' . .. 4'. . «up»... "' we» who!“ in» Warm ~ . '1 assists-t titanium. ‘ l)â€"â€"- Mar-yville, Halt Tennesie, April 12. Summary of the Proceedings. . _ 1 A terrible tragedy was enacttd on Thurs E ’day of last week, |in one of the upper: Edistrictsef Seviercounty. A poor widow DURHAM CHRONICLE. E-woman of the name 0f Stratton had been '3 f in Knoxville to receive pension money to ‘ . the amount of $555. On her return she l After routine business, Sir Geo. E. Car- I sought and obtained lodging, on that Thurs- 3 tier presented the report of Commissioner day evening, at the hiuse of one of the - Ulttald Smith on the Red River question. mountain settlements. E ' - lair. Mackenzie asked for the other re- ‘E A Being much worn with the journey pebi . The lide or human being, from the ports, and also the promised Bill cf the , formed on foot, the woman retired at an E‘Gld WW1“ to this continut isi'rapidly Klan-231m of Justice, adding that if such a ‘ early hour, occupying a-bed with Burkarib ‘ ï¬ndino its way to Canada. 7 The P‘O' measure was not speedily introduced, he E wife. The man himself went out inme- . ple ofa England are especially turniu my,†have to bring down one himself. E diately after supper, and did-not return‘unt'fl l their attention to our Dominion Th: 53, Geo- E. Cartier expected to have the ‘, the hour at which the women were going.: troubles of Red River and ofFeiiianism . . l other reports in his hands in the evening, . to bed. He sat beside the ï¬re t-short time _ . rnd that shortly such a measure wouldbe then tinkered about the room aifew minutes, mu doubtless he greatly mgmï¬ed hi ’ our American friends, but facts will introduced as Would give universal satis- and ï¬nally departed the second ,; me. ‘ faction. E Some time in 1155:0131" Mrs. Smucmsoou speak for us and the truth will When thotarifl‘ resolutions were takenEaV-‘oke from an “Mm dream. SbeEghortly beknown everywhere. Not long up, Sir George E. Cartier moved that the i “33 greatly Small†â€in ‘mind sand evident- E since the ship Erie left London with words “coal and coke 50c. per ton,†andEly apprehensive-of ' Ager. She tried ,0E250 emigrants for Canada, “a “he†“wheat 43. per bushel, be struck out. from E calm her agztmed'thqnughm and sleeptgain, E are, doubtless, now on the ocean bound the amendments. but found it. 'im Pssmle. - t Hon. Mr. Holton moved that the words E sense of peril in!“ inflzmzimï¬zz l for our shores. The .efliorlh'ï¬hu Gov- “coal and coke" be expunged from the i ’00"! was gllP’nt and’iitterly dark ; yet the E etnment in favor 0f Immigration must motion in amendment, so that the effect of i WOman fancied she heard sounds without be crowned mm ““0““; and we h0pe 31,6 gaging} motion 60 remain to 3mm,†'9 that baled no gong, The money in her will be greatly increased. .' No doubt we the Committee to restore coal and coke to E POESPS’don was ‘no coitforter then. shall 300“ hear gOOd news from our en- .the free list. Finally, unableto_;endure this state ol‘Eterprising agent, Mr. White, and the A long discussion ensued, and the antend- E3“?ense longer ï¬e awakened Mrs. Burk-’ intelligence That is difnsed, .Ibmnghoui inept was put and lost. Yeas 6'2, uarys‘QO. , him], and beggedtoh, permitted tooocupy Eurbpe by means of the» " v'ernment Elfin; original motion was. then carried E the back 3‘54?“ $597503. Dying she was pamphlets, c, will “pay, ‘" fruit. and the-House went into Committee and E aha“ l° he "1 ‘59“: “'1" 8" "lam! . So “on as we: can open. llfll Gill] the ; amendtd the resolutions according-to in- considering “is “filter? 0' timidity, 3‘ once ' - -, - .. ; - SllucticllP. Ethang‘ed P1806? with the woman and in a North West. ‘0 the-public, we can mm The llouse‘again went into Committee E short time was “leeP:§g‘i°- conï¬dence “Him the millim of Europe of Ways and M nus and passed certain of.’ NM so the other however. Weary ‘3 "ho "mil to halt“ “he“ Mm“): ‘0 the resolutions, and adjourned at 1.35 she was, she~could not sleep nor drive fear 0“! 6000"!» “(but we wantbenceforth 2 from her mind. As arom- plied in usuali to raise our Dominion to that; state of ldhwce' Film“! is 50"“19“ '88 heard eminence to which it ought to reach. : Without. The muffled trend of feet souud- - l -' d After routine business Mr. Masson -(:'ou- E ed before th h '* ‘ are “Pu“ i "“703 5) 3“"‘3’99 8“’0 and ’ e once. â€The door was softly population. All these will speedily ‘pushed open, and iwo human ï¬gures A Terrible Crime. -â€"-â€"â€" A FFARI-‘l'l. BLCXDER 0‘1" 1 LYRDZRER. ' store-l1 or 0031:1055. _â€" OTTAWA, April 28. THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1370. Immigration. o'clock. OTTAWA, A prii 29. langes) enquired why Mr. Donald Smith's, . report had not been placed in the hands ofE steam“, emem, the ,apnrtment. Noise come if we use that enterprise that the 11,9 membem. 1 less they crossed the; puncheon floor and case demands. If we let the Yankees lion. Mr. Morris said the delay arose in IE approached the W' where the ",0 wo« outstrip its in enterprise then we shall the printing. 1‘ men were lying. Mote and boeatlhless with deserve to be despised. British capital l'r'tr. Walsh made an explanation with re- terror, Mrs. .3- saw one of the ruflians lay especially, will he at our .comié’snd if 'fercrzcc to his having drawn mileage allow~ * his hand 9a the face_of her unconscious we are We to ourselves. - rllZCC. He said that as soon as he became companion, while with the other he drew - _ . __ aware that he was not entitled to it. be dis- E a. long knife across her throat. She dis- The Fenian Raid continued drawing it. E tinctly heard the low hissing sound made , , Hon. Mr. Hacdongal'l asked when the; by the keen blade as it cut in way through has “0" yet “he“ place, but. tnere 19E Northwest llill would be down. I the yielding flesh, then the dull grating as great activity displayed by the Fenian Hon- Mr. Howe was afraid not before i it crossed we bone, and felt the warm blood organization just now, and very little Menday. ! of the victim as it sported across the bed doubt exists that the preparations made Some further discussion on this ensued, l and fell upon her face. 'by the government averted ï¬t the time in which several members urged the pro.’ Overcome with the horror of this bloody the dreaded 0“,".in There in" many priety of 'being early put in possession 0f scene enacted by her very side, in the midst who desire a cheap popularity, who are rti: ll it rmation on this Stib'ect. : f ' . - - . . q: I JEE . . 1 J o silence and darkness, the fear of a 51m blaming the Government ‘fOr making .,.r Planets 11inch: muted the secondElM fare paralyzpd the p00,, woman, and . h 'd “k 1 Tell-Jill‘s; ‘Jf lhe Bank 01- UP?“ €303le Bi“: she thought she was dying. Daring not to l preparations w en no rat m P ace, for the purpose of bringing the affairs of, move 0,. make a sound, yet scarcely able ,0 but the very parties were equally loud that Bank to a speedy close. , control herself, she lay with cloud eyes in 1866, in condemning the Govarument .\ number of Bills were then read a third and wildly beating heart, helplessly await- because they had made no preparations. time. : trig the termination of the fearful drama. â€"†Sir Francis Hincks moved concurrence, The murderers laid hold of the “(91935 in the tariff resolutions. , body of Mrs. 13., believing it, of course, to Mr. Ross (Prince Edward’s) moved in 3 be that of the stranger,fand dragged it. on amendment, that the ï¬shermen of Ontario . the floor, and thence but into the yard, no have ill‘.’ same privilege 38 those Of Nova doubt to seal-ch for the money which Burk. ; - , . . ’ been extended towards him b our Gov- Scotla wrth regard to salt. , hard knew Mrs, 8. carried in her bosom. y After debate the amendment was lost. E The jam", the moment she saw them e'h'hehl‘ Heh’ fulmtEnattug the most Mr. McConkey moved that the duty on I disappear through the open door. sprang hEOVl'ld execrh‘mhs against hhsEhhd Phh' salt llf‘ left out. This amendment was also l mm ,1“, bed, in the hope of making he, lishing the most uuhlushing lies, to the ’ ' great delight of his Fenis‘ii sad. Anglo- ‘llort. Mr. Dot-ion moved that flour, meal, 3 assassins discovered he mistake “,3, had hating Yankee hesre‘rs.‘ He lately de- wilent, coal and coke be added to the freeE made they would destroy her without mercy. livered a lecture at Chicago, in which list. This was lost. on division. Yea“ 63,- ‘; The miserable cabin possessed one wretched E be acted the part of a coating hypocrite itays 8:). . E excuse for a ï¬replace. ~It was built of splitE and an nudutiful son ’of'the Church, Mr, Thompson (Huldimand) then moved timber, lined with mud and outside extend-E defying, as he did, even the power of that the duty on not: be struck out. Lest. l ed up perhaps a foot REEbOVB we level of the , his Holiness the Pope. gills cad-€1,810†Yul" hi; i “â€97 76' a mental log. ' t st b 9 tin -- those outlaws l‘lr. Cusnult moved that instead of 0) Through this broad'bpening Mrs. S. saw '3 5 mh- e (exc P_ 3?. . - cents a fun on coal there should be an ad the light shining from without and there. the h‘eninns) greatly dihghhted With hint. flu then moved she sought an exit. ï¬lmtging through the A specimen of the Vile-Stash and hor- tbat cool and cake from Great Britain be: hot ashes and buried tools, with feet un- riblo lies that are' placed. before the “‘lnllll"d .ree. LOSL clothed, she clamberefl over the low wall Fenian Brotherhood, we give in the fol- }1 r. Holton moved thatlndiazi corn used E of the ï¬re-place,_and_ï¬cd towards the near- lowing extract from a downipornry : for other than distillery purposes be ad- I est house ; a half niile‘dis'tant. “At the close of Father“ McMahon’s rnilEtEcd fz'ce. Lost. . d {3'}; tth The alarm was given, and in a remark- remarks, there were numerous cries for hâ€. -.1CCOH\C‘Y move to S J e on e “by 51m“ space Of time a small company ‘Morrison,’ but the chairman said that, duty on packages. Lost. of Citizens assembled, and proceeded to the , d . , l f ï¬ , 31:. Oliver moved a redllciiou in the duty scene of ‘be murder' They happily teach before ln‘ro “clog that 00‘ 0 re, 0“ tobacco. Lo-‘ll- ed the place in time to-surprise and capture they would listen to a fellow prisoner The resolutions were then carried, and a Btirltbard, who was engaged in packing up of the lecturer for a few minutes. The Bill introduced and read a first time. E a few articles of clothing, preparatory to gentleman in question, named Uooney, The H‘Juse “dim-mild at 2 45 O'ClOCk- a flight. His daughter, a girl of l'.’ or 13 i came forward, and said that he felt it $98", was aSSlSling him in [his Opemlion- his duty to let them know what Fenian The hardened wretpli “whitened ""3 E prisoners suffered, and that the Irish , little, if any, concern for what had tran- - had no libert in Canada Those who prcscntatton 0f several reports and rc- soircd. and seemed only to regret the . y ‘ ' had emigrated there and settled were turns, S†John Macdonald rose to SUb ifailure of his original design. His accom- . mil. to the House the outlines of tlte‘ plice had escaped but “9,, 951,-" is being oppressed and tormented. 'I‘Ebetr horses measure which the cabinet. had prepared made to secure his arrest, The unhappy were klllefl, the": homes burned, and relative to the North-Wcst Territory victim of this revolting crime was foundEtheir families murdered. They rcmem __\_ McMahon This pardoned criminal isgiving a ‘sorry return for the leniency that has l-tst. Yeas .33, nays 8'). E escape. She well .kD-ï¬'w that as soon as the u rillw‘r‘m duty 0 ' 2"; Lost. OTTAWA, May 2nd. In the House of Commons, after the and of which we give an abstract in an- . partially secreted beside the corn-crib, some bered the aï¬'ray with the Orangemen at At the conclusion of rdisiflnce in tha rear 0f the house. Peterboro, and how there was no law in ‘ Canada to protect an Irish Catholic.â€" No one could wear the green there with- out. danger of getting hislisad broken. He himself was the worst persecuted other column. his speecb,4Mr. Mackenzie expressed his disgust at the conduct. of the Govern, ment in the North-West‘ difï¬culty and‘ ""‘r ‘ n i . . . . " . That our people are 'a law abiding people dinouuced the measure as one Of the is forcibly shown in the matter of Riel’s most preposterous schemes thathad ever delegates. A‘though m murder of poor Irishman m America; called a Fund) been submitted to the House. He went . VOung Scott has exasperated the masses be~ SPY here, “nd 3 Fenian 0’8““‘397 ‘0 Can- “ R' h t d on a great length to ï¬nd fault with sev-= men’ '0 0 an E“' There he was arrested, nearly .