HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1893-12-7, Page 215
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MONTREAL' SHAKEN
' • ..: ' • - e . - 6
Quebeo. to the wellborn part of OntarlIn lell
, , ,r 'than th t .hi
even more *ever. One , . , Is ele 9'
vember 4013, 1877. At Menteeid there wets
only one disetinet she* pre!** el by the
meal tunibling WON entittniffi'MtntlY, Ware
t be dieting:0 telt and 'to Oahe Whs.
:ow. . Y ' • ' • 'objects
. eashee. and other 100In
. ,
entulingthens to vibrate foe WSW. Seciondit
It seemed to he limited to the area 6190g
the Aim. St. Irewrenee, extending froin
near Three Rivera on the erne. to Elamite**
on, the waffle in a direation treneverae to the
Sb. Lastragoo, extending- from Obliawn to
the southern Peet of New Nogitsrlit • On
Au** 21st, 187% there wise n *hook which
was felt through Lower end Upper ()amide.
Another eaetlepanke was experienced on
Novernber 2913, 1880, and wait -felt at Qaa.
heg and various plums. on the Lower Bb.
Imwreuoe oT
n slight bliand aleo t Ottawa. here wen eek in April, 1880. Olt My 31st.
1880, thete was another. Thie Waa an•
tanueuel period of the year, end tt wee felt
thretnont the Province of Quebec.
In 1882 an esvethquake Wool impart.
muted in the Lower Provinces, and
in Marten 1885, a shook was felt throngherne
the both:lee of Quebec. In April of the
, ignamittv.yromarenetn,e was fet ab Llin.rray By and
Juno,1887 Mill another
was felt en the lower St, WrSuee and a
k It feature
Qualm°. Earthqua es were ma _e aep
learn then four during
111 1888, there hetng ne h k
that year. On Jaunery 1111 the s cc Wee
bit throe hem) °Liebe° and °memo, in
e9 - . ,
February there was a very slight etecee le
July another, and still another in November
of the same year. !the Met Amok wee ex-
Perienced at about t .
hree ontleolt in the
morning 01 '8ePtereher 26.)ht 1890.at
A HAMILTON MAN'S DEATH,
' • ' ' •
hurried to .thelopper Windows ler Om the
*wt. sight sted were hinainated Wlidi teeter,
Throtigh the lest Window teWerd the river
--the il000nd beyond Mon -they could
500 a' Man iireFla8, bla le- .9" .7ehreugh III!
tlii ir s eke me to ou tan lours towage!
i tehetew-ihriew- .t . Re Vi-eiegebed, the whinew ,,„,,
, and laid Oats arM sioress it, hot * merciful
.
. p,avtd.... rint .sherb Ina oefferings. He
. .
leaned hie head against ir.be ismer edge of
the window for 6 MOW* likft Me in
Then 4 at bil ow of ileum
wen. . I •
ailleinthed agelerildt hhillar efreathhing hiimihin• tint
I newer folds ma t at woman) is isp r wou
,
ettePeWenalethh"isnfibfc' ttt: 6.411„4"'„,,:lif:vrelliWV.au:
the floor. IN4r n time the wirtdoW was 01‘
floured with fiensee, but later, when the
reef ellowed them to Weep away before
the wet wind, they meld see the inanimate
1b.ody blazing where it len. . ,
me. jeneenaa In Nammou.
Sizteen or eighteett yearn aim Bred. Dine
eleo wee me be ine wee men*, , ymeg
Mos In Ilizicaliton. He vere then maanineed
le ge e
ira tl o ral offices of the old Ginat West.
.
ern Railwaymen -sere he was a great fayorate.
irtl wont to London from here, an bon.,
Menden te Detroit. Me wife was formerly
Mies Minnie Turner, who at one time ltRvol
here where tahe rnet Mr. Dunning.
f '
!soother and 'deter lived at that time in But-
lington and are mill there Mis4 Duening
b , , , . .
keepe a miliinery store in the heart of the
vill o and ber mother lihes with hoe. M.
4! , •
Dunning le a weman of ebene 80 years, and
tisheablupnrgt's.sent vt" ill wial thal"illnablen (if
The deceaaed had no famil ' bile lived
with his wile N. 10 Likostie Menet.
They "t:edon °el:Pt:tee'
Mira Dunning le Inert -broken, and her grief
is pitifowl.e"Mar, Ditaupnpnyi4;""h"at:
habit ef tekirig hie noon -dam Meal down
own, but he decided to change end on
Thursclay for the first time in months he
took dinner at home. He said it was lone-
some °ening by himself down town and
' .
he vvas in good *miens when he finelly
no the haw, unconecieudy to go to his
namb.
.
,
GITAG 1
,
,
0
ef
Was
pee
e ,
was theepiritual
of
to
that
following
political
an a°14
throat
strength
becoming
and,
hrunningttokaboll;
or rule.
wee nein
131°
in
Garfield
and
instead
the
by the
atd
to
I
him
te think
purposes
hie
Blaine
end of
He will
He mealea
into
be President.
may ;
short
die the
tompesb,
he will
-my
enter
theology.
had embodied
under
things,
must go.
,
Mankind..
,
.
it."
it?
Son,
won
t
.
• .
n,
mune
President
give
etrenee
Garfield.
e
my
as
and
innocent
guilty
not
miry
die
forever,
;
Mattoon
Blaine,
magne.
