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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-03-09, Page 2'41k •• The Poet to els „. . • The Meech Century-" • contains the • following hitherto - unpublished Meet. by Xi. Bryant. They are .unfinished, and . dated Beelyn; 1e73.: ". - ,ho morn hatlitioethe glory that it riordoth the day So beautifully die,. . Once I.oan call thee to my tide no mOVV. To gal% upon the sky. : - NorThy dear hand, with each return of spring, sought in sunny nook the flowers she gave; - 1seek them still, and Sorrowfully bring - Thechoicest to thy grave. • • • t . • • gere-, Whore I sit alone, is sometimes heard, _ • prom the -great world, a whisper of my name, - Jolued, haply,. to some kind,. commending- word, 'By those whose praise is faint): •-• And than, as itIthckght thou- still wert , 1 turn me, half forgetting thou are dead, Sio xeati the gentle gladness in thine eye,. • Teat once I might have read:. .1 turn, but see thee not; before my eyes - - -Tha image of a hili -side mound appears • W1,0re all of thee that passed not tethe skies m laid with bitter tears. , - - An:t 1, whose thoughts go hack to happier days ThAt fled with thee, would gladly now resign ' All Ulm the _world Can give of tame and praise . • For One sweet 1064,4 _thine. . - 'Tins., over, when Ircad of generous deeds; - Such words as thou did'st . once delight to hear, yhoszt is Wrung with Anguish as it b16eds • To th.iull thou -art not near. • . •lind'ilow that Loan talk no more with thee aneient friends And days too fair to last, - A bitterness -blonds with the mentor)? <Of .Ji that hAppy.lagt. Oh, %ten Tt • - . r • - 3embe.inetit'erte • Tho gteet Barnum and London 'show has •grown to be something even -leech heeded the- laegest entertainment of its kind. It hears - ally a-4sumed the character; intpoitanee and ot an •-estalilished publio institution--; Overything appertaining to which interests eveieybody, and about .which more is.wtit- • len, read and said than any other topic •evekee._ There is something amazingly •'.is.fgc.fiat-i.4g in the there magnitude of the •igures eiquited to illustrate its Popularity • and grei-Wegs.. For- over; two hutdre timeiest year it attracted a dilly attend teeeee el, 'thirty thousand people; it repre- sents eepital of Over $3,000,000; iteactual daily Olpenses are - over $4,800; it _ uses aetee y a -eofid mile of -its on railroad oats, - require:4 eight -level acres for its tents; eiep:orni 600 remeittia Women„,300 superb *tortes,- 160: advance .advertisers and five. .spacioueg adVertising .cere, -while the bus ' fee -printing. and engraving alone..represent a spiel fortune. , Instead of singlespeel, inenseit exhibits -nerds and droves of the iarest and- costliest Wild beasts; as, for . examples, e9 elephants, 10_ .giraffes, 10 ostrich; and 32 (?amets and -dromedartes. it ha 9 lost over-' $80,000 woith of an- imals urohaSed $260;000 worth more. The -salaries- oftiteleadieg agents equal those of ° cabinet ministers; it has representatives in everyeountrylecat" the globe, securing mot -ages, the mere search for which Costs not less. than $166„000 it year. A few days, • Ago ieeabled 020,009, through the banking houses of Brown Bees, of NeW_York- city; and of Brown, .Shipley ce Co. and the Ori- ental Bank of . London; .England, toits • ageete in Mesh Barmaheis the.first pay- isaent on . a -mysterious, newly -obtained -featere which it confidently -predicted .„ ViMMIF Parnell's!- , BH:.FERMENT. Tenc4 ePlY, FURTHER txpgcTED. " A. last (Feidey) night's Londoncablegram says : .There ias much excitement in the tiession" de' eenocet. ' A largenumber of. House of -05iem ons at the opening of . the persons were i the lobbies unable .to find room in the Huse. The strangerstgallery and- press galfery were filled.. The seats of alt the merith S were filled. - .Mr.