Loading...
The Sentinel, 1881-08-19, Page 7oc ntinued from second pages plague, to he mixed up in a wretched clandestine -love -affair like _this! She to steal out of her fat:sees house at night to meet a stranger, and plead her sister's cause with him!- The thought horrified her, but the beautiful face in its wild sor- row, the sad voice in its passionate anguish, urged her ou. Lillian went hastily to her own room. She took a large black shawl and drew it closely around her, hiding the pretty even - ilia dress and the rich pearls. Then, with the letter in her hand, she went down the staircase that led from her room to the garden. The night was dark, heavy clouds sailed swiftly across the sky, the wind, moaned fitfully, bending the tall trees as it were in anger, then whispering round them as though suing for pardon. Lillian had never been out at night alone before, and her first sensation was one of fear. She crossed the gardens where the autumn flow Its,' were fading; the lights shone ! ir gayl - -em the Hall windows, the shrubbery lookidark andmysterious. She was frightened at the; silence and darkness, but went bravely im. ' He was there. By the gate she saw a tall figure wrapped in a travelling cloak; as she crossed the path, he stepped hastily forward, crying.with a voice she never fagot: "Beatrice, at lait you have come!" "It is not Beatr ce," she saising mf. from the • outstr tehed arms. "1- am Lillian Earle. y sister is ill, and has eent you this." • CHAPTER xxxvi. -Hugh Fernely tick the letter from Lil- lian's hands, andread it with a mutter imPrecation of disappointment. The mon, which had been stfugglitg for the last h If _hour with a, ma s of clouds,• shone o t . faint.i4,7: by its ligFit Lillian saw a. tall man, ' stvitUe., dark hand ome face, browned with ' the sun of warm clines, dark.eyes that had . in them a wistfuI sadness, and firm. lips. I He did not look like the gentleman she was accustomed o -He was polite and 'resisectfal. WheIe heard her name, he- . - took :of his hat, aid . stocid uncovered dur- ing the interview.._, . - .. . . .. “ Wait I"- he brie . "Ah,. must :I wait yet: longer? - Tell your sister .1 have waited --- until my earning Wish to see her - is wearing ray life asva.-Y. - ".She is really i 1," returned Lillian. " I' , s anaS: alarmed_ for er., _Do.- not: be .7angry With me if I say. s 0 is ill tlitOugh anxiety - and fear," ' ,. - " IIa,s:: she sent -on' tcrexense _her?'- he isked. gloomily-. jt is, of ; to use. Year sister is say prom's d wife,: Mise -Lillian , .. - and see her I will. --..0must wai at least Until she is ;willing," said Lilli ri ;- and her calm digni.7. ,fied _manner 'infi e ced hiu eSen more - than ber 'Verde,- she look.ed. earnestly_ iato Hrigh_Fertiel _ It waS not a bad. face, shestlimight ;„ there. wsta no. _cruelty ei -Meanness the.te, - ahe reedit:No-se l fierc iin. violent-ia it tlita it a cl -startled. her: ',Ile "cl. not look like onewlie -would v...-aritatly . ad wilfully Make_ her Sister, wretched foitl. fe - Hope erew her heart as shegazedi With Iiirt for Bea ri • get, a -ehildish; foe iS error,— - .-:- --.- “My Si:St-or is v bravely -- so uiali she can bear- muc drive her mad." _ • _ "It is killing na.e "rale interrupted- -fib be g ntinned. BIELniteeti. - : Ur -slyer -a W.'11anasswrites from Batli- . urst, N. B.-, to To. .1 and Stream( t4a,f, he. : tried a dozen pr seriptions for - repelling. -:- niosquitoes, flies; FuiicI similar pester and found. none of thciii effective until he came Across:the following,! -.which are dead sure every tittle : " Three oz. sweet_ 04, l'ozs carbolic acid:, Let, it be thoroughly applied ' upon hands; -face; and all. exposed -parts • (carefully avoiding . the eyes) enee every halfhonr; when tiie'lliee are troublesoe, m or for the first two or three days. until the skin -is filled with it,,and after this its ap7 - plication will be pe eSsary only oceasipnally. Another -recipe, eijually effieient,sie: Six •. parts sweet oil,: on . part creosote, .ene_ part • pennyroyal. Eit i of these is tigreeables to nee, and in ph ay injurious to theskint XVe have -both of .t eSe.in our camp with nes And -all -flies. keep a safe distance." a . • Wools) iE A Strasait ?