-veil'
victim
broken,
inepira-
special
•
i ,
,
• ,
s
$at, orosidp.:,8
h t,
" e
the
is,
condi
e
but) w
was a
or
a
with-
..nee
him
13°N°
LAW
the
wile
that
rani,
of
my
be
and •
killed'
and
and
is the
stop
babe
hie
and
ewe
open
To
coverer
or
gentlemen
have•no
gilded
neetiout,
the
corrective,
' They're
iind
tion
•Headgehe,
and
are
s
a
-
U.
I
and
• Oniteau
matte
approval
indeed
cleated
which
aoteristio,
hags.
PRESIDENT
me.
Bradley
corpus.
seem
Before
long
Rev.
my
entitled
wait
views
I
so the
1flettll
I
m Y
ther
willing
make
nation.
I
great
meaT;,,,tuvrigearVeattaeyt-ilaeurrodelitcllt3tafilioseti,
newest:eery.
I
owe,
In
" God's
attention.
God.
cordially,
United
19tb,
,
•I
the
I informed
particularly
was
eccordanoe
President
was
those
was
is all
"10e
branded
felon's
fool,
end
relined
He
persuading
t nab
bing
leaved
merciful
I mat
in its
corridor
child
motheMe
rude
a murmur,
breath
fanner
If yen
ing upen
easily
deep."
Hare
Journal":
bona"
now
bright
everlasting
been seen
London,
with the
possibly
The
newapaper
_...._--...
,106,k
.
the.
afterwate
all
prevented,
e
•How aid. °lariat hno.W
Ile wee citelet maul
• 130,1rnew itfkee tile feet ef His existent*
wiltWaed sinus were against fibs.
ne hAd HO money, and no Wends.
He was hated, eespieed and
Winalltecrucilied, art a vile impostor,
yob Ho neyer denied fite dimnite,
This Made the Jews. hen%
11":Ity0Phralthet°ertnaclikd MI ait.r.o ono." .
Tliey killed Rim and went below
Chriat ebove, •
. .
Because the ALmighty
Wes leaching Him.
Christ's egotism was stupendous,
Hie talk was, I„ i, 1,
Me, Me, me, Ma .,
All Goinsmen are terrible egetistie,
It meet be so, front thiir nutiaton.
They have ideas, othere terve not;
They talk and preach,
And tell what, get at things they win dos
And that makes them egotiets,
• e
Mit time rightenthat.
may put your eody in the groun.
d
That ends their power t '
Your name and work will
Thunder down the ages,
And God will recnon with them n
Christ came .
" Satan also."
"When I would do good,
Evil is I resent a itli me."
This shows how this world is run. •
It is run
On the Good -Devil -Man combination!
God has a Devil to fight,
So has mat I
All the evil in this world
Comes from the Devil,
Every move .
God makes is modified, somewhat,
By the Devil,
These two forces strike,
And the reminds often difilarent
From what the Ahni hty intender-
no long as man ira a f r co agent,
Ill cannot be otherwise, .
Man is possessed by
Good and Evil.
If be is Christ'e seed,
Good predominates,
And he lands in Heaven
If he belongs,
, To the Devil's seed
He goes below.
The Judgment will fix
Every man's place;
Whether he go above,
Or below.
To one or other all men
Must; surely go!
CrtanLES G.urrzafr..•
S. Jail June 14th, 1882.
. .
walked home from this interview a very
and sorely perplexed man.
..
EFFORTs To savn TEM atunDEREIL
bed re and a a to be b-
p_ p 13, per en
d t o the President, and an it met the ,
of Mr. Reed, one of his aittrneye,
it wee written at his euggestion, he
me to preeent it to tile Peeaidenn,
I 'meted to do. The paper is char -
but leas so Ihan most of hia writ.
Here it ie :
Annum; '
Reed has just informed ,ree that Justice
has denied my application for a habeas
I am somewhat surprised, as it would
to bo contrary to law.
Mr. Reed came I had Just finished a
talk with our mutual and very dear friend,
Dr. Hicks. I desire him to express to you,
views and feelings as to my position. I am .
00 11 full pardon. but I am willing to
for the public to be educated up to my
and
I d_ auffer in bonds as a patriot.feelinge in -the matter. In the
have concluded to acquiesce in Mr. Read'ssuggestion that you respite mei until Jiinuary,
case can be heatel by the Supreme Court
bench. _ , _ i _
understand public opinion s changing inii
favoy, and by January it may he still fuer
enlightened as to my inspiration. I ant
to die for my inspiration, but it win
a terrible reckoning for you and thisThe
made you and saved the American ;people
trouble, and' the least ) on oan do is to let
i
,
am God a man in this matter. Tha
.
Saturday's Star 1 published a peens n
ways," to which I call your criti al
Ms true, every word, so help me
With great respect, very sincerely a,ad
:
CEARLEs GurrEAD.
States Jail, Washington, D. C., Jane
1882. .
' 'THE PRISONER ASLEEP.
