HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1881-11-11, Page 3,
---Continteadrene Soot:ea-page. •
account, but both inteats. Mildred affected
to lauklt at their: fears; and, endeavored. to,
- . reassure them; but when she -once more
:sought. her Own couch. it. Was net to. sleep -
nevi ,and :totally Unexpected cause �t•
•0.1aprehensioalliacInew taken possession. Of
' . • - •
Why, for te. (first tirae- during their
. Married life.„Idid her husband sleep witle•a,
' leaded 'Plato( under his.. Was
he
• too,. beset by 9:2 plesenti-raent of imrciinePernt
or wasle- new cognizant of some real
:clanger, the nature of which he was eon-
oeaiing freni her? . Mildred- did notdare to
Ask hiM the • question,. - for very dread,
what tolight..be ithe reply....
,
iguistrut, sir Night Thoughts.
Agriculthriall philosophy :'-' The law of the
. harvest is to -reap. more, than you. sow. -Sew-
an act and you reap. a habit;.sew a habit
'-and, you. reap a. ,character, sow a.. Charaeter
and you reap a destiny. - , .,-
A, rellgion.that is false is usually intri--
,
.e'ate. Tbe only two rites that characterize-
' the- reli("ion ,of -Jesus. are noted_ for their -
comes 0 'of +he soul and- out of, symbols.'
k ...i.,
sidtple _ • .au.v..- The Christian.. wcarship,
, r
The. wrongs we infliot cin oth_ers follow ilia
like our shade. • f -
CilEirigh: . thy friend; • and- . teMperately
admonish rthiiie-endny,,, • .. , . i '-i-
-,ortnne often' raak.es. -a. tie -h. -feast ahd.'
then takes away appetite. • . 1 '
Nev-er-excuse a • Wrong action by saying
•sonaa one &se does the. same- thing,-
Spare when you are. young.and. you, will
be, able to spend when you are old.
--• Itis good int-af-ever, and ranch -betterl in -
ager,. ta Italie the tongue kept clean and
smooth.. . . -
healtit a, the tbody, thepeace of the city,
Order is the sanity -of the mind, ha
• the sectiri:ty o the.State.
.Real friend hip. is a slow: grower, and
n yer thrlveg,i.niess engrafted upon a st4ok
known andi eciptocal-ineri•t. •
educa,tii, end. ,only With life. A chil ..is-
tn
da in the
Instr./v.' rn. school-roona;but
s
iven ter.
7.tha.0 ' iverse tO
,.„
.•a% be eontinued_.)
•
•
•More hearts ine away in seeret taiga sh
for the want f kindness from. those ,
• sheuld ba,, the r comforters :Wan for- any
• Other calamity in life.
The essence' of true nobility is neglect, of'
sell. Let the thought- of self pass in, and -
the beauty of. a great_action is gone, like the
bloom from soiled flovier, •. •
-
lite Duchess of lEdialkorgh..
The Lou -blies Edinburgh has ma e
herself Ver_r p pulro ivith the Scotch pep
ple,. andir.E glandgreater faverle of Chicago, and of the . Wide diseussioa of
""intLetitirt-' 'TO riDO
liutthrlitted for Atit'y
' Genteel' ems
• -
(New 'York Gra
, • • . . .
I .
_
atj..-•- Ago -caned
hie.)
• Young woman, young womaii, 'you've
-come. to this great wicked. City to get
"coniething te.do,t) what?- Oh, "-any-.
thine" Young woman, "anything" .,is.
nothing, .Anything is hardly a legitimate
occupation..., Young Women; there there are
--
5;000 or 10,000 youiig men and women who
have come • to this city from all parte
of this land and even froth all other ends
of the earth who are willing to do any-
thing. Young women, you are by birth
American. You have been well-bred and to Use the durrei2t expres-
sion,. But what can. yen, do? Music?
We have music te4chete, starving by
•the thousand. Painthig?1 We have the
beat and. spores Of them whe can't make
room. tent. Amanuensisly Am:Ike of
them are on. the street daily looking for
.work. Stenography ? Telegraph
operator ? .The toWn is full. - The fact is,
young woman, the few coMpatatively easy
employments have -long been. reionepolized
by young ladies -like yourgelft who name
here ready to do "anythin " t I
i2ROP.-Ri3BERTSONSIVIITI-lr" '''"A"kiffitEMEIVir 1110E1F1011;-
_
The 'Scot& "nettle' Dinisties-the Present and
..
