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The Huron News-Record, 1893-01-25, Page 9
( 2'44la XI1rlllf; : OU'1'e a suffering woivan. The eixronic wealutes, patuful disorders, land delicate derange- Tnonta that Come to W01111111 only have 0,positiveremedy in Pr. fierce s Favorite Prescrip- tion. If you'll faithfully use tt, every disturbance and irregt:- Iut'ityca n be pIcrrnanentlycurod. It's a legitimate medicine for woman, carefully adapted to her delicate organization. It builds up and invigorates the entire system, regulates and promotes all the proper Nile - Was, and restores health and etren th. the 10 lyrremedy Prescription" s ills that's guaranteed. If it fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Welt fs the best to try if you have Ca- rl# --a medicine that claims to have cured 6filer'st or a, medicine that is backed by 2no;tey to cure you Z The proprietors of Dr. :R+f$e's Catarrh Remedy agree to cure your 't erilhpayou perfectly$509 in cd ash. or The Huron News -Record 8x.se a yea[ -1,1.2h In Advance. ifV'diensd y, -Limitary 15tii, IritPJ {1 DOUBLE DUl'Y. Sava the II 11it'sx herald:—" E•lward Fat•rer, who for in toy years dill double dut4' in Cati:n1i, as Grit atnbassador to \Vagbingtou and editor of the Toronto G'lube, is now, tut our readers are aware, ,loin. duty as annexationist•etlitjr of the New York Saul. And, however we may have admired his e1pacity fur tluiug double s duty in Canada, it is impossible to contemplate his present performances without arnazumout, lin writes er ticles for Grit organs in Can Ida, anti then copies and commonto ou them." To this the Ottawa Citizrrt adds : "Edward is a versitile '„euius, and never was scrupulous. la 1874 he wrote the 'Tory cono ti.n sheer, and then was paid by i[ardy to write the answer to it,'• .717 5 THE CIRCLE OF LULU, 000 DELIGHTS tN THE PERFECT SPHERE ANO CIRCLE, God's Oporto Govnrtuuunt and Spiritual Arrangement etnent Carrell t With the aIa- terhal Universe—The Circle Toms Outek- ly and the Good unit .1':v1i We Start S Comes hack to Vs. ATLANTA, (is., Jan: 15.—Rev. Dr. Tab marc, who is now making a tee days' tour of the Southern eities, preached here to- day. The throngs in and around the audi- ence hall were beyond estimate. The sub- ject chosen was, "The (.'ircle ut the Berth," the text being Isaiah 40:12 ; "It is He that sitteth upon the circle of the earth." While yet people thought that the world was flat, and thousands et years before they found out that it was round, Isaiah, in toy text, intimated the shape of it, (pod sitting upon the circle of the earth. The most beautitel figure in all geometry is the circle. God made the. universe on the plan of the eirute. There are in the natural world straight lines, ang es, parallelograms, diagonals, quadrangles; but these evident- ly are not God's favorites. Almost every- where where you will find 1 -Tint geometriz• ing, you find the circle dominant, and if not .the circle, then the curves, which is a cir- ole that died young ! if it had lived lung enough, it would have been a full orb, a periphery. An ellipse is a eirelo presaed ettl}' a little too hard at the sides. Gilti pt's Causeway in Ireland shows what God thinks of mathematics. There arc over thirty-five thousand columns bt rocks—octagonal, hexagonal, pentagonal. These roeks seem to have been made by rule and by cotnpass. Every artist has his nifty pre• uoulding•rouin, where he may nuke napes; but he chooses one shape as erablo to all others. I will not say that he Giant's Causeway- was the world's oulding-room, het I du say, out of a reat many ,figures, (pod seems to have elected the circle as the best. "It is he hat sitteth on the circle of the earth," 'he stets in a circle, the :noon in a circle, ire son iu a circle, the universe in :1 circle, lie throne of hod in the center of the irele. When men churches, they ought o imitate the ilea of the GreatArchitect, 0d pnt the at:lience in a circle, kuow hat the tides of emotion toll more easily hat way than in straight lines. ,Six thou - and years ago God flung this world out f his right hand ; but he did not throw out in a straight line, but curvilinear, ith a leash of love holding it so its to ring it hack again. The world started front is hand pure anti Elleu10. It has been nixing• on through regions of moral ice 1d distemper. How long it will roll God fly knows; but it will in duo time make mplete circle and some back to the place hence it started—the hand of God --pure d Edenic, The history of the world goes in a circle. Vi sty is it that the shipping in our day is nproving so rapidly ? Is it because men e imitating the old model of Noah's lark. ship carpenter gives that as his opinion. !though sit much derided by small wits, at ship of Noah's time beat the Majestic d Etruria, and the City of Paria,of which e boast so touch. Where is the ship on e sea that could outride a deluge on hich the heavens and the earth were reeked, landing all the passengers in fety ?