed at finding if looked up. This hinged the mind of the .unfortruiate man. circumatence she reperteeto her father, His father, who is over 70 years of age, has . . and he went and tried to get intotheltonse; been interviewed, but is unable to throw but failed. Yesterday morning the aged any more light on the affair. father and his deughtermade another at - A TOUCHING INCIDENT.. • tempt. Again fmling, he ptooured a ladder The deceased was musically inclinea and and, climbing to the back bed -room win- plaYed the harmonium which be possessed ilow, saw Mrs."Derby And two children • in facility. In pathetic )‘,.. apparently Riley. Bursting into the with eeneiderable contrast to the awful tragedY Which hige ' Tame heefound, that they. were ell dead. An alarm Was raised and a further starch taken place is the fact that yesterday week the poor children gathered round their was made. In another bed -room, lying in parents in the warm glow of the sitting - .•Perfect repose, and with the bed••010theri room -fire, and whilst the deed man played neatly folded over 'them, Were four other children, alio deed ; and in the kitchen the harmonium they aang with the mal°di" ...lying on his side on :the sofa, the body of mia sweetness of childhood the hymn, " thTake, oh I take me to Thy care." . Such e man Derby was also found. .All eight, Was their last song on earth -the , °once of which is as overwhelming as the ciataqtrophe which followed.' Less, than twenty hours after their childish lips formed the innocent ,ineooation they were truly at rest -in the sleep that knows nottwakening. •tusmerat Iso WKET eit SNOW.' Air Astonishing etere About a. Greet in etlahe--Twe *en goteleed 1. for torty-Bight !intim,. • • . A Ban Franoieoodeepen*. sas: Jehn membere. of tbe iamily•werettine *sneered • lifeless. The 'fans of - all the ',deed :were • peaceful, 'showing that net . struggle h..44 . *ken Oen and that no Violence. had. • been need. . police. were hastily . eummonecie and. their inquiries and regearches Made,. it.vidont . that terribleeeerieeof • nined,ers eeneenistelitt py eifneWeelhiel'eater eirtOlee - eqiiftiPebeetthirtelblerelreer ShietiStneeefint • betties; One 'marked. " Preesio .aoittr :'and •, • the .other " the .bed -room in which the eleildrenweee lying ,waaa tee -One contaieing a milli=likefinid. •:Inquiries from... the. neighbors .e.eheteeed • • thef Derby hest • beenfor 'GO* time.: a little ' queer.. .elie troubles &on not from want, but • from either twine of nioney troubles. He was interested in Will, from which he expeotedeteidetive:ociniticierable benefit; but some dispute. arose, and •the. matter ieaused • • the ,tertin inueli.dintrees„. ,The .deferred hap°. •. nieneetion, With -his tapected benneet; • which he never received,: seenan to have • 'preyed onhie inind.and Unhinged • E.A.*w4 x,oterLovinz• „HAPPY LAIW In the of a Trams; He Witnesses A, Conntry which Has ressessen Home. Buie for 1,000 Team . • k thousand years of Bogie Rule ought to be. interesting subject of contemplatkni just' now. Yet for no less *Period has tltie Isle of Man enjoyed apolitical oonetitution of its, own, first founded for it by King • Qer3S. the Norseman, who was Wel. consed as . a ruler by the • Mann, men; and photer gave is still pointed out. in ."thFiriland ' (aa the Lancashire folk call it). The " Westminster EeVieveli gives an:account of that constitution. Teat 13 and Oa years -to go to the front came, he Kingdom of Man was II et taken pois- e*. ence. began preparation with all the session of by Edward 1, en desire ofitp ardor and enthusiasm of the Southern inhabitants, He nomiirate its Governor youth at that time, - His.last parting was or King, which office was hereditary in do with hie" little -sweetheart," as he fondly 'Stanley family for over 300 years, when it. Callett herMted Ms promises to return and. named by inheritance to the Duke: dil;• • make her Ms bride were sealed by many a "Athole, who sold his righte to the British .. pure kiss of love and tender embrace. 