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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1892-07-01, Page 2•4 74. .4, DEATH -DEALING WIND. Jitinneaots Visited, by a Oyolono Which Bilis Many People. A SOH00L-HQIIBE,, DP3T$ )101% ® !! special from Manky MUM., hays : Oae tbe;eworet Pastors -_ asters that ever visited thermMinnesota ocon,ired ietweeiiSand II o'clock last evening. • The tenable fnnnele shaped tornado a8>;alnswept_ over .the.. land. and laid waste scores of happy homes and sent fifty or sixty souls into eternity. The aztent of country devastated was greeter than ever before known in the history of the State. Starting near Jeekson fn the Southern Minnesota road, the cyclone moved eastward and pealed four miles south of Minnesota Lake, there took a broad, circle to the south and passed away north of Wells. Considerable rain had fallen during the afternoon and about 5 o'clock the at- mosphere became almost suffocating. FIFTEEN CHILDREN RYI'.r.ER, Curiously shaped clouds appearkd over the southwest dud many people gazed in wonder at the sight. About 5.30 o'clock the wind rose and- the circling black cloud was seen adhancing and tearing asunder everything in its course. It passed two, miles northwest of Shelburne, and it is re- ported that it there struck the district schoolhouse, in which -were the teacher and 18 school childnen. The building was demolished and the teacher and 15 scholars were killed. t At Easton three buildings were destroyed and several persona were injured. Linden was visited and many houses were torn from their foundations. One family of three persons was killed and others were injured. A large group of ' trees was com- pletely, uprooted. The storm passed on eastward, destroying farm houses, barna, and in fact everything m its path. At Wella, sidewalks were torn up, store fronts blown in and other damage was done. Several men were blown down by the force of the wind. FRIGrfXFUL LOSS OF LIFE AT WELDS. Four miles south of Minnesota Lake five farm • houses and the outbuildings were utterly demolished. Four persons were killed and "three injured.. Much damage, was done south of Wells, and it is reported that from 40 to 50 persons were killed south and vyoat of 'that village. Moat of the damage was done W the country, end the full extent of the disaster is not half ]mown. e'er It is impossible at present to 'get a list of tt those killed or injured. Probably not less .titian 100 persons were wounded. .44c7' PITCHF.IV VTO THE GETTER. 141) :; 1 Blow Bev. Mr. Tuck's Antbealoon Campaign Boded. A Newburg, N. Y., despatch says : The Rev. Edward A. Tuck, the pastor of the People's Baptist Church, of . this oity, and an ardent prohibitionist, stopped in front of Daniel Long's saloon in Broadway, near the Armory, to -day, and when thirsty citi- zens were about to enter he used his per- suasive eloquence to deter them. Long sent his bartender out to ask the preaoher to desist, as he was interfering with the busi- ness.Minister Tuck refused to go away. Then Long .went out and ordered the preacher to go. The dominie replied : " I• am on the public highway and will • remain here as long as I choose, and if I can keep fifty men from your saloon I will do so." Long told him if he did not go he would be put away by force. Then she dominie . caught a railing in front of the window and defied Long. Thereupon the saloon -keeper took him by the Dollar and said : " Now, dominie, I don't get in front of your place and try to keep your customers out, and while I carry on my business according to the license I have paid for I will have no interference with my business. I am stronger than you, and if you don't leave I will sling you out in the gutter." Still the Rev. Mr. Tuck refused to move, and a moment later Long threw him out in the street: The affair created considerable excitement and the minister threatens to bring a suit for damages against the saloon- keeper. W. C. T. U. CONVENTION. Same Encouraging Reports Presented by the Ladles. -An Ottawa despatch says : The fifth . annual convention of the`DominionWomen's Christian Temperance Union opened ,this morning in the Congregational Church. Manyddele aces Were present. Miss Tilly, Corresponding Secretary, read the annual secretarial report. It referred as a matter of congratulation to the fact that. Lady Somerset's invitation to attend the world's conference, held in London, Eng,, was ac- cepted by Mrs. 