West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 21 Nov 1878, p. 1

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ey Review" H not paid in adranse tely made as addi%on to OUf wnal:spe of GIOH.". B..M Melsneton and other Tewn euld subscribe ps makes 1% one of the great Facuiteq Style of the Art and repidly SV OOR ITC. ev_â€" MNeview, s a vast aroount of interestin AL ANXD FOREIGN "POSTAGE FRER RESSEFS. TYPE, Ete Family Newspaper F THE LATEST apon being satafad by leaving th Egremont, Proton COLUMX PAPER flce is furnished with Department, MATTER, MARKET REPOBTS, PROVED KINDS. AZ who want a one in the very e Greatost Promptitude ©1.25 por Arnum n the very beet style, amd THE a for Advertisers, 1% & AND EDITORIALs, is of Work r of Grev. incressing Cirewâ€" PRMPRTEYOR. enuk Tok o . oetybeu lor doing all ag¢ Wood Turning, elail uinds doso to order on short notice Always on hand all kinds of Loathor of Native and gloreigm Brunds at iny Tannery. Cabinet Maker, I have now fmcilitios for manufacturing an artiâ€" ste second to none in the County of Grey, rud have no obl stock on hand, but all my goods are of the atest style, having opened out a largo oondfn- mont of A ! Last, Contennial and Freuch Box for i-nh' fine work. Insewed work I defy competiâ€" on. â€" The work is done by workmen of experience, as everyone admits that Jopps‘® Shoemukers canâ€" not be surpassed. h Just call and see my "Eureka Shoe"â€"something new in those parts. Orders loft at J. W. Boullen‘s Harness Shop, Durâ€" ham, will receive prompt attention. Rspairing dono with neatâ€" ross and dospatch. fort of t Not FAIR PRICE AND LIVi L Xf Mertgages Firs Sargsoms of Qutar Rockvillo, Bontinck, March 1st, 1378. Olice and IÂ¥; Urfmoisters®, and UNXDERTAKER, Garnfraxa Street, DURUHAM. B\ Professional and business cards, one inch space and under, per year, ........ $ 4 T wo mches or 24 lines Nonpariel measure 7 Three inches do. per year.............. 10 Quarter column, per year...;.......... 10 Half column, w VY + . .Â¥ x ++ l8 Oue columu, 4+ Cld en td be s a ware NRB [;A\Z".Ilé TERMS:â€"$1.00 per year in Advance, #x. 31.25 if not paid within two months. &# At theâ€"Ofice, Garafraxa Street, Upper Town, Durham, â€" â€" Ont. "THE REVIE W PUSINESS DIRECTORY. 3 LECAL «_ . Do You Want Moncy. Y MacRAF, REAL ESTATE AGEN Do. aix month®... .... Do. three months...... Casail advertisements charge ine tor the first insertion, and 2 n each subsequeut insertion CAsH FOR HIDES. J. C. JOPP PBI0T3s AND SHOES. TF thinrs LIKXS LEATHEKR! EXTI svery Thursdaray, MACDONELL & MACMILLAN, ARRISTET JAMES LAMON, TTORNXEY â€" AT â€" LAW, Solie/tor in Chancery. Notry Public, Conveyzncer, &e Geo. Jd. Matthows, MISCELLANEOUS. ADT RATES OF ADVERTISING. ISTERS, ATTORNXEYS, â€"&e por Town, Durham, Out. 334 thscriber keeps on hand no low mods, but qgods that are cheap when L mcideration the long wear and comâ€" Shaiineeis LDarzbor Shop. MEDICAL. Ds TT DKR. KIZRNAXN, t and & wl 4 1 € I~ FUBLISTED t & Frost. s College of Physicians wnd OrricE ~Noxt door to Purker‘s JAMIESON onsoN, mbrotybes For ind Attorney ncery and Ins xt M Ont dad i J. TOWNXSEXD J. W. F1 tinirdre pt when accompanied to the contrary, are nto University and Mants voILLS. xG PROFIT m can engage in. per day made by r of either sex. ir own localities. O8T, LL. B i Bros., Owen ee. Improve lress STINSON rhy «ing, &c.. rtised three t not to exâ€" s at lyon 1 8 cts. per ets. per line â€" Nopareil i a th the He *y1 73 19 )'(‘], nth 1 W 28 15 eP Een i O TW sb s l monts. Interest coases at once on ameuuts s0 1@"Mortgages and other Real Estate #eâ€" curities purchased, or advances made on imâ€"? Agent at j u Hnap Orrrez 1i Adclaide Street East, Torente Borrowers can, by special arrangement, have the privilegs of repayiug principal in such sums and at such times as Fbe)' plesse. whether the mortgage be repaysable in oue swm or by instalâ€" T To i. ce on Sn P P PV TT WY BaxxeErs : The Bank of Montreal ; The Canadian Bank of Commerce. Soricrrons : Messrs. Blake, Kerr & Boyd. Maxao®n ; J. Turnbull ()FFF.I‘;S to Lend Money on Farm, City und Town Property, on the following Liberal Terms, viz;â€"8 per cent per annum, Interest payâ€" wble HALFâ€"YEARLY, NOT IN ADVANCKE. n]\lwr cent. Bt‘t wnunim, Interest paywble YEARLY, NOT IN ADVANCE, Capital authorized by Charter, $3,000,000. PresipEXT: Sir Alex. T. Galt. Â¥iceâ€"Pussiognt : A. H. Campbell, Esq. Dirmctors: His Homor D. A. Macdonald, Lieut.