HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-05-19, Page 7vie
•
• calukclit ,X0T7keteeilds •
Vie -Coneereiteee-eareabieheo
• lianceeeeseet au unreal° Preacher -
Abroad.•
Ak Wisconsin par, sou heti-leen hauled up
for illustrating his: serMorie by magic
lanteen.
• Rev. T. W. Seffterof Cobo.urg„ Ontahaii
acCePtedetall from ZiOn_Methodist Church,
Winnipeg. • .
Seven. theological - atudents Of Knox
College have gene tet the - Northwest tO
engage- in. missionary work timing • the
Vacation. •
• Rev. Mr. McGibbon, of Chatham,- has
"been inducted to the 'pastorate of North
GeorgeltoWte. near Ottawa, lo place of the
. ate Dr.
• Another. letter Imo been received from
Archbishop Lynchit waidated April 13thi
:Rio Grace Was stiI1j. Doblin, but igtended
• toStart en route. for Rome: in four or fixe
dare He. was enjoying the beet of health.
Oue of the MY papers Hays 44' The:chest
people of: New York crowded the: theatre
lea -heat Ingersoll,' • in what sexiest is the
' weird best there: teed? .The best in morale,.
wisdom and wealth? Rest hi wLati4' Ji
they were the hest, what Bert of people are
tlaewoiet.T—Neur York Observer. - •
- The Toronto, Methedist Conference Will
meet in Toronto en the -14th of June. The
• .Statioaing Committee: will convene on the
9th. :The London .Conforelacia •Meeteat
-
Woodetock. =Vie. 7.th*Of next month; alla
the Montreal Conference in -Brockville on
the last. Wednesday of the preseetmenth.
Bev: A. C. dillies, who was echicatedfat'
• Knox College, labored.- for a short tircte in
• this country, and afterwards went to the
United States, is now in New Zee;
has recently accepted a cell tea E‘v: Ett-tali:'9"4",r • I.4
•Dunedin,: which. payS saIaraenf
'•
The Metho• dilt Transfer - Cox
• which met in Montreal last, T.re• .
passed resolution transferrivg
. Potts' to the Montreal .Conferents.
Rev., Hugh Johnston to the Toronee emu-
ferenee. Although.thie transfer le effected,
LATEST s:10140B1- WINNIPEG.
The Ravages. of'itlie Floodti-.Grave Fears
Still Entertained -An Slepentent-,
Burned Down. .
A. despatch. from Winnipeg on --„SaturdaY
night ssys Mollie Taylor's hagnici waa
burned_ to -night, supposed to bet, -.the work
of an incendiaiy.
Three express trains have. arrived, from
the. south in the lett two days.without 'any
mail_ matter. The fault rests with the
United States --authorities, who have neg.;
laded to attend to- thetransfer. ' -
• The water in the Assiniboine is still
rising, and is- now very near, the auper-
structure of the bridge-. Grave anxiety is
child
--feltasto its-. being- able -to -withstand the
WIZ
Now Y
petitiozi
granted
John W.
Mrs. Soo'
petition
restraine
SSASSIIPal tumuturioss.
-
mem *Among the Q ulteallap- -
nic, May 9.—Yesterday. on. the
George Sooyille, d'udge Donahue
writ of habeas COT= commandirig
uiteau to produce the body of
loin court on May 9th. Scoville's
Lieges that his_ wife is: illegally
of her liberty by john W.,
and - owe the • triel • her brother
Charles has shciwu strong evidence of
mental'. iiiturbatiee :which - has been in.
:14,
reseed b• persona who have .iittemptedte
use her for the purpose. of gaining
notoriety Petitioner • says' - he .last
saw. his t wife in company with their
' John W. on 7th :. May. John W.
• hitter& -the petitioner of his
ereaboute - -because .he does
t.- the • question of • her
present freshet. It is believed the worstis refuses t
,overa se the fall of water _lip streena is so
great. that a, _corresponding drop. here is
• momentarily looked for. The Whole region
• . . • _
- beyond: the bridge is under water. St.
