HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1881-06-17, Page 6,I.-411•111
THE WAR OF THE LEAGUE,
Continued Rioting and Increase of
Crime.
\,.
'COLLISION BETWEEN MARINES AND A MOB.
The. constabulary Heartily sieh of Their
Dirty Work.
ATTEMPTED TRAIN WRECKING.
Loenon, June 8.—The number of the out-
rages in Ireland is increasing. The figures
stand : January, 139; Febivary, 170;
March, 146; April, 296; May, 327, and for
the first week in June:99. These include
attacks on property, atterepted murder,
cattle houghing, incendiarism and all other
offences directly traceable to agrarianism.
The Secretary is said to be alarmed at the
attitude of the police. Large numbers of
them are sending in their resignations, and
hundrede of the older officers eay the pros.
peat of getting a retiring ahowance alone
keeps them from throwing up the force.
Under the stringent instructions issued by
the Executive men are almost afraid to
defend their lives. They dare not fire
directly Into a .mob except -upon receiving
word of command from a magistrate
in attendance, who shall not give such
order until every other means of -dispere-
ing thei mob hes been exhaueted and
unless the command is in most imminent
danger.: As yet uo such imminent danger
ha& arise in the opinion of the magistratee,
although over 400 sub -constables have been
placed Ors de combat by wounds from stones
• and stiolcs, and eleven have been killed out-
right orrsuccumbed to wounds received at
-the hands of the rioters. Every fourth man
in the -Woe has.suffered more or'less from
!stone cuts and bruimes not -counted as
- woundsphe Leaguers employ watchers,
wbenevr collision occurs, men who stand
_aloof frem the scrimmage and watch the
movements of the constabulary so as to be
• .
• ready in case any. rioters sheuld he killed
•, ter mak: out a ease against them before the
. coronet e jury. Any policeman who, makes
himself!• conepicuous in a melee is thence-
forth a ,Marked man. :If the disturbances
,continue one of -two things is certain—the
rice will either resign by hundreds or
- .
teak lees° and wreak terrible vengeance
on the mob. .- -
CORlei June e.—A train with troops from
Cork arrived at Skibbereen this niorning.
-An obStructien placetl:on the track WAS
-diseoveted in time to prevent a disaster.-
. hIanil of the bayonets with which the
mariuea charged the crowd at Ballydehob
HUNGER AND THIRST.
Fearful Experiences of a Ship's Crew
in Mid -Ocean.
•
WITHOUT FOOD OR WATER.
The Captain's Horrible and Blood -Curdling
Recital.
"LET'S. IMAM t•OTS." ,
Mr. William Saville, the chief mate of
the steamship Nebo, - which recently
arrived.in the Tees, givega heart-rending
account of the sufferings of the crewof the
Germau barque Tiger,which•was spoken by
the Nebo in lat. 33 N. and long. 72-58 W.,
flying signals of distress. On sending
a -boat it was found that the crew were
starving, not having tasted' proper food or
water for Dine drays, and had been on a
short allowance for a much longer time.
The Tiger was bound to Baltimore, but
had been tossed about by contrary gales
from early in January titkApril. The crew
suffered horrible privatioU.
TIM CAPTAIN'ti STORY.
After describing how the ship was.dis-
abled in mid -ocean and tossed about hither
and thither for two months, and the dread
of impending starvation, the captain of the
Tiger said : .
- "It was -in the first week of Marob that Hebrew . language and -literature, has
what we had allfeared came to pass. It accepted a position on the staff of the
was on a Sunday morning that the cook Eneylopedia Pritannica.
came to me and said that provisions were "Keep thy tongue from evil and -thy lips from The celebrated german traveller, Mr.
very low, not enough, he 'fetid, to - last all Waking gujle.... . - • • Rolphs, has lately -returned to Cairo from
hands -another four • days on - the regular - What a comparatively happy and blessed Abyssipia, where he was for soine days the
allowance. I said nothing, but went bele*, tworld this would - be if people would Only guest Of King Sohn. Mr. RoIphe is full of
he after me. and then I saw with -My own ,rbold their tongues! It is very evident that .nraise for the King, bemuse of is kindly
eyes that -what be had said Was true, and, 'the Father of Lies has a Arst mortgage oit -aispositicin to all Europeans. . . .