â€" wov. of Out.; Hon, John Sirspson; Hon. 8. C. Wood, Prov.â€"Treas. ; Williain Thom» son, Esq.; George Greig, Esq.; Donâ€" wld Mackay, Esq., of Gordon Muckay ; G. L. beardmore, Esq.; Win. Ince, Esq. C Or to Office THE BRITISH CANADIAN Loa and Investment Co., Any Person Wenting Money English & Scotish Capital ©500,000, Stirling. Loans made at 8 por privd No fines G@enetr SHINGLES, LAT!H ANP LUMBER All Communicati Custom Sawing of Lumber Rockville Mills, With the Cireular Saw agzoinst all kinds of Saw Hourse furnished free to parties buying coffins from us. | Remember the place, WwWATSON & SON‘8 Wayon and Carriage Works, y7 Pricevilie Ont. NO ARMISTICHE 4" Caskess and Con mings, always on hand WM. WATSON & SON U ndertakers, Comissioner in A PIBSTâ€"CLASS HEZARSE To HiRE. B[’XLDER. Durham, keeps on band a lurge stock of Sush, Doors und «ll kinds of Building materials, ulso a stock of Moulaings in Walunt, Rosewood, and Gilt. Plans, specifications and bills of Luziber made out on short notice. A full stock of Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds and Trimâ€" " Tg0. mingsalways on haund. Rentinek. Fob. 14.1878 IXYVESTMENT COMPANY, (Limited.) lemember the plac CUNERALS fur done at once, and Vol.I. No. 41. DURHAM, Co. Grey, NOVEMBER 21, 1878. $1 per year in Advance War, Warl CiuAamRcGls VERYV NOBPCERATE. on hand and sold at d Roal es. Expenses Lower than any other Company. A. McLELLAN, Main Str‘t, DUNDALK, Ont Ebe Gren Revicks. al Estate, Loan, INXSURANCE, AXD nt for the Victoris, The Western and & Murine Insurance Co‘s. Insurance ow Rates, Farm Property insured for agnainst Fire and Lightning at T5¢ on each $100.00, ications nrnmrtlv nttended to. Busi ss private and confidential, PRICEYVILLE, ONTI Should borrow from the AND SHINGLES, 2RCOBT. BULL, 2 ut lace,â€"n short distance north the Post Office. (LIMITED) 13. It., Converancer &c. ara l J. w. CRAwWFORD, Durham P. 0 nished on short notice ns. with @ll sorts of trim vritr at 8 per cent l of time between i mproved Farm and List. Priny? wards according to NeTNXTYRF t the times 1 pr went. rda, v1 of ’ It was @ large handsome house, which ) her father had built soon after lis second pmarrirge about twelve years ago. But | although they had coared the creepers to | cover the red bricks, and wreathe the doors and windows, Nelly always maintained that it was not so charming a place as the little vineâ€"covered cottoge where she was born. The cottage was still standiag, she could see it from her father‘s hallâ€"dvor. Ard she had ouly to eross two fields and an orchard i when she wanted to visit the dear old man i and woman who had sheitered her in her | childhood. "I don‘t like the book," Nelly repeated after a pause. â€" "The writer seems to have strange ideas. â€" The heroâ€"a very poor hero â€"is false to the heroine. â€" After getting enâ€" gaged to her, he discovers that he can never love her as he loves another girl ; avd of course she releases him from the engogement wken she finds out the truth. But instead of representing him as the fellow that he was, the author presis‘s in showing us that he became a good husâ€" band and father. He bogins his career by Aimâ€"inâ€"arm they walked through the sweet grass, keeping under the shadow of the hedges and trees. _ Mrs. Channell waited for the girl to speak again. Mrs. Channell was the only mother that Nelly had ever known. Her father‘s seeâ€" ond wife had brought up his daughter from babyâ€"hood, while Mr. Channell was away in & foreign land. It seemed to Nelly the best and most natural thing in the world that her fathet should marry the woman who had cared for herfrom her earliest years. The relations between her stepâ€"mother and herself were simply such as they had always been. Only she had taken up the habit of calling her "mamma," instead of "Rhoda." "Why didn‘t you let me take it mamma?" the girl asked. "I think you oug‘:t to use these idle hands of mine, if