A Conatantinorldvdespntdhâ€" lays that Albania. is in rovo t and’is preparing In ex- tensive movement. This season eople have been so busy working that they have had no time to talk; but now that the hurry is over we want to hear what has been done in the ï¬eld and garden. The season has been colder than usual, but Battleford comes to the front with red Wethersfleld onions weighing eleven ounces ; white Portugal, eight ouncesâ€"both grown from seed this year; and a cabbage. dressed for the pot, sixteen pounds. The grain crop in Battle River valley has been safely harvested and the return is of a most satisfactory character. Potatoes are all gathered and for size. quality and yield sustain the high reputation of this neigh- borhood. The farmers are in good spirits. and are industriously making the most of the present delightful weather by ploughing and preparing alarge acreage for next year's crop. All kinds of produce have met with ready sale at remunerative prices, and it will require considerable ï¬rmness on the part of the farmers to resist the importuni- ties of buyers. if they would retain enough for their own use and for seed. That out- Iiders may know that this is not the hyper- ‘ borean region it is said to be. we may men- \ tron that as we write the flowers beneath our window are as bright and fresh as they were in summer. ' The Edmonton correspondent of the Herald. writing on the 28th September, says: Owing to the backwardness of the ast season the frost can ht some of our ate sown grain ; and while there will be some light grain, we shall be able to show some as good as can be raised anywhere. Turnipe are not up to much this year, ow- 'lng to the persistent attacks of the fly in the summer. Potatoes are everything that can be desired. The harvest is nearly over and in potatoes there is an upward move- ment. From the Saskatchewan Herald, received by last mail, we learn that the news from the south is not of a very agreeable charac- ter. Horse-stealing is being practised with great audacity. leading to fre- quent collisions, and it persis ' will result in bloodshed. In a recent con- flict with horse-stealing Indians ï¬ve half- breeds were wounded while defendin their stock. Cattle also continue to be kil ed by wandering bands of Indians, who seem averse to settling down; but some bands are making an efl’qt to do something for themselves, being convinced that their former means of living has permanently vised {wav- , 77V .7'_ r-â€"â€"' v..- *vuuui “VII-I- ing, the remains being deposited under the altar of the parish church here. Father Hort was quite a young man. but full of promise. He was a native of Alsace, was educated at Strasbutg, and came to this country two years ago. While zealous in the dischargeof his dutieshe never obtruded himself upon those 0! other faiths. He was a universal favorite. and his pleasant man- ner, his kindly voice, and his cheery laugh will be missed in this community." ovn Noarnwnsi' Tnnnl'ronms. v.7 'Julbwu L “w. UL mu m. H . m. 1'. “ Rev. Father Lestanc was immediately sent for, and arrived on Suturdn evening. Elle funeral .too‘k place on Morn ay_morn- “ The usual formal certiï¬cate was given by 81113802 Price. of the N. W. M. P. each week was his recreation day, and it was his custom during the huntin season to take one or two of his older echo ars and go on a shooting excursion among the hills or to some of the lakes that abound in the neighborhood. On Thursday, 14th, he sallied forth as usual, accompanied by one of his p ils. As the. afternoon advanced the lad mplained of being cold, and re- turned home, leaving the father to pursue his sport alone. A couple of gentlemen who were out shooting at between 5 and 6 in (he evening saw him tie his game togexhsr throw it on his shoulder,and,as they thought. start for home. That was the last seen of the lamented gentleman in life. He was then on the west side of the Narrows, and from the direction he took it appeared as if he intended to go home by passing to west- ward of the lakes; but from the place where the body was found it is evident that he‘ had gone completely around it to a place opposite where he had started from, or had retraced his steps after wandering a while and waded the Narrows at a point where he was last seen and where he died. The condition of his clothes favored the latter supposition, and it therefore seems proba- ble that he had lost himself and retraced his steps to a place that he knew. and sitting down after wading the Narrows had been overcome with cold and fatigue. 