___._- Ho.» oâ€"sâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" The Law. l yorld exprgssion,’ th‘es __ d l . . and Scott ave sen t ate exact y in ac- . . ,, eral clauses 0f â€13 blâ€: laying particular l cordance ,with the directions of the statutes mobbed, and sent. to the Penitentiary. ' How different is this statement of the ' - ‘ Even we" threats that were 5' the ex euditure Will“ll would "1 30°11‘01““. . . E . . sire b upon p h imadek “l Toronto â€1’ h“ reference ‘0 condition of the Roman Catholic Irish here with that of the late lamented devolve upon the Dominion by the ar- E their apprehension “Ede,- hymn-31:, 09E rhEe , the bill. Sir Geor e . charge of murder. c ism, up 11.18 r'Etngcmantsb Z: d \l Mackenzie’s oilscaréeiy known amongfus, even. ii! our Thos. D‘ArcyMcGee, who declared re- Cartier W h e i r. i - iremme“ â€â€˜lleme"“" hf," having been eatedly that his fellowcountrymen and Erctious and fully explained several carefully examined, have been dismissed by p . , .. . C d clnuSes of the'measure. Sir John Mac- E Mr. O‘Gara, the presiding magislmt'e, at co-reltgionists were ssfree in ans. a as 'm - - , d d t 1their trial at 0N!â€- NOIP'PE 00W! be in any part of the worhj, and that their donold stated t it. was in on e 0E,"oven against ,5“. rim m uh; .' d'tion “nmnmm than that employ a.mouiited police force of'200lmmden and theroï¬vreE-t .8, could 90, be con tE . ‘ . V . . dot: to rotect the fronï¬cr and E legally detained, despite the prejudice and of their brethren in the-United States. men in~0t . - p , . l clamor that were raised against them. The to rcprcssdisturbauccs With the Indians. E mm], of this procedure I,“ be received Mr. Macdougall expressed his dis- E with satisfaction by allérightflthinking pe0~ in n which had been . ple. it would have sadly complicated pleasure att " “â€33““ ‘ 'matters it they had-'beeu committed for eâ€"o O.D-.â€"-4 l Joseph Howe is to be Lieutenant-Gov. _ , . ~ment; that is they-gets invited here by ascribed the insurrection to the course 3 our ofï¬cials, ,‘md “23'0Ҡhave been the. _ pursued by the Roman Catholic priest- ‘E height of treachery £09380 ,0 have detained , ' tthem‘ under these~:§i§Mstauces. This , . hUOd' He denounced the appomtment l murder will be ferreted'out in due time.â€" AShdolm 3 advertisement. of Captain Cameron to the head of the i When we have restored order at Red River, ’ - the territor as the most , Riel and his colleages, unless they shall police force for, t' ihaty could be E have made their escape. will be duly tried . . . unfortunate 5e 3° m“ , , .in the law courts, sad. if found guilty, ed in Government circles in Ottawa. made. Sir Francis Hlucks reviewed l hanged. In the uni-934mm, by all means , , ., l . 'n glei them have BMQE return to their own .he measure at great .eugth, rebutti g E country. It is the opmwn of perm†'ho the objections brought- fOTWMd by 1 have paid due attention to the cute in hand, i Messrs. Mackenzie and Macdougall,and that as "3 Of Canada had “0" legal posses- ._____._.._.â€".‘â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" vindicating the Government for not E 0,, the murder, a commission will be issued having paid over the money to the Hud- i by the Imperial “mom,†5b,, the trial of son Bay Co. He was followed by Mr. Howe, who clearly showed the gm'eEposed of. responsibility which the GovernmentE would. have incurred by Paying thel Assst‘u mm A FHCIWORIwâ€"Streetlâ€" Work on the bridge is actually com transfer money to the Hudson Bay Com- E , puny before quiet and order were estab- place, . was seriously stabbod today by s . ., hose family , , lashed. He severely censured Mr. Mac young man named Cresryi " ,. th d f 6002*“ conduct ,0 which be attributed E reside at De rry we“. It “PM" ,1,“ across the bridge be ore e en 0 sex â€4.9“ the insurrection; fended himself with considerable warmth t and offered to prove before a committeel then read a first time and ordered for second reading on Tuesday. The House adjourned 81115 p. m. hand making s. dangerous wound, He is thought to he in a very critical condition. 't iCreai-y has decsmped to avoid arrest, El" . eration Act for the district of Algoma. 03? It is rumored that the Honorable SiLvsn .stsrtoN.-+Read William ' bogus counts last year: W Richot and Scott are recogniz- 53: Messrs. Gsowski and Macpher- son have taken the contract, from the aim of the 39d River country at the time Grand Trunk Coum)‘. to build “18 of Commons who can obtain a secondar- new international railway bridge across for any motion which is pl’Opurlyain..or- lllie accused parties. in that manna, at the Niagara River between Buffalo and der, may insist on a division, 39".“ . if ileast, their case can be satisfactorily dis- Fort Erie. The negociatious ending in everyother member is, determined to the acceptance of the contract were oar- vote against him. ’ tied on mainly by cable telegrams.â€" happened that a divisionlist has come i Ville,‘1Prii 26.â€"Jamfl 170031353515, ofth.’ maimed“, and She contrac‘oï¬we ha'e no side ; and if the moyer .udfsncfmï¬el' doubt whatever, will have trains running were occupied as tellers, _ it impossible .‘ ‘ ' an altercation Crux]. rushed It 3°"! ' Whatever 0‘: 3“,. pngineering would consist of animals “manâ€. ML Macdougall de ED'ETIZTW witha manureofork, and stabbed character MLGsowski-put‘his hands to are not reckoned in the numbers a. him '0'! 33mm]! in ‘59 abdomen. He he will prosecute energetically to its connect]- a, the table. . -. .. , ., . . d then attempted to stab him in the chest, ï¬n“ accomplishment. The construction _ . . 1.? of the House that Mr. Howe had incite E when Douglass the, up his "m, and two of this bridge is no “a“ job; . and no we halftireeds "5 'ehel‘ Th° bi†"aleng‘ 0’ “W {‘“l‘ penetrated “mngh hi' better men than Messrs. 6101"“ “‘1 "99M. M .W’PM‘ Mscpherson could have taken hold of M9!!!†1,1,3 Marianne --- __7 tâ€"H’w" 7 r i H i ' E l A Canadian Burglar Caught. l The Detroit Post gives the following ac: In the House. 