HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-2-1, Page 7Grin wee Ottor It
eine not Arnett° tine OS SOMO.'
Perhaps, hi Um° high soled -Mg
Znat as kOln ot al Tare colorcome,
Troth richly worth expounding.
Iambi this adage-truni s ablimew
And I would here eeehe 0 is
Andif a boinnou deem my rhyme.
Why, simply "grin and bear it."
When cherished err/Jens tame to naught,
Or pain embitters pleasure ;
When Welke aid bonds you firmest thought
Bring loss to retarded treasure;
When friends forsake, and foes increase,
Poe on, though hard to weer it,
A sunny mile of potent peecew
'Twill help -just "grin and boar it."
When woes come thesis and still More thick,.
Disasters gathering daily;
When hope deferred the heart makes sick,
While round you Jesting genie,
iZhe world snows not how sto your soul.
Dreams not what griefs do Mar it,
Moen over self a cn. m wetted;
AU brave y "min and bear it.'
Ali, 'Math teem homely words therelim
vastmines of deepen mecanieg
Whole tomes of toned phi 000phy,
Wee worth most careful emotion
"Yet not mem stoic's tore I urge -
Forever 1 forewe ex- it --
ant earth's ani heaven's best wisdom merge. -
Meet God, then 'grin and beer it"
-.Mienin B. Strong.
A CRUEL CRISIS.. •
,13, 'Story of the OW War In England.
1893+
"Altman( ,BATUtAinai.
"MrDZAR Witer,-The strike at Ardley
Moor shows no rogue at ending ; indeed, Is
seems likely to re) on for ever. I don't)
know whine ate to -Memo, the mestere or
the mew; I wish one or the ether would
give le. I am glad you're out of all the
bother, for we are obliged he heti ourselves
in readiness to quell tee Mom that are daily
asxstielpateel. 'This pollee business ie a Jolly
eseesionee, but,I supra° it comet be helped.
All the minnow except my company, is
away AM -quelling in oiler perm of the
nountry, ea we are alweye snider atm*,
might ,and dav. If old Bo rod wonld only
woneede trills, I tiluk the men would re-
turn to work willingly; but heti
ebstimate, and rim are they. Contogaently
starvation
is pertioaely tear far the outliers.
"Charlie is Tao wen, but I haven't seen
lihn atone lunch. Mary, tee new lunette -
meld, came up this eiternoon selling ter
tiro. Sao Gaye he went vu Mimes half past
2and had nob returned at 430. I supeose
the young reseal ie off on One of his ram-
bles: Hope you ore enjoying yourself,
itearle. Onerlie and I both teed oar very
brae love.
"Your afrostioniete, fond Old tubby,
" Delineate Venn.
p. Se -'-Yen know Bar:log*0n Ta watts,
Um follow who Med to out we one with
emu f. e has Isere been eppeinted a Meal
3. P. I fleet envy him hes dudes these
times, though he did no -eaten me wide her-
,Mble punishmenee when I Decried you off.
Goad -night, darling 1"
Tee above letter finished, Carats Vane,
,Allotes Third Paelehicre Reetineten sealed it
seed addremeed it to MIT. Ghes:"Tane, Hotel
lideeropele, Sandporte
as There " h- said, is the* done." Caleb
tear writing, but that will . give the little
WozOon end 'Jur mou?.er .someeriing to talk
nbent for a wash. Wed, R illy -res the
sergeseat of that name eneered the zoom -
'le what WV? 1"
" Av ye plaza, sore' replied Reilly, salut-
ing, " the man hem the polio effuse is out-
ride, au' he events to me ye,eeh—tee colliers
hue viewer° to nitre me 1),10 tonight), an'
'there'll he -gm deuce and all if the tojere
donee tiers."
" Veey well, send the man in."
" Ylw nor." end witl*noete realute, Ser.
netnis Be lly retired, weeding a private to
show stele= en tie the oaptente ream'?
Like
his supenor offieer, Sergeent Reidy
led a lively hatred ler police work and all
that (personelle. As I e seated often say at
matte 4' !hostile furticeire an' 'him barren
VW &vent sport; but febrile' on yer own
fleet en' blood wares. horse of enotless ogler
interely Atrd hie seretimenis were in-
variably waivei with ansierreteien.
The vpihot of Impostor Arkin -who 's
itesiview wive Cape. Vane was e oomeland to
the moo to tests o it, fay armed. . The
enter was 'oaten ly -obeyed, ad in a few
:minutes the oripeein and his men were
marching tioreugh the Roberti* gloom
scrolls .A1 -3103s, Meer to the eat of the
trenble. As they unme% the pit and paned
through the rows ef miner s oetteges, the
Sew women and ohildrws kit at ht me atone
to dor doers and rev :ei teem f r neonate
they were'idoeue to pay in he etre:el& be-
tweenmaster end men. Btu • he soldiers
took menet:lee o he abase, tor of he m's
ilea thrown. Iltreog on heir fellow -men
was bad enough, tine ti ey coed not war en
the women ane all wee C iinblog the
brow or tee les hi I, C p Vice sew that
'Jibe was to save o toe pite u ldinge,
be and his Gong:easy *meld swig° none boo
moon.