you want to keep them on of mischief." "I gave you a book t3 read this morning," Mrs. Channell replied, "Yos, I have read it, and don‘t like it," said candid Nelly, stepping back to lay the volume on the hall table. "I will walk with you to the cottage, and we can talk it over." On this morning she carried a book out of doors and had read it from beginâ€" ning to end. It was a book that had been recomimended to her by Mrs. Channell. Nelly had a great roverence for her stepâ€" mother‘s opinion ; but the story had not pleased her at all. It was directly opposite to all her notions of right and wrong. She even went so faras to say to herself that it ought never to have been written. Nelly was a girl who gonerally spoke her mind ;â€"a little bluntely so.netimes, but always with that natural earnestness which maukes one forgive the bluntness. As the distant clock struck twelve, and the stableâ€"elock repeated the strukes, she turned ard wont into the house. ther," she explained. "I have been makâ€" ing a new eap for herâ€"look, Nelly." She lifted the basket lid and afforded Nell a glimpse of the soft lace and lilac ribâ€" bons. Nelly Chanell was not sorry that the morning was over,. â€" Like most people who kave a groat deal of time on their hands, she was often puzzied about the disposal of it. When she had deligently practised on the piano indoors, and had paid a visit to the liitle stepâ€"brother and sister in the nursery, there was nothing more to be done. She use! sometimes to eay that this part of her life was like an isthmus, connecting the two contineuts of schoolâ€" girlhood and womanhood. On the threshoid of the house stood Mrs. Channell with a light basket on her arm. "I am coing to the cottaze to see inoâ€" The little village soemed to lie asleep in the August suoshine. From the upland where she stood Nelly could see the colâ€" ummns of pale smoke going up from the cottrage chimneys, but nobody was astir in the gardens. It was noon. Scearcely a fluke of cloud relioved tho intense blue overhead ; not a breath of wind fanned the thick leafage in the copse behind her. But, ah! alas! ho sighed in vain By river‘s gontle flow For ho did no‘er return againâ€"â€" Poor Exils of Gleneoe! ‘Climbing the hills that once were freo, Avonging Mucdonald‘s woe! Fust laying doad on bloody lea The murderers of Glencoe!‘ ‘Oh! how I long once more to trend The land where blucbelis growâ€" With elaymore, bonneot, kilt and plaidâ€" The valley‘s of Glencos! ‘The naked child, the widow paloâ€" Naught could appense the foo! The orphan‘s cry, the virgin‘s wail, Caused Ja«ghter in Gloucoe! ‘Cursed be the name of Campbell, ayo, That struck the occult blow ! Oh! doubly cursod be the kindred tie That link‘d it to Giencoe! ‘Dark was the night ruthless the deod, That redden‘d the spotless snow! And darker still the tyrunt‘s meed That slaughter‘d fair Gloncoe! That I must lull my woeâ€" All unavenged the bloody bierâ€"â€" The massacre o‘ Glencoe? ‘Alas !‘ he sighed, ‘and is it here Whers palinâ€"trees wave and orange bloont, By river‘s gentlo flow, Thore sat, in sad and silent gloom, Au Exile from Glencoe! NELLY CHANNEL. The Exile otf Glencoe! POETRY im from the| Nelly liked his sermons, which were ut the truth. | never above her comprehension ; and yet him as the| she liked him none the less, perhaps, beâ€" r presis‘s in | cause her instincts told her that he could a good husâ€"| have soared higher if he had chosen. She his career by | fell into the habit of comparing him with But before a month had passed by Mr. Chanmell and the curate had found out that they were of one mind. The newâ€" comer did not want to upset any of the old plans, but he showed himsel{capable of imnâ€" proving them. He was no shallow boy inâ€" flated with vast notions of his own selfâ€" importance ; but a thoughtful, active man, whose wisdom and experience were far beyond his years. And Robert liked Morgan Foster all the better because hs was the son of poor pareuts, and had worked hard all his days, first as a gramâ€" merâ€"school boy, and then as a sizar at Cambridge. s "HMe used to say he was quite alone in the world," she answered. "His house was next to our school, and