HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1881-08-19, Page 7 (2)- Coiatinueddroin secondvaged
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.
plague, to _ be -mixed , UP: in 8 WretChed
-claaide8t1ne4eVeraffair. like,. thitel She . to
• -.--, steal out of her father'shonse. atnight to
-.meet a atrangere "and. plead-711er sister's
!pause with. linni .The thought 'horrified
• her, but. the.eau - ul face n its wild sore
.• -.:. i.. ..
. - row, e. Bad, voice- in its passionateenguashe
. urged her on: "y . ' •
Lian went hastily to her own • rooin.
•' '-- She took a large Week 'shawl and arew• it
. closely aroundhee;-hiding the pretty even-
!
. iegalress andth rich *pearls. Then, with
the letter indierhantL she .went down the-
sta,iroase- that- 1 dIrora her room to the
-- - •garden.. . - , , .,..„.
•
. - The, night wee. claek,• heavy eloudi -. sailed -
swiftly aeroes: ehei" sky, the.whed :Moaned
fitfully, bendingthe tall -trees. as it were
. in anger. theh --Whispering round them as though suing • for, „pardon. Lillian - had
• never been out at night alone :before, and
her first seresetioia was -one Of fear. She
-• Crossed the Igerdens dilate -the auttinan.,
e flu* :,se. were fading; the lights -shone-
' gayi l- „deem the Hell Windows, the shrubbery_
. look . '' -dark an nlyateriotis:Nile. was:
frightened at -the silence and ''darkness;.
but.,Went braireiy dem, : He as there. ' By
. - the -gate she ea* e tall. IgUre. Wrapped -in -a.
-- travelling -cloak;. as.ithe-- crossed the* 'path,-
. he stepped hastily .dorWerd, aryingdfith. a
7 ,voide, she neverfOrgat:, o_ '-. 4
- ".Beatrice, at lest yen have- coiner'. .
.
"Itis not Beatrice," she said, shrinking
from - the' outstretck3A,„ arnis.• "1 'arn
"Lillian Earle. . My slater is ill; and has
.sent.you this.' -
, .
...r CHAPTER ' XXXVI:
• - • • . . .
Hugh Fernely took. the letter from ,Li -1-__
law§ hands,- and. read.it With a mattered
Areprecation of dis&ppointinente The Moon,
- whidli had been straggling for thelast half
• hear with a "Mese of clouds,shone out,
fain/ v.:- -by its light Lillian saw a tall man,.
withl e dark handsome face„broWned with
• the sun of warm clinies, dark -eyes that had
in them a wistful sacletese; and firm lips.,
-.., .,,He did 1:10-t look- like the- gentleman, she
'
was aecestorned to.. He was polite :and
'respectful. When he "-heard her nanide he
took of hie hat, and ,stood uncovered dur-
ing the interview.1 . ' - , - , . .
•'', d" Wait!" he cried. : .‘ A.11,-giust. I -wait
-yet - longer? i-Tret yeur sister I have
"waited.y
until my , _areing wish to see her
a. .
: s wriar. e my lire away.e . .• _ ;
- , - ;
".-Sheds tea* ill," -returned Lillian. ," I
am, alarmed for- ler. Do -not- be angry
. with me if I say- g ; els, ill thienieh anxiety
• -Paid fear." = .. i - -_;. , , - .
"Has she Sent. on to excese her-?" he
i
asked, gloomily. " It. is of ere use. ; Your
eSister is my prone* ed wife, kiss • Lillian
rand see her -I wilh" -- - - • -
You freest wait -at ;least until she is
; willihg, said Lillie :- and her ettlin algid-
' flee- manner - infleeeced- him eeen more
' than her werde - i she tl
: leaked earriesy-
1
• ,. ,
into Hugh Feriaely" - faee-•• -
It was net a bad eceeshe thought"; there
---- Watt no; cruelty or meannees there. 'She
.teacl love Se iietce 'via violAut it that it
Startled her. He did not look like- one who
drould wantonly "add wilfully -make her-
eestee wretched for 1ife. Hope grew ih her
earta she. gazed. She resolved. to 000:
ith him for Beatrice; to ask hide to for-
det eitildish4 fooli h promiste.;-de) ehuidish
rror.. •,
" dry :,sister_ is_ ver
ravely—" so unhap y that I do,notthink
sh, can-bear-41in* ote ;-it-will-luddlor
dr4ve her made" ••
"1t Is killing. me," he interrupted..
- darbec ntinued.
• edeiel stems.
unhadPy," she said:
_ .
