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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-02-20, Page 6OPOBBRIAG ROMAN Ori HOLM Religions Disabilities Bill in the Howse of Oommone. 4L4DNroNE'8 B10 SPEECH. A London oable Bays ; In the Honee of Commons to -day ]til. Gladstone moved the aegond reading. of The. ,Bill to remove re- ligions disability, and @aid that he under- took by thio Bill to remove from the statutes en injustice ted ten anomaly which are a discredit to a (trh ) $e hoped e d P it won w. o m a� ="';a,.rs.,,,.rx.y...Sr'�.........,�.. ti.. a��i" Wtntea in introducing the Bill. As Chancellor of- the Exchequer° in 1868 he pleaded fpr the opening of the most difficult offices to whioh the moat obieo- *ion was taken.. It is seriously doubtful now whether Roman Catholics are legally disabled from holding the offices of Vioeroy of Ireland and Lord High Chancel- lor df England. The Catbglio Relief Aot did .not oppose in so man words_ • : p !Med at no Catholic shogtld be entitled to bold 1 them otherwise than as now legally entitled. " What," Mr. Gladstone asked, " was the a al 829 ? Catholics' Every enbjeot wasosition efore the entitled presumct e w ably to hold any crown office, but Oatholioe 0 were debarred by the Test Aot." Mr. o Oiladetone added that he and a number of w good lawyers, including the Chief Justine, a were not aware that there was any die. Sa ability except the,Test Aot, which was re. the Sheled in repeell863. It was contested whether efteotualiy qualified Catholics. wi Parliament when it repealed the Test Act un had no speoifio intention to open diose to offices, and it was therefore hie duty not to ofi'i be deterred from prosecuting this bill, the Sa obto remove an ma anomaly, whioh was ect of whioh was simply e pposed to exolude, apo and perhaps did exclude, certain of the ebo Queen's subjects from holding certain oflioee. If the bill was read a second time be proposed to move that it be passed through committee pro" forma, reserving that the substantial committee be taken after the report of the bill from that ooinmitThp bill, Mr. Gladstone said further, a a not affect the succession of the Crown. because the Crown was not open to competition._,. The.. Home •Seoretery, -he lidded, is himself a Catholic), and he etood as near the Sovereign as the High Chan• oellor and nearer than the Viceroy of Ire. land, yet ld his office, andhe(Mr. (i Gladsted hie one) knewht to ofno obstacle against �a Jew, Mohammedan, Binder; or non -religions person being Chancellor. — ' ` William---Heiery Smith asked why Mr. Gladetone's 'peach was made now instead of during the many years he had held office. Mr. Gladstone retorted that he had de- livered similar speeches in 1867. Mr. Smith replied that Mr. Gladstone then was in Opposition and that moreover in 1881 Mr. Gladstone, in answering a question on the atne ect said that the Government did �not intend to advaoate the abolition of all the remaining religions checks, such as prevented the Chancellor or Sovereign being, Catholics. Catholics did not demand the bill. Mr. Smith opposed the bill because it applied to two !sone only, and moved that it be read the second time six months Bence. After further debate Mr. Gladstone's motion for the second reading of the bill nOw• was rejected by 256 to 223. In the division in the Hours of Commons en the Religions Disabilities bill Home Secretary Matthews and Sir William Ver- non ' Harcourt abstained from ' voting Three Conservatives and nine. 'Unionists, including Mr. Chamberlain and Sir Henry James, supported the bill. The Irish members, including Mr. Parnell, voted soliidly with Mr. Gladstone. THE OIHILlaN TROUBLE. HE LOST HIS HEAD. EIGHTEEN MINERS DROWNED. Republican Demonstration Attacked by They Tap an Old Ver -Filled Mine and are Spanish Troops• Speedily Overwhelmed. The Troops Fire Right and Left and �— Many People are Wounded—An /Wintry THE 331011TH R(3LL. to be Made. A Hazelton, Pa., despatch says : At 11 A Barcelona oAble•aaye : The. revolutionary o'olok this morning, while Charles Boyle 'bj k.it einoldering throughout Spain, nearly and Patrick Coll, of Leviston, were drilling burst into flames in,thiaoity today. There a hole in their °Flambe! in the lower lift of was a peaceful demonetratien in. v' irk a No. 1 slope of J. ke into on ee Co., at pestis and speeches were the main Jeenesville, they broke into the old No. 8 ear features e oto Ff a �l ��. f r• k, ♦t k . ... °'�-" 'Yr '��.a /:4ritYN"'r'gFn•"r,.. -rn*�, �. ,....4ur,�,�.,.,t.ST+C�`,,,+,>a.,.