0‘ Commons on MW. icount of the career of a young man form- day afternoon Sir John Macdouald sub ml, employei u, g dry goods clerk in the Emitted to the House the result of the “on, of Mr. June. Eaton, of St. Cath- ' Cabinet’s deliberations on the framing erines. While here he went under the of a constitution for the North West~ name of E. D. Wallace, and wssuniversally Territory. It had been determine respected. He eluded the police for eight ‘ ed that that country should be termed years, but was arrested in Detrort at last. 3 . . . . The Pos't says: a " province†in future, instead of a eer- . l ' 0 O Eritory" as heretofore, and that its me prehvlihii: 2?:2312’ ;:::rm::t:f O O ‘ †‘ I - tshould be changed from“‘Assmskssa 1†ployed as entry clerk by the dry goods ï¬rm “Manitoba.†The province will contain E . . of Barbour, Show Cole, at Cincinnati, E 11,000 square miles and Will be govern-. 9nd was regarded as one ofthe most trust- eed by a Lieutenant-Governor, appointj’ Imthy of their employees. His labors in l . led under a separate commission, who the ï¬rm were quite arduous, and he often .‘remaiued at the ofï¬ce until a late hour of lshall also have power over the unset-E. _the night balancing his books. During the year motioned above, the ï¬rm ascertained thatETemplar was sending goods to a man tied and unorganized portions of the icouutry which are not. included in named Dooley in Indians, of which trans~ actions his books showed no entry. E Manitoba. The province will be reprea He was discharged from the employ of the ï¬rm, and a few nights later the store Eseuted in the Senate by two members was burglariously entered and $6,000 worth of goods were stolen. Circumstances indi- until it contains a population of 50,000, cated Templar as the burglar, and detece tives were put upon his track. One of these caught him, but before reaching Cin- cinnati Templar was able, by some means, to effect his escape. Other ofï¬cers took hold of the matter, and traced him to Cana- da, where the trail was lost. In the search, however, they discovered that the titer. 'chant Dooley, in Indiana, was but an alias 'fora man who was employed by Templar _to' sell the goods upon commission. ' About four years ago his former em- ployer heard of him in Canada, and sent fan oilicar after him, but after ascertaining that Templar had lived in various places under‘ _ _ . , _ .. assumed names, the trail was strain loch-- _l‘h“t every Bunch smile“ who has The search was not wholly Dabandoned, attained the age of twentyconï¬i years however, and last fall one of the ï¬rm when and who has been :a householders!†one in this city, met a man on the street whom year dull] be entitled to state. ‘iIt is l he thought to be their former clerk. He pro osed that an annual subs' shall began making some en uiries about the P ,. , q . be paid to thc province at the rats .of man, "11° “0" h°"-' “’9 name 0f E- D- eighty cents per head, 1.0,,ka the Wallace, and was boarding at the Franklin population at 15,000, and that afurt‘her‘ House. But before he “named Foam†subsidy of $30 000 shall lie paid‘hr is. “me“? ““3 "hum-h “"3“ â€mm" ’ , alarmed and left for Canada. He was support. of the local government.â€" - , - Either the English or French language traced .to St. Catherines and Toronto, and . , . ,again eluded pursuit. Two months after may be used “1 the proceedings 9‘ {the he reappeared at hisformer boarding house, legislature and both languages shall be._sgid that he hsdaboen one. visit to some used in the records and journalsgngoth friends, and nothing more was thOught of chambers. It is also provided that such the matter until 011 the 12th inst, when The Red River Bill. ‘ when it will send three representatives, E and subsequently when it attainsppopu- lation of 75,000 it will be enacted to' send four. To the House of demons the province will send four ré'ï¬imntai tires, elected from the four electoral districts into which it. will bsf'd’ivided The Lieutenant-Governor will-him an executive council composed of fit}: mem- bers. The legislative sssembi’fâ€"will b0 composed of twenty-four wingtips, di- vided into two chambers, hav ‘ adue regard to the various continua into which the settlement is at present di-I vided The qualiï¬cations of voters will be the same as provided by ths‘:Confed- all: shall become the property of the â€chm†0“ the “loving day it became Dominion except a reservation of 1,- known that be had been arrested whiie 200,000 acres for the purpose of ex- $312215!†{ythfthe Rm" 50‘1â€}le tinguishing the Indian titles. The ad- a °'†° “his“ mm†mm“ . . . custody of oï¬oers. A few days later and justment Of those titl“ and 0f “’5 “he. the lCincinuati papers contained an actiount of the white and half-breed settlers will of the arrest of Mr. D. Templar, in this be left to the local government, subject city upon acharge of burglary mentioned to the approval of the Governor-Gen- Shove- eral. EDuriug the past week the proprietor of .the Franklin House received a letter from Wallace requesting him to pack and send him his clothing in his black trunk, and to keep the brown one. As he was owing a large board bill, this brown trunk was open- ed to see if it contained aught of value, and athesight that met the eyes of Mr. Rubi was certainly suggestive. Besides a number of blood handke h'f nt' - Resmssu.â€"â€"George E. Desbarats, clothiiirr m le 8’ a qua “y or under . . . 6, etc., were found coal chhels, Esq') has tendered hls realgnatlon to saws, jimmies, skeleton keys, dark lanterns, the Government as Queen's printer.â€"- drills, powder, fuse, and, in short, a full The reason assigned for this act, is that and complete assortment of burglar's tools the printing eontvaetcompslsflrr Des-r ‘9‘] PPPIEWQCE- Th? , trunkscontaiueq, 8 .barats to have his residence iu'OEEttdwa, [mes 023‘“??me “all“? pages, “d" .and this he ï¬nds very inconvenient to'dmssad to Lizzie. Tfmhl’ai’. P}? .m're’ °.r’ do h g,“ sold’li' l . df‘ 't . ruthenonoofvhis wives, for ithastransptr- . a ‘_ g ,l“ ‘°“‘° “_ “"1“th ed_thal hehastwo orthemï¬n‘ciu'aq In- :ind besides having entered into an ex- ‘ ' . . . . didpu insane asylum, and 3 “30nd,†On_ tensivc business in Montreal, he ï¬nds it‘ tario.