- Parnell said the tientif.et he desired t� '-do was to make his eesition-olearto the Irieh. people at home ,and ebro.ad..., Mr.". Forster, he 'said,. might, tolhe.' ashamed for tradueing him-. He eeclened to reply to Mt. Forstmes questions,. ancl,, charged that gentleman with .having -risked hint (Mr. Parnell) to inform egainst -believed'. the Were likely had he not of: that pap responsibility is aesocnateie If Mr: Forster etioles in the. Irish World to . incite to orime, •• why stopped:: the' oircillatian . cozepered the of . Mr. Forster-, who teed the articl ei and believed what the -te- suit would be, *ever teed feli brought again fairly singled the leilinabtha did.he sapPies and Boyterit likely._ to • Ode Ireland? • Mi. were not irtent continued—H€ fend hietselfe himself from. itt the eyes of tt in Englind: ppressio nifecl ire paigie" over a cep:bed-the ea.° Of that paper, Mr. Forstee's Mr, Parnell of 'Carey, statethene-ei'. ct, but.. of :belief or hear - Say.' It • had Oen already disproved: . as eegarde Mrs.-. Vete. :The . evidence in e Beene of .:the.• Herder. epen-. the feet that some . ion. received eheqttes- from 'Lund of . the I. Land - League. n given to thoesands of o that of himself, :who had m, though_ they were now heti: Mr. Forster had'un- t Sheridan • as mentioned hi Treaty negotiations : Why the names of -Devitt, Egan a wake also - tnentioned as I • . • vor to prevent outrage .itt 'teethe exclaimed : "They nee to me." Mr. Parnell hadbein challenged to de it had nothing .to' defend occupied- a better positien e Irish than Mr. Fptster did r ' -Forster was guilty. of melee the heeding ie the nd " Incidents Of the - cam'. °lump recorcling-outregee, mat Mr O'Brien, the editor is liberated from. prison', unfairness - was shockipg. nalyzede t the - evidence. whioh:was -not a refereece to t Thied "rested men while in p the. sustenance Such aid hid- prisoneri. elle. Foster's . animus was dee i to the feet that he endeavored to . obtain. a peomise from h,m (Parnell) but failed ,t� do so, and lost is office. He declared; that the present e tnanifestle tinfit Act. Mr..FOrs congenial Work _ cials... of -Ireland: were to adixiinieter thee.CriMee r ought to return to his: Hs was hopeful that he would *eather e he has weathered. other" formidable i opeeeseione.: He. .ipeke for thirty-five mieetesttduring the whole of which period t Prince of Wales: Was in the gallerye e Mr. Treeely -proceeded tb .v Government in , replying to Mr. Parnell, dieate the pelicy of the :rela• id.- • Since thepresent will 'even eclipse- gigantic Jumbo as si, Government th re has been commissioned _ sensation. It will move upon . the gkeat to suppressicri eit the nurabee of murders • west the coming sesame larger and richer- ,has 'teen ree.uc cl erom three ,monthly to in 'thousands Of curious,'- instructive said one tu. the;lasfour artlta had months; -• -.entertaining possessions than ever before. The only- politly for -Ireland, was to say ifo wonder that the name of le....T.Bernurn pi knownand quitted, all .elati busy World ever,, as the synonym for shrewdness, •pluck, enterprise eaid 'semis. There may- be- another Jambe, but thereewill never -be another -Barnum. ; •' • . • " • . • t Beginning to Squeeze. - Two or three ,e -ears a,gt: a Jersey- City temeion lawyer took the case of it widow who wanted about two - thousand dollars . back pay, ane the papers tut to Weeh- private person lead been -pointed out by the beton, to be' hidden away webs until some clerk had nothing else to ong the °Oh- Land League tig)i -would act against it. ‘ Kr: Parnellineed out that one of the do but eeamine them. After three months prisoners had .etaturned the cheque' - sent Lad passed a young farmer _called to aski him from t 'e s' exactly what t and do it. ,He had not made borstel alien distasteful to t himself, and wie reeigaittion an Cebinet. • He t More fatal to responsibility local bodies: convinced -that e.GOvernrnent meant to do regretted that Mr. 