what was worse still, our fresh Watetwould a . large number .of persons, who are In 1871 the dendition of Mreiladstone,
not hold out ap long as the feed.. I MUM diligently Working for his . Satanic. glorY - by who was suffering from a -chronic dyseetery,_
back and spoke to the initite4anidthen-calle4 defamiltgletteir. neighbors e4dsmilieerporne rdavo -grave concern to his friends. -He,
the °TOW aft and told tlieneokr Whistle* Other. Ortgages we wot 614)itseleitern io KoWever, got over it. At thet titeli be tipeke
regarding :the food . and water, aiidthet we hurry 'to 'forealoie -theni.e.,Pothapti . the leaning on -- a light staff and sinie-ite tem:
should te• have to go On very Shortralletvanee. reason : it, :they are doing. such splendid , perary -return be has-been obliged to bee .a
-They. .were too: far: gone :' to - be. seated Werkfoi him. By hundreds and thousand s- laiini.lar. Stipport. He:spoke thus while
by ':-.-ineie--1 toplik4 --We '- wept- :utioa,, P10.1104_0•49w4, thoi-!39;04-00 of life and 'making hiS efoquent 'tribute' to lord Bea-
slierteillOrailcoeand*Iloresawthe-wster -tanker- everyflooehty withZ their putrid .
gaveotit firibt; :, -On Mareh 31f ---nine -' dap': tints, here end:there Makintia feu' alOtikon -
- • • - • $ ,-,'. - - • • ' cons!field-, -33- 0-,-4e, 04.,...the iiiiiistl_gi'd: co. m....
ago, as you Mayo:ill- it, dating _Item . this the '-fifit,- character -of -. some 0110 .Wbo. :is Marshal- -
hour--4-served out the last -'.:drop. of • fresh -unfortunate : enough , to eagle; vegee_ their 'manderef. the Austrians -at Bedews, who
Water there was aboard the -vessel. 'Whilst observation.. -:-.The evil that _that IBBa'act lives. _reoentlY.--disd;= is sAidot-:thoiLthatvilet:,:yr:e::::::
the _pannikin went round I.'praYed to . Ood &net them, and the, evil ._e_iu . f them:bas during hicefotirteen yearsof eeeirem. silt an _
thitt a -ship. would eight es-.:thet 'dity,--'ithat en '- inueortality no - less -sure; --- Nor -is .elahoratejuetificatioe
Hernething would7happen-to tak*Our eyeful --:there..-_-anY s -Way tinder ,:heaven by which 'But: at 'met he destroyed all - hie papers,
safe -tinge. frorti -us.: - -For - four - days. .We to eseaee 'front- ' these- Iota- .,Characters."with the remarkthat•lie was following the
seriveC along -..iparehtial . _perched !—andd -No eeintnenity, „nee. neighborly‘and frater- e*ainPle- of Other unfortunate goer*.
thin- there Wasnothingmore to eat. • ;Oh, par Oirale is free, from the- foul slemOereriee _ .:Leey, the well-known cornet player, was
siee-.I know now whet. thirst hi. . In -ell whose- blighting .- curse reteattef ellitiltfter arrested Yeeterthty'irt New York ' and held
Sufferipg there'W no like of it for pain,:: It they are gone. I-. They 'enter secret house -I to bell toi
.-- answet .ii -divorce : proceedings
.Was..sliockingto iiee-theftesh green -'foam:- holds, where -sweet liarmon) and lovereign- begun, by:Emily Levy, whoellegeethet ehe
i•ugWater alongside ited- feel that it could: suPreineeand-hytheir-Sittanie-clitining-and 4--w1Ls- married. AO :him ,in,London, Eng., in
not be drunk Of. ,' The tun Would go. about -aevilisli-..words :sow. the seeds .that _ripen. '1800. !Several ' years 'ago :Lev.-ma;rried
the : deck -hunting . for, the gleam : of, -clew. bate:ma:lice -end-betted., They eatiliebrOthSE MS,Priate CDIAVILY•,:daughteE,Of .the late Mr.
when +h. eghtcomieand .I -saw. 'one -lean- and Otter to take, up, axles- against 'each and Itlif-e.-F. B. Conway.
ber wondering why I du to life so
•13
eagerly, what there was in it t make me
so passionate to keep it; bow oor a thing
it was when the want of a cup of water
and a piece of bread _made it an agony, and
then I remember fanoyiug that I stood
looking into a cool well, and 'ming the
water gleaming in it, and trying to reach
down so as to scoop up a mouthful with my
loud, until the agony of thirstdroto we
on to my feet, and for the twentieth/time
I went on deck to look about for the help
that hadn't come for weeks and weeks.