; Adr-Ivere, W., Adains writes from Bath•%rt, to F_o_resC and Streanw tkete he
tried -.a ;dozen- preemiptions for repelling
osquitoese flies-, and similar pests, and
'found none a thgw. effective until he cared
--across the fealowingewhic1 ado dead sure'
•every time: " Three ;oed sweet oil; I oe.
• carbolic aeid. - Let it thoroughly-a,plied
• apprehandseefece, and all exposed: parts
(earefully. avoiding 'the eYes) -once -every
'half hainr, when the:flies- are -troubleeemee
orfor thefiestetwo o threedays-urrtil-the
- skin is filled withide ncleafter this its 'ap,
plication will beeneees ary only occasionally.
Anot recire, equ lly efficient, is: Six
- aaweetoj_ one part creoaote; one pa.rt
pennyroyal; her of these is agreeable
tO nse, and in no « yiinjurii)us to _the akin.
e have both of in our camp with
all flies keep a e dist de.',"
•6* ?MILL THEY 0111E."
How a Virginia You Lit iy irect Deceived
and Ruined by an Aely' rtisement bat a
litz
Religions periedicat. '
• Early this month den Stirnable and
highydeenneeted y.oung lady, Whose
widowed mother keeps bo ding house iir
Va.., and- 'eit eniely poor, in
search of hohorable employ 'put readiii.the-
Hartford Churchman an ad ertiSerneht for: governess to ta,liticharge of he young phild
of a :widower. Slee-apPlied erthe position,
forwarding • letters of re'cominendatinn
'froth an eminent judge an -an Episcopal::
divine of Richneond., • The a vertiser carae
to Richmond in pereon; representing
'himself as ',Thames Mary n, a wealthy
widower frinee -the West, ana. xpressed such
. •
ter given- the-
inediately.-. to
alned in Rich-
, result of his
governess he
Whopa before
a is action with the char&
lady - that he dame eon.
engage her serrices. He re
mond several .deyn, and th
visa was that instead of
_ -
Secured a bride,- upon
marriage he . settled _ 0,000. The
-contraet was drawn .-h . -the judge
who had - • in: part bee the.. cause
of bringing thepartiesztoget er: Marvin'a
fine appearance; plausible' haractereand--
the letters of Credit and in reduptien he
,nieeentecl eitablishedtlie utmost confidence
in hiht. Re also eucceeded,w bout troublein ,
negotiating', at the First tional Bank,
a draft of -1800 upon 'Chicago. The parties
were married lastweek, . left for an
ektencled tour. . The return of -the draft,
with the- statement. that :it an the letter of.
credit..were.forgeries;. revee ed thee true
character of- impostor, a d detectives
were put upon his tratk y the bank
officials. The „first-Intellf e ce from the
bridal party was telegram f oni the lady,
-dated-Albion, N.Y.; July 25 h, inquiring
int6 thetruth of __the report n the paperre
there that a fatitra.cCident ha befallen lier
- • -
reether. From: this it-woul appear :that
. •
'Marvin. had concocted and. p briehed the
story of • the accident inthe ope that his
wife would retain heine and give him an
opportunity to desert hex'. riends went
to Albion to -'her relief, arid e is noweon
her way. home. Nothing , yeke been
-heard froth the detectives y nt -after the
if-ripe:dor and forger, who believed to
have escaped to Canada. -
11
1,
THE ` SITEOW:-0-
NingaraN „Itnpriktoned /1/Pog Itedente'ti
by a Bold -Youthr
Early last spring, a, black an . White bull-
dog was thrown. off the ,raiIevay sespension
-
bridge at Nia,gara I'alls; a dis once of 150
ee , y its owner.% 'After
.Water the, dog made a, clesper
reach the Shore, and in Se dein
by, the rapids upon what i
knewn, as Taylor's Island, a I
rocks a few yetds below the .br
a. month- ago two other dog
. _
boys -were in the rivet bathiu
old Maid of thei •Mist landing.:
getting eut tad far, were also c
the liter aeon this alma
swift current.. They at -brae
attention --hy their - scamperin
rcicka at water's 'edge,
watched: by the treVelling. rat
ov,et the bfidge on the trami;
having; nothing to exist "upon t
fed' there by thrWing.piecea Of:
Several
triking -the
e effort to
it was Cast
cOmmonly
rife pia.. of
ge. edhotit
with:smite
hear the
The dogs;
rtied deem
by the
d much
S On the
and, Were
c passing
he caninee
e_ „citizens-
efuge beef
succeseful,
a terapts- were made to deAcued harp fro
their herreatage by irteans of at ap worked:
by a tope from. the bridge - ' -sterday a
yeung man named -James' •I3toe, ; living at
Suspension Bridge, teered to by means of a' rope -1 dder and.
secure the dogs. _ He secured WO 'Of the
three, placed them in -bage, and they were
drawn to the top_ a the bine by ropee
The ;".other dog, not desiring 4, quit his
hermita,ge, placed. himself reacb.-
-The-dogs being ranch yalued by: he differ.--
ent -guests- stopping at- the le tels, it is
kpectecl that the boy will be full -rewarded
for his daringadveature.
