HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-06-16, Page 2--•
SI CR* Ai
- CALAMITIES.:
Loss of- treelel and All Elands letslte
ILIeldirart—Miraculeint • Escape of w -
The Bishop of Cleveland Eecommunleatet Steateeldite rateseliaers'
,
•
all 'Lady- Land Leaguer!.
The steamer Springer went uptheriver'
at Cincinnati on SaturdaYwith e60 excur-
sionists. On returning near Newport
-Beltway bridge a strong wind was bletying
and the steamer had to lower her chimneys
to pass -the bridge. There was a. delay in
•lowering the chimneys- on account of the
. •
No Woman. ettee be a tateacele and ce imperfect working of •the Machinery, and
Itteivelieg leolittelecn. ' the wind struck the -boat. The captain
saw the boat would strike the chisel edge
.• A Saturday's_ .cigvelata despatch says : of. the bridge pier ilaidshipi toe.' late to
• The Right Rev. Bishop Gilmour, of the back against- the strong current and
Roman Catholie Church; of thiseity„ to -day poweriul gale.. He ordered all steam
issued the following Bill of Excemniunicee and dashed ahead. The starboard
tion against the Ladies' artier of the Irish
Land League . • •
• - anaw.er to ray grave and severe
criticism. of last week on the forteetion
of. a ladies! t branch of the Parnell Land,
• League of .Cleveland, the Preeidetitess
thereof' last Sunday afternpon 'internee her
• audience- and the pulia.ile • that they must
"away with such dictation,'" as their
Bishop game- them when he told tholn." the I ort. the -part of the captanewould he.ve been
equivalent to cutting the boat in two and
loaing the. Jives of nearly all on board.
The schooner Industry, from St. Joseph,
capsized north of South Haven . (Mich.)
harbor last evening. All ,,on .board were
drowned. The wreck was near the shore
Kid witnessed by hundreds, but owing. to
the terrible sea it Novae imposiiible to render
assistance. When Arse seen the sailors
were silingipg to the rigging,. but were
washed away one by one. Captain Sing
was the last to godown. He was at one
finae se near shore that he could be . recog,
nized. aslant efforts .wiire.made.by the
sailors ashore to rescue: ilia perishing crew;
but the wreck was carried so rapidly .by
the gale that nothing could reach her. The
severest storra of the ease= is -raging, and
itis impossible to do anything but wait till.
mottling, when a search for the bodies will
be begun. e.
:THE LADIES DAR. WM la THE- W.0,417.
side el the steamer struck the pier, and all
the passengers were 'thrown__ down. . The
steamer grazed the pig, &tithing- the
woodwork and. wheel, and. the boatfloated
helplessly down stream: and struck several
coal barges moored below, wrecking oete
The passengers scrambled of on the coal
fleet without injuries except torn clothing
and slight, bruises.. Two seconds' hesitation
•• -1101ey political %roue was no place for
Women." In the same hall-, and. by one of the
then who are pushing forward these silly
woplett, it was said. at tee...same, meeting.
"If were to bp ruled by Scotch or-
.. • Italian or English priests we had hatter
shut down on the whole lot," -Another
_ addreased bishop - as 'Gilmour,"- and
, the tone of all the addresses is so fl_agrazitly
disrespectful of bishop and priest that it
'becomes necessary tospeakin terms that:
• will leave no Misunderstanding So long.
. . ,
• as: this Parnell hraneh of the Land League
confined itself td, the simple discussion of
-1" the Irish question 1. paesed., them. com-
parative silence, as am strongly in sym,
pathy with the Cause of 'reload,' afacr have.
ever apoken in clear terroe upon the. ques-
tion heal, in .Cleveland arid 08e:where when
time and place • presented an opportunity.