'Parnell hie pesition, dearer. Mr. ant to the Address was •ceLord. Lieutenant and to d, if carried,- lead, teetheir the resignation of the ought. nothing 'would he bland than 'to- hand the its government to the the, Government Were he life of any Oficial or - Omit the ease,. and . regularly for ninety elaye,--since that day, he dropped in, With bis: - , " Well, any good news for eehe wider jennings ? : • At his lest visit the Other day. the lawyer - replied 'after: the same stereotyped fashion, and added • , "1)c, you live near the widow? " ,U Qnly One farm between us." et - , • "Andeshe has tad you' to ,watch for the - stoney ? " , Well, IlOb :03X9100y. that, but I've kinder taken A upon myself. --to 'do so. If the evidclerjertningegets thattttwo thousand dollets before the first of April My heart _ is geing to -yearn to emarry . her. .-. If she doiet get it.Pra going to. marry an old -maid ., with tweety•onee acres: of land -And a yoke - of oxee. 1 wouldn'eleave•corne in to -day, ' but -the widdee she's' a winking and the old meie- is looking purty as . a bed- of •onioes,'end 'things is begiening to squeeze • on.. :rec."- - • - 1 William Young, the dramatis . who wrote Peendra.aon 7,4 foe. Lawrence Barrette has perneeee speeeh,lailed." wlit-rch :Charles Wyndham ' may Pioduoe gram eayst Th authoeities have teceived had nothingt that the prison Land League,: - Sir Staffo d orthoote said he wou/d.be sorry to we ,t e or harass the government, but even:if, the result be to mese the Gov- ernment to resie it .would be better. that it tentation fund, seeing he. do with the League, and Seeere not members of the should happen an that the country, rely- ing on false bee ity, should belee back to the Ministerial; _policy of the - past. - ler. , Gorstts amend nt Was rejected by 2e9, to 176. The Patne iteteabstained from voting. -McCoitat and, lair; Irish "Home' Maier's - - ./ : , ' voted with the ajcirity. . . , 2-, : ' It estitated on very. best - anthority that startling'revelet one -regarding the wieder and conspiracy ill heePUblisked in a few days. -Ten:neen etillrehortle be arrested in the.Deltlin distrete awl' pretences. - When these- arrests h ve been made: the 'Whole of the_ organization well , -be crushed. It will be proved teat all the murders were prisoners gest - othmitted for -trial - are- atranged by Oiler rganizetioli. Stx of the Willing te beet; .e informers. , The -News r says: "As :a Arsons). „vindication,. Mr.. wtieten 'a comedy entitled ." TheRejab," . A Iasi (k4esetiteit Dublin- 'cable - ;text _Beeson. *- -THEE MODERN SMAT,T, Bpeet-The Bikhep one," and are huite • • leevitely)—When I was; your. • age,- my • identity. '-- Mice. t arey young -friend, it was no teonsidered good "boycotted)! si iee - tnenners for. little.beys to jOhi itt the con- a tenant has p" eersatioe of grown up people _unless, they chalked n :were inviteetto do sty. Smali American— warning Gus thee was seventy or eighty years ago. "cursed Weeteehanged alt that, you bete—Pence- for eoel,P Seilie very fine-ipecittiens of asbestos are Cavendi - -beetle found in .Nevada. The fibre of the stated, • Specui nens enema s from four to eix inches" charged. , jn leegth., ated is: soft and silky. A strand :Pius - . of it eau be tied into a knee the same AA the infa . fitak iibre. It is found in what, from the - regirdin . valuable iiiferm tion cob; ening "Number ositive As to his pis been completely ening informer', Not id rent, and 110tiOSE5 are s of her :property pay rent to the tzpatrick, arrested urder of Lord F. e, and who, it was er, has been die- s. telegraphs from mpbatie denial of made against me piracy. I have to- det,eription given, appears to be serpentine day invited an Legume,. into the - wetter .at took; ad not very far item the enders:4 the hands of ehtelerieigh.Enthassy,endlieve extinct voleeep.takee fitePS eo eecortain the source of theXi, -Thanes ChanAtre Vaughan, a lei -gee -cruel libel again ,t me," Aandeemprietor of Shrepshire, England, A. 'London ...otjbleerene dated yesterday - wa,s' sentenced to twelve months' imprison. (Thursday) Rape::: In the Imperial Cern- 3teitt for -peetitry . in a- case le which- the mons Mr. Trevelyan, in a reply to a ques- Viceir cf4.1oppington (the liete Mr. Benson) tion, stated ; th rt.