.
found a haggard lane waitin,g for me in
•
gloomy cell on the 21st id June.
him of all that; I knew, and
of the appeal that bad been or
about to be mode to the President in
with hie own note-whieh the
pomeased-but that the appeal
based on the ground of hisanity by
who presented it. For same burns he
lost in thou811.11, and then said, " That.
wrong, although they Mean well."
is hard enouge," he said, " to he.
aenloo mei to 10subjected to the
fate, but it le worse to be declared ei.
all:math: 1 ' It was an insult to God •
a humilietion that he resented and;
to submit roe."
coneented after eeme opposition, andi.
him M Immesh 114mi:telt on kis cob,
beside him, put my howl on he throb -
temple, and in a few memento Twee re -
e
te tinmy dietracted charge In the
arms of sleep.
there a 34:44,g Lane studying that liana .
quiet repose, wkitle the guard in the
ermined hie month and wondered. A
could net rest more peanefully - on itie
bosom than he seemed to On that
'
oat in the murderer's cell, white nee
not a twitch, nee an audible
gave sign that he was not aaleatik
1 '
did not know that; you were look-
the slayer of Garfield yen -might
say : "So, he giveth hts ' beloved
, . •
Ifto EialTudke Mao Terror Inlo
, . . ,
the Hearts of the People.
rs se n t 1 n n et ri nib
lall et I 0 lie r us From a to
me , . 4
s
' Story Window. .
41061••••••=0.1000
Th , , , n i
e ASSMIll s , rroputoy
Career and End.
a __..,,--
,
HIS STRANGE THEOLOGY
,
ALARMING SCENE IN COURT0
..:t,-.
DAsnED To PIECES BELOW
e
—.-.-.
-----....
1118:rotarr soriatb*caellt I; jeal:47-2hur
4,10 " s a int
311414 e nee -
Mtn**. •
Rm. W. W. Hides, who
Adviser of Guiteau, the assassin
Garfield, pas retasetly confrontedMen
"wrY " ni" r°,31"4"'24/ with
ectenceldraohnomof thheninziriyty; The
Ordlorwily. said Gunman,
t -
!lett" Nve" 1'1(4 j4"14 IMQh
vjel ,?ase ait d_d. ae'. 0...
"Got Tun, n ine in u Unn °
wan it ease of yeur mgind
than %embody eke.
'goad sort of fellow, but without
,
timid temper% He was in face
mere puppet in Blaine's heeds,
oetulbatgr atiditingAlowileatutaatnierneloYn
detester. Blaine was the tilephistenphetnee,
and lee intention was to rum
did nob care for Garfield, ut
1" nie own end°. Gad Permitlaed
all this, and there was fastened
the neoessity of Garfieldei removal
one way ant."
If On krieW that Mire;
, . . y
a Triply te puppet in Blaina'a hands,
'
Mr. Bleine was oologeetia8 tredeen
wby did you not remove Blaine
,. fl id ? Wiay did you select
"."--dt-
viotim for removed and peas
, - . „
moptlet ,
°phew!' 1
" I obeyed Godes inspiration
own motive. But reason enough
found in the fact; that
" First-Garfleld was surely
Mai e b d
n w°11n° ,; an,
" Seeond-In tailing Garfield
Blaine's power and dethroned
•
and yet permitted him to live,
to see the frustratien of hie
to be despised by all teen for
which I mamas/red. / tell you
deadeet man in the world th-day.
A STARTLING PROPHECY.
"1 will picture to you the
Hie ambition is unbounded.
at nothing to gain hie ends.
President, and will fool his perm'
• please. But be will never
Scheme ae he will, platins he
bin his grendeet, he will fall
short it may bo -but he will
of hie own ambition, 13reken,
broken, like the reed in the
will never be Preeident. And
all to me -to my inspiration
tion -do you hear? My inspiration.
Guttman insisted that I shelled
the systematio otudy of hie
make it mere interesting he
his views in a poem, written
inspiration. Here it bo:
isEAvEN AND NELTo
Almighty created all
Save his great personal antagonist.
The Devil, or evil One.
The life of these
Invissible persons '
Never began, and
Never will end.
Tide makes Heaven and Hell.
The Ahnighty had power
• To create this Universe
But had no power
Or disposition
To create the Devil.
Ordinary Theology teaches
Re created the Devil,
I say this is a libel on the Almighty.
Why should He create evil?
This world was created
To enable the Almighty
And the Devil
To lest their strength
In the parson of Jesus Christ,
They fought it out.
The Almighty and Christ triumptiedl
They overcame the Devil.
Man by -tai h in Christ
Can do the same.
To Heaven or Hell, all men
The HIM to Heaven is.
God, Christ, Man !
, To Hell.
' The Devil and.man .
Most people go M Hell,
" The wiled hem
In the Wicked One."
Narrow is the way toile/won.
Few find it.
In Heaven
•God rules.
In Hell,
The Devil!
In this world.
Sometimes God rules
' °
the Demi!
Six thousand years
Or more
God and the Devil
Have propagated
Their kind.
God created Adam and Eve,
Satan came,
Eve fell,
Adam, too 1
And thero came trouble to
Devils were propagated!
Man got so wicked.
The Almighty carried the day.
He gave man life,
The flood came,
Man etarted again,
But no better!
So Men and Devils
Have prepagated their kind,
From Noah's time
To this,
Nearly two thousand years ago,
The Almighty. undismayed,
sent His only Son
To atone for man's wickedness.
Fools and devils
: This Son crucified.
Why was Christ crucified?
Sonic say: i
"The Divine economy required
1 • ' •
say. .
God had no power to prevent
Man had power to kill God's
They did it,
And paid well for it!
God always makes men pay
If they harin His man.
The Almighty bad poWer
To raise "Jesus of Nazareth,"
And Re did it1
Without Christ's Resurreetion
Where would all dead men be
To -day? .. ' '
Destroy the Devil,
And this world
Would be a paradise.
