cevient in the Alps for h recorded. In makine ly Fairs. Bjane an English phy. w fell Over & N LIEVE «* £33, ~ 600 bead of cattle were ht at Puerto Espagna, 8. 8. LKECTORY., and Chemint and Physi« cians endorse . and ~ A TY THE SKIN, nonu ING s HE HEART, B riwd ST STOMACH, The _ State Assayer end it as a dmt. &e., Kingsâ€" IT snrpris.d at the re in that locality, hard to introduce, ist ordered a fow u that the de. n in enely M * 5 9. tm. ; .Unl"...'. «hnd :30 p., Â¥ -.nm.} or Rov, hic Me 24 rtoom at 11 m a% 8 1 In making h lay aftor 6 th. artly 1 at the Purk moutlh loronto. D n dluy was esâ€" CDOr traim A St On Au le, the tw Kuitt-' CHC HaAS :u'l the applisnces for "~Nitling Stockings & Socks How are yo; ;f for Socks Look out for cold wsather. rv-ui wl.‘nnnnny on hand a !:l‘l .I;'pl;’l." and Tewny Harness, made e Good Work and reasowable chas M) Vary a *lame HARNESS, HARNESS. New Stock of LEATHER, HARYXI wHIPS, CURRY COoMBS, BRUSHES, BELI S, &e. Roliable Scotch COLLAR. CALL AT BOULDENXN BROS And See Their New Antiâ€"Galing, Eas Working, Good Enongh ‘nrngm. Des. 3, 1984 Â¥r=® AMERICAN COLLARS, | . Lnte» Rs vfll‘.“’nlbp WM. JOHNSTON, Jr., | JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIER ®, 1407 Y I I ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for the 4 County of Grev. Austion Swles attonded to in all parts of the County, at reasonable rates. Goods sold on Commission. Land Sules curefully attonded and the sale bills promptly posted up wring and Summer Fashions$ reguls1} ceseived. Durham . Fob.14,1878. ; 1 imnortant qnestion for overyâ€" o consider as thore i+ nothing more inâ€" ‘r hoealth than cold feet, however such @nsilv heromedied and everyvbody maae Wo~able by calling on Witinra FSohnâ€" enr., who hasall thae acethie L1 BOS Willbe mt Ma day and Fric Dundalk .M YETERINARY SURGEON tood FIT Gua.ranteed.‘J Catting done to Order. Alexander Robartson »n the m -.n-.mnIa i. ‘@shortest notice and a »tition . A calland inpport nat Is Agent for the Celebrated wilsom 3t Sewing Machines of Mamilton,. a Specitalty. AZ Solicitors in Chuncery, Conveyaneers, ete. 0 wen Sound, have resumed it Flesherton. Office pon every Taursday as beretofore. LFRED FROST, _ J. W.FROST . LL.B Wend OiBeesâ€"Wingh CHAS. LEAYEN§, â€" _ _ Maker, Lambton Street, ttear the Post Office, DU RHAM, 13 * RADT neeat theOld PostOffice, Lowe: Tow1 County Crown Attormey June Hith . 1880. n wl ATvortisements, excent when accompanied by wr. Aen instructions to tize contrary, are inserted @ntil forvidden, and charged at regular rates.. @rhwne . Money to Loan. DURMAM St BUSINESS DIRECTORY. â€" S srGat JACKES & PRINGLE, LTTORNEYS at Law, Solicitors Offceâ€"Lowert Town, Datham. B.JACKES, B. A. R. A. PRIN MISCZELLANEOU®S. HUOGH MACHKAY, Fashions Segatsels Teceive d â€"PRRMS:â€"$1.00 per rearin Adrance.â€" $1.434 it not paid Within three m o ut ho . :\Bl’llSTEllï¬A and Attorney‘sâ€"at used upon it. It also ean be sow the fAimest fabric. Prices from #35 to $13. ". 9. N~ITXCOON, E.D. MACMILLAXN, TTORNEY â€" AT â€" LAW, &6.â€"Orprice TAILOR, ALSO THE OLD "THE GREY REVIEW" »ppouite Parker‘s Drug Wore, U}p{ T;"-l; the O Bes, Gurafrate Sireet Lower Town, Durkam ronto Frost & Frost, ATE of Outario Vetrinary Col apport nativeindustry RATES OF ADVERTISINXG. pposite the Canada Prosby- terian Chureh.{ DURHAM very Th ursday, ! a full supply of Carriage inde of the best material. reasomable charges MEDICAL. DUNDALK .Ont DENTISTER w . s prevared t « TOWNSEKXD, P ablizsher a 10 ojcl th 1979 od acthods, lates trongest Linen thrend S. JEROME, Licertiat 13 PTBLISHED DURHAM. charges that iclburne . every Mon ek a.m.to 5 p. m. yâ€"13¢ M.:cb@rd, 1082 th thing Agoo ;i |SMUildinmg Lots \ Kecery K. A. PRINGLE y190 h ASy , Upper Town 19724 \ THESE Lots are benntifully sitnated on . the principat Street, in U Town, opposite ' the restdence of Gen, .,vknnn,l';,lq., they are very even. have boen used as a Cricket ound, and are near to where the prineipal "rodfl'e. is bronght into the Town for sale, Since the opening of the Railway to the Town of Durham it his become one of the bost Murkets in Ontario and at no distent day, with its splendid water powers, will become a manufacturing place of note, J H.‘ Hunter, Esq., is now erecting a commodions Storeâ€"house at the Station, 80 x 40, three stories hich , and otherstonâ€" template buildings of a similar kind. Durbham is ‘ noted fori‘s splendid stores and Hotels, This is a far safer investment than Manitoba Lots. The | wivertiser soli~its ap offer faw awa 2. "33 °0. i €NC wdverticep s13 "{Sopt bNtn Manitoba Lots. The | the accused Adrertiser soli~its an offer for ame or al .l s * Apply at this Office or to 1 the Lots i illnstration ply | TOWX of PrRFAy 600 Bush. Frash Darham P. O.. ~~â€"3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 8, Hunter‘s Sn}vey. East Sids Garatraxa St., North of Jackson St. v162 , IMMENSE STo His) annd ‘I Lumber, Luinbeiflu To e Shingles, Shingles, Lath & Lime, ‘al mEASE STOCK of FOREIGN MESTIC LEATHERS, Also Findings in gront variety. A spl PRIME HARXEsSS LEATJ Call and examine and you cannot f ycurselves, y187 | "The N. L. $ ilxmc'r ard SHCE SHKOP Ont. v212 SHOEMAKER S R Darham Feb.7 , &c. a*4. Having patronace . 