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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1881-02-18, Page 6MOTHER SHIPTON'S PROPHECY. The Alleged Poem -A Few are Fright- ened by It-Pronounerd a Forgery and a Modern Fraud. A house of glass shall come to pass In England ; but. alas! War will folloW, with the work In the laud Of the Pagan and Turk, And state and state in tierce strife Will seek each other's life; 'But when tlie North shall divide the South, An Eagle shall build in the Lion's mouth. Carriages without horsesshall go. And acsidents till the %%odd Nvith Woe; Primrose hill in London shall be, And in its centre a 1.,iS1101).S see; Around the world thoughts shall fly In thy twinkling of an -eye. Water shall yet more wonders do, Now strange, yet shall be true ; - The world upside ,lown shall be. And gold found tit the root of tree. _ Through. hills man shall ride, And no horse nor ass be by his side ; Under_the water men shall walk, Shall ride. shall creep, shall talk; In the air men shall be seen, hi black. in green. Iron in the water shalt ileac easv as a WOot [CU 1 'oat ; Gold shall be "found 'inid.stone In a laud that's ntiw not .kuown ; Fire and water -shall wonders do ; shall at last admit a Jew; _ The.Jewthat was 'held in scorn • Shall of a Christian be borne and born. Threatim6s tbrett shall lovely France lie led to dance a bleody (lane° Before her people shall bedree; Three tyrant rulers aluf 11 she see; -` Three times the people rule alone ; • Three times the people's hope is gene; Three rulers in succession Seel. Each spring frqui different tlyuasty ; .Then shall the worser tight be done, 'England and France shall be as one. - All EngIanits sons that plough land/ Shall be Seep book in lutmr- Learning shall so ebb1.0 11-&-uht knew. • Thepoor Shall most. • • -. - ut shall'eotue - The -swarm sea -hated and eighty-one. - • ineighttss • - Sestaany people have: .beeL. credu- - • notighsta pin their fitithitothestates. ent of,the last.nottplets but it will oevets "theless" interest thatriTeam that the beertartiehed arnitheremiss,andlaY half DOWN WITH A CRASH . Fearful Disaster at Buffalo. COLLAPSE OF THE L Y. C. STATION. Two Trains Enveloped In the Ruins. SEVERAL PERSONS INSTANTLY KILLED: Miraenlous Escape ot Many Others. BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb. 8. -Shortly after 'J o'clock this morningthe roof of the Central railway depot fell iu and reports .said that many persons were buried in the ruins. The streets were filled with people at the time and in twenty minutes 5,000 or 6,000 persona surrounded the big depot and struggled for admission. T -he whole eastern half of the long arch, excepting two short spans next Use new part, had given wts; -under the weight of melting snow ba'ud fallen, burying a passenger trait -,partly tilled with passengers, and 4,-.) or more men. who were outside sne cars. .A Lake Shore train ‘14°- 21)- lay ill the depot waitiue far the connecting Central. -train which was • late. The nunsher s. passengers on board could only be ass,roxiniated, .and no One aeetned to be ‚ale to tell with any'. delinitenes.s wssther any uf these were missing or not. The. eastern end appeared . to have given way 'first, as thesentike building fell in that direction, but - the' rest fell almost simultane.ously. • The,' bystanders at the -time heard one loud crash and thp building. was in, ruins. The- -debris pro- sentea to the eye a huge. mangled-Massof - brieks snow- and portions: of ."reofing; loosened . bricks dropped occasionally, and gteitt inaases ef.thawalla' seethed ready to topple at any moment. -Atthe southeastern - a - . - _ corner two New. York, Central 'cars had :greater partot thesalleged, poens,:was never buried With bricks', On thenexistracklay _Writ.ten-bYtth-C;in-rnato ot MotlierSl.liPs the btiried Lake Shore trains, It WaS' CO -M • • il:111'8' c4ve--"- '11-16ient: '1a;c1Y-Scelust°-p1ctcIv hidden .