HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1884-03-14, Page 3March 'IA 1.884.
GURRENr TOPI04:
• , ,_ i . •. ,.,.,.._ t•••••---- .
. PT the will ox Mrs. Stapleton-hirethertoh
which has been published, the Pope hi not
A legetee for two millions of dollers, as
etstted, . Prior to her deoettlie oho conveyed
that Seth Ni her near relative'Mr. George
Errington, M.P., in trust, to be applied to
the Pope's benefit, and the organ of the
Vatielth etetes that, while certain journale
were ascribing to hfr. Errington secret mis.
alone from England to the court of BOMB,
hie business was dimply to arrange for
ale munificent gift to the head of the
Church. By the will Mr. Errington ac-
quires a large- landed estate, and large
elhequests are math- to angthee Roman
' Catholic relative, a brother of Lord Gerard,
&Ltd to the Bev, Demi Kiernan, parish
clergyman of the diadricti in whichher,
estates lie.
TAU eleotrio light is not everywhere cm.
sldered an improvement upon the old.
fashioned modes of illumination. One of
the latest and best epitome was recently
introduced into the Court Theatre at
Stuttgart, and it was .eupposed that the
orchestra would find it very eatistaotory.
Instead of weloorawg the change, however,
they have just petitioned the managemeut
for a return to the old-fashioned oil lamps
that they had been using pretheu e They
eity that electric( illuroinatithh,li 't ',roved
objectionable, becauee itii..)4111- , y-, with
many, unpleasantly affethi i th.'': neronie,
They also assert that theyliow fluilit more
difilonit to follow the guidanee of the
leader. A committee of experts, composed
of oculists and disinterested mutatiane, has
been appointed to examine into the matter.
The excia,vatton of the St. Gothard
tun-
nel mot many lime,. On coming out of
the tunnel the men •desoribed the sensa-
tion as being like a !midden plunge into ioy
cold water. The hot, humid Mc affected
the digestive organs very much, and pro-
duced iutestinal Worms, whioh clamed the
deaths of a great number of workmen. Horses
agehe einaliarlyatketee, and died rapidly.
Moral eminent doctors who audited: these
peculiarities pronouuced them as being due
to the 'want• of aeration and the poisonous
gases evolved from the blastivg operations.
And they reported that during the Working
hours the men were alwa,ye m a high state
of fever, whioh was otheeeded, when the
work was done for the day, by cold 'shivers
and oellapse. With these experiencee to
guide',them, the engineers of the Simplon
have'heoessarily 11313a0 thQ question of yen-
tilation one of seridas and anxious study.
Etraraurvia of 'newly -la -Zan intents, Prof.
Genziner says that the Renee of 'touch is
developed -from the earliest period, and
re-
fiox actions aro. readily excited by the
slightest stimulation, especially' of the
a,nd then of the ban& and the wales.
The tooling of brain is only ' clearly ex-
hibited after: 4 or 5 weeks, before
which time infants do not • shed tears.
Hunger and thirst are menifested• fit in.
creased -general-irritability„ With, reflex
movements, which cease after the first
week. Smell and totem* not distinguish-
able to infants. Hearing i8 perceptible in
the first or seeohd day of lafe.4" They are
very sensitive to light, and alter a few days
learn to follow tee motion of tbjecte by
moving their head. Betweeto the foartio
and fifth week the convergence of the
pupils and power of co•ordibution iu ViBiOn
are perceptible. 4 (helium petheption of
color does not exiet under 4 or 5 month&
M. &me Downie's, iu • the Journal dee
Debats, laments the want Of enterprise
,
manifeated by the. Preeoh• :industrial
°lames, as compared' withethme of- Great
Britain and the D'ilited.Stotee.:' He sitY'11
that Prenohinen are pot only over clatitious,
but such great lovers ot routine that it is
impossible to get them out_of a, path -they..
have once fairly entered into; As anex-
ample of this sfblidity of character, he.
instances the condition .of the advertieing
trade in From. Although . Frenchmen
know that Englishmen and Americans have
made large fortunes by ocintioupua and.
pereeverine advertieing, - few. Francini:Jen
are inclined to seek fortune in that way.
.An for newspaper advertising in France, it
is still in its itifancy, and ia likely to re-
main so; for Frenchmen will not see that
the presentee of numerous advertisements
in the same paper in no way preventa the
public from giving attentien to anindivid,
nal advertisenaent. •
CVICAGO'S Manual Training Sthool has
lassa, opened with sixty-five hciys. Thebtlilding,
not yet complete, will tommthodate '350
pupils. realitiesl hietthotioth is to begiven-
in the use of tools, with suchiiistructiOn.
ae may be deemed nebesea,r'y ib-mathe.
maties, drawing, and the branches
of a high school 'mum. The tool histiaio-
tion, as at present conceinplated, will
include carpentry, waled turning, pattern
making, iron 'chipping and filing; forge
work, brazing and soldering, and the use
of machine shop tools: • The course of
study is to cover two years. One hour per
day or more will be given to &awing, and
not less than two hours per day to Flop
wee4work. Before graduatieg each .pupil, wilt
be required to comiteuat'e !bambini,. Less
than one•third of those who heate presented
'thomBelveAfor eaamanation. have beee Ara
cepted. The expense of -the building • has
been provided for by members of theChi.
eago Commercial Club, and with moderate,
charges Inc tuition it is expepted that' the
School will suetain itself.
