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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-07-06, Page 29 , •••••., IDENT ON THIS 0.7.11. 1491101111" Ilthiereie Tlheatean llama Mich- ditirseimeents ingeteae • Man& fee Overtaraed care. ('riday) night's Brookville de, re; The O., T. R. express Oleg ofteruoou haetheith & Very aerioue M the eemaphore just east of the ugusts road. It seems that after tie had passed* rather sharp (terve k *Prevail and. 0 !Mather a cars own from the rails. The tender tke expre!ui car Waft Pitched down • Went on Abe north *side, and ached lato kindling wood.. The messengerovhoee name is Edward ad just turned the lock ef the safe ' dein happened, and fortunately any injury. Hie tap was off, and his heed narrowly * being Brandied, being pro rein the rod of the °ear U110141.0 the"prettence of;.•which uhtedly owes his life, The seemed twining- baggage, hail. the true .from under it.; it -struck th ear and knocked the end Off, it, uto the .field nearly at right eta es 0 Arai: , A. beggegelnan .ale ed and a .brakesman were in. the e time . and bath enaped with %glee. time, had a number . piledon him, „,but was only bruieedethout•the *Oat. The two, 0•.pitehosa,, into theffeld, the =- mug end for ondethe baggage oar :end of it and landiiig at right the trick.. The pest -Olio oar on the actith Ode. and 'ran into ; WhtoW- rises about four feet turn:04 more than -33W viaY he mall .olerle Was net hurt.. WI 8004a teeratobee on the side a it *moped 'epretty! well. The *a fitstedlatfe etirtrage; and it 4 'partly over to Mk; south aide fallowing it also left tbetraok. an OhlV left the tioolt, but wan red, , and thedining.ear did not rails.The only 'Passenger who a Of being hurt was an•old lady atiO: Velar, attleo.,belOOge to Delta. lea eiere chiefly from the shook g,uent4iight.. ]r. Moore, one of any's surgeons, hastened to the he accident and. did What was A ' train was • immediately ea from Brookville to the scene of dent and the passengers were •sthastetiOn. The Work of china aok Otte then begun and vigor. rigidon under the directionof hioGoirent and, Mtniiith. at ,naraonlerie •egespe of 1:belittle- d train hands- ivakiindoubtecily or Westinghouse 'air -brake, and to Strength of:thecae. - • • •• HORRIBLE DISCOVERIES. Waal Chtieken alma ilutuati Stenos Found in a lagoons Cellar. • --ereee-e* • A MONTHLY NURSE'R 'PROCEEDINGS. last (IiVedzieedaY) right's delphia despatch says:" The police to. day found in the -cellar ot a dwelt. ling n- North Fifth street„ formerly. oco ie by Dr. 'Isaac Hathaway, an elle . maltraotittener, the bodies of sever* ohildren • and a large number of human bones. Hathaway wale arrested in March, 1881. with key. Thee. B. Miller, for committing criminal malpranice upon Mary Butler, a servant girl, whose child died. Both were admitted to' bail, and Hathaway fled. .HO, however, returned some time ago, but has never been re.a,trested on tee'ohaege. Three months age his wife (dinged him with brutally anaulting endthreatening her life. She abked tohave a. viarrant•issued for his arrest, but eubsequently withdrew the oharge. . She told the ofdoialseatthat time that het husband had performed several 'oriteinele operatiehs •upon her, and • she knew he had perfhetnecl hundred" of others. 11.p.to 4 caplookallis afternoon two:skulls or portiene of ekulle of infanta had been found buried, in the cellar of the dwelling. Hathaway is now in the 'county' prison, !barged with assaultinga relative. The coronerhas lodged a detainer at'the prison against him. The bodies of eight infants, in an advanced. Mateof decomposition, were timed on Sunday night buried in the gat - den of's house in -Gloucester, England, 'occupied by , a monthly nurseThe occu- pier Of the,houee and his wife were brought before the Magistrate yesterday, and amended on a oherge of wilful murder. %ascot graripi ..11re2natih.