A rod glare glowed agairseb the cloudy
mly, mad lit their path. Newer and. neerer
'they adveneee, aid they saw long fiery
longues of flame leoplog high 17011 the
• hanks
of coal round the plea month; angry
=Kt retched hither and thither le wild rage,
3oebtog like demons in the awful glare ;
thole mad marooning, rising wieseve the
hisehig and oreekling of the burette fuel,
deepening Into a sullen rear of defiant
hatred as the military approached 'tedehin
eight. With a comma* impolee the r:obers
seized Makes and brawie and melted within
the wells .'eurroundleg Abel Holroyees
house, built nob ler from the mint's of the
wilt he owned, and from which all his wealth
had been wrested by the num whose blind
passion was the geese of the preempt tumult
In they rushed. bearing down the iron
gates la their mad has and swearing
loudly to set five to the budding.
. The seldiere came to a hale omelette this
retreat Air they did +to, old Ail& Holreyel
and Barrington Th waite-who lied. been sent
for teo "sod the Blob &et, if inceenserroem
setp to the spit. . Their appearance vase the
eglgweilor o fresh outbreakof fury. " Brun
pleases drawn " Teach th' ewld
"sweater =omen 1" cried 'he mob. " Will
ye' pay nest fair lenge 2" Besotted one, belle
than the roue, nod who seemed' to be a
leader.
"Nee I weentelf thee care 25peroenie
advance s heir wage r shouted hack Hal -
mild. "1 merle my nosney the same road
no yews bad a °hence to, an' 1111 none gi' lb
away for nowt
"Excuse me, Mr. Holroyd," said Vence
• twillediffievilty making himself heard, "hut
'
that wart of leak will only Melte them to
/nether violence* / helm just been rionfor-
ming with Mr. Thwalies. Pniodies them to
'arblitrater, or.soinething-eneythireg to quiet
- them and mole them disperse." .
'et Aridtratien esseitied the angry old
Meow "I'd peemiee 'ere newts th' sett.
11.1 ha'" no meddlers hiterfeelts' 'IP my
bushiest& If they don't like to work for tie
wage I oat aferd to pey they eon
Close l'i
He oho* hie Thee at the *rowel, Who
amazed,
and shooed, renewing Miele
'Ilteete. Avid even the Mee and ethekle of
thehernia, cosi ised-d to the din.
" Now, then, fritorsite," ceded //Wield,.
tiffelettnaliet t AM./ to He:idle/sr lie iho
1
my hence one bake. an' Mogi trout to th'
pound or well as all the cool at leek
Whole* these red eoitte Manaus' stele lite
toy-sojere for? 'Welitge their eleed Amato
or what?'
"Will you leen thelle grounds mid re-
turn to your homes l" elsouted Theraiter'
tines urgee. But there wine no elneevity
his Ions ; indeed, he longed to force the
toldleve to extreme moons, shave e taw
how disteeteful tench a ovule would be to
his old rival, Captain Vane.
etre the answer came back sharp And
"No, we eyelet I Were here, ano here
we'll stay; and if owel Heirend wean't ge
uz advance we'll been th' pleace
elesewn. "%Veil gli him two minutes to think
It ewer
And the ahonting of the mob nod the
roaring of the Aimee oentlened. '
o Holroyd, Tasmania and Vane consulted.
To ell suggeetione ef oeneemioxi or &thieve
elm Holroyd returned an obssinate refusal
urging the employmene of home for the pre -
&aim of kes pirty. Vane wen d ci bee
police oeu d not gala an entreace at the
batik of the home, and so eject the restore,
but H Irod explained ths:o it would b.
iropeeeitdo for them to male tbe high cur -
retooling wall. The slily way in was
through the gateway, whies the meet wale
aireaoy roughly eartioeding. Would Oepan
Vane advance at the palm of the bayone.
and totes an entrance?
Vane replied that he certainly would,
bee not until he bed seen the pshoe nudge
the ettenrepe themselves.
" New 1" Shouted Sem Bradley, the
Meters' spokesman, " tieue's up I West's
gook' fur t' de V
For enewer, Thwalbe read the Rot Aut.
No ore could hear it, and few 'reale bave
oeeded it had been Mead. ellen the pelice
rushed ,at. the gateway with drawn *run
-
alumna. 'Bet the storm of stones, firebraude
and ether mbisileri with which they were
met roused them to beat a ipeedy retrest,
amid , the bootie and jeers of, the striker*
now flushed with euoo.8111.
Than Thwaite lermelly desired Cap-
tain Value to do his duty. The men
were drawn up in double line, and the
action decided upon wan two volleys
and a charge at the bayonet's point.