' . 10 Future llosditiila Of Ilis Doctrine,
,Dr. Buckley, the editor of. the Christian
Advocate, he's sent to his journal from
,
England aninteresting account . of a' talk
which he had with Prof.- Robertson Siiiith
in Edinburgh. After some jocularremarks,
in answer to • qtueltions in regard to the
avidity With'. whica American, publisher's-
had- edged his book and had published it,
"Withobt saying,- 'By your -leave, sir," ".
Prof. Smith' spoke ...of hie - relations -to the
'Free. Chtiroli and. en , other topic.s. He re •
tained. the eame -ecolesiaetioal etandingin
the Chnrob,he'said, as he did before the pro-
ceedinge for- heresy were &via' against
him„ .and .- he - ow:11d ',accept a 'pastorate
at .-, any i time.- ... "For. the: present,'
however,"' -he . said, . " I - Shall'. . net
Preach, tiotbeing willing to stir alp con*.
versy." . As to the -effect, of his trial,. lec-
tures, publications, and/the general: diticus-
sion Of thefiubject; Profeseer Smith said:
"The_inero intelligent Ministers . ad lay
-
Merl are hioitiiig- into these things. - They
-feel that they -have not. had. placed,befete
• - • them all, the established -results of --the
only do and were only -Waiting to' do, a few
things.' an you. 6°°11-? ..Yies and no, and believed that the less studious and thotight
al little that your mother itaught you.. at -studies f recent times... It hair :conie to be
-home,. and- you doet went' te go, out control iVer the :public - Mind, and over the
ful elem Pt has exerted a -disproportionate
blitnieto you -that you shou. cl not t° gervia°'s - of . °°11ra° -t ' and ' • Ennall iletiono .-the Church.' Precisely how far -
:thing as sinking to the -1 Vel, of. -',. hired my_
).„
wish 4:',. 'this will go, and whatfOrm. the final results
, or betianieindignant at the 4dea, of Sue
- h a, ' - -
will tak ,,the future ehOw. : It IS -not
'help.' Yes, it's_ loss of 'cake,. :rey dear, desire - to -. diritutb the Church . sl
and. social ostracism . andt a 4reat ha-ve mit in dootrine ;departed. front its
Plf standa,ria, • Butitis folly:to suppose- that
'tteixt yon and . your genteel _young lady
high echool friends. .Could ;you. assist in upon. col literal ,.issues. an unvarying form
9. fanillY as -nurse ce: housekeeper or to age, Or that inveitigation, den yield - tro
.of eXPreaSion &ale 'perpetuated, froni age
:body which involves labor or- the lower • ....Haw do
step jut° manY a:Placa now open for ecsice' further results.". , ' . . - • - .. . , •
.plana of respectability ? you,. answer the „- chttage.".
.. No, you can't, asked iji,-. Buckley, "that your eriticidne
;Young woman, for though- tn° adage- rune - lead to. Unbelievingratienaliena ? " _ "Whet
'.in this free and happy land that all honest
labor is;hon.orable, -exact ttarth doesn't ran I maintain," was the renlY, '' is -simply that
quite that way. I ou can't do "anything.' Whatthe Bible contains is• valuable only as
it assiiiii.-iii.presenting Christ to the -hearts
.Your high. school education. hasn't taught oi Men.- This i not*Ratienalieni. -Far
you to dO "anything." Yen . have Spent from it; - I begin •ith 'Christ and end
many years in-learnit4g to doi.:few things; atm.:
along with `thonsandis .and . 'tens of thou.. titbit pa Sof the Old,Testament
•sands -of -Women" -all •15-, Ver- the land, tion, and the human element in tilt* i
have od ria,„-lecal and_ tenip_orarY -a,pplica-
- and. the resultis that -there -are agreat many
• more of you able to 'ditty!: nd paintatel nothin minuet -1r. consciences or eapable
of - bein iassindlitted - with: a 7 ttue and
',there are people...Who
!PlaY' and. copy -ili. a nice f ix, inw24, than -eyramet iCal conception- of Christ."- - Pref.
W -alit to P14 it'Ytilix1c -Smith; I however, ' -.said ..-- thatk niinisters
fot.drEvivi#tr,- Painting, .plaYi . 4. py-.. -ought , al to , preach_ on . oiese., ques7,
-tug' Butb what are -Iv° g°ing •t° 0° tier's.' lie di ' not- - They slieuhl devote_
about :'at '4 Where - is .the '
far,sighted-Watchinan on the owers of .our
'vigilant themielir, eg• ice . "positive - truth -.truth
• modern -Zion- who, shall cry 1 ' ng,.• and loud. whiehrean be pia) ed, illuetrated--, applie&".
