M u mooning 0! am Town Council on Mondty evening In: linhmu Pukuon wu appalnlod Anon-0:10: the nu- 1880. Among the prominent onlull In New York ll Algernon Sonorlo. 0! England, who monlod n dough»: o! ox-Prosldont Grant. Mu. swam rennin-1n Englond. The Pope is said to have iormed the generous and preiseworihy. resolution oi making the tree-urea oi the Velicen Library more soceesible to the world. He has mode uoonunission to consider the best means of publishing oaislogues oi the various collec- tions, end hes ordered the: one oi the rooms in the Vatican be set sport for the use oi persons who wish to consult the books end msnuroripls oi the library. Genereilons oi Iohoiers hsve groened over the lnscoessibiliiy oi the rsre or unique printed volumes and psrehmenu so jesiously guerded by the Supreme Poniifl. The Eatebiished Church in Englend is edminisiered by 2 erchbishops. 28 bishops, 4 suflregen bishops, 80 dsens. 74 erchdeecons. 610 rurel deene. end 28,000 clergy of all clesses, oneflith of whom here no perochiel cherge. The yeeriy incomes tense in the higher grades from £15,000, paid to the Archbishop oi Centerbury, to 532.400, to the Bishop oi Bodus end Men. One thou-end pounds e you is ihe dieconei everege. There are 10,000 churches. The gross income of the Estebliehed Church is £8,000,000 per ennum. end the Church population 13,000.- 000. 'In Ireland there are 2 erchblshops. 10 bishops. 1.238 beneflces, end 2.000 clergy. The church-going popuieiion is 760,000. one. with e tot-l indebtedness 0! 875.500; there no ten Preebyterien ohm-eh". with an aggregate debt 0! 0121.800; ten Methodist churches have a burden 0! 8123.000; the six Beptiete ere entirely tree from debt. but the other emeller bodies ere heavily burdened. Tho churches of Toronto on a rule our, 3 very heavy ludablodnou, u the following wlll thou: the Aoglloon ohmjolgu numlm: gooâ€- At a meeting 0! the Gleegow Free Prelby- tery recently the Rev. Mr. Campbell gave notice of e motion â€king for the eppolnt- ment 0! e committee to lnveetlgete eerteln vlevn expreued by Proteuor Cendll‘eh in his opening lecture It the Free Church College. A oonlerenoe to oonelder the matter we: held In privete It the clone ol the Presbytery meetlng. Rev. A. Stylemnn Honing. Vicar oi St. Paul's. Oierkenweli. London, well known in Oenedn. hu lately iuued A circular to 800 paper-I. Inggemng the formeiion of emigre. tion clubs. to enebie industrious. well- ohonctered mama to emigrate to the coloniel; and especially recommending Meniiobe as a ï¬eld for emigration. Tho ooromony 0! lbs bloulng of the now 8. 0. Church. at Bunk. n bonnlllul nnd lmponlng ediï¬ce. will take plloo on Bundoy next, Feb. 1st. Tho Bight B". Bishop Wnlnh will parlonn the ceremony. The church In one o! the most hnndaozno muo- tnru in western Unlulo. Rev. Dr. Raid mm that the receipts {or the Prubï¬orisn Home Mission Fund up to tho 27th'lnlt. have been in maxked ï¬nd encouraging contra“ with those of Int you up to flu umo duo : 1880. Home Mission Fund from tll The nocion prevails that the Episcopal Church hu pulp!“ and places for all chc ministers thct dents m 30 our to that told, but â€cording to I recent canny of Rev. D. 8. Miller. D.D., o! St. Mark's Church. Funk- ford, Put. them no 525 uncmploved E piecopcl clergyman of the 3.300111 the United sum, and only 2,000 hold motor-hips. Weekly Pabulum for Lay and Clerical Renders. In we United Kingdom there are 50,000 Jews. who have 90 synagogues. The Unila- rians have 855 miniutexs. The Quake" have 827 moeuug houses and 14,500 mem- be". The prograu at Wesleyan Melhodlem in the Fuji Inland: le indicated by the hot thn there are now 841 ohepoll and 291 other pieces when preaching is held. with tiny- eight miuioneriel engaged in preparing the way for others. The membership number: 23.274 personal. ' All the