German has the most accommodating of post-o can. It daily transmits birds. beasts and ï¬shes. if ofaharmless sort. A goose, unlnmlllglbly directed. was lately at up {or auctibn sale. when 3875 was ound under its left ginion. The sender has not been discovore . Rev. 8. 8. Hunting appeared on the stage of a theatre at Des Moines, Iowa. at the conclusion of a regular performance, and married an actor and actress who still were the mstumes of the play. A drunkard took his ll-year-old boy with him on a. spree, at Maquokam, Iowa. and gave him as much liquor as he drank him- aeii. The boy died in the stupor of intoxication. nguo; we was munng with a madman! And yet she pitied him far more than feared him oven now. The passionate {earning of his last appeal melted her eart within her. _._v- an, uuvu "0y ICWVII! The down of terror stood upon Mildred’s brow, for wildh agd vehement ashwaa Ru We a co , in eyes a to t ins meg: ten-i fee. All of aeuddegoahc knegw that that which she had been combating for his aake as a more shadow, was a sub- etantial evil which had already fallen upon him. Poor Rupert had all along been right; ehe‘waa talking with a madman! ,-_ __â€".v â€"vu-V “nu-Iv- “ What!†he broke forth, “ without you! Neverâ€"no, never, Mildred! Be mine, and I will go with you whither you will, and do your bidding, whatsover it be. But I wil never leave you,be sure of that, my irl; you shall escape me never, no, not in eath itself; for it you die, then I will die too, and climb up after an to the highest heaven. though it were from the abyss of hell. Then surely, being a blessed spirit crowned and palmed, you would reach out a saintly hand to lift me into bliss. and save my soul; and therefore now, being an earthly angel. will you not give me that same hand. and saveâ€"ah, save my reason i" rm". 3-..... -l 1-....-“ , ., . --.-_ _ _‘â€"‘- vu- HIV mt notionâ€"you should leave home awhile.†“ Whit} "9 kn khhhï¬ 1..-..L n _2‘| “ Ay ; but not as I would have you love. And if you turn not to me, Mildred, you will work more against me than if all the world besides had sworn my ruin. Oh, how to tell yonâ€"how to let you know what hangs upon your answer, and yet not fright you, Mildred! Nay, tremble not sweetest; you have nought to fear, whether your ‘ yes ’ shall bathe my life in sunshine or your ‘ no ’ provoke the threatening moon to gvitt eclipse 1†“Againsi you, VRufï¬Ã©rt? 1-5;? When there is not a. groom in Clyï¬e that does no_t_ lpve you ?†‘ ltl “ Nay, Mildi‘ed héar me out. Oh, do not join them in the cuckoo-note. Ob, do not you turn against 1115 my 9133 llopg." ‘ u ‘4-:_~L "‘ “But how much worse," sighed he. “ to think of them, and not tospeak. 0h, do not think that I am hoodwiuked, Mildred, by ought that men can say or leave unsaid about poor me. I know the falseness of their assuring speech, as I know the reason of their silenceâ€"their ‘ Hush! Raymond is coming; not one word about the curse.’ " “ Rue,"Rue, dear VRthrsvohbgc-i' Hum-ed tenderly, “ this is the very thing you should no}? 9.0 the ygry gagkâ€"†naming to hasten the pulse, to stir the blood, the mind itself will sooner or later growâ€â€"he was looking at her, she felt, so ï¬xedly that she dared not raise her eyes to meet his gazeâ€"“ will growâ€"lethar- 00" 81“ You are not lethargic, Rupert.†“ Not yet." said he; “ I trust not yet." There was a pathos in his low. earnest tone that might have almost moved a slighted woman; no wonder, then, that it pierged Mildred‘s heart. ' “Dear Rue.†bhérï¬l'tirmured, “it is not "91!