A good many people have been oredn. lone enough to pin their faith to the state. ment of the last couplet, but it will never- theless interest them to learn that the greater glut of the alleged poem was never written y the inmate of “ Mother Ship. ton's Cave." This ancient lady seems to have gained a. great deal more notoriety than_her_ witchcraft or prophetic powers ‘ n- L-..“ nah] Ghnt Eng] l mwuvvu w-ua Var resorted to. The printed book became a manuscript. The existence of such a manuscript is altogether fabulous. The truth is that not till the year 1641 were any of Mother Shipton’s prophecies given to the world in print or in writing. This book the British Museum does possess, but there is not to be found in it any of those anticipations of the steam engine, the bal- loon, railways, the Crystal Palace, etc., which have so startled the credulous. “ In 1862 a Mr. Charles Hindly, of Brighton, published ‘ an edition ‘ of Mother Shipton‘s Prophecies, and here for the ï¬rst‘ time were given the rhymes which contain theso pretended predictions of things which had already happened. This book aroused a oontrovers a ut the existence, life and prophecies 0 Mother Shipton, which was continued from time to time in ‘ notes and queries,‘ and in series IV., vol. XL, the editor announces that Mr. Hindley has acknowledged that he is the author of the prophetic rhymes." â€is AL_L 13:..Jlnuy :nGnv-nn_ owiws’w IOTIIBB SIIIP'NI’S PROPHECY. Iron in the water shell float Ae ees as a wooden boat; Gold all be touml 'mid stone In a. lend them now not known ; Fire and water shell wonders do ; England shall at last admit. a J ow ; The Jew that wee held in scorn Shell‘of 3 Christian be home and born. -'l‘hree tlmee three shell lovely France Be led to dance a bloody deuce ' Qeforeher people shall be free; ____ -I.-II “In. em- 110‘le uvl er-v ____~. _ Three Wren} rulers shall she see: Three t mes the people rule alone; Three times the people's hope is gone; Three rulers in succession see. 0 Each 3 ring from dlï¬erent dynasty; Then all the worser ï¬ght he done, England and France shall be as one.~ All England’s sons (hut plough the land Shall be seen hook in hand; Learning shall so ebb and now. The poor shall most wisdom know. The world to an end shall come In eighteen hundred and eighty-one. Elvruvvnv -.. __-_v “is also believed that Hindley interpo- lated some lines of his own. The lines: Carriages without horses shell go, Iron shall on the water float. England shall at last admit nJew, are given as earn les of these; but ithesnot et been shown t at the prediction regard- ng 1881 was one of these interpolations. A Gold Fever at Slum â€" Discovery oi Quartz Xleldlnu $3,000 to the Ten. 81m Famcrsco, Cal..Feb. 9.â€"The steamer California, thirteen days from Sitka,brings sensational news that Alaska is afllicted with a gold fever. Some two months ago genuine quartz croppings were diseovered near the Token River, about eighty miles north of Sitka. The indications were so strong that the discovery crested excite- ment which has increased with every breath of news from Eldorado. The s imens of quartz brought by Captain rroll have assayed as hi I: as 33,000 to‘ the ton. It isa whitish-vol ow, profuse! sprinkled with sulphur rock. and rich enough if found in lar e quantities to make bonanza princes 0 every man in Sitka. As no means of transportation can befurnished until the California returns. the excited merchants will have to remain in Sitka at present. According to the best authenticated reports they are pulling down their stores and packin their mining implements for_a_t_rip to the oken district. vâ€"__--. _-_ ml when the California goes back she will tnnsform this lonely district into busy mining camps. At sresent there are hit men in th gold ilel . though Capt. Carrol says but 0 even claims have been located. The miners cannot work before the end of Ketch. but while waiting for the snow to melt. the adventurers will lay out their “Wu. The California Will take back all Em ror William is now growing thin in his y, nndhia legshavo diminished in rotundity; his military conm are thickly dad and his trousers are out very . The old man’s strength is evidently [mm but he bouts that ho is as active as the lumber she can carry. [tinng‘ AN A LASKAN ELDCDBADO. Fearful Disaster Buffalo. comma on Ni x. v. c. s'mlou. Two Trains Enveloped In the Ruins. SEVERAL PERSONS vINSTAIlTLY KILLED. BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb. 8.â€"-Shortly after 9 ; o‘clock this morning the root of the Central railway depot fell in and reports said that . many persons were buried in the ruins. 