monumental teblete, cnept two, in City Rood Chapel, London, eeoepid the revagee o! the reoent ï¬re. Only one. tbet ol Mre. Mortimer. hee'tellen trom‘ the well. Thet ol the eloquent Robert Newton wee eomewhet Injured. but the ï¬ne buet wee pre- ilerved. Bav. David Jenkins. of Monticello. lows. hu got into hm wner by punching thu Daniel kept the lion: in the den at buy by tom 0! parlonnl mognetism. and his expul- lion in to be undonuken. The New York Observer any: that this talk about the poor not huvmg privileges to attend church is all bush. and that the real truth in that those who stay away had rather be loat- era and heathen: than anything also. And they danced right merrily Til. '1.qu unruly time tor tu. "rho homo tilting this way and lhbn that wayâ€" oh.wbu.t Inn! And no but bobbed up and down un its moist and steamy otow 1) With a chun- falling on! at. hm, and thou the dance was done. Wining {tom Living-touts to the Free Church Record. Dr. Laws toys that the slum tudoin ofleotnolly stopped in his old ,hndquuxou by the miualon. A number of boys unvo been lent in to: Christian instruc- tion. Then the bngpipo «nod to play; And number muo “Highway Bung tho tattle. louder. louder. an 1:: who new V"! I! E And the toot of laughing sm- (Girls with shamrock in than curls) You could almost hour a-keoplnz tune to ms 010 [tub 11¢. 0h. um vlnhr 3mm. Such- mony. morn tun. LI £113.13"? in mama. won “I lining to n "1"“ um um" Boom-h sir. And it nomad. I do declare. Al though bsflnpo phyod by an, In breve: 10min; . Dullng. smiling, cunning Boll (in-pod mm any band; nor drou. And 5 pretty courtesy making, while the kettle mule l buw . “ l'll yourpwtnor be." and Ibo: “ Forwud. blokwud. one. two. three: " And pussy cried. "anol my dens," in one im- menu mo-ow. AHONG THE CHURCHES. Incl-one The Dance I- lie Kitchen. souroea‘ ; 020.980 9| ‘. 7,019 88 013,351 03 Four Penn-flunk man found guilty of making {nudnlonl election romms won on gum†ï¬ned $400 «oh. and "Mound to | your: Inprnonuon‘. ' A Oalnlvlllo lamily may 1nd Hugo wash- lng o! blanket! to do and the hired girl uooordlngly proouud {our quiz“ o! no“ soup for the purpose. honing It ï¬nding in I pull ovomight. the mun of the house, by minute. mixed bun mm It Ind led “to the cow. The cow still llvu and the washing wu pontponod {or a week. The most singular case is connected with Psreons' sermon from “There shsllbe no night there." preached forty years ego. and printed in " The Pulpit.†vol. xxx" 1837. If any one will exsmine the volume of "The Pulpit" for 1869 -No. 2.373â€"he will find the very ssme sermon, word for word. from the ssme text. end contributed by n well-known English prescher ss his own. He hed pnr loined it yesrs before. and on sbnormsl memory for forgetting. forgot he hsd stolen it. and sins, forgot he hsd stolen it from “ The Pulpit.†and there he is impaled. He hes wisely kept silent. offering no explnns- tions. saying nothing. for he hsd nothing to soy. ‘ Stmhtoy claim to hue the ammo" boy in the Province of Onhrlo. HI. nuns in Fletcher Andrews, his .30 In ten your. nnd be 1m puud the noon. oxamimtlon to: ontnnoo lo the High School. own. I hope." “No. mine." “Dreedinl' but he is young. let as worn end seve him.’ To the vestry they went. The young men wee penitentâ€"everybedy found out in peni- tent-end eoniessed. When Morris cleimed the semen the preacher wss indignsnt end broke out: “I knew you were coming here this morning end I determined to give you something good. so I preeehed e eermon by the Preeident oi our College. Dr. â€"â€".†The sermon wss Morrie'. end the preeoher hed robbed e thiei. Onieb Morris. 