The Sentinel, 1883-08-17, Page 2ine.0110.'
4
ee.t.--e--eeeereee.
DIA
void* on Ronne 4111P Ablicd
11111ilhieeittry.
LETTER 'vvR0TI1
dilipletoli says Eight enormous
ere built around ()stray's reoi.
d Aiwa were numerous iires
t the city. Banda marched
beetroots plaYinit national air
y crowda cheering. &slight eol.
erred between the orowd and the
he offieleas fear that the Fehisns
•emboldened by these demon.
The mob entered housee on
t lest n#ght, and seized bedding,
dealer ertiOlee to meke bon-
boate the deeth of Carey. Bffi
rey were burned, and r000k
are hehl in various toWest
meaeures for the protection of
neoted with the Photnix Park
ale have been mounted. Parnell,
,day in reference, to th,*shooting
-d the Irish should rejoice that
Iftliatiti IN CANADA. SETTING A DISLOCATED
Remarkable Faith Cures Vouched for
e Priest. •
THEM 1123IPLESS CRIPPLES BEgromisfa
A Montreal- despatch saye : The party of
Ottawa pilgrims, suralbering 1,200 permits
pi all Agee and sexes, under the epiritualt
care of Mgr. Dehareel aud thirty priests,
retailed here today from a. visit to the
shrine of Ste. Anne de Beauprei. They
wets all in an evidently joyful statese
they had been favored with fine wombat,
and three reareoulaus cures of in.
firm Femme are „reported .to have
taken place. One of the important
came was that of a young woman who had
.not walked for three yeareand tour months,
who is now thoroughly well. Her name
was Dorion, from Aylmer, near
Ottawa, and she was 21 yeses of age. A
=oilier of yeare ago she had .fallen. and
injured her knee, displacing theknee-cap
In such a way that she had no use .of the
leg ; she went on crutches. It gradually
denied by ,the Oovernment had• became worse and during the, last
accomplished. .. ' three years she had to be carried on se
°dad that "Wien fled t° litter.- Six doctore had attended her more
fter the demonatrations of '67, or less.00nstantly, but without avail. She
Skil P04101000 as a ronian had long prayed to St. Anne, she said, to
y was ebot outside 'colonial relieve her of her misery, and had •latterly
. O'Donnell . must; ' therefore, preseutiments that the saint had listened
lighted. • to herprayer,and that a visit to Iter sacred
last night') in their atteraPtsshrine would Hee her limbs cured. She
°lighting of bonfireeend sup. bee done so, am& WaS tO•day SS well ea
emonstrations in celebration ever. Nies Dorioe further said :• if I was
eath, were obliged to make a borne on to the train at Aylmer by four
r of streets. They were stoutly men. 'My leg was completely useless,- and
611"ecti°336 a'the eltY by th° would swing helplessly fron:eside to side or
p and strong measures had. to
'twist round. When we got to the Church
prevent a geiferahriot. This offite. Anne de*Bnaupre I was carried in
police etmets were crowded aid placed at the fourthrailing from the
re, many of G whom allowed altar. I had searcelY knelt a moment
errough usage. N'inety.two When a strange feeling canto over me. It
nets .were fined ten shillings
ling bonfires, and fitur.otherti. :8
'ECK.
To 1Pelicu.,10. .OPOraidoll, leirfornird on a .
rvws.volvarsilla Map was WO.
to Pte.. , •
As:aireadybriefty reported tel Opt.=
;from. Reading, Pa., ,t)tio:_ a /41e. meet. re -
Markable cases mit reedreleeeceete light thisw.eele foe Dover Toweelelp. Edward Swartz,.
Of that. place* wan ..ent in the woodland
.durSing the: eevere ;Moran. of. fleet week, mid
'ootild find no ohelteeexcept under' the Imo.
trees, He weestandiug elem. to e large oeli
tree, and When the .storm was at ite height,
a large limb was - lerenehed. off a tree ;tear
by and precipitated aornsti Mr. Stve,(Ktes:
neek, dislocating . Phyinciane Were. at.