•
• Sitavii* and .*hortinitt
It is undeniable .that Aineric
-Eastern- States are SteacW dee
stature. There Was a tithe.
Yankee was proverbially long in
at the present (-14 the long vari
only -the backwoods et' Maine
Hapapshiree-while the Yankee
ideee Haven,:Providence :and o
towns is about - the 'size a th
Frenchman: _ In New :York
eight of its native born inhabita
ss.
cede
liWno WOULD- `13E-. ' A . ILAVF1t7-_.
- S aker communities; it *ea -known e
-•greats.virtue is itsceticis here are no
•..feeniY ties,. And the 'pa Ian of love is
trampled iincrer foot. "NO brother- Shaker
s akes- hands With a, sister Shaker, let it
s ould awaken the affeietionate nature. - No
S a,keress dare adoian her _heir or dress
even with the conimpitest garden flower,
e ,Y t every brother 'bee' a. sister speeially
. in nding; sew did his- liettoens,'and inform
1
a,s iened to look after his- clothes do his
r the Elclress When he needs,4 new garment.
_ Some orithe Shakeradwhe theorize, about
- the hed:r features- ofet eir . faith-- sEiry that
•ia
„thereshould.exiitbetvr en th ese two a sp e cial
--Spiritual affinity, but his:does not seem to.
be the case in.' practice. . "Pioteibly;" says:
• ;a visitor)." a sister Would be more likely to
• be drawn in spirit. toward :some brother
whose old stockings she did not -have to
darn." - . -.., . •
he mathef-indaw seem,s. to be -the sarne.
• e*e .ywhere, yesterday, to -day And -forever,
la,
_in. yery &lime,. among -allpeoPlee,-and in
.,- eve y.countrY.ort the feceof the globe. - In,
Fr nee- they pursue her even beYond the
por le of the cemetery, -and Make pare -
gra -he eheut her upon the dordb. As for
exa _pie, in a Parisian grave yard: ".Here
-lies Jesepla--d---. He lived for twenty Tears
- aft- .bis wite's death in the society of hie
erg nig' to a Vetter world.„. ' - . e • ‘.
i
- :roe er-in--law-, and died in the blessed hope
• . -- il.'
Rev. 1,thiiip.ifrookk, in dile- ;01 - his Yale.
•
leeedeeti`cdr" T'reaching,'" te110, stork of-
. -a hankwelod-sman e who, ! afWad.heading en.
-thet petticoat- fellOwg -that ..r. have
-ever'
t
ext mperaneous ' sermon. :.:-freni Bishop
;Me de, rem ked'; d_diteris. the frrst one of
seen thatcaneshant without -it rest." e --
ns of the
easing' in
hen ethes
latilnbut
ty exists
and.New.
Boston,
er large
average
o mean-
ta is still
oung meet of - so rety -and.
prep ivities are more; f equently
un er than ov rfive feet, In th -country
towns the- height of the men seem to va
inversely as the size of the Nopulatien a d the
amongthe farmers We faint' witja tall a.d L
WAYWARD pricit 1,104E.
Seduction and ./Ibtlaction-The- G-Ikl•Cand
dot be foam!. " '
A King -sten despetelesitys Glenburnie is
norneWha.t agitetecl overa scandal ef con-
siderable magnitude: In March- a young
ledy abeut 18 years of age, in poor health,_
Was sent frorct _her home the -vicinity of
Belleville to kande Glenburnie. She
was good-looking,Seeleltence had, manedad.
mirers. About April ehe became acquainted
with a young man who had returned from
the States.. got let° 4 he confidence of
the lade', and is said to leave rained herun-
der promise of marriage.' The relations of
the young couple were discovered and- the
_ ;
girl's relatives notified. -She was requested
to return home, and for this purpose
. .
LeCin
• ey was n o But instead of
'returning she was .abducted by her lover.