But it came at last; for soon after day-
break I spied, and I think I was the first
to bee it—the smoke of a steamer right
away astern. I knew by looking at the
oompass that she must be coming our
weed, and 1 called to the men, _and
they all ran aft in A tottering
way, and there we stood m a crowd
PERSONAL.
'liar Paragraphs About People In Every
Rank.
Andrew Johnson's heirs are noe in liti-
gation over the distribution of his property,
which is valued at 5100,000. sa
It is d that Secretary Bleine will
attend,the ball to be given to the Governor-
General at Sussex, on July lat.
Madame Rose, Boubeur has neerly coin.
Pleted a" Lion and her Progeny," which
the is executing for M. Gambart's gallery
at Niue.
In au article on Bismarck the London
Spectator likens Germany to a great factory
in which one man possesses the vecret of
the trade.
Bishop Elder, of Cincinnati, has issued
ciroelar to the churches asking prayers
watching. Would she pass us without for Archbishop Purcell. who le sinking
taking notice? thot was our thought. Bit
by bit she was hove up, and then we saw
that she beaded in such a way that she
must see us; and gooe after her hull was
clear upon the horizon we noticed that she
shifted her bairn so as to run down close to
us. Our sufferings were almost worth
haying for the joy we now felt. We waited
and watched as elle:drew closer and closer
to us, and then, when we thought she Was
close enough to see, we all tossed up our
arms, and I Eall for tbe skin of my poor
rapidly.
Dr. Blackie, of Edinburgh, son of Dr.
Blaokie, editor of "Good Words,' has been
offered the chair of Natural Science at
Acadia College, N.B.
• Mr.Ste.nton, son of the late U.S. Secretary
of War, has lately, it is reported, married
the daughter of the Mrs. Phillips who was
sent to Ship Island by General Butler for
Insulting Union soldiers in New Orleans.
It is stated that AdelinaPatti's American
tour will be under the mauagemont of the
dogthat lay just abreast of the galley, and. well known impreseario, Gye, who pays
brought it aft and waved it, that they her an enormous sum for fifty represents -
-
might guess our dreadful extremity by the tions. •
sight of it. Presently I saw, when they •Prof. Robertson Smith, recently Bute
- .
were upon our quarter, that they hid -stop- -pended by the Assembly of the Scotch
ped the engines, and then we went to work Church for writing certain artioles on the
to lower the boat." .
,_.
were broken. - The peeple- assembled on
the-. toP I of a . eteep 'hill:. - The -soldiers -at,
• teMpter r. to tight -their way tht'ougle and
.lio1ne-11' ilea eteues tit 'tlia.people..,-Quiet-
-
hundred ;troops: wereshent, to quit.When a
* nese blIng ' restored - at: Skibbereen, - One
: portiere- of the railway Was foundout upe
_Later telegrams ' from --Skibbereen repotte.
: the.'tow1h, . again excited. • The 'military ere
, quarte#41in: the towu Veal. The cuagis-
• , trates i_lhave issued., ti, proclamation pro-
bibitinit the opening -Of -liquor shops a.t.night.'
7 ltosiece. Juin!' )1. ---Tho - kopoin inttOlt, irn-
.. premettby-the active . participation .-, of the -
Irish el#rgy in "the:-leud--agitetion„.despite
hie:exiles& injunctiOn..- He- has. laidthe
matter -before 'the Congregation for Extra-
. etdioccely-Eceleitiatitieitl-Afficirierie order to
--: recall Otohedierit bishops- to duty. .
• urirvainr- nutt Useful.. _
Prof. Langley: believes- the . fetal_ hetet
• coming1from the KIM to the- earth to be
mudh:greater -.than th13- highest estimates
hitherto given. He iilso affirms that if' all
• the sohtr radiations reached- the earth the
• lurnino s geneation would be blue- rather
than white.' • - _
A now revolver,d
- devise --by nerr.Sederl;
Vie.nea- rbing. Pot. 4o.), has the.- pecu-
liarity' [pat in firing not only is one car,
tridge- discharged, but -.a diticbarged
- cartridge -case- is iiim.ultarieoicily ,driven
' out froen the cylinder behind. : •
The-russian Society for Promotion of
Industry has. offered a silver medal and
1.',-100 for a practical method of -separation-
, of the i'texible -fibres from the- stems of
-native-and foreign --nettles; especiallythe
-complet,e- ren2oval of the plant -gum con-
: 'tabled in the states.