.oinia summoned And .made 04thinination.
of the injurics. sustained! by Mr. Swartz
They', were, satisfied that • . !mold
not in that , condition, . and
the only hope for him. was to have
the break set... tho operation woe %dun,
geroua. gee., MI present etpreesed. their
belief .that the man Would -die, The doetore,
informed the unfortunate, male . of ; the
dangeretee bonatioie he WAS. • in, . arid When
asked. if he Was willing at once to have the
eperMion performed • he'. reptie.d. inthe
;afdrelativee femile. of the Man ;were
summoned. to .his. bedside, and he. heda
good•bye to .eaob. one,: eapeoting, that he
would net .. eurvive the. operation. • • -The
.•petting. Mane with .; garnay Wail. 'an
effecting. one, .• not soon to be forgotten by
• those • presento' .111r. Swam
Wall 'perfectly oonaolous and talkedfreely.
. He replied to the phyeiniatis when quee.
:timed about...the. Critical nature or the'
operation, tbet, he. was in their 'hands .;atid
in the hands pea, and .that they shOuld.
do the they. could ..for him. It was
found that the fourth • joirit of .the neck
had been-fraotured., -Rey. J... Deiniuger
was also called in.. He held .religious ser,
vioesin the. reohn 'doge:pitting, theetefeetre
• v.- • .
was as if a great weight ha&beene telsene
'0.0.•-:-;
ablegratn. announces .
a examined 'before. the Port
gistrate today, 'charged with
rey. According to evidence,
Wonnell were drinking: just,
rder. When the steamer was
eini Table, Bay and Alps,
11 suddenly shot Carey in the
'staggered away, O'Donnell
shot him twice in the heels.
20 minutes. O'Donnell says
rzdan digger, andlost large*
ill°. He was unaware of
• until. he saw it stated in a
O. Power was. He then de-
ilL him: O'Donnell was
0, YOUpg Woinan TAM he
; He is six feet high,. has
hair, iii-Oyeara of age, and
e hand. •
infernal machine O'Dea-
ith him is an ordinary
• Mrs. Carey deposed that
er she asked O'Donnell,
thy husband?". He
t to do it."' Carey's identity
y the 'steward and another
S demeanor
on the steamer
He provoked a. row at
busing the English.' • , -
.Y.,,despatch nays: Felix
ty, Olaineeng: to be an In.-
onhelli who killed' Carejr,
New York Branch Of the
inns. O'Donnell did the
rare of .the Invincibles.
ed at Montreal •Lynch
ed. hint.' .He sari • the
&mile has not long to
B LAST' Parrs,
Iona to the British Goy.,
rittfin pardon were un.
ands for„ tents , were
rotherPeter was removed
; so that he did net,knew
of him other informers
son, and he ,knew not
gime. Hediegan'to sine'
s had been done with.
e expression in a letter;
fore he was taken from
be WsEtiirispioidus that
etetn,.eseetteete&eiteeeol:
der. -children Were fieet„
iit:wifittlettletheyotinger
amily'llillosned, it being
that Carey would Meet
orb.
auppoited:tn be the lest
fe. • It WititYleddiessed to
In:Witham jail, who had:
f :dealings with iTames
tter'e • arrest • and int-
" ButwAy, 1.813)ily,
n will snd round telhe,
Ogy' for my non -attend.
eeting. I Would wish'
Id. I expected that I
fore title. 1 require
foie days elsewhere
know it is. your 'own
eailse: I might have
t the safe •cleeitreire.
ear friends -j11 'kith:a-
lso the pardon as
o one -it is best to be
t a ease of kidnapping
y from mee-I expect
ay. Ikuowyoahave
heateme-but if you
an you weal& excuse
My Brother to was
pel and a Convict Ben.
longside of Me -good
re sincerely,.
jettee GeneY,'T. C.
atop here."
ny doubt that Carey
lay of theqinurders of
.The INA police
pleuty of evidenee to
bapital crimes, . and
4(11016810110 on cross-
er had lieen one of
y peen ot allowed
1 uueur thio Dame.
tett 'be sty led divine
en; and the home
Comely, pure and
ly by the' agehey of
de by *numb's halal.