That was the last that has been seen iv
her. She was taken to- a' house near Col:
linsby and there kept. -Her' stepfather
came to this city but a, short time ago in
• search of her. He went ,to the one whom
hebelieved knew 'where 'she was, anclasked,
'Are: you the -person who 'ruined my
child?". 'He said he was not, but the -pro-
duction of a,,revolver made him -promise th
get heredFor several weeks the foolish girl
ha.dbeen hidden. She is ,the hands of
badly-dispoded persone. . The girldi_family;
are great distress on account •of her con
estedin the case borrowed 81.00 f
DRESSY WOMEN AT, ..saAtAT4IDA,
. . _
(Saratoga letter to St ; Loins-oliebe-democride-
• dThe lady at Congress Hall With the one
hundred mid thirty-nin-e .; dresses is: still.
astonishing -the natives; and the strangers;
two ter three etinies - ,day, andfteide her
path a pleasant -There is one prodigy
here the -person of a. -.dame:Who haS it6t.
repeated eae. toilet" once in thee -Weeks,
although arraying herself intedo or three
differentdress daily, and _yet Lennon:eines
tolier adhering' net -elites that -she.hatt no
maid -; - that .'„thee Weald, not trust
one Of; them; " The • tales of her
gixte(02. . trimIte. • and one room. lull
of Wardrobes - and ;racks:of -her finery:are
not half so "astentielaing - at; the, -fact of
her -
having -no -neat-handed -Phyllie '
and .care_foi tlee innunierable bonnet
boots; gloves,'' fans,. flOWere :end furl)
that:Matela with and 'ecccrmpeeyetsph
It ninst. be that My -lady lies . awake -
to -plan theepecteele Of thee-dieting:de
toile.when others that the marse
.•
the eivals. in her chosen cult e MiS.-
TerreenWay, Of Baltimore, now 944, --the
ddienthetd.peineess "-of the season, setting
herselfablaze fret!) eroWn---fir.girdle
her ..dazzling jewels and making all the.
Other diandoed-Weateria in pale'
;and -green, With; :their . tedenitatimie
'Mts. ;.-: Astoids eregalia,
s .end
elawit
nights
y, 4n4
r
famous one thatdatirpasien this 'Bald
ollectien, end it.would seem- as if the
_ .
a been Sinbad's cave or in a shower - of
diamondse .so thickly do they cover. her
neck, erins4nd 'little finger. Besidesell
this glitter of precious stones the gossipe
credit her with possessing - 365 dresses,
fact that is intensely ineurnfttl- and trilr
heart rending when it .remembered that
a witeringplace neadton hardl last
sover
ixty days, and ili,lat-throndieSSOS aday for
a, that tune f leave' hihety•fide gowne
not
A. lloyrs sad Death. -
duct. One of -The young men who is inter- d
an
uncle, and is said to be spendieg it in keep-
ing, hee from her friends. As &lest resort
a warrant has been issii6d for the arrest of
theprincipal.• •
•
A. -,Wite:E'.8 RETURN.
, •
Appearing to Het; Iliashaild, Who Sup.'
; posed Ile -Had 'Buried- Her;
A : despatch feom New York nays: Old
August •lst,-1880; Mrs. .Beekerethewife of
John BeCker, of .410 Fifth street, diate
peared.frore her -honied: Her husband co
.cluded_that She had either fallen or jumped
-
into- the river.' Three-Wee_ks after her elfse
-aPpearance lei found the pody *dm
an
-in the Morgue that-. he recegniieci'lls 'at
.
Wife's.. It Witadelitered to him and he d
intereed in ;Calvary Cemetery.
evening,- while -Mr.-Becker.• was absent,: -a
. woman calling hereelf. 1/1....m Beaker made
her appearance at hishouse and- asked -for -
her 'husband. . She Wa..told that Mr.. Beaker
-had buried his Wife a yeat ago- She insistect-
lioviever„.- upon remaining until her husband
returned and she was _allowed to _de. so,
ldr. Becker made his- appeaeata-ce. When
confronted by the woman/be reeogniied her
as his wife. Mrs. Becker saidthat she had
been living In. New dereeY with friends and
had -not heard of her funeral. - •
oflly
more
lady
-ere _ comee .. Mr. Burns, and _ he's
drunk • "exclaimed. the little son of james
Irving last evening; as he looked from One
f th aivs o his father's apartments,
No. 398 Kent, avenue Breeklyn M
`The African .Slave Trade' Vigtorotei. .
• .
•
From time Ito -time. intelligence reaches
England: from the Soudan Which leaves no'
room foiddoubt-tha e the African gave- trade;
dent:lieges to be e vigorous operation ni
that. country. -1t 8, indeed, stated that no
;fewer then 56;004 or 60i000negroes.-are still
annually convey • --to the Turkish and
suggested- thathey lock. the: debre
.
but -her hnebetnd,'Whoeknevi -BUrna,-neid
"No.. 'Let hini- come in." -- An -e 3-ehn
Burniesteggeted into the roptii; With 8 Coa,t
'throWn.pyerelaie left attn,- and leading his
:little.son. ddiniere 9- yearn,. od age.; bye the"
hand. Thechild looked ill and Orouldliardiv
stand. -::Casting the coat on thefloer urea
-
said -*Filth:lithe, -lie -down; there; ,I'll -be
back spine"' „He ,tlien Staggered:pat of the.