- a ishorthand writer was :was, charged with killing _a pheasant withent present dtiriegt e examination of witnesses "se license. A- laborer. named Woodward, at Dublin ast1& The witnesses were mit ;who geve falseevidence in the same ease threatened, nor *ere they proffered drink Was cormeilt4d for four months. • - The debate oh.' r. GOrst's.ameedinent was Arthur Morel]; of -HalifaX. Int Fey, city ebbe resumed. r. Lowtheepreeneed the medical tAfiter, and on of sjes: A. Moho, •Vetiseivative support to.. a vigoros policy 'Pretideut of the Union Bank, died very in Ireland. Forriter „tette ko„fcr• _the sedeeely this Morning -of hemorrhage of Phteriix Park rders Irelente'would,have .the lunge. • •• believed Mr. .13 •:„, -nee t - 11t 11111, , .„11111111BIED . ,. have be me ungovernable. 4T46,:reciel* diselosur a increased the simpleton that the Lendlie e_Wali coentestedeteith -the 01*. rages d" they pieblid- -expected that Mr. Parn11 would elucidate this „peineet. NO mere -die lahnertWould be eittactene; He charged „.ildr-.• Paeivaltee *Ake .heading. . an organization which ettitarted'. ,An I. agita- tion that promoted &Orem and incited lo - mue ere!. tir,. giirtiellee-eeatted the Advantag e of- „the- agitation. , He did ncit plan he Otitrages, but connived aetheir commission.eXt. O'llelly shouted "-It's a lie "several. times. XIS WAS •Buspended by - a vote 11305 to 20, ' Mi. Forster reiteetteed. the cheteereetgainet Mr. Parnell, quoting from his speeches, ' that : Murder „ was, unnecessary.. :He said the . wretches who hadecOnemitted the Photnix Park.assessine- tions had net Wed on the letter but spirit' of these speeches. :Until Mr. Parnell ex- pressed regret and eepentarice he could net. Commmileate with-. him. •- A._ feeling was no risittg .even in . Teelind. against the: agitation. -- Mr. Parnell and his. friends had been ueveited and 'unmasked: -.Teete were leed' or* for Bir: Parnell, buthe die not movei . Mr, O'Donnell, attempting to interpose, Wait ruled _mit lof order. ' Mr. Parnell in wee agree -The St years has .ipredueed . such interest and _exciteMerit as Mr. Forster's attack to -night on the policy of the _Line League. The TintO,priiits a copy of the manifesto betted bythirty Imid memlterii of the Iiilih:Reitub- *late: Br therlioed I resident -Ai .1 Landon, .addressed to all :the =initiate of the .Bro- therhood, expreeeieg.the horror and shame with which they read the disgraceful story told in ehe.Kilmeinharn -Court-Heine: • , . . „ ... . : . . e . .. . , 't eiteeet ItrAlt IS I.T.? -Interestitig 'Table of Distances- From - Atlantic Coast.... , - -A number of interesting table's of dis- e tances ex etebraced - in - a recent report. published hi Ottawa. From the %tilts of Belle Isl to -Duluth • at • head of Lake puperick, the -distance by water is 2,384 statute miles, . of -whicht 71.1 are - artife cial, and 2,312-1 open: navigation. The dis . tande te Liverpool. via Cape Clearefionl Halifax, ' 2,910 statute miles; from -.Ste 'John, 3,243 miles;_from Portland, 3,278 miles, an hem- Quebeeee,242 Milett, The distance • from Quebec • t� Liverpool Via Straits :el Belle ' Dee ' and, Malin' Head, north of I Ireland; is • 3,060 miles. - The following 1 is a table of. 'distanees, by -geographi al.- Miles, from the prineipal sea- ports - of • America to Liverpool, _ Havre, Havana and Rio Janeiro: . ' ovedle adjourn the debate, which onclard says' no speech of --recent. the . ..• • . •. • 0 • a. .,4 •• . ii , a. d at. ri a- . • • d -.. Rio .Janeiro. .- Quebec t6.... . 2, ' Boston to...,•.. B,895 New " York if. 3,095 - Edladelptiat - 3,275 - Baltimore ii • 3,450:. N. Orleans ti-• . 4,780 2,939 .2,993 . 3,228.- 3,358 3543 - 4,838 2,891 1,530' 1,240 1,190 1,160, 595 • 5,546 . 