“ to. speak of spa]: things qsrthese." have often thoughtâ€"often when we were here together. but as boy and girl, brother and sister, not as nowâ€"I will one day tell her all : here where we have passed whole summer days. and she has seen me at my best and merriest (if. indeed, I have been ever merry). seems the ï¬ttest place. Nor sea. nor stream can everbe so dear to me as this same moat; alone I have listened here for hours to the creek of the slow. flapping rook. and the cock-crow, half- ohoked. halt-clear. from the distant farm, and never wished for better music. But that was before I heard your voice. sweet Mildred l†Here he paused a moment, then resumed reflectively, “How slowly the waters creep. as though they loved to linger about this ancient place. and were loath to leave it for the hurrying river; and yet. see. they are dark as death and the bottom is choked with trailing weeds. So has it been with the Clyffards them- selves. Mildred. We have kept ourselves so long from the great tide of life, that we have grown stagnant. andâ€"andâ€"what is st nant is unhealthy. Where there is not in; ‘to hasten the _pulse,r to stir the (Continued from fourth page) (To be continued.) Jersey Queen. a famous Vermont cow, owned in Peachnm. gave 4 403 ï¬gunda of milk during the ï¬rst 100 an a of or yearly test making 251 pounds of utter. Alexander of Russia, is the least happy of sovereigns. He feels himself walking in the shadow of death in its most sinister form. He looks gloomily into the future. When with his greet-uncle William the other day, the Emperor promised to recom- mend hie heir to rave e. friend to the Czar-ins and her chi dren in case of her pre- mature widowhood. There was much religious conversation between the two rulers. There will be brief periods of severe cold during the winter of 1882 and longer ones A, man-“IL Volcanic disturbances are likely to be exceedingly active on the American con- tinent and will probably occur in entirely new sections. of wa'fmtb. The smmner of 1%82'willbe generally unfavorable to agriculture, owing to cold and wet weather. Western sections will probably suffer more from rains and floods than {rom thunder storms or cyclones during the sum- mer of 1882. The winds and storms of March will pro- bably arrive ahead of time, and render the closing days of February exceedingly die- agreeable. Minnesota is likely to experience more wintry Weather than many neighboring sections. The latter art of April and entry of May, 1882. wil remind one of winter again, 'and the spring is likely to be cold and back. ward generally. The winter of 1882 is not likelyto be‘ characterized by heavy anowfalls on this side of the Atlantic. In Western Canada and sections south of the lakes, navigation may remain open all the year. or close but for a very brief period. , ‘ December, 1881, will be “0,5399 Airnrthe lako_r§gi9n. (From advanced sheets of Vennor‘s Almanac for 882, by permission.) In Newfoundland the winter of 1882 is likely to be extremely severe and stormy. A warm wave is likely to occur over a large portion of North America during the month of November, 1881. and again during January and Februa , 1882. A frigid wave may expected towards the close of November and entry of Decem- ber. 1881. (From advancqqisheats The Weather and Probable Events Next Year. , ewmsï¬u ._-_ -v av waves: all uuWo ll-ll‘. Bruce-Kennard immediately went off in a carriage which waited at the door. and gave directions to be driven to his relative's ; house. The messenger and another man . having entered the carriage, the reverend . gentleman’s suspicions were aroused. He saw he was being driven in a contrary direc- tion to what he had ordered. and towards London. All his attempts at getting out of the carriage were in vain; he was forcibly held down. He shouted. but was grabbed by the throat and choked into silence. He asked was robbery their aim. They answered that they were no robbers, but gave no explanation. Whenever he‘ shouted. he was temporarily gagged and seized by the throat. In order to leave some traces of his route he threw his hat out of the window and endeavored to do the same with his coat, but was prevented. He was driven on through the forest, across London, past the Angel, Islington. where his shouts to the police attracted no atten- tion, and at last landed in front of a hovel on Hunter street. Here he strug- gled with all his might, and in vain cried “ Police! help! murder 1 " Knowing that a policeman, whom they had passeda few moments before, could not be far off, he clung to the railings and cried the louder, but to no purpose. He was dragged in and placed in a front room, whence