•
`-that our. schoOls - and ,Oolle ea ate. yearly • - - •
In -View of the heresy trial- of:lat. Thomas
• turnip(' out tens of thou d
than she- Was.: The syMpatily felt for h if:, yotiag nietiand women for W om.the buy regard to ecclesiastical discipline -concern-
about
. . . of _educated his ease: What Professor Smith.. Bay8 *
- her mother's death, the strange- 4-- : money:Malting, bread -winning world. has
ourestanciee. attending the .second marriage : little -or -nothing -to do; .on if they get ' ,
.ing the doetrinal -Utterances of rainistars
. of her -fatakkert. and then ltii terribledeith,
have done- hum to - remove the - ,prejudiecs. nothing. - A skilled oyeter-openctr makes-
. "anything" to do will . pa ti4eizt .,4ttie or will be iead with Unusual interest ; " It is
impbssible' he Said, " for an orgairiz,atien
that'onee Drew iled against the Doches4, his l')" per di ..- A good bricklayer wants
„It.
Then. again,. she 'ha& proved- . herself e , aa per 4.4,ay.. good cookgets minke. than to exit -without' a corninoh basis of belief,
If a-minieter preaches 'contrary to. the
-eiceflent ,wife and a tender fly:411.er i a d maay college. professoks. .,,,Blit these are
o stitaidairds he should be supPressed. ,If r
- these are qualities -th4 always. eiPear. IL" genteel occupations.' Youi wantto be had been .Iguilty ' and preyed : guilty :of-
'
the large :liejart f the English nation. ' TI e denying the standards ,of the Church to
It
..ger-lfeel, and you axe right, in, aspiring to
• : day is at haiid ..hen, the Thichess of Rai' - . viiiich, I beleng, but one course would , nave,
. With those she ikes. is oharthinsi .; but s - ga.d,,sordid, sour World, this, Mademoiselle;
,is..a, good. hater, and is: -uncompremisingl
ladies in EntAtt, ci: lier manner in private.' -.:1411: cash Value on .genteel • loccupations. : ,i hribiste,:rs,
burgh will .be one of the 'roost poptilar "iiiit',n1 the world_hi this 'town. don't place , a
with the reeognized Stendards. which form
remove we fro til the ministry." ,
been open i to the. Assembly;- -namely, to
indeed„ who.. do not agree
gentility- iltud refineinent. but,. young WO,
I I -
haughty and _cold with- those 'who do- t
p ease her.: She thus makes eneniieS and G
keeps then:" but her- virarrn heart,- hidden
Orttler lir rather 4old- exterior. as i t Makesher "
pienty,of friends and keeps them. The ,F
Queen r is Mach -attached te this Imperial Stmt..
*dautrhter4n4aW4 - • C.
• 4.
Clev
Tryin to'lrie*eitt Diphtheria. •
Dramatic Notes. t .
• igA•
ilbert and Sullivazi are ngaged_
on
her neiv,- opera. /1 /
r.ank. McKetki agent -Joril • Haveriy's
tegist Companyr, IS- at the iloyal Hotel.
• R. Gardner, Elliott. -Bateee;`
Lilin
pany, are at the Royal Ho el. .
es and "Only a Farmer'lDanghter "
ap es= -Pays Canipaninil the tenor,
00 a Month salary; Ile [only- sings
ve nights during that peried.
ere have -been set up in Ithe Grand
a. House at Paris a nuniber of mirrors,
during 45 by 52feet, and ,Weighing from
to 1,600' pounds. . ' -
oth•often, makes $1,000 a perforratmce,.
ulloch nets 1F60,000 a year, and Barrett'
recent engagement secured! a• personal
. Id view of the, prevalence --of diphtheria_ , easi
, in various garts of 'this_ Province, it i& ..i•v!:ei-
-__ - . ... . . .
-to notelhat the authorities alt
-. gLydney, Cape...B
• measures in oril
• diphthetia, virbie
-, Here are:some o
I. That all e.ase
• isolated, sad. tnot,,,t e heads of families where Vac
.,:. disease existadie#1 y a yellow flagnot less than
, twelve incites pull e hX.Sorae, Conspienons 'place
• on the dwelli g. . That the medical, MOD, of
• the -town. be- repec fully requested to notify the
• Secretary- of t is oard of the appestaace- and
, tonality of any ne - case of diphtheria corning
- under their obse ation. 3. That any person
- coming. into- the To n of Sydney from any dwell
• ine in which.diphtheria, exists shall- be liable to
a pen,alty not exceeding one hundred: dollars. 4.
