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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1893-06-23, Page 21 t, t T ^ v , ADRIFT.. DORY. FRANK S Teriible gafferints ,�f Banks 'Fishermen _ Blown Out to Beat - : GATAWED LEATHER on TIE* OAR- B. A New York .despatch eye: _Vetted about on the ocean in an open boat for three days and forced by the pangs Of hungerto. eat Wood anclkieather was the story -told by two fishermen, ,whoi: arrived here - on the steamship Wells - City, of the Bristol line, yesterday.• . • - - "- Lenoir end:Bement set out in a- dory from ,• their'ship about 5 h'elook on the.moining- of • May 30th to -get; the fish on a long line which • :was anchored soine:-dietance from the ship.- The weather . wee -•feggy and quite alireeze was blowirigh . -• • • They- had just got the line actoeithe dory • when a Squall came up.. They clung to the. line but the wind lelew with great. violence • andtheet-soon had tip let go of It and keep -their boat's head to the - Bee to prevent being . capsized. - . The wind _epeitinned to blow for heats with great fury, and cerried them with it away from their ship. When night came they were*drenehed. to the skin and mir-ab - with /Cold. They still continued to use their oars to keep the boat's head to the •_Sea. Neither of them slept at all that night, and morning found.. them -much exhausted. - They .continued to row at intervals all that day, but they did net eight a. -Vessel or- •catcht . a: glimpse- hf -anything :that looked like lend. Their boat shipped considerible • water .and they- had to nee- their .scoops bailing it out. • Both inenbecame very thirsty-andiungry clueing their second night on the.water, but thethed nothing to.. eet or drink. They had . not even :a line to catch • fish with. Lenoir and Bement took turns at sleeping during their nightie voyage. : They only took short nape of in hoer, though, as they • were afraid they inightboth.falt asleep and their boat•be lost. - • • . . . r They became so hungry during their third •• 1.14'11 voyageetleat they made a brealifest on some leather that was bound about the item- - where they enter the oarlocks.- ,The 'either did not take the edge off their appetite, and .toward evening .each :selected a seat ,and -chewed. big pieces of the wood... Each eteawed a piece -out Of a seat ix inches•loeg- sad about half an inch deep, Weakeqd -Irani -hunger eta.. thirst and worn Mitt -with their exertions at -the oars, both men sat down in the bottom Of - their boat andilet her. drift *hither:eh.° pleased. - Their tlatoeitsvvete parched- with thihrit, and *their eyes were sate from: the stilt water eed. - rain: that had been blowninto them. - .• The Wells City -hove -in eight just: as the • dusk of niglit was flling- on - June. 1st-. Lenoir tied_a COO on an oar, and they both • -held it aloft as a signal of distress.; , Captain Savage bore down . on them and threw them a hue. They Were se • -Weak they could hardly hold on to it so: as to get • _their boat alougside... Second Officer Wm. •N. Hunter went down e 'adder that was tlitown over the ship's side festened.a rope, , about the men's Waists andthey were drawn • aboard. Youeg.Breeaut had on only a suit -. of Oilcloth: Both _Men were: given dry clothes encl food. They will be turned over. to the French Consul. • .MARRIED THE MAHARAJAH. Her Willie Developed a High Living. DIVORCE r t SHE TRIED TO LO$E Tule for -A 'New York despatch says; Mrs. Frank • Leslie,. *hose -Varied matrimonial expert- enceir have recentlycansed niuohj gossip, is again in the Divorce °mitt -waking a- separa- tion from her husband, William O. Kings- bury Wilde: Mese Leslie met and fell in love . with "Willie" Wil de; brother of Wear Wilde, two eyears age: was a newspaper man. There. was aigniet wedding and,a Wei tioneynioare - 66 Willie " exhibited from the ;Oat's. fond nese for liquor, his wif e Earl,: and on his •wedding night became and con- tinued - •the- spree,- Mai. Leslie Says, for .a week. Penniless Meese% •," *tills " -fouled fault With life in the -Gerlach -apartment. house and . wanteda mansion iin Fifth avenue. 