In, China, large pieces of silk, often with
- sacred- ;sentences written on thein-, are,
offered to the the gods. _teitireated -that,
in the temple of Confucius alone, _about
•_ -$0,000 yards of silk are burnt -in this way.
The- In*erial Court at Pekin issues its
• edicts on silk in the imperial color (yellow);
and the' accrediting- documents of Athlete.
• saelore to -foreign courts- are novralso_of
•'the saaie material. -
• Your Tongue.
Dr. Howard's Method et Itestorbig a
Person Apparently Drowned.
This is the plan taught by a man
In America much renowned,
To give back breath and snatch from death
A body apparently drowned.
Those who are the standers-by
Off his wet things now must take,
Must rub him very warm and dry,
And of his clothes a bolster make.
The first step is to make him sick,
Ho turn him on his face;
Your roll beneath his stomach stick,
And the corresponding place
Upon his back press thrice or more;
• Each time you press count slowly four.
•"The next thing is to make him breathe;
Therefore turn him round,
Put your roll a bit beneath
Where the shoulder blades aro found;
Then place his arms above his head,
His hips between your knees;
Your hands upon his ribs you spread,
And his sides together squeeze.
With elbows steadied on your hips,
You sudden forward press;
The weight of your body as it tips
Will make his labor less.
Backward and forward now you go,
Eight or ten times per minute, slow,
At the very least for an hour or so.
If the breathing does come back,
Let it have its way;
But if it should get too slack.
Quicken it you may.
When Bs breathes, the standers-by
Who all the time'have rubbed hini dry,
Put him in the bed they will
And leave him now to doctor's skill.
•. itii r inALaige T..ranensrisithis. .
• Pomp cting thelilevelopinent of the sy",..."
-. -outlet_ arge„,itaesportationen theldiseig--
,iippi„Itiver_, between„ -St. Louis - and New
0d-tape:et- thestatiSticien of the New York
.PioduciExchange, in ' his report just pub.
-Iiithed,layst. "-With the 'facilities. multi.
:plied itis 0W:he& there can be moved from
the towns on the Upper -Mississippi- any.
- Whore frorii.2,001.000- to 4,000,000 imishele
_ ,
Of granii-per. week,. at a Octet, :takipg-the
rivetarid ocean freight from. New. Orleans
•. to Liverpool, of - several .cents per .bushel
lees than the, _charge for the SEMO genie°
_
through the direct .routes eastward, via
- North Atlantic ports." Speaking- of the
Welland' Canal the statistician says: "11
thick ratite 0(111 do whit it Is olairned if can,
- the buuiiness remaining of - the.grain trade
-for the
the mea
dotneet
: Theex
year w .,
.- monopelizedby Montreal:and New Orleans.-
:
To - competition - . and retain the.
--: export ii -grain trade through New ' -Yea
• 1
Canal State t ere is a , positive necessity- for so
. Improv ug• the Brie - Canas to_ diminudi
.tlie cos of transportation through it fully
one _ defier or more pot ten and this.
: improveinent . should - be - promptly,-. made
before Abe course of export graitt-Oadef
-shill hive ohange4." - --.- - - —
- II- . -_, --......-;•42--- '.
- , .
.Hit Ildviard Thornton, .13ritialf. Mi 1
to Washingtoni:li ganged Ambas��doi
St. Petersburg in the plate of Lord4/0-
- ern, w 4a has gone 10 Constantinople... - - -
. ..
: -: Prince Bismarck Is ,:saffering - frem
inflem citiOn-or blood-Vesisile in the legs... -
- '
throw bilietealf 'tepee ueen big belly -and - pet' Me,ThoMas- j.:tliomption, who has just
other,' and separate ehildren mid tiereeta.
his tongue teethe Water ae They turn friend_against frieudi:apid curdle. Was One _cif the listenrvivorsof the
thongh-fancing that the .15itteiness would the milk :of htupee keieekeee in 'their Alifateur..Dramatio Company establielied
lis,ve been chafed out of it by the jumping .breasts. :TheyarraYonelmembeiof naoletY-- by Charles Dickens,where he. was a fellew
of the ship. I had - • Sgainst.attother, and out strife and :conten-- member' With George 11. Lewes, John
TWO rel. ANIMALS ABOABD .
tion where otherwise. . harmony would -Leech, Douglas Jerrold and Others. Mt.
