News From the Arctic Sea. amrsrm , (mummw'umgso. 3,,“ E G“! “M19 ' m 1 “due mamwmsmum Aadfurriersallto'i, " M“ - m u one-“um. ottMJmâ€"Wmof willemzlépi. «when I] mï¬ï¬hl lull hudbcL “God be “0mm st:ka us to"Bab bn.‘ thanked, ’eare e2" u-ranl‘ .stnm] H “rifle New} “alride Capt. looper Bed-(no Mnmthe Fm g mud m . m cm: _ mama“ w a†'a'ry mule: maummwn Omwuer m“.,’ ' oer “ : . . ’ my“. Ana. ,, 1,, we mug, 5:“. who, after threeyan of African life, longed "sh “ h R‘ llymwm“ Wine-70"“; for rest with than. But the strain had' â€"â€" apcndthrlftlm lnthe"straiu. been,“ Musicians hutch In the "Sound." Kn“ ""1 {0" M. in)“ multh A private letter has been received at T ..(._ nom- b M; and he without seeing them, w“th b )1“ Cluk f a; Re - Com Influx-a shouldâ€; wgoowrï¬ Thu- pgrished one of the noble-'6 11 Marine {.33 Capt. fiooptezr ot‘i'i'é rm And sailors to the Maine. of the ' slavery. Victim 0‘ Revenue Shrine steamer Corwin, dated Gunmen should to " Bogaay'wo. a†cupid“! 0‘ A!“ 0111113390“. "1‘0 Plover Bay, June 1-1. Capt. Hooper says saw the destruction of a chief source of their wealth, he was recalled by their influence from his work of liberation in Ilahr-el-Ghanl and Darfur. He was accused of wishing to exclude the Arab element and make use of the in his and of teaching them to assert their independence. e‘hoeblscks to "Japan, lkflbclbn to the “ L'nlted States," And maidstoihe“laleofflsn.' Thus emigrants and misplaced men. They would no longer vex us; And thine not here provided for "ad hem-r go to--“ Texas." *- thathe hasslready beenfurther west than he succeeded in getting last year, and is con- ï¬dent that he will get much further before the season closes. There is every indication, he says, of its being anopen season, and if theJeannetteisinensteuce thereean beno reason why she should not come‘ to open BOIOLO anal. I Bahr-elï¬haul and the adjlgin- wage;- mi; year. 33 it will undoubtedly open â€"â€"â€"- mg were ecentreo ncanl "3 furtherthan'thasf ' . Cstlioo r The “11380 m 3W “017 °‘ ‘1‘ trade. 'l'wenty thousand Arabs were Occu- had plenty Iof dogs}: and ii: Wm mnhfl “10â€"3†W“ UM pied inhis traffic,andatleast eight thousand the Slave Chiefs. slaves were captured and e annually. an- 0-4. .va for! Ens-t Inn This is the very lowest calculation, and the ltomolo flessi, one of those Italian heroes number W MI! in“. ‘3 WY: if 1‘“ of African exploration who have honored the Km “en "hm m3“ Lyery Arab “med Italian name, is dead. He w... born at Rav- “we I134 CHM. and pursued his military no! 1111311 ro'rwo nrxousn suvm, _ g ' studies at beewreuerswlt, but the ncws of his drmd- md from Jaw! Fascia Casi took three hundred. Even the poorest Arab kept fuldeatb was carried to his family. residing about twenty huts made of straw and encu- at Trieste. He had been absent from them cled with thorns, within which the slaves three years,‘an.d the sole hope of his lastï¬lays “38' an“ "mum: “ramp. and pen ’ to were kept fastened to each other by along chain. Uessi destroyed all of these places of rcmd: home. But that hope was not realiz- wickeduess and let the slaves 0 free. ul, as| licfdied indth’f hospital at Suez}. h(Jessi was t to ricud t e no race ant t c cu~ ,, . ,, . cmy of slavery. Appointed by the English “’3 “elgbbo'lfm of Bahr‘e 'bbm‘ 333- l‘aslinllordrm who was then in the service “0‘ long 38°},1mmblm‘,‘ by “7° h‘m red of the kbcdivc, to subdue the rebel slave ‘I‘oum‘l (“nines Of‘mbe “Sued D83“ 6Y- cbicf, Suleiman. his success in that enterprise The Amt†Prefeï¬e‘l ‘0 hunt {0" Blues 8’6 on account of the numerous flocks of sheep in the land, and the Dgangey were soon re- was rewarded by his a intment to the governorsbip of Ilabr-cffifhazal. In two , . . w. and a half be disciplined and armed duccd tothtrty thoqmd fqmflws- These Iii: own soldiers. and in twenty bottles de- “‘0'â€! w some had 'mmble “The? top mentors on account of the pestileatial strand the marshes, but only after the trium ll of stroycd the nnny of Suleiman. which con- uistcd of nearl fifteen thousand men, with , , (least over Suiloman were they pe ed to return to their own land. cignt tbousam in reserve. Sulcinmn, who was the chief negro dealer in Africn,â€"Gessi calculating that be ex rtcd fifty thousand The death of Gessi will revive this terrible slaves mmuully-â€"â€"was illed, together with scourge in that of Africa, as even while other slave-dealers. he was there the Arabs only awaited his dc- “ The trade has now become impossible," parturc to roveugo themselvesou the ncgmcs wrote llcasi to the Geographical Society of who had assisted him. He believed, how- ltomc in 1579. “ I have armcd all the ne- ever, that with four or five stations directed drocs, and they can now defend themselves." by honest persons slavery could be abol- In the decisive bottle where he overthrew ished. Suleiman be had two thousand well-annod Romolchssi was of medium stature, thin, rcbcls opposed to him, while his own force with chesnut hair and beard. His vivid was only one thousand men, man of them lance. nick speech, eat activity, and in- bcing nlso slnvclioldcrs, and there ore not in ilemitab 0 energy ear y marked him as one sympathy with him. But be succccdcd in adapted to great enterprises. The last will 4 cfcntlng Suleiman and in make his name forever remembered among the unhappy negroes of Central Africa as u liberator and benefactor. But he was known previously for his explorations in the upper Nile, and for his circumnavigation of Lake Albert. This lake had already been discovered by Samuel Baker, but Gessi was the first to cir- cumnavigate