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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-05-08, Page 3
ear avmmrmups:° ea M,a,•1„ w The Twenty-ThJrd of .April. Hand. he tcross on on Soon ter wall, Over the highest towers tall, Shadowing bridge and moat. Behold how Cressy glistens On thesind of her silken sheen, Lot all the wide gust~ listen4 TO the anthem="Save the Queen." Weplowed the fields anti scattered The gaud aced wide and well, And many a nation, shattered, Admitted—" Blood will tell." We waded thro'..Trafelgar 4,,\ On the dogged British plan, Since then we've faced the avalanche • At foggy Inkerman. So bang the blood -red cross without,. On peopled laude and seas ; ,.•..•. . ,. T•• , , r rwaa,,, ,,,zz1�awA•wmagis'•�y m'•. The battle and the breeze. 'Bi) ho g Yoh banner outward, Lo.l let its folds be seen ; A -hundred million Englishmen Are shouting " Save the Queen." TILE Ku Posing for Artists. 1,161,1e, Trtrr..,,rc.:: tip ar'aesra cd& THE KINDERGARTEN. A Sketch' of This Important. System of 'Trailing. , Children Who Learn by Doug and Seeing —Olay Modeling. Sewing, Weaving and Designing, Lay the:Foundation for Self- 1Bespect—The Kindergarten a Founds- - tion for Science, Art and Ethics. (By a Hamilton Kindergartner.) The work of the kindergarten can be summed up in one brie! sentence : " Dur- ing the first six years put into the ohild the ref , ^TMST. peen lite." This indicates the eoope of T oekel a educational idea and suggests the innumera- ble linea along which the work of the kindergarten lies. The senses are the gateways of know- ledge, and through them the child meet receive the first nourishment for the development of mind. The world is full of New York is ernpbatio in insisting that a majority of studio models are modest, clever women. Elbe soya the ordinary price paid ie $1 a morning, or 33.,} cents an hour, posinge430 and resting 15 minuses. It is tremendously trying work, necessitating oonsiderable training to make a aubjeot available for an artist's purposes. Presti• nese 0 reoomme heroio form and feature ere strong datione to favor, but women of soald, with characteristic and marked faces, are prized above beauties, and are often able, to command very high rates. As an instance of the possibility of the profeseion,-rhe told of two little Italian boys, brothers, who support a family of nine members solely with money earned in this way. They are charmingly handsome chaps, with lustrous southern eyes. They ail for pictures of fruit venders, acolytes, boy princes, etc. `So easily and enrely do. the young foreigners make a living that, with the abandon common to their race, both parents have resigned labor, and with five other children subsist upon the etudio profite of their two eldest sone. -Illustrated American. Charles Matthews. Char_ esMatthews was wont to take thing•° they came, rays Chaanb' Jour' nal. P have played to 'an era audience of one," aid he to a friend. " It was in the Bandwioh.Ielands. I had advertised the play to commence at 2 o'olook, I had the soene set, and as I make it a rule never to disappoint the public, I determined to go on with the show. I oeme on and bowed to a man of color, who, in a white hat, was eeateit-in 'the-atallei Henretnrnednixneo salute with becoming solemnity. I went through the entire first sot of ' A Game of Speculation,' and that man of dolor never, once smiled, -he never changed his posi- tion. At one time I was nearly sending the prompter to feel him to see if he were alive. I lowered the curtain on the eeoond set, andhe was, like the House ot Com- mons, ' still pitting.' I felt bound in honor to reward persietenoy of this kind, and I gave him the third sot, gag and all A quarter of an hour afterward my colored friend was still in the same attitude, so I went around and told him the show was over. He shook hands with me and smiled, and asked me whet it was all about." Uniform Rates of Wages. After several weeks' negotiations the boot and shoe menutacturere of Toronto, Ham- ilton and London and their employees have agreed to a uniform bill of wages, and the possibility of a strike bas been averted. The new arrangement takes effect May 81h next and will continue in force till July let, 1893. The number of workmen concerned in the agreement is over 1,000. -Toronto World. lt) er First Baking. Jester : Young husband -Did you beke "this oeke, Martha ? Young wife -Yea, George. Young husband -Well,, yon take the oaks - Young wife (flattered) -Oh, Georgeil Young husband (continuing) —and throw it away. Appropriate. Boston Herald: Saloon keeper, in furni- ture store-" I want to get a sable suitable for pard playing." Salesman-" Yes, sir ; have around oak table ? " Saloon keeper--" No, square deal." Liked It Turned Down. Boston Herald : " I'm going to turn out Anti gas," said the old man ooming into the room where sat his deughter and her young