'For Parliament in 1765-:Z70,000 being paid . a ,While letters -letters full of tenderness, him and £416,114 to his heirs, for the loofvEe laanindedwevitohytioion-acnadmeirigfthiltiensgt the b het. jt of the island. It still manes , own laws. These are framedfly the future. Suddenly they cease and then' the House, of leees, established by King conies' one written by a, friend telling of. orry and ,after e the alludes have ban the capture ef young Harry, the bravest Pr sanctioned by the Queen and Council theY the breve, (tine his incariiiiration in a Yankee prison., Months of sorrow and anxiety fol.. low, • and • then comes the sad news of hio death brought by some ti exchanges" from the prison in, which he was confined.. The grief of Elainewawierriblec but -theeeeming heart, however kindly it may lave, however bitterly it may suffer, seldom breaks, and in a few years the image of handsome Harry was but a dim shadow, and the slender, delicate 'girl had, developed into a handsome, charming woman: She had Many admirers, " and on Deo. 25th, 1869, eight years after the departure of her boy lover; Elaine Marston stood at the altar to beconie the wife of one of Henry ' County's most respected citizens. Last week a man in the dieguite of an old tramp passed, throtigh, 'Hampton and 'inquired forthe home of Mrs. He • found the place, beheld the face of his entre promised bride, bright and happy With the love of &devoted husband, bright and interesting children • ,Her Wedded HaPPlaaaa•• ' • In 1861 there lived in the lower pert of Alia County, near Bandy Ridge Poet-officee Mq.coD.11400.M,be, who t; itt . bas come' down to an Old lady by . the name of Swann, .and the city from Altoras, Idaho, tells the story :with her a grand -daughter, Mies Elaine of a queer happening there& week or two Marston,mini lovely girl of 10 summers. • • Adjoining the* home was the plantation of "Five- mem wereeworking at a shaft Judge Miller, the wealthy, father of Om located about half -way up the side of hindsorne Young Harry, thdevoted sweet-, Silverton eteir of the Alturas range. heart of thelnentiful Elaine. Esrey was The snow lies several feet -deep all Oyer tVill'yearther senior, And When the order mountain, and, as the day was clear, by tietill•Oeorgia's sone between theltges Of the middle, of the afternoon the sun .had thawed the anew" jait enough to 'makeit soft and inclined to elide. A Swede walk- ing en a teen above the shaft mined his footing, and in scrambling to regain it pushed a • little.' body • of • snow Mit of its balance. ; This was, at the head of a dry gait*, and the weight and elipperinese of the snow were enough to start a elide. In, a second's .time it had 'grown to a tremendous sin, and, growing bigger every sedond; it rushed down the mountain with a terrible roar. The trees. in its path ,were mowed. down like grass before a scythe. The Swede. who started the elide lell over in it, his lady Wasburied in the snow, and had not been found when I came away, • • "Two men were working the windlass at the 'mouth of the eliaft and two others were inside. The two at the surface heard, the slide coming and hurried to get ont,of its way.. They were caught in the vast mass Of rushing snow and tumbling trees. But by some unexplainable accident they were tossed to one side andsucceeded in getting out of the avalanche. They were knocked senseless, but received no serious injuries. •, • . • e " But the queerest part of the whole @tory is 'about the two men Who were inside the shaft.. The slide came right down over the mouth of the ehaft and peeked its 130 feet ohook full of show. The two men; Martin Smithson and Tom Callan, were in there,' buried widen all that mass of