Stassding well without the recipe of
Moore' stun of elonce, the selelers were
yet able to take .gesid aim, for the banks of
coal acijacert wore Oen fiercely burnmg.
There was a sharp oloeking as the men
hustled with hall cartridge, and bbe centers,
seeing that business was evidently memo,
wavered for a moment, but instantiy r abed
-madly, ie seemed, braving certain dastrue
tion. Obedient TO Vane a command, up
went the rifles to the "ready with
mmhantoal precision, teed every finger
teuobed the trigger, every ear listened for
the word to fire.
But it did not come. As the word formed
!testi on Captain Vane's tightened lips, a big
collier forced himself inn, the front rank et
the ankere, bearing in his arms in jute.
bairn] boy -the cepteeneelibtle son .Charlie,
"New fire, 'dye' dare" cried the man
"We reckoned eat' redcoats, me be SAM,
an' I thowli we'd find sunimat as 'tad to
they pea-ahoothe. Dept'In wcllt oust fire en
his own ohi'db, I reckon I"' A d 'whit e
whi, hoarse leugh, the fellow held up little
Overlie high in air.
Vane was pale as death. He knew now
why his boy had been m ming. Whet wets
he to do? To fire was to kill his may Child ;
to refugee to do would be s negleot of duty.
He ?oaks& toward Thwaite for advice.
What it was be saw in the megistraie'a
eyes -cruel sailefaetienl Clearly net in-
dignetton or pity.
" Well, why don% ' yen fire yeeir pep.
guns 2" 'screamed Het co cl. You'll be too
late, directly. They're up i' th' bop memo
we torches cow 1"
"Shari'," cried Sergeant &dry, forget-
ting discipline in his anger, " a ur. aft
don't flee, ye meld coat helmet, beocaese the
bhoy there's his own flesh tor blood."
" Men," cried Vane tie the eviller., "U
you are men give me back my hey -
would yen make a father murder hie own
son ?"
"Have yo' thew') o' our 'Milder, cap's 7"
answered SAM Bradley. " Tto.y`re clem-
min' a' whom for want o' bread, loses alone
meat ! Call off yo'r men se", goo neck to ids
bemires's, Ale premise vo to bring the
o hilt onerto ye' reel %way 1"
Before Vane could reply, Thwalte broke.
in.
"This parleeing with riotera Is absurd,"
he odd. " ortuesate for y
Captain Vane'that those blackguarde
yonder have thee hey; but yon cannot allow
that fact to interfere with your duty. Ie
the mime of the Q Aeon you have sworn re
tome, 1 oell on you to fire open and &o-
peras that mob 1"
"But Th vaite-tioireyd—". Vane
beg -he -i; but before he could formulate b
sentence Charlie cried out to his feller.
Elie childish treble could be ol any heard,
for the truly terrible situation had coin -
pellet a general :deuce.
" Feiner," cried the boy, " Dees he
& freed to fire. Pm nob afraid to die -I'm
n et a tomcod, if these men areeowards.. Say
g' of -bye to mamma I "
A mighty cheer from the soldiers' throate
broke the painful silence. Old Hewer I
seemed struggling be my smelling, and.
despite tie peen, Captain Vane felt prouder
than he felt When his (e.leen bed placed
upon hie breast; the Vtateria Come He
burned to Thwaite, sod aid:
"You have executed your throats of j. -al-
one vengeance In a °suet way, Mn. Thweite,
a. ea you and I will settle this elsewhere.
Yon mad have made risme' arrangemenit
with these men, I deresey. Ent you thed
S O. that I ran a soldier Sae reed it fatten
aftererarde. Meg it, man," as liteitoye
teuolied his arm and sibentenered something
"hong it, I'll file, thengir your ohs ,leaoy
.00tte me My boy'a life 1" The lime of
bayoneted muzzles one' more grinned at the
avid Ceptain Vaxiff culled "Fi--'
• "S -op 1" stowed Hattori, rushing le
fres:Mel the soldiers. "Slop I I'm ea rani
'an and ta rough 'en; hut,' shaking his hoe
at the r eters, " afore I'll see e mon alma
down his own somber nip rake, ye' con brae
down every abed I own I New, brun emelt
MY' be denied I tiepin, ye' con rest about.
teases."
"Best my boy—"
"Hero ho is," shouted Sem Bredley,
enstehine the child from his comrade, anti
rating him down free. " Rea to the
fey ober led. Well nears be beat by owd
Abel Holroyd in dosser' t' reel thing. Au'
Abel, / II yo' my word 'et not) another
attar or Atone *hail be hurt to-neete Rue,
tad, run ' • , ,
The boy flow to his Mende, and as he
wee ought in his When] armee a greet
cheer, that ceded ha a milled sob, Went) up
from every men, soldier end striker -alike,
* * * *
'
' "Bight about fiten, qtdok Match I meek
be their quarters tramped Captain Vane,
Charlie in his arms, and hie company of the
Thied
"An' Wad,' told Sergeant Reilly, in
the oenteen verb morning, "we woe- nearly
father /Men' oareelveti en elie toad home by
raysion ay a Mist in Our or s that was
nayther fog nor min, dye toe l''
"Decter. I haves frightful cold in the
head I Who' shall I take for, Or Doctor
alter refitebite)-e-A handkerchief.