3 iomoun London preacher. was oiton robbed of hi: unnonl. In company with o oloriool iriond ho “tended a chopel It a wanting piooo, Ind tho putor. n young mun. punched. A: the conclusion the friend uld to Morris. “ Extnordlnuy unnon. quite wonderful." " Think so 1"wu ihe reply; “ you innow whou _i_t it. of oonuo 3" ‘{ Hi- Bad and sickening ae it ie to contemplate meanneu and diehoneety in men who proieee so much. it hae ita comic aide. Two iamona London preachera were engaged lome yeare ago to preach the dedication aermone in a new church in the north of England. The preacher in the morning had a noble theme. treating it in a maeterly way, and the dia- conne wae 'delivered meet eflectively. To- ward evening the other preacher arrived. and coon entered the crowded chapel. He aecended the pulpit and took the lame text. " Glorioue thingc are apoken o! Thee." and preached the very came aermon. word for word, that had been delivered in the morn. ing. The irienda oi each charged the other with “ borrowing." They were both thieves. The rumor: war one by Pareone,and had been pnblirhedtwenty veare beigrer The Rev. J amu Pmonl. 0! New Enghnd. us me Jouph Parker 0! his any â€"i. e. ., 1m robbed or borrowed from more thin any one. But Parker, brillltnï¬ a- ho in. II but a child compared whh Parlour, who ranked wirh 3.11 gm! Ohnlmorl, among the are-ten o! pulpit ontpu. to see 3 report of hill own common the {allowing Monday. as delivered by the Methodiet. It should be eteted thet the reporter eeked to see the preecher‘e menu- ecript elter the service, and wee refused The preecher even tried to dleeuedo the reporter from printing lt. but he thought he land a good thing end declined. The author of the sermon had never preached it to hie own people and he never preeched it time, lee__t he ehonld be thought the plegleriet. A distinguished Methodist doctor of divinity. formerly of this city. afterward I college president. wss travelling for pert of a day in oornpsny with one of our prominent city psstors who was on his way to preeoh in Western New York. Lesrning his errand, the Methodist doctor inquired about his sermon, es wes natural. The text, subject, plan and illustrations were all gone over. Judge oi the surprise of the Baptist pestor Some years ago a minister of the New York East Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church preached the “ Conference sermon†before his brethren. It was a masterly pro- duction. but unfortunately for him he had stolen it bodily from a volume of sermons published by the deceased Dr. Pitman, of the New Jersey Conference. and his brethren detected it. One of them the next day pro- duced the volume and read extracts from it. showing clearly the plagiarism. The preacher, blubbering like a baby, stepped to the bar 01 the conference to receive the censure of the body. administered by the bishop presiding. A correspondent of the Examiner and Chronicle tells the story of a Princeton pro- fessor and a physician of this city. who a few years ago attended the Metropolitan Metbo. dist Episcopal Church in Washington. The President, General Grant. was there. The sermon was a very fine one. but was stolen. Both the professor and the doctor remembered it. and the following day procured the volume in which it was published. llevel-tlou of III Intentâ€"Poets and Authors Ala. Guilty at the (Menu. Says the N. Y. Herald: Dr. Lorimer. cl Uhicago has been beaten in the role oi plagiarist by another Baptist. Bev. W. H. Sloan. oi Oanandaigna. N.Y.. who recently preached. word ior word. the celebrated “ Temple †aermon oi the Rev. Dr. Parker. 0! London. the same that Dr. horimer also delivered and which got him into trouble. Mr. Sloan was invited to inrniah a copy for publication in pamphlet form. which he did with the modest rergret “ that it was not more deserving of the honor conierred upon it." From all parts 0! the country come evidences that this deception is very largely practiced by the ministerial fraternity. The late Frederick W. Robertson. of England; Dr. Fuller. oi Baltimore; McOheyne. 