It is a splendid place;
.Aiwway.
Devil and all !
Bat the Devil cannot be destroyede
God cannot do it.
Man cannot do it. .
0 Jog along!
-oemere-7t,e-waneen, ,
Most toltell,
And 'that's the 'end Of Man i
The Alinighty is infinitely
Pure, and Wise, and Goode
Ifo. is almost oninipotonto
But not quite 1 •
He Wou,ld be, ent..r,e-ly. Omi.pOten
Were ii not for the anost
eimining ane flower
Of His unmeared Antagonise
The Devil, or Evil One. •
So it is, '
And stioh le man's lit&
I anewee:
In the grasp of the Devie,
That 18, ill hell!
Ev se with God's wer •
Alia ellii , j'a° '
et eminence;
- Matm arethere nett ,
Theydid tiOt
BetliVite hi Chrid
.- ' Aild we, ' ,,
---...--,--
ideederet Jury. Officers and. Pr/toners Flee
for Vide Ievett-Sebool Children Musk
iskte the ssreess—what Caused the
stteeet
quake -3Former Qua
Many of the tall beildings on Sin Jahlee
etreet andin the central pert of the city
iliook violently and their ocioupante in many
eases rushed to the streets hatleee and coat.
tea in greet alarm.
Cornwell reports that the 'mewing ee the
ground there asII.55 was pleinly -visible.
In Montreal people in the Beard of
med
Meade and C Arn'Exchange were so alaroccurred.
over the rocking ef the bnililing that they
&eared out on the streets, In the narrow
etteets,likeSt.FrencoleXeviermeoplereehed
out, looking up fearfully. as though exPeott
Ing the atone wenn to fall on thetas.
It was the Worst ehakiog up Montreal has
End for many a day.
In the Public Schools the onuciren
were paniti-steloken, and atavapeded
be the atroet along with their teachers and
masters. . The crockery in the Mora and
mateurants got badly rattled, and made
fatal movements to the floor, and in aome
easels windswe were oraoked. Rumors were
rife that the gas works had blown up ; that
the Nelson monument, had been blown into
the cloud,* ; that there had been a terrific)
explosion somewhere. People gunned
vaguely that the shook was an earthquake,
but nobedy could be sure, and everybod9
waited for further developments. Very
mon the news poured into newspaper effioae
trem all parte of the city and varietts parte
it the Previte:1e and adjoining States. Frem
all over the oity reporte ran much the same.
The earth quaked, buildings sheok, win.
lowe creaked, crockery was smathed and
tables and chain moved. People were
ciente-thicken.
In the City Hall the employees rushed
azi of their officies into tbe corridors with
mitsternation on their countenance& leas.
den walls &took, big iron safes rooked, and
averythhig in the building took upon itself
snore em less the appearance of a ship 013 880.
an tbe Central Peirce Station the protectors
A the paten° from violence found themeelves
itterly inoapahle of grappling with the
uilewful outbreak, and retreated in any-
thing bub a inittiterly or greceful manner.
Mere were aleo exciting scenes in the chill
touris and public tams, which were soon
tumbled of their contents. '
0
• ROARED THE
One of the meet thrillieg scenes canoed COURT.
m he shook was witnessed at the Court
if Queen'e Bench, which was in session at
he time. The windows of the court room
hook end retitled as ff they would break
ato thousands of pieces. The mem
nee iron posts trembled like reeds,
he floor ehook ae though the strain upon
13 was too heavy to bear. So great was the
Lein made by the shaking thee the witness
n the stand could not be heard speaking.
rugs pieces of falling plarreer added to the
lin and ten or ef the scene. A stampede
ras the mule. Hie Honer Judge Wurtele,
rho was presiding, sprang from hie seal; and
an for emety InSo hie privets reom '- the
Ley, regardless ef the duty they had been
worn to perform made madly for the door,
saving their hat; and coats behind them.
Me police, witnesses, °Moore of the Crown,very
isioyeril, reporters, in feet, eve and all, ran
sr dear Ida to escape the horrible fate
rhioh they now felt threatened them. The
eliceman in charge of a prbener named
L'elelt, who is charged with embezzling a
awe sum of money, ran away, leaving his
barge to take cone of himself. He did eo,
ad was fund when the panto wa°
trer standing on Notre Dame street In a
azed condition. The anxiety of the orewd
s reach the doer would have been amusingutigment.
ed the threatened danger been less dread-
ib. Heavy benches were evereureed me
rough they hed been Made of matohwoodthey
retread of solid os..k. 'Two men gob hops.
lately mixed up with the overturned
inches; one man waa clearing away with
tree overeoats, none of which were his
rem while anther frugal individual in his
trror had grabbed two hats which were
vo or three diva too small for him. One
ell -known Judge, in his haste to get out
' one ef the lower courte, gob a pretty baA
n. . High Coestab e Bissonnette, who was
L the Court of Queen's Banoin, kept hisSometimes,'
•eeence of mind and begged the crowd nob
, rueh for the doors, whioh, however, were
on jammed with a mass of struggling
imanity.,
A GENERAL ALARM
The streets were soon crowded with nee.
e issuing from every shop, °throe and pub-
i department. Everyone had the same
testion to put: " Whet la it 2" and no-
sly seemed to have a ready reply. At till('
oment the ' salvage waggon, anaweeing a
a Alamo, rushed down Notre Dame street,
A this at once gave rise to a rumor that a
made explosion had taken place at the
a worke. Then oanse another reperb that
e powder megenine on So. Helen's Island
d explo&d, and suite a number of people
shad down to the wharves to see for
emselves. A report Was edso circulated
at a tuccessful attempt at blowing up
olsones monument had jueb taken place.