•,1,. �� T.r{fiR �1, a +. wu'^—�' L „s�l7ion Nicolas Salmeren � :z :.n oo d t err-;�; sew ::x l ai been flooded to the month with water. Alfonzo Zorillas, co-worker in. the William Brisliu, a drivers was driving at propogation of Republican ideas ,te bottom of the elope wben he felt the and natural the crowds which wind coming, and cried out : " Boys, for were attraote by the prooeaaion, God's sake run for your lives or we will all beoame�somewb excited. This attitude be drowned." In a moment the force of of the populace seems to have alarmed the water name and Brislin barely escaped officer in charge of the troop of mounted with his life. Besides him six others were gendarmes who had been detailed to main- saved. John Boyle, laborer, was drowned. twin order, in caee of each em The water roes ra.', CI xur e rest of the workmen it�overwhelmed the latter. In five minutes the elope, which is 624 feet deep, was filled to the month, and eighteen men were buried in watery graves. The lost are : Lawrence Reed, married, eight ohildren ; James Griffiths, married, one child ; Edward Gallagher, married, two children ; James Ward, married, eight children ; Harry Boll, married, seven children ; Joseph Matnowitob, married, tour children ; Barney McCloskey, Patrick Kelly, Jake Wieto, Mike Smith, John Berne, all single ; Tom Glick, married, one child ; Tom Tomaskaekay, married, three ohil"dren ; Joe Aetro, Bosco Prink°, Thomas Giekor John Boyle, Samuel Porter, all single. Te news of the widest excitement, ends the month aster created the elope wee soon thronged with people frantic in their efforts to obtain information of the inmates of 'the mine. When all wile escaped reabhed the surface, and it was known who were lost, the excitement. increased, and in lees than half an hour hundreds of men, womed around the operand the er terrible n and children ;manelof anguish that ensued cannot be depicted. Wives implored piteously Hely of the miners standing by, who kne.w...only ..-too well -the fatal""result; to save their husbands from a watery grave, Children Dried for their fathers, who would never return. Relatives and friends wrung •their hands in sorrow and distress, and appealed to merciful Providence to save them, when within each breast was the certain feeling that their prayers would be unanswered. The' weather,—hick—wa bitterly cod, did not'have any effect toward diminishing the crowd, and it was only after the terrible result was made plain that none of the entombed men were living or could possibly be reached until all the water was pumped out of the elope that thegrief•strioken friends of the unfor- tunate men could be induced to go to their homer. u�-tom v emergency arks, ngs. ' case eeem to have oat bis head and to have ordered the gen- armee to charge the crowd. They did so t a gallop, firing their pistols and arbines right and left. The result as that several ersons ' were more r leas dangerously wounded and a number t the ballets from the Gendarme's nd capons indow were of the flattened ahotel from und the balcony lmeron was speaking. The action ' of nt Gendarmes crowd seems toged havehe di persed thous any open act of retaliation. It is deretood the Government will be aeked order an inquiry into the conduct of the tier in ndarmea. lmeron'a friends Jaime of hthae tithe bullet rke around the window from which he ke show that the Gendarmes tried to of him. • kt Violence on the Part of the Troops Said to Have caused It. A h rom Buenos s the Milianeps rising was was due to violence ree on the. part of the occurred at Castro. regulars. oobattle betweee n the regulars and the iti`snrgentslasted three hours. Seventeen of the former and 130 of the latter were •killed. Profiting by the revolt, the hostile emotions of the Chiliien regulars attaoked one another with knives $o settle an old q barrel, and the insurgents around the oily joined in the fighting, which lasted two days. The lyceum and hospital suffered severely. The number of hut it se large. reons killed and not now quiet. xThe ha harbor ill patrolled by volunteers who are partisans. of the President, aasieted by 2,000, sailors. PThe revolt appears to bo reduced to the rincipal harbors. Beaten on all sides, the insurgents intended to retreat to the mountain, assume the defensive and march towards Santiago, which is novo denuded of esident to convoke Congress, which wouls. Friends advise the d settle the quarrel An Owen Sound Man Tries the Razor. A A. Detroit deepatoh says : Yesterday afternoon a boarder et the Western Hotel found John Gray, another boarder, lying on the bed in his rcom with his throat out from nerear almost to the other. The bed clothes' were covered with blood, end the razor that Gray had used on himself lay on the floor near by. A doctor sewed up the gash, which partly fevered the windpipe, and ont through