A women named Mrs. Frederick. wile of e respectable end well to-do merchant. at Ottawa, attempted to commit suicide on Wednesday night by jumping into the canal. She wee touched by two young men who hap- pened to be out boating at the time. She had been drinking too freely ol late. In the London Hospital lor Inoureblee is a girl who in dell, dumb. blind and bench bucked. A ayetem of language by touches hue been devised by which to communicate with her. while she expreuee 116780" with 'the ordlnery hend-elphebot ot the dumb. An ex-privele in the Grenadier Guards, named Nicholson. afterwards a commission- airo. died in hondon a few deye ago. leaving £20,000. Hie nephews heard of his fortune and applied for lemre of administmnon, which were granted. There WM a sister living. and as she was the nearer relative ahe was duiy cited to eppen, but she refused to do 60. though she, too, in poor. M. Barney, the dramatic critic at Le Temps, who has accompanied the Comedic Franearse to London, is said to be severest and most impartial of critics. The London World tells this of him : “ Not so very long ago he wrote an exceedingly iavorahle notice of an actress than playing at theGymnase. The story goes that the lady, in an ecstasy of gratitude and joy. immediately dispatched a valuable diamond ring to the great critic with her com- pliments and thanks. Bet,t6‘her astonishment and disgust, the bauble was returned, with the intimation that M. Bar-coy took no ices from those who pleaded haiore him, and was not. moreover, accustomed to be bribed. He, therefore. demanded an apology for ac gross an impertinencemhieh. oi course, the actress had to make, in terms of the deepest contri- tlon.†Other elx 0’ so may come oot about the end 0’ summer, for We will have plenty to keep you till next year. when the whole club may come. It will not be beef and green at Neerdey then. but every day and all the day long i! we have a mind. Meanwhile, your lowing friend. Anon! MGUALL. “ Dun Farinaâ€"About three weeks alter we parted with you at Kirkwood we arrived in this country. But oh i dear,dearl it is a far awa' place. What with the passage in the boat, and the passage by the land, it is a long road indeedâ€"away over to the other side of the world altogether. It is not the place where the people walk with their heads down, as you do think; but the place where they stick straight out like preens tree a preen cushion. Yet, strange to say, we ken nae odds of oorsel's by what we did Scotland. Oar heads are just as they were, and the skies are above us, the same as the were before, an' we dinna‘ stick not like preens. We have taken up a section and a hall ot land, that is 960 acres, and we have celled the place thanmoor. which is a very good name, tea, as you will understand. The ï¬rst thing we did alter We got to our land was to build a house, which we did very well ; and the next thing was to delve ooryaird, which we also did in ï¬rst. class style. All the seeds we brocht out were sown in due order, and are now brairded, and the hail andthe cabbage are just wonderiul to look at. We will transplant as many not nor beds as wad be able to teed adrove o’ nout as big as the cattle market 01 Glasgow ony day. A big farmer not lar from us said it we would give him twa days harrowing and twa days harvesting at the end of the season, he wad lend us his twa ploughs for a week. 80 we got the twa pioughs, and the stats in them, and we have turned ower as much ground as will give abundance of everything we desire. We have in tour acres of wheat, an acre 01 barley, and an acre of peas. We will plant two acres 0' tattlee directly, and some turnips and Indian corn, say about an acre of each, and about an acre and a hall of oats. Now did ever ye ken such good fortune or such good luck? What way should folk whine and yammer ower imaginary ills 2 Gang out and meet the ills 0' life boldly, and they will flee away along while store ye some to them. In our case this has been so, and so will it be in everybody's case who puts a " stout heart to a