The canadian gleaner, 13 août 1874, jeudi 13 août 1874
[" > in Um.; as sror 1 at vith lof im- to of the eet lity ley nd ved Ox- he Lhe Ye ON ie ch k of - 's Coooa\u2014G247570L AND CouvoRy- BudasTAS ledge of the natural laws \u201cBy 8 thoroug ons of digestion and nutri- scout 0 aeons of dietetic articles, at their wi ! \"1 ¥ \"ihe Euston road, London\"\u2014B8ee article in Cassell's | Fnachold_Quide.| 0o0L! WOOL! In returning thanks to my numerous friends for their patronage, I to sinte tLat I am now paying the HIGHEST LE CE for Wool, and have on hand a good stock of ! vy Tweeds, Flannels, Blankets, Canadian Jack- Hew D vercontinge, Shecting, Woollen Socks and oY ings Nubias, Sashes, Scarfs, and Ladies\u2019 Jock.So all of my own manufacture, and hich I will * ; t most Reasonable Prices.exchange for Wool æ able Prices, ie valleyfleld Woollen Mills, June 8, 1874.\u2014INION MARBLE AND GRANITE DOIN WOR DREW & GRANT, Manufacturers of and Dealers in MONUMENTS GRAVESTONES, \u2019 : TABLETS, &c., From FOREIGN AND Domestic MARBLE.i i tion paid to furnishing Scotch Granite particular Afton P Monuments.5 Noxt Building to J.C.Bruce's Store, HUNTINGDON, Q.R DREW takes this opportunity of returning his \\ thanks for the very liberal patronage bestowed on him in the past, and to inform them of his removal from Trout River to Huntingdon, wher he will carry on business on « larger scale and in a more efficient manner, he having associated with him as partner, Mr Grant, who is a first class workman and who will supervise the work in the shop.Parties desiring anything in the gravestone line SHOULD RE- WEMBER WE CANNOT BE UNDERSOLD and will find it to their advantage to learn our prices before giving their orders elsewhere.Scotch Granite Monuments will be furnished at as low prices as they can be procured in Montreal.All kinds of livestock taken in exchange.THE CELEBRATED CARRATRACA MINERAL WATER [8 UNSURPASSED AB A PLEASANT AND COOLING APERIENT, One or two glasses of \u2019 CARRATRACA every morning before breakfast, or on an empty stomach, during the hot weather will keep your system cool and healthy.CARRATRACA WATER stands unrivaled as a valuable remedial agent in cases of Habitual Constipation, Derangement of the Stomach and Bowels, Chronic Inflammation of the Kidneys, Gravel, Gout, Rheumatism, (especially the chronic forms), Scrofula, SKin Affections of ull kinds, Dyspepsia, Heartburn, and Acidity.WINNING, HILL & WARE, MONTREAL.\u2018 FURNITURE, SASHES, DOORS, &c.The Subscribor keeps constantly on hand, at his Factory, in the Village of Huntingdon, a good supply of Chairs, cane-bottomed, wooden, and rocking) edsteads, Lounges, Sofas, etc.Sashes and Doors on hand and mado to order from the best of material.Coffins made to order on the shortest notice.pa Good saw-logs of any kind, shingle logs, and grain taken in exchange.A.HENDERSON.Huntingdon, Sept.17.HARNESS! HARNESS! J.W.ROBERTS, PPOSITE Brossoit's Hotel, Beauharnois, Manufacturer and Dealer in all kinds of Light and Heavy Single and Double sets of Harness, Riding Saddles, Scotch Collars, Whips, &c.Orders promptly attended to.Kepairs done with neatness and despatch.Printed list sent on application, .THE EXCHANGE BANK OF CANADA.FIVE undersigned, having made the necessary arrangements with the above Bauk, is now ready to receive money in sums of one dollar and upwards on deposit at the Bank rate of interest, A Pass Book will be given, in which every deposit will be cntered.Dopositors can withdraw their money in whole or in part at any time on presentation of their Pass Book.: ANDREW SOMERVILLE.Huntingdon, 28th August, 1873, MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE COUNTY -OF BEAUHARNOIS.Insuring only Farm and Isolated property.PRESIDENT \u2014Archibald Henderson, Esq.Directors\u2014George Cross, Esq., Francis W.Shirriff, Esq, M.D,, John Symons, Esq., James Fortune, Esq, Alexander McNaughton, Esq., and Daniel Macfarlane, sq.Secretary and T'reasurer\u2014Andrew Somerville, Hun- tingdon.Agente \u2014William Edwards, Franklin ; Robert Middlemiss, Hinchinbrooke ; Thomas Clarke, Ste Philomène ; Peter McNaughton, Hemmingford ; Robert Smaill, Elgin; Dr McLaren, Ormstown ; Thomas Gebbie, Howick; Alexander McIntosh, Athelstane; John Davidson, Dundee; I.I.Crevier, N.P, 8t Anicet; J.C.-Manning, Franklin ; J.BD'Amour, St Philomène ; Louis Préjent, Beauharnois ; J.B.Poupard, N, P., 8t Urbain Premier; Arthur ferdman, Herdman\u2019s Corners ; Dr Anderson, Orms- M&F Partics wishing to insure their property, sre requested to apply to the agents or Secretary.y CENTRAL VERMONT RR.3 AFTER MONDAY, MAY 25r1, (SUN- 0 DAYS EXCEPTED) SOF Day express leaves Ogdensburg at G a.m., Malone 30 a.\u2018m., Chateangay 9.00, Mooer's Junction 10.35, 8t Albans 12.15 p.m.arriving at Boston via Lowell at 10.00 p.m, Mail Train leaves Ogdensburg at 12.35 p.m., Malone 8.05 pm., Chateangay 3.40 p.m., Mooer\u2019s Junction 5.22 pm, St Albans, 7.25 p.m., arriving at Boston st 8.30 a.m.connecting at Bellows Falls with Cheshire ond for Boston and Worcester, at South Vernon with Conn.River Railroad for Springfield, &c., ar- Tving in New York at 12.30 p.m., and at Rutland for Troy nnd New York, ' Night train leaves Ogdensburg at 6.00 p.m., Ma- one 10.25 p.m., Chateaugay 11.25 p.m., Mooer's Junction 2,50 am., (sleep bans at 6.20 am, and connects at Rutland for we and at White River Junction and Bellows Falls ï tb trains for Boston, Worcester, Springfield, New otk, and with trains on Passumpsic Railroad.TRAINS GOING NORTH AND WEST,==LEAVE 8t v Express leaves Boston via Lowell at 8 a.m., lbans 6.35 p-m., Mooer's Junction 8.15 p.m,, at causer 9.50 p.m., Malone 10.25 p.m., arriving the Fenaburg at 12,40 am., making connections for at Accomodation Train leaves White River Junction a .50 8m, Northfield at 7,30 n.m., St Albans 12.00 M, Mooer's Jnnction 2.25 p.m., Chateaugay 4.40 Las {alone 5.15 p.m., arriving at Ogdensburg at Night Express Train 18aves New London at 3.17 ron So Vernon at 0.55 p.m., receiving passengers aoû Conn.River Railroad, leaving New York at Chath and Bellows Falls'at 11.20 p.m., from \u2014 re Railroad, leaving Boston at 5.30 p.m , con- bud at White River Junction with train leaving pm ns 6 pm, New York at 4 p.m., Troy at 10.00 no t Albans at 6.30 a.m., Mooers Junction at ative?Ohateangay 9.40 a.m., Malone 10.05 am., with a at Ogdensburg at 12,30 p.m.connecting 8) rand Trunk Railway for the West.rai ing cars are attached to the night express Albens ing between Nt Albans and Boston, and St iach eg, SE Cars between St ng an - SR on Day Express Trains, ng car to St Albans) St |\" NO.463.HUNTINGDON, Q.THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1874.the hich gover careful application of the fine properties tion, ul bY ted cocus, Mr Eppe bas provided our of velo tables with 8 delicately flavoured beverage break ay says us mauy heavy doctors bille.\u201d\u2014Cioit / whic] a yoy Made simply with boiling Water or | Scie Ce packet 1s Iabellod\u2014 Jauzs Errs 4 Co, Milk, pathic Chemists, London.\u201d | MoeE ous or Cocoa.\u2014* We will now give an Murs ess adopted by Messrs James Ep) $1.50 A-YEAR.0 LET, east half of Stone House, on Princess Btrect.Enquire of D.SHANKS.FOR SALE, L' No 3, on the Main Street of the Village of Huntingdon, with Store, Dwelling House, Stable, Sheds, Store Touse, &e.The Store and Dwelling are 1} stories high, well finished and comfortable, The Dwelling House is 26 by 38, with Kitchen and Woodshed to the back, About 40 cords of Maple stove- wood, now in the shed will be sold to the purchaser if required, \u2018The Btore is 22 by 40, with glass front, and has a store house to the rear 23 by 24.I am also gelling out the Lalance of my Stock, consisting of Dry Goods, Boots & Shoes, Hats Crock- ory, Hardware, Haying Tools, &c., &c., at and under cost for cash.\"A large lot of Scythes very low.#@F All those indebted to me, will please call and settle witbout further notice.A.P.CUNNINGHAM.NEW GOODS.\u2014Now receiving Summor Dross Goods, something stylish and cheap.Bost Fast Color Prints from 12%c.per yd.Best Groy Cottons from 10c.per yd.Hor- rocks White Cottons, cheap, cheap, At the West Exp House.Teas and General Grocories.\u2014A saving of from 5 to 10¢.por 1h.can be effected by buying your teas at theWEsr Exp Mouse.Sugars.\u2014A fine lot bought expressly for the fruit season, just to hand.Best yellow refined, about equal to white, at 10c.Janned Fruits, Cheose, 1[ams, And Bacon, Atholstan Mills Flour and Meal always on hand at tho Wesr Enp Ilousr, Additional supplies of Boots & Shoos.\u2014 Assorted sizes of Brogans & Slippers.J.G.intends making this an especial line.His long experience in the trade enables him to select the very best quality, which he will soll at the cheapest rates.Ilo has pleasure in calling attention to his large and varied stock at the West Exp House.N.B.\u2014A quantity of Patent & Common Bee-boxes, also Boe-books, from experienced apiarfns, for sale.JUHN GILMORE.ARM FOR SALFE.\u2014Tihe subscriber offers for sale his Farm within 1} miles of Durham, on the Chateauguay River, containing 200 acres, all under cultivation, with a good Brick House, and all necessary outbuildings.Will be sold in block or divided to suit purchasers.For farther particulars apply on the premises to CHARLES STRACHAN.Post-Office\u2014Ormstown, Q.CANADIAN NAVIGATION COMPANY.HE MAGNIFICENT STEAMER CANADIAN, Captain Rankin, has been placed upon the route between Montreal and Beauharnois, St Timothy, Valleyfield, Coteau Landing, Port Lewis, St Anicet, Lancaster, Summerstown, St Regis and Cornwall.The steamer will leave the Canal Basin, Montreal, every Tucsday and Friday afternoon, at 12:30 o'clock, and Lachine on the arrival of the Train, leaving Bonaventure Sta\u2018ion at 5 o'clock, for the above places.RETURNING, Will leave Cornwall, every Monday and Thursday morning, at 5 o'clock, a.m., calling in addition to the above places, at Coteau Du Lac and Cedars.This steamer has superior accomoda- tion for passengers and freight, and will be found a comfortable and economical conveyance.For passage or freight apply on board, or to John McMartin, Canal Basin, also at the Company's Office, 177 St James Street.ALEX.MILLOY, Scerclury.Company's Office, Montreal, April, 1874.RESIH ARRIVALS.\u2014The undersigned beg leave to intimate to their customers and the public generally, that they have just received and opened out for inspection, once of the largest and best assorted stock of Spring and Summer Goods that they have cver had the pleasure to offer to the public ; and a3 they are determined to sell at & very small advance on cost for cash or ready pay, they would invite all intending buyers to call and examine their Stock before purchasing elsewhere.We would invite particular attention to our stock of Black and Coloured Alpacas, Lustres, Black and Coloured Coburgs, Black Silks, Japanese Silk Dress Patterns New Shades, a large stock of Ribbons, in Velvet, Silk and Sash, Feathers, Plumes, Flowers, Black and Coloured Silk Fringe, Gimps, Kdginge, Kid Gloves, Waterproof Fancy Table Spreads, Bleached and Unbleached Cottons, Tickings, Jeans, Denims, Cambric, Linens, Cotton Flannels, Plain and Fancy Flanncls, Fancy Shawls, Prints, Broadcloth, English Doeskins, Canadian T'weeds, Scotch Tweeds, a large assortment of American and English Hats, in endless variety, We would call particular attention to our stock of Boots & Shoes, as large and varied as will be found in any country etore, also, Wall Paper and Bordering, a large stock of Ready Made Clothing, Crockery, Hardware and Groceries, select and fresh.The above goods have been bought with the knowledge that they must be sold cheap, and all parties favouring us with a call will find that they are decidedly eo.All kinds of produce taken in exchange for the above goods, Swanton Lime always on hand.Having Leen appointed Agents for the Queen of the Harvest Separator in the County of Huntingdon, we have already sold several machines which give perfect satisfaction in all cases.As n Separator of all kinds of Grain and Seeds it has no equal.No fact is morc to he deplored than that farms are becoming fouler each year by sowing foul seed with the grain.The use of this Separator in the preparation of sced will increase the value of any farm of 100 acres more than the cost of the mill yearly.For further particulars and terms apply to the undersigned.WILSON & McGINNIS, Athelstan, April 30th., 1874.CEMETERY WORK Of all Kinds NEATLY EXeCUTED HZJNTINGDON MARBLE WORKS.EILLY & HALE, Manufacturers & Dealers in Monuments, Headstones, Tablets, Mantlcs, &c., from the best American & Italian Marble, New Jersey Brown Stone, Quincy & Scotch Granite, in Shanks\u2019s Block, next door to Tully's Drug Store, Hun- tingdon, Q.We beg leave to inform the Public that we have a stock selected by us from the quarry, in which will be found the three most necessasy elements requircd\u2014 Durability, Cheapness and Beauty.Our experience in the business warrants us in saying that we can fill orders quicker, cheaper and better than any firm in the business.be sure and call before NOTICE.XPORTERS of l'roduce to the United States can have Invoice value attested, and certificates granted, on application to A.SOMERVILLE, Huntingdon.FOUNDRY \u2018FOR SALF.HE Franklin Foundry wiil be sold on reasonable | terms, with a large stock of metal, coal and sand : there are also patterns for ploughs, stoves, mill castings, &c., &c., sufticient to supply the large business which has been carried on in the premises for the last twenty-fivosycars ; also, blacksmith shop and tools, carpenter and paint shop with tools, and a supply of seasoned timber necessary for the business.Apply to WILLIAM EDWARDS, Maritana, P.Q.TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT J.FRONTIER PUBLIC NOTICE, UNTINGDON FASHIONABLE TAILORING ESTABLISHMEMT.-\u2014Give honor and credit where due.As some Parties have been asking whether the Tailoring branch is an independent concern; and so on, this is to certify, that I have no interest in Mr Walsh's business, only to make his work up, and lie pays me for it what I want by the piece.He finds me roorn, machines, and everything, except wood and coal oil, rent free.I employ my own hands and pay them.He gives me the privilege to make up all I can get beside the work from Lis shop.Partivs furnishing their own cloth, &c., will make their Largains with me and pay me.If my last advertisement has led any to the conclusion, that I had an interest in the store, I nm sorry that I did not express it more fully.Mr Walsh and myself have been like what we are to-day for nearly four years, JOHN NEVILL, P.8\u2014You can rely on having your work done well and neat by me at Moderate Charges.KG Agent for the Webster Sewing Machine.Terms very easy.Enquire of J, Nevill, IMPORTANT! \u2014AT THE\u2014 DOMINION BLOCK HUNTINGDON, ILL Le found as large and as Crear a stock of Tweeds, Coatings, Dress Goods, in great variety and latest styles, Prints, Grey and Bleached Cottons, Plain and Fancy Flannels, Regatta and Oxford Shirtings, Hosiery, Kid Gloves best quality, Black Dress Silks, Lisle, Thread & Cotton Gloves, Very Crrap, Ribbons, in Silk & Velvet, Corsets, Gent's Bow Ties & Scarfs, Silk Fringes & Laces, Muslins, Trimmings in great variety, Lace Window Curtains, Umbrellas & Parasols, Men's Felt Hats, Groceries & Crockery, as can be found in any country store.BOOTS & SHOES A SPECIALITY.pa CALL, AND SETTLE OLD ACCOUNTS.SA STORE, The highest price paid for WOOL axp BUTTER on account or in trade.W.A.DUNSMORE, THuntingdon, July 9, 1874.GEO.@.O'NEILL, DEALER IN eas AND GENERAL GROCERIES, Large and Choice Stock.NO ADVANCE IN PRICES.BF \u201c Best House in Huntingdon for Ten,\"\u2014 Public Opinion, Geo.Q.ONE.V ALTER SUTHERLAND, M.D., begs to intimate to the residents of Tluntingdon and vicinity that he has begun the practice of his profession in this village.Orrice\u2014At the house of Mr Third, NOTICE.oe undersigned wishes to intimate to the public that he has secured the agency vacated by Mrs Williams for the Celebrated Lockman Sewing Machine, ang is prepared to supply purchasers on most reasonable terms.It is not necessary to \u201c puff\u201d this machine, as its success for the past five years has established its reputation before the public, Havelock, ARTHUR ROBERTS.26th June, 1874.FAX FOR SALE.\u2014The undersigned offers his Farm for sale, being part of lot No.16, in the 6th Range of Hinchinbrooke, containing 50 acres, 35 being under cultivation and the remainder in woods.There is on the premises a good Barn and Granary.For further particulars apply to - JAMES GRAHAM, Herdman's Corners.HARLES MARSHALL, M.D., desires to intimate to the people of Huntingdon and vicinity, that he has commenced the practice of Lis profession in this place.17\" Office at Wm.Marshall's.AMES WILL begs to announce to the ® public that be has just received, in addition to his former stock of Furniture,a number of excellent Hair-cloth Sofas, Wool, Moss, Excelsior and Hair Mattrasnes, Pillows & Bolsters, also a large number of Whiteside's Celebrated Patent Spring Beds, the best and cheapest Bed in the Dominion.My stock is large and will be sold at Montreal Prices.Intending purchasers will find it to their advantage to call and examine for themselves before purchasing elsewhere.Huntingdon, 3rd June, 1874.| \"FOR SALE, VALUABLE FARM and residence for a family, in the Township of Franklin, County of Hun- tingdon, about 2 miles from Franklin Centre, and the same distance from Rockburn, where are Churches, Mills, Stores, &c.The Farm consists of 50 arpents of land of good quality, with a Brick House, Sheds and Barns In plenty.Four hundred bearing Apple Trees in good condition, à good permanent well of water and a small brook at the door, also & stone Blacksmith Shop.A daily mail from Montreal passes the door.Applicants for purchase can call on John Craik, or to Fisher Ames, near the premises, or to Julius Reriver, Esq, Hemmingford.There is buying elsewhere, Live-stock & Produce of all kinds{ also a thriving sugar bush of several hundred trees on taken in exchange.TERMS EASY.C.B.REILLY A.E, HALE J.W, HOBART \"1 ¢ 8 Albans, Ve, May, ARTS Gen'l Buperintendent.N.B.==No Canes ror Extaa Inscarrnoxs.the Farm.The place was the property of the late Alexander Greer.Franklin, 6th July, 1874, A DESIRABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE, situated at Beriver's Comers, Hemmingford, and lately known as Serivers Hotel, with Btables, C House, Wood Shed, &c., thereon.It iv offered, either in bulk, or in one, two, or three different parts, syita- ble for Dwellings or Business Stands.For | u- lars apply to.JOHN EDWARDS, on tha premises, Hemmingford, April 15th, 1874.TENDERS WANTED Fs the cutting and drawing of 40 acres of Fallen Timber, to be made into Cord Wood, 3 feet from point to scarp, French measure, and delivered at Rankiu's Point, during the eusuing Winter, The wood is on Mr Peter Prady's property, Godmanches- ter, aud will Le shown by him to any applying to Lim for that purpose.Also, 10 scree of Standing Timber, to Le made the same as above.Tenders will be received for this by ALEXANDER BUNTIN, Paper Manufacturer, at his oflice at the Paper Mille, Valley- field, np to the 15th of August.FARM FOR SALE.HL undersigned offers his Fam for, sale, consisting of part of Lot No.41, Lot No.42, and half of No.43, containing 2124 Arpeuts, on 3rd Concession, Ormatown.The greater part is cleared, and in a good state of cultivation.There are good Barns, Stables, and out buildings erected thereon.Will Le sold iu block or divided to suit purchasers.For further particulars apply to the proprictor on the premises.ARCHIBALD McKELLAR, Ormstown, 7th July, 1874, HE IIOWICK AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKS \u2014Sccond to None in the Dominion.\u2014 The district is challenged to make Agricultural Implements that will sell cheaper or give better | satisfaction than those manufactured by the Howick Agricultural Works.Owing to want uf power I have never been able to supply the demand, but having, about 12 months ago, purchased a steam engine and extended the shops, I will be able to supply during the present season Agricultural Implements of all kinds, and will warrant them to give satisfaction.\u2018Threshing Mills, of Brasher Falls pattern, 30 inch riddle, Fanning Mills, the Taylor Rake, Grubbers with latest improvements, Land Rollers, Circular Saws for cutting cord-wood, and Drag Saws, these last I would commend to the attention of every farmer and dealer in wood throughout the district, as they are an article that are above competition in point of utility, cheapness and durability, they can be driven with tht greatest of case by our common don- ble horse powers, and will cut on an average from 35 to 40 cords of wood per day.Being agent for Matthew Moody's Celebrated Mowing and lteaping Machines, and also for the Harvester, a machine that cannot be surpassed in America for cheapuess and for giving universal satisfaction.Intending purchasers are invited to inspect the Machines before purchasing clve- where, Planing of oll kinds done for farmers.Parties having Reaping Machines to repair will find it to their advantage to give me a call as 1 keep blacksmiths constantly employed.All orders and repairs will be punctually\u201d attended to, and work warranted to give satisfuction as none but first-class mechanics are employed, ROBERT MAW, .Howick, FEMALE TEACHER WANTED 4 OR School No 3, St Louis de Gonzague.Salary, one lmndred and thirty dollars.Apply to J.SYMONS, Ju., Secy.