- CX-CePt where a .coiner • have, gained-- agreat deal -Motes notoriety.. of _ °hos of ,the _fours oars _ pooped th-ro.so-s, .,thahher.Witchera. ft or p.rophetia powers the aVerarehing.WreckaUe. strange:139 saY•- , . entitled -her to. It has - been - said. that • none os- siss osss, weramate.riallss damaged. Mother Shipton - lived. at 1inaresbbre's its T11 Yorkshire, ih-tts, cave .1Sessae tfie rivesssser: ,E7 EltRiKIE.1) ' long' siree, and simile& uttered her ssge :managed to get through tothe end Of. the -Saying-a. The:nlaceria known asthe,":Long :trainand so„ escaped"withni lesa thaii: an few feet fibisS thanienth.Ofsthe hour. After the :accident -Omitted a force Caste is the fanishis Dripping, well, the Water • of over one handred. stithi were piit.to.werk of which:safes- power: ,te•-- petrify.: _articles -on '..•the::ruhlis 111 scarching 'VerY.w1ieY0 _ hung la at in. - the _SpaCe.' _of,' -three to. six for " the ".. bodies. of persona supposed • thooths1:-'_- Gloves, atUffedtbirds,.. hats; -etc., to 13:e Ander the- &brigs :-. The :first result of - are reghlarly petrified "there- and sold to : the search was a horribly-inangled cetpaes curious visitors. . 7 " ' -01 a inasi, which was immediately,. renioved ' Into th.essissole Matter -Sidney Hall, of to the Waiting -tooth. ..11e 14._extelided on". England; instituted a :thorough search at the-floot-a Sickeniag-sight. 11 is flLeeNVaS the • British. Muaeuni: ahd •gives the Rine:Wing of a leaden hue. and his -.hair was. matted: result uf :hia inquiriet Some ,Siiteen :With- -blood:: Rath legs Were:, broken,:.the years_since /smelt excitement was - da.hsed left being Completely _Shivered:. His: Chest._ by the publicatien .of soine- 'St: -culled -was 'Crushed- in and the back of his. skull ailbgedto have been. given to _fractured -And -clots of -bleed -a -were settled the world hy. dertain. 'Mother.. Shipton ' itt'2---eabh ear. 11e-- Was ssobh after apwarde of 400- years :ag- 0-. It is-...gtavely .rocogni, Johns-. . B.yrues; • tsserted: that -Mother Shipteies prophecies- SissOPerlY.... 'Buftabonian. but -: who vere _first pUblisifed 111 al printed r: hook in -- -448; which in ,-tlie-libtary of - :he British Miisenin Si Of course this cannot ,e true,- as. the .firSt`: --printed.,..bodlc-ii the. Iazarine liible, dated .frons1150-5,5.- This, stiaehbod: being -ex -posed, atiothersitas; been: sorted to. -- The printed -hook bed -ante The existence - .of -such aa sanuseript is altogetherfabuliius. -The - nth is, that net: till :the year 1611 were Broth0;Shipten'S.- prophecies given . ,sthe world in pritit or in writings This ,...`ek the British Museum- does- possesi; but . ere is not to be • fetuid111 it au -Y -Of these .-ti,cipatianS:of the ..steani engine, the bal-' ea, railways, the.."Crvstat Palace' ',etc., tich have so Startled the credtilbus _ , . , "r 18-62--, 'Mi.: • Charles .:IIindlys -Of laliton`publiShea sais edition:' of Mother ."•,-ptorl'a-Preph-ecIeas and:here for the firat e-weregiven the rhymes: which-Coatain Se ptetended-preaietiopas of thingsWitiolt • already happ_ened,„:"-_,Thiabookatansed :.--hatrovetsyabout the exis-tence; lifaana &cedes Of,. Mother.- Shipton, which Was tinuealtonatinsa.to time -in 'hotessand -Hes and• in series. [V.j Vol. X1, the_ 7 or. aunouncess.that 31L.- Hindley has hiSviedaetl thathe- its the .-author of the. -ihetierhyines.". - . • : is:Alsctbelieyed. that Hilitiless intetpos t•sorrie linea of hi. - Owns "The line's:: - Carriages svithmithrirses hal 1 go, shaisen-thescatersissat, . -ngtasis; shail at last admit asfeiv,- - - - . a . s - . -tven-----asaamples of these-: but it has riot " sedn-Showo that :the-prediction:regard; 3141 Was one _of theseterpblationes=1: . . _ A.LAiiiiKAti EIADOICADO.- . - Ad- • Fever at Dbicovery, at artiK Irieiding $3,000 to the 'Con. . _ 9. -The steamer' thief:, thirteen daya from Sitioa;-1-rings 7 . ional news that:Alaska:Is afflicted gold few's. Some tWo -monthaltge teqnartz croppings were, diseciyered le Token 'livers about eighty_ miles A Sitk' 2 I� indications were _so. tga.t the thscoye•ry. ' created _.excita which has inereasea: with .eibry. of -newk -- from -.Eldrado. The ens of . quartz brought by -Captain' have ass'ayed. as highass.a.,53,000 to It IS a -whitish-yellow, ,profuse1 d wlth Sulphur roek and rich if - fauna in la,rge -qu-antities. to senthiza princes of every- - man in As no Meana of transportation • caii shed until' the California . ted paprobanta Win have to remain: at presentskccerdittg to the best s .cated ,reports they: are puThng eirsteres and packing theitmining tits for a trip to theTokendiattict,.. n. the California :giyeS back she -will ire this lonely district into busy -amps. ,Atspresent there are -fifty he gold field, though Capt. Carroll eleven elainiS have been located.