the gardens joined ; that was how I came to see so much of him. No one ever went to stay with him, and he seldom had even & cal ler." In the golden harvest time, just after they had cclebruted Nelly‘s niveteenth birthday, a new face appeared in Huutsâ€" dean, and a new influenca began io work among the villagers. . The reetor who Rad grown old and feeble, was at last induced to secure the services of a curate. And Robert Channel}, having been a good friend to the people for many a day, felt almost disposed to look jealously upon the stranâ€" ger. Itmight have beeu that Robert Channel! thonglt too rmauch of what the husband should be to the wile, and too litile of what the wife is to tho husband. Tuere are moments in the life of the strougest men when only the touch of a woeman‘ hand has kept them from turnirg into the wrong road,. But it is not easy for a father, anxious for the safety of his girl‘s future, to think of anything beyond her reâ€" ‘ quirements. Nelly was a prize ; and Mr. Channell could but daily pray that she might not be won by one who was unâ€" worthy of her. It was generally known throughout the cottmty that Nelly was the dauglter of a rich man. _ She was very pretty too, although not so beautiful as hermother had had been; and at nineteen she was not withâ€" out wouldâ€"be suitors and admirers. But nct one ofthese was a man after Robert Chanâ€" nell‘s owit heart. ‘They were hunting and sporting country gentlemen; whto talked of dogs and horses all day long. _ He wanted a man of another stamp for Nelly. â€" H« did not care about long pedigrees, ner dic he hanker aftor ancestrial lands. He desir»> for his childa husband who would guide a young wife as bravely up the hill of Saecri fice as over the plain called Ease. "I wish he had left the money to a poorâ€" er girl," remarked Mr. Channell. _ "Weli, Nelly, you will now have a hundred and fifty pounds a year to do as you like with. I hope you‘ll spend it wisely, my dear." "I hope no one is defrauded by this legacy," he said gravely.â€" "You will have quite enough without it, Nelly. â€" Had Mr. Muyrtle any relations 2" Mr. Channell read the letter in silgnce. And then he looked up quickly into his dauzhter‘s face, and nut Ins hand on hors. "Who is your new â€" correspondent, Nelly?" he asked. "This is something different from the youngâ€"ladvish epistles you aro in the habit of receiving, isn‘t it ?" "Tond it, father," she cried. _ "Old Mr. Myrtle 1s dead, and has left me three thouâ€" sind pounds! _ You remember how he made a pet of me in my schoolâ€"days ?" "I don‘t know the writing," she said. Opening it carelessly. But in the nest minute she hastily laid it before him. When she entered the broakfast room her father was already seated at tha table looking over Iisletters. He held up one addressed in a legalâ€"looking hand, to Miss Helen Channell. The book was talked of no more that day ; and for many a day afterwards it stood neglected on Mrs. Channell‘s sheives. Nelly had forgotten it after a night‘s sleep, and the next morning‘s post brought her & surprise. Mrs. Channell thought within herself that the young often believe themselves a thousand times harderâ€"hearted than they are. Those who feel the bitterest wrath when they think of an injury that has never come to them are the most patient and imercifulwhen they actually meet it face to face. But she did not say this to Nelly. "He didn‘t deserve to be happy!" cried Nelly, "He ouglt to have been sure of himself before he proposed to Alice. If I had been in Alice‘s place I would have let him depart, but not with a blessing ! _ She took it far too tamely. I would have let him see that I despised him." "Lewis Moore was not a treacherous man," said Mrs. Channell, quietly. "He made a great and terrible mistake, But sometimes it is not easy to distinguish beâ€" tween a blunder and & crime. The heroâ€" ineâ€"Aliceâ€"had grace given her to make that distnetion. Fhe saved him and herâ€" self from the e€fects of the blunder by setâ€" ting him free. She bade him go and marry Margaret, because she saw thit Margaret was the only woman who could make him happy." an net of treachery and yet ho prospers, and is