snow, for two days and nights, and when they were dug out they came in, and are now. just as sound and well as •anybody 1 The anew was packed into some.Parts of the shaft so.tight that it was almost as hard as ice, and it took exceedingly herd work to get it out.. ' But the anew, no matter how to be promulgated by the • Deemeters un tightly it is packed, does not exclude the judges, who .also presided at the jag air, and that .is the way they h givit eflerengh.neTheji ewer -Oscan tn-rieeitt happened to dustice4Ase aindifferently •ate etbe herring• deliveries,. and who swear to administet zieliteesseitienteeteeeraM'eeSeelillir•f2ileg alsger Creltanegt-efeet.egaleatteeeetezt51344.1neemsmattemieeitilheasfizawn. affavo-i-da#0.0.111--cy4itnclaclor.::govt- esualgTeZimenetifseenneldee-et ,3141.1Ee'iondeeltdeiZebesesseesilistendedetteremaitrailltieDeeniefeer eight hones, With the snow 'peeked areuna `Bn0CUES41161110 clai'4COIVerniaigaltd-lesteeef ir/ his oath every iime he ste his dai1y them so close that , they mend not moven the report brought -across the continent me.se. 'which the herring formed IA reliable. Though so near each other they thatElaine did not marry till 1869, and principal .part. Fishing ie still the chiell almost touched, they could not even speak was now a widow; the latterpart of Which. industry of the 'island. rite, .ancient a word. They could just sineitly stand heedid not know to be false until he begged Bishopric of Soder and 'Man used to in- saYs he will never elude the Southern llebrides-Sordorensee, there itnd think. They say they were con- bread at her door. He at.'8°.9ttl'.errefergfe,zie:Je 'B i? ilPili:taltV eeesee •g t &TA, shire. :. • .• e'smenteeseelefienselleeeeehreffeens • • -.Re!. Dr. 'Hay,: InverkeillOr, ,has ' on ..ree tiring,been preeented with it silver tea and Coffee service. • • ' ' .. .. ' ' ' 1 . . . , . . . • One kidney of an ox recently killed by A. Wynne,. Aberdeen, measured • 4. feet .9 ificheeeand weighed 140.1be . • • - ' : licking for some time after. the snoiv came visit Georgia •again People are 1 or Southern Isles; whence '•the name . Mr. Robert Bence Johnston, writer to down, • and that they ' Buffered tortures, dead, his heart's ;best.tlieltoyhei ' for .1886, • £55,000, end .its eipeneiture. : • his :Rude " Sodot."' The revenue of the island 'wan,' .. the 'Signet and•Procdrator-Fiscalfot Edin- They. declare they . never longed for any- withered; and nothing temaine for him but burgh le dead; in his 53rd' year. ' . • .. • • thing So much in all their ,livea as they did to go forever from the nines of his ohild,e-£50;000., BY an Ace of 1866. the whole . at • , . ..foi desitli." ' ' • ' hood and. the lan'cl'of hisbirth, to spend the the Customs revenue: Was devoted to the • . . . The estates of the Rev... A. H. Belcher, '. . ' • remainder of bis life is best heolin in honeifpurtmees•,ofethe , island,. except . £10,000, Faeque Parsonage, Fetteicitien, have been , . . oringthe God . 'o gave it. , He lies many which is the contribution for Imperial pre- sequestreted under 'the hankreptoy Acne.' . Ilif'. Prior's. Strange Visitor. • . Old comrades in ms in this notion, .who : tection. A' school is , provided in. every . .. . . . . , • . . . . 'est Sunday morntng, at the. •anseason, • will, doubtless, ,recognin in. Harry Miller pariah, education, is cOmpulsory. • Tive - . . , •, . •• According to the Scoitish 'News, greet townie ineneinted 'evidelice that the crime ..ntimbere ofeltishecown,emen_yov_er_20:yearn ebbs' hour of 3' O'clook, a yeeing :teenier!. in in (linseed the • many hrave .bleYs , sent ent .17 'Legislature' ie. a thoroughly independerit ' "wae.prenceditatect ' ' This ieneade clear by of age; are used up ler sanseges inGliegow. uttereffitide condition calledegr"fillie".lionse AT.