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The Sentinel, 1884-09-26, Page 3ilvinise Iss logosint Tbe palliate 4 the Ililliellgte Wedded • the teatilelli- THE 'Cilii., WH LOVED k JEHU. (Ftoto titteN:Y: World.) - . - 7None of the members of Nr, G. P. Moro._ sines ^family retired .to -bed Tueaday-night, They walked up and down the bane a their mantion wonuering *here VietOria. had gone. Mt. Motown.; was disceneelate and his- wife deatlity eick in her tooth upetaire. In vain id Mr tdoroaini's daughter, Julie, and hie Sons, .Arthur P. end Giovanni, .. piped with him to tetireg :and getea few _motilelist. .T.,- he old gentlemen remained seated n * the- library as it tranifixed by fear. Be gazed steadfastly at the old titmor ' that covers- the 'Walls. -. • kindilenly he would riseup and ran his • fingere netvousty through his minte silky_ and hurl eathe otvengeance tit his ex-..• t man. We want tb get married. Can't you .send fOK the paator 2" added,. lit German, - " Certainly ; take a _seat," replied the lady. • • 7 Presently the clergyman arrived and in a few words he was apprised of the mission the young:oouple were on. Al_ the conver- sation as well as the marriage ceremont were- 'conducted in German, and •,: the. clergymen declared that theyoung Man spoke :fluently and appears - to be well educated. "We beim no ring,"-sudde ly ejaculated the expeotant" groom, adding, ," Is one necessary ?" • ' 7 - xADE ict.AN AND WIPE. The Clergyman replied thatwith them it Was not necessary to lie;ve a ring, end. the. two stood. at angles lacing. the Millie -ter while the ceremony was being: pertained, Mrs; lieliezer -Mid Mrs- Hebei:Abel acting as witnesses, _The ' question$ virere. Baked' of both in German,.the • groom _replying: in that leriguage and... the t- bridein Eggliste , Once or twice . She faltered and -bitithed • , _ orirnson,_ especially_ when . asked 1 if i she was more his pet. .Ever einem . the was . 'would take the man to be h r lawful bus- band,,,,the litter looked . her. squire in the , -colichman, Eiiiest. J,- &Melling. f. Victotia. . 10 years oidhe devoted himself to her edu.- fem.. - - . - • . - - ., ..1 - . - 'cation- - She was -provided with the 'best while. „the witnesses were signing the governessand had all the- atiVantages. that- certificate the newly7married ',couple sat . Nothing was apored to make her e polished nervously eyeing each • ot er, when the Si. -Vincent'e Abidemy could .. afford. lady. --Lie showered iewels end expensive gro,ilerlresel Upon his wife and asked:- ,._ , '.T.--yrating the collation of the rural popu. . - dreseeS tipon her and. to feel that the was yrou happy -no • V - - ' ' ' . „ ' 'Ion ' experience having titaight thet the bite .- , - • BigT1011.BBE VELIT117611. illieney.lialithirers' Ceasrisrelal Vane; • 1, - N.1 1 - he depressed: state:bf Beiteelv eitericul- thie; says. the Ttezet; has artiliseditteelition to the importande.',0 bee- culture ini. this - country' as • a -profitable and _elevating e4pioynient for Is ' ring agthiturists: It ic-hi, .thought 111014 de irable in their intermita. t the siipply ot home-produeed honey ould be largely increased -and -the impor- ton of :honey febel -the continent and ericar-most Of -asi,thich is -declered,1 on q.h. -*nal) tioal a • thority :to; be . Omit ly " ,,,ulterated, -_- shetild be. oorrespondingly &detailed. In One recent month the Mone'y. , , .- van of imported honey into Great Britain - viati £30,000,- -Tinge are few places in England where bees may not be -kept with ore- or leis profit, and is not even eceseery thattbeir 'owner -.should have a gerdeno-Andeetl., it 'would require a Very extensive - glide* to be large enough- at all seations. to. supply It single bilis of, bees -itli the dewed_ necttir • from its • Wers.! NOt _ Only from our Jester: ds do . bees [. Obtain their abundant ores,' but . Irani themyriadblooms of Our est "andfrint trees, the gay luxuriance_ 1 the hedges and ihrubt, and thebloisome f our meadows anduPlands. To the clergy- • an and colintry gentleman the introduce ion of advanced' bee cultureie advcioated- c offering a.ready means of.greitly ain.eli- . . VOilleiti ran IPIIISSIDENT. •Tiel • Beinnitet T.;•VI armies s Lune .settse , Aimelyel•Ser With Severity. .• .gtrI receives harsh tree, Ment thC:40.Ode of EiniundAites in London W0'4; who says: By the uticiv ized AmeriAn girl is meant the girl who his not ," (:X Ce YeWrope."