'Lindell," of . Fredericton, and Miss Tilly, of Montreal: The report proceeded to say : The work has progressed steadily and -all the reports of the year are very encouraging. Each department is thoroughly' alive and ready to work for the highest good. Noticeable is the deepening interest in the juvenile and floral mission departments. The money expended on charities was' larger than ever before, being $732, while $151 was expended in literature distributed. In' the Northwest there are three unions, Qu'Appell'e with 9 members, Edmonton 15 members and Regina 28 mem- bers. Summarized, Ontario has 170 unions ,aid 3,207 members ; Quebec, 74 unions, and 1,628 members ; Maritime Provinces, 75 •anions and 1,511 members ; British .Colum- bia, 5 unions and 300 members ; Mani- . tuba, 26 unions and 204 members ; North- west, 3 unions and e2 members. Totalled, these figures make 363 unions and 6,982 members. . • --Mon are very niuohlike dogs ; she more worthless they are, the more they howl when they get hurt. The trial of " Prince" Michael began at Anna Arbor, Mich:, yesterday. A large num- / ber of students attended and created some excitement in court. At the General Sessions in Sarnia.:yester- day Andrew Crawford, first deputy -reeve, wasindicted . by the grand Jury for aggrayated assault on Mina Frances John- ston. At Imperrial, Pa., Mrs. Jules Leroy, wife 4 t of a coal minor, tried to hapten the break- . t fast yesterday by ,pouring kerosene on the s Sre. Mrs. Leroy and her two children were fatallyinjured. TIE ULSTER PLATFORM, The Protestant Protest -Against Homo Rale. FIVE -'PLANKS NAILED'= DOWN. Great "Gathering in Belfast radar - Prayers by the Fria/4e 01 A11 Ire- land and Lessons by the Moderator el the, Geneva Assemli►ly. -Ten 'noun. . sand Delegates irreseslt -- Dsplze of Altercera Chairman. There are thousands of delegates and vial - tors and hardly a bed can be obtained for love or money. The wealthy residents are holding aper house to accommodate visitors. Forty thousand tickets have -been issued for the overflowing meeting in the Botanic Gardens. Fifteen thousand invitations Vere issued for the brilliant reoeption held in the convention hall last night, at whioh the Duke of Abercorn wee present, in ,this city to -day Work was geneQally sus- pended, the shops end houses" bd9tlggg decor- ateli with liege and bunting, and many mottos expreasnve of ,the Ulateribea' deolera- tion for Government rule preference tp an Irish Parliament. Frpm early morning the iltreetewerecrowded'notonly with citisens Of Belfast, but wit thbusan of persons who came in from al yparts of the Province. The convention is held than enormous pavilion, erected for the ppurpose, at the intersectioa of College Park i►venne and Rugby road, and the building was crowded tthits utmost capacity bo -day. About 10,009 delegates wore present. Seveet thousand of these were seated in the area of tie building and 3,000 in the galleries. Two hundred dis- tinguish d strangers had•seate in a separate gallery. About 100 reporters were present. The roceedings were opened with a prayer y His Grace the Primate of All Ireland, after which the 4dth Psalm -"G ,is our refuge and our strength "-was read by Rev. Nathaniel M. Brown, D.. D., ex - Moderator of the ' General Assembly. Robert McGeagh, President ,of the Ulster Liberal Unionists' Assoei{ti n, moved that the chair be taken by His Give 'the Duke of Abercorn. Sir William Millar, M. 1)., of Londonderry, seconded the motion. The motion - was carried, and, the Duke was ,escorted to the chair and addressed the convention. Sir .William Quarters Ewart proposed the foliewittg resolution, which was adopted : 1. That we avow oar fixed resolvb bo retain unchanged our present position as an integral portion ,o! the United Kingdom; and to protest in the most unequivocal nnanner against the passage of any measure that would rob us of our inheritance in the Imperial Parliament, ender the protection of which our capital has been invested and Mir homes and rights safeguarded. 