wonderfully happy with the wife of his choice! It is too bad." There is no need to tell what he raid. Perhaps it was not a very impassivned deâ€" claration ; but it made & happy woman of Neliy. Aud only a few minutes later Mr. Channell and Lis wife returned from a wintery walk, and found the two young people together. There were no concealâ€" ments ? Mergan was too honourable, and Nelly too simple hearted, to make a secret of what had taken place. It was all talked quietly, but with a good Ceal of restraincd feeling, and then having declined an inâ€" vitation to dinner, the curate went his way. He scarcely knew? himself®in the charâ€" acter of an engaged man. He had been working so hard all his life that marringe had been a very distant prospect to Lhim. While there were the dear old parents to _ Those calm autumn days were very | sweet days to Nelly Channell. The sumâ€" ! mer lingered long ; no wild winds sudderâ€" |ly stripped the trees, and so the woods kept their leafyness, and stood in all their gorgeous apparel, under the pale bine skies. Nelly thought it must be the peace of this slow deery and tranguil sunshine that made her life so happy at this time. | She did not own to herself thatevery bit of the old scenery had become dearer because Morgan Foster was learning to love it too. Her father and mother discovered the ;secrflt long before she had found it out ; | and they sm‘led over it together, not illâ€" pleased. "No," sarid Nelly, suddenly looking up through her tears, "I shall be a great deal worse if you leave me to mysel{!" Her face told him more than her words. In a moment the truth fashed upon him, and covered him with confusion. A sainer man, or cne less occupied in earnest work, would have seen it far sooner. Morgan Foster took a chair by her side, and felt his heart throbbing as it had seldom throbâ€" bed before. There was but one thing to be done, and be was going to do it, The curate advanced a few paces, and stopped in sudden distnry: There was something so pathetic in Nelly‘s pale, tearful face, that he was stricken speechless {or a moment. And then he recoved himâ€" self, and began to make anxious inquiries which she scarcely knew how to answer. "Nothing Lbas Lappened, Mr. Foster," she sobbed. "I am only crying because 1 am in low spirte." am in low spirte." "Shall I go iiway now, and call tosmorâ€" row ?" asked the bewildered young man in his eml arrasment. Christmas had come and gone. 1t was the last day of the old year ; Nelly sitting wlone by the drawingâ€"room fire, was seriously taking hersclito task, and askâ€" ing her own heart why the world was so very desolate that day ? True, . the ground was covered with snow ; but the afternoon sky was bright with winter sunâ€" shine. The brown woodlands took rich tinges from the golden rays that slanted »ver them, and scarlet berries glistened against the garden wall. _ Nelly had wrapped a shawl round her shoulders, and had laid the blame of her low spirits on a cold. It mattered so much that tears in Nelly‘s "rown eyes began to run down. her cheeks. At that very viomont the drawingâ€"room door was thrown open, and the page anâ€" aounced Mr. Foster. that he would give Nelly to a man who lad only a hundredâ€"andâ€"fity a year, and was exeambered with an old father and mother, living in obscurity. Some of the dissappointed suiters remarked that Chanâ€" nell was a fool to have the parson hangâ€" ing about the place ;â€"there was no countâ€" ing on the whims of a spoiled beauty who might take it into her head to fling herself away on the eurate. But this notion was not generally enfertained; and the inâ€" timnacey increased without exciting much notice. i ‘ "But the cold is not to Llame," owned the zirl to hersolf, "When one has a friendâ€" nch a friend as Mr. Fosterâ€"one does not like him to stay away from the houss for a week ; and one cannot bear to hear that he is always at the rectory when Miss White is there! And yetit ought not to matter to me !" She had more than one offer just at this period. The neighbouring country houses were full of men who had come to Huntsâ€" dean for shooting. _ They admired Nelly riding by her fatner‘s side, and looking