- 'In this letter (Writt‘en'in 1863) he necessary to make that city his place of mam-,3“ and enumerage. hi8 sing, ,3}, that abode. ".- 2 ‘-‘: hef-has joined a church, has a Sabbath- scï¬ool class, and is goingftohe Shelter FORT EME- May 23â€"“ is "1’0"“, min. This letter, howeveffwas never sent. on reliable authority that the friends of Wallace, sincé his residence in this; city, the late Mr. \Viley, G. T. R. agent, ha's‘.been one of the most urbane, affable who was drowned crossing tub-Niagara gentlemen 0f the day. He regularlyâ€- river on the 24th ,ult., are in possession “ltd?“ Church 80d "83 conél’isudns {OP-hi3 of information which will warrant an putlctiliousness in the outward Observances investigation of the afl'air.‘sIt is bblfeved of’raligion. In fact, his friends wet-sass ‘ . -~ ,-. numerous as his acquaintances. 'EH'e'i’Efen that fpul minus wetre used, as £315 hf. under the eye of detective Bishop, howeypr, cease was cows 0 carry consi era a fertile sold an overcoat worth $20 0.1' Q5, money on his person at times. A re- {ct-#5. ,0 ,, moral-hand dealer, .andgatihe ward of 3100 has been offered for" the tim‘of‘hisarrest that om, was fumbling recovery of the body, of whichpthere hisEEinoveinen†very mwly. 1. Templar, has been no trace up to the ’pres'eii’t. is at piesent in the jail at Cincinnati await . ,_ , i. log examination. The fruit buds have been "if; "gen- [E- D. Wallace was, about two years crally destroyed, or ‘ much injurï¬ _w and a half ago in the employ of Mr. Joshua late frosts, throughout all Missouri and. WWdlal‘dt merchant, of "“3 “"380; but , Il . . . t . . his engagement was of short duration, from southern . “hols. I 13 â€Id .the grape the'fact, we believe, that some of his trans- crop in Missouri is utterly ruined. actions were not very lucrative to his em- . ' ’r .- , employer. While here he made a cloak of f qufago stree: cars have reduced their religion, and was veryracn" in church are 0 vs can an . w.- ;, " matters.]â€"En.Cu_nosioan. s A Mexican lady, Senora Biestigue, died recently, leaving $3,000,000 to the poor. ' am“ Mr. Simpson, of Algoms, has left Ottawa to prepare for accompany- ing the Red River expedition. ll? Parliament will not close for nearly a fortnight yet. it .. For the last four years President Lin. coln’s widow has been petitioning. the Americans for a yearly pittance, but Con. gress resolutely sets its face against any. thing of‘the kind. Mrs.‘_Lincoln, unfortuo nately for herself, is strongly suspected of having communicated to hér southern friends who crowded Washington during the “tic- bellicu, important intelligence relative to the movements hf the Federal army which her husband was weak enough to give her. It has been publicly' stated ithat,“ nearly all Wards~plam original. no. body but~ himself and the President was supposed to know anything, were frustrst~ ed by the Confederate leaders in; a manner which left no doubt upon' his mind that the enemy was apprised of them by, Mrs. Lin. cola. What or these suspicions. are well founded or false will probably’ never be known, but Mrs. Lincoln will bear the onus of them as long as she lives. Never-theta; Congress ought to make some uppmpï¬a. lion for her. There is s strange incon. sittency in singing pans to the memory of martyred. president and letting his widow 8°. begging. ~ - . , ~ Dncsx’sx'ï¬iiss iii ~blew Toxinâ€"l! But!- leigh†writes from New York city titanic Boston Journal," .snd- makes some revels.- lions in regard to temperance, _ He says : “ I met the other day in the street a well known minister, who was so drunk that two friends cculd hardly hold him up, and his Farady is to be immoitilihedgby a statute in the British Museum._ “I Mr. J amesBrooks, of the/New York Etyrm, is remodelling his Fifth Avenue residence onu;yery expensive. â€â€˜0.â€" Ths decoration'of his library alone'will eost'stï¬nooï¬ ' “Tm“? " -~ ~ -~ - â€"'-'-'-‘--»~ - - x... 4 . A young lady clerk employed in .the Treasury Department at Washington, was frightened nearly out. of zhcgitwits last. Mcnday while atwork, by ï¬nding a i brought forward. He ridiculed tbeltrial for murder. They were here under ernor of Nova Scotis. "Dr. Tupper is mouse snuglyenscontrcd in. her chignon. proposed system of Government, andElbe Proms" 0f Pmllpl.‘ b7 °“" G°'°"“ to succeed him in the 'Cpbinet. Seven Philadelphia girls untied It is said that but ï¬velives 99.10.†on Railways in Russia as yssï¬‚ï¬ â€œâ€˜47 . {"3} ‘ .i Thirty per cent. of the population of France can neither read or writs. Any member of the English House decent. Quite an excitement was produced in one of' the Brooklyn ferry boat cabins, It ' has riotous. ° out with only one name on. tbs losing i to imagine a case in which thé'giuority key. wine-i P“ The threatened-Fenian radii-Li; is E . dowii’s with. ,, , . ,opposcd to tho movement; if - .- » Psi-disused! he too narrow foi- criaclius. .-__ ....¢. »..>.\.’.- . . . ._..»-'.-.. language was neither chaste, reverent or when most crolvlrded, by at party too drunk to navi to w o insists inannouncingfl . . . . _ , poatedlgabis, connection with the rei‘lgidi; land "°.J“.‘l‘°“l‘¥“hem-nuts. press, whichhe really held. -It is no tin: common thing to see in the cars'usnd on Broadway, women, some of them quite young, and some very fashionably dressed, so intoxicated as to attract attention. {The drinking customs of New York are fearful. One of our banks, at its annual; election, provides agenersl carcass. Brandy,ywhit. och, ad libitum, are fun- ished, and old directors and stockholders and young clerks get glorious] ,fuddlod, nor is thisculmn. 511831†““1 t has ’-' seven miles. - gum , --'Rs‘sd W , .Ash- ~_ -_'_l‘.he LondonAthmEmtm is responsible . 