- • • Mr. Murphy; Q. O., has been appointed s judge of the High Court cd Justice in Ire. oli•LISION , AT "h.:`,.ir.,eeetticisAttititlitie,441nwentadive 'Bun dapight,'S Ltaidork ciablegtarie 'Britis . painienger iinifielsgurunui belonging to/tlie7mi f*aland' P*03Pati3fik)Ofemse ine ollieien- ff On''gridai4;Aight.,,0 he Waiters oetainetteeiegratetetentritee-fete- 4*0*Mid.. . The Antanui items- er001.11.411101dditletai dYe & saloon to whom aUntilled•',,dhe ta 4/00, tiered eneued at a Calor W o was saved aphis life.hate•TWAliother saloon • WereAlse saved. &1i Becoitid nteerage. ,passengerk_werel4Opit.. 0,400r. the-V.6104re was dragged. o litlE0ntiLwitlitheeid, of ropes. esseIs1t together. On• 0.- Hurttnul...strholt••. he Wei:fare t In trontofltha saloon on 1,M) • The surviyora state that ,Vae'lllefifir lbrit,ethek.side of e the ave.Wayeillee cardboard. „They Of thapitiatingere Might have bOen ' 'a' biteatieand a steamer, which: note ..hyid-,;beedektiO Waitare't distreSitY•Viiii.. Waiters was an ,of 8832tonn, built in The; as elfin an iron Shit): •' . iis,1ibh, htaIv?* ' yeatoeiteetudyingetheecrk-0 ng, dr rather beilAplaoing, and that:-.411properlyphiced-bedevill inanrilife,[7if aMeke magnet -0v' influennew sensitiveportions, m ' itetitu*natuit certainly make. an . ,8,3101V0Us 'dap! "Molt.. Al 'le. sphere,. You May ' always your feet to the equator, and let lita_49 true as it needle to the e proper ditention• at the body is csiti-Importance for the proper Of , the bleoitand. many dis. in the' oiganisnik have been imply planing the:* bolster in a oint' a the compies from that it ied: Let' such as 'has hitheetce 8 habit Of sleeping, With their re their feet ought tine take to example of,,the late: Dr. Binh. Magdeburg, whodied recently of 109 yeari. , :The moat-uh. idol], We aretolki is when: the ue east and *et Some cheerv! us that to 'deep in sue& a pos. taneount to . committing @Wade, dinettes are often aggravated by • from the proper poeturese- lasaatiell kohlisoselphy. is better . after she shed •tears. suckle is sweeter.arter a• rain. angers is often feared less den • A covetgit oaten, de .*.way a hobs den she will fur a rail- animsi dat is got the greed. eh og knows when got enough man.neber knows, when he's got ugh. , are how young de chile is, dar is Mpg oh honestyor dishonesty. -hat's out her principles mighty s life. is More liftnefe Wit], money dens a she ain't nigh so •hones' , wid her - man '11 pay a debt Whai a maul e, but it man tell de,truf whar stretch it mightily.-Arkamas said the Ma,ii'viith the big neektieo lak Charley% play is a work of The charactere are entirely " no one ever aaW, heard, Or a Well periaM0, and no, one will bear; or dream of aiteh. Yes, dreadfully original TRUE e • Alleged Murder .o( a Christian VW lar Jews to Obtain Heir _Blood ler VOW. aver Brent!. WEBB'S DAMN° .8wm.t. The are t EnalistenwitUltrier go elteut the NI A. last (Friday) night's Vienna deepatela pays: At the greet trial wbiolo is'noW pro- ceeding at Nyreghhaza, in Hungary, ot :number of Jews scowled of haeing mur- dered a. Christian girl at Thee -Sklar to use her blood to miX with their Passover bread. sister of the girl alleged to have been Murdered testified that she spoke to her sister on the afternoon the murder is said to have ocouered, while on the other hand the principal witness for the prosecution,: 4 Jewish boy named Moritz Schaaf, . swore that he Haw the murder committed in the synagogue before the middaymeal was • partaken: of. The trial is causing extraor• dinariexoitement, and Christians ,in the vieinity are intensely hostile to the unposed men, and thoseewho attend the trial -jeer the counsel for the defence when they rise, to speak: The fathee of the boy Scharf, is one of the prisoners charged with. the prime. ,The boy, though not legally coin - polled to testify against his father, elected to do so. He tella his story with great coolness, but he refused his father's reageet tiesPeak in his, native Guinan, and the elder Scharf decilitres , that the boy would not dare tell. a lie in that tongue. , The prisoners curse and spit at the witnesses who testify against theme' It his been elicited in the -course of the trial that the boy Scharf intendsto become. a Christian, that he has been_ toldby the Cathblie priests aboutethe alleged use of 'Christian blood in making Passover bread, and that: he has beenthreatened by the pelioe prior. .to the open examination. • Mr. Peter Hay, governor Of Spike Island bokviot Station for 28 