stay bras." This is aï¬ne country, as level as Glas- gow Green tor miles and miles. Will Fer- ‘ guson says if the Holland and this country had been mixed thegither it wad hae been 0' some advantage to haith plaices; and Will's maybe no fat wrang, for a ban every titty miles or so here wad be a great im- provement. The air is clear and pure, and you can see for twenty or thirty miles at a stretch, just by a’ the world gin ye we're looking ower the sea. Between poaching and ï¬shing we are getting as much flesh, ï¬sh and low] as we can wire lntae, and no a gamekeeper tae sayâ€"" What dost thou 2" Jack M'Leau shot a moose deer yester- das morning which was as tat as butter, and we did bleed her, and did make the black puddin's, and the white, just like as when the mart was killed in the Italians. We brocht wi’ us lrom Winnipeg to our farm a bag of oatmeal, a bag of wheat meal, a bag at Indian corn meal, and a bag of peaee meal; and we do have pease brose and bannooks, and scones in galore. Our oatmeal bannooks we toast at the ï¬re on stance. and our Indian meal we make like parritch, and mixes it up with the wheaten flour which makes grand scones. All are most excellent as a king could desire to eat. We have got a cow, too, {or which we paid £6, and so have milk in plenty, and we wonderii our friends in Old Monklands be as Well of! as we are, for we are literally in clover, though we have to eat and drink in a shaet_wi‘ no a spoon in the house. The tollowlng opium from Arohy McCall. a Scottish ruidonk o! Mmitobn, to :he Lang Koil Club, 01 Airdrie, Scotland. was Intoly 1n- Iefled in the Advertiser, published than: -Elaim c Auguot. In the blind meadow, overflowing With sweet new life in every place. Where toms and lightest grasses growing Mingle in one harmonious grace. d- eper than all conscious being, ‘ Still throbs the qulckened pulse of Air. For somethlna lles beyond the seeing. Divinely lair! Low down among the daisies lyln . Near to the greet. warm heart 0 Earth. My secret olue eludes the trying. Merged in a new and larger blrth I lose myseli in holy union. 1 cannot stand and gaze apart. In that unbroken close oommunion Heart learns 0! heart. Wnet impulse stirs the feathery asses, And dips along their wavering I ne 1' While, as the sudden tremor passes. 'i‘wo strange, sweet eyes look up to mine! Eyes with a more than human pleading, so poet-deep. so mudenoshyl Tlil all my soul is drowned in gaming, 0 rare blue eyel lame fluoride in Sunday Afternoon for A "nu-Q A Scotch-nu on Manitoba. Blue-Bud Gnu. An old larmer. intent on making his will. was asked by the lawyer the name of his wile. when he gravely replied: " Well. indeed, I really don't recollect whntitll: we’ve been married for upward of forty years. and I always called her my old women.†The lawyer left a blank. to be ï¬lled up when his old woman’e name was ascertained. lanmh. A Chicago prmoher advoxtma that his netmonu never exceed twenty minum In I-.. AIL It is not only possible. but easy. for a prac- tical adopt to draw out in this way minute and elaborate details of secret iamily history. A few years ago. while connected with one of the public institutions at this city, I made a number of experiments in this line. I told the patients afflicted with various forms of nervous and allied disorders. not to tell me about their symptoms, nor give me any hats in their cases, but to let me tell them ; and then I would proceed to indicate. alter the manner of a clairvoyant, the locality 01 their maladies. and the history oi their troubles. In the majority of cases I was successful, and made out the diagnosis to the satisfaction at those who sought my advice. and with good reason. tor nothing that I could do prevented them from telling me, although I asked them no questions ; uninten. tionally and unconsciously. they would guide me at every stage oi the interview. By a‘ little practice any one could easily acquire this art ; and long study. each as professional clairmyants bestow upon this subject. deve- lops great skill in thus managing and