the ï¬re irons were removed. and he was told a gentleman would explain every- thing. As he had had no dinner he was given some refreshment, and was then advised to go to bed in a double-bedded room. He lay down in his clothes, but did not sleep, and heard mysterious consulta- tions in other parts of the house. At early morning the “ messenger " who summoned him from the inn appeared and threw himself on the bed also. with his clothes on. He questioned the man. and found he was detained as a lunatic. and that a doctor would soon visit him. He bribed his companion to send a telegram to Wood- ford, which was never sent, saying he was unavoidably detained, but that he would explain everything in a few hours. In accordance with a message received by the “messenger," he was detained till 12 o'clock. when another £5 note gained him . his liberty. He found acab at the door. drove to the railway station. and reached ‘Woodford Church at 1 o’clock. an hour too late for the ceremony to be legally per~ formed. He made his statement on oath there and then, and the next morning at 8 o'clock was married by the Rev. Canon Duckworth. He cannot give any reason for his abduction. as no impediment had been put in the way of his marriage by the bride’s friends. He intends prosecuting those whom he suspects to be the authors of the outrage. V About the 5th of September the Rev. Robert Bruce-Kenuard. rector of Marnhull. Dorsetshire, Eng, aged 57. arrived in Lon» don, to be married to Miss M. M. Bade. the daughter of a merchant residing at Wood- ford. whose age is 37. The consent of the parents had been granted and all was ï¬xed for the wedding, which was to take lace in l the parish church, Woodfcrd. At t a hour appointed all were in the church but the bridegroom, though he had ordered a carriage to take him from the hotel where he lodged to the church. On inquiring it was found that he had been taken away by three men on the pre- vious night, apparently the doctor of a lunatic asylum and two keepers. Mr. Kennard subsequently escaped. His story is that a person was ushered into his private sitting room in the inn at about 8 p. m.. representing himself as bringing a\ message from a relative in the neighbor- hood seizing him to go Athere at once. Mr. An Anglican Clorgyman ls Abducted 0n the Eve of His Marriage. HE IS HELD IN LONDON AS A LUNATIG. A STRANGE STORY. f the house. At early Jget " who summoned appeared and threw so, with his clothes on. a month of tor Annie Muller committed ’auio-cidle in‘ Detroit because her sweetheart gave his trousers to another girl to mend Fanny Clow found the ordinary diver sions unsatisfactorv, at Little Falls, N. Y.. and so she amused herself and grieved her friends by lying four days in a pretended trance. A watch was set. and she was caught eating on the sly. Her next fun was obtained by hiding herself. and letting it be supposed that she had drowned her- self. This time she was detected in send- ing her own death notice to a newspaper. Pasha. Stone, the leader of the revolt in the Egystian army, is an American. He raduate at West Point in 1846. He istingnished himself in the Mexican war. In 1856 he resi ned his position as ï¬rst lieutenant in t 9 arm and‘went to San Francisco, where he came a banker. When the rebellion broke out he entered the Federal army, and in 1861 he was made Brigadier-General. Having blundered in riskingabattle with the rebels at Ball’s‘ Bird! in October of that year. in which the Union troops were defeated, he was arrested and conï¬ned in Fort Lafayette in 1862. In 1869 he went to Egypt. and became chief of stall“ under the late Klledivo. _ .. ~ ~~- -~ -~- “““J ‘ie proven by the fact that no aid has been asked from Ghieago banks, and that the market has advanced today and is quoted ï¬rm. Ship era view the advance in rates by lake to t is port from {0 per bushel yesterday to 80 to-day as an indication that the body is to commence moving to New York before the usual fall rise in prices by the railroads later in the month. Another theory is that the advance in freighte ie to get canalere in