Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-12-28, Page 2• •;;"•T,,:%•' ••• 77:41tEKlir.D44113) Metes, Nemo that %noir' Gonads, ffinry Sot* ileinthan, 469141.188 P/?'—n14130Aro' mac - aims: intioduced far erenoe the. folloiving jinni resolution authorizing the President to negotisto with regard to the unity and assimilation with the 'United. States!! of the Dominion of Canada, or of one or more the Provinces thereof: • "Whereas, the Oltiffen(Nef the Pen3lnien , of Canada aro One with tie in race; lineage, -• history and tradition and Whereas'. the . resources! of the two Mentriets suppientelit each other antl!the' arteries of OOMMOrOat both natural and satifiolal, are Po •r. leaked and. • Mutnally dependent n eaoh ether thetAhey ou eon. ditute & einglestem • be •one and inseparable.; and'whereae, the eoinnscirotel relationi between• the -United Mates, and the Dominion of Canada are end. hate been strained unnaturally . primped and hi a meaoneoparelyeed owing to the inability of the two Governments to entesblieh Mph is systeniNef internetiOal trade and commerce between them as is <eesentiall to meet the eequieements of the situation • and whereto, the conditions and mistimes 'before. referred to, as also • the , geography Of the two Muntnee, euggeet the ' =possibility of e just, and permanent settlensetit of tho. controvereies pertaining to the fisheries, boundary and tranecon- linentat trade except by a' blending of efforts and interests , under one govern. mental eyetem, and paint logically to the necoeseity and probability of a' unity and 'assimilation between the two nations under „ one Government. 4$ Wheietig. ho, the bonds of eympithy resulting:from 'kinship, race, languege, tre, elision and substantial identity of govern- mental systems, together with a dommtinity of 'interests based upon commerce- and its aide and agencies, siebt ouch oharaoteg . that such tinion„ind 'assimilation is ' being discussed and fivOrlibly considered by oiti. • zeal of both netiOng, and ineemudit as it is '• believed that ite early' .conehmnittion wield be great ,advantage so all the eithiene and erebjeote of .the two coUntrzei, provided the Flame 9611 be attained in a manner eonsietant alike •with . the honor and dignity 6f the United, Stitt' and Great Britain and the Dominion of Oneida: • "Therefore, with a view to. aid ht the consummostio pfstehat is hereinheforeang. Leated, bo 15 by the Semite and meiisent-Representatitell'ef.-the -United States; in ()engross .aseembled, that the :President be, and -is hereby, authorized and etnpowered to invite negotiations looking to ' the assimilaticon and unity of the people of the DoMblioe Of Canada • and , the United`, ,. State! under one Government, 'mob unit and asehnilation • to be hissed •upcin the admission of the eevend Provinces of the Deminion, or any one of them, into the Union of States -Open tarnurof equalitywieh the Myers.] States new coMposing the Union, and the asatunp- ' by the United States of the total indelitedneei of "the Dernipion of Canada, or a jest proportion , thereof,- and comb other equitable.-terma, apd-conditiene • as justice to.the high contracting partite' may Alei resolved further, ...tido a view , to snob negotiations the .President invite thetisppointment'er Commiesionere by the Governmentis Of Great Britain and the -010$1140fflia-A 4.1 47,211und. With thi a,000 %root rat O tin Grand Labrador. A Quehed delpitch - MarVelleue fiterieo"are rotated by the fetr 7400.01lnais 1211rttle White men. has Over, seen these fall!, and the Indians' ideals of meapprement• and distances. are pa imperfect that even where their stories agree it is exeeedinody difil. cult; to cleduot from them anything like 'reliable data. An expedition iatelY under- taken by Randle F. Holm'', F. R. G..8 • and H. Duff, fellow Of All BOtIlle -4 Oxford, to explore the interior of Labrador and investigate them falls, unfortunately failed in its 013100it Ole explorers having, been Misled by erroneolis Calculations aa to disteneeS and the exact looation of the cataract; and conilled to return in con mums* of runni short of provisions. They get io hear to' he objeot of their ex- pedition, however, that they Were enabled, Irons the general configuration of the 00611. try, to fore) what must be IC tolerably cox.: recot estimate es to both the location and raegnitudeof the imitated. This