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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1891-6-11, Page 6How a Dainty ilitvaY At a club Men Were of women. "1 mad. am bought lest "and my Yard of it , „ °Quid- yards at look.rOratliEta __, 14 for laet week. T i ' ak ag mad slowly - NI wife -Y for her to other economical beautifully got her to the way it lane which at one time La,ce need Dress skirt Dem motet Handkereinef Parasol Total.. Of course but she can conapletee elude her upon it. sweetest could do • would be New yore The Czar Daily A Berlin against merit's treatinent more intense. . ia,at the inflicted is %seer ted, from the Hebrews Ozer and It is declared . . chief inetigeitor practised A Moscow four large toms Department last Sunday delay of the boxes would but for the toms Department pails unopened. the dais erected lotted owing nem d, but -et that mines and under unconfirmed, • tons were the roof of insure the window faxing own& LOVELINEtia IN erAcia — ___ ..,.„,,,,....,...._ PIKCORATIVE NOTIGNS. All Around the 11:011e0 WHIN CI ' • Candle "A i'l'Ihh°11*.i‘ Foot oushiene AV/ Made of dyeal ekin embroidered with 211k and tipf . The Englieh faektiori of The bed•ri for receiving the °lolling, laid off' i - is beginning to obtain The "Weill' libraq table° are- affaire Of oak and enehogany T , , . Curved indshelney foem " t ' Hunting fatal end boating f &Meer the aceePtanee (4 the l'ulumer girl 8r2'painted with birds and dogs al . and flirtations, s fil f le. f • • h ° a 444 1°44 °L euremer "8 ° ewe " I e duck. Tall metal lamps are the neweel - UMW ATROOLITES. , ..--......--. gam sicoLE Tim rABsos. , BIB JOHN MACIDO ipx. A T -1-1 _ _ _ BireteleiJo propound e policy,'" be deolared, 'i tbat will better this wean& taste ot Ohtani aud berry tea back te, office: Before this time there were m alia twoWed Peeteotioniete in the Conservative camp, Ludmwarboehniaoitrh,Jlestamut lianiathdoevi,E1.110NevnecatoteCaomeoinittorende to be a " broad eational policy" the memners of the Oppesitiog began to organize their ecattered forces onee mere. With the greatest ardor be propagated the. gospel of protection. The gorgeous picture he drew ,iii the certaiu effects of the N. P. was accepted by the Pe°Ple, and when the general election was held on September 17th, 1878, the Conserve, tiyes were returned to Power With the old leader and the new policy by an overwhelming Maiorite. The framing 018 new tariff to take the oPullateteasok! thEeutoficlorttuatireliffaliorrordevaeuGa ovV'aesrna. went. Trade, Winch bad Mein langeisbiug fore the first year of dm new regime, again become pros erous. For this the Alinietry received the drt d 8' J b ith h' 1 hr ore an a o n, w is uses, B avidness, aided m diffusing tbe , idea that prosperity bed been obtained by Aot of l'arliamout. Toward the close of 1880 a contract was entered into with a powerful syndicate for the completion of the Canadian liacifle Railway. Of the general election of 188e only a bare mention need be made. The Country was fairly ProsPerous and the Government was .re- turned to power with a good round majority, The older members . of _the government gradu- eala 0,1'01)130 out, taking _lieutenant -governor- spins and places upon the Bench, but Six: John reemained sepreme tie the country and in the Primal Chamber. Once or twice at this period his health was regarded as MS precarious eon - dition. Anether rebellion, broke out in the Northwest in 3885. That serious wrongs had been suffered by the half-breeds and Indiane,through the neglect of departmental work and also e u h the wilful acts of lacemen has never siren gdeuied. Riel, the P 1 d ' w • icioxisii outed. There was for " ear' tints sidera,ble disaffection among the Premier's supporters in Quebee, with a Stiffen- ing of his _ssupport in certain quarters in Ontario, rlY Li lent A The election.: were brOulghtOII B:i Yneleanrtbearn°Cieth he eG onvaeruni ma e Pin, on or Perla,- , . , e ent was once more sus- tame." by a considerable majority. Of the gradual return 01 hard times and the growth of the movement in favor of closer trade relations with the United States, all men know. Nor is it neeessary to describe the election iianapaegn at lase March, when the N. P. fought its last figlit. It is probable that the arduous work performed by Sir John in that contest helped to rob him of hie waning strength and vigor. During his long career Sir John was honored with many marks of distinction. He was a Privy Councillor of Groat Britain, a G. C. B., a P. p. L. of Oxford, and an LL. D. of Queen's laniverisity, Megaton.. He was twice married, on the east occasion to bis cocain Isabella, daughter of the late Dlr. Alexander Clark, of Dalnavert. Invernesashire ; and on the second to Seam Agnes, the present Lady Macdonald, daughter of _thelate _i.. T. T. Bernard, a _mein:rear of the h -Privy Councel of Jamaica. By his first wire _e had two cluldren-John Alexander, born in 1847, who died in the following year, e.nd Hugh John,...born in March 1860 who wo s returned to arnamen a 0 ast election as member for r t t th I ' ' ' Winnipeg, eau:eV Wifo Figures In a Divorce Sun, A Providenee, R. L, despatch saye : blre. ;On L. SulliVan, Wife Of VLI 0 PhalitilPIOn ef champions, reeently joined the Salvotien ' Army, and ehe lite teken a front seat in the eYnegogue. Liked, she bite taken the pastor Pare= Henry E. Howland, , ' ., ... a • Val mar own and pent ins wire on sweepmg and alone. Mrs, Howland has sued her huebond for divorce and the ma was Called in the court on Soturday. The ream wee packed with women. am Howland said in her testimony ' ' • i Omit her husband was a food man until d th ' h • h Th Mra Sullivan jeMe e o tdo . erl . . _ , ... , aii be Wir 18 ;SP° buitivan. 