—two of each kind of living erea- res, thousands of species. Pomotogy' 11 go on with ,its achievements, until after any centuries the world will have plums d pears equal to the Paradisaical The t of gardening will grow for centuries,and er the Downings and :Mitchells of the ids; have done their best, in the far ture the art of gardening will come up to e arborescence of the year one If the kers of colored glass go on improving, ey may in some centuries be able to make nething equal to the east window of Yorknister, which was built in 1200. We are six ituries behind those artists, but the rld must keep on toiling until it shall ke the complete circuit and come up to skill of those very men. If the world tinues to improve in masonry, we shall ve after a while, perhaps after the ad - me of centuries, mortar equal to that ich I saw last summer in the wall of an turned English city, built in the time of Romans, sixteen hundred years ago., at mortar to -day is as good as the day in ich it was made, having outlasted the ck and the stone. ' I say, after hundreds years, masonry may advance to that it. If the world stands long enough may have a city as large as they had in times. Babylon, five times the size of don. You go into the potteries in land, and you find them making cups vases after the style of the cups and es exhumed fron.Pompeii. The world of going back. Oh, no ! but it is swing. in a circle, and will come back to the es of pottery known so song as the s of Pompeii. The world must keep rogressing until it makes the complete nit. The curve is in the right direction, curve will keep on until it becomes the e. 'ell now, my friends, what is true in material universe is true in God's ntot•al rnment and spiritual arrangement. t is the meaning of Ezekiel's wheel. All mentato•a agree in saying that the el means . God's providence. But a el is of no use unless it turas, and if it s it turns arotinrl,and if it turns around oyes in a circle. What then? Are we s of a great iron machine, whirled nd whether we will or not, the victims exorable fate? No ! So far from that, all show you that we ourselves start ircle of good or had actions, and that 11 surely come around again to us, un - by divine iuterventiou it be hindered. e bad or good actions may .Count the it of many years; but come hack to us will as certainly as that God sits on . ircle of the earth, Jezebel, the worst an of the 13ible, slew Naboth because anted his vineyard. While the dogs eating the body of Naboth, Elisha, rophet, put down his compass, and ed a circle from those dogs clear a- 1 to the dogs that should eat the body zebel the murderess. "Impossible !" eople said : "that will never happen." is that being flung out of the palace ow? Jezebel. A few hours after came around, hoping to bury her. find only the palms of her -hands and kull. The dogs that devoured Jezebel he dogs that devout°ed Naboth. Oh, a swift, what an awful circuit it is sometimes the case that this cir• eeps through a century, or through centuries. The world started with a racy for government; that is, God was president and emperdr of the world, e got tired of a theocracy. They "We don't avant God directly inter - with the affairs of the world ; give us archy," The `world had a monarchy. a monarchy it is going to have a dim- onarchy. After a while, the. limitedchy will be given up, and the ro'bub- form of government will Be every - dominant and recognized. Then the will get tired 'of the republican form' vernment, and it will have an OUR CANADA. Mr. Mevo', the new Scotch prufus- Por uf,i.tulitical sciences at the Uuiver situ of Toronto, travelled 1111 the way to Montreal just to interview the C. P. R. management about the working of their great railway. Ile intends to study the whole Canadian railway sys tern from Halifax to the islands of the sea ; to dissect and analyze it. and lay the fruits of his investigation upon the shelves of itis seminary room. Ile also intends to make a ptacticel study of the social condition of Canada ; to at- tend meetings of laborers, fanners and mechanics, all over the province, and to literally soak himself with Canadian ide0 and institutions. The pr.).vetbini busy bee and the jr-stly cols• braced ant might profitably take a few lessolla from the popular professor of eoonomics. BEN. BUTLER. The late Gen. Y. F. Butler died in his 75th year. He had been connected with 11Gassachasetts and national poli- tica for over 30 years, and was four times the unsuccessful candidate for the governorship of Massachusetts, in three different parties. He hsd been Democrat, Republican and Greet.