Boniface, on the east side, in the viOinity „
-of the hospital, is also. submerged, and, nisN"
the.highwa,y is impassible for teatna. The W. Gait
water is kill rising in Red River', at the me; :
foot of Post-effice and Notre. Dainci streets-, Win ms
-having risen about three inches:in the kit *here m
twenty-four hour's. A number- of people a terribly
'nearest the bank have been compelled to
vacate and retire to higher ground. The oiroumst
• water .has been steadily rising de after- afraid' -of
:noon, hut withtbe present warm, Weather
:and rapid fall -at Emerson: and other points
up" stream a decline ishoeefully looked for. -
...Intense anxiety prevails- regerding the
;Louise- tailway and traffie bridge. It :is
-being weighted down by iron and stone
• placed at each abutment to preventawash-
Out, the water being- now beyond the
-bridge •. weettrier„. not, .av.illowe,gkeci7,;:tilorn.hevii ieli
• Funds itivesteti for Prl
We are preplifell• to offer ti "510°°
tactility afforded by a- la High
and On equally fa v'C'ej-gh':----t
his
tORveyiuicfng hi a liPe
raine,
and. there the two Were Miele happy. '
• Winnipeg is a -perfect .hot,becl. of excite!
'both minnit-ers• keep their Present Positions ment and discomfort. Strangers arriving
Until after themeetiog of the annual con, can get nothing but the :poorest accomino-
-fereicesinajene, • " dation, and thattoo, thehighest possible
. On the question of the Mk:establishment price. A whole bed is it luxury -which
of the Scottish Kirk, Scotch public. opinion belongs only to the upper cla.sses ; potatoes
is divided somewhat after thee manner.: are a pcsitive treat, beef of inferior quality
Episcopalians. lay and clerical; are opposed. 15 25 :cents per pound, mutton tet any kind
to ; in the 17 -me ministers Ewa rule, is 30 tents per pound, and. Other provisions
- 84pp:oft it; aymen • oppose it ; among ire propertionatelY high-priced.
wife's
not w
. _Au4viaitcw- .0*
•
•
Much. -Poem. Paems as_ aloOd's 1.4 illopi Of the
•. . shirt!' Addlettf al Incentives to iIelt:_
-: -Del*iiesi:iii,, , ' " .
A:despot:Ai from New. --York says ; .Thei
venerable Dr. Will:WM B. Williarne, .t
the
the BeptistMinisters' Conference rester
-
day, read an intereeting paper -9n suicide
beforellie brethren, in Which' he - gave - a
Varietyof et:zees:1er euicide.; ilfustiatedhy-
iocidents • and exiiMples. : Aniong other
pansies' were named innih. Peeing as -Hood's
"Song.of - the iiiliiit," -- 7hiel4 - he said,
ioduced many .inedleweeien to : ehorten
-their lives -by reasonditevetrayal of their .
Sufferings ; over-situily in a -particular toe
-of "Mowledge, ineh As drove -Hugh -Miller -
(the Scotch nettedi and geologist) to take -bis
life; eegleCtof the Sabbath reet,which Made
Lord Castlereagh, SirSantuel Rorccily aid.
• tuentel ' ondition to • be Made publio,1 others shorten tlieir existence, poverty and
'Counsel ays Scoville -told him the idea of) eentineentalism; failure hi military, -polite
.helPing h r brother had taken possession cal, besinesis or ambitious echerees in life.;
1
e like an inearie delusion ; . john internperence and ganibling, bad literature
an seys: ! "If _Scoville crowds- and- the likc. : -Cowper, ,,; the . poet -;-,
he Wall . f shalt _ show .. him -Napoleon, the -*great -. general . Charles
proper light. ' I do not ' kneve York, the English statesman, Thomas
Scoville is; but 1 -do knOWshe is Shepard, whose I Church cradled and fed:
wronged ViroMaA and. he is a CUM- Harvard . -Iinivoriiity,:_ettenented ...suiCide
fraud • without . a • pallieting when ' they were young men Dr Dr. „ Wil
ice-or redeeming- :trait. • She 18 hams called attention to. the lose . the
hiin, and , when- leterne to the world and the 'Church - *odd have :sus,
tallied had those . attempts. of :Mine of.
thein not n3iscarried. • • Samuel , B. Marie;
the inventor of telegraphy; was Voted. ae
saying that death-. would:havebeen-a great .
relief to hineagain and ago*. in his early
days, and that bite. he. not been -a Clirietien
lie -would have Committed. 'suicide. Lord.