estimate agreeewith the description of the Grand Fall° lurnisibed by Maoiean, who tsited them 'le 1833, and, whose further progrese into the interior was stopped by them, • He • giveithe width of the miter, immediately abate the fall° at 1,500 feet, btli My° that the cataract itself. it not more than 150 feet across. The height of the fella he esti- mate. at 2;000 feet. This estimate is endorsed by a half.breed named Kennedy, met by Pdessre. Holme and Duff in the interior, and who, thirty years before, Wag in charge of Fort Niseopeci on Lake Pet- ehillaPOn. One • of the thief diffionl- tiee encounteted by explorers desirous of reaching the falls is the obstinate re.. fugal of the Labrador Indians to appromb them. They believe thent to be hannted, and think it impossible to look upon them and live. Kennedy wee conducted to them by ' an "old Indian nime,d Lonie.overthe- Fire, who, being an Iroquois, does.not share the superstitious belief of the Montignaie and Nesoopees. Maine Mame and Deff vieres principally misled by. the erroneous !Statements and citicelations Ise to distances cOntainedie Professor Hind's Labrador," She leading authority upon this virtually iinknoWn country:. The falls are on the Grind or PotobikaPon •River,•whiols Sows into Hamilton islet. They are 30 Miles above Like WaminikaPon; a body of water Itself 40 Miles longandsituated 150 miles inland—hour-1bn month -„-of---the- rivere--:-ProL-Hind-gives-thielakereif Only 100 milee front the month of the riverons that the eapediticon of Messrs. Holme and Duff heabeeught to light the fact that the best works hitherto published upon •this terra inagnita oontain anything but reliable data. They agree, however,. with Professor Hind that the elevation • Of the iminenee table- land which forms the interior of Labrador is about 2;240 feet. On'this height of laid are tesneetsesion of great lakes joined ' by broad; placid streams,. and •when these Mach the edge of the tableland they dom. mance their wild gamer to the sea. • The Moisie and the Coldwater Rivers deocend by successive falls, bet toward. the Muth.. east the descent_front _the '.elevated table; - land is quite sudden. This is partiorilarly true of she Grand River; ,whtoh has a deep 1 of over 2,000 feet in 'the thirty nines, com7 mein:sing with the falls and ending at Lake Wesminikapon. Theis is e alight rapid bolo*, the felle; but none neat. the lake, and re everything goes to phow that the height of mrs. Helen C. 'ffitild WON Mr. Wintlenn but De. Dimon% 1*04 Had " Maniteetations" at Midnight 11711r. - A Vioh,..ita, Kan., !match Bert lirtrelltatiolielf--::-:lieniulat.Yi9antt :he; grittehm Of Perry Windom., a prominent; ,society man and manager/9f a leading loan and ,mort. gage Company here„ to whom Mrs. Field imagines that she is married: ' Mre. Fteld's mother testified that during hot June and. July her daughter had been very Oat and meted very. queerly. She then is:suited that ebe War engaged te Mr., Wind; oor, and one day went to his place cit business and on herreturn told her mother that they Were to he married *het after. Peen. ' "1I1, cement NOT," SUE SAID. Mre. Field dressed 'herself in a :white drepe and stood on the front ,poroh thet afternoon awaiting the coming of the poem. Ple.-; Windsor did not appear, of °course; but she continued. to dime. beeself in the same fashion for two clays, and then her mother went to $ Mr.- Windsor and asked him if he intended ' wedding ber widowed ,daughter. The gentleman mid he had no Bitola intention, He added that he had been receiving. anonyineue • lettere and postal Cards and also little packages of flowers, eto.,• from Mrs. Field, conteining allusions to certain 'matters of which be had no knowledge, and that he wanted it stopped. It W88 then that Mre. Field's mother concluded, that her daughter was insane, and going home the. told her what Mr. Wineeor mid, and advised ber daugh- ter to drop the matter. 