'Next the victoria was not stylieli enough for him-, andihe intuit have en Eng- lish stanhope viitte fast hOTS1313-htd geed hanclnesse These heparchased. and his -wife 'paid the bill; •: Mese Leslie; in her - action for. divorcee after eeeiting_ these -alleged facts, says Wni" would get . up until: dinner time; although she was One on business at an early hour. •-• she &eye • that when he left his teeth on the bureau; forgetting to pat thein. in his mouth, it gave -him an aged and repulsive took whicleveas- not at all agree- able to her.: Neither was it agreeable to foot -his bills. for $5O to $70.a week- at the Lotos ClubforliqUoieh elti• re. Leslie says she paid his restaurant bills and his membership dues in the Remo-. •club. She also says ho *maid steed up. and mock her when givieg. reditatiovs tie public, . Then tame -bale- :from Europe amounting to 20•;000, which she wasasked to pay,but wouldn't. - • - • - . At the.Lyceum Theatre in New York on FEEDING CONIMPT .s . • - should remain on their chaise lounge the ent-ire day.. Vit—; IiWS BATHf3 AN]) BREATHING. iet and Regimen of More 1nportance • • • EARLy-CASES NOT - • Au Irish Girl 'Wedded to a Distinguished - Indianshotentatei - - A -London cable says: Indian society is greatlyeexercised over the marriage . of His Highness the -Maharajah of Patiala with Florrie Bryan, the. sister of his chief trainer. - The -story, at told. by the .I.Aou- • don Graviricris somewhat romantic. The %Maharajah Is ruler of one ef thelprincipal Sikh. States, and is one of the most -re- • nowned sportsmen Inlia. He has cer- tainly . the :best• stable in India, Ethel has - spent large 'sums in promoting horse racing, . his colors being generally to the fore in "every leading event. _ He is the _best polo • player in the country; and it was but. the other day that his team defeated the crack teems- of. Calcutta, while he is enthusiastic in all matters -of sport. . • . Speaking English ,pirfectly, .the Mahara: Yell was quite * favorite • in Anglo-Indian society ; but the Indian-- Foreign Office • would never consent to his visiting Eng- land. . Miss Florrie -Bryan is the sister of Mr. J. Bryan, whom the Maharajah en- . gaged ,som° years .40 to look -after -his stables. e She is. of Irish extraction, and, If not bOtrrin-India, has passed most of her ene occasion, after repeated visits to " see 110i7LESS,. Superalimentation, •FreSh Airj *Rest and • •- e•man ' �uring.and between the • act s, Wild.e. arose in the-box•occueried by his wife and e party of friends, it is said, end insisted On talhing. to and ordering sibient the actors on the stage. Lhs enraged -• the aedience,and it . was proposed .to -put'. him-. out .of .the the atte, but he Raved themthe tieubleehy going eat unassisted.• - Mrs.. Le elie:becainei.ip,diegueted With..her• huileand. that she went . to Europe in - May, 1892; for the avowed purpose, _ as she .told friends, of losing hien in the vicinity of his mother's door, but" was enjoying tee much the luxuries of thitaworld as pro- vided by is Wife to ,peiniit.lhiniselt to he lost, and he .foliewed close after his poem.. Mrs: Leine . had e conference with her mother-in;laWancl- the latter's. on. Mrs. • Leslie announced finally That the Weald* not. support "Willie" in idleness any longer, and leftetellittg hina thetwhen. he had made up. his mind to become an in- dustrious Maxi he could talk to her of recoil.; ciliatiein net before. :She -returned' to this. country and last fall -began the aition now before the !courts. -. • - ,Sincethe snit Was begun Mrs; Leslie de- clarea•she has been in receipt of from three to aix lettera weekly froxn ," whieli :lie -114 beggell aztd: coaxed' to be Bathing—GratedriMeaz Diet Stuffing:by 4 Tube.: -Value of Fats-.Hespiratory G3714. /ttito.. 