—In . the Shaker conaintaniti sit it is well known the - great virtues is a EitiCiSM. There are no family- ties; and he . passion of lose is trampled ender foot; sn-s- brother Shaker shakes hands' with ' sister Shaker, kst it , should awaken theettiOnate nature. No ShakeresS dare adorn even with the co aneSt garden flower. or dress . her hair . Yet every brother has; a sister: specially assigned to look ter itis clothes, do . his ---: mending, sew on "s buttons and inform the Eldress when 14e needs a. new .garment. Some of )the Shak rs . who theorize about the Lir features 6f their . faith Say that. there should exiit b tweeifthese two a special spiritual affinity, but this does not seem to be the ca -ser in pra tice. "Probably,"- says - avintor,-"- a sister would be more likely to lbe drawn iti spirit 'toward some brother. whose old stockings she did_ not have to . darn." _She resolvealto plead ce; .to ask.liiha to_. far - h Prottiee-s=a-ohildiali - nahappy,"-!-.-she said: ppy that I de not thitk More ; it will kill her, Or , Themother-in-1 eserywhere, yeste in every clime, a every country on t France they ,pursu , Portals of -the '.ce grayihsithalit her: example; in.& Pan lies Joseph—. 1 after his wife% de mother -in -Jaw, an otgoinito a bette 11 seenas torbe the Bathe ay, to day and forever, ong , all peoples, and in ieface of theglobe. -In- -her even beyond the Very,- and -make para. pon the .toinb. 'As for ian grave yard: "Here e lived for twenty years . the society of his , died in the blessed hope Worlds, - Rev, raillip 13reo s, one- of his -Yale slecturea-cfn." Prea hitg," tells a 'story Of a backwoodsman ho, After hearing an extemporaneous - ernaon - from Bishop Meade, remarked, Ile- is 'the first one Of • ,them-pettiCoat fel ws- that I have ever seen that can shoo without, a, net." - A -few days since the second of :the two great- bells for tli new Eddystone light- l'ai se, weighfng about 42 cwt, mea- _euring 5 ft. Afire diameter. at the mouth, answering to the tote 0-, a.iad intended to the one eat ft)signal to leeward and the other to wind. ard, -was -bast at the foundrY of Messrs. GilIet,..Bland &Ca.- - . The Prince- of /ales bas sold. his yacht Formosa to Mr. Bi • offsheinas --• stx*In*.amia•SaIlrawam. - A. No - - . - 4.• ...m•••••••••..r .•• vo. mr..S.9{7..47244. -•••••••••••••••••••••• "STILL THEW' COITIE." Plow a Virginia Young Lady was Deceived and Ruined by an Advertisement in a Religious Periodical. Early this month all estimable and highly connected young lady, whose widowed mother keeps a hoarding house in Richmond, Va., and is extremely poor, iu search ofhonorable employment read in the Hartford Churchman au advertisement for a governess to take charge of the ) oung child of a widower. She applied for the position, forwarding letters of recommendation from an eminent judge and an Episcopal divine of Richmond. The advertiser came to Richmond in person, representing himself as Thomas Marvin, a wealthy widower from the West, and expressed such satisfaction with the character given the lady that he came on immediately to engage her services. He remained in Rich- mond several days, and the result of his visit was that instead of a governess he secured a bride, upon whom before marriage he settled $30,000. The contract was drawn by the judge who had in part been the cause of bringing the parties together. Marvin's fine appearance, plausible character, ani". the letters of -credit and introductiOn he presented established the utmost confidence in him. He also succeeded,without trouble, in negotiating at the First National 'Bank a draft of $800 upon Chicago. The parties were married last week, and left for an extended tour. The return of the draft, with the statement that it and the letter of credit were forgeries, revealed the true character of the impostor, and detectives were put upon his track by the bank officials. The first intelligence from the bridal party was a telegram from the lady, dated Albion, N.Y:, July 25th, ingniring into the truth of the report in the papers there that a fatal accident had befallen her mother. From this it would appear that Marvin had conmicted and published the story of the Accident in the hope that his wife would return .hame and., give him an opportunity to desert her. Friends went t�Albion to her relief, and :she. is now* her way home. Nothing has yet been heard from the detectives emit after the impostor and forger 4 Who is believed to have eseaped to 'Canada. . WAYWARD ONCE 210BE. Seduction and Abduction—The Girl eau - not be Found. A Kingston despatch says Glenburnie is somewhat