3 The streets were ï¬lled with pea le at the time and in twenty minutes 5, or 6,000 persons surrounded the big depot and struggled for admission. The whole eastern half of the long arch, excepting two short spans next the new part, had given way under the weight of melting snow and fallen, burying a passenger train partly ï¬lled with passengers, and two or more men who were outside the cars. A Lake Shore train (No. 21) lay in the depot waiting for the connecting Central train, which was late. The number of passengers on board could only be approximated, and no on seemed tobe able to tell with any do niteness whether any of these were missing or not. The eastern end appeared to have given way ï¬rst, as the entire building fell in that direction, but the rest fell almost simultaneously. The bystanders at the time heard one loud crash and the building was in ruins. The debris pre- sented to the eye a huge mangled mass of bricks, snow and portions of rooï¬ng; loosened bricks dropped occasionally, and great masses of the walls seemed ready to topple at any moment. At the southeastern corner two New York Central cars had ‘ been crushed to smithereens and lay half buried with bricks. 0n the next track lay the buried Lake Shore train. It was com- , pletely hidden except where a corner of one of the four ears pesped through f the overarching wreckage, but strange to say ‘ none of the ears were materiallv damaged. Miraculous THE TERRIFIED PASSENGEBS managed to get through to the end of the train and so escaped within less than an hour. After the accident occurred a. force of over one hundred men were put to work ‘ on the ruins in searching everywhere for the biies of persons supposed to be under t e debris. The ï¬rst result of the search was a horribly-mangled corpse of a man, which was immediately removed to the waiting-room. He lay extended on the floorâ€"a sickening sight. His face was of aleaden hue and his hair was matted with blood. Both legs were broken, the left being completely shivered. His chest was crushed in and the back of his skull fractured and clots of blood were settled DOWN WITH A CRASH! n.uyuu.y- â€"â€"._ -_-_‘ in each ear. He was soon after recognized as John W. Byrnes, properly a. Buï¬alonian, but who had of late been at Erie, superintending 'the construction of the tug Annie P. Dorr, and was probatgly about to return. His , u- nL _._LI.. uuu "w r ...... â€"--._ apparent age is from 35 to 40 years. Shortly after 11 o’clock a rush of ï¬remen and police in the direction of Byron Kring's cfl‘ice heralded some new discovery, and a cry arose that another body had been found. Beneath a pile of débris, within eight feet of the depot master’s ofï¬ce, lay, the body of Henry Waters. The man rested partly on his left side, and across him lay a huge rafter, which in falling had evidently pinned him ï¬rmly to the earth, The face of the dead man was much dis- ï¬gured, the nose having been crushed flat with his face. The unfortunate man was ; private clerk to Superintendent Tillinghast and was one of the most popular men in he company‘s employ. He was about 43 years of age and unmar- ried. At the time the accident occurred any“. aâ€" v..â€" ---_- he was standing near switch Bngine No. 136 talking to Coroner Scott and Passenger Agent Smith. When the roof began to cram lo and fall they all ran toward the d t master's ofï¬ce. Mr. Smith barely succeeded in reaching the oï¬ice when the whole roof fell in, and Waters, who was afew feet behind him, was entomhed in the ruins. Shortly after the body of Waters had been discovered a. portion of‘ the wall which had re mained standing fell in, and several of the ï¬remen narrowly escaped be- ing killed amid the falling mass of bricks and mortar. In fact thecondition of.a large portion of the depot is exceedingly dangerous. Up to this hour it is only known positively that two lives are lost. but rumors still prevail that several more are in the ruins. Five or six persons are said to be missing and until they are found or the debris is entirely removed. this can- not be veriï¬edor disproved. u .- uv .y----vâ€" -â€" Lnsn.â€"It is re orted. but toolste for veriï¬cation. that ve bodies have been taken from the ruins. [The roof which collapsed was of iron lates and supposed to be very strong, but ere and there new plates have been put in place of those which were found to be weak. Work has been going on at an extension of the building for sometime, which would make it one of the largest wrsilwsy stations on the continentâ€"En. ‘. Tums] - A . 1y-nl,, AAAI__A__ BUFFALO. Feb. 8.