HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-07-21, Page 6cl?
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W4 ' TEM LAMB WORE.
Nr.ai'Vellen$14104eta sp1ydg t40 Qneen'e
4reifltrtY,
A London cablegram setts: The Eoyal
garden pnrty at Buckingham Pelage thie
week, being favored by ltne weatlaer, was
the most brilliant event of the season.
There Was 4 grelater diePlaY of odd !lad Pi,°'
turesque toilets than at any eoeiel event ui
London this year. Black and white com-
lainations were very popnlar. The Duchess
of Itexbnrgh Wore bladc and white, Her
dress tvtie of white metre covered lightly
with black lace spriped ribbon -wise, while
linee of bleak silk moire gleamed through
the meshes of the lace with its own pec.
liar effect of small rivulets of running
watet. The bodice and drapery at theback
were composed entirely of striped lace. The
small bonnet WaS white, veiled with fine
black lace and trimmed with white plumes.
The sunshade matched the bonnet, The
Countess Brownlow's dregs consisted
of exquisitely tinted shot satin,
named after Sir Peter Lely. The
satin was enriched by the shining
through of deep yellow silken threads at
the back. These gave depth to the endow
gray, which in turn was counteracted by
the pale tones of the greenish.blue with
which the gray was hot. According as
the folds caught the light one tint of the
other predominated with the ever-changing
effect of hues seen on a dove's neck. The
front of the dress was in ivory silk, covered
with Turkish embroidery of somewhat
similar style to that worn . by the Crown
Princess in the Jubilee procession. This,
however, was worked on silk muslin of very
soft texture, in gold, silver and white silk,
and instead of being laid at on the silk it
was carried up to the neck and arranged in
znost graceful of folds down the whole
length of the skirt,the glimraer of the gold
and silver harmonizing most admirably
with the pale gray and deep yellow in the
brocade. The bonnet was small in size,
and consisted of a skilfully.arranged mix-
ture of white lace, pink rosebuds and white
tulle.
The Countess of Hopetoun's dress was
composed of white lace, embroidered in
silk and fine wool and draped over with
pink Bengaline. The bonnet was of
pink tulle, rising in tier upon tier of minia-
ture puffings, and trimmed with roses in
shades of cream color and pink.
Thenew style of dress Called the " Mar-
guerite " was worn by the Countess of
Lovelace. It was of blue and yellow fou-
lard, the folds being drawn at the right
side through the bands of a pocket in dark
velvet. A rich trimming ran round the
skirt and &framed the bodice.
Lady Dorchester's dress was of foulard
mauve worn over a front richly ornamented
in straw. Thebodice was in full folds caught
across diagonally at the waist with bands
of straw embroidery. The collar and cuffs
were also embroidery.
In the dress which was worn by the Hon.
Mrs. Egerton the whole of the front was in
stripes of alternate cream -colored lace and
gold embroidery, through both of which!,
lining of pink satin shone, contrasting
harmoniously with the gold, as pink only
can. The back was of water -cress green
moire, as well as the bodice, which was
made with a vest of gold embroidery and
lace stripes. The collar was a Strip of gold
finished with a high and picturesque frill
of soft pink lisee. The vest, which was
caught at the waist with three gold buckles,
which held in its fulness, was of moss -green
tulle, covered with gold tinsel and edged
with sparklinggalloons in gold and green,
the latter being shaded like a peacock's
neck feathers and gemmed here and there
with large square stones"' imitation of
emeralds, and cut with a skill that has
brought a fortune to the inventor. A
crescent similar in character to the galloons
stood upright above the brow among cloudy
folds of green tulle.
A lovely dress slightly akin to the above
WAS in bronze moire, the whole of the front
being draped with ten colored crepe de
Chine. The fastenings were large metal
buttons of a rococo design. The bonnet
was made of twigs and trimmed with pink
roses.
Lady Dudley was dressed in black silk,
striped with late, and opening in front over
long soft folds of white silk muslin, the
silk being so arranged as to fall over the
muslin, floating away from it with every
motion of the wearer. The bonnet was
also black, relieved with white.
The Marchioness of Downehire,was also
in black and white, the dress being of satin
and stripedribbonwise with silk. The front
was of white silk, covered With lace.