-Treas, St, Louis de Gonzague, 24th July, 1874, NOTICE 8 hereby given that T have placed all my accounts in the hands of John J.Maclaren, Ksq, Advocate, for collection, All persons paying before the 20th Jay of August instant, will save costs; after that date costs will be incurred.HUGILT McADAM.Huntingdon, August 5, 1874.INSOLVENT ACT OF 1869.In the matter of James Burke, of Havelock, in the County of Huntingdon, an Insolvent, | the undersigned, Charles Baillic, of Montreal have been appointed Assignee in this matter.Creditors are requested to fyle their claims before me within one month.CHARLES BAILLIE, Montreal, 28th July, 1874, Assignee.RAVAGES OF INSECTS IN THE WEST.Omang, Tuesday, July 28.\u2014Tho present Summer has been romarkable for the immense swarms of destructive insects which it hag given life to all over the West, from Illinois to distant Oregon, and from Texas to Dakota.Darts of this region are fairly alive with the potato-bug, cricket, or army grasshopper.These pests are leaving nothing green or edible above the surface of the ground.In many places thoy have been so destructive as to necessitate the aiding of settlements by those adjoining them ; and it will be an unexpected blessing if woveral sections of tho North-west are not compelled to appeal for succor to the country at large boforo the Winter approaches.In my rambles through tho country 1 have heard much complaint of expected hard times, and probable want of food in certain districts where the grasshopper has been a visitor.All sorts of business are dull, and a brooding melancholy seems to have settled upon the farmers, which not even the predictions of the scientists as to tho early death of the orthoptera can overcome.In Montana a small grasshopper has destroyed every vestige of vegetation in the Gallatin Valley, one of tho most productive regions of the Territory.They made their appearance even before the snow had entirely departed, so that tho tender shoots of wheat, barley, oats, and other cereals and vegetables were devoured before they had attained an inch in height above ground.They have visited other localities in that country, also, but it is in the valley named that they have done most injury.The effect of their depredations will be to make all grains quite dear in that section, and to cause farmers to scll their porcine stock at least, not having the means to feed it.Cat tle and horses must, also, bo dependent on what they can procure from the plateaus and meadows, and, as the Winter in the valley is often quite severe, they, also, must suffer materially trom the raid upon the vegetation, In Idnho the crickets have made one .of their occasional tours, being, in several places, as donso as ever was the Egyptian storm of locusts.The disgusting creatures forth themselves into hillocks under, apparently, every biade of ; and move in myriads over fields planted with cereals and esculents.Around Lewiston and other portions of Idaho, they were so donse, as early as tho middle of May, as to be estimated by so many bushels per acre.As that part of the Territory is devoted princi pally to grazing purposes, or mining, they cannot inflict damage enough to affect the crops throughout the Territory.A fleld is reserved from the raw of these digging a trench around it, the base be- _| that their range is far more limited.ing narrow, then widening as it slopes upward.When the insects fall into this ditch they cannot crawl up its vides owing to ite angle, and it is too deep for them to jump out, so that thousands of them ish in their prison from hunger.is same specios of cricket has visited eastern Oregon for the first time in many years, and has inflicted much injury on tho crops.Millions upon millions seem to move togother, being guided in their course by a common impulse.tho Blue Mountains which had been cropped off closo to the ground, and even the thick stalks of potatoes had been devoured.The line of march of this army seemed to be to the wostward, as 1 met them from the ele vated plateaus of Umatella County to the Columbia River.In their migrations they cross streams.I saw millions of them at ono time in the Umatella River, they having apparently, entered it with the intention of floating to fresh pastures.Thoy fdlow the courso of the current, and on reaching tranquil water\u2019 swim toward the shore and reccommonce their devastating work on the first edible vegetation thoy encounter.Myriads of them wore swimming along the banks of the above-named stream, and it was noticed that they worked their way gradually down the bluffs, and thon boldly launched into tho water, each hillock being under the charge of a leader.Before entering tho stream, they seem to hold a consultation, as they were crowded together in a donse mass of soveral hundred, and on separating all would move to the tranquil water along tho shore, and enter it together.Their ravages in Kastern Oregon have been greater in Umatela County than elsewhore in the State, but, if thoy do not spread any further, the damage they can inflict must bo comparatively small, The next pest in the West is tho potato- bug, an insect a8 vicious and destructive as any of ils congoners, with this excoptiot\u2014 that its taste is more limited.It devotes special attention to esculents, and these it dovours with a rapidity und avidity that cannot bo excelled by any winged creature in tho universe ; and this bug is most num.orous in Colorado, which scems to be ils favorite habitat, yet it is also a visitor to Illinois this year, where it ie doing considerable injury.In Colorado it wooms to have spread over a large area almost simultano- ously, as if it sprung full-armed into life in ench seetion.This would indicate that the ova from which the insects come are laid in the grass and hatched by the heat of the Summor sun, and that the insects are not migratory like the grasshopper, or at least They aro extensive enough, however, in tho American Switzerland, and their work will inflict much damage on the farmers.A The grasshoppers are, however, the great plague of the country.They have been more destructivo to crops in Minnesota and lowa than all the raids made into these States by the Indians during the past ten estimate the actual damage done by them.They have cleaned out every green, edible shrub in South-western innesota and Northern lowa, and when finished there winged their way to the South and West.A light guess would place the destruction of wheat alone in Minnesota at 1,500,000 bushels.I'his would make the loss in wheat amount to one and a quarter million dollars, and as much more, perhaps, for the other cereals would, together, give sbout the esti- mato of the monetary damage to Minnesota.Towa has probably suffered the samo loss, or very near it ; while an eighth of a million dollars, or perhaps less, will make up the amount of injury come to Nebrasks.They did not reach the Jatter State until about July 10, but thoy have beon constant residonts ever since, and have spread nver a large arca of country, embracing about two thousand square miles.Along the line of the Union Pacific Railroggl they have devoured the leaves of every corn-stalk, so that tho fields present a most dilapidated appenrance, us naught is seen but tho bare stalks, devoid of even the tassels.Those ears which were soft in early corn the have eaten to the core, so that none is loft for seed in many localities.1 witnessed a shower of these insocts falling near the town of Fremont, and can only compare it to 8 denso snow storm, a comparsion not inappropriate, as their wings are white.In a second after alighting every blade of grass, shrub, tree, and house wae covered with them so thickly as tc seem one mass of dark green.When the train attempted to move on it was prevonted by the numbers crushed by the wheels, as they made the track so slippery that the drivers could only whirl around without progressing an inch.Before the train could proceed the track had to be swept, and this delayed it an hoor.The freight train was detained over two hours by this same storm.North of the railroad, in the Valley of the Loup, the hoppers have destroyed all garden vegetables, and the corn and sats ; and as this section contains about the poorest inhabitants in the State, the suffering must be severe.The grashoppe have not proceeded eastward further than within sixty miles of Omaha.Thdir migration to the south does not extend beyond the River Platte, but no one can tell what moment they make a move to this wealthy region.If they are confined to their present limits they cannot do very great injury.What mischief they have done will be a serious embarrassment to the farmers, as they will have nothing With which to feed their stock during tire Winter except hay, and this crop must be comparatively small, as the people did notanticipate being compelled to depend upon it solely.They will also suffer for the want of fire-wood, as many of them burn the corn during the colder months, owing to the paucity of timber.pesta| 1 have not seen or heard of the le making-en effort to check the dopredations 1 anw flolds of wheat at the bse of|28 Lord Glencairn, fow of theso insects have moved eastward, but not being able to find aught to devour in the wostern portion of Nebraska, thoy had to tako their departare to some othor .{ region.years ; in fact, it in irapossible at present to|you onduring the ather month?of thess voracious pests, except in a fo w isolated cases, where a fire was baiit of gress, and burned amid the corn, in hopes that the smoke would drive the scourges away; but its effect at the utmost must be limited, for as soon as the fire dies out th return Lo their work of destruction with re newed energy.They have even strip the cottonwood trees quite bare in several instances, and this alone would give an idea of their numbers and voracity.When they rise in the air they are so dense as to oftentimes obscure the sur, amd the noise the make is somewhat like the rush of a wind, storm at sea, except that it seems duller and heavier.EEE Lord Gordon, alias Lord Glencairn ali Gordon Gordon, has onded his life tragically Tom Arrestod ip Manton on an Eng- writ, he promised to go back peaceably,\u2019 but he took the first convenient rension 5 shoot himself through the brain, So ends the career of one of the most daring swindlers of modern timos.te bogan by swindling some Soottish jewelers out of £5,000 worth of previous stones, passing himself off and reforring to the Dukoof Hamilton us his friend.Thus started in lifo, he came to the United States and ; negotiatel for u vast tract of lund from the { Northern Pacific Railroad Company, travel: fed on prince in the Far Wert, and mado preporations to bring out a large colony rôm Great Britain.In Now York he consorted with Tweed, Shandley, and the magnates of Tammany and Erie.lo was on familiar terms with Mr tircoloy, and fin ally accomplishod a font, the greatost, in its way, of the ago, by swindling Juy Gould.That sharp operator actually put his resignation ay Prosident of Erie and over 8500,000 in cash and securities into (Gordon's hands in order to give him the monns to execute à grand coup in advance of all others, lis flight to Manitoba, and the subxequent row which his Kidnapping by United States offi- ciala crented, made quito a little war-cloud.He fled from British justice, and has finally snuffod out his own brief oxistouce with n pistol-shot.It is not given to many rascals to cut such a figure in the world, and now that the man has finally taken himself off, it should bo said that ho was possonsed of many gifta and n positive genius for successful fraud.The lllinois TompeMnco Law, which renders both the liquor donler and the owner of the promises whore tho liquor in sold jointly liable for damnges, direct or conso quontial, which may result to tho por-ons, property, or ¢\u201c means of support\u201d of any one, from the aalo or giving away of intoxicating liquors, has boen declared constitutional by the Supreme Court.The evidence in the case before the court showed that oue Thomas Addie got a drink of whiskey \u2018at the saloon of Maurice Km ny, and was afterwards seen going into this saloon, as well as other saloons.fio became intoxicated, and tho next morning was found upon the track of the Illinois Contral Railroad, having beun cut to picces, ovidontly by à pnasing train, Tho suit was brought by the surviving wife against the liquor dealer to recover damages for injury to her means of support by reason of the death of her husband.At the hands of a jury sho received u verdict of $2,000; a decision which was promptly confirmed by the Supreme Court, with the assurance that it could avail tho liquor dealer lémory nothing to show that other per- sous had sold part, or even more, of the liquor which contributed to tho intoxication of Addis.Two Confederate soldiers were talking to- gother, when ono asked the othor: ¢ Where was you enduring the war?\" \u2018The other replied, \u201c l was twenty-four months in the army, sir.\u201d * Yans wal, whey was you eu- during that time?\u201d \u201cI was twonty-three months in tho hospital\u201d « And whey was \u201c[ was looking for the hospital.\u201d A Pennsylvania toper sworc off six ycars ago and has put a penny into a box for every drink he would have taken.He countod his hoard the other day and found he had missed 1287 drinks, to the benefit both of health and pocket.The Rev Mr White, a Roman Catholic prient has published a letterin the Kilkenny ournal, warning intending emigrants against going to the United Staten, as thousands of thousands there are unemployed and starving.If Irishmen will persist in emigrating, let them, he says, go to Canada, rather than the States.Australian papers state that a company has been formed to work the sulphur deposits at White Island, a marine volcano 140 miles from Auckland.lt is estimated that 100,000 tons of sulphur in an almost pure state are lying on tho island, ready for shipment.A Minnesota farmer in illustrating tho rapidity with which the grasshoppers devour everything, relates that he and others one day saw them coming, the air being full of them.They alighted on 8 even: acre field of corn, snd so numerously did they swarm upon the leaves and stalks that they were bent to the ground.In twenty minutes thore was not & stalk in the entire field that was not stripped bare, Mrs Susan Rosenthal, of New York, koeps a grocery s\u2018ore, and resides immediately overhead.On Wednesday afternoon she heard some person walking across the floor of her rooms, and going up stairs found a strange man ransacking the premies.With admirable prsrenco of mind, Mrs Rosonthal locked the door on the burglar, and at once raised a vigorous alarm, Officer Shalvoy came slong and captured tho stranger As he was about jumping from the front window.The Journal of Chemistry publishes & recipe for the dentruction of insects, which, If it be one-half as effica- clous as it is claimed to be, will prove invalusble: Hat alum water ls a recent suggestion as an ineccti- TB de.It will destroy red and black ants, cockroaches, spiders, chinth bugs, and all the crawling pests which infest our homes.Take two pounds of alum and dissolve it in three of four quarts of boiling water ; let it stand on the fire until the alum disappears ; then apply it with e brush, while nearly boiling hot, to every joint and crevice in r closets, bedstends, pantry shelves, and the like.the crevices in the floor of the skirting or mop boards, if you suspect that they harbor vermin.If in whitewashing a ceiling, plenty of alum is added to the lime, it will also serve to keep insects at a distance.Cockroaches will flee the paint which has been washed in cool alum water.Sugar berrels sad boxes can be freed from ants by drawing 8 obalk mark just around the edge of the top of thems.The mark mast be unbroken, or they will creep over it, Lat a continuous chalk mark half an inch in width will set their depredation ot manght.\u2014 en ES ep » RT Shan A = 2 = mem mes em en FALL SHOWS.st.Lawrence Valley Agricultural Soclety at Fort ; , Sept.9, 10 and 11.Chateauguay Agricultural Society, at Ste.Martine, on Tuesday, 15th September.; Huntingdon Agricultural Society No.2, at Vicars, on Thursday, 17th September.Beaubarnois Agricultural Society, at 8t Louis de Gonzague, on Tuesday, 22nd September.Huotingdon Agricultural Society No.1, at Hunting- don, on Thursday, 24th September.Franklin County Agricultural Society nt Malone, Sept.20 and 30, and Oct.\u2018Ist.THE CANADIAN GLEANER is published every Thursday at noon.Subscription, $1.50 a-year in advance.For papers sent to the States or Great Britain 20 contsadditional has to be paid for postage.Single copies of the Gleaner, four cents.One dollar pays for eight months\u2019 subscription, two dollars for a yoar and four months.Advortisoments are charged soven cents per line for the first insertion and three cents for each subsequent insertion.Advertisements of Farms for Sale, if not over 10 lines, are inserted for $1 the firt month, and fifty cents for cach additional month.No advertisement inserted for less than fifty cents.Office in the Dominion Block,opposite the | Post-office.The @anudian Gleaner, , HUNTINGDON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1874.son to believe that anything likely to give = = © [government by Giermany and Russia is ex- was filled with Tue Dominion Government has determin- pected to bo daily announcod.denios positively «at he had anÿ part in Mr Hibbard and his American ussociates aid, Tabor werthlcss As Drofoor Titubner = i i ; aro to at Valloyti \u201cviday, son.Wirks in the © Agriculturist\u201d for this wonth, 4 We the transaction, affirming that all he know Le Où ytield on Friday In con- may worry through, but what will becom of the of it was what transpired before the Cabinet Valley field oot Mariah and ita orostian fruits and vegetables of future generations if insect when tho Order in Council was passed jhio à distinct corporation, nothing will bo sapidly us it docs, and has been doing for the past authorizing the excuange.The sole mo- douo there at present in the way of bond- dosh y an\u201d .i i ng.On Saturda y ci Aud while we work to grow, tq protect, and to tive ho had in agreeing to that Order was whi Le uso council gather in the result of our suinmers tail, the\u2019 bright that he belioved the larger lot they were , \u2019 y \\Y, 10 Guys pass away mud soun the sad reality will come ! .party areexpocted to pay a hort visit to getting would solve the difficulty ns to giv- | : , upon us, Shut alas! the fall is here, vo short, so E \u2019 luntingdon.Lurtied is the season of floral beauty.Bo much of ing land to both tho Catholics and Protes- Un Wednesday evening u very violon: work has do be crowded into it, that those who pos- tants.If there is any blame it rests upon thunderstorm passed over the District.RA Nr VRE At Se Rn rd tho Hon Mr Archambault, who attonded Le storm Fe proceed by a particularly sweets of jura life.Aud yet, with the many appli- ; ne Teed «hot term.rom Sunday morning the hout ances for the farm and houschold, improved and con- solely to the transfer.On Mr Irvine ho is scemed to grow in intensity until yesterday, venient machinery, useful inventions, wonderful and when for several hours the thermometer MW it is time that the tone of society in country .; Caf \\ \u2018 , a0 np, districts beenme wore elevated and refined, that those acquiesced in the Order of Council.Mr ranged in tho shade from #2 to 94.The who live Gut to gather money, to be employed at Chapleau\u2019s statement throws no light on tho pt broke at half-past oven, and although interest to the highest bidder, use some of the fruits of ss Men sa .: neither tho thunder nor the ruin wero oxces- thelr frugal labor, to beautify and adorn their homes, transaction itself and is merely a denial that siwg, the lightning was extraordinary, The Chuice looks, pretty pictures, 8 house furnished with he is responsible for it.It is a most unusu- clouds fairly throbbed with eloctric light comfort and to use, flowers and trees with the lusci- al, if not wnprecedented, step for a Minister for nomly an hour, so that it could not bo © fruits God has given for our health aud pleasure, ; id be dar! ñ will do much to make the memory of home pleasant of tho Crown to publish such a communica.said to be dark for over à moinont ut a time.in atter years, to the little ones growing up around .