Croekett, ,TeX
ing hinteelf with hie
75 in Change out
eneeeeigrielgt-reIZ.Itee",e'Z'oe'ee- '&47,etee'
lag my prayers. to St. Anne for
hearty an hour, when all at once I rose 'up
and Walked away. I got hp as instinctively
as if I had never, had anything the..inatter
-in filet, when 1 rose from the railing I.
forgot that my leg had been bad, and was
not fully cognizant till I found .myself
walkiog" Father Labelle here stated that
he was perfectly aware of the condition of
the -limb before the nairaolte and could
vouch for the authenttoity of all. Miss
'DOrion .,had related regarding ber being
brought to the church and as to the spiritual'
workinge defieribed . byher in 'the process
ht her cure.' Ile knew her personally well,
and She would ehrInk from an untreth. Or
an exaggeratiche-e The other tWo•rniraotil•
Ous cures took .place on the eteeeeori .just
before the, pilgrtnis landed:. Father Labelle
andthe parents gave the paitioulerie- One
was little Miss Burns, aged 6, of ,Ottawa.
'Bite had. never been-, able to Welke, Or:
scarcely 'momher legs: She had prayed. -of Loeds lest night .Lord, Epily 'asked
to • Ste. • Anne, And eviiteed. a wonder- whether the: .dovernineht. had .arrived at
rut faitliall through thirpfigriniage. Said ,aey.timishin respecting the Irish emigre..
Father Labelle "As we were coining into tion scheme proposed , by .Mr, George
;Pert we all joinain singing the. Te •Deum Stephen. Lord Derby. •stated, that the
of thankfulneSs for out enccessfUl Government assented to the principle of
age.. The „little ,girl was leaning cn her the iiiihetee,' but regnired, the Catadian
centehes. When suddenly she walked slay •Government to assume' the lesPonsibilitY
leaving theite behind. They are now on the of ; the loan .advanced.. by the linperial would fix hire, and She took one or my old
boat. She walked up to the train, and she Treasury. This the -Thieninimieleelined to suits axidtnade it over for pa; and he were.
18 now: safe .board, Oured thoroughly." undertake; but the .:elegoeiations were not time; a week before • lie knew it was ..an
.The third Cure was 'Of a little boy about the abandoned. • The Imperial ..Government old 'Suit Made over, halt one ;day. he
same age' as Mies Buena. He had never hoes OarrY the scheme etiaceosfully found handful of dried Up angle worms
had the proper Use Of his lega-fwas •fact through. . • • . • • in .the Pistol' pocket that I' had forgot:
paralyzed.' On reaching Montreal' Father. • eee on „ix.. 'when I Was fishing, and pa laid the angle
Labelle told him tooffer another and final A117,-'6"1-.. R4)`‘-"." IN .wOrine to Ma, and Ma had to explain that
'prayer to /Anne. " Talk "t0 "Hart!' said Ouptain-- • *voila: ,Finitl! Feat to be 1.814 made over one °Utley. old ;suits' for plc'
.he,.'ias if .yon were. tatting to, your oven • Atliesnaged -it Caatidars. He was med. and totikthem off • andthiew
Met*? : The clerg,ynieu left alone to
,his devotioen for. some moments; when the -,A-Nieehingteridespiatoh.-saire: One thein out the back. eveldeve; "indeinvortehe
thile came to -him • walking; and
;tiered. left his crutches on the boat. •
perfe..0", abatiadieteeeove^ residing Weald never humiliate himself by ' wearing
gmnetinuouzioes..to-daY . that some his son's old clothes. . Ma- tried to reason
time this month he gin pve'r. Niagara •L'iiiee but he was awhil Worked gland
s. .ay e. ao omp t . ep
teat by aid of•tt niechahiCaldevicewhicit stormed • around to ' find his cid. 'suit of.
hateduvented. ,.A bag seven feet long clothes, hitt Ma had sold them to plaster
and four feet through tO be inflated With' :of parts image peddler, and pit hadn't any-
•
gis and strapped to • his back. • .H_ Shia 'thing t ' wear; and e wanted 'ma to go.