:house, reniarkinselhat he would returniii
shert.thnedvith some 'clean clothing and
. , .
medicineefer the boy, He had been, gone
but a fedi :minutes When -Irving- was visited
by, a. peigh. her, Who,. upon looking at - the -
•Child on ethe ,floor, • said; .---."_Tha,tdd
very sick boy.:" Mr. and Meee. ervieg;
together With thee neighbor, thein
Wehe .•an .4cein and
hoci consultationas toewlited they should
do in the: teattei-. ..They -finally decided to
notify the-politeidthe father -of the child
. ; .;
uot return_ within a few inientee,...
the little fellow rerribyed tri
et. some futeliee talk . .Irying
ered the kitChen, and, al
set -owns = larenglit ;the others into
in. : There - lay ',Ethane, - -.ba
. e • police- were, ;informed
. .
eh the -father of the ligyeraeurned,. so
e after, still; under the- iniluence
. was ockedup for. intoxicati
e- eaSe; Whenlinvestigated, preyed •• tO -
very sad Oho.. ..;Durns and his
elated: about two enthral:ter- age; ;a
Mie had lived. first with ,Oneparent- a
the other When-witlehisietb
tWo_slept ; oh at andedilapided
-trees in 4:stable,: chrtier Vanderb
Park .-aventiese...'4ei:., the fifth
endered almost every ..-cent he earn
rtirr,--•juninie ?fared. --badly, and it
gilt that ekposiire and Want of . prop
rishment caused his 'death:eel/dem To
gyptj'an-per e.a le'Red See, wheretheY ,,Maie
are dispose•do to • alerefrem-all Tette of ed-d,l_
the Sultan's deminions. • tit is neques-
tenant, Gesei Pa,shit, who has lately&ied -7, e.
).
tionable that in .1879r. .Col. Cordon dealt nq
What *prorniSed ted be a death 'blow te the
slave -trade, in the -• Sendai]. His ' ion- a ,
fteesaffernigterriblediaddedirps,fOughrand tIlil
beat the Slave tritclere in .a pitched battle. '!„,.-4,
in . - which- they; relying- upon filiperier -UP.
nuinbers made the -first-- attack: Gessi a
_Y . -_
' P643116; inflietea _a crushing defeattipon the BeP
slade traders, -end-liberated immense num- 2-tlii7
bets ;el stades. ' If ''Col.: Garden- had. been dirty te
Properly supported by TeWfik.Pesha, there Ide-
iereaiotato 'believe that the slave -trade, dilat
eepuIcl have been driven out of the Soudan. and
. . _
Since his departure his old eneraies- have Sfitqlt
to a great- eXtent repined _their 'Pittner d ed
influence, and have sueceeded in r`eviving :etude 11
on a large scale he traifid la neilroes.- . It unn
dia.
and
tit.
.r.e-
ter
the
ck; - Of.. all the'" Qneenraclaught-era none 'has
nd. - ever mixed -se freely and .so •frequently ' in
iiec. igeneral - eLendpid isociety as . the-- Princess -
of. 'Jellified -has- dope this seasone 1 e
on : _. e ----A fellow who had been eating unrige-
.be i fruit -said,. soniething Was 'Wrong in the
ge 'Department of the Interior.' -. : "" - •
nci; - 'Baldheaded:Men ereinformed:- thaddleere
is but one avenue eel escape- from _their -
611_ i4e_a., _ , ,t ; e . - - e. -. -.
en aftlictiOn and that a Carboline ea-id-et:dors- -
eatrac of petroleum,- the great hair
i
renewer, which- bean tecentlyedmproveil
er inore.-effieanione th n ver and isebiediy-
ed faultiesi.. . - -. : --- '--- ''..777. •-, -•-;
is : -
rk _I
er -
6i Distinited Relatkonship4.”
•• He. was a husky -voiced and very inaudible
man, bia howas deeply iniearnest when hoe
unWound. the cotton handkerchief from his
neck yetterda,y and said te the magistrate'
in the Tombs Court, "I want my Lillie
sent up." " -
"What has she been -doing1"-asked. His
-Honor.
'Bin lactind mean, very mean. Forgets
I'm a husband and a -father and oughter
hey my family's respect. See!"
" Haeishe been in any reformatory ipsti-
tuticin before?" ,
guess not • Lillie's not strong odd the
reformetind-none -• of 'em, Would do he a
powerful heap o , good ennyhow.