'Mrs,. Field seemed to, give up the idea. Nothing. istrange was -noticed her manner from 'July until sheet • six weeks ego, when she again began to talk of 'pipe and inanifestatione and tionneeted Mr. Windsor's name with them. She would we the Window for sauteeing buggy, and. on seeing the one coptaming her tsuppeeed t lover wouldeay': • t "There ie another Sign, , The marriage o will new soon'he 'consummated." b DLIT 811E WAITED IN"CIIIIII6I1 AT MIDNIOIIT:, • About this tinie she alaci began to talk of 11 the Chin's:41,14nd skid she would not allow t her lover to mane between her and her God, an the thought . be 'Wished to. She would -dress in her best and go to Church at 10 or 11 e'elook at night and sit there, and on returning hoe* weak] 00,44 portion ,of the marriage,xerentony--bad-beenTperz- , ?armed. • -- -- ,113Last Sunday night she went td clierch' -8 r nded were- ;4WD 04410001e bqueate el the IU the interestte:fv;114-ClibeePequleieet;eifeflrethial propriety, it Wee found inexpedient tO give legal sanction: To this lad Category must nott be added the previsions ,of the will Inade tbe 100 Bay. William Wight, of the Arab's Tent, Chloalhuret, Eng.,'whioli wee finally adjudicated upon by M. Judie° Chitty:, The deceased olerio had given in. structions for the endowment of . a female college of a dertitinly motel' and not un- attractive kind, eines its, thject 'was to train ladiee for the important ,dutiee of wives, house nitsteesoes and mothers. Woman, the reverend gentleman proceeded didactically to observe, ehoeld be some- thing moroheeful and more noble then a dell, a butterfly or a plaything for • her husband. To carry ot ,bis generous aspirations the ecaeritria •Mr. Wight propoluided.' a. ethane OM' Of the features of which • were that the young hid= who were to be trollied to be- come. exemplary wfiree, boueemistreseee, and-rpothere should rise very early and re- sort to ealutaryithe bet not &twit% Conte. Mont use of the cold bath. He further pro. tided for quarterly convereeziones at this hymeneal 'college, and directed -that two. thirds of the invitations should be sent to single gentlemen. He &leo directed -that his remains .thould be buried in hie garden,, netit to the gmve.of clog.named Labrador, for which Ammar he seems to have enter - Paned a pecouliar affection. '. The court, however, held these bequest's to be illegal, and fsfrAnstlin" 'Chitty made an order for the distribution of .1hotipeoperty among the neat of kin. Of. the thorough inzpreotica, bt *ty,:of the plans ,leid down by the well Which" Ilan Beim Meehan in Favor elf. Nether vs. *other-441dt' of rather -T. • ' Difference* Wigious Belief, The intentions; of many testators ,heve. An interesting case -re Dickson -was been rendered nugatorr, lees by 67 'infer, decided by Mr:" ,justice Street at Oegoode eg 0 a OP eeridle w WOW 0 moutgiu the' matnir n which the r votille Cutter., 'One Arthur Dickson m ening but ecoen ioteetator. there can be no reasonable-donbt.' -Ltine ego the poet old ne of ladies -Who at their demige left heir we/nth to endow a' "college r • tat". " 4046 It A Would have een quite feasible for Rev. Mr.. Wight to bequeath the whole .of hie pro. isety, had be on ohocien, tionithe Royal Hol. taw** College or. to th,o414iyal Society for he Pieventioti of ,Crueltyto Animals. As t ies4410 •whioh bee., hoer... uplett„,will einktityinlY ,ite monuintio, I ,futilti gen, resit.) tind'iniedireeteiViii ety•tes do good. d sat mine time. ' On returning aha mid .part of the marriage ceremony had been petit:seined and that in e few cleys'it would sP end. Last Wednesday night she went n again. She scion returned and said , that W the raatter would be settled thie week. to Last night she made another trip. On as two differept Sundays she dressed and W awaited her lover to be married. h . .11r. Windier, the plaintiff; mid that he fri met Mrs. Field about two years age in s IY business way.. Shortly afterward he be. di gan 50 get anonymods Postal „cards and we lettere, which 'considerably annoyed hire. So Finally he got letters and packages signed sh with Mrs. Fiela'g nama.' She d is ex aho alio Th a f r08 aa ha mn the -Po -per the stil Qu Mc chn 35 ham con ho h At t fath out hat wife he m Bee end for e she the teen ago' pate man Seat, can ear e of it fighti "DOOM Bonoralble areer., A last (Friday) night'ef,Amhersthurg de - etch says: A ehooting. occurred' ear Gordon Post -office, m :Anderdon, on edneeday, which resulted in mob injuries Vincent McQuade, a Well -knout tough, Will Smelt in his deitkrabdutfl Weida, hen all hut`birciself were absent from the &tee; . report wee heard, and when ends rushed ;M. theyt hued t McQuade ing .in the doorway leading from the ning-rooni to the liitoltep,with a horrible nnd in the heed,' friire'which blood wed Very freely, While i'double-barrelled cotgun lay at hist_feet....TInlevaindp-wocind eight 'indica long by feurvinches wide, tending bethWard. front about an inch ve the left eyebrow, and there is a break ut the sized -a silver dollar in tbe skull. e doctors state that the patient may live ew days, though his death will assuredly ult. It is not known whether it was an oident suicide, el. it any 'other Person fi any. hatd in the, affair. -The gun at have been near hie face when shot wig ' fired, sea traces. of wder were disoernible on hie face. A tion----ofilre °beige of shot, lodged in ceiling. 