0n the following morning the searching parties set forth, and near a bluff close to north end of the Narrows, about three miles from town. the police found the body of the man they were in search of, life being uite extinct. How or when he reached e place where he died, or what was the immediate cause of his death, are questions that remain unanswered; and this adds another to the numberless cases already on record of mysterious causes of death on the lains. The place where the body was ound 13 about three miles from town, and was quite familiar to deceased. as it was one of his favorite shooting grounds, and close to some of the principal trails leading from the south. goin astray. On that occasion he was oaug t in a snow-storm that prevented him seeing any familiar object; and having only slippers on his feet, and no matches wherewith to start a ï¬re, he suf. fared intense] at the time, but never complained 0 any permanent ill effects afterwards._ _ Deoeased was a laborious V ...m. .uvvcav a student, and in additio; $6.133 Jther dutizs huéht school 'oyery day-a Tllursdax i}; A-.. _--|_ _‘ _ 5 ma. now was Iounu next do w in; south. .utterg unconscious that 30mg astray n that occasion he 8nd End of a Priest in the Canadian Northwest. The Battleford (N.W. T.) Herald. 'uet received. has the following: " On Friday. the 15th of October. the usual quiet of the bwn was dinturbed la! the rumor that the Rev. Father Hort. e Roman Catholic priest in charge of this mission, was lost on the plains. At the first announcement a searching party of police and civilians not out to seek him. no one for a moment doubting that he had lost his bearings. and would be found around some of the lakes he was wont to frequent in his shooting ex- cursions. It will be remembered that about a ear ago he lost himself when near {he Big ‘ ill, and was found next day walk~ LOST 0" THE PLAINS t The bodies of three men who had been frozen to death were seen fleeting down the [giver at Montreal on blocks of ice on Tues- ey. Mo'x'rnmn. Nov. 24.â€"The amount col- lected here for the Stella-ton sufferers has now reached 84,000. V HALIFAX, Nov. 24.â€"Tho subscriptions for the relief of the Stollsrton sufferers amount «1873.200. The Colliery Dist-tel. Summon, Nov. 24.â€"An exploring arty want down into the Cage pit to-day. hey found a considerable amount of smoke in the pit that has come through from the burning mine, and had to suspend opera- tions until it can be cleared away. The water is still rushing into the Foord pit. It is calculated that it will take about two days more to bring the water up as high as the bottom of the Fan it. There will then be about 350 feet in t e main shaft. The taking of evidence at the inquest was concluded today, but no verdict has been given. -v a“.-- a“. -v uv uv uuu uuyu , "a time antistiau church, which Christ would join if He were here on earthâ€"a com- pany of believers in and followers of the Nazarene in all respects. engaged in works of mercy, in lifting up tramps and vagrante. not in hunting them down by bureaus of espionage and detectives; in feeding the sinful no matter how they came into their deplorable condition; clothing the unclean. giving rest to the weary. medicine and gentle words of love to the sickâ€"in a word, doin just as the Saviour did." If a church of t is sort is successfully founded in Brooklyn it will be the most notable re- ligious achievement of the age A new and novel church project is under way in Brooklyn. Tho projectors think that there is room in that city of churches for a place of worship that shall be as free from aristocracy as from ecclesiasticism and sectarianism ; that shall have no salaried preacher or choir ; that shall not be a bazaar of fashion ; in which the poorest shall be as welcome and as well treated as the richest; a church not only saying but believing that no man is so bad as to be unworthy of help or so hope- lessly depravecl as to be__ beyomj hope; u. A“.-- III ,0 . .