1' f t
• " YOU ShOuldie t give her up_ so quickly„'',,
said the magistrate ; "little girls will be%
little girls." -
":But she idn't. little Lillie ain't, and
she can wallop any one of her !inches on
our .block."
- •" Evidently a, •little wild- and'_ head- r
-.strong," Soothingly muttered, the magis- •
'trate.. She Can't be positively iwicked'
"She can't, eh ?" said the applicant, and
he brushed beak his hair. "See that
scat? She did that with 6, soup ladle."
• Then he lifted -his fileeve. "-&e that en ?
.!Twas the s_aucepanlid she dug that out
with." He pointed to a -Yellowish patch
under his left eye "She used a tolling
pin to do that." •• , •-• •
,
"Phew I she Must be a dreadful child.
-.Why haven't you corrected her ?"
• The applicant looked' bewildered. .
"1,1 ell you, judge," he said, "it takes
aria n with. grit and -muscle to Correct
•
Lill When she, gets bustiug viand o
our D emises moSt people he -.V tcr light
out
it
_
, • • :It
not
her.
eve you tried advice ?"
en, I -have; and ate. barrel stave, but
ing short of a tart -rung wouldtouels•-
_,
. .
_ •
,
he must beevicious."
" he; is • but -I 'wouldn't mind that if she; --
did _get drunk sci. often." ,
-4' a runk:1_ ' Dees she drink?"
"1,ike She can stow away -re
_ .; ; y mo
lighthing timeethan any heitigin the
business - that ever : ;stacked - up ,
against." -
•
::;•BTahityhiserdrsetarcif!ritig1-.'s'ii is CUSS1U t34Lalhe :
gets in a sccildinl condition there ain't
eivy one in the digginS pares about .facin-
She swears dringere: Stronger and -
lei -VI -Ler than pilot in a sea fog."
" She -Millet be 4. terrer."••.; -de
'She is es.. 'Youentigliter see her. -swing -id
washboard' last5week when a neighbor she; -.
didn't like.- came en. She'd have thawed".
and theYwent beckon her."-- •
the eteerean's, ear. Of ,only here t.eeeth'sifalee
"My gracious! -Does she go-- to sclinolV.'
--Aftaiii the -applicant looked perpleked: -
--Go to sehool.?" lie asked: -
'Yes ;- hOW. old is shei?";'
.; -"Well-there; you -Idaye me. Lillie's age .
sornethin' I've netergofiniite."
' Whatdan't you lino* your own daugh- •
-ter's age ?" ' .-• - •
; e Darter I'd said the applicente and. the
puzzled expression paeiried.away. Darter 1
Why, dedge, li1
Pim', en. e. as; g.4374.tweclif1.1
is quite true that -that tr• affic-. cannot Hefl
he t•iffeatimIlYe suppressed domestic
_slariry is abolished in Egypt, but ...yet Col.
'G-otderds- ekperience show that by the
adt:iep �f vigorous the -number of
victinis may be.greatly diminielied-,-and the
traele rendered b-oth hakaaelppeaald unprefit-
dble.-dancien Times, . -
Late.st Canncilatt TottIngs. :
The othe4 cia_ y a .gold- medal: list Of McGill
College, Montrea‘ was ignominiously,
plucked' itt•74)is prirnary Jaw examination
-
because of-lus janorance Canadian higtory.
ee,
Apples are a -comparative failure around
BelleViIle, and _ -the curculio has brought
uctiongion the plum °rep.
.Pc. be ix -lively eontest for
,
*hid&
_ -;
err:Om-the Ti'ottsvitweeernala
-Isaap-Eithinean employee :of the Shar
less Iron Works, West Chester; -ii -el with
frightful' death on -.Thureday afteenoo
About : 2, .o'clock the ban-
ernployed the WarkS-dvere ,stae fled by
`shriek,: folloWecl - by ..• pounds like)allisplace
machinery whirling and-collidin witla
-lepercls. •- The - engineer, John 1,11forgaii, wI
was irran - adjacent thorn immediatel
stepped. the ;engine, while . the employee
hastily ren in the direction .whence Ali
Unusual- noise earneJ Olieer cope an
tiLlward Sharpless, two of -the meellinist
-Arrived on the scene jliet in. - t
dee the 'fokm of• b
eia
ly whirled • around., • the. . mein
leading from •the machine - -shop
e planing )3aiii. With every, few- ieve
ns his heed and ihotilderirstrUck• the:
f the shed above knocking the hoards
and flying- -two of- _theta- eh:ter-to-Abe'
d below .-_ When. ;the engine: stopped!:
an's heed and arra%) „were dangling
the shafts.".ellis.: legs andbeidy "Wein-
letely Wound eieund" the shaft and
pecItightly t� itby;thebeltewhich hac
etadinseyeral places .before- the dbody
• be eertioacide. The bond!) Of the
loW,theknee -were and naisbed
aplintersi --'_whioethe- thigh. bone was
HE VE_ R.Y DES
. • -
P -
It
IN -Tlii-1-1A;-0IILDI
a c 1 ri. e
n:
..3rs mintifactured.by ' -
. ... .