it, which he did in 1876. For this exploit, the honor of which Henry Stan- ley contests with him, be received a gold medal from the Italian Geographical Seciety. “If the'voya o wore not lous it would not charm ma,‘ he said, but this was dau- gorous enough even for his bold spirit. One of his com anions was eaten by a crocodile ; one died rom fever which he himself had also: the white ants destroyed their goods : they were drenched with rain and at night tormented with mosquitoes. \Vith the aid of one thousand men hired b the Egyptian government be transported 1. rec bouts over very high mountains destitute of roads. The boats were thirty feet long and were manned by eighteen mariners and twelve soldiers. Gessi was accompanied by another intrepid Italian travellerâ€"Carlo Piazza,â€"-and al- though the season was unfavorable on ac- count of heavy rains and the natives were hostile, 'et he succeeded in exploring this lake. I a considered it a rent reservoir, but not the source of tho Yilc, which is Victoria. Nynnzu. Hero also were those rrowths of vegetation which four years later ecamo the source of his death. “Numerous floating islands of vegetation of immense size move about on the waters and for days prevent navigation. The stalks rise twelve or fifteen foot in height, and sometimes the wind moves them as if they were sails. They go at the rate of four or five miles an hour, and the waters are continually changing their aspect." »â€"â€"'-<-â€"»4-.~>«-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- The Hallucinations of Grout Hen. Popular Selene. Homily. clothing for winter use should the Corwin get shut in by the necessity of making a trip to the westward early in the fall, and says that should they remain during the winter they should do some exploring. He expect- ed to order a lot of dog food at St. Michael's foruse about Aug. 1, .in case it was needed. They had a hard time getting coal, being obliged to haul it a mile and a half over the ice, which was beginning to melt on top and was soft all over, the water being in many places over a foot deep. All were well on board. This letter, with Capt. Hooper's ofï¬cial , was sent by the whaling bark Tom Pope. which put into Plover Bay from the Arctic Ocean with a full cargo of oil and bone, and sailed for San Francisco two or three days afterwards, where she arrived a few days ago. In his report Capt. Hooper says : . “The (Jorwin sailed from Ounalnaka on May 22, and touched at the Seal Islands on the :.’.3rd, where we found everything quiet. The seals were just beginning to arrive. The weather report at St. Paul’s showed the t winter tohave been a very mild one, with but little snow. No ice had been seen in‘the vicinity of the islands for nearly a month. We left the islands on the evening of the 23rd, and sighted ice the next day, which we passcdin the south and west, and, following the Asiatic coast north, crossed the Anadye Gulf on May ‘27, and arrived at St. Lawrence Island on the evening of the 28th. Owing to the mildness of the past winter the natives of that island had been able to hunt and supply themselves with food, and were found to be much better off than last year. They had taken one whole and have quite a large amount of walrus, ivory, and whalebonc taken. from the wreck of the schooner Loletn, which ran ashore on the north side of the island last fall while en route to San Francisco under seizure by this vessel for violations of law. The natives here were lamenting the non-arrival of trad- ing schooners with whiskey. We sailed for Plover Bay the same day, but could not got in on account of large quantities of ice out- side. We spoke the bark Rainbow, Capt. Laphum, whaling off the bay, and learned that ustory was in circulution among the Indians along the canal: to the effect that a party of seal hunters, while on the ice near North Ca in November lust, had fallen in with and carded two wrecked vessels, sup- poscd- from their description to be the miss. ing whulcrs Mount \Vollnston and Vigilnnt. The same story, with‘ slight variations, having been told at Marcus Bay, East Cape, St. Lawrence Bay, and other places, induces the belief that there may be some truth in it. I therefore determined to ï¬t out; a land party to follow the coast to the north and west, to investigate this report, and to make inquiries in regard to the J eanncttc, believ- ing that if accident bud befallcn the vessel her crew would endeavor to reach the Asiatic continent, and might now be strug- gling along that coast and be in need of us- sistance. At Marcus Buy, a. few miles from Plover Bay, I engaged an interpreter to ac- company the land party with his sled and six dogs, all I could get at that settlement. The following day we stopped at St. Law- rence Bay, but could neither hire or buy dogs. When told the object of the expcdi~ tion they shook their heads and said, ‘No use; all dcad,’ and would have nothing to do with it. At the Diomedcs, where we ar- rived on the 30th, we were more fortunate, and succeeded in getting nineteen dogs and two sleds. At the ’I‘upkuu settlement, Cupc Scrdzc, another native was engaged to not as driver. \Vc also bought another sled, u very fine one. I intended to land the party at this place, but, ï¬nding open water, con- tinued on our way in hopes of getting nslioro west of Kolintcliin Bay and suvcmnny miles of travel. All the boys were still full of ice, ands. narrow belt, broken and piled up, lined the shore. Although thrown up in places to a height of thirty or forty feet, the ice sheet formed by direct freezing was found