• -ars cannot work before the- end of qt *bile Waiting- for the snow- to s adVentuiers. will lay out their he California will fake back all she -can, carry. • - - Williani is now•growina thin in 0, and his legs-latVe- diramiShed in his military Coats are thickly nds his trbusersare cut ;very -- ie old man's strength is evidently t h boasts thathe ist-taa-dtitie as- . had of late beep. -at. Erie, stiperint•Miding thecon, strudtioti of tile tug Annie P-s.Dorr, dad, wassprohably•-..about-to, apparent- age is ftem-35 to 49 Yeara..:Shortly , after 1.1:cs'elack it rush Of firenieo antipolice in, the directioo..b.l.illytens Rijn g Oftrea -hetaldeci,`Soinef.new disCoveiys god.'11 cry. arose that. amithers-body had been-. fotto-d... . . . Beneathapile of debris, vithins eight feet. Of -the-sdopot :naastet'a-- adffice; Tay"- -'thes of, -.Henry - Waters. - The_ sinan- . rested partly -On his left _side," " add.across hint lay.a tinge rafter; which • in failing 'evideutiv pinncd liirn fitstely to the -:-eartliS 7:The-fate-Of tlies;aetta 1110.11 was much =diss_ .1.1gure.d,. the's:lose 1.M.yinst -,been - crushed flat 7. witit bus fades Theutfortunate- Mans -was' -privateelerk-to7SuPerintendent 7 Tillinghast -and; WAS one of. the most popular ranmi 11 _ . . ha. comnan-y's.• _ 'He .- was 'abent 13 - "years--.. of . age and the' tithe theaccident soceurted- ' he was - standings near- sWiteli-Tengine_ --No.:.,136-1- talking,- to '•Coroner- : assd :Passenger, Agent 'Smith. Whet' the- Too begao„ to Crumble 'fall they all, ran toward the --depot Master's - office. Mr. Sniitli-barcly succeeded in reaching .0M- -office, when the:, roof- fell': in, and Waters,. WlieWaSa-lew-r.' feet liehitiasiiim,' -ivaa.efitonshea in the S-hettly after :the badY - el .WaterS. '•-liad been ,diseeVered- . -portion- of the - had -...res 0.iIled staiitling-fell iri, and seve.rai- of the: .friemen, -narrowly .eseapeas-be- ina sansid ,the- . _failing- limas oarickS -ands mortar. --In fact the condition. of -a -large portion et:the-depot iS exceedingly: dangerous. lip 'to -this hOhr; it is only known.-TOsitiveIy- that two arelost,- but ritmors still prevail -that several more are in -the or six. persona- are said to be .toisSing'and -Until they ate found or -the. delaris:is 'entirely teipoired;- this:can-. not be vetifieti.. or disptoved.. ' - ' • reported,_ but toolate:for- kitchen and helped _aslady to peel a- Pum ECCLESIASTIC STRAIT -JACKETS. Dr. Talmage Discourses Further on she t4ubject of AmUsements. "I have no sympathy with ecclesiastical strait -jackets," said Dr. Talmage in his sermon yesterday morning. "If you will show me tpe style of a man's amusements and recreations, I will tell you what are his prospects for this world and the world to come. I think one of the ghastliest mis- takes ever made by Christian men is the attempt to put down the sportfulness of youth. I have known men of such a morbid state and of such twisted theology that they * ere opposed te ball playing, hated charades and tableaus, and dried away with all par- lor amusements ; ' and when young People, full of exuberance and vitality, ask "what shall we dolor recreation?" have answered., "prayer meetings." -(Laughter.) I have noticed, however, thatn people nopkiewwhowto who do nt know how to plaY d work, s hese noticed: that the mightiest men in the Church of God in all ages have joined in hilarities and recreation. William witberforce trundled hoops with his child', ten. Martin Luther- helped dress the Christmas tree. Thomas Chaliners flied kites with his children. Those amuse'. ments are to be shunned that disgust one with everyday life. All amusements are bad that are Calculated to -pull us down iix moral and physical health. I wan you to avoid all amusements tha are beyond your Means. How man tables have been robbed to pay !pi club champagne ? The corner saloon is ii deist to the wife's faded dress... There a; excursions of a day that make a tour cle