2. That we record our determination to have nothing to do with a Parliament certain to be controlled by men responsible for the crime and outrage of the Land League, the dishonesty of the plan of campaign, and the cruelties of boycotting, many of whom have shown themselves the ready instruments of clerical `domination.. 3. That we declare to the people of Great Britain our conViotion, that the attempt to set up such a Parliament in Ireland will in- evitably result in diawder, violence and bloodshed such as have not been experi- enced in thin century, and annotxnee our re- solve to take no part in the erection or the proceedings of such a Parliament, the authority of which, should it ever become constituted, we shall be forced to repudiate. 4. That we protest against this great question which involves our lives, property. and 'civil rights, being treated as a mere side issue in the impending electoral struggle. 5. That we appeal to those of our fellow - country men who have hitherto been in favor of a separate Parliament to abandon a demand, which hopelessly divides Irish- men and termite with us under the. Imper- ial Legislature in. developing the resources and furthering the best- interests of oar common country. A London cable gives the following addi- tional particulars of the great anti -Home Rule meeting in' Belfast : Sir William Ewart, in moving the adoption of the first -resolution, said that love of civil and religi- ous freedom was the cause of the meeting. All the loyalists of Ulster were welded' to- gether by a common danger which caused all differeneea of creed and party to be for. gotten. The resolution was seconded -by Thomas Sinclair, who declared that the` Ulstermen were determined never to°submit to the hateful ascendancy of children of the revolution and would- ignore the existence of Acts passed by the Dublin Parliament. Mr. Andrews, President of the Ulster Reform 'Club, declared on behalf of the Liberal Unionists that they would" never electte members to a Dublin Parliament, and would never give their allegiance to such a body. Mr. Andrews concluded hie speech amidst the"greatest enthusiasm, the whole convention rising and wildly waving hats and handkerchiefs. He declared that, "As a last resource we are prepared to defend ourselves, and we will do so." The resolutionwas carried unanimously. Rev. Dr. slynd, a Presbyterian clergy- man, move the adoption of the second resolution. He denied that Ulstermen were animated by bigotry. They were ani- mated by a dread of bigotry, for a Dublin Parliament, when not dominated by a reck- less it of lawlessness,. would be domi- nated by a most intolerant and arbitrary priesthood. .Rev. Dr. Kano,- a clergyman of the Church of Ireland, seconded the motion, which was also suppot�ted by Mr. J. D. DunnvilleMr. W. J. Dbulaghan, a tenant fanner, Mr. Robert Greerand othere. This resolution was also unanimously adopted. The third, fourth and fifth resolutions were then taken up in tarn, and after a t number of speeches were made, in which the speakers reiterated the idea of retlist-i muco, as voited by previous speakers, all . were adopted by a unanimous vote. Captain Sharman -Crawford then pro -'I posed a vote of thanks to the Duke of , Abercornfor presiding. Mr. J. J. Whyte, D. L. (Loughbrickland), seconded the me - ion. The vote of t]egnks was passed, and he immense crowd Vose and joined in in ng " God Save the Queen." The, volume of sound was tremendous. Rev. Dr. McC'ntcheon, President of the Meth- odist College at Belfast, then pronounced the• benediction and the convention ended. The Proceedings occupied e little over two Ileum C1V11L LmmE. IN BE /41/1. 