9W . . E . ME “.4 for the remarkable statement that one: Death on the Trapeze . E The following are the details of the death of Adolphe Buislay, as given by late papers from the City of Mexico: ,. _“ A frightful accident happened on Feb. = 27, at the equestrian and acrobatic enter- tainments given at the Piaza de Torus. It had been announced in the programme that Montana would go up in a balloon, per- Sforming on the trapeze bar. For some Iun- ‘lt-nown cause the Mexican equilibrist did not make his appearance, and it was decided in consequence that the youngest son of M. Buislay, aged about 12 years, should exe- cute the ascension. Adolphe Burslsy hap: posed to be present simply as a spectator. At the moment when his young brother was about to descend, Adolphe jumped into the arena, and offered to take his place, re- marking that he did not wish an accident to happen. He took of his coat, and keeping on the leathern buskins he was wearing at the time. he caught the balloesas it ascend- ed, hanging by his feet on the trapeze. On the sides of the areas were large posts, the extremities of which were connected by transverse bars. Onrisiug the balloon was tohsed by a violent wind against one of these posts. At the same moment the bend of the mrounut struck violently against it, and before he had time to recover himself, the trapeze become entangled in the traps- verso bar above, and the force of the Wind caused the ropes attached 'to the balloon to break. The trapese bar being thus de- tached, the unfortunate acrobat, after sev- eral unsuccessful eï¬'orts to disentangle him- self and to cling to the post, Was precipitat- ed headforemost to the ground, about 50 feet. During this fall he was noticed to describe several somersaults, or retrolutions, before reaching the ground. Many persons lisiibned‘intoï¬he arena to the assistance of 5b! niifottunite man, the victim of his fra- ternal devotion. His fall was to terrible that be was at ï¬rst thought to be killed. He lay, bruised and inanimate. upon the ground, and the blood gushed from his nose and mouth. The greatest consternation ensued among the spectators; many ladies fainted, and. gentlemen-rushed to. the rescue. He was found not to ‘be’ killed outright, and, notwithstanding his seVere injuries, the phy- sicians for a while entertained hopes of his recovery. he, however, expired on the 10th of March, after ten days of cruel suf- fering, deeply. regretted by all who knew him. The day after the accident a sub- scription was started among the French residents of the city, and realized the sum of $800. He has left a wife and one small child, tonwhom a beneï¬t had been propos- ed. Adolphe was a native of Provence, France, and, at the time of his death, was twenty-four years of age. oâ€"Wgwfl The Fenians. The following is taken from the Belle ville Intelligenccr, whose editor, Mr. Bowel], writes from Ottawa, and is a mem- ber of Parliament : “A great deal of speculation is going on lands as do not now belong to individu- .Wallace went out after dinner and did not just now as to the probabilities of a Fenian raio'. The Globe and other papers of that stamp ridicule the idea, and blame the Gov- ernment for taking the precaution they have done. The same papers blamed the Government in 1866 for allowing the Fe- niang to cross, and if they had not. adopted these timely and necessary precautions now the probability is the GOvernment would have been condemned for inaction and want of patriotism. It is hard to please some people and particularly that class who make up their minds not to be pleased under any circumstances. “ Our conviction is that the Government acted wisely. The information in their possession was of that character and from , such sources that they could not treat it with indiï¬â€˜eren‘ce. They may have been misinformed with regard to the time when the raid was to take place, but it is quite evident from the information we are daily receiving from across the lines of Fenian ‘ movements, that an invasion has been con- paw’ Count Otto Von Bismarck. Harper's Monthly contains the following graphic delineation of Bismarck ': . As a parliamenhsry speaker, Count Bis- mat-ck commands attention by the weight of 1 his thOughts and the importance which hisl position gives to everything that falls from his lips. His voice, though clear and audi- ble; is dry, hard and unsympathetic ; and his manner, lolliug and negligent, seems to express the thorough contempt he is known to entertain for parliamentary forms. When addressing the'Chambers its actually? stands in a leaning attitude, twirling a pen in one hand, and occasionally glancing at the papers on his desk, and speaks without ges- tures, in halting, monotonous tone, often l"emailing himself, as if forgetting what. he hi“! 1‘!“ uttered, and frequently stammer- lng in a;psinful manner ; One who has often listened to him says , “ He appears to strugglséwi’th his thoughts, and the words Eclambeiflover his lips in a half-reluctant way. After two or three words he contin- Milly pauses, and one seems to hear an in- a‘r‘ticuliite' sob.†But when roused he sometimes closes with a well-delivered and vigorous perorstion. Upon some occasions he can be terribly bitter and scornful, but he never warms into eloquence. In private life he is one of the most ple- sant of men, genial, witty, and inclined to social familiarity..- His coaversation is sparkling and few men tell an anecdote with hitâ€"tightest. His fondness for female societyjap given rise to several piquout stilt-filial his own expense; and so much scandplwss occasioned recently by a photo- graph ingwhickke and a noted female singer were represented together, that he felt com- polled ,to explain the circumstance in a let- ter which was published in the German newsps‘pers. But since the days of his youflafflfolliua, when he was known as “Mad Bismark,†his private life has been without reproach. As a statesman, his caregrfs‘Open to the severest criticism. Arbitrary, self-willed, imperious, impatient of opposition, and unscrupulous in the use of meajis to attain his ends, he governs with the strong hand of absolute power, and crashes out every attempt to assert the political treedom of the individual or the masses. His political ideas are those of a born feudalist. Connected by family, by tradition, by education, and by early pre- possessions, with the aristocracy of Prussia‘ he has never sympathized with modern ideas of pupular rights. To him they appea. monstrous, and subversive of law and order. He believes ï¬rmly in the absolute right of the king to rule alone, and regards every check upon the royal will as an infringe. meat. of divine prerogatives, and a step to. ward social anarchy. This explains his contemptuous and arbitrary treatment of the representatives of the people in the Prussian Chambers, and his arrogant as- sumption of the right to carry out his royal master’s policy without their consent, and in face of their opposition. It serves toex' plain, also, his attitude toward other Ger- man States. He saw that everywhere in Germany, except Prussia, liberal ideas were making headway, and that the military or- ganization of that State alone offered an effectual barrier to their progress and ulti mate triumph. He regards the throne and templated, and it is also very evident. that ‘ the army 3' the only ““9 fohhdhï¬w' Of as these precautions were not made a moment too soon. It was far better to be prepared than to be caught napping." NOR’jYEST. The Sioux Indians Threatening. THE AMERICANS WISH A PROTECTIVE GARRISON. ST. PAUL, Minn, May 2nd.