- backer. In 1882, the Den:elm's elected him. In 18S4 he was a sand - date for the presidency, but was d- feated, getting only 133,825 votes. His vigorous administration of the affairs of Now Orleans during the civil war trade him widely known, New 011eane owes him gratitude fur the sanitary improvements he effected at the point of the bayonet. He netts:+ himself so obnoxious to the Confeder- acy that Jefferson Davis declared him an outlaw, For 'the last ten years, ,`-, Gen. Butler devoted himself to his large and lucrative law practice. His fortune is estimated at 37,000,000. ROBBING TELE GRAVES, A COLORED MAN"BOASTS OF DOING SO AT WASH I NGTON. The Advertieer'8 \Vashjngtou special' Slays in regard to the ieteettou of grave robbers in the Washington.cemeteries, that George W. Marlow, the king of ,the ghouls, delivered four ,bodies to ,three medical colleges last week, This was verified by the watchers on duty. Wednesday morning Marlow himself admitted to a reporter who celled at hie home and represented -that he was a doctor in search of "subjects," that'lie had robbed the graves with the assistance of three f;atalwart eons. He is a heavy set negro, with sharp feittores, a heavy L. black moustache and long, mutton ;'Chop whiskers. Ile made the state Xr that he was regularly employed business of body snetchiug, and "'• sh ed his ghaetly booty to numerous `.p ruts throughout the country, From the 'admission made Marlow's income " must exceed $5,000 per annum. Fifteen ` dollars per subject is the ruling pride '. In Washingtott colleges, and $25 for bodies shipped to points outside. In 'Washington the students pay $18 for each cadaver, leaving a profit of $3 for :the demonstrator. Marlow said he 'a8itpplied at regular intervals the dia• hooting material for the medical de- '?partment of the Columbian ':University, the Ctroodwin Medical Cuilege, Howard ". 'nivereity Medical College, and I n— tifSiial University Medical College 7u1'ing the past year, said Marlow, 1 raeurreeted and sold 340 subjects, of tbeee, only 140 from Potter's Field. i m g St it b 11 r al 01 co w' an ii ar A A th Ali w' tit R' w sa to wi m an ar aft wo fu tri ma th 801 Mi vet wo ma the con ltu vat wh exp the Th wh bri of poli we old Lon Eng and vas is 11 ing styl day on p circ the circl \ the gove Tha corn whewhe turn it m part area of in I sh the c it wi less Thos circa they the c won she w were the p mark round ofJe the p W ho wind they They the s and t what But ole sw many theoe the Peopl said, feting a mon From ited m mortar lican where world of go march, which is uo go, eminent at And then, all nations fintt•n.4 out that is not capable of righteously prover man, will cry qct again fa• a theoo anti say, "feet God cotut, back and duet the affairs of the world." Every --monarchy, limited monarchy, rep is be - last prole O 001 CPO lude rush king open n the nils, d to the sit ? ten hall we run k of ible, one the encs y to and let - hat t bath you ung that iu a will 15Aanti to was you ted see r ?" ler° or's y a god say you ter r of Yes, that u1 nm blit aerie "p and see roe." Or a matt c yn and, says, "1 want to intro - to you. I went into a prayer• meeting in Atlanta some years ago ; 1 sat back by the door ; you arose to make an exhortation ; that talk changed the course of my life, and if I ever get to heaven, under God I will owe my salvation to you." In only ten, twenty, or thirty years, the circle swept out and swept back again to your ow gratefel heart, Bat soin..times it is a wider circle, and dues not return for a great while. I saw a bill of expenses for burning Latimer and Ridley. The bill of expenses says : One lost] of fir fagots.... .. . • , .. ° 4d Carts a Tor four loads a Itetn, 0 post • Is 4d Item, two chains . Ss 4d Item, two staples Cd Item, four laborers , 2s Sd That was a cheap fire, consideringall t reumetances; but it kindled a light th tone all around the world and aroused t artyr spirit, and out from that but•ning atimer and Ridley rolled the circle wid id wider, starting other circle,, euuvolu g, overrunning, circumscribing, overarcl g all heaven—a circle. But what is true of the good is just ue of the bad. You utter a sland ainst your neighbor. It has gone fort un your teeth ; it will never come bac u think. You have done the man a e mischief you can. You rejoice So se n wince. You say, "Didn't 1 give it t. n !" That word has gone out, that slan rous word, on its poisonous and blaste y. You think it will never do you an