deluding the unwary and non-expertâ€"Scn'bncr for July. 1n drawing out the (acts of personal or family history, clairvoyantc do not always ark direct questions. but rather make atate- monta with an applied interpretation, to which the victim. oltentimea entirely un- consciously. responds by word or look or sea- tnre. or perhaps by all three, and at a later stage of the interview these secret iacte are artinlly given back to the victim. who has no recollection of having previously imparted them, and will not believe that he has done co. but prefers to believe that he is in the preaence oi divinity. A 7 The Peterhorongh Hound Show wss held lees month. The Prince of Wales arrived lrom ‘Ycrmouth by the Great Eastern Beilwey. ao- eompenied by Colonel Teeedele and Colonel Ellis. Twenty packs of hounds competed, viz., South Berks, Brookleshy, Cheshire (N.). Chlddlnglold. Cote old, Cotteemoro. Fitz- williem. Esrl Fltzw'ï¬llem. the Grove. Holder- nese. Sir H. Johnstone'e, Lord Middleton’s West Norfolk. South Nottinghsmlhlre, Oekley, Pytchley. Bnflord. North Shropshire, Tynedele and Werwlckshire. The Fitz- williem hounde carried on the champion prize. also three ï¬rst prizes and two seconds ; the Oakley. two flute and one second; the Tynedale, one ï¬rst; the Brockleshy. two seconds; the Grove, one ï¬rst. The town we: enfete. u gov-av yvv; - , -__ ..â€".,, 1“ People's Tribute†of a golden lauxel wreath l was so cruelly snubbed by Lord Beaconslleld, continues to utter howls of pain and resent- ment in letters to the Daily News. He swears that he never asked the leme Minister for any lavor save “a oonrteous word of recogni- tionâ€!or his toils in the Conservative oause.. But. alter all, observes the New York World. Mr. Turnerelll has got the “ courteous word of rooognitionâ€for which he says that he has panted. and is just as well off as the French- man 0! the old regime who became the great man 01 his village because “ the King had spoken to him in a latest." When he was asked what the King said to him he replied, 0| “3- Midget. no-A8---I_ -__I-n_s_,s _v â€".-â€"u â€"â€".â€" vv Jun â€0 Joy-lull, “ His Majesty gnoiaualy exclaimed, ‘ Do get out o! my way. blookhead !' " Mr. Tracy Tumorelll (whnt a ï¬iokeney name that in. by the was) whose poor “ pmhla’n 'l'ril-min" n. n nn‘t‘nn 1-....-I ___-A‘, Hum vs. Datumâ€"A certain curate, e contemporary tells us, was asked to dine with his squire one Sunday. not ehundred miles lrom Salisbury Plain. The squire was an old gentleman who dined at four o'clock. and. as it was rather a herd matter to get through the service decently in time to keep the appointment. the curate told his clerk that they would. tor once, dispense with the singing. To his horror. the clerk. at the moment when singing should have inter- vened, jumped up and said, “I give notice there is no eiugin’ this Sunday alternoon, ’eos person’s goin’ to dine with the squire.†The Bristol master builders issued a notice on 2lst June to the efleet that, as the mesons and carpenters on strike had reiused the after of arbitration. the employers have determined to ï¬ll their shops with non- union workmen from distant towns ; and at a meeting which the employers held a con- siderable sum of money was subscribed for this purpose. 0n the other hand. the work- man have issued warnings to all mesons to keep away from the city during the strike. Every exertion is being used at Chsthem Dockyard to have the armor-plated torpedo ship Polyphemue completed by as early 8 period as possible, and it is hoped that she will be ready for launching during the present year. The vessel attracts a considerable amount oi attention on the part of visitors and others to the dookysrd from her extraor- dinary shape. which is utterly unlike any- thing hitherto eeen in the Royal Navy. A special service in memory of the late Baron L. de Rothschild was held in the Jewish synagogue at Dover on the 27th 0! June, at which the minister, the Rev. J. Barnsteln, alluded In touching terms to the benevolent charity of the late lamented baron, and