« Le Gare cuve while over and anon there wus à vivid flush you, and do more to draw their wandering footsteps to tion, but then Mr Chapleau is a very curious followed by thunder.It was not, however, the dear old Lome when your faltering stops need until the storm had passed south of the vil- their strong and mature aid and comfort.And if, in .\u2019 .lago that the electric displuy appeared in its the present tiie, wyery fat o and mother In fho land Ir being known that the sympathies of grandest form.Then the lightning could would, with judicious care, teach their children to \u2018 ; .; .pe ! appreciate the many and varied beauties of Nature Germany are with the Republican party in be scon omerging from different points and, talk to, «uit encourage theru in their researches after Spain and that Franco favors the Caritsts, Jranching Dis Spumed he cloud with i \u2018 ho ep crentions of tiod, und instruct then in se: ensoly brilliant linea.culiarity p the mmystetie slorie v it is natural there should be a great many |.ring fs was that it nord Toe bie Shot and beauty of farm life would become desimble to ramos as to the interterenco of both, Daos- upward Sot Jatorully than w ont AO wh the many who now despise, because they do not under- 2 s or lator: , cards .oe ; > stand its true voeation, and the future of agriculture pite the definite statements which have caîth.Whilo tho storm was at its height, would receive both dignity and honor from the been telegraphed, howover, there is no rea- 8 flush that descended towards tho south- hands of the rising generation.Axsie L.J.cast was followed by a bright blaze.This ' Hillsife, Clintenugay Basin, : ¢ morning wo are informed that it proceeded SANS RVOPHE AV AV rise to a rupture has yot transpired.Tholfrom a barn of Mr Henry Conlter's on the Tikug a thing oo AY imposi \u201d 1 2 1 O01 hie wel POY \"ne - French government has denied that they Gore, which was totally destroyed.The tion, and which is practiced on Lipeds by bipeds, aud have permitted any violation of the neutral.building wus 80 feet long sud formed one! gut is nothing more nor less than setting duck eggs ity laws.The rocognition of Serrano's very severe, \u2018inasmuch as that gentloman sort of a man to Le u Minister.sido of his yard.It contained his stable, under liens or turkey-hens to be batched out by granary and implement shed, while the loft ; them.Take into consideration a poor hen who has To or 12 tons of hay.Phe [sat three long weeks, with all its cares dnd depriva- ; i i ack i sorner.suli 0 tiona, in ordet to propagate her species and fulfil thie It is not | lightning struck in one corner, splintering mandate of Ler being, aud when, through the machi- od to go on at once with the construction of unlikely France muy do the same, for sho is the post, and scattoring the fragments for [nations of wun or woman, she has been deprived of the railroad from Fort Garry to Pembina.in no position to give offoct to her sympa an acre around.No mark of firo being où her natural productious and those of another and and are giving out the tenders for grading.| thies for the Carlists.Pembina is on the frontier, and the place to which the Northern Pacific Company de- them, it is conjectured that it was the hay | entirely different species have been substituted, and that took fire.Mr Coultor saw the flames thereby caused to bring into existenco a lot of, to her at once, and rushing out, with much diffi- wny of thinking, unruly and disobedient offspring.10, ! g , Ti os = | : : .; ; , | Fancy the feelings of a pour Len when she, with her TE escapoof General Bazaino isan event culty, saved his team, his mower, and other | 160\u201d come in the vicinity of a river or pond, when signs building a branch so that when fin- the effect of which is probabl y ovorostimat- articles.The progress of the flames was the whole make a dash into the water and at once , | ished.Manitoba will bo brought in direct ed.Under Napoleon ho held a very pro- 50 rapid, however, that the greater part of >< > swim off to such a distance that all the fuss and tho contents were lost, including a pleasure | clucking she can wake does not seem to influence .A .[3 a .\u2018 > a I ; ñ .3 \u2019 .rs ic 4 railroad communication with the rest of the minent position and is now a devoted parti waggon, the reaping attachment of bis ma (them in the least to return, and which they do not continent.An eutery is made by some |$40 of Eugenie and her son, but his reputa- chine, implements, grain, &e.A lane, 10 do until they, of their own free will and accord, sce fit to return to land; but even then, instead of being affectedly loyal folks tbat Manitoba ought tion was 80 blasted by his conduct at Metz, ! feet wide, divided the burning building from \u2018ike dutiful chicks, and follow the ways of their - B to have railroad communication independent that it is questionable if anything he may attempt to restoro Bonapartist rule would When a| not Lring further discredit upon it.of American connection, which is doubtless desirable but not practicable.short line to Pombina will meet all the * wants of Manitoba, it would be a proity business to plunge the Domin- mother, (has it ever been settled which is the mother, the one that lays the eggs or the one that hatches thein 7) but keeps the poor hen in a peck of troubles .qo ; .OTT a [to fol'ow them up as they make a dive here and vain, which poured in torrents, greatly ts \u2018there after the insects ou the grass.The other day us sisted their efforts.Mr Cuulter speaks\u20181 drove along, [ saw a stately turkey-hen standing thigidy of the promptness with which his {seemingly in great concern on the bank of a large {the other and the wind being favorable, the neighbors, who came in rapidly, managed \u201cto save them with great «lilticulty.The Tux prize-list of the approaching Lort Covington Show has a few novelties, pre-\u2018neighbors, oven from a considerable dis- | diteh watching a numerous flock of young ducks, who .; 0 apprit ; pay we lis.Were propelling themselves and dodging about among miums being offered for what are termed tance, arrived, and of the euergy they dis- | eds, Whether she had hutched them or not 1 ion into a debt of many millions to|uLitorary\" subjects.Thus 85 are offered \u2018 played.Jud feels deep ré gratefal de ow cannot sa, but being the only elderly fowl in attens .on ; : their assistance his win J ' 55 dance, 1 natarally thought she haw rougnt them suit n few sentimental hypocrites by con | for tho best Essay on Tl'reatmont of Meadows ral ; 3 \u201cwould have gone.Îlis loss amounts to |into existence, knowing well that there are people structing a line through the wilds north of| and l\u2019astures\u2014time 15 minutes.85 for the $700, on which ho has 8150 insurance j mean chough even to practice deception on u turkey.Lakes Huron and Superior.Despite all that bas been done, it is to be hoped Mr Mackenzie will tell the Manitobans that they must rest satisfied with the Pembina branch until such time as the prosperity of the North-West will justify the enormous outlay of a road tothe Pacific.\\ telegraph across the continent, from Ottawa to Vie- toria, British Columbia, will be finished, it is expected, next year.Tag dreadful devastation caused in the West by grasshoppers is well calculated to make our own farmers uneasy regarding the future.Time was when it was suppos- od insect plagues were peculiar to the prairie country, but experience of late has convinced us that our own section is liable to like calamities.Last year there were parts of this county and of Chateauguny as fairly overspread by grasshoppers as any we now read of, while this summer the hordes of caterpillars in some localities were beyond belief.It is to be fervently hoped that we may be spared visitations on such a large scale as those which afflict the West, yet such a contingency we ought not to ignore.So far scientific then have been unable to discover any remedy or, indeed, to throw any light on how these insects are brought into being or why their appearance should bo so arbitrary as regards time and place.1f we only knew how it comes that they will disappear for a long term of years, or why they should follow particular routes, we might be enabled to keep them in check.The close attention now being paid to their habits can hardly fail in throwing light on this important subject.Between the rapid increase yearly of weeds and the frequent recurrence of insect plagues, itis evident the production of food is not going to pro- gross at the same ratio as that of the settle- mont of the country.\u201d More land is cultivated but the yield per acre is yearly becoming less.Tox Washington Government continues to be much annoyed by Indian outrages in the West.The range of country infested or gent\u2014time ten minutes.85 for the best original Uration Ly lady or gent\u2014time 15 Le .î \u2018 .any 3 top ,|hen, I would ask those who do such things, how best Essay on Family Government, by lady in the Mutual Company, Noon after Mr {they would Tike if they were dealt with in the same Coulter s burn was str uck, a bolt entere | manner ?1 think 1 must write to Mr Bergh about it, the chimney of the dwelling-house of Mr J.Blood, Lugo ; blood ! Here some great tragedy hax .Rutherford, ulso on the Gore.Mr Ruther- | been enacted : some poor wretch has been murdered minutes.$2 for the best Declamation by ford, =enr., was preparing to vetive at the holes plural in bis body and in order to stop the cu.; = .: Q time, and sit \u20183 the ligl twinge totlowed the | tire lite blood from flowing ont he hay stuffed the boy or girl under 15 years of age\u2014time 5 MN Gs and say ; si ant \u2019 ni holes nnd cavities with eaves off the trees, Tere stove pipes, passed downwards close to him [will be n tapsteey to unravel ; sn astounding para- and went through the floor into the celliu.| graph fer the papers! These were the thoughts that {Beyond shatterings the chimney sul slighllÿ caue rushing into my mind as 1 saw several leaves Amateur essayists almost invariably fall in.splintering the flour, no damage was done, jon the rond covered with blood, but they wero soon to the sormonising strain and ten or fifteon And the friends of Mr tuthérford swill be ( dispelled us, upon a nearer view, I saw they were minutes.and 83 for the he-t rendered song.The limitation as to time is most judicious, minutes of maudlin moralizine is cuouxh gratitiod to learn he escaped unhurt.Vague orice, whose juice iad stained them, for human endurance.F 5° reports are afluat of à fire near Durham and I would suggest to Municipal Councils, when they eee ae ot another in Elgin, Lut we can find no appoint Rond Tuspectors, to take à person from either His Excellency, Earl Dufferin, is having ground for them.extreme end of the roud district, Wien a persen in s Es y, l'a .is he re ; , f y : ; FE \u201cthe middle is appointed it is most always the cake a most agreeablo trip around [aie Superi- There is a very active demand Just NOW that there is one end vf the rond that he travels the or.This week he is to sail down Lake for cattle of all Kinds, both for, the Americ most and that end will be pretty sure to get the lions Michigan and will visit Chicago.It is{can aud Montreal markets.Farmers who slave of the repairs: whereas if he was a resident of gratiféing Caine to leuth that the, bave any surplug stocke vo no difult in | tbe et woud al get sh.\u201d ues wo war A .0 + ., nl de ss to » ic ve 3 Council of that city have unanimously voted selling at fair prices, Haying may Le said © thousand miles from home.to give our Governor a public reception.to be over, aud theyield is almost uniformly 1 7c section of the country that T have been in \u2014 \u2014 good.Colonel Reid bud a 20 acre field jately the crops look well, and as an old man (he was i ; \u2018 i .which he believes cut 3 ton to an acre.It\u2019 French) asked me once \u201cHow de crop look your An inquest was held on the 9th inst.by; \u2026 -ertainly the L vi | tf timothy | way answered that they looked very well.Says Doctor And Cur the body of Was certainly the heaviest crop of timothy | \\ : tor Anderson, Loroner, on the body ob, ©°° - Tho heat haw hastened the hes de crop is not like de women, for when de crop Louis Leduc.aged four years, sou of Louis: We over saw.10 eat Mas Mason LE took good dey are good, but dere is some où de wom- Leduc, of the Parish of St Louis de (ion.| Fipening of the grain, and harvesting will en who look good but zague.\u2018The child went amissing, and, be general in the course of ten days.after scarch had been made, the body waxj At the Provincial Riflo Match, which be._ \u2014 \u2014 found in the river St Louis, near his futher\u2019s | gan on \u2018Tuesduy at Montreal, wo are glad to\u2019 1.G PERS IN MANITOBA residence, about three hours after being, sce that Ensign Wright, of tho 50th batt, ; [ UE SRASSHOPPHUS LA Toroto OBA.missed.A verdict of \u201c Found drowned\u201d, Durham Company, carried ofl the first prize tine on oe oath July from Winnipee, was returned.Lin the first match, consisting of the National anys ng = > Pegs At the quarterly meeting of the Montreal , Rifle Association's medal worth $25, and $30) 5%)\" yr Co Gf Vatayee Board of School Examiners held on Tuesday, ; in cash.The ranges were 200, 500 and 600, The Ml-absorbing Jubject of interest ut the 4th inst, the following candidates were | yards, five rounds at each.Ensign Wright Present » grasshopy : | 4 ¢ A , .x in a found entitled to receive diplomns, viz :\u2014 | écored 51 out of u possible GU.Thero wore \u2018tion, the nature and extent of their rava \" He was of a pretty good age and had some experience, CoL.Puvssv.2e St Louis de Gonzague ; Model School, 2nd Brydges, valued at $150, will be awarde trado and immigration.ui .Class\u2014Catherine Cook, St Louis de Gonza- also © him should ho bo successful next |, Iho chlomologint describes lent tho ue, (French).Elementary School, 1st | your in shooting off with tho othor winnors! lucky ar rao ; plone Slass\u2014flattie Churchill, Havelock ; Maria | of this match during the past three years.SPreit® C tho ha tho vad le red gvasshon- Eugenia Clancy, Memmingford ; Mary {In tho second match ho carried olf the {species lontenus forur Dogoor).in.op Hawthorne, Hormmingford ; Eliza J.John.fourth prize, namely 815.per, ca * (Degeer), in size, , ee .; olour, and ornamentation, but it has ston, Franklin Centre; Mary Ii Johnston, Evexiss Stan Lovce=-=The Members of the Even.| shape, co rer Wwinse-covers and Wins in pro- Franklin Centre ; Margaret Ruddock, ; ing star Lodge, No.80, met on Saturday even | 4: 5 it a Rev Cvr Sh P Huntingdon Elomontury School, 2nd, ing, August ist, in Orange Lodge room, No.al, portion to its size.cv \\yrus omas, : * 1 UE or the i Le : ho has mado this order his especial stud | Class\u2014Sary Eugenia Clancy, Hemming- and after the usual business had been transacted, the who ! I Yr \\ .following members, who were elected officers at a,! and who hrs observed them in their native ford, (French); Maggio Curran, llaveiock; previous meeting, July 25th, for the ensuing quarter : oe S vies from the eastern red-legged grass- Isabella | Deputy of Evening Star Lodge.species .McDonald, \u2018North Georgetown ; Ida Vestor Elective Memivre\u2014Madden Stewart, W.C.T ;, hopper, and that when the Rocky Mountain Wallis.Huntingdon 8 Amclis Barr, W.0.T.; William Pect, W.C.; species makes its migrations to the low The es ntingdon.has intimatod to the! Rachel Beattie, W.S.; Mary Sweet, W.T.S.; John: lands, it froquently alights amid the com- 0 \u2018 | Barr, W.T.; Thomas Quinn, W.M.: William Sweet si ivi several municipalities its determination to|J.G/; Henry Bharnals, O.G.| mou castorn species nleo living there, but ; ; ; ; .\u2018 ; ixes with them in the least, and close tho Seignorial Indemnity account by Appointed Officers\u2014James R, Stewart, W.A.5.: hover mixes wi .' paying to each its capital amount.Wither.Mary.Morgan, W.D.M.; Louisa Barr, W.K.If.5; hen the migratory spocios louve tho placo *risci o i oo : > fly $ 4 ?; to the municipalitios have only received tho I'riscilla Roberts, W.L.H.8.Standing Officers\u2014 | thoy fly away In masses without ta ing any .\\ Jol inn, D.G.W.C.T.; A 2 Pr.W.of \" i i A interest at the rate of 6 per cent.Tho John Quinn, C.T.; Arthur Roberts, W.of tho common species with them.They Chateauguay Basin, (French); \u2018The members of Evening Star Lodge take a | to eight thousand dollars apiece.À very | ©pened and there are now about 50 members, and its and sterilo placos\u2014generally coarse, gravel- by turbulent Indians is so vast that it is a work of great expense and labor to bring them back into bounds.One tribe, the Comanches, appear to have been incited to | take uparms by an appeal to their credulity.One of the U.S, officers writes that \u201c some two months ago a prophet arose among them who told them that he had had an interview with the Great Spirit, who said that the Caddæs, Wachitas, and other Indians, who were adopting the mode of lifeof the whites, were going down hill fast in means and population, and the Comanches would do the same if they followed the same road, and the way for them to be again the powerfal | nation they once were was to go to war and kill off all the white people they could.This chimed in with the feelings and wishes of the evil disposed of the nation, and the\u2018 present war is the result.\u201d That the spread ot white influence, wo cannot say civilixa- tion, is the ruin of the Indians south of 45 is 87 true that there is something pathetic in the declaration of this Comanche prophet.Ma Cuarizavu has published a statement he furnished Mr Ouimet regarding his alleged connection with the Land Swap.He Ÿ affairs are in a ver i y y land 1 i i or .: ; ; , .; y satisfactory and progressive state, ly table lands whore vegotation is very serious consideration with the councils will | The Lodge sent to Montreal and procured material for scant\u2014 that as yot no remedy has been dis- be how they are to spend this monoy.IN Ladges for both officers and members, and much covered, nt least when the insects aro in tho the meantime, until the railroad question is credit is duo to the sisters for the very active part! perfect stato and furnished with worful | settled ono way or another, it is likely all they took in making them up.The Lodge is ofit of pe Fi powortu will leave it in the bank.Would this not {debt and has still money on hand to the good.The wings.Fire and water have been tried be favorable juncture for the vill initiation fcc for gentlemen is only 2 cents ; and for With but little effect.When in tho larva In - don to a an d xet an arran coment | ies 10 cents, and quarterly dues the same.The} state and incapable of flight, they may bo to have thoir ind ton E to the M a icipal | Lodge muccts every Saturday cvening at # o'clock \u2014\" destroyed in limited numbors by rolling the Loan fund wiped out ?land with heavy rollers, or setting fire to i .CT the grass in circles in the spring ; but thi Ulderic Bechard, late of Laprairie, was ' A PEN-TA L K.| wou d be impracticable on 0 large scale ns found drowned in the Beanharnois canal on |\u201c Fuas is à new kind of apple tree destroyer,\u201d said tho firet legions that produce the sccond the 4th inst., near St Timothy village.| ® gentleman to me a short time ago, and he exhibited : p \u2019 .| \"a very Ugly looking geometer aol brood, doing the greatest Jamage, are most- Tho deceased, for the past six months, has ® YeT7 Ugly looking & ash colored on the ; j 8 ) ; il :k, and black ou the sides, with a head like a very I ! ! lans been selling sowing.machines in the | backs oe ite mole deg bein about - inch and Se Net ie oui the vicinity of Valleyfield and St Timothy.He a half.I took the specimen home, having never ground ns soon as the grasshopper has laid was of intemperate habits, and is supposed seen anything of the kind before, and soon found it; jtx oggs has been found the most effectiv 3 i 1 to be the Anisopteryx pometaria, or canke f vo : ©.to have driven into the canal, during a fit | pleryx pol 1 canker worm of À dcop lay 1 od f intoxication, as his horse and waggon the orchard.They come forth in March and Apri, cop layer of soil turned over is found to of in found in\u2019 the canal also.An in Ego t ascend the trees, and pair, when the femalo lays egg, crush the eggs, and thus destroy tho spring were 30, Inquest on the branches of the trees, close together, in rows, crop of grasshoppers.This experiment has i was held upon the body before Louis Ger-'glucd together and to the bark by a grayish varnish, .beon made upon smallspots of ground where | vais, Faq, Deputy Coroner, of 8t Timothy, « which in impetvious to water.The eggs hatch about\u2019 myriads of ogus wero deposited, and not \"and a jary, and a verdict of \u201c Found drown- the middle of May, and the little canker worms gather .I us I ; 08 i Jury, upon the tender leaves, and upon the appearan grasshopper came from under those layers od\u201d w returned po! y p ppearance of .as : cold or et weather croep into the heart of the flower | Of earth tho covered tho eggs.This treat.for shelter, destroying the fruit, while on genial ment would, no doubt vory good to pro- Pomperatrs ind snilenin Rain in Pleasants they a the Jeaves of aes leaving tect cortain fiolds or \u2018gardens from tho in.