two or three arteries. Gray was then taken to omritioal condition. ency He wis 54 or 55 yeere he now ars old, a Sootohmen•by birth, and game here from Owen Bound six year; ago, when he went to work for the Michigan Central Railroad Company as a checker in their city delivery office. Between two and thee weeas ago he wee discharged from his Jar phabits. it is said, on Despo Despondency caused him�to attomtpt.eaioide. A Great Mistake. `'Prohibitionist -a -I nt very Sorry you ave nae that pint of whiskey in the preeettoe a T'onohiiot. Ile is ono of our leading pro. hibitiioniste. Friend—Did ho tell on you ? " No, o ; he made me give him half of it. Brooklyn Life. —Don't eay that a man is a "bad egg" when,yon mean that he is " too fresh." UNHAPPY POLAND. Sad t tories of Russian Atrocities—Methods of the Secret Police. A St. Petersburg cable says ; Two dele- gates of good Polish families report the Russian s' B i an a t ah ' oritiee in Poland n d ha ve revived the practice of the_question by..torture where -itis desired to extort information from prisoners. At Warsaw tha.apeoial tribunal tried the condemned 46 " Suepeote " without per- mitting them to call witnesses or to employ iaons iu °neel. Before Central Russia starting t eprix nerr thee ! were flogged. While under the torture of the •'..question'=-a-well=known- t ao a. alfa= las Guisbert, became a maniac under the terrible euffering brought on .by want of sleep. e tell of terrible Private atro atrocities committed ines received orPoland. The Government has received news of a oonepiraoy, and are employing every means at the disposal of despotism to reach the chief conspirators. Trio 'secret police. have adopted et new method. Having failed to make the suspects reveal their seorete, they " have arrested a large number of eir female ive° and friends, from hwhom they are atendeavor- ing to elicit the required information. Young girls are tortured in she presence of their fathers and brother°, and wives are flogged before their husbands to discover the names of the chief workers in the new movema fashionable eduoationaotted laestablisbment in t tor young ladies, was entered at night recently by the polios, who forced their way into the dormitories and made two arreate, one e, sister and the other the affianoed of a young lieutenant in the Rus- sian army. These girls were horsed on the shoulders of two men, and flogged till bits of their flesh flew about the room. Then, without giving them time 'to dress, they were chained together and hurried off"to prison. Their sub'segaent tate is not known. A story cores from Kielce that a lady of 22, recently married to an officer who is under suspicion, was arrested one night during her husband's absence and taken to prison, where she was subjected to such torture that ehe'°promised, on having her hands set -free, to write down a full conies. Sion. She took advantage -of her liberty to swallow a phial of prussic acid she had concealed in her corsets. It is when the Story re oiled her husbands that he blew out his brains. SHO BY HIS DAUGHTER. She Confesses to the Murder and ttlaims It was 'Justifiable. A Paris cable says :..A startling tragedy is reported from Blois. A wealthy man of high social standing and a member of the manic i. pal canned has been shot dead. The crime Was committed by hie daughter. She fired five shots from a revolver at her father with fatal effect, and he expired" in a few moments. The woman has etirrendiared herself to the police:- It is reported that she has made a fell confession to the authorities, acknowledging the orime and jastifying it. A Secret Alliance. A City of Mexico despatch eaya: It is reported here that a secret a'llianee has been signed between Gantemala and .tion. (Was against San Salvador. A Guatemalan despatch eaya Gen. Cayetano Sanchez died today at Faltenango from allot wounds inflicted by soldiers. Gen. Sanchez wee arrested several days ago for insabordina tion and was put in confinement Yeeter- day he attempted to escape, firing on the guard who followed him. The soldiers returned the fire, fatally woanding him• The Government has ordered a court cf inquiry in the case. Guatemala is prepar- ing for war and bringing' her army np to the standard. Ono of the symptoms. Chicago Tribune : " That was the young preacher's first sermon, wasn't it?" " Yes• How did yon know ?'' " By his elaborate argument to prove the existence of the Deity." It'cleeell C. Canfield, a farm hand, bas confessed to having choked to death a young girl named Nellie Griffin, whom he seoared from the public; eohool at Cold- water, Mich., on the plea that he wanted her to go into- a family. After ohoking the girl to death