11111 1 1 _eYouTHe PARItti18.8 811A.KE . nee. e see- ' • q doubt -iiow eiiitts •eniPng Oetbest in- formed physicians as to .-the icurability of can- stription en its early stages:- S#, long as a eoneumptine -patient's appetite :reaming 'Retie- - , El' '- ' foctpry 'there iriechanee . for recovery,.but kid, ,. as *ion as isuch a per- - spiel appetite fails the 7 geneialeco. dition loses ground, and if the sit, 3 4 i .. eatiop dos. not emi • nitrite . the , fend is oat far off. . But it is not enough etit the appe- tite, -to- he good.; the patient must eat a great deal. : In Other_vtoidaihei tenet lob only eat, I:if •but gorge himself. • :- l• *• 1 -• • When a coneureptive perscia eels -a dis- taste ifor food it is more tliffient and taloa more time to succeed. -EVety.elifort: should be nuide to find One Or. ttvo'fiiens of feed thatwillbe accepted -with pleasure . at bhe. outset. • If this is itepoeisibleethe only -t4lig . left is :to have recourse to _ . 'I i t ARTIFICIAL Ohmic i .. , i. , which conaists in _passing Gude'i or twice a , Since a healthy condition of the functions of the skin has a clear bearing on the gen- eral nutrition, these patients should siee theft they are kept in good -order. For this purpose it is well to recommend that the entire surface of the body be rubbed at bedtime with. Cologne water or essence of [turpentine. This should be done as quickly as possible, and net last over a few minutes. Patients with a slightrise of tem- perature in the evening Bh-ould take a cold sp nge_off with salt water or vinegar and water, after which they should be rubbed vigorously, and then wrapped .n a blanieet for fifteen minutes. - r - • Respiratory gymnastics give 'good 'results In patients On the way to recovery, or when the lesions are completely healed ; this is particularly benefioial -when the chest is miaow and prominent. The. process con- sists in taking deep- breaths through the wise slowly three or four times an hour, which can be accompanied by movements of the arms, raising them above the head- and then letting them down again. -taken heck. Iiedy. Wilde:. has added her preyer to those of her son and lhas told.- how • -life in that county. - • The Maharajah -to-et her it a ben. some twelve months ago and..: became enanitored -tif her, but littleewas thought Of the attach- ment owing to the disparity their iseciel and racial pesitions; : Three. Months ago -Ilia Highness gave a sea picnic :in the Bay of Bengal, .to which, Miss flOrrip. BrYartc *as invited, atd.then proposed in set- feein; -photestirig that he would sooner "- lose his thea her_ The. reiult Was . that .the. lady CenSented tp merry him,. changed her- • relied -en for theinutpesrh beeoroing: a Sikh, acd elrly Month.the nuptial • cereutolayi took,plaee, aee,orciiitg to the Sikh rite.- The: . teleharejahiwas already married: to.. a Sikh - ledy, Who is. Styled the Renee:. blit, the European. additien •to .theiehousehold is to be his -coneertt4e. proceeding which hes • . given much offiince t,o. the Patio:his familyh -- and set on -foot a - number cf. dengerous. -intrigues. : - • .Tife Viceroy -ha* expressed.. his. disepe • provat of the marriegeoindele is field= that the G.overnment of India is taking : steps • to have the .1dahatrjell removed. sfrcini power _and placing on the guildhe. asather. delete . family.. Meanichile His Highness is Utley- - ing..himseli Witb:ioine usefuk reforms, and- :* European with iihasstiting him haploid -big •. hie firdurces *Itch are seid beisOmewhit complicated', _on a proper footing, Willie" miesed his carriagee and the genial society of his Wife. • EMS. HARGARE* L. SHEPHERD Abandons' Her •Libel -Snit - Against _the. _ . • Brockville "Hecorder." - -Mrs. -Margaret L. Shepherd; who recently appeared in this city in an antieRomith otutade, has abandoned. her libel suit, against the BrockvilieeRedordeit The • case was to have been tried at the tipringAesiises,. she having obtained- .en interim . injunction to Prevent the paper publishing matter -bearing on her life, •and character. The /teciircietz says: _ • • • • " "Siiice then theesatee-polley of delay. has been pursued by the plaintiff, and alt. at- tempts to have her exemined 'under. oath have. so ...far _ _After: considerable delay- an -.aide* was -.obtained' 'requiring the plaintiff to furnish secutity - for - coats, -giving her peer Weeks which to .do -so.- Slie_appealed against this, asking for SiX week*. The appeal . was dismissed and Juni 4th was the day fixed by the court for furnishing 'the seeerity,_ This date fell on Sunday, thin) making. Monday, Sti,. the lest day." ••- After references to the woman, and how she Was taken up and beic•med by some -citizens, the Recorder says: . "We propose at an early date to publish a .short. history of Margaret,Shepherd, as she is now called iron material: now in Our possession, ob.. tained in England, the United States and Canada; from court records and other docti- -milts, including seine- written by the fait hetoitie of the etoryheyselft". day an india rxibber lb° through the mouth VESSELS BLOWN, A .-Feivi thD Disagtos in the British NO: DEATH AFTER THE BANQUEL,, into the patient's stomeoh. lik funnel Is then adapted to the end of the tube .and into it are Peered the -differexit substances to be given to the patient as foOd. This is an excellent_lway, not. only . of stuffing the patient, hilt of 1 stimulating appetite. No for need be had, of i the 1 t• 1 _digestive tube revoltirg ageinst, this- ferci- hie introduction of food, asc-1 there is no relation whatever between the), appetite:and the digestive power of. consumptive per- sons • whether they eat -of theit own accord , , , or beteuie they are forced to, . they digest perfectly Well everything they take. t THE BEST npops.i - • -ItTiteegenous- substanceih -naturally held. the leeding.place in euch-e diet, and ei4ong thera_preference. should' be given to meat and eggs - which containthe most nitrOgen . . , . i . , per ..equal vet -Moneta :Beef, ilia], mutton, J3 fresh pork, poultry and fish ,i etee • equally geed, and the way.in..Nolteh-thy are Coeked is uhintpertant '; it is a Mistake - to adhere to one rule of Cooking, roasting --or broiling, as is. dote in certain &Milted, ' When the patient in sebjecte.cl'foe monthtote the Rams form of cuisine. - • ' - • II- i. • . eGrated meat is obtainedbY•Sarapiiig 4. out of beef With -the blade' of * knife and should • r be taken in very small dozes at :.first, from forty to sixty gramme.s, midi'? into luinps -and powdered with sugar.' ' The dote should be increased -gradually nntili the • patient j takee from one hundred and fifty to three. .hundred.grainenes ei day: -.P Wdered.- Meat shoUld be.:; recommended to f:consiun tives- whe have an inserniouhtable iiiitslike pit- raw. Meat, and since_ it has. always e disagreeable odor, whatever - dare. may have been - hken •tniter'preparatien, it is t well not. to 1 it the yie.tientehendle or examine in • WEAR LOOSE CLOTIIES. The clothes should be worn loose so as not to impede the .movemehts of the chest, sufficiently thick in winter to be warm UR readers will he In- terested in this narra- tive of disasters to the finest fleet on the water, • as given in All die Year • Round : • The Eiger, a: fine • iehtsiiriere- seventy-lour-gun ehip _ j st •returned from American watete, in 1111, blew up in Portsmouth herbor, with great Ices of life, few escaping Out of a crew of 800 men. Cruising eft tiorsica in 1794, the Ardent, sixty-four guns, took fire and blew up, with the loss of all her crew of 500 men. In the