years, hat been ap- pointed to the gOVernorShip of Mountjoy Ireland Par' no land tax.; Ireland- pays no ban duty; Ireland pays no assessed titan; Ireland has for tea years paid no income-tax. • Ireland ought to be happy. • There Wes recently visible deorease in the ttunibn of inmates in the. Wexford Workhouse.s? Contrasting it with the same peried last year the norabers were .502 in 1882 and 478 in1883. • , Some time ago the Cohoolhogie of Bally. Macodit had. to be dotted in Consequence of an initbrealt•of fever, and now ithas been founcL'netiessery to olose the National 601°61 at Lady's Bridge, near Oastlerea.rtyr. . The 'General Assembly bf the Arish Prelre byterian ' March • tionemenced itsganitial tiesdion inl3elfest onjsane 4th. Bev..De. T. J. Kilion, ofBhlfast, was the Outgoing -Mod: eraser, and the Assembly •unanimously eleoted steins etumeged;the Bev. H. B. lioriSiiif:proolistown. • • • • The Cork Exhibition premien" to be an event Of great importance jn themanage- turinghistorY of Ireland. The display will den the Moat complete exhibition Of the indhstries and resources of Ireland yet sta=s laded Within the walls of any buildind • • The fkoteh Greys now etationedat Cm* Wilrbeitliottlitemoved to One of the Scotch s" • ee. • The residenee . of ;Mr; Willie* Weigh, situate In DrinicleOlan; neat Castleres, was lattty burned to the kro_u. Waterford ' • ; The bacon trade in: Waterford much•18. idepreseede The prioe'of pigs now averages 1.18 per oveLe and froM• 4,500 to 6,000 are killed every week., •• • •: ., • John Lodge, lately"- a clerk in the *ploy- in'ent of: the Mangter Bank, Who was• iellargedat Dublin :with stealing the sum of A5,600, haftberni acquitted. : ; The. perils .of fain teethare illustrated ' Late Pforth.ivest • Sleeping oars are now rua between Win. nipeg and Port Arthur; and are well,patron- teed.. •• ) , . . . • The aggregate pay -roll - of tho 0, P: B. employees on the Ian pa-y.410.y was over $300,000. • . The foundations. of a new ,joint hotel and court house at Swift Current, to cost $100,000,.are being put he. • • • . Upwards .of '600 men. are cosi employed itt theCtinada Pacific; machine and • repair shops in Winnipeg.. ' The first hosiery manufactory in Mani- toba has lust been enabliehed at Dominion City by Messrs. Webeter Hateeing. • Mani, of the 'farmers around Rapid City .have seeded down !vim 100 to 200 mint this season, and the crop 004604 are splendid. • The polite -fore(' at MeLeed is about 150 'Arena, With outposts al the Crow's 'Nest . and • Kootenay Passes, Whootatip "andbther •A. new gold find has been located. near Tache station, on the (1,P. R. east.' Mr. ,Ilforito, lately a, eenductor On the lineijethe fortunate man. • • . renting $6,203. The proposed expendi- . Manitoba's aggregate Iumbei cut 'last *biter was 70;500,000 'feet. It now .sells for 025 per thousand feat, the same quality havingeOld last year, fpr .$32 pet 'thousand. •. • • • ---"A"Itatiliiiiiitaiirthe• 'financial position of Brandon shows that the expenditure has been 1,119,440. This has been paid out for improvements, new fire engine and hose titre is estimated' 'at $19,704; and the antount at the credited the city 18 31,730.41. The town site -tat Calgary,. Na W. T., is expected to be,plaked on the market about thefirst of August. The railway will strike there about that time Or a little later, . Apiculture successfully carried on in the Northwest, as beeereauire a Wear, dry atmosPbere and a rich harvest of flowers if the air is damp, or the weather Cloudy,. they will not work so well. ' Another region .why they work less it warm chinas is, that the honey gathered temaitis fluid for sealing a longer dine, • and, if gathered than it thiokentie' it sours and spoils. Our clear, bright skies,. dry air and. rich 'fine are Well adapted to bee by an inquest on the boas, of.sol,tiowheiaLce., _ ged.25-x_e_a_e aeleaddoMetieate... eeoreae,theeeQkfr:lraMkefe.n" infoWtelloceingO ,celitile of 'false teeth. • He • ' • now . a iltopst .111ribv-entwiligo 'Woo : • • 1Secovertili • 17 t accidentally mallow -id- two fame teeth; fandeon-thettdvice, of a-einecliiialeanatte was 'itaken to _London. "e'He was admitted- to St. Bartholomew's Hospital