- She has berter biitek41igt of e" New Yak Or <Itostini-- die le by Paris;"he "YAWNS% stAt'411 her native raw material glaringly etheeed.. She is generally very-- .. pretty; ker jecimplexion dazzling, her • eyes are di1.11t.. and brilliant, her little foot • and hand pkilVtehiegi, and bar figure slight and ilini 0.4•'weind of willow. Make bar speak want much making, by the bye ---and 740 Voice is as harsh and loud, her acceot oft*.eous and her nasal twang uobearabli4 be has an immense amount, a - ,fun he that is, it you get hold of a gdod iiencsudY; thehas -plentY...of *it and shrestV.quaint burimor, and she anaer at a loss poreething to says' She it a: 4% romp at. eart, and levee a bit of herd flirting 'Xly. She is not very -acceel- plished; she knows atitlimetic well, and thoript ly appreciates the .value of ere is generally something leete -tae er. Of the ratted litaitin 1. setecied Probehly a greet many MO are .ignor- vote direotly for - Preeident, The . Con- vention which- forined; the Constitutionunder Which* we lives 1781,,Ispent more time and thought on .the question, bow tk Preindeet,Should. be elected than on any other pipit of the -Constitution. jAn lemmings number of prOpolitions. were mitimitted. Some of them were rejected one day, to ' be 'tempted the, nest; -ethers wciuld ' be _accepted one - dity, and rejected the next. There Was .one suggestion that the . Gov- ernors of all the Boatel sioduld meet. and, choose • the : President; another "that be 1 . be elected by Congress. :Among those Which were offered niany- times and always rejected,. Was the proposition that the peOple.shouldinake the choice,- Of the two. _theniii the country—if the thireen colonies ender :the 7 Confederation could be celled 'cotettry-÷One - was in Mortal terror lest tbe eights' kit the States should be overthrown; the other bad not a tittle' distrest,of the People . , ' The first of -these -..partieg• " afterwards . woce3c_ beatime the Democratic .party, whidi from otiginal'appit bet; she has her Own -peou- that time tattle present- has Usually been. liar Mi410 .and. ecoentrio ways Of the ehampionof State rights. It • opposed' -behivint -4O society. She always tilks the proposition to elect a President . it loud, set 'iie thought you were _deaf, land popular vote, .betiautei of a leer Abet- the large States Would Overpower the -smaller ones. The Federalists opposed it because they did not •billieve the people !mold be hilly trusted to make a': good:, 'oho*, - Out ot thig. :agreement, for diffeient reasons, sprungthe eel:wine of. an iiidirect election. by electors not proportioned in number to the pOpulatibn, .,Each State Was to tiate as many .:elieitors as it -bad Senators and Representativee ia' - Congress. -Several objects were accomplished py. scheitie. Tbe electors were chosen by States: The .iefluithoe of the 'States would not be overcome by'mere face of numbers, nor would the larger mite( be fable .to ;dictate arrogantly to. the. - Morebver, lt wire:thought-that a chosen body of 'electors *Mild act independently, and Would make a.better selection .than cold the people as-, ,Whole.'„ In this latter eitpectation there. has been asappointrnent ttran the begin- 7 nil*. An :intrigue, ' secretly denied on,, alinost _defeated .• John Adains for Viciet:Prisident at the very. :first election: under the . Constitution in 1789. .13ut that part Of . -plan - Which gives elec: Ws to do State, and pot in., ptepOrtion to their populatiOn, will continue .to be wise is 191.4 as there. are State lines and _local, goVernment loy- States. 1! The tinie. might coine i'vhen New ..raiglandin New Arorki Pentisylvaniei and Ohio---Castizig,2 as many votes as -the Whole South,. excepting Mis- `souri—would be able, by. their • upanimity,_ to ilecide all elections. This not at all desirable. The lergerStates may wis"h for it; but were the election.to he decided by popular votes,- the independence of the smaller States wouldeuffer severely. When any one remarks' that John Quincy A.ditnis was. wrongty ehosen President, - beiguse Atickson had:more •popular vote* than he; that Polk was a 'minority" PreCident, and that Lincoln, was elected by saninority tit Votes and by Minority of States, he !speaks foolishly:- The: Constitution does not provide. for 0 popular • vote itt all,, nor did the fathers who framed it intend to, -leave any part.of the' election to moldy. of 'a -popular vote. LThough they -, not accomplish- all they.