â€"In addition to the two bodies recovered from the ruins of the New York Central railway depot (as telegraphed you yesterday afternoon), two more bodies were shortly afterwards recovered. The body of D. W. Wells was found about half- past 1. His legs were broken and his head was fri htfully mangled. One 9 s has been crushe out and one side of his read looked as if it had been torn open with a hook. Wells was about 17 {learn old and was employed as clerk to r. Home. foreman the car shops, who speaks very highly of him. Another body was found soon after near that of Mr. Wells. It was crushed so that it was almost impossible to recognize the features. The skull wascrushed almost flat back. and both legs were broken. When taken up his arms were thrown across his face as though to protect it'The “‘21qu up. nay- w -_V._ bodyhas been identiï¬ed as that of L. 8. Hunting. 110 was employed aaaclerk in tho ofllco oi the Buffalo. Now York d: Philadelphia railroad, and was tho sole support of a Widowed mother. . -Tailors 08311. to â€"bo good loversâ€"4h†best know how to press a suit. Escape 0! Mnny‘ Others. at Dr. Tel-lye Disco-nee Firth» on the subject of LII-menu. “ I have no sympth with eoolesisstionl strait-jackets," sand I. Tdmeae in his sermon yesterday morning. “If you will show me the style of a men's amusements and recreations. I will tell you what are his prospects for this world and the world to come. I think one o! the gheetliest mis- takes ever made by Christian men is the attempt to put down the aportfulless of youth. I have known men of such smorbid state and of such twisteg theology that they -L-_...Inn were 0 found to ball pln; and ta anus. and cries! Illa-w an“ us uuvu v" u"... -._- 7 7 ,‘n _ were 0% lied to ball playing. hated charadea and ta cans. and cried ‘ away with all par. lor amusements ; ' and when young peogle, full of exuberance and Vitality. ask “ w at shall we do for recreation ?" have answered, “ prayer meetings.†(Laughton) I have noticed, however, that people who do not know how to play do not know how to work.’ I have noticed that the mightiest men in the Church of God in all ages have joined in hilarities and recreation. William Wilberforce Atrundled hoops. with his child. 1..--.. LI‘.‘ :- F-u- -â€" .â€"â€"â€" ..-, " llWIav-w -. “Munv' ._- 7. ran. Martin Luther helped dress the Christmas tree. Thomas Chalmers flied kites with his children. Those amuse- ' ments are to be shunned that disgust one with everyday life. All amusements are . bad that are calculated to pull us down in . moral and physical health. I want ‘ you to avoid all amusements that . are beyond your means. How many ‘ tables have been robbed to pay for club champagne ? The corner saloon is in debt to the wife’s faded dress. There are excursions of a day that make a tour clear round a month’s wages. There are ladies whose life business it is to go shopping. Some of these recreations have their echo in bankruptcy. A shake in the money market is echoed with a stagger across the richly furnished and carpeted mansion, and the whooping cf bloated sons come home to break poor old mothers' hearts. How often are we ministers asked to go over to New York and beg off young men who have made false entries or taken money from the drawer. Many a young man is wrecked by amusements that are beyond his means. “ Then I charge you not to make amuse. ments your lifetime business. Life is a serious business, whether you were born in a palace or a hovel. Alas for the man who has nothing to do in this world, where there is so much for ourselves and for others. Alas for the man who spends his life in laborious doing nothing. After evil men havedestroyed a man, body and soul, what will they do 7 They will chuckle over your damnation. Look at that young man with good impulses and bad associa- tions. He is aship, full-winged, crashing into the breakers. I knew such a young man, and the men who came and sat unmoved at his funeral gazed at the coï¬in as vultures at a carcass of the lamb whose heart they had ripped out."â€"â€"N. Y. Sun of Monday. . The Prince of Wales likes to skate. A (lespntch from Shanghai says that Com~ mander Horatio Nelson Hood died on Mon- day.- 4 â€" - -. “â€1, ‘,__A u“;- The Comte and Comtesse de Paris have lost. their youngest child, Prince Jacques, born nine months ago. Mr. Samuel Woods, M.A., of Kingszon, who has been appointed classical master oi Stratford higli school gets $1,000 salary. Mr. Grant, clerk of London township. was on Monday presented by the Council with a 820 buffalo robe as a. mark of appre- ciation of his services. The bowager Lady Baynes, who died a few days ago in London at the age of 88, was the ï¬rst European woman who ven- tured out openly in Canton. The late Frank B‘uqkland lef‘t his widow 1' _-.J-_ *uu Auto J. lwun a..