Loading...
The Exeter Advocate, 1892-6-16, Page 2ACyc TARO An Vook, zible e cloud nhops drop t mess b 'with. dear rible f upon t 'were a one wla centre again blocks flfled w raised in ruin the rui rehears Congre packed the 1 utes buildin had fin Whe eh and dais ing abo pastor Many o were h known the fall and soo prisomn forrned were in ere so they ea of the in broken, internall 50, and it is imp number. five min been bu A Gal ports oo casualti Lufkin a bet of ti Inge we number persons little chi on a red its moth probably storm is tion ha aid have The An An A replete 11 been co Cauvin, • murder Montell, and was life. A tab.', wa late at n sorbing which 18 e• mained were ver was mar scandal° the diso proceedin the judge preserve but were any degi room of e the trial. annoyanc threatene wives we they in t finally on to yield t triumpha law stude messes, b disorderl torrent of liars and enjoy the of the wil urged the The Less Later details of latest new indicates than was tion ib is r startling! accounts ened in covered f miners we a very pre men being All the in pitals, and attention number of services to suffering o found that three men engaged in location, b which pet believed b of the min reekleseine ight into rumor is 1, .Origin. Li mainly of miners, a entrances agonizing ()barred an hoiated to riotne of th of a loved arnace. has only fo Ile had stu WO, Be had seat hilt had And yet este theta -Of atieVretin drat A judge ktesit *limy Black rus Wheat field .r CHILDREN INJURED; . A ROMAN SCANDAL, "1.1137LNO rimy. —. am The Geas 0 tots peen 'Played At the Bazaar, mamba Masonic A London cable says : Sbace the iving ' 'l chess genie played in various pastoral fes. tivitiee some years ago, and the represente- Wm of the same game in one of the cendo operas, there has been nothing more charm- ing than the game of "living whist," which a s has been one or the features ,of the Masonic Bazaar, held in the grounds of the Royal ' Dublin Society, at Ball's Bridge, near Dub- lin, for the purpose of procuring fends for ,, the Masonic Orphanage. Lord Plunkett, Arohbishop of Dublin, inaugurated the banter. Tho most attractive feature of the - entertainment WAS a game of "living whist," in which the cards were repro- lien ted by the Masonic orphans, who had been previously drilled to absolute perfect. ef tion. Here is a description of the game : . To represent the card teble a large cloth is stretched on the floor, at the sides of which the four players only take their seats. To the sounding of a bugle oall the living cards enter in procession, the kings and queens all attended by their knaves and aces, and guarded by the smaller cards. After the four suits have taken up position, the court cards begin a stately dance, in which the smaller cards join. Then the . music changes, becoming more lively. It grows gnioker and quicker by degrees, until the whole pack gets apparently into dis- order—to represent " a shuffle." • The trumpet sounds again, and the cards open out, disclosing in the centre a little blind- fold page, who " guts " the pack with his wand. Then the " deal " commences. The pageleada the trump card to its plaoe, and the other cards move round to quick music, arranging themselves in four lines, one •on each side of the table. Another bugle oae. and the cards step round, face the players, step off the table, and sort themselves into Each 'slayer in turn now calls out his card, which turns about and moles into the middle of the table to a dance measure, and so to the end of the trick. The win- ning player now calls the winning card, who, accompanied, by the partner's card, takes captive the other two, walking theih off to the corner of the table where the tricks are placed. After all the tricks have been played and score called, at a bugle call the winning tricks form fours and march round the table in column, the beaten tricks, with downcast heads, following. Then the oorner electric "candles" go out and all is over. ' MANY HEARTRENDING SCENES. A DELUGE 0 FLAME. F Apporiamis. trio' orange fieede --.. -- . ...,—,— • CrOWde WittOh the Recovery of the 13irhec.- berg Mine Vidill18. — „-- ill . Agin Gasoline From an Exploded Tank Floods aStreet. Anal Ada *nonId Not Me *wallies Tho inteatines consist of t' parts, the email and the large. intestine extends, in a mod of 0 [one Strikes a Crowded Church In Which a Designing Priest and a Frail Penitent Figure, and Wrecks it. THE MUST TURNS MURDERER. „_______ TWENTY4E'VEN MOUERS PERM'. The Vienna L . - na correspondent of the ondon • • NCtus' describing the 13mhenberg "ester' ea s • " Whenev r body is recovered the - Y • ° a 7 name of the victim passes in a wiliaPer through the crowd of awe-struck children and sobbing women until i.t reaches the wife of the Victim. Often she reads it in the faces of cemPanfens- 04- cry Pr'pelaims that rale has understood, and the crowd opens to allow her to pass. 