11 Is Malde Very Uaplleasene >tY Nees Um • elvll Military '>Q9> ny Berlin gable says : The people are gen- erally exoited by, another murderous deed on th,e_part stfthe K.s1aer'asoldier1, show - sag that the remanding and promotion of Lueck, the sentinel, who almost , without ex- cuse shot two citizens, is having ita•effect in inciting to other deeds of eiolence. • The Imperial Guards wore returning to -day from a review... They were marching through Be4lealtrano square, when some workmen attempted tocross between the detachments. Thin was in violationof military rules, but under ordinary circ nnatanoes would have passed without notice. Sergeant Brevimann, however, leaped from the ranks and clubbed the workingmen with his rifle in th"ee'moat brutal manner Blood gushed from the heads of the victims as they fell prostrate on the pavement, and, notwith- •standing the formidable aspect of the Guards, the people who saw the cruel spectacle could hardly be restrained from attacking the sergeant. Theworkursn stag- gered to their feet and tried to make their way to the sidewalk, but the aergeant ,vas ready again with his rifle, and brought the batt -end down with terrific effect on their heads, his superiors looking on, some with indifference and others with a smile. The workingmen fell prostrate this time uncon- scious. The guard coolly marched over the prostrate bodies, and after they had passed_ the victims were carried to a hospital. Their condition is critical. WHOLESALE . E.hCOU1UN1CA.TION. A Bishop Denies the Rites of the Church to Nearly 840. A Cleveland despatch says : There was a' highly dramatic scene at St. "Stanislaw? Church last right when Bishop Hortsman denied the rites of the sacrament to nearly the entire congregation. There has been serious trouble in the church for two weeks, culminating with a riot Saturday and numerous fights Sunday and Monday. The bishop has been dut of the city. Whenhe returned he at onee sent the congregation' weed that he would address gem that night. The.church was jammed with peo- ple. . After stating to the -members that no power on earth could remove Fr. Rozinski, the pastor, who is objectionable to a faction, the bishop extended hie hands over the heads of the congregdtion, and in a deeply ;tragic voice ordered the congregation to its knees. Then in a solemn voice he said " I hereby deny the right of sacrament to all members of this congregation who have participated in these ungodly actions until they shall make public confession of their repentance ab regular services before this congregation." This temporarily excom- rgunicates at least 800 members. - A TOSSBHIBt. .HOIt1QOl1. A Weaver. Batters His Wife's Mean Into a Shapeless Maass. A ds cable says : A horrible marder wa pe trated On Saturday evoningenear they e village of Earby, Skipton, York- shire. It appears that Moses Cudworth and his wife Eliza, both weavers, set out on Saturday afternoon for a neighboring village to -make some purehasee, and the former subsequently returned home, and stated' that he had murdered his wife, at a spot on a lonely road, about a quarter of a mile away. He was arrested and charged with the crime. It is asserted that the pair lived unhappily together. Both had been drinking on Saturday, but were not intox- icated. The woman's body was discovered with her. head battered into a shapeless mass, apgahtly with a heavy stone, which Was found near the scene of the tragedy. SHOT TWO WOMEN. A Murderous Scene in a Car Followed by a Tragic Suicide. A San Francisco despatch says : Enoch Morrison,. a negro, fired four shots from .a revolver at a colored woman in a car on the open local train on Friday night. ; The wopan and a female companion who was occupying the seat with 'her were , severely wounded, and great . excitement prevailed among the passengers. A moment after the shooting the train stopped and Morrison jumped from the car and ran up the street.. He was pursued by a crowd, and just as he was about to be captured he shot himself in the breast, dying ,almost intently. Jealousy was the cause.. Never. Never be afraid to talk to strangers on the subject of religion. Never step over one duty to perform an- other.. Never be impatient with the children. Never forget that God sees you. Never say anything about others that you would not like to have said about you. Never grow weary in web doing. Never oonclude that a man has no good in him, because he does not think just as you do. Never worry about troubles that have not yet come in sight.- 8 Never do anything for mere effect. Never he discouraged about anything as long as you believe that God lives. -Sam's • A TITLED rooster, who calls himself the Marquis of Ruvigny, is in New York, work- ing up a scheme to have the Duchess Mary of Medena,'wife of Prince Louis of Bavaria, succeed Queen Victoria on the British Throne. His idea is that the descendants of the Electress Sophia have only a Parlia- mentary title to their place, and what Par- litament has done Parliament can undo., Queen Victoria is descended from James I., but Mary of Modena is a direct descendant of Charles I. 