Femme tests made with the•Nordeilielt
gun by the British naval . authorities
.exhibit the wonderful. eapaoity of that
weapon. It eeems that a hardened steel
bullet of eeven and one-fourth outlive
weight, at a range of 300 yards, Fine.
trated, at au angle of forty five degrees,
the Bide and boiler of a • torpedo 'boat, as
represented by a ene.sixteenth.inch steel
'ilea° 'eighteen inchee in front of a ;mooed
steel plate One half Leah thick. On being
fired directly end on at a, torpedo boat, the
bullets penetrated tbe steel hew plate, one.
sixteenth inch thick, at an angle of ten
degrees, and four bulkheacte et right tingles
-andotriking the boiler, the bullet Nutt
indented the half-inch steel plate repre-
senting it, to a depth of half an inoh ; Buis
-43e1hf01Jtly,-.thader similar oonditionte the
plate was perforated altogether. The
seenthey is also remarkable, the meat
deviation at 300 yards of ten, rounds fired
slowly being 6.6 inches; and in taped to
rapidity, the trials ashore marked 108 Mots
in the spasm of 80 seconds.. • •
A Errameth journal relater; that a few
months einoe wrarkinen* taMployed upon
sonic oonetruotions on the bank cf the river
Dnieper, in Central Russia, Maployed the
electric light to enable them to prosecute
their labors at night. The brilliant rapt of
light attracted so many millions Of Mater-
nal moths, beetles and ether insect(' that
limn time to time it Wits necessery to atop
*Mk and set all bands to destroying the
•
°tousle of winged v1011110 Mot frequently
coMplethily obsolired the light. Tui a eng.
•,gesteci 4the 144 ot employing thehdeotrie
judi • lie agrictoltere, and orientate in
ligh4 eleetroy hooleirniVes,Mts pre.
that ireotion are to he tried next,' taphole.
Not only to Insects, but to fieh, thebightproved fatally attractive. Its rays, directed
to the surface of the water, drew together
vast quantities of all the Rama found in the
Dnieper, and when within the charmed
„field of illurainatiort they lay crowded
togetlaer in MUNN, beenthirly blinded and
stupefied. The workmen, improving the
opportunity, road° a notable haul of fish.
Nunn.; all the reoeut Premiere of Eng.
lend have enjoted the advantage Of having
had wiveeof greatdevotion and tioneiderat.
hie. Ability, to whom. tender •cere and trfni,
poky in their ambition they have been -
largely indebted. The devotion 'of the
clohntees. of Rumen, who le still living, and
.the Coutatees of Beaconsfield, had Home,
thing of romaece. Mre. ialadenove, who ie
nearly the paw age as the h.'reanier,
companies her hthiband, DA did Lady Bea,
oontheld, everywhere, and. frequently re.
amine in the While gellery to the •oloee• of
the night'ssitting,. land Paltnerstop, more
than Perhape any other firell Minieter, how-
ever, Wm:indebted for his peeition andite.
maintenance to 'his wife, who was PhYsi-
°Ally and ,naeutally a remarkable *math.
Up to her -death in 1860 at 85, four yeare,
otter her hueband, the could read without
glasses, and talked with .all the firehind.th,
orgy of A young woman ol. 20. Her voioo
wae niostAheery, appiest .atidmit. Her
0.As werece.bright:blue, and lu [Tito of o
very evident wig the wits o very haudsonie
'om.joy.„. She hed mum peoulialitiee, el -
ways shook handswith her left hand, Mei
prenotmeed gold " gould," and china
" cheehy."
Clow or Alumna" meet,
Of the countless good storiesattributed
to Artemns Ward, the beet one, perhapa, ie
WO Whit% telle Of the advice he gave to a
Southern railroad coneuetor mot' after the
war. The road was in a wretohed con-
dition; and the treies, cioesequeraly, were
run at a, phenomenally to* riots of speed.
When the conductor wes ' eutiching 'his
ticket Artenaus remarked : "Does this
railroad company allow paseengcee to give
it advice, it they do Rh in , a respectful
manner?" The tiouduotor replied in gruff
topes that he gums ed so. Well," Artemus
went on, "it occurred teen) that it would
be well to detach the cow -catcher from the
front of the engiue and hiteh .it to the- rear
of the train; for we arefoot Lab's,
to Overtake a cow; but what's to, preveut a
cow from strollivg into thip ear and biting
& Passenger "
•The Queen's priatere, Mesere.Spiittiewode
-dt Coq have the largest printing press it the
world. .It scaeoely ever stop, and turtis
Out ?Ow shbets per hour., •
The Legielature of. New. :York 'hail
conferred!' upon • the Mayor of New York
clity absolute appointing power, Making
him as independent as a monarch. • •
. .