-tiediarlild'eantirity'redgirr--ferailiieheirSies7b---d o. yTliftt-'the penti10-iilue the -Connection various letters-,whicharetnethe-posseesicin„ 7- MiseecitilditeeMicephaili-eof -.Editiburgh, of :Mr., Thomas W. Prior, the business our freedom and . our homee.-e-Hampton with Groat Britain, and are eiceedingly ' ..,of ehtepolice, in. Which be., makes reference 'whale into Madras, is the. firet 'lady, manager of thia,Chicago Oeete•Hotree. She (Ga.) Times.. ' • ' loyel . • e . . '••• e. ' e to his intention of doing awey with him. medical •gomistrgionaty sent Out by the Free seemed to be dazed, and. not i *oia of in. . . ' 'self, and seys he heti told lini. wife, and she. Church. • • • ' . foimatiencould.be drawn' from her as , to The Highlanders ,it the Bettie of Aline. kio. More Bridesniaitls, . is *Wing to go • with, him. • . The .most • ht.,• • • -, . partner of the whenoe...shee had' conae or why she 'was Our flee' brigade Of Guards was. senrety • One of the notable, 'features. of fashier portant letter bearing on the point iOne Mr.Robert Kerr, Senior without. clothing. . :The Whole household out up' when ihe. Highliendeie diew near, this year. will be the gradual disappearance , e. ' sedressed to his sister a Mrs. Booth, who firm of Kerr 4 Co:, spool -cotton . nianufair- Wae'aroused., and the• youngng woman•Wes, and then, as•Kinglake' tells 'us, a Man in of bridesmaids.feeen weddings. Nothing • ,: resides at. Eccles. In this he says; «1 tnrers, Paisley, died OH the ilth •of soon decently clothed by :the ladies... She One of the regiments 'reformingon the elope , can be prettier, in, theory always And. .oe- :•- ", gannet leave my darling ,wife and children Februarys': . ' • .. made no resistance to whatever was 'done cried, in the deep and honest bitteenese of. casionally in reality, thane group of win& .• ' behind. In feet, Annie often said she clicl , There died at•Pree Inverbrethock Manse, to her, and 'seemed to he almost oblivious his •heart, "Let . 'the Scotchnien go on; 'clad maidens attending theirthend to the , • • not • wept to ' live • ,after I -went; . and Arbroath, on the 4th February, • the Rey. to her surroundings and seven to. her own. they'll • do the work l"•• and with hitethree . altar and illuminating the scene with theft' 'wheel I told her it few days ago that I could David Crichton, LLA, in the . 87th Year existence' :save when, now.. and then, 'she. kilted • battalions,. Sir 'Colin, *hose. hOrse, decoritive presence. ' But, under existing . . riot stand Able ety 'longer, she traidshe•wae, of his age.t . .., • e • . ' ... , , . . burst outcrying. • :Of course, every , effort was shot under .him, adiranited to meet •atrangenientie hridesnieids. are a• very eet•• .quite. ready to go. I wish our bodiesto be The old festival of Utellellyee was ob.- was ' Made to faith- • lierr'.. and ' . she twelve of the. (weeny..".Now, men," rifled pensive luxury. . The bridegroom has not • .. sent to Owens College for cliseection, oto. .served at Lerwick, eOrkney, .on. the, 30th was at • hint induced , to •take • . scene he, "you are going into' ectioniAnd remem- only to give each one of *hear' a. daintily - 1! they, ere.efiquieteet.Way possible and at lighried, let the funeral :he C011- tilt. t procession: the event being.geleb . .. . sleep, train. which :it ewas.:•enpposed she her this, that•whoever is Wounded e-I.den't costly present, but he is expected to futniale 'dtibtee in the• Would eWake in better condition mind; intriewhat.his rank is -must. lie where he them with tionqiiete.int , well. There hue, •-; ' . : • . .-•. eerated by atoreh- and, indeed; she did seem •brighter , for the falle. No soldier west- (leery Off wounded of late, been a tendency towards very tiny '• the lent, expense."' .. •" • • . It •is • understood • that the ,house and short nap. but still , would speak no word Men. ' • If any min does.. such •it • thing, bie...bridesmaids, whoa& • tender' age would ' A TROBAIG:ecCAUSE. 