‘ *Itv was therefore plaihï¬tï¬ei R was the devil’s work to destroy the prayer ï¬nal: '7 Rev. Dr. Parsons, missignary of the American Board at Constantinople, and lately murdered by robber Turks, was a man of great courage and ï¬rmness in the path of duty. Some years ago, riding alone and unarmed. and With nothing of value about him save some Bibles and Testa- ments, he was waylaid by desperadoes who demanded his money. He told them he had none. “ What are you carrying in that 1 package ?†“ Only good books;" and taking out a Bible and talking kindly to those hardened wretches, he persuaded them to buy and pay for a Bible apiece. Being killed while asleep, no such defence was possible. Some of the English Ritualists are be- coming violent. The Rev. B. Marriott. speaking at an indignation meeting at West Bromwich, after condemning the decision in Mr. Pelham Dale‘s case as “ idiotic, lunatical and foolish." and the lawyers and judges as “a regular set of fools," said that the abominable Public Worship Regulation Bill had come out of hell, and he could prove it. " Those Low Church people wanted to teach the public that they (the clergy) were not priestsâ€" that they had no power to give absolution after confession of sins, and that the real presence was not in the sacrament, and this teaching that bill, was intended to Sir John. Holker, in laying the corner- stone of a new church at Preston, England, recently. remarked that if there was one thing more than another which tended to increase inï¬delity it was the feeling of in- dignation raised in the minds of thinking men when they reflect upon the bigotry and intolerance of religious sects in bygone times. The most effectual way to combat it was by the earnest teaching of a com- prehensixe and liberal theology. Notwithstanding the denunciations of the entire press exce t one scurrilous sheet. the rehearsals for t e “ Passion Play " go on in New York. It is creditable to the dramatic profession that the part of the Virgin Mary is as yet unï¬lled, because no actress can be found to assume it. al. though the salary offered is 8200 :- week. One to whom it was oï¬ered dec ared she wonu'ld_not plgyjt fora million dollars. L Rev. J. K. J ones, of the Anglican diocese \of Huron. who a short time ago left the Church of England for freethinking and then, on his return, did dut u an evangelical at Walkerville, only to apse to Romanism a few months afterwards, is now a master in a Roman Catholic college at Sandwich. Mr. Arthur Mursell, of Birmingham, has been reaching on " The Church Congress and t e dramatic stage." He does not like the deliverance of the con ess on the sub- ject of the drama. He 0 aims that dra~ matic representations are tobe approved or condemned according to the moral charac- ter and tendency of each case. ‘Y-Lâ€"ILL_Lm_J A n , . .o n Rev. D. J. F. McLeod, formerly of the An lioen diocese of Niagara, has been cal ed in n by the Venerable the Society for the ro egetion of the Gospel to give a. series of dresses on mission life in Ge- nade, in the diocese of Hereford. Rev. '1‘. Howard Gill and Mr. J. D. All- croft have been enabled by subsorgtions from friends to Present 81.250to the ishop of Liverpool. in addition to Mr. Wm. Atkinson’s 81,000. and a few other smaller sums sent direct to the bishop. Mr. George Hague. of Montreal. has wiped off the remainder of the indebted- ness of the Yorkville Congregationalism, amounting to 82,600. The ï¬rst Methodist place of worship in the Northwest has just been opened in Rapid City. The Methodists of John street. Inger- 3011, have just reopened their place of worship. Rev. ..W Day has been installed as pastor a? the Luau]: Congrogstionalists. Rev. Dr. Dre has resigned the putonto of Knox church. Goderioh. The Georgina: Anguoans lave spent â€.000 in buyxng a parsonage. CHURCHES AND CLBRGYMBN. l The Scott Act In lsI-COII. Br. Cnmmsss, Nov. 25.â€"Pursuant to notice it very large gathering assembled in the city hall to listen to the arguments both pro and con regarding the Scott Act. The latlorm was well filled by a number of our eading citizens, with Mr. Grifï¬n, pastor of the Methodist churchjn the chair. Professor Foster, in opening the meeting. in an able speech went into the matter ver minutely, and from a statistical point showed the enormous evils of drunkenness and the vast sums that ware annually lost to the country by the consum tion of ii uor and its concomitant evils: e was to owed by Mr. E. K. Dodds.who maintained that the views of temperance men were iallscious, and their efforts to force obnoxious laws on a free people folly. Both speakers were well