doa: I And for y dealers. - Ask your -merchant for
4 - McC L BROS.:kCo., TORONTO, -
diarclitte and take no oth '
Y - This oil under L the eeerieresd test and most i
e active
on awarded:the hi h t -
competition Was at the Toronto IiiduS- -
g es prize; also
= trial Exhibiti .
a itheon,GRaniZilltoMnEpairjed --"thethlel Fr
ovineial. Exhibi.:
yer eda ,
s, Dominion Exhibition, OttawteXui.tutlii:ilarchiritite:
, . Farmers and all who use Agric e
' ory,,will save money and machinery by ushig-
_• .
redresefitation of Birtle in the Manitoba _rapid
slate,- There are already fouread- shelf
tes ineAe.. field—Messrs. Creme- and- th
ds, of Biftle ; "Ifejer,Bolion„ of Shell lutio
r, and Mr. Templeton, of Shoal Lake.. roc;f-0
. ,
ys the -Detroit -Free Press: " For -five looee
s after a man leaves Quebec and settles groun
inv England he is carried along the the in
us ofthat 'city; . This is togive him, a, .froin
'half fought the fire in ihegrass ,that •1'30.1,11.d
rded the little girl .who for an bent :tulle
deconsiderable demegerecentlyiti the lidd-bd
e • Village Council of StaynOr have etiaP
ter
ce tyo 'glib:me...sick and return." „
well -formed figures,- AB .We. go Twest th;el
-average' height steadily- increasdee except woo
in the large -cities, and ill' thief Nortd- wee
western and drontier -States a man who: `‘.;-
is- less- ihari BiX. feet high is' reea,rded.as '''' °a
a peculiar-. and unfortunate- petspn. If,' Year.
now,ewe_ lookat Europe, we find. that in in. N
certain aountries _ men , are sinal and in cells
in tenni:Lardy fully -five feet ten inches high, and
i
others they are of respeetable-hei lit. The than
Scotchmen are as long and lank a the -then ,Th
of ,Maineor Minnesota,ana the n Iishnian rewa
except in London, Where a smaller Vagety cause
of 'Englishman is Occasionally _mit. - In'ceme
France, on the othei hand, the Men have ' eies
dwindled so steadilyderingthe last hundred eeeeli
-years that the standardbfheightl r a,drees- any
lowered., In Spin and SOUth r Lily reed- ment
i
sign to the - army his :been r peatedly givin
are -.small; ,whereas in North Italy enl. in e
. Mtiehiv'augeri Brightehae twe
brokenj and protruded through the skin.
The o
which he claims cannot be beaten by
other two cows in the -Province, fo-r being
g -milk. They averaged for the last at var
being
h 'over 1'00 pounds each day and he
ge . a c eque- rom the cheese factory for
b f ' the be
6 for the month. --e
taynor J. P. fined a pathmaster for
g down a shade tree which le found
e road, opposite the -farm f Mr.
rist„ in ottawasEbga„ and use toefill
billert. The Magistrate held the shade
tiler leg. escapedvvith bruises, no bones
broken.. Beth arnas were- fractured
iota places, the banes at the: elbows
torn-literaily a,part. The trunk of
dedwa,s terribly crtished, while the
;
head and. fac Were poendedelniont beyond
recognition. .The blood; ,Opzed from _both
eara.and -fro cuts on various parts -of the
body. The s • sifts, andpulleys were bespat-
tered With- tied, -drops- Ofwhich-discieloted:
the shod to or et, distahce of -seVeral feet.
froth the Shift., The shaft Wes making.
one' hundred end...fifty nu -e, in. every AIM of. which it is.
estiniate his head and.thoaldernsttnek
the.tho as ',stated • &beide. :The :sereafter
,ettefe • by him when he -first -emended his
situs on Weeddietincily heard over a equate
off,
•most of e Gerna-any theydre,as tall as Eng
lishmen. Wherever ewe- find. a rac
of 'thee we can easily ascertain ;that- they
;have decreased in stature within& century
and that thisedeceeese isstill in - progressWhile in cOuntries where n:ten-- are. -of
mediem height no tendency togeow either
shorter or taller is -perceptible.'