round it month's wages. There are ladie whose life business it is to go shoppiu Some of these recreations have their ec in haakruptcy. A shake in the monk market is echoed with a stagger antes§ th richly futnished,and carpeted Mansion, a ' the whooping of bloated- Sons com6..h4 to break poor old mothers' hearts. Ho often are we ministers asked toad over New York aidbegbff young menwhoha made„..false entries- .4or,:- taken money fro the draWet. Manya young man is *recke by amusements that are beyond his mean a" Then -I, charge you not to make arauS4 .inents yout life-tintthbuearyou w s* .Lei:ed bt ettribUtii vii in a Palace or A hovel. .-Alas, for the ma wheshas nothing toTdo in this world; whexe there ,is so much_ for ourselves and fd, others .' -Alas for the man- who spends 111. life in laborious doing nothing After - eift men havetiestioyed a man, body and sent what Will they _ do ? They will chucki !her your datenatien. Look itt that gotta man with good impulses s and bad associa figisa. • He is a, ship; full 7winged, - erashin into the.- breakers; - I knew such a yotifig, than, ;.and the inen who Casiae and :sat: unineved.aehis funeral gazed at - the -Coffin- _ as Vultures at a carcass of the lainb who _rheoanr dt at lyfe y had ripped Y. -Sun 'Of • .- • Prisot, * • • The Prince Of Wales likes -to skate. - MINING CATASTROPHE,. Several Men Killed and Wounded in the Explosion -The Accident the Result of a Miner's Carelessness - Strange Incidents and Sad Scenes. CLEVELAND, 0., Feb. 10.-A frightful explosion occurred at Mouz & Co.'s soal mine at Robbins, accompanied by appal'i.ingi loss of life. The scene of the explosion is a few miles south of Salem. A man named Smith disobeyed his orders and attempted -to pass through a forbidden room contaie ing fire damp with a lighted lamp in his hand. Immediately a terrific explosion occurred, and a hole -was blown through the fifteen' feet of earth- composing the roof. Mout twenty men were at work, of whom six were killed and a number dangerOsly wotinded. A mule and eight cars were shot out of the main entrance as if fibm a cannon. . Another , mule - drasvind: . a car in which a man was seated was blown on top of the ear, killing the driver. A dog was also blown out of the mine. Jaason Leck, wbb had Aust. entered. was blown over a high rail/load embankment into. a creek and badly blurt, The men not -disabled or killed escaped through a.shaft to the open air. The kiilled are James Logan and his 'Son, Jas. Mehan, Win. Haley, Greorge Henshilwood, iinct Edviard Smith. - The Man who causedIthe explosion is -badly 'mutilated, his lastly beingburned to a criap. The wounded; are James Crouch, -Robett Haley, Edward Creighton, J. Aiken, Peter Wilson, andihis two brothers. - Nearly all are badly kart. Some will die. Mrs. ; Griladth had gond: to the door of the Mine to call` her Son wilomi the explosion ocehrred. She, saw the Mille shoot out of theitainesan found. her Ison Uninjured. George Hens ilsvood dieg in - his wife's arms.; - Th o s nes are Imiut- rehding in the extreme-, • corps of phs.'sn- eiana- have been to the ..as4ist-- anCe of the wounded - IVO 'WEIN' _GssoWs . Or DO 't hey --Pito'', .e.roWing--.-betorit 3ilheY - ' are,.30 e- ,.. .. ' ..---(x.ortacoz-1-,.ost-, january 19.) - .. At- a Meeting :ef,.....thei. Statistical - Soo _qty.: -last evening it PAPOY '-On ''Statistical obtlers. ;vatiOns-on the- groWth, of the- hnmaii htnly . (iana.lea) in: height -alias. Weight,„frona ,.:1-.°3 to coras 'Of the Bormigh Jail Of Iiiyerpal,":' I 30 yearS• of age, na ;illustrated by thete- y Mr-. j. '1'. -Was read: - -11e-kitiid: ".bit -20 ye -ars ago I had o.ccasion t-fi Alisit the Borough Jai' at-Li:vet-poi:A: . Havingigot accesa-to the jail. records,l found. themi on. examination, (lilac . worth the labor tit be . s - - -given • to them, satici :seleoted the 'Ass -elites telatiiiiY to the •Yeare 1857. and • 185cst as 0 . .4 ••••-=. - • - likely to -afford :IC- fait sample of the. new material thus :Madeavailable. .- Fsem these figures I. found tliatenly one infer+ce of _.- -any -1,,s,lue:' could- -with any degree; of Certainty --.Jhor deduced:;- that being :that i the men thug- passed 'un er'exatnina'ion .1 . - .. .