4,939 .4,885 • 4,990 6,000- • 5,314 The To Teta Atettellies- of Iffonree in a 'Bad P:redica= A Detrtht despatch says f At Monroe the ice gorge oi the river.in raising ha a broken. The bankst of the river and the -neigh.borieg streets, alo the entire lower parts of the city in. thei vicinity of the depot and docks are pilediigh with • lee. On every side is desolation and 'ruin. Yesterday large quantities of ice from the up- river came: down, forming a dense blockade extending from the nearly a :Were --oom in beets, of _the fin anada Southern Railway bridge Re up the - '-iver: Many families elled - to , leave .. their- lieuses and it was tested - that. One hen city bridges -would go, but the break was secured just at theertgkt time. between two railway embankments where the and is very low, situated upon which were a large number of 'email frame houses, oceupied by poor , French people: r Ovei this ground - the ice was forced in huge masses, smashing in. the siaes of some Ana. trert fling, others. Had- the water risen a foot higher; or had _the gorge he/d • TM for bile a tew. moments' imager, this -serectere, together , with - theeliew. iron bridge' of t e 'Canada Southern:Company, would hail) been. carried away. As soon as the gorge broke the waters subsided rapidly, leaving the streets from the city bridges down, and for several „blocks back from the river, -:thickly covered With huge btocks of missive ice. • . . . ' Be of- Good Cheer. A Man who acquires _a.habit of giving way to *remote is one on the road to ruin. When trouble comes-- upon . him, instead of rousing hisenergiesto-combat it, he --weakens, his faculties grow -dull, his judgment becromes obscured and he -sinks into the slugh of despair; and ifanybody pulls him out by main forite and places him safe on solid groped, he stands there dejected and disceutagedrand is pretty sure to waste the Means of help, which . have been given him. Ho* 'different, it is with the man who takes es cheery view of life even- at its worst, and faces every ill with unyielding pluck! - He may be swept away by an over- whelming tide of misfortune,but he braVelyt struggles for the shore, and is ever ready -to make the Most or the help that May be given him. 'A. cheerfulthopeful,bouragepes disposition jis invaluable,. and. • should be assiduously cultivated. - The wise man has his follies, no less than t e tool ; b t it has been said that ;herein - lies -the difference—the follies of the fool are known, to the world, but are hidden from himse are known - the world. • ". I tell, Charley, is he levee t e very groued she walks on. "Yes,'t salFogg, "when- she is walking on her father's estate." .,-• - . Marie etOistinger's repertoire - includes =neatly 200 (verse. . • • . The less you -leave . your -children: when you die, the Metre they will have twenty years afterwards. Wealth inheritedshould be the incentive- tot -exertion.-- Instead .of -that "it is -the -tithedeed to sloth." The only money that does a man_ good is_ what he ewes himself. A ready-made fortune, like " ready-made olkehes, seldom fitsthe Man who OOMSS inte.poseefiaion. Ambition, stimu1ated by, hope and a heltfilledpurse, has "a poetise that Will triumph over all . ,.„ 1- e the follies of the wise than' &himself, but ire hidden from on," exclaimed Browne" tha holly unselfish in his affection ell isupeero.e -end:Would difficulties. • • The Snecesstal Pa _ewer tit - a • • r, Ciaarth. -4-- Mi. it0 's Anna 44lievwer7's almoat cOmeleted her fourth • year in e pulpit of the Wil- loughby Avenue Se reodist Church-- m Brooklere, and havin'te menet-rated that a young wentan can b successful pastor, she end her friends t it is about time the Methodist Bishoie ceived her into. the Church-werle She. p that she has no •6 ether ambition- that; e do pastoral work. 