agitated over a scandal of con- siderable magnitude. In March a young lady about 18 years of age, in poor health, was sent from her home in the vicinity of Belleville to friends in Gleuburnie. She • was goodlooking, d hence had ma,ny ad- mirers. About April she became acquainted with it young man who had returned from the States. He got into the confidence of the lady, and is said to have ruined her un- der promise of marriage. The relations of the young couple were discovered and the girl's relatives notified. She was requested to. return home, and for this purpose money was sent to her. But instead of returning she was abducted by her lover. That was the last that has been seen of her. She.was taken to a house near Col- linsby and there kept. • Her stepfather came to this city but a short time ago in search of her. He went , to the one whom he believed knew where she was, and asked, "Aro you the person who ruined my child ? " He said be was not, but the, pro- duction of a revolver made him promise to get her. For several weeks the foolish girl had been hidden. She is in the hands of badly -disposed persons. The girl's family are in great distress on account of her con- duct. One of the young men who is inter- ested in the case borrowed $100 from an m uncle, and is said to be spending it in keep- ing herfro-her friends. As a last resort a warrant has been issued for the arrest of the principal. York A .WIFE'S BETUIIN. Appearing to Uer Unsband, Who Slap- poseci Ue Iliad Buried Iler. A despatch from New York says: Oii August 1st, 1880; Mrs. 'Pecker, the wife of John Becker, of 410 Fifth street, disap- peared from her home. . Her husband con- . c uded that she had either fallen or jumped into the river. Three weeks after her dis, appeara,nee he found the body oi wornan in the' Morgue that he recognized as his wife's. It was. delivered to him- and lie had it interred Calvary Ceradtery. Last; evening, while- Mr. .Becker VAS. alisent, a °Mau reading herself Mrs. Becker 'made erappearauee hii house and asked for er husband. :She Walt told -that -Air. 13ecker• Aa buried hiawife a. year ago. 'She insisted, ciweser, upon retnaining Until her husband eturned she allowed to do so. Mrs_Beekett madehiesapPearance.,:-__"When onfrented bythe woman he recognized her s his wife. ...Mrs. Becker Said that site ha,d ecu living inqiew-Jereey with friends 84 hot heard Of her funeral. : , • — --The African:, Slave Trade Vigormui. • - - VrOLL _iinie te time. inT telligenee-eaches !viand froth the Soudan -Which leaves no ooria for doubt -that the kfricati'slave-trade ontmues to. be in -vigorous .operationiti - hat cotntry: It he indeed; stated that no ewer than 50;000 cr.80,000'negroes are Still' man -ally conVeyed to the- .Turkih sand gyptia.n ports of the Red Sea, :where they_ re -disposed of to dealers from -all parte-9f • he Sultan's donairdats; Yet it is tnqnes-. ionable that in 1870,: COI. Gordon dealt. -hat promised to be adeath-lalow. to: the lave trade in theySendan.,1HIS Lieu, enatt, Geisi Pasha, who has lately -died fter suffering terrible hardships;fought and eat- the slave traders in a pitched battle, ii._ which they, relying.. upon - superior Umbers,: made .the first attack:Gessi Pasha inflieted a brushing defeataipen; the slave, traders, -and liberated immense num- bere of -slaves; J -If. Col: Gordon had 'been properly supported by. Tewfik-Paiha, there is reasonSto believe . that the SlaVe tra.d would have been driven out of the Soudan: te. Since his :departure his old enetnies-:have for ruin Jimmie- 'fared 'hadlYs and it is great ' extent .regained - their foetner encl. have succeeded in revising: thoUght that exposure and want of PtePer. " othnfluealnacrege scale the traffic in negroes, - It nourishment caused his death.—Neta ' is quite true that stint traffio, cannot Herald. bo 03ffectuallysuppressed domesticslaYerY is abolished iii Egypt, but yet Col: Gordon's experience ..ShoW that by the adoption .of vigorous ii adoption number of victims may be greatly diminished, and the trade -Tendered -both hazardous arid imptofit, _ able.--Lancion -T - s h TIIE SIZ011Y 'OVER. - • • • h i‘t4i,gree.a'e - IMprisoned. Dogs - lieseue,a h _ by a sow Early last sprits a bla,ck and white bull dog Was. thrown: off the-ratlway-stspension -bridge at Niagara Fade, distanCe of 150 feet; -by owner.