the inoperable loss J udeiem end the World at large hes sustained by his death. The new Chucch oi 8t.Mery.Southcmpton, intended as a memorial oi the late Bishop Wilberforce, and the corner stone of which was lsid by the Prince and Princess of Wales in August lest. woe consecrated last month by the Bishop of Winchester. The church. which stands on the site 01 the old building, lie tram the designs of Mr. Street. It. A . the ‘estimated cost being 818 000. In order that every man belonging to the Royal Marines may be taught to swim, the Admiralty hove ordered a large floating swim- ming both to be constructed at Chethem Dockyard. which is intended to be moored st Ohethcm Berber, near the Royel Marine Barracks, for the use of the ofï¬cers and men ; of that corps. J Tho dispute burner: the rector and the parishionerl n Dunn. in WIIOI. oonnnuu wirhoul prospect or settlement. the average congregation M the church being about twenty. The rector bu dirponud with the organism services and plnyl the humonlum himself. leaving rho reading desk {or $11“ purpo‘se. now Clnlrvoynmn Forelcll. ENGLISH COLUJIN. A man who went West to “ grow up with the country" has returned. He got there just in time to get acquainted with a tornado which was doing a little visiting in that section. The tornado took him no on ex- ceedingly high distance and ehowed him oil the possessions oi the esrth,and then let him drop down ogeln. He says he hss groan enough in theieet law days to ssteiiy him for all the rest 0! his natural llie.-â€"8alem Sunbeam. A munln Venice. Ill.. bu christened bit on “ Othello. or the Ham 0! Yonkers»; \ 0n the 23rd oi J nne their was a great deal 0! excitementin Belfast, and some distur- bance. which happily did not assume a serious form, took place. In the morning the membere oi the Belfast Roman Catholic Total Abstinence Association leit on excur- sion to Magheraiel, marching in procession to the railway terminus with bands and banners. On returning in the evening there wee a great deal oi excitement. and, to prevent rioting large bodice oi constabulary, both mounted and foot were stationed at all commanding points along the route. As the procession passed along some of the atreete stones were thrown both by spectators and the excursioniets, and some windows were broken. but at no point did the conflict aeaume great dimensions. Sixteen prison- ere were arrested ior atone throwing and rioting. At a thinly attended meeting of the Home Rule League held recently in Dublin, Mr. Show, M. P., ststed that he did not contem- plste permanently occupying the position of ieeder oi the party and hoped that the mem. bers, who. on a body, were high-minded, honest and intelligent in proportion to their numbers. would before long choose a repre- sentative, to whom he would gladly give place. He complained that the party had been treated coutemptuously in Parliament and maintained that, though the League was ï¬nancially unsuccessful, the principle oi Home Rule wee flourishing. The majority of the Board of Trinity Col- iege. who oppose hoxd Beimore's Bill, have written aletter to Lord Cairns explaining that their continued resistance to the Synod in the matter is due to the amount 0! paeeion and excitement which has been introduced into the controversy. and to attempts that have been made to pack the Senate for the purpose 01 carrying that bill. The Irish Commissioners of Public Works have issued their forty-seventh annual report, which shows that up to March 31 the Skate has made total advances 01 120,000,000. those (at this year amounting to £469,000. against £483,000 in 1877-8. The total re~ payments have amounted to shove £10,500,~ nnn _la|_ l AAAAAAA n n‘ _-_ --- In the presence of thousands. and wllh all the magniï¬cent ceremonial of the Catholic Church, the noble Cathedral 0! Oloync was on Bundoy, June 15th, opened by the Right Rev. Dr. MscOsrthy. Bishop of the Diocese. The building is the ofl‘apring of the popular goneroelty and the popular piety, not only a! Irgland, Inn of America, Australia and else~ w ere. 600, with intéieat o! £2‘;5'60:666v;;£::n’d the tow amounts remitted. 