'While she is weeping over her dead another body. is brought up and the scene, terrible in its . pathos, is repeated. On Wednesday morning some of the entmnbed men, talking through the speaking tube that runs to the mouth •of the Pit, eald that the rafters were burning and that many °- the Miners were still alive. Since Thursday morning no one has been rescued alive. Some ot the men who were first reamed and who have recovered auffieiently to recount their experience say that they • saw cow- panions, holding lamps in their hands and in some cases speaking to them' auddeni7 sink down lifeless. A horriedly•pehoilled. will was found in the pocketbook of one of the victims. Some precipitated themselves into the shafts to escape the stifling smoke. T o brothers were found elae ed in eaoh w P - other's arms. A few of the rescued rescuers were so impressed by the dreadful scenes that they appear to have lost their reason. While punaping air into the Maria mine on Thursday afternoon signals were received showing that there are ten still alive in the pit, although it is impossible to reach them. Many persons are convinced that the Mine was. fired ' by Socialists and declare that a few weeks ago a quantity of wood chips saturated with petroleum was found in the 'nine*" The London Chronicle's Vienna °or- respondent says. it has transpired that there were 700 men below at the time the fire broke out and that it is certain that 500 were lost. It will be two weeks before all the . d f 11 h . bodies are recovered, an u y one month before the shafts can be reconstructed and the mine made safe by replacing the tun- which were destroyed by the fire. In the meantime, the miners will be without work, and Much suffering will result. The fragments of bodies which were intact so far as the limbs are concerned were greatly swollen. Only thirteen of the rescued sur- vived, while twenty-seven of the men who volunteered for the work of rescue were kill d b f 11* t' b ff t d Th e y a ing im ars or su oca e . e ,lo ' 1 800 000 fl ' , Pa II3 , , OTITIS. , . PROBABLY 150 PERSONS KILLED An Oil City, Pa., despatch says : Never b f in tho f 0'1 d tho e ore ehistory o 1 City an e oi, country has there been such disaster, ex. oitement and turmoil as this city is now witnessing. . . " at 11.45 o'clock this morning the city and country for miles around was startled by two explosions happening almost simultaneously. Oil creek was a raging torrent, and in Center street a crowd of people stood watching the muddy waters rollingby. Oilwasperceptiblefloating on the water, and several gentlemen were discussing the danger should the oil catch fire. Hardly were the words uttered, when about 200 yards up the stream a mass of flame was f seen to Shoot heavenward. "Run," yelled a hundred voices, and the people turned like stampeded cattle and started for the, hills. Hardly had they started when a terrific explosion rent the air, and the entire creek and for hundreds of feet on each side seemed one masa of flames and smoke. The panic- stricken crowd shrieked madly in their efforts to escape. Women and children were trampled under foot, and about twenty were severely bruised and had to be picked up by a few of the cooler heads and carried out of harm's way. About half a mile northward from the rat -office, on the Western New York & Pennsylvania Railroad, a tank filled with gasoline was standing on a siding. Some young men noticed that the tank was leak- ing, and, seeing a shifting engine approach, ran up the side of the hill, 'where they turned, and, looking down as the engine passed, witnessed a fearful sight. A masa of flame shot a hundred feet into the air, and the earth seemed to shake with an aw- ful tremor. The engineer and firemen were seen jumpink from the cab, and it is sup- pesed they were burned to death or killed by the force of the explosion. In an instant the flarnes swept madly over the entire upper part of the city, which is flooded by the oily waters of the creek. ass„ --' women, and children who were moving from their houses were caught by the deadly flames, and if not burned to death were drowned in the raging torrent. Seven bodies have been taken from the yang on e floods, and are 1 • the railroad track unrecognized. At this end of the oity Was an wooden bridge which went dowironn fivend minutes after the fire started. Th . e huge iron structure was broken and t avelike ao much kindling wood. ep away From this bridge southward for a quarter of a mile the enthe town is destroyed, and the fi is etomach to the right sale of tt abden. of the on The large in which the other opens throto alit, extends from this Paint I '1, part of the abdomen and then p . and descends on the leftside. 