vigorous and blooming in her habit and bat. They met her now and then at a dinner party, and straightway fell in love with her chesuut hair and brown eyes, and were mot unmindful of the handsome dowery that would go along with these charms. She was wont to say long afterâ€" wards, thai her unconseious attachment to another was a safeguard of God‘s providâ€" ing. Many a woman spenks the fatal yos, because her heart furnishes her with no reason for saying no. Robert Channell encouraged the curate to come often to his house; but no one hinted that he thought of him as a possible sonâ€"inâ€"law. | It was too absurd to stippose that he would give Nelly to a man who Lad only a hundredâ€"andâ€"fity a year, and was exeumbered with an old father and Even in person this son of the people could hold his own against tite decendâ€" ants of the old country families. He was a tall broadâ€"shouldered man ; and Nelly, whose stature was above middle height, secretly took a pleasure in feeling that she must look up to him. They were seen walking side by side along the Huntsdean lanes, and folks began to say they were a fine couple. Ripppininbac tC > c coal 1 all the men she had ever known, and found that healways gained by the p:ocess. TORONTO i The crowning exporience of the trip is | when the boat renches Trinity Bay and { steams in close under the gigantic precipice of Cape Trinity, with Eternity over rgainst l an enormous mass almost equally bold and | stern. ‘The face of the rock, cightcen hunâ€" I dred or two thousand feet high, is split | down absolutely perpendicular, dropping | into the back water like the face of some vast piece of Titanic masonry. The depth of the water is said to be quite equal to the | height above, and thé vessel steers boldl; j in beneath the frowning wall ti!] it secm as if the awful thing must certainly topple ! over and bury us in the deep. To add t |the excitement and almost terror of the ? sensations, the steam whistle shrieks and | the mountain gives back a succession of f strange, nnearthly echoes that return again | and again in wild reverberations from a | score of different directions. At Baio St |Jean, as well as at Tadousae, whea we â€"reached it by daylight, there was a perfect [ and very singular display of the "terrace | systam" of the Champlain poried before re | ferred to the geological nge just proceding ‘t!xe preseat. Theie are here no less thu ‘five distinct terraces, one altove ancthcr. ITheix' steep escarpment: o! ycllov sand ox tend like t20 long lines of some extensiv« Lartification, tier on t‘er, each besvring o: its summit a perf.etly horizontal streteh oi green and cultivated land, like so man;, shelves, or the floors, if you please, 4 » fiveâ€"stormied farm. The diiferences of lave [increase greatly as thoy ascen l, the lowis } being perhaps twenty faet above the water |Â¥ie next fifty, and others at a hundred an: ‘fiflty feet, three hundred, and six hundred i and then behind them all is the nativ« lrucky frace of the primitive native granit , mountain, seared and split iu every dires | tion, a thousand feet or more higher yet, | and forming a very singnlar contrast to the | yellow color and severely horizontal form | of the structure below. The upper terrace, such is the theory, is the remnaat of what formed the original fHoor of the river or sea bottom, when these mountain tops comâ€" posed an archipelago of countless granite islands in a wide estnary of the old geoâ€" logical sea. An nplift of the continent, cousing the waters to rush away swiftly, evaded that floor, letiing down the level of the water to the next terrace, which formed the second sea bottom, the mere fragment of the previou® bting left as it is now. The second floor in turn wa&s torn away by a second uplift, and the third was ' formed, and so on till the present level was | reached ; the foree which occasioned the i succossive uplifts growing weaker and | weaker, and raising the terrace a less disâ€" | tance each time, till the last attained only l about twenty feet, whereas the topmost is fully three hundred feet above the one next l below it.