1 , . grounds of 'Abbotsford, ,whicte have , been to tell vv.ho she was or Why she was there. riamnshallbAtifok up in his parish Mike naturally reduce the expense of the presentee , • Police records have been sought ill :vain advertised to let, ba-v.e beenrented' by Mr. She is a eery beautiful young woman, and Biesteady-keep eilence-fire low 1 :Now, in proportion to threeyears..• : ..Brit even. . • for a parallel so, far ,. as the extent of the -.Thorbuen, of Liverpool. • • '•.., . Mr. end Mrs. Prior have become consideree. mime the army bei watchinguel, Make :pre these eieeppeating n favor of small et - tragedy 46 concerned; bit its whole !our; ,:The otistodiete of the ,National • Wallace bly interested in . her ;, but; ethengh she 'proud of ' 'My. Highland. Brigade 1" . So called pages, Who know 80 ' little of a page* .7 roundinge are charged with pathos, and Monument at Stirlinghave accepted an offer • has now been an inmate of their house for •beautifully dna the ante& of Bernen-an duties that they alternately tread on the,: deetitute- of anything in theway of brn, of a bust of lathes' Watt for the Hill of two .days," sho. hee- not yet been induced eye -witness of this .pare of the. battle -7 : bride's train and trot after it, but Who de, ...- • • •tality. Sensed. Hall. Derby, the leading Beata Within the stracture.• ' • • ' , to tell anything of herself -whence she describe their. nicivemente that We can- . not wiped.' either . jewellery or • bonritietta,.,-• , 'miter in the dreadful drams, well . JA ,live. starling wile recently ,, found in. iiaine or why she was in the.. unaceountable nee. resist quoting • him again. ." The The fact is; that • bridempaide heve,.,so. fe.;e,: • .., . • , . • .,. • brought up, and uetil e shalt ; time ago was Blair No. 9 Pit..Dalry (120 fathoms below itopdition in which she presented. herself: .ground they had titeescialid was Se good deal • speak,raised their terms to such .anenealteal. -..„ in: oornforia.ble circumstences. ' He was the ground). It alighted on the head of • the etre Prier's family • physician has been more.eteepand•brolten. than the slope, don height that . humen.• nature; '. in 'the. ''. , - manager of it largeoltentiat and druggist • nveteman and allowed itself to be caught., called in, and it id his Opinion that the beneath the redoubt. In •the lend wbere : shape • of eiteepetated .•bridegrooms, . bait ', I' , . ernsineeeeend besides Making. a fair income • The ,deeth is announced•cif Mie Richard young woman is neither dumb nor ,pet•nitt- these. Score are bred there are shadows of begun to ask if they cannot be dispensed ',... had preepects from a MaternaRennes; for . many years well-known in needy lacking in • intelligence, • yet, he is se sailing clouds. skimming •up the.mountain with, .. And thiewill certainly cones .about • . ' l • good estate in the undowho farmed it connection. 'With. the filen of 'Rennes, unable its the rest to explain •her presence side, and their paths are rugged and steep.; tinniness in '" letuldigore," there should be ,.. : ., •. ftzpounty of Derry,. •.• 'Anent three.yeere ago. : Blanchard & Co., wholnale . eliminate, there. He thinks, •heenver, that she is yet their course is emooth,eilasyfaed swift. • established an orgenized brigade. of brides- . . ' liowevet,. his health failed,•end he, was come Edinburgh and: Leith' .. improving; and that . in time .she will be Smoothly, easilyand awiftly, the Black maids ready with .their •servieses on every •• polled to give up his .siteation. He can- , The guarantee fund of the .Glasgow Ex- able to tell who she is and dispel Some of Watch eeernee to glide up the hill., 'A' few • oeOesion and •anxiepe to "Hall the .litan; plained of paint) inhis head, end, it ,was hibitionetO be opened in May, anionnts to the mystery that now eusurroundsde her;:case, instants before, and • their. . tartans tangea. groom "in consideration of a: very • trifling. ' ' discovered tht anhecess had _e formed. nearly £300,000, 'The Exhibition will cover -Chicago Tirne* '.: • - • the dark valley; now theirplurnes Were on fee. -There are rumors of sharp practice tin e' it . ' This; after -a time, as it • was thouelit, 'wits an are exceeding ..by 20,000 feet the space . the crest." Another • line. earn° on .in • the part of young ladiesewho hive jewellery. . 