1nd therefore not paid back. have been £6.000.000. his blflifla. Mr. Charles Ormshy Blake. 9. landed pro- prietor o! the County Gaiwey, has deemed it necessary to submit a memorial to the Lord Lieutenant, complaining of the refusal of his tenants to pay any rent and ot threatening notices having been served upon himself and LI. \. “than Inthe linen trade of Ulster the hopeful tone continues, and a conï¬dent feeling in beginning to menileet iteelt in a variety of ways. The turn over of yarns on both home and export account has been good. Most epinnere hue ordere which will keep them going (or some time. The lugeet consignment oi ioreign cattle ever received in Ireland. consisting 01 200 Spsnish bullockc. arrived from Oporto at Dublin on June 17th. It is intended, should the experiment prove successful, to eetablieh a rivalry with the supply {tom America. At Oookstown. on J one 12th, a large Home Rule procession marched into the town with flags and drums. They were prevented going through a Protestant district by extra police force. Returning out of town they completely wrecked a house occupied by William Coolie. Three men were seriously assaulted. . 021 J ans 20. the Most Rev. Dr. Woodiock, Bishop 0! Ardegh and Clonmecnoise, took possession of his Cathedral Church, Longiord. and {or the ï¬rst time not the priests of his diocese. From every corner of the diocese the clergy thronged to give their new Bishop s 10:51 end corals! welcome. Mr. O'Bullivcn. ML. for Limerick. said in Dublin on J unc lath, that his election, though conducted very economically, con him £1,100. and he justly observed that was hard to expect men who were not rich to run such pecuniary rinks. Reports from various parts of the country lndica‘e very considerable progxoee in the growth of etope since the change in the weather, eepaciallyin green crops, which this yearl have been more largely aown than lune . The priests o! the deanery of Dingle, Co. Kerry, have put forward a declaration urging the landlords of the doanory to act towards their tenants in a spirit of kind consideration in this season of distress. and to make an abatement of rent. At a meeting of the Bent of Ireland pro- prietore recently a dividend at the rate of 5% per eent., free of income tax, to: the heli- year was declared, leaving abnlenoe of between two and three thousand pounds towards next hell-yenâ€; account. "7 _â€"' â€" v It-.- ' M. P.. to administer his astute. The personal assets are under £16,000, but the real estate is reported to be very lsrgo..-The will is or unusual length, extending to ï¬fty Iolios. One 0! the ingest wuohousu in Cape) streei. Dublin. has boon opened by u company wiih considerable public support for the sale of nomlntoxlontlng bovongea. The house was formerly a betting club. A bill has been ï¬led in Chance b trultooa ot tholnto Mr. McCarthy IgyowZig: M D a-.a...a..:-...- 1.1. “A-.- Lord Portullngton has written oxplulnlng that his rolusu to grant an abatement of rent in Queen's County arise-1mm ht: balls! that his tenants no lutrly pxoaporouu. and have every xenon to expect a good hornet. The fund for the “wily 0! Mr. Butt bu now reached a mm of over 532.000. a stout put of which has been subscribed by mom- bou o! the Bu. The Dale of Lulu“: hu mounted the Dublin Moohmloa’ human, in addition to other boon. with a complete net 0! the mm TIMI from the reign 01 James I. IRISH COLUMN. up man it there tornado in that an ex- him all let him | groan aim for -Salem nsd‘ hie case at three o‘clock in the morning became so plain. and the Government’s poeitlon in the matter was therefore rendered an un- tenable. that Col. Stanley roee. olive branch in hand. to euggeet that Mr. O'Donnell ehould say that the sentence. ii it had been ï¬niehed. would not have contained a threat. A eatielaetory aeenranoe to this efleot having been given. the motion was withdrawn. and about 8.30 membera found themeelvee ln Palaeeqard in the pure air 0! a bright enm- mer morning. alter ae