- s'After striking the a water the dog naade . desperate effort to reachtheshore, and in so doing it Was oast by- the rapid's upon -what ie commonlyknown as Taylor's Island, a large pile of, rocks few yards below the bridge. -.About - a nionth ,ago twe other dogS - with s'etTe. E hove_ were in the- r'vers - bathing near-- the r cdct Maid of. the Mist lauding. The does getting eat teo-far; were also carried clown •t the river upon this island lay the1f • swift -current. They - attracted much a attention by their . scamperines- on the E Vt a rocksat the water's edge; and _Were - - - . . watched hy the tra-Vellin,g public", passing over -the bridge onthe traits. The canines - hitting nothing ta exist upon the citizens fed -them by.throwing, pieces of refuse beet aver the preeiplee.-. Several unsuccessful a.ttercints were naade to rescue...them from .their hermitage hy rneanS of a trap worked; by a -rope :from the bridge.. -Yesterday a young 'mail named ,Jariaee Brown; living at Suepension-. Bridge; N.Y.; volunteeredto: descend by Meansof a- rope -ladder and secure ,the dogs,. HOSecured two of the three, pIadedilim?in .;bags,,a-ncl they were- drawu. to the:- top of the bank by a -rope. The- -.other deg, not desiring , to quit his liernaitages placed himself beyond reach. The dogs tieing much valued by thediffer- eht guests stopping at the- betels, it is expected that the boy will be full* rewarded" for liis daritgadventare. • Shaving iand:-Shorteuitig. It is undeniable - that Americans of the Eastern States are steadily- decreasing- in stature. There was - a • time When the Yankee was proverbially long and lank,but at the present day the long variety exists onlyin, the - backwoods of Maine and liew. Ifanipshire, while the Yankee of Boston, New Jlaven, Providence and other large. towns is about : the.- size of the average. Frenchman. itt New :York :the mean height of itsnative born inhabitants is still less: ; The young ' -men of society and broking proclivities are more _.frequently under than over five feet. In Ape country' towns theheight of the men seenis to Vary, inversely as the size of the .population.and among the farmers we meet with tall .and• weir -formed figUres. As we_.- go westthe average heightsiteadilY.' inereases; except it the large cities, and'in the North- western and frontier' States a man who is less than six: feet high is -regarded as a peculiar and' - unfortunate -person. It, now, we look at Europe, we find that in certain -countries Men- are small' tuads in- Otheri they are of respectable height. The- Seotclimen are as long and lank as the men of Maine or Minnesota, and the Englishman is ordinarily fully fite-feetten'inehes high, 'except in London, where a smaller variety' of -Englishinan is Occasionally met, .Itt France, tiilthe-Other hand, the .meti have dwindled so steadily during the last hundred years that the standard of height for.admis- -sion.. to the arnay has _been - repeatedly lowered. In:Spain and South Italy men are :small, whereast.---ilas:Nortla Italy..andin most of 'eerniany they are as tall' as Eng- liehmen, Wherever we find a.: small race Of men we can easily ,ascertain :that they have decreased in stature within a century, a,nd that this decrease is still in progress • while -111 .countries - where Men are . of - inediura h-eightno tendency -to grow either shorter or taller is perceptible. . Miss -Elizabeth Fleming; who die re- cently at Edinburgh, was one' of ithe links: between the Present times-md that of Scott. Iler .mother, Isabella Ra.e; was the .daugh- ter of Janaes- Rae, the -father of surgical teaching 'in -Scotland, and 'another of Dr. Rae's sdatighters' married Mr. :,Keith, . of haVelkon,'. At 'whose. ' house . .Sir- Walter Scott, a great friend of ;the fainily,was in the habit of meeting Miss Fleming -and her sister almost daily. Marjorie; or "Maidie," as he .always 'called the latter, was :an 'eepecial favorite. of Sir -Walter's MAW the time of her -death, at the early age of 11, Herlittle tale was beautifully teld a few yearssago lay Dr_. John Brown, under __the title of Pet Marjorie.' ; DRESSY WOMEN. AT SARATOGA. (Saratoga letter to St. Louis Globe -Democrat.) The lady at Congress Hall with the one hundred and thirty-nine dresses is still astonishing the natives and the strangers two or three times ,a day, and finds her path a pleasant one. There is one prodigy here in the person of a dame who has not repeated a toilet once in three weeks, although arraying