'Phare are 52 persons, accord- ing to Ruvigny, who have a better right to the throne than Queen Victoria. We do not suppose tho Prince of Wales will allow hirhself to fret over this revival of Jecobin- ism: If Ruvigny would go in for dispensing ess altogether But who of Codlin and .with the king and quee he might attract, a cares for the . rival Short? Telegraph Inspector Marx, of Berlin, has committed suicide in a .horrible manner, by ripping open his abdomen. He was desper- ate because a lady to wham he was payInt. his Iiddreests rejected his offer of marmite. MICHAEL GETS FIVE YEARS. He Goes to State Prison for the Longest Term the Law Allows, THE GIEL'8 FATHER E80APE8 LYIVOHIIW. The biggest sensation ever known -in Ann Arbor occurred after the verdict was ':rendered -at 8- e'clooh--to-night....--Such-wee. :the feeling that had the '' Prince " been acquitted he would have been lynched. An enormous crowd assembled at the court house. The " Prince'.' was sneaked out through the back and some suggested that they get Bechel, the unnatural father of the girt. A search was -made and it waslearned that Beohel and Lucifer Durand were hiding in the sheriff s offiab. The crowd had in* creased to 3,000, and soon the office was in a state of siege. The door was locked, but in an instant the glass was broken out, and the mob gazed upon two cowering forms. The Flying Roll disciples begged for mercy, but were answered by a fusilade of books and ink bottles. Lucifer was mistaken for Bechel, and was roughly handled before the mistake was discovered.` Then Bechel was seized and cried, " anything; cut my hair off but do not kill me." Some of the crowd shouted to lynch him, and othera to apply tar and feathers. " Cut his hair," yelled one,' and this sounded the key note. Beohel was taken to a barber shop, where the proprietor asked Win if he desired his hair cut. He said he did, and the flowing locks and whiskers were soon on the floor. Beohel was then escorted to the depot and told to keep out of Ann Arbor. Durand was also sent out of town. Thepolice made. no attempt to stop the mob, which numbered 3,000, but prose- cutions are said to be likely to follow. The only wonder is that the Israelitea were not lynched. Prince Michael will begin serving hie term Saturday, and to -night Bechel'e curls are seVing at 50 cents a lock on the streets of Ann Arbor. AUTUMN CIRCUIT, 1895. Assizes. HOME CIRCUIT. MacMabon J.—Milton, Wednesday, 7th September ; Brampton, Monday, 12th Septem- ber ; Orangeville, Monday. lath September; St. Catharines, Monday, 26th September; Toronto (CCriminal), 'Tuesday, 4th October ; Toronto ivil), Tuesday, 18th October. EASTERN CIRCUIT. Armour C. J.—L'Orignal, Monday, 12th Sep- tember • Ottawa, Thursday, 15th September ; Pembroke Tuesday, 27th September - Perth, Tuesday, 4th October : Cornwall, Tuesday, llth October ; Brockville, Tuesday, 18th October ; Kingston, Monday, 24th October ; Napanee. Monday, 31st October, SOUTHWESTERN .CIRCUIT. Rose, J.—St. Thomas, Monday, 12th Septem- ber - Sandwich, lVionday, 19th September ; Sar- nia, `Monday, 26th September • London, Monday, 3'd October ; Chatham, Monday, 17th October; Sime�@@e, Monday, 2lth October ; Cayuga Mon- ddayy,�lstOctober; eimcoe, Monday, 7th I`{evemben - MIDLAND CIRCUIT. Falconbridge, J.—Hamilton, Monday, 5th September ; Barrie, Monday, 19th September ; Pieton, Monday,3rd October ; Whitby, Mon- day, 10th Octobr ; Belleville, Monday, 17th October : ' Cobonrg, Monday, 21th October ; Peterborough, Monday, Sist October ; Lindsay, Maanday,'7th November. NORTHWESTERN CIRCUIT. Street, J. -Owen Sound, Tuesday, 13th Sep- tember ; Goderich. Monday, 19th -September ; Woodstock, Monday, 26th September ; Strat- ford, Monday, 3rd, October : Walkerton Mori - day, 10th October; Guelph, Monday, 17th Octo- ber ; Berlin, Monday, 24th October; Brantford, Monday, 31st October. CHANCERY SITTINGS. Boyd, C.—Walkerton, Monday, 12th Sep- tember; Chatham, Monday, 19th September; St. Thomas, Monday. 