1 J A FIRSTâ€"COLAR® nHEARSE To HRE Remember the placeâ€"a short distance navth, y10 v194 Fair I"O SALE T THE ROA(‘AI\'\'_ILVLE MILLS imnery U ti [mln maurket price A WEEK. 412 a a Costly Outht free, ed argeqnuantity of JO]sVTB‘.‘ -l:< l\\‘. G.R. Bentinek, M (:C.\’ VEYANCER, Commissioner in B.R. Reat Estate,. Loan & Iosurnnce Agent. Lands Bought and Sold. Deeds, Leases, Wills&e. neatly and correctly prepared Auction Salos Attended. All Business Strictiy Conficdentiat, 11 »U s Tim Boor for 1 dealing. Repah CCOTLCH . ind (wh )LA.VS, S_pe_t;jï¬catinnn. I h | ' THE Two GaTES. a ,BANK Or COMMERCE | A pilgrim onee (30 runs an ancient tale), } J Old, worn, and spent,crept down a shadowed vale; e xenmse On either hand rose mountains bleak and high ; DURHAM. |aitiasietetes _7’ a Thopuhmruuodmdhh!mwmbuo: d _ _ His faded cheek was seamed by pain and care : ita| ® His heavy eyes upon the ground were cast, j Capiteal$6,000,000 : Reserve Aud every siep reemwonespny tesarmy in + | $1,400,CGO. The valley ended whore a naked rock | 5 . Rose sheer from earth to heaven as if to mock 4 ’]’-!U-\' BANK issuo® Letters of Credit on | The pilgrim who had crept that toilsome way; } Great Rritain and other }‘v:rul!n Countries; But while his dim and weary eyes essay i BuySapd Collects Sterling Exchange Isanes drafts To find un outlet in the mountain side , on New York and all parts of Canada. 8 < DEPOSITsS . f$4 and upic Is R ived 4 puudemfu senlptured br‘.zan door h"’ spied, _ i upwards Received, And tottering toward it with fastâ€"failing broath, | _ u96n which the current rate of interest Above the portal read, "The Gate of Death.," 1 d 6 r : wl o0 tliowed: IHe could not stav his feet that let thereto ; C OLLE C TI ONS IIIA DE ! It yielded to his touch, und paussing through, f On F8isonable tertmme, and a He came into a world all bright and fair ; ! ‘ | a ‘ambapn) * e ) Blue was the heavens, and balmy was the air; P | General Band!ng Busxness | And to! the blood of youth was in his veins, | | ® TRHANSAUTEIH, [ And he was 6lud in robes that held no stains ! ' | ___Â¥ 169 __ | Of his long pilgrimage. Amazed, he turned ; § * | Behold! a golden door behind him burned r y Â¥e t L | In that fair sunlight, and his wondering eyes, U MOH ey O Oan «1 Now lustreful and clear as those new skies, I \ PNCLAANEsT Free from the mists of age, of care, and strife, | r ’l UIE undersigned has a large amonnt | Above the portal read «"The Gate of Life," s of Sn private and Compreny funds to lend »-Ilurper'a Jl::ynzir:e. C on sither Furm or \".1'11‘5\':;:‘.{:1â€1"-.'(,) «t lowest rates K#Blind X irnished. Work 3 |p-¢;;'|'nt:“u‘(;:Im'll.‘cll'x:-lhl‘n:, Charges Moderate . 1 Durham, Planing Mill, ‘~SASH, DooR Jusiness Mottoâ€"Close and promp atie | fuir dealing between ali men Sept.29th , 1891 W. M. CLARK, Architect and Builder D@otus ks salh : A Great Rritain and other Buytapd Collecta Sterling Px on New York and allp . DAVIS, FLESHERTON. corner of Seddlerand Albert Stroets, Lower Town, Durbam, inrket price paid for Hides, Call Skine ¢â€" respects, Ladies ‘ing commenced business I solicit your *. | make the N. P. Boot, such a® the mtlemen of the Dominion wenr, I expect A.and the Hon, Al0xandet eomIRate ane Should Call 7th, 1882 â€"INX THEâ€" ROBT. BULL J. W. CRawrOorRrp, h Lime. , May 25th, 1880, Repuiring done, JAMES Opposite the atrict!v o« lg s DR meried the Hon. Alexander coming to get iy N. P. Boots. All the leading conld think it?) the Conservatives with me. as they know the N. P r for both wear and appearance Vol. V. No. 29 te placeâ€"a short distance northc the Posi Gflice, CA D ont variety. A splendid lot of iNESS LEATHER. the Dostâ€" uy at home ensily made e. Address Trts a’Co., tuced to the 1 MARKDALE , Connty GREY, â€"â€"ANDâ€" and Examine of interest: _ _ onftdential and NADIAN «. BECE. â€" . ment in detocting trath Lend~» Fast. 4. 000000 . CHARGES LOW cannot fail to smit and Gentlemen and upwards Received MC HreIE avious ausue 'l So recently as 1873 a family of four perâ€" it and appearance 3 6. sons were very Tl'ly conticted of murder 8 McCREARY, Iut the winter assfzes for Durhkam on a like e Tirview Office, â€"| L23 er Town Durhain. [ prece of evideuce. &A Arnnkan nu... 1 actor Augusta, Maine LLLS. Also ILot 41,Con, 2 40 We west Agure,. _ _ R. A. PRINGLE, wer Town, Durham tf17k ention to business . 164. stinmates, &e and DOâ€" y197 costs of toans The ‘xcoused m.m,'w [ _ "CC+0 Ane qnestion was :. How had ir| this wound been inflicted, and by whom e The prisoners undoubtedly occupred the ,, | room in which the deceased bhad teen ly e ]ing. and in this room was discovered a | table smeared with blood, and a large, â€" | strong, pointed pmir of seissors, almost , covered with blood. The inference was irresistibleâ€"the wretched dranken tramp llmd been laid anc held down on the t:er‘ and the pointed scissors had been forcibly 1| "jabbed" into his eyes. ‘This was the theâ€" o | ory laid before the jury by the prosecution * | and a convietion seemed probable., One of the prisoners, however, a female, inter mpted the proceedings by declaring | that both the blood on the table and that on the scissors was the blood of a large fish which she bad skinned and cleaned on the prev« ions day. Whis explanation seemed im | probable enough, but as the trial would " vndoubtedly last over the day and there was plenty of time to test its truth the|| judge directed the blood on the table and > on the scissors to be carefully examined | ‘ ‘ by a celebrated microscropic expert who : snbrequently gave evidence that the whole | ‘ ’of the blood was fish‘s blood (the corpue. | ‘ cles of the blood of a fish being under a f high magnifying power, totaily different in £ size and shape from those of a mammal)} and none of it hnman ! Here, as in the P last case, the subsidiary evidence was too ’!