herself in twe or three different dresses dadly, and yet announces to her admiring satelites that she has no maid ; that she would not trust one of them. The tales of her sixteen trunks and one room full of wardrobes and racks of her finery are not half so astonishing as the fact of her having no neat handed Phyllis to sort out and care for the innumerable bonnets and boots, gloves, fs,ns, flowers and furbelows that match with and accompany each toilet. It must be that tny lady lies awake nights to plan the spectacle of the coming day, and toils when others rest that she may surpass the rivals in her chosen cult. A Mrs. Greenway, of Baltimore, now reigns as the “ diamond princess" of the season, setting herself ablaze from crown to girdle with her dazzling jewels and making all the other diamond -wearers in a ball -room pale and green with their lax k• admiration. Mrs. - Astor's regalia is the only famous one that surpasses this Baltimore collection; and it would seem as if the lady had been in Sinbad's cave or in a shower of diamonds, -so -thickly do they cover her heck, arms and little finger.. Besides all this glitter of precious stones the -gossips credit her with possessing 365 dresses, a fact that is intensely mournful and truly. heart-rending when it is remembered that . a watering -place season hardly lasts over, sixty days, and that threedresses a day for all that time will leave -ninety-five gowns riot Worn. .k Boy's Sad Death. , • “ Here Conies Mr. Burns, and he's drunk !" exclaimed the little _son of James Irving last evening, as he looked from one of the windows of his fatherleapartreents, at No. 82$ Kent aVenue,:Briabklyst. Mrs._ Irving suggested that they lack the door, but her husband,- Who kncw Ruins, Said "No.• 'Let • Iiin2 come -.An& so John Btirtis staggered inn? the .ryorrr, With a coat thrown over , his left arne4 and lea,di g his: little son ilamee; 9 years' .Of • age, by the hand:- The child looked ill Andbould hardly stands Casting the cOat-oh-the-fleor Barbi; said : " lie-.doWn "there ; be- back.sOon.n He Out of the house, - remarking that hesWould. rcturn iii a: Shorttime:with scinie -Clean clothing -and inecliCine for the 'hoy.s, Ile had been gote buts few minutes when Irving was ;visited by a neighbor, Who, upon: looking- at the. child --on the- floor, said,' '' That's a. ; . - very sick boy.", Mr. and Mr.s. together _ With. the sneigh_ber, - -then -went -.into Teens F- And held a cansultatien'as to_What. theyslimild do in _the matter.' They iInaly decided to notify -the police if the father of ,the ehild dicl-not return within a' few Mitautee, 1111 (1 have.the little fellow removed to a hoSiiitith After some, -further talk .!BIrs. Irving -ref entered the kitchen,. and 1L"mainent after . her screarne. brought the others into the ronin. There lay' Jilumie on his . back, dead; • The: police -were, itfortneds, and 0 When the father Of the boYe returned, some. time after; Still under : the influence Of liquor, he was hacked up for intoxicatiatil. The case, whets haVestigatek proved to he a- very - sad- cine:i- Ruing • and his _ wife separated - About two months-- ago, and Jiintnie had lived -first with sine parent and- i then with the other. When with his father the -two slept:son a dirty. ahd _dilapidated .1 mattress in a stable corher of Vanderbilt r . and -Park . avenVes. As the father . . equancleyed almost' every 4 cent _ he ;earned "Distorted Relationship." He was a husky -voiced and very inaudible man, but he was deeply in earnest when he unwound the cotton handkerchief from his neck yesterday and said to the magistrate iu the Tombs Court, "1 want my Lillie sent up." "What has she been doing ?" asked His BI'm°2°rBnactin' mean, very mean. Forgets aih. husband and a father and oughter hev my family's respect. See !" "Has she been in any reformatory insti- tution before?" "1 guess not. Lillie's not strong on the reform, and none of 'em would do her a powerful heap o' good ennyhow." "You shouldn't give her up so quickly, said the magistrate; "little girls will be\ little girls." " " But she ain't little, Lillie ain't, and she can wallop any one of her inches on our block." "Evidently a little wild and head- strong," soothingly muttered the magis- tra,te. "She can't be positively wicked.' "She can't, eh ?" said the applicant, and he brushed back his hair 4 See that scar ? She did that with a soup ladle." Then he lifted his sleeve. "See that un? 