3....°°.%PrAtnhVat - e the time. bete Pamela min n b had met Km Sullivan one day, and on th t de brou ht her home to live .e Ilex . e with him. Mrs. Howland aid ehe couldn't stand that, and told her nuoptina to send M. Sullivan away. They went away together, ostensibly to visit Th, , . , . , . . emmeh in the D meson, and reruineo ea I, up ULYV .,, . morning. Then Mrs. Howland gave the person e leoture and told him that it was a =grace for 'a olergybasn to go mess y with a prize-fighterie wife and accept a e. from her. " 'amend ring " After theit he left home, and I mu ' . f • three week," continued the ee° hire et ree Be • F• - t witnese. " Then I went to, wer . ovi and found him all dreesed up, sitting an the house with Mrs. J. L. Sullivan. When I went to Miss Wittman's I found my husband eiok and a boy taking Care t he had two of him. I then saw the ..,. diamond rings instead of one, and I out 011 the en a ement ring which he were. g g . ga a e to He g5tve we 66 and then Or Ore ra . go right home. My husband then went down stairs to the organ and pleyed and , sang " 'Friendless and sad I am weeping.' " 0 I t 1 he church eon he be- nee wen te es . 11 h Oa gab, Pr,eaehin anent Deli a , e tin- g 1 h me hE00.11/38 the 161thiiill wile. (tame 0 . . Pe0P le at Centreville were going to tar h h. 1 noioner of and feat er im. was e. pe the wife of Pugilist Sullivan, and was to have received N2 a month, but. Mrs. t me ai3, When m husband Sullivan sen i Y , was sick Mrs. John L. Sullivan took care of him. He never oared for women be- fore he was converted." . ,. According to the testimony o' 2 other witnesses, Mrs. Howland was a .4 terror' , compared with Dirs. Sullivan. Another witness eaid that Mre. John L. Sullivan was the clerk of the church, and ehe sent money every week or month to Mrs. Howland. That money come from theDire. regular contributions to the church. The ease will be continued nett week, and Mrs. John L Sullivan has been sum- Binned as a wittleee. Woman Manages to Mato With irfur". Yard° °f 14 heitlee the other day eeverol talking about the drew eaDeneee for rieventv.five Yards a hiee - • . , . month," said a married man, wife was 'Meeting evorY angle when she handed me the bill." she weer the whale Beeentr.aeti one time ?" said a young men corner with a startled imploring t h d b ' 0.0gag men it Gen announced 'e his pooket a PI ee of Paper f ram ' enfolding it the man began • ' ' amid that should it be neoessarv ' I : a 2. - dress more peony, he, or any woman could manage ' - with forty yards of lace. So I write it down for me, and this ie Stan& ; Number of yard of a niody dreeeed woman wears : on under garments 16 yards 13 " 4 It 1 o 6 " - 80 yards she does not Wear her erase' P. . , ' " t get niong without it, eines it her 003tIlme. Tlais does not in. hat, which has more or lees hoe In foot, my wife, with one of her , smiler!, Sedd that the woman who it and look well osa forty yards a perfect paregon of economy.- Recorder, Alinost Incredible Eitoriee of Ilrutalitie0 - Praetieed Upon Jews. --ea...-. A Brief SketQh of' His Life and History. . A JEWISH BOY CRUCIFIED. et ,AI.,ondon cable eoys I An English tray- • .eller, who has returned from an extensive tour through Rueeia, soya that only a faint treat - • idea, can be entertained a the cruel treat- anent to which the Jews are sal:tinted. He says they eau be persecuted with impenity, as they ere oOrteittered doge whose ernes of pain no one is bound to reiard. He refere . , • . . . , e . e ei e tO a mot in Wman ft dozen a amen inmate were torn from their mothere' arms and thrown in the streete. Yonng Jewish girls ' are constantly kidnapped in °Country towns and sold in St. Petersburg and Moscow for - oral purposes, mud when complaints sre made to the authorities they are diere. larded. Every stranger arriving in Mos - oow who izas a long nose ie obliged to go before the authorities and prove that he ie not a jeV7.. There is one form of cruelty largely vr tised thee seems almost inoredible. - mu - Per a year or so hundreds of Jewish babies have been stolen and shipped to various ports on the Nile to be need se bait by the crocodile hunters. Of course, they are not all eaten by the animate, but now and then one le moon The crocodile hunters lime a baby on the shores of the titration 15i d 51 the lazy animals , an presen y y . oome out of their beds after the infant. When the or000dilee get near the little one and within reaooting raloge of the hunters, Who are concealed in the bushes, they are shot. The little babes serve ae a bait to 10 n the benks, and by bring the anima 0 this means it is possible to get many anime.le which could not be reached in any Other way. It hoe been field that *he bunters have let the crocodiles epproaoh too near the bebee before firing, and their first shot being ine.ffectual the little one was eaten up. At any rate the, are used for bait. "You think it queer,' said the stranger, "that a yvholesede kidnapping of babee is not noticed in the newspapers. That is not strange. You do not know Btlaein. The papers there can only printbaked W hat the Government approves of. If an editor gets any news that is sensations' he he IOWA first submit it to some official before using it. That is Russia." Another traveller who recently returned from Corfu gives the origin of the horrible persecution of the Jews that occurred there. He says that during a recent Hebrew festival the Christians kidnapped a Jew boy, whom they rendered insensible with drugs. They then fastened him to a cross, with a crown of thorns on bis head, nsiling his hands to the arms of the cross, but not otherwise injuring him. They painted a gaping wound on his side in imitation of the spear thrust in the aide of the Crucified Christ, and in that condition carried him through the Jewish quarters. As the boy was in-tration. sensible, he had the appearance of being dead, and the Jews believed thst he had been in reality crucified. In retaliation, the following day the Jews kidnapped a Oh ' V .' 