• M. N. Erna, clothier, was shot and
fatally woohded. on thestreet at Riehmonch.
yesterdey, by his eon; aged 20. An old
feud *as the ca,wie.. The youpg men fired.
four shote. • ' • • ,
l'The Sultan. "in testimony of high. fettle
fietion " with Mr.'Etiovie Areold's reerla
of the Foith " ne e poetioel 4 Xpoeitiou of
the religion of.Llam, hes collierted trifkiiw
the Order of the °beanie of thelbird elese
. •
At the laid election for : Yak, Etigiand
which' was the find) under the lice, • Corrupt
Praciloes Aet; the exPeusee of Sir F Mil.'
lime the'. sucomettil Tiog, Othlidace, • Were
.1O00, and of LoCkwood,'.1.,beral; 08,500.
At the previone eleetion •Jetueig Lowttier
apent $25,000 in an U.D8D6OefiNflif 'tffort to•
keep hiss*.
Evilest Gthrah, aged' iti the. ineatie •
. . . .
•departnithit of the Pbiladelphist, Almehoute,
in a quarrel mantetitireeep • was
the head with sin eattleenareachersandebie-
settitll'faMurecl, • : tyur.d piecee , ot tient:
have been removed., and the rainier,' guy' he
•willfully recover leg reissue, .
One of the Most siugelar apcidente ou:
tecerd receutly occurred itt u mill at Neale.
ville, Teen. •Aawnedulan hy ',some means
was thrown toward' the oirediar !ISM and,
evidently thielting that he was geivg•tthon
it, died from ,Whieh s • the verdict
of the horoner's nay... Whet pieked.uP ktt
was dead; but there we lie eige of, a.briaise
On his body. . • ', •:; •
The British coloniee imeiva more, and
'More netice at the hendeet '.the Tinperiai
•
Government. Dr. Berry, the new Primate
of Australie, was, meaterat.ed it West.
,iniuster . Abbey, (ihstead of the: chapel .:at•
Littnbetb, where colonial 'prelates are
utaially moseeratedheytdently with a view
to givieggreet e'citatt; 'end imonehia,tely
,afterwards went on Whisit to the Queen:
•Atadauie Gereter; the 0.0re:singer, saye
elatimpagne strerigthees the Ns- ioo. . That is
What the police hay. .A crowd of 'hien will
go to a oharopague 1Ui4Per 48 quiet a kit e
tens, bu.t when they gohome they Wili
hang their feet out of the witidoWof. the
hack, and Bing and, yell eh • the- eoiee will
stop the chichi in a ohurch etet:ple. • There,
irs no doubt that chaippagnetitrengthens the
'voice. . . '
LIM), a lather, and a bald-headed man
Were trayellivg together,. L3sing their Way
they wereforeecl, to Bleep. in alio open air
and to overt danger it wag agreed twatiii.e•
by,tutue. Thelot fitettell .eio the .bather:
who, tor amusement, thieved the More head
While he was sleeping.' • He then wokehitn,
and the fool iaisiug hit.; 1' And to ear/itch hie
head, eitolainiedes-" Here's peetty -Mita
take ; you have a,wekeutil the bald-headed
inartinstead Of me." •
. ,
--Ouehrthe root apueing. inveetiong of
the present century is' the loaded cigar a et
least that is•t1p. e ue if:the atnoliet• 'of fun
extracted is measured by 'the expense in
'obtainnag the ;enjoyment. A fellow' in
Terre liaute,Lid.,,gave -one to a friend to
emoke, and the Moil t Was. the latter' lia.d his
lane burned, and the magistrate eial about
040 *bald settle the fiue and costs. k It • is
not Often one olarget NO' worth of hilarity
out of, a five cent playthitig. • The idiot
asylum yawns for this youth. , •
Ii ftenkle, the• Rochester inventor and
electrician, -fa suectoesful in hia /atest veng•
• tute, Whig tra Palle will Sone he turned to
pramtioal account he ti great electric motor.,
The tuition Of the New York Logielottire itt
favor of making the United Settee Ride of
the Palle a Natiteal Peek (Rappels Heolile
to abandon Progpeat Park; but he has,
teverthelese negetiated for the pUrehase of
land on Canada Fide of the river and
. for power from the Great. Igerhishoe
for onarying otit hie .orighiel plaii Thal
plith contorts& ted thelighting of sixty.five
American and 0iinadieu 6.tiee, connected
by ' meant' of underground °Alm with -
electric Iights generated nt hliagarit. The
plans are all drawt fOr ten hydraulio
engines of 200000 horse poWer. each, and
gigahtio Machinery. That Heade himself
Oleos business is &limited by the fact that
he will Aeon Open an dace On the Canada
ado of the rithe and endeavor tecomplete
arrangements with capitaliete, wheel he
expecte to furnish 022,000,000 for the
Undertaking.