Althoffoi-Britieli politician, declared that
every Monday mornipghe felt like thre*--
ing himself off ILondon Bridge :into th .
5, Tharnes:.•The elderRebert Hall and Phil' ..
Melville,- father of Henry (the: great,.
,
A preacher and writer); were suioides in heart
thonglenot in act. . The .gramasire of the late
Charles Darwin; the hithak of jelin Stuart:
Mill 8.-..nd others were -suicides in fact. And
- - - 1 - - -
Dr.:Williams reparkedahat the material-
ism is: moving towerd just such reeults.:
Looking only toward the dirt he, said the
ii gospel -of dirt"Igivere them no consolation,
for, as Thomse.Carlyle ideclared •of them;
"wotldlinge puke -up -their Sickly.- todsteace
by suicide in the -midst of luxury.!" . An-
dierage in Clarist'and' His - Word, Di. Wil-
nd: caused a wreck, which -was lifi-Ans insisted, was 'Life: only - safety from
detain the trains. arid -blockade stich a terminate:Md.-hie and itri . terrible
for some tints.- The brakeman conseqadiees:
• -AN
United Presbyterians, a majority of both
milliliters and people are in favor of dims- . The 6‘ Bible:flew "-7-oi the Bread. Tata
.tablithment-
-Rev. Allan Simpson, pastor of the Poplar
Grove Presbyterian Church, EEalifax, N. S.,.
UNLOADING GRAIN. • referred du 'terms of condemnation. in a
. A New Elevating Process. • recent sermon to the taxes on breadstuffs.
. The facthaving been made the ;subject of a
Thiene* portable tower which wasbuiltparagraph in the .Recorder, Mr. Simpson on
in connection with .an Erie elevator last the following Siniday spoke of it, and ex
year . has just been tried at Buffalotand - • -
plained that he had eonsolered•the question.
- pronounce a tom p ete success. 1
w irrespective of . party polities.' He said-: ..
make ft, decided revolution in the unloading '"•I am neither afraid, nor ashemed -of the e° h"rth
of eargoesof grainthrough the countriaas by start. to
sentiments- to which I - gave expression.last
At a, cargo can beelevated in just about half.
Sabbath evening: I believe them
tower is an exact duplicate -in every respect area and the.
'- the time. now required The portable intend -to hold by them till I am convinced °Me, 5
they are incorrect, but I don't want that a fert3'
• of the stationary or regular elevator tower,
exempting that it • is built entirely -separate paper or any other togive there a Polittirneael ilit4nattan.ernos,
twist. When I was oontending ',for
. from, the: elevator, - and ea - arniaged trade in breadstuffs, or rather fOr as little
that it . can be moved about 730 feee express s
interference is possible in their ttansports- jest itz "ti
one. way or the • other,,in order to elevate '
,., Um:tired place to place, I was not speaking bkaade
'from both hatches. of a..•
boat a' the interests Of any party, as I wasnot TiMes•
the same time-# The elevating capacity of speaking age,inat . the. policy of. any party.
the Erie - elevator; to which the new And my reason for referring to the /hatter malt me- ent..F. uaii'ai in New *uric-
epachirre has: been attached, is about 6,000 , now is that I was- reported as speaking in - A. deal:latch from Ile*, York says: The
--..- -liusheleper hour, and--the-cargoes of hotly favor of' tbe late Adrainietration, .atid
: the- propeller Clarion and the schooner against-. :
the policy of ' .the ' present
Annie Sherwood were elevated at the rete
Administration... I was doing_nig of
e-of10;000--baeheleper hour;tiotir legs- -being the kin& In this inatterbothAdmiinetra.
need-, M spite of the fact that one Or two
dons are bake to me. I was not -.thinking
- steps were necessary to nits portion of the .
a consciously of either. Lwati simply pre-
iPParatus• that wasnot correctlyarranged .iienting the Bible vie -iv of the -subject."
at first. It is tiiought. that v• hen every- , - •
-
hotel she; slipped out of the door and rail
away. He wants to take the little girl
away from her and lock her up in an
asylum,
The ma
dares I -
his wife.
to break
He has
drive Me
to do
hen the woman perfectly sane.
is crazy hiretelf. duiteau de -
m init detaining or restraining
He- has declared' his intention
own all three of the Cluitealia.
ieatened to disgrace me and
out of New York, but I defy him
BAILSMAN% DREAM...