1 these and other similar rumors were
m abandoned, hettrever, when the newe
an outside confirmed the faot thab the
y hed simply had its there of an earth.
aka shook felt all over the Province and
the adjoining States. The shock was felt
exactly thirteen minutes -to 12, and the of
70quake appeared to be northeaet and
ithwest. Fortunately, no serious acme. caught.
ste resulted,
sIR WILLIAM' DAWSON'S OPINION.
tie William Dawson, one of the greatest
ieg authorities on geological subjeots, ing
an asked to.dey hi opinion of the earth- berry
Ike, said it wen ne doubt the result oi a
dement or giv ne-wey ba the rocket along whnh
junntion of the Laurentian and Sllutiart sverk.
nations. Frth
om what he can judge, e took
meet eartbqueire came from a great the
eh and inertly vertically. The cheek wan
y pronely/cad, aud wan followed by a
ailing noise, which indieates the depth
Mich the Settlements toek plece. These
eo aro nob uncommon In Canada, but bound
8 pilule much more frequently anare the
ih mereeevere in the autumn than iti given.
.
vesamn
Pntivrolid SialITINWARES, don
:mitred haa eXperienati , that
, ri several very Sir
e wrbbquake Idiot:don but to -day's ehOok
prohatity the worst everreeorded. In
1 an eartegmakemehook the bit a d
.. y n to
ed ooneiderable sleeve. Oa January erldileey
187L a ice k was .1 "' n e Fortm.dwo
oc expor once a
'kesbeery, en the °Aiwa Inner, hub Was
,
'sported from May °thee plane. There a
ii Znere. eXernielve earthqinike oh May etwasien
A , 1871, thinpreiritillia from. iheall* it oixingisd
.,
ellarrowilan Wry or the 'Great Detren "re
-Brad. thisentnine *wrote Falinme Sneer
leallor', is StorT• •
n, onRowe line that of
he Edon, Moore & Co.
e v i s
fire come so ewiftly us to
, , emoote sebotihzepanarestionefathlide
. , ,,,e,
' its &ce will nova, he fergotton
me,..emnt: . by these whe maw' it
edWee'nee from beginning to end.
Eyenvitnessee are just arriving at a °Isar
concentlen of the ordor of the events and
tan ilow tell the story of the fire just; es it
a v v mimes 0.
(I i iit 11 th I id
o ng a
terror that aucceeded one another holler
h d ttx
dew the mind could oompre ee ern a
the elm& One who was passing Hoffman's
t tt fr .
drug store, at the corner 0 de loam avenue'
and Bates street, about 1 o'clock, heard
away of commotion in the dry goods home
. ef Edam, Wore & Co. morose the way.
, . , 6
" I looked up," said. be, "and .sstw• the
olerke on the upper floors running about me
111 they had gone mad with fear. The
began to nub intohthe street, coattails and
Malone shouting ' Fire I' in atratned voicaa.
Looking up I saw jets of smoke spewing
from ever orevice of the windows en the
• - Y .
fifeh floor.
"A emend later a front window wait
thrown up and a wild figare appeared ln It
with bleckened nine. The man was gasping
for breath. He had a coil of rope an kis
arm. Leaning far on over e w ow 9
f t the hid ill
he looked at .
THE AwPOL Dissiness
between himeelf and the stone pavement
below. Then he glanced backward. As he
did so the smoke reehed out, enveloping
him in a thick cloud, from which dark red
tongues of flame began to leap. The man
seemed loan .
"Mi instant litter the rope came *blazing
downward mad one of the cloud of smoke the
man was men demanding hand overhand,
with ono foot held in the sail of the; life -line.
Before he had descended ten fee*, the
window he had left was choked with flame
and it seemed as if the rope Must part be-
fere be could desoend. He paused at the
next floor, hoping to enter, hate the interior
was a fiery furnace.
the
"From there he came with e. mob,-
rope burning his hands with the friction of
hie dement. He touched the ground in
safety,- and as he did so the slender cord
that had saved him descended, burned in
twain where it had premed the window
ledge."
Thie Man was EllwardPashelt, of No. 766
Antoine street,. He was a checker in the
ehipping depertment and was the last man
to leave the fifth floor alive.
"He ran babe the lower floor, gave the
alarm and a Moment later was f
Mmbe
eet the
crowd that:leisured down every avenue lead-
2.',
lug te the fire.
"He had hardly touched the ground when
another man appeared at one of the upper
windows on the Bates street aide of the
building. His face ware bleekened, his beer
and betted singed, and he wrung hie hands
that were blistered by the fire. Be laid
hizneelf aurorae the window -sill, holding hie
head aa low as penal° to escape the deedly
gases from within. These who saw his farm
w never orge ee a ir
ill f fnh book f de p ir cm the
doemtd matt looked down upon the helpless
crowd below. '
"Still another horror °eine. The glass
was beaten from the emend window beyond
where this man lay, and another man writh-
ng w pa_mos upon . e
i ith tn dragged hi If th
narrow Mono ledge thee lay between an
awful drop to certain death and the
„,etihtog, mooing man of aem„ behind
him. ,
"There was a panic in the street below.