'Mini:tied, ,iind efter it., six months,' stay at of the Manehester Exhibition. • •,,;:e Ttadleal Wornao',.ort Orem Redernr,. , • echelon; and another 'etill-ethe, Cameron ,more thee is , Meet, andehttee been rashbr Severel. inible 'English., weemen• .have re: and the'. 'Strtherkind Highlanders. : Arid asked to "choose something" for themselven. . • Col*yn.Itity, with his leerily, he' retnrned • „The Glasgote.police'. feted at Canelachie, ' • - • rapiritee -}le told.. a ' .feiend: that '• be, Pars. King lying on .6 bed in her honse, (teeny 'oak nide all prejudice and fear of now, to the eyes pi the superstitious ,Rus- is . the bridegroom's gift. Diamonds ane , ,sians, the strange uniforms of,theiee baree. like. horsiest in one respect, viz., that 'few :. toSalford le itilprOVea :health and•tn) good Mi.:the 8th' February, the deed ...body Of. a thought he shotild tectieee,.. but within covered With wounds and blood. .• Her htue prejudice and gone to earning nioney ,; in business. .' As 'they lwee all. succeeCled, the kneed troops . seethed, 'novel, „ •and even peonle.seeta to be . able to resist • cheating • 'a few• - weeks. ..of' .his return'. he. , had' band and three Other .perettes. have. •been innovation promises tis ?morass°. : As dress, terrible; • their - white,. waving ,. sporrans. about them, more Or -less. .0tethe'tioctasieas Another' telapve: Thie tithe, he showed arrested on suspiaiort. • • ' • • ' were • taken • for the - heads of • low' of . a 'recent Wedding. ....affairs assumed . ' ..• Signs Of : deresigeniefit, and be was :sent Since the Scintish; Education 'Act came makers and millinere they are making. 'for- tunes.... A rediOal Woman .lamentethis and horses; ..joid !. they , • °tied, - , to. . each another phase in &Mention withthebridete. twelve menthe ado to Ireland hetay wit into fore% 15 years ago; £4;000*de ,000, • or Li 4 other that the angel of light•haddepetted Maids' present,' Ten, girls oan hardly eipeet:'• .th • his uncle. Her he wan treett4 with Much per. head of the population of ,Seotland, has. plores the fireelliat tho' 'craie' for ' 'new - and that the .elemeo of . death had come. to be of one mind bunch a subject, and the . *incite:18e, and hie health improved. Lest . been spent inthe erection of school build- expeneiee and often injurious ityles. of A: close and deadly fire Was., now poured ' bribridegroom: .unwittingly deaf ' it "veritabie .... .• . August . hie unele• died. . 'The trouble brciko iugs, and the annual :cost Of the .upkeep of dress' continues. , She 'says ; • honestly believe thittethe : . '. alines 'of ' into these " gray blocks," as Russell cella, firebrancl among them by saying he wouT etel ....-. . -,-..-.4-. — " ..L7tit'ageineehie deed -Was. ;quite utihingehd eee buildings ea ,e1.000,00: 7- . '. r " L ' dress ere due to a neglect -• to . educate giris theRussiansquares. :No. ear. ticular.seend • „leave the .choice to them. o alter•, the ,,, and when, in the following Month, . to appiate the impertance of geed .physie n followed, • ye the yells of the wounded, . siinile,,he thereby sowed ail:tension among re . e . . , . ted returned to Salford lie took . with hiThe meniorialerected in West Parlia. s ment Square, Eeinburgh,ta the late Duke eal eleveldfatent, Children are beim With while the Highlanders " cast about ",te re- them and reaped confusion