The Countess of Onslow was in a drew
of soft and rich pink silk, covered with
Valenciennes late. The effect of the very
becoming bonnet of pink crepe and tulle,
trimmed with rosebuds, was still further
enhanced by a sunshade of pink crepe, with
drapery of white silk muslin.
Lady I3antry's toilet presented an ex-
qtrisite Contrast of color. The dress itBelf
was of rich brown silk, turned up with main
of a golden fawn tone. The bonnetnttched
the dress.
Another excellent contrast of color was
seen in Hon. Mrs. Hugh Elliot'e mig-
nonette -colored silk dress, worn over a
front all softly draped with pink crepe de
Chine. Lace iii light design and of a
creara-colored tone was ihtroduced wher-
ever. the pink raet the mignonette color, so
as to SOftelithe effeet of the junction. The
bonnet was of mignonette -color end of
pink roses. •
Bontiets and hate, especially the latter.
Were a study, for which the retirement of
the sun and the cffising of sunshades
Offered special ftscilities. One hat of a
quaint and hideseribable shape was
thatched with tieige. A large loop Of geld
'gauze Was placed in front, and inthis sonic
bitele, presumably swallow, Were disport-
ing therrnielves. A very 0,11, broad -
brown straw hat hed blusters
of unripe currants falling doWn. he
,rim wee taught np at one side with Char-
trouse'green and 'brown ribbone. '-"Several
head *ere Made Of a pedectlY 'transparent
tittbetenee like fibre, whichWas embroidered
with straw in twine- fanciful dettign. These
were of various Shapes, but at they showed,
the hair and shape of head, they Werein io
Oise unbeconaitig,' The • prettieet was
bleeko with embroidery of strart Color and
a branch a 1..086/ laitt across the top, in
which theme Were displeyed. A directeire
much Worn- Ulnae had ht/ders of flrst4h-
ated halla made of t1aY PeqUins, Atld
sPanglee Matching the net of which *hey
were ;made. They Were worked, n go14i
silver, bine, heliptropet awn and 4rey,
according to the prowling eqlor of the
gown. With few P*cePtione Yeti high-
PreWnP4 hts verenet
Sg4. N4A:44XrXrCT-N,
PerPitnit Agvelltnreof an Aeronaut Annt
.1440 4rr1entle,
A. rortip,s (Ire.) despatolt pug Mr, C.
H..0;in:4y...will not forgot his .iterenantic
-excursion Of yetiter4ay f he lives. t he as
O14 tie Metlineelith. He took to. his be
after the active. philanthrophite on 1490.4
the yacht -Mermaid pio4o4 him up, with s
companion, out of the wind-etirred waters
of Cap= Bay, The .cotament he made. to
his pteserverS. was:
4f1,114=* the .I.ord, .cim iliyo.
lancer "
The haiiom Q(44411410 started from
Lincoln Park in the presemie ,.of
inense crowd at. 6 o'pleck 'yeeterday after,
noon. The wind was strong, and, there
was PIRO delay in getting the inflated bag
of oiled and varnished -Cotten away frtrit
errafirnitt. FinaUy Mr. Grimley •06.z.pd
on high, and the gaping sl:ectators
stretched their necks gazing as the air
ship sailed away across Casco Bay. '
When the balloon attained a considerable
altitude an adverse current turned the
course from the land toward the sea. The
teronaut took in the peril of his situation
at a glance. The air current might carry
the balloon far out over the heaving ocean,
and night was approaching. The valve
eOrd Was pulled and the outflowing gas
soon caused a descent to be made, Off
Clapboard Ieland more gas was let out and
the rocky eurface was approached near
enough to permit a line to be cast to a
party of picnickers. After much difficulty
the shore end of the rope was fastened
around a large bowlder. The fettered
balloon waltzed about in the fresh breeze,
and before the teronaut and his companion
could disembark a sharp puff caused the
rope to part.
Away went balloon, car and adventurers
up in the air again. A current diverted
the course and down plunged the balloon
into the sea. Then commenced a dash
through blue water of a unique kind. The
partially collapsed gas bag went ahead,
dragging the car and the Ittokless passen-
gers along and keeping the iff thoroughly
drenched.
Perhaps the trip might have been pro-
longed until' the coast of Europe was at-
tained, but just as the oronaut began to
think hie time was approaching the yacht
Mermaid was discerned heading for the
novel racer. Coming up into the wind just
in front a line was cast from on board and
was secured te the car, and the frisky.