m ,trihanke," said the unabashed young man. "I was jaet going to do it myself." Of Course. Brooklyn Life ; " I ehould have brung my 'umbrella," remarked Mrs. Livewayte, a meniber of the Chicago Literary Society. " Brung," asked Mrs. Laker, in a gentle, corrective tone. How stupid of me 1 Of course I meant brang.' " Two Similar Diseoveries. Toledo Bee: A surprising discovery has ately been made by a relative of the man who observed that Providence • was kind enough to cause the largo rivers to run by the big cities. The new discovery is that almost invariably the big advertisements are rnn by large end successful business beer. If yon want to sink money .get into the swim. --Years ago a young woman told Bar. nom she heti a oherry-oolored cat. _Barnum told her to bring it end be would give her $100 for it. The next day ebe appeared et the office with a covered basket. Barnum lifted the lid and found a bleak oat inside. " Where's the cherry cat ?" said be , " Why, that's the one," said the young woman ; " blank cherry oat." Barnum handed her $100, told her to leave, and gavo orders never to &dna leer again. -Dire. Mary A. Livermore leotnred' Iia Boston the other day on " Women who de not marry," in whioh she said : " Marriage is the divined institution of the world, but it should be the union of two equals. It is a sin for 'a woman to become the wife of a drunken or unmoral man and the mother xitetInth6.tdnan"._ in a' eo • iEtilreent-liairitiTgraermlit nations; but enlightened people have out. grown the thought that children ehonld be left alone and unaided to find the neoee- aary'food for mensal growth until they are old enough to go to , achool. If, when the °enacts are firet awakening, their training le neglected, all after education will show a defect whioh can never be wholly removed. - There is nothing formal in the education of the kindergarten; everything is done in the play spirit, because play is the nativity whioh le natural to the earlier steges of man's development. So the children's minds develop as their bodies do, without their being conscious of the process. They learn by doing and seeing. The kindergarten Gifts, with whioh the obildren play they are building and design- ing, are the means of giving them a know- ledge of elementary geometry, number and form ; snob knowledge is the inevitable re- mit of handling them and playing with them. There is a logical eequenoe in the development of the Gifts, each one contain- ing suggestions of the preceding and fore- shadowing those to some. The first . consists of six worsted balls with long strings attached, in the three primary end the three secondary colors. Fr-om--shese-the--yonngeet_.ohildren_ _gain_.s_ definite basis for knowledge of Dolor, direct. tion and form. ,All this is taught es the children play with the balls. Direction, for instance: Front, bank ; . right, lett ; , up, down ; they kern as they. keep time se some rythmio song, moving the ball in the direction indicated by the words of the son ,himself away, specimens of quartz and 'other minerals, and perhaps a pieoe of tree whioh grew in the coal period. About eaoh of these things a pleasant little story is sold to interest and teach the children, thus fostering the germ of a eoientifio mind. Theile stories are very entertaining, and at the game time they give some idea of the climatic divisions of the earth's airtime and of the manners and oaesome of the people living in different parte of the world. Stories about animals, it judiciously told, foster. in the ohild a love of natural history, end give him the fade whioh form the ground work for this etude. In stories and oonvereations with the children the kindergartner finds her beet opportunities for seed -sowing ; for went° there is no department of edemawhich cannot be simplified and made interesting to children, ' and in oonverea- tione with them they are led to express their thoughts and taught to. express them in eorrect language. The fundamental principle on whioh the method of work is based is found in one of Froebei's own The eeoond Giftis it concrete illustration of a. great educational law. It consists of e wooden ball, and, sharply contrasted with this, the cube, and then to relate these two opposites, the cylinder, became it possesses the qualities of both. The ball is the symbol of the earth, the run, the moon an d all the heavenly bodies ;'the cube, symbol- izes the mineral kingdom, because all the crystal forms only are modifications of it, and the cylinder is tound to be the typical form in the animal and vegetable worlds. When the children's attention has been directed to these taots iv dime simple and interesting way, they are always quick to observe how everything can be classified under one of these forms. One, little boy, after be had been in the kindergarten a few months, soddenly discovered that bis house was full of