where' he Wad 'attended to, but he diaa. Death reeulted by percolation from a small, abscess Which bad formed•in the throat • causedby the. •obetruotion. • , • • . Carlotta ;,itlairlaisnnitti' , A..1steW 'York telegrani says: A.' rather •inigtie case Oarnet6 light in. the -Yorkville Polioe Court yesterday, When Annie Sine - : nee oharged her hueband with abandonment . and non.support. The littehand admitted that he left her, but pleaded in extenuation that he was for ecivenel years- under the impreiskin that be was atop& father, and but leettietlifound-that his wife had been :Palming off onlim two ishildren,,whoin she had taken out of a charitable institutioneas his offspring, when in tacit she' had never ;been a 'mother. He claimed to have pro. cured it diydece from. the WORM, and exhibited:a document whieh all the legal lore in the court oinia not translate. 4The ,lustiee succeeded in restoring peace, and the couple left the cent happy. 470 , , • . ' She Was There. • Mr. Topnoody walked into, the kitchen the other night, when he Came' home, and at ohne angrily said to his *de: "My dear, did you tell Mi,t, Brown that the greeter part of one family attended one of thoteAetestable donationparties ?," "1 certainly did;" Ate replied. What did you do that for? You know you were the ronly one there from this house, and I think. you Might haviione regard for the truth if you hiwmfv any for tell me I lie, Topnoody." "But, neyeleat, I—", .., • ' Shut up t 1 aaid the greater part of tins faintly was there, and I rneant just what skid „X was there, and if X ain't the greeter part of this family then this litiuse iseefpr bale and I am ready to lie down beneath the waving daisies:" • . "Oh I" stammered Mr. Topnoody, and he wont back into the sitting -room, and !von reading a Eixter's Behan' Beat."- • • To think propor1otemust think bide. On May 22nd the body of Wtriateynolds. pendently, oandi4ly nd• eonseouti'vely ; a respeotable farmer, who had .disappeared only in this way can*. train Of reasoning suddenly e ttleolit ten days :before,- was din hp conducted ticoessTti11y.. 45oVered in a pond ticilVallient to hia ' The Earl of Dufferin is to pay it visit to dance, et Wel4pretown, near Atition*). his residence at Clandebeye, County Down. „e-Ae:shott- time ago MreBobert-Fenixaof this town, was surprised one morning to find that the fatally baby -carriage had die, appeared • during the night An active search *the viainity failed to reveal the whereabouts a the Missing' artiole, and information was given • the Pandas and 'Hamilton:pollee lobe on the lookout for it. But the perambUlator ;entailed lion est until, it few days ago, when it was recovered in , rather . a iremarkubbe, way. Mrs. Blank; living a few doors frcnn Mt. Fenix; had a dream the other. night, , when everything Was etille . She. dreamt she ea* some youngsters feloniously &battening the lost baby onriage and con- veying it to it residence on the gime. In her Midnight vision she eaw. the residence and the carriage snugly .stowed away •oia the, prenilses.' Next morning before break. fast she related her dream to Mr: Fenix"; who, though rather doubtful' that anything would come of it, made in excursion to the Floes to investigate:, Sure enough, he found the object of his mission et the house and in the position describer/Ie. him. The oomerrepoe is given as e solid feet; and - it any parent doubts it the dreamer con be Producied.-Dendas Banner; Be Caretal. What Caripe$ Vou,Seleet° "Tho other clay taman wit* his bathe on the register of it Philadelphia hetel and was shown to a neat room, On the .second, floor above. In 'five-. mindtee• he came rushing down the stairs (he \ was in too great it hurry to Wait for the elevator) and, panting for breath at the desk, yelled out: " I °awn keep that retire, you know,' why, the carpet's got snakes in it.'" • " The man had a red, face and a redder nose, and I saw at once that his peculiar' ciondition had winged bine to mistake the figures on the carpet for makes. Se; with- out asking any questions or trying to explain away the delusion, 1 sent him to a room wherathe carpet is mn big 'squares, like a ohess-board.' '-llotel'elerk, in Phila. delphia