'Twas the saucepan lid she dug that out with." He pointed to a yellowish patch under his left eye. "She used a rolling pin to do that." " Phew ! she must be a dreadful child. Why haven't you corrected her ?" The applicant looked bewildered. "1 tell you, Judge," he said, "it takes a man with grit and muscle to correct Lillie. When she gets busting round on our premises most people hev to light eut." "Have you tried advice?" "Yes, I have, and a barrel stave; but nothing short of a cart -rung would tonal her." "She must be vicious." "She is; but I wouldn't mind that if she didn't get drunk so often." “ Drunk! Dees she drink?" . "Like a fish. She can stow away xeore lightning hi less. time than anyheing.in the livin' business- that I ever stacked up Against" • . • - "This is dreadful " • But her Strong 'suit i cussin", When . Lillie gets an a scoldin' condition there ain't .. tiany one in the diggins cares about facin her. She Swears longer, stronger .and, tougher than a pilot in a sca fog," • _ She musb be a terror." - - • -'She is. You oughter :See4ber swing a Wasnboard last week when a neighbor she • didn't like came in. ., She'd 'lave chawed: - the wonian'aear off only her teeth's false and they went hack on her" "My gracious r Does she gO to school?'" -Again the applicant•looked perplexed. .. Go to school?" he asked - . " Yes ; how old is elle?" - h e . -ago ‘!. Well there, you - - - is`somethin' I've never got putts" ._ What ! don't you know your own daugh- ter's age-?" • -, . "Darter Melilla the applicant,. and the • puzzled expression passed away. "Darter I Why,' jedge, Lilli 's my wife" • • , / . N st, 111 - A. summons' wee granted.—/V.•-.Y. Herdki.- • 1 - - - ' Of all the,--Queen'Ei_claughters none has - ver mixed so freely and so , frequently in general London society as the Princess Louise has dope thiS=leaseti. —A fellow 'who had been eating unripe ruit said something was wrOng in the I • Department of -the Interior." . Baldheaded men are informed that there - s but One avenue of escape from -their afflietiOSI, and that is darboline, a deodor. zed extract of petroleum, the: great hair - enewer, Which being recently improved, more -effica,cicnis than ever -and is absolutely aultless. - 1Latest Canadian. Jottings. The Other day a gold medallist of McGill College, ,Montreal, - 'was i ominiously plucked at his primary law camination was in an adjacent room, Immediately because of his iporande of Canadian history. stopped the engine, _while the employees hastily ran the direction whence the Apples are a comparative failure around Belleville, and the curculio has brought unusual noise came. , Oliver' Cope a,nd Edward Sharpless, two of the machinists, destruction on the plum crop. arrived on the Scene just in time to There is likely to be a -lively contest for see the form of mad - the representation of Birth) in the Manitoba rapidly whirled around the- main Legislature. didates in the, .field --Messrs.' Crear and te the la '- Legislature. There are already fel:1r can- shalt leading from •.wheh machine shop 'A Death Whitt. „ (From the Pottsville Journal.) Isaac Esbin, an employee of the Sharp - less Iron Works, West Chester, met with a frightful death on Thursday afternoon. About half -past 2 o'clock the hands employed in the works were Startled by LARDI THE VERY RES ac ine Ey' THE WORLD, Is manufactured by shriek, followed by. S011ede eliePlaced •NIcCOLL.B,ROS. Co., TORONTO machinery whirling and Colliding withloose • '• • - And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant fox , boards. The engineer, John Morgan, who LArdine and take no other. This oil under the severest test And most active competition was at. the Toronto Indus- trial Exhibition awarded the highest prizes also - the GOLD MEDAL at the Provincial Exhibi- tion, Hatnilton, and the highest award at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa, the silver medal. Farmers and all who use Agricultural machin ern win save money and machinery by using . none but • I t. it ;eVery few revo- WOods, of Birtlev,Major -Bolton, of Shell I t' Ph'illYag gli 1 - u ions Is. head and shoulders struck the . River, and Mr. Templeton, of ,Shoal Lakeroof of the shed abOve knocking the boards ' - Says the Detroit Free Pre.s.s .