New York. where they will be used for the Burpose of storing grain in conjunction wit the elevators there. A despatoh from Buffalo says: A reporter who interviewed the leading grain men and ehippere upon the probable effects of the J. B. Lyon failure at Chicago learns ‘ that a divided opinion exists. Grain men are of the idea that the syndicate holding the vast body of grain now stored at Chicago and Milwaukee, who are known to be backed by New York capital almost entirely, have entered into their specula- tion with the intention of carr ing the whole amount until an advance is orced in ‘ New York. and that the failure of Lyon has the look, from the fact that his shorts} were not has ht up on a declined market, of being more rom effect than from neces- sity. That a general tumble is not likely is proven bv the fact that m Am i... 5...... Some papers are not of much account as to appearance, but I never took one that did not pay me, in some way, more than I paid for it. One time an old friend started a little paper in Brant County and sent it to me, and I subscribed just to encourage ‘ him, and after a while it published a notice that an administrator had an order to sell ‘ several lots at public outcry, and one of the lots was in my county. 80 I inquired about the lot, and wrote to my friend to attend , the sale and run it up to ï¬fty dollars. He did so, and bid me ofl' the lot for thirty dollars; and I sold it in a month, to a man it joined for a hundred, and so I made sixty-eight dollars clear by taking that paper. My father told me that when he was a young man he saw a notice in a paper that a school teacher was wanted away off in a distant county. and he went there and got the situation, and a little girli was sent to him, and after a while she grew up mighty sweet and pretty. and he fell in love with her and married herâ€"now, if he hadn’t taken that paper. what do you reckon would have become of me ? Wouldn’t I have been some other follow, or may be not at all. A RUSSIAN BCOUBGE. \Vono than War or NlhlllImâ€"Dlphiherln In its \Voru Formâ€"A Fatality of 77 Per Celiaâ€"People PanicuSu-lcken. A London despatoh says the reports from Orel, a province of Central Russia, show that diphtheria still prevails in that dis- tressed community. Nooutbreak of which the history of the place has any record has been worse than this. It is actually stated on the authority of local doctors that in 77 cases out of a hundred the persons attacked by the disease die. It attacks all classes and baffles the skill of the oldest ’physicians. The epidemic so far has not ‘ seriously afl'ected any of the adjoining pro- ‘vinces. and as the boundaries of Oral are exceedingly irregular many of the out-lying districts are yet unattached. The province covers about 20,000 square miles, and is one of the most thickly populated in Central‘ Russia, containing no less than 1,500,000} people. The soil is productive, and there are rich mines of iron and copper ore and other minerals. The people are. panic- stricken and all who can do so are flying for safety to other parts of the country. The despatches received are by no means full, but the scenes now being enacted in the devoted province must be distressing beyond description. A telegram from St. Johns (Newfound- land) says : The British steamship Juliet, Captain Williams master, owned by Boar- ing Brothers, of Livorpool, has just arrived at this port. The Juliet is on a voyage from Dundee. Scotland, to New York. laden with iron and a general of bale goods. She has on board ï¬fty " ngers for the United States. The from Dundee to St. Johns occupie ‘e days, and is renounced by Captain liams to have been boisterous beyond all his former lengthy ex rience on the Atlantic. From the time o leaving Dundee until last night ‘ the wind blew a tremendous gale. varying from weat-eouthwestto northwest.but abet. ing not one jet in violence. In fact, the Juliet may he said to have been under water for ten complete days. On Thursday last, when the storm was at its height, the sea crashed in through one of the port side lights and