1 d ea h r throat, young ris Ian gir an o e and, stripping her naked, hung her up by the heels in front of a Christian butcher's ahop during the night, so that the horrible spathes e was1 seen by the inhabitants tiae first thing the next morning. This roused iutenes bitterness on each side, and as the Jews were numerically the weaker they suffered in proportion,. ........-o--... ROUTT•BLVEN TEARS IN PARLIAMENT , - . ---0-- P3ondensee Dein the Global The father ef efr John muctionaid was Rush Macdonald, a member of a. Highland eamily of Sutherlandebere Scotland The future Premier • • was born in Glasgow within (sound 92 the bells , . , of the Cathedral of St. Mungo on January 11th, r 1101511XugLiNad Ton. ahl emigrated to Cat:A(11 u andSett e a Kingston. At the age 0 15 the son had so wen ratietered the rudiments ef learning that he left [school and be. gem the study of law undr Mr George Mackenzie, a prominent bards:ear of Ringston. After six years hi study he was caned to the bar of Upper Canada in 1836 at the age of 21. ,Re at once succeeded to the largo practice of Mr. Mackenzie, who died,about tins time, and shortly after became emanated as a partner with Mr.. now Sir Aleeander, Campbell, ientenant-Governor of Ontario, It was at this p... . n. Oliver Mowat became a law ' leered that Ho ' clerk in Kingston and first rivet the young law- yer with whom in after years he °reseed swords so often, . Five years' late ' 1844 h t • d roar , e en me upon hie anti ar kerrufor the Veingifton ern et3lree ascoinner e Canada. Re was eieeetea as a srippeohrter of the Administration of Mr. Draper, and on may nth, 1847, became a member of the Etecutave council or Canada BB Receiver- ieonneialo.f 11Crown feTiv wdeek8 htPe"me C°m11118- I' ef, - _. aii a but ieaenere of office was nef. A dissointion of Parliament re. suttee in the defeat 01 1136 Government and the choosing of a Beforrti eamittry, under the leader- shin of mean. Baldwin And Lefonts.ine. Mr, Draper accepted a seat on the bench, and thus Mr. Macdonald, who had been again returned. to the Reuse from Kingston, became a leading e in tbe remnant of the Conservative party. T e policy of the Baldwin-Lefontaine Ministry and later, after the burning of the Parliament House, of the Hicks -Morin Ministrytwae opposed meat vigirously by the Conservatives nominally under the leadership of Sir Allan MacNab, but really ender that of Dlr. Maedonald, his first and ableet lieutenant. At the beginning of the seseion of 1864 the Hicks rilinistry was defeated on a motion of want of confidence. ft then appealed to the electorate, Mr. Macdonald, BIM pr.oteding that Upper Can- ad a was receiving unfair treatment, was returned „„ again for Kingston as the leader of 19 pro- nouneed Tory members fromUpper Canada. Tim bulk of the Upper Canada membere were Re- formers of advanced views under the leadershiN of Mr. George Brown, who strongly condemne the policy of the Hindle Ministry. The Ministry was defeated ha the election of the Speaker, and on undertaking what was in effect a defence of Mr. Brodeur, inember for Bagot,who in his own person had acted as returning officer and de- meteeemeeent elected, was turned, net by the independent Reformers and the Conservative was suppose at the in e - Opposition.at d that ' d pendent Reformers under Mr. Brown, tile most numerous body in the new House, would be minallieMddebeuetio.Siwreptre sett 0010sent for. ma chief epirit in effecting a coalition with the Lower Canada Reformers and the remnant of the Minolta Ministry, and in the new Cabinet was ppra ted Attorney -General West Until the :outrun of 1860 Mr. Macdonald' could never count on a majority from Upper Canada for auy Administration of which he was a member. In 185713a had become Prime Minister at the head f the Macdonald -Cartier Adminis- In the following year the vexed question of locating the seat of Government eaeulirdeits_Ddeeeeeat.AiThe eitntery resigrod ancid. rie The refwusal orfi :lie Governor-General, Sim L- mund Head, to grant a dissolution,eforeed Dlr. Brown and bis colleagues in turn to resign. By that move, familiarly known as the " double shuffle," the old Ministers came back without being compelled to seek re-election. As head of the Administration Mr. Macdonald practically ruled Old Canada from the time ef the double- ebuille until the defeat of the Ministry on the militia Bill in 1862. The Government then resigned and a Reform Administration was formed under John Sandfield Ma Macdonald, _ ; with Mr. Sicotte as Lower Canadian leader. After a very precarious existence the Macdonald-Sicotte, afterwards the Mae- donald-Dorion Cabinet, was forced to resign in 1664. Mr. John Macdonald eves puce more Premier of Canada, although i hist • Govern- !inlet only lasted a few weeks. The questions of representation by population and of the Con- federation of the Provinces of Braises North America had now attained such.proportions that dminietration could retain power without ptmg them as part of its general