That,allhouseholders shalt have -their opremises
., thoroughly eleane and put In. geed sanitary
1
• 'condition, and the the Health Wardens and
Health tospectors b --instructed to see that this
resolution isonforc d.' - ' ' .
etot, haye set 9,foot_ gevere Tb
r to restrict the spread of : Op er
has been.prevalent tliere /ilea
;their erdmancea:' • r, 1,200
Bo
of diphtheria be coio letel ?ic-o
-
Dettlit:Cmitsed•r Piercing Iffer Ears."
Etigenia, Angn a RUYMODf 1 month and
-7 6-,- days_ old, dii,d, 24.3 East Twenty-third
-,- 'Street, New York, n Saturday, erysipelas,
produced by pierc ng her ears in order that
she might *ear rings irrthere.
A strsiigeeXpliationhasbeen unearthed
of the raannertn hich, certain freemen of
the borough, 9r, drimsby, in England, 00
of whom Wave just been struck Qa thet' roll,.
-originally had the privilege granted their
- ancestors._ . When Queen Elizabeth visited
the:pia:Co she was so struck by the excessive
,
ugliness of the ladies of the borough that,
out of coMpaSaion for, the poor men who
lad it:ioilkiarry- there,: ea put Heider!. piece_
of le, ;to a Share of which each native-
born, woman was entitled. on Marriage, thus
giving to the brulTroom. "a portion, and
E.CeOngequont*ght to at Fariianientary
elections, - The: land still remains, and the
freemen have. Vote . for 300 yew's,. but they
have new become a thing of the as. far
as-votiOtis:_conceried._ • ' ',
, . . . .
-•-lt the recent _visit of the Prince of Wake
- at Mar Lodge ttiere_Vmalla'grand•;_toroblight,
bat.. The proiieseien of the. guests from
• the-lei:Use to; OA: dancing marquee, whion
- - . - - -
todk place- shortly after 1.ao- dock, was very
pictugestpie. Preceded by font pipers Caine
- the brilliant army .e.if- guests, at the head of
whore marched His Royal Highness the
Prince of Wales full -Highland costume,
on his pain tieing the Duchess of Nan-
chester.. The Duke- �f Albany, also in High -
rand dress, followed next with Lady
. Lonsdatkthe Earl of. Fife and the rest of
the gil . ,•a-.. amotig whoui. were the Marquis'
of %Ilartington and Lord Row.ton, following
• the company, being escorled. by Highland-
: ersbearieg pine -torches'. .
, • --,3-
- Jean- Hostig* WEia al popUlar actress .
fifteen :- years ,ago,., drawing large , and
admiring andietioes„; and. receiving * great
salary. She _.iteve-- darns, a poet-, living by
• teaching aloe tion teaaanb_itichie, seekers for
-, fame oxi tli stagetT,.-; Oblialey *here she
live 10 a, iserabl? tenement. This is
. what corn of being ,fist -rate actress.
-
r
--4
in a
profit of In,000 i4 Week. _.
•
Mr. John S. Clarke was last week in
Cleveland. and. clre* excellent houses.
•2t4es late. Claxton will begin tour Of
theljnited States on. the 22nd Pecember.
Mr.. DI. Er. Rosenfeld has written a fatal. -
Cal sketch in. four acts for Arr. Sol Smith
Rueseltentitled "Way e and. Wane."
'tie said thatthe _receipts -4 Latta last
week in Philadelphia from .her new- play
"Bob" amounted to Upwards ellati.Lopo.
Louise Pomeroy. froni who -"Brick "
Pcmeroy, the' bowling Western editor; was
divorced- because-she-iTould be an actress,
is said to have cleared $40,000 dn her Anti -
trolled tour. •- •
, Nary Anderson saYs.: "So
born fat, some achieve fatness, •
hi themselves-. tip with ora news
things." - .•
t AmOng the recent -arrivals by
Ship'Parthia from. Liverpool Were "The
Royal -Hand Bell Ringers." who are to
Make a. six. months? tour ln. t e United
r
States and Canada. --• - • • -
I -
girls are
and some
papers and
he steam -
That highly popular political ' novel, "
Foes Errand," has failed as`a. play. T
• the 'bond- of . union 'should -• not remain.