â€"Cor. Newark Advertiser. The carliest snow fall in sixteen years oc eurred in Kanses on Saturday. Many attempts have been made to pene» trate into the interior of Greonland from the west coast, but, until this summer, with little suceess. Three Danish gentleâ€" men, Messrs. Jensen, Kernuerup and Groth, under the Commission for Scientific Exâ€" ploration in the Danish colony, started io explore fand survey the coast between Godâ€" haab and Frederikshaab,. Lieut, Jensen took advavtage of the oppo:tunity to make an excursion into the interior over the ice. The aim was to reach several mountiin peaks rising out of the ice. The baggage was placed in three small sledget of the traveilers‘ own, and the toilsome journey commenced on July 14. _ After two days the loose snow accumulated on the surface of the ice to such an extent that the jourâ€" ney became very, dangerous, while they continually sank‘in concealed crevasses & 14 holes, saving themseives only by adopting the Alpine expedient of attaching thein selves to each other by a rope. ‘Tue sur fuce of the ice was generally undulating, but there were also many rugzed parts and chasms which ren lered the journey a very difficult one, It was foggy nearly t whole time, thd on July 28 a snow storm eame on,. On the 2ith the expedition reached the foot of the mountain referred to nbove. ‘Then came on nuother storm which lasted for six days, with contmuous snow and fog ; the truvellers were snowâ€" Llind.. The weather cleared on the Bist, when the ascent of themountain miglt be undertaken with some prospect of success. The height was estimated at about 5,000 feet above sea level, and on the other side of the mountain as far as the eye could reach, ice sheets and glaciers were seen, and not the sgoallest speck of land free of An Excursion into Greenâ€" land. So Morgan Foster; as he walked back to his lodging over the frozen snow, began to wonder at the good gifts that heayon had showered upon him. It was a strange fact that he was mure inclined to worder than to rejoice. be helped, how could he think of taking a wife? â€" And now, here was rich girl willlng to srarry him; and here was her father aetually consenting to the match with evident satisfaction ! But Nelly was someâ€" thingâ€"better than an heiress ; she was a very sweet woman ; such a woman as avy man would have been proud to win. A Sail Down the Saguenay. {ro se coxtryusp.) # € Tus Onoust Max is tus Worip.â€" The Lancet says:â€"The stomes of rien whose age is considerably over a hundred generally come from a district in which verifieation is imporsible, Never, perhaps, even from $uch districts, has a candidate for the age of one hundred and eighty been presented, but one is offered for our credence in the person of f citizer of Beâ€" gota, in San Salvador. Weare told that he ouly confesses to his age,; but liis neighâ€" bors, who must be better able to judge, affirm that he is considerably older than he says,. He isa haliâ€"breed numed Micimel Solis, and his existence is testified to by I)r. Hersandez, who was nssured that when one of the oléest inhabitants" was a child this man was recognised as a centensrinu. lis siguature, 1712, is suid to Lave been discovered among those of persons who asâ€" s sted in the construction of a certain gonâ€" veut, Dr. Hernandez found this wouder© ful individual working in Lis garden, H:s skin was like parchiment, his hair was as white as suow, and covering his head like a turban. Heattributed his long life to his careful habits ; eating orly onece a day, for hali an hour, because he belioves thut more food than could be eaten in haif an hour could not be digested in twenty â€"foer hours. He had been accustomed to fast on the first and fifteenth of every mouth drinkiog on those days, as much water as m: He ca« .fii" onb mld% lui toode, and ‘:;k ll.