BRIDL THE (ZARIN.
inrepeao Priocesses. Aoxieusl$ bait,
iog 'the Cast ef Fate.
NICHOLAS' NOT IN A , HURRY.
e Is Not Ott Father's Son 14 rolltles-Ills
Liberal Thews , Inaba Huns Irsepoisular-
lle Item Not Like War -Siete to Want
Wales' Daughter.
NE more royal
hese) is being
bewked in the
°wile of Europe.
Phie time t h a
owner of the tont
bhe Czerowitz,
eldest sort of the
Ozer the rennin
inti want ot All the Reales
-the powerful ruler, Mat is
to be, of hundrelie Of Ma"
hone of ite ople. • This young
man le leaking for is wits, a
roman wao will tome day *it uport the
thione, the mat powerful of her
eex in ihe world.
Orencernhtg this fortunate woman, that
ereedini little rogue, rumor, has much to
icy. But this much leeks confirmation.
Itentorday it was the &emitter of the Prince
if Wales, to morrow it Is a Danish Prime's
and seek Week we mean have another story
end smother won. Indeed, the heir be the
Throe° of Runde, is the most engaged, but
ey no moans the most ongeging, young man
ee Europe..
Teem is no eligible young woman Oen-
meted With any of the rujing European
It uses whose name hos not been cenneoted
with hie in a niettrimenial way. It may be
:he young Grand Duke known Mr he of this,
for his eaters and his father's poen °enema
to not allow him to bake any of the gossip
that there is filing about him and other
royal personages.
world? THE GRAND DIIKE IS.
some day to be the meat powerful man in
Who is this Grand Doke Nicholas, fated
.He may become Cater of Bustle at any
-Imo, should the anarehiete or rithilises
summed in their designs of killing the pre.
met heed of the R name& .
Little is known oboist him. He has nob
deured to any extent in the newspeper
prose of Europe. He may or he may net
have had ese..pades, am other royal 'prep
have had but ens never hear' anything
about them. He is kept in seclusion. He
Is not Meowed ube freedom that ordinal'',
princes of Eerepe are allowed. Powerful
ee his father la, ItIn heir le in some respeots
e pleener. He is • being brouglit up in a
eery cimer why. The greatest enjemnerie
he seems to get out el life is in riding
tricycle, and in running over to London
when he gets a chance, where he has a good
ramp we heist interference. His brothers --
the Grand Dakee Meshed and George -are
tar horn being kept in seclusion. George,
iadeed, ham seen service in the RUH=
army.
As the immediate heir to the throne, and
In view of the uncertainty as to the life
mama of the Cur, le has been the policy
of Alexander III. to keep the G`zerowitz
'rem any dangerous, or even public) peat of
duty. This accennte, In. the main, for the
feet that se little is known ef the young
-man, who is now, by the way, a few months
over 25 years of ago.
NOT A BRILLIANT MAN.
Truth be told, them beery little aboutthe
miring man to worsen attentive, made tram
Is position as the eldest son of tlie Czar.
Tbe Grand Duke, te fart, is a very colorfast
genth indeed. Ie leaks strength mentally
trel physically. He has shown no talent for
.rrytbirag of conreimence. There is nothing
'It -bee Tartar sheet him. He is net at all a
Romeneff in oppearance. These men have
aesrly Alla them been of the meet Iniprem
sive eppeerapee. The mad Emperor, Peal,
Wifil a Site lush leg man. Alexander II.
wee one of the handsomest num, in point
ot phyt gee and face, in Europe. The
present Ozer is a veriteble Ajax, and is held
es he the minnow:41i men ire Europe.
Grand Doke Netheles is e weakling. He
east neither the Remaneff face nor physique,
eon testes& recernbles his Daniell mother.
Frequently shore are rumors that the Czo
tiee determined to um his anent:ratio poiveris
nod name his robust emend son as his moo
It appeare true, however, that though the
Ozer may love his sen well enough in a
waned way, he he no especial admit -anon
for him as a pi-mein:nivel ruler of Russia.
nee massive Imperial crown of Refight and
his flowing robes of Stste have looked im-
Vt1es..ivo enough on such giants as thereeent
Czars.! Russia, but the effect will be diffsm
eat neon they are put on by the somewhat
puny Grand Duke.
But this is not the word. The Czar
might forgive his sen his weak physique
iced Dirtlelt bee. There Is worse. The
Czarowitz ie inclined to boa littera ; and in
'he eyes of the Cow this he . a crime against -
Russia and agamst him.
rus nutundinisat orrOslan.
Alexander III. cannel) understand liberal.
