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The Sentinel, 1882-02-10, Page 6- EXTRAORDINARY SCENES: A Temperatice Meeting in Possession. of Roughs. •' •• ROWDY RASCA.TeeTY 'RAMPANT. The Glailoweeforat. Brittsh Daity- Mail contains the folloWing report- of la leitrphy " meeting at Dundee, Secitlande The Mr. Murphy referred to spoke.= total eestinence to a gathering of severe:111am- • sand- persons at the-Grim.sby Cain 'Ground three years ago MMy of our read rs • remember hirivi According -to -invitation front the Church . pulpits and otherwise, a monster 'juvenile teatmeeting took place in- Cook's Circus.- . All were admitted free on sheering the blue- . ribbon, _ane pledge _card. -Long before 71 °Week,. the hour of meeting, the -children . assembled in ramie thciesandse and the crowd, swelled inits propoxtions until 'not only the vacant mined" about the pieces . Was crowded, but the Nethergate Itself was • blocked: At lest the doors of the circus *ere thrown toren,. mid the mob rushed in yellingsheuting - and, Etcreaneng. The • interier.of the Melding was soon packed in every -cerner, and still the mob outside came surging reund the doors, No. more • weld be admitted, and the doors were • Ordered: • to be closed. Then' followed a •Beetle on the street molt as has been rarely witnessed in Dundee. The roughs from • the Scominginirn • and. the_ Illaxwelltown districts had - 1i:teetered in great force, aud- it is believed had Supplied themselves With blue ribbons -for the. occasion. A large proportion of that class he,d succeeded in .FALL OF C+.011BETTA. • • Defeat and. Resignation• of His Mineietry.• • • , • .- . . . =CITING SCENE IN TEE•CEAMBEE. A. Paris despatch says, : • After - a -short but eaciting -debate the. -Government was yesterday beaten, 'bra meeority of 55, Last :evening M. grainbaita and. his eolleitguee tendered --their resignations. e When the deputies -.emit:Mee in: the _afternoon the -Meuse Was pecked from lloorto T.heediploniatio bee. was qiiite felt; :there: as nee even aniineb. of standing eaten Tie • he Fess. or etibunes. By e o'clock pre-. • isely the Miristers were in their seats, X. ,:ceaMbettalooking- mucheealnier than late Kohditye learguine, -Chairman of the onamittee,briefly calleeen the Goveinteent eo reply to. the report readeaet .24.oneayeince M. Garabetta accepting the oh:allenge was efien. tamely ascending -the .tribunee .The- :spene neve-became highly. iiitereithig. The -decisive Moment had come: Would M. -Gambette be epee' to the situation.? :That he Was elle* to its extrude •gtittity teat, - could not.be a doubt.- 'Hieepeech haribeen: carefully elaborated, and • was evidently, meant, to be conciliatory.. Dpening with. much. show of hetnility, the • speaker .attempted to persuade theeheen13er that it wits inacpordWitb. the Government, "for if," heesaid„ "it had, rejected Barodetes schetheolmilimited revision it could only. _have meant to appreveof limited revision." • Finding his argument little tothe; taste Of -his-heerere, he warmed with the ocese sion, and proteseing • against the criminal, • gaining an. entrance • to- :the °name to the 'folly of calling the whole constitution into exclusion Of the legitimate hoiden:of caids be rallied the Revision and ribbons, but when the hundreds who lee On the contradiction contiiiied in fie wertiekept out saw the &Ora closed, they report, and asked- if it was or was'not • yelled outtheir rageituehadat the deem and eti favor • of: complete' . revision, Skilfully • !sicked and Aotited, but all: in vain,. • Five lowering bis wigs for Eft .few moments,' he police officers attempted to disperse the • then referred_ to the . ridiculous • inisinter, nick but they were .met with hotels: and pretation given to his anewer in: the com! yells, pelted With mud,spat on, and. kicked mittee on... Saturd.ey. Rasing his ' Voice and buffeted abut- by the you,* rowdies:: again the