1 colon. From the lowest part of t colon projects a hollow, 1 appendate, a few inehea 1m diameter about the size of a This is known as the vermifoir Fiecal matter, and occasionally find its way into the' appendix to become mflamed. The inflammation is ones tends to form an abscess, w generally into the abdomen, bu• into the liver, the bladder, the veins. When it breaks into th• gives rise to that painful and disease, peritonitib. . Appendicitis is a more °cam than physicians were formerly a many cases that were formerly as colic are now known to have 'Ileitis. It is of aupreme impo the disease should be recognized the main hope of recovery lies 1 operation, and this must be perf or not at all, Without such an operation 1 comes septic, or putrid, and fills with blood -poison. This ohang• takes place by the third day. patients will not consent to at • until the case becomes one of hi and not a few physicians even with them. Dr. Agnew, of New York, sea Monday, and urged an opera* ttending physioian and the 1 ferred to wait. On the follow: being asked to operate, Dr. Agn In another case, a consultini urged an immediate operatice family physician thought the pa. recover from this attack as he from others. The consulting pi plied that without an operatic,: would be dead within three hem in half that time. Pus is at first healthy. By it, nature seems to check, or cure, tion, but if the pus cannot find it BOOR becomes septic, when ni offers any hope, e and even a tion but little. The time fsura or it is before the pus becorces septic. on the second or third day. Ar moval of the appendix will gen the patient. —Youtlea Campania; W:N 011' A RED HOT STOVE. • )malut, Neb., despatch says : Mo- geb., was visited yesterday by a ter- ,oloue. As the huge funeral -shaped ,assed over the Burlington &Idiseouri ,nd round house it seemed to suddenly , the ground, first striking ,the busi- ilding owned by. H. W. Cole, and ,wful power tweed. the metal roof Af the two parts in the rear and g it around brought/ it down with ter- nee in almost its former position he heeds of the oigarmakers who i work there. All escaped except o was severely injured. The ' storm teemed to rise up in the air and drop to the ground about three sway, In a moment the air was ith flying debris and the cry was hat the Congregational Church was 1 and hundreds of children buried in is. The children of the city were Mg for. the children's day at the attic/nal March, and that edifice was to its earnest capacity with ittle folks. Only two min, mfore the • cyclone struck the ; about 200 of the smaller children shed their exercises and gone home. iroh was raised from the foundation had down in. one MASS of ruins, bury- it 60 children, together with the A the church and several teachers. f the children who were leaving rt by Hying timbers, but so far as is ione seriously. With willing handssuits. m timbers were raised the ruins i all were released from their im- ent. Timbers in falling had m arch over the heads of those who the church. Several of the children reriously 'injured that it is feared not live beyond a few hours. Many' jnred children have legs and arum and "still others seem to be hurt y. The list of the injured is about ts many were carried home at once ossible at this hour to get the exact the cyclone struck the church ates earlier at least 950 would have 7ied in the ruins. A TEXAS TOWN VISITED. va estonlTex., despatoh says: Re- atinueto come in of damage and e caused lay Tuesday's•eyolone. At everal were injured, a . . 1 f A Rome cable says: .The niaterm or drama of the Cavalleria RuStunes, type might be culled. by some budding 111armaoni e . t , ,- from the evidence which. has jus ell. heard in a court at Montano during A trio, ending in the sentence a the Prieetdt° 20 pears' penal aervitucle for the reur er of a young woman of that place. The - - victim, Nicoletta Clio by name, w58 married, and her husband had gene to America to gain his fortune, expectingtiti,o return with money enough_ to tniek_e s pretty Nicoletta one of the tines hladie o the little village. kleanwhde _t ie. young grass widow was overwhelmed vith at- tentions from weuld-be loyerh, attracted by her beauty. She was .evidentiv only annoyed by these attentions and.' _,.k'S a life of severe piety, _attending olauroh at every opportunity III order, it was said, to discourage idl the more the_ unwel- come attentions of her ardent admirers. Unfortunately, however, her beauty had a baneful effect Upon the Priest, young Father U0 Luoia,with whom Niedetta's visits to the church brought her into frequent oompan- ionship. Ile Lkuoie, soon fell madly in love with the young woman, who seemed th have flirted heartlessly with him for the. purpose, tlappareny, for thet beter oonoeahng of the fact that she had at last yielded to the im- portunities of a suitor who had succeeded where so many others had felled in winning her heart away from her huaband' memory. De Lucia in the course of time discovered the deoeptien which had been practised upon him and at the ' h fi kl same time became aware of t e o e young. WM8.12'8 sinful liaison. Furious with jealous rage, he traced the lovers to their trysting place, and surprising them claimed in one another's arms he fell upon them furkuslY and attaoked them with a bludgeon. The man contrived to escape alive after a severe beating, but Nicoletta received such serious injuries that she died two days afterward, having in the meantime enounoed the pries as her mur. erer. e d ' t h d Th trial, which has just ended, was the occasion of great excitement among the people of all the country round, and thehers