= "For five loose and flying two of them. clear to the • %years after a man leaves.Quebee and settles ground below. -When the engine stopped, I , 'ARDINE. .A.SIC FOR, • • itt .New England he is along an the the man's head and arms were dangling census of that city. This is to give him a from the shafts. His legs and body were - die s J ch'ance to get home -sick and return." firhe Village Council of Staynor have rewarded the little girl who for an hour 8,nd a half fought the fire in the grass that caused considerable damage recently in the cemetery there. - ,IIAII=U1111Mine completely wound around the shaft and strapped tightly to it by the belt, which had ;to be cut in several places before the body could be removed. 1 - The bones of the left leg below- the knee Werebroken and mashed into splinters,. while the thigh bone was FOB COUGLHIS,' COLDS, ASTILK4 NVELOOPING-COUrGil; CROUP. This old establiehed remedy can be with confl broken and protruded through the skin; Mr;D:MuchNiauger, of Bright, haetwo cows which he claims cannot be beaten by dence recommended for above complaints. The other leg escaped withbrui_ ses, no bone_ fi the TRY IT. If your merchant has met _got it, he__ bein broken Both arms were fractured -can get it lc: you. at various places, the - bones at the elbows - APT -43- W. MCKIM any other two cows in the Province -for giving milk. They averagedforthe last "mina month over 100 pounds each clay and he literally torn apart: The trunk of . Hamilton 0 .r.ilnerlY Biell?prigpmrtite-r the bod5r was terribly crushed, while the I -an°. = - _ . - - got a chequ f om the cheese factory for e head and -face -were pounded almost beyond $20:66 for the month. rtEognition. .The blood oozed in both , A Staynor..J. P. flu,/a pithinaster for - • •- ears and from Mats on various _parts of the -cutting down . a_Sha e tree _which he found body. .The shifts: and pulleys were beepet.. on the road, opposite the farm 1 of Mk.' tered witlybkod,rdreps of which discolored - Gilchrist; in NOttawasaga, and- Una t(011 the shed roof .f0 -air distance of several fegte: a Culvert, The Magistrate held that shade froth • the .shaft. • The 'shaft was making ' trees had to be protected:. and could not be. -about sae2_,121,incirea ana fifty i.revehitiees. ,but down with iniptilsitY'bY PijAhnlastgrA,Oe per -infinite; in pray -aye of -which it is . ,• . ,. .. - - any One else for any purpose: - ' ' estimated his --- head and 'shoulders struck - " A Chinaman.sstarteda laundry ini . Kngs- the roof:AS stated :above:: '' The 'screatial-. ten. and 'fared badly. The: boys,. 'whose uttered_hy-him. when ' he -first- realized his _agea.ranged _among :the t*Einties; -.pelted situation was distinctly heard' overa square - stones, eggs and other missiles: at shop off, aswasalso thesound of eaehbollieion - 'and, Mit down JAS.:clotheslines wherilull Of with the boards- of the .roof; It; is - most - 'clothes.. The Contents Of ' a bottle of ink probable 'Illat the shock' caused - by the were scattered over iionie of the linen. . 'first collision- knocked: him senseless, and .- i John went for the rascals with an axe, and that he was uncone-C*1.113 of the terrible! now. than he some of them would .doube htless VMS SUbjected. • - - sufferers 1 -but -for:- the:fact. _ -.that -.they were fleeter: -bramu ises-and tilation to:Whibli_ his -frank A 0 NORTHERN PACIFIC 1 RAILROAD LANDS. 'I FORTUNES FOR- FARMERS. 50,000 Farms. 0,000,000-1cres. Best Wheat Land, Itich &Wow, ChFlee Thaler, - Farming, 8tock-Raising, Dairying, . Fuel -and Water m Abundance. $2.50 per acre andnpward. One-sixth cash and five annual payments. Re- duced Fare and Freight to settlers. Write for "Publications No. 63." Geo. Dew;-Trevelling Agent, 72Tonge st., Toronto. R. M. Newport, General Land Agent, St. Paul, Minn. - Atm E s cor T A A SalMOn, supposed t9 be the largest ever - caught- in the CchimbiaRiVer, had a Weight, whet dreseeclsof :eighty-four pounds and filled sixty-nine Cans. v: ' -Opc)pal Land Agent for Hamilton, Ont. — GENTS WANTED.--=.1.11JCRA The, death is aim:camped Of.' Mr. •Wm.- G.. - Fargo, President of the At:clerical:1r Express Coinpany. He wasthe pioneer of that eystem; afiddied worth over twenty million dellars TINE, respectable empleiment for teach -4 ers during vacation, or longer, or permanent, for Ow energetic young men in this and. adjoining . counties. To those whocan show fair -success and adaptability, expenses, liberal coinraission and moderate salary will be paid. -.Addre,ss pith references, Drawer 2591, Toronto. ' '