Everything is leadineOS. will be out in the alley up the suit he
retied to a pOint in etteeziver near Ghat tereeileit the. window, 1.eit ,e; ragman bed
. • imilow TO SWiltl.
Captain Virtibb's Views on the lifetatarliall
Art.
)
Webb was rub alad reeklese, but'be• Was
tot ignereeet of watee or ite ways, e wah
an expert iu ele art :which he, believed iu
ihoroughly. Some time since, talking a
swinuning as a soiletioe, he is reported as
saying;
's I believe every boy and girl ought to
korcw how to swim properly, not with any,
purpose ot. making it a proteSsiOn or ImbeY,
as I have done, but in iutatice to theroselves.
It is very easy tb learn to sevint, if the thing
is taught scientificaily, and all who leapt
may some day find it an astemplishment
sufficient to, save their lives I do not think
the people Of America have yet awoke to
the importathie of the science of -swim-
ming, and I" think, as yet, there are few
scientiac Min:MIMI in this country.
The people., here .have, all the ad,
vantage that Could be desired in the
way ot water and climate, but th,eyrito not
realize the text. In; England •alt young
people are supposed to know how „to 'swine
There owiinmiug is an aecomeilishenent,
and thb parents consider it a duty to. have
:their childreti taught how to Mini.
_ „
MIK is a science, and in a great measure
depends on a good pair of lungs properly
used, aided by the action, of 'the proper
muscle in a man's body, so as to get speed.
man to be a good swtotneer must be cap-
able of keeping up a good rate of speed,
without etrauning or overtaxing his
strength, and to•Soecimplish this is eireple
and very easy. The eir-in :man'telunge is
sufficient to float the weight of his body.
In swimming 'breast to' he mut keep the;
arms extended, as nearly as poseible on a
eve' and at right angles, . from the, chest,
with the heed thrown back in a'positain
that is natural and net strained. He must
breathe ratturally and in recovering from
each strokothelegee ireemeeradeeetire titsti2-%tL
•
of shears. Then the • legs, close together
,should be drawn up preparatory to the
plunge. Most • swimmees in this country
have, a Very bad, faUlt: While knowing
how to &vie' their 'wind,. they rely on the
apuirtficrworkto be donerand, praying for
a successful result of the operation. One
of thephysicians took hold of the patient's
head, two others at the neck and shoulclerr,
and the frecture was successfully reduced:
The patient said at once' he felt' bttter ;
that he had more feeling in his bedynwhich
had dieen. completely paralyzedeat . thin
time. The demote cannot say what the
-result of the- operation will be. If the
spinae cord ie not injured. the patient, it is
thought, He is doing as well
as can be expected, and at last' amounts
hovel of hie ultimate recovery Were enter-
tained. The case. &Umtata considerable
attention among the medical fraternity,
°Wing to the nature of the injerieseeeelee
_ ee _
•
• IRISVE1111011010111 TO C%ibA
-
AMONG THE CLOUDS.
Actin* VaYallielfrolo litsiiilland go 1110141114:
-Graphic Account if ihe 71r* 4.P•
• eablegrem dated Tbe ague, says
The balloon " The Colonel," winch
aseended at balloon,
Essex, arrived M
Flushing on 'Wednesday night. The
aeronauts Were Sir Claude de Orespigny
arta° )11r. JOaeph Siromene. The latter
gives the /following &Bement of the voyage. ,:. •
The start was neade at 11 o'clock. We kept.
nearly ever the middle of.the Blackwater c, 7
at 20 mimetes past 1 we were over Brad -
well; at half -paint 1 o'clock we wire "
just paseiag over the shores of
Essex.. Taking our beaeings, fOU194. ,
were pipe Straight toward leetterchim, and
if Abe wiLd omitinued would:probably reach.