\u2018 ; 8 Are SUZ.uri ; 3 3 3 3 | Highest Lowest 24 hours inches for their destruction, but nothing seems exact.Juries inflicted by this insect when in the I 6 August.voue \u2026\u2026.0.y to sucoced, without injuring the trees, and my own | 18FV8 And pupa state, but it would be no | 6 * .77 B81.00.0.00 opinion is that, ss with other depredators, searching .protection whatover from the winged hordes \u201c 7 vee T1 BB ieee 00 .0.03 for, and killing, ie the best and surest method, worm, that migrate lator in the season.: 8 « ,, \"8 B59.00.000 j moth, and egg, being destroyed when found.1 bring TIEIR HISTORY.19 « .83 B87.00 .0.00 to the notice of the readers of the Gleaner these Ento- Grasshoppers first appeared in Red River ° \u2018 mological observations in order that they may be 19 .85 sees 00 cies 0.00 gided to Le up and doing, and with their own hands OWArds the end of July, 1818, six years 11 \u201c 85 59 .00 \u2026.0,00 I help to save their orchards from the ravages of the after the commeoncemont of the settioment.Francs W.Smarr, M.D, Huntingdon.| myriads of enemies that would fain render our toil They covered the settlement belt, but did life su injurious, so harmful, is allowed to increuse as\u2019 | basswood leaves that some one had used to cover Model School, 1st Class\u2014Catherine (\u2018ook, 120 competitors.A cup given by Lt.«ol ges, and tho probablo consequences upon i Martha Hall, Franklin Centre; Jane Lang, were duly installed by Bro, John Quinn, Provincial | wilds, states that they are quite a distinet | amounts coming to tho municipalities in| very lively interest in the temperance cause, It 5 fy in numbors so Immonse and to such die.the county of Huntingdon range trom three enly a little over four months sluce the Lodge was , y not utterly destroy tie wheat crop, it being nearly ripe at the time.lurley and other crops wero swopt away.\u2018They deposited their eggs and disappeared, and tho following spring the crop of young grasshoppers was immense.These departed before depositing their cgges, but devoured all voge- tation ou their route, thus destroying all the crops of 1819 and deposited their eggs, so that in 1820 the crops wore again all des- |troyed.Thus for throe successive years wero tho crops in this country destroyed by these pests, They then disappeared for 36 | Buccessivo years, the noxt visitation being in 1857, whon they visited the Assiniboine! settlement, doing but little injury beyond depositing their eggs.The following season their progeny destroyed all the crops; ; within their reach.In 1564 they again api peared in considerable numbors, but did lit- : tle injury to the wheat crop.Tho following year tho young grasshoppers partially \"destroyed the crops, leaving many districts tentircly untouched.Tho largest swarm ever known came in August, 1867, but the :erops woro so far advanced that season that \u201cthey did but little injury.Thoir èggs pro- {duced such immense swarms the following spring that thoy destroyed overything that | had been sown throughout the sottlement, rand famine ensued.In 1869 they again i visited the country, but too lato to do much) jharm.Theo seuson following, howover, thoy destroyed most of the growing crops.In 1872 immense hordes of these winged posts again visited a part of the country .about the beginning of August.The country west of Hendingly escaped, und gonor- ally the whent was not much -injured, but they played sad havoc with the gardens.Nothing was sown the following spring throughout the infested district, but throughout the western scttlements u largo crop was grown and saved.HOW THEY ARE TO BE DESTROYED, Many people derive much comfort and cncouragement from the discovery that nearly all the grasshoppers are infested with small parasites of a red colour.Those best posted upon such matters assert that these parasites ave deposited with the egys, and that they destroy thom.IL is further asserted that the eggs being deposited so early in the season all that escapo tie in- soct will liuteh this season.It is to bo hoped this theory will prove of practical value.) TITE CHURCIE OF ROME IN MANITOBA, Tur rvecont change of Govermmont in Manitoba seems lo be considered by the Roman (\u2018atholi¢ hierarchy as afférding a desired opportunity for consolidating their power in that province, and completing arrangements for making it an improved ecclesiastical model of the Province of Quebec.With this view, it is intended at the next session of the Legislature to introduce a Bill entitled ** An Act to incorporate Catholic parishes and missions in the Province of Manitoba.\u201d À copy of this Bill was, a few days ago, published by eccles- iastieul authority in the Nouveau Monde, and iveceds upon the following preamble: + Whereas the different parishes and missions of the Catholic Church possess properties devoted to their foundation and sup- pert.# Whereas the properties of the said parishes and missions have for more than half a century been administered by the Catholic Bishop residing at St Boniface ; # Whereas tho Catholic Archbishop of St Boniface, desiring to be aided in the administration, of the said properties, has demanded to that effect tho incorporation of the said Catholic parishes and missions in the Province of Manitoba, \u201c And seeing that it is oxpedient Lo grant such demand and assure to the said parishes and missions the advantages solicited by them.\u201d The bill then proceeds to onact that any parish, mission, or other Catholic corpora- ition, having a desire to possess land for | church buildings or a cemetery, shall by the i mere fact of its canonical erection into a | parish become a duly recognized civil body | which will be represented by the Archbishop of St Boniface, the Vicar Goneral or the Dean of his clorgy and the Cure of such parish or mission, with power to add to them two other members represouting said Commission, These parishes and corporations to have the fullest powers to acquire and dispose of property, both movable and roul estate, in such manner as thoy seo fit, the nominal limit to the possessions of coach corporation being a revenue of $2,500 per annum, and any corporation to havo power to transfer its property or part thereof to others.Lull powers to manage their affairs without civil interferenco are asked for, and it is provided any momber of such corporations will not personally be liable for the debts, contracts, or obligations of the sume.A provision is mado that nothing in the roposed act will bo held as affecting, or be interpreted as affecting, any rights of the Crown or of any civil body recognized by law ; ulso that the act will be classed as a public one.It is also provided that each of these corporations shall furnish u statoment of their property as often ns they may be requested to do so by the Lioutenant-Gov- ernor of the Province.The preamble of this Bill it will bo seen is founded on the precedent that it has been usual for Roman Catholic ecclesiastical corporations to possoss landed and other property.This precedent is, however, an old one, Created at a time when the Church bad its own will in such matters.Tho precedent in modern times when tho authority of the State iseupreme and civil government is better understood, is quite opposed to such rotonsions.It has Leen found that tho al- owing of property to accumulate in the dead-hand ot the Church, (mortmain tonure, or mortification as the Scotch law calls it) is so detrimental to tho public interests that in Italy, Spain, Moxico and other countries on the Luropean and American continents, intensely Catholic, the Government has had to intervene and sccularizo theso possos- sions.The most modern precedent thore- foro condemns tho preamble of the Bill.The holding and disposal of property un- dor the above bill appears to be confided entirely to the Archbishop of St Boniface, but as under tho now regime of the Roman Catholic Church the clorgy and hierarchy aro mere instruments to work the will of the Vatican, without reference to any law whatover, the Pope would be the real owner | of such lands and others, thus violating a: leading principle in the constitution of most | civilized countries.In Lower Canada the | laity have a right to some voice in such matters, but it seems not pro to give them any such privileges in Manitoba.Civil rights imply civil responsibilities, but the ecclesiastical policy of the Charoh | mess ns of Rowo at tho presont day | = the fullost advantoge of rite taking pudiate Lhe lat cop to re.I ater to tho utmost of its L makes the civil law available to the or: most oxtont as an instrument to né own claims and t enforce itu ¢ , 10 compel payment of 1; ute, such as tithes, fabrique 0604s tri &c., Lut denies the applicabilitg or same Meahs as a recourse against teal ve any of its ecclesiastics, such gy holding spiritual ponalties, withholding of the re monts, denial of Christian burial, &e sacra.such judges and law officers as would\u201d dure to allow such recourre.\u2018This knee: re ecclesiastical tyranny is grievoualy felt by the Catholic laity in {his Province and of] countries where their Church has influe re Ono of them speaking agniust or uttorin any disapproval of occlesinatical person ol matters would be linble to bo deprived nr moment of all privileges in the Churel, ne cluding even decent burial i but if he ventured to demand redress against any cler .man who publicly slandered him and ring his character he might be told by a Jude Routhier that the Church\u2014mesning he ecclesinstical part of it\u2014was above the con.mon law nnd no redress was to be had I does not seem judicious for tie Catholic laity in any now ecclesiastical arrangement to countenance the giving of such addition) facilities for an aggravation of this kind of irresponsible despotism as the bil! under re view seems to afford.© The pleasant fiction about reuderine un account of their properties to the Lieut, ant-Giovernor can be well Appreciated A this Proviuce where such à thing was neve heard of.The Nouveau Monde unconscions ly exposes the object of the bill when it says iL is Lo eunblo the State to help in the \u201c sublimo work\u201d of the Church.Any clauses putting a seeming restraint on the latter are mere forms never meant to Le allowed to Le so, if tho Church can help it This statement is fully justified by modern ecclesiastical policy.This alliance with the State, and the proviso that the bill is to rank as a public one, shows that the status of an Established Church is aimed at.There can bo no objections to allowing the Chureli of Rome Lo manago its affairs and divide the country into as many parishes ns it likes, but it has no right to any further civil recognition in such matters than is extended ta other Churches, the samo privileges as are possessed by such, and no more, should be accorded to it.There can be no Estal- lished Churches allowed in this Dominion.The State has enough to do to mind its ow affairs, and all the concern it can havo in such matters is to seo that occlesiastics are made amonable to the common law like other persons.In this view of the case the passage of such a bill as the one above de:- cribed would be simply the granting of dangerous and exceptional powers Lo « section of the population, favoring it to an extent that others neither obtain nor desire.The future of our Great North West i- Lound up in the fato of this bill, which, ir passed, will virtually hand over tho largest and finest part of the Dominion to the ruie of the Pope, and crown the work which Mgr.Tache begun in [Red River, and has steadily been keeping at from thie rebellion down to this day, and to achieve which hus been the ambition of his life.We all see how busy Roman Catholic\u2019 missionaries me in advance of tho wave of sottlement, preparing new regions for the ceclesiastical yoke, and what is done in Manitoba will be repeated in new Provinces, till all are conquered for Rome.This is a consummation that should be prevented by every possible means, if this Dominion is to escapo the sinister influences of an effote ecclesiastical system that has brought nothing but evil consequences to countries where it was allowed sway, and round whoso necks it ha- hung like n dead carcase, and which are now getting clear of it as rapidly as pon sible.\u2014Montreal Witness.ELECTION BY BALLOT.+ Tux first-elections under the now law took placo last week, one at Napiervillo and one at Elgin, Ont.A despatch to the Toronts Globe tells how the ballot worked at the latter place : ; \"I'he ballot-boxes used hero were furnishel by tho Government.They are mule of black walnut, 20 inches in depth, and 10x 12 in width, and are very strongly put together.The door in the top\u2014out of which tho ballots are taken for counting at the closo of tho poll\u2014is three inches by seven.and is secured by a lock.Tho slit or open ing through which the ballot is dropped into the box is 3} inches by § of an inch, an is covered by a spring slide.A small knob is sct in this slide for convenience in mot- jug it back whenever a ballot is to be drop ped, which done the thumb is removed aul the cover is instantly to its place with à sharp snap.Tho number of each box is marked on tho slide cover, When the ballot papers and returns aro mado up at the close of the poll, they are put back into the box and the door again locked, Itis fur thor secured by an iron hinged strap which covers the key-hole, and by means of th knob koeps the slide firmly in its place.This strap at one end is inserted into th side of the box, and the other ond is fastened by a email padiock, On the opposite side a seal put on the strap com plotes closing of the box, and it is ready for ae livery to the Returning-officer.Every Pa vision is made for security, and ballot stu F- ing is not possiblo if the agonts of the didates have their wits about them.© ' only objection I have heard made gaine! the box is that it is too deep, and tales uw more room than is necessary.A shat one box would perhaps answer the purpose Je\u2019 as woll, but it would also be more conch ent for extracting ballot papers through ve- opening, if tho opportunity for s0 doing Lu sented itself to n tricky doputy reunmivs officer.In voting only one elector 5e mitted at a time, just so soon às his nd takon and a ballot paper and enve or nit handed him.A sccond ono may bo ad?w ted whilo tho first is marking his pap Immediately the ballot is returned = by deputy returning-officer and dropp™\u2019 him into the the box, the elector passes cu by another door.In this way H&J four may oasily bo recorded each hour, or hundred during tho day.na like Tho machinery of the system TNS fp clock-work ; thero is no distarbance 1 eon room, and nono of the wrangling 10 fasion that was inseparable from I voter booths under the old aystom.Lhe ; in and out and goes nt ness.Everything is so quielly dono LI the most sensitive lady in tho land tod to record her vote without being 81 eo As the slightest annoyance or provoca Onis of the new law does not allow the age! \u2018heir tho candidates to make known ors who friends outside the names of the elec Lar ch ol ra var \u201c4 the tis thr 1 tek (ul deny an von] H say ult pus con ( 119 to A uld N Cu now va us ind of ca \\ port For an Fral tion) loh lattd of tl prog Fre olli 1 Jung D \u201cor will S lias certd I tion al 8 I ma] line! part) nea] caus ties, now tio have Pay has | P; ame city hero from guer 205 Be CUTE was} CL ed rd Le Ed msm EE emg tt ved of > WME RO \u201cor bave pot voled, recourse was had hat will be promotod ; at tho passage of tho act reforming church On Monday, John Hastie, who vosidos \u2018 by à farmor to stop at home, but ho had this fact it is thought that the fire was the the importance of time for the process patronage in Scotland, near Allan's Corners, was severely hurt by made up his mind to come to Canada.Be- which will conduce to the religious welfare {a bull.At fi#Rt it was thought his injuries.foro laaving, his mastor told him that if he of tho people, because it removes the cause would prove fatal, but the latest word was wanted to roturn to England he would send of controveray ; and at the passage of the| that he was progressing favorably towards him tho money todo so.ilo bas a wife, Public Worship Regulation bill, which will recovery.and a daughter about fourteen yoars ot age.settle the form of worship of the Establish.| Parkhill, Ont., Aug.6.\u2014Mrs Simon Me- He says ho did not come away because he| grounded.Tho flames instead of spreading\u2019 them for four hours and one for ono hour ed Church.Leod, wife of the Recvo of this place, and could not got a living.In tho old country along the lower deck, at once shot up to the bofore the lecture.By the cloan sweop rer | be could just got a living and keop himself cabin and pilot-house, and then swept across - which was made of this food, it acomod as : sister of the Rev Dr Clarke, of Manitoba, ÿ ; ¢ hod .\u2018 CANADA.; ._ died yesterday and was buried to-day.Her Yospectable.But, said he, \u201cI could\u201d work the hurricane deck.Tho ngers wero if it were very palatable.We are informed servativos concerning the unfaithfu Great excitement is being occasionod in! all arousod, and tho boats lowered, and many that it is the intention of the rector of St.Cons , ; remains were followed to the cemotory by, All My life, or ns long as my strength would ling members of the party openly brand the Parish of St Bazile, County of Port tho largest concourse of people over wit, | allow me, and | should have nothing in the were carried ashore, but others in their\u2019 Gilos's to have similar lectures given from er Lead fer with being renegades, and of Neuf, by the occurrence of certain natural | possed in this vicinity.Tho principal end.Lf] got on well in Canada thero will fright jumped into the water, and thoso who time to time\u2019by competent persons; and ir\u2019 er id not in the power of any one to henomens, consisting of peculiar noises of places of business wero closed.bo a great many moro como from our place wero not drowned reached a safe landing-'so, it is confidently hoped that the pourest ! internal commotion in the earth and well: place, aflor drifting a long timo with the.inhabitants of § Giles's may be tanght to of course | isfaction of his accusers that than has over done bofore.\u201d This man was 0 satisfac i a: Last week wed- | done bo | ! of (i ou fo is untrue.This 18 ono of the defined shocks of earthquake frequently ro- ding took phate nt Spectator says nt wock a wed.instrumental in inducing twonty-seven oth current.The boat burned near the shore, | furnish their families with nutritious, pula.the charg curring.The noises vary from low distant 4 hecking of voters as they pus.re herd to the chock E this way tho runners or.wl + kopt posted, and every one Who ro- at- we looking after was attended to.One ity qu uence of the ballot in St Thomas town ri.SE hat amuaing.At the election in , a last tho Conservative candidate bad he Janus 89.513, This time it has been or 8 nap by 93, and speculation is rife among work of an incendiary.Another thooryfis, simmering on the fire.Time would not a.that one of the deck passengers while smok- low the poor women tasting the viands ing-dropped a spark from his pipe into the, which they had actually seon.prepared, but cotton.When the boat became unmanage- ; they woro invited to partake of tind ablo sho drifted on tho sand-bar, and there dishes, which had been on the fire, two of putmoroius features of the ballot, and your i DR etedtiae an understand that it is heartily os Dy the friends of tho favoured can- 6 didate.ere (EWS BY ATLANTIC, TELEGRAPH.© ndon Aug, 5.\u2014During the discussion of the Monde hip Regulation bill in the House of Com public Mr Disracli, referring to the strife between MU and State on the Continent, expressed the a) tion that, however tranquil might be the gen- cent tate of Europe, there wero agencies at work pree cal a period of great disturbance.Li on, Auje, 6,\u2014 There has been a terrible gale off Loue of Aberdecnshire, Scotland.Hundreds of de iug-bonts are overdue, and it is feared many of form have been lost.ol Gazette plbliche Terlin, Aug.6\u2014Tho Cologne Gazette publis ca a cram from Paris stating that in the Superior po of War, Gen.De Cissey, Minister of War, ps ded an immediate credit of 4,000,000 francs and de nb credit of one milliard francs for army Al nurposes.i.> , : ug.6.