he buried her olothee ander a cow abed and entirely wen* to bed. Re is now in jail at Charlotte.. a DETERMINED SUICIDE. A Trapper's Body Found Hanging to Ratter of his Cabin. e details received rthrough of commercial tic raveller ellerhave 0of Quebec from the distriot of Beaune county. A short time ago a resident of that .plane, who followed the habits of a trapper, left amAfter nneually long home on a delay"hep family�beomme anxious, and set otic to find bis whereabouts. They tramped through the ?modeler a long distance when they came across a lonely cabin, usually inhabited by huntsmen, and on entering were horrified to see the missing man hanging to one of the•rafters. He pre- sented a terrible spectacle; and had been dead some days before disoovery. It was a determined case of suicide, as he was in a kneeling position, the cabin being too low to admit of standing upright. The unfortun- ate man met with an accident last winter while ont,gunning which unbalanced hie mind, and it is supposed he was suffering from mental derangement when he cam. loathed the rash act. A TRIBAL SECRET. Dr. Oronhyateklia Explodes a Popular Fallacy Concerning the Squaws. n seems to the white men,"°aid Dr, Oronhyatekha the arevail re the Forester's dinner, " that the Indians are hard on their women. Well I want you to know that the Mohawk is born a warin life.or and he reaohes Every Mohawk warriorisexpected to respond when the war Ory is raised, but every warrior ie given his choice of going out to battle or staying at home. If be etays at home the old petticoat and skirt is hunted up, and arrayed in 'these he must go around until the return of the braves. Thee it is that the white man, seeing the young Indiana hoeing potatoes, tendinthink that they are aorta and the womenrof the tribe who are obliged to do - the menial Iabor. (Laughter) This is a tribal aeon', but I did not mind telling it to my brethren, the Foresters." The Prayer of the Cannibal. (J. H. Calthrop, in Puckr) vvo Attend, Christians, to a Savage heathen's cry; Withrthe tired nextone send sa wire both young and tender, That we with good grants and rico may sweetly Conversion snow simply out of question When suffering from this dreadful indigestion. Midnight Music, �lunsey's Weekly : Landlady -Yon look sleepy this morning, Mr. Poetioas. Poeticns—I am ; I was kept awake by the mnae. Landlady-- It's that horrid s tomcet of Jenkinees 1 I'll have Tommy shoot him f be bothers you again. A Chanee.tn Rise. New York Weekly : Young Man—I see you advertise a vacancy in your establish- ment. I should like to have a position where' there will be a chenoe to rise: i4lerohent—Nell, I want a man to open ap'and sweep out. Yoe will have a chance to rise every morning at 5 o'clock THE HORRORS OF SIBERIA. Adventures of the Captain and Crew of a Yankee Whaler. Captured t y the Russians, They Are Kept Three Yee25 iI a Male-•Jhained to a Coppr♦♦pse-'Wort! or Starve—fieleaeo and yh h ., �P � widE ..k ,,., . �,.:!� . ,�+�. `rllc„, ri sat: , ,• u � i rhe people of Sohaan have anffered ter. A Boston, Maes., despatch of lags ribly by $Dods, which destroyed temples, night. says : The .Herald this morn• bridges and walls in the tea districts in ing publishes the story of Captain Wen -Chuan. The lose of life will reaoh Joseph W. Morrie relating his experience fully 1,000. Immediately following the as a prisoner for three years in it Siberian floods at Pie Chang a fire broke out and °dal mine. Captain Morris says he was destroyed 35 houses. In three other places captain of the ,eohooner Helena which houses were burned to the number of 200. sailed from Yokohoma on April llth, 1883, The suffering among the poor is something on a cruise for walrusterrible. Thee ede are. ,f6.. 1 They_ six .,. ... �- r �e ...�„_ smog wre es are • FLOOD, FAMINE AND FIRE. One Thousand Chinamen Drowned and Temples, Bridge Eto , Swept Away. OVER TWO HUNDRED H0UBE8 BIIRNED.` A San Francisco, Cal., deepatoh of yesterday says : Details have been received o! the % 'rr°tl;;}e floods tiktd famine which Flay prevailed r vett ed reoently P enl in Y met-- ° r .. 