01 Scotland; Mc- [lvaine. at Ohio; the Wealeys; Pitman. of New Jersey. as well as Beecher. Talmage and Dr. Parker. oi London. and many more are thus made unwilling and uncredited contri- butors to the popularity of scores 0! ministers here and elsewhere. Indeed. so brilliant and popular a preacher as Dr. Talmage preached a aermon some time ago. which had been published in an English paper item which he took it. but which of course was published here as his own. A Methodist minister. of Brooklyn. some {months later. preached the same sermon to his congregation. and when asked it he had stolen it from Dr. Talmage. he produced the paper irom .which both had been cribbcd. OLIBIOAL PLAGIABIIJI. Mr. John McCullough givee an enterteln- ing account oi hie flret leeninge towerdl the drama. It wee in a Philadelphia chop? el related in the New: oi that cityâ€"that the boy John began hie work in lile an ap prentioe in cheirmeking. In the name “101) waa an intelligent old mechenie named Burke. whoee bney life had been brightened by much herd reading, and who wee continu- ally reciting Bhahapeare greatly to the Mr: delight. Burke's favorite emueement when ellghtly enlivened hy the wine cup was to murder young McCullough with at point bra-h, and then recite with exceeding great effect over him. Mark Anteny’e epeech over the dead Crater. “ I become perfectly en- raptnred with the men.†Iaye the actor. “ and made such a patient. accommodating corpse for him that he fluelly made mea present of a copy oi Shekepeere. From that day the doom oi the cheirmeking busi- neer. so tar as I wu concerned, wee Ieeled iorever." A Goon Strumâ€"It ie eteted thet Mr. Jemee Oherlton, formerly of the Greet Weetern Beiiwey,end now Generel Peeeenger Agent at the Ohloego. Alton szt. Louie Boed. hee recently mede e iortnnete mining ven- ture. He. with enomber of other gentlemen in Chicago. pnroheeed e heevy intereet in the Memmoth mine et Smithviiie. Arizone. A recent letter eeye thet e lete etrike in the mine ehowe eeeeye 018390. 81,450 end 81,847 of free gold to the ton. The eheit in down but 100 feet, end the vein ie ï¬ve feet in width. The indieetione ere thet they will ell mete their iortunee out oi it. A Oelitomle eolteu end elnger, who he! eppeereiln tiahte notwllheundlng that ehe hee an "uncle! leg which eon 03.500. Ie pmmm In 3 In“ wherein ehe enee her meneger (or hreeung I contact wuh her heoenee he thought ehe eonid not ulna (win: e wooden lea) In " Gkofle-Ghofle." Adeline Petti ie the meet favored oi oper- etic eingere. She bathe in royal levor.end her eminge ere nimoet iebuione in their emonnt. but-her prominence end her weelth bring their diudventegee. emong which is the deiiy receipt of conntieee begging lettere wherever she eppeere. At Berlin one night recently. the eged Emperor ectueily went on the lingo oi the Royal Open to congretnlete the dive; but the paper. which chronicle thie pnblieh eieo lome letters, one oi which reed: "Medeme. you are rich end you know whet love it. Give ue e few hundred marks. '0 thet we may merry. and we will bieee you everieetingly." ' Min Gonoviovo Word hu just returned from. Iuoooulnl tour In the country. She hu token to: horn“ and mother 3 pretty houutn 8t. John'l Wood on nlonu lento. Evidentlynho hu dooldod to mnko London her hudqnurtorl. though the has A tour in the United Stutu later onin oontomplntton. â€"Loudon Corrupondmt. Eliza Weatheraby u too play a pruent. “ Evangeline †BI co la composing I new oomioopon. Startling Record Oi "errors In the nether (la-nary. The London correspondent ol the New York Timer, under date Jan. 16. gives a startling picture ol crime in the Mother Country. Only recently. he relates. a coroner publicly declared that ohild~murder is a common crime in England ; that scores ol