policy. accepting Negotiations were opened with Mr. Brown, leader of the Reform party in Upper Canada, and, Mthough with greatraluctanee, that gente man consouted to become a member of the coalition Government. It was formed ex- pressly to carry out a policy of Confederation, y Bir1:.o3 uNieonnn ea s4ahghbea elk tietbn cmrepresentationi eaieabeing conference was held at Charlottetown in 1864 is, ler the purpose of effecting a union of the Maritime Provinces This led to another 0011- ference be Quebec, where a scheme of Confedera- bon was agreed upon, and to a final conference in London m 1866-7, where the terms of the new constitution were settled. In these successive deliberations Mr. Macdonald actively partici- pated, and at the last mentioned conference anted as chairman, The Britisb North America Act waspassed in n the let of July in that year the new 67'and ony Dominion came into existence.Honors of various dogreee were bestowed on the Alinisters who had taken an active part in the negotiations that preceded the passing of the Confederation Act, and Mr. Macdonald became Sir John A. macdonald. Sir Etienne Tache had died in 186e, his place at the head of the Cos,lition Govern- neene being_ filled_ by Sir Nareisse Belleau, who heidlyromeinajlifeentraatiltama But he; that tinag Sirmpreme control over aisle pvriroceueaggs"or goe cabinet Mr. Brown resigned in the early part of 1886. Mr. Mowat had previously accepted a vice-chs.ncenorship, and there remained in the Cabinet no member of the Reform party with sufficient influence in the country to inttrpose any effectual check. on the Conservative leader's policy. rarty ties were again drawn more strictly, and velsoon Sir John Macdonald, instead of being the bead of a National _Cabinet, was simply the ' leader of the Conservative party. As one of the joint High Commissioners appointed by the 'Perla' Government to settle the Alabama he, claims and other matters at issue between reat Britain ' and the United States Sir John pto Washington early in 1871 and assisted in the framing of the Washington Treaty, which was strenuously opposed in the %onn at rdeotnuakied i nB .ctitett eau oberiol itialet EtIlleeaefh Iii°/iiiiii:eue, together with the necessity for union among the Conservatives in view of the approaching general elections, induced the majority in Par- t to stand topether. liamcin 1872 the rennet, went to the country Earlyafter making every possible arrangement to secure success. The fight in Warm was a bitter one. A short time prior to the Dominion election Messrs. Mackenzie and Blake, the loom of the Liberal party in Dominion affairs, had defeated the Sandfield Macdonald Ministry hE the Ontario Legislature. The Conservative art in the Dominion was routed in Ontario. E ilYpremier bad to fight hard for his own seat In Kingston; Sir Francis Hineks was beaten; in Quebec Sir George Cartier failed to secure a swat. Novertlaeless, even when ' the shadow ' 1 loomed OP darka of tbe Pacific soanda.I - and ominous, and Mr. Huntington femme. lated the charges against Sir John himself; the Government was supported by a ma- inritet t. le Seedily, hottever, when ' me s anciaal3cOuld8noeleodniger be made little of, a committee and then a special coramission was appointed to boldan inquiry. The result was a reindufau?_blc_mto the friends of the Premier who n 1 along believed him to be Innocent of Wrongdoing 10 1310 relations with Sir Hugh Allan. Of the effect 01 1130 revelations open the oountry nothingeneed here be said save that, when en,tional. 0 tober 23r41, 1873, the Opposition' moved an amendment to the address condemning the aotion of Ministers, the Government, without awaiting the *rote of the House, resigned. The th fatal gateheoltlin eietiy was atmouneed on ITOV. 5 . wx k Zle was called on to form a Govern- merit and after the elections of January, 1874, Sir Jahn Macdonald beemato loader of a cioniewhat demoralized and disgraced Opposi- tion. For a timo after the sneaker that overtook the Clonservative party as the result of the Pacific • e hn fte looked on t f scandal, Sir, o ev by no a few o bis followers as a man whose career was closed. The Liberal Ministry under the leadership of Mr. Mackenzie seemed finely entrenched iri tiower. The country partook 'of the peospeeit 3, . - ii ' ' - that at tees period owed over ihaworld iike a Wave, eud then) was apparently little beln for tbe return to power of the Coneervative part t'' But the tide of prosperity ebbed here as else. where leavin behind it a universal de re silo , ,.., , ft e s n of tram alike n the old world and the now. The petiole iiought, Govetninental aid to revive none, but, with an honest tedognition of the truth thea In ouch cesee the only true remeay lo to Wait and Work and avoid °°°°°2° lii quackery, Mr, illkoltenzie stood firm to tbe p- theciple of alloWing trade tti fie ' in it' t T eha I Sir Johnh ' /7 1 i no ura nem a, °wirer', se zed UPOU the discontent of tbe people. "We will Effect of Bed Position's., An erect bodily attitude is ol more importaroe to health then in 1 p 0. generally inlet:tate. Crooke pesitione, maintain.ed for any ls time, are always inj neon% Whet] Bitting standing or 1 ing I I 1 Y whether sleeping or waking. To the body leaning for ward on the 1 or to one side, with the heels elm , . with ie. a *Gym wile helltiet is n • - • in bad taste, but otceedlOgly deti to health. It orampe the istomach the vital oreano, inteertipts the Ira ter the cheat. and „Nowa the eno, the abdominal and thoracic omen in Net, esmengena • the whole r M 1 'la eysterra any o ii . Veil become humpbacked Or severriiy round -eh by sleeping with the head raised a pillow. 