‘.w‘;i. County of Grey, was murdered near Torâ€" ronto. The deed was said to have been committed by one of the Brooks Bush gang, who were broken up ut the time, and one of them named Brown was tried, convicted and hung for murder. A Mail reporter now states having had an interâ€" view with a womun who is the sole surviâ€" vor of the gang, and she tells a story to the effect that Erown was an innocent victiin. This secims to hbe confirmed by the prisoners proteâ€"tations during the trigh and when sentenced. During his confineâ€" menut he made frequent protestations of inâ€" nocence, and his last words were, "I call the Almighty God to witness that I am innocent of the murder for which I am about to be hung." From recent developeâ€" ments it seems almost cortain that he was innocent, and while sincere pity must be felt that a man should suffer uvnjustly, still he was to be blamed for being a member of a gang whose regular occupation was thieving and debauchery, and appearances were thus strongly aguinst him. _ The moral to be deduced from this is upparent to law as well us to men, "a man is known by the company he keeps." ow can wars be avoided and standâ€" ing armies dissolved ? ‘This is the great question for Europe, and for every nation of Europe. To my thinking, the most diwect wayâ€"I was going to say the only wayâ€"to this great ond lies in free trade between the peoples of Europe. If tariffe were abolished, or even if they wore made very moderate, the nations would trade freely with each other, their commerce would increase enormously, and they would bhit by bit become like one grand ustion, their com:norcial interests would multiply on such a scale, and their mutual knowâ€" â€"a,6i ns try to unpross on prabii¢ pinion he convietion that the protectionist system, the systeni of high tariffâ€",and the monopoly which some classes are eagert» keep to the letriment of the people, are the principle canse and the most powerfal support of standing armies and of freqnent wars. If this idea could prevail in EZurope, then, indeed, shotuld we be able to welcome the dawn of that day in which armes will no longer be considered necessary, and high tariffa a crime against the interests and the happiness of the people.â€"I am, with great respect, yours, &e., Joux Buront. *"To _ Professor Pietro _ Sharbaro, Bologna." ledge and intercourse would became mo iutimate that the ambition of monarchs and of statesmen would be impotent to drive them to war. *"The treaty between France and Engâ€" land, negotiated eighteen years ago by Mr. Cobden, has entively changed the seutiâ€" ments of the two nations to each other, and if the tariff of France were as free ns that of England, the two States would, tbrough their interests, become as one. If the tarifs of Europs were mbolished, Curope would not fear war, and her irmies would in a short time be reâ€" luced. "Mononoly in commerce. hich tariffs "Monopoly in commerce, high tarif«, wrotection of the trading classes at the exâ€" nense of society and the consumers, such are the allies of great armies and the grand bstacle to a general and lasting perce in Europs. Destroy the tariffs or reduce them greatly, and standing armies will be lissolved, for thon almost every protext on which they are kept up will have dissanâ€" In 1859 Mr. J. 8. Hogan, M.P. for the *‘The situation of Enrope at this moment is deplorable ; its nations are groaning under the weight of enormous armies and burdensome taxation. They are at the same time disjoined in interest and sentiments by tarifis, which form an insurâ€" mountable barrier between the peoples of the different States, and prevent that reâ€" eiprocity of interests which would mauke 1 impossiLle for their statosmen to drag thens into war. *Rocgnars, Sept. 28. ‘"Dear Sir.â€"I cannot write to you ab any length on the interesting subject of which you have spoken to me, and I fear my short letter will not reach you in time for your Peace Congrass, _ The following is a translation of a letter written by Mr. John Bright, M.P., to the Advocate Pictro Sharbaro, professor of Iaw in the University of Macerata, and prime mover in the commemoration of Alberigo Gentili, who from his chair in Oxford first propounded the doctrine of interpational observation :â€" "For the dis he promotion ion of tariff« he nations re: wodnets of in CRre B Mr. Bright on Tariffs. Hosax Mcrorr Case Reviveo. â€" ty to banding 0" groat armics and of peaee T rely on the aboliâ€" and on the brotherhnod of n‘ting from free trwde in the lustry. ++ B + a <l++ J

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