Columbus became a captive balloon. Mr.
Grimley maintained his presence of mind
throughout the adventure.
DESTROYING A. BABY% BIRTHMARK
The Judge Calls It "Contempt of Court"
and Punishes the culprits.
A Chicago despatch says: Mme, de Ben-
kalear and Dr. Birt were each fined $500
and sentenced to thirty days in the county
jail by Judge Tuthill to -day for destroying
the birthmark on the person of Baby
Andrews, concerning the possession of
whom a struggle has been in progress in
the courts for several days. Contempt of
court was the offence for which this
punishment was administered. It consisted
in tampering with evidence, and the evi,
dance was the birthme,rk,,by means of
which the child was identified. Mme. de
Benkalear acknowledged having ordered the
flesh cut away from the child, and Dr.
Birt admitted having performed the
operetion.
Judge Tuthill, with extreme severity,
declared that no excuses or any statement
tbst he had heard could excuse the barbarity
which caused the mutilation of the child,
and thereupon passed sentence upon the
culprits. An appeal was taken.
Struck by a Wild Engine.
A Bessemer (Mich.) despatch says: The
regular passenger train to Milwaukee was
crowded with people Monday night, and
the conductor found it necessary to stop
the train in order to collect the fares.
While the train was at a standstill a wild
engine and caboose ran into the rear
Bleeper, setting fire to it and throwing
eeveral coaches from the track. The wildest
excitement prevailed. There was a general
rush of passengers for the doors, but they
were all found to be locked, and it was
necessary to force them open before any-
body could escape. There were nearly 300
people on board, including a large number
of women. A number of the latter fainted
during the excitement. Some of the
passengers and trainmen succeeded in ex-
tinguishing the fire in the sleeper.
Several passengers and trainmen
were hurt by the collision. Their
names are: 0. Wild, of Eagle River,
passenger; Dan - Tangway, of Wausau,
passenger ; G. Ruiter, conductor on sleeper;
Louie Curtis, Wiecensin, central yard-
master at Beseetner ; John Natha, wiper
on freight engine.
Nova Scotia's New Bishop.
A ilalifax despatch says : The Episcopal
Synod of Nova Beetle at the meeting last
evening for the election of bishop of the
diecese, vecant `by the death of Bishop
Hibbert Binny, came to a decision on the
first ballot. The only candidates norni.
listed were 'Bishop Sullivan, ef Algoma,
and Bev, B. G. Rdgehill, Chaplain -General
of British army, in London, The vote
stood: Edgehill—Clerical delegates, 70
lay delegates, 66; total, 126. &Mean--
Cloical delegittes 20; ley delegates, 48e
tote), 68. The eleetion was thee Mad-
imanimOtia by a standing vote. Mt. Edger
hill wits garrison chaplain in Halifax eleven
years Ago, mid Was then considered of
strong High. Church tendencioi.
A girl etaplOyed in A etireet shop hi Netv
Platen /ettned Over& fOur-faot rail At the
elevator, doer Seine, (111,yg ago, when the
elovater came down and piniiea he by the
neck to the top Of the gate, The elovatcir
'is *tiry hi6ely bid &hoed, end �piea with.
straw bonnet 'Nag lined with IIIOSS green
out Cutting her head oit /Ant be1 her feet.
Velvet, tvith no trimmings on the onteide I Then for senile region ft. bould not be
taVitR fevedoien Of chertiee. Sth&l1bon.; etatted nP. And Arlen tOtt .the gate EtwAY to
Otte, Made tip of satirii studded and jetted get the girl Out., She Was unconEiCiOnii, but
!let to Match the brown in whir; Ward fOon fccOefe4t nnhartned•
iTU plifePoRDtv wD1)1.110
Politi41efi Wigu at t4a 4Pnit london
Wedding Xeeterday,
'RESETS B ciriT..E.gEli AND P.TYIPRP.
A Lend= correspondent cable: London
has a Williant Henry PrOfth who Oonctirne
himself with newspaper, whe conducts ,a
great press agency, Arhe a Practicelly the
publisher of the Londmi Ulna, and who
can make or mar any new gazette or book.
He oleo concerns himeelf with the Privy
Council, the Secretaryship of War, the
leaderehip of the Bowie if Commons and
with Strand politics. Yesterday laiedaugh-
ter was married.