-plaw 'inane Asleep He. Wakes
AlntOst a Illorrible Reality.' -
What 11
- p
A brak
trains o
Weetern
escape fr•
hid been
over the
constant'
Between' Deposit and .Hancock two trains.
collided',
likely to
the. trac
in questi
approach
a fourth.
' d
require
feeling, v
down on
welt. B
asleep.
was lyin
tic express, one of the swiftest Odle! on the
reed, ra over him and out off both his
arms, m ngling him so terribly., that he.
weld pos ibly not survive. The dream -was
e -that the man awoke, with a.
Ind 'himself lying flat on the tree&
'antic express coming - around a
ut thirty.yards away, at the rate
piles an hour. TO seize the rea-
d leap from the track was but an
work. -The engineer of;tlie
w the light and stopped thetraiii
e to prevent a collision with the
freight traies.P.hilitdelphia
Man on one of the regulartreight
the .New York, Lake Erie tt
ailrOad met with a mostiiinoular
ni death the othernight.' There
in unusually heavy rush of freight
read and* he ihad. been at Werk
for two days l and three nights.
was aient beck to flag the first
ng train. • He -went back about Tito t Yoting B.
of a mite, :the regular diete,nce A young Married men it a certain hotel
the rules of the coinpany,. arid having aeheathe aheabeehieseceneatina
ry tired from overwork. he Sat out of town fee; thenight,..eent a- note to a
• e track, on the outside _ rail, to friend from thelbilliard room to theiolloiv-
fore five minutes he was sound ing effect : "Dear :B.--tetne down . and
hile thus asleep he dreamed he. join na. c. -and / 'aro going out for 6
on the tracilt and that the Atlan- time'tolliglat.. • vire. are ...going to wee in.
the town. Don't . give it :away.' . :They
went Out and had a " About 10
O'clock next morning the husband appeared,'
grip,eaek in hand; .and entered- - his room,
where he found his: wife: crying.hy the
window% 7": Well, my :•dea,r," he' said, bracing
up as well as he could and trylegto" look SS
if he had had a long - and tedious :ride On
the railroad, "I've got book at last, tired
out, but awfully glad tosee -you again." He
expected that she wouldrush into
but she did -witlaing.• of the eied.
She looked up. SA "inn severely withher
tear-liedimmed. eyes; lint • never moved.
. "Oh you ileCeltfut 'wretch !" she ex-
claimed; Atter! she had gazed at himUntil
he felt as if lieweeld like to. sink through:
the floor, "1 - never:- expected thisofyou:
Oh how coold. you Maw -could-you?"arid-
agein She biiist into tears. "-Why, my-
th:Ming, *habit the matter now.?" esked. he,
-determined to stand grouhd-
-wa.s.: sure that she knew his secret: " I
:sup -up -epee yseu too-ook in, the tovr.own last
night,ifehe sobbed. "1 don't kilo*: What,
you mein; .my dear," said: he, now as pale
as agheet, "IYou don't 2'." replied his wife,
, suppose .you didn't Write
this'?" and she presented' to him the note
he ha&Written: te his frienCand which
-the bell -boy . had: ,delivered No. 185:
instead, ofNo. 285. . He told hikgriend .the
.next day that when lie startedout again to
take a huffiness trip .into the country he'd.
have to take his Wife with him,
- .
411101110 ,TRUI _illOaDO.141.
.1fIni*OrSity lixamliaistions-Tho Milt
,--: ..- • ,'' . tbe Schools.. .
At the -recent Meeting Of the Lo don --
Teachers' Association_ Miss Vittoria Drury
read an essay:on "Regularity and l'unotu--. --
day of Attendance;" holding forth thiidea -.
that the 'Marks' system- failed, frontthe - -
fact that thes•e who needed them -least as -a---
stimulus,- Were the -Very ones -who gen4ally , .
obtained the most. Again, the . note syie-
tem did not meet the bites; from the fact - -
that ilianir, Very. Many, forge notes. to suit
ci
themselves and thus- free -themselves from
the censure of the teacher. ','. .'