And &easter. ' 'Uncles will ' Mid a neittbet • of , •dectimente , Of Buccleuch Was unveiled. the. oath& day, juet ;the capacity that 'Parents. choose to load ; but after their nett volley a etrange: Only two Of the ten were itnertiinone, and ., elreferriegto the eitate. ,!.Thiepreeented"tne bythegatl. of Stair in --the preseete. al a give them, mid' *hem 'Pee* come to "en rattling noise was .heard, is the Willett; fell ,on.thie wedding flay the bride found her - 'will being proved, but no amotint of, pee; large commute° of people. Tho.. toemoriel, that with themeelees rests the destiny 'of liko. rainamong the fin .ganteentraire het- sell shorn of four of herefriends, who heal . Minion weidd.induce hitti to part with 'any which consists of a" colonel, bronze ,iatettie. those whO come after theoft. there' will be . tins Which the enemy carried onteide ' their quarrelled irretrievably. Brideemeide haste : ol tho.. doetinients,- base:nee, .he 'said, his by Boehm, ,R,A., stendieg en all ornate , . more radical Men and vvttn .oere' ..Wlienfetiox !knapsacks, for they 'were. all ' iright-about , simply *Mttinguished themselves, and it is ' . brothers, who Were ecebenefieivies with pedestal, has .cost n6,700es . - are edncated for smite occupation or . pro, fade now. . A Wail, of despair floated Over , more.than: possible •that .a hundred' year's e bite, wanted to rob him. When he returned .. Sir William Johnston, of. Kirkhill, long teesionthey Will have len time to eteee for , those gray -coated Masses of. Muscovite irt,lbence the Gomel chronicler will be . '' reed, . • to Salford. ' be Went to live inethe eniell head of ths firm of W. ce-.A. It Johnston, the approbation of men in .general"..", •' fciirtry as they broke and fled, theoWing. ing. up':,,„their functions andlititiee'tvith te• hoist:eel Gitrfield street cvhieh hae been the nblishere Edinburgh -Whose 'moos ete '. • .nteay muskets, knapsacks ".and. everything viewto etiggestingtherevival ofspretty but • Hoene of the tragedy. • .These factie whinh , are well known.thronghout the Wald,. died- e eseeesewieenerersetztieeneuraneeee _ that might enatmber their flight ;and now obsolete old custom. -London Daily .Z\letne. t�doubt the. tinfOrtunate nian's state of years, haVing.heen: born at KitkhilL Bank ' One el the most importent judieial deel; for the first time roe° the Highland cheer. Were elieited On" SatttrditY; leave Ito' room on .the 7th inst. at :the ripe 'at e.Ot nearly 86, ,. .. . • '-.Catsell's Byilish. Battles' on Land and Sett.' • , Betook ine.11int: . . role& There is nothing • ea leltd• to the .in October, 180.' .He stetted bteinees „in. ,• stone weer rendered in tine State was chilie: (4red in the' Circuit . Cetitt by Judge kitk. . • opoinpOsition of Hotel *ie. • • M. Sampson," she sad' With a ,bleslii belief that .- bis Wife was.strallarly affected,. 1826, and tbe following year assented his ft I Waiit Anal* you Whet you may think is ! , • Hawes yesterday. .A. Membet of One of the ' In one ofhle letters, hoWever, he, eays that two brothere, Dr, A. Ke Johnston and Mi. seoret' mutes' lseneflt &seed:Wens had " Is your mien piernade Otherse'niertt?" tt vety:ettaege question : Do yen ;know it .• ' his wife was (tithe readyto die with ire, T. B. Johnston asi nettle:ire,and the 'Nide nsured his . -life: fen' hie Wife; giving , her deeninded , a dyspeptic looking patron of it, young MT. Brown iii.6.geptleirgiti of correat .. . '. h' . i and in a, hitter .whichwas' diecovered on nen le•still carried on .under the original .'name, as the beneficiary, :in the amount Of betel proprietor. . . , ' , , . habits .?".., ''Mr. ,Semplion grew pile an ..t • Saturclay he assettethathis dear Wife tot* designation,' though' Sir William rented $2,000. He subsequently procured a " Cettentiy not; Why do yeti iiiik, endh henemed. and hawed. "'Welle-et-ehuniz-e. . her.doseiilie a•larnb. ' • . tWenty:'Yeartrago.