‘ wenk to convict the prisoners. ; «We remember a trirl some years since u at Chelmsford in which the microscope $ gave remarkable evidence as to the guilt of fa the accused, and also furnished a singular be Grep Revicm. | prece of evidence. A drunken tramp had | entered a house of netoriously bad char ‘ acter at Gateshrad, and his dead body was | discovered next morning lying outside the ‘lwusP, the death having been probably | caused by some strong sharp instrument | which had been thrust into the corner of |the eye and had penetrated deeply intol‘ the brain. The question was: How had this wound been inflicted, and by whom 2 The prisoners undoubtedly occupred the room in which the deceased had teen ly ing, and in this room was discovered a table smeared with blood, and a lurge,l strong, pointed pnir of seissors, almost | covered with blood. The inference was irresistibleâ€"the wretched drunken tramp bad been laid and held down an tha i2t1. C pe C‘renmstance fulling through the one dence was felt to be too weak for a e tion, and the prisoner was aeqnitted, real offender being afterwards di ered. ® | the deccased had been stabbed by the pris I(mrr, placed in the sack and carried on his buck to the spot where the body was alterâ€" Iward discovered. Upon this evidence so stroug it seemed the pfisoner would imost "l,kely have been convicted and executed; but at the last moment a chemist stepped forward who had analized tha eoloring mautter on the sack and jacket, and who unhesitatingly declared it to be red oxide: of iron, a large quantity of whneh the pris-l oner bad in his possession for use in hisl business as a . house. natniae}" hi. !/.‘â€" y crime. | There was absolutely no evidence |against him: I#t apon examination of his !nlrode, a seck was discovereil rolled hp in [ a corner of a cellar literally stiff with blood (as it was consinered to be). On the back of a working jacketâ€"proved to be | long to the prisonerâ€"were dark red etains; | and the theory of the Jrosecution was, that ( the decessed hok hisse" n p oys i in l D |ana the body of the viectm covered with | wounds, and ‘lained of almost eviry drop 'ul‘ blood, Was dissovered lying in a diteb, |about a quarter of a m‘le from tle house of a man who was known to bave a partion ur disfayor to him. â€" This man was subse quently nrrested aud charsal win in ; surrounding an nccurrence, attd all point. 4 | ing to one individual fire often worth more |than any dirsct evidence; for facts do not |lie, nnd statements trequently do. Neverâ€" ’ theless, it may be a question what are facts and what are hot; and wlen the bbserver ;lnn.l no resistance from tmicroscope; chemâ€" l‘i.s'try, and the other applied sciences, \'ery} | great mistakes t@re sometimes made. fl-'rum this caitse cireumslanlial evidence obtained popularly a bad name, which has Innt yet been entirely got rid of; while it mnst also be adimitted that the most m-, imnrknl.le ecineidence of adterse cireamâ€" | stances lins sometimes been found to be consistent with innocence. In 1880 a murdet was committed in Tsâ€"| lington of a peculilarly atrocious character| sud the body of the victim nnunmay® l4 |. °C i nonse of netoriously bad char at Gateshrad, and his dead body was vered next morning lying outside the The value of cireumstantial evidence is indisputable: _A nnmber of silent Fets of the power of that instru Circumstantial Evidence °* 22 °00 Wear Tor £ convie risoner was aeqnitted,_ the being afterwards distuy. house painter! ‘This s‘mnce trom thicroscope; chemâ€" he other applied sciences, very akes tire sometimes made. caltse cireumslanlial evidence pularly a bad name, which has "C"/ elemieu uy the pris sack and carried on his ere the body was alterâ€" Upon this evidence so from falsahsod. and â€"charged 1y the prosecution 1 probable. One , a female, interâ€" y declaring that DURHAM, Co POETRY _ | _ A Milwankee claimant to the throne of ""~ | Ireland has written to Mr. Gladstone, urgâ€" od.|ing Her Mujeâ€"ty to renomuce her title to fax ‘ his country. into | evi. one came extioct after the Dr‘s a;n-vnl federate. "" 1 CC7YC Cay, nought a young horse from [:l Mr. Stewart, living near here, which he ‘lnok home and Iitching it up with a mate ltn a wagon he and hiis son drove off. â€" The young horse displayed an ugly temper and commenced rearing and plunging when Mr. McF. got ont of the wagon and took the antimal by the bead whereupon the vicions brute reared back and in descend-‘ ing the fore feat strack the unfortunate man on the breast knocking him down.