The examinations at the Ontario Pro- -
Vincial University :for degrees, and -f r the .
third, secdnd• and firet year's course, have .
.eumnienced. - There. are 400 candid& es in
Artie, - and 30 :in law. -, The examin -one .,
:close On the 31st inst. • ' : ,
The resources of keit largest co legete
in the Utited.S.ta*Itsee- shown in thefel- -
lowing table : - -
Elide*-
: r College.. -_- .- nient: 1i:collie. Stu
Columbia.. -..-.........-$4,800,000..$261M
Harvard - - - 903,000 233,000
John Hopkins - 3,500,000 -200,000
Ye,,le - - _ - -1,5Koco- ming - ,
At the meeting of the Toronto and •
KingstonSynod an overture- comme ding
the tem of the Bible in the Publie Sehode was: : introdneee- and supported by , Rev..
John Smith, eit 'Toronto... He remarked -
that as Mattere now stood the .Bible -Might -
be introduced if none-objeatea, 'a conoeSeien. :
to Roman Catholics; who. notvvithata ding
this, -.claimed Oa Obtained . the •p. emit :
Separate Seheols:. ' With these in eti tepee;
the way _Was clear to Make a chane•by :
which • the Bible •would- be reed, not
expounded in schoole Unless 'objected to,
, _ . _ ,
by the - trustees-. He.. moved that the
priniiipIe of the overture be approved by the
.Synod - and,. a got:Omitted : appeinted to __ .,.
do -operate with that - of the Synrid of '
Loitidon and Hamilton. .:Agreed.
-.: . . . . ,
thing is in good. running order theeleVating ••
-Capacity will be doubled. ' . . . -
A Bich Beriniot iReeentwa-:',eitiets." ,
•• - : Cincinnati has a_ strange hermit in
Edward Holroyd. He was once a partnet
W." and Bean."' vvin'llan ndlinna' in a. large, and successful dry•goods house,
- -
.
The marriage. of Sir Sidnev Waterlo* and at.that time was public-spirited, jovial.
- saitt Miss Margaret Hamilton , was an- 'and widely known ; - Twenty years ego he,
pounced receutly in a cable despatch from retired suddenly ‘ from business, secluded
Paris. The bridegroom is a wealthy printer, himself in a very handsome suburban resig
Of London, Eng.. formerly a member of amide, and has never since been off the
. Perliament, and in 1870 Laid Mayor of the premisei. For Months no human being
Metropolis. As eviclence Of his immense seeshim, his ordere to the family who live
wealth it mentioned that he bas 25,000 in the house being Sent out from his room
tenants in London, eit'd that he once -spent in writing,- and his food- being passed in
e256,006 from hisprivate purse for the through -a wicket. The building is going
entertainment ofthe Shah CU Persist'. He to . ruin • • through neglect, paid the
passed iiome-tinie in Philadelphia as one of -groundc; are untended, but neither through
. _
• the British. Centennial Commissioners, and stinginess- nor lack of meats, as his
afterwards came to America to visit Gene-'• .propertyhas appreciated to t250,000 in
nil Williams, Charles- Crocker and other . value, and: he frequently gives away money
friends io pelifornia. While approaching, in charity. He takes the daily news-:
bling-lecY shouse 40 met a young woman papers, and seems - to keep informed as to
404
with, .-, 1 he fel i- iu Jove at first sight, what is going on in the world, bet -Will have
The yo - g ,woman proved to be a Miss nothing to chi With it, and lately refused to
, Hamilton, the daughter of a widow in corn- 888, one of his -former business partnere.
. fortablo circumstances and at that time a
giiestof the.Crobker. mansion. Miss -Ham-
- ilton was.witty as wen as handsoine. . She
went riding horsebaok with the baronet and
beat him at billiards every time. Her
oparming manners and other excellent'
• qualities so. impressed Sir Sidney that at a
dinner party eliortlii after the first meeting
he proposed Marriage. Miss Earnatori,• .
accompanied by Mrs Hearst, of San Fran-
cisco, went to Earope and lived some
7 months with the varlets members' of the-
Waterlow family, so that they might
becomeacquaiated with her, and journeying
to Paris the other deymarried her million-
aire lover. -
-
• Trisateward ask Wilfrid•Lawstin,MP.,
having, reported that one of his tennis had
recently' been rel.et on a ten years': 'lease,
at_anincreased_rental of, 00- Or_ satenitte_
the honorable- baronet inquired who: wife,
:responsible -for the improvement; and wag
told that -it had been effected by the tenant.