The appealing faces of those two men
I k d d 1 to 0 f bur d fan
ots e own u a ea o up ne ee
that net have reflected their coming
deem. .,
' ,
BRADLEY S DEATH. ,
r. 4 Hold en 1 For Ged's eake, hold on
reared the crowd . with one voice. "Tho
hook and ladder truck le reaming to save
yeterr
is The d f 1 gin b II
noun o o an g e s came nearer
and nearer, the mini clatter of galloping
homes told that they were flying like the
wind. Shouts of 'Clear the way 1' were
an, men ran
heard,d into the middle ef the
street waning the de t t o ith Iran- mar men n w an-
et 2 tu
°-eaa' "Bubten. —
whe can stay the prover of the
•
°Israelite when once they assert their
might 1 Blacker and thioker rolled the
sittoke above the two figures whose
whole world wee °reeved be the nat.
rem op,ce of a winnow ledge whose
. .
span of life was redneed to a few
moments, The smoke BMA driven away and
behind it came roaring flamer, that meant
instant (Meth. A Mint cry came from the
firet man who appeared. Staiwerb police-
men threw "tome bales of jate beoesth him
and burned away their heads. The man
lowered blmtelf until he hung by hie hand
above the awful gulf, but Ile iviudow '8111
pew roasting hen One hand shriveled
and lost Me held. He swung elewl'y
around. Mill clinging by the olthere
then thab gave way and the man OaDIM
down with the speed of an arrew, striking
the bele with terrific force. Hs bounded
the ser again and was can ht in dozen6
g a
strong arms au he manic to the pavement.
The broken beep of Bradley A. Denning
picked up and hurried to Hoffman's
wasstegeler
drug store. \ on
' ' .
m RAY s FALL flo DEATH.
'
"One men was OGill left hovering above
with fa hopes of e
ints moue. On came the
and ladder trank,and tbe ladders were
from it in an testate. Before one °fluid
reised to the )(shy height the awful
clime, Rumen 'utterance had
, , in
ite limit and Jamali DdoXfq leeKee. the
for the lab time npon- tbe orewei
Hie clothing btazed DP Ra the fire. . vine
cyk ran beneeth ehe winnow with a pife not known,
2141L oiairood to mil senseless Mona the otos
W410196., ledge and an has'ante later year
came whirling down into the Menet with ore
fere° shat it 'lathed him to tee ground The
he lay oroishod and bieeditin 201- the feet
of the orewd. Ho uttered a few mabn. yea
werde &winker* mink into the ' no. be
,
OnsoMipmers from widish he never rallied.,
44f4ewe/ was 00,03'
eaeeMI rle• d into th.e D-oerfl
nttiltosmad Duning woe token by
by the' Harper ambulance, The latter fends
a few worth' to the* around .him. perainie
i de in the, dee Moro oared hr nd
r en - ' • g P a 7 various
ba Month, bub he murmured: " Thetei imakiie
, , . i . e .. a . e ,
I, '''0 Peen snit 097°Sn,° SWRY• . OOlidlidIVO
her ecenes that were s red
Itheve We" et , • , . Pa colon
people in bhe 'meek Fly° other Ayes'
. . • ' •
ieb net amid the fleme at& smoke •and but
. - . 0 reburied
other
. , vas .stits 20 . tol.•WM/Mating
' ' ' a' ideitnuittitti,
of Ituttnatter, Rosedale!: & Clo.-
TRAMPS ATTACK A TRAIN
'
. •
They Have Two Battles With Trainmen.
and Get &nail Booty.
—
NONE OE TEEM WERE ARMED.
10 was however brought to an tinsucorsaful
end by the heroic reaiatatice of the Minn -
men, who feughe a *methane battle during
the run of ten miles from E,khart here.
The firenof Nm 60 pulled out of Elebattlast
night 0010.23 with orders to run teLigenier
without stop.
All mimed well with the train, bat when
about a mile from Elkbart the conductor,
John Hickok, and two brekete en were
attacked by a band compeeed of eighb burly
tramps, who, it ie Bluth learned, hoarded
the brain at Elkhart and had been concealed
between the oare. They overpowered the
crew and were proceeding to disconnecielese
last ten cars when the crew, aniseed by
the engineer arid &men, again secured cion-
trel of the train. .
A second attempt was made four miles
further on sold Mem that point into Goshen,
a run of four miles, a desparabe fight was
waged between the eight robbers and the
crew. Conduotor Hickok, who knew the
imminent) danger Ne. 32 was in of running
into tbe freight, enocuraged the brakemen
and extra Oonductor Cratepbell, who hap-
be on the brain until paned to the train
reached the Geshns ands. The bat.
37
tie for the control of the train was
desperate for the latt Mar Indere
and Ganductor Hickok was badly bruited
and pommelled, air was alma one of the
brakemen, who residse as Elkhart. The
rebbers mowed four watches and all tee
money belonging to the craw. The engineer
was sent Jo h I d ffi lots1
r hebp, an e cern were cm y
u h
upon t e scene.
That the eight roldere who were upon
the train when it arrived in tbe Gothen
yards should escape seems inoredibM, but
Imola is the fact owing to the denei condi-
Mon of the crew, and the alarm ef those
here an to the . mute of stoppin g
they all escaped. Two wera subsequently
captured, and the theriff and a pease are at
present in het pursuit of another. Henry
Simmerman was arresewn e oty
d tithi th i
limit& and later in the morning 'William
Conn was oa d T. i
pture . hew two are now u
embody here. A posse of efficers and Leke
Shore deteotives are scouring the surround-
ing country for the remaining six.