DANGER let itiffffillifilleiGie.
INIAMD10110 elm-14mile* Who
Seel Mem se be d "leen ere oi the
neve _entered Tertinrc,.
Stockings farm * very small part of A
woe:agree (IMO e,nd are seldom seen unities
slippers are worn, and yet A lady is as par.
tionlar about themats about her bonnet or
glOVell. Stockings, too, have decided
tashions of their own. They are light.
dark Or gay without the slightest regard to
the prevailing style of the rest of the toilet,
and at times even the deepest mourning is
' observed by them, while the draws May be
• a blue or red. Sometimes silk hose are in
Teeues these for eYening being daintily
embroidered, while at other seasons lineet
1.siele thread le the reiguing favorite, with
insteps of filmy lace Work for full drese.
Qeoasinnolly sk bride has stockings that
are real works ot. art, and, however much
her newly made, husband may admire them,
he is probably glad to retnember that the
paternal pocketbook rather than big own
opened to pay for them. The prettiest
ever made in this country are probably
those of fine white eilk, with instep of Roo
point or doonesoo lace carefully inserted,
and whit* the low slipper shows to ad-
vantage. These are of course only seen on
rare occasions, and those of cotton and
Lirle-thread are most used. A few years
tmahg ue° inbrua t; now
aionrweY rade, al igYmi alonemed yea alsb ul oag erni tkn bi pbe ;wee ledati eelsrpi ouo ngr
carefully lifted her skirts to . escape' the
glimpses of red etooltiega of all shades DB
all sides. This is more particularly the case
with .ohildren, and a boy of proper feeling
wouldfeel eternally disgraced it called upon
to wear red or bluestockings with his close.
&Wog knee-breechee. But the ladies wear
them, too -wear them In spite of the fact
that the dye literally •pours from them,
blatikeeing the white underolothine and
making the feet look like those of an Afri-
can -and all bemuse they happen to be
lie fashion of the moment. Some women
are rebelling at last, and positively-deoline
to pee them, declaring that the dye is in-
jurious, besides being so peculiarly die.
agreeable in that it olings most persistently
to everything but the stockiegs. 'They
are going back to the old-fashioned tan --
bleached Balbriggans, which are after all
the most comfortable, and perhaps the
prettieet ' as well. 4 'lady, when inter.
viewed 'eboub black hese the other day,
said that the last pair she bought had kept
her awake for two nights by oausiug . the
greatest irritation' of the skin,
"1 thought at first that I Inuit lie pet.
-Honed," she added, ." but it Mon passed
away after I left them off." •
" 00 you think cheap stopkinge are any
worse in.such respects than more expeithive
geode ?" she was asked 2.'1
"Not at all. The very ones whioh mused
me BO Muth trouble were by 'no means
cheap, as I paid no less than 131.60 for them,
althotigh they were of plain eottons Ilave
had cheaper ones which were meth better,
but they All Tub off in o meet clisoeuragiog
fashion. If any one .hould invent a black
!lye that did nta run I have tio doubt a for-
tune might' lie Matte, butnntil that happens
I shall wear no more bleak litookiug,0
Red hose' are alinost as bad about rub-
bing'ote and se.veralseriouspoisonous amnia
resulted fromtheir use.- Dark bine is
generally another -bad -color Inc running.
Silk etockings are new eold ga such Very
lbw figures that many people of only
imodera.te meats wear them altogether of
late. Very handsome miss of alishades
DAY be purchased. for el 25, and ,some are
even sold for lees than 131. It is pardon*
ovviug to this fact, doubtless, that silk
etoceiugs matohiog the eater of the toilet
are so much more' generally., Worn with
eveuing drese tha,u was the case itt year or
two ago, and the 'wearing if bleak stockinet(
with 'ball scostuthes IA uow• almost exolus
sively coefined to children. ! ' ••
The bablong in nien's woke charge even
more rapidly than those for stockings and
the faehionable haberdeshere' ''*indowli
are tioneteanly filled with them in etylee
as new as the are gorgeous, although those
• et ``.blitbr,' hi) are still cousidered the
proper thing for evebing dress: .
, The latest !ahoy in 80e104 iefor the "
ate!' hose," whir& come irt all colors and:
aro pemillarly 'ale:turd itt effeet. itt ie' a
noteworthy fact that this ementrieity is
only observable iu metes goods, for what
woraan hoold be induced to make her feet
appear larger and more olutosy than neees-
eery for the sake of ,beirg in the mode in
Ruch an Affair 2 'These hose 'Mud lead to
all sorts of' aeaidente, too, and 'the washer-
womati ignorant: of the wonderful new
earn:tenth; would 'Wiry likely mistake them-
for.ill•made gloves; and perhaps even sym.
patbize with the unfortunate mah who had
enah dreadful tends,
Theee suggest, too, the potsibility Of
" diules" of a few years benne walking'
about in "digitated elioes," the absurdity
of which mitehine.that of theIong.
pointed beets of last year. -N: Wor/h.