carried everything before it. A i poor lady passenger was dashed to leeward and had her skull fractured. She was landed this morning in a dying state with a coflined child that succumbed last night to its sufl'ering. The Juliet leaves this port for New York at noon sharp. A Steamer Twelve Days In a Tremendous Cale. FEABFUI. WEATHER 0! THE ATLANTIC. now it ans to Take a Newspaper‘ WOMAN AND CHILD KILLED. A Corn Comercr Cornered. All the beautiful resents given to Gen. and Mrs. Grant while they were abroad have just been nent to New 'York by Mr. George W. Childa, who has had charge of the eighty-two cases containing them. The Phil elphie Record says: “ It is under- stood that in the two and a “half your trip around the world General Gmnt‘ received presents c uivalent in value to double the expenses-Io his journey.“ There' is no probability of this resolution beinï¬â€˜carried into practicaleï¬â€˜ect. inasmuch as t a British Apmerioan and Canadian Churches have quite recently at great ex- pense issued new hymn books. Resolved Thst the spirit of brotherly love which has been manifested threu bout the var- ious meetings of this (Ecumenical ounoil is evi- dence of the feelin s of unity smon all branches of the Catholic emily and wit s View of strengthening this bond and drawing it still more closely together this Conference s of the oninion that e adoption b the Methodist r‘hnrch throughout the worl of a Common Hymn Book would great] tend tosecure this most desirable end, limit at this resolution be referred to the Business Committee to report upon the best method of bringin it about, in having it submitted to the various hurches, and have reference to the time needed for the die-1 rosal of hymn books specially in those Churches which have but recently adopted revisel hymnsls. At the meeting of the Methodist mon- menioal Council, Mr. John Mmdoneld,‘ of Toronto. moved a resolution bearing upon a matter that has long received his atten- tion, namely: Suicide is very common in the present day, and it is difï¬cult to read the evidence given at coroners’ inquests without feeling that in nine cases out of ten there has, to say the least, been mismanagement some- where. At an inquest, for instance, held at Rotherham a few days ago on the body of a girl, aged 16, the daughter of a laborer, who hanged herself in her father’s house, some really remarkable evidence was given. The deceased, according to the statement of her mother, suffered from a “ bad leg.†She applied to the doctor at the inï¬rmary‘ for advxce, and was told by him that she , must have her leg out oï¬â€™. “ The doctor,†said the witness. “ d her (witness) that morn- ing that he did so to cheer deceased up.†A woman who was called into the house where the deceased was found hanging stated that as soon as she saw the deceased she addressed her as follows: “ Maria, if you are happy, speak; and if you cannot speak, 0 n your eyes. She asked that question, a e said, because the deceased, as she was hanging, "looked hspp ; †but she subse- quently wished she h out her down. As it came out that the deceased’s mother had thrashed her about the back, head and face before she was found hangin , the coroner adjourned the inquest; an the case is certainly one that seems to call for further inquiryâ€"St. James Gazette. An Old Man Brutally Murdered in Ills Bed-Ill- Wile the Guilty One. A. despatch from Coral, Mich, says a horrible and mysterious crime was com- mitted at Colwell lastnight. Aman named Owen Garrett, aged about 69 years. was this morning found dead in his bed, having been brutally murdered some time during the night. Garrett and his wife have not been on good terms for some time past, as he has been living with another woman named Hicks. Garrett's wife is suspected of know- ‘ing something about who dld the heinous deed. A later despatch says : The coroner's verdict sets forth that he came to his death by blows inflicted upon his head from a sharp instrument, supposed to have been in the hands of his wife. Lavina Garrett. On this ï¬nding she was arrested and taken to Stanton