rot. But I am watching that word, an. ee it beginning to curve, anti it curve ound, and it is aiming at your heart u had better dodge it. You cannot dodg It rolls into your bosom, and after i Is in a word of an old book, which says itis what measure ye mete, it shall b seared to you again." You maltreat an aged parent. You be dged hitn the room ill your house u are inpatient of his whimsicalitie d garrulity, It makes you mad to hea tell the same story twice. You giv 1 food he cannot masticate. You wish was away. You wonder if he is going ive forever. He will be gone very soon. steps are shorter and shorter. He is ng to atop,. But God has an account sale with you on that subject. After •hile your eye will be dim, and your t will halt, and the sound of the grind - will be low, and you will tell the same y twice, and your children will wonder ou are going to live forever, and wonder you will never be taken away. They ed you "father" once ; now they call the "old man." If you live a few rs longer, they will call you the "old p !" What are those rough words t which your children are accost - you ? They are the echo of the very ds you used in the ear of your father forty years ago. What is that ch you are trying to chew, hat find unmasticable, and your jaws ache, you surrender the atteinpt? Perhaps ay be the gristle which you gave to r father for his breakfast, forty years A gentletha n passing along the street a son dragging .his father into the et by the hair of the head. The gentle. , outraged tat" this brutal conduct, was it to punish the offender, when the old 'tt'f•ose and said : "Don't hurt hitn ; it's righe; forty years ago this morning I gest my father out by the hair of his !" It is a circle. My father lived the eighties, and he had a very wide rience, attd-.he said that maltreatment arents was always punished in this d. Other sins may be adjourned to ext world, but maltreatment of parents shed in this world, e circle turns quickly, very quickly, what a stupendous. thought that the and' the evil we start come back to Do yon know that the judgment day be only the points at which, the circles • the good and the bars we have done ig back to us, unless divine interven• hinder—coming' back to us with wel- of delight or curse of condemnation. Mexico as a'1Leaort. exico is a queer co{entry," remarked al friend who had just returned from a her©. The Best hotel irr the City of co is a poor \iort of an affair by the of our New York hostelries, We n't get a room with a hath, I had to he public bath connected with the Paid 25 cents. Nearly everything cents. We paid 25 cents for our„ nd 25 cents for odr brandy aril soda, waiters are worse than the New York e. They never bring you the correct ge. They are natives, and the worst robbers out of jail" ' all. man iliug racy, eel).• step uhli• oanisn, anarch}-, only different step tweeu the fist Theocracy and the I theouraey, or segments of the great c of the earth on which God sits. But e become impatient because you cannot the curve of events, and therufo•e 0011e that hod's government is going to b down. History tells us that in the nut of the Pyramids it took two thousand wo years to drag one great stone fret quarry ,ted put it into the Pyran Well now, if men short lived con ufi'ur work so aluwly as that, earnest God in building of the eternities afford to w VI. though God should take thousand years to draw a circle ? S we take out our little watch, which have to wind Op every night lest it down, and hold it up beside the oleo eternal ages ? If, according to the 13 u thousand years are in God's sight as day, than according to this calculationtu six.thousui years of the well's exist Montle, been only to God as from Mont' Saturday, But it is often fhb case that the rebo is quicker, and the circle is sooner eonp ed. You resolve that you will do nv good you can. In. one week you pit word of counsel m the heart of a Sob School child. During that sante week give a letter of introduction to a yo man struggling iu business, During same week you snake au exhottattun prayer meeting. It is all gone ; yon never hear of it perhaps, you thick. A years after a man 001108 up to you, says, "You don't know nue, do yo You say, "No, 1 don't remember ever have seen you.""Why," he says "1 in the Sabbath School over which were the teacher ; one Sunday you invi ale to Christ ; I accepted the offer; yon that church with two towers coeds "Yes," you say. He says, "That is w•I I preach," or, 'Do you sue that govern house ? That is where I lice." One da wan cones to you, and says, "G morning." You look at him, to til "Why, you have the advantage of me cannot place you." He says, '•Don't rcmem'a r thirty years ago giving a let of introduction to a young man ---a lette introduction to Moses H. Grinnell?" " yes, I do." He says, "1 am the man ; was my first step towards a fortune ; bt have retired from business now, and giving my time to philanthropies and pu interest, otnes to lace tripe g of wood 2.s ci s) rat L in in tr ag ft.