sentence of the accused to a long term of imprisonment was received with cheers from the crowded court -room. The fact that a still more severe sentence was not pro- nouneed is due to the provocation which the woman had given the murderer. . lf LOOKS LIKE MURDER. yOnng Woman's Mysterious Meath in a . Detroit lodging House. A Detroit despatch says: Coroner Keefe was called to 25 Macomb street at noon to- day, to take charge of the body of a WOMall who died under suspicious circumstances. Mrs. Martin lives at this number, and keeps' boarders She told the coroner the dead ' . woman came in a coupe a on o o oe is b t4 '1 kth* morning in company with a man and 'will another woman. The man engaged lodgings for his two companions, and leaving them at the door drove away. At 8.30 this morning one of the women mune out of the bedroom, telling Mrs. Martin that she had to go to work, and that her companion was ill and must not be disturbed before 11 o'clock. At 11.30 Mrs. Martin knocked at the door of the sleeping apart- ment, but received no answer. ter- The door was not locked and en , ing the 'room she found tho only occu- pant lying on tie bed dead. Mrs. lVfartin hurried to Patterson's drug store. A clerk at Patterson's drug store identified the hotly as that of a girl who.oe,me to the store . after ' anied by a Man, and midnight, accompstaked for chi"dmul. ' Both said the drug was to be used by a physician, and it was sold to the man, who gave the name of W. Hillman. • The description given of this man convinces Maa Martin he is the same men that &mom- ' Eanied the two girls to her houlie. Coroner Keefe found the body clad in a night-dress. i'‘' The girl was about 26 years old, and more • • than ordmarilygood-looking ; heroomplexion and dark hair, the latter, especially so. Her weight is about 140 pounds. An inquest will be held. Dr. Dumas, who was called to the house, says the woman died of strangulation, and that the drug not the immediate cause of her death. persons num- tem fatally, and a number of build- re demolished. Blascoe reports a of houses destroyed and at least 20 injured, Six of them fatally. A ld of Mrs. Culienbaoh was thrown hot stove and burned to death, and er and three other children were • fatally injured. The path of the now a desolate waste, all vegeta- • been destroyed. Appeals for mg been ma,de. FOMENTING REVOLUTION. Arrestor aFormer Torontonian and Several Others in Hawaii. A S Fr • an memo despatch says : Advises from Honolul y b cite t was u say grea ex i men causedere on May 21st by the arrest of there twenty persons charged with treason. Those arr Med aremembers ofthe "Hawiian p e • V' " d h f h • roteettve *soma zone an ave or t eir object the overthrow of the exieiting form . re still raging. The fire depart- A SQUAW MURDERED. A Rat Portage Sensation -Was Robbery the Object? A special to the Winnipeg Tribune from Rat Portage says: "Yesterday a man re- ported to the police here that he had dis- covered the dead body of a squaw lying on Tunnel Island, a abort distance from the water. Constable Woods, in company with the informant, went over to the island and found the body of a woman who had evi- dently met foul play at the hands of some arson or unknown Deceased p persons. . came here from Winnipeg last summer, and worked Berne time as cook in a restaur . . ant She was then a widow, although calling herself Miss Mundy, and worked or lived at °lie thne in the Roblin House. Since cora- .s . fife here she was remarried to a man named ment are making heroic efforts to stop the flames, and risking their lives every in- stout, as it is not known at what moment fi '1 any o the mmense oil tanks above here burst and send their burning contents down upon them. The loss of property 'is estimated at from $750,000 to $1,000,000. Up to 5 p. m. from fifteen to twenty bodies have been recovered and identified, and the death list will figure up muohlarger, some placing ib as high as fifty. A later despatch says: Titusville and Oil City, Pa., were visited by cloudbursts yes- terdat• morning. Several oil refineries were t u k b lightning,d the blazing1 a r c y an e .oi floated on the surface of the water, eettin _ _ . _ . g fire to hundreds of houses. At 7 o'clock last night it was estimated that nearly 150 lives were lost in the two towns. , , . SILK STOCK11TGS. — The Love or Fine Hosiery that i Women. We venture to say, says the P1 Times, that if any girl were to e sudden fortune and were asked intended to buy first she would dozen pairs of silk stockings." S and underwear meet with a chord in a woman's heart that mends cannot tench. What it knows. Why silk should be se appreciated than the finest lis which may be equally expensive - - ' lem past finding out, But remains and , Paris shop recognizing this failing, 1 aorta and grades,but neverth so that even moderate purses in VODEEN INVADE A contr. - y Threaten to leave 'Unless the ladles A.re Admitted. x cable says : A trial which a ith highly sensational features has minded here, when a man named vho was charged with the inhuman Df his aged benefactress, Mme. , was