No man has ever'. spoken- stronger words.
than I on the wrongs. or Irelaud, as Seen in
my late jecture on the . "Land
Leagtie.".: - I resented,. and to -day re-
sent, the impntation and the bharge.;
• sa • industriously - made by the men
• of this., Parnell bra,nch of the .Land League,
• that be -cause I refused to. advocate the "no
teat .policy se lately in vogue that there -
'fore toia the enemy of Ireland. I reject
such charge as simply untrue.- So- long as
this- Land League Society • had Conline.d
ieself to a. membership they and I
•. would have probably had but a.diffetence of
opinioneas to the means to help the cense
• • Of Ireland. They had their -views, I had
-mine, and weseere free to differ, and, as
. mete act it- out as men. But -when they
• liriegivoreen into the. pen:UO.l. areme and
wal.etterapt. to. unsex the women .of my
fleek and make -them brawling politicians,
• and under the plea of patrietieraatteMpt to
destroy female modeety,and so bring shame
on every Catholic woman of Cleveland, then
it is time to speak, and to ap.eak in words
that willend dispute. When the question
- squarely raised. on choosing .between
female -modesty and pretended 'patriotism,:
then I. Oahe tnyeelf ou tbn side -effertiale:
• -- modesty; and when it comes to defending
. the female Modesty of My.flock as against
•„ the Brazen mtworeaulieeee. Of female- poll-
-ticiaris„, . accept the gage, and will see:
•that no Ceeholie woman within my diocese.
• • shall turn herself into a brawling poiitielan..
It there are women of -this kind, andif there
are women in 'Cleveland who will . turn
• then:me-Ives-jute brawling politicians,- then
• they' shall not be Cetholie women and if
. heretofore they have se calledthenaseives;
• then the public Shall 'knew they are 'Rano
longer. No woman within 'the diocese of
-ClevelaUcl shell at the same: time be a,
.Catholic- &et a. brawling politichthe The
Catholic, woreae must. live within the
.Modisaty ' of. the. hence. She must
ee. the eirnament of the fancily
circle, and , her - woreauly delicacy ' and
gentle nature 001 nark, tainted with the
' nOisy.. brawl of -the virago. Wontaa.• mus
. ' be woman. Women shalt not be•permitteO
to Unsex themselves, and at the Bathe: time
within the limits of the diocese ot
tJleve-
land -remain . menabera Of the . Oatholie
Church. 1, RichardGilineur, by the grace
of God and the appointment of the Apple-
tolie See Bishop of Cleveland,_ hereby and
by these presenteeecotannuncite. and, de—
dere, eiconirounieeted, ipso_ facto, and
within the limits of the Diocese of
lee& out. off from -.the communion. of the
Citthelic. Chutcle any Woman now a mem-,
• ber of the Parnell Branch Of the Ladies'
- Land League of Cleveland, who shall attend
any meeting 9f. the nide Ladies!. Laud Lea.
.. gee: in, what is known tta the Parnell Hall,
Clevela'ed, or•in any ether hall, whether such
- naeeting be held on next Sunday afternoon
or hereafter at any other time or place. I
- furthetdeelere exceineauniceted, ipso facto,
arid, within the. -limits of the Diocese of
Cleveland, and cutoff from the communion
of th.e. Catholic .Church, any woman or
women who shall, after the Publication of
ehieej cam the aid mentioned- Ladies” Land
League. . Female- modesty must be main-
tained, let the ,coat he 'whet niity.-°-. No-
Catholicetemen Shell be permitted to -forget'
leer Womanhood,, or it she does, she shall,
within . ,the Diocese .,sof Cleveland,
cease to ' be in communion with the
• Catholic Church. We hereby direct that
next Sunday, • the 'late thia letter
•*_Shall he read at, all -Has-sea the
. Enghsh-apeaking churches. ,of the CRY., ot-
ClevelanO.; and we also direct the pastors-
•
to Warn the women of their respective
congregations against joining the above-
• Ledies' Laucl • League, -or in any manner
countenancing any Movement which -tends
to taintoi lessee ateoegus Catholiefernale-
Modesty. Given under My hand end ..seal,
at my Bpiseepaleeeidenee„Cleieiend, this
let day- of -Mine, 1882:. '(Signedy • •
•• R. Giteteee, Bishop of Cleveland.