-- .1., . durnot oil ati average a tain their full. height; or their -full Weight .lnuch, if -'at all; before -10 years,!_,Of . age. : A- certain .--.1)e-r, , .A., despatch froinShafigliai_says that'Coin- SiStent Irreaulatity indue d. me to re et.= f wander Horatio Nelson Hood died en MOII Ninth -sorne.liope of: an e planation, o it day; .. . Suggestion made some sy-ears before by M. s The Conate and Col:eta-se de Paris have .M1 lotsailrench - statist. After a. car qui HOW REPORTERS ARE BORED. A Leaf from the Diary ot one of the Fraternity. The following leaf, evidently dropped from the diary of a young reporter, was picked up by the " devil " the other day, and is printed in the hope that the loser may be able to reclaim his property: Saturday, p. m.-" Well, another week has gone by in about the same old way. I've been wondering lately why some people don't know any more than they do; why they will persist in talking shop ' to one of us fellows every time they meet us in society. Now, I am not ashamed of my business, which I think, requires a considerable amount of brains. The other night I went out for a 'little while to a soil of social gathering, and I hadn't got into the parlor before a young lady simpered, Mr. -, you ain't going to put us in the paper, areyou?' I had a big notiou to say somethint bad, but I didn't. Then I go to some public exhibition, and eyery acquaintance I meet says: Well, are you getting it all down?' or, Got something big to write up now, haven't you?' or, • I s'pose you fellows get to go to all these things for nothing?' or -some equally flat remark. Everywhere it's the same way. Go to church, which some reporters do, because they en- joy it, , and you are met with the facetious -remark : , Well you have to be pious once in a while, don't you?' Meet a man on -a street car, and ne asks you if there is any sensation afloat. People don't seem to think that we fellows .ever lonew anything. but 'shop.' Why den7t they. ask a lawyer, out in society, if he is looking ler a case, or a doctor whether s • he expects somebody will be sick before he, leaves; or a. bank cashier what the highest ,per cent. is upon .first -mortgage. loans. I can't understand it. We are ins*, use other folks, and there are times, rare, it is sadly true, when we are not, on chity, and feel . that we would be glad i to enjoy social life just AS -ether rteopla .213ut I suppose it -ahtsan Witti so and always will be, and I m itod tired and ;eldepy to try atinderstand - -why."-Cleveland Leader. - - • - ; iViao, in Bingland in ISI ? _ .'*1.The t.(..tm°eurria°1311e7riloilfes:)1-1e' .Majesty's IPrivy Ceuadil is.the .Right - Hon, Sir John iMacpheramtrlacleod, :K. C.. S. Is aaged 88 the. youngest,- II. It.:•H, Prince Leopold, ;aged The oldest duloe is the Duke of - !Cleveland fisted 77 - the yotinaest itheDuke of Newcastle -(a :trntiRr), 8,ged; 16.. The - oldest marqttis ia the' 'Marquis -of Donegal, K. P., C. EIS-st.ged -83 ;‘.the youngest, the. Marquis Camden - .(a 'minor), Aged 8, - [•The oldest • earl istheEarl of Buck'- fingharnslifre, -aged 86 .; the youngest la Earl Russell (i. ;nainokb. aged 15, The -Oldest . viscount is Lord: Eversley, aged 86 ; the yotingest, -Viscouut • :Smithwell (a miner), .aged 7;. The-..ohiest •baron is Lord Mostyn, - aged 86 ; 'the youngest, Lord Soutiaa,mptoo miner).,_ aged13. The oldest member of.' - the -1HouSe!rof Com -Mons is Mr. Willia-m Btilkoleya Iliighes, for the- borough �f Cartaarvop,'. aged:- 83 ;.• the yonagest; Mr. James-Dieksop, Dinigasinen,agea The:oldest judge in Englana-is lost their Youogests -Ptinee-sjacqueelf aini of the figtires reSulting du: jug'. -Chancellor the Hon. Sir .James„.13_acolis:alsis tflIflLii bornhirie Months -ado: '.' -- - ' .2- :. • - - - -,----- -... - ailing- satiea :of ' )'ears item :the sine.as re-:- Schiefsindge ,in-.bankrnptcy,_ aged_ ,-82 -;._ OP i ,- I. - . , .. •Ni. s'-- 1, -Iv a :.,- It A . t.- Kin' -t nientef. the annual •:draft of conscript1111-YOillige;§ts thCs• '3ErOn; Th -r: Pharlos 8; .'°' ' • Is- ensue. _cm s; s . ..so , „s mj that.. COuntry, -Ile- liad _observed -that ithe I.BOWens. Of 'the- Queen's- Baaolt Division; - SYlia lia-8 been -apPointea-nhisca.1 inistet •-, f $ 1901?salry,nun -of'. 