convicted of the heinous crime sentenced to penal servitude for ;irl. accomplice who was alai) on e 1 acquitted. Thproceedings ended kht, but the ease was of such eh-. uoterest that the large crowds ad thronged to the court -room to the close. The spectators r unruly, and the trial throughout ked by the most riotous and B conduct. To such a pitch did ,der and tumult arise that the g.s were entirely interrupted, and. had to appeal to the military to erder. The soldiers responded, Linable to quell the disturbance in ee until they twice cleared the very one but those taking part in The jury were also a source of s. to the court officials. They d to leave the place unless their 'e admitted. So Persistent were Leir deniands that the judge was of sheer deaperation, compelled o them, and the women walked of Government by deposing Queen Liliu- h d lkaani anestablishing a Hawaiian re- public. The leaders of the movement are understood to be Volney V. Ashford, the he well-known agitator and participator_ in Iv revolution of 1887 and 1889, and Robt. . Wilcox, whose e area r am an agitatoran *h te'd revolutnist is also well known. Of those arrested George Markham George Max- - ' e well, Alex. Smith, and Lot Lane also took part in the trouble of 1889. The others are Hawaiiana unkno to fame. Col. V. V. Ashford was born at Port Hope, and lived in Toronto for many y , ears being a member of the volunteers there. He became well-known throughout Ontario in connection with the bli t* f th pu ca ion o e Belden atlas. A married sister, Mrs. Dun- resides at Darrell a few miles north of Ch resides a am. e was e =ate at Trim. y. e H d d ' 1 H is friendly with D P 11 d' , e e Dr 0 ar S taMuy 01 Shuter street, Toronto, and a letter they received from him a few days aeo said there s .1. was great excitement in Hawau, but he said no log oeas th" t lead to the belief that there w any prospects of a change. He wee Atter- ney-General there until the recent generalvras elections. Yesterday afternoon Dr. Pollard received a deapatoh which C. W. Ashford, brother of Col. Ashford, had cabled frona Honolulu. It reads: "aVelney and others arrested on the charge of treason. No cause for alarm. Distrust press despatches. Rest assured no to prove charges. • Ostrander, ' t 11" •' who is at workingpresentin eamp a , Rainy River. Th resent e woman reached• here from that place a day or two ago, and is known to have had money in her posses. sion just before she met bele death. The body has been brought here, and an inquestcarriage Will be held to -day." , *4 lif.se How Married People Alight be Happier. Married people would be happier—if home troubles were never told to a neigh- bor. If expenses were proportioned to reeeipte. If they tried to be as agreeable as purchases of the one great lux essentially feminine wo nian. I wonderful satisfaction in knowing is dressed even better underneath aide, and as a very pretty girl r "1 always think of being thrown or having a fit or somel would. necessitate the exposure of . THEY TOOK IIIS WAD. nun's Defaulting resimaster Had a Little Roll of Bills. Winnipeg espa says: etective A W' • d tchD ' O'Leary, of the Dominion Department of ,Tustice, arrived here on Saturday night, • having in charge the French deputy -post- , master of Hall, who is charged with having stolen the contents of a large number of registered letters. The pair came from San - in courtship days. If each would try to be a support and cornforb to the other. If each remembered the other was a human mug, not an ange . eao was asto b • 1 If h kind the other as when they were lovers. If fuel an provisions werein esay d • • laid ' duringth high tide of summer work. If both parties re- membered that they married for worse as we as or e er. men were as t oug i • 11 f b tt If h 1 t ful for their wives as they were for their sweethearts. If there were fewer silk and velvet • street costumes, and more, plain, coats; therefore, whether in gi velvet I mean to have my ver stockings and petticoat ot silk women will advance the argument are cooler for summer, but have n when they are accused of we same weight through the wintei Go where you will and question Ni . • - like you will discover that abo i gowns and bonnets, dainty finery • jewels, a woman genuinely en luxury of wearing silk stockings. PAZAC" THREATENS THE PRIESTS. — Ile Meets Another Disamr ons Defeat -With mutiny or Wavelet. ' A. cable from Caracas, Venezuela says: Palacio is distressed at the reports reaching him from all parts of the country. about the taken by priests in the against the dictatorship, and is threatening the church with retaliation unless the clergy are ordered to stopfighting the Government. In pursuance of this plan the Dictator sent word to the archbishop that if the priests continued to aide with the revolutionists there would be a dissolution of Church and State. Serious complications are likely , to ow out of this affair. The Catholi • c pope: f r . . . • .Not ation is greatly excited over it. Fears are entertained that if the archbishop refuses to comply with Palacio's