-.__.__ but poorly provided for, the London Worid says, and at the same time he bequeathed to the nation his Fish Culture Museum, valued at four or ï¬ve thousand pounds. - __ _. 1-1- “ £A_._.-.J-. l' ______ Rev. Princi al MoVicar. LL.D., formerly of Guelph an now of the Montreal Presby- terian College, has just received the diploma of the Athenee Oriental, of Paris. having been unanimously elected a member of that society. ~____.', Prince Bismarck has taken his son Count Herbert Bismarck, to be his private secretary. The young man looks exceed- ingly like his father. and is saidtobe uncommonly gifted, giving just hopes of future greatness. Possibly he will continue the prince’s iron rule. .m I ,.___~_‘ vnv l’""" v. The Prince and Princess of Wales stayed ï¬ve days at Lord‘ Avelend'a country-seam ,,,,, _. n...a. 1:..-1 nnn LlVU ua‘yn av Adv-\- ...v-.._._ ,, ' not long ago, and during that time 4.000 head of game fell to the guns of the host and his party of guests. The destruction of produce in rearing and feeding this game is estimated at 350,000. Mr.Longfellow,the poet, is too old and good a man to be misrepresented. Some of the apers have said that he once went into a itchen and helped a lady to peel a pump- kin. The lady now comes forward and denies the story. Longfellow did not peel a pumpkin. It was a squash! Stillman B. Allen, of Boston. has just distributed $300 in prizes to Maine bogs under 18 years of age who have raised t e most Indian corn on one-eighth of an acre in the past season. More than 600 boys in all parts of the state competed,and the ï¬rst AAA- , ,_._A_:I_J A- t‘-nâ€"‘DD an‘l “II “I II: V: Iluv u-â€"-- v-._l. _ prize, 3200mm; awarded to Fï¬inkE. Small, of Stockton, who raised 2,246 pounds. Count Von Moltke is a men of nerve et'fll, in spite of his venerable years. When the building of the general staff in Berlin, wherein he lives. wag burning the other evening. he calmly qnitted his rubber of whiat. attended to the removal of ofï¬cial papers. and then went pleoidly to look at the conflegration. Miss Marianne North, :1 pretty English artist. is making a tour of the world with very high credentials, for the purpose of painting the distinctive. flowers that row wild. Sir Joseph Hooker. director 0 the Botanical Gardens at. Kew. vouches for her artistic owere. her botanical knowledge and her intrepidity as an explorer. A Wrm's Kiss 'rmr ms nan Dunn.â€" A coroner‘s inquest on Saturday in the case of Mrs. Emma E. Careless, the woman who shot herself alter her husband had died from small. x resulted in a verdict of death from b ood~polsoning. Evidence was adduced showing that the woman had eon. tracted thehfatal disease by kissing the corpse of l r husband to whom she was greatly devotedâ€"Philadelphia Press. Personal. the mural Mei iii-nu 3r 0 Euler's Careless-escâ€" Sun-[e Incidents and Ind ace-es. Casumn. 0., Feb. 10.â€"A frightful explosion occurred at Men: as Cc.'s coal mme at Robbins. accompanied by appalling loss of life. The scene of the explosion is a few miles south of Salem. A man named Smith disobe ed his orders and attempted to pass throng a forbidden room containing ï¬re damp with a lighted lamp in his hand. Immediately a terriï¬c explosion occurred, and a hole was blown through the ï¬fteen feet of earth composing the roof. About ;twenty men were at work, of whom six were killed and a number dangerously wounded. A mule and eight cars were shot out of the main entrance as if from a cannon. Another mule drawing a car in which a man was seated was blown on top of the car. killing the driver. A dog was also blown out of the mine. Jackson Leek, who had just entered. was blown over a high railroad embankment into a creek and badly hurt. The men not disabled or killed escaped through ashaft to the open air. The killed are James Logan and his- sonngas. Mehan. _>J Wm. Haley. George Henshilwood. and Edward Smith. The man who caused the explosion is badly mutilated. his body being burned to a. crisp. The wounded are James Crouch. Rollert lisley, Edward Creighton, J. Aiken, Peter Wilson. and his two brothers. Nearly all are badly hurt. Some will die. Mrs. Griflith had gone to the door of the mine to call her son when the explosion occurred. She saw the mule shoot out of the mine, and found her son uninjured. George Henshilwood died in his wife’s arms. The scenes are heart- rending in the extreme. A corps of physi- cians have been summoned to the assist- ance of the