to be very light and not over four feet in thickness. The natives at every point re- poxl't:1 the past winter as having been very in: t . “ We followed the coast to the northwest until 4 p. m. on June I, when in lntitudo' 68“ 10’ north, longitude 176“ 48' west, we came to solid'ico ahead and on the starboard bow. “'8 had been running in a loud and came to the end of it. The weather had been thick and snowing bard most of the time since our entering the Arctic Ocean, so that we could not see more than a mile or two, and much of the time not further than the length of the vessel. Aftcr reach- ing the end of tho‘lead. not being able tosco tholand or form a very definito idea of its distance, wes‘sfood to the eastward under sail, keeping the weather side of the lead, waiting for a light up to eunblo us to de- termine our position, and whether the shore ice was passable before landing our party. The wind was blowing fresh from the north- ward,bringing down large quantitieslof heavy icc, which, owiq to the thick snowstorm that prevailed, we could not see until surrounded by it. At about midni lit in working out of an unusually heavy low of old icc, our rudder came in contact with a large piece. breaking the stock short off and LIBEIMTINII ON K II C! DIIEIJ THOUSAND SLAVES. He. made roads, opened schools, re lated the tnx on ivory and gum, and trict to re- duce thnt distant African pOsscssion of Egy t to order. llut tlic Mussulmans there cou d not forgive the destruction of their trade in slaves, and they rendered his position so dis- agreeable that when I’usba Gordon lost his ollico (lcssi also lost his and left Bohr-el- (Miami. “'orn out with fatigue and mental dis- tress Iic embarked on the Satin with his peo- ple. consisting of five hundred men, women, and children, in September 1880. But his voyage on the upper Nile was destined to bo- comc known as one of the most tragic events in African history. The vessel, which was not strong cuougb to force its way through the mnsscs of aquatic plants which incumber that portion of the river, became tangled in them and rcmnincd there three months and u linlf. This sudd, an m untic plant which grows in equatorial lutitm es, transforms the stream into a vast impenetrable marsh and stops unvigntionnscom lctclyas the iccdocs in northern regions. A [the efforts of Gessi, who act his men to work with lmtcbcts and spades to liberate the Sofia. and the four burng attached to it, were unuvuiliug. To the horrors of his stnmgc imprisonment were soon uddcd intense suffcrings b famine. About half of the people with (iossi dicd from fever and fumiuc, and many of the survivors who were rescued by nuothcrvcssel which won 1 to their rcliof also died uftcr reaching Khar- toum. u city ofabout oighty thousand inhabit- uuts, capital of the Egyptian Sudan. The dead bodies of the women, the child- ruu. the weak, and the old, who first succum- bed to these misc-neg, lay putrcfying for weeks on the utron 'brunclics of the dreadful plants that hold t IOIII in a giant embrace. chernl of the dead bodies were devoured by V the survivors, nnd (Icssi relates in his report to the Italian Geographical Society that the moral effect of these scenes upon his own spirit wusmore dreadful than even his suffer- ings for want of food. The people, also, to alleviate hunger, cut up the skins in which their effects wcrc wrapped into strips. soak- czl them in wutcrovcr night, and thou IIHIIJCII AND ROASTED THEM. The fruit of one of tlic plants near them. to- sembling tho artichoke, was catcu, but could not be found in sufficiently large quantities. Added to the hunger and fatigue occasioned by Working in the water to libcrntc the ship, was the torment of moss uitocs at night. Many of tho sufferers wnl 'cd the deck all night, and sometimes in turning )ut their I‘m-t on the sleepers, when groans um screams and often fighting succeeded. At one time in the early part of this period of torment tlic Sofia was within lmlfa milc ofo in wntcr, and llcssi hoped in three days to able to reach it, but a tempest, followed by two bound of bail, drovc flu-m back into the green wilderness of branches. After that they could not see the pure water even from the masts. The night before the rescuing vessel arriv- ml, (it-2m wrote: “I felt myself dying; I felt lsuguur and cm )tiucss. and my stren th was leaving me. l cannot describe w at lam-.1 tbruu 'lI my mind that night. I had l‘St'IIIM‘II dcnt I in so many battles. from so many In-truynls and conspiracies against my life, and I must die at last in the middle of u rivcr from the same cause that had killed thousands and thousands in NinnrNism or in the burning desert of lbwfur.’I “'hcn The number of grcnt men who have been once, twice, or more frequently subject to hallucinations is cousidcrublc. A list, to which it would be easy to make large addi- tions is given by Bricrre do Boismont (“Ilallucinations," etc., 1862,) from which I translate the followin account of the star of the first Napoleon, w lCII be heard, second- hand, from General Rapp : In 1806, General Rapp, on his return from the siege of Dantzic, having occasion to speak to the Emperor, entered his study without being announced. He found him so absorbed that his entry was unperccived. The General, seeing the Emperor continue motionless, thought he might be ill, and purposely made a noise. Napoleon immedi- ately roused‘himself. and without any ro- amblo,'soizing Rap by the arm, sair to him, pointing to t e sky, “Look there, up there. The Uenernlrcmained silent, but, on being asked a second time, he answered that he crceived nothing. “\Vbat!" rc- pliod the ‘mpcmr, “do you notseo it? It is my star, it is before on, brilliant ;" then animating by do recs, e'cried out, “It has never nbaudone me, I see it on all great occasions, it commands me to go forward, and it is a constant sign of good fortune to me.