.am. He never admired the limey/bat
liberal idea of his &beer'and he OM
anderstand °Willem those of his eon.. He is
ea him position of a hen who has batched
not -'n -k", which wid bike to the weber
in spite of her protests.
The young Greed Duke disegrees with
his tether in many essentiales. His temper -
meat is bluer of * echelon and hie tutors
more made him a very feir sue. The Czar
ivies not like 'cholera in the abstract. He
him to have them shout biaa in arbein
oration% but he mead he better pleased if
i.0 could (lb withent them.
Another subject open which the Czar
end his eldest son disagree is with refer -
nee to the Emperor of Germany. The
Ozer has no eopeoial love fer test chip.
eon young monarch. Grand Duke Nichols
hae, And has given paled° expression to
els opinion. Should he come into power
at sortie time in the neer future all the
love making that has recently gone on be.
swoon limes% sod France would have been
for nabbing. ,
THE CZAR'S Prawn manna.
But perhome the widest 'breach between
oho Czerowitz enti hie tether is on the
Jewith quotation. The young man does not
believe in persecuting the Jews or in driving
them from Russia. There ore other points
elf difference between the opinions OL the
OW and those of his son, but these are the
main mese and to a men of the Omer fierce
tampon which will not brook opposition,
they are sufficient to muse him to look upon
his eon as a wilful, fractious boy, not fib to
rule any Ptimie.
That Greed Deka Nicholas would be able
to put his Advanced Motor Into brie ehOtdel
he wino hito power Ise -morrow there Is
email reason to believe. He has absorbed
some liberal Mem from his totem but he is
mit in any way A' fore+ fiti or a aliment young
mein Ho ei not resourceful, hal no atiattial
talent for effeire. and Would be is Week
figure In the hands of the strong body of
itaideglits who now isurround Alexander
W. sad 144,4, obivo his reantionarypenep,
Wm lb all In all, the yeneg heir to Idel
Rostou'throno 0000000 A pittUalihtt 'MOWN
The heir of his tither, he Is yet dielended
by him. IrbaCzer hi not at the Wet Of
wtbiltes raLiztrtyery iheobl4etis botralieviottimemel offf hints
somata, and then there ante, ;reportsthat
the hereditnry taint of beloolty, which has
!hewn itself fienti time to time in the
Romenefk has marked him in an open
flamer. Datder there OtrollinfinnitiOn1 his
conduct Seward WO ROD, in B/B0113 he plow
Bette hitt, trey be bIghly laperlikat In Its
results.
ens OZAROWITZ 1.14ANS TO GERMAN ¥.
' Thom who have OOMO Into 00008i0 with
the Cesrowitz-and they are not nnosreone
-all owner in the opinion that, while, not
over bright, he in fairly intelligetat Mid wee
amiable.
Thts latter quality has made him popular
with all partied in the Russian court, oven
inoltellog tbese who leek upon him its a. very
week epee indeed to rapport the weight of
the &mean Crown -as he may some day,.
He has a curtain grace and tact that come to
him from ble °Omer Ainteis WAND and not
from ble orosegnitaed falitter. He le more
of is tehitler then meet of the Elusion men
of reek are, but is both modest and simple
of manner. Tutors whom he hag had from
time to time have reported 01 him that the
amiebility he shows in public Is net as-
sumed.
In the etheolroom he was the same. He
always mob his tutors half way in their
eflorte to improve him. He was never
churlish, nor did he display any of
the " ripened *child " qualities that
might have been looked for in a
young man of his position. Not especially
quick to learn, he was wilting and patient.
IA was iron one of those totem that the
Grand Duke imbibed the Mese which made
him German rather than French in his
Moto and sympathise, contrary to what
would have been the wishes of hie father,
had the latter known anything of the
matter.
AN ADMIRER OW TOLSTOI.
Still, the young man it, fairly well versed
in French litereture as well as Gorman and,
unlike his father, he is an admirer of German,
end of the younger writers of the modern
&maim period who are palling to the
front. Ho is said to care little for heavy
reading of a politica or historioaloharaoter.
He has a taste for poetry and Bolden, and
in this amain he Is like his mother, for
Alexender nr. has no liking for that Fort of
reading, or indeed far any ether.
Newspaper literature le served on him
sparingly. lebe Omen press croslra are a
zoalourt lot, and mum do aomething to earn
their wages. When they come acmes an
English newspaper, for inetehoe, of an out -
spike)] character they give it a queer over-
heating before it pet to the future Czar.
The remit is that he knows only in a
fragmentary way of a good deal that is
going in the world outeide his father's
palace.
IP he could fellow his own bent ho would
undoubtedly go about freely and learn IMO -
%tag of the people whom he may be called
upon to govern. But the fear that the
anarchists will insist on taking shots at him
with dynamite bombe prevents his doing
anoygoewe
.ntel slumming in St. Petersburg or
mso
NOT PARTIAL TO WAR.