'At last reports the patient I hovered' between life lila death. Me- ade war an adopted 'blind. of Patrick Quade, having been taken from the rch stops when an infant, and is -mita years Of age. bed borne hard 6-fer-renriY- Years! PestObeing almost tinually inotroublawitli somebody, and as been-.*epos.ledlyollefOre %the mune. he timoolthe -affair hie *Ife and bee or &lawyer's officebere, getting in . inferisietiOn• for arrest, he ing thathrothipefifirfnlikabizsed :his , who a good-loOking woman whom anied in Detroit. Iter 'father, Thos. ty; letely, from was the& esvoring mere McQuade's erred nticinghis danghtert from her' bon*, being under 16 yeara of age, fin. which Dominion °loonies protide a pertilty of ren years' imprisennsent A few days McQuade and his stepfather had a dia. , when he threatened to sheet the old , but the °id man got the drop on hins the bill petting his clothing in its ree. Last Week AfeQuade also had an plit in two by a. razor in the hande colored man with whom ' he .wee ng. mons to things Of *hi& , he had no know. - edge AND sENT Bin TO81E8 AND POETRY. Then little pill boxes with flowers ,and oetry began so pour in and the rambling tiers increased. Mr. Windsor says he wrote to Mrs. Field to discontimie this cor- respondence, ..and after her mother had milled on him her letters did stop. • About that time he was inforreed that there Was a blackmailing ethenste:being_ winked by Mrs. Field, and he was asked if he was engaged to her. He; of courie, said no. Hie ides was that the blackmailing theory was correct, and be took precau- tions accordingly. • Some of Mrs. Field's lettere and notes were , prodamdin QueWaca,_eard giving Mr. Paiiego over the " Second •iStreet Railway," , 'and 'signed Helen C. Fielde, Manager." . MANIFESTLY 3IISTAKEN " MANIFESTATIONS." A letter 'Written last spring said thatehe minion of Canada to consider, the :win- the Grand Falls is very little, if anything, dein arid expediency of settling and ad' short of 2,000 feet. They are by a- great jesting • ell controversies and differencese deal the highest falls known, that aroma:t- wine& . now mho between the two Govern- . . Witte. growing . out of the fisheries or otherwise, by snob a enilm'enditeeimile- tion'as iehereinbefore Buggeeted,eitheree to , the *whole: or anyProvince Or several Pro - vistas* of the,seidDominion, ouch negotia- tions to.be cendelited with it due regard to the andeable rehitione which obtain be- tween Great Britain and the United Metes and the thligitionaimptieed thereby." . • . ' Gossip of the Dominion. Kingetou Medical College, chime on Dec 21es for the holidays. . , Dufferin CountY valuators estimate the real estate rt 18,000,000. ,s• Three new bucket shops are reported* to be in fuli bleat in Montreal. Collingwoed harbor is frozen over. Thi• e is 'metier than for years past. • , Montreal hae decided to doom up barber shops and photograph galleries on -Sunday. • Over five miles" of the rdedbed of the •O k. R. west of London areready for the ' The.. by-law • making it •compuledrY for • the Ingersoll Chief of Police hi do detect- , tive work for the 'Scott Adt, has been re- . The death retool Berlin, Ont., et present ie enormous, among old people eepeoielly. Quito number of :cases of typhoid and scarlet fever and diphtheria aro reported. Luke Coulter, A brakeman on the N. it XL W. DiViSiOn of ,the Grand Trunk, bad his bapd badly crushed at Bradford •thia week While coupling carat • - • Mr. T. II: bleGuirl, commercial Master • in the CollingwoodCollegiate Inetitute, lute t been appointed consmercial ' and drawing •imager le the OtteWit Nornsal School - Mr. A. F. Ames, B.A. formerly =Oho - wester of the Themes Colle- giate Institute; is now, Principal of the Riverdale High School, III.' At ro. meeting of the ecingregestion of Diunfries Street PreebYteriau Church, • Tante on/ Thateday. afternoon, Ai 111bleb' 11144 Rev. 