‘ ' It up rs that stars of this kind, so frequent y spoken of in history, and so well known as a metaphor in language, are scam- mon hallucination of the insane. Ilrierro do Iloismont has a chapter on the stars of rent men. I can not doubt that fantasies 0 this his friend. the German traveler Marne, Icnch- descri “on were in some cm the basis of . . . ml him on bound the ship llordccn, (fuel was that am, belief in numb , which not a?“ ' 81:91? pill-gle- l“ ptgortupztc; reduced to a skeleton. The strong man 5‘“ ‘3‘ e m c“ ' m“ a r “8 "‘5 a few persons of eminence ormcrly enter- tuned- The’h'allucinations of great men maybe accounted for in part by their sharing a tendency which we have seen to be not un- common iu the human race, and which, if it happens to be natural to them, is liable to be developed in their overwrought brains by the isolation of their lives. A man in the position of the first Napoleon could have no intimate associates : a great philoso her who explores ways of thought far shear of his contemporaries must have an inner world in which he passes long and solitary hours. Great men are also apt to have touches of madness : the ideas by which theyam haunt- ed. and to whose pursuit they devote them- selves, and by which they rise to eminence, have much in common with the monomania of insanity. Striking instances of great visionaries may be mentioned, who hhd almost beyond doubt those very nervous seimm with which the tendenc to hallu- cinations is intimately cannot . To take a single instance. Socrates, whose claimant was an audible not a visual appearance, was subject to what admits of hardly any other in tation than tic seizure, stadn 'ng all night through in arigid atti~ to e. t em on deck work the vessel out of the ice, steering as best as we could with the sails, and when in clear water rig ed a jury rudder, using our studding sail ms and swinging booms. It was worked by lines lending to the steam Windlass, and answered its purpose nicely in open water. On the 2nd We steamed to tho southward all day, fol- lowing the edge of the shore ice, and keep- ingn squ' lookout for land. I was anxious to land t a party as far west as possible, but we had to run up this lead between the shore ice and the northern pack over one hundred miles. The lead was rapidly clos- ing behind us, so that any delay would ex- pose us to tho dan er of being shut in, and, perhaps, crushed y the moving ico coming In contact with the solid shore ice. We therefore kept moving northward until about 4 p. 111., when it stopped snowing for a few minutes, and gave us a view of Kolintchin Island, right abeam, and not more than six miles away. We stopped immediately and landed our part ', w ch consisted of First Lieut. Herring, 'I’hird Lieut. Royusolds, one seamau, and two chuktchis. f‘hey have twenty-ï¬ve dogs, four sleds, a skin boat, which can easin bedrawu ona dog tied, and which will carry the entire party, with pm visions and dogs, if n to cross open water. They have, also, two months' via- iona arms and ammunition. is dril tent, and any of deer skin clothing. charts, sou lines, instruments, to. They are instructed to go as far as Cs ‘ Jaclnu, if possible, and to make ever on to sacs. tainthed oftruth," any, in the re- port-mentioned, and to make diligent in- uiriesinregard totheJeannette, andgain 'blo nowledge of theeout, charm \\'lIUIl| Iii-c friends had always compared to n km. the bch soldier who {cared neither enemies “or death, wus as wvakns a child. lie was lifted on board the other vessel and was soon partly motored. but the sufferings ‘ had been fun grunt, and a fever ensuul, which ended his life soon after. The juunml kept by (fuel during his im- prisunun-nt among the barraui was sent to the iii-ogrnpbical Smiotv of Home after his blwmtion. Tho intmpid s iritoftbis Italian traveller faces death wit calmness as ho nightly keeps the record of his suffering. " \\‘c are constantly laboring," he says, " at one plant about 1'“ ILVK Tuol'sssu rain mud, and rverv day the work is mom difficult for my p-oplc, lmuse they an: half immersed in inter. We are surrounded as if by a strong wall. It is as difficult to go back as lo mliallvc. and we can not send in or relief. as both the shores are poputh by uarlikc and savage enemies who are not lrieudl ‘ to us." At the end of the scumd mouth’he writes: " The moment is critical. There is no hope of salvation. All begin to abandon themselves to desperation, and, seat- ed on deck with their heads down, wait for til‘flUI." On the lashiay of [let-ember: "This is the most terrible day. I remember nothing like it in all my life. Tor-nioer la the new year-vs sad day for me I think of my home, of my wife. my children. who in their play know nothing of the terrible situation of their father. So ends the year less. and I am led to thiscxtrunity because I was not dormant-sin my am ' against slat-«y. .mntluential men of hartoutu had crin- Mmflw Cantata features of the new Tsy bridge thatahall In plant theoae whichwent down with such gym.nt loss of life sppcarto have been exactly ï¬xed upon. Its total length will be 0,000 feet. or about two miles, and calculations are made for double the wind which the a t ï¬e willsrer ' tobearupoathe as. e wind pie-rm isput at twenty-one pounds . . . . . “are and allowance is made for - donned the war W :sabesnsn as it up “I ‘°°" . . . . tor of the natives. kc“ and tomcat the ves- junrd their own interests.