neat instant, - lie Made the very Afteralesperate struggle the, stabIe-yard -kerne threatening- d-eolaraeious_ tvhiele bed • behind ehe- Wel-wee eleired and -the _gatearoused-the-wrath of the committee.. After_ lear closed .; but the mob driven. out' . a. short .but telling- rejoinder be M. • swelled the crowd on the stied. Peovest rieUe the Chamber was theii-consulted as Mown, in attempting to : get, into the to whether the report _�f the -committee , • building. Was etoteetee by -a stalwart con! Shouldhe preferred to - that of the Cabinet. stable; but, netwithstindiegethe mob sub-- AY a Tote of. 28.2- to 22 the co-mmittee's jeeteel him to very rough Usage. Inside the report was, ed-oppted. This has been a vir- • building the scene wait one of wild cote tual defeat for the Cabinet.. M. Gambetta, fee*. Tea evasgot over in a way,and the amidst intense eacitenteet; returnee to the . Provost end Mr. etuiphy shortly addressed tribene .and.atinouncee that theMinisters the. audience. • It was with .difficultet that could no Mega': contimie to administer the • theyecould make themselves heard above affairs of. the country. -M..D. Feeycifiet, M. - :the -din, Which was. waxing 'iogder and julee Parried Brissee are all spokenof louder every minute. 'Hypes. were sung,. as likely- to au -calm& him.tTbe formgi*en te . but the tumult drownedthe voices of the the- ehreat was polite, but. the threat was vetediets. _Mr.. Scrimgeour was then, called barely disguised It the Congress, he argued, on to speak-. On making his .appearance should,outitep teat:ed. for it • the tumulthroknoutt_with. h noise- like, the. the Cheri:dens it Would becommitting e • rotteingottheaea. -Fremehis_tioint bidet revolieteceiaryeate. -Ifieneeoletions Would • waiegeriee and the youngroughe broke: be therefete be. mile. and have no effect given • yondale bonds. . Thecominittee and the them by the Rieoutive. In support Of this attendants attempted to quell the _tumuli audacious theory M. Gembette.. has -a pee- . and eject theunruly part of the audience. cadent supplied bye the congress -which A. deuce: Free Olierele elder was seen in the elected let. -Grevy„ and a ;Speech of - middle of the throng beetboeingthetascale Dufame, but - neither Made much ertapie:e • with: a longtoieewhite others were in -vele .sion On theOliatebet, and the-seance,:which .etulea.voring to. enforce silence. Oneyoueg had been anything but..orderly: from the rough. Was observed flourishing_ a long- outsee'eow began to grow riotous,- einvain _Waded sheethemile- in a. recklesa taanneet dtd-he exhibit:altthnin gnifidont *I -Ohio -ea • ; bat a gentietnan maderuse at the, -nada of hiseloqueiace. In vajn did he debate on and disarmed him of the weapon.- The • knife is -quite- new, has. a, "blade ot about Eter inches lone set in a.. white bone..handle, . -and AB most.fbrmidable: Woking , piece ot -cutlery, being one ofetlite dagger keivee so frequently to be observed in: the • pictures of the er penny drelidfuIs • treting scenes of brigand: and pirate. life. . The letill�. was handece-over. to • pour, whaeome time later- was aecoeted by at eaideciotialeoking youth; 'Who repre- sented thatthe knife was the property of. • - • his brother and that -he had been sentte olaine it. elr,Sceitegeour,howeyerideolinee • to yield. up theweapon mikes to tee real • owner; and • accordingly lea. the bending • with it: in hit -possession, retaining it 82 .8' trophyof teefiercebut fortunately, se far as we have:heard, bloodless cenibat which ' taboo waged. After considerable eaer;-- • tionthe .Ceretlit was at last • cleared d. the • Uneuly audience dispersed shortly after 8. • teelook. • Prayers Oflered sensuitarieoesie ta .But . • foe, cieeeeuid and 'Nes;r1 Yorh. - Aneerie, Pa., despatche dated yeeterday, •- : At this wilting a -peculiarly; eiteiest- • iliegaffatr is takieg place at Edinboro', a fifteen miles from; this city. A number