same year the Impetueuse, li$e-of-hattle ship, wes burnt and blown pp inTortsmouth harbor, but most of her crew eshed. In the .fotlowieg eea r the kitene, of ninety-eight guns, euddenly took fire at Spithead, while moored in the midet of the eiqthent being the.thin. ;The use offlaimell Chan 1 and were 'Mostly saved' by heats from abet Tel Fleet. The ere* peeped overboard .. withoutbeingheaey, and light in summer . underclothing, should be- recommended to i patients who , verepire freely, i became .thel`thips a• nd the spore. The thin'e .gline were eriporation of :the -perspiration. takes place . , ALL. LOADED A.I.,a,? sHOTTD, • very much. more -slowly with woollen .han land, as the fire gained ii hiastery, they went tit other kinds of . underwear. The head off one .after the other, vie a as the berning ould be covered, -wolollen .soCks evoiti, as !, ship drifted - from her moorings, and with. well as ..a silk *rip . around the neck; i the flood -tide made for the harboreanietin '•neuffiera, however, thoidd ,be forbidden, ars 1 she -caryied before her consternation and - they impede the passage of the air both by i dismay. Fortunately the great ship: -e mouth and nose. .. . - 1 grounded • on the sands et Soutlisea, and I The temperature of. a nonsemptike's room soon blew up with e report that ehook all &Ad. not exteed•fifteeiii t� sixteen degrees. Portsmouth to its foundations. The death- - 6ntigra,de in wintet.. It eau even fall aslroll .of twen.ty souls. included two seamen of y - - titeraii.. YabeleY—What isilaab*medicine youare- - • • - f . . _taking, Mudge' , .. •.‘ 'Mudge—Iron. Ya.baley—I thought you _ had quit- all . kinds of hard "drink. '. - • law. low. as eight degrees without risk, and by the 'Queen Charlotte, killed • by a cannon - this means all - - t shot from the burning vessel. • DANGER OF CATCHING COLD 1, I In theiolloWing elear,'179602the Amphion Swoaulintilil,akliabregliedg°t°odi'l hd:cittealokingsPidlYe: �n going out is avoideele An opal fire i fri6guatthe reierable,.as ensures ee conra stant renewal. �f the air in the room. Stoves, heaters or All Was festivity on boatd--the captain was - • he air in the room, and this is meet iinde- ea stoves have the dravibaeleti, drting wbrapridhreoronolopetmaiciresrs fraoismo hoatdhe.r. eitable foitdoniumptites,•as ben:lakes their dinner going on, and it is thought th_at there . lereathing • difficult, stops* the 'sputa' and were mracurket3.t4inanhfachunAd.nzedobgsteleravtecronboard; lves them fever. This Opprettien only4 describe eases when moisture is given Out again irk how the Aniphion of • a eedden appeared to he room by °venerating hot water'. . I rise in the air till her keel dame into view, edicais, but I think that th.ey arewarrantedi; into the air with -a debris f b iron ]e .1M eT 'MARY TOR DERBY,: Earl of :His Sons Daiighters Were Leit $Lot,000. AiLondon cabl.e £39ayk : ' The Will ..of the . " • I.4- Ear), of I)erby has he:ax proved and the personereetate sworn. at £1869,611, groin value. Lord Darby, among other bequests, left £20,000 in treat to each ofithe younger sons and: daughters of his brother, Lord Stanley, _a Preston, . Governor-General - of Canada.. - His five 'step:children all received similar legacies, and the three sons of one of them, Lord Arthur Cecil, £5,000 each. Sir. Thomas Sanderson,. one of the -executors, receives £10,000. The will paid probate duty of £54,063 and estate duty of £18,021. r TO TEMPT -THE APPETNE. tO MiX 4 with a think Paste, dered linger, or two noon- fels of tom peach, . Mix the lot together and dilute it With siifficient $coilk or water to enable the person to Seva0ote it readily, In this: way -: a consumptive 'iatient can be •Medes to take fronal-ohe . hendred. to two .hundred. grammes 01powdered-..meat ini twenty-four hoUrs,. and insOad of deadene, 53g the !appetite,. aalmight- be feared witn, such