'the - same' age; brolightforW,Tard aged 44„ ;Tlie--oldest •judge -in Ireland is the. : tratf,orld:-hi-, : : if -a'..•-.. h ' i' --..suceesaive s - yeara• - - diffeted.",-,- gen. allotti.ssilaines O'Brien, --:of . the Court of - s•.-?..ai..;,Gglischotti gd f s ;: rAnt,clerk- of 't4OndenteYi'1101:i-P 'Sifletablv M -. - their " '''averaiie '''.-.1.1ei4ilit-S- ;Queen's 13each, aged 74- ; thesyoting-eat, the - licit- and--•-•. On -7-- a';:eerePa- rise- n" ---_--..-of-- tli:se. retdriiS ;;Riglit -iibli --_Oerald Fitzgibbon,- :- jUd,c.,1e .14-- Ni.-..EiS. Q1.1 . Men.daY'presentedliy.. t,hes,C, 0. u *itha•$20.buffalti robe as-'a7/31:arkd laPPresi -with tliciSebtstha-aanahal-:ili-ti rice'. of eerit ily 'Appe-atgell 46 s - The.eldent tif-.the Scotch ciati ' • - a of his - --- . _ aei - • . ..-. ' . s - . . ; • . : ' the.loc-ahties-an.whIch .these then *eke ihtsir; iteras of _Session is --the Right. Ho' is: -,Jo.h.h.: .. o•vices - - - - - ' : .. . ": -- • - •• • . - - - • ' - - - --- - - • - - - - • ' The:DOW:atter Isadyl3ayitea - who ' died_.t and rettiedlleobserved..gorne coincidenCla of i IngliS . (Lo a Gleneersel- - Lord- - justice= , few days acso in Leiidou •rtt-, the age of 8 deficient height inthe Conscripts With ligin: l -General-,- _"7. ;,--:,tife - Yeurthests ..illexanaer, : ' Wa-s. the 'firlt. EhropeanS*Siniaii.-_--Irlio ye prices in th:etyeara of: theit-Tgestation tad - '.BiirtS -.Shand (Lord -Shand);-.aged 51; siple - tilted out ppefilyna.catitaii.....- ' ' ' • • MfanCy: ; Thiss lea.: him to the . con:el-11'0On TsaldeSt:ptelate-Of tile:Church of England.. : %The late Fra;uk:13iickland left: bus widu7j that Where -Yet kdeficiency-4etirred itiii!ght 'the Right.Rev. Alfred. -Olisants Bight) .but spoorly.: -.provided_ for,: tha. Loution bedue-to_earlY wiint-of -suffieient•nutrintent- Llan-daff;,"aged 82,-'• the yaangest,'.the 1 i,,, :World; .Sa.,yt _s "s_ and at :thc,. same time he tiod - the-nee:to- defective ;harvests.-- - The .-Reit :.ROWley -Hill; Bisimp of. ,Sddor: and - bequeathed tp the nation his Fish Culthrp... prisoner_ tia :entering -..th-ejailissta-ken to -a • ' Man, Aged -44. The :oldest 'prelate of .the.. -, :11I-tisetirti,.valued_ at.: four Or ,five ,thOusand. toolit-'keist-fer -this purpose andi8 theretta „Irish.-- Episcopal - , :Chiircli .1.a"Stlie -Right - peunds:"Ss.....:„ ' "S s ._ -- - - -; ; -77.„gistefecl. As _part of the p Oceas he is..1put.:Reif.7,johal Ircibett - -Dailey,- Big -hell-- of: - 'PriiidiPtilMcVicasisL.D.:'' fOraserl Oil- ii.-bpD.ad /het al p1 ite ncaii the leVet of Ithe ;.KilitibreS .saged. r 80-,---•:•stlie YOungest, 1 tha ; , Of:G.uelpit-staa-nowl of =theMentieal Presby floor. : , ,As -1 lie. - depressess , theSplatosshiss _Rio*Ress. !Robert Saniuel. • Gregg,, pis. op toritta Cciilege. haSjustieeeiVeathediploth Weiaht -- Se --- indicated 7 - Wit. ' EV le-Vei ' flild of Cork aged 46.-- The oldest = . _of the Athenee Oriental; of Paris:, ':•hatin beensiitianimenSiy elected a member fit .th socie-ty. t. - , - . -- - - - - -,--• - s s - . PrInce -Bismarck has taken his so Count -Herbert BiSmarckstp be his privat secretary. .The young man looks excee inglY *like his fa,thert and is said to , . . uncommonly gifted; giving just hopes future greatness. Possibly lie will continuo the prince's iron rule. _ _The Prince and Princess of Wales stayefl- 4 .five days-,atsLotdssAvelaratss-cesintiy-seat. as piejec_ting - aria; Slidiag.. DU '.-, a , -IOW -.Scotch Epi copal Chureh ia 'fhb Ri.glIt Rev. ' I hat- _behinds -. him till .- :its-leticlies his- Robert Eden, 13iaho.p bf. Moray sand Ross .- Ileac& marks : hiss -height on. - the ' ,ia.r.; :(Priniiis),. aged 761- the. youegeat,sthe Right ...-. - . -The -Weights- areataken to pounds -and- the i Rev. George Richard •Maelternes;•L'ishopPf -. - heighta-- to quarters of an. 'inch -and are at - Arayitand the Tales - aged ;57. The -oldest- - once, 4with-Other_ particulars, recordedin p., baronet -IS Sir lros&- Montefibte, -aged '96 - • - Lewis-. • - boOk_closa at. hand: -_,- _Until._ Jahharysallli78; ! the, youngest , Sir ,,•„-Thorus,s. LHugh the priathiers Were measured in. their lot-- i Neave(a :m }nor) aaed 5. Tali ebidestionialit .coVerisia; viliatever - that -. Might- happe isto- ,is General.' irDurteati MacGregor, K.