wounded. Or Do The: Stop Growing belore They 8 are 80? ‘ t (London Post, January 19.) ‘ ' At a meeting of the Statistical Society last evening a paper on “ Statistical obser- vations on the growth of the human body (males) in height and weight, from 18 to 30 years of age, as illustrated by the re- cords of the Borough Jail of Liverpool." by Mr. J. T. Danson, was read. He said: “ About 20 years ago I had occasion to visit the Borough Jail at Liverpool. Having got access to the jail records. I found them, on examination, quite worth the'labor to be ‘ given to them, and selected the ï¬gures relating to the years 1857 and 1858 as likely to afford a fair sample of the new material thus made available. From these ï¬gures I found thatonly one inference of any value could with any degree of certainty be deduced; that being that the men thus passed under examination did not on an average attain their full height or their full weight much, if at all, before 30 years of age. A certain per- sistent irregularity induced me to refer. with some hope of an explanation. to a suggestion made some years before by M. Millet. aFrenoh statist. After a careful ‘ examination of the ï¬gures resulting during along series of years from the measure. ment of the annual draft of conscripts in that country, he had observed that the ' men of the same age, brou ht forward- in successive years, di ered con- siderably in their average height, and on a comparison of these returns ' with those of the annual price of corn in the localities in which these men were born and reared he observed some coincidence of deï¬cient height in the conscripts with high- prices in the years of their gestation and 274-..-.. mm- 1.": Hm in the conclusion MINING CATAS'I‘ROPIIE. Lavvu nu w..- J_-V_- , infancy. This led him to the conclusion‘ that wherever a deï¬ciency occurred it might be due to early want of sufï¬cient nutriment and thence to defective harvests. The prisoner on entering the jail is taken to a room kept for this purpose and is there re- gistered. As part of the process he is put on a broad metal plate near the level of the floor. As he depresses the plate his weight is indicated on a lever and ‘33:“; .u. n mn‘o‘ \VUIBLIU ID I uuuuuuuu vâ€" 7‘ ,, n. \projecting arm, sliding on a. metal bar behind him till it touches his head marks his height on the bar. The weights are taken to pounds and the .heights to quarters of an inch and are at once, with other partigulgrs. recorded in a can!) years éound econo‘my. -â€"A Grand Haven (Mich) despatch an a that two tugs have atartedm search of t 9 City of Ludington. reported twenty-ï¬ve miles from Ludmgton on Friday. It is two weeks since the_L_udington left Mil- Qï¬lie; t: $35!; the lake. no NIEN GBO‘V f aud Wounded l- A Lee! M the Dim et one o! the Fraternity. The following leaf. evidently dropped from the diary ofa young reporter. was picked up by the “ devil ’ the other day. and is printed in the hope that the loser may be able to reclaim his property : Saturday. p. m.â€"-“ Well, another week has gone by in about the same old way. I’ve been wondering lately why some people don’t know any more than they do; why they will persist in talking ‘ shop ’ to one of us fellows every time they ‘meet us in society. New. I am not ashamed of my business. which I think. requires a considerable amount of brains. The other night I went out for a little while to a sort of social gathering, and I hadn't. got into the parlor before a young lady simpered. ‘0. Mr.â€"-. you ain't going to put us in the paper. are you?’ I had a big notion to say something bad, but I didn‘t. Then I go to some public exhibition, and every acquaintance I meet says: ‘ Well. are you getting it all down?’ or, ‘ Got something big to write up new. haven’t you? ’ or. ‘ I s‘pose you fellows get to go to all these things for nothing? ‘ or some equally flat remark. Everywhere it's the same way. Go to church, which some reporters do. because they en- joy it. and you are met with the facetious remark: ‘ Well you have- to be pioub once in a- while, don’t you?‘ Meet a man on a street car, and he asks you if there is any senmtion afloat. People don't seem to think that we fellows ever knew anything but ‘shop.’ - Why don’t they ask a lawyer, out in society, if he is looking for a case,or adocwr whether he expects somebody Will be sick before he 4.2-.. _L..L bl.“ hinhnnf. no 015wa w uuvu _-_ __ leaves; or a bank cashier what the highest per cent. is upon ï¬rst-mortgage loans. I can't understand it. We are Just like other folks, and there armtimes. rare, it is sadly true, when we are not on duty, and feel that we would be glad to enjoy social life just as other people do. But I suppose it always was so and always will be, and I’m too tired and sleepy to try to understand why."