, Herr Johan Prantz,Lutlier, health aoltety.
Germane, 500 krone, who are, on their
way to 'southern California, where they will
settle ae fartisgra. They Will not even plapt
Vineyards. suoh,ie their hostility to all that
oen iathxicate, . • ,
. .
A venal 25 feet long by 5 feet breadth of
heaps waa recently launched .at Si. Peters.
burg. She_is built of paper. Her draught
of Water 18 very areal', and she is well
adapted for Ceiling ou shallow rivere. Her
motive power is etearta , • '
Ambition doesn't alwa,ys over;shOot itself'
When hpbraidea for tot attenditig school:
aud learning to be a Umber, a HarritiVille
boy replied: "Plant* i• they would • hang.
siuch a teacher aterd make. I'd rather be
a, teamster."
'Rev: Mr. McDonald, wee? :pteached an
eloquent sermon cua Friday evening at
Auburn, was erreeteit at Springfield, Ill.,
yesterday morning on the charge ef thefiu.
of a horse and suit of clothes froma man -
mimed Pester, to whose, house he wino
after the religious seri/Toes for the purpose
of speeding the night. The 'minister, the
horse and Ilie olethes Were missing When
Poster awoke in the morning. The stolen
property was fouud in McDonald's pos.
Thethirttesixth anniversoryof-the-find-
hog of gold in California, whioh occurred in.
1848, gives theiouittals of that .,State an
opportunity to review the influ,ence of that
discalyety on the .Phoifio elope. An interest.
ing feature inlhe diseuesion is the exhibit
of the edema° of other industries beyond
`nitinh, which gave the State its earliest
impulse.. The emitted agrioultural produot
of the State is over 0100000;000; anti one
brunch of agriculture, the fruit product,
now aluthat equala the gold yield. It is
estimated that grapes alone will _soon be
worth more to the State than the mines as
worked. Within ten 'years grape vines
_ were sold for kindling wood in California'
m little wee thought of the future of the
vine. During the past year San Francisco
exported 023 000,000 worth' of Wheat and
045430,000 worth of merchandise, and Im-
ported 040,000,000 in merchandise from
abroad. The wooleproduct of California
Amounted to 1341 000,000 and her treasure
shipmente to 012,800,000, showing the
present 'relative proportion exiiitingbetWeen
her mining and Ogrietiltural intonate,
„ eereerrieutiatton awaits
eerier a courtahip of forty yeors a couple M
hYisanila Ga., have iust teen married.)
rorty years of (*natant courtingi
Q, proatabtinating Pair 1
Forty yeare of gay escorting
To the picnio and the fair,
YthYserimms of :rteoan4irtliTainagtethig
Fortyt 1/: we ?nowt tattbyythileiegetge.
Forty years-lel:tat blissful joy Wm
ia the heart to think Oath:
Forty years of cream and oyetere,
Floured with the willhig kise.
Forty years of osculation,
retinue like a summer's dream;
Forty years of procrastination
Make ttie nectar sweeter geem.
Forty years of swiftly dodging
Sundry dogs behind Hie fence
Potty years of mesh' and lodging
At her parenta' own expense.
Forty years of dilly-dallying,
While their friends were weed and wed;
Forty years of ehilly-shallying,
Till unthatched became each head.
Forty years! what time doth cover
with deep wrinkles youtbiut bloom,
Yet Butt bride will lie in clover
„ With her venerable groom.
It is estimated that the United States
Senate is the wealthiest deliberative body
in the world, the seventy-six members of
that body representing 6180,000,000. -
A Springfield, Mabee floriet found a nest
of young Mleeliving at the bottom of a
flower pot in which a, bulbous plant had
'not been flourishing.
An Italian boot -black of New York city
has eased in the past three years from his
earnings over 0486; EIe sends money
monthly to his mother in Rome.
The charm of the best mote is that they
are inventions, inepinttione, flashes ot
genius. The hero could not have done the
feat at another hour, in selawer tnoed.
If you talk about yourneighbors ib is
very ranch like blowing into a dust heap
and filing your own eyes with dirt; 'If you
try to keep.houest you will.ho too inlay to
• know whether any ozoe else is honest or not.
All high beauty has a, moral lenient in
it, and I fiad_the_antique sculptures ! as
-etliiifaras liferous Antoninus, and the
beauty ever in proportion to the depth of
thought.
A young lady inquired of a married
friend how she should best retain the effete
tions of her lord and master. The replyeWeet
"Fed him and flatter him."
"I've got this thing down fine now, Mil-
dred," paid Amy to the Boston high school
girl. "Don't BOX got it down fine,' Amy:
there's a dear. Say reduced it to extreme
tenuity." •
' Life i3 ruade up, not of great sacrifices ,or
duties, but Of leale things, in which smiles
and kindnesses and small obligations, given
habitually, are what win and preserva the
heart and mum' comfort. •'
. -The wife of the living skeleton sari she
will tie her husbard into &knot it he me.
knot.her., Of mune it would be a bone-
.