of ladies are praying,according to Previous arrangement, for the recovery • Of _Miss: germ- Van Dyke, who is -said -to be dying -teem the effects of a turnot. The• ' beat physic:liana of the vicinity exerted. their utmost to axeest the -growth, but it defied ▪ their efforts, andat lateher case was given • upi as _a hopeless. one. Some Christian • friends - eAyised the prayecured. , • the young latly being- a atm Christian. •-believer; emote ,to leas Judd, of Buffalo, • and otherstor the purpoite of fixing Upon a eley .for united -prayer on her behalf. Te-dey was set spelt,- end at this moment. • a -band of praying Young ladies.is sown- -• bled- around the bedside of the (yew gip. •,.invoking the Almiglitylo cure her. As an the ease of 'Miss Judd, of Buffalo,. and Mies • Mamie' Leo, of this city, by preconcerted • anangemeets prayers are being offered at _ the same time in BUffeloeCleyeleaid and.\ '• New York. A telephone ineesagefiera 'the *tulle states that as yet- the lade is weaned, but she is easier and trusting the poWer and Will Lthe • her. - 7. , by a. Schoolboy.: - - A despatch from West Jefferson,. 0., gape: -Mike Hi . teacher in a peblio- Scheel three - es frotti-this place; yestere • day- afterrioon called. in John Butler, one of the direct° ,_ assist heren. quelling a disturbance Ong the - instigated • b3r- 1i -boy named i; Scott, le Years of 'age: Mr. Butler :r. = raged Scott that the - latter struck him on the heitewith a piece ottioal, orUshing' his skull and inflicting .1 fatal inediee. • Scott esisped. • - The Winnipeg Tithes:of the- 19th says: - "Hugh McMahon, 0., of London, Ont, • who arrived the, other evening, has come to Wes Bagot, h tester of Mr. Bagot,tne of ee'. the Goverpor-Generales. aides-de-camp, ie. •Ongsgedlo hi married to Mr. Graham, a "• Itiontonlist of HorMajesty's yacht Osborne. his devotion to the dem House applauded his gr refusi3d.to be led away -net help ihweedly coin more than once while Chamber to alion-tam intiou.....- hosom than slim was clothed in puryl..- .....0.1.11111.11•41•W ^1114.11100/110143 OM& WAMPUM 1/110101Mai %was; geowniumbia....D.'fi ratio cause: _ The ed periods, but . it y them. One could . aping MeGambette he addressed the r iiia liege of lions. For a 'time he halt See ceede& in cowing them, but a single false step must destroy him. The eharm of his ?loquenee had worn out, the lions Were. preparing to spring.; Only one thing could Weesaved, him, the sacrifice of the scrutiu. ,liste. This fatal. squtin-de-liste he ref id altogether - to ebandon. He wound ound and round it the whole time, eequett d with% wandered away from it, but cam: back to tt. Dis- geiseit at he would, th reference was plain and to the, point. The, Obamber, however, ye:Mid ha.ve tothiiig -to te with the scrutirt- de-liste, though M. Ga betta deolered.that -. • it • '' - . was indispensable 1 Directly he ap- -preached the subject it grew hostile and rebellious. „After. preaking an hour and. a half, amid continual interruptions,. 1/1. -Gambetta resumed his seat. , He was applauded by.barely hell the. Chamber. -- -' -BI: Garabette has tided: to President .. gravy his -resignation and these of his colleagues.. The Pease -tent haseent foe M. Derreycinet and • it Leon. See. The die._ nuseion became so itni4ated that a force of police was -celled in e.hd remained dining the entire session. . . -What the _ . TALMAGE ON:INGERSOLL_ - His Opinionof the 'Creation of VOitalrand the • Prattite-eiretegallye - _ • " Legersollethe champeet-,Blesphemer-oe America," was the subject.efler.TalitiageN morning diecoinse on Sunday. --Aux±1-eM- mense congregationceowded the Tabernacle, and in hieprayer- Mre="'Palmige-saidithat theye! came es enipty pitchersetoethiegreat fouutain, as Unlighted towhee to the:great fire." After defiesuimitig Iegersolefoequee.. tiening_ the truth e of -the-Biblee-Telmege said: If Moses.._ had gone- inte-partioulaie