Sir Wilfrid thereupon ordered -S, 'Check for
£800 to be sent to the tenant. If all:land-
lords were as einidderate as' the veteran
advocate of the RaTM18811(8- Bill there
would_ be -fewer agrarian disputes.
• Pitoresson Caineitivoon, a leader of the
United Presbyterien-Chuith of Scotland,
. ePeaking. on."' Soma Aspects of the demi'
recerttly, said they must have
specialists in therdeistiy, and that the
tuna would come whena department of
-science must go aleng with dospel,preitell-
lug, and when men wouldhave tei devote
themselves to particular studies, in, the
service of the -Church They also 'Wanted
sPecialiste in evaugelisingpower, a - work
whit* must be done by ordained ministers,
either -in- the-I:shun* or upon an nen plat.
fOrnasepitrittaefrorothe church.,- - • '
litany of his Old 1011300111teS believed he was
'dead, so completely had he dropped out df
notice, whet!a description in the -Enquirer
of his- manner of existence -called , their
attention -to him.: He 18 now 80. The
cause cif his seclusion was his Wife, with
When' he quarrelled, -and ' whe obtained a
divorce, compelling -him, to provide for her
a separate maintenance. This soared him;
and, he vtowedle bedone with hunian beings.
After Marrying
Daniel Salt, of Maninghare lane, Brad-
ford, and Old Crosley, of Halifax, Who
married a milk -maid, and then turned his
attention to carpet -making, would have
been much astonished if they had'knoWn
that their -grandehildren -would entertain
royalty. Stroh higoing to be the case, Mr.
and Mts. Titus • Salt, of Milner Mield,
aItaire will- have, that honor...cei the
appro-aeLing visit of the Prince' and Prin-
-cosi!, of Wales to Bradford.. Milner Field:,
is a modern- edifice„InifIt on an eminence
overlooking the :workeof the Silts and the
valley of the Aire, and bears a dose resem;
'dance, beth.".iir architecture - and -eize, to
the numerous -charitable asylums in the-
,violnity -ofour metropolis. It was built
nth the fortune that MisaCrosley brought
, her husband; and -is rather,
depressing. in, its strict adherence to
editeval incenvenienees in the way of
narrow windows and stiff -baronial furni-
,ture, and, during these bad times in the
north, it -refound tO be an, expensive man-
sion to keep Up.—London World. -
7th Regi ent Armory, whiah, it is claimed,.
will hold eight thousand persons, was filled.
last (We 1 nesdeyhevenieg QA the eccasion
of the oping of :the May musical festival.
:
The aud nee give - Theodore Thomas and
his °Ma kraut three- hundred and cheriis
, •
of eight ea . hundred. a. cordial but not
enthesiti tic reception. Annielooise Cery
failed to ppear,oWitigtoillnees, The evening
paseed r tiler timely until the appearance
of Fra. - Frieclerich-Materna. She wae
received with e itorm of applause. She
gavethe teeitative and aria,. "- Absohenli,
cher ( Fidelio,") by Beethoven, with
such pp ee and effect as to mainland a
re -call fi time*: Materna finally sang
again, a avor the, audience seemed deter -
Mined xi • t to be.refused. The chorus -and
orchestr showed - effective and 'careful
training
. •:.
F..N.-Ciorich; author of the world:sung
balled, ",Kethleen litlavourneen," iSstiffering
the pangs of poverty in his old age and a
leiblie sulisoriptiorehas been started tor his
relief iterottland' Me.
, .
- •
EVER summerthe question d what is
the best ieseripti�n Of dress for women to.
wear co o es ep. It isteeer settled. Why ?-
Because the ladies are in the hands of their
drsstha:ers,, and they . follow foreign
modes, az d so from year to year fashions
change, but they improve • little. _Still
there ba been . a vast . improvement in
oostutr4 for some years past, in epite of a
few extrd
vaganes. In alit:ding tmim
o mimeo-,
tive rad cal changes, carrying int away beck
t� the eeys of hoops—maytheir advent be
long pad eonedl-Mr. Wm. Morrie, ,author
of" Th
that t
rational
of ladie
liberty
battle s
into ex
chance
-Earthly Paradise," well remarked
first. and . greatest necessity of.
and beautiful costunie Orti the part
was that they. should exercise
of choice ; so he begged them to
utly for- it, orthey would tumble
loded follies again: Their ..only
�f keeping ' that liberty Was
by -.resisting the imposition 7 on
costume. -of unnatural menstrosities.