‘ The horses being partly held by the boy in the wagon, insterad of passing on over the prostrats man, plunged madly on him in. jaring him so that hbe only lived a couple of hours after heing picked up. Dr. Yeoâ€" mans was sent for who did all he could for the sufferer without avail as life soon he. | TrRamptso to Deatrt.â€"A sad and fata) accident occurred on Monday by which Mr. Dongal MeFayden, a farmer, of Egreâ€" mont township, met with a volent doata. Mr. MeFayden, while in Mount Forost on the above day, hought a young horse from grand jJury, and chat the tonntry o set was consequently deprived of ; esting and exciting criminal trin ure Hour. solder, by which he identified the coftin, It is unsatisfactory to be obliged to state that owing to a legal technicality, the inâ€" dictment in this case was ignored by the grand jury, and chat the tonntry of Somerâ€" 885 was consennanthe Aanatuny * g °uy n oo ies n e e m i + ; â€"_ Cor Doubt is ever tts own Deity q | removing and secretingsor (]esï¬â€˜nymg the The shadow still dilates on darkened eyos, z | uameplates. _ One of their ecustomers, the Ana lengthens as the awfal night comes down. , | plumbers eventnally gavs information of 1» the above delinention of beliet and Acubt e | the "little game" that was being played, the reasoning of the poei is obviously based . | and the three delingnuents were given into | on philasophic doubt in direet opposition ; | custody. Great difficulty was found in to sceptical doubt, and his object is to : | identifying any one of the coffiins, but at , show the snperiority of the one in comparâ€" | length a very aveient undertaker was dis.‘ ison with the other,as seen in the life of man covered who positively swore to one of ‘ and in the progress of trith: Philoscphic | them being that of a certain admiral. He! doubt is the friend of trnth; hLit sceptica® said he knew it from a circular Llot of solâ€" | donbt is the enemy of truth; the aim of der in the centre of the head of the coifin; | the one is to adviiice trith, but the ain of’ which he knew to be his workmanship, | the other is to subvert truth, How inconâ€" His story was that the admirn} hid died parably superior is the one to the other in ’ ! suddenly, and that it became necessary to | the interest of truth 1 As has been already solder down the coffin before his relulims'shown, the great end of donbt is to set, lcnuhl arrive for the funeral; that upon ‘ truth free from everything foreign and adâ€"| / their arrival a danglter of the decensedl verse to it, thai it may stand forth in ull! much wished for a lock of the old m:u.'n‘ its native foree and beouty ; or in the case hair, and that he being one of the plamâ€" ] of evolying truth from eollected ‘facts or bers employed, bored a hrle through the | given data, the great end of doubt is to head of the coffin, and knowing that the | supply any defect in the premises, to conâ€" ' old admiral always wore a Pigâ€"tail, and | yert any flaw in the chain of argnment was buried with it intact, drew that adorn> | and to remove all ivrelevant matter, that : ment out through the hole with a wire| q just conelusion may be arrived at and | 1 hook, and eut it of tor the daughter, after new truth distovéred, eithet in the doâ€" ,13 ward elosing the hole with the patch ¢f| main of religion or of tliat of science. | & solder, by which he identified the coftin. Hence, just as doult purges the truths uf’ It is unsatisfactory to be obliged to state religion of all extraneous ingredients mixed | 1 that owing to a legal technicality, the in ap with them, or of all mere haman opinâ€" ! c dictment in this case was ignored by the iong superinducéd upon them and makes | a grand jury, and chat the conntry of Somerâ€" | thom stand out in their own heavenly sigâ€" 'o iet was cousequently deprived of an interâ€" niGicance, so shall belief in them shine out | & sting and exciting erlminal trinl.â€"â€"Leis, with equal prominence in excellente nui t ire Hour. under the three aspectsâ€" n nsumercm n 64 NB B 4~~â€"+nnons . .ls N 0, 0_ **ME0â€"10f ihe iuneral; that upon ‘ their arrival a danglter of the deceased much wished for a lock of the old m:u.'n! hair, and that he being one of the plamâ€" ] bers employed, bored a hrle through lhe: head of the coffin, and kuowing that the j t3 F.. 1 1 1 I" y( o O AmtSrAnny WIP we menttonof oâ€" ‘pnruuun"idun(f!icunon." The incumbent 6 jand church wardens of a certain parish in e | Somersetshire wore charged before the is | mugistrates., @and afterward . "presentea" n | before the grand jury of the Tatinton Asâ€" h | sizes for stealing the leaden coffing from e | under and ancient church in theircustndy. _| The evidence was long and very oxtmor-‘ ; | divary, showing generally that the rever. t ] and defendant and his assistints had long been in the linbit of faising the old coffing s | from the veault under the church; of batter. , | ing them in, and of selling the lead to the | plumbers around. 