The Lailiee branch held a. Meeting last
evening and determitiedla stand firm, even'
• if they should, be all excommunicated. '
Cieveratee, aline 4.—The breach
Bishop Gilmour and h:iceilock is.: wider thae
_ ever. His letter- threatening to excem-
rounicetn. thaIady members.. of the Leta
. • AMONG THE cummcilEs.
seasonible eittleciisable solaces" -
Fatima from a Trapeze.
4 Ot course I had to let go, and then. I
beganto tdra spirally a (3E011660w and
then go down. I instantly recilized that I
must not leaden spread. out. I gathered
ray left arm close- to ray body, pushed my
head forward and drew ray legstogether,
struggling to get into shape to fall on my
side. I did fall just that way forty feet
a 'wooden stage.. My min wee driven into
ray side and a rib was broken The arm
was shattered,' an`d I Was laid up for many
months- wa,e going down in. an
instant I saw over again, as vivid as Iife,
every fail I ever witnessed. Theycame
up in- mied, one right after another,
like successive flashes of lightning and
_seemed. to be experiencing of them in
.my own person, But, worse than every -
:thing else, a greet deal worse than the
:shock of arriving -r was the terrible shriek of
agony that went up from the audience. It
.Was like one heart breaking wail 9f agony.
I can hear it yet, .and I do hear it every
time I think of the accident. That is a
peculiarity of'. our family. We all heard
that shriek and nonet f us ever forgot it.
How did. that accident occur? My brother
Tom made a mistake in the meashrernents
because of a, miscalculation of a space in e
round dome. The rope was two feet
farther away from the ladder than it ought
to have beeu.:—Louisville Commercial.
' The death of a woman from starvation*
Sandwich, Ill., has drawn attention to the
singular case of a father; mother- and *mu,.
all insane with the name 'delusion. Their
narae wacrLaye. The mother believed that
.her ion was -born to be- a seviour ,of 'man:
-kind, and he grew up in that faith, beedin-
ing a preacher of a kind of Adventism.. The
father- became as wild. as the rest, and.
lately, when Mrs. -Lay -began a fast of forty
Oays, both then encouraged her to persevere.
ReVeDr. GervaskSmith, ex:President
of the -Wesleyan Conference died on Sat-
urday morning week at 'his • residence,
Leigh Roctcl, Highbury, 'London: -
• It is estimated that the costs of the Dobie
• ,
suit against the Temporalities' Board; in
all the courts, on beth sidesetogether with
the expense of legislation, will amount to
the -large sum of $15;000. . •
It is said that of the six hundred and
twenty ministers • in the Presbyterian
_Church of Ireland only one can now preach
in Irish, but there are, a number of Bible
readers whoa can use the oldtoegne; "
Thersmemorial atone of the Livingstone
Memorial:U. P. Chiiroh at Blantyre,- Scot-
land, was laid- on Saturday week by Sir
-
William Collins.. In the course of the
ceremony Sir William spoke in 'eulogistie
terms of the character, -life and work of
Dr. Livingstone, who, he eemerked, to his
latest hour,..when he lay dying in his hut
at Dela, wee occupied with thoughts el •
how to give the African continent kpovie.
ledge and liberty and true religion.
Mr. Derwin, when in early life cruising,
off the past of SoutleAmerica, nis,intained
that the Patigonisms were of swab a dif-
ferent rape from the Engliah that they
Were incapable of improvement. In the
latter pare of his life, When he learned of
the success of Christian missionaries in
civilizing them, he frailkly avowed his
mistake,„ and became a ,Subseriber to the
South American Missionary Society;
There are • five :Vacancies in the sacred
college; which consists at present of sixty,
five earditittas: Of these, -thirty-four, or
more than a majority, had the happiness to
be Italians. The nationality next highest
upon the roster is- French; with but
Ireland, like America, has but one
cardinal, wherein the Turks are equally
fortunate. . The oldest of the Cardinals is
Dorineti ArChbishOp of Bordeaux, who is 877;
the youngest is Zigliari, Dominican, who
hi 49. The average age of these princes of
the church is 52 years.