-
loved. tha_do4 moreri Worst' than all, they hreali -the Thoinpson leaves two .daiighters onoof
_a dog awl a oat.
tender -bond et union between man and Itfet whom is Mrs, Elizabeth Butler,tho' painter
lith
They plant the insinuating word in the ear_ of the 66' • •
knewe C!‘atil bal
Yhdehi4
lt41li-matli?il
;anwewubtlhe; oor sharp spixicion-whieh .riPonaintO jcai :
1111 'torture - Of. thir0. :W48 etrOnge4 041ne rd. ipuily, aild- 011 (18 in niutualhattectrand stipata-- „: Geotge Eliot -fused •to take ti leaking: part
see bis soft eyes watchingMe assorrow. hon. - They blow Their foul breath upon -the in thepsyet. meetings at ediockh,not often
. -:, --
eilfferingie.cliel -reclioned•bY the .sight Ofiiie - Yno
1u
tn
eg
e'atellead--11;iilligiltbneda-;Y:tthge-eitirvicteetratliniiilitigehdtdevouredra en - 1)dihl t: 1 ) -g. . - she43te It '- st. i fl f
s ,i3Ei :fthvti rii 6:., , ?1,esd:t ::-Iig. es. ir 7didY1e;
Ifelly eit'any human. _sonl!ai though Own_
tong, 4.0_, :were eneugh. to have Made him -fly. have "--beetlati °net,' are :eitr'anged;'efidthe - --
.i.ee.„1.0e. , Tee. -day aftet-out-pteviNiehe. hate loo-rroot of -their : Whole lives- :changedi not: ey-mpathize with:him,. • Herinfi. delitY:
, given- out the. men came aft and said they Charttetere-:' and names • : are :Tuthlessle: ;greW upon :her.... end -She . fieelly :cattleto
meet kilem-Y,Oog. -: They were raging with -amealoa, woi..48 -aro aisto-*ioid,...4oticitre-,---ro. is4 -believe _ thet„. "-one - could lead. !letsober, a.-
- -:
thirst hungeri_theYsaid, and they must. •---rePreSented, the truth-itseltie 'Made -a -ilid. and self.eacridoing. hfe without
righteous
--kill him. I foughtberd-for lile we. Joke
s.and everything 'besmirched. and -darkened r..eferen°9'-tr? 4nY'wciild-but.thiK"'•
'them towait:through the . night and 'give ,iendeitheie -touch.. -Hove mentlivei have'-'4-±heke aro no tidings yetofMSheard,k-- eard,
•niy-dott a chance, for a Ship,niiiiiitToorne in been blasted, het* inariY.hearts :have been 14-0-dieseyeated.fren:eCarleten Plebe* few
PAU man .optined.-blis mouth for Me tc:elookf ,
-brOk-0117,.botv'many reputo.tioniblOWn to the - -N63-04-icagO.-. - Mr. Sheard is numSee.r three Of
therneteing.... No, he; theY.tnnst-kill him,.
rowed by tbe: -.scalding ',fears that have- .
those who have'disarpeareilirdic -Almonte.
within. tefew yearse-, and - not : the faintest:
winds, how meny -oheeke ''haVe:.been :fur. -
lit-Wae full of .froth, he 'coal . not epeak, but. . '
rained' down : them, how many licipee'and traos-diecovered: - Number one had been a
he pointed to . the- deg. and then 7.at: hie
ellink-i eerily . raft,. hiding- my face. ' - They. the hot breath Of .1,--filatiderouttonguk..itt. _
hy. clerk in ereig's.bookstore;iapd Ues.theee two
a-druggist named Shair--ea- brother of tbe
-.inoilthanO-- it Made 010 :lick, ,eick,.:--and, I bright expectations kaiie- been Withered
eaPtele• °It -that ka-IP° day - -, The tongue Y. tOwn6grude(.4:- has slain salain more than dies."
,P-r:VefiehniltepttPeti_fteltitaveieevrt:a°13f and arduZire°rsildo;f -tbe
killed the dog --but seine imete Of that, ,, 0---r-
- - - - - -- - .... . --.. . , . . . - reputation-, .. , .: . ,-, .- - .. 1 , „.
, -. . . . . . . . . . _ .
. . .
''.., - Two SHIPS PASSED.' - - the- sword.. - _Indeed, . - it. 1: has-, often -hit° Lord 13eaconsheld- are takieg steps for
. .
.:---We signalled them -With the ensign at been --thn : tongue, . that has --,'Whet the -the erection: Of a memorial meiiiiment to
neak,.,U den down;.. they went by and took edge: of - ihe-= Sword and - 7dtaWn-E-At his Moiety, it is announced .. :that the
_no-notice—though bring- Me :face to face Iroin- US scabbard. :-- It has heenlhe-sCOnf. -artist of the !tette Of-gi._GladiOne, to be.