Jail. Mrs. Garrett ï¬rst “gave herself away" by going to a neighbor’s house and telling that her hus- band was dead, and mentioning the hour at which his death took place. Upon visiting the house it was found that Garrett had. been foully murdered in his-bed. his head having evidently been split by a blow from an axe. Since the ï¬rst despatch about the tragedy, search has been made upon the premises and the woman's night dress tound hid in a partition between the upright part of the house and an addition thereto. The garment was daubed with blood and hair, and with it was found the axe with which the deed was done. The Garretts were both spiritualists, and Mrs. Garrett is 53 years of age. .. -_- v vvm has made several efl'orts to see his little wife, but without success. as she has been secluded in her father’s house here. Stan- hope is the son of a. canal superintendent. quite boyish in appearance and rather good looking. His wife has 325,000 in her own right, and is the favorite daughter of her father, who is very wealthy. Secretly Married on a Mountain Topâ€" llollunuc Elem-men: with 11 Con- monphce Denouemenl. A Hagerstowu (Md) despateh dated Oct. 4th says: Miss Clara Hamilton. the 17- ear-old daughter of Governor Wm. T. amilton. is the heroine of a romantic runaway marriage which has just come to light in this town. Miss Hamilton has been for several months receiving attentions from Mr. John Stanhope. a young man 20 years old, and it was Well known in society that a strong attachment had sprung up betwoeu the two. It was equally well known that the Hamiltons frowned on the courtship, ï¬rst, because they con- sidered Clara too young to marry, and. secondly. because of Stanhope's inferior social standing and lack of means to sup- port a wife. The lever was forbidden the Hamilton mansion about the let of August, but the young people fre uently met at sooialgatheringa. It was (learned today that on August 17th they went to Pen Mar. \ a resort on the summit of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and were married on the top- most peak by the Rev. Mr. Murray. of West Minster. The romantic spot where the ceremony took place is 2,500 feet above the level of the sea. and is the highest int in Maryland. After the marriage r. and Mrs. Stanhope returned to their respective families, and no intimation of what they had done was received until last Saturday, when a friend of Governor Ham- ilton discovered a marriage license for the couple on ï¬le in the Clerk’s ofï¬ce of Carroll County. The young lady was charged with the marriage, and after many tears admitted that she was Stanhopg’s wife. The groom Ln:- Mnj- _-_-~†TIIE GUV’NOB'H DA [10 II'I‘E R. A Conn-on nynm Book. A HEINOUS CBIDIE. Looked nappy. The London Inuit-to tor the Cure 0! - llflpedllllflll III Speech bu ro-openod for tho Fall and Winter. For cir- culars and tostimonia'n from hundreds whom we have cured. Address BTAMMERING {NBTITUTE London. Ont. This old established remedy can be with cont! dance recommended for the ebo ve com leinu TRY IT. “you at momham he. not so it, he can get it to: you. y.JOHN W. BIOKLE (Fotmeriy '1‘. Biokle 9 Son). n.---:".:;â€" A-.- COUGIIS, COLDS, ASTHMA WHOOPING-COUGH, CRGUP. *‘f‘l‘,’,i§iii099Hm 1"“ A lon'nmna Iron mtnmnns. 50.0†Full. 0.000.000 Acres. ‘ K ‘Bui What Ln! Rich mm. Chico Tllber. I Fur-in . flock Raisin . hair in he! :nl Water In Ailing.“ , 89.50 per urenndn ward. Onaaixih mash and ï¬ve unntm pa ants. lie. ducod Fare and Freigh to settlers. T Mir!