- intended, they have left us- a eyetem -which, if not perfeot, secures the country spinet the diotetion of the great Slates, and gives- nag; mode of. electicin Which- is popular enough for alt practical Purpeses.—Keuth'i QoMpanion. A. 'Jets Bridge in iseatiana, k • •• anted the reason why -the peOple do -;not ,hePpy eaaed. his, heart. Victoria' was con- Leieeted the finest . mum:keen for Miles around, and when it was _known that she bad -consented to porton:wet' a ettered gatli- ering everybody was anx.ious to go, Mr., Morosini,sharedthe glory and compliment5. that tate showered on - tier. Great 'were bis Opeotations 'of her future, but they Were blasted in a siugle. deg. The very _ thought she 'bed discarded his love tor that neld forth by a coachman was enough todrivecrazy.. . Long before the sun: bad risen he was dresesed-and ready to 00010 to the city, in :the hope of learning something of Victoria's . whereabouts. -Alia son-Atthur, whelepent - the night at his father's side,. was able) vit. ' Taking the boy's hand in his, Mr. Morosiue without *siting for the cerriage,. walked a mile down the avenue to the depot. Mrs!. ." Morosini begged him to send _her wpid at - once if anything neftheel been discovered., . He kie§ed his wife- and. pronlised to do so.. He took the 6.27: traiii, atid-tbett was. the ' - beat seen of him:, At 1 o'clock in the alter- neon- Arthur retprned,. bringing the Infor- mation that VictoriaViral3 Married to Sobel- - ling,, the dereMony having been pertorined. by -it Methodist =thew. Tbis 8°1)26w -hot relieved the anxiety a Mrs.'• Moroaini and she felt eitsiet. By this time scores. ot carriages drote. " up to the house. All Contained elegantly dressed ladies, 'neiglibets and reeideuts of the 'village. They ell debited to see Mrs. Morosini and express her deep syrnpathy 'with her, but tue doctor bad forbidden any visitors to Opproson her bedside and they lett, leaving their cards and condol- ence, The male -portion ' of Yonkers, too,. was worked up. One and alt-oonlemned the action ot ticlielimig as that ot scoun- drel, for Whoin 'shooting was tett good if- . ever the .'_outraged fattier sets eyes upon .him. In the stores, the post4.fficie ana the railsvey station nothing but the elopement. was talked ;about. The W0131011 were shocked and . tbet- men clenched -their flta as they read the papers. . • The plan, for .the elopernent Was care.: - fully" laid.. Oh-. 'hat Blonda,Y -Victoria asked to take a walk. and one the maide wentwith her. -.: She walked down- to grotto about a mile,. and. when alone the wrotea Mite to &belling containing- the . final instructions', for . the. elcipeine-nt: &belling was to Meet her at the wall in. the rear antics grounde, and help:. her over: She had no .baggage save one or two extra dresses- alie wore,' and. about $25 in cash, the property of the -maid, who bad confided it to her for. Hate -keeping, and a pair. a dieniond ear-ringe and 'maims, in. all worth about $200. She was . evidently anxious, to get money,- for she wrote to Mr: Can:tont; the -Italian banker in Walt street,! "for,61,0904with which the Said.'stie wanted -to buy Ohrietmas present. -Mr. Cantoni came upitith the money in his pocket on " Tuesday, hut she was gone,- . lag's Romani has -about 01,200 on deposit in her own in the Hanover National „BAIA, but it will be. of no use, as Mr.,Moro- eint has stopped Payment on the cheques. &belling, is mi said, had - -between 6700 and. 6600 in -the Sleet:diet. Street and Seamen'a Soinigsbanks. He drew this out -several days age and doubtless has it . with him; The conple. Were seen. on the 6.30 train by . 'the conduotor; Mies Merostni wag. Seated aletigeide of Schelling. She had a• --hand-• kerchiet to her rnOuth as it she had a toothadhe and she carefully avoided thawing bee' face; and the:conductor the:login shetwas on, hertity-to the city totem° a tooth extracted and at Schelling'wee sent with her ak • escort. - 4 the most profitabie live &took to She blushed and her eye drooped, u sce 18 beyond the inaudible" movement of her full which people -can direct -their attention, a,nd rolling lips there was o reply. The requiring an exiseedingty small outlay and us and uneasy' la very little expenditure of time. By pro- . . pair became painfully newt and in their -anxiety, to get awaythey-bid. per, rational management a hive o .the party. good-bye and left !the house with - t be eAnia,y be Made te,rettitn a profit in ordinary out staitinifor the carriage. Ones tbe: seasons of : from 100 to. 600 per cent. on sidewalk a'repid walk was int:ref:teed mites!. theif;actual Cost and still leave the stook lively trot tottards. Secohd avenoe, Erpest intiot foranother year's _work. . -Bee-keee- . holding his- blushing bride by her ;. .; ing hes- hitherto, and is now, z in a great ber finge_r,ipong.artl.yTlehadeying.