17th October,; Sarnia, Friday,'2ist October ; Sandwich, Tuesday, 25th October; Goderich, Monday, 31st October; London, Thursday, 3rd November. Ferguson, J.—Cobourg, Monday. -19th Sep- tember ; Belleville, Wednesday, 2Ist Septem- ber; Kingston Wednesday, 28th September; Ottawa, Monday, 24th Octobe-r : Coqrnwall, Monday, 7th November ; Brockville, Thursday, 10th November. Robertson( J.—Guelph Thursday, 15th Sep - Amber ; Simcoe Thursday, 22nd, September ; Brantford, Monday, 26th September ; Hamilton, Monday, 17th October ; Owen Sound, Monday,. 14th Noverdber ; St. Catharines, Monday, 21st November." Meredith, J.—Peterborough, Monday 2th September ; Lindsay, Thursday, 15th Seem- ber -Toronto, Monday 26th September ; ood- stoc'k, Tuesday, 25th October Stratford, Tues- day, 1st November Barrie, Tuesday, 8th November ; Whitby. Tuesday,,l5th September. Scott's Youthful Heroines. - Out, of thirty of Sir Walter Scott's heroines, sixteen are described as under 20. Of the other fourteen, six are undated. This leaves. us eight, three of whom are set down as over 20; two start at one side of the line and are carried over to the other ; two are by implication rather than by the intention of the author taken out of their " teens," and one, Amy Robsart, is a heroine " of an uncertain age," since she is historically a middle-aged matron and fictitiously a youthful bride. Of the sixundated, the presumption is altogether in favor of the earlier age. A member once entertained' the club with the state- ment that nearly all Scott's heroines are motherless. . They are girls who have grown up in the companionship of uncles or fathers, older men, and with an early responsibility of thought and action. They have had to plan their. ,own wardrobes and decide their own conduct toward their loyera. Some of them have been behind the scenes of stirring political events. Nearly all have been thrown into situations. where they had to think for themselves, to act with decision, and in general to fulfill the whole duties of heroines. ' The heroines of Scott are, some of thein, only lay figures, but, at least so far as they have character, they are women, and they justify the deeds which are done to win them. -Mrs. Suburb (joyously) -My, dear, I've succeeded in getting a servant giri at last. Go to the kitchen and kiss her. Mr- Suburb -Kiss her ? Mrs. Suburb -Certainly: I had to promise that she should be treated as ne of the family, TME WRONG CALL. Lagt Sunday morning Deacon Smith, Tn service slept awhile, And Deacon ,tones sat watching him With grim malicious smile, Which broadened when the preacher cried, My friends, the Lord doth call l" And Deacon Smith, but half awake, Said, " Ono small pair, that's all." -Experts laugh to scorn the new theory. that electrostenolysis can bo overcome by the mere juxtaposition of 'dilectric power and the mbItiphaee stratified conduotivity, • -The ladies are all enthusiastic over that nect?`Tamilkando tea, 1t is gait() the latest craze tri teas. ti DR. PARKHURST'S CRUSADE. A Priest Who Sees in It an Adver- tiseni nt for Vibe. WHAT THE 00NFESBIOII AI, REVEALS At St. Francis Xavier's Church, in Wed. Sixteontlir.atreet,.yeatarday',morning, says the New York Herald, the Iiaev. William O'Brien Pardew, S. J., ,the rector of the church, preached at the high mass a strong sermon against Dr. Parkhurst's reform methods. In the course of it he made the following references to the crusading social reformer : " There are some so-oallecl reformers," said Fabhoo Pardow, " who seem to be animated with a desire of correcting vice, but they do net go about it in the Christian way. " It is hopeless to think of co r 'eating vice as long as we persist in loo vice merely in its human spin 'g upon —as an offence against society, a misdemeanor. " Vices, especially certain classes of ' vices, are sine. Sin is an offence against God. A misdemeanor is an offence against man -against society. As long as we en- deavor to overcorpe vice by police regula- tions and detective agencies we will fail Police regulations will never make men or . women pure. " St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Ephe• - aians, referred to certain crimes that • should not