While Bev. 'Canon- MiirPhy was address-
.
ing his congregation in the Roman Cetholic
eller& in Herrington street; Dublin,, on
May 15th, and exhorting theni against out-
rage, and denouncing the muiderebt Lord
Frederick Cavendish and Hr. Burke, he
fell, and died. Getting :vehement in - his
utterances, he was proceeding to say that
"the blood of the murdered Men would cry
for vengeance,"' but he had only uttered
the' word "blood" when his voice faltered,
-a,nO he paused. Again he attempted to go
onevith the sermon, and scareely I had he
said blood" the second • time than he fell
senseless on the altar, and was dead seven
minutes after.
an's TATPT WHO -cOnES Too LATn.
g -
The train departs at half -past eight;
The traveller runs apace,
Ile yet may reach the station gate --
closes in his face!
He sees thetrain slide down the track;
He curses free his fate, •
And mutters as he wanders buck—
"He's left who conies too late I"• ,
- it Silt the dinner's smoking hot ;-
The wine foams in the glass;
The soup is boiling from the pot.
which: deftest waiters pass; '
The wine ; the soup is cold;
The diner comes at ,
You see the old, old story's told—
"He's left who copses too late!"
„ •
A maiden holds a heart inthrall—
He cherishes a glove. • •
And sighs to gain her, that, is all!.
• He does not tell his /aye. .
And some line day, the -cruel mail
Bears as a dreadful-fato,
Her wedding cardsi—then let him wail—
" I'M left who came too late!"
—They had a good deal' of trouble iri
Montreal court the ether day, trying ece
swear in a Chinaman. He said he be -
-ILOTOr-01 FVN IN Hh1I taiefOine OF 130ei*Att1O
All that. was- Wained was aTudicittas Some tood Stipeestlons Nehich oho d be
- ' Development ,40 she smite; • • ;Aciedinpon.
- -
-
• (Detroit Free Press.)
One of the members of the Church COO-
ferentse heldie-Detroit was out pie a Walk
at an early hour one Morning, and,encoun-
tered a strapping big fellow Who was draw-
ing waggon to a. blackspeith shop. ,
".Catoh hold here and help me down to
the shop with ''this Waggeri, and I'll buy
the whiekey,e. called the big fellow.
"1 eerier .driek,"! Solemnly replied the
geed man. • - -
"Well, you can take a Ogee." • • •
never sintike." -
• The man dropped the waggon tongue,
looked hard at the member and Diked
' Don't you ehew ? "
Ne, sir," was the decided reply.
"You must get mighty lonesome," mused
the teamster, •
"1 geese I'M all right; I feel -firs-trate."
"111 bet You even that can lay you on
your baek,"'said the teameter, • -
- "et never bet," said the clergyman.' • -
• "-Com-e, now, let's warm up -a little,". -
- I'm in hurry." j
lees take each other down for
fun, then. Yon are as 'big as I am and
give you the . tinder hold "
never haVefun " solemnly replied the
member. ,
"Welt, I'm going to tackle feu, anyhow.
Hera
tweaeragosl'e' r .an;endeityored toget
it bank hold,but he had only jest cenereenced
his "fun when 4e: was lifted clear pff the
grass and slammed against a -tree box with
stioh force that he gasped a half a dome
times before he ceela catch' hie breath.
"Now, you keep, away from me," ex-
claimed the Minieter, picking up his cane._
"Bust me doult,',' replied the teamster
as he edged off. - "What's the in lying
and saying you didn't have ci;n3e.fetic in you,
when ycincitre chtiek full of it? You wanted
to break my bagkedide't you ?"
Priitee Arthur's Landing.
In View of the expected completion of the
C. P. B., to Thunder Bay 'within the next
six wee*ks,:it intereeting to note the great
impetus which is given - to traffic on the
iipper lakes in consequence. The . Herald
of Prince Arthur's -Larding reports that
the number of steatners calling regularly
at that port is to be more than double this
season... It states that whereas there have
been heretofore only -six of such melee.
steamers there aretobe .fifthen this sum-
mer, of these tha Sarnia Line six
and the Collingweod Line .three; Vesicles
whichthere is to be a line of -three steam-
ers running between Wiarton on the.