4 A HATED RULER. -...- Pereecuting Foreigners and in Dread of His Own People. ys. ri to in !gam ion oeble se • P bie " d• V' Russia because of that Govern- of the jaws is becoming Mr. Gladetonele statement Czar doss not know of the horrors open his Jewish subjects differs, it utterly from the facts. Protests Rotheohilds and other prominent were placed in the hands of the obtabied a reading m montia ego. that the Czar is himself the , . . . of the increasing eeverities upon the Jews. cable says: The discovery of boxes of dynamite in the Cris. of the French exhibition was in part the reason for the Royal visit to Moscow. The have been seized on the frontier concession made by the Cum which allowed exhibits to The whole ground under for the Cztr was then exam- to feare that it had been under. nothing was found. Remora were dinovered on the railway the route taken by the Czar are but the most extreme preoau. takese. The police even removed a triumphal arab in their zeal to safety of the Czar and every on the streets was orderer' -.................- Cultivating Disease. The in arta orgasm o no wa Th " t 1 ' d t thoughts about. A men's stet healthy when be dime uot know he . i , - When we are conemoue oe tne ems any internal organ that organ is sic - . „ . . . internai illumine:re' is intendec its work unconsciously. When - . , • gm to think about our stomachs tt b •on is arrested. Jobo Hunter eaiS gout by tbinkine about his great - le i ' , mem who al .. a, the teole world potatoes will agree with I whether fruits and vegetablee are combination, le in a fair way trouble with the simpleet food. 1 about the interned organo gets thc - t f t - - sort o e age fright, end they are pc -Good Health. WAS SHE A WIFE 2 A'Divorce Obtained by a Woman Never Legally Married. A Brooklyn dee etch ea s • Recent' li 31 • . I' Maude E Janke wife of Corporation f-, E. ' . , '-'ounsel Jenks; of this oity, obtainee a ,V.v,ivrce from her ihutsbant,dn at Newport, , on he grohn 0 ab .donment and e * hinnuort. Bisbee, Lettleiohn of the 211 - - - - ' re •soo al diocese of LOD', Island VMS a Pi P. o , witness ea court for plaintiff, who ie his e ' asnehter The divorce Emit spa the a P - ' fb' h P eaaance se. the is cm Ea a witnese ceased a lively diseuesion in Episoo al eireles P ' which is still going on. In view of this is op sa t eto n last month convened the 3.3' h I't 1 ' h biehope of four of the nine* prominent diumu°8 88 811 488148i44tiC41 (3°43.!t on 4 committee of inveetigation as to the tarifa. oient and exonemble ground for the Jenks divorce case. Churchmen who ere more 1 11 d • 1 • • 1 • 1 or ass we veree in eee enemies, tria e and judgments any the case etands in hie, tory without a parallel. As the result of what the quartette of bishops leerned they h qd d ' th ' cl' t th ' ' ' ave reoor e as me ver to a opinion that Mend E. Little ohn was never the 3 legal wife of Altnen F. Jinks, the marriage • . being null and void abinitio. The bishops referred to are Bishop Williams, Cen• neotiont • Bishop &arbor°, New Jersey ; v ewark end Bishop Pot -a BishomS'airke N t - " - ter, New York. Biehop.Littlejohn is on record as strongly deprecating the looseness of the divorce laws and the slipshod methodu of oourte. Hie object in convening his consecrated brethren was to get their certificate in sup- port of the position that Mrs, Jenke had , e, gob a divorce for such a Ct1090 as the Pro- restant Episcopal Churoh recagnizes, and that he himself in becoming a witness for her had kept well within the 'ince of his snored duty. The facts on which the four biehops base their decision° have not been made public!. Bishop Williams assisted at the marriage of Mies Littlejohn to Mr. Jenke. The couple lived together tenyeare before Mrs. Jenks became a resident of Rhode Island in order to get a divorce. Mr. Jenks has married again. --a-- The Author of "rude Tom, lgarriet Beecher Stowe will meet eightieth birthday June 141h. A mein who recently visited her S.By'E one would know tine amber of Tom's Cabin' as she iu to -day f: pictures. Time hes made its inroads upon the feu .0a brain. 1 there are in mumbers, yet the 1 bright one, and the eyes still tate of their old• time !metre and spark bodily health is auperb, and each me her inking, Jong walks, althong elvessys amsornponied by an ottende one outside her femily and neigh her, for the least thing onteide of 1 daily routine steam; ber and b almost complete eat -mention. Sim longer concentrate b6 r thoughts f than a few reomeatre upon any on stile uNHAP.EY MARRIAGE _tn. Ends in the Deluder of Wile and child and the Paramour's Suicide. . A Kansas City despatch says: Some0 wee e ago rs. ano e Maokey, wife o k Id Bi h M It f , a miner of San Juan county, Col., arriveu at Galena, Ken., to visit her mother. A week later William Alvord, aleci from Colorado, arrived at Galena. Alvord and Dirs. Mackey were seen together daily and 0 . , o a • waa ;mon Duey. atm av oo e°681P , - - -, _Yin' 2 Alyord, Mem Mackey and ner two ennotren went for a walk. Some time later they wore all eeen near Chico, a village near .tel About 4 ' 1 k the ld ohna 4 ena• ° ° 4,° home e 0 .6St 1 1 a alone and aged 6 years, returne. said she had left the others in the woods. About midnight Alvord went , to the house of Mre. Mackere mother and asked for Mrs. Mackey. All o Monday searolling parties were out loot. ing for the woman and child, and in the afternoon Alvord was arrested. He con. feseed that he had followed Mrs. Mackey here, and etrited that they had gone