Honesty recp_nres theni not to wait to
be thrust out:-.- As. I Said alew moments
age, while My opinions on some -points may
.cliffer widely . from the opinions :held
thereon by -others; I elaini that upoit
the doctrines of the Chureh I have Uttered
, -
nothing centrary to the standards." con
Chinon, Dr.Buckley says: " The interview
to me *wire stinfelating and instructive. The
inapreseion as a, win:4e is that -he ie alniost
a phetionienou of intellectual vigor and
alertness, and that he is . thoroughly
suriOere ; that hie views may perhaps be.
Safely held by him, but that, logiCally fol.
loyeed to- their last results, they would lead
many t� the verge of rationalistic belief, if
note the last fatal plunge."
•
The Prisotter's Pet..
Many touching stories are told of pri-
soners' petsa,birds and•mice,' and even the
spiders of the cell, the jailer's children, or
eventlie ' faithful dog. But the story of
EdWaid Earl's interest in the little.daugh-
ter of the jail housekeeper, as . told by
himself, as eloquent and pictureiqueand
pathetic as any. It waswritten tWo_da,ys
before his execution in Hathilton County,
NeW York : -
As 1 .sit at my window and look out on
the b_e_autiful earth things eeemed changed
-7-dlllerent from what they were a month
ago ; • the people_seemed more kind ; the
sky looks motelleautiful and blue ; the
sun Shines brighter; every monthful .• of'
fresh air -taetes- sweeter and is breathed
with a- thankfulness. I never felt before:
No -4t • is inot that I have - changed;
those leives, a month ago, were green:
Now they are falling to the earth, and I
knOW that before the last one. drops I too
will fall and lie lower than they. That.
littlo 5,year-old playing opposite my win.;.
.
A OW 18 changed -a month ago she would
venture was made in Philadelphia, with all
the advantages of exCellent 'toting and
xieusive advertising; -
of
e windOw and we play 'keep house;' she
rmalies believe 'she is my little girl come
a tcevieit me; I .make believe 'she is, but
a Irak sad play for me. To -day she has
d been telling me that Pinkey (her doll)
-
• is. very sick --teeth bother her-• but
be, oh, sahice. I promise to be there ; she
laughs, thinking I am making believe.'
We bOth laugh; there is musicin her laugh-
ter -:-a tear in thine;.but, when it ;is
,erectea, I will be there -and swing."
The author of this narrative murdered
this Wife, wile Ina deserted him, taking with
her las child, of whom he Was very fond.
In a rage and frenzyle-killed the mother,
and Nit for thatirenzy might have secured
his child and been playing with ler and
loving her as he did the little one that both
eheereid andliadclened his last hours..
he.
The death is Anheuraied at rogue
PdusicalProfessor Franz Hilmar a.t the ag
of 79- years. Professor Hilmar has t
treclit of being -the Inventor of he ,polk
th
user an
• ilia
•
not Speak to me ; now she is using all her
little arta to attract my attention, and will
ory When we are separated. She lives in
the house with me, and every lair day she
• Nate herself on the grass beneath
It is said he composed- the fitst
vier appeared -in print, botlethe u.
he step being taken from a
Bohemian countrY dance. In .Czech the it a Septober now Whenitgets tobe Octopi.
word " polka "oaans "-half " ; the ,analogy ber Mary Pinkey.will be well again, then I
of meaning is obvious. The first le must come down and swing, and that *ill
ever wtittert was the " Esmeralda, Peaky.'"
The Rochester Democrat relateS the fol.
lowinginoident of the production of " Tire
Mighty -Dollar " iirtthat " Rather
a Many. incident °centred' at the C rnithian
-Aced:env-fast evening. In- the middle of
Miss Ttavernier's best .scerie a large dog
-Walked on the stage, and just at that
moment the lady's. -lines were, 1 -And now
leave me instantly." She. was pup-,
poSect be talking to Roland Vonee, 'but- as
she saw the dog she gave the words- w,ith
sheit Are and. spirit that the .bru seemed
tedateli their 'meaning at ones, aid turn-
ing tail he -retired as quick1y. as lie
appeared, atnicl. the laughter and applause
are_ audience." ,
eleck presented bY John Wesley `to-
.
the:0okt Street, Methedisif• Chinch,. New
York 116 years ago, . is still keeping time
for the worshippers in that sancturti7... •
- -
!