Georgian Bay and Thiluth. Also a new
line has been -organized.to Tun hone Mon-
treal to the Landing. In addition z to the
fifteen steamers thus enumerated it iS
understood that the American Line of
. .
steamers will call , at the Landing the.
greater part of the season: Prince *ether's,
Lending bids fair to beeeme a.great-port.=
-Manitoba -Free .Prees. •
Ladies' Fashion Jottings:
Sun urnbrellas- blwatered silk are a
delusion and -a Snare; It ,desirable to
have such an one as can be raised in event
Of e sudden shower. But 'Water will destroy
the watered effect, paradoxical as the asser-
tion ma,y seem, as this peculiar appearance
is given the silk by pressure. The snare
part of these unibrellas in due either to a.
large proportion of- jute in. the.naaterial or.
a liberal amount of. sizing which . 'wear
removes, leaving a Slimily cover full of thin
places: - Beware of them. .
It is said that • the style of Wearing the
hair in Japan indicaths the age and position
of the Women: There are different modes
for widows who de not Wish to marry a,
second them and those who are hopeful of
again being wedded. Such a, custom could
possibly have no significance here, where
all the women are -young and all widows
faithful to the memories of "the 'dear
departed."
A -toilet that recently . attracted much-
attentionin Paris hid yellow birds Olustered
on the shoulders and in the hair.. - . •
-Black silk_ stockings, reserved for -morn-
ing Week, are dotted with red or blue butter-
flies, with yellow antennas. For evening
white lace stockings are -embroidered with
gold and- silver stars, or tiny silken florettes.
Dressy 'ahoei have remarkably sheet -toes,
closely. beaded; they are _Made in white or
black _satin or in the material of the dress
tsTehlfis
*sert'of a spring must be a lolessieg-to
somebody. For --nontance, the mother of
four - or five children with heap* of summer
sewing to do, Who is generally happy When
everybody else. is _berating the rainy
Weather. Such a gloribun time as it has
been for old clothes, . -
A fleeting but rather uncommon, mode
is to put the cross bands from Indian shawls.
and utilize there for trimming Ores -sea.
Thus a polonaise in white suninier vicuna
will be completed by large Indian revers in
laveuse style, and the accompanying skirt
of White Siciliene have the same bias
setoff by silk pompon tassels felling over a
_
thiekiv-hite chicoee.
• •
The other day we read_ some -wise fool's
saying like this : Yon should never pulJ
down an opinion until You have spmething
to put it lei place" In other words, if
your friend iamb for a boat ride just above
Niagara Falls don't disturb him until you
have found some smooth Water -ler his
beet. This is all nonsense, When a man
is in the wrong get away from .it as
seen as passible. He - will hiinself find
something to takb place when it is
.needed. An error can do him no gooO, and
the sooner he gets rid of it. the better. It
may not be all that is required, but it is a-
loegstep towards it.
' -=" You was never hitched into harness
with a baulky reulee:wee ye ?" said the
farmer to a, young man Who had come to
ask his daughter's Noeeresponded.
the candidate doubtfully.- e Wellethen
don't at jest as if ye was spilin' for ce
chance," was all the satisfaction he got. .
—London' World ! "To pour out alter -
noon tea and do some fendy -work It now
about all In the Wayof homeindustry that
.
. • .
lieied," in anything; "that he no swears& is expected. of a, Woman ni society ; anti it
at alle ;" and he didn't- swear on a eaucere first- sight,: that -women-
When asked if :htk was a Buddhist; he ill perplexing, et
Who have fell opportunity to be perfectly
answered:. "Ie no• knowee What you say;
idle or to employ their minds .upon a
-What you talkee about?'' In reply to the thOusand•intereatingetildies, Yet prefer to
question, "What religion do --.You belong
and was give their tinie.to that pretence of indinitry
to ?I' he said, "State of Ohio,"
filially sworn by crossing his hands on his afforded.by fancy work." ,
.-
heart. e ' -- - Rheumatio'Mr..Bnrke _bathed hiinself in.