'f‘hey bad, however, | ulways bean most carsfal to guard against | any possible retognition of the coffins by removing and secretingsor desfhvying the â€" uameplates. â€" One of their customers, the _ plumbers eventnally gavs information of : the "little game" that was being played, ; and the three delingqnents were given into custody. â€" Great difficulty was found in 4 identifying any one of the coffiins, but at $ length a very ancient undertaker was dis. /; covered who positively | swore to one of / q them being that of a certain admiral. He| . said he knew it from a eirealar Llot of solâ€" l d der in the centre of the head of the coofing | { which he knew to be his wnrknmnship. | t] His story was that the admiral hid died | p snddenly, and that it became necessary to | {} solder down the coffin before his relations | sl could arrive for the funeral; that upon ‘ t1 their arrival a danglter of the decensed | ... | In a samilar case at Norwich ' of the prisoner‘s gun had be blown with the bullet into the deceased, and was uninjured, carefally spread out, it was fo respond with: and ndonbedly A torn newspaper in the prison aud was the chief means of bri his puilt. One other case only will we 50 mSniey! n _ |ivg taken to pieces for the purpose: beâ€" I Do: tween the horn plates of the handle and | beli Ithe stecl linings were found a few drope of [ ar blood and a few hbaire. The woman while | °Ug l in prison, apparently saspecting that some. | inve " tamg might be found on the knife, told ; tain | the warder that after losing her â€"danghter | 02y ’ she bad "eaught a rabbit and killed it with | dout | ber knife," and that if any hair or blood |©900° | was found it was the rabbit‘s, Dr. Alfred | of on <«Taylor, the very clever and acute micros. ; 40°s _ copist, however, on examivation positively ]With _ swore, not ouly that the blood was human / we b blood, but that the hair was squirrel‘s hair, In t and round the throat of the munrdereq Whic child was a "vietorine" of squirrel‘s hair, Wron , which bad been partly eat in the deadly and i seuffle. The prisoner was executed after a in ths full coufession of her gnilt, , would J In one case of murder tried at,Tereford, | receis | the strong cirenmstantial evidence . was "€2801 , that the woman had been partially robbed, it A tl ; and in herâ€"pocket were found twonty or jeet U thirty postage stamps, hbastily toru off an. | tions Sthet portion of the sheet, while in the ; belicf, prisoner‘s pocket was fonod the other por» believe tion of the shéet, the two parts mot only basis o corresponditig along the thry margin, but. With p also as to the lekters placed in the corners *°t fort of eanch stamp. o : of that n\ aftanes lt p pf "| [ ind iA 66c oug. [ ""2 CC OUCERE POSssiUiHlites of bellof in them, picion of course fell on the i0ther, hut | When those two eonditions of mind are nothing appeared to wmrant it In he [ associated together it the protesses of poeket was found a knife, wich was sub | thoyght, it is necessary to Hote what is the mitted to most crreful examination, it be. | native effect of the "one on the other. ing taken to pieces for the purpose: be. | Doubt is antithetic but not antagonistic to tween the horn plates of the handle and | belief, and tlie design of this relation is to . the stecl linings were found a few drope o | mark out what we ought to believe or } blcod and a few baire. â€" The woman while | @Ught not to believe in things after a due n prison, AUDArently s remeotine tss oo P imanast.coge col oae ue wepaper in the prisoner‘s pocket, the chief means ot bringing home . Grey, AUGUST 31, 1882 case at Norwich.the wadding x‘s gan had been partially e bullet into the body of the was uninjured, and on being id out, it was found to corâ€" and indonbedly form part of destruyed lite. Sus. ' on the imother, hbut J warrant it In herd aut â€"Conâ€" orin part of (2) A wellâ€"grounded belief in the grin- eiples of religion.â€"All the truths of reliâ€" gion are congecial to man under a dne sense of religion. ‘The story of the cross , (1) A deepâ€"rooted belief in the religions nature of men.â€"Religion forms a constit« | nen: part of man‘s natare, and when he is adorned with all the graces of the spirit, this stands out with all the convincing clearness of a great trith ; but it appears so with snfficient distitretness to the eye of J Christian intelligence, even when he is placed in cirenmstances less favorable for its manifestation than when he lives under the economy of grace. Religion, wh'ich has been indelibly written on the henrt nfj man by the great Creator, causes him fo ‘ acknowledge a Supreme Being. Now, the ' abstract idea of a Supreme Being is in iteâ€" ‘ self one and the same in all men ; of heavâ€" enly origin and independent of all earthly modifications, The way and mannert,howâ€" ever, in which men acknowledge, nnfold, and represent this idea, is as various as‘ men themselves ; and. like everything huâ€" man, is subject to the laws of contrast and progression. The world is one vast muâ€" senm that illnstrates the nature and attriâ€"| butes of the Deity. a se: be. | Doubt is antithetio bat lie and | »Oli¢f, and tle «dlesign of lrops of [ mark out what we ou i while | OUght not to believe in t t someâ€" | investigation of them, 1 (c, told ; tain extent believe in i “gmerlmny at the same time it with | doubts concerning . them, blooq | ©0nterning them lead us Alfred | (:(our behef