walk. ing together and had parted pleasantly or, the ceneetree of Goma. she had agreed to get a divorce from her husband and marry him. On Tuesday the search for the missing mother and child was re, mimed, and in the afternoon both were found hanging to trees in a lonely piece of dense undergrowth about s mile from town. The child, aged about 18 months ' wae henging by a ribbon which its grand- mother had given it. The mother was 30 feet away, hanging by her apron to a small sapling. As some men were "oNsing the Galena city prison on Tnesday evening they stopped to take a look at Alvord, and found him hanging to one of the bare of his cell ysindow. SHOT startling A Now dressed, yeere old Ninth avenue . a 42 -calibre , , tiro ist the 'we' - theue. was examined and finally enough. box of blank but be seid en, fi-ived arrele of 1183:88:1er. of the revolver btlet ortisbed an he fell hie body - The body of his pockets ,, e , eepeime rove 1:ha eignature HIMSELF DEAD. Occurrence in a Hardware Store in New York. York despatch nye : A well - gentlemanly looking man, about 50 entered Steel's hardware etore on ' to-dity and asked to be shown revolver. He was told the • ' . bad was a 32.calibre One of Y • 'minded to the stranger, who it oritioall admired i y, tra beauty, said he thought it was large Then he asked for oertridges. A cartridges was handed to him, he wanted loaded ones. Having a box of these he loaded all seven the revolver and then tested elm Suddenly he placed the muzzle in his month and fired. The through his brain and skull dead.. Nothing was found on to indicate who the man was -• was sent to the morgue. In one . was a portion of a very ill. 1 tter written b some woman e y . was torn off. Jenkins Breaks Loose. Miss Fenderson le ene of thee nymph•like maidens who seems th nation or 800.10 pOVPsi &earn of She is somewbae eliove medium with lithe, • f 1 • grew u figure, exq its rroportione and beat • • - ' a** -a mingled eseo and dienity. 19 terieg l„ite ei her beight, owe hair eontraet wi I 1 t 1 e strikingly with h ve.ve.y ammo over- malted by E marked eyebrowa In momenta Otal or excitement the pele teamose tir ch„he deepees end nese" tie, dawn, and her nen onie eyes fte redoubled lustre. Here is not th of coloring alone, for her feetures cameo -like delicacy Bud regularil Orleans Picayune, A PEOI7LLAR CASE. A Minister Dies of a Bony Growth In His Brain. A Pittsburg, Pa., despatoh says: The death of Rev. Dr. Thomas Pitts last week gives to medical ecienise one of, the etirangest oases ever known in pathology. An autopsy has disclosed that the minister had it veritable horn in his brain. Dr. Samuel Ayers, specialist on diseases of the brain, conducted the port mortem. When the skull was opened a bony plate was dis• covered. It was two inches in length, three-fourths of an inch in width, and had a very rough eurface. It was found mu- pying a part of the membranous partition between the two hemispheres of the brain. The minister died suffering from con- vulsions, which were doubiless ce.ueed by the presence of this bony growth. Thie also explains all that seemed unacmount• able in Dr. Pitts' erratic conduct and action during the liat few days of his life. Dr. Ayers said he did not believe therewas a similar ease iu the history of medicine. He is (melee to explain the presence of this strange growth. There was more or less bone deposit in the brain, but why this form Ness taken is unexplainable. To be Eaten with the Finge Olives, to which a fork should i applied. Asparagus, whether bot or ool served whole, as it should be. Lettnoe, which &milli be dippei dressing or in a iietle met. Celer y, which may b e properly p the table cloth beside the plate. , Strawberries who:: served y t tl,' • la s ems on, as ley are in t o most houses. Broad, "Si rind all thrill ah cakes ' ' * Cheese, whistle ie invariably eat the fingere by the most particular 1 Even the leg or other small pie bird are taken in the fingers at fits dinner. 'Where Lace is Made. Bruges makes the well.known Point Dueliesse. Valenciennes, named from its French native province, is a pillow lace, now beet made in Flanders. Point D' Alen- con, which ranks next to Brussels in via ae, is made mainly with the needle. Black and white Bilk lame are made largely by the peasant women of both Spain and Portugal. It is a different fe.brio, though, from the "Spanish lace" sold i ° American shops. That is a maohbae pro. duct and comes mainly from Lyon°. Bloniie got its name in an odd fash' ion. It was &et made from silk in iie natural yellow -white hue, so was styled by its French makers " blonde," or "fair," In spite of the introdnotion of naichine lace there are at leatt a million lace workers in the various Earopeen countries. NEWFOUNDLAND PtilTiTIO NS. --- Hr. Closchen Consents to Hear a Depute- tion at the Ear of the House. A London cable says : Alex. Stavely Hill, M. P. for Staffordehire, in the House of Commone to -day presented a petition from the Newfoundland Legielature prey. beg that one of the Newfoundhind delegatee now in this country may be hrard at the bar of the House of Commons in proteet against the passage of the Knutsford bill, which into sieme up spin on Thursday. Mr. Hill gave notice that he veered move to this effect on the second reading of the bill. Mr' Goschen, Chenoellor of the Ex- chequer, said the Government would assent to hear the Newfoundland delegates at the th bar of e House. The Newfoundland bill will be heard on Friday. Mr. Goschen added that the bill before tho Newfound. land Legieloture was limited in its opera. tions