babies are put out at the way without enquiry. that “overlying inlants in bed" is trequentiy murder. that many children are starved to death. and many more latally dosed by so called “ remedies " lor inlantile complaints. Belore this ofï¬cer ol the Urown made that statement we had already had some terrible examples of the horrors oi baby-larming. and soon alterward there was brought to light one at the most painlulrevelstions in the history at crime. A husband and wile. comparativer young in years, kept a children's home. They were in the habit ol deliberately and slowly murdering their little charges by starvation. There was reason to suspect that in some cases they thus tortured inlants to death tor “a con- sideration." Eventually the gallows was led with the carcases of these two prolessionai murderers. but the Queen's oiiicer previously quoted still insists that there are scores oi undiscovered child murderers, and therslore we have in our midst scores at undiscovered murderers. “in London, I can mysell recall. within the last dozen years. hall a dozen notorious tragedies which still remain dark mysteries. and in which the chic! actors, cruel and deliberate assassins, are at large. It is in evidence that malelactora sometimes suï¬er mental tortures. Recently a murderer came back to the suburbs oi the metropolis and gave himsell up tor a crime he had com- mitted twenty years ago. He had been all gave: the world during that time. but could rest nowhere. A lew months ago he was tried, lound guilty and sentenced to be hanged. but mercifully reprieved. that he might be sent into penal servitude lor lile. Every now and then some poor mutilated body is lound in a cellar, or floating about rivers in pieces. ‘ and there the ghastly business stops. The Euston Square murder has to be added to the list at undiscovered crimes, though. on the other hand. we did succeed in bringing home to Kate Webster the awlul murder ol her mistress, whom she assassinated. boiled. cut up, and distributed piecemeal in the Thames and on a manure heap. A Standard- shire coroner has publicly declared within the past few months that he believes many persons who are supposed to have emigrated to other countries are lying murdered at the bottoms ol unused coal pits. It is possible that this may be an exaggeration. though no man in England had such opportunities 0! becoming acquainted with crimes against the person as a coroner. A medical expert told me recently that deaths by poison are commoner than we think. Scores of cases where there is reason for suspicion are passed over because medical men and nurses are afraid at making charges they may be unable to tally substantiate. Certiï¬cates oi deaths are olten given care- lessly by second-rate practitioners." Don Thompson hu paid all his old aoorol extending over twenty-yarn. ond ha .130 mode u soon 0! family connections happy. The roptuontailonl o! Mme. Pam-3?“). Pul- Gmo will begin on Guardâ€, the 14th of February. At the beginning Iho will ting only Moo 3 week, on Tuesday and Sunday. Mr.‘1'oole hu recovered from hie eloineu, end it wu expected ebet ho would reoppou It the Fall, Theatre lent Seturdey evening. He ll now undying hle new port in Mt. Byron'l comedy, " The Upper Ornet." nn-lcal and Dramatic Not". CRIME IN EN GLAND. The wolvee in the neighborhood oi Temee- ver, Hungery. continue to commit teerinl de- predetione. devouring ell eettle not conï¬ned to etelle or other pime oi eeiety. A prieet who wee returning home in e eleigh wee et- tecked by e peek oi wolvee end ordered the driver to heeten iorwerd. At e eudden engie oi the med, however. the vehicle wee npeet end ite oooupent torn to pieoee by hie reven- one neeeilente. beiore hie terriï¬ed eervent oonld render the elighteet eeeletenee. The letter meneged to eleepe. In enother looellty