' • -13hegiarag, "rwant to be an angel," and,
he declared that she was one already. . To
this . she bluehingly demurred. - Then in
Married her. Demurrer sustained.
•-;:.A. black velvet brae:tile has the front of
the skirt of blush pink partly bidden by
black Spanish hoe, tbe elboweleaves end-
-in in pink ribbon and black lace.
-Whiskey is. Made from cosp,but you
can't =Uwe, wife believe when the amens
hquor on her.besband that be has tasted
:nothieg etropger than grain;
.-Women are constahtly tnakiit a great
talk about temperances The beet • way for
theta to encourage total:Jetfoil:5e is to steP
marrying interupet ..fte men, ' • . .
"Mamathusette, . which sets .examples
for all the warla, lies 85000 farmers wbo.
Own dogs,- aud who doh% "core &heat for
the emaller burriber of farmers who own
Cheep.' „
, Joseph Atli baton:aged. 35,'.while lying in
itt drunken stupor °tithe rallwaytrack neer
Selma; 11 G.', was Out to pieoes by .9,
easmenger irain. His heart and lurtgs 'were
torn out. Ho. leaves itt wife and • five
children. ,
„ You mothete Who do not educate your
ehildten, how ehould your thenklessness
for an unmerited bleesing !causeyou to
haw down Yetis betide in: shwa before
every childless mother, 'every childless
wife, aud blush hereon° One worthy WO-
mO,n sighe !Attie that heoven which you,
like it fallen :angel,' hatvis abandoned,-_
-Richter. • . • . .
Before the .conitnitteaaOf the. NOW York
Senate on food adulterationSits.a-x cl C:17
pert stated:yesterday thetin eye factory he
touttd finitatien: cheese Was made, 'corn-
pethe of three-fourths of lard and one-
-fourth„ butter. ' Another stated ' thee he
foiled only six sithiplea of .genuine Oht of
, thirty he purchased.- ;
On Saturday afternoon, Oliver Lane,With
his wife and child, arrived atPerkints, Dalt.,
froth Iowa and drove out to their .
When they reached the shanty an unknown
atniea: st:itok Lime and .11. is wife with. an stii.e
and brutally kicked the child and ran away*.
He bas not been seen' shme, All three will
; Charles Seowann. and, others: shipped to
Europe 'tome time ago by ,the•Giiion line
some cattle. In a storm which ,oaused the
ship to roll violently 156 headdied. Snow.
don shed the GuipriCompatyandrecovered
jridgment ,,iThe General -Term at New
York Yeaterday•leveried tho. judgment on
the ground that the rollitog of thip was
itt ,paril of the; Ma, spinet which the
deteuditit dad not inure the plaintiff.
• Of the midshipmen of the British navy
„.
142 are decorated with medal% • aSs
Sheriff Springer is ill ,at his- home,' in
1414111Lge heather of coal dealers from vie.
Holm parts of the :United States and
Canada are in Montreal: for the purpose of
ufgotiating for 0, supply of Grand Trunk
cowl. It is said thip year'e contract will be
for half it Million tong. 0
xmcopt, gdaxma
Rheumatism, Sciat,16t,
'Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache,
gore Thident,Sweill n sm. Sprain's. Brebse6.
Herne, Senide. Frost nitelo,
AND ALL IrlikED 00011At PAINS AND Ad118.
SitAby Drugglei And Benet, ntn tswhero. 1140ento n bottle
IDMIlonn In H Lewin/fen, .
THE teammate A, vermeil co.
(Sommers to V0OWLDI CO Edenton), .11d, V. 8.1.
neve"oolol!*
*Irmo' ovAs mot 1{1M Wit
A Mee who Made and laceiscreit'Irerinic
Alter 1Poirtostic,
The suicide of George H. Pryer, ea.
millionaire and spendthrift, is the talk not
only of the town; but of all the State. Pryer
cone to Colorado in the earlier dam and
since that time has been considered one Of
the leading citizens. Pryer Rill; at Lead -
villas was named after Wm. On this now
famous bill, the riokeet in the carbonate
belt, Fryer made the first loostion, "The
New DiecoverY," whioh produced millions.
After Fryer wild it he wits one ot Colorado's
threwdeet miners, and was thoroughly
posted se to geological formations. The
Leadville boom was ot its height when
Fryer Hill was not thought of as containing
mineral. Mr. Pryer, after Outlying the
mineral formations,, ocincludea wet the
carbonate belt necessary extended
into the hill and he sat ar force of
men at work developing. His friends
lauelied at hini, but he kept on pinking and
the result was "The New Disociyery,"
which produced a furore in the- miense
world. Since he has been itt Colorado he
hes made and lost a dozen fortunes, being
engaged in mining io all parts cf the State.