to one year, which the Impede' Government could net aceept in Vi8V7 of its engagements with France. -- CHEATED TBIE GALLOWS. an Italian Murderer Leaps From a tete- duct and is Drowned. A Denver, Col., despetch says: Pepbao Felerigo, who owns le truck patch in the Platte bottoms, became irriteted at a neighbor's cow evbieh had strayed on bia land, and on the little son of the owner of the animal being sent to drive it out on Tuesday evening he seized the child and b • began to °huhu it. Coney Glutz, a young man, was passing et the time and Meer. fored, requesting Felerigo to let the child alone. This further inceneed him, and drawing a revolver he shot Gluiz through the head; killing hint almoaa inatan4IY• The neighbors becoming excited over thearoceeded murder, started out to the :number of 1 several hundred arid surrounded Felerigo's h°°°° for the Purpose of taking hint °r1t and lynching him. He escaped by a rear Twen -third door and started for theIcy street viaduct, pursued by a howling mob of nearly 1,000 people. When half way across the viaduct he was confronted by a crowd coming towards him. Seeing no other means of escape frora the angry mul• titude he leaped into the Platte River and attempted to swim ashore. The current was too strong, however, and be MB ear- ried down and drowned before the eyes of his pursuers. sL RANS&S TR e..GEDT. — A Mother Kills Bar Children, Suicides, and Fires the House. A Topeka, Kits„ despatch says : A small frame home at the corner of Buchanan avenue ma Gordon street was burned this mornieg. In the ruins were found the charred remains of Mrs. W. A. Updegraff and her three children, all girls, aged from fifteen months to five years. All the surrounding ciroamstirtoes point to a deliberately end carefully planned triple murder and suicide. The scene of the tragedy is in a sparsely settled district among an ignorant clam of day laborers. The father is a teamster, and left home early this morning to hunt for work. He has not had any work since he moved here, and both he and his wife had been despondent. He wee found about 11 Osoleck and told of the terrible fate of hie family. In a half crazy condition he put the whip to his horses and haetened to the allot. He could give no information what • ever as to tbe tragedy. ----e...---- A Berme Rescue. eit • Herbert Murphy, a 3.year-olc was playing about a bonfire near h on Eleventh street, Long Island Ci hie clothing caught fire and he was a sheet of flame. Cherlos Crowlc 30, who lives next door, eaw thc peril, and, without an inetant's tion, grabbed a blenkee from and eprang out of the emend -story a w io e a een sten mg, a] h• h h h d li d' to the rescue. He epeedily moth blaze with the lOanket and probst e • ' l'• ' - he little fellow's nfe, although bot and rescuer were badly burned, terribly. The window from WhiO le jumped was 30 feet f th y rom e gi .. Geraniums. There is nothing better adapted for bed- ding sent than the geraniums, and their varieties are almoet endless. It requires "lan little care, ie not sensitive to atmos- phe ' h rio o toga nor troubled with insects. The 'ay g ra • 1 fi f bed.t i e mums are a go fine or ding. They are really much finer than when grown in pots. F. JO von Hohenzollern Rime. Thibaut and Joan f A three' ' o t• • - o Aro are very eau lira varieties. • Geraniums delight in a Bendy, mellow soil, only moderately' bi. I ' • f too rich , th ' t a '11 ric • ' eir en erica' will be to produce luxuriant foliage anfew n but e dowers. Whenever the leaves of geraniums turn yellow or pale we may know the soil i t - ' 0 which they are growing • g is extenuated and should be enriched. ' The Philanthropist and School -Ham. A Certain Philanthropiat went to Visit a sehoce. "I See," He Kindly eaid to tie e Teacher, " that You Keep Great Order, and I have No Doubts but that You Man. age By Kindnose. May I take the Liberty to Ask You How You Make Your I a• roilarde Task seem So Essy 2"' 4' I will tell yon," answered the G tl s h i mGanlis sa • Mtn, "flow Make things Run S E '1 I F' 1 0 11,81 y. ix t Bo that When I Knock one ScholarD H f 11 d• own, e a s over an tit li another n 80 IMO 0 And ' er ne, n t a is as Good as Two Lioked. Ili saves a Great Amount of Labor. e Moue -There are So Man I • Many nventions ,. for th f Lb that eSavingo a Or, a 000n M0 Poor Working Man Won't Be of any use only as a Voter,L F ENA Ana. ----re.-- Appropriate to tbe Cieeasio 1' I have an idea, my lord," 1 Queen Victoria to her Prime 1 .. which, I think, will add to the feeling which exists between this and Anaerina." "Will Your Mejesty deign to it 2" replied Lord Salisbury, oboe( " Ibis that we collier on Preside • the f to Garbereh neon e order o e on 1 May next." 6; But why decorate him on the lar date, my liege?" ' " Beoanee that is Decoration A • II i .4 memos. -ouene. Feed the freart., o / • le s any MIBO1 mese ea mean which holds lode i meeee in es 6 • unspoken when dear 'wee are • close halide up which our word save and feed ? MIA your glft C . * /0 give comfort, joy, cheer and hoe you. ea 1 ,o encourage about TJ 't t - to warn thine, who are heartened ' w ' in pathe of danger, to inspire th,e with het m ti e to k'ildIe the y ri. v 0, 1 . h • --meetly aspiration on cold heart .