even be mentioned among Chria- tians. ' It is a mistake -worse, it is A crimp -to drag those hideous vices into the scorching light of day, to the great scandal and ruin of many.. " The pulpit should not be use a a de- tective agency, or as a meant giving,. prominence to vices, eapeoially „certain~* vices, which should be studious y kept .Brom the knowledge of innocent youth. ADVERTISING VICE. "The system that has been recently adopted by some would-be champions of virtue seems to be merely a gratuitous ad- vertisement of vice and its resorts. " The Catholio priest of New York, whose holy office makes him acquainted with the inmost secrets of the human heart, can testify -to the injury that has been wrought by the public attention that has recently been directed to the viae -ridden hanntsr of this great city. A morbid curiosity has been aroused, and many heretofore pure young hearts have bben familiarized with things that they would never .otherwise have heard of. " To cgre vice we want to enforce the 'sense of the injury which sin does to an in- finitely good and merciful God: " There are airy( of high fife as there are - sins of low life, with this difference -that for the former iron gates bar the way to discovery. Only the eye of One .can gene- • trate ; but for the latter money opens the door, to any cower. Why should the search light be turned only on one ? Christ never held up the -sinner, however, lowly fallen,. to.the raillery of the world, but He said, ' Come bo me,' and then ' Go and sin no more.' " The world's idea of jnstice is. the justice that. appears to men. You must, to be: !8 truly Christian, begin from within." HEAT TFia CONFEssioNAL REVEALS.. Father Pardow,,when Icalled on.him last night, had no hesitation in discussing Dr. Parkhurat's method of correcting vice. " We became aware from • the con- fessional," said the father, " that Dr. Park- huret, by calling public attention to those vices that were- better not mentioned -that St. Paul • himself says should not be mentioned -that many heretofore pure have been led into temptation, if not worse. "Tho matter of correcting thesevices has been the thought of the Roman Catholic priesthood long before Dr. Parkhurst began' his method of attempted correction. We - recognized the harm that would result from •calling publics attention to such things, T" venture to say, however, that we, In our quiet way, have done more good than has Dr. Parkhurst from she housetops and in: - the police courts. " No l _the priests of New York hive llad no formal conference over this subjecb.;'; We would not again direct public attention to the matter in that way. Wo think harm. enough has already beetle done in this direo- •tion: " Informally we have discussed the mat- ter much. Our office is such as to enable us to say certainly what has been the result •as far as.many young people are concerned, of Dr. Parkhurst'$ efforts. A we have all agreed, that much harm L unques- tionable resulted therefrom." If you are trjiubled . With hawkine and spitting, dull headaches, losing, sense of taste or smell, you are afflicted with catarrh, and to prevent it developing into consumption, Nal -Balm should be used promptly. There is no case of catarrh which it will not cure, and for cold in the head it gives immediate relief. Try it. All dealers. „ -Messrs. Crossley and Hunter, the evan- gelists, sailed for Europe frons New York yesterday and -return about the first of �'- August. They will be accompanied by Rev. '� D. O. Crossley,- J. W. Crossley ana E. J. Davis, M. P. P. w . *,• %•• 'TAC `'d! • t i:14#1170:111:t;L`•' SQOTHINQ, CLEANSING, HEALING. • Infant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure Impossible. Many so-called di,olsc•, aro simply symptoms of C s tarrn, aUCh as'heacdache, lo::Juu nrn;e of smell, foul brfiath, ha t •::g and spitting, general fv,ThIg of debility: ctc- If y ri troubled with any of :rindred symptoms, vein :,a�• ; Catarrh, and- sbould l Lo timo procuring a bot:,lo o� •NASAL BAWL Be Tra.r: c,O in ( time, neglected cold iu had results in Catarrh, followed " by consumption and death. Sold by.ail druggists, or sunt, post paid, on receipt of price (50 Cents and:?1) by addressing F.ULP011) : CO. 8rockellie,Ont.