-.71-it"ltl40-btrwaa'aiadeit divorce from his, wife for her marital lilts, an insulting question .7" - • ' '. ' • yes,").he said, ".• I. think he is, but ob., Mien . . • "WAS Tits wit,,E, A teeters TO TIM OSII,110 ' ' baffler, And in 1848 be' aas, elected provost. conduct, but 'he.dia not Change the 'certitt , " Because the pie I. ate ' last :night. .gaaii Smith -Miss Clakii-:Clarseee" A little ' Not a .f.w‘i people think that both parents While he held the latter 'elfin the Queen, cateeif insurer-1013'in her behalf.' • After his Melba nightreale," . ' .• ..later heinked down into her eyes, and ',. *ere concerned in the mordar of the Odle:- whenat ttolyrOOd. in 18$1, conferred on •delith the society .refused to pay her the , . , ,• said t " Why did you Ask Me 'about Mr, lain, and that the htlebend gave the •fatal .hiee the biennial kniglitiniee. Sir William eiturtiet of the pointy OO the grOundthat Aunt Hannah Vaddleford,.. Of Monroe, Brown, darling V 4.1366111401 fancied hie dose to his .wife. Then lie serene:nine let- Was twicUrearrfed; and. is .survived by Iris before his death shehad. ceased t� be his N. it, • Who. is :le • her nieetieth;yecte, • is is becoming interested in 6 very dear fineed - tere endfiticilly .tiOneined hiriiseff: ', The widow and two grand daughters,. . • wite, end 'that after . hie death She was ,spendieg, e busy winter.. Since the .061c1 of 1111110," said •the girl , unbluthinglyeee , hedied of the tievereeiottinsefeeittc( .upstairs • , .e.• , - i ••• ,: neither lint WidoWneehisheir. jedge Hewes Weather' eet in iihe hasknit need pairs Of Epoch. I.. `• ' , " • . , we're undreseed, and. werelying 'hi bed as ft Itev., ttlii, klook, of. Montreal, has elethiled detected on these grounds that the divorced eteeliiirge, neen vete of mittens and 51,tio ,4, ,..,,,., , Wet*. • Thek heti evidently beeii carefully the &alto Knox Church, Winnipeg. though Wife Was not. entitled to the amount of of the: peit of lOgnien4O leggings, beside° spinning!' „ .!!.f.y...,. , , .. , • , ._, W Selleineford has taken Ott like . • sertteged after deene. • Tho body of the' offered a salary Of $3,0e0, . , i• niutatin.-Chicago jeered!. , ' ' ell the yarn she shetieed • • . , i naterenzation paperS 11,,I em.w sore, are promulgated to the people on the Tyne weld gin every July. From this hill which is a small mound of earth brou in portions from each of the aevonton parishes of the island, the laws are read to • the a5aembtcd multitude. The Manx Pale Hemet contests of the King, or Governor; of the Upper House, or Council (sitting lar right of office), consisting of the Treasurer, • the Bishop; the Judges, etc.; and of tl Keys or Commons, 24. in number, electe for seven years by the voters of the eheade ings and towns. The Governor can dissolve this House when he likes. Billie are introduced in either Komar, •-• passed on to • the other, coneldered .ea by both at a joint Meeting in Tynwald, signed and sent to the Queen forher assent, and then publicly promulgated to the peg- pke A £4 ownership or tenancy of a free- • hold, or. a. £10 occupancy of other premise, ' es *vote by the Howie of Keys Election ot,1881. The same Act gave the, franchise and the , many, comforts- of a • beautiful to unmarrie&. women possessed of stin country home, and returned here to take property -but not to those who have only the :oars for his home in the far the tenancy --qualification. Women elate West, not as a tramp, however, have a, right to half the marital property on; but as a handsome° gentlemane-stout and the death of the husband. :iTho laws need' hearty, and with only a few silver hairs upon his temples. He told us of his life in prison until the close of the war, of the afaiseze eitexhiohlreaehecithint of the mar. ese-e-e-e-etteseeeeeseeeee.---e" • • -.see , -eteeeteteee,eet