oblongs, and that his horse ween't anything but a lot of cylinders put together. Following these ere the building Gifts, which are adapted to that stage of the ohild's development when he desires 10 in- vestigate, and to analyze the forme whioh he handles. They are cubes whioh are subdivided by ontting into various geomet. noel forme, and their analysis progresses from the simple to the complex. The parallelopiped, the triangular prism, the 'square prism and the rectangular prism are found among these divisions and sub. divisions. So in building miniature houses, barns and hotels, the children finding in these fundamental forms playthings to amuse them, are only too glad to know and to remember their names. Succeeding these Gifts are the tablets need to represent enlaces ; the squere, the Half . square, the equilateral, the right•angled scalene and the obtuse -angled triangles. Following these are the steel rings, the stick used to inclose apace and the beads to repreeent points. The possibilities with the Gifts are inexhanetible, end it; is only. neoeeeary to show a child a few of their possibilisiea in order tb call forth -hie inventive faculty. The choice of the Gifts is baeed on a thorough understanding o! soienoe, end there ie nothing in, theworld of form which can be wholly unfamiliar . to a ohild who hes been trained in the kindergarten. The Gifts are also valuable • for manual training, es most of them require skillful and delicate handling. If . it is true that impression must preoede expression, ib ie equally true that expreaeion must follow impression. To learn bydoing is one of the principles of ' the kindergarten, and doing in an orderly and logical manner, seeing the dependence of one ton another, leads.to orderly and logical tbinking. The 000apatione correspond to and follow the Cliffe in their development, and are in miniature the industries of the . race. They give the child an opportunity for the expression of the ideas whioh he has gained. Clay•modeling, sewing, weaving, paper folding, cutting and designing ere 000apatione whioh'delight the ohildren, for in them they find the means to express themselves, and thin lays the foundation of self•respeot, •einde the children see the tensible remits tbey have prodnoed by their own thought and skill. If a kinder. garten were conducted under ideal condi- tions, the kindergartner would spend some part of each day with her children in the open country, near to nature's beer*, din covering her secrets, observing her won- ders, onitivating•in the children the seeing eye, the hearing ear. and atimnlating them to intelligent inquiry. This in itself would be laying en educational foundation deep and wide. Bnt this is not often possible, eo field end forest contribute their treasures and the children are surrounded in the kindergarten' by An many natural objects es ere available, for the purpose of awakening their interest and onrioeity in natural phenomena. So in the kindergarten we always may find seeds sprouting, plants growing, the obrysalia waiting to turn into a butterfly, the cocoon in whioh- the- -°ilk--caterpillar. hag ----rolled.. imparting a mere variety and multitude of facts that a eobool becomes a sohool (in •the true sense), but only by-emphasiziug the living unity that is in all 'things;" The acorn is not the oak, although is ognteins within it all the elements and possibilities of the fall 'grown tree, and so she kinder- garten is not a 'school of science, art or ethics, nor the kindergartner a teacher of these things. But she can say, as eaoh child leave° her influence, " I have laid the foundation though another buildeth." THE RIOT AOT READ. Great Disturbances in Detroit Over the Street Oar Strike. Detroit News : Is is not too muoh to say that all organized end legal government in shit, town, whether representing the sov- ereignty of the State of Michigan or the munioipelity, has collapsed. For nearly a week the oily has been in the hands ot a mob, whioh declares that no one shall be, permitted to earn hie living at a certain occupation- without its permission, and whioh, to enforce •that order, has been guilty of a . thousand crimes in open day, of — a seailit;..