( yo th hit hit de wa ha Is ar Yu it. rol t- rol "W me gra Yo An him bin he to 1 His goi to s a R gai irtg etor if y if call you yea chs will ing wo old whi it and it 111 you ago saw etre man abut than alt drag head into exile of p worl the n puni Th Oh, good UB. will join, comic tion come „M a leg trip t Alexi side could USO t hotel. is 0 boor a The articl than set of he at lie of er t- 1- as er GLOVES OF SWELL MODE 87 YLF,4 NM HAVE SEEN ENDORSED AS CORRECT FOR THI3 SEASON. and Itid to Kitten. A.rn the Fashion, This Another }Melt In the Direc- tion of Manittshinesn. If any one ever hatl OA inspiration it was the author of the famous remark: '"Bhere is a satiafaetion in being well ibeased which even the consolations of religion cannot give." And here is another sub- lime fact. There is secret joy in being which' the serenity of a good conscience is 89 nothing. This be- ing true, every one must feel a desire to know what will be the proper gloves for all the vicissitudes of the coming season. Feminine /Apparel has of late, Itteenied to take on a masculine aspect in many points. Gne by one women here wrested shirt shoes end even sus- penders ft•ont man. And now the latest and swellest things in street gloved ere inan- eish to their very finger.tips. The most popular colors, ac- cm•ding to the New Ytirk 'World, are dark rod, pearl and gissy-white. The for- mer are stitched so as to form a cord or vent- port:Lan. welt of the kid, with very often an arrow head at the bottom. The pearls and whites have black stitching. If the kid is thin it has broad silk stitching instead of the cord of kid. Mousquetaires, for street, wear, are SUEDE EVI•:NING 0/.04E. FRENCH KID GLOVE. so entirely out that—atrange contradiction —you shnuld never he seen out in them. ia the day of buttons ! They niay be of any materiel—brass, silver, pearl, trans- parent porcelain —anything, so tltat they are big ! Four is the most, common num. her, but two-bitttoned gloves are supplied to go with th, fashionable long-sleeved gowns. The buttons, the band of kid around the waist, the binding and the REAL SEAL. stitching must all match in color, and it must be a different one from that of the gloves. Evening gloves lihould match the cos- tume. The material, too, is not just a matter of choice, as you will surely dis- cover if you try to find a 20 -button le»gth in glace kid. You will receive scorn and contumely as your only reward. DRIVING GLOVF.S. suede kid. It is all you can get. Also when you wear it, let it wrinkle all it want& If you want an elbow length take your choice between suede and glue kid. If you select the fortner it will be a mousquetaire; if the latter it will be buttoned to the elbow and altould fit smooth. Now, these things arc like the laws of the Meeles and Persians, so you will save time by acting accord ingly. For those who go in for comfort more than for style and appearance there are the very heavy undressed kid, soft and warm. It may he had lined with fur or some warm material and the inside of the wrist shirred up with elastic. An Englieh novelty in the line of nutter. ial iii real reindeer. It is said to be ever- lasting in wear. It certainly ought to be warm if its long artic service counts for If you awe reckless with your money you will probably have a pair of seal skin gloves, with long gannt/ets, luxurious af- fairs, with whose protection you can safely shake your fiat, no matter how puny, at old 174* ii..rraerMr''A4MTVAVVA.74=0:=2MTPAIXTZZOMEMO °ABOUT WOMANKIND. what Feminine, rietiats nee mattes are nettle the worm (aver. The &Moot of Deeign for Women in Philadelphia has two football teams, and ever office October twenty-two young wo- men have entered iuto the rough-lind-tatoble sport, with the same enthusiasm which die. Linguistics their &forte with the brush. The sophomore team of the Utiiveraity of Putnisyl%ania, hearing of the prowess of these fair rualiers, sent in recently a letter addressing the manager of the art team 11,3 "Dear Sir" end desiring information an to their open dates. After a period' of brow. corrugating refteution, the reply to the very flattering request of the wearers of the Pennsylvania red and bine, Was sent in the ehape of a red toad blue Tam o' Shanter of sugar, goigeous with floating ribbous and tilleti with succulent Open dates taut' el with cream It isn't quite easy to imagine the