Times. : gars!: Whirliutlil Rapid*, • 1118 OWE T- TROUSAND DOLL t. Captain Ma • eve Webb, who swam the English Channel in i87, and now proposes to'swim threugle the 'whirlpool raptdoe be- low the Niagara Falls, aplained ,p1o4 lip a New :Yerle Herald reportee a, day or two. aka, • - • 0, Yeerhe Said, "I an going te swim the whirlpool rapids, and I will say that It Is Edema the aagnest bit of water in the world. I cane over frau' England two weeka age to make the trial; and I went to the rapids last week and made 0. oritteel examination. They aro rough, I tell you, and the whirlpool ISN a 'gaud one, bat I think I OM etroog enough and skirled enough to get througn. olive. Toe. eeople at Niagara Falls tell me that I will be tampier committing euicide. You ought to hear the blood..ourdaug stories 'that were retailed for my benefit. A year or tweago boy . who was spaddting %tumid in the attire water was &Awn into the rapids .atiehtid his heed cut off. A girl fell iato the rain. last Hut:timer from the rEaspension 'Bridge, and when her deal hay was picked up at the other bud of the rapids it WIIE bereft ot all clothing but a pair of stockings. In twenty-three years they pay that eig,persoos have lost thecr ltvee. in the rapids, ' . „. HIS oseeer ,exii Naze : "But what is your object in attaingini; such O terrible feet ?" ., • : Tea thousand dollars,i',„ • • " How do Yeti propoe0 to pass through rapid's , • • , • .." •explain my plan. ..The, cutreut, they toy, thirty-nine miles thi• beer and, the river he nineey-fave feet deep. :It is • wide just bedew the falls and. harrewe at , the rapids: *I km only afraidNof tWo awful. Magee of 'pointed. rooke which jay out from the shorn into the whirlpool. The water fairly shrieks and hisses as . it. boils over .theru. . Now, I want to avoid sides, and yet I date not go into the middle, for theie lies the vortex, and Out- 'means death. I will go out the .rnicIdle of the river in a sinaltboat jest about the Suspension Bridge.' Tbe.only cilothing I shall 7014 will be the silktrunhe hadeon-wheri tiWene the Eng At the time appointed will leap into the river and float into the, 'rapids: Of bourse 1 .will. Make no atternpt to go forward, for the:fearfutepoed Of the• water Will carry Me through. When the 'water gate any bad. I will go under the:bane facie,- and zeinain beneath ; until; I eat cora- 'tilled:to come up for ,breath. That will be pretty often, ,T wager. • When I strike the, whirlpool will strike out with al my etre/filth, and try to. keep away tromthe suck hole in the centre.. I will begin with the breast Oran and•then tile overhand' strokene, My life thee, • depend :upon tny Miniales and my breath, With O. little ,touole .of ectienne behind them. It -may. take me two or three hours to getout of the •whirlpool, *high:- is about a quarter of a mite long. ,When I do, get threitahe._1 will etry-terliiia on the -cansaiiiiiiiide03ut if the: current is top gynft, see think it ite, I will. "keep on down to Lewiston the A.'nneriosii side." • • • •• • • . , . INTE1tW THE PROPOSED pEAT. , , • • The feet will probably, be :performed on the 21st Julie • ',The vedette railwey con; panies which run . to Niagara ,have eubitorihed 11110,000 .for•Cepteni Webb, and it is expeoted that O hundred- thousand Pei-, aerie will Witham ..the 'Undertaking, Pre- parationa are being made to haSe. speoial excursi6he from eVery tOWii,and city within reach:sof the railways,' ' • • • , -Captain Webb was 'horn Shropshire, England, and is the son of physician. He took Odeon early: and became the cap. tan Of a inerthintinati.' • Many yeark ago. he jumped' froth the • deck.. of the Canard. mail steamer 'Russia during a atom to save a. Sailer Who fell overboard. For this aot he reCeived Dein the handset the Dukeed Edinburgh the first :geld anedaleVergivehe • . ,. • Ato aves•deeteigette apeeptainetlasieheree-ad never otecteereeitolgeete-settewitheltine-thersteconcle time. .Af ter his thrilling swire tide VhothielTthiTTwenty-fourtli Regimeet, evhfch:weiseeffierWard amen annihilated in Zululand, gave hien al3teentesecup taken in bllltie. • Bolas, a think fall of decorations. ..aied trophies:. , • • • " • • • • • • • • INSECT IPESTei . IN, . CANAIDA.: . • • , .111.,;Slaple •Ifiree Borer in' 4nikario-Cater-. • Pillars impeding Traias-rsiato Bugs -.011d.Canker.Wormss. ' . . • • • Repeete from Borne pate of New Bruns- wick say that the 'potato bag is more pieta- tifUl thiseenon than ever before ' itt the same time of the year. - Theme seems toahe a diabolical purpose somewhere Within or batik of the promos of evolution. No sooner do the fruit growers and farmerktdiscover it specific or invent a protection against one degtruOtive •peet, than 'another and entirely ' new variety orawlkeita to titke its plane. A new and voracious canker -worm ate the latest arrival itt Weetern New York. ' An inseet (the nettple.egnien) is said to. be affecting the maple, trees In London. The female, a moth4ilse,insect, lays her eggs in crevices in or Wider the bark, and in a few dare the larva) hatch:front the ego, burrow under the bark mind euhseepiently. eat their way out, ih this' way injuring tee trunk of the treed. When, the terve are safely lodged, under the bark leo remedy will reach theta, but the 'moths may be prevented from laying their- egg() on the trees, or the time destroyed, by. applying to the trees a -mixture of • soap and a 'strong solution of washing Bedeor lye made as thick as ordinary paint. Hard or sea Reap may be used for the solutioa'. Tho meths are said to be abroad at this season. A wan will be appointed in each ward to IOW out for the insects and'kill them. Caterpillars hi great humberehave put in their appearance tn Celeheatet, NS., and other neighboring: °wattles, and hue, even been in snob masses on the railway treeka as to impede treble. They •have stripped much vegetation in the euhurbe of Ilttlifax city. Many fieide of Potatoes ,have, teen destroyed; The slender worm, is allot an inch tong, .completely eatinA'the core out of them. It has been observable also itthat vicinity that groat qiutlititiee Of leaves have fallen from the treee, *hi& is attributable to the operation of game 'kind of worm, • 'The grand old man- athet Time, 1131.1141.01.11141 AND 40411.40Y.. .._. wain toe arteettees• leeneve---A Oeu*tltl- *steeet-Ast, Female pactor.. 2.232 2$ TOO SHORT. Life is too abort for any vaiirregretteog Let dead delight bury its -dead, I say, And let US gQ,Uposcorg way forgetting' ssae joys and sorrows of melt yesterday Between the swift sun's rising and its setthig We have, no time for useless tears or teete • Life is too short. " Life is too short for any bitter feeling; e Time is the beet avenger, if we wait, The years veal by, and ?n .their wings bee, "Nrre1343:vieinno room for. anything like hate , This solemn truth the low mounds "seelaa.‘ „ revealing That thick and fast about our feet aro Steal ' Life is too short. Life is too short for ausht but high endeavet- • .r.roo 134ort fur spite, but enough for lov • And love lives on forever and forever,It • • tnokz3te.sztrgstireatneiirvoelroggiliaerovre 16 His vast realm- the radiant souls slat oever " Life is too short " • . • A'he Boston • Pilot • says there ans over 151,000 Catholic, 'Indiana in • the United fittate4 - , • The Wesleyti,ne Australia he,Ye.96804.. pupils in their Sendey tiolioole.'' They leed • ell other Churches. • • A. powerful • revive' of religionisin progress in Esthonia; on the ehores of the Bathe .Sea, the work Moravian brethren. A Proteneet ihstinition for the ,aupply of treined. English speaking nurses has been organized and put in sucionsful opera. then in Bonne. There aze.hetvettien fifty ancl:autty -Ono- peen ladies working in the Zeitanas in India under the auspices of the Church of • Eng. .land Zenticia Miseion. • The first regain- fetUale phyeicht Imnicisisaiottityeenstoo.bi:ty. the Women's 111:tohmeen'Ivis et; iqlroeciiigsti. Charch. ' r, • • " Entire Baptist churcshea are being gob- bled Ile by the Morneme in Sweden," -so says Rev. Mr. Liljiathea Baptise mission- ary. in that cc/witty; , • . • • • Mrs, Anoclibei. 'Melte° :is the first. Easty • Inditth Woman who had ,ever attempted to study medicine. She seiled from .Qttioutta April 9th and Wii1,:ori eer arrival, ehter the- . Feli2ale MediOal College Philadelphia. The Sunday School Ultion anilounoea a Belies Of. stuck* QU' the lessons doe thee remainder of the year by distinguishedee writers.