'rpt 'e schooner was captured by a �Rnseian gun- their , y to Shanghai, and how to deal on boat. The schooner and crew were taken thhe to Vladivostook, where they were tried and with them will he ao l • difficve. ult problemn ndmillet fer conbioted of violating the seal and fishingare 'telling 8 the fairs along the great road laws. There was no American consul at , are o&P to PBolta and tion Si li double the ripe the port and they had no oountiel. Thy of onayear ago. .gaoling stalks for fur l were condemned to imprisonment in a coal cannot be had at any pries, and for build- �� mind for three years. They were sent into ing purposes they bring four Dente per different parts of the mine and were stalk. obliged to send up ten tons of coal per day for the first year and six tone per day for the other two years. If the stated amount of coal did not come, no rations would be given them, Capt. Morrie was fastened to a Pole. The chain between them being eighr feet long. Atter being fastened to captain saw no ono but the Pole until he was liberated, not being allowed to leave the mine during the entire three years, sleeping on the floor of the mine and sub- sisting on rice soup. At the end of three months his oom'panion died,* but no . one eameto release him from the body. At the end of fifteen days the captain out the Pole's body in two with bis shrivel and got it upon a load of coal. A hammer and chisel were then sent down to him with whioh to out off the chain. When Morris came out he found dF .C1. Crocker, of Searsport, Maine, one of his _.crew,. had just been re Ieaeled. "Together they walked 150 miles to Vladivostook, the Russians refusing hem transportation. They were coal -begrimed, ragged, and sore from -Abe bites of vermin. An American vessel took them to Nagasaki, where the 'United with clothes, t ttea and 'they Consul themvided their first hot bath in three years. The 0... nl—furnished--th-em with transport- ation 0 to Yokohoma- From thence they went to San Francisco, Morris finally reaching Boston; his native place, last November, where he bas since been employed by, a street railway oompeny, Last Friday he left the house of friends in West Newton to come to this oily and since that time he bas been missing. Of his Drew three were Americans and twenty- two Japanese: Of the Americana besides Crocker Capt.' Morrie has heard of but one living out hie term of imprisonment. The schoonor.waa captured on Sept. 6th, 1883. lVi1NERS RESCUED After Spending Four Days on a Timber in a Flooded Mine. - A Wilkesberre, Pa., 'deepatoh says : When at the time of the reoent mining disaster the men found the inclined cut in the vein and climbed ap its°almost perpen- dicular passage, they planed a pieoe of timber pioked ,ap in their retreat across the opening of the tunnel, and climbed np on it. Their feet rested in the water below, but soon after its gargling sound indiosted it had gained its highest altitude. They sat on that piece of timber three ibohee wide for four days. Behind them was an • immense body of loose coal, held in place ' by a small piece of timber, and • fearing to e dislodge it they dared not even rest eiai n et it. --They kept a light for a few hours, but then the oil in their lamps gave out and they, avers in absolute darkness, with hardly enough room to hold themselvesu. butsght. River both Cragel aandable Shelank his times became crazed. Cragel imagined he saw a mine oar, and jumped into the water to ride_npnn it He was -rescued by fiver. Shelenk was more easily managed, although he was Bobbing constantly. On Thursday the men lost traok of time. The first welcome sodnd was the " plunk " of the pump, and then they knew work had commenced towards their rescue. The first meseage between them and their res- cuers reached them shortly after 3 o'clock this morning, the.water then being down to snob . a point that men on raps cotlld float by the clogged brattice work and get over the level to the gangway on the other side. When they learned the three men were alive, the rescuers uttered shoats of joy and some plunged into the murky SAM JONES AS .A PUGILIST. waters to wade and swim across the abyss. The work of reaching the imprisoned miners --1--- was accomplished at 5.30. The water was He Believes Be Will Yet Have to Kill down .enough to remove the imprisoned men one at a time on the raft. They Somebody. reached the pumps safely and were wrapped in binkete, having first been given some milk. They were then taken to their homes amid shouts and cries of joy. SHE IS STILL GROWING. A Young Woman from Missouri Fight Feet. High. Benjamin F. Ewing and his wife and daughter have arrived in New York •from a Scotland county, Missouri. Mr. Ewing is and of middle-aged e-agee farmer, six feet in height colored coat that file himwwith the grace and precision of a salt seok,ad hie panta- loons came from Kanene City and have brown stripes in them Miss Ella, the d'sngl 5 , is eight feet tall and weighs 245' pounds. Sbe told a reporter that she was a good horseback rider, and was never sink in her. life. She began to .grow, over -fast when 8 yeare old, and grew one inch in height last month. She is 19 years old, and expects to keep on Browing until she is 21 years of ago. Mies Ewing's face ie very large,eind so are