Holland before dark. The boteopi tAke • :
Sea WaS Clearly Seen in every direction,.
every channel and shoal Was easily marked..
They formed a curious network, Wenould.
see two men, near Harwich -very distinctly.
Six stemmata beneath tie appeared almost
iri collision. eAt 2.30 p. m. we have . net '
yet spent an ounce of ballast or touched
any Salve. ..Our altitude at this. moment
is 10,000 feet. Our feet are cold
We emptier to be •overlte.ulipg mid .et the
southeast. At 55" minhees past 2 :we are
enohrotitled in Mist ; can see nothing
but 'ourselves and the A few,
ritinuteeleeer we have a magnificent pic-
ture of the balloon on a aloud.' We oan
see. our vis reeis tieing everything exteetly as.
we do, , even to our fingers hauling 'the
ropes and grappling the eable• whieh have
let Out distinctly reproduced I can hear
the 'heating of our. hearts very distinctly.
Our ears, are 000ttsiontilly blocked, but we •
remedy • this . 4.3y. .widely opening the
mouth. M half past. 4 we think there
is a' slight sound as of surf. We
are very. Slowly. deseendinge' • At • 20
minutes to 5. we emerge_o_the-t-
.Rtintraz;...„.„4,fOtifrattd.
en Ateu-mmutes past 5, two ateamers
are distinctly visible, both going tvestWald.
In few seconds we were oyer vast, area
of what looked. like mountain e' of -snots,
solid enough to,walk on, The grandeur of e
this scene it *mild be utter folie for me to
.attempt to describe..
strOke of their arrive and the' plunge' of the Not the slightest.
•
legs for speed, but pay no attention to
the recover, as purstied by. myself and
most scientific swinimere °in the .old
country. They seem to feel that, afteithe
stroke and plunge, tautens depends mainly
on the mumber of strokes they 'ean. get in.
As a result their inotioh inewater is by
jerks, the force of the stroke. and plunge
being retarded more or leas in the receVer
• •
01 'Pee legs. In. pursuing their course they
soon tiie, the museles they-riatiiially bring
into play, and of course his hae_rame-or-
Imre-fie-of bei their breathing power."
A Hitch In Itegfclitutions with the 1D.ominien The Alia, BoVss' Old Clothes.
'• tilryeA'nmen.• Bey; did %tell yea :about 'pa • • and -nt
London cablegram says : In the Howie having trouble?"
:No,. what's the row.? •
'
•." Well, you see, mit wants to eeonomize
all she can, and pa has been getting•thbaner
Blithe he quit deinking and' reformed, and I
have kept on growing until •I am bigger
•than he la: Funny, ain't it, Abet, a boy,
should be bigger than his pit? Pe wanted
a new. suit of clothes, and ma' said she
• ' rill Rt. h win 6 ji h. h6 said he was n� old oh.arity he ital •ad eeellep00, ; Llrerlg$
,The':Terrible ..110.11,ester In Imetilerel.ler.
and neddeniaa
ti*splefidespateh says: Of the foreign
ere stopping at Oseamicoicile only. those
who Were at the theatre were paved. The
surviseietewer,e obliged topass the might ie
uakkkoA
essuiretFeseeiallipg•Iteie.help. beneath the
ritins..e-Thereitrbatelittleeliiima_ Wit, the:
latter- aro.14till, alive. According to :the
'latest estimate 6;000 pereous . perished:
(Three soldiers; while searching for victiros,
were fatallyinjured. . Subscriptions have;
been opened throughout Italy for the' dis-
tressed. • : • ' • . - .*.