With theircaptainsbefore-'4tiy-: Maker, and -oeuntless villainleSiferimder--itslash Men, . erected:in-Bast London,- has.coMpleted his -
I'll -gay they saw We --and-kner- weWorein _etild-Woneet0 tee; -have- been- -driven-tor-dee- , --niOdele .. Mee'Glideterie-'.appeate-212-theace-
distreile,.and cduld hate flayed us bad they 'pertiftion and:. Milne: We 6'1k -of -the appe-' of addressing a pano. assemble**, and ' -the
chotien: -Hunger-andthitst were Madden-
. • but how inlich • o
., . _ . _
-titeoe, the drunkard, f the statue, is a- .little::mbre than' -Mee feet, in
i
inges. I'll tell you °be ofourshifts, ,..We ntemperance of thedaymayhaveits origin.- height. _ ... - • ,. - . . -; r. -.
had Heine:oil for theysidelights,and.binnifele in the-- ber$1-14 Unbridled tongue of .home.. • . . jury .seacole, the .Enoish n_uis-e5,:whis so
lainp ;.-,vielocok off our boots ad . -Mit Out ' now manyofthe wander.eraftonithe path -gteratly:Oletinguished:hereelf be the battlfe.
eqUaree;e1„ leather -and- soaked:, the pieces in :Of:v-itt-U° have boon driven Aliened by the field and in hospital' '_during the Crimean
the Oil and Pet Ahem.. into our mouths. 'befall:sand ',unfeeling ' words Ithat.' _have Nese, lately ---diect7:in - -Etiglaod; She was
Ahttelieve-.Mete,Viedik sit,; but none Of kindled :the_ .0:11Ou't_eare'':sPliit-2. •Alasi: totese.nt-at:pan y battles„sndlat tbeiriek of
us:could. swallow.' 'My throat felt,--.aer if a het!, , taany.i.:-..._ Then. lield _your tongue! 'her -life often :carried the :wouti` ded off time
hind Were uPonit otitside,.semeeziegit-like MOT -a _mail would have.: been leee.,-'gujIty. .gete, 1W -lien. --L. she -,_retilined to England 9.•
'II, vice, - .-..It- was Oreadfeefoliear our_iiiiiity had -. he, Stabbed. hie victimto_tbe . hectet, .fund:Which gave -;her COrafert_and•case was
voices; 11-Iy 'own -frightened me, and duce than.havo PleFOod --hill4 :With 'Abe .Poilitnied- 'iiiitted for her: ... She: has sirs:1301y .enougli
Ityings-:to-- peak 10 4:--:--iii-ailf. _t_..*!te .:oo. shaft -L. of _it Oeleinny_iful els-adores,. Th* _beeeeethe47-all her--prOpertY10:-.:petsons Of
shocked, by the .• sound -:-I _,:inade that -,.11 ohakaetevelaYee- -te7 worse ' than:Alio -man- :tithe- - ,- - - - :. ...-.--.=
teePed: short, and then burst into tears,. slayer, -- 'for :the lattee .kills his- Victim: at - , A- eery- sad event occurred'-.'. e Ieswieh-
tbe fleet titeie I had criedfor'Yeaele 7and 00:60,:- --611(1' that is acintrativ4IY the end :recently. 7-Lady...die-Cane,.--whotie eldest son
Otlier indiete si lifetime. of ig in the militia, and hag been Villingthere
pats.- - °tithe -day before' the Nebo. boVe fait,- :wittle..the
in eight eorne of tbe men seettled'to-go MIA thieorY.-aUd :We. Ho is also the nobler of "einee ;Eska'', 'camedown -to:::_eetee :tem
altogether.... JThey: -. were 'all -about 'Me, the., two, 'it any degrees of .ziobiiity -Om through a very _seriona lingerin _attack of
suffering .had .lovotted.,:en ..distinetion'l we bepredicatedof :either, or he..briVes- the -congestion -ef the hingH., ..ou ,he ag_told. by,
were like _ dead -men for ..-: that: -tnatter.'-' • I :Penalty of - the _ icilatqs_;. -While the his _:.osaied. advisers - that :tho .6450.i:oust
heard- one- man,in the: dreadful gasping othemasneaking; lYing villain-, thoroughly --•eientually.:,proVe leteiees,. 'Mid ..htit am atter-
voiee that was Comition to Un.raWitdvise- the- 100140; with is Of tneanneee-from of tene-,-,the poor lady 'said, -"I, atwoeliee;
others - to hill-- thentselVe&l. bii-lits willing - which even th'isebeak-thief wIft$ 'steas late I shall die to;" sank into a sort of collapse,•
to die; he said, and would kill hiniself.. first
if. the ethers mould follow. .. Two or
looked- at. h im -,. and listened' as if • they would.