-_.of. rioting, -of-..._the -_de struction of property, of threats to life and limb, and of open deft. &hoe of the polios . authority. In the midst of this reign of orime, in the presence one mob engaged in orime, the police being paralyzed, demoralized and helpless, and the mob carrying everything before it, the -mayor-of-she-oily-and•-the-eheri-off-the- county ride up td the scene and look on complacently "' to inform themselves and Shen quietly turn away end leave the scene, presumably being informed. For the honor of the oity, for its good name, and for its interest, it is time for all good citizens to endeavor to put a stop to, these thiege. In every pity. village and hamlet of she Union that is reached by the telegraph it is known to -day that the riot act wee published in Detroit potter - day, and was disregarded. That is a actions piece of newt, tinge out of Detroit, and it is scarcely oalonlated to enhance the good opinion whioh the people of Detroit bave gained among their fellow -country- men. Let the people find their lost senses, begin again to mind their own business, and cease to blockade the streets with crowds that, 'me&ningly or nnmeaningly, are -only looked upon at, lending moral sup- port to the deetruotion that is going on before their eyes. Owing to the blockade of the tracks the street oars have stopped running. OHILIAN WAR HORRORS. A Government Defeat Followekby Scarcely Imaginable Atrooities. MA88AORING . DDFENOELS88 OITIZEN8• 1eil advices from Chili say 500 Govern- ment troops and 800 revolutiomate were killed in the battle of Pazo al Monte, in whioh the Government forces were de•' heated. Five thousand men were, engaged, Two hundred and thirty•fourr wounded men were silken to Valparaiso. The Gov. ernmenf forces lost all their artillery. The cavalry, 700 strong, took no part in the �.>s"C''_u`p ..:.;. ;.....:.: .'r ... •,'tu'a.../.. qty-•.lti'•T3'.`t'li,`2::..x'.•.., .. ,+ The revolutionary army committed e number of atrocities at Poem al Monte. There were 1,000, inhabitants there. Ot these many perished, inoluding women, when the clispereed troops were followed up and when the victors• commenced to plunder drinking shops and provision attires. - The soldiers, it is alleged, while NEWS OF TRE WEEK. Lord Randolph Churchill started yester- day for South Africa. At Osgood° Hall yesterday morning in. 1r Thomas Galt quashed° two more local) option. by-lwwe, Four mutinous artillerymen at Porte. month, Engr, were eentenoed yesterday to two years in prieon. Piggott, the Tease ranoh manager who " went Ihroi gh " his employer for a large amount of money, has been tweeted in Halifax. • A°n 8.year-old child named Dickson, while playing on the banke of the Gatineau eadenmnr+°c;�lkse�lan., a,a�,.m,,,,,ran?.,e&101, tn:,t�.s .. water and was drowned. • It is semi•offioially announced that .the French Government has not been informed that any treaty bee been entered .into be- tween France and Abyssinia. The Dominion Government, it is said, has deoided to pass legislation providing for the more rigid iaepeotion of (tattle Proviaione were recently so scarce in Iquique that $20 wee paid• for a can of pre- eerved milk, and beef sold at 1110 per pound. The Peruvian consulate is daily besieged by hundreds of Peruvians seeking provident) for themselves and their fami- lies and the means of returning to the north. The offioere and orewe of the rebel. vessels state that they have bound them. selves not to lay down arms until they bang President Balmeceda in the principal square of Santiago. A correspondent at Tarmpa.c& writes theft on the morning of February 3rd.- upwerde of 3,000 workmen collected et Pozo al Monte in order to proceed so Iquique and make a formal representation reapeoting the eoaroity of provisions. Shortly after they reaohed the works Manager W. John- son gave them ten- barrels of biscuit and 1,000 ' tins of preeervea, whioh were dis- tributed among the strikers. - They re. manned there that night and on the follow- ing day • sent some of their leaders to Negreyroe. There more men were to be oolleoted. . Suddenly, however, a train appeared, loaded with Govern- ment troops under Martin Larrin. Without halting or parleying the troops opened fire on the 900 defenceless work- men, women and children. Shortly after. --ward---the-forces---marobed-.forward--and- killed all the men. Meanwhile the men from the Negreyroe works, with -the Dom. missioners from Ramirez, returned to their homes, otherwise tbey might also have fallen victims. Some who escaped from the slaughter took refuge in the nitrate fielde,,but were subsequently followed up _andekilled.-After-these dee committed some 890 men were arrested, end of this number eighteen were . mur- dered. The Chilian Government and the Chilian rebel 'authorities have both shot several persons. Among the number was Anibal Narango, a Government officer, who was shot when the rebelaretired from °Ovalle. It is impossible to tell where 'these pro- ceedings will terminate. It is stated that when the Government forces retired from Pozo al Monte on Cantina they shot all the prisoners they had and- destroyed all the .nitrate establishments they passed. THREATENED WITH DEATH. Canadian and American Missionaries China 14P.obbed by the Natives. Rev. J. Goforth, Presbyterian mission- ary in Chine and well known in Canada, writes from Lin Ching that the natives are giving great trouble to the niiseionariee in the Henan district. He says : Pressure has already been brought ' to bear on the officials and gentry of the unruly district from their superiors, but