As might be expectied from a mild-man-
nered young man, the emote -Az is not
partial to was, as eeme of his 'oreheehers
have been. There is nothing of the
Dan Cossack in • him. He has no
ambition to crush the Turks or to wage war
with Austria or with England on the
Rattan free tier. He is a peaceable young
man, who would rather improve the some-
what expansive bit of ground now known
am Ramis, and no one denies that there is
room for improvement. Ho is unlike bin
two brothers in this respect.
Of these, George, the naval eincer'is not
the Mod to tura his back en a fight. The
Grand Duke Michael is the Czar's favorite,
and, though younger than his brother, Is
said to be he one whom Alexander at times
contemplates naming as his successor.
Youthful though he is, he le extremely
precocious, end bus a talent for political in-
trigue and government.
Either of these two young men migbt cut
a more dashing figure than Greed Duke
Nicholas. Yet those backward weaklings
ars often deceiving. Mere than one of them
have out- stripped stammer and hater
equipped men on their own ground. What
hos ocearred may rimer again ; and besides,
Duke Maass is teeing. When his time
cornea to fly alone his pinions may prove
stronger than they seem.
A MAN OF GOOD MORALS.
There is one thing Who said of the young
men that cannot be said of other knight* of
his ego. His Et °has been clean. His name
Is unentirched by scandal. He has lived
quietly with his books and studies. His
molts have been and are of the amplest.
He Ill tenderly attached to his mother and if
his affection for his rough bear of a father is
less strong, he hes at least given him re-
spect and obedience while disagreeing with
him en many points. He really wishes to
improve the oonditien of the people of
Russia and on no narrow linen He I. no
epode of war or bloodshed and no permit -
outer of race or religion.
Such a young man, with, even moderate
brains, might rule sensibly.
The in -triage of this young Mill to the
daughter of the Prince of Wales and his ac-
cession to the Remittal throne before the
text great European at roggle„ which states.
men eay canna long be delayed, would have
an important effect upon the turn
of events. His known and openly
avowed friendship for Germany and
its Emperor would lead him to treat
the Triple Alliance neutrally, if not with
downright open friendship, and would leave
France isolated and almost alone in Conti -
nava( Europe, while his connection by
marriage te a daughter of the Prince of
Wales ;mild certainly tend to promote
amity bebWeen Russia and England.
REOEMBLEStIllii mime to Tenn.
Of canna, them latter things can only be
speculated Upon. The Czar is not an 614
man, and he is a more than ordinarily vig-
mote one. He may live and chest the
anarchists and threatened madame for
many years, during which time the map et
Hareem may be changed mere than ones.
But in the uncertain position held by the
Czar, his eldest son is into to continuo NO
itstereating personage for more reasons than
one, no matter whom he marries -or whether
ho marries at all.
Vim young Russian boar' a re -
Markable resemblanth to the Duke of Yak,
the second moo Of the Prime of Wales.
Indeed, they are as like in the face as two
peas.
A stele ef siege has been preelahned at
Oieree.ree hely.
" ringlet) your huiband seuroblinee Otelese
hernia the worm for liquor 14 asked( the
charitable caller. " Na, indOeli, mimeo.
answered the wife, "hell never none tit
*arse fee it .11i's1 only when he II fell the
he la in a goad bunter at all.
In counsel it is geed to tee danger*, but
•In execution not to see there, takes they
ore way emote .
PUNISHING BAD SAVAGES,
4..Joint Blench ma British Expedition ,
• ".thoVointern
EICA0i411. ttwaioua BirO0Ekle,
' At Neumeit reports reached the Boomerieng
of a case at eatinieselllni and two of &leder
by oniiveli. 'Proceeding to Villa (Sandwich
Telenet), tile), holed of the massacre of re
leteldii crew of the American schooner Don
Henri at Pentecost Island. ,
Gentian Bruce, of the American verse),
Mated that early in September, calling at
Pentecost belated to engage wives for work
in the plentetione, th. y sent off *beat con-
taining hi. Litton, Ok French tireder,.. and
three natives. When they renthed the
shore they were &Mocked by wives armed
with tountea eke, and Al. Linen and two of
his beet's crew were murdered. They sale-
queetly foetid the bodies of M. Litton
end one native' lying on the beach terribly
Mutilated.
Before the Boomerang had time to inrea.
legate Ode murder mailer report came to
hand of blie SSIESOSOTO of a boath crew of the
French trading etemener Neptune at Awn
Island. The mew of the Neptence stew one
of their betide horribly hacked about by
blows from is tomahatekiwhile another vctim
wee disembowelled.
The Beoncereng immediately proceeded
to Aurora bland, where she fen in with the
French warship Banff. She, toe, had heard
of ithe murders. There estate a convention
between Greet Brindle and Fame with re-
ward to teem itlande, for the protection of
We and property, and the suppreesion of
the kidnappbeg trade. The commanders of
the wersidne determined to punish the
Pen most islanders for the assassination of
the beat's mew of the Ametioan steamer,
end preeeeded tt h her.