••
. . .. turpentine at LyonseIowe, and then lighted
FAT/ OF MODEM' illaf,i..--The--worla goner- his pipe kir a -comfortable Smoke. He was
ally takes men at their Owe apparent esti-. burned to ,. • ,
mate of themselves. Hence medeSt men Mr. Divan said he was -flattered by the
never,attain•the same consideration- which- French Government's offer of 11,600 fel'
Christ," but he had
beetling, forward men do. It has nOt. time. his eBeeememene of
or patience to inquire rigidly, and it is worked at it four years, thought it his best
partlyiMpesed upon and carried away by
the man' who; vigorously claims its regards. :picture, arid valued it at $10,000. .
The -world also never has two leading ideas.. A Parent may leave an estate to his eon,
but how keen they it be mortgaged? He
about anyinan. There is always a feniari.
able unity -in its conceptions of the charac- .may leave him money, but soon it may lie
tore of individuals. If an historical person squandered. -Better leave him se sound
cortstitution„ habitsof industry, an umblem
has been cruel in a single degree, he is set.
down as cruel and nothing else, although he ished reputation, A good education, sand an;
of Vice. in any shape or'
_may have Dimity good qualitiestallnot equally le_riintrd abhorence
conspicuous. If & literamY „man is induce ' these 'cannot be wrested frOm hire,
trims in a remarkeble degree, .he r world -4 . .
and are better thin thousands of -geld and
seeake. of lam.as pnIyintluntrious, though .st ver. - - -
ha may -be also very itigenions. • - Dr . Wilsen - President . of tiliVertity
League was read- in Cathohe chum es —Atter all, Jay' Gonaonly gets his
, vi -
. td -day. Thepriestsfavored the Bishops victuals and clothes for taking care of all of
i
. position.pn. A rousing meeting of the Land.
Leaguers was held to -night. ' The general
statement favored the ladies who have
supported the Leaguers in the city, The
^ ladies are determined not - to disband,
Mary Rowland, President of the Ladies'
Branch, has written i bitter open letter to
the Bishop, saying that the women will
• continue the work ' they have undertaken.
She sets the Bishop's threats of excom-
munication at defiance.
The greet. importance of pro
againet the spread: of contagions di
is patent, to every one, and the foll
instructions will apply to any eorara
The 18th and: 191h geotioinc of the
Health 'Act of 188e Make it inipti
epee honsehoidets and .physicians to
the local Board of Health When any
diphtheria,- *Wet fever, waling*,
other :contagious &seat° has. man
and section 20 Of the 'sam.e
vides a penalty of 420 for neglect
saint: Further, provision is
pladarding houses in which any Pont
disease and: unless the
Observe the foregoing septic:41k the
have no other alternative _than to tit
most extreme preventive _ measure
the weerld bee. long ego decided th
vention is better than cure; the fel
iinportant paragraph in reference
danger of contagion, taken fro
pamphlet of iontructionajuet looa.
Charman of the Provincial -Bo
Health, may well be considered cat
•:"void exposure to special eonta
the disease,- more danger for phildre
for adults. Do not; therefore, let a
go near a cane. Do not permit any
or thing, deg, cat, or :other- anivial
thing, letters, ete:, to cense direct -
Cagiie of these diseases to. a child,
previously' disinfected -under - co
supervision. If you do visit a case,
yourself and change and ,disinfec
clothing before you go- Where the
ohild- See that your fesidence„ r.pr
etc.;:etc., are kept Clean and dry, t
Sewer connections are trapped
drains:. well ventilated. Never
passages from - perscins- sick Yvi
disease t3:. be placed . in water-elo
privies, but attend as in section 8'
Special attention to purity ,ofornilli
Do not allow a -child to Tide in anYr-
Where there is SuipiCidnof infected
i -
'ding
ea,sep
wing
Intl' 7.
ublic
ative
vise
se of -
r any-
ested ,•
pro -
e: for) . •
glens
Ode
ea,rd
e- the
As
pre, e
•Wing,
:the -
the
y
on, Of ;.
than
ohild
(anion .
play, -
ena
.nless
petal •
bathe
your
te a
ises,
t .the-
, and
allow-
. the. -
eta •-or
Give..
poly.
ehicle
mou8..
having travelled. Avo d eposure wind. -
and cold, dry _air. Do not wear Or andle
clothing worn by a person' during s knesit
or convalescence -from these disease . . Be '
Ware of any person who has: -a 'sere throat
or running at nose; Do not kiss a take'
the breath of suoh. a person. De no drink
from the Same cup,: or put pen i your
mouth.'Y
Stock GaMbling.