in them. Be f Who in the old time walkt their porflous way, | With the grey hairs of kingly sorrow crowned ; Who laid their heads npon the bloody block | For their last pillow : who amid the flames ; | Bore witness still, and with their q!iivering bahds ‘ Sowed every wind with sparks of fery thought, Because they did belfeve, we kneel to read , Where men ana angels mingle tears of joy** Because he did believe, Columbus sailed For that new world his inner eyes had seen, Me found: so Faith its fhew worlds yet shall find, While Dotibt shakes its wise head und stays beâ€" ‘ hind, <‘ Newton believed for many a year Letfore i The Mand in Henvor shook the apple down, Becanse we have belioved, our knowledge comes: Beliet, not Doubt, wili touch the secret spring. Belief is that soul attitude which sees ’ How the pure distance of s »ine infinite sen Relieves the dark ground of our inlund life, | And feels the frosh spray make its roses bloom, j But Doubt turns from the light and only seee [ The shadow that it casts, and follows it : 1 mE csitne: ce doubt,‘ Is the prowd epitaph ins Our glorions dead who i Crowned with the garlu Because they Wia believe Thoy lived great lives deeds, aiui is eA iio . does pervade donbt, but dotibt comes in p fwith keenâ€"eyed serutiny and suvjects what , | we believe to the severs orde«l of criticism. In this way, doubt prepares the materials, ; which belief has laid up in the mind, to be wrought into great principles, discoveries and inventions. Were doubt not present in the exercise of such functions, belief , would become creduality, when wo wonld ‘receive anything or everything without reason, hold it without reason and defend it a the expense of reason ; but, as we snb. jeck things to an exhaustive series of quesâ€" tions before we accept them as worthy of belief, we enst all erndities out of what we j believe,and place our beliet of things on the basis of undubitable evidence and in record with pure knowlege. This is in suhstance, get forth by a poet,when he sings the praise of that belief, which is the outcome, not of sceptical doubt, but of _ philosplue doubtâ€" + ‘They weought in ED And B6k Th io ul lla l Prepared apecially 1 Doubt pervaded wit In all our doubts conce is always a certain am ed belief in the religions Religion fotms a constit« s nature, and when he is he graces of the sDirit, with all the convinein# Philosophic flo;b; inscribed nbove hem. Belief may and often onbt, but doubt comes in serutiny and suvjects what tpectally for the Review, aded with a belief in truth.â€" ts concerning things, there tain amount of what may in regard to them ; otherâ€" never trouble ourselves to henm. We may to a cer ve in things, while we ie time entertain serious 3 them, and cur doubts lead us to sift the etound« i their grandeur d of eternity, , and Conquered and did their . and not ‘They our knowledge comes h the secret spring. which sees »ine infinite son is the outcome, not but of philosplue conquered Poubt, did their doathless wrought in lie, | _A smallpox nurse st Paterson, N. J., has ‘ 5‘" iire |communicated the gisease to his lnmil_v.lc"l" c":e and one child has died, and his wife and| * :,z .1 remaining children have been taken to the ! in «tore itn i | tit dod; pestâ€"honse. ~Fears .ire entertrined thai Itill ander bis recklessness has disseminated the dis | ma‘ely r , ease throughout the town. | came to, stounde telligence and lays tho ground work for l“ intellectual, moral and spiritaal knowledge. As yours was put into you, ever casts _ Buch doubts, ns failsé coin, from it. Belief ever precedes the selfâ€"conscious in _ (8) The doubt of this age is, in a great measure, antiâ€"religious.â€"Doubt too often gives itself to subvert the foundations o religion, to argue down the principles of religion and to obliterate out of the soul all hopes of immortality. Doubt is thus the abhorrence of the truth, that makes wiss unto salvation. n J ’[off anything and everything which may interfere with it In such cases, which are frequent, in sciesce and religion, doult is a foregone conclusion in the mind and we dislike everything that appenrs to disâ€" trust it or to cotme in collisien with it; or we question everything else and feel angry if anything dares to touch it, \ , or to (2) The doubt of this age is partial, biased and oneâ€"sided.â€"Doubt, as the love of truth,views things from all standâ€"points and under all aspects to ascertain whether or not it is truth ; but doubt, as the averâ€" sion of truth, is a desire to ignore truth for the sake of some cherislied idol, or to ward l (1) This is an age of sceplical doubt.