â€"Cleveland Leader. “0' BBPOB’I‘BBD AI!!! IOBBI’. (London Times.) The oldest member of Her Majesty’s. Privy Council is the Right Hon. Sir John Macpherson Macleod, K. C. S. 1., aged 88 the youngest. H. R. H. Prince Leopold, aged 27. The oldest duke is the Duke of Cleveland, aged 77 ; the youngest, the Duke of Newcastle (a minor), aged 16. ‘ The oldest marquis is the Marquis of Donegal, K. P., G. C. H.. aged 83 ; the youngest, the .Marquis Camden (a minor), aged 8. The oldest earl is the Earl of Buck- inghamshire, aged 86 ; the youngest isEarl Russell (a minor), aged 15. The oldest Viscount is Lord Eversley, aged 86; the youngest, Viscount Southwell a minor), aged 7. The oldest baron is Lor Mostyn, aged 86; the youngest, Lord Southampton (a minor), aged 13. The oldest member of the House of Commons is Mr. William Bulkeley Hughes, M1). for the borough of Carnarvon, aged 83; the youngest, Mr. James Dickson, M.P. for Dungannon, aged 22. The oldest judge in England is Vice- Chancellor the Hon. Sir James Bwon. also chief judge in bankruptcy, aged 82; the youngest, the Hon. Sir Charles S. C. Bowen, of the Queen’s Bench Division, . aged 44. The oldest judge in Ireland is the . Hon. James O‘Brien. of the Court of Queen‘s Bench, aged 74; the youngest, the i Right Hon. Gerald Fitzgibbon, Judge of Appeal, aged 46. The eldest of the Scotch l Lords of Session is the Right Hon. John 5 Inglis (Lord Gloncorse), Lord Justice. . General, 70; the youngest, Alexander 1 Burns Shand (Lord Shand , aged 51. The‘ oldest prelate of the Churc of England is the Right Rev. Alfred Olivant. Bishop of Llandaï¬, aged 82; the youngest, the Right Rev . Rowley Hill, Bishop of Sodor and Man, aged 44. The oldest prelate of the Irish Episcopal Church is the Right Rev. John Robert Darley, Bishop of Kilmore. aged 80 ; the youngest, the Right Rev. Robert Samuel Gregg. Bishop of Cork, aged 46. The oldest prelate of the Scotch E iscopal Church is the Right Rev. RobertE en, Bishop of Moray and Ross Primus), aged 76; the youngest, the Right ev. George Richard Mackarnes, Bishop of Argyll and the Isles, aged 57. The oldest baronet is Sir Moses Monteï¬ore, aged 96; the youngest Sir Thomas Lewis Eu h Neave (a minor), aged 6. The oldestknig t is General Sir Duncan MacGregor, K. C. B., aged 93 ; the youngest, Sir Ludlow Cotter, aged 27. _â€"_____.â€"â€"â€"â€"‘â€"__ Col. Inger-coll Accused of Blasphemy. thrme'ros, Del., Feb. 9.â€"â€"At the open ing of the February term of the Criminal Court, Chief Justice Comegys, in charging the grand jury, called their attention to the recent address of Col. Ingersoll in this city, saying it was blasphemous, and was worthy_the attention of the jury as coming a a,I-__|........ under the law of blasphemy. Mr. Vennor is at it again. He states that the entry of February of last year (1880) was fully as severe as has been that of the present month, and that the Decem- ber of 1879 was much more severe than the December of this season. January of 1880, however, was a mild month and the very opposite of the January of 1881. Upon the principle of general compensation and from the fact of our having now had in succes- ‘sion two months of severe weather. Mr. Yennor is strongly of the opinion that the present month will give us the thaw pre. dicted in his almanac. ' In this he alludes to a rapid disappearance of snow and sleighing over a ver large area, and a return of winter an of storm weather towards the latter portion of t is month and the fore part_ of March; He thinks '- _-|.1 4-..... up!“ Who’s anzther 'rb‘iizxiard" dud cold term will travel over thaUnjted Sfates shortly after .u ~L .1--L_....n..- H'BVBI UVUL uuu Ullaâ€"V‘- N-..-_o ' the entr of March. and that destructive gales wil visit New York. Boston and other points durinï¬ the last quarter of the present mont . - - Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel’s young- est son. Arthur, has resigned the Under Secretaryship oi the Home Do artment on account of bad health. None 0 Sir Robert‘s sons have made much mark as men of talent. Albert. the eldest. has made much incise in the world in his time. The most ‘ promising. Sir William. died in active ser. vice. The second. Frederick. has heena safe. lodding ofï¬cial. The late Sir Robert. mind ul of his eldest son's irregularities. tied up his ro rty as tightl as he could. A memorab e c was in his 11 prohibited any investment in Irish real estate. a who In [England m 1531 e of