7-
The Schiller prree is one that is 'offered
Getnany for the pest new drama in the
language Of that 'country. A coninaission
of protninentliterary_ twin, that alesembled
in Betlin for the consideration -of probe:
-
tions eompeting for the /irks; 'his dedidett
that none . is ;good enough.. this, year t6.
deseite it.
Per)lotak• PaiiitIon 'of -a WhoIe Fatedli Iu
New Itiakk4A *tire Halves Thein Otai
. .
of gbe Niriadows. •• .
- •
•
_ esuatch from New York dated last
_ .
(Thursday) night says: This morning a
fire Suddenly broke • out in a three•storey
tenement in west 16th .street built in 'court.
• , t• -
, The sunflower Is now one of fashion's
asorites. Geed authority tells nit that
brocades are wrought these-. huge,
;glaring flowers.' The trains of some of the
',new- evening dreises are literally !strewn .
with them-, and eluStets of the. golden, and
town blossoms are placed at the corsage
and: _elsewhere ,on -the -toilette.;:. even- a,
. e 'by storey brick teiienie
and not ten feetftom
n ; Apray of the gigantic flowers in sli htl '
either packed with
poor people. J. Pa;rkerson, wife, daughter
Annie, aged 9, and Queenie, the baby, lived
on the third floe!. .The only way to get
up or down -to - the third floor was
by wooden stairs . outside: the ...house.
. .
While the -Parkerstons were - bed
at 6 a.m.1. the house: teok.fire by drunken
inmates of the llower floor uplifting- a
amp. When the Parkertions wereawakened
by- the smolie the vilioltylower,Part -cif the
hot* Was destroyed, the outside stairway -
humid down; and there were ne„ Means Of
ecape except through it tviiidoW demi' hitt
he -nattow space . between the binningoliee• and the tall tenement adjoining, the
Walls Of -which were red4not - and .the
merit below covered with embers. Parker.
on threw two bed -ticks down tubreak -the.
all, and before they Cotild barn up dropped
Lis wife down, then his daughter &Mita:
nd then took. the baby in --hie arane arid,
ung out of the windeW, preparing:to drop
ith 'Thai barned off
a
th
in
al
ig
be
bu
in
'na
felF, rettiking his head against
he • hot .brick opposite with-
uch forcer as to -knock him ,senselese`
he. baby fell, et/lick her head. against the
ame fraotared her skull, and had her
heek. burned off. against -the het - kicks.
Then Patkeison and the baby reached the
ed-ticke the -ticks were on Are, and both
eing ueconscious Perkerson and
au-ghter Annie had - to drag - them out
rougli the narrow "alley. filled with. burn.-
gwoOd, and When they realied the street
1- four weiee atlarne,. their Clothes having
nzted,•and the. mother and daughter
came- unconacions from oxhatistion, All
ere taken to, the hospital. The frame.
ildieg had been condemned by the Bnild-
g Department three_ Years ago, and they
d ordered it torn down, but -the landlord
a influence; and continued to have it
remm
a.and. be packed with tenants: - •
.. •
Ladles BrOcaded Trousers.
have heard and read -of the " Ladies'
Dress.eform Association," the. Via -
countess Harberton for Its • high -priestess,
but I had no • idea the reform had made
any practical ' progress in England till last
k
Weewhen I actually twice stumble&
-against ladies, in the new garb in the
streets of London -one -in _Bond . street
and the other .in Cromwell road. Well I
am bound to say. I like it. To be sure, the
ladies I happened -.see in it Were both
handsome: and well Het -up, carrying
themselves like queemi..4*But, really_ in
itself there appear s nothing objetionable,-
- and the -dress certainly 'con tribtites to -free-
dom of movement and I should ithagine
the comfort of the wearer., It is for all
the world like a riding habit eut. short ft?
just above the anklet exhibiting merely the
extreniities of the trousers. . f must 'Men-
tion Vieth.. -Only insteadof the dress and
nether garments being in cloth tilos I
, e
-eaW were at a black brocaded silk staff
that fell gracefully and looked quiet and
Trousers worn - thus, with a,
long skirt over. theta; are very different
from the lend, I vulgar iBlediner costume of -
lorrtier efforts in this direction; and itis
just possible that the -.reform may- spread.