†“‘3‘†‘ 0‘ u ‘53:“ 9'; ï¬guuhfln'd’ so! at Ta un (0pc Serdns) on theeomple- New Year‘s day be greets with: " The day ' w“ I’M“ two of e duty. After seeing them fairty is damn ' and in thought Isessd best wish- es to lanai y. relatives, and friasda." 0n the «a he writs: “ If hpr does not cause to- m umw we shall be dead. Hunger has as. haunted all the strength and every hope of Qvnx \‘Icroata has neeivcd a gold are my purple.†But outhchthol January they. ass pruent from the Ashamed at .K. inane positepoaition. Itis intendedthat there as.“ he a parapet of wroagbtiron, aaia precaution iacaseacarahoald leavstbe startnl we steamed to the southward, la- tendinghto come to flour Bay, haul the rose as] on a beach and repair and shipourrud- der, or rather it with lashing-of wire mpeandchain. the 4th we pa-edout through the straits, but, encountering snow 1 storm and gals andlarge quantitiesol drgicadidnotresehthisplacenntil the l'. ." ‘A row Facts About no: Not ‘ PORTABLE “" SAW MILLS, , SHINGLE MILLS, I I IGRIST )‘IILLS, Bum'r “t1 CORN MEAL MILLS, “l ~â€"-a.\‘ 13â€"â€" THRESHING ENGINES, ~ .-1:. . . or: SPECIALTY. t‘a ltyol Works per wwk :~ I Portable Sau- - To the Elliot: 1 Ta. the drith leaves of Chinese shrubs be» |Iongingto the genus Thu. nat. .onl. Tern- stmntiuucnr. 'Ihcy are native: of Chtnh.‘ Japan and Tonquin, flourishing most in val- leys. the sloping sides of mountains, and the banks of rivers ex to the southern rs 's of the sun. There are two s vies of the tea lant. Tim: fi'itli‘. with broad leaves, and ’ “(a boiled ,- thefonner being mnsideml by some as the source of groom-ad the latter of black tea 1 Thereis alsoa variety termed Tim: sisal-4 mmsis, which seems to resemble both the references to the owners of the vesse in ‘ others. The names given in commerce to Glasgow, and, having concluded the trans- , the different sorts of tea are unknown to the action. arranged with a ship chandlerof that Chinese, the 1m ‘ excepted, and are sup- Porta lo Grist sun. 3 Standard t‘lmppilr; Mills. city to store it with visions. wines and to have bed by the mer- I‘m“ Fm“ Eu’fl‘I“ A Strange mane. One of the most audacious swindle: in the history of crime is undoubtedly that of the stalling of the steamer “Ferret.†the full 'culars of which have recently come to light; The "Ferret," a vessel of 3-16 tons and the property of the Highland Railway y. waseharteredin October of last y a man who gave the name of “'alk- er, foraterm of six months. Walker pre- sented what seemed to be perfectly (‘bu BI CYCLES Best English Makes. Send So. stamp for circular of “ lion“. l‘.\N.\DI.\N ROAD- ‘ P othertbin tothe tune of some 87,500. for chants of Canton. The black teas are Sun! for new Circulars. Address. which he lg:‘veathree mouths' draft. I-‘mm Bohoa, Congou, Gunpoi, Souchoug_ Caper co" Glasgow are steamer shipped for Cardiff, and Feb»; the m m T‘mnkny' Brantford, Ontano‘ Canada. whem coals were takenin. which were pmd - Hyson skin. Young Hysou, Hymn, Imperial _. . .uL LmBs 1 WP um†E I "III I ii? If Ilimblia Light James Francis Powersm'ho has made aclenu _ the season in which the leaves are picked, breast of the vessel's doings after it was the mode in which it is prepared, and the “ML Sglisfmnun“unguurgp‘ finally taken agclbougiebaii‘lséra‘l‘imlkaï¬listiï¬ct in whichl it grows. Green tea is l Addn‘sst. J. IKI.\.\ & ms. hmymn. (in! wt a pear ho ter. -t i 'a or salt to oweita cu ortoaucxtractof indigo, P‘ - ~ 1 h‘h‘i‘ l I lilVllllllll I I 1 1011 ' â€"â€"-~nr run-~â€" for in the same way by a worthless draft. aud Gunpowder. liloslhaand clu‘aIL Find prirc ut l'nn'invin was joined by his confederate in the to Prussian blue, and gypsum; and the ‘Agncultural &Arts Assomatlon Here thcyalso took in their third engineer, The quality of ton depends very much on Exhibition. Inudum 'I‘estiumuinls on nhplicu swindle, aMr. Henderson. The "Ferret" Iflou'ering finds their rich tint to the leaves left Cardiff on the 22d or 23rd of October, 9 of the Ufmfmgmm and other plants. havin cleared for Marseilles. She then The most remarkable substances in teas pass close to Gibraltarmignalliug there the . are Mimi", an essential oil to which it owes w gran.“ Ammw_ name and number of the steamer. This was I its aroma, and an alkaloid named dieine. A. T_ LANE' or osrsnlo. about 2 o'clock in thc afternoon. The ves- sel then steamed slowly along the Mediter- ranean; but no sooner had dusk arrived than the crew were ordered to throw out a lot of life-buoys, buckets, barrels, and other mova- blcs of little valueâ€"but all having the ship‘s name on. themâ€"overboard. , A small boat was made to share the same'fatc, in order to strengthen the im ression that the "Ferret," I after having sign led at Gibraltar,bud comcl Theme and Uufl'rine, which differ in name to grief in the Mediterranean. T be new, . but are identical in nature. The ten plant naturally puzzled at such a proceeding, be- is the wtb of a particular region situated gan to growl and wanted to know what it , between the 30th and 33rd degrees of north all meant. But Henderson quieted them by , latitude. ‘ he was the master of the vessel and I The trees are plnntcd four or five feet 100 of dried tea contain, on an average, nboutï¬ parts nitrogen ; the largest amount, by far, that has been detected in any vogc. table. ’I‘ca taken in moderation is beneficial to the body ; but in most constitutions, if Itakcn in excess, produces considerable cx~ Icitemcnt and wakefulness. Tea and wffce their energy to two substances, P.0.Box use )lantrral. To BE HELD AT LONDON, M A N I T O B A ! 