On Arrival the B mmerang and Soorff each
heeded forty-eight armed bluejackets at
different points, the French being more to
the etertilt, with inebruotions to converge en
particular vintages whine the murderers
were krtown to reside. ' Ten minivan of the
Loyalty Islands and four Pentecost inland -
ere acnompardea each pertly as guides. The
path taken by the British force led over
very steep hills, thickly weeded, and en-
tangled 'Attli creepers, making it almost im-,
pixietrable. Two of the party fell exhausted,
and wete left with 1111 escort. On reaching
this village, the British fen co was to await a
signal Morn the French, on which
both partiee were to spread eut
and capture the murderers. 17afortunately,
the nasives raw the Briiith force and raised
an alarm. They made a feeble defence with
old Stadium tomahawks, poisoned spears
and %moan, and then belled into the bush,
where it was impoenible to follow. A few
natives were wounded, including a women.
One was captured unhurt, and carried on
beard the Boomerang. Tao French face
wandered storey, said did not get up in
time to oreeperate except to Desist) in burn-
ing the villege.
The Boomerang and Boos if then sailed to
Aurora Island, where parties were landed
and similar tactics wore followed. The
French 'Arty shot one of the murderers
when trying to escape, and another wets
cemented. Two villages were destroyed
and fines infl oted en ethers. On arrival an
board, the Abele -French Cemminion re.
amemoled, when the °sleeves from Pente-
cost end Aurora Islande were tried, found
guilty of murder and sentenced to imprison-
ment for life at the Frenca convict seiVe.
nient at Noumea. Vilma the Peetecest
many() was made mega -tinted with hie gen.
Venice he died ahnest immediately. At
Pentecost bland upward of twenty vvhite
men have been mesiacred and robbed.
A MAHOGANY ROADWAY.
Real Brazilian Hardwood 'Used to Pave a
• Street in Paris.
The laying down of mahogany roadways
sounds almost like a dream of Oriental
magnifioenca, but it is what the Paris
Municipal Commit are engaged in at the
present moment. A portion of that almost
iattrminable thoroughfare, the Rae Way-
ette-teiat portion neareet tie the Eastern of
France Railway terminus-haa been palled
up, and workmen are laying down blocks of
reel Brazilian mahogany of a peculiarly fine
texture and color. It Is confessedly an
experiment, as the mahogeny is dearer than
the wood ordinarily used for the same pur-
pose. Mahogany, however, is not as dear
as it used to be. The actual cost of the
new readway will be 50 honor a rquan
metre, which is considerably lose than £2
a rimare yard. lb Is hoped then the extra
outlay incurred will be more than compen-
sated for by greater durability. --London
Daily News.
Au oil stove 11 inches high, with a lamp
that will burn 20 hours at an expense of 12
cents, and which will boil, roast, bake, fry
and grill shops and ateake to 10 minutes'is
odverlesed in London at a price of $4.37.-
.Fictreituare
to IL.4.JTTOLLNE(tOTTO1=1401(60TTOLUNII
virounvni 'otrout orrousNE
I o
COTYOLEPr �. COTTOLEN 0 OT'LOL8.1' ee{{ 0, �C:OTTOLENEk 0 iCOTTOLLTN 0. `C,OTTOLE\Fi 0 (COTTOLRN1:� 0.;COTTOGEN `) ` COTTOLkn''
LCOTTOLEN . ICOrEOLENE� �L'OTTOLEN ( COTTOLENE: {CcrrOLENL1 1,I.OTTOLENl4 iCOTTOLENEI ;C.OTTOGHN I COT TOLEN4'
' Esi 0,,----7;---.yr--iE
FE 1.G PA'
,Has come not a little
knowledge as to cook-
ery—what to do, as well
as what not to do. Thus
we have learned to use
... „
GOTTO- ENE
the most pure and. per-
fect and popular cook-
ingmatetial for all frying
and shortening purposes.
aCOTTTOLEN*.0 {COTIOLENZ I 1c.OTTOLLENE 1l.OTTOLENE L0 I NOD GLEN 0
TTOLHN 0
�COITOLHN C,COTTOLHN
PROGRESSIVE
COOKING
is the natural outcome
of the age, and it teache,s
us no/ to uselard, but rath-
er the new shortening,
GOTTOL1ENE9
which it far cleaner, and
more digestible than any
lard can- be.
The success of Cotto-
leue has called out worth-
less imitations tt nder
similar names, Look out
for theseiAsk your
Oroce, for COTTOLItN4)
And benure that you get it.
Hada only by
N. K. FAIRNANK & 00..
Wellington and Ann Ste.,
MONTREAL.
trOttio 0 ortOtint 0 tif
0 iL a.. o LIM
•
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles
dent Ma bilious state of the enter); suoh as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Diterese after
eating, hale in the Side, nc. While their Mose
remarkable succeas bee been shown in cueing
SICK
Headachs, yet Onersoes Lune Una fertil
are equally valuable Donstipettom
and preventing this annoying complaint,
they also correct all disorders of the :Damao%
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
AD
Ache they would be almost priceless to theta
who suffer from this distressing complete;
but fortunately their goodness does not and
here, and those who once try them will tiqa
these little pits valuable hi so many ways thet
they will not be willing to do without them.