x59;000 volumes Would not-lrayeecouteined the sacred- iteratuteeeeBibreewritereevere AL TO e " Wdrld "and 'Othee N -paper Offices . • • • . Reduced toA s. SUPPOSED Lop% 000,00ct. : . AwfntScenes and Ind Women---ALPerish in embiliting Heeds. of Fireinen=r=4,10C-ot Wife Aefire, which for seiftri • eve power is uripatalreled not ignore, uses; they knew more than----NeW York, broke out B Ingersoll, - -Ohl JO_b_.kneW_seleUtit-eeapeee -Wedlock yesterday morthe atioe and the iefiketion tionsandS7 -building, coiner of, Park.i, .of_yeatie age. _ &b. -was the-firste" Old 140- -man street few ta habilities ;" he ktiewileetout thewindeane flame shot tip to the etto their currents:- What modern -astronomers -structure; with Crowded have justfound out DMA knee thousands busy": throng of men e of years. ago; "-Stan:nod kneweleabontthe wrapped up in -a deadly ee brace of _fire. circulate* of the blood. James Wattle- The unfortunate peoPleypho . occupied -application' of -steam andellieratearnagnEitic offices in this tenber-beetetructure were telegraph e Were_ known:e_lo, aetiquated: suddenly :confronted - wig -el -death in the Job. Alethe lese ofeBur_ke,. Placksteetee in awful foree. ..Ther se witnessed Curran, Choate, [Everett, Webiterleall the- the awful _spectacle of p eworking girlsEnglieh, _Romane_andraereetnelaw 18 sinking back in an oceofitbf flame, and founded on the tin sentences by thiteveme men and ivemen leaping 1 ,fra,ntic terror ;arable lawyer eiecorded—ihe Exodus lee from upper . -windows.. oironstricken Moses never imagined -tihattethe skeewasea firemeen and spectators sied paralyzed solid roof, with the stars hung urageinitit by the frightful sedeffea at occurred, 1114-Ornettlellt10. (148•11gaiii,1.-7-Ah-Lia. the ane • 'the • wink ofeed ruction vent risk of raising another laugh," said. Tale on with aniezing rapidity, arrow (mopes_ mage, "1 must gipeakettIngersolre favorite and deeds of %heroism re" numerous: joke. I must_ stet& at his boneAdam's It seemed as if human lif es being -blot- rih from Which rinse was made. --There's ted out every moment, an I will perhaps no absurdity : in this, -When-we know not known for Several t1ys --how ,many thatthe word translated rib . meseis perished . rn. this human olocauste Old side. But Ingersoll- doestet kecite firemen Bey: they -never fire spread it; he --doese'reknew------e-___ word-eter through e building with s *rapidity .._ For letter of elebreW. 11Iattheellenry thinker et block around the burnln4 BEng the lir. that women was taken_from the left side was fell of black seiblie, a tst :which the of man; neatest -his -heart ; het-lesay that driving pow storm had gee:30 peculiar: she Was taken; beeneetheeright side, from effect. When the fire wa its height the wider .:the righ aim, suggeiting-that he heat was tee great for -the liremen to get should fight herebattlesestrike down her. :between the World buildi n4 :the Reny assailant, avenge her honon.-----Youemay cheats, men, shine him, aElsault. him,but he. becomes liyid-vrith -rage if . you say eny- thinged -Thee-pint-was pathe, te-Itlien and 4:8174 °fevewillirkla elp ilarinurn. ger 111 and.destruc-. history of, rtly after 10 the old World w and Beek- tes a sheet of ndthe entire ces and ::its: women, Was inuldeig ter elong the Na ,Nassau street not bawl feet wide. - When the: World building . tioally illuetrated- -13yeereferenee toe the_ . chief e anxiety dente couple who were foiled in ea-etieethetee --:.brick. Well between thee embrace.- on the; wrecked -Hudson Biver This -was le heavy wall,_ train. They rent side by side to death," keep- the fire out of th said Mr. Talmage, "and they were laid depended the Safety of the side by side in I the gram Ingersoll. says The water tower : from _ the Bible Wine polygam-ye—Doei the stream is thrown at a hei Almighty teed :ueohold polygetty?