a nourishing miitureq;the..desile fOir, feed. increases. BO juice,' whether ex- tracted .by-preesure or by heat, is net Very nourishing. - Meat rextracts are toferior prepaiatiouti, which . may [ give rise to digestive disorders and-diarrheea. Peptones' are- far from having the nutiitioes value of 1, grated Or powdered meet:- : Next:to meat fat is the -oat, neceseatte forth ef food for consunaptiie .patients, a .is witnessed by: the . excellent.i teem* obtained . from the use .of i cod-liver oil in tuberculosisduringthis •ce teey. • This! Oil should not be considered a inedicinee It Is food; of which the digestion 4-na assimilation are reiadered:easy by the biliary cle-nients i.1) Contains. The lelloW.. Oil Would be taken' in preference to. the whiteivariety,:- which contains neither biliary elefinents nor allea,1- loide. - The minimum dose per dienaehould be four tablespoonfuls. , ienienes, VENTILATION AND Rk..97. .. _ . .-. . Peewees- with tuberculotie ofthe lungs can Take. either wine , or teer,-whichever . they prefer, ancl: small dee s of alcohol 4 Theloest way to take' it it a little water, so as - to form to which can lie- added po flavored with vanillanand on These -considerations May hays .seemed tient MASTS WERE SHOT UPWARDS. y the importance of the subject. :1 hope .1'• and human remains thextreoratiat ther 0 'WAS that T have convinced My readers -of the' nothing left- of tbe Ainiibion but dense herapeutidal value of hygiene in a disease wreaths of eneeke and a ...tangle of floating hhearbaecdte;.i.zwelidiobily mane'sd-etitxcphinae7cosniaxotepdyiecctlaln;rcakeiltviir tihtch! :111:Ettl,;061,Vrteirthii'nflifuti.etiern6Odf; aticiliaetenreqW0i bthir. liitnorS ,. I., wreckage. Vet. the first lieutenant was time, but cannot upezalimentation and open-air file far bet -la littleichild, hurled from ite m.sether's-allf25 er teettits Can be Obtained thaniwith•tffiher I who had been shattered to pieces by the ex - 'forms of treatmen-t. A-consuniptive person i plosioie : 'should always try to gain -fish, and it is ..a i This was an eta Of explosions, for not long good. plan to have him weighed. evety Week, deer, ireheee, the Reesiatne, 44 guns, sail - !as as when the weight is increasing thetprog- lug in itileyaian waterbetween Sumatra osis becomes almoet favorable. • • 1 and Borneo, wee /niece by lightning, when • 'her magazine exploded and she Was totally TNin , IS BEANO 1 glitING. • 1 . _. destroyed; while 12 of .lier crew were Eaved Fruthful iCharlie . Stott -es Stahl' - of an A mi -t °f 300* The survivors were made Fill- , - - . riephant's Sagacity 1 loners by:the Malays, and exherien.cedireornyd • . •• . veracious•• Charles Stowe,narrative ofGirard, i, i rtdh,6P (ids thilvil3 at..111.:merslenigvseshn'adgaaipd.v:14teilebeBit)rirteitith-hgg. stances pf eilMost huniu.. intearesilooll.gardedlicei 1• Lee . . DEATH AFTER itr. BANQUET. " anincials : • ' 1- • , A terrible' disaster, toe, powered to the "I've read . -e• good deal," said Mr. $towe,iSpePtre, 64 gilt/8, which • lay at - anchor in "about the intelligence. sof el4hentS, but Table Bay in 1799. There had been much there is a dices ekphant out in Geneva,O. feting and feestitig between the ship's that is the :smartest and most intelligent I officers, and the reeidente Cape Town, elephant? on mirth. 