But to do so it niast -Come from -above, else
society Will not have it an anyconsideratien
• At the Ladies' -Dress Reform Association
may be seen a specimen of this "rational
dress," as it -is called..- laithis the trouserit
are made very wide; with e deep flounce at
the extremity,:. which combines With the
skirt worn over theta, So that in allordinary
situations . no person Could possibly tell
there was any difference from the present
dress of orld."
ME& hating tat
At the ordinary Friday sittings of the.
Queen's Bench and Comnion Pleas Divi-.
sions yesterday -in Toronto Mr. Fenten,
County Attorney,. moved -for a
bring upthe evidence laid. before.the Police
Magistrate;Tordite, in the Sundayshaying
case Of the Queen- vs: Pattiek Graham,
which was dit3rnissed by the Magistrate.
The Magietrate. _honeyed.' the evidehce -in
the case, but disnaissed., it onthe-lai, hold-
ing that Sundey:, shaving is 'a _work of,
necessity, T andrefusing to eptiviet. The
cage was- dismissed with costs, and an-
ordet• made for payinent of nosts .against
the prosecutor, George WashingtonSmith,
another • barber. Itie well-known
principle ' of law that -no man can
be tried twice-. for • the same._ offence,
and Graham having been acquitted bythe
Magietrate the case cannot -be reviewed by.
the. court abeve.:Mr.- Fenton, however,:
seeks by' a aide wind: -to get-the:ease before.
the court; . nerving. against the Oder for
costs made agaiegt the prosecutor.
pretty strong ease decided by the House Of
liords ifi-1.837 is relied upon by Mr. Fenton
his autherity for cenviating. • The
earned . judge, :however, 1 refused - the
ertiorari on two grounds 1. The acquittal.
. That -the order, for costs cannot ..be:
prattled against, as by Mr. Fenton's!'
dmission, they were. imposed at his own
equest. This ipitial-diffictitybeintin.. the.
ay of the County Attorney; his T only
se -tonic° is to appeal to the full. Court, Or
est contented. with the . declaim of the
agietrate. -
1
2
a
a
SwantoWnie Toorntica.--jelinr a.
MoMullein,of the: auditor's office -Elevated
Railway, New York, returned- to his home
in this village- -about tWo Weeke E.34100 -in very
feeble health, his New Yet* physician hav-
ing . advised bin) that his disease was-
censumption' whit% pregaOsia was appar.
ently verifiedEL day or two after his arrival
by quitea severe heniorrhage A few days
later, however,during a At of coughing, he
threw Out about ha3f ofla Wooden toothpick,
Since -Which time his condition has steadily
and rapidly improved; and he is cOrifident.
of-
speedy restoration to his • accustOnied
Imalth.-El/envilie-(N.' Y.) Journal. s -
John K. Bennett,. after living reputablY
the age of 65, at Bleomfieldr ind., sud-
nly changed his sedate.ways to those :of
profligate, In four years he sinfolly.
tndered 025,000, ancinbent-a week agro
und,himgejf pennileis... His neighborti
- not think poverty a eutdoing putnah
lit for his blicIlediidtietT se -they 16-tined's
k took him out of bed; tied-hira to a tree
d flogged himy.• '
to
de
a -
fo
did
in
mo
an
g
odified -• size; is :arranged for the :hair.
handeompetattificial clusters- of tuna- -
ewers are satin antique, wonderfully:
erfect in their imitation of natiire Lind
very expensive, it'..:singie spray costing
,
rom $1O -to $12„, . These sunflowers of
rachlifed Size :will probably be&popular
or_tiage bouquet all - winter, though there
re:many other flowers that rival them-
fillow nasturtiums blotched - with brown,
e leaves touched -crimson and geld with
e 'autumn frost: Huge pansies in purple,
Iiite and gold; golden rod, astois, Wary..
utherautati, tulips;.; great lilies. and
chids are all fashionable.- In the fancy •
Or flowers of splendid size and celot it_ is
ite possible Mureclzel Niel; •jacquentinot -
00_4 other roses will . for a time be thrown
Holly.hooks, which are coining iiitP
i'vor in England, ate -not yetpopular.
4.
_ initek'S _
•••tt sure,'prompt and effectual reniedY for
atvoitaness in. all stages,weak memory,
Is of brain power, - sexnal, prostration,
riQht - sweats, sperreatorrhea, seminal
weakness and general loss, of -power. - It -.-
repairs nervous waste; rejuvenates the
jOed ilitelle0t;- stterighens the enfeebled
-14in, and restores surprising tone and
..stA r to the exhausted generative organe.