—ii -- - Canadian Cattle Not Diseased. A Liverpool cable says: Further par- tioulars in regard to the reported seizure yesterday of the °ergo of cattle on board the steamer Lake Huron from Montreal, . on the ground that pleuro•pnertmonia existed among the animals, allow that only one of the cattle was suspected of being affected with the disease. The cattle in• , specter here ordered the animal killed and ins lunge were sent to London for examine. tion by the Government analyst The latter to -day telegraphed that there was not the slightest trace of pleuro-Pnerimopia in the lunge submitted to him, and conga- griently the imago of the Lake Huron %MO landed. THE NEW YORK BOYCOTT --- Semite in the Closing of Lumber Yards and General idleness. A Brooklyn deripatala mays : Thirty-six lumber firms of Brooklyn and Long Island City closed their yards by -day in support of the New York Darden' Aesooietion in its fight againat the boycott of the labor anions. One hundred firms in this city, eight in Jersey City and Hoboken and 36 in Brooklyn and Long blend City make a total of 144 that hams ceased to deliver , lumber. Braiding neeretinne in *h. .t. ie ci sr , and Brooklyn aro ahnoet paralyzed in eoneequence of this boycott. Thousand°, of mechanics are idle so a result of the difficulty. Never oration with Washable weInchosen mho at• o details to The dog aro preferable etroll. Th eoe coat t' t ion on of and 00ming Toe spats waistoorit Buffmolored i h , e enappleet ' divtilged.-C/othierand Mr. Cr that I want get home Mrs. Cro York Sun. The al rubies, sapphires, set in eilver ' ' thirtyaline troy • in it ' pearls, 9 &tilde. Notes of Men's Toggery. a made•up tie under any oonsid• the neglige shirt. waistcoats that come in :many deeigns will be worn. mg geaeon promisee in all its be comparatively uneaten. . ' elfin loose.fittilag tan shadea when one ' goes out for a b' ‘ '1•‘‘ '3 ' s-zrt-a mos. seneime eaves. th t ' • e ru of ouritom-is reaming, strong. are now worn to match the by the M7 ge s men in town 3 --ere t - - - • - opats rend waietooat is about ' the' th h ing e season ha yet Furnisher. • Women as Type mistributore. About twenty-five women now have pleasant luorati / ne i'l 1 , ve enap.oyme . on -any newspapers in New York as " Wet 'b t 0 th - i ri n ore et is, they are employed during the day, at the same rate paid for night work, tO dietribute type for compositors la h i • w ° t ne pre er to reduce their working hones. A diott ibutor o type m th ' f may us earn about 40 minas an hour. -Ladies' Horn e Journal, ' A Gang of Reverend Counterfeiters. A Duquoin, 111,, despatch nye : United night erns Skates Marshall Bacon le,st ted me Geo W Vanail at hie home. three I/ ' - W. - miles south of the town on *he charge of making counterfeit money The arrest ie ' * Et Seqtlel to the arrest Of Rev. Jerry Holmes larit Saturday, near here. Holmes le oup• , , pond to be the leader of a gang of counter. !niters. Va oil as taken isci Springfield. n wi - . . He bag breed here for Over twenty yeere, and his anent emitted great eurpriee. There are more of the gang to be arrested. a—......_..—.. George 'Explains. ' ' New York Herald: Ethel - Whitt did , yon mean, George, by telling Maud that I W&9 a cheetnut 2 George -I -I -I referred to your bewail. ful head of oheetnut hair. Stravvberriee are a l' p r ioularly wanton/ to those of Henguine or bilione ,temperament, to phihisioel, aneraio and rheumatic *nd• . • . • . ' z 1. Vidtleas • ' 1,.mr.toue conoidered that by eat. g berries, inorning and in Iltrateevening,' attacks of out " . ' ' g might 130 prevented, and .4.,. -.„ been-atiem "red' Strawberries eaten in abimdance produce the same effeot se Vichy and other eirnilar Waters A 1 . h t - ' revo oinon se eirokon out in the Pro. vinoe of Cordoba i A t' Th ' n rgen ina, e ise. Bomb have cut the telegraph wire, •----e— 1 oesly7-4 tel you before I go beef for dinner, and when I whet do I find ? .. eely-Fatilt, every time. -New • - ngliola crown is made of diamond, pearls and emerfilde, and gold bande • 1 wegles , i . i ounces and fiVe tientlyvVe'ghto there are 3,452 dian2ondo 078 la" If ' ' ku leo, 17 sapp MO Sad 11 era. _mm.._. -a' Thiele are doming my way to. " bt nig ,„ rernarksa ehe 081 es he gene • i missive y on the heap of old boots, lumpe, of coal, tin can, eta., with which he had beenpro. Stinted. Cholera /380 appeared among Indian pile grime on the Idand of Karparau off tie' i west dont of Arabia. White Hair Fashionable, • • A rumor anummoipg the revival hair a" theit"hi°°°1'1° °°1°r of ill may be resoonablY credited. Thc doubt about it, white hair betide e distinction, and rather tends to re completion than otheresise.-1" American. ...— • ' ± ti '' -What IS the meaning 0 "mean me, 8lt 1 ' ked th i li S h 1 tkote o nny ars e etto er. 0 00 - # alsereasiedi Intivirrer rwreWetlittli.: usbionie, massive - hey are o offered • They id water °yore of seen. vastly oot peo• bodily ngth of her in a position, it with tomaole ated on, Is only /mental' presses motion tione of in and, usettlar slightly uldered 11 a high at tO bo etch is hoe one. tame of k. The to do we be. &gee. he gob toe. A ring if im, and a good to have hinking m in a werless. rate her literary : " No Uncle ona her greatest Ankles oe is a in some e. Her air day h she is nt. No bore see or quiet ings on can no or more O topio." o lovely, O ince!! beauty. height, isite in ing of e clue. n•brown ✓ large, trongly. !motion *0± her a rosy ev with o beauty have a ever be d, when. in the. aced on ith the, elegant small en with eople. ces of a ionable child, be home . • ty,when speedily y, aged olaild'a hesita. his bed • window, d went • ered the yr sieved h the boy, Crow. round. bserved inieter9. f riendly country mentiOfl nionely. t Her - 30th or portion. Day in so that is heart starving'', • would speeeh e to all the di. treading indolent fires of snare." ' of white e future re is no look of ellen tho lusgrafe0