7• tt-and e the guests had hardly gone .ashore Once in awhile a cyclone sweeps over e from a supper -and ball on board the ithe Buckeye State and levels buildings to Soeeptee when a howlingegaleicame lip from the ground. This elephant, whose neme is the 'northwest with a hvy sea, so that the Snetzer, knows as neucli about metehroleg- I Scepue began to drag her anchore tied drift Leal conditions . as the entire force !of the 'towaids the shore,. Adding to the Remittent weather bureau-Demi:Ailed. Not long ago, danger a fire btoke-outeand the ship blazed as $noozer oast his weether_eye out ief the fiercely -while. she drove helplessly before window, he taw a cyclone to the southeast the wind. Thetia-mes were • only quenched headed deed on the menagerie building. in the beiling.surf in which the gallant Shin• • " Slippieg-his chain 'and graspingiau axe , struck and WE lit to pieces, within sight and; in his trunk he went out to. the Windward I hearing of those who had gathered on the - of the building. and drove a guy stake deep I shore to ,..iender whet aid they could. hi the ground. The:cyclone was then htit e Forty-seven of the, crew struggled ashore, or - .• -Asparagus Saute I have always: found very nutritive and palatable the soup itnede... by :this formula: After:chtting the tender. tips: to serve 414 - petits poi's; cut the rot of the stalks up and boil in stilted water:Until tender.e. Bring te boil three pints Of . new Milk and -stir. of treatment stand _Abe -col into this a teaspoonful of flour and as nhich 'they. oan.protock themselves; better - butter that have been - blended together: 'then eitcessivw lieetie *WO' Produces. , A-Dedral#e Ha/iota:the I- RO). the. asparagus through a- colander and',thetn. a varlet', of dieeomfeits and ailment. B.—But compel your add to the milk ; .8h:inner abeet a. auartent : As- soar,. as consulniptiv' p _are oertain of daughter to work for :her ? YOU'ere • s •mile oft and was Tepidly • nearing the.hui ing, .1teuildng iniide Snoozer unfastened the cage Containing the giant python, and seizing the big snake in hie trunk trotted outside and tied his tail to the guy stake. • Then leering . himself ...on his hind legs he fastened the python's . head around the centre chimney of the building. The cyclone was now but a quarterof a mile away. . 66 Dashing around to the leeward of the building, the tintelligent • pachydermi braced his powerful legs in the ground and,put his head againstthe side of the building. The cyclone was now but 100yards off. The next instant it struck the menagerie witheterrific forde: iThe superior . intelligence of • • the elephant Was here mast evident: he had taken a -chain and fastened it to the wind- ward _ side of the building, it !meld have • been snapped like 'es thread, but the python was elastic., and he 'stretched just enough to hold the building in -place, together with • the elephant's brace on the other side. The force of the cyclone was so. great that it .stretched the python ten feet and i shoved Siooieris legs down bite:the hard ground up tei-his body. • I . "When the cyclone puked over, Snoozer trotted around, untied the,python, !replaced - • . It in its cage .• pulled un the guy stake with las trunk, re:turned the axe to its .piace gipped -the chain over his ferefoot and con- tentedly resumed his noonday ineeltof•hay," • • the end of meals or whilell eating %will b 'found Very useful. 1 • - t During. the day the: patients should live- ent:ot doors, but at sups 'te they Ishoul. regain their mime and hot leave them until -A Safer .Wayi. -I • 1 - . the following morning. The bed -room think it's very 'good advice to should . be ventilated duringtheday by give to 'count 20 :before be getimad hiving thewindow vide . oie,n, and during and anther boy for hitting him," said the night the same purpose can be ettained -Abner. "1 tried it to -day at sch4owhen by blinds or perforated panes of glut. Thpi Willie Anderson hit me, and before I got to mothoi. of treatment shotld be. kept up ' three he hit *me again. Then I began over from one end of the year . • the other, in again, and just -peel got to elk liegave me winter as well. as summer. , It h°8 be+ i another ender the ear." • . . 