He was a high liver, and onoe he predated
fortune he did not rest tilt he had spent it
all. In spending hie rowiey 'be was the
"Coal tail Jolieny " of the West. His
extravagance and hberality to his friends
caused his finanoirl ruin. For the Past
year he has-been tryiug totetrieve his foe-
tunee in the tnineialiut for once hi hie fife
fate was against him.. While he made
mopey his beet days in the DAUB seemed
to have passed. Last summer he married
Mee Cunningham, a belle of Chicago. The
wife to -night ie insane, caused by her hus-
band's death. His relatives live in Philes•
delphie, and 13b.Raul.--Denve r.Republican.
5eh,000 Wound he Bed.
Lethells, MOWerin, an elderly woman. who
had been living 3n the tillage of'Essex
Centre, Out., for the last thirty years, died
last Week. It was iumored that the old
,.
"lady was poeeeesor -of slaw amount of
money, and that the hoarded every cent
that she obtained. She was always very
reticent and never associated with 110 of
her neighbors. AU& her death it was
decided.to search her dwelling. Nothing
tinueual was felled until the numbers en-
tered her apartment, where, on pulliug ouf
the drawers of a bureau, they foundsa
numbernt purses filled win bills. Bills
were foundin her trunk *finned to the
lining of her dresses, sue also gold
amounting t 13668 in English soveringue.
' ...
,Together with the bills, the aineunt found.
'Wile 02,368, The searchers were about to
leave ihe apartment when Mr. Powrie, one
of the party, felt somellard lumps in the
bad, and, ripping the tiok open :with a
:knife, he pulled out bag after bag of Silver,
which were thrown int:, a basket, and when
all was extracted there was art meth as one
could lift. The money was taken to the •
village and a queer variety °toeing was
displayed. There were old Mexioan and
Spanish coins not circulated in Canada for
over forty yettre. When all the money
was counted it was found that the was
worth .about 1315,000. Most of this fortune
will go to John•MoWean, a cousin of the old
•lady, who oame.from Scotland abeutaa year
ago.
: • .
Suspecting tiomething -wrong 'le the holm
of Charles. Shlineider, at :Erie, Pa., neigh?
bers yesterday morning buret open the
door and found the family iniffooatingfrOm
coal gas, the cover of the stove being partly
eft All were 'hlaok in the face, ,with blood
ranting from their .mouths and nostrila:
'All day phyeiciane have been striving to
reetore them to consciousness. • Henry
Meter was revived, butMies Sehneider,
aged 18, is considered past hope. • .
"When I Was at. Constantinople;" re..
marked tbeHon; G. J. Goeben; " 1 had a,
eoeversation with a Turkish, pasha, Who
said that the femole-slaves were treated
witn exceedingly great kindness in Turkish
families, and that their morals were
looked after dim% mote eatiefatitorily than
those,of female servants ID any European'
coninihuities. I did not entirely agree
ith hi "
TAW. XIII..
iBrilPlant Celebration 01 the .Anniversary Of • ,
Hhi Goron.ation.
HIS ,HOLINRSht IN STATE.
A othlegram from Rome Hayti Teiglay
being the sixth anniversary of the corona,.
lieu of Pope TAO XIII., the mond VOA;
cal celebration iu the Sietihe Chapel Wee en-
Preeedentedly Magaifioent and thapreseive.
Among the applioalione for tickets of ad.
Minion not the leaet eetable were Slope of
a number of rrotestant Epiecopat clergy-
men and Eeglith Bituellete, who are jtv,
staying here for the' seabell NvIth' their
families.
His Holier:els, Arrayed itt his grand robes
and wearing tbe liana, appeared resplendent
in white ItnO gold. Ile watt marled in the
coronation iiedia or chair., supported on the
shoulders of four eervautri an light purple
.medhaval livery, and four other servants
bore the ancient fano of oetriela,,feeithere.
His eppeorafthe was feeble and aged. He
entered the chapel with ali the papol pomp
and ceremony of state identified with the
eironattou of a sovereign, pontiff, aid yet
aide by Ode were the humble insignia, of
the son of'the carpenter, the fishermen and.
the spiritual amd•personal butoeseor of the
chair of Peter.
The proceseion ben; the Papal apart.
menus along the majestio corridors And
salons wait headed by a group of the Guard
Noble hi their semi mediaeval and "sump.
tuella oostunie. Then mune the Papal
procession proper, the cardinals find,
walking two and two, and •presenting an
imposivg. spectacle in their gramma robes,
their•treinebeing hell by gentlexecattigges,
garbed in black Velvet tunioa with' puffed
Osman, termtuatiug whh white 'tat% cuffs.
Aft' r the cardinale came the .patriarchs,
archbishops, • bishops • and Moneignori in,
ropier order, two by two, awl wearing
their robea. of purple. After these came
the deacons, doetors; priests, monks and
films of all degreee, and then the Pope.