----_-_HoW ;the 'ground, was gest teeny Wives did ere mTtke-foreAdeni ? Ono:- ihe--._party-walr.from top Ab! -Mr. Ingersoll; it -would haea beerr just to -trent of water. -On . th as easy for Godeto have giveeeAdam :titre; Perk Row the most yew ten or 'thirty Wives, Ibutelle didiete He sent was employed in k started the busineseetle-He-iiehted_it ton- arty wall wet' The ttnota cast hy this tinned. All the great raw ettee---131ble engine was item an inch' We, and Was fed steed _aloof . from pelegtenr•er werepunby five- lies of -smaller- Wee. It required ished 'within an inch ofetheir lives for -the .fieur nien.totnituage the Otele. The force sin But -*lid nee David and. Solomon favor ne this Ahearn was snarl& to bear itivey polygerny ? Yee, and they were punished the light wood work ai legns like loose for it . David WO iihased by the Bedouins, paper. It reached to t1eorniCe of - the the Xoabites, siekness, dethronement and Times building indhelp le keep the reef death, yea, the,'Llird God Almighty get wet in this way e The fire wee finally got: after hire— Solomon had something to de under contrel. With polegaine yebutreadliiiitiook ot gccle- J. incident - siastes; :and learn how helleatheathe - and calla it all vanity.'Wh • le' y, Biwa_ One *man well dress„nda.sfePdgareeltlf. hundred. Women ` rf "1 of bine eLauglit ;neat William, • "Baby is dead!" passed along the line and soon forgotten. quiet again I leaned hind and fell into a de those-vroids-inean. Somewhere—a dainty form, still and cold, unclasped be Mother's arms to -night; eyes that yesterday *re bright and blue an skiei of June drooped to -night beneath white lids that no voice can ewe raise • hree little words copied somewhere But after all Was my head upon my p reverie Of all that . a • _ . falehadlieen broken, and she - fell to the• . fiaggin.g but slightly hint aWaYe -.1ettereatrier; Who - had -Piet: °de- pleted: his delieeryin the building, and .an ' °toupee:it who ere:aped both "say - they 'few : at least -forty panitestrieken welter' and 4fraailesdbilYneuMineglt.:.b°14 141.the •. 11 -13•V -161r floc -1s• . Tive colored. waiters in •'Nash Brookl• e:. say they sow two white women eine one-. • iiegress perish together in the fiee. • 0, 01. Bruce, editor:of the Teefeeee.le - and Pam narroevly• escaped.: was his eine° on the third floor when the. fire broker. through the door. ••Hp threw - his , subscription books out of a. wiedote • crawled- out Of the Windew _and along thee .window t� Timo.:, building, ande -eseaped through that, hiving :his alma, hands; Saxe and neck buined.,•end hair -and: beard badly singed. " leeuee_thinks ineey of - his reonieesitors Who Were at Workeeriehed. Bruce's father had all has whiskees.hureed- • Several wettable' prizes won it .Vate- niatches were burned in .-the office. of e e Turf, Field and Farm. • , „ . Ellen Carey; employed in thetop floor of the bindery, juinpideete 'awell hole with another gtrleue •escaped with a fewbruisese She feers. that sixteen of her companions - perished: - - Rev. -Edvieed' ,Prime, -.Of the ObserOer,..• - escaped in the mane Ma:met-Ms Bruce. - Dr Sieetuees. ;prime and :eon eseapece.... - without then hats, The only feniale:. patent Eeilicitot:aee e bending escaped. . :• . A woman standing on the sill win# dowin the -fourth storey held on -to a tele! phone .wire with the left hand. Shewas hatless,- .and her °leen,* Was in a chs- erdered .-. She . fanned herself with her right hand and waited for asses, "twee. Holdfast till -1 comae! shouted - fireman Rooney, and - . scene of men aeig. boys realited forwent and dragged: a ladder from the het* and ladder waggon that hade. just arrived.