21st to the 80th ‘Sept., 1881. Those going to Manitoba will ï¬nd it to their advantage to correspond with us. Subscribe for tho Colonist Acme. a ulpcr xivlngjust tho infon matiou you require: lie. to cud of your. l‘um- phlots. will: maps. sent free. llollirook‘: all: l‘nrlynvlth sloc nug curs utliwln‘d. \vlll leave on 8th Sept" per u.’l. ll. ul ILI5 a. m.. and con- tinue every other week during the souson. pro- | coded two (In '3 before by their fast freight train. 754130 acres 0 choico land for sale on may terms. Letters cuclosu 3c. stump for reply. $18,000 OFFERED IN PREHIUMS. '- 0W0 333'!“ _ _ D. .t. |l()l.lllt00l(, woult do Wltll it what be pleased, and if any . asunder : they have a very stunted appenr- Successor to It. \iâ€. I‘rillio Sr 0).. at King Street one should dare to utter another. word he ' once. and are not allowed to grow higher than Btu-ll. 'l‘ummo. would blow that man‘s brains out. He next is convenient for men. women and children ordered the vessel to be veered around and I to ick the leaves. steered back into the Atlantic. This was I \ ’lien this is done the leaves are put successfully accomplished, and the vessel into wide, shallow buskots and pluced on was taken tothe Island of San Jose, tliclsbclves in the air, wind, or mild sunshine, whole ship having been new painted on the from morning till noon. They are than “my and the name “Bantam†substituted placed on u flut cast iron pan over it obur~ for that of “Ferret.†At Sun J osc more c 0111 coul stove, ten or twelve ounces [win 1 thrown was taken in, and course tlicn taken forzou at n time, and kcpt stirred quickly with Santos, where a cargo of coffee was bought ' a hand broom. After this they are brushed and id for in the usual manner by fradu-Iofl‘ again into the baskets in which they lent drafts. The “Bantam,†having left ' are equally and carefully rubbed between Santos, us her "owners" told the coffee I men's bands to roll them and then are merchants, for Marseilles, no sooner got out nguiu dried over a. slower ï¬re. The ten is of sight than she was veered around again, 3 next laid upon a bible to be drawn or picked her name once more changedâ€"this time to over. the “Indiu"â€"â€"nndhercoursc directed towards I The slimllcst leaves are called by the the Cape, where her whole cargo was (lis- Chinese l’hu-lio, the second Pow-choug, the posed of for some 370,000. This was to-.tl1ird Su-cbong, and the fourth or largest wards the closo of Inst J ununry. Tnychoug. The “India.†now stcnmcd for the Maw 11 1677, the East India Counpmny im- ritius, where she underwent repairs, and ; ported 4,713 lbs. of tea, which 'lutted tho thence to Albany, where more cools were market for SEVERAL YEARS.â€"~T ie Li-Quor taken in: payment in’vuriably being made Tcu Compnuy, in ISSI, nrc sclliu v upwards in worthless drafts. Course was then taken ; of 40,000 lbs. PER WEEK, because I my under- for Melbourne, Austmlin,wbere the “India†' stand the great principle of selecting their arrived on the 20th April. \ankor and his!th for the amount of tannin and Maine partner, Henderson, went on land, but the ' they coutnm. crew were strictl forbidden to leave f:th Yours faithfully, ship, and orders to keep u the ï¬res cou- I‘m. the Li-Quor Tea Co., stmrtly so that steam could 0 got up at: 1). G30. CLARKE. few minutes' notice. Meanwhile, the strange I [\Vc call attention to the ubovelettcr from disappearance of the“Ferret"hudcuused grcut tlic Li-Quor Tea Company. “'c understand commutiou amongst the underwriters and i this is the pioneer compimy of the book- sliipowncrs in England, and descriptions of I bonus system, and their ‘nglisb munu ver is the steamer had been sent to all parts of the . now in Can:qu for the purpoko of cats ilisli- world where it was supposed the vcssel'ing agencies throughout the Dominion. \Vc might have been heard from. Now it so . bcurtbut quiten few have already secured happened that a Melbourne policeman, Mc- what appears to be a most valuable ngency.] Kenzie by name, had read in u. Glasgow I paper an account of the disappearance and n description of tho “Ferret,†and his notico I All Mtonkmnï¬ F1103- lmving been attracted by the strange be- I A large proportion of the American people haviour of the “India,†he examined the I are today dyiurr from the effects of l) 5 mp- ship registers of Melbourne. In them be sin or disordered livcr. Thu result 0 t new found no such steamer as the “Indiu,†nor j diseases upon the masses of intelligent and one bearing the number 77,942, which the ; vuluublo people is most ulnrmiugmnking lifc “India†born on her main-hatch, nor one nctuully n burden instead of uplcusuut exist- liuving a capacity of 340 tons. But he did I once of enjoyment and usefulness as it ought ï¬nd that the “Ferret†was it vessel of 346 ~ to be. There is no good reason for this, if septenlbel' tons. These facts being made known to tho I you will only throw nsido prejudice and authorities, a. thorough examination of the skepticism, take the advice of Druggists “India†was made. The whole swindle was and your friends, nud try out) bottlo of now laid bare. The number of the vessel , Green's August Ii‘lowcr. Your spccdy rolicf bud been changed as well as her name. A is certain. Millions of bottles of this modi- new 10 -book had been made. The , ciuc have been given away to try its virtues, names 0 all the crew had been altered. A with satisfactory results in every cilsc. You plan for a new expedition had already been i can buy a sample bottle for 10 cents to try. repurcd, and the “India†was to be licncc- ’l‘lu‘ec doacs \vill relieve the worst case. l'us- fbrth the “Raven.