girl all, student "kicking the goal,' but vett tau trust her womane Wit to get the better of the Utriversity team witheut try- ing it. In the legal profession the American wo- man is making hei• way Against much upno• sition. As ) only a limited number of States admit her to the bar, stall Hoven wo• wen have been ad«tittecl to practiee in the Supreme Court of the United States. lioth the Chicago Legal News and the Chit:ago Law TiMCS are edited by women lawyers, and nevem! legal associations have been fornied, including the Equity Club and the International liar Association. In Wyoming and NVashington the mixed jury system 110.1 bettn tried with SO001.188, and in :Montana the greatest of all triumphs has been soored by LItti election of Ella Knowles to the office of Attorney -General, an honor never before accorded to a woman. Miss Knowles is a graduate of I3ates College, and studied her profession in the emit. tYhen she went to Montana she found that the statute prohibited woman's admission to the bar, but she secured the repeal of the law, and has ever since been practising with success and profit. Apropos of what is now being written of works, the records show that many of the wives of Frenehmen ,1 letters have afforded valuable assistance to their lords. Al. tthonse Daudet wo, only dissmasa the plots of his novels with Mrno. Daudet, but she also helps him to write them, Mine. Diculafoy's co-operation in her husband's scientific missions and writings has won for her the red ribbon. Mme. Lffiamptleury, who was the pupil as well as the -goddaugh- ter of Delacroix, executed many of the cari- catures in Chatnpfieury's coune works, and Mme. Esquiros is known to have written a portion ot her husband's"Iiistoire des Moo. taguards." Dr. Schofield, a well-known specialist in hygienic laws, looks on women as the third line of defence against disease—the first be- ing public, and consisting of the Health Board and sanitary laws : the second pro- fessional, and consisting of the regular med- ical army; and the third private, and con- sisting entirely of trained and scientific wo- men volunteers in the home. The doctor is getting up a petition to have hygiene in- troduced more generally in the higher schools for woinen. Mrs. Gladstone'a resignation of the Presi- dency of the Woman's Liberal Federation has been received with much regret by the leaders, Mrs. Gladstone pleads increasing cares and duties as her excuse for relin- quishing the responsibilities Of such an office ; but it is well known that the sever- ance is in consequence of the difficulties which have arisen within the camp itself owing to Mr. Gladstone's attitude respect- ing the enfranchisement of women. Sir Andrew Clark says that Mrs. Gladstone ought to be called the Grand Old Woman, for she is as young as her husband, of whom she takes such excellent care. Although she is eighty she has never known yet the need of upectacles, Bald when Mr. Gladstone speaks she is always near, waiting to wrap him up in warm shawls and to refresh him with hot broth or tea wheu the apeech over. The Italian King and Queen have an- nounced that at their coming silver wed- ding they will tiot accepegifts from the people, nor will they encourage subscrip- tions for useless expenditure, but that they will gladly accept as marks of the good Wile of the people the dedication of any institu- tion of charity or the inauguration of any work of benevolence. The New Century Club, of Wilming,ton, an organization of but four years' growth has commenced the erection of the first dis- tinctively woman's club house in the coml. try. The building is being designed by a. woman, Minerva Parker Nichols, of Phila- delphia, and will be owned and con- trolled entirely by women. The object of the organization is to extend the sphere of woman's influence, to increase her self -res liance, and to advance her mental growth Mrs. I3orden, President of the New Mexico W. C. T. U., has been licensecrto preach in the Congregationalist Church. During the past year ahe has travelled 4,000 miles and made over thirty addresses in her temperance work. The Rev. Mary T. Whitney, a minister of a different faith, has accepted a call to the Second Unitarian Church in Some,rvilic. It is said that Mr. Whitney, also a ininister, is very proud of his wife's a.bility, and on one occasion, when preaching as a supply, ho complimented on this sermon. "Do you call that a good sermon?" he answered. "You shoehl hear my wife." They de- cided that they would hear hia wife, and the result was a unanimous call to the vacant pulpit. Luella Cool, one of the leading dentists of San Francisco, has charge of the dendrite, at Stanford Uuiversity. Owing