-_juinappde_dperottily ieejerittyoteuf ere., ateadowneadutostfetad hiss, Ententien. dxszno avenue•car,going down tottt and were los sight of. - . . , The girl basin apparent plain. goldrin on.her hand, but d,uring tlio -ceremony, o epsning he; palm, A large lattmond flashe4. fire into theiminister's eyes. • "When thel came to..-rae," Said the! ioleigYmen, ","! thought hita to be 013100, SOW or:teboriiii man, and her a Seamstress or 'clerk in 4 store, and that the.. twO, wishing- to spent - their- vaeation together, 1 wanted ..to get married.. Both looked so plain that I never. dreamed the hey was I from so itiith 1, famtlY. -• The young ansaid he aame _this country from Gerniany ;, when b years' of age,. and I has lived wit Germans most ell his life,. felt sorry .filt the-girre family when I learned the tt and regret that was Oalled upon to p . • form the ceremony. _ 24r:: IlIonsini 'returned in the evenieg.: " Wel t� hie home I h6 said, " I have consul daughter i8. roamed an Judge Donohue. He tells _me that the w cannot help me. Therl may. he: 110 for me," he sadly 4`, "bait:there is an unwritten law thee can allad me relA obtain the stored up honey .ignorance knows no better means than tostnother the bees with brimstone and destrey and strain the 'hOileycombs;. Thus , the": Stook. is reduced, the iambs are deittreyed,and all the bees! labor in inaking•thent lost. Theist; also & great waste of material, for a pound of wax,: worth% about . 2. shillings; . costs the bees, about twenty pounds of -honey to make.' Again the :honey., is °oaten:dusted .with the. dirt of the _Aensely-orowded *population, as Well as ortiehed brood, young bees, -eto., go into the - strainer that bulk May be intireitsed, and not the leapt -condemnable is the inhumanity. .prititioed in 2 destroying the industriotis - little 'creatures W110 . have waked. so hard for. their masters. TO sitpersede this raiment ot the dark ages„ there have beenat varioos times designed and Jmpicried. many hives aod•:applianees by use --Of Which- perfect totomand can always be had over the, bees and their dwelling -place, affording facilities for honey...gathering' and. removal in. its natural, .pure and whelescipte stets, with. Out injury to the Thebestmeans by. Which- this is eiceptoplishe&is by the use. of frame hives."—ti.- hives,. in which the beits,instead of being.allowed to fix . their_ combs jam:Ovid:11y to the walls: of --their dwellings, are forded to build the •conibe on movable . trainee, • -the, pOsition.:, and nuncher: ciU - '.be ," Veiled - at. the . --Of the beenaster, so 1 that he is • ena;bled either to-. increase . or take away .froin -the nuniber Of bees t in his -bite, to notice at once ,When sickness Or hunger is 'imminent; -tto extract the honey,- without • destroying the • combs whereby. the .produotive power of the stook le- increased; And; in shOrt,-...to perform nuinherless operations.. Which could.Only be done With- great difficility, orinot at all, in the •-old-fashiened ..atraw skep bee -hive. Beet are stook that any. one with stifficient ground rto. stand tt hive Upon. ixtay keep. Every 0115 Welcomes the -busy bee. To it we:owethe security pflarge orops of fruit --beside Lerd Sudeley's extensive fruit fatm . . • . in ialbucestershire there are many hives— and the beauty and fertility of Our. flewers are largely, intireand its -means. It is eatiinated that thousands Of. tons of honey and wax are annually'Wasted -this °bun - try for want of bees to gather them: On the continent of Europe, itneed"-hardly be Said, bee..olubs are very numeraiii,. and in the , German •' empire- ;they meet With 'especial lincouragementrfroin the Govern -- inept.. The British Bei -keepers' Associa- tion; established- lin 1874,- of which. the- BaronessBixrdett-cioutts 'hi -President, has, however, 'done nitioh,.. and nevi doing more,loward the encouragement, i'mproVe-i Ment and advancement of bee. eulturer as Well as the exercise- of humanity in the treatment of the honey bees. Lately, too „ the Rev. V. H. Moyle oU'BroOkhouse, Burghfield, Reedit*, 'beta ' succeisfully,- striven- to promote the use of honey in the manufacture- of- drinks and.biscuits, secur-' ing, se far as_ the litter is concerned,- the eration of Messina; Huntley and LWEI-all my ,datighter, baek again, !and 'll never Consent to./ her 13:Orriege ;With: Oat ill..bred fellow,. Untilerlie is ,back.,e, in- -under my.roof I shall r Main .uneatisfie . " Beyond this Mr.