“ for "Publications No. 63 " Goo. Dow, vaollin Agent, 7;; Yongo fat, Toronto. R. M. ewport, Goneml A limnd Agent, in. Paul. Minn. Biclde’s Anï¬-Eunsumpï¬ve Syrup 11050 but â€"v _v vmvao Thisï¬ioviiâ€"nn or the severest test and most sctive com tition was at zhe Toronto Indus- trial Exhib tion awarded the highest prize; also tion,Hnmiiton and the highest award at the Dominion Exhibition. Ottawa. the silver medal. Farmers end all who use Agriculture] meohin cry, wbiii save money and machinery by_ using And for sale by dealers. Ask your rearggpergyd take nq other. McCOLL BROS.Co., TORONTO Machine Oil n... w-“ "mu wuuuncu will be commencedï¬at Victoria (B. C.) harbor m 4: Cam .1. n- a. few days. U 7 __V- , vl uuuluVlllU, Blfloles ; Joseph Chartrand, barns and stables; J. Deslorier, outhouses; W. Adze, one barn; Mrs. Psquet, outhouse ; Joseph Gravel, ‘house. The Model Farm was also destroyed, and in this the inhabitants suï¬'er severely, as their supply of seed was stored in the buildings. The college loss is set down at about $200,000 ; insured in the Royal for 031.000, and in the North British for $10,000. In the library were 10,000 volumes, and the professors‘ library also contained alarge number of curiosities of literature. So far as could be learned there were no serious casualties. The Principal is the Rev. Father Nantel, the assistant being Rev. Mr. Charlebois. Bishop Bourget was upon the ground and a meeting was held after the ï¬re had been controlled, resulting in the determi- nation to go on with the education of the students in temporary buildings, such as can be procured. Ste. Therese is a village on the North Shore Railway, twenty miles from Montreal. It is the alma mater of Hon. Messrs. Masson, Chapleau and others and was founded forty-ï¬ve years agm summon mï¬ï¬b‘.‘ on.-- -_- nunsu "an in uuugel'. The college was built of stone. was six storeys high. had an octagon tower 150 feet high and was ï¬tted in modern style. The main building was 145 by 77 feet wide and the wings were correspondingly large. As soon as it was apparent that the town was in danger, Montreal was asked to assist them. The ï¬re engine and reel from No. 1 Station, along with the reel and hose ‘from No. 2 Station, and six men were immediately despatched by special train from Hochelaga at 2 o‘clock. The college by this time was in ruins and several other buildings were in flames. The hand pump had grown tired and useless, and when the Montreal men reached the scene they found that all they could do would be to save the rest of the village. This they succeeded in doing after a hard struggle, and at 5 o’clock the ï¬re was under control. The district burned represents more than asoore of buildings, and besides the destruction to the college there will be much loss to individuals. The following is a list of those whose property was destroyed, and who have not a penny of insurance : L. Beauchamp, barn and outhouses ; J. Lemoges, barn and outhouses ; J. Ouimett, barn and outhouscs ; Joseph Beau- champ, dwelling house ; A. Desjardins. dwelling house ; J. Jubinville, stables ; .Tnunnln nl‘-_a_-_ ,1 e The Bel-uh] Building Burnedâ€"several Other floun- Deuroyed â€" Largo Library Lost. Mom-nun, Oct. 5.~At 12 o'clock today a ï¬re broke out in the dormitory of Ste. Therese College. The students, number- ing 250. were at dinner t the time. and the scene of confusion which followed the alarm was indescribable. The ladsrnshed oil in all directions in the effort tosave their clothing. A few moments sufï¬ced to ï¬ll the dormitory with smoke, and several ‘of the more adventurous spirits, who saved afew articles. had narrow escapes with their lives. and were beaten back. leaving their rsonal effects a prey to the destroy- ing e ement. The ï¬re quickly spread over the building. and by the time the village hand pump had reached the scene it was evident that nothing short of a couple of steam engines could save the bui ding. The riests and laymen in charge of the bui ding made strenuous efforts to save the library and paintings. and in this were partially suc- cessful. The building was doomed. and owing to the high wind prevalent it was soon evident that the village was in danger. Thn nnllnna man L.-:n A. . . STE.VI‘HEBESE COLLEGE WNSUIRD. E‘NANE s 0 TA". '1‘. c. LIVINGSTON. Special Land Agent for Barnum», Ont. NORTHERN PAcï¬'il‘id ARDINE! IN THE woRLn, Is manufactured by .. vâ€"lvru gun-v01. I he Model 7 Farm was also and in this the inhabitants suï¬â€˜er as tthfil: supply of seed was THE VERY BEST Ask Your merchant for 161'. severest 393; qnd_ moat . AL AL- '-flve’yearsflarg§ ._ . -.-v) â€u. and stables; J. Adze, one barn , Joseph Gravy], a Son). Pronflotor.