it is not sufficient to emit our coned, and so they are apt to get a harder squeeze betor they awake to the fact %het when they adopt Chinese methods of looting Britiabere they will have to accept British methods of paying for it. The American Presbyterian miesionaries have,been • driven out . of Oho-ming.ohon Dr. Hunter'n wife and two ohildren end Mr. Lane. A mob attacked their reeidenoe .and wrecked ell they could lay their bandit on, _the 000n. pence of the house esoaeing by highways. Mre. Hunter was oornered by a mob and caught hold of an elderly Chinaman end asked : Why: are yon truing to kill me and my ohildren ? " The crowd fell back & little and a man cried out : " We don't want to kill yon, but it you don't leave the oity nt once( we will." The entire party were allowed peacefully to leave the city in carts next day, but the excitement and exposure had an ill effect on all, especially Mr. Lane and Mrs. Hunter, who have gone into consumption. During the riots the Mandarin was appealed to, but deolared that he could do, nothing." Mr. Goforth nye in conclusion : " None of these things move me, but I confess I would not care to have my wife and,boy pass through those experiences." -Dan Rioe is organizing, an old-time entering circus. It will make tote of old boys feel young again to see Den Rioe in the sawdust arena. A MORAL POEM. There was a man in our town, Who was so wondrous Wise. That when bis business slumped way down Began to advertise ; And when the public eaw his spread, With all their might and main. Unto his dace they straightaway sped And set him up again. A deapatoh from Montreal says the upper lake trade this year eppeere to b© opening very badly. There is lees atnff to carry and rates are lower than last year. 'i'tig 111)TOTh S SWETIIEAI IitUT. The editor's sweetheart's -oyes are bright As mho done her dainty dress, And smooths the waist and books it tight, For her lover is coming to see her to -night, And her form is going to press. -More then 6,000 men in New York do bnsinets ander protection of their wives' names. X195 HELEN KELLER'S LASH. She Will Attempt to Educate a Deaf Dumb and Blind Boy - Tommy Stringer, 5 years, old, whose home is at . Washington, Pennsylvania, is deaf, dumb and blind, and though he has been to all the specialists in . Pittsburg, it has been found impossible to restore any of his loan senses. Helen Keller, a little girl from Tusonmble, Alabama, who is likewise deaf, dumb and blind, and is being educated at the Perkin's institution, Boston, learned some weeks ago of Tommy Stringer's case and promptly set so work to have him sent to Boston so that she might educate and train him. The oaee was very eimiler to her own, and she was eo interested that she at once deoided to put by $35, whioh had just been given her, as a starter for a fund to educate the little sufferer. She wrote Superin- tendent Brown, of the •Pittsburg Institute, to that effect, and told him that as soon es she got enough money she was going to start to teach Tommy herself. Another gentleman, bearing of her philanthropy, sent her $100, and she is now at Boston lending the force of her wonderful intellect to the development of little Tommy's faculties. Alexander Leggate and Louis Peterson agreed to see that there was no lack of money to take care of the boy properly. Three Things. 1. Three things to admire -intellectual power, dignity and gracefulness. 2. Three tbinge to love -courage, gen- tleness and affection. 3. Three things to hate-ornelty, arm genie and ingratitude. 4. Three tbinge to delight in -frankness, freedom and beauty. 5. Three things to ,wish for-healtb, friends and a cheerful spirit. 6. Three tbinge to avoid -idleness, loquacity end flippant jesting. 7. Three things to pray for -faith, peace and purity of Heart. 8. Three things to contend for -honor, country end friends. 9. Three things to govern -temper, con- duct and tongue. -Harness and •Carriage Record. Kilted Fighter's. Five British regiments wear the kilt) ; five the trowe. The lowland regiments of too line and the (highland light infantry wear the trews, while t1 a highland regi. -menta wear the kilts. /These regiments are the Royal Highlanders, the famous " Black Watch," formerly known es- the 42nd and the 73rd Foot ; the Seeforth Highlanders, formerly the 72nd and 78th Foot ; the Gordon Highlanders, the 75th and 92nd Foot ; the Cameron Highlanders, formerly the 79th Foot, and the Argyll and Stitherlend Highlanders, formerly the 910 end 93rd Foot. ' -Tbe most beautiful nnmartied ,royal Primo)irl in all Europe is the Prisa Alla, of Heave• Darmstadt. -Andrew Carnegie was once a messenger boy. It is said that Mr. Carnegie' owns twelve or fifteen weekly papers in various parte oLEnglend infingenbnieffieffrlelitintWarentoirenteninporeee Senator Sutherland hes entered enaction for Blander against R. Watson, M. P. for Marquette,, charging