1 a noticed that patients : 'folio ing this coureel, -61Y09. ElhOuld coat by Untie my boy,' . d • from'. which ; said Abrier's father. hits were dragged out of the 'surf, but the cap- tain. and two hundred • and ninety seamen and marines, between- flee and water, mieerably perished. THE CHARLOTTO COOL CAPTAIN. Cruel, tooi was the loes of the Queen Charlotte, a fine line-oli battle *ship ef one hun- dred guns, a sister ship to theRoyal George, which had experienced such a sad fate just eighteen -years previously. For it was in 1800 that the Queen Charlotte formed part of Admiral Lord Keith's fleet in the Medi— terranean, and she was lyi- • off Leghorn when she took fire, and 10,1.31.1. with such rapidity that only one hundred and\sixty- seven were saved out of her crew of eight hundred and fifty men and officers. The captain, When last seen, was tranquilly - making a report of the occurrence to the Admiral in command, ef which he gave several copies to seamen, begging them to save themselves if' possible and their 2 • . despatches. The next great btes by firewasthat of the Ajax, a fine seventy-four gun ship, which had shared in Rodhey's victories and in the greet iBattIs of Trafelgar. She was With Duckworth's fleet tn the Dardanelles - in 1807, when. she took fire and blew up off the island of 'Penedos, with a loss of two hundred and fifty men. - • _ We - shall have, to - pus on to the. year 1804 to chronicle another fi - loss, that of ift., the Bombay line -of -battle ah off eff the port of Monte Video, happily nut attended with k-sTshefnliwfee. c• ome to the year 1881, when the . Ward blew up in the Straits of Magellano- when only twelve men escaped out of -oh-OL hundred and fifty. _ . of an bour; stirring often. Pat some croutons I the n-htUre of tJleii cmnPli they should 41 rich man and could easily afford!to .keep hibits ninth: marriage- - in tee eottoiii of the soup tureen ; teat be- a nc on I utualooltpatioine a gees .her at.home. 1' - 1 - . Thereis an oId Mexican which pro-. Dentist—Will you take gas, sir?:Petitue spoonfuls of crearn into the . sone). . It. mist • life of reit in the ibpeie a it They shou d to Work for her bread is that if eceseary . hemaybe able to suppert her husband-- . Mr. D.—My only objeet incoinilling her -foreliftiug from the fire stir three table- end pleasures, and give themselves up to a _ . -,-I think I'd better., DejLitist (to olerk),. pot boil after theicream is added. ,"- not welk meele, and had. better rest duthig • • - - their Promeiiides before t ey feel tired; sewn , d t - • - - for this gentleman -;--140 Octra, charge, - Lord Shannon, of :_zoglaitd,- is know.. Is well ii;iretire early in till evening, .an a Henry, ma.ke out a life and accident policy - - - yeti Bee, eohiPetitiou is keen thistle among; _his,. friends as the talk but little, especiallyduriugtheir .Walk;s: what's:the nanetaeplease we have bo He was employed as a cowboy -on ap.- ranch gxeicise for - one hour . in the meehing and L inducements 10. hold our- trade.. Manitoba Jot' several years lbeferehe two hi the: afternoon ie. en ugh --for :patients -- • • f but that. Who, AVA " My mother stood- in the way of my marriage," she said sorrowfully,_ to her con- fidante. "Did She Object to the young man?" - " No she snarried'him herself." offer.ex ra 1 herited the title and. estate& I who have no ever • an ready noir, . sir. • • ingerenni.neelie eiethenia. •-• " • Wes = - .The Power:of Genlits. Lady—No, sir ; you Illeediet think give a great, sttorg man like you a dinner. * Tramp (looking at 'the house number)— - Yes, this is the very place that me partite". said I'd find the best bread and coffee there was in the whole town. Lady ---Well, wait a minute and l'll see What I •can find. • ' . Dusty Rhodee—, This paper says surgeons cut open an elephant' e -stomach and took out a cable' chain weighing ninety pounds.. Fitz Witliam—How do they account for tts being there' Dusty Rhodes—The sup- position 13 that he swallowed it while eating, in the dark when the chain was young and very small.. _ • • • 4, 3 - • t- 1 ^ ,