After the Church digeituries came the
members of the ' diploinatio corps, their
ladiee and, friends. After these: came the
representativee of Ike
the Grand Master and tbe three commend-
ers of the Otdes-Lthey being .hineal
desoinidants of the: fiat veliants ever .•
known.- ,
A screen of rare tapestry fell in !hint of
the lower part of Miehael Angelo's painting
of "Tho Last Judgment." Close by and
on the left War; the Papal throne...! A group
of the cardinals sot in a menu -Wrote around
itrsome, hoWevertheincon each ride of the
altar bearinh.the-erablemilftle new light
in contradistinction to the old bellied it, '
The diplomatic aerie; accredited to the
Holy See gat iu the ;front rows. of: tile
tribute next to the permanent marble
screen • which divides the (Mandel of the
chapel.froni the nave; Bellied, the benches " •
wee° occupied by'Roman and foreighladies,
all robed itt black atul. wearing- ,blaok lace Se
veils on.their bijada, .•.1
The celebration.of initee -Was liy•thieDean
Cardinal. The ohoie, itt singalaeharmony
-and without aceortiplinireept, reedered the
Mass musio• of Ptizziui, ,tbe Appitioit of
Baini, and abenedietu especially ograpoeeti.' :
At the tezminitiou of masa th'e Pane, inc'• •
clear monotone, intnned the leBlessieg,"
the entirtheongregetion,kneelng
Alter all this the Pepe helfia long ahd•
elm with Cardinal Jauebiei:
• • ' ..;
TWenttoeight Cardinale hey° :died Since •
the bee'etsion of. Leo X11I., aza 13hats are
itt thia mottent 4'0tthe 58 •
existiva memberatif the Oellege,.tone was
created by Gregory -XI I. -- Cardinal
Sehwartzenberg, Archbishop of Pregue ; 37. .
were created by Pim IX, and thertircutin. .
iug.21) by the preeent Pone.- Of these
Sites are GerentietwoPreneh,oile Englieh,
one Irish; one an A rinecian ani one a Pole. . •
Nearly half cf thou, 'therefore, near are,
not' helium; and the whole fininhef of .
foreign members of the existing college is
26, as against 32 Italians, a rropertice n-,
preoedented Or a very long time. pagG. ,
the 22 now .undisposed of Were given to •
foreigners, itt non -Italian majority would be
w • • • created.
•
, . •
, WHO It UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL.
SEE BY Ex/v.0011Na THIS MAP, THAT .THE .•
.ChipperraXalls
freitko , • f •
710, on
CHICACO,,ROCK.ULAND & PACIFIC 11:1°Y4*
Meng the ateat Central Line, retards to travelers, by reason Of tratthrIvriled gee-.
_graphicalpoSition, troe•shortest and beat route between the gest, Northeast .ands
Southeast, and the West,'Northwest and SouthiNeet. - ' •
It Is literally and .ctridtly true, that Its connections are alter the principal lines.
)1' road between the. Atlantic and the Pacific. • -• . _ .
* he its, Main line' and braticifies^ It reit:thee Chided°, JoIlet Peorla, QttaWa,
La Sails, Genesee,' Moline and Rock Island; In Illinois r Davenport, liguscatine,, .
Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des MOIties, West-Llberty,t,
IOWA. CIty,.Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Center and „Counqii
In Iowa, Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, arid Leaven-
worth and ALM tson-inAmisas, and tho hundreds Of cities, Villages' arid toWriel•
Interrnedlate. The • •
. .
I`CREArRO.CK...1SILAND ROUTE.”'
,•
As it Is famiikirty dulled, Offers to traveleie all the advantages and OOMf011e• -
Incident to a smooth trace, safe bridges, Unielt Depots' at OA conneeting Offset
Fest Express Trains, composed of 'COMMODIOUS, WELL VhWrihATew, WELL
HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and, ELEGANT DAY COACHES g a line of the
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON SECLININO CHAIR •CARS OVD, bunts PuLLmANnli
iatestdesianed'and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING QARS. •
that are acknowledged by press' and people to be the FINEST RUN. UPON ANY
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In Which superior meals are sorted to travetere at
the IoW rate pf SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS • EACH,
LTHR tE TRAINS °nob way between CHICAGO andathei mISsOUR1 RIVER.
• TWO 'Miele each' way.between CHICAGO and Miltheal20.41.11ainti.5.T.eweitli.
via the famous - , . .
ALBERT LEA. ROUTE.
A Hew and Direct t.lne, vixe Beetled and Kankakee,haw recently been opliwo:n
betWeen Newport .News,' Richtnotiti,' Cincinnati, Indianapolis and L,a rayett4.
end Vounoll BIUffit, SL Paul, fflinneepolis and intermedinto.polnts.
All Through Passengers aimed On Fast Exprees Trains.
Per inotedetalled Information,See •Micps and Folders, WhIeh may be obte Med, as
Well as 'Tickets, at all principal Tieket Offices In the United States and Canada, or or
Ftp. Ft. CABLE,: , • .' E. ST. JOHN .
VlosoPrilevt & Gentl Manager, Cenot Vett & Pamir
• .CHiCACCto