received and good order was kept. uuu. vuuruu uuuner Is at}; 11.011 11. Lo Llan evin i354; Hon. Jamel Cockburn is on. AmoeDeCosmos 1358 Mr. Rufus Stevenson is 45; Hon. John O’Connor is 56; The Governor- General is 35; Mr. Thomas Robertson is 58; Hon. Wm. Mc- Dou gall is 58; Sir Richard Cartwright is 45; 8.11m L. 8. Huntington is 53; Sir John A. Macdonnld is 65; Mr. D'Alton McCarthy' is 44; Hon. James .deonold' is 52; Hon. Alexander Morrisis 54; Hon. Mackenzie Bowell is 57; Hon. William McMasterie 69; Mr. Geor e W. Badgerow in 39; Hon. Alexander ackenzie is 58; Postmaster General Campbell is 58; Lieu- tenant- Governor Robinson 18 59. A contemporary publishes the following list: Dr. Orton is 43 'Dr. Schultz is 40; Senator Aikens is 57; Treasurer Wood is 50 ; Mr. D. D. Hay is 52; Premier Mowat is 60; Hon. J. 0. Pope is 54; Mr. G. A. Drew is 54; Mr. James Trow is 55; Mr. Hugo Franz is 46; ex-Speaker Well is 45; Mr. W. 11 Scott is 43; Mr. J. B. Plumb is 64; Mr. Samuel Platt i968; Hon. David Mills is 49; ex-Jndge Coursol is 61; Mr. J. C. R kert is 48; Sir Albert Smith is 56; ‘Spea er Blanchst is 51; Hon. C. F. Fraser .is 42 ; Mr. James Young is 45; Sir Samuel Tilley is 62; Hon. G. \V. Allan is 58; Mr. Wm. Wallace is 60; Hon. John Carling is 52; Hon. A. S. Hardy is 43; Hon. '1‘. B. Pardee is 50; Hon. Adam Crooks is 53; Hon. Joseph Caron is 37; Mr. Speaker Clarke is 54; Hon. Isaac Burpse is 55; Hon. Frank Smith is 59; Hon. Edward Blake is 47; Mr. Samuel Merncr is 57; Sir Charles Tupper is 59; Mr. Jose h R'mal is 59; Mr. Thomas Wliiteis 50; r. A onzo Wright is 55; Mr. A. \V. Lauder is 46; Hon. J. A. Mosseau is 42; Mr. Moses Springer is 56; S aker Macpherson is 62; Senator Adam ope is 67; Hon. John Norquay is 39; Hon. A. J. Cha leau is 40; Mr. Donald Guthrie is 40; r. W. R Meredith is 40; Mr. Hector Cameron is 48; Hon. Wilfred Laurier is 39; Ben. H. L From time to time rumors appear in so- oalled “society " journals announcing that Her Royal Highness the Princess Louise left Canada solely because she neither liked the country nor the people. I learn upon excellent authority that her royal highness, whilst on the journey to England, several times during the voyage expressed to a dis- tinguished passenger her profoundest regret at the publication of such rumors. Thar publication gave her pain because. ï¬rst, they were entirely devoid of foundation. and, secondly. were unjust to the Canadian people, for whom she felt the greatest re- gard. As for Canada, instead of despising the country her feelings toward it were entirely the reverse. Her' journey to Eng- land and continental Europe was underâ€" ‘ taken solely upon the urgent advice of her medical attendants, who further urged her to remain there duringa part of the winter, so as to restore her health from the influ- ences of the nervous shock she experiean during the unfortunate runaway accident last winter. Her royal highness will pro- bably return to Canada about the end of February.â€"Ottawa correspondence. Counterfeit one dollar Dominion notes are in circulation, and many have been vic- timized by them. The following are the marks by which the bogus bills may be de- tected: Title blurred and scratchy, and the eyes in the portrait of Jacques Cartier like a black spot,snd a white streak extends from ear to chin on the side of the face. In the vignette, in the centre of the note, the clouding above the dove is dark, and the work around the ï¬gure " l †defective. The long “ 1 " on the face of the note is without Scottish plaid; in the signature of “ W. Dickinson " the ï¬rst “ i " is without a dot, and also in the signature of " T. D. Har- iugton †the “ i" is not dotted. i Grifï¬th's valuation, of which so much is said in the Irish des atches. is the valua- tion put upon the and by Sir Richard Griflith in the famine period. At that time it‘was found necessary to reform the tax laws, and Sir Richard was employed to make a uniform valuation for taxation pur- poses. the old valuation s stem being arbi- trary and irregular. Grifli 's valuation does not, however, represent the real or actual value of the land; like our municipal assess- ments, it is considerably less than the real value ; in fact. it is customary to add one- third to the Grifï¬th ï¬gures in order to ar- rive at the full rent value of the land. Hence when a Land Leaguer demands Grifï¬th's valuation, he means that