But atter all sick head
ACHE,
is the bane of so many live. that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pfile cure it
while others do not,
CARTIER'S LIT= LEVER PILLS are very seardi
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable arid do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle atom
please all who use them. In vials at es eepts;
tire for $1. Sold everywhere, or smithy mait
CASTEN MEDICINE CO., kW Tat
ball Mind Don, WI itiet
'TWAS A GHASTLY SMUT.
Heaps or Shapeless Human Re-
mains in a Sleeper.
FRIGHTFUL RAILWAY DISASTER
Athehmorad et manvitieremeeee Passenger
Expeems wrecked -Bun Into by a G., fie
et N. Train.AlsAwtril Scene.
Na. 35, from New York to 'Lerida, en the
Richinthed & Danvil.e Retires& was run
Into by a Gen gm, Carolina & Northern
train at the limning here at 1 b'ulook this
morning. Tweatefive persons were either
killed or injured. The sleeper was full of
people and e ae struck in the centre and
crushed. Not a person escaped unhurt.
The day coaches were turned upside down
on the aide of the track. They were nearly
full of pestengere and few en board escaped
Injury.
The postengere in the sleeper comprised
many urmainent people of Wasbingten and
New York. When the crash came, few
martens on the train except the train bands
were &make. There a as net a moment's
warning, and almeat in an instant the
menetencoos rumble of the trainhwheelawas
succeeded by the cries of the stricken pas -
Barger*. These in the sleeper bore the
orient of the disaster, and to them all attest.
riots were. immediately given.
The ear p esented a ghastly spectacle.
Preered against the broken fragments of the
car were calmest ehapeless masses with life
and hien iby crushed out almost elm:titer e-
ously. Scattered about were others in
whom life still remained, but whose piteous
cries were heartrending.
For a minute the terror of the scene
exaggerated, if blab be pessible by the
derivate mei the lensing of eteem from the
engine, baffled the coartme of the few who
were abet re render aid. They soon re-
covered their self-pessessien ent ugh be turn
lathe practical work Mere thence and the
work of rescue beggar.
There was no scarcity of le...feria to
stretebers and the wounded who could be
reached were quickly placed on the backs
if ear seat* and placed beside the wretch
until they could be removed to a mere suita-
ble place. Orhera of the wounded wore so
hemm din by the debris that it rt mitred
considerable time to free them from their
imp itenandat They, tom were fiaseliy got
out end pieced on the hastily improvin d
+tote.
A physioien was on beard, and forest
nately he escaped serious iejory, and wa
able to de a world of good. By promft at
bention he succeeded in restoring compare
tive comfort to one en two who seemed o
the point of death, and most of the ether
he cared for sufficiently to render that/earth
S Tient removei safe.
Who excitement and confusion are moat
that non muss have yet been tenured, as ib
has required the full time and attention of
al who are able to reeve 'about to care for
the injured.
Chester Court House, which is the pope
name for the place where the accident gro •
mimed, is the aunty mat of Chester county
S„c, It is ne mese °rem Cherlabo, and an
equal distance from Columbia.
THIS LOOKS BETTER.,
General Superintendent Bee, of the
Itioinnoad & Denville Railroad., shows Meet
the aocedeat at the messing near Chester,
Ei. C., this morning, was nob so serious as at
first reported. There were only tett paean -
gem on the wrecked Pullman and only
five of these were injured. Pullman Cone
dueller Davis was slightly be -u. sed, The
company's turgeon sari none of the paseens
gem are seriently hurt.
Moen 1 beanbags,
The weekly denoting, which not even
" progressive '' 9 omen eleirk, is delightfully
got through in a oerbein town in the pro-.
einem. %he derriere unite at ene honed,
with ball and egg and *apply of stiookingse
anus of the riumbm reeding Wend while the
me ply the ne elle. The reader is 'elected
eeek ahead, mod must do her darning at
home emi alone tent once in the Season, -
New York Timm
Down *it13. High Prices Pot
Electric Belts.
$1.55, $2.65, $3.70 ; former prices $5,
$10. Qualty remains the Oame.-16 di
ferent styles i dry battery and acid belts
or strong current. Less than half
the price of any other eenepatty auditor
home testimonials than all the rest tee
gather. rail list free. Mention thie
gaper. W. 1 BAER & CO. Windsor, Outs
As to (living rearm People &Chance.
There is a groat cry thet the, young
people should be given a "eleemee That
Senate be be the trouble ; they Ito Wean
tee Many chance's If they teete compelled
to make their own ohettbee they would
amount to more.
Borrowing Is the mikes and the death of
every ntmOs istate..-444 2hatioit.