demend the latter will imprison bim. To prevent this the Catholics are arming themselves. A mutiny took place a few days ago among the Government soldiers under General Arras, at Mesida. Forty men were killed before the mutiny was suppressed. Francisco, where the deputy -postmaster was extradited. When the prisoner arrived at the jail here he was searched by Gover- mei. Lawler's assistants,. and handed over a few cents. He contended they were all he had. Upon dose examination a pad of .somethhe- g was felt concealed at his waist. It was found to contain $762, which , is perhaps, part of the money extracted from letters. He was quite indignant, and re- tidy house dresses. If there were fewer " please darlings " in public and more common manners in private. If masculine bills for Havanas and feminine ditto far rare lace were turned into the general fund until such tines as they could be incurred without risk. If men would remember that a woman cannot be always smiling who has to cook the dinner, answer the door -bell half -a -dozen times, .. His Falling Served. Him "Miranda has accepted the yo who stutters so much." ' " Yes ; it was her tender hearts her to do it." . "How is that?" "When he addressed her in b: cents she couldn't resist him." atly into the court room. Some whohad been called as wit- at,part ehaved in a very indecorous and ' manner.. They indulged in a invectives and called one another thievesCa,uvin appeared to disorder hugely, and during some lest scenes he laughed wildly and. disturbers to renewed efforts. NO DIVORCE FOR BENNETT. The Preamble of the Bill not Proven and it is Thrown Out. An Ottawa destch s- The Divorce paeayonsidere i. comm-tt,e of the et d ' nate cester da the Bill to the ref of RobertBe ett r _ re i . . In ' h Y 1 k ote eeper, of Georgetown, in the county of Halton, who sought divorce from his marked that they had no business to search him, but he was informed differently. The detective and his man are now on their way ' • 0 east, going to Ottawa. and get rid of a neighbor who has dropped in, tend a sick baby, tie up the cut finger ot a 2 year-old, tie up the head of is 63, ldand 8 ldwl - ear -o on skates, an get an 8 -year-old ready for school, to nothing About out DrSmith. says of gout that na I •11' t f ' ' 'produce i , or it is rare in 1 all wines will produce it, for i T MG OUT THE DEAD, of Life , at sha proforma Boa ;treater Than Pa-pected. . Timm cables give the following) the Bohemian mine disaster : The e from the scene of the disaster ;hat the loss of life is much larger it first reported. After investiga- eported that the list reaches the ' large number of 200. At last 5 dead bodies, burned' and black- , terrible manner, had been re- rom the mine, and 25 of the re rescued from the death-tra • p in admit, condition, the unfortunate shockingly burned and crushed. lured have been removed to hose are receiving the best medical- • . wife, alleguig adultery as the ground for the application The committee decided to throw out the 'Bill for the reason that the I preamble was not proven. The evidence of the one witness who was examined was not judged satisfactory and conclusive. A letter was filed before the commiteee onMrs. behalf of Mrs. Bennett, which ib was , declared was written by Bennett to John tive in Toronto in - Hodgins, private detee , , titillating him how to lay a trap for Mrs. Bennett and surprise her in company with a man in order to secure against her the evidence necessary for divorce. Hodgius declares that he never received the letter. It seems to have been intercepted in someLivingston manner. The committee's report puts an end to the possibility of Bennett proeuring a divorce. . UNHAPPY HONDURAS. Insurgents Carry en a Desultory inrest say of sweep' ing, cleaning, dusting, etc. A. woman with all this to contend veith may claim it as a privilege to look and feel a little tired in Spain and Italy. Not all ma will produce it, for it is rare in Vie mania. Warfare en the People. ' A New York despatch says: The latest .who, news from Honduras shows that in the ' • battle beviveen Gen. Bonilla and the Gov- . ernment, troops about 100 persons were killed Gen. Bonilla sometimes, and a word of sympathy would not be too much to ex eot from the man P during the honeymoon, would not (says an exceange) let her deny as much as a sunshade , Pru Ishocked • yn— was to luss Mr. Waite! Miss Pru3rn—I'n prised, mamma ; it was very eleotr: MESE RAINY EMMA. The owl took his hat and his gloves c marrETTE,s tATTLE clam . She wants a Pot of DloneY Front a BMW° Newspaper. , A Ballo despatch says: An interestingBat libel suit is booked for trial in the Superior court, Judge Hatch presiding, to -morrow. It is the case of Mre. Juliette C. Smith against George E. Matthews and Charles E.army Austin, proprietors of the Express. Early year the Express published a despatah into stating that Mrs. Smith had eloped from with a young swell of that city. The story was untrue, and after suit was ' ie begun the Express published a complete re- IVIrs. Smith wants $25,009 dam, and Mr. Lyman M. Baker