the waiver entered e yerd edjoining en inn end eeiz ad en en. which beoeme en eeey prey to their voreeity. At Seelonte e ehepherd wee teten by enrpriee end killed. end in other dietriots meny pereone heve hed nerrow eeeepee. A strange dieeeee hee eppeered in the Rent End oi London. It in en eiieotion oi the eye, known in the inieoted diatriet ee " the blight." and not iemiiier to the native ooniiet. It in virulent end dengeroue, not eeidom destroying the eight it it be not promptly taken in bond. Three week: ego there were sixty-nine euee oi this dleeeee in White- ehepel elone. The epidemic ie Inppoeed to be eioreign importetion. It but been duldod. Inn A oonhmponry. thn I landlord's bull!!! bu no‘ Mummy \0 all goods thn In" bun soiled. Ho nun employ an mouomr. Bums! Menusâ€"A complete model oi e three-throw nilwey switch end track. also two height ens. all on improved principles. u used by the Greet Western Beilwey st present. wee sent to Toronto yesterday after- noon to he on exhibition beiore the Beilwey Committee 01 the Local Legisletnre, which met to'dey. The models ne all nude qunter size, and among the nrengements lor the protection oi lite is the walk on top of the ireight ens tor brekemen. which extends over the end of each on, neniy meeting. consequently there will be I spsoe of from nine to twelve inches to run over. The ladders for getting up end down from the top of the one no ell on the side. instead oi between. es meny no now need. The semephore et the three-throw switch hes e bond which points the switch to the right or left, upon which the treln will be run es it proceeds. For the mein line the bond does not show, es it points along the line. At night for the switch e smell white light is essocieted with the red light, showing tothe right or leit es mey be when the switch is turned. The nsnel green light is used (or the meln truck. Haunx. N. 8.. Feb. 2.â€"-’l‘hs snow storm abated about three o'clock a. m.. and then clear weather set in with biting cold. A steamer was signalled lrom the east shortly after six o’clock. which proved to be the George Shattuck. from St. Pierre ; at nine o’clock another signal went up tor a steamer east. and at fllteen minutes to eleven o‘clock three guns were tired from the Uitadel Hill, which announced that the look-out party at Camperdown had made out the steamer to be the Sarmatlan. and that she was some four miles lrom the coast, in charge 0! a pilot. A moment later the mail steamer's signals were hoisted. and. as it by magic. tlags, hunting and streamers floated from the flagstafle at the dockyard. the various public and private residences. while the shipping in the harbor and at the wharves were decorated lrom stem to stern. The streets and wharves were Immediately crowded with eight-seen. The Barmatian steamed slowly up the harbor. The Union Jack wasj lowered lrom the Citadel flagstsfl and the1 royalstandard floated in its place, while the signal's staffs were handsomely dressed with bunting. At twelve o’clock the Barmatian dropped anchor of! the Ordnance yard accompanied by the commissariat transport Lily, in which His Excellency the Governor- General had steamed to the mouth or the }harbcr to meet his royal wile. The guard of honor from the 63rd Hali- iax Volunteer Blfla Battalion,under command 0! Captain M. J. Power, had taken up their position in the yard, but the guard at honor iron the 97th Regiment were latein arriving. Her Royal Highness having landed and was comfortably seated in the sleigh when they came along. The landing stand was neatly decorated with flags and hunting. and as ‘Her Royal Highness stepped from the Lily on to the landing stand a ringing cheer rose from the people 'on the wharf. while a royal salute thundered forth lrom the Citadel. The Princess was received by His Honor the