- d20.0
e A g
cuttiri
' on- th
Gilch
a eels -
Mise Elizabeth- Fleining,
.contly at Edinburgh; was one of fihe lliehe
een the present times:rid -that Scott,
-wet:her, Isabella:Rae, Wes' the daugh-
f Sernese Rai), -the -father ' crf:eurgital
hing eiri-Settlied-,--eancleanothereief
s delight:ere married --Mr,. ..Keith of
elston, at -wheelie- hbuse Sir Walter
t, a- great frarid :-'of the .fanailyievas in
habit- of meetiegMigs Idlemingencl her
r almont daily. Marjorie or "•M ".
•-ard he always.- called'thee littee, -,Was
-
especial favorite' of -Sir:Walter's edtilet e.
time Of her:death, .at the early ?geed 11, -
Idol little tile was beautifully telde a few
re eon. by Dr.- debriddrown utider the
of Pet Madjokie." '
betev
'Her
ter o
teac Dr
Rae'
-
&few days since the -pee -end. of the twc
• gre-- bellaefor the now Eddystone- light-. • seat
hoe e; &tali, weighing - about --4 .wt., rhea- int)
seri g 5 ft. 'diameter at the mouth sisee
•. ans. eren.g, to: the. note 0,e&nd 5-nth/ideate
trees had to protected and cOuld Llot be
out dewh. with impunity by patlemas
•any one else for anypurpose.
, about
erg or leeeetni
• A Chinaina,n started aeslaiinciryln ngs-
ton and fired badly... The keyed hese
cies ranged andeng - the twenties pelted
s ones-, eggs and ether at his shop
• deatdown his elothellines.When full of
clo hes. _ The - contents �f:a, bottled, ink
wee scetteted over -etoine - the=e/inere
John ' nt for the reseals with an axe, n.
but for he 'feet that they were fle
than he's me of them would_doebt
etiffers now.
ant e one as a fog signal to -leeward and
the other to Windward,-.. was east at the
ound-r-yeof keeses•.- Gillet, Bland. di -Co.
• T R-rmee- of Wake has soldehisYtteht: 3"edr.
For oee Mr. Idiscledffrlieirn. , . title:
. •
Eti
•
; •
. . •
A ealmon, suppose e the largest ever
caught in the Columbia Biter, had a weight,'
when dressed, of eighty-four pounds and
filled sixty-nine cans.
s was elerfetliedsoinid of each collision
wi the boards - of the -rOof. - It is matt-
obable that the shock- eatised by 'thee
Met collision -- knocked him - sienserene, and.
that he -w -as •unconscinus of the terri
-bruises and mut attend to which his frame
easubjected.
The:death is announced of Mr Wm.!. .
FargoepresidentQf. the American- xpress
Company.„ die"-ddet the pioneer of that
system, and dliedewei thover twenty million
•
•
aciamc
Ant—Consum
• CQVG/1189 .00.1;.°RD'S? , -ASTHMA
, IIVI. _ 4PCIP!No.,-COIToll; '
TRY IT.
di ence recoline;:.iiiird_Cemd7fi_o7italUPthe ke'h-ove comPlaints. -
c nt has. not get it -he .
This old established remedy Can be with cold
'Canget it -fee -you. 1
JOHN.! W. iiicKLE . •
_ . . (Formeriy,T, Biekle & Son),
-kiaMiltOn, Ontario.: .
. ,Proprietor. ,
0
A
0
T,
A
NORTIORN PACIFIC
I RAILROAD LANDS.1
FORTUNEtie FOR FARMERS.
, _
50,00Q Fend'. 6,000,0111,1cees.
Ilea:Wheat lend, Richlleadow, Qom Timber,
, . •
- Fanning, Stock Raising, Dairying,
Fad -and Wider in alitindanee.
$2.50 per acre and Upward., One-sixth
eash and five annual payments. Re-
duced Fare and 'Freight to settlers.
Write for " Publieations No. 63." e.
Geo. Dew, -_Travelling Agent, 7.2 Yonge
it., Toronto. R. M-NewporVGeneral
Land -Agent, St. Raul, Minn.
M I 1,41" /sT S
A
T. V. -LI 41(1‘1GesTOIY,'
• $Peial,Lind Agent for Hamilton, Ont. -
GENTS WANTED. -.-..LUCRA--
TIVE, reppeetabie employinent for tpach-'
ors during vacation, orlonger, or permanent, for
iew-energetic young_men in this and adjoining --
eopnties. To these- col show fair success
and adaptability, expenses, liberal" commission
and moderate salary will be paid.- Acldres8 with
references; Drawer 2501,1 Toronto. • -
.4
1