\u2014\"The Popolo Romano, (newspaper) ome Cabinet of the Vatican is negotiating to tain from the Government of Austria, France, and Portugal {he renunciation of their right of excluding adidates at the Papal election.Micneva, Aug.G\u2014It is reported that Father Hyacinthe has resigned iis curacy in this city, owing 10 # misunderstanding with the extreme wing of the \u2018atholics.cs au.GA circular note in relation to the ist insurrection, sent to the different European calé, Ly Senor Ulloa, Minister of Foreign Affairs, is shed tosday.Senor Ullon says that the Carlists, powel publi under the pretext of defending religion, aro guilty of oo diarisim, assassination, and pillage.In support ents, he instances the massacre at Cuen- ; lot.- ug.7\u2014Tho New Press, of this city, reports that the Duke Decazes, French Minister of Foreign Affairs, has complained to the British Gov- anment that Germany is secking a quarrel with France, The complaint is based on the conversation of July 30, between the Duke and Princo Hohen- Iohe, the German Ambassador at Paris, when the latter stated that Germany, irrespective of the action of the other powers, would take what steps it thought proper against the discriminations made by the French in favor of the Carlists, in violation of the c\\ligations of neutrality.\u2026 _.London, Aug.8.\u2014Mr Disraeli intends to visit Ire- lund at an carly day.Berlin, Aug.@\u2014The Cologne Gazette -snys the French Government have agreed to call the war ship ss 0rencque\u201d from Civita Vecchia, and that the vessel will probably quit the station before the 15th.St Petersburg, Aug.8.\u2014The Goloss says the Czar lus invited the son of the late Napoleon to witness certain military mana-uvres.Rome, Aug.8.\u2014The Pope has declared his intention to create four new Cardinals.Last night au artned Land of forty persons quitted the town of Tinala, and proceeded to Bologna destroying telegraph lines, and disarming the railway watchmen.The party were pursued by the military, who arrested nearly all, and seized their arms and ammunition.There has been some excitement in Bologna, caused Ly the organization of revolutionary socie- tics, but thege have Leen dissolved, ahd the town is now tranquil.Eight leaders of the Internationale have been arrested here, and other arrests have been made in Florence and other Italian cities.Papers were seized showing that the Internationale las been making great progress in Italy.Paris, Aug.11.\u2014Intensc dismay has been created umeng French Government Officials here and the city is wild with excitement over the nows received here this morning of the escape of Marshal Bazaine from the military prison on the Island of $¢ Marguerite, Bnzaine was sentenced in December Inst to 20 years' imprisonment for treason.Bombay, August 10.\u2014Disastcrous floods have occurred in Upper Scinde.Seveml towns have been washed away.London, Aug.11.\u2014The following are tho articulars of tho escape of Marshal Bazaino, he appartments occupied by the Marshal opened upon a terrace which was situatod upon & lofty and precipitous cliff over-hang- ing thosoa.A sentry was placed on tho terrace with orders to watch tho prisoner every moment.On Sunday evening the Marshal walked upon the terrace with Col.Villette, his aid do camp.At 10 o'clock he retived as usual, apparently to sleop, but before daybreak he had effected his cscape.le must have crossed the terrace in tho dead of night and oluding the sentinel, gain- ol tho edge of tho precipice; thenco by means of a knotted rope he descended to the sea.Tle evidently slipped during the descent, and toro his hands as the rope was found stained with blood in soveral places.Under the cliff in a hired boat were Bazaine's wife and cousin ; they received him as ho reached tho wator, and Madame Bazaine, taking the oars herself, rowed directly to the strange steamer which had been lying cussions, as if from the discharge of heavy mutterings to loud reverberations and con- ordnance, and somo affirm that they can tain stage one of these ladies thought fit to faint.distinguish the sound of rushing, troubled waters.Thoy are located on u small hill covering an éxtent of half a league, situated about half way between the River St Anne and the village of St Bazile.On Tuesday tho concussions wero so violent and throa- fled their homes and others are preparing to follow.Opinions are divided among the startled inhabitants as to whether fire or water will declaro itself, and tho result is looked for with much {ropidation.Morrisburg, Aug.1 On Monday morning, about one o'clock, a large cheese factory, owned by Messrs Chambérlain & Logan, situated on the river near tho Rapid du Plat, about three miles above this place, was discovered to be on fire, and in a short time, with all tho contonts, was completely destroyed, nothing being saved.The loss is about £3,000; no insurance.W,G, Parish, a former partner in tho factory, sold his interest to tho present owner about one month ago.\u201c Tho United States authorities,\u201d says the Kingston Whig, \u201chave for a number of years been engaged in survoying the water boundaries separating the Republic from Canada, tho ostensible object of the work being to furnish for commercial purposes accurate and reliable charts of the great lakes and St Lawrence River, which are issued to Canadian and American vessels tening that tho more immediate residents]; This action appeared to be a signal for a general fluttor, for the very next moment the other five bridesmaids fainted away successfully and in charming style.They choose auch effective positions and went through the entire performance without cyen rufiling a dress or spoiling their hair.Tn fact it was tie \u201cboss\u201d fuint of the season.On Saturday night last, a venerable old man came to the police station in Montreal, asking for protection.He gave Lis name ax Jolm Halliday, from Dundee, Scotland.© How old are you?\u201d asked tho sergeant.Oue hundred and two,\u201d replied the veteran, \u201cI was born in 1772, and have à son 76 years old!\" Ile further stated that he was a sail-maker Ly trade, and came over to Canada in October last to join three of his sons, who were, as ie supposed, living in Kingston, that on Lis arrival in that city he learned that they (all passed the prime of life) had moved away to Manitoba ; he was not prepared to go any farther than he bad got in search of them, and cone sequently he had remained there till lately, when he bad started back for Dundee.He said he was pen- Diless, but that lie Lad sent home to the \u201c bablies\u201d for money to take him back again, and expected a remittance very shortly.The old wan talked very scusibly, is not feeble, and bids fair to live another score of years.He must Le possessed of an iron constitution \u201cwhen he can withstand the depressing cf- fects of destitution among strangers and at his extremio age.The most destructive fire known in Montreal for vears Lroke out at 2 oclock Saturday morning in Henderson's saw mill on the canal bank.The fire lasted five hours.About $150,000 worth of property was destroyed and one life Jost.The fire originated near the engine room and spread rapidly across the street to a new tlour shed, nine hundred feet long, on St Joseph Basin, which was totally destroyed.The flames then communicated to the Steamer York, late the Huron, « partially completed dredge, belonging to the Harbor Commissioners, and an empty Large, the Davis, all of which were entirely destroyed.Forty piles of lumber were also burned.The losses, as near as can be ascertained, are ay follows : Henderson, $10,000, partly covered by instance.Gage & Cooper, who used part of the mill as a furniture factory, lost $10,000; insured for $7,000.Capt.Tate, of aliko, free of charge.Tho survey of the St Lawrence from St Regis to Kingston has already boen completed, and the surveyors aro now engaged in taking soundings of the harbour and vicinity, working westwards.Application was recently made by the director of the survey for permission to mako the usual survoy of that portion of the harbour lying within the line drawn from the Mur- ney martello tower to Point Frederick, which is that portion which calls for most accurate survey, it abounding with shoals which, in tho interests of navigation, should be carefully noted upon any chart making pretensions to usefuluess.That permission has been refused, however, the applicant being told last June that the Department would furnish the surveyors with a chart giving such general information as would be necessary for commercial purposes, which it has yet failed to do.\u201d Tho Whig, without professing to know the reason of the refusal, suggests that it may have originated in \u201cmilitary red-tapeism and sentiment,\u201d but we suspect that no European power would permit one of its harbours, in private waters, where there wore defensive military works, to bo surveyed by tho officers of another State.Mr St Julien, who was lately dismissed by the Local Government from the charge of Registrar of the County of Ottawa, on account of appropriation of funds and other malversations, has just been appointed Stipendiary Magistrato for tho Magdalen Islands by the Quobec Governmoxt.Ilo is now under bonds to stand his trial at the Court of Q.B.for his offences.The Quecbee Government scems to havo lost all shame.\u2014Waterloo Advertiser.The Montreal Witness of Thursday says : Last night about 11 o'clock a stabbing aftray occurred on St Catherine street by which a colored man named Benjamin Hubbard, whitewasher, received wounds which the attending physicians stato must result fatally.Tho disturbance which led to this fear- | ful result originated in a drunken quarrel between two young mon named Joseph Bolland, 19, dnd Frederick Anstead, 21,| shoemaker, St Charles Borrommee street.Belland\u2019s brother, who lives a little east of St George on St Catherine street, near where tho disturbance occurred, interfered : between the two men and brought young Belland through tho yard in front of his house, which is some distanco from the street.Ilubbard, who lives near by, Loing aroused by the noise, also assisted to quell | the disturbance, Lu his arrival was tho; Tate's Dry Dock, lost the steamer York, valued at $30,000 ; no insurance.The tlour shed, which cost $35,000, was not insured.\u2018The harbor dredge, worth $50,0¢0 ; iusured for $310,000.The machinery, which was being put in by Allen & Co, of Chicago, was dustroyed ; it is not known whether it was insured or not.James Tuwley, sashes and doors, lost $2,000; no insurance.The York and the dredge burned to the water's edge and sunk, A druggist sold to a man, under the iniluence of liquor, living at Mount Albert, Ont., a half a pound of Paris green to destroy potatao bugs.Passing thiough a field he lost the parcel, and two mules belonging to Me 'L.Harrison, owner of the field, sate it and were poisoned, They were sold at $300.Quebec, Ang.11.\u2014A long sitting of the Cabinet was held yesterday, but the mecting was of Larren result, and nothing definite was arvived at, save that it was determined to await the arrival of Hon Treasurer Robertson.The silence of the Treasurer is cause of na _uncom- mou anxiety tothe Ministry.Cablegram after enble- graif las Leen sent without response, Yesterday a dspatch was addressed him to to the Bank of Montic 1] in London, requesting lis immediate return, and it iis expected that if he is in the provinces the bank authorities will he able to reach him.Queber, 10.-The Licutenunt-Governor and Madame Caron visited tho French flagship this afternoon.Ilis Honor wasattend- ed by Major Amyot, A.D.C., and was received with a salute of nine guns.While men were ongaged harvesting wheat on the farm of Mr W.II.Lottridgo, Barton, Ont, his little sou, aged threo years, bad a miraculous escape from a most hor- riblo dgath.It seems that the little boy was in the field playing with a dog and that the two went into tho uncut grain a short distance in front of the reaper.The driver of the reapor saw the dog go in, but did not notico tho Loy until he came close up to him, and betord ho could stop his horses the revolving rake struck the child on the head and drow him within four inches of the knives of tho reaper.If tho horses had gonc onc stop further tho little innocent would have met with a most horrible death.The driver, with great presence of mind, did not move from his scat, but held the horses steady until the arrival of a follow- workman, who was called to his assistanco, and who took the child from his perilous position.Clifton, Aug.6.tho Great Western night watchmen found a man taking a box from a car in the G.W.R.About midnight one of bride.When the ceremony had progressed to # cer- ing the position of tho agricultural loborer | boat, and the passengers who jumped over on that side were nearly nll lost, or badly in somo parts of England at the presout time.burned.with one of the quecrest circumstances on record.| \u20acF8 to emigrate from the town of Burwell.i the flames enveloping the shore side of\u2019 the table and cheap food.Six pretty maids were in attendance on the blooming Those are only two or threo instances show- .| A rhort route has been found hetween ! China and Australin, & survey having bosn t his representative in this country.Tho whole of of these immigrants sent out Ly the Labourers\u2019 Union were under the immediate charge of Mr G.M.Ball a member of the Committee of the Union, and who has been delegated by Mr Joseph Avch us Mr Ball takes especial care in secing that the men|l under his charge obtain suitable situations, !i and that tho agreement between any ono of t them and their master is what it should Le.man who claims to be the.Inst to leave the Tho one hundred und seventy immigrants t who left Liverpooion board the Sarmatian, t and under the charge of\u2019 Mr Ball, wero thus | 1 disposed of : 21 stopped nt Kingston, 33 at Bowmauville, 5 at Newcastle, 1 at Quebec, |i and ho remaining 100 came on to Toronto, v some of them\u2019 being sent on to Ingersoll, Woodstock, and othor places out west, Thero wero also à number of domostic rer vants among thoso who arvrived at tho sheds this morning, aud suitable employment has has beon tound for all of them.\u2014Globe, Gh Aug.° UNITED STATES.1 A stalk of blue joint grass, twenty-cight | feot long, is tho latest Minnesota curiosity.\u2018That popular ballad, « Mother, bring my little kitten,\u201d is thus noticed : + L'he mew- sick is fair, ro fur as we are able to judge ; but the words seem to havo hoon scratched | off rather hurriedly, and strung out to such known to have been lost, and two ladios) vhores of Now-Guinoa wore saved without the use of them.Many \u2018ship Basilisk.sank by clinging to each other in the Water.\u2018 \"The fire was discovered about 4:30 A.M, n, time whon all the passengors wore uslcop.The crew scom to know little about it.males, and 20,617 females.shouting and crying as the flames burned tor in that city \u201clooking with a deop-moan- ing smile upon a largo lot of groen cucumbers in the market.\u201d was obsorved to whisper confidentially to several undertakers, with 1,200 tons of assorted merchandise, from Bt lives are known to be lost.and cargo is $130,000.iton to hold buck grain for better prices.Kern ave strong in the movement, and the consequence is but little wheat is loading here for forcign markets ° .: ; None who used life preservers are mydg of the hitherto unknown north-eastern by the British sen he total number of emigrants from lie.land in tho tiest six months of the prosent yenr wan 45,781, of whom 25,164 were As compared with the corresponding perind of 1873 there Was à decreaso of 14,359, lenvtlessness nnd heroism were displayed | n awful contrast.The officers oxerted hemsolvos nobly to save the passengors.À BIRTH.At Valleyficld, ou the Sth inst, the wife ot Me James T.Anderson, of a daughter.At Dundee Contre, on the Sth inst, the wite cd Mi Sanuel Millar, 2ud, of 8 daughter.DIED, At Dundes, on the 10th inst, of Diphtheria, John William, vecond son of Alexander Carnerets, wgod years and 5 months.At Huntingdon, August 12th, Henry Charles, only won of T.K.Milue, aged 6 months, At Godmuanchester, on the 9th inst, Jute, wile of David Smith, aged 77 years aud 4 months, MONTREAL PRODUCE MARKET.(Corrected weekly by Messrs Shaw & McFee, Commission Merchants, 96 Foundling at, Montreal.) BUTTER\u2014Store-packed Western, 715$ 220 ap § 31 Dairy, Faire to Goud ., , Soe 222 Choico Dairy.22 @ 2 CHEESE\u2014Faetory, Fine 4 104 @ 11 Finest Fuctory.A «æ M, PORK\u2014Mess, per 2604.A0 D 25,00 Thin \u201ca 22.000 qt 22.80 LARD, In tubs, & th, .13 @ A4 HAMS, Smoked, ÿ tb ont says the lust object he saw was a child, hreo years old, who was boyond his reach.t was alone, naked, dancing with pain and t.Not one of six small childron aboard Vas saved.A Davonport newspaper pouks of a doc Ou his way home ho Vicksburg, Aug.8.\u2014Tho steamer Henry Ames, wis for New Orleans, struck a snag last night near Vaterproof, snd sank in 23 feet of water.Only three The value of the boat San Féincieco, Aug.7.\u2014Fanucrs show a disposi- The Grant the present time, | : Schenectady, Aug, 11.\u2014While a circus and mena- a length that thero is a foline of reliol when | was on its way to Saratoga from here by last night's tho singer comes toa paws.\u201d Those ae-| bain, pions es standing nn ne Lie car, ainted wi \u2018 \"3; aule wa | truck the bridge a few miles south of Baliston de- quainted W ith the ballad will back up these ! malishing the cage and giving the animal its liberty.assertions, 1 0 | Lt made « dash through the field, returned and jumped À party of IHinois farm hands were 50 like a cat to the top of & car in which there wire three high-minded that they left the dinner (ablo Horses, and renching down hia paw attempted to seine because a negro wis invited to say grace.them through the bars ; it succeeded in injuring one Canvausedd rh.LL.A TALLOW #Mh.7 FLOUR\u2014H burrel, Superior Extra.6:25 Extra Superfine.4.00 Bpring Kxtm.6.24 Superfine, ,.blo Strong Bakers\u2019.580 2.60 fir fer.fn fii fu ar am fi PRES AL we A2) REY R Ge Glo 5,35 nan de 2.65 damago to the crops in Meoker County.A1 dispatch says tho destruction of crops is total along the line of tho storm, tenace, on Lake Pepin, the Baptist Church was struck by tightning and destroyed.' 1 Louisville, Ky., Aug.5.\u2014A Courier Journal special dispatch says that a fight oceur- red at a small village in Clark County, Ky, on election day, in which two white fen wore killed, two negroes mortally wounded, {4 and fifteen negroes more or less soverely |i wounded.The fight began at the polis, ; Out in Wisconsin a horse kicked and kil- | led a book agent, whereupon tho citizgns made n donation party for the horse, and he now has oats enough to last him a full horse lifetime.\u201cAro there any fools in this town,\u201d asked a ktranger of a newsboy yestorday, \u201c1 don't know.\u201d replied the boy ; \u201care you lancsome ?\u201d Maverick Square, Fast Boston, according to the Boston Traveller, has a curiosity that excites much intorest among those who have geen it.generally of à green colour, about the sizo | of the horse-flv.have taken up their abode in the trees in that loeality.\u2018I'heir mission seems to he the destruction of flies, They | ) i eh of the horses, but before doing any serious damage a cit St Paul, Minn , Aug.5.\u2014Tho north-wes- ruse was ndopted which resulted in its capture ; & calf tern part of Minnesota was visitod lastoven [in a field near by was thrown into a freight car when ing by a violent hail-storm.which did great | the lion jumped in after it aml was caught.At Fron.! New ITampshire.another puts Lis loss at forty tous vouring the lattor as fast as they appear.sonicthing said, stood np on a bench and flonrished a when outside Shaw told him the penalty of the nw xeized the murderer and sent him to Carlisle, whence, for fear of lynching, he was sent to Lexington, \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 also the: trinl of the Bishop of Parna for sending his Yo resiguation (o the Pope without cousulting the Govern.$5.ment, from Mr right on the temperance question, she fol lowing udditional reply by him to a correspondent on \\ \\ , ; the same subject in interesting.Me Philip of the Thonsands of a peculiar insect, Cockburn Hotel, Edinbdrgh, had written Mr Bright, his recent remarks, asking which was correct, to which Mr Bright replied :\u2014 Upper Canada Bag, @ 1001hs, I 2.76 ap OATMEAL, Upper Canada, & 2000s 5.50 fw Lower Canada, A.50 fr CORNMEAL, per barrel of 2001s.340 Au BUCKWIH EAT FLOUR, @ Lt 200k 2.50 ap WHEAT\u2014Upper Canada Spring GOfh 1,20 «db 1.35 White Winter.120222.1.15 @ 120 CORN, uh.Lee fev aaa .fie ih (TR A .fe Les OATS, @ 32h.en BARLEY, § 481.00 @ 116 BÉANS, # Goth.se @ Lu FLAXSEED A0m.1,40 @ 150 POTATOES, per bag, 00.,.000 fp 0.00 DRIED APPLES, th.00 fe 00 KGGS, per donen LL.see sa ae, NT fe IN Considerable activity In Butter and Cheon, pantie eulariy fine goods.Receipte taken on ncrival nt ?ipiotation.ST, GABRIEL CATTLE MARKET.Monday, Aux.10.All gradew of cattle sold off rapidly this mornivg, the supply being but moderate, The ast consignment of distitlery cattle of the snmer is reported to have agrived and were dixposed of nt from $5 25 de $5 75 per 100 tb.live weight, Grae cattle are inn very fair condition for the mason sil command $4 or Bheep and Lamim are enguired for, hut none in market ; the former are quoted at $4 4c $6 and the Intter $2 00 to 83 50.Hog, light arrivals $7 50 @ $7 75.In hides, pelts and tallow, thers in no change.