-0.13., hes :---,ACthat date -the ptacticesWaSs.cbankeds ;aged 413- ts-th youngestsSirLualOw--Ctitter-,ss -by-taking:Off- their .- hodta ;and:Shoes *ile".;.:aged:2-7s : ; - • - '.- - ; .---s.* .--s -- - - -- :being measured. So infich-lenthe pibit.:.f-- • ,-.- ' -. -• - - .- ."-s - - ---,----- . _ . . -ble.accuraeSt-Ofs'vliat-Sstes a:1'61014:as to•ithel c--- '-'''' illg' .4-9-n -4-14-***4' :4'4- vils-1'4"11Y1' not --long -nos- and .-durInfg-.:tha tamesIMOO• height_and- weight of :these Men; Talples:- - -L'. WIL-3116.: 'N., Del.; Veb..9.---1:At the "Opell -, - head. of game fell td tbe. "guns -of • tho. hoat and ins party of -guestas-:: '1 111 . were then .givetf of - the heights- and Weights - :Mg. of the February term. of the Crimma - ,-.; taken betweehl857and 18781 But it-actin:LS 1 Coutt; Chief Justice CoinbgYs, in pharging . ----- , ' '. - - r- - ..-- '. -ieestirnatedat0000beet acquainte •of produce inrearingand feeding thiSgande now to be Well understood amen./ thlose the grand ury, balled their attention to d With the'subject thari Ilere' the recent - tldress'of Cel. Ingersoll in this : -- - . • ., . . . _ .. as . „ . - --gr.Longfellow,the Poet, is too old and good height' ail(' -weight in a soldier-, -as in ot _ors citY, -saying it va'd -.blaspheme-us, and • was .- - a man to . be misrepresented. .. Sothe Of "t Working in pPen airs la: of les bollse4uatce , worthy the attention of the jury as coM,Mg .._ ., than -maturity.- 'Thu bate Dr. Parks; Millis '• under the law of blasphemy. - - papers have said -that he once . went into,, -verification -that - five- bodiei have beeu taken- from the ruins - sTim, roof whicheollaipsed..-Was of ikon plates'and supposedtti - be :very strong. but -here and there new plates have boon put in place of: those which- 'were flotilla to be weak: .Work-fiass- been_ going On. at an •:.extensio-n- Of the' building sfur •soinetinae,-. which- -would": make. it :One of the largest "railway.- atationa on the._ continent.s--En. TI3IES.d - _ • ,• - - `BUFFALO, 1,Feb. 8. --In addition to,the two. bodies recovered fromthe ruins of the New York Cetitral railway depot (as telegraphed you yesterday Afternegi.91„two more bodies - were shortly afterwards. recovered; _The. body of I), NV. _Wells was found' about half: past 1. His legs were broken.and his head Was frightfully mangled. One eye has been -crushed -6ht_ancrone side -of his head _kickeil. as ifalt_had been torn open 'with, a hook. Wells was about 17- yeats. old , and was eimployed; Ss. clerk, to Mr. Home,:forernan of the car shops, :Who speaks, very highly _or 'Another 'body was found -soon _after near that- Of Ark. Wells. It .was crushed se that it was ithnostimpossibleto recognize the features. The skuliWas crushed almost flat-. back,' and both legs Were broken. --WThentaken up.. his aring Were- , thrown across his face as tin:high to protect it. The body 1ua.4 been identifieCas . that of Is S.. 'Hunting.. Ile was ercipleyed as a Clerk in . . . - - , _ the office- . 'the I3Uffale, _ New York & Philadelphia- railroddr-and -waS the sole support. of -a Widowed mother. • - _ _ 4111._ • ought to be -good lovers -they best know how to press a Butt.: - • - _ . a s - a- - :kin.- -s-The lady now temp's... forward And denies the, story. Longfellow did net pool asputiiploin..-: it Was a SiltlaSh ----..f3-_tilltm-an 13s: Allen,' of Beaton, -has .. jua distiilinted. ,5300 in_ prizes •atoMaine rboy tinder. 18 years of .age Who ' liave:raisedst , artioatiIndian corn "en ' Miebightirsof •tin acre in the past seasons..slIOre thstn -600 bdys.in altp arta of the- state.`cons petedian a th e *LI -Of. Steckton,-.Whe raiaed 2;246: poundS,--.-;_ - . `prize,. $‘200, was "a3varded- to FralikE. Small Counts;VonMoltkii is a.nahri•ol nerve. SU/11 in. spite of .hias.teetstable:years. Wiltiqi the building: of 'the- general 'staff ' in Berlin, Whereinhe' lilies, -was • burning,:the other .evening,:lie ealmly -_quitted his rubbe of whist,,attended: to the: reinoval of _Dfft papers, and then went placidly- to :leo . - .. .: . . . theconflagration. . - -. ..