- In an instant tb.e ladder Wag, ,placed. along the: side of • the bending.. It - only reached to the third storey and a cry " pf &klieg • went . tip - - from the erowd: P ash up another," a hundred - _street. trent, . . mreentshaawn tfiayt •,ethoemeissdilYs;ltlewat; s. teTs7ao• t..adetiethutee.lii,• oraatin. you 7 at. go, - the hold a minute ?" the leader asked . of the • 9n , ebe poer woman. "yes, but en God's sake o eiteildings.. hurry," v.i'as thehearse reply. "Come- On; . itteitse tibouwiledrint: r i en," said the fireman - to, his companione . "Damn the ladder, we must save her ;" met- . et et thew& lip he went till the OP .of his 'hands just- . bah a tem -inch eetteeed.the won:tales feet.' The.crowdhelde °tee Joe teem its -.breath in suepense. The woman re - that -it washed mooned cool. ." Hold on -to the wire - and - _ bottom with a step; ee my shoulder," said the ' fireman,- itilappsotsrietie -mei,Elperej gInding her loot with hand. The woman did as she was told, but as the brawny fel tug :the Times lowwent to move a step lower. she eeemed ' y xyoung who vrasestendin ki No house is large e.'r' 0 ug andh. tastalrydintwg oey.lf-oltheeettie:: window iii Beekman I dr( :stretched forth her hatiteiripleringly. A 'reeeeied tooneman. (Iteneveed-laughtee) heroic firenfan tried to gas ladder to her, Me Bible -does niiiiialint pelygite2y; Inger but before they could do A -the. fianies.teok Belli -end L takeetheelleerteneand-accursed held et her .olothinOteld eeloPed. her in slander.. land -hurl. - it back eine- vcier fire, and she plunged bite kite the .burning blasphemous teetk."---- jt back _beildem• g. . ...-... Eliot a literary :adulteress,.. and .. paiting Et,' Elise , Bull (colored),a janitrees, Who - eulogy upon Queen_Victeria, Mei Talmage: had charge Of six robtha the lipOr. 11004 said_th4before7Wgorthrringh with Inger- Ttee engaged with hat ee .in cleaning soil -.he woiederroet to the Worldethet the them,- when . she *at ne alar*: and Bible was the onlYT3oek-fitlee the' hoesee. started to leen, but . W.Ei ilt- off 411 - every hoIdandthatit was the friend ofallthinge ,direction - and clitebed ' „the ledge of the • Two eat hands, whose resales/ fingers were wont to -wander lovingly around mother's neck and face, loosely holding: • white buds, quietly foldedin confined rest. Soft lips, yesterday rippling with latighter; sweet as woodland brookfalls, gay • RS trill a foresthirds ; to -night unrespon- sive to kiss or call of love. A. silent home—the patter of baby feet forever bushed.e-a oridle-bed impressed, little shoes half wore—dainty garments, shoulder -knots, of blue to match those eyes •of yesterday, .foIded with aching heart away. • ' A tinymound.anow-qovered in BOW quiet graveyard. motheras groping 'tier for the fair head t rest upon' het bosom. bitter tear, as broken reality. The hope of fifth e storeywineow. etfemaintained: -her pureeeed.thateeifidelity,wasethe advociate of all thiegeemeere. "-TheiteeWheego.:Eind pay 50 cents orro. dollar -to hear . the 'Lend_ Jesus Christ ineulted_will come Berne day to need the blieee 6f-Hileenomises: Whe- ire came to dio We shall want our elieiee of pellovis:- The illee-e--of-regret is stuffed with nt3ttleie_the tiOn.isetuffedWithedeletehadee • Whatewe shall need_is . the sesithitig, _eomfortieg pillow: -steffed, with the ---fiethelea- of the - - - — - - eg• • . - • _ . The Positionktd ihe No matter to' what extent therefinement Iii machintetiolamYtYle-earried,etiirrinAhe end, the careful and painstaking opeistiOtt, of the skilled nieohatho that meat being:the produces of_thesetoelsteeeepeifection that will meet the requirements of modern . de - Mends: The lathe will not turn eo -tamed that, in this respecteiteepioductiori cannot be improved byetheliandwor,iteettheeikillee machinist, nor will mulling or :planing machine reeduee_surfacee so -true -44e lie is not called upontozactify them with the file and seiaperi- 1-NoVicii*---eyer;the:_heantifut finish -on -won -4a- atio-elli-the reedit of the ineividettleffortoftheoperetoreteetheethen of the. perfection-ofeeoole.