- One is on ••,‘ Joshua, as a Military : Leader," by Genera .jeeleute L. Chentber. ledia • • ' e • -is • ...T..' . :Chicago seems tosgaininpOpulatiOn ranch „. mainerapidly, than In" true goodness." In ' .1849 the rani ehurohee and mitisions to population in that city Was Is to • 747 ;. in.; 18801 01.2,081; and from 1880, to 1882. no relative taiii was Made. The Queen of Madagascar will not allow' • intoxicating liquairdeto be manufactuted, • imported sold in her dominions, and, finding the ,regularerlicie uhreliable enforcing her laws, has organized a pollee force of vecemeit for tnis depertment. • The reoeipte into the trettemeryee_of• the --IfnitetC-Staten-Presbyterian, Board a .lionie Minionti fot. the year eliding last 'Match are more then ,690,099 larger than for , the - year ending ' March net,. 1882; and nearly $130,000 lager than tho year 1881. ' .% . . • 'kitty's the Churchman:: "It is 'not every doctor. Os- divinity who is competent AO teach - - children. It is reported that One of them, uadeetakingto,•deline•catechism to a• Sun- day School,: said t A Oterechisie is a synopsis, •a compendium, a syllabus;:: Of ;•-• Christian dootrine.' • •• - _ .4.cooydingto the Missionary Review,. the Pilnclus •'not only believe in prohiniOn • in ope state of •existence 'after death, but they believe in 8,400,000 SUOOSsSiVe ;periods of' existence, eaca,begittethig*ith beth ande ending wieledeatli, and. probationecitinued- in each'aed all then." , The Shaker dectrineseetee now forma. lated; present thefeliowna, pointe: , Beget in o God who site over all. That. -In the . Readheadear at. - 14trft:124,1eaS15. • by Him and sent forth beetiline-tagee_nenye_.,___a_____. spiritswhowill guide safely those to whom . aheyeeeverce-setta -Theseingleeeteeofeetheee spirits is the Christ, firat deecendieg upon, •Jeette, . was the -Ben -,ofnkitry- and. e Joseph, and then upon Ante Lee. •The• direet ' guidance of ''everg • believer by the • ., Chnet otdet•of spiriee. The 'rejection of ' " the •books called the Holy, Sontature4 a contaiuing all. the *ora ef. God: . The Ooze% •, ttequeet. disuse s of . the sacraments Com- , inanded in the Bible: The enforcement of virgin.purity,eabstipence faite nearriagel and from all that offends Agana chastity; A ,corcirciunity. of Ojeda, Of affection and • interests. The :following Of the..., moral , virtues, love, peace, justice, holiness, good: nese, truth: An open confession of every • .n. T . • known inemperance, hon-remstanee, freedom from winally antbition. • ' ca . • • An Economical Stove:. „ • , There ZB real economy irk,* a coal oil stove in the saintlier season; if the proper article is obtained-. , But it ehould be ,a good heater, two or three,. five•ineh .wieks will • initially answer, for all purposee, although . some etovesetee furnished' with Os' meey as . 'SiEwith plenty *of heating ,ctipacity heavy wotk can be. -done when, sanirehlee and the learners- ore easily tegulated to suit any requirementTwo or .three cents worth ef coal Oil per day will rue a good- * • sized Move, and one of tini great beauties of 04er:eta:ern is Nit no time 18 lost he int..' management. The full heating power may be obtained ,in less then half a minute, and, the "Moinget its work is done, the furnace e may be extingnished. 1110 coal oil, stovet has conch to eoinmend it to the prudent . kouseWife; but we think that MaraufaCtilrerS have neat -yet paideufdelent attention to ie • ecobetrnetiOn. • Fear Not. ' * All ii1noy and urinary eoiriplainis, especially • tright'S Disekpo,- Diabetes and Layer troubles, Hop Bitters IVin surely and lastingly cure CaSes exaetly like' your own have beeii cured Pry yonr own neighborhood, and you eau fiiul rejib— ble proof tit home Of what...116p Dittera hag7!tud • ean do. ' • The great ,declinc le the death tato among child ti in „Ehgland, duse.-"•to ever. • inerevain itary improvements,' and therfore kely to be Molt and Thorp marked, makes Malthfietam trot:able, Transparent bennets for inidenrouier Wear are made of gauze amid tablet:led with aigrettes or flowent. The inside . of the brith is finished with pla,itings of Soft '0