'Bred as a strtot trecopalian, she had OVEITOOMEI the satepleette -her .family after she Peettnlean eyankrit. Not to-diegrice. them, es some of . heeteetlatives fearedshe might, she declined top the family name of -Snowden, towhicettAft was entitled, and adopted instead the netibp she had heomete tocustomed to undeelep aunt's tutelage, that of Anita Oliver. lerd work has told upon her. _ .Oppositi ° from Methodist preachers has rendere 1er life more than. .ordinarily serious,aude appears now to be A demure young , 201atl of Quakerish testes,' Who, though fOin body; is abund- ant in energy:te„ -- The chnichew-hich Wee Purehased from the Williamsburg Saegaleank, for 0 e4,000, weer about to be turnrieento a livery stable e ee - -or a:beer garden wh:43paeegoftorit.sainSheethimeled; the title in her own giving her bend -for rt 00o 9 but she subse- quently cenveyed theetettoperity. to trustees. It Was ' found that ter he -property was deeded hi the ousterete;y the confer-. ence might repudiate -'ithel Nathodism that tolerated ,a young- wee'ige as pester,, and appropriate the chimer 4,1ifiss Oliver began eoeun -the -church on tiot business prin- ciples, making her t. • salary the last payment due, and re, t. /Ong all bills to be 'settled 'monthly. g Month's -propor-. teen of intereston the 'Mortgage has been Uniformly deposited [4, esaviegs bank, so that atithe end of: months' the lull amount is alwaysej'is and. She deter: mined to_make her ei.:et prise Unique in its economy: She figurtt out that 02,250 would meet all thte penses; her own salary included, and n the revenue fell short she gate to the rah what NOS due her. She sether face ree :elye.gainst church fairs, festivals, . oys supper, necktie sociables, leap -year etetertainments, char- ades, tableaux, cents:Met tieax-work Shows; or etny..other projects-: t would Ore the ' cherish into ala. ys, epezi.et eateeg-saloon, or a bazaa r p. h owever, , favored lecture!,c eicerts; hepeteee-g-bees, historical exam ions, debeteeeeed a -reading -none, tle revenue from I for a: •school, far 'intelligence of the. rd the cause of e does not undek- ehe constant cry in. the benefit of the te o Nita Anna Bletitadist .and manageirto get letting the church-roce sheeeentends that if .community ,is prove religion is advanced. steed whateis meant so rnanyentirchee, " church.' :When Miss Oliver tte:!.‘ittpieted the ' usual Methodist pastoral teet. of. three years last April, she resigned, sett,e'em that she was a Methodist and believee,,te itinerancy, but the trustees declined 0'resent .the subject t to the chierch, and thette dal bbard, which has seven, female meek ers, unanimously re -extended a ball -to Lee. She hati'worked herself down int healteelatet .she accepted , on . • conditions wht relief.- She ' has hader. church,. has had a te avenue, and has W- et. another place."-- oPfitirSeacht°for ehreeert.hoaritec.4 by which she could er„tilt a house, if she had land owned by liikeetf, and accordingly she -made a propositiefe le the church, that if itsmembers.would etf eel 01,000 at once; she would accept it fee tealary due . and to come, would pay- it eve :the 013,000 DUO- gitge, ,secure the release of the building lot gave - her some er study' in the on Willoughby a table -boarder Q'- it 1- is pro. age alongside the lee hit upon a way elopgside of the chime for herself This iu went to the' solution at troubled melee, men e responded to at once, filed -plans for a coati build in the spring... ' " She's got a head' end put up a home nious plan, which question that had the church, wee Misfit . Oliver has she going to 0 Jay Gould for busmess, said one o ir friends yester- day. • "She has . dune 110 her tenets, of economy, and the,. reel. e is thee last year the receipts of the ee tercet amounted to 04,709.99,being an j rease of 01,219,52. over -the year before. t„'t interest on the debt' has been. reduceep e'..-'120; and the 01,000 above referred to iecluee Vae debt to 012,000. This sum 'Mies Olivertfeexeremely anxious to raise. -.Acting underetee advice of others, a year agosheissued etteppetil, offering to send her picture to -ere rubsoribers. The returns amounted toe e,ly 0137, but she thinks this is. dueta, 'et) fact • that the -appeal did, not get int hands of a suf- ficient number sof per 1, as only a small Member of . the 8,00et were: dis- tributed. 