Germs ts 'should veil the human_form,
and 116 ther: caricature nor obliterate its
Bees, he body -should be. se.draped as to
expressendless beauty of, motion. This
should especially borne tornmkbecause
fashion ble milliners had &lefty one endin
view, e., how to --hide and degrade the
human oay in most expensive manner,
they 1 okinc-upon ladies -as " scaffolds
Upon w -Chto-hangainindle Of a:Leap rags;
which ould.be sold dear under the nariiii of
dress.. If ladies did not resist this to the
bitter &costume would be ruined again;
and he fervently begged them not to be up-
holster d arm -chairs, ; but to drape
theme vas like -Women: - Let .ethem resist
change for the sake of - °binge, which was
the ve bane of all arts, and they shciUld-
.
use m terials which were .beautiful and
ilur,ebl , and notrun after novelties.
'
ents.
8
79
32
9 .
The Atwater and Ills Son.
. Rev. De. Charles' H. Hall; pastor of Holy
Trinity. Claureh in .Brooklyn, has a Ways':
taught 'his yoangest. chiid - to 'ley gr ae at
speak
:the teblikas soon as it could - His
young hopeful is nOW a small boy, hose
prerogative is to ask the -divine b.1 ssing
upon the hied as soon - as the faroily is .
seated.. I few days, ago the ,prteher,
being in a hurry to get thrceigh his 6 ening
meal to, go to a Wedding, entered the dining-'
room swiftlY,. and is socinee he took his
Seat b'romptly said grace himself.
looked at hini in sprprise, and as the
finished, the boy, shaking out his n
-said : " WC:le-you've got a cheek." '
, , .
•
Mr. eorge- .Howard,: -Member ar is-
' IP
merit, ho succeeded the date Lord Latter-
ton-a,s eir to the Earldinix of Carlisle sae I the tiles of the Oxford intetetnent.
theCalitie Howard- estate, has del:aril:tined I Five 1Tnitiad States Senators are Of
theA illifuture thiestate Shall be known .foreign birth. They are Charles .W
a teetbtal one -The well known Castle Janes, •of_Florida, born in Ireland.; James
'Iowa Hotel and apcither at Welburna B. Beck,: of lientucky; born in Scotland;
have en Closed, an the brewing Utensils ,John P. joneii,-Of Nevada, born inEngland ;
from- e• -castle itself, mudding. of largo dating' G: ofVe*Eicla, borniri
copp ; haveLjust teen William J. Sewell, of New jersey; --born in
add b Ireland. :
. Elam Speneier, who has for the _second
tiree become LordLieutenant of Irelapd,has
kietermined atitsk tobis post, encIfiiithi
ally endeavor: to do his duty -in the trying
circumstance, ootwithstandieg the data
tardlyand untimely removal of the Chief
and Under Secretaties. ; The noble Earl is
the -fifth of hierline, and has for a desigiiii--
tion the name of Jobe Poyntz Speocer.
He weehoirein le3e. He Wait edueated at
Morrow .and Trinity College;- Cambridge,
taking hie doges in 1857, and the foldaving
year martied the third daughter ,of Fred!
brick Charles _Seymour; a grand-
daughterof the first Marquis of Bristol.
He • was groom of the state to the
Prince Couecirt from 1859 to 1861; . and
groom of the state from 4862 to 1867 to-.
the Prince ; of - Woks. He represented
South Nortlianiptonehire. in, the holies of
ootiimons from April_ to December, 1857;
but the death of his father then- removed
him t� the holies- of peers. -When- Mr.