Licut. Governor. Lady Macdougsll. Ool. Drayson and His Worship the Mayor. She wore a lur cap and silk jacket lined with fur. Her face was} covered by awhite veil. She looked in good 1 health. but a little pale, doubtless the result 0! sea-sickness caused by the rough weather experienced 03 the coast. Alter the Princess and His Excellency were coated Her Royal Highness invned Govexnor Archibald to take a lost in their sleigh. «‘0-» A Noble Example. The old ï¬rm 0! builders. Messrs. William Lawrence (2 Sons, 0! Pltï¬eld Wharf, Waterloo Bridge, and bread street, London, which was lounded in 1813, and 0! which the surviving partners were Mr. Aid. W. Lawrence, Sir James 0. Lawrence. Bart, M.P.. and Mr. Ed- win Lawrence. ceased to exist on Dec. 81st, 1879. The retirement at the partners was marked by a noteworthy act at generosity. The whole of the business was handed over by them to some 01 their principal clerks and managers. who had served faithfully ior a long period. The sum of £30,000 was also placed at their disposal to enable them to carry on trade on the most advantageous terms. The artisans who had been employed by the late ï¬rm {or ten years and upwards were each paid sums varying irom £10 to £20, according to the number of yeara' service. and a law oi the oldest workmen have been iulormcd that, in addition to their £20. a penaion will be grant- ed them ior the remainder of their lives when they are pleased to demand it from the Brothers Lawrence. No interest at any kind is retained in the new firm by its lormcr owners. Return 01 Princess Louise. ROUGH WEATHER OFF THE COAST. ENTHUSIASM GRAND RECEPTION A'I‘ IIALII‘5X. OF THE PEOPLE. The Manda. organ of the Pnpnl Nancie); ram-ring to the million of Pm." to tho United Hutu. Inn: “By tho month 0! n Prom-taut. On‘holio Ireland 0qu Prom England to nooount. Whoour cum justice. pun the my for terrible “plum.†Ion â€"Tho Northern Btilny Comm, m propuod to furnish lath Blmooo to. In 1'05 ronto cud Huntlton. There in u pretty cool huntt in the nonhom Ith- thll Imon of good altar ion. In. Mupolo. tho union «out At Bum. bu an ordot from Plum“. phi; to: 25,000 tons. The English people In ten months drunk the following number of gnllonl 0! who: Sherry. 8 819 000 , port, 2 892 000, ' 8mm. 3, 463, 000; ohnmpoano. 1,.171 000, ‘ Spnnilh rod wine, 852,;000 other kinda. 1.198000 gnllonl. Lord Dunmoro. who II n momplhhol mullonl nmatour, hu lurked u emu o! 00-. com It the Groannor Bull in Pinlloo. Th0 Pdnoo 0! Wales. the Duke of Edinburgh III the Duke of Oonnnught will “and "subtly nu: tho price of Hoke“ ll 10 guinea for tho '0 9'0 London Truth: “ In the mount do, girls on not moidena so much u buholout and the one cox hu pretty much the “no amount of libetty u the other. Tum you: .30 it won thought handout almost lndollooto to: on nnmonlod glrl to wands; about the Itrooto nlono; now It II tho tale; our! on: pretty young bloholou II pettloootl Ind {may hud- wonld â€out tho tin of o protector «In ony my noun", to their ulntlon." The Natal Mercury reporte on much: one». A Kaflir wee walking up tho ltmt‘ coming 3 veryiuge fleh. when :nin member oi the tone, knowing thot tho nettvee do not fleh, euepeeted thot eomethingwol wrong. nnd questioned him no to who“ he got it iron. The Kim: not giving 5 “tile. notary explenetion. wee uked to so to the voiioe etntion. where the oonetlblo took union of the ï¬eh. Ind found theo neck of punk. bottle sticking out oi ite month. “a the bottle out he tonnd it oontoinegn mm. the ertiui Kamr wee dotoined to: going illegoiiy in poueeeion oi liquor. A proceu (or converting common egete into the beentitnl bended onyx eione he. been recently invented in Germeny. The eaete ie flret colored red by immenlon (or I week or more in n corroeive eointlon of ircn in eqneiortie. The plecee to be bleached m then impregneted for the acne length, 0! time with e conceive relation of one pert oerbonete oi poteeh end one pert cenetle poteeh diuolved in weter. Alter thet. the etonee ere dried for e week et e 1110de warmth. end ï¬neily expoeed in n cloud eerthenwerc veuei to the high temperetm o! e red-hot lurnece.