the landlord shall knock about 30 per cent. 03 the rent. Queer Dispute about Property. Ades atoh from Montreal says: Mrs. Joseph . Kirby. of Niagara. has laid an information against Dr. L. 0. Thayer. ooulist. and Miss Greasy. of this city, for alleged conspiracy to defraud herof certain revenues from property in which oom- E‘lainant is joint] interested with Mrs. Dr. hayer. The p aintiï¬ alleges that Mrs. ‘Thayer. as sole executrix. gave her husband power of attorney to rent the roperty, which he did to Miss Greasy for O a year. giving her a five years‘ lease, and subse- guently telling her she could have the lace or two yeara'rentfree. Shefurther egos. that the tenant sublet to another person at ‘ 8500 a vear, and the transaction was done with a view to defraud. Dr. Thayer and Miss Greasy being arrested on the charge, gave bail, and the preliminaï¬' enquete began this afternoon before r. Dugas. The defendants are highly respectable, and occupy a good position here. The matter seems to arise out of a family misunder- standing. The Prince-I Louise and Canada. Age. on (tuna-'- Slalcamen‘ What u GruIlh'I Valuation. Connie-den Dominio- Notes. teen in Tennessee and‘ New York, below zero on the lakes and thirteen below zero in the northwest. clearly indicates an abnor- mal degree of radiation from the earth’s surface in the region whnece this glacier- like aerial mass was cradled. Sir John Richardson many years agoobeerved in the Arctic area that the intensest cold weather was due to the earth's lose of heat by radia- tion during periods when the atmosphere was exceptionally dry. The popular name ‘Vllere ll Clllc [from and \thre [I ll.- Gone. .. The cold wave which is now receding \ from our Atlantic shores has been one of the most remarkable barometric maxima that has ever been noticed in November. The central area of this wave rested on Monday over Ohio and Western Pennsyl- vania. where the barometer stood at 80.85 inches and the thermometer at about ï¬ve degrees above zero; but the wave stretched westward to the summits of the Rocky Mountains and eastward to our Atlantic seaboard. In a northerly and southerl line it extended from the parallels of Man:- toba to those of the Gulf of Mexico. In- deed, the whole country east of the Rocky Mountains was buried beneath its frigid air,oxcept the extreme southeastern sec- tion. Such a wave would do for the rest1 Siberian Plain in January. and its venti at so early a period. marked, as it is. by‘ temperatures ranging simultaneously from ‘ thirty. degrees on the Virginia coast to four- be called to Mrs. Sheppara'e baby farm." The coroner called Mrs. Sheppard, and told her that she had had a very narrow escape from a charge of manslaughter, and ahehad better be very careful in future. deceased was suffering from acold. and last Thursday she heard that he was dead. Mr. Thomas Murphy. divisional surgeon of police, went to the house in Rathbone place. and there saw the child dead. On making a postmortem examination he discovered such a mass of tubercle in the lungs that the child must have been dying for sometime past. In the same room with the deceased there were Mrs. Sheppard, two young women. and two other farmed children, and he understood that they all llived in that room. He was clearly of ‘opinion that death had resulted from disease of the lungs, accelerated by impure air and overcrowding. Mary Ann Sheppard, of 41 Upper Rathbone place, deposed that she received childrenito take care of, and rented two rooms. When the doctor came he found them. all in one room, because the little ones were cold and timid. She had received 6s a week from the mother for the keep of the child, and had done her best for it. The coroner: How many children have been in your’hands to nurse? Witness: Over 200, and I never had an inquest on any of them yet. After some further evidence, the coroner, address- ‘ ing the jury. said that Mrs. Sheppard,old asi she was. was an excessively cunning woa man. and had taken advantage of the\ Infant Life Protection Act in a very clever manner. The jury returned a verdict “ That the deceased died from disease of the lungs. accelerated by impure air and the unsanitary condition of the room; and further that the attention of the inspector under the Infant Life Protection Act should Dr. Hardwicke held an inquiry on Wed- nesday week at the St. Pancras court, London, on