Gladstone bedtime premier on the fernier
occasicin, he made -Earl Spencer lord lieu.,
tenant of Irelenda- and the office was held
from Dec'eniber, 1865, to - February, 1874:
Wiled Mr. Gladstone becaMe-peime minis
:tor spin two. years ago, he made the earl
lord:president of the.coinicil. He has -for
a second title that ' of Viscount' Althotp,
and his country residence is Althorp park,
Northamptoria_He is the patron of twelve
livings; and is lordlieutenant Of North-
ants, and .4itc.- landed -estate amounts to
24,254res, With a rentel of - £42,221.
Lord -President of the Council his salary
has been .£1,900; as Lord -Lieutenant -Of
Ireland Will be £20,000: •, Ixo has.. no."
chiMren, the sheir-presumptive being bus
half-brothen, .the Hon. Charles Robert
Spencer, P. for ',North Northithipton-
ishire, yoang-maii- of 25 years of age.: Lord
Speneer alinight " of the _dexter and a
Privy Councillor. His uncle was the. cele-
brated Rev. and Hon.- Father Ignatius
kipeneer, a- Pessimist,. who_ was one ottlie
earliest- seceders to _the Roman Church at,
' The importation of tortoises into England -
is carried out under circumstances of great
crUelty, ; and .a • few months' ago mile •
indignation was excited -by the discolery•at-
the docks of :some casks of tortohie lying$
unclaimed, •Inany-ef the unfortunate crea.
.
tures .being dead. There were extorted
frem -Mogador :jn • 1881 • thirteen berreli,
containing abott • 3,000 totteises. 1These
wretched animals; .says the consul --eit that:
place; are closely packed in b&rkEbt and
sent without any food milt voyage of[about
three: weeks' duration. .. Many of 'theta
frequently die on the voyage, and should a
barrel become offensive its contents are,
thrown oVerboard at the shipper's ri k and
tisfa,o-
expense. itis,he adds; a very un
tory trade, being email,- inpapab10
development, involving an imam* aMount '
of cruel* to numbersof helpless atiir
less animals and yielding no subs
harin
profit. .
• The greater -pOrtiop:-•of _the 4
western •transportation (says )8,
pondent) had bedeat llullook, Min
*here the steamer had come alongsi
antal
airreJn-s:
'toots,-
Le the
train, a,nd throwing tiut a . plank taken in, .,
her load of passengers, and then making- .
her way -across :the -imbrnerged flats :had ..
readied the Red River, down whieh she. -
had brought them to the C. P. it. -tram this - -
`sidcforEmersOn. While tbey *ere taiting
at Hullobread had gene dp tO lift cents
* .
per loaf, and provisionsof every Iiiiid_Were
proportionately dear, 'So that the toit of
the journey to.people coming in.witfil theirfaitiliesverygreatlyexceeded their lexpec-.
t-altiM61s.aentimis '--Disee' Pune; ce. -411 rdlin-e. -
. . -
- -- .
:Ademi, a girl of 19Yeareofage,disateated ' :
very omysteriously. :from . her hone, - 129 •
DE6,1honsie-street; Toronto, yesterday, - She__
..
took her Bible iwthe morning land taited
fer St. James' Cathedral Sunday°hod, :
and -up to Midnight nothing had betni heard "
of her.: cardinals of short stature ...- being
only about 4 feet 8 inches -hi heigh1 .., Her
left aide has been . paralyzed, and I She .ift :
lime inconsequence. ; She is ,-fa r 00132..
plexiened, tolerably good looking - and of
pleasant manners'but is somewha weak
nt:
m intekit. - Her family lived in H• Milton
about Six menthe age, and she hid sae act-
quaintanci3S in Toronto: , .1
. ,
The Prince a Wales, says Eaminildtates.
in the London :World, must have al ward- .-
robe as large is Mr. 'Irving -or an* other
theatrioal staryand must be qiiite As /Midi
in. need of A !I dresser." . At Port mouth
-he appeared the first day_ in e Y lunteer
uniform ; at the review • he • Was lin -the
Uniform of the Civil . Service Cor s -; the
'same night I.saWhim at Govermiten Heise
in the red -topic of a general.. offic tr. - . He
can On occasionlurn out as an admiral,- a
guardsman, a . hussar, -a Highlander,-. a
-Uhlan, cir in the:flowing robes of an Indian
rajah,.possibly of a Chinaman or :3,. ep.
:-i
.' The .Chicago Times says: - I' . . .41,- hur
voted to . be the 'handsemest President is
within thelmemory of this generatOn."
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