heated a debate as one could poaaibly imagine. The Chancellor rose and protested that the words which he moved to have taken down werea ï¬nished sentence, and related to a threat of obstruction on Saturday; but the Clerk at the table being called to read the words. read out an unï¬nished sentence, stopping at the allusion to the Hyde Park meetlng. Then. led off by Mr. Dillwyn. Sir Charles Dilke. Mr. Courtney and Mr. Chem- berlaln, a long and stormy debate took place over the “confessed muddle†of the position, viz.. that the words alluded to by the Chan- cellor I" the Exchequer end the words recorded by the, Clerk exhibited a "cornea Dy we won: oxmblled I Mal ‘ Ayaflsnpq. _This view of the Mr. Pernell asked what words were to be ‘ taken down. but before this could be anewer- iod.h1r. Sullivan was upon his tact. and the excited and vehement cheers that greeted his ‘ every sentence told that he wee giving utter ance to the view and feelings of the united body of English Liberals and Irish Home Rulers. He called on Mr. ltalkee, whether. in the whole history of Parliament there was a precedent for such a piece of conduct as that which the Chancellor oi the Exchequer had juet been guilty oi. (Screams oi cheering, groans, cries, and exolamatione arose iromali sides.) Was there, he added. a precedent ior euch a proceeding as that proposed, which simply amounted to taking down the nuflu- ished words of a member in order that he might be punished. If this could be done, added Mr. Sullivan, amid the ringing cheers of his iriende, no man would be rule; there ‘ would be an end to the liberty and indepen deuce oi members; and ii there was no precedent ior it. he denounced the proposal as being destructive of the lreedom 0! Par- liament. The House seemed staggered by this utter conflct of personal assertion, and Mr. Mac- donald declared that belore the House could now decide between the stripes and lashes it was essential that this matter oi the diversity and variety oi the cats should be cleared up, and that members should see for themselves the instruments by which punishment was inflicted. He therefore moved that 'the three cats shown to Mr. Calian at the Admi- ralty should be deposited in the library, where they could be seen. Mr. O'Donnell. in supporting the motion proposed by the member for Staflord. declared that Mr. ‘Macdonald had informed him that ii lthe cats were not produced the Bill would ‘ not be allowed to move an inch on Saturday. and that more than 500,000 “Londoners†would assemble in Hyde Park to -â€"-. At this point there burst out a perlect hurricane of angry shouts of â€Order," the House evidently resenting what looked so plainly like a throat of the most unconstitutional character. In something like a lull in the leariul din, the voice of the Chancellor oi the Exchequer was heard exclaiming, "I move that the words of the honorable member be taken down." Then, indeed, chaos seemed to have come again. From not merely the Irish members, but from the whole body 01 the Liberal party, there arose a unanimous and passionate cry of indignation and proton, the purport of which was soon made plain in the point that Mr. O‘Donneil‘s sentence had not been ï¬nished. and that its sense could not. therelore. be judged. The Chairman here lost his balance. He put to the House the question, "Is it your pleasure that these words be taken down ?"â€"â€"a proceeding which it afterward turned out was unnecessary on his part and necessitated a still greater ir- regularity by him. Hie question was answered by ashout of "No," and then, seeing the awkwardness at a debate and division on the question he had propouuded. he retraced his steps. and without taking the sense oi the House directed the Clerk to take the words down. _cw_â€" â€" ur. -uvu Mr. A. M. Sullivan rose and proposed to add a proviso that such personal correction should not exceed 25 stripes, as in the case oi prison corporal punishment. and expressing his hope and belie! that the Government would accept this limitation, seeing that they had