The first Beene occurred in the Padding,
ton Reilwity Station, Lendon, where the
guests assembled to take a train to hie'
eountry seat, at Efenley.on-the-Thames
On the platform were his Cabtnet brethren;
headed by Lerd and Lady Salitibury, aceatip
panied by a big deputation of London
swells,
The sacqnd scene showed the wedding
peas at the ancient, ivy embowered
church. In scene third tie bride, bearing
the prosaic name Emily Ann Smith, was
met at the altar by Walter Acland, captain
in that navy which Gilbert and Sullivan
satirized in Pinafore." When Smithpere
(who, it will be remembered, was the origi.
nal of Sir joseph Porter when he was
Secretary of the Admiralty under Lord
Beaconsfield) gave his child away to Capt.
Acland—a war secretary's daughter wedded
to a prospective naval hero—she partially
and traditionally hid her lovely, beaming
face under the meshes of a rich lace veil,
and wore an ivory satin dress, its train
fragrant with freshly gathered buds. At
her throat was a necklace of diamond mar-
guerites, the gift other father:
IMIDEBBIAIDS AND rIIEInIME8sE5.
Two of her sisters, two nieces and two
cousins—one of whom had the poetic name
of Gwendoline—formed her bridesmaids,
daintily gowned in white nainsook, lace
trimmed and emphasized with blue and
white ribbons and tiny bows. Also muslin
and lace hats to match with the dresses.
They carried naiad baskets filled with
alternating water lilies and forget-me-nots.
The bridegroom wore his gorgeous uni-
form, which was well set off by the pic-
turesque costuine of the Turkish Ambe.s.
sador. In a chancel pew near the latter a
group of vicars and &anti gave a Church'
blessing.
Scene fourth was the dejeuner in a large
marquee on the elegant grounds of the
Smith estate, called Greenland.beside-the
Thames. Here the bride's health was pro-
posed by the bridegroom's father, a K. C.
B. and an honorary physician to the Prince
of Wales, with no end of medical alphabets
to his knightly name of Sir Henry Went-
worth &land.
TUE WEDDING PRESENTS
in the house were arranged as if they were
a museum collection of rich gone, bric-a-
brac, rare porcelains and antiquities in
silver.
A pair of gold bangles, edged with dia-
mond sprays, were the gift of Premier
Salisbury.
Silver salt cellars enough for a great
dinner party weretrom Chancellor of the
Exchequer Goschen:- All the presents were
admired and were also especially watched
by a cynical looking detective from Scot-
land Yard.
The much abused Home Secretary, Mr.
Matthews, was not in evidence except by
his gift, a reeplendant fan.
When the rice in the final scene was
thrown after the bride it bounded from a
going -away bridal dress of white poplin,
relieved withgreen velvet, or from a white
straw hat, trimmed with white and green
tulle to match the dress, while huzzas of
good luck were chorused at the gateway by
the original Sir Joseph Porter and "his
sisters and his cousins and his aunts."
DR. McOLTNN'S CASE.
Be Will Take the Bull of Excommunica-
' tion by the Horns.
A New York despatch says: An even-
ing paper to -day says: Dr. McGlynn's
ease has taken a new turn. From
announcements in Henry George's paper
and from intimations by Dr. McGlynn
himself it appeats that the doctor is
quietly awaiting the publication of the
bulls of excommunication, and that when
they are published he will not pass out of
the Church, as has been generally expected,
but will make a fight against the eccles.
iastical legality of the excommunication
and will demand an ecclesiastical
Dr. McGlynn claims that according to
the deoreee of the Baltimore Plenary
Council two yeare ago he cannot be
suspended, much less excommunicated,
without being tried by a council of the
clergy. In this elaim he is supported not
only by his followers, but, he claims, by
many eminent divines.
Rev. Dr. McGlynn returned to the city
horn the west this evening. He would
neither affirm or deny that he had received
hitt notice of excommunicatieni, He said
his CaEleWaS like that of the Irish prisoner
Who was told to pled and replied : " How
can tell whether I am guilty or innocent
until f have heard the evidence." The
doctor said he might have something to say
later, but just now intended to take a sort
of vacation, speaking onlv on Sundays.