is her at. here. The fair Plaintiff is the wife Me. John C. Smith, of the shoe mane. firm of Cooper a& Smith. It is charge that none of the Toronto papers pub- outbreak. the story of the elopement the dee- , . , , • being sent out by special cortes- . suicide or wounded. retired from Pr to Cortez to Livingston after scour- ing all the arms and ammunition which bud been stored in the custom house. While the insurgents were inGen. Bonilla and four of his officers were cap- tined by the Government troops and put m prison here. Two of the officers died from sides fever. The of Bonilla retreated to the f rests where the remain makingsallies -° , y , adjoining towers seizing guns and am- in munition wherever found. I3onilla was is expelled from Hunduras aome tune ago, Helevel vast, a nephew p hew of a defeated candidate for the Presidency. Bona -Penn had a festival yesterday in honor of the anniversary of the coronation of Emperor Francis Joseph as King of Hun- gary, which took place .25 years ago. We are too far away to hear much of the twin cities, Buda and Pesth, lying on opposite of the Danube, which forty years ago had hardly 100 0' containe d , 00 people, but now half a in" lionfibuildings il . Some of the nest the world are in Buda-Pesth: The city much like Chicago, being the centre of a agriculturalcountry , which ours its ha ts • televators rves into he and the mills of the capital. The railways of Hun- His evveetheart for to see, ' 'When his daddy asked him where he ' '• On a definite object I'm ntent, i To wit, to woo," said he ; " To wit, to wit, to wool" he scarce had stepped outside. the When ho could not fall to see - That the sky with clouds was all o'era 1' llpjain wee failingSiarslana fast, .•': oo wet LO WOO, sam ne, Too wet, too wet to wool ' —In a multitude of bieseles o„fet„. " J Th ' h b S The sout - ound ante, Fe p . train which left Wichita E , ,r, . ., e, 0.4a p. in. ,yesterday was he b 9.45 end nursing possible. A tarp persons have voleateered thew aid in the work of relieving the the rescued miners. It has been most of the victims, including who lost their lives while bravely the work of rescue, died of suf- sing overcome by the fetal gases. vaded the whole mine. It is 'those who made an investigation 1 that the fire was caused b the s of a miner who carried A naked one of the chambers, Anothertents hat the fire was of i d' iicen iary wee _crowds of excited persale, the families of the unfortunate 70 pressing closely about the ,o tho differehb ahead. The most stones take place when the I otherwise disfigured bodies , ate the surface, and recognized b i weeping crowd as the remitiars me Who met death in the fiery MILITARY INSUBORDINATION. — • I 'skill F Ill ObJ t t Si last n en us ers ec o eeping on the Wet Ground. •Toronto • A Dublin cable says : Great exmtement prevailed last nightin Lifford, County Done- gal, arising from the insubordination shown traction. by the Fifth Battalion (Donegal militia) of ages, the Royal Inniskillen Fusiliers. The men, torney who . are performing a series of mexceuvres, of were ordered to pass the night in facturing which had been erected in a field. said These orders the troops ,refused to obey, y fished • . . ., declaring the ground was wet, rendering ib patch dangerous to sleep under canvas, and that pondente. the tents were uninhabitable. The officers were highly disconcerted by thierefusal of the men to obey orders, but they had 110 equal war to enforce obedience. They argued . with the men and made threats, but the burglar militiamen remained firm in their detertni- caught nation not to occupy the tents. The offieera Were finally obliged to billet the men incharters houses' in gary Santa De Cabon, a young Mexican woman, who claims to be endowed with divine reaping power, has been banished from Mexico on a process of inciting the recent ..Mayo Indian dliege , • . city 1. • fine Frederick Horning. a young man lying with his parents at, Woodstockl 'c,ommitted pavements . . a on Saturday evening by taking a of Strychnine. There ie no ex lana- slaughter of the act. pita! TUE COTTAGE BY MR SEA. of been writt ' belongs on up in story, it s been sung in, numbers Sweet; mumema . has captivated thousands with ite symmetry its complete-, large a dream from the Atlantic it has risen fair • and free, . With its beauty -so romantio-hae "The got- equipment tagohy the Sea." • dity, it's like a droam-a vision -though the ownere poetsslug it go • .. , . eom nught have been Elysian half a hundred years ago ; something now Iwo pun of business; when that cottage people yonshall seek, . ilnd the sign up : "Boarders -Twenty dollare by tho week!" 000i ss . . --at le statea by the attendants at the idle 1 i '1 d th ' og ca gap ens et ne ape will sleep on h , is bath as adult man often do es• he —Tho largest farna in the world is in found tai i It • 100 b as' '1 a 0. 