â€"News is received from Fort Garry up to the 10th April, representing that the Sioux Indians are becoming very insolent and troublesome. They had appeared at. the lines of the Hudson Bay Company’s trading post, at. White Horse Plains, and after procuring supplies, said they were going to ï¬ght the Americans in the settlement and clear them out. They were prevailed upon to return peaceably, which they did, saying how- ever, they would come back and cause the American settlers trouble before long. Letters from Pembiua of the 11th, says the Americans are very anxious for the establishment of a garrison there to protect them, should the Sioux on the British side begin the warfare. The: Hudson Bay Company have re- sumed buisuess, on condition of recog- nizing Riel and his Provisional Govern- ment, and advancing Riel a loan of £3, 000, and in case the Canadian Govern- ment refuses to accept the terms offered them, to increase it. to £5,000. The Company were also campelled to ad- vance a loan to the government of four for trading purposes. , Garry, and everything quiet. _,J! A bench-Bishop {souls-t tbs, £3091†fouflh 0f thé â€Paul“! of. France are lunatics. thousand pounds worth of goods for soldiers andEhaugers-on. The Company were allowed to use part of Fort Garry Parliamept was in, session at Fort The question whether a‘ man should be permitted by law to marry his de- ceued'wifs’s sister has been again agi- tated in the British House of Commons. A Bill making such a marriage legal has passed through’ Committee of the whole by a majérity of seventy, and will no doubt be carried by the same majority when it comes up for “bird reading. The 'House of Lords will, it is thought, throw the Bill out. The question of the morality of a man mar- rying his dead wife’s sister has been matter of discussion both in the Church and in parliament for years, but. no argument worthy of notice was ever adduced against it ; and such marriages have continually taken place, though the offspring of such marriages in Eng- Few, perhaps'of our readers hrs aware of the number of sub-marine cable Tele- graphs now in use. There are no less than sixty-four in actual operation, the shortest of whichis three miles in length, and the longest three thousand and fourteen miles. The aggregate. length ‘ of the whole twentyctvro thousand and State. He will make use of public opinion, when it agrees with his own, to further his own designs, but he will neither follow it nor allow it to govern him. From the Emporer of France he learned how toEcheat the people with the semblance of liberty and self-government, and to make universal suffrage the ignorant and set-vile agent of absolutisrr. .___â€".â€"â€"â€".â€"Qâ€" The red man has been even a carer thorn in the American side than his black brother. Without going back to the days of the Pil- grims Fathers, we may mention the Semin- ole war, in watch the United States lost thousands of lives and millions of dollars by their blind policy of treating the Indian as an intruder who had no buisuess in or claim to the country. Along the Western frontier there has been an almost incessant guerilla war for the last thirty years, yet the “un- tutored savage," as the Americans call their enemy, is anything but eradicated. At the present time the chiefs of the for- midable Sioux tribe are collecting their braves by thousands, and pre ring to try their luck once more upon t as war path. Several American regiments are movmg towards Dacotab, and nothing but a radical change of policy can prevent a conflict which must prove as serious to our cousins astheir late rebellion. The inhuman mas- revenge which has ï¬lled the Indian’s mind since his ï¬rst acquaintance with his white neighbours on the other side of the border. w are working for the country in King to pay its a visit this Spring. “REVS-r4 chopfallen testing the mstter.-Leader 3rd mat, There is a hitch somewhere in the Fenian programs. All the arrange- ments were made for a grand descent on Canada, on Sunday, May 1st. But Sunday, May lst, has come and gone, and there is not yeta“Fanyan†iu Capadhbarriug the gallant few who stompepitentiary. However, we must not. quarrel with the Feniaus because they were so kind as to stay away from us. We hope they will continue to stay away. We . have sundry other littlh matters to look after just now ; and are therefore just as well pleased that they have made up their minds not , parent eutefld the city clerk’s office yesterday and regiét'ered the birth of three child- Carried. reap-Etc whomhis wife had given birth on the" 18th and 19th inst., two being born'qpthe former date and the other next. libel-following day. We understand tha§:thp;Queen has been in the habit of making a present to the mother when such extraordinary cases are brought nndsrfltbo notice of her Majesty. At lic men. any rshtei'no harm could be done by Glenelg Council met at the Hotel, as a Court of Revieio instant. All the members p22,?“ The Reeve in the chair. The follow; alterations were made on the smug: roll : Robert Turnhull’s name it struck off and Robert Pringle’a inâ€: ed for lot No. 10, [st con., N. D, R‘; East. half of Lot 16, on 4th con., N '1) R, added to Finlay McRsc‘s nag-eu- ment. 1. P. Bissell’s name struck op and Robt. White‘s inserted for North of lot 7, Gsrafraxa Street, 1)“th 1 Lot 19, on lst con., 8, D_ R, “idea.