, At Detroit counsel . for, the pool sellers
have-Made:a written epplicatien to -6 City-,
-Attorney for the issuance of a co plaint
against the various meddlers pf the etrait
Board of Trade for violation of t e ordi-
nance .for the -suppression- of ga bring.
They claim that the ordinance inel • es the
-
Board of Trade as Well as the poo -rooms
and bucketshops,and that 'the men
• should be bfought. up and pieced 'n the
same footing as the Men who run t pool -.-
rooms and bucket -shops, -
WoMateis Spkere Among the .Plutes.
. .
A equaVe-can pack more than the average
Mule. What would rupture the kidneys Of
a Wit . Creekjackass would just about
ballast a Pluto matron. This .morning on
the plaza a stout buck Was*.loading up a
'Squaw for a tramp. He piled a lot of
blankets and: baskets ripen her hack and
Started her. On one Side she towed e
clumsy Newfoundland - deg that - wasn't
broke to lead Well audit pulled 'back On
the Other stde. he had a fat:' boy 5: or 6
years old. The :.,dOg wouldn't come along
aridthe boy wouldn't go without it..The buck
solved the problem at once by pitching the
dog into one basket and the - boy- - intci
another to Dalancie things, and the :caravan
etarted with the big buck in the rear, sweat-
ing. Under- the -weight of e. linen carried,
smoking a cigarette and not a bit tongering
whether bus darling Wife was stag Rene
under half a ton ar only 300 pounde.— -
(Ney.) Gazette. -
it Mfllioes of men in hurable homea sleep
sweeter and • sounder than the • great
fluent:lei, As the little bootblack once said
tor his chum when passing A-. T. Stewart :
" Bil1,1111 be that °Id -duffer would give a.
clean thousand tot my appetite," •
• ' '
ilag-POY long
430 feet' . Millie& ftV the
but and. six inehee at the top, straight as
an arrow and clear of knots was recently
out at Puget Sound LogginiCamp. •
• .,
. .
College, sails foe England. -immediately
after convocation next week. !rising among the duckweed on the surface,
Lord Mal Mennere has sailed from_ tege -fottunately succeeded in rescuing him from
ilbna in the Allan line steamship Polynesian being. drowned.- r for Canada, Where. be 'will rspain. for a, 'The recently married Mike of Albany is
eheettiixie.. • - • . • • • . very ill, and all the planithat had been
'During the last forty yearscrimehis made for- a yachting (*Wee and a foreign
Very 'ranch diminished iri Seotiandi It has tour- have been abandoned. 'The Duke
fallen off 59.'per ceeteeendecietetin Iprisons and ;Duchess Will remain quietly at Pere -
have been -closed for want of occupants, •minit for a few weeks; And will:then goto
The wealth. ot Scotland hem increased in _Osborn Cottage, Bait Cowes, and in the
- Tux French vital. itatisties. f 1880
which have just been published, ar. robbed.
Of much of their :Vitlueliy the fact -that- a,
census was taken last winter. Th have,
however, a• melancholy interest s con-
tinuing: to illustrate the diminu ion oZ
French vitality. Thebirths were 20,177,.
of which 68,227 were legitimate, t -figure .
showings steady decrease—in fact e only .
year in recent tithes which made worse
showing being that after the w r with
Germany. The legitimate births are in-
creasing as steadily. -; The deal were
857;337, a large increase, while VI census
showsthat the. urban population among
which the deatlitrateie higher th in the
• country districts, is, growing .large The
• marriages were 279,6e5, which,- a xecent.