A Man With is Marble Legr
A Mount Sterling, Ky., despittch saye t
Mr. Howard Williarneon, a well-known
farmer of this connty, is just nov.r an object
of mueh attention and the Subject f$f n�
little sympathy. Some six menthe ago hfr.
Williamson noticed that the fleshy part of
his left leg seemed herd& than that of his
right. Since that tithe this hardness hat
grown mere end More perceptible, and
though the patient hes had the attention of
excellent theditel skill, the limb Ian
it:Vitalised in hardnesiiittitil redenibles, r
pieee ef sculptured marble. Mr. -William.
see Offen; no pain, but as hit hip is Stone
frotn the hip dovirn he..finds 'locomotion
difflorklt, the More so on itOcount of the
Mee of the left foot, Whit* ire ea spread
apart that heis in constant atelid of break -
frig them OV.
4.0.1.••••••••••••••••••••,..m..0•
Cardinal tife.niaffig objects- to a • carriage
and walkWhenever his health perianth.
He says- that when cardinals went abont iti
fine Carriages they generally ire4t tO the
711E P91408 ANO CQPRTERAMs• Two ftIONTIIS F EARTINUAES'
r,
ifovf, tbe Arrelit ef Uie Pas. 0.49fik 4 0
891)01r POCUTrtnc0 1140XICO
81,1403iire4 cirfOrimeilt--1101,ne Pecre- —itntlatng l'Ilrar TiMfb
"117 Agat!Iiirii's hi a r4139xt An El Ease, TVA., deelletch allye To
test (Friday) night's London ;Ole montha ago to.day. cot:awed the first re-.
Biqa: The Lord Chencellerhati ctimmenced o0floa earthqueke tn the southern teart ot
an ingaig into tl}e eonduct ef Magistrate the 'United 4tateee an4 the =Warn Part of
Newtell in the ;natter ef ti e area 'ef *lee gintico, And ellOolts helfe been felt at tAltet-
Cia-
.44 vele ever sue. Ittunore and, descriptions
Ts4 Cas Pee resulting in Public eel more or lees acourate have 1:leen received
tation against the hullying blaclonatl, Iron time th tiine.from Bavispe, a town in
ins of courteilane by thP Police. The Pall he meeioan State of Sonora, 20 mike
Matt Opefts leads the movement by reviv- southwest from B1 Paso, showing tbat the
Mg old stories of the infamy of the police disturbance thereabouts was perhaps the
towards outcast women. The agitation most serious of auy But nci detailed state.
has reached Parliament. Mr. Pickersgill ment from an eye.witness has, been
bas Oven, notice of a motion that it hi reeettild here till the nrrival to -day of J. J.
nepessary that an ingnity be made into Deaver? one of the ewnere of the only mine
pie administration of the London police, whieli is being worked in this region. Mr.
aria in'the House of Lords Lord Mi ltown Deaver says :
will queetion the right of the police tO "From May 3rd to aline 25th, when I
bititrarily arrest courtesans. left Bavispe, there were et least three hun-
',.4 defeat of the Government on a side dred shocks, I arrived at ldavispe May
like the Cass incident involves 4th, and have Billee explored all points of
hing more serious than discredit and the country south and east of Bavume for
some ridicule. Mr. W. H. Smith's refusal sixty nines. I have failed to find any traces
of an inquiry into Mies Cass' arrest was of the reported volcano. I found signs of
one of those hlnilders which no good leader very heavy shocks twenty-five miles SOUtl3
of the Honweula have made. Thefeel- of the town of Hunahinera, which is thirty
ing that the police and the Police 'Aegis- miles southeast of l3avispe. A steal] moun-
trate had made a mistake was general. tain about 700 feet high was split clean in
Mr. Newton has long been, Imowit as an two and one side thrown down, while the
arbitrary and dommeering judge He other remeine standing Fissures a foot or
. •
accepted, the testimony of a single police- so wide ad hundreds of feet long were
man against a girl apparently innocent opened up in great numbers all through
and drove out of =int the girl's •eniployer, this region.