â€"Oaueu'e Hagamu. Aetothe possibility of substituting for the gellowe eome form of deeth 1erth leee pelniul, Dr. Henry Nechtel. e dietin- guiehed French phyelciet now in New York eeye that the serrate does not elwey I kill the tint time. end could not be mode“ eueeeeetul except in the hende of e eklllul lumen: thet edminietering chloroform violently ll peinlnl; thet pruulc ecld in the eye doee not elweye produce ineteuteneoue deeth, end man be edmlnietered by e phyelcien; thet doeth by etrycbniue iey cometimee eccen- penied by terrible convulelcne end fleet peiu; and thet even electricity ie not cure, for emen in Englend wee etruck bu“: light-u ning end etrlppcd o! hie ciothee en bones were broken. end yet he unwind It. "Kenning by the neck yuntil deed†eeellte likely to rennin on the etetute book {or the preeent. Minwauxsn,Wis.. Feb. 1.â€"A terrloieeud revolting experience of a midwife of this 6! is published to-dey. A man and woman ea ‘ after her proleaaionslly in a closed hack. 3h. reluctantly accompanied them. on they were“ strangers. When in the hook they blind! folded her. and alter a roundabout drive. she wee taken to a room, when the baudese I“ removed trom her eyes, and she tound hers sell at the bedside oi a young lady. Th. eocouohement was safely (floated. when III." men pulled a pistol lrom his pocket on threatened to shoot the midwife it she . not kill the living child. In answer to hï¬ repeated threats. she eeid “He could _- her. but she would not commit such a hideous crime." In his desperation the man 8"!â€- the child and plunged it into a boiler‘d! soeiding water. _ He then blindioided- W7 midwife and hurried her away in a he!) IO her home. The police are working up the case. ‘ ' In a recent divorce enlt in Detroit thI following neeeegee from the huehend’l were reed: “ 23rd Meroh. 1878â€"Belle drunk: I bed to go to Mn. G.’e to who one at tho children. Munâ€"Belle drunk. ï¬lthâ€"Belt. drunk end eeleep; bed to get in through tho window. Withâ€"Belle drunk end rowdy: no dinner, no enpper; ley with her clothe! en upon the bed. 283hâ€"Belle drunk ct one palm; no dinner, end more drunk to thet day. Apru3â€"Bclle drunk ct floflmen'l . «Ixâ€"Belle out from three to eeven. end got home drunk. 7mâ€"Belle drunk; no diam or upper." And eo on up to Me, 22, when the entry ocenre: "A men in the honec. who left hie eclchel on the teble and run out o! the heck door when he new me: tonnd the whlekey bottle. Mey 24â€"Moved myeell end children.†.ltcortelnly seemed ebont the. An Imposin- nnd Notable Muir!- Event. Cmosao. Feb. 1.â€"â€"Ths Times 0! this ing saysâ€"â€II is very probable thtt Oathsdrsi oi the Holy Name. at the not!!! North State and Superior streetsmm sometime to-dey an imposing and no matrimonial event In the merriaae 0! Joseph Unuohon. the present Connor Manitohs. and tor many years prior a I ter of the Canadian Parliament. to Emma Le Moles. oldest daughter Hon. De St. Denis Le peg; as did also Miss LeMoine,aeoorn . by her brother. De 8:. D. 11031on iron the Canadian ospital. Thin In t A concession and equitable division of spun tag“ the part 0! the distinguished principal! [If this coming contrast hae been made noun . (tom the (not that the Manitoba Parliam is now in eessiou. end osnnot reach an lie journment until the Governor‘a “tum", The ceremony was potion-mid It 8.» ,,,7_ vâ€"v pm. The uévernor a-nd b31616" h Manitobo in the morning. und tho 0M members of we puny for Cumin. Marriage of Goveruoiicnucl and mu Lefllolno. A Midwu'e’niliBI-rlblc Experience.