â€" |Doubt meets us on every side and from ’every quarter, _ We dare not, indeed. spesk in disparaging terms of honest 'dunhh We cannot think of the satrmogles | of earvest, inquiring minds as if in theinâ€" selves to be condemned, and necessarly ,ilnpl)'ing something greviously â€" wrong, some aggravated guilt. Many of the most Iearnest and established Christians havo‘ passed through that experience ; but there is too ntuch of a tendancy amongst multiâ€" tudes at the present day to encourage donbt, to invite it, to be content with itâ€" yea, to imake a boaet of itâ€"as if it was something in the fashion. | / _ Doubt, as the love of truth, is the noble lerectnesa of the soul heavenward ; but : doult, as the love of a foregone conclusion | to the disregard of truth, is the soul lying ,'Iow in the dust. In the latter sense of ] Aonbt, there are several things we would | here noleâ€" !i-vurniug desire for truth ard life, and perâ€" i fect docility of being tuight and led, No J man can be led out of doubt into faith or life whose feeling is that of the hard masâ€" tering passion. With hbaif the doubt of !the present day one can have but little | patience ; it is sheer intellectual gladiatorâ€" ship, or antiâ€"relifious feeling full of hostile animus. No man inspired with the animus of infidelity will ever attain to faith ; the strongest evidente wotld fail to convince him. ‘If they hear not Moses and the prophets, m‘-ilhry‘ would they be persuaded J though one rose from the doad." l MelPiitatts Abntsinandca d s f Yot, if we will one Guide obey, . , The drearest puth, the darkest way, ‘ Shal! issue out in heavenly day, And we, on divers shores now cast, Shall meet, our perilous voynge past, All in our Father‘s house at last, 2. Doubt imbued with the spirit of truth,.â€"Doubt is the love of truth. We doubt this and we donbt that, and so on in our investigrtion of things, because we think that it is not truth ; but, so s>on as our doubts are satisfied about anything, we receive it as truth and love it as truth. Doubt is a bridge within scepticism and faith ; but a bridge is a road leading in opâ€" posite directions. We may doubt, with the feeling and tendancy which inevitably issues in unbelief or with the feeling and tendancy which inevitably issues in faith, The redeeming virtue of doubtâ€"the snc-l cessful condition of a Wioht Sesmnâ€" Lo . is to him a gregt object of attraction. ‘The Baviot is to him the chief of ten thousand and altogother lovely. ‘The word of truth â€" ’ is to him the joy and tejoising of his heart. ) The fine unrratives and iripersotial style Y | of revealen triith 1s to him m source of deâ€" ~|light and wonder, It is hard to make a ° | chorce of the most beautiful passages, in n ° | book which is so gemmed as the Bible ; * ' but it is certain that not many things con ‘ |tained within the sacred volume may take E !rm.‘: with the exquisite story of Josepl.. ‘| Who teught those anciebt writers their |simplitity of ‘angtiage, their felicity of ex. | pression, their pathos, and above all, their |faculty of sinking themselves out of sight of the reader, and making their narrative stand out slone and seein to tell itself? Shakespeate is always present whea we y read his works ; Macauley is always pro ‘ sent when we follow the march of hi |, shapely sentences | but the snered writers | , are all hidden from view; Again Chris| ; tianity is snfficient in itself and nceds no g eXternal aid. It is the power of God and | , 'the wisdom of God ufito salvation, 1 _ (8) A clearly defined belief as to our 0 future destmy.â€"Imlned with the splrit of religion and actuiated by the prinetples of % religion, man hgs in himself the tilleâ€"deed C to an Inheritania in H.. Lc â€" I sny to thee, do thou repent To the first man thou mayst meet In Iane, highway or open stroet, That he, and we, and all mon moye Ur.der a canopy of love As broffl as the blue s ty above , That doubt and trouble, fear and pain, And anguish, all nre shadows vain ; That death itself wil) not remain ; That weary deserts we may tread, A dreary labyrinth may threna, Through dark ways underground be led, Vab 5t see ceï¬ ce L usn 200 Whole No. 233 inheritance in the "C" nevitably issues in faith, ng virtue of doubtâ€"the sueâ€" lition of a right issueâ€"is a ire for truth ard life, and perâ€" f being taight and led. Ko led out of doubt into faith or P2°008, and above all, their ing themseilves out of sight ind making their parrative : and seein to tell itself? _ always present whea we ; Macauley is always pro . A noble spirit, skies, ; Two of tlie residents of Williamsford, alias the Sanble, have not for some time j past, been on those terms of friendship | generally known es "endearing." . The j ordinary means of reconciliation having been evhansted, one of them determiued to open hostilitics in a practical way, and aecordingly a few evenings ago, strongly entrenched himsel{ in a fence corner armed with a pocketfn] of stones, ready to shy at the enemy wheu he came within ran; e. Inâ€"tead of the eneniy, bowever, who should pass the way but the "village parson", in tins case a young missionary from Knox College, who, thinking some soch fate was tn store for him as Lefel Stephen of old, tirt dodged to the rigt. then to the lefs, till under cover of a board fense, hbe uitiâ€" ra‘ely rushed in at the first open door he | The Mayor of Leeds, England, at the | close of a cricket match Intely, said he had | been very greatly dissatisficd with the re» | sult of so many ofthe matehes in which the Austrailians bal been engaged in the | conntry. He had strong convictions that the fanlt on the part of the English play» ers was not far to seek, for there was eviâ€" dently something wrong. _ The Enplish cricketers did wel! in the morning, but after lunch, and champagne, and cigare, they fell awat. â€" But of the Aunstrailian eleven, seven or eight did not nse either aleoholi¢ drinks or cicare, and the other menmbers were nearly as abstemions. _ Ar long ns that difference existed between the tramas, England won‘d rank second. If the Enzâ€" lish wanted to occupy in cricket the posl« tion they ought to, the players musi give nup drink and tobaceo. ‘This advise won‘d do no harm to some Canadiac players if followed. "Vl Inpuctrox.