who tried to certify to her goo fl character. "The greatest disturbance seenas to have
The British public has a well.folinded ens- been along the great mineral belt about six -
picion of the testimony of the police in miles west of Huachiners. The mountains
Snob cams. The belief is general, more- west of Hal/jape have undergone a great
over, that blackmailing prevails among change. It has been facetiously observed
the force. Professionally • immoral that the mountains had a quadrille and
women are allowed to promenade Regent °hanged partners. When the great upheaval
street unmolested, while the coma' tvay- occurred the mountains moved up and
hirer is pounced upon. This eaBe has down like great billows upon the sea. Omer
roused indignation among people'Whe have range would drop down behind another
no sympathy whatever with the etereo- and then rise up again. During the firet,
typedagitationperservedinby one notorious shock flames shot up from the mountain '
journal. But just as the police stick to and set all vegetation on fire, but the fiery
each other and the magistrate stands by outburst soon gave place to mud and water.
the police, so the Home Secretary supports Many new springs broke forth, and in gen-
the magistrate and the Ministers bolster eral the amount of water has been increased
up their colleague. The result is they all one-half.
come tumbling down together. Mr. Smith "The town of Boviepe may be said to
on Wednesday had to unsay everything he have been totally destroyed. It was the
had said on Tuesday, promise an inquiry first shock ever known there. Of the 800
into the case and promise that Mr. Newton inhabitants, thirty-eight were killed ont-
should be overhauled by the Lord right, four died soon afterwards and about
Chancellor. 160 were more or less seriously injured,
Mr. Matthews came out of the business making a total of 200 persona, or one-fourth
so badly that people supposed he would of the population, killed or injured. Pre.
resign. I believe he did actually offer to vious to the earthquake nearly every build.
resign, but Lord Salisbury thought he had ing in the town was constructed of adobes
better remain for the present. Mr. Mat- or Mexican unburned bricks. Since the
thews has been much attacked lately. He Shticks began, however, the people have
was Lord Randolph Churchill's nominee, moved from the old town site and are build
but Lord Randolph Churchill threw him ing a new town on a little table -land not
over during this debate with what looked far from the old site, and they build noth-
like alacrity, and called him a pedant, leg but brush and picket houses, being
meaning that he took a purely lawyer -like afraid to live ha dwellings constructed of
view of a matter which involved things heavy material.
more important than legal particularniee.
He is an able man who came too late into
politios.
" The shocks continue almost daily. On
June 25th, the day 1 left there, two shooks
occurred, one heavy enough to crack walls
Forty-nine Conservative members have and knock down plaster. But the people
signed a letter to Lord Salisbury asking show no intention of moving sweet,
him to accept Mr. Matthews' resignation at
once.
THE CROWN PRINCE'S THROAT.
What Eminent Doctors Think of the
Trouble, •
A New York despatch says: Dr. Morrell
Mackenzie, of London, has sent a cable-
gram to the Medical Record detailing the
results of his third operation upon the
throat of the Crown Prince of Germany.
The entire growth has been removed by the
larynigeal forceps and the parts beneath
are In an apparently healthy condition.
Dr. Mackenzie says: "Prof. Virchow has
examined the specimen microscopically and
reports that its tissue shows nowhere any
alveolar structure or evidence of the immi-
gration of epithelial misses. The
structure consists of slender connec-
tive tissue, which canton's only
on its surface enlarged cell ele-
ments, partly undergoing proliferation,
but assuming nowhere the character of in-
dependent focal formation." Dr. Sherady
says: "So far as the microscopical exam-
ination is concerned, the disease appears to
be essentially of a non-malignant charac-
ter. The disposition towards limitation
call proliferation may be caused by,active
inflammatory processes in tissues peculiarly
exposed to limitation, but from any other
point of view the outlook is not as promis-
ing as it might be. Everything new in the
way of prognosis must depend upon the
fact whether or not there is to be any re-
currence of the groWth. If the latter
tains, with an increased disposition towards
cell multiplication, chances for ultimate
recovery will be on the wrong side. At
present we have reason to hope for the best. '
insane Asylum Atrooties.
A New York despatch says: In conse-
quence of the shocking revelations of
cruelty to patients in the Ward's Island
Insane As.ylum, elicited during the inquiry
into that Institution, the Grand jury has
indicted attendants McHugh and Cleary
for manslaughter. The particular case
selected is that of George Farrish, whose
death the attendantsare accused ef causing
by beating, him. The accused pleaded
not guilty ana were committed to the
Tombs.