do it. His frightful words; -1- fancy, pit" -a
thought 400 -the headli 'of , some Of them. -
‘'Nos tie:: Reid one, if a rnan't.i.leilling,16°
diet, let bith •die- for bis **tem.': -I knew
what the wretOli -mean t, --and tried;to Apeak,
but I could not move my -tongue. ...Another -
said.
- TEA TABLE GOSSIP.
—The sun
west.
pa—nt.Aspiece
' —Is the powder on a girl's face ever
blasting powder?
• —A little girl wanted to know if 7the
guinea hen -laid the golden egg.
—.Judging - frorn his name, Professor
Dragmanoff would make e good politeman.
—A Swiss firm keeps hundreds oflarrier
pigeons, which smuggle small watchesinto
possible to know much about 'a
man OW you try him. After that it is
just possible, that you may know toe much.
—It • is never fide to take too -Much.
luteteet in the affairs- of your neighbors.
Six per centi_ ought to be enough for any
—There were 344 students -iip at the late
examinations in the Faculties of -.Arts and -
-Law in theUpiversity of Toronto:, and 78
_• -
were plucked. .
---4t is -said by -twine ene who knows that
it is perfectlY natural that physicia,nisbould
have a horror of the sea, because they are
more likely -than any other body cif men to
See sickness.- .
—Many different styles of -collars -are
being.mades-but theyare all of that delight-
ful kibd . that Unbutton suddenly behind
and flying up ,catcha fellow behind the ears
likeo grip from a pair of tongs.
is the oldest settler in the
commission —Mend these
- people are BO anxious 'lest ;men
sliOuld be spoiled by the possession of .too
they much money that strive to get it all
thi3meelveit. This .kinel of philanthropy is
not uncommon.--
—The great -difficulty in -connection with
redistributing the fends of -niafikind,
is the eloquent demand of the communists, -
is whether you and I shall have the whole
or only a half: - • ,
°Always, the New York canals and
eard Mace will be limited to the
a requirement- of .consuMption.
rt trade for goveterrientlis of .the
id in this - contingencybe mostly
- • .
, 6 pEfii DBAW LOTS.'
101000134d myttist andheld it up, and beat
tbe airwithWas if tnikIug him, thalling
My head as Ogee), It$q could, and Alen 1
found my VOiffti, for Maids With% strange
-rattle, ',Better for each merit° kill himself.'
This *wed them, and theywerehiiiiiitt
'pritstri4yoonfe ,ot,thetu went away and fell
'te'prowling about' the d1i,1 Astibethhir
eyes about them like mild beasts. That.
nightpassed.IlaydoyOmakiageurelsbou14,
,c r c ed.thtt, Gyer
vgiirse tbe
and- again I‘1111 filtieotra ittblited
-if a Ship was in. sight. I grew delirious,
I think, at one time, yet there was a deal
, _ .
your hallway and appropriat,es your pro-
perty, would Shrink -with difigust. Mind
your Own bugle-eggand let the -.affairs of
others:alone. What ifryou do- see trifling
defects And failings in others which 'do not.
exactly square with your notions.and
ingaz they are not accoUnta.blo. for themte
fko)I, for you: have not beenmadee, judge
elfer theta: They will come lout right,
no doubt, if you I -et -them alone:, Theinit4-_
dler 10 -other men's business only mars,
and • thank • heaven it does soitietinieg
haPPef :that in thrusting his neee-eipto
other Vetkplels biiiiineisPlie gets It flertothilY
_josayfintstmtilimteadsit4,.ti,e.eNra:ote:147.10eft.: will find hin us
6142ptc.:111-4..