----Miss-.'Xariatine Nerth-,-. a pretty Enghel artist, is. nutking it tour of , the- world with 'very,:higii credentialk for ;the p'utpose ob. _painting the diatindtive .flewers that: wild. : Sir Joseph „Hooker, director of t m -Botanical Gardens at Kew, -vouches for -lit 'artistic Powe. -her abtitanical khowled and her ititraepiclity:as an e-Xplerer. - . • -.. - -" 'a a . - TIRT WAS' HER 1JEAYII A coroner's,inquest oli'Saturda,y in the easc Of Mrs: EtarTha E. Careless, the woman W11110 -shot herself- after her iniebahdhad dirl :from Small -pox', resplt-ecl :in a =Verdict o death from blood:poisoning. ; Evidence- was adduced showing that the WOlItati hadadins: traded the lataldisease by - kisang the corpse Of her husband, to:whom-she was greatly devoted.-Pniladelphia Press. "Manual of. Practical Hygiene," dkeWithe attentioh's of our naval -- and imhit try authorities -to -seine important details: in •the final growth of the. bones:aad.: mus .of the liuniati body, strhetice it is to be Inferred:that the -men- o . _this 8,nd. otier Europ.eati.ceniatries do not, in fact, arvive- At physical maturity :till they are abou$ 10 years 01age; -find- sof, do. net, before- that age, -acquire their fall capacitylot exerflioh Mr.- Ventior is at it? -again. He states - that theetry of February Of last year (-1880) waf s nlly.as severe -as has been that of the present Month; and that the Decem- ber of 1879 was much 'more Isevere than the December -di -this season. -January of 1880,- -; however,i-waS-a mild: month and..the very ' opposite ef -the January of 1881. 'Upon the principle, of general c01i1pe4atiol1 and from the fact -of but having now bad- in -sueces- and endurandes ..- The sfigutes: laid before , the: Meeting,' irdperfedt aii they are in -ethers .si'prk two mouths - of severe weather,- Mr. - respects, certainly. leaaditectly -to the saiine' . • - th• • r - - • ' - Teimor is -sin:Mssly-aof-the opinion. that the - conclusion. :lltit thie.•Pidely, differefipin pre -sent Me th svill.give_ -OA "the thaw. pre - :the speptilar- noti011: . s'That has.lin 'dieted i°14 4Iree'eaes 'le this :he id •hidegl ' ,'- and and - Widely: .--,f, conancrate,d - :the :- jB,i, toa rapisldisappearance of, sooiv of 11; :.. or-'-.- tlyireaheits _AS - the ad Sleighiag. over• a very. large sareas :Asia a =lnatarity., 'The artiiiei Of the worlds 1 rethh of Ivieter- 241(1-:°f --st°r1hY weather ='• ' aceerdanee:With -the 'popular LetionS. littsse _tows,idath-e latter portions of thiasmenth- ; long:rbeen-iand stilt are; composed mainlik of and the fete part' -of March: -.He! _thinks. ineh-nanell under thirty -years -of age. - Otir- :41:cith-er• -"-bli-4ztira " aka -'edid.. -te•ii-1-. ••*11-1 diva recruits are aecePted. :at- "eighteea ._na travel over Ithe United States shortly ofteafter - matchea, the priVations ' -.and the..expos t nahrotigh deception ,es sesss Yet ii* the entry..-qf March,' andthat destructive , - ' Of a .canripaigh have - always strewed -the ". - • - .sf peints laity -nig the last quarter of .. -the s rssa. galeg will visit New --Yerit, boston'and other roadsides• .8. nd-filled the 1MaPitals .inatilit.1 Presehlecilith"- • .."' .;- .• . With the yiningermen:-._ Now, it an hayab-i. _ jPrini'0..Ninistcx Sit li.ohert lieer,e y.oung; be doubted,. that, for all -severe phYtiCal -est son; Arthur, has. resigned the -Under :. . exertion, or -_eoduranee, the Conditieng nre Secretarri ip of the Home Department on the Saine,-and.:-# tlii4: be, so, We ;have IJO 1 accouh4 Of-- -ad health. icoDe -bf.SikliolVres lack of sound atatisttoe long been practiting soils haveplide..-muCh marks Us nien of • with .-!nuist preciousinaterial As mosthu:-1J talent. 7 Albert, the-eldestshas made -much 1 .sOnnd. eccthorny.- . --.' -' 1 .1 -noise in'stiworld inshis tithe. The -most ' - . promising, - if William, died in active :sets • s -=A Grandilla,ven -(Mich.) : despatch -Ela3r vicc. The seeetid; Frederick, lias -been Ar that tvirostuga have startedin. search of tlic safespledding. official. The late -Sir Robert, City of Ludington,: reported twenty -!We mindful Of this:eldest Sou's _irregularities, miles from Ludington ott Friday,' Is is tied up his property as tightly As he could. . two weeks Since the Ludington lelt :411-1 A nieinorable•clause in his *111: prohibited , waukee to, cross the lake. - • _ any investment in Irish real estate. _ 1.• , ••-•