†A complete code of itivolyso‘d by all Druguists on tho \Vcstorn private signals to be used as telegrams to continent. confederatcs in London and other parts of the I -.- ._______ World was dlscovenfdf, In short' the .exnnl' Ask your dealer for “.Cnslurinu" Machan Oil mntlon of the “India revealed a gigantic and soc um. um. burrcl m bruntlcd “Cnstorinc,†conspiracy, carried on with unparalleled us nono other Is gcuulnc audacity, having members in tho largo scn- , AN EMISHNT DIVINE “W. U I have been ort Cities of every continent. The stcmucr ' using the pcmviun Syrup. It gives mu new itself was at once pluccilm the bands of the Vigor, buoyancy of “writs, elasticity of customs authorities, while tho crew were nl- ’ musclopv Seth w. Fowl“ & Sons Bonn", lowed ‘luwtly de‘mmP- ,wur’mt†0f ‘1‘" will send free it pbnmpblct of 32 pages. con- ms“ were the“ “amid f0" “ “1k.†and Hm“ ; tsining a full account of this rcmnrkublc demon' m“! 0“ “‘0 29th All“! Henderson medicine, to any one sending llllll their was found III a country town, where he had ' address. gwc" hm "lune “8 George Bolton’ the U30 "Cnstorino" Mucblno Oll for ull kinds of Pom“: were hka “Hollglf to ï¬nd I“, m†I‘OS‘ ‘ machinery. It is also excellent for burnt-es nnd session moneys, consnstiug of com, Bank I Icutbcr. making it Wntcr nud weatherproof. For notes and 00d drafts, to the uniout of 311,- I “I0 by 1|†dealer“- Eutrice must bo mudc \vllh Ibo Secrofury at Toronto, on or before the iuIderuu-uihum! dslos. \‘Il. : . Hurst‘s. Cattle. Slump, Swine, Poultry, Apri- cultuml Implements, on or below Salon uy. August L‘mli. ‘ Oral“. l-‘iolll Roofs. and other I-arm l‘nulucls, Machinery. uud )luuufuctun-s generally, on or before Safunluy. Au ï¬rst full. ' ‘ Horticultural l‘rts nets. Lulllcx' \\ ork. Him Arts. etc., on or beforu Sulunluy, September ‘8 LIME "1 HDâ€" .\ .I l' l' 'I’Uls'A CCU I'lrlso Lists and lllunk Forms for mnklm: the entries upon. can be obtained of the Secretaries of all A rloullurnl nud Ilurllcullurul Sm‘lolii'u and Moe mnlcs’ Institutes throughout the I‘m- viucc. IlllNltl' “AIDE. Seen-fury. Toronto. J. B. Ai'lerHHDlt'l‘ll. President, vaburah. For sale by dcnlors everywhereâ€"ivHOLESAIJC only M) [be Munufuctun-m. Th 8 bra. :d I. guaranteed to be the via b-«s Chowing‘l‘obncnn in Gunud l, bsiu, manuf'ucturi d . f I the finest sun-cured Virginia. Le if. To a. mid imposition see that. i a -h Plug bears lbs to stump, and every Uuddy tile Caution now-e of THE ADQIgIgIQIIlIlGOU cu. Building & LocnrAesoiciatioï¬. MONEYIU LOAN AT LOWEST RATES. Cures Clio/era, Cholera Morbus,py- sentery, Cramps, Colic, Sea 810k- ness and Summer Complaint; also Cholera Infantum. and all Com- plaints peculiar to children teeth- ing, and will be found equally beneï¬cial for adults or children. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. T. MILBURN 8t 00., Proprietors. Toronto. tir'l‘crms of repuynu-nl In still borrowers. D. GALBRAITH, Manager. 13 'ronou'ro sun. 'ronou'ro. Interest ullowcd on deposits. â€"--~â€"â€"‘v-«-pâ€"â€"c w... _.._.. UANADII’S- “GREAT- FAIII cuRNév'si'NEw HARRIS Wood Furnaces! I'IDIC'I‘AIIIJZ 0|! .\"I‘.\'l'l0\'.| It". 1881. ~A.\'n- â€" 1881. INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION! -~e.\'l‘ 'l‘lll-Z ~ CITY OF TORONTO, ~~l"lfll.\l â€" 5th to 17th,1881, ('l‘\\'() b KICKS). $25,000 IN PRIZES nrc offered for Live Stock, Poultry, Air-haul- turnl, llorIlcullurul, uud Dulrv Products, IIl|Il(‘.. mums, Mnuufucturcs uml budlcs' Work. .\c.. Au. ENTRIES CLOSE AS FOLLOWS: Manufactures or all kinds, Sill... August 20th. IslVL' Stuck. do" “ “ “ Poultry, Lndy llidurs, EVERYTHING NEW ms'ruc'rx'vn, and INTERESTING. The urentest attractions and limit accum- Iuodullou for ealslblloru uml vlullurs over altered at any ethIiIlIun held In the no- mlnlon oI'Cnnudu! ImCiIIEEIAf‘ EXCUIL‘IIONS will be run from uIl I’ltllldi LISTS nnd ENTRY FORMS will be sent nnywhcro on receipt of post curd. Semi for them to J. J. WITKROW. K. J. HILL, l’rcsldunt. Soorctury. Toronto. &c., September Isl. Dwelllngs. Five Sizes of Coal Burners. HAVE Yoll ’l‘llll-IID \‘I-l’l‘ BIGKLE’S A C SYRUP [arm-ml for Dcurrlp‘lw- l’nmpldc-l. E. & U. GURNEY & 00., 725. Wnl or was arrostcd some days later, What's In a Name? mu but whether any of his slinrc_ of the booty The virtue of most of we page“: medium†Coughs. Golds, Croup, Whooping nmm'ro’fv ONT- hԠbeen foul!“ “3° 1M0“ adv‘ces ‘10 “0t 3‘1)“ with which the market is flooded, lies in the C " ' in“? am“ ‘5 Em“ he“ “‘5 _M°“’°“m°v . “3 name, but the virtues of Burdock Blood Ilit- ough' 856' there ‘5 89"“: amputc 0" mmm‘demmu‘hug . tern lie in tlic furl that the ' cleanse the If on noodnnytblug for such complaints you whether it ought to be handed over to the mom] of in, “mm, Md cum (fygpeppin. bu. can Iinrdly find its cquul. Ask for it. ' owners, or to the insurance companies who had paid up their losecs when the destruction of tho ship seemed beyond a doubt. JNO. W. BICKLE, - Proprietor (Formerly menu: .9 Son.) HAMILTON ONTARIO Lyon & Alexander, I28 BAY ST., TORONTO. Importers and Mnnufni-Iuroru of every dciszrlp lion of PHOTOGRAPHIG GOODS, FRAMES. MOULDINGS, Chronic», Mirrors. I'rrrorntrd Owls. ate. BIRTHDAY 85 snihii SUHUUL on, New Iffusfrufcd Catalogue Issued Isl M I, iousncss uni indigestion. l’ricc 8|.00, trial bottle 10 cents. Toronto Oil Com any are solo umnuructurers of "(Iustorino" 3 ucbluo Oll. Infringements will be prosecuted Burdock Blood Bitters Cures all diseases of the blood, livcrnud kid- neys, fcmnlu complaints, nervous and gener- nl dobility, and builds up the entire system when broken down by disease. Arc you getting up n Lacrosse Club? Get Cooper's striped under-Vest: Blue Navy, and Red Stripes, 00cts and 05cm cucb. Cooper's, 100 Yougc St, Toronto. Have You Tried 1t 1 fyou can testify to its marvellous )wcrs 0 licnlin I and recommend it to your riends. We rc or to Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Suns-lorry. the grund s )ecific forull summer complaints. diurrbu-n, c iolcru Inor- bus, dysentery, cramps, cbolic, sickness of ow.