The =their of lohn Froelich, who died
tinder Suspicions circunistances in Mareh,
1886, testified before the coroner yesterday
that she believed her son was killed. A
Month beffire he died he seeined to be strcing
and Well. Two weeka later when shecalled
et the hospital his head was cut in several
places and his body watt bruised. He was
thin and pale and complained of piing ia
his eider. Ile Mild he had been beaten.
Three days' later she watt notified of his
death. When hie body Watt brought over it
ehowed two large bruised spots on his fore-
head, aa if he had been struck With a club, t
and the back of his neck wag terribly.'
swollen.and, bruieed
Had to Cut oft HU Hand.
A daletia, Ill., • despatch says hire.
Batitsch get her hand caught in a horse=
power feedpitichinelit Sand Prairie, Iler
husband stopped the Machine, but could
not extricate the hand, and so cut it Off at
he wrist.
JOHN cHINAMAN
Marries a New Haven Heiress.
A New Haven, Conn., despatch says
Yan Phon Lee, of Fragrant Hills, China,
who graduated with high honors at Yale's
last commencement, was on Wednesday
united in marriage to Miss Elizabeth Maud
Jerome, a New Haven heiress. The cere-
mony was quietly performed at the resi-
dence of the bride's mother. Yen Phon
Lee flat came to America in 1873, and
resided for five years at Springfield, MEWS,
after which he eame to New Haven and
spent four years in the Hopkins Grammar
School, entering Yale in the class of '84.
After his freshman year he was
ordered back to China by the Gov-
ernment, which bad sent him and other
sons of prominent Chinese residents to
America for an education. Before return-
ing to his native land Miss Jerome had
fallen in love with him and the couple were
engaged. The Chinaman became tired of
home and surroundings and at the first
opportunity he ran away and finally
reached New Haven and hitt sweetheart.
He again entered Yale in the class raf '87,
and greatly distinguished himself through-
out his collipi course. This wedding is the
firet one on record in New Haven where tt,
Yankee girl has married a Chinainan, and
the event excites considerable comment.
After a wedding trip at Narragansett Pier,
Mr. and Mrs. Yan Phon Lee will reside in
New Haven, the groom intending to enter
the journalistic field.
I A. DOUBLE DHOW/XING.
Mr. Wm. Hargraft, ex-M.P.P., of Cobourg,.
and Daughter Drowned at the Seaside.
the sectotary a the "United States
Treasury has tient e, silver Medal to Mite
Edith ,Olark, Of San Fraticiseo, for esiitig
a schoolniate front &Owning oh August
Slit; 18811‘;
A Cobourg despatch says: A despatch
was received hete yesterday announcing
the death by drowning of Mr. William
Hargraft, of this place, and his youngest
daughter, at Scarboro', on the coast of
Maine, for which point they, with Mrs.
Plargraft, left Cobourg a few days ago. Mr.
Hergraft, who Was the father-in-law of Mr.
W. G. Gooderham, of Toronto, was for over
fifty years a resident of this place, and had
filled every position ot honor in the
gift of his fellow -townsmen. Ile was for
Very many years a member of the Council
and also Mayor of the town and a commis-
sioner of the town trust. At the general
elections of 1875 he wee elected member of
the Legislature for West Northumberland
in the Liberal interest; defeating Captain
Gifford. Ile was most highly respected,
and the sad deaths of hiniself and his
daughter, a young lady of about 18 years
of age; have cast a gloom over the town.
He leaves a widow and several children to
immure hie loss. Arrangements will be
made irnniediately to bringthe bodies home
for interment.
The admirers of er•Mayok lioewell pre-
, •••
sented hitn, . in theAlouneil 0hainber Of .
the City t/AlltTorcinto, yesterday effernotiii,
with a, lite.ine oil pottreii of hitneelfk
*Mob he inutiediately handed over to' the.
City, to be hung tip ih the chainber, .
Allbough mtieh is written eVeik Y,ear.in .
fairer Of raising Jorinfilein tirtichOked and '
chufas for hogs, their produotion Appetite
it) be direlnishing. A. fatneet*ha tvants to
Plant at acre to elthen Of theta genettilly
Arnie great alitiouliy obtainirx seed.
Theugh it ie bald to be easy id rinse bite
hutidcd huiliele of rliobiober�nan edit Of
land teed Cannot ordinarily be Obtained
for ICE'S than 2Pee