\"Montreal, Aug.12.Giold 109.Greenbacks bought at 90§ conte, Silver 9 to 10.4.80 880 561 3.50 360 The grasshoppers are doing immense damage in toscaw-n, Canterbury, Franklin, andl other towns in One farmer estimates that they njured his hay crop to the amount of fifty tons, and They are now naking a raid upon the fruit and corn tassels, de- Cincinnati, Aug.11.\u2014Near Carlisle, Nicholas Co, Ky., yesterday, & man named Hamilton, while attend - ug the Methodist church, becoming offended at istol.Thomas Shaw, one of the trustees, succeeded n pacifying him and coaxing him out of door, and or his offence, whereupon Hamilton shot Shaw hrough the heart.The congregation came out and MISCELLANEOUS, New York, Aug.11.\u2014President l\u2019arda, of l\u2019eru, lise edered the expulsion of the Jesuits from the country | With reference to several letters recently published nclosing two versions that had appeared of none of Luntingdon.\u2014Greenbacks bought ut 594 to 00 cents.WANTED, 40 Clarges Street, London, June 6, 1874, Pian Si\u20141 have seen no report of what I Lave exude a viseid substance which attracts the | ga : but T have seen some extracts from newspapers, | A SMALL GIRL to assist in Honscwork.flies for &ome distance around, and to such an oxtent that none are fonnd in the houses in: the immediate vieinity.Tho exudation holds every fly touching it, while the insect quietly inserts a barbed tongue in the body of the fly.and completely eviscarates it.Tho romains of an immense number of flies lying upon tho ground heneath the trees whore these insects are doing their work boar witness to the extent of their philanthropic efforts, A Mississippian married a widow for her money, and on the wedding night possessed himself of the treasure and struck our.Unluckily for him his wife's daughter, a strap- Giving chase she overtook her paps, threw him down, tied him toa treo and corrected him with a hickory stick.but all more or less inaccurate, been times when I have doubted if I should lave adopt-d the same conrse\u2014not that L now doult, or | that I regret what was done thirty-five years ago.There is a great movement just now as to temper.| | BR.LEWIS will open a Singing School Saturday ance, Ld, tary conscience\u2014seems shocked at what was done at \"gist of ten days, two sessions a day, afternoon nud the late election.the thought that the publicans and heer sellers de- Concert.stroyed nn Governgpent, and installed another in its place, and that distillers and brewers were the best night.candidates for the Church and Conservative party, as most likely to secure the votes of publicans and beer eller, speak, # great reform might be effected; but without a! PEVHE Huy on the mamhes, on the cast half of Lot \u201c Middlin', mem\u2014jist middlin\u2019, nacthing ava, an\u2019 ithers we dag twice as muckle.\u201d | A.CHALMERS, SCHOOL.There may bave Apply to SINGING \u2018The publie consclence\u2014even tho arlismen- evening, at 7 30, August 15th, Term to con- \u2018There is a sense of humiliation at! evening.Terms $1.00, including all rehearsals and made known on Satunlsy | LR.LEWIS MARSIL HAY FOR SALE.Further particulars If the Christian Churches would move and | revival among them J fear not much can 1»: done.No.14, and on the enst half of Lot No.15, in The Sçotch Churches might banish whisky, Christian | the 1st Concession of St Anicet, will be wish bn pere zeal ping girl of twenty, observed the theft and itiuly, departure.and welfslenial can work wonders\u2014Yonrx cons wishing to purchase the same.For further Joux Buianr.particulars apply to the undersigned, Very Hann Lixgs \u2014 Well, Kirsty, how's business?\u201d JOHN BAWYER, Son.Some days we dae St Louk de Gonzagu ROBERTSON & GIBRH, A Goo Listeser-\u2014Tlev Gentleman-\u2014# Well, Tim, eee off the island sinco the previous evening, |si busiv , curd her 1 attempted t t him, Presently the brido appeared and joined her did you leave the letter at tho Squicea?\u201d Tim\u2014* I ADVOCATES, i A g.signal for abusive languago from both the|yurd here, and attempted to arrest him, .ppen Joine id y ve A r Tim\u2014= OULD intimate that their office nt Huntingdon ; Thoy reached the vessel in safety, woro |young men, \u2018and Josoph Belland struck when a scuflle ensued, in thecourse of which danghter in the castigation.The piteous did, yer Itiverence ; 1 cLetieve they're havin dinner, will be open on the 19th instant and scveral taken on board, and the steamer then put to Iubbard, the parties by this time being all the watehman shot the robbor, killing him, c'ies of the unhappy groom soon reached company vo Le tonte Raul fo often | days following.; sea.1t is thought that thoy have landed at |in the yard.Tho two men succeeded, how- | Ît is said that the thief fired first ; ho ran the cars of the polico,Svho burried to the - eC ; a qu .have [told you?Tiru\u2014\" Plase, your Riverence, I N s 1 p URE I 0 NE Y.tenon, as the steamer procecded in that |ever, in bringing Joseph Belland into the {about two hundred yards after being shot ; |Bpot.Tied to the voots of the treo wis the) niy listeneil withmy nos\u201d ; FRESH! divection.tommenced > The first nows of the affair came to Grasse, tho nearest placo on the const, ad tho magistrates immediately sent offi- tors In ovory direction to search for tho house, whero he was locked up in a room, ho had two other accomplices with him, and Hubbard sot out for his home.As ho approached the gate opening on the stroot | who escaped.Tho thief who was shot was named Durham, and resided in this vicin- husband of only a few hours\u2019 creation ; the step-danghter, with her clothes torn into threads, stick in hand, and rapidly re-/, On Saturday, 18th July a most audacious outrage | NE E J was perpetrated at & place called Guineabawn, near.MACHINE EXTRACTED.Mullingar.The house of Patrick Dardis, a farmer,\u2019 was ¢ntered by a patty of armed men, who fired sev.NLAVOUR equal to the best Comb Honey, at SL he saw Anstend there and ordered him ity.peating tho licks, hile the bride was punch.) BEG ERC throntened to mnrder the accupant if | LW.W.DALGLIESH'S axp J.C.BRUCE.fugitive.There was great commotion in \u2018away.Ansiead, however, replied with in-.Yesterday morning about onc hundred ing him in the ribs with her fist.calling |, \"gi not give up his house and farm within sven TSTUGY AND WABGON FOR BALE ~The sub- Marseilles when tho facts beeamo known.|sulting language and running up as the un-| immigrants arrived at the sheds from Que- him o robber, and demanding\u201d her money.An investigation was opened ; Colonel Vilot.to, who was walking with tho Marshal on tho evening of his escape, was discovered fortunate man says, without the least provocation, stabbed him first in tho side and then in the thigh.Hubbard succeeded in bee, they being part of the number of one hundred and seventy agricultural labourers The case was compromised by the return of the money, but the honeymoon was over.| ako, the Earl of Longford, the owner of the lands, po, days.Defore going away the ruffians entered the | : offers for Sale a threeeseated dout li cowhouse and shot a fine heifer dead, Twelve months : scriber offers Family Pleasure Waggon and a Double Waggon, iron Both are second-hand but are in good order.evicted the then tenant for non-payment of rent.ARCHD.HENDERSON, ; and their families sent out from [Fng-| The Dubuque Times tells a romantic! Dardis got possession, and ever since there has been à ee there and \u201cimprisoned.The Commandant walking in a neighboring house, leaving !|land under the auspices of the Labourers\u2019 little story about the marriage of Mr.N.L.} pad fectling existing towards him among the pes- \"PIE HUNTINGDON AGRICULTURAL of the fort of St Marguerite was placed un-|groat tracks of blood all along the side walk.Union.The mon are very good ropresenta- Alden of Dubuque and Mrs Abbie M.Orcutt santry.; ; \u2018 ! IMPLEMENT WORKS.\u20acr arrest, and General Lowal has gone to $iodical assistance was immediately procur- tives of the agricultural class, and with the A very interesting lecture was delivered : the Island to investigate tho affair.ndon, Aug.7.\u2014Parliament was pro- logued to-day by a mossage from the Queen, which was read by royal commis- fon.Her Majesty thanked both Houses or Yoting the annual grant to Prince Leopold.She states that the relations with all cd, but his case was declared hopeless, as his lungs woro completely pierced through.Coroner Jones was thon sent for, and also! Mr Cassidy, a magistrate, and Ilubbard\u2019's, bridgeshire, many of them being the lock- fortunate occurrence caused a rupture and But aided by the | they separated, sho remaining in Boston and In tho | nusisted passages and the money grant from he going to the West.deposition was taken, in which he dotailed the facts of tho caso 8 given above.exception of one or two, have all found ready employment.The men are principally from the connties of Suttolle and Cam- outs in the latter county.of Boston, which took place here on tho 22d ult.The bride and groom becamo ac- | uainted thirty years ago, and two years St Giles's schools, by Mr Buckmaster of the : ir ore ong 5 > science and art department of the South later wero engaged to bo married.An un- Fach was married und cheap cookery.The lecture was deli- recently, says the London Standard, at the! 8 wo have disposed of all our Mowers, Reapers, Rakes, and Corn Hoes, we are now prepared with & large number of of first-class Ti hreshing Machines for the Fall and Winter trade.We have now ready the following kinds :\u2014 - 24 inch Cylinder, Tron Shaft, Wido Riddles, Norway Iron Teeth, Kensington Museum, on the subject of plain vered under the presidency of the rector of meantime the police had arrested young!the Labourers\u2019 Union, they have been eu- without tho other's knowledge, and both | the parish, Rev Canon Nisbet, and wos Mowe wu ; \u201c .sien powers are friendly.Tho message Belland, who was in his mother\u2019s house, but | abled to rench Canada and mako a fresh had children, he five and sho three.About largely attended by the wives of working.24 \u201coo LE \u201c ; .urther \u2018says: Nogotiations have been undertaken for the renewal of the Reciprocity my formerly existing betweon Canada | nd tho United States.The negotiations, wt of hn by the desire and in the inter nada, have been temporaril suspended by the adjournment of tha Amer, can Sonate.They will be revived soon, and calle Will lead to an increase of commer- | ul interest between tho two countries.1 | soeply lament tho condition of Spain, and 10 earneetly desiring tho rostoration of | were unablo to obtain the namo or any information concerning tho principal offender.On the arrival of Detective Fahey he found that the assassin had fled through Belland\u2019s, house, passing through the back window, but no other trace of him was obtained be- ond his hat, which had been left behind.ith this clue, however, Fahey was enabled to find out the person who had committed the deed, and proceeding to his residence in St Charles Barrommeo street, he arrested Anstead there.After tho deposition of the start in life.Several of the mon express themselves well pleased at the prospect be- foro them, and seem glad to have escapod from the hare existence thoy were obliged to put up with in the old country.This is especially noticeable among the women folk.There is one man with his wife and eight small children who comes from Framling- ham, Suffolk.Mo had been in the parish Union for 16 days previous to coming ont to Canada, and when he was in work his earnings only amounted to thirteen shillings a just about 5 o'clock, when tho steamer was five years ago her husband died and over ajmen and by a number of district visitors 28 June and ladics connected with the Ladies\u201d Sani- the former lovers met in Dubuque made it tary Association which has promoted the: movement, ous ! prepared threo excellent dishes, consisting of two soups and one stew.The first soup had for its ingredients five pennyworth of meat, one pennyworth of bones, three farthings\u2019 Worth of carrots, one halfpennyworth of onions, and one halfpennyworth of herbs, making a total of two quartsof savoury soup for seven pence three-farthings.The second year ago his wife passed away.Last all up, and tho warriago bells rang again.Cincinnati, Aug.5.\u2014The telegraph opera tor at Aurora, Ind., reports that the steamer Pat.Rogers wns burned this morning, one mile below Aurora, and about fifty lives lost, the victims being principally ladies.Mr Holmes, the onginecr, gives the following account of the burning: lt was Parties wanting & good Throsbing Machine are reqnested to giv: ns a call.| ALL, MACHINES GUARANTEED AND Font SALE ON REASONABLE TERNS.THE ATHELSTAN SASH, DOOR, BLIND \u2014AND\u2014 GENERAL WOOD WORK MANUFACTORY.\u2018The lecturer had previously N addition to our Agricultural Implements, we have this spring completed extensive works at the Village of Athelstan for all our wood work, be- Py : sta i Sani i ides put in & number of firat-clasa mechines for the Peace and order in that country, consi d beon taken, the prisoners week.Certainly, two of the children are|opposite Loughery (\u2018reck, that flows into bad for its ingredients dripping, onions, pes rannfactare of \"on-interference ns most conduire there.| wars M rot into his presence, and no growing up ; onu à boy of eighteen, used to the Ohio River Pwo miles below Aurora, flour, potatnee, one egg, some parsley re a WINDOW BANHRS, BLINDS, DOORS, \u2018 Into, I am thankful that the famine in sooner had Anstead entered tho room than earn six shillings a week ; the girl, how-|that I noticed a bright light among some pint of milk.This furnished more thao | kinds wl URNIT , ndia has not boon attended with much | Hubbard exclaimed * That man with the|over, was not out at servico\u2014her ago is six- bales of cotton on the after part of the boat.two quarts for sixpence half-penny.\u2018 ° ands ll kin of 0: re services of à firatclass Mans- H mortality, which is due to the timely pro- + white shirt gave mo the deadly blow.\u201d Tho teen ; she other six are very small.Anoth- I hastened to the spot and found the cotton stew was a capital dish, consisting of od ee Ben \u2018had nearly 15 vears experience st the # emoons and measures taken by my Gov- prisoners having heard the deposition read ler man from Fordham, near Newmarket, burning rapidly, and boyond any possibility scraps of meat for twopence half penny and, ! Éariness in the United States, together with s caf of : \u201cmont.The Gold Coast is being gradunily | to them, were asked if thoy desired to put! Was ont of work owing tothe laborers\u2019 strike of being immodiately extinguished.1 hur- vegetables and flour at an additional cost of | workmen, We feel confident we can turn pont by Racided And reorganized, and the King of any questions.Anstead then naked Hub- | for nineteon weeks before coming out here.ried on deck and gave the alarm to the!twopence ; the whole being served for four | first-claas work to those who may Ny shantee is discharging his obligations.\"bard if he was positive that he struck the, When in work he was gotting twelve shil- ilot, and told him to ran tho boat ashore.| pence half.penny.The loctarer gave a Baliders and Con are Invited to give us Parti Message procecds to \u2018 éongratulate \u2018 blow, to which Hubbard answered \u2018 Yes.\u201d ; lings à weck, and during the strike he re- He had just turned her bead to the shore i clear statemont of the chemical \" ue of the = tractors 1 lisraent \u2018upon its work, \"and expresses Belland asked if ho was prosent when the coived nine shillings a weck.Ilo is marri- When she became unmanageable.The pilot, materials used, as supplying © Jarious \"i work guaranteed and on Reasonable ie Sone Jecause of the reductions in taxa- blow was struck.To this he anawered in ed.Another very respectable looking and |statos that ho could turn the wheel but the wants of the human frame.He went throug! For particulars apply st the ofice uni ; © passage of tho Fac act, b Which the health of women oe chitiren | the negative, adding that Belland was in the house at the time.intelligent man, who comes from Burwell, near Newmarket, had money offered him thinks the tiller-rope had been cut.steamer would not answer to her heln:.He the wholo process of making coach dish im ce Atheistan.From the presence of bis audience, insisting upon BOYD & CO., Proprietor.Huntingdon, 13th Aug, 1874. PAPE rf.2 mt WE AND OUR NEIGHBOURS.BY HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, CHAPTER X.> ' man, Mr St John, in the inno- Toa his heart, was À t of the temptations to which he exposed his tural.in the chants with a singular feeling of near.rate, kept her own little counsel.taous young disciple.© was serenely tified with the sight of Jim's handsome © and alert, active figure, ns he was enacting good shepherd over his unruly flock.Had he known the exact nature of the mo- tivos which he presented to lead them to walk in the ways of piety, he might have searched a while in primitive records before finding a churchly precedent.Arthur St John was by nature a poet and idealist.He was as pure ns achrysolite, as a flower, and being thus, had been, by the irony of fate, born on one of the bleakest hillsides of New Hampshire, where thero was à literal fumine of any esthetic food.His childhood had been fed on thedry husks of doctrinal catechism, To such an one the cool shades of the Episcopal Church, with its orderly ways, ita poetic liturgy, its artistic ceremonies, wore as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.No converts are so disposed to be ultra as converts, by reaction, and persons of a poetic and imaginative temperament are peculiarly liable to these extromes.Wearied with the intense and noisy clan- ; gor of modern thought, it was not strango if i he should come to think free inquiry an | evil, look longingly back on the ages of simple credulity, and believe that tho dark of intellect wore the bright ones of, faith.Without really going over to the: Romish Church, he proposed to walk that : path, fine as the blade that Mahomet fabled | as the Bridge of Paradise, in which he might secure all che powers and influences and advantages of that old system without its defects and corruptions.2, So he had established bis mission in one ! of the least hopeful neighborhoods of Now York.The chapel was a marvel of beauty, and taste at small expense, for St John was in a certain way an ecclesiastical architect and artist.gentle temperament, had the organizing | talent of the schoolmaster.No one could : be with him and not feel him ; and the intense purpose with which he labored, in: it.He marshaled his forces like an army, \u2014his eye was everywhere and on everyone.little children to come unto me,\u2019 and ho lelt a strange, now throb under his surplice.The throb alarmed him to the degree that fearod thut which Angie hud not even told to ber own mother'and sisters.To aay the truth, she perhaps she might be laughed he did not look in that direction again at as Quixotic or wanting in good sense in through all the services, though he certainly did remark certain clear, bird-like tones ing so much beyond the usual standard in thoughtfulness for others, and, se any Mr St ou.John know nothing about women in that Just about this time, St John, unconscious.claws of society, their works and ways, whero ly to himself, was dealing with forces of or how thoy got their dresses ; but he had a which no previous experience of lifo had von him a conception.He 1 out of £: vestry and walked to his solitary stud in a kind of mage of vague reverie, in whic general impression that fushionable Women were in heathen darkness, and spent on dress fabulous amounts that might given to the poor.He had certain floating views Iden hair and hazel eyesseemod strangely in his mind, when further advanced in his lent with moral onthusiasms.