•• The • survivors • say thirty-seven. &mem
are entombed in a room dia the Hotel
Paccolit.. •Coutit Zergaedi steer three hemp'
exhausting .labor" tescuedtilearepereeee„.„
butaiIed-touccrnplith th�i5iincipal object
of his efforte, the eavifie of his sister: The.
play. at the theatre on Saturday night was
burlesque opening with an earthquake
/
, A Rome' eablegiain sive : The • news-
papere appeared .to day with mourning;
borders. many people' injured at bone
will be oripplen for life; The dead at Fork,
humber 300; at.Laccoarneeo, 500;. at Foil -
eon& Sertaia,, 200. Twenty -tout children
poriehed „ iu Misericordut As) him. ,Tlie
King and.Q.neeu have stitteribed100,000 lire
aiu.d the Pepe 25 00Q ler the aufferets.. Two
.thoesapd sadiere are digging in the ruine
mid have saved arthotiseed Itves.up to mid-
day on Sunday and'txlitinied twenty-four
persons alive ou Monday.
• Enthusiasm.* one Of the most powerful
engines of shooese. When you, do a thing, do
it with a vim.. pe it with your might. Put
your Whole ooul into it., Stamp it•With your
own personality. Be actiee, be-energetio, be
enthusitietia and heitlifel, and you will Ite•
comOlish your object: TrialY has EttierSOn
oitid "Nothin1great. WW1., aVeX 4001eVed
without enthuepont." •
lit the " God.iiitoxinitted " religion of
Islam there iH eu incredible number. of
beautiful .uames forded.. -•..-no less than .5504
atheirdieg to a paper by Mr. B,edhotise
the doureel of the Boyd. .A.siatio Society.
,04fieliee Mahomatedan praye'rs elects
29 for repetition, slippink one of the 90 bads
of his rosary with the breathing • of eiteh
nattie.--eithetatlen., .„,
• The roost novel railway project is that Of
utilizing the great water-powee of the 'Alps
for working eleottical railway, in Switzer.
fetid. ,The 'tentative exnerinieut Will be
tried between' S t. Moriiz and l'ottresita, a
distance d nosily i)voquilies, end if every-
thing works well the lite Will be. extended
north 'about fifty miles further and south
about thirty miles.. - ° • I
T.1 ,,,1t;Mains :will •junim.eVerboard e,ti ,,pped thria.and4igatie,r,i.t7:4u#,,r-rzi;
fl OM's. alriiiiii-Eu-ster anAputicen_and..
edgeoftee rook over which thewatersfall went outafeerthe-ragenkir, and herunand
4,-Vellebentoebeg•Tellfidly- as the _water, _Peeefterliim,and the_ragreae;.oldavolide7-
itiid-as: my body Will be very muth lighter mei? there Wae-sie (escaped lentitui•frone the
it will shoot right out into the air, and i asylani, and he was chasing peoPie ail over.
will descend .five Or eix yards" beyond the the 0037s:end the policeman took pa by the
fall of water.When 1 reeeh the • water lirien,uleterand pulled it off, and :be Was
below' I will float down .to the. !mot where, a sight whenthey took him . to the police -
Captain Webb • lumped in the other day, station. 'Blisand nie had to go , down and
and etrike out for the Canadian gime. b1,fiim out; ana. the .pcifice. lent . us, a
About half ainile above Goat Island there rOttlin tO ph_ t 'over pa, end We ,got him
'iv a prominent bluff on the Oanadian side.
It is about 150 feetlAglaitnd ienveryertea,ely-
-perpendrentee'boe „day last week*
,adjusted my apparatus 'and • jumped off. I.
descended in a direct line as "steadily and
at about the same. speed as an. ordinary
hotel elevator Meyee. The water was only
four feet deep at the base of the bluff and 1
herrn° trenblein making a safe landing."
Dr. Richardsonis said to be a man Of means:
and ghee:title attainutentei
. • ,
nittrAriout
Treniendeui ExiiiO4itia—Every
Pune Of Glang 11.pvtii tirokna-77.
lk'oltrot , ' •
A Victoria, B. C., telegram says Sir
Alexander Cartipbell had an,iuterview.with
the Government,"•witicla it believed ' wits
satisfactory, respecting the pointwat Issue:
H. M. S. Heroine,. welch ie long overdue,
put into Astoria for feel. • :
The dry, hot • weather cetitinhes here
there .having been tio %sin for two months.