the body of Edward Rayner, aged 18 months. Mrs. Alice Rayner, of 9 Macclesï¬eld street. Soho, an envelope folder. deposed that the deceased was her son. She was living with her friends. She saw a card advertising that children were taken care of, and on going tothehouse indi- cated she saw Mrs. Sheppard, at Whitï¬eld street. and arranged that she should take care of the child. Witness saw it two or three times a week. On Saturday week she visited him. Sheppard, and found that the almost, or running in Small channels in every direction, so that the men could not get near the struggling engineer, whose limbs were literally shriveling while he yet lived and strove to cross the pitiless pool that was momentarily devouring him. He was seen to fall, and all efforts to rescue him having failed. the building burned over and about him and the ruins fell upon him. A Baby Farm with Over 200 Lillie Ones. [low Jel- Wllfl-ns. cl 8:. lie-ls. Gave Ills hits (or Ills Om. The St. Louis Chronicle as s the exten- sive establishment of the Btiouis Smelt- ing a: Reï¬ning Company, situated at Cheltenham. was destroyed b ï¬re last Wednesday ni ht. and one o the em- loyees. nam John Williams. perished y the most horrible death imaginable. being ca ht in a stream of molten metal and liters ly burned by inches. The ï¬re was caused by the burstin of a cupola of one of the furnaces in whic about twenty- ï¬ve tons of lead or bullion was bein smelted for reï¬nin . The particulars 0 the ni ht's trag y as related to a Chronic e reporter were to the last degree horrible. At'the time the explosion occurred John Williams. the engineer, was standing at the door of the engine room. 0n seeing the serious nature of the disaster, and looking about enough to satist himself that the buildings were likely to burn, he naturally thought of his own â€fairs and started to get his coat and dinner bucket which hung on a post in the engine-room. By this time the molten lead, w ioh was running over the ground in every (1 rection. had reached this part of the building. and a narrow stream had made its way di- rectly across the path between Wil- liams and the place where his coat was hanging. Ashe went forward he gave a little leap. expecting to clear the stream, but; trip over a wire which was stretched along. alling, he dropped partly into the hing); pool that had begun to widen and sp out just at this‘ point. Two men who happened to be near saw the engineer’s distress and started to pull him out o! the uddle in which he was floundering. He, owever, succeeded in picking himself up without giving the metal a chance to burn him seriously. It is said that he even went and got his coat and was returning to cross the leaden flood at a narrow point. when a second interruption came alo from a diï¬erent direction and caught im. This time it was almost impossible for him to escape. The two men tried to reach him. but the consuming mass by this time waspovering the whole floor THE GREAT COLD WAVE. HORRIBLE III! VELATIONS. BOAI’I‘BD ALIVE IN LEAD. Seventeen large cases of plate-31mm! the Masonic tem lo at London. 0110.. hue Ab ived from ancheeter, Englund. Th0 value of the glue is upwerds of $3.000. so " was. In another letter Ever- ett asserts the following wards were distinctly written : “ The fire bug must visit them to learn them something. On the other hand, Pat Donnelly has made an afï¬davit before R. Fox, a commissioner of Lucan, in which he solemnly declare. that Everett never in his life saw a letter written by Porto to him ‘Donnellyh that he never told Everett such etters contained the slightest allusion to anything ap rough. in? what Everett had stated ; that ‘verett to d him after the first publication that he had been shooting off his mouth too much, and asked Donnelly to substantiate what was said, as he owed Porto a squeezin William Donnelly has been interview . He says he knows nothing of the matter. never saw the letters, but would like to see them published. 80 the matter stands. If Donnell refuses to exhibit the letters, it looks b for Everett. as he can produce nothing to sustain his serious charge. and will probab y he proceeded against. The Policeman and Postmasterâ€"Pu Donnelly’s Atlantic. Losnox, Ont... Nov. 25,â€"The latest Luoan sensation received a new turn to-day and the outlook is bad for Everett. In an in- terview he reiterates his former statement and goes so far as to give some of the ex- pressions in the letters he claims to have read, written by Porte to Pat Donnelly. When told that Porte had denied all that he alleged, Everett replied: “ I take back nothing. What I have said I stick to and am prepared to prove it to the very letter. 