¢ What a ministry, of instituting a holy sisterhood, lovely spirit I\" ho thought ; and he felt as if who should wear gray clonks, and spend all he would far rathor have followed her out their money and time in deeds of charity.of the door than to have come to the cold, solitary sanctitios of his own room.Mr St John's study was not the sanctum, was stylish and becoming to an alarming On the present occasion he could see only the very patent fact that Angelique\u2019s dress of a self.indulgent, potted clergyman, but degree ; that, taken in connection with her rather that of one who took life in vory serious carnest.the sight of tho disabilities, wants and dan- ers, tho actual terrible facts of human ex- bright chooks, her golden hair, and gilanc- His first experience of \u2018ing hazel eyes, she was to the full as world- disturbances which formed his theme, pastoral lifs having beon among the poor, ly an objoct as n blue-bird, or an oriole, or' many-colored any of those britliant cregtyres with which it has pleased the Maker of ull to distract istence, had produced the effect on him that our attention in our pilgrimage through this they oflen do on persons of extrome sonsi- sinful and dying world.bility and conscientiousness.1lo could not.or a luxury while wants so terriblo stared him in the face, and his study, consequent.Angio was so fur from assuming to herself | think of retaining for himsolf an indulgence any morit in this sacrifico that her only thought was how littio it wopld do.Had it been possible and proper, she would have v TIES hes religion as hes housekeeping.She adbered strict- ! i Iy to ber own church, in which undeniably none but ancient and respectable families w and where she was perfectly sure that whatever dress or duportient she saw wag certain to be the right thing.nw was # church of eminent propriety.It was large and lofty, with large drawn aisles and excellent sleeping accommodations, where the worshippers were assisted to dream of heaven by every appliance of sweet music, and not rudely shaken in their slumbers Ly uny obtrusiveness on the part of the rector.The rector, the Rev Dr Cushing, was & good.amia- | + ble man, middle-aged, adipose, discreet, devoted to \u201c our excellent liturgy,\u201d and from bis heart opposed to anything which made trouble.Ou this particular morning he had selected that well-worn text, ¢ Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers | of Damascus, better than all the waters of Jordan, may 1 not wash in them and be clean 7 Uf course, like everybody who preaches on this ; text, he assumed that Jordan was the true faith as he\u2019 preached it, and that the rivers of Damascus were! any and every faith that diverged from Lis own., And as lio plaintively recited his exhortations, his | voice coming in à solemn and spectral tone adown the fur-off aisles, it seemed to give a dreamy and un.rel effect even to the brisk modern controversies and - The gorgeous, lights streamed silently the while through the stained windows, turning the bald head of ore ancient church-warden yellow, and of another green, and another, pyrple, while the white feathers on Mrs Demas's bonnet passed gradually.through suce cemsive tints of the rainbow and the audience dosed off \"at intervals, and awakened again to find the rector at i another head, and talking about something else ; and : so ou till tho closing ascription to the Trinity, when {everybody rose with a golemn sense that something or otler Was oyer.\"Fhe grenter pajt of the audjence ly, was furnished in the ascetic rather than willingly given hor ermine cape to the poor, ij the intervals of somnolency congratulated them.che esthetic stylo.Its only ornaments were wan little child, to whom the mere toach of | sclves that they wero in no danger of running after dovotional pictures of u severe modirval type and the books of 8 well-assorted ibr.ary.There was no carpet; there were no| lounging chairs, or sofas of ease.In place was & prie dieu of approved antique pattern, on which stood two wax candles and Iny bis, prayerbook.A crucifix of beautiful Italian | workmanship stood upon it, and it was, churchly color of the season.tired with work which had begun carly in| the morning, with scarce an interval of reit was such a strange, bewildering luxury ; but she had within herself a spico of practical common sgnsp which showed her that cour raost sacred impylscs 4g pot always to to literally obeyed, Yet, while the little scarred check was resting on her ermino in sneh apparent bliss, there mingled in with the thread of .scrupulously draped with the appropriate her instructions to tho children a determin.:8tion next day to appraize cheap furs, and As we have said, this room seemad seo if she could not EF \u201cstrangely lonely as ho entered it.llo was a cape of her very own, oss the little ono with Angie's quiet common sense always siocd her in good stead in moderating her enthu- pose, and a perversely shocking ides pro-jsiasms, and even carried her at times to the St John, like many men of seemingly \u2018sented itself to his mind\u2014how pleasant it'length of differing with the rector, to whom \u2019 would be to be met on returning from his | sho looked up as un angel guide.ample, when ho had oxpatistol an the pro- «priety and superior sanctity of coming fast-i labors by just such a smile as he hud seen beaming down on the poor little girl.For ex- When he found himself out, and discover- jing to tho Loly communion, sensible Angie season and out of season, carried all beforo ; ©d that this was where his thoughts were had demurred.3 running to, he organized a -manly rosist-! ance ; and recited aloud, with unction and i i i ingi .emphasis, Moore's exquisite version of St | He trained his choir of singing boys for pro Jerome's \u2018opinion of what the woman should should have such a siek-headacho that I cessional singing ; He instructed his teachers, ho superintendod and catechised bis school.In the life of incessant devotion to the church which he led, woman had no place except as an obedient instrument.le! valued the young and fair who flocked to, bis standard simply and only for what they could do in his work, and apparently had no commerce of society.| Yet it was true, as Jim said, that his eye | bad in some way or other been caught by Angelique ; yet, at first, it was in the way : of doubt and inquiry, rather than approval.- Angelique was gifted by nature with al certain air of piquant vivacity, which gave: to her pretty person the effect of a French picture.In beart and character she was a rfect little self-denying eaint, infinitely Ramble in her own opinion, devoted to do- | ing good wherever her hand could find it, and ready at any time to work her pretty fingers to the bone in a good cause.But yet undeniably she had a certain stylo and air of fashion not a bit like ¢ St Jerome's love\u2019 or any of the medieval saints.She could not help it.It was not her fault that ber little hats would set so jauntily on her pretty head, that her foot and ankle bad such : 8 provoking neatness and that her daintily gloved bands had a hundred little graceful movements in a moment.Then her hair had numberless mutinous little curly wur- lies, and flew of itself into the golden mists of modern fashion : and her almond-shaped hazel eyes had a trick of glancing like a bird's, and she looked always as if a smile might break out at any moment, oven on solemn occasions all which were traits to inspire doubt in the mind of an earnest young clergyman, in whose study the pictures of holy women were always lean, long- favored, with eyes rolled up, and looking as if they never had heard of a French hat or a pair of gaiter-boots.He watched her the first Sunday that she sat at the head of her class, looking for all the world like a serious- minded canary bird, and wondered whether so evidently airy and worldly a little creature would adapt berselfto the earnest work before her ; but she did succeed in holding à set of unpromising street-girls in a sort of enchanted state while she chippered to them in various little persuasive intonations, made them say catechism after her, and then told them stories that were not in any prayer- book.After a [little observation he was convinced that she would \u2018do.\u2019 But the habit of watchfulness continued ! On this day, as Jim had suggested the subject, Alice somehow was moved to remark the frequent direction of Mr St John's eyes.Von this Sanday Angelique had had the misfortune to don for the first time a blue suit, with a blue velvet bat that gave a brilliant effect to her golden hair.In front of this hat, nodding with every motion of her head, was a blue and gold humming bird.She wore a cape of ermine, and her class seemed quite dazzled by her appearance.Now Mr St John had worked vigorously to get up his little chapel in blue and gold, gorgeous to behold ; but a blue and gold teacher was something that there was no churchly precedent for\u2014although if we look into the philosophy of the thing there may be the same sort influence exercised over street barbarians by a preuil -dressed teacher as by a prettily- chorch.But as Mr St John at Angelique, and wondered whether it was quite the thing for her to look so striking, he saw a little incident that touched his heart.There was a poor, pinched, wan-visaged little girl, tho smallest in the class, whose face was de formed by the scar of a fearful burn.She seemed to be in a trembling ecstacy at Angie's finery, and while she was busy with ber lesson stealthily laid her thin little band upon the ermine cape.Immediately she was sharply roved by a coarse, strong, older sister, who had her in charge, and her band rudely twitched back.Angie turned with bright, astonished eyes, and seeing the little creatare cowering with shame, beamed down on her & lovely smile, stooped and kissed her.\u2018You likeit, dear?she said frankly.¢ Sit up and rest your chesk on it if you like,\u2019 and Angie gathered ber a ond went om telling of the 8 , Arthur St Jobn took the whole meaning of the incident.It carried him back be catacombs to something more be whom a true priest might love.¢ Who is the maid my spirit seeks, © I must teach my class,\u201d she pleaded with hevsolf, \u201cand if I should go all that long way up to church without my broakfust I couldn't do anything properly for them.I'm always cross and stupid when that Through cold repront and slander's blight?comes on.\u2019 Has she Love's roses on her chooks ?Is hers an eye of this world's light ?No\u2014wan and sunk with midnight prayer Are the pale looks of her I love; Or if at times a light Lo there, Its beam is kindled from above.I choose not her, my heart's clect, From those who seek their Maker's shrine In gems and garlands proudly deck'd As if themselves were things divine.,, No\u2014~Heaven but faintly warms the breast | That beats beneath a broider'd vail; And she who comes in glitt'ring vest To mourn her frailty, still is frail.Not so the faded form | prize And love, because its bloom is gone ; The glory in those sainted eyes Is all the grace her brow puts on.And ne\u2019er was Benuty's dawn so bright, So touching, as that form\u2019s decay Which, like the altars trembling light, In holy luster wastes away.\u2019 ¢ Cortainly, not in the least like her.\u2019 he; thought, and he resolved to dismiss the little hut with the humming bird, the golden: mist of hair, and the glancing eyes, into the category of vain thoughts.and sincere young clergyman, had under.| taken to be shepherd and bishop of souls! with more knowledge on every possible sub.| ject than the nature of the men and women | he was to guide.A fastidious taste, scholarly habits, and | great sensitiveness, had kept him out of society during all his collegiate days.1lis\u2019 life bad been that of a devout recluse.Ile know little of mankind, except the sick and , and who had for nothing the vision of his handsome face and the charm of his melodious voice amid the dirt and dicomforts of their sordid poverty.But fashionable young women, the gay daughters of ease and luxury, were to him rather objects of suspicion and apprehension than of attraction.Ifthey flocked to his church, and! seemed eager to enlist in church work under his leadership, he was determined that there should bo no sham in it.In sermon after sermon he denounced in stringent terms the folly and guilt of the sentimental re- | ligion which makes playthings of the solemn rituals of the church, which wears the cross ss à glittering bauble on the outside, and shrinks from every form of the real self denial which it symbolizes.Angelique, by nature the most conscientious of beings, had listened to this elo- uence with awful eelf-condemnation.She elt hersolf a dreadfully sinful little girl, hitherto,'and she undertook her Sunday- school labors with an intense ardor.When she came to visit in the poor dwellings from whence her pupils wore drawn, and to see how devoid their lifo was of everything which she had been taught to call comfort, sho felt wicked and selfish for enjoying even the moderated luxuries allowed by her father's reduced ition.The allowance that had been given her for her winter wardrobe seemed to be more than sho had a right to keep for herself in face of the tor- rible destitutions she saw.Secretly sho set herself to see how much she could save from it.She had the gift of a quick eye and of deft fingers, and so, after running through the fashionable shops of dresses and millinery to catch tho ideal of the hour, she went to work for horself.A faded merino was ri , , and, the aid of clever pat.ripped skillful band, transformed Rie the stylish blue suit.The little blue velvet hat bad been gathered from the trimmings of an old dress.The humming bird had been a necessary appondage to cover the Plecing of the velvet, and thus tho ontfit which had called up so many alarmed scru les in Mr St John's mind was as complete a work of selfdenial and renunciation as if she had come out in the black robe of a Sister of Charity.The balance saved was, in her own happy thought, devoted to 8 Christmas outfit for some of the poorest of her scholars, whose mothers struggled hard and sat up late washing and mending to make them decent to be seen in Sunday-achool.youd the atthentio, even to Him who sid, \u2018Suffer Bat how should Mr St John know this, good was better than sacrifice.\u2019 Thus Angie concluded by her own little light, in her own separate way, that \u2018 to do Novertho- less, she supposed all this was because she him headache, but he was so good he went on just as well with a headache as without \u2014und Angie felt Low fur she must rise to Le like that.\u2018Thero now, said Jim Fellowstriumphant- ly to Alice, as they were coming home, \u201cdidn\u2019t you see your angel of the churches looking in a certain direction this morning ?Alice had, as a last resort, a fund of reserved dignity whicl; she could draw upon whenever sho was really and deeply in.earnest, \u201c Jim) she said, without n smilo, and in a\u2019 grave tone, * I have confidence that you are a true friend tous all ¢ Well, I hope so,\u201d said Jim, wonderingly.\u2018 And you are too kind-hearted and con siderate to wish to give real pain.\u2019 ¢ Certainly 1 am.* Well, then.promise mo never to make remarks of that nature again, to me or any- would be more distressing and annoying to her than anything you could do; and the dear child is now perfectly simple hearted and unconstrained, and cheerful as a bird in her work.The least intimation of this kind might make her conscious and uncomfortable, and spoil it all.So promise me now.\u2019 Jim eyed his fair monitress with the kind of wicked twinkle a naughty boy gives to his mother, to ascertain if she is really in f sweet, austere com she expected to bo obeyed.¢ Well, I perfectly long for a hit at St John,\u2019 he said, ¢ but if you say so, 80 it must 0.* You promise on your honor ?insisted Alice.¢ Yes, I promise on my honor ; so there !' said Jim.I won't look even with an eyelid in that directign.I'll make a perfect stock und stone of myself.But, he added, ¢ Jim can have his thoughts for all that.\u2019 ; Bew ideas, the true Jordan they were happy to find , Ian dircetly through their own particular church, and , they had only to continue their stated Sunday naps on j its borders as before, , Mrs Wouvermans, however, was not of a dozing or ihreimy mature, Her mind, such as it was, was al- wayg wide awake and cogpizan of what she yas about.She was not mysceptible of a dreamy state ; to ysc an idiomatic phrase, she was always up and dresaed | every thing in her mental vision was clear cut and exact.\u2018The sermon was intensified in its effect upon her by the state of the Van Arsdel pew, of | which she was on this Sunday the only occupant.The Van Arsdel pew was a perfect fort and intrenchment of respectability.It was a great high, sqyaze wall pew, well cushioned and ample with an imposing artay \u2018oi piaye;-books ; there was room there for à regiment of suints, and hero she sai on this pleasant Sunday listening to the dangers of the church all alone, She felt in a measure like Elijah the Tishbite, us if she only were left to stand up for the altare of her faith.Lyrs Wouyermang was not à person to lct an evil run on very far vilkout a protest.While she was \u2018musing the fire burned, and when she had again mounted guard in the pew at afternoon service, an still found herself alone, she resolved to clear her cone science, aud so she walked straight up to Nelly's to see why none of them were at church, \u201cIt's a shame, Nelly, a perfect shame | There wasn't a creature but myself in our pew to-day, and good Dr Cushing giving such a sermon this morning.This to Mrs Van Arsdel, whom shs found luxuri- | ously esconpesl on à sofa drawn up before the fire in \"her bed-ruora.© Aly, well, the fact is, Maria, 1 had such a headache this morning,\u2019 veplicd she, plaintively.¢ Well, then, you ought to have made your husband owas £0 low down in the moral scale, for did | and family go\u2014somebody ought to be there ! It posie \u2018not Mr St John fast ?\u2014doubtless it gavel tively isn't respectable, © \u201cAl well, Maria, my husband, poor man, gets so i tired and worn out with his week's work, I haven't a | heart to get him up early enough fur morping service.Mr Van Arsdel swt feeling quite well lately ; he hasn't been out at all to-day.* Well, there are the girls, Alice and Angelique and | Marin, where are they \u2014all going up to that ritualistic {chapel, F suppese, Its too bad.I told you in {time of it just where it would lead to.It leads straight to Rbme, just as I said.They have lighted {candles on the altar cvery Sunday, and Mr St \"John prays with his back to them, and has processions, and wears all sorts of heathenish robes ; and your daughters go there, Nelly.The very plumes ju Aunt Maria's hat nodded with warning energy as she spoke.tAre you siyre the candles are lighted?\u2019 said Mrs ; Van Arsdel, sitting up with à weals show of protest, {and looking gravely into the fice.\u2018I was up there | once, and there were candles on the altar, to be sure, but they were not lighted.\u2019 1 \u201cThey are lighted, said Mrs Wouvermans, with lawful precision, \u2018Ive been up there myself and i seen them, Now, how can you let your children run at loose ends so, Nelly.I only wish you had heard the sermon this morning.A \u201cWell, I don\u2019t know what we can do,\u2019 said Mrs Van Mr St John, like many another ardent body else, about Angie and Mr St John, \u2018It: Arsdel, helplessly.| \u201cAnd we've got both kinds of trouble in our family, Eva's husband is reading all What's-his-name\u2019s works, that evolution man, and all that; and then Eva and the girls going after this St John, and he's leading right straight to Rome ay they can go! Poor Mrs Van Arsdel wag somewhat fluttered by this alarming view of the case, and clasped her white fut hands, that glittered with rings like lilies with dew drops, and looked the image of gentle incapable perplexity.\u2018Tdon't believe Harry is an infidel, she said at last.¢ He has to rend Darwin and all those things, decrepid old women whom he freely visited j earnest, but Alice maintained a brow of beciuse he has to talk about them in the magazine ; sure,\u2019 and looked as if and as to Mr St John\u2014you know Eva is delicate and can\u2019t walk so far as our church, and this is right round the corner from her ; and Mr St Jobn is a good man.Ho docs ever so much for the poor, and almost supports a mission there ; and the Bishop doesn't forbid him, and if the Bishop thought there was any danger he would.* Well, I cat think, for my part, what our Bishop can be thinking of; said Aunt Maria, who was Lraced up to an extraordinary degree by the sermon of the morning.\u2018I don\u2019t sce how he can let them go on so \u2014with candles, and processions, and heathen robes, and all that.l'A process \u2019em out of the church in quick time Tf I were he I'd have all that sort of trumpery cleaned out at once, for juat sce where it Alice was not exactly satisfied with the\u2018 leads to! I may not be as good a Christian as I onght position assumed by her disciple ; sho there- oro proceedes] to fortify him in graco by to be\u2014we all have our shortcomings\u2014but one thing I know, I'd no more have such goings on in my dio- .) than I'd have moths i , some farther observations, delivered in a orm right ¢ tavo mothe du my carpet | Id sweep vory serious tone.