already brought the number 01 lashes down irom 50 to 25 in the general code. The Government responded to this by Mr. Gross ioflering to accept the amendment oi the \member for bomb ii, instead 0! stripes, he jwould use the word lashes. No sooner ‘were these words uttered than Mr. Hopwood, springing to his lost with flashing eyes. and in a speech of im- mense bitterness and vehemence declared that what had just happened "tore the flimsy Veil" item a base and hideous hypocrisy. and revealed to the world that when the Government spoke of a lash they meant nine stripes. so that twenty-ï¬ve lashes were to mean 225 stripes. Mr. Oallan then rose and narrated circumstantially a visit which he had paid to the Admiralty tor the purpose of inspecting the diflerent kind of " cat " in use. This brought up the First Lord of the Admiralty, who denied some oi the statements made by Mr. Dalian, and a most terriï¬c war of words followed. Lennon, Friday. July 4.â€"-For more than three home this morning the House oi 00m. mons was the scene 0! tumult almost unex- ampled. The proceedings up to about midnight had been tranquil enough. About this time an amendment was proposed by Mr. Parnell to clause 181 oi the Army Discipline Bill. pro- viding that personal correction ehould not be one at the punishments indicted in military prisons tor breachee oi discipline. The Government had evidently thought they had completely done with that disagreeable and odious Iubject. the “lash.†so iully debated under Mr. Hopwood‘a amendment sometime ago; but all at once they found themselves 1 unexpectedly plunged into the whole subject ‘ again. Mr. Parnell'e eye having detected in the clause the worde. “ personal correction“ he fastened upon them and moved the omieelon of those words. as a protest. I presume. against the use of the “laeh.†Marvellous to relate. no determined discus- sion was entered into either way; but a division was called for and taken, as it were, on the instant. resulting in a vote or 37 for Mr. Pamell’e proposition and 157 against it. Then .t_-1rn- EXCITING IOBNI IN Till 00H- â€0ND. â€"â€" Tumult Buondored by the Discussion of the 0‘ Out." (London Correspondence 0! the Liverpool Put.) "A: ï¬ne a ï¬eld of potatoes ll out .8. treated shag." remarked Mr. Smiley. u h. leaned over the tones and compliant†viewed the growing crop. monttlly nofllt thet the 817 he bed invutod In Peril would heve bought mo‘re tuber: then he 00! nice on a lot twice u' Ingerâ€"New Have“ Regiatcr. Ahmilyin Olovollnd, N. 0.. ll chat“ by the promo: 0! twenty-nun dunno“. Another llnk is to be (arsed In the 0111.4 chain of international reoonollleclon. 1M ereolion of e monument in the Abbey Church- of Bl. Peter’s, Westminster. to the‘ III Prince Imperial. There was at ï¬rst objection made, on the grounds of hit belt. a Roman Catholic end a foreigner, but Dela Stanley hen overruled them. Are Ohm not monuments In the Abbey to the Frenchmen Oeseubon. to the Bwlee Bpenhelm. to dig nonoonlormlat leeee Wane, to the W diets John and Charles Weeley? Do we.1 the bones of the Romen Oelholle Dryden. moulder there? It oomelne e bull, too. at the Corelcen General Pasquale d1 Paoll. who was one of the earliest triende of the am Napoleon, and who died ehe honored suede 01 George III. A little French boy named Bruno. ï¬ve; 3 old, whose parents live on Lake street, C..- brake. we: killed last evening et 7.30 by engine 0! the Weetern extension, when I“ log to Pembroke. He wee out on the '1‘: Wharf, put the railway crossing, and ' he enw the engine coming he avid - turned to cross towerde home. but we" , by the tender. as the train we! ' . ~ backwards. and knocked on his he. 14. ‘ wiee on the truck, end the whole train pa 2 over him, cutting him completely in two e ' ‘ killing him inetently. The covered body ' 7 immediately picked up and Coroner D . , 1 notiï¬ed. The body was pieced in. .