'Cochrane' presided, Rev. Edward. Cockburn,. M. A., • of ., Uxbridge, Wiser tinaninionsly ideated to: the pesters' claw of the. eeligregatien. " Taking 'time the'litireliseb. " stay, genie," temarked 'reedy man tolvpArty, I ain't no bum. I don't went no mm,.I don't ,waret riothire to eat, and Iitioe't want no bett'; .." 'said lone oftbe gentlemen, ". ViliAt 1. 15 You *ant ?" tottant,". 'Odd the men, 'money enough 'tObuy iiiirkw ilhAvel." 'The ,M01101.Weli contriblak4 by the " gents," ',per the • seedy man waii,sieen twenty .minntesi later IniYing'.10•Snow Shovels in n,-.'-.-- posed of any great volume of water. There are mere mountein torrents that fall from a greater height, and the great fell of the Yosemite Valley meseures 2,550 feet, bat is broken into three distinct leaps. Niagara, on the other band, has a, height of 164 feet only; AN OWL MIMED. Vrtinged :Wooster that Ate Dlr. Orlando ' . 801111110/11' Ducks. A Perish, (N.Y.) despatch nye weeks/4ga Orlendo.Seenione, a fanner Jiv- ing here, found is duoli in his barnyard dead and partiiily eaten: ,11.e thought the slayer was coon, and so he borrowed i Of ,hie neighbor, Gemge Thayer, and set it near the remains Of the duck. -The ,next morning the trap and deck were both gone. Seamone got Thew's coon dog and tried to run the neck, but the dog:Miffed mound and ley down. with an exprelsion of con `tempt on hie countenance. Nothing' fur- ther wan eeen' until • a wear. ' when Thayer found ndiick torn to pieces =der the abed in hie barnyard: Thayer is an old trapper and hunter, and he did not take any stock in. the coon theory!. After dark the next night he set trap near the .,•reinains of the deck. The' next Morning the *tap was still set, hut the duck had been dragged: . to one,' side and more was eaten off it; He' than get hree tnips about the duck, and early' est morning be had' :the . nornione old owl. He had 6t one tee in no of the<treps Thayer bad set, and upon be other foOt. Was it trap-4he ors° •Ient Seemone-with the 'chide broken. ..The wl was aloe caught in another of the traps et by Thayer, so that ho was held by three rape, and were nob.' too smith. His eee were as large as a: men'e finger,. and he trap on hie leg, which would breaks nekrat's leg, had not broken; the thin. o wingemesoure Aix feet from tip to tip, nd hja head is icticens large -as,the ,Sfun's ffiM cat's. 'lie had not , been bothered to try,a steel trap for flee weeknand earn a ving besides. Pp% Thayer hap him shied up barn; and is feeding him Fon all the delicaciee oldie Section: , The following hicident occurred' at the battle of Run. In the heat of the ae. tion an officer,' who has since become pro- minent and well known throughout the country, wisathen command of ot brigade on the right of the line. While riding over the field he diecovered ii, soldier co:wattled in tchole in the ground, which was of keit sialloient dirrieneions to eff,ord'hisn ehelter. 'The general rade up to him, hiquire4 me to hie regireent, and ordered hint to join it at °tee. The man looked hiinful in the face, oedttlibumupon hie nog° and replied: h, iscqyen don't old fellow . You want in, bole ifor yonriel UU at Ififidt' nild'Vfnn'OiscOwe,ti esmslersila r, '4 1 '-'u 1v* bathe the baliy,eithet 5'41. L.. bestir I' Gmetteo P.:* ib 4.44 Ste not Made, happY tw ng ale , j:ust *coaling dr followings ineal. ", • roe° ivecl there preemie than two dld. • 111. .underetood from " manifeatatione P that be wee too ill to come to his office, but that if he would cell on her it would be all right and she would waive formalities with pleasure. About ten days ago hereceived herphoto. graph, and three daye ago he returned it by request.' Ile had not spoken to her since loot summer, and he never noticed her on the street. Be bad never spoken to her of marriage. ' Mrs. Helen C. Field, when put on the eland, said the whole affair was all a " mis- take," and that the bad misunderstood the signs. • The jury brought in a 'verdict of "not ineftee." , Personal Feints.. Dr Oliver 'Wendell Helmets, 'although now an octogenanano is in exceljent hesitb. and just se bright and witty as hoover was `Lord Sherbrooke', better known is -Robert Lowe, the English statesman, is, reputed to be worth $10,000,000.. He hegan life as e college tutor. The announcement is made of theengege ment