1 I am prepared for all emergencies and will 1produce the letters in question at the proper time and place. You musn’t think I jump at conclusions. I have taken stock in this thing and will see it out tothe bitter end." When asked if there were 100 of the letters referred to Everett replied, “ I cannot say how man letters there are. I did not read them air .There isalarge pile of them about that size (illustrating with his hands a package about six inches high). I picked out some of the strong ones, and I tell you thereare four or ï¬ve of them pretty rank, and no mistake. In one of the letters to Pat Donnelly there were the followin words: '1! you have a particle of the Irish blood in you which has been transmitted to you by your parents, you will come on or send somebody to shoot So.and~so.'" Everett would not spte who the " So-and- gn †"Inn ___-- .. -_v uv-vu’ two oï¬ered very warlike demonstrations. However, they were again ejected, and lodged in the county jail. Nothing (hunted by this experience, the couple have again resumed possession of the farm. and. as I. consequence. are once more in trouble. The couple appear before the St. Thoms- : ".1"- .14...." uvnvlv uuu Du. .Luulnll pollce msgxstrate to-morrow mornmg to answer a. charge of trespass. ‘Somclhing Like an Irish Sceneâ€"Foul“, Driven off their Farm. Lonnox. Nov. 25.â€"â€"Mr. Alf. Brown, a London bailiff, not long since was resisted and assaulted by e. Dunwioh couple. The couple owned a farm which was mortgaged to a London loan company, and in conse- quence of non-payments. Mr. Brown .was instructed to eject the pair, which he did. breaking the fanner's ribs in doing so, but they subsequently returned. and upon his endeavoring toharvest the crops,the worthy tmn nflau-m'l "A--. ___I_-I_A : 7,-‘-_ -- __--- “v...- and of the sleigh and its contents were scattered for a considerable distance, but no harm was done excepting slight damage to the engine and frightening of the par sengers. Copeland had suï¬iciently re- covered to inquire after his team at 3 «.m. this morning. Narrow Escape of 3 Passenger Trulâ€" Team of Horses Cu! to Pieces. Lxxnsu, Nov. 26.-â€"While John Cope- land, a. young farmer, wss dissipating in one of our bars last evening his team which had left him and started down the track. was run over by the Toronto train, due in Lindsay at 9.10 p. m. Both horses were instantly killed and the tender was thrown' from the tmcli._ . Fragments of their flesh , , ,, â€in, ..... ' uuuuuuu ‘V‘ “1.,“ G. A. Thompson, merchant tailor, had his goods damaged to some extent by removal, and R. W. Woodroofe, jeweller, had a large plate glass front broken by the heat. Both are covered by insurance. , . 7~â€"-v"â€" .â€" Fire. Ixonnsonn, Nov. 26.â€"A ï¬re occurred here about 6.30 this morning in J. H. Berry’s tailor shop on Thames street. Owing to the determined eï¬ort made by the ï¬re brigade the ï¬re was conï¬ned to this building and the adjoiniu one. The loss is estimated as folows; J. H. Berry. merchant tailor, stock, 84,000; insurance, 82.800. Mrs. A. Curtis, fancy goods and millinery. stock, 84,000; insur- ance,32,000. Mr. J oiner.barber,8200; covered by insurance. E. Barker,‘boots and shoes, “EM . 2..-.._-___- ï¬nnh __ _ 8500; insurance. 3300.77'John Moi-)onzlvs: building. 3400; no insurance. M. Trip . building. 81500; insured 7 for 81,005. Some Sr. Jonas, Nfld.. Nov. 26.-â€"The terriï¬c gale for the past four days has worked an appalling destruction to the shipping in several harbors along the eastern seaboard. Telegrams are coming in every hour from the scenes of the disaster. So far the loss of twenty-one vessels has been announced. No loss of life has et been reported. It is feared, however t at many vessels went down with all on board. Twentyâ€"one Vessels Lost at Newfoundland. for these cold spelleâ€"" hr ‘ therefore a misnomer. u ey formed. not within the Polar the vest erid wastes of Centr " ern Asia. 00,0116!†TIOIV III INGERSOLL MANY LIVES PROBABLY LOST. RAIL‘VAY COLLISION. 'l‘llE LIJL‘AN HENSATION. TERRIBLE GALE. Valuable Property Destroyed by El..- EVIC'IJION.