-years go, isnot BO hacl a showing though
iedlyebelew the 3004000 Of a fe* ye re ego.
On the whole the statistics, taken ith the
fact that about 27 per cent. of the ecrints
for the , army are rejected. -atm lly for
physical reasons, do net Ilford m h hope -
to tlya well-wishers of the French °pie:
-111 fares the land to hastening ills a rey,-
Where wealth ateumulatee and decay.
Mr. Sturdy, a gentleman who act.•up to
his name, took 150 shares in 188 in- an
English assurance Company- cl ing to
have over 450,000 surplus assets. n June, ,
.1881, the eriMpatii's report • poi ted - out -
that this statement was wrong, ar.-in fact
there was a deficiency: Air. Stu.i y then
asked for his money back, and we refused.
He then went tele*, and the. Y' e-Chan-
.cellore-refused his applicationen t e ground
that theze had been no intention: 1 decep-
tion. But the Court of Appeals h deckcle
in his fever:
Look here," said an.indignit t tat& .
to his landlord, " there is a c tin the
cistern of that ,house you tette to Me.",
Is it dead?" "Yes.' " Then will not. .
disturb you any at night; sel ve 1 have to
tales your rent 15 on. that accoun '
Daman ommaitcy pg TEE SOLOMON 7.112inS.
-
of tobacco
ath, or
,The qiiestion as to Whatbecomes of the
bodies of 'anlintile whichdiea natural death
geeatly. interested Prefessor Nordeeskjeld
during his Arctic, voyages. He very seldom
found such remains, and declared that on
SpitOetgenit was easier to find vertebrieef
monster extinct reptilesthan the bones' of
- - •
the seal, walrus; or birds of the present
day. - The problem is Yefirnardved. -
- 'Bridesmaids .in pale coral appear well
in a gloomy church: :
_ .
•
While Sister 'Agnes, :of the - House of
Mercy, Cletver, near Whilst*, in England,
was making arrangements the. Other any
With a botts,ger'n Wife at De4Worth for the
reception of a little invalid boy who had
been • brought from - London,
. she .was
informed that the child had fallen --into a
pond -hear at hand, Sister Agnes, , is-
ms excellent swimmer, without waiting for
assistance, rah to the place, and lindin
that theboyhad disappeared plunged into
the water, and, directed by the air bubbles
the same time front £196,000,000 to £970e autumn they wilt to
l pay long visitlie
.Queen at
. .
10 Weirs of tobacco.
1 at;r(nr igooeforobainteutssh,
,,ells { sows t
flats -tic
1_rsitriinsag, rred shells
10 dog's teeth — 150 por oise teeth '
10 isas ... . . . . . .... good q ality wife.-
—It is - asserted over and er that
anxiety shortens life, but when a hap tees
another fellow feeding • his girl n
sand-
wiches at u picnic; is he gOing to it down
and bid his tioid bo calm? Not y a boot-
jack. *
-Art English - surgeon Says t e time is
. • •
coming when man's stemac canlkite
repaired and replaced " WithOtt serious •
difficulty, It -Will Simply keep ira hothe
part of the time.
• George Bennett, at Iowa fa er, was -
accused:of criminally • obtaining 1 oney by -
coetracitieg to deliver grain. wh h be did
not 'possess. • He protested the he knew
nothing _whatever_ about the tter„ but
the evidenceagainstconvin d a jury,
and a year ego be was __sentence to three
years in the penitentiary,-- The man who-
-persbnated Bennett has now bee detected,
and thecon-vices innocence is «ade
The Governor has pardoned him and will
eilt the eLegislature to vote h m 0;000, •
besides a parchment On -which t e facts in
:the ease are officially inscribed. -
Ah ha," said lira Part gten,j• "it
takes all Sorts of folks to maki a warld;:'-
ind-l'in glad I'm not one of eine:
--Several- of the lumber ettiP
It wifl greatly expedite the drre -
Gathieau belie been eennebteh b elephone.
ne passed
lay night
cer_loads of therm
over the Air Line on Tblirii
beend for. Salt Lake Cite.