¢ For my part,\u2019 sho said, «I think \u2018nothing \u2018em right out ! said Aunt Maria with a gesture as if she held the besom of destruction, Mrs Wouvermans belonged to a not uncommon is in such bad taste, to sny tho least, as the class of Christians whose evidences of piety are more foolish way in which some young poople will allow themselves to talk and think about an unmarried young clergyman, while feolings far above their comprehension, Tho very idea or suggestion of a flirtation between a clergyman and ono of his flock is utterly repulsive and disagreeable.\u2019 simply interposed the question : ¢ What is flirtation ?' Alice, with heightened color.pretend you don't.\u2019 « Oh,\u2019 said Jim.voxation.very provoking.\u2019 say,\u2019 said Jim, in an injured tone, aro.\u2019 now you're not pleased.rough on a fellow.\u2018 Oh, come,\u2019 said Alice, scolding you.\u2019 Jim Ÿ ; Aunt Maria coming from church.CHAPTER XI.was just returning howe after performing her Here Jim, with a meek gravity faco, \u2018 You know now as well as I do,\u2019 said *I'm sure 1 givo in to everything you Ï tell you its ofgoing punctually to church ap; aughed too, and felt triumphant : and just thon they turned a corner and met Son wer fase When Mrs Wonvermans met our young friends, she and money, and thought that family devotions in one of the most time-honored ch bes me coming ork nes! churc me coming out of church.He in Now York.She was as thorough and faithfol in Mre Wouvermans, your young Indies Rave deserted tod vigorous in hating than in loving.There is no manner of doubt that she would have made good her word had she been a Bishop.Oh, well, Maria, said Mrs Van Arsdel, drawing her that she had lived so unprofitable a life he is absorbed in duties so serious and has | knit zephyr shawl about her with à sort of consolatory movement, and settling berself cosily back on her sofa, \u2018 it's evident that the Bishop doesn't see just as as you do, and I am content to allow what he doer.As to the girls, they are old enough to judge for themselves, and besides, I think they are doing some good by teaching in that mission school.I hope so, at least.Any way, 1 couldn't help it if I would.But, do tell me, did Mrs Demas bave on her new Lonnet ?\u201cYes, she did, said Aunt Maria, with vigor; \u2018and I tell you it's a perfect fright, if it did come from * Youneodn\u2019t Paris.Another thing I saw\u2014fringes have come round again! Mrs Lainar's new cloak was trimmed J * Well, then, I suppose with fringe.: for some ways jm walked air of olan plating all the possible consequences of this change.humility, as if in a deop study, and Alice, with checks getting redder and redder with \u2018You don't say ro,\u2019 sald Mrs Van Arsdel, contom.\u2018There was snother reason why I couldn't out this morning,\u2019 she added, rather irrelovantiy=\u2014\u2018T bad no bonnet.Adrienne couldn't got the kind of ruche necessary to finish it till next week, and the old one « Now, Jim,\" sho said at last, ¢ you are in too shabby.Were the Stuyvesants out 7 \u2018Oh, yes, in full force.She has the samo bonnet she wore last year done over with a now father.\u2019 \u2018Oh, well, the Stuyvesants can do as they please, said Mrs Van Arsdel; \u2018everybody knows who they \u2018 But you act just as if you were making \u201cre, let them wear what they will.fun all the time; and you know now you \u2018Emma Stu sacque trimm Maria, csant had a new Paris hat and.a with bullion fringe,\u2019 continued Aunt ¢ I thought I'd tell you, beca: \u2018Upon my word I don\u2019t know what you what 1 again; its Just ae moan, 1 have assented to every word Jou good ag over] Veet dress over said\u2014givon up to yon hook and line\u2014and again; it's just as \u201880 I can'\u2014and for a moment the great advantage to Mrs Van Aredel.* Did yon seo Sophia Sidney ?\u2018Yes.She was gorgeousin a mauve suit with a laughing at the hat to match; b absurdity of the quarrel ; * there's mo use in ye th lemony S00 OF temily fn ber looks\u2014yellow as & lemon,\u2019 * Who else did you see ?said Mrs Van Arsde) liked this topic of convermtion bestor than the\u2019 der \u2018Oh well, the Davenports were there and the Liv.Iogsoncy, and of course Polly Ellmore, with her tribe looking like birds of paradise.The amount of time, ves to dress in Sud spoke to wisi us ; you musn't suffer them to stray from the fold,\u2019 says Le.1 saw he bad his eye on our pew when he first came iuto church.: ¢1 think, Maria, you really are quite absurd in your suspicions about that wan,\u2019 said Mrs Van Arsdel.\u201d \u201cI don't think there's anything init\u2019 f Well, just wait now sce.I know more about it than you do.If only Alice manages her cards right she on get that man.ards $ e never will manage c Or Any pur , Bhe is too proud for that.She hasn't à Vit of policy.\u2018And there was that Jim Fellows waiting on her home.I met them this morning just as I turned the corner.\u2018Well, Alice tries to exert a good influence over Jim, and has got him to teach in Mr Bt.John's Sunday- school.\u2019 Fiddlesticks ! school ?¢ Well, the girls all say that he docs nicely.He has more influence over that class of boys than any body else would.\u2018 Likely ! Set à rogue to catch a rogue,\u201d said aunt Maria.\u2018It's his being so much with Alice that I'm thinking of.You muy depend upon \u2018it, it hana bad effuct, Mrs Van Arsde] dreaded the setting of Ler sister's mind in this direction, so by way of effecting a diversion she rang and inquired when tea would be ready.As the door opened, the sound of merry singing came up stairs\u201d Angelique was seated at the piano and playing tunes out of one of the Hunday-school manuals, nnd the whole set were singing with might end main.Jim's tenor could be heard above all the rest.¢ Why, is that fellow here ?said Aunt Maria, \u201c Yes; said Mrs Van Arsdel ; \u201che very often stays to tea with us Sunday nights, and him and thy giils sing hymns together\u2019 co \u2018Hymns !' said Aunt Maria.¢ I should call that a regular jollification they were having down there.* Oh, well, Marin, they are singing children's tunes out of onc of the little Sunday-school manuals.You know children\u2019s tunes are so different from old-fash- foned psalm tunes! Just then the choir below struck up ¢ Forward Christian Soldier\u2019 with à marching energy and a vivacity that was positively staytiing, and fo te sure not in the least like the old long-drawn, dolorous strains once supposed to be peculiar to devotion.In fact, one of the greatest sigus of progress in our modern tunes is the bursting forth of religious thought and feeling in childhoad and youfh in sirius gay and airy as hope and happincss~melodies that might have been learned of these Lright little \u2018fowls of the air\u2019 of whom the Master bade us take lessons, so that a company of wholesome, right-minded young people can now get together and express themselves in songs of joy, and hope, and encrgy, such as childhood and youth ought to ba full of Let those who will talk of the decay of Christian faith in our day, so long as songs about Jesus and his love are bursting forth on every hand thick as violets and apple blossoms in June, so long as the little Sun- day-school song books sell by thousands and by millions, and spring forth every ycar in increasing num.bors, go long will it appear that faith is ever frech- springing apd vital.ft wag the little children in the temple who cried, ¢ Hosanna to the Son of David, when chief priest and scribes were scowling and saying, \u2018 Master, forbid them, and doubtless the came fear Master loves to hear theze child-songs now as en, At all events our little party were having a gay and festive time over two or three new collections of Silver Clarion, Golden Chain, Golden Shower, or what not, of which Jim had brought a pocketful for the girls to try, and certainly the melodics as they came up were bright and lively and pretty enough to stir one\u2019s blood pleasantly.In fact, both Aunt Maria and Mrs Van Arsdel were content for a scason to leave the door open and listen, \u2018You sce; said Mrs Van Arsdel, \u2018 Jim is such a pleasant, convenient, obliging fellow, and has done so any civil turns for the family, that we quite make him at hoe here\u2014we don\u2019t mind him at all.Isa pleasant thing, too, and & convenience, now the boys are gone, to have some young man that one fecls perfectly free with to wait on the girls round ; and where there are so many of them there's less danger of anything particular.There's no earthly danger of Alice's being specially interested in Jim.He isn't at all the person she would ever think seriously of, though ahe likes him as a friend) Mrs.Wouvermans apparently acquiesced for the time in this reasoning, but secretly resolved to watch appearances narrowly this evening, and if she saw what warranted the movement to take the responsibility of the case into her own hands forthwith, Her erfect immutable and tranquil certainty that she was fhe right person to manage anything within the aphere of her vision gave her courage to go forward in spite of the fears and remonstrances of any who might have claimed that they were parties concerned.Mr Jim Fellows was one of these persons in whom a sense of humor operates as a subtle lubricating oil through the internal machinery of his mind, causing all which might otherwise have jarred or grated to slide easily.Many things which would be a torture to more eurnest people were to him a source of amusement, In fact, humor was so far a leading faculty that it was difficult to keep him within limits of propricty and decorum, and prevent him from rnc- ing off at unsuitable periods like a kitten after a pinball,skipping over all solemnities of etiquette and decorum.He had not been ro long intimate in the family without perfectly taking the measure of so very active and forth-putting a member as Aunt Maria.He knew exactly\u2014as well as if she had told him\u2014 how she regarded him, for his knowledge of character was not the result of study but that sort of clear sight which in persons of quick perceptive organs seems like a second sense.He saw into persons without an effort, and what he saw for the most part only amused hii, He perceived immediately on sitting down to tea that he was under the glance of Mrs Wouvermans's watchful and critical eye, and the result was that he became full and ready to boil over with wicked drollery.With an apparently gravo face, without passing the limits of the most ceremonious politeness and decorum, he contrived, by a thousand fleeting, indescribable turns and alidifi intonations adroit movements to get all the girls into a tempest of suppressed gaiety.There are wicked rogues known to us all who have this magical power of making those around them burst out into indiscreet sallics of laughter while they retain the most edifying and innocent air of gravity, Scated next to Aunt Maria, Jim managed, by most devoted attention and reverential listening, to draw from her a zealous analysis of the morning sermon, which she gave with the more heat and vigor hoping thereby to reprove the stray sheep who had thus broken boundaries, Her views of the danger of modern speculation, and her hearty measures for its repression were given with an carnestness that was from the heart.\u20181 can't understand what anybody wants to have these controversies for, and listen to these infidel philosophers.I never doubt, I never have doubted.I don't think I have altered an iota of my religious faith since I was seven years old, and if I had the control of things I'd put & stop to all this sort of uns.¢ You then would side with his Holincss, the Popo, said Jim.\u2018That's precisely the ground of his last allocution! * No, indecd, I shouldnt.Dr Cushing showed this morning, it's the greatest danger of our day; and I think that Mr 8t John of yours is nothing more than 8 decoy duck to lead you all to Rome.1 went up there once and saw \u2018em genuflucting, and turning to the East, and burning candles, and that's all I want to kuow About them\u2019 But Mm Wouvermans was morc gracious to Jim that evening than usual, and when she ross to go home that young gentleman offered his attendance, and waa accepted with complacency.Mrs Wouvermans, in a general way, believed in what Is called Providence, That is to say, when any little matter fell out in & manner exactly opposite to any of her schomes, she called it providential.On the prefent occasion, when she found herself walking in tho streets of New York alone, in the evening, with a young man who treated her with flattering deference, it could not but strike her as a providential opportun ty not to be neglected of fulfilling her long cherished intentions and giving a sort of wholesome check and caution to the youth.So she with infinite adroitucss to prepare the way.Jim, the while, who saw perfeclly what she was aiming at, assisting her in the most obliging manner.After passing through sundry truisms about the necessity of caution snd regarding appearances, and thinking what people will sy to this and that, she [roceeded to inform him that the report was in circu.ation that he wae engaged to Alice, \u2018The report does me entirely too much honor, said Jim.\u2018But of course if Miss Alice isn't disposed to deny it I am not.\u2018Of course Mise Alice's triends will deny it,\u2019 said Aunt Maria, decisively.\u201cI merely menti itto on that you may se the need of caution.You now, of course, Mr Fellows, that such reports stand the of others who might be disposed-=well, you Oh, perfootiy, exactly, quite so, said Jim, who What dces he care for Sunday.could Le profuse in his phrases ocens T'm extremely obliged to Yoo for ty nugget aud doubtedly your great experience and uw led the ways of society will show you the ¢ ge of deal with such thing.at way Lo ou seo,\u2019 pursued Mrs Woy dential tone, \u2018hero ie at present a berges, COUt- admirable and desirable, who is thin ing vo ony ly of Alice; its quite confidential, yoy Know ous.yoy must bo rare of the danger.' \"i but percelve\u2014a blight of the poor fellow! bopos, and early affections, said Jim, fluently \u2018 ugh of course the very suggestion of such a ell, in regard to me is flattery far beyond my de robot that I can't be annoyed by if, still I shoytq ort foundly sorry to have it occasion Any troubl Fr udding Alice\u201d | © to Miss \u2018I felt sure that you wouldnt be offend for speaking s0 very plain] , en ed with me entirely private) ¥ plainly.T hope youll keep it \u201cOh, certainly,\u2019 said Jim, with ¢} , goodwill.\u2018 When ladies with your act and 0 human nature talk to us youug fellows you give offence.We take your frankness ag a favoy - Mrs Wouvermans smiled with honest pride, ' 1 she not been warned against talking to this pouth something that was going to Le of most exp} ve tendency ?How little could Nellie, or Eva ora them, appreciste her masterly wkill, Bhe real] 4 i\" it in her heart to regret that so docile a pupil y cet appreciative of her superior abilities So 1 [ Was not desirable matrimonial parti.Had Jim been a yout © fortune she felt that she could hav.§ ; hands for him.¢ held up bot \u2018He really is agreeable shut the door upon Lim.TO BE CONTINUED.] \u2014 It is scarcely a weok since cn excitod by accounts of a flying London, which would enable its Inventar | fly safely through the air, le Was Fronchman named Do Graof, and ho had re cently given a public test of the Powers of his invention.\"He attached himself ang his machino to a balloon, and after he had reached a considerablo clovation he es himself loose and succeeded in flying half 4 milo, desconding with some difficulty, oy account of a high wind, but safoly, \"I machine, which might be likened i appoar.anco toa bat\u2019s wings joined to h peacock\u2019s tail, was constructed of cane and waterproof silk, the wings being thirty-seven foet lone: with an average width of four feet, and the tail eighteen feot long and three foot broal the whole apparatus being ingeniously fixe to the shoulders and worked by the\u201d arm.On the 9th July M.de Groof determina to make a second trial, and a large crowd assembled at the Cremorne Gardens to wir.ness hig flight.The balloon by which in ascended first reached a height of a thousand foet, but it afterwards slowly descended until within about one hundred feot of the graund, at which elevation the disoiple of Dedalus launched himsglf' only to moc the fate of Icarus.His wings closed about him like a shroud, and he fell headlong to the earth, striking upon his head and side Hundreds of people rushed to his assistance but ho was lifeless whon plo'ed up, and the surgeong doclared that his death must hace been instantancous.A peculiarly painfui incident connected with the luckless inven tor's fatal full *was the presence of his wife at tho scone of the accident.She had taken a tearful farowell of hor husband just prev: ous to the porilaus undertaking, having hau a prosentimeont that it would result in ui denth, which was only too unhappily fulfill ed, Wo suppose oxporimonts lilko that to which M.de Groof has fallen a victim wit; be made to the end of time, but tho law can.or should, prevent their being made in put lic, with the dangerous aid of balloons.Washington, Aug.1.\u2014Tho War Depart ment has reccived a roport of the expeli- tion under the command of Capt.A.I Bates, which loft Camp Brown, Wyomin: Territory, July 1, for the purpose of pui- ishing the Indians who had been committing depredations on that and tho neighboring valloys.After several days marching le reached the Indian village at Owl Creck Mountains, which consisted of 112 lodges placed in a deep ravine.The Indians opened a sharp fire on the troops as they advanced, but without damage, and tho troops quickly drove them down through a gulls where they were crowded so close together, near the lower end, and the troops had splen did chance at them, and counted after th.fight sevonteon dead bodies in one heap In about twenty minutes, or half an hour at the furthest there was not an Indian in the village, excepting the dead and numbers uf children who were left in the lodges.Th Indians who escaped had reached the rocks above, where they opened a very telling fire on tho troops, killing two men and wounding three in a vory fow minutes.The result of tho fight was twenty-five Indian known to be killed, and, with the usual pr portion of four wounded to ono killed, 10\" wounded, Of the killed, seventoon weru counted in front of the village.Tho other wore loft, part in the village, and part ou the side of the bluff.A Buffalo court has dismissed a complaint against a street-car conductor brought by 4 man who was ejected from tho car for spit ting tobacco-juice on the floor.GREAT ANNUAL CLEARING SALE IMMENSE SACRIFICES.pe that W ILLIAM THIRD & Co.beg to announce t they have commenced their Great Ant Clearing Sale at and Under Cost, so a8 to make M ' for theïr new Fall and Winter Importations.tu noted arc a list of the immense sacrifices mace Tia Ladies, Gils, and Children\u2019s Summer \u2019Trimmes at 50 cents, worth $1.50.ir Ladies\u2019 Prunella Gniters, 75 cents per pat, price $1.25.x Ladies\u2019 Prunella Gaiters, 90 cents per pat, rice $1.50.; \u201c cure 8 Fancy Shoes, 20 cents per pair, torm rice 50 cents.surait, Children's and Misscs' Hoop Suite 3 cents [xT former price 30 and 75 cents.ins, Thomas Hoyle & Son's Celebrated Fast Color A 10 and 11 cents per yard, former price 1 Conte, Gentlemen's Fancy Flannel Shirts, 80 and former price $1.50.Gentlemen's White Linen Pants, 90 cet former price $1.50.; Good Heavy Grey Cotton, 6 cents per y rice 11 cents.allow Beat Canadian Refined Coal Oi, 24 cents pu gallot 11 ibs.Bright Refined Sugar for $1.09 | Best Layer Raising, 10 cents per pound.ad, 1 Best White Loaf Sugar, 12} centa per Point: price 17 cents., Best Whole Rice, 5 cents per ib.Best Malt Vinegar, 25 centa per g8 50 cents.Ur Best Brown Family Soap, 6 cents per 1.former | : 3516 Good Sepen Tea, 45 cents per fb., former pet de Best Japan Tea, 60 cents per f,, former PCC fy Boys\u2019 and Men's Felt Hats and Caps all et 1 at exceedingly low prices.geyth American Hay and Manure Forks Shel.y Snaths and Hoes, at Greatly Redu est, Overs! Boys\u2019 and Men's Undercoats, Pants \u2018\u20ac &c., at Extremely Low Prices.ods, Flac Japancse Silk Dresses, Fancy Dress Good ed price Lustres, and Coburgs, at greatly , too BUD: Also, gn immense quartity of other discount.ons to mention, at the same rate 0 to call and therefore invite all intendin Purchat\u2019h secure Great Bargains at an LIA Yi THIRD se 0 I\" P.8.\u2014TERMS during the Salo will be Bip ic, Merchantable Produce in Exchange & Huntingdon, 9th July, 1874.rful l'in ever ; waa her thought, as she TOsity was machine in forme: former pts pot pair, rd, former forme?]lon, former prie\u201d ie If Sa ne: tio 1 to on wi me tio Es Al Ex ! tin Mi "]
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