'We stilllevee she.. says, that there is 013, eitens in Brooklyn end New York, if appeal to the people,: el'eiltnth %IL get theet to stand be and take el le money.' Miss 'Oliver planned -t� Ole an inexpensive engraving to the subs. -tier-s; but one of her fine picturetethe re :i.;a. c . ' • portrait made at ainer hjiciosixis!:,[4.1.,3-e admirers . had . a ste:' 'engraving ra. expense, and. a ys th°fat.-litheer' difficulty inoat - One of the. h 83-- '11j '. is . a .feeling among men .0-ia. t:Lnlateleeed no -3 ted- become. a back- eit are after aleonly second-rate creatures :-•;11 member of the churcet Miln'd often spoke in story of . a -man w, -fertile d - he tells the slider from Methodit •.' ' Oliver.-I'l -. epee and was re -con- verted rsome men had by Miss. failed to revive his rele.'" e He became a meetings of the girl.paet obsteo.=v„pnderful work, but when thet success were cleared away, and the; WAio the church and the buildin expressed his delight, said.: "Well,' now or well—fair membersh good. incomes, heeds that—I don't Efee why for a minister." He information that the .. have been a beer garde eendhe would most likely have . been meet et 'r -out " Ein . beer" th. ere -if it had not beeor the Rev. Miss Anna Oliver:. ' , .. g werc ,,O)out fi.nished; he e, rubbing hishande, 'church is doing so large • audiences, buildings, 'a-nd all can't have a man .silenced by the 4ce would erebably •A sound business -1 operatic. Jones declaees.thathewife is the- most thriftye woman. he elite knew.. "Why he exclaimed-, "she kt.,:ti! made ten patch- work quilts clueing theeist two years out of the samples :she ee:Iteeted, while sleep') ping. " . - • • . Scottlelt Neas. At a meeting at Glasgow on the 2nd inst. of the oommittee of the fund raised for the. relief of the guinea city of Glasgow _Binh shiteeholdera it was reported that £887,000. had been subscribed. Thecommittee had paid in grants; donations and Wane, £372,- 000. A hundred thousand pounds is still' required. The applicants for relief num- bered 977: Their loss by the failure of the bank was nearly four And a hall • - - o Mr. Robert' William Macbeth, whohas just been elected an associate oft_the British Royal Academy, is a. son of iiitit eminent Bootchporerait painter, He has . exhibited at the Academy for ten years, and known as an etcher as well as a painter. He is 35 years old: Mr. Edward J. Gregory, who has also been elected an antedate, As still Younger. He has been exhibiting portraite hi oil for eight. years, and has also been meneher of the Institute of Painters efe Watek colors. The Nairn Free Presbytery has adopted an overture to the Assembly, idenounoing - the use of instrumental music fel church as. unsceiptural end sinful." Th' Rev. Me.) Cameron, °Ardersier, in seconding the motion, said it had become a question wit him whether he could remain eenieraber Pe :the Free Church if instrumentalntutet was sanctioned. ItOtrlIS ELOPE scene at a Balivray station- he Injured meiseatet. . , A last (Pridey) night'iitt. Louis despatch: says: There was a stbrmy scene .in the - palace .cer at East St. Louis last eight. The. wile of ex -City Marshal joshes Sabine; was eloping with a butcher, named Thomas, Stringer, when Sabine came Uponthem:, For a tree it -looked as if to hnsband - would kill the 'destroyer of .hi lime, but 'finally he bent all his energies to finding out the whereabouts of his two chil ren, whom his wile had spirited *away en concealed, and was informedethey were at Alton; which appeased letn'somevehit. Stringer's eon coming -upon' the smile, the four went • to a restaurant near by and di cussed the eituation. Whatever. arrang meet was • reisiehed, the eloping couple A'1 net cohe Bider it binding epee them, a although Stringer left in A buggy efor -St. Louis; evidently with the intention o giving up the woman, he -subiequently oirted her. 