of Mies Pritchett], a former Bootee gaii; to. Baron Vint Schroedior„ an .cifficer Of tho Imperiel.Guard of. ,Waldennere;, the &moue. Bridgeport reei- . . delice Of F. T. ilarnum. bas beimeold; and will be turned into it summer betel. Mr. 13aincirrihowever, 'emitinnoto reside in BrithespOit. [ • • :• ' Sem Smell 'd,eocribee those ' members of the therch whose practices 'do -not mum. pond With their profeselosis as the pillar - Ahem* of the church.. Suoh people are not neemeary to bolter up it canoe. Mr.. David Loiivi, of .'New York,' named , • , his infant soh Benjamin Harrison 'Slid received thin neat note from the president. elect "Tot me expreast the hope that the way in life of the Child may be pleasant and that the name, which 'hag been ameigned without hie consent may/it:least not impede his siteceie in life." - flir,Morell Mosekenzie's oratorloal feat at Edinburgh last week almost' surpassed the recent performance of Lard Salisbury. Within 40 home -he delitered' three leot gees aro mryoogod: tonitond two recop tipper and one largo dipper petty, )1/ • A Plea for Sleep. • Dr. C. Pollock, in the ChastauDdan: n, A healthy baby teethe first two yeses or so cude moat of ite time in sleep. After that a baby should !latest Feast two hours of eleep in the forenoOnand One hour in the afternoon, and it lignite possible to teach almost any infant to adopt this a� &regular habit. Even to the age of fonr or five years a child Should have 068 hoer of sleep, or at least rest in beclrbefore its •dinner, and it should be put to bed at 6 or in the evening and left,undieturbed for twelve or feuttteen hears./ Up to the fifteenth year most'young people require ten hewn, and till the twentieth•year nine horns. After that age every one findi out how much he :Or she requires, 'though, as a general rule, at least six or eight hours' are noleeestary. Eight heath' Weep will prevent More nervoris derangements iu Wisetion 'than any medicine moo cute. Daring growth there must be ample Sleep if the brain is to develop to its fun extent, and the more mei- vette, excitable or preCo0i0i3O a child is, the lodgereleep should tit get if ita intelleettlik progress is not tO 00ine to a premature stanclatfll, or ite life be 'CO short, . at an early age. The Blindness ot Love, r ove blind?" asked little Johnny, as and hits sister cense into the room; very innocciet., , • • „ h my' dooron replied his mother: ‘• It' 1 Merritt 'looking I I yei is it 0 "1.0inil 014 order te he% his two infant: children', who were ender the age Of 5 and • 8 mapectively„ delivered to hint, by their mother, his wile. The learned. Judge was eatiefied from the affidavit"! that the appli- cant Was a man Of drunken. habite, that he had on More than one ociaselon beaten hie wife, that she wee justified in leaving him on account of hie ill-treatment; and that his habits and con -venation rendered him unfit to have the °bargee! the children ; he was not eatlefied that there were not faults on the part cif the. wife also but eaid that^ she at all event s was e moral and sober woman. • The father. mid that ^ if the children were given. to him he would Place - them under the pare of hie mothe • and sister ; lint the mother and eistee ea they neither able nor Willing to, ta therge of them. '' On the other hand, the mother of the children waeliving with her own mother, Who said that she. was able and Willing to maintain them, and the judge thought they were in good hands whero they were, and well 'clothed and properly fed and coxed' for. "Having regard to the welfare of these intents'," said Judge Street, "and to the conduct of the parents, I think that this mother elicield have their custody for the'preeent. * * * It is urged that the father hie a, right to hive the children brought up as Pr -dinky. terians, and that their mother and her mother are both membeee Of the Salvation 'Army. A perusal of thievidence leads me to the oonolueion that as between the 're- ligious training to be at present expected from the,father and that of the Salvation Army,'T should choose the latter. When the•thildren are older, the father may ha* a right to rain this question .again; but dS present it does net appear to be a pressing one, owing to the tender lige of the !And- ean:" • . • :` • INISS cABRIE F. JUDD% SPINE. She Tells the•Christien Workers at'Chleage ''. A HoW the Lord lioided it. ' . The Chrietian Workers of Chicago held their annual gathering last '.week in the Rieet Methodist Church. I tev: John Moe'. row, Of Pittsburg, presided at both morning , and afternoon 'sessions. address was — made by Mies Carrin.P. Judd,- of Buffalo, who told Ireotehiftpi infaileses-Chriet had restored -her to health and strength. She related in her addrem, and afterward itt detail to the reporter, the. 