â€â€"-â€"â€" Tm: Duke of Cambridge, while at the din- ner of the London cnbmcn. the other day, ro- ccived a somewhat equivocal compliment. One of the cabmcn, in responding to the toast of the evening, described the joy which be felt at the first sight of the Duke. His Royal Highness, said cnbby, bad a presence an an appearance which, had he not known who he mm, would have induced him to think that .lie was a cabmau of thirty years' standing. The Duke looked glum for a mo- ment, and then joined bcnrtily in the laugh. for which followed. Cures Dyspepsia, Nervous Affec- tions, Genera. Debility, Fever and Ague. Paralysis, Chronic Diarrhma. Bods, Dropsy, Rumors, Female Com- plaints, Liver Complaint, Remittcnt Fever, and all diseases originating in a. bad State of the Blood, or accompanied by Debility or a low State of the System. eRERUVIAN SYRUP If so I.\‘ speaking of a nch '-wcddcd pair, a veutleman said of the bus and z “The trou- le with John is, he has no mind of his in whumlu’ï¬â€˜.‘ 2H IV-{zml A never ralllug D's-nua- ssrnt (‘nrr for Illnesses of flu- Illusion. ltlndtler and lrlnar, Organ , or attendnulyumplala it. Write for pamphlet at: Kllllltl‘ msnssu and Printed List of Testlmsc slats. tree. . Starr Kidneme 60. at “l‘ M. West. Cholera lawman. Vlgf‘r'iw'd NEW ldfo Into ell purl» of lbr t-in Bnowxsoxâ€"Wcll. I always make it a . . rule to tell my wife everything that bap- That tcrriblc scour enlnon clublren may pens. Smitlmiusâ€"Oh, my dear follow, licspccdily cured by )r. l‘ow er's Instruct of that's nothing. I tell my wife lots of things “ ild Strawberry. All‘fprms of lmwul com- thnt never Imppeued at 31]_ plnint, nausea and vomiting, from an ordin- 0- nry diurrbwa to the most severe attack lof v I c Canadian cholera, can be subdqu by its nrompt use. It is the best remedy known Advuiclngym,carc, sickness, (liaaplmiut- ' for children or ndults suffering from summer moot. and hereditary predispoaitiuir all op- I complaints. crate to turn um b3“ IIva 3““ aim" "II Toronto (Ml ('ompnny nro solo manufalurcrs them inclines it toahod prematurely. Arzn‘s of "l'nntorinu" )Iaclliuo Uil. Infringements HAIR Vioolt will restore faded or malight‘ “l†"“ "MTUWI- TORONTO. ormlhairtoarichbrownordoe b k,asI ' ' "‘ ““"'†" ‘ m. bodeiml, It song,“ and 0 . the; I . ol‘unxcs, Frames. Mirrors. (Ila-I. l’lc- 5“ P. siting I“ hid“! “duh 1‘ WWW“. A Ithir‘i'iiuws a Billin’l'almllg. and m dandruff, humora. By Ill uso ;" " Pgi‘nx‘. “I [V IN.“ “2 111553 lair i‘ Chwkwlv “Id " “‘"V smvth'hZO Auger. bur-cs 5 to :15 inch. Hand or will be ueod in all cases where the folli- ; horse newer. Semi for mtsmguc. cs )llal'f‘f'll" do are not destroyed or the glands decayed. g {Ing “"b V ‘ _ __ I ~ _ Pi 'A‘ITfll'BA I. I!†OFFICE-ah "(VIII “A I." .a Its effects are bautifully shown on bushy, I . ' YOl'NG. Toronto. selects (iovcrmm-nt jawâ€"1.- Nth" 1:3' a?“ “11:2! gswfgm nd 'und sells Land on commission. ‘ H i ' ---â€" 4 of youth. armless an sure in its opera-I “I-†ï¬t." Timurâ€"53517.,» ' THE BOYNTON GEO. BLWATSOII. r V. est. ’I‘arosto. I BOSSIII IIOUS I a -:-ns. Toronto. Pal» we Hotclofj‘wuie Justin-It‘s!!- fawning- I333: omnincidfii'figoiiiixgh I †"ROLLESTON HOUSE. .Véfszfll"; 53â€â€œ *‘m‘dr.-. - Ilsa I u is school for Sean ladies. Tune Tums su. Tiusos, and after ten " "“ ’ ‘ you, "can the Km,M,d,w me Remedyl masses WILL m: nrsunun sum: toâ€"da ' commands a large and increasing sale, I “1“ Thu "hm! mo" ï¬ï¬ahymm domitisincom bleuadreesing,andis especially vain for the soft lustre and rich- nessoftoneltim It contains neither oil ordya, and will not oil oraoilor colour white camhric; yet it lasts long on the hair, and it kip- it fresh and vigorous. For sale by all d era. ‘ I! King:l ('omerlilnuk York ‘. HOT AIR FURNACES. LAIDLAW, sowrs & 00., ’IJNI‘I’AI’I’I‘IIIILK, 11AM ILTON. ONT m...- -_.. “ mats-am The remedy that has stood the test of time . is Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. A General Defeated. A Mrs. J. (i. Roberth wrils-s: “I was u ed, “m cm." the-me n. suffering from general debility, wan; “1 5,5,. For Wurlulug (flint-ohm, School llousrs mul own- 1‘ Oh. that Will "ch "0 (IIHOFCIICU : the stomach and bowo- complaints of infants _ Shrub Will always heready '0 31W III!“ a or adults. Let its merits be known to all P ,1 Bupdlu u... Mmu] mu, m, "I" ..",,,..,,|,‘ piece of hers I†responded n lmlv. who lmvu not used it. . If "'2 Element, lltlth’. luv-wing Mum-y- r with a meat enviable reputation. dobtalnin smhwucauosmomblni s Almost infalliblsto cure dysentery cholera an coma u u . . . SLIXl‘per package. post paid. Ask yourgï¬gtm I "by, hO‘TS‘ «goglrln'l‘a Mugginwrbus, and all manner of fluxes, cbolic mulch;uwr[:siiig.littllJli‘ll’hIoillfsitzi;If 4"“ “0‘ "v a" *“d ‘0 "ugh “‘11†4‘ particulanapplylo I». menus. m sassicmnl‘flwltmfnlwlum. WIH‘WYIWH of feltbetter than for years. I coma: inn-.3 Lo.. owuto. Imms. Tore-ts. .‘umuwrmlkmuu your llittcrsummucb. ' H