- v ' and carried to the reeidenee of hie ;. stricken. parents. where on inquut likely be held. No bleme can be attached the nilwey men. The late Prince Impannl, in his only ‘ rend chiefly histories which trotted on ‘ grant-uncle’s bottles. No boy over cored little for novels. Bayond the historic romancan 01 Alexandra Dams: nnd W Scott, he scarcely touchcd any workn’ 4 ï¬ction st all. His temps: was shun ot- qniaitely sweet. Whenever it wu poi .: ble to grant a petition, the Emperor ' cure to do so if it came through hll log hands, for he doted on the boy, and I have let him have his own Why in Ill tht The Empress was rather ï¬rmer, and , the young prince under n curb which w good let him; and it um chiefly owing ‘ ‘ her wise and even guidance thnt he I) ‘ whntFronchmen call " un ieunc homm dew," and Englishmen, a patient can ,_ ____ _â€"u v... u... uyv u I‘ll-ll! m Don mil von veal-ml schdroko I whatnot-“fl! down on do: floor . ’Iwaa a achnnk und nodding numb. ,‘ 6.14 -J. H. Holland in the CW _ 7N, _-- _. rum-.3, mun? gnaw} Van schpoilmg, Around dot plnox ding coiling upon min. vnnm Am. ,- , _ _.._ ._-....vu nu "1w num- tendon. Una can I no got mnddor as I neter m pita Mine plood vac not as poking, mine 511110319.qu vu- nnhnnilinn __ V _ ._._ -11- ,vâ€"uu “111“) vonoe puforo: ‘ - Shunt dnko dot sumo] from oud mine hall. ll ahump down on mine door." . 15th vlnkod and and no mare. Ven to all vot I but mention It payed no and tan Hnn "Profld." said I; “ding of en], proud. mm 11 ¢ or devil, ' For vat you comes into mine house? I mt here no more. Loaf nodding here an a. dokon of dot no vloh hn' flmbnn , __, _--v w u uv-uu u: wulnuu 7M he! spoken. ' ‘ You go home! I was not joking. tor I we vnnnn null“... . - ~___-â€" u... nu A v. Ill!"- 5 ’1' mm the vlnd und ngddl-n’gumuo.’ '4 - 43,; Chen here I flung my window. you due all... once came uudo A dln shuns like a pig pluk out I Matti pe ore. V" Von veartul win]: he gate me. not 0110mm sdopped or eaayod be; 813 pack he humped. und den he thumpodnfl mine pedroom door. ’ Vere miue Bunny punts van Imaging. In] across my pedroom door. ; Dare he sat. and nodding more. i The air don van no ferry funny. for it “lineal! more like honey; M Und den I squeese mine nose herd and]! 3! n guide 3019. ' ‘ ,__-_ ._.-- .... u, any», "I. 'll vue mine nuts to-nide. Und it you (1 uk dot I van dlghd Inn» 3111 dOWn 03 do: door." Again I heard it gently any, “ Yon’io ml pants no more." ’ D13 1: sayed nnd nodding moro. Back into In pedroom turning. all lulu! mmu mo tuning. Den vonco more I hurt a upping. loud louder an palate: Now I cried out " Dunder vedder, vot tho in ï¬sh der matter ?" No, I din]; dis ounnod be. 101; {pat by aiming. mflu- n... “I... .._ _... , -‘-_uu. avu v panes no 156175.; "Von in dat‘fll cried. and nomodln; back {lie wgrdjf No more." Plriok u dummiesâ€"nodding more. Doeb into dot plackuess poopingmll uoundnl voodshed creeping - Dreaming dreams no'Dutolunnn our 4:» dream potato. The silence vos unbroken and the Itlllnul 3| uo (token. But I near somepody woken: “You “HM“ want: no Innm » _ “,7. _-â€" m' mu will. Ill more: ’ But at vonco I got moxe poldu and I chum! do: dqgr, V.~_- _.......- unuu 31-qu up WI. voodanod door; Und dare tor you halt hour I sdood mm mm! A! “ _-_ _â€".. aâ€"v‘n. . “MARIN“ w r. 50 via}: I van, I could not 1m mine hands up more 2 -V- v 5‘ ’ 1313 I said. and nodding mm. ’9 Py und py I us got payer, den I dskel hill. h und saber ' " u m 1 Ike mid t do ' ndvffkilonyndvï¬nnr- on m. pm “a“ ,- ___ . ..-... - w...“ uv- null. mull" van in a muddle; But I dough: 'twaa Johnny Snyder drying to sohud my door. Und mid cabbage sdumps to hit mo. II he a doneQnetgro._ A From and mine I make! von mob and van dis dru 1rd: 1 m‘ Mine Got. vot makes mine 193: so vest. I (all not poxoro. I sohurco could valk. I could not duh. mlnolni van In a nun! Dot - .-..- .-â€".-wuuun vuag "all!!!“ hon-d Dome cupping. v ' u 01 some von out] (11'0me bxlohbm n voodnhod (105:; y Du: do: snyder po .1 muttered, drying to [I my “2‘19"?! 00!. The Raven. Al A 00mm “I If. Vonoo u a nu midnight dreary II In“ velkpsnd vou'y . 0101;311:133†myotuguvoudrmkln an ['0 In my p'od 1 us fuchd gabbins. von Id!“ In:- Mm- -1 -u_ d M91011 die and nodding mo",