The plan ef the robbers was . ene which-
would, had is bean bueoossfully carried onN
have incurred great less of life and moneys.
The were endeaverin to I i h te
g eaves e g t or n
caraYof th f i ht ith track,int hi h
ereg on eowom
expected No. 12, which vitas following
close after, would smash. In the sinned
wine wretk it 1
, , a surmised that the wreck-
(elm e anted to get awaywith oensid bl
era a
booty from the ex ress oar.
John Newell caPme from C 1 t
O�Ica a noon
to -day, and was in conference with ' the
entente' s of the road. NimP200. Baker &
Miller. A reward of er4 000 will be posted
all over the eurmunding coati ny in themorn-
Ing for the arrest and conviction of any
one of them. Ef. Meamerman denies ever9-
emu_
' g sowing that he, came te Goshen from
E;khare onthePhiie l 13 12 it tlhr 11 h0 i
let bbt
consistency of the Merles h tell le 1
e e a mow/
proof of his guile The conductor of
the Plug swears thet be was net en bis
mein lam night. sin, „ern3.,,, ease stated
that he bought his ticket at Elk bort and
paid 25 cents fer it, viiiii!s ,,be a•guti,r fare
is 30 canto. His heme is in Kendatitellle,
and he has been 10 toe employ of she Chicago
and Se mull me. In h a b hoe wthe found
four silver dollen. wimme was the ',mount
beken from the engineer, svelte Cann had in
his possession 812, the emount of which
Conductor Heotok was relieved. Ceno
Maims Banton Harbor as his home and
;claims he is tramping te F.•rt Wayne in
searah of employment. Ha dees net mate,
however, why it la nothassery co Menus vsith
$12 in his pOcket
A singular Manure ef the sir& is that
none of the gang carried weapons of 003'
kind, whith would make to appear titat it into
was a gong ee needy tramps organized for
the most desperate Rue its -riles., kind 01
pleader. The two who are In custAmly will
thy little. Trity arehardirieleing specimens
manhood, ninon and heerty, and der.t
perste resimaoce Was offered by Conn when'
Warddium out the etemaebt
During the past year, says the Scientific
nan several hyaielans in New York
Amen ,i . p
e
have trim , with a gratifying eriCeisies, a
neve 1 treatment for d isDatetv D a and dencer of
the stomach by waisg e - ing out tb at organ.
The promos is very temple and not danger -
ons. A long flexible pipe is passed down
the throab entinene end is in the atemetib.
'
The upper end Ins a funnel etbaohed, bite
witiott het waterle poured ambit the riternaoh
is tilled. The weight of thi'; Water in tbe
pipe and funnel gives a hydreralla premiere
suffietiont to distend the stereaoh. The
Pine hes an aperture bliteneugh to held a
lead penoiL After the motored' has been
'Stied, the funnel en of e p pe s throe
d th i 1 d
dewn until ab ie lower than the, bottena of
the etotuaoh, and the storaa-ih is etnettled as
,
a barrel of any fluid le emptied througe a
siphon. The peoceas may be repeated
several thaw). The result he that the un-
digested food and mucus aro washed out,
and the hot water cloves the bleed yeomen'
and redness brdiammetion. The relief is
immediate. The dyepeptio may have his
stomach washed out before e melt -ens° that
he eau take refresh start. After the Mime
•of a veffielent time for ordinary digeetion,
mrna
the stoach y be wathed out again.
This promue os hbeen in use at the New
York Heepital, we are informed, for some
time.
Good Manners ha Children.
Itele no wonder that there are zo many
ill-bred men and women In the world when
, . . ,
one pees the lack of pause taken by parent's
to instruct their libtle ones in forme of
table and social .etiquette that are 83 (3034115
he to the pliable infant mind, bus
tang --
which, left Tinsel:Ice . are so , ote
d • on• supple d
by aotioes that become bad halms; in a
shore time. Seltiehnees is fostered
easily through a laok of watchfulnese. Tbe
gentler courteeies that comfit for so much
are not instilled in childhood, and in latee
!mare the mans or woman is regeeded as a
bore, Good ,olothee are not everything.
„,
'yen good health le not the .oniy priAtt
desirehle in a eland's' reake-up. Good
manners should be added to health and
attire in order to gain a pezfect ensemble
that counts for eo ranch in the world's
No see oats estimate how grrat
a factor in life la the possession of good '
manners. They are the open sesame to M e
beet of moiety. They are the mark of the
gentleman or lady, but they meat be
acquired in infancy.
.
'
eater in to Hieintea. .