Forest fire's are raging every where, and the
air is filled with smoke. Yesterday after.
noon the lbeat erom the fittest fires ignited
soMepowder in 'Onderdinakei mill, near
• Yale, ,.which blew up • with two ot
report fl: Esery paue of glass hi the townf Yeliewas broken. No one Was killed,
but several were badly hurt, Three :hnti:
died andsixty eases of giabt and ten eases
of Week powder .exploded. Tie lOka • is
-The' tv. histle of a locomotive is heard
MOO yaids, the noise Of it trail, 2,800 yard.,
. the report of it musket and' the ark of a
dOg WV yards, the" rail of it druto 1,000
yards, the croak' of a frog 000 '5, arae,ahd a
ericket'schirp 800 verde. ,•
• One of the \thegistrateti in the of
Cahiroimen is Dahiel O'Coeuell, grandAoh
of the agitator. The birthplace Of the lat-
ter ie. a ruin, the roof Wien in, and the
stone Walla overgrown with invy inside anti
•
Lhothe; and -he iewearing his summer panes
.whildlthe taitaritrikes„ him' a new,pair of
clothes. 1 think pa toe excitable and
too particular. I never kicked pn wearing
pa's old clothes, and I' think he ought to
Wear Mine now. Well, Itnust pi down to
the sweetened Wind factory and, jerksoda,"
!sae the boy weht out and • beteg up a sign
in front a the etore, 'Spinach, for greens,:
that the, cat has made a nest itt over Sun-
day."-Pech's Sun,
• Iteentriustne .0111.aiwearenee .of a i;sicli. •
•.. A deepatch, from Montreal sap,: "
very Ougula3p disappearance:here is that of
Miss' SrPvensen, aged' "32e a espeotable
dresemeker of Hamilton, • Ont„ who en-
gaged a' room in a. 4cent residence :on:
•MauCe Stkevata,. brought her trunk, setv-
itionachiee; etc.„ beret on the 23rd of ,May
'limit. She •stoped there one hight,".weet
out thonext day, and never returned. It
mould appear she bus no friends here, . no
one haying inq' uired about .her • fete..,. The
matter was mily reported by her laedlitdy
to the polices today." . ,
- . ,
made by a. mediaed student in Zurich.' To
what the pi_ext letinnee
. The next swimmer who seripusly aspires
to do what W,ebb failed in trying to do will
carefully leered every' yard' of the cotiese,
to begur With. He will send &Utilities doWn.
the -rapids and watch their drift and fate.
Ile will teht the currents 'aed study 'the
eddies and inovetieehts of the water in the.
w.hiripool. II tieing taken all thine obvious
precautions, tend litivifig`gateed a fair Ithow,
ledge of thesituation, be will take partich-
lar tains to keep'out, of Niagara 11,tver at
that ticu ler p0111.tee-Pe Ve Toe qinionerdig.
moveruenteould be detected ineihy part er
this vast eloudlaied. • Every mountain Peak
seemped to stand thegre, fixed . fgorevefy.n The ^
tem tation was too reat to. b do
leave this grandeur. until .,a greater tempts,
tiedoeme-tee positive sOundeef the surf ,
irmiediately beneath. We now Opened a
valve .and rushed downward with groat
rapidity. 4 few seconds were taut:dent to
bribe us -down from, our highest- 08MM:ie.
17,000; latir.'..-letotigh to have. shritad. before.
our hulightedevtilioneltedeachot•Walcitteritern
-Wand, on the northwe'st Side of the Scheldt
River, and. the, me:inland of ,Hollapd" ii -
ting us in to the south. We had already
,passed the north of the SCheldt: con-
sidered we were DOW safe enougli,. and,,
iketched Walcheren evhile flashing jut be-
neath the ',People Were now haibrig t
froth, all points,„ The balloon brOught,down
splendidly. at 'Flushing, the grappling iron
taking a •firm grip in ditch mew -nide.. •
ing '• wheat .field.' • The .ditrih acted..
as a faith.° round the balloon to keep Off:.
the great. crush.' When we had emptied
and packed the balloonewe went through the
streets, which were thronged with people:
all the wayedithe Hotel Wellington, where • -
we wereentertained feta short time. After.. -
getting ilaitne refreshments We proceeded to
the landing stage, and there procured berths! •
sui_theeteemee-Priimesli-MlaY--16i Queens,.