to her large practice she can give but one day in the week to the university work. The many admirers of Carmen Syla a will learn with regret, that the talented Queen is still in delicate health, and will be un- able to attend the wedding of Prince For. dinand. It is little more than twentj years ago since the young Queen, so active and impetuous that site was known as the "Whirlwind," rushed down the stairs with her usual velocity, slipped, and fell, like the heroines in the no-vels, straight into the arms of the man who later became her hus- band. Fate pursues with unkindly severity the royal women of Europe. There is the Empress of Austria, a recluse, ill with mel- ancholia frotn the death of her son ; the Empress of Germany, wretched from the il temper and insane exactions of her sick and irritable husband and the Princess of Wales mourning the death of her son and the open infidelity of her spouse. Indeed, tho Czar- ina of 1Russia may be considered tin) hap- piest of them all, though there is always the fear of the assassin, for the Czar of all the Russias is very' much in love vvith Danish wife, and the house life of the im- perial family is one of great domestic, hap - PRIZE REIMS Poule Correctly. esoc- A Year ef DolZglit for 25 Cents. This young Lady in the above ent thr,., admirers, each one or whek. in the above ItideN. The lad.11,iters or thir Young People 10110%1, a tine Celli tVatell to the pernott who first CP11 .411 OW 1111,,S1 the three admirers. 'l'o I me serum! a 11:1.. Si11Vgie 're the thlt•t1 a/4 Vh.gailt Five O•c10015 'Sliver Ten Sei•ivice. T. the rt•Ill'Ih Mamie !lox. To the fifth a SticjiIcx 'rypeariter. answers. A :Jr, Gold Neve to the tie three. A Solid Gold Ring to each ,4 the )11,M hy•,,,,,Tettt A gold brooch to e.wIt :he next too i•,•rr,ot answers. A committee emorktinc of LIN from the public gcle,,,is 1'. is will sed seed .taine es ith asi tsrss.ce»; ••1 11111.4 NOT EXACTLY .0; DESCRIBED. T112 TtrOlitet Sun, the annexationiet ),IiLled on the 12th a picture of lion. Thomas Bellantyne, Speaker of 'oath: "Al(hougli Spaakor of did Mimi, Mr. Balliintyne does not hesi- tate to exptess the opinion that Politi- cal Union would be a benefit both to Canada and the United Stales." This was follOwed on the 13th by a picture of the Hon. John Dryden, Ontario Minieter cf Agriculture, of whom it is said: ' Since becoming a member of the Plovincial Cabinet Mr. Dryden has been very reticent on the matter of Political -Union with the Unitad States which is not surprising in a colleague of Sir Oliver Mowat, but previously he was known far and wide as an Annexationist, and no doubt his pri- vate opinion on this question is still the sante." Sir Oliver Mowat has a big job on his hands to purg his party of the disloyal element therein. NEIVS NOTES. —The wealth left by Gen. Butler ill estimated at 87,000,000. —As high R9 88 30 per ewe hes been paid for pork in Meaford lately. —77•Mrs. William Mackay, for over 50 years a resident of Woodstcck, Ont., is dead, aged 80. —The thermometer registered 13 degrees+ below zero in Kingston haat --The emigrants who left German ports for the United States in 1892 uumbhred 108,820. —Lord Stanley was presented with an Indian acldrese at Sarnia on Tues— day, by Chief Jacobs. —Rev. Sam Small, the evangelist, has returned to newspaper work, hav- ing accepted a position on the editorai stall of The Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution. —The Fails of Montmorenci, Que., were last week frozen solid, something tfoliraet,hae never been known to occur be. —The French authoritiee have de- eided to surrender Wells. the ewincller, • to the English Covernment. Welk is known as the biggest swindler living. —Eight carloads of horses raised on the ranchen of Alberta, N. W. T., were ahipped frotn London last week for the old country.' This is a new ex- -Hiram Walker (tr. Sone have in hond at Walkerville somewhat over 6,000,000 gallons of whiskey, npon ntTibiee:re'ir7taY9;r0C0h0inaman who mu rd e r - on Friday on a by-law to raise shop licenses to sell liquor from $200 to $1,000. The by-law was carried by ously assaulted a fellow -countryman at Guelph some months ago, was badly trozen while wandaing about Oxford county a few days ago, and died in more stories told about him than any one since Lincoln. The lateat is extract front The New Orleans Picayune, May, 1861 when Butler was roops now in Washington are negroes, with the ex- ception of two or three drummer boys. General Butler, in command, is a native of Liberie. Our renders may recollect old Ben, the barber, who kept a shop in Poydraa street, and emigrated to Liberia with email competence. Gen- eral Baler is his son."