-102 V.1 -t 1-
: :After all the 'talk of Mrs. Langt tv-
titetrient,-"Argus," a .Weiliiriowir
whopin La/4- and WOO of the Mrnp1iojy
tAid goqa tato 01 that lady'rfatt' � at. the
•qit --private view :of ..the - roevepor
-
' Loid Bute is building a Magnificent
mansion in Scotland; with Outer WIWI five
of. sense in 'my Wanderings ;.for remota- feet thick,
•
and antually-eXpired OD SE4E4, y morning
without any apparent disease o1immediate
cause for deatbs except a broke
ilibe. Bern.
tef Havra.
t was Been
ore of Per-
ernbardt's
an agree,
ears of age,
dressedin
other Was
.gurieyod.
• glimpse Of
him -from among the •:throng. When her
eyesfell mtion.him _her .actione are said to
have been ;IldeaOribahlo; •treMbled,”-
writes an eye Witness, "turne1 aler than.
"eter, oriekvrelyed her tame, rn from one
partnt tlie'Vettel :to another, houted Out
hie uame time -and again and would
probability %Os., sprung into the sea had
not: the- ever -faithful, Clande-4-been, by "to.
prevent her..- -Finally the tWO boats were
lashed together! and - ,the -eon wassoon
entoica inhis inotbees-ar* ,It`was a
:Witching:sight. No actingnot, ."
When the Amerique, with
hardt aboard, wasneer the pc;
a fortnight ago a bargetugha
coming out, with a score or t
sons on- deck. Among them was
son,,Mthirice, who is described
able. young /elle* of about .16
of eleaSant: appeatance. and
-exceedingly good taste. His
expecting to see him and-eage
the a proaohing tug to catch
--"-A -Lessee in Love" •is one of. the
latest books: One does not need to • buy
the hook to'-gettbe lesson, most -any 'girl
can give him one that he Will remember if .
she tries.
_ • • •
—We can blindly follow Providence and
ask: fio questions when we are led toward
wealth,but *when we are led toward poverty
our theology gives way and we ---suddenly '
_begin to deubt. '
,----Takes' life easy—the 7 hangman.--
Yonkers Gazette.' Prefers, we suproge, the
fallseason:PhiladeIphia Sun. Ile likes 10
have -a.good spring, „for upon it depends the
imocass of th61.1141-Viork. .
—Seine wretched cynic once remarked
that there would be fewer .i3vils in the *
.world if it were not for;the .existence Of •
women. Yes," was thesharfreplyjyon
yourself wouldn't be in it -
—" Ha I" Says a, -sh3rn uncle, regretfully,
I'm really sorry that I scolded my niece
so at thetnoment she waeleaving-US.:_Poor_
child, she cried so much that I had to lend
her a handkerchief, and She :carried it off-!"
whoWhippecibis lather gave -
the following explanation: Well, the old
man deserved -it. He has often whipped -
me „cruelly and unjustly ;when I. wasn't' -
strong euoughto.fight back.'"
_ _ , •
—Dandelions are all the rage now" on;
the other side." -Bouquets of . the golden ,
beauties adorn the belts or glow as breeches
in -the quaint costumes- of--. fashionable -
women
go; MO W.:Sag.
He Dame, he sat from balf-pasi8 ti1110,
With Annie, brightest told mon vitt* maid, -
In silence most intense, ,
" Would I had wealth to travell" iipalie be then,
" Here, take this nickel," quickly Annie said,
Thy tire -in thestreet Oar heu ."-
say,•Jenkins, can you tel a young; .
tender chicken from an old, tough one 7"-
"01 course loan." "Well, how ?" By
theteeth." "Chickens have no teeth. -
"Yes, but I belie." "Good morilibg..".
"Good 'nettling."
—A -gentleman -under the influence of a -
spring evening,- moonshine and other
romantic surroundings was led to ask
pretty but somewhat strong.minded young
lady to "row in the same boat With him
for life." On one condition," she ans. -
wered piomptlY, "and that is—I, steer."
. ,
—An upright marble tombstone,- When
firmly inserted in a framework -of granite,
is -generally acted upon by the weather, so
that ikbulges in the centre and ultimately
becomes f ractured. ;Professor Gentle linde
that , in' the atmosphere of -Edinburgh a
marble slab is usually deilled in lese
than tt century.
--Nothing se completely upsets hummi •
nature and proves that, the- 'old fashioned
dogma of totaldeprevity is a good doctrine -
11 you can only live up to it as, the per- .-
eistent hum of a mosquito -• who seems
willing to die a martyr if he can only light
on yosr_mose or bald head. If your tongue .
can use guileless words under such einem-
Stances, and not resort to expletives which
are the fires of a quick' temper,.
you are ra4rue husband and e proper. can.
Mai fp* the superintending of 'a Sunday
Mime). _
_ -
•