'story of her Meese. • At the age of '16 .h was etritheri. with a 'nervous Midday. Her opine became effected.. At the end of a few months she was obliged to take to her bed. She was helpless, and confined to the 'bed for two years. She wasted away until she weighed only 86 Pounde.: By the power of prayer the had been eestoredkto ..health and etrength ie a single nigher kiss 'Judd, as ehe stood upon the platform, presented. an , appearance of 'robust and Viperous women hood. She had never had a return of her trouble. and had no fear. that the 'ever -"Tulide'afterneen session was. opened with a. meeting, at which several told of having been cured of --a variety of aftlic. thins through their faith in Jesus . Christ., One young man hid been relieilid in it ' single night of a Combination of epinal, heart and head' troubles, and was a firm believer i,n the power Of Christ to heal from all sin and dioite : j. Miss Judd then read ".,t‘y number of pas; , begets from thoScripture, in which it was plainly stated that by prayer and praise to God and an Abiding faith 'in the truth of His promisee all evils Arid illness that faith; hi heir to can be reinoveci. She. said that. once since her wonderfuleare she had fallen, and severely injured her knee, bet that ' when She had said,,'" Dear. Lord, please, • Mike it wen," and hadistepped,....firniiy2and. ebnildently forward the paps:had • been • once removed: BlinVillhaw, the Whistler.' , ' In conversation with a friend of ' Mrs. Shaw it correspondent lessened that an ob- • servation of .the lady's palate dieoloiles a • , long, narrow, tube-like vault; a peculiarity shared by all prominent vocaliets. 'Her • naturally Jong, slender waist developing into a bust; chest and shoulders of charm- ing 'symmetry affords exceptional capacity. for ettatained and essay breathing. , She has • a qitiok ear for the intricacies of sound and 'reads readilyat sight, and finda,that. what: is once learned shenever forgete. She experienced at • that that diffiettl so troublesome to the player upon brae stroznentsz4116 flabby embouchure. r chest, from 'bust tO throat and shoulder to shoulder; has become wonderfully dove. loped, and ie unusnaliy firm to the tonek. • She cannot whistle on an empty stomach, nor bear the hauls csonstriotion about the , waist„ yet without it corset else, could not . Whistle at all: Her throat Must be loosely deemed, and she finde considerable inoreek • in .the felneee of neck. Otto advantage Mrs. Shaw shires with no whistler, am. tour Or profeeeional, is that of looking at her very. beat while ehe whietiee; Her fade remains absolutely Ire° from Contortion, ' griinace or wrinkles. She any ehe hose a iseneation is of '1. grasping the mites" when, the takes them on het lips. Ellie needs fresh, cool air to do her best, and only he, .00rnee wearied Indic:tee, hooted rooms. rodeo/tiger Wanted. Wanted -In Indian Serritory4Jndor. . taker. Musa be ahle to ki,11 : hie matf before ; beeping him. Wesley Barnett, it deeperecloo< is now opened up With a strong party in the Creek Nation, and has a mien made, which he.keepain hie Mom in anticipation of hie. :death., Ho' has famed a defiance to the United States authorities; annotinoing that - hie coffin is ready, if be is killed, and dar- • • hog the •officers to comennd put him in.- Suneyside. • euriche !Incident'•,iri deer!hunting, is *niched forby eportemen lately returned t • fronetitnMelue,wocale. A. petty of heaters in a sledge on'Lekii Melanesia matt &head of them large deer.' Imniediately there was a race over the lee, the sledge encoding ingot& the hike at' a rate imposeible to the hunted gnimeile Suddenly the sledge met bit ti eltopped. It was the deer, se„ persisted tho. young iviiiob bad net Oulrbeen deettalten baited fiend. • 44 trOiV could Mw. rifettitt4iteWhen., been- inttialed 'Open hue' of the . %linnets of'Y' Cora got =der the m101000'1 And slid thii sledge.. Ite.fa*ther Capture was an. called hintherloth Mo. "- 'II *.7 r , t. t f