“ Thos. Gray’l assessment. Samuel Scott’s assessment reduced 820. John McFe‘e’s name placed on the Roll for lot 50, 2nd con. N. D. R. The Roll was then ï¬nally passed. The Council then took up the um] business of the township. A petition was received from the Trustees of Union School Seetictl No, 12, Artemisia, and No. 2, Glenelg, ask. ing the Council to pass a By-lsw to enable them to raise 0250 on the leselg portion of the section for the purpose of building a school house. Moved by Mr. Lsrnprey, seconded by Mr. McDonald, That the petition of the Twisters of U. S. S. No. 12, Artemisis, and No. 2, Glenelg, be laid on the table for turd-e. consideration. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. McDonald, That Mrs. Seston be paid $12 for the support of Ellen Me. Coll’s child for three months, ending 6th inst. Carried. Moved by Mr. McDonald, seconded by Mr. Trotters, That Mrs. Mitchell be paid $8 for the keeping of Ellen McCall to the 5th instant. Carried. Moved by Mr. Travers, seconded by M r. Lauder, That the Treasurer pay Mrs. Pounder three dollars, she being in indigent circumstances. Carried, Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. Travers, That the petition of Mr. Paterson be laid on the table for further consideration. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. McDonald, That the communication of J. Rutherford, Owen Sound, be laid over for furthetl consideration. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprcy, seconded by Mr. Travers, That James Lawrence be allowed to perform his statute labor op- posite Lot. No. 1, 3rd con., S. D. R... to the satisfaction of the mover, and “that the clerk notify the pathmaster to that eï¬'ect. Carried. Moved by Mr. Travers, seconded by Mr. Lauder, That Samuel Edge be al- lowed to perform his statute labor under the supervision of George Staples, on the lat con., E. G. 11., between Lots 18 and 19, and that the clerk notify the pathmastcr of the same. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. Lauder, That the request of the deputation with regard to the improve. Arm, merit. of Lambton street he granted,and , that. $200 be appropriated for that pur‘ pose, and thstthe Reeve, Adam Coch- rane, S. E. Legate and John Kelly bc a committee to have the same laid out to the best advantage. Carried. Moved by Mr. TraVers, seconded by Mr. Lauder, That the assessor be paid $65 for his services as assessor. Carried,- Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. Travers, That the mover be authora ized to expend one half the cost of the erection of the town-line bridge, North of Priccvillc, providing the Council of Artemisia do expend a similar amount. Carried. Moved by Mr. Travers, seconded by Mr. Lauder, That. the following appro- priations be made for the improvement of roads and bridges : $125 for a bridge across the Saugecn at Lots 15 and 16, con. 10. $30 to crossway swamp on sideroad at Lots 18 and ll, con. 11, sacres which have perpetrated lately will i both sums to be expended under the serve to increase the deep-rooted spirit of supervision of the mover. 830 for side road at lots 35 and 36, con. 3, E. G. R., under the supervision of the Reeve.â€" 312 for road at lots 13 and 14-, con. 3, N. D. R., and 820 at Lots? and 8, cons. 4 and 5, under the supervision of the secondcr. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. McDonald, That four dollars and sixty cents be paid J olin McCormick. being balance for collector's fees due for 1868. Carried. Moved by Mr. Lamprey, seconded by Mr. Lauder, That Donald McFaydcn be paid 32, constable fees; also C. Wil- liams $2, expenses prosecuting Mr. Raymond for selling liquor without a license. Carried. Moved by Mr. Travers, seconded by Mr. Lamprey, That. Win. Morrison and Wm. Ritchie be allowed to perfor- their statutelabor on side road at lots 35 still 36, con. 20d, E. G. IL, undo! the supervision of G. Putherbough.- The Council then adjourned to meet at the same place on Monday, 20th June Hâ€...â€" .___;,___. enjoyed for some time. The ofï¬cial vote of Connecticut shows how great a number of peeple are lisbla to make mistakes in the names of pnh‘ Thos. M. Waller received for the oï¬oo of Secretary of State 43,000 votes; Thos. N. Waller, 498; and Th0! . Waller, l ; while Hiram Appelman hid Previous to Mr. Monkhouse return- 25,899; Hiram Applemsn, ing “Bed River, His Royal Highness and Hiram Appleton, 286. Prince Arthur presented him with some pipes forhimself and some of the chiefs of the Indian tribes. This present is particularly symbolic, and, coming from the son of their “Great Mother,†is likely to have beniï¬cial effects in pro- moting a friendly spirit amongst thelsome ï¬elds sincs “10 300' 10“. “ml“ severslitribes; for, while smoking the l “18 influence °f th° pleasant weather pesos-pipe round their ï¬res in the North- l westgrp district, they will feel bound parts °f ï¬elds where ' “’89 ‘1‘!“th °f closer to England and the Dominion of l “‘0" â€0‘1““th the 'h‘“ is entirely Glands, the Government of which, have dwmyi’di "hi“ 0“ the “Eh" ground. always shown a desire to treat. them in though "9*!“ sickly looking, “ “ the flit-est manner and preserve their improVing in ‘PP°‘""â€"’BW Hora“ rights against all oppression, and place the! in the most advantageous position. silver has proved a failure in Dot-him- Thigfï¬iflingprqsent from Prince Arthur Nearly all our merchants†again “k. ii likely to be productive of much good, in; it at per. 17,082 ; The Fall wheat is in a number of in- stances in this neighborhmd being ploughed up. Others have determined to try it though there is little prospwt of a good crop. It has improved in In the low The discount movement on American VOLU N 0' 4tlnrii Inesday, llthi Capt. v s. n.â€"A f U"). ‘Durhami M COUR TOWN ‘ he first 8 T be hel on l‘lf'ldtly k' a. in. All pers notice. lientittck s "TRAY of ill a small He has sulxw ‘ person plvi lier retuvc. hut-barn SPlN Si f [The sub 1““: friends on has 013" Sitlliillli: )Etle Ull ll 5". ,witll'lt.‘ lttllt‘i tilt: rash. C 151‘ J l) A 'ultri‘sm Adan. \ lit‘ll, J llartles, lltll‘gl‘sï¬ lltltns, i toyle. ‘ lilll‘ltS. . Hall, J llell, “ lieggs, litlrt'vll llittttte, Ilyore. , (‘nmer (‘lark, (Hy-1;. l {fart toll 4‘:i'tlvrt l‘; !:!111 .’ t,\w.l. ‘ n-zl'mi ll.t\‘l‘.< liking 1‘ ‘mtlkt wit 6% in it