her hands nd feet. Her hand lea foot long, and it takes forty yards of Bilk to make her a dress. diffident as yet, but She a ager is going to tkherandhr Chicago manager Europe this week, and he thinks her tehyo nese will wear cff after her tour emote! t crowned heads. The old ,w, t the talk of cothing bat Europe.f' gentleman eu can ap Broadway and tried in vain to to walked two -for -5 cigar. y a The Way of the W orTd. l"My dear," said young Mrs. Fitts at the play, " it is a hutililiatini,, confeesion for me to make, but I am positively nervous for want of a piece of gum." "I'll go gat yon some ss soon as the cer- tain falls," said Mr. Fitts, And various of their acquaintances, ae they saw him disappear, said what a pity it was that so sweet a,yonnt, woman should be bound for;ifet° Such a Leave of the demon drink that he could not ,-Ven wait until the Ow wee over to satisfy his depraved elope. tits. RIg FIGHT WITH A, .MANOR. A La Grange, Texas, deepatoh of yesterday says : Rev. Sam Jones delivered a lecture at the Opera House here last night. Ox being clues. tioned as to the unpleasantness at Pales- tine, he said he was on the depot platform waiting for a train, with a valise in hie hand, when a man stepped np and asked, "`' Is ibis Sam Jones ?' to which be replied, ' That is my forgiven name.' The fellow," said Mr. Jones, " then bit me in the fade ° with a cane, nutting a deep gash somas my cheek, and also hit me on the shoulders. I then put down my valise, grabbed the man's cane, wrong it out of hie hands and started in and literally -wore him out. We were separated and I left him in the hands'of doctors for repairs. I have °learned that the pugilistic gentleman is .the Mayor of Palestine. He will know who to jump upon the next time. It was a pitiful sight to see the fellow attempt to draw his pistol. He could not get it oat for I would have taken it away and might have had to kill him. I dislike it very mnob, es I have been out of this line of business for the last eighteen years. I am afraid this kind of thing ie not going to atop here. I won't have peace• until I kill some one. Last fall at Pales- tine the keno call of gambling dens could be dietinotly heard by ladies at church dur- ing service, and I pleaded for women and children. Jones seemed to feel sore and fatigued but his lecture here was a anocess. The „Care of the Brooms. The rapidity with which brooms ordi. nerdy wear out ie surprising. This ie partly due to leaving the broom standing en its brash end when not in met but more to oareleeenese in handling. A piece of strong cloth, or, better' yet, of old woven under.flannel or d be drawn on over the handle eanl d downbelow the place where the broom splints are stitched. A few stitches' with otrong cot- ton yarn should fasten this cover both at around lowerts edge ghand e, sewingather st o stiitebee through and through. This cover beide the broom splints together, and prevents their breaking oat and the tearing off of the of a iitrikingdagain t doors° and mop boawhich rds and reaching under heavy pieces of furniture does.—Harper'° Bazar. • , Even a genius needs common sense at times in order not to be mistaken for a fool. A_VOTIIER TERR1r3Lr WARNTNO. There was a man in our town and be was won. He saidrrus unto chis neighbors, "I'11 never adver.. lige Ten !moons sticceeded swiftly, and the sheriff came along; The non -advertiser was sold out, and his goods scarce brought a song. Thetooal 'fields of"Torrlain are turning out so wellthat it is thought that M. Ferry Two Beaux. may be restored to'populer favor npoe that Chicago Tribune : ieene alone. two beaux on your string by do yon have The first rotary fi.re•enpine was marl$ in "'Well, yon see.. 1820 by a Cinoinatti firm, but it wee many Chailey ie toy society yeare before the firemen wgaid take tiredly man, while Ed is my steady -go -rotund." to the innovation, A Sacr(',1 Buffalo Nears:cuneibe maiden in short Just as the skirts W(46 s ' prchiat the meet difficult etepe of a „and ting „the policeman appeared at the door. 1 1; a " Call thio a sacred concert ? " be asked. ddo keeper fret," arke fined thele on at the Ind of the second act. a eolieott°° at ' Seo? Just yPhat •,� Was Wanted. NOW York herald : Dr• Kiliall--Did the medicine I presoribed for you husband act properly ? liIrs. Gltr;widder—G,y, yea, very nicely, - Doctor. Thanks, awfully, And I had no trouble with the life insurance, Cabwigger—Did you ever man under the tied find a the night we thought there were bur_ lar in the house, were bur lar' I found my .husband' there, Strawberry organa, honeyante d encumber batter form ,part of the ]lift of nevegre.atee for keeping the face.and hands smooth. '°