0 aba• Is Y 0 tna es an acres. It coat, $50,006 hail ... belong to. the Government, which manufactures not only locomotives, but and threshing nutchines. The roller of flour making, and the mid- purifier came from Buda-Pesth. The has many parks adorned by statues ; boulevards ; wooden,.stone and asphalt' ; a town council of 400 members; filtered water supply • a great municipal ' -house ; magnificent public hos- ; good sewerage; free baths : Much the vacant land in and about the city • • to the municipality ; will have a I 1 t' l'h•plant b e ec no ag ting in 18 5 ; trarirway system pays street rentals and lath taxes, and at the expiration of existing • - , • the street railway lines and theft' . will become the property of the rebels without indeinnity to the private Te d b• .1 b • e e uca ion ' . a ala ena Is verY to lete Amer' a 1 till I • 6 el lea ean •ft P . • . Is . „ earn sehteneed from Europe, tholigh many do not like to ack owl- dad it - ° e - - - ' hunting —The Duke of Portland hap given $300,- Won on the turt,, to ehatitiol, through 1.. . . itffitience 0 ble W. Ago A man never knows what he eat/ de until from • h " • • • triee, and then e, is often sorty that he away. Mit - Hon. A. W. Harvey, of Newfdtindland, Beetle gone to Spain to negotiate a treater hundred , a o dock by mash ed at the stock yards near the of Redili , in Chrotestr c • e k ' .ip. T was fi Roagge and the engineer and taken • prisoners. The robbers then the express car, broke open the 2 secured ite contents. The amount c 's said to be S10 000 1 - , • Mr. 0 F Johnson has been a ' ' ' 1 superintendent of the Canadian div the Michigan Central Railway, to Mr. J. B. Morford. . The North Chiba D il N " ma" hasten the overthrow of the Pa la Ad ira1 Shen will take tour ‚with I," t th war w un o e thene of ant to -operate with the land forces. who were captured were .dect th t T -1 d '11 h on e lip . wo ea era wi e ec the capital dity, where they , to die a lingering death. ' s ome _Indians a few days ago for buffalo bones near MI Aerie., earee acmes the bones c Willie itleMillan who was loot tine in the winter While attempting . his home to a neighbor's, eigh . The • thaen 6 11. • • • , e 1 ti "°w' in (183"la' of a disastroes re yesterday houses wore fleette-ded Al -,1 t , s dose —Secretes saki I "Woman once Mime ton to man becomes hie superior."• —" I am at your service ma'am," as the .t It's said when the lady of the house him stealing her silver. It MY mat wrrn. Like She puts her arm around my neck; A slave to beauty's Plot. • I put my hand 'Made my vest • And give her all I've gob. Hut ea Tyt•hus fever has broken out in the r- - • -- . it ofthe garrison at Gineaen, rruetna troops have bean removed from tho 1)3. But quarters arid are partly encamped in , , to You'll fields and peably billeted on peva iti the surrounding villages. .11 fish are good brain food because they zoo ' . 11- I ' Spa hb to be good to In So 90 8. wa aug wills. flat —It is timid that in some motions of L , , , . c. . ., _4. , corn pianting le Doing done In arrow , trileltoe8,1,600,000 with all her 400,000,000 people, rty miles of railrottd. "Afford-. The facts of the case vsill be laid before the hailita a tli 1' ry u ort lee' t rarrrstlota. led all his lifetime in a very tedient thed through human wisdom till r Was thin and nrar. h daY he finds hinneelf u o ne ua g the temations that Ail the Sante to Illni. racks $e ( 4. e .3A I t's .. e at o•ov p. in)—Do you mind waiting The until I put on my gloves? fected He --Not at all. 1 d ' ' ' ' on t care much for the e eatre any way. houses his little chats ar. la not always eloquent but ii . , people hang on his *Orli t bag appeared in Many Nina* 4 . . In basebali, itoh " 6' 1 a p m une Wil save go nine' ' aearpon —Mil t glorious jume No ' ..., maim,: . jfrhit may &seem vitt utter_ ors saisassasasssasassa,as e Mien thab country and bin colony. sons were burned to death. Substances ved, ro prineirol Tho small oil, from the loveer pare testine, into 11 a narrow o the upper. OTOSOSS Over is called the e asceedieg 'orm-shaped g, with a. lead pencil. appendix. a seed, may and cause it. dicitis. It hide breaks sometimes cheat or the abdomen it dangerous on disease ware of, for looked upon been appen- rtance that early, since n a surgical tined early he pus be - the system in the pus Yet many operation e or death, sympathize a ease on n, but the amily pre. ng Friday, ew refused. physician , but the lent would had doue ysidan re - Li man s. He died formation Manama - free vent, o medicine ical opera - operation generally early re- erally save s Born in iladelphia me into a what she reply, "A ilk hosiery responsive even dia,- is no one far more le thread, is a prob- the fact dealers, eep all eless can revel ury of an here is a• that one than out- emarked out of a hing that my petti- ghitm or t, corset, " Some that they othing to tiring the months-. hom you e pretty and even joys the ung man that led oken ac - 11 drinks, cotland. t is rare t liq,uors nna and see you net sur- e. ne nighb. ent, door. at„ there is ttesenger • at Id up" robbers teflon e train fireman entered afe, and btaixied pointed Mon of succeed :ys : To iensban. rrien-ef. on and eventy pitated, atoned ill be while rieton,, f little e 3701118 o walk, as the . . One• wo per-