Scene -Colliery village in the north ef
Sootiend. Collier (Lewlandorn eamployed
in the mine near by, la discovered standing
by the open door of his coinage, in convene-
tion with the village pelicernan (of Hage -
land origin). Pelleetnan-" Well, and how
will she do to -day, whateffer 1" Getter-
" Brawly, man, brawly." P.-" And will
she ps working pelew ta ground so for se
tealb h will 1" C "Tub
, 8, where e mites pe i— e.
man, no. It's a' bore (empty) behaw here,
hung imam." P.-" BOOS 2 My oh 1 And
if she was boss, what for Wa0 the no fell ie
te1.-Eta
'pe sure V' " ' in I Cob to, it'd
ne LI' in, sae long as the water's below it,
Y0 5014.»B.- Water ?-water? Oh,
dear, if to water was te try Up ! A pistil
wouldn't far Refer in to Hialeah] whateffer,
forhp.' •
The w Everlassing Rose."'
is an item from the " Loudon Court
A diligent recorder of " fashe
inside on the fact that many -men ere -
wearing' '0 little Mu ton•hele stud ole -
mulct color, Wed h , is -called ,en, '
rose." Of course nothing b'
of this adornment in the west of
and to le poesible that the dim
hen risen one or two Frenchmen
Legion diger:neva in their imats,,:,
the novelty boa been started by
of socialistic teradenoies, who -
Intention of witting a fashion to -
youths. ..
-
Tablecloth orate Cape of Good Moine
,
A frequent istmospkierto phenomenon at
' t
Cape of Good Et• pt is a queer mist whine
e d k
verhangs T.,ble Mountain, eat Is known as
" the . aeleolosh." The mama which grade.
y co eot OVOT t e mounta !Treat 0 0
all 11 h in it- th i
surface over the perpendicular sides 51 010
i lig tal, f, rocke, d .
pbog over the
tnewtkre in ' fr 1.I 9 xr"ribl;lik "P 1
Is e of fibrin
-66 n 6 8" S' a. - e a ' ee '
Then the winds begin to roar and larb
fraemente from the wipe of the "cloth,"
vwff ft io &Alio torn to nieces. The
. e 1 `
atmesphor10 freak a wineny Seen
the aliernoone of very hot days.-
Worthington' 8 Magazine.
,
first Am rIcan tin was made in Con,
in 1770, The last Was made by r
,prooesa, at Columbus. 0.
,
.2 SEDENTA.R2" occurArrozr
,
r -, plenty Of sitting -
, r •,..... d 0 W it and adie
q , .
e •Much exercise ,
r ought to have Drt
, .
r Pierce's Blestermen
t/ Pellets .to go wirii,
it. Tlaey absoliitelY
and permanently"
cure Constipation.
Onetiny, sugar,
, coated Pellet la ill
a regulator, a gentle laxative. '
themmailest, the taeleitt 00 take,
most enth.ral reMedynnManle. '`.
n , 'r
Siek Heednehe,BiliOn
Indigestion, Biliime Attack*, .
Stomach and bowel derangement" ,'
reliened arid Mired. - •
.. . , .. •
,
' Charremegnem Roireinush.
The oldest rosehUsb in the world is at
Hildersheiro in Hanover. le Was planted
,
mere than 1,000 yearn htgo by Onarleine.oi,
commemoration of a melt antede be hare by
embassorior of the Celent Hsronteen
Beichicle After it had beetme all :tura:rang
a cathedral wet built ever it. It 1,1
however, that a coffin shaped wink
built around. lin sawed room in the
818, the vettb. and brieh Survivlua a
which dentreyed, the catthedrel ila 1146.
bunh is now 26 feet high MA 'eleven 33).
of the wall. The swan, efter 1 000
e t • th 1 1 e 1 . . in in
te' eerier , , st OD y to noises anie.
' w tea knee At • .
r.,-- 07 zng epsonne. .
, hook
Johnnie and the Jam. torn
A fond mother of a emarb boy, after Trish.; be
a lot of jam, lahelad tbo pore, "Geom. eminent
jam -put up by id re, Benne." , reached,
noennie aeon discovered tbe Isbell on down
they were de/maned, and Mil to belovv.
- Hewing emptied one of the j re, he In
Ms Rotited pineal and wrote endereeeth Then
,
babel: smoking
"Pat down by Johnnie Mason." he
such
and
The Atuffrian steamer tisent ' Laszlo. und.t
for Rouen, France, lifts heen lost off telligible
coast of Portugal. No nitaile are
She wan a vessel of 900 toes.
It 18 *hated at the Foreign °Ace at Lon. Heephl
that there is no inlith in tho report; away
the Marquis of ihiffeein would strowsed ,epeke
' •
Julia P ' °stets at Washi geo F
0 "n n- n.
' into
Tile Anetrian Gavernmenti bas resolved
make a large Morrow be the Auserlau eteeigh
forme from the hest rd the year. •
new ingimerits will SO acILIOd, , the
, • • -
Mr. 0.A, Geoffelon Q. 0 - wee tendered "
.. • n tine
lunch et Mentreel on Saturday on the
of his 50th birtlidise. Theiihnie Was,
,by Mr.. Wastes: ' Employees
Live ratt m'e onlne NOId f.. ea•,
peddiere in the 'Alecto of Southrn
towns. Buy.ts aro found aineeig
who wenn 00 tan the' hides ' for
tees, and .eao i timer ems , Or
' ' ' i h ' hill h
bethe manner that he regards Most
• ' - ..
tre, the pmeenvetion of the sknin
` .
The' vil, in in Bider "Ileggard's lateht
' ' " i e - ren
eticianiee ' omen ta eolosene tuber
torontbba mUrdprili . end several
it IcP.s eeeltiriit e elteP Of Ow
in' A. "tot& IN Th* ' /MAD " ten
qinckly tured by Dr. Sage nears
taiTh Remedy. Se is Detail -bee
Hearleche, and . every teoubline
craned be' Catertrin So is
tat& itself. The peoprieterg P
offer gp00 fi)1 Owe whielt .