--ereart---agoe the epinionepreild ed -.16---eareionsideeetble -extent- i that. the - services- ofetheellighly---skilled mechatid-WO . - int=13-07-WMuch-a-niatter of -necessity in the future as in :.the poet, but thoeceivheelitiilt_o_nsticle greinide built poorly., .1.. The man will always_ be superior to the Machine,- -andi•MusthlwaYe seeletter then he can perform. thiemtin May direot,tbe efforts cf fiftyskilledwork- men -tee theepreductioe-ofegoodTwerk, but _ tI-- d_work - ' s fifty men cannot _o i:ge_e_egoo -e from one unskilled woOmanwr.-.±InitiiroTyWtoola:iihd iiiichanical:applieneeil--e;Wilefieniplieseilit the aitizen:inehieliteduction- ofeefieneework,_ but the greater the_iefineMehts of these tools and appliances the gee -Deter must be his. skill. Instead 0! relieving him delis :responsibilities-, W-Wiili---eWohld- be every sense a rinistortunte,--theVadd:tO-theni, whinh-n2ake b-iit in evielyeeleeetheebetterin- being able teemed - thenee_Altogettier-the position �f eheskilledineohanieleineve;y: way:satiefeotery in-itareiatien-teiliiprOved machine- .peedue_tion,elleMid '1e:the-eel:es- end: -appliances of the fittene,-- however refined; can never usurp his place inthe -industries of. the world nor.-10lieve-hien- of the part he is tsii..----pray: --ininture. nmeleanicil adietteiereent-43feceitiesee. -. ,.. -- ---e-----e,---ee A recent- letter-froin7a-Floria-Orange= grower speaksofthousands--ei --oranges- lying underthetrees uieliiiiiteefterereenew, freak of . naeureewlefoliesplitiethe fruit On the trees, thueespoeling-themee=Thilenew difficulty is generally1.Itribnted--to-ihe: ----.. , summer drought.- - - -_____ _ iaoh in 1.1110118y slum - at shall never again . The low sob, the egMB awake to sad. ture pests -wrecked; likefair ships that euddenly go down in sight of land. •The watching of other babies, dimpled, laughing, serong, and this one gone. The presentlgonyof iet, tho future emptiness of heart, MI held in those three little words: "Baby is dead."—Telegraph Operator. Lienteekovenior Cattahon sold, last -week; hree blocks of land in Brandon for .24,000. Only six months ago he paid 4,6,000 for the aame proPerty. ..• • . position only for -a _blest of " fire and emp struck. - her, - and. -Oh eireee in her descent . ent with a eull the Strangely .eeough b, terribleefelle she war, Timis office in sei stele past all:Mullen aidend arrived. Two nien ermined' -Window; and by deoppi •cepings aed,kiekingein lee themselves, t Making their -escape. • , -stated that Was -seen in fourth bending appealing for raged aboet_her igniting fell back into e flames; th •burned -to death.•" ---A. m. Stewart, edito -Avarican Journal, was puity-from a wind.OW-bY, - Two men in eheereeetio fire near them, were lie out.: They then xleepe -street. •elt-iereported.et were broken. Several • Fertilely overcome wibh eeeyming girl wearing' waetut off from the sta storey ewindow on the steed hesitatingly -whi emeke . encircled her. cried the spectatore.--- lookhelow, she threw _ with a:thud On ehiesten picked up life. vreeeatin onished-almost beyond. ..S.TillAYEA•prineer oil can -Journal, eumpee fr broke- his hip beneeind- ._iiitettal injuries.: Heee Richard BoWie,-a-pr :paper; jumped out of th -"dow end -sustaihed gem both.legs,:inteenei ineite bead -end face. tie -Will It is knownthat feed! working in the SCottie I I oments *hen a om the window over several truck the•pave- erushed mass. d folkeved . the orne into' the es but she was sdyingwheilit f afthstorey and 'slinging to indows-as they eY succeeded in y haeree woman. rey of the World Ip. _ The .flames er clothes. She d no doubt was . - - of the Scottish eued :with: diffi- ternee: • - , - - • storey, with no to throw a girl headlong -t° the t the -gtrre _legs_ emen were eem! toke.