, expetience of thousands proves it an.
iOaluable .remedy,. Full .particulars, nt.
°tit:pamphlets, which wedesire to mail
free -to any address. Sold by all druggists
ei,titytrhere at Re: per bOx, Or twelve boiseiti :-
fat $5.00. = ••
Gladstone's recent illness was eaused
b? h18 devotion. to` rural pursuits: While -
atiIrawaiden- he -went out into the weeds
,tor fell tinaher, though the weather Wafi
tar -
Y •
. e result
ld
was a coof a very
Eeeibus sort, - -
',teat improvements lave recently beiii
• intlole in .:Carboline, a, :deodorized extract
pe ro eum, the . great • ,nate.ral • hair
re wer, and now it is absolutely. perfect_
h exquisite mail- •perfureed
hafrr dreesing .and restorer. Everybody is
de ghted with it. geld b -v all druggists -
f
L:EXAMINE ° t
• L progress of our. students. .
Iilvestigate our claim -to have the .most thor-
ough .and pradtical school in Canada,- and -before -
Spending your money, satisfy yourself - that the
L. • .•,:. •
BRItISII- AMERICAN' - COMMERCIAL -COLLEGE. •
toRos*O,
Is tie place to learn business. -14ar-institution
offell4 equal advantages to young radii: Students
ern at any time. For:circu•lar, -ancl. . specimens
of nnrrianship, • - -
•• Address•
• the Seeret.ury.
ur method ofteaching. Watch -
14-Aelt.'* ffIAGINTJSTIC ITTEINIC1111:11
Is a surd, prempt
and effectual wine
. dy for Nervousness
in .ALL its stages -
• Weak Memory
Loss offBraiiiPower,
••Prostration, Night
• Sweats, Weakness
' and.- General Lose
_Of Power. It repairs.;
Nerious Waite, Re
(TADE NrAnii.) juvenates thaJaded.
:Tuts ea,- Strengthens the• Enfeebled Brain, eila -
Restptes Surprising Tone and Vigor to tho Ex-
hausted Organs. The experience of thousands
provhs it an-EvyAmnAezn REMEDY. -'
•
Th % Medicine ieFpleasant to the tp,Ste, and in
nc4se and !under no -circumstaneas can if. do
Eath .box contains suffidient,for two
weettis medication, thus being much 'cheaper
thanA any other Medicine sold -and " .while it is
the ellteapest, itis-nauch better. -*. •
Fil11 particulars in our pamphlet, -which wo
desire to mail free to any address. .. • •
3.alvoketi-e fflodielne- is sold by
druggists at 3-o cts. per box, or12 boxes -for $5, -
or tivitI -Be mailed free of postage on .teeeipttof
the -Abney; by addressing- • •
•Mitich'i.Datanetic edieine co,
. •
Wipdsor, Ont.; Canada.,
Sol ny all .ciruggistsev trabere. ,
•
-
. ,
tli4DE saguLD koT FORGET. THAT -
.-
Tor1j imOtoiedllorse and Cattle.- Food
Is matinfactured-- only in Hamilton, Out. Its
tuirivklied success has calledfOrth-a .number of - '
imitafiOns, sellingniainly =011 the.acknowledged
reputation of - Our nod.. -Notide carofully our
trade nhirk,-and-when-ordering.he afire- you get-
THQ. 143EY'S Improved .Cattle Food from Our
- , . „ ,
Acurowv, nAnurATOIV;_cl‘T.
COUR .FOR, LIQUOR CRAVING, IND/GES
TION.0111. Costiveness. - :Now remedY,:gam-H-
ple-IT atonal:le to any -part of
-Oaliadabr united states.- Address W.
Druggist, Toronto.: _ •
. - •
-Over I.00-etemraireta lave -been cured by-utt
during:the past -three -years. .Testimentals from511 .,
partf„of tbe.Z.13.1-an amtda. 'Address- -
_ - , .
- man TB, London, Ont.-
- ,
sic von
IC 8
Asoillptiye.. Syrup
• - r
Tniaold-eitablisnedlreineidY cau be ivith-cone -- •
eenee rOomMencled far .thapalsoiret. corolaints . •• -•
Iflout,iiierti*ntIbiks*,ncit.sof it,jhe
ott tot •-`' • • . -
.JOHN W SICKLE 7
. - ' (Formerly T. Bckle -& Son);
l• la •. . Ontario - Proprieter-
-- . •
•_-
ami
'
;