that the latter aocueed him of personation in the recent election. Andrew McKenna, aged 8, and Neil Mof- fatt, aged 11, got hold of a demijohn of whiskey in New York yesterday end drank heavily. McKenna is dead end Moffatt dying. Telegrams received at London report that the Roumanian Government has issued orders stopping the export of maize in oonse gaenoe of the depletion of the stooks of maize m Roumania. News bas reaohed Madrid that the . Spanish gunboat Canto struck a rook off Porto Pieta and'beoame a total loss. The Canto was a veeeel of the third clue, and was need as a guard "ship. General de Negrier, commander of the 7th Army Corps, was yeeterdey weaned in she chest in s was whioh he fought with Gaston LeGrand. The latter wee wounded in the jaw. ' The dispute originated at the Theatre Premeds. Mr. Gladstone has deoided to support the Divorce Reform Bill, introduced in Parliament by Mr. Hunter. This fact bee amazed the Liberals, who believed he would-opposetiny_eatenetion of: _divoroe_as a_ matte!of religious prinoiple. Manuel de Galvin, formerly Minister to Washington from San Domingo, has returned there es a epeoial commissioner to negotiate a reciprocity treaty between San Domingo and the United States ander the terms of the MoKinley Act. ant -Pleasant, Panepeoial-°aye that the foreigners at the Standard works are drilling every night, and trouble is feared there when the eviotions take place next week. It is believed the foreigners have arms concealed in the vicinity. A cable despatch from London states that the Portuguese Government have yielded to the threat of Lord Salisbury to revert to force to compel them to' respect their treaty obligations,end have consented to the free passage of the Pangwe River. Influenza continues to spread in Eng- land. A large number of members of the Hone° of Commons ere now ill. The Committee on the Manoheeter Railway Bill bee been obliged to suspend He eittinge for a week owing to the malady attacking oommittee members, counsel and witnesses. The exports from the Dominion for the nine months' ended March 31 amounted to $73,734,003, en increase of $525,282 over the same nine months in 1889-90. The imports for. March were $8,419,895, and the duty collected $1,939,573. The imports for the nine months ending Maroh 31 were $81,829 943, a decrease of $722,944 below last year. An election was held in Whitehaven yesterday for a member of Perliarhent, to succeed the lade Right Hon. George A. F. Cavendieh•Bentinok, Conservative. Sir James Bain, Liberal Unionist and Con- servative, received 1,338 votes to 1,105 oast for H. G. Shee, Gladetonian. At the pre- vious election Cavendish-Bentinok received 1,216 and .Shee 1,110. Consular reports from Spain and Portu- gal announce the remarkable anomie oD the system of grafting Amerioan on native: vines, whioh results in preventing phyl- loxera and producing good wine. The oonenl at Madeira writes that on the north side of the island, wbere all the vines were deetroyed by phylloxera years ago, the new vines have given their first fine crop. The Ouetome Department • has been notified that Officer Trudel heti just effected near Quebec e seizure ,of smuggled lignite velaea at $5,000. The oontrmeband goods comprise 155 oases of gin, 42 barrels of spirits end one barrel of gin. The owners thus far are unknown. The department was also notified that 40 puncheon° of molaenes bad been seized at St. John, N. B., for an infraction ot the Customs Act. The trial of George Goodwin for the murder of Richard Langford in the town. ship of Huntley will not come up at this Arsines. The evidence is not thought to be sufficiently strong as yet to secure a con- viction. It will be remembered that John Cassels, a man who was believed to have some knowledge of the crime, was eupposed soon atter its commission to have commit- ted suicide by drowning. The body hes not yet been reooveiled, and serious doubts aro enterteined conoerning the genuineness of the oaee of suicide. The miners' strike at Dortmnni1 is resuming alarming proportions. Ten thousand men ere ont, and it ie expected they will be joined by Ii,rgo numbers to- morrow. Tbe strikers are greatly excited and beyond the 'control of their leaders. The men are encouraged by the result of the Paris congress and the action of the Belgian miners regarding & general strike. The employers are making tremeiidons efforts to stank' coal in antipation of the prolonged straggle. Docs advertising Pry ? Well, Mr. Bernnm died worth &boat 85,000,000. There never was a man as good as a really good woman. The general rendition of the coke region yesterday was that of quietneee. No evict• tions have taken plane, and no trouble is contemplated. All the plants before re- ported in operation are running. On Monday two more plants, the Dexter and rankla.n, will .make en effort to -resume.- ..... _-......,_...•�.x, ..-�., �,� —.� w ..