'Sabine has now given, .up the woman for goad; and is making . frantic .eff rts.. to find • - •his -children. .11E PRIMULA:0CW POSIT ON. •- • euteeruled by BOA Cont for T ree Vioarsl: .What- nearly preyed to be • fatal acci- dent occurred 'tb' Me. Wei. 5 mmingtont night .miller for Scott Bros. . Balmoral' . Mill, onTuesdaymorning. About 4 -o'clock, he was,in the fourth flap putting the belt on, when his coat tail got caught in a ' belt behind -.tend; carried 'him Off bus-feete where he hung suspended 'we h fet and heed down for nearly three ho rseexpeete ing every second to be his 1 st .Wheie -- found in that .posileou by the ay -miller; . Mr. Ceareanier, :about- half -pas 6, he im- mediately stopped the machine y and took, him down. He was sufferingt rribly from. the "dant:tied position eie -had been in sot lone and the. cold. He was i iitediatelyj- taken te. his ;Own home, and' r. Forbes: sent for, who did all he could to make the old gentlemen comfortable. Not bonsai wete broken, and with.good Oar we .expecti to see him aroundagainshortly. Caledonia &ohm. : • - Be Careful, Yotingst r.8ft . It is such fun la skate, to hrow inow balls and to make snow men, that you ma some time, in the enjoyment of these winte ost painful t and ears, with tight the wee- beforeone, olt to your, rab it with stored. If y, but take nd rab the arm again ou neglece sports, forget how cold it is. -troubles often follow froeted fe The old fashioned skates, put o straps, are very bad. They sto lation, and a foot may get froste knows it. Oti a- very cold deeel ears; if One loses feeling, at cnic snow until feeling or color is i a foot becomes numb, do not del off skates, shoes and stockings -- foot with anew until it feels Do not allow the sport to make these matters. It isnot often that the feet, etc.eare actually frozen, but .hey get se eteld- that the circulation ofc he blood is M stopped. -eg the foot has no feeling, . there is danger e Avoid freezing your limbs now, and muchfurture pain willbe sieve& : - , , ! . _ Canadian Shipping Stati ties. - • ' The annual report of the Minister oft Marine -and Fisheries shows that die e. 2,105 persons employed in. the s rvioe. e:4 total number of vessels' on the re istert - books at the close of last year was 7,312, - measuring 1,260;777 tone, being a dearease of 82 -vessels and -50419 tans at: compared with. 1881. The value of the .registered and of Canadiatevestels in foi1143aw757726e :0 6 tonnage of Ceetada-is 037,823.3 0. --Daring 'the past year :the 'total number of casual4 ties and wrecks ., of British, da,3 adian • and, . foreign sea -going vessels in Cati1diem waters eig eraofthebeeef t . atom weed 116. - . • Captain Campbell; of Burlinet each; who is Visiting friends on the othe side of the -Untie eteneotget through ie do sequence of the floods in Ohio Valley. When the water subsides the -captain will be eble- to retTheurn.moving-bog- in the "...I -vicinity of elastlereeein Ireland, is advancing rapidly, toward that -town. Several thousand agres. of hied are submerged, mills are 'stopped, - bridges are choked- up, and treffie ou the . road from Ballinger& to Casti. rea is now e -tt suspended. The bog at Bas ietke-'which moved some time ago, is also leaking up en. Beveritlplaces' • . j . dinner held last night in Toronto, Mr. J. le: Kerr,. Q.0., PALM., in the Maeonio Order,„ . oondem.ned the lottery recently held at London, and asserted that it washed in ' direct opposition tothe protest ofthe G -rand . Lodge, and was merely a joint etocleentere * - prise, in which the fraternity had no in. ereat. was 301,tepresentmg a tonnag tons, and the amount of loss w and 3,661,438, of teenage. •The lives lost was 111.- The &se year to vessels on the inland' 34° and the number a livek lost CONDEMNED TEE LOTTEBY.0•••4.,d tie BIELSOIli0 V • e, lleterie Geistinger's parents were. prom'. • nem', members of the Bt. Pet rsbeirg 'tea - eerie!' Theatre. She lost her parents ekt the age of -14, and has gaine6 her Iiveiihooil eVersince by appearing on the stage. I 4 4 9 °94 4.• 0. „. 4- - 4 °