â€"The Presbytery of Sangeen ,. | met in the chuech at Beli‘s Corners, on a | Phorsduy, 15th inst., to indnet the Rev. ,, | Alexander Nichol, Inte of Ajton, into the g ) congregnation of North Tmther. The Rev. y | Mr. Walson of Markdate preached a suitâ€" . | able sermon from Exodus xxxi1. 86. The j | Rev. Mr. Rrown, of Taittle Toronta, progdâ€" | ed as moderator, ard put the usual quesâ€" , | tions to the ministor, Rey. ~Mr. Macâ€" , | millan, of Mt. Forest, addressed the induct. , | ed minister on his drties, and Mr. Morriâ€" . | son of Cedarville, the people, Mr. Nieho! | enters on his dazies with good prospects of | success. He gets 8700 of a salnry an a } rented house or mense.â€"Confederate, Mr. Stophfl‘nson, er., father of the War: den of the County of Wellinpton, died at his son‘s residence, Arthur Township, on the 6th*inst., at the advanced age of 90 years. The deceised was a color sergenit in one of the regiments during the battle of Waterloo, and as was natural was proud of ltbe position he Beld, and delighted to reâ€" count to the rising generafion the history of that event, About seven weeks »go Mr; Stepheuson received a paralytit stroke and never recovered from its effect, Daring his illness he was tenderly watched and cared for by the members of his family, who did their best to cheor nis last houres The deceased wa« highly esteemed by nil classes of the community, and his death removes from our widst an old settler and a brave soldier. ’ The people to carry ot th Superior with omnl. A con the 15th inst., the project, of canal with : isting waterws the 10th inst., for the purpose of furthering the project. It is eiaimed that forty miles of canal with slight improvements in exâ€" isting waterways will make the connertion} that the lift will be less than that of either the Erie or Welland eannals, and the tot.| Pr. Esroyd answering to the sooun on the seene of the neei found it necessary to amput; Inted member close to the sh patient from last acconnts ie Confederate, ’ Aryt Taxex Ofr.â€"On week a man named James Corners, while feeding a ty at the farm of a Mr. Cook Proton, had his arm drawn ler of the machine in some ing off the limb just mho Madical aid was sent for in Dr. Esroyd answering to tiw ""verested in you ; if he hastily averts his gaze when you catch his eye, the chances are that he is a gentleman ; but if instead he smiles at you, you may know that he is only & "masher," s mt have made a study of love, G profit by what he says : o "Iy, truly loves you he will always embarrassed when with you, man is not intereste l in vyou a the chances are five to one age & fellow continues to glance at interested in you ; if he hastily gaze when you eÂ¥i, has ... C ‘me Tather of over 20 chilren, STORM.â€"The rain and wind Monday last diq eonsiderable Artemesia township, Nearly , along the Toronto and Bydenr from the school house where ] teaches to Fleshemm. was level ground. We have not yet leayy tent of the damage done to the believe it is pretty considerable.,â€" The Kincardine Standard ma ho 7 MRA Aiihnipritiins. sw n ... N will carry his paper from the city, Sap Accrorxt.â€"My, Joln Kirhy, a man of advanced Ake, living on his farm, 120 con., Nornunloy. fell down from the upper part of his barn on a heap of rubbish, and hurt himself so badly that he died thie days after. Ho was one of the pioneaers of that settlement ; eleared abont 200 neres of land, and owned eonsiderable more, He is Td SXbLNDY O 0 Â¥er SW etcta n ail Cns young earrier dove. Q» 1 went from Walkerton in 1 Wedneï¬day from Harriston tant from Paisley, in 49 vai Tharsday from Palmerston time. He intends training 7 o dR Bc s The County of Wellington Sunday School Convention wil be held on Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept, 6th and 6th, in Enor Church Harricts,. Frank Carrier ople of Dulath appear determined ot the stheme for connecting Lake with Red River by means of A \ convention is to he held there on Local and other 1an named James Smail, while feeding a threshing _ °* 7~C4re man seems to ady of love. Girls read and he says : "Ij a young man he will always be somewhat ston, """R to the summons was of the necident when he to nmputate the mutiâ€" » of Paisley, is â€"a4 ___, _ ~~CARe sAB P« Nenrly every f."ï¬ ) and Sydenham romd, use where My, Morey on, was levelled to the not yflt lQ.‘"’«' ul. @x« to On ‘l‘!mnd.y of last some manner, teapâ€" above the elbow, â€" _ On Monday Inst it ton in 3p7 minutes, on [lrn'utnn.do miles dis» in 40 minutes, and on merston in the sama in all hinste and shounlder. _ The is doing well.â€" Small, of Bell‘s inbo ‘g machine 1 con, of the eylin crops, but @x« Â¥] t â€" 2 F} TX P r 4 " o O 0o