"borough., I had . forgettee tgemen. •••
lion that. the gold was intense ,at the'. '
Mouth • of the. *eat. Beheld .at an,
altitude a 17,000 feet. ,had .400.patinda
of ballast lef c when we came. down,. and
our -
journey auldhave been prolonged but •for •
our having. promised Lady de.Cieepigny.
that we would de our best to descend on •
;reaching tee'eoast. We landed'atIo'clooke
•
. coition 'itaiAisi$E4.
. •
:.7rhpii.i They Venue", .14.enie liwithoutt 7
-7fieanteeentie-• He "De I'arVille '
opu a,r expr'es. ohear.e. often -It -17g. yery7si;;;
the iisitizence of ohockii ,of this kind, t,he;ele . .
..! .
t8heileeile!3CleollIzennit.ihglYt-1.1"s
similar expression, ....May • freqtiently • she -
heard ;from jpereong have reeeived;
violent. blows. teethe head or faelt. Under
reallyeeem& td - see jnfinite. numbers of
sparke:••Shotike of a certain °tape in:tin:eased
Upon the nervous, system seem to have the.,
faculty 'of prodieneg pitenoreena • of light..
This ..remark . has heed suggested,' by the.:
feets We are about to, relate, 'which , lead
gia suppose :that . sonorous eelenttions.arer. "••':
i',Usceptible dertaili oases Of p,rovokieg
lunainous'ainiationki. There are, ie fact, !.
persens ; who are.' endowed .with
eueh seneibility that ".,:theY .'oentot hear .•
it soiled Without .at thesame time perceiv.
ing ',Each sound to:them has its
poculiarcolor; thhe woed eiorrespoude with
Ted and that one With "green, Cue eat° is
bine and another is This pherloixte
Soon, ".cOlor-hskring," as the English car/
it, has been hitherto • little observed. Dr.
.elusebttienter; 'Of Vienna, al,psitrs to have
been the fleet. ;portion who .took eerie -Lis
ticiticte of it. While still a child, whole ..•
play ieg one, daywithhi 'brother., etrikieg
fore neatest glasti teevr(1•r the ringieg, he
discovered that !he Ss, tors at the same
lime that he .perceived the eoged ; and so
well did he diocern the color that; Whim
stopped ears, ,he• could divine by it how
leuda sound the fork teed produced. ..
brothenalso had similar experiwiees. . Dr- '
Nliesbailiner was isf ter ward LLblC to i.dd to
his *lynx chatirvations nearly iapstiOalSeS.
this yeutig•men mosioad, notes' were trans.
*tea by certain .fiied eolorse shigh.
notes ificiiiced Clear csilore and the low notes".
dull ouss. More receetly Pedrouo, ap
oplithalitfolegiat of N Witte's, 116.44 obmerved•
the same peouliaritiesin one of his frienclife •
• • , • .
,A eurviyer of the bfittle of Trafalgar died'
a fortnight again lingland.., kis name #,Pitil
Prannisltarria, age 80 °his iank, that of-
retited Coremander. ile,entered.the British
,naVy, when ninOyearti.of a4s, and ()LAY .
months before the battle of Trafalgar was
'fought.
A clock in the family ef & Cittedete 'Moe •
mita that had .1,1,,yays beta •trustworthy
euddenly 'stopped. Inveetigatioh showed
thet a .sparrow's egg:. 'placed ia the °leek,
, outehad hstched, and • the ihfant sparrow
1 had colhded with the penduluni. .
Bob 13urdette fiari the .Boston 'girls are
so awfuny cultured they woh:t 641i it the
" Sextiet By and By." They tali it the
Sugared Sublequeotlye"
The Presbyterians are building at Sher.
bot Lake it -church to cost $3,000,
a •
4'
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