- • blue dress; Whe ran toe fourth Rove side and the flames and liimp 1 ]up!" g a frightened lf out and -fell avement. When her heed being ogriitione •' ' e. Scottish Aitieri- the third 'floor, eivecl -dike-roes. probably die. r on the _same bird' stOreyWine tie irate:nee Of Mid .outs nii the, obablydiee -- ompesitots were - American rbems, -which were iselatekwli the fire broke nit; end Bowie --and Ito are the only "Ones seved., : 'TIM rooms en the upr fieorsWereunder,, ,going.repairs, and rionelee- the earPentere known to have beenea Oik therein when the fire ooeurted have Y I been accounted kir: - e - is unknown', istorey Window. Waita inemeee wnOM Wiling rilig-.iitore -atia the window told did- eci, .and her • awning, _betehe to e.ween -heel apparently . keit. eter emcee when a• leemtm on the step. below; °might her and she was hastily carried . the ground; Cheer alter e cheer went up from the crowd . • • • A GOOD.. THING TO- KWOW: Professor Herrmann, •the • woneerfel me.gieian, keown throughput the world -for his skill,. used St. Jacobs -Oil for a severe - attack of rheumatism hi the 40111aer; and was- oured hy.it. He considers Stejacebs Oil a valuable peepeettion. - The parties who have the right of sepul- • ture in the ancient .burisi-groundot EceIe-r. - feehane in which the remeies of Thomas Carlyle were • interred, have • had. the: -; formerly unsightly spot greatly improvee, :The .retteieieg wall has been pearly alle. rebuilt, midwalks have been constructed Around and BO far as postible across the - pound. For the convenience of eisitors,. of Whom there have been:many, it has been arranged to leave the- entrance gate:so-that it can be readilteopened during the .:day time, thus saving the trouble Of hunting after the rkeepeeeef the key. 'Except the . decaying :remains of two or three wreaths, there is nothing to point optietelyle's grave, the very small headstone net !Wee bearing his initials, although similar stone e- at the head of his mother's and his brotberee gieees, on either Alp, bear theirs. • Hen: Mr, Beaebiee, ex -Speaker of the • Quebec Le-gislethree will be appeinted Speaker in the new House. . • • - , • , - A TOUGH HORSE STORY \ The Cincinnati -..Feveitieerlately published -- the folleiving. horse story, Whieliwe rgive:, se justas it appeared: e A cuxios Met:mice' e x- of sagacity in the horse oec d reeentlye- • .iii. the stables of Xr. A Toegbeele, ,sitiated • .on NO/thlarn street - Mr;T. ies8,fee alohg 'time been in the habit Of using 'et Jeeeseee: Om, the Great German eteteedy„ie his ex- 7 ..teneiee iteedese - Among. Mr. -T.'S Many horsesis a great, powerfel renadian draught , '. - horse.; This enimal: in oetuseef -time got - - eo.that that -he 'knew theil.See .TAtoies Om ebottleverY-w.elli-,eowellein- actethat oneda.ye_ 'recently tei Mr. Tee rettth .upon miterieget„he eMbles_ -licking the sore Almeida' •itoodbeeide lithe. the ani 410011- Mai '&546_0111,..; • 411%11.0 - peocroia. sionlani, Whose appeared at ethe fo spectators . Old- be and twentymen tore -from in front Of a ne‘ holding it 140 up un _the *Oman to jump. Weight broke through from- 114m-3:less," he kaught hini abeast. which \h.* -3 - . surto tolistiekibgeWork;tethed .hiehetid -.• and caughtup with his -teeth from ione theliox - - , . _ . . . _ .. . . used as ts receptable a beet...le-of Se....4cer.s PIL. ' He threw the-, beetle. -4)11:' tli.e-egoer with violence erioughlohreak it,and then.. deliberately 1i -eked up th- 6 ST: JAcOn,s on:- - _and applied itto the cut Resdenewehave seen thelees-ofteeeeiatioa. beliedbeybeinga- with -lees sense. than ToUghinsues hoese. _ . . . . . . _ _ . . The word baspassed. ammig us, -and velem . we SeB:it_ Man who won'ttry the 011, we say, 4 -Heim -Mese than Touglimap's horse."" . To.many this mey apeear ati a.vexy "tough" story; and were there not propfs -inneutter- • ebee...of the efficaey of the Great. Germap. . ,.e1einedee they would be jestteek in so _ ' designating it. The test-111101in however; is plehtifel Mid pointed, Mice its . from peotte"- whoee lone experience in niattens anno . Joining to hotsetlesh.mi ' les theirepinions:i 1-to-Peofbteld'eothederate and respect. - 7 •