-Morini• said he hati,tio news.- It -was, however, intimated; friend that he hact*- been informed of place when-Vice:iris-and her husband 'topping and that he was Only keepin beck to give him :merit *andel te do mealn to sectireter return. The elopement waathe -talk athe Stibelt Exchange yesterday, Mr; Monsini is bOt popular on Wall street} and there was !out' little sympathy expressed with him, elk* f his . deught4 is I hie. own syikem- which alloWed; his liberty or Ohipal eanuitenttents outside of. his house,- Yi it is known -that otherwise he was vatic *ad and generous to them, and his sole hal% in life was to bee them ,well establisheVand , . prosperous. ,. . 'n j ' ' , -.. Morosini's desire h been to get 14° a high grade. Ile. waoted to marry!.- his daughterto some milli naite. , In Jibe:bolsi 13 aspirations he has - he n. sordewhat ham- pered' by his old -coulter:don with' - Gould. Evict the latter has snubbed him", in a,,,tooial way._ Though IfOrogum, is an -old sailOr he. has never -been invited by Gould oritiest . -,.t. on his Yacht the Atalanta. _ The. gean lEtoyal FanillY• 1, . ;.:0,8te, as if an 'express train. slims .-. v her just one minute . and no more. d, . !' has ga hearty appetite, - and : mixes tl*ii Ftrangest condiments togetier. At her 't..',1,„.,,*_Tefebst she breeketup tour or five halt--boit4 eggs into' a tumbler, and beats thorn vi3Ontly into a sort of yellow Mash before el* Will taste them; . and with these eggs ek.0,1: -des ours. corn -cakes, rolls,. - " mletilaSWII toast, jam, bacon, lab, fowl hominytirunee, coffee', tea, cream ;. Often finishinC with, a plate of fruit and -a s, tumblerpg ked water. She usually has a lot of Ondy in her pooket, and eat 3 , it at all 110V. She loves to sit in a rocking - Oak, ftit he heat of sun or fire, munching candy 4.54 reading' novels. She doe's not care to.Oetving orihousewerk; she oonsidere it bene°11$'11er, and leaves it to the 14 help " or seiv6z#4, She loves to display.her email feet .anghands—aveoultarity of American :. womettiA 'They occasionally- glory 'in instep;ut, this is seldom, their - feet, as.it • rule, 114 small, - narrow, thin and fiat.. But a trOctiof this kind OM be made to look ... et tiny toAder in a well -fitting boot. ;: There- fore; VW/American girl delights in boots ., slid ettatn gloves, and spends the pester . part og piq pooket money on these iteine, . The Ar4eniedi girldoee not mind what she. say's etjOing as she -says somethiog..--to keep silence:# any subject is insufferable torture - - to her -:.:q "Saks olive 1" exclaieded: . v. . oharMiOgly lovely American belle to 11141" one etlpoig, "what are- our tongue5' for if . we taki4,04 talk? Guess the English are a - long VW too solemn ;-* they don't hay mote funerAl than we . do, say?" .A salute digniqN_ct manners le -unknown o the Ameil ' girl.- • " ' • •i ; ,...- ,i .ill. Whale's Adventure.. Kendal,. Chairman of lh - West Coss% :America; Telegraph 'Comfit°, ly, OM- , triblipt'S the f011OWing Story to CI ibrr 0110311. papSCOt AS a hatter of ouribeilly and . unic01 experience in connection vnth the, . workOtg of submarine telegraph +les 1 - 9 - beg lill.4..ye to hand you some extraces from • the Liters from Our manager on tge west cosseii),C: South Apiaries., and also '*un the cap.t4 of our oable-repaiiing teamer. The4ttttacts go to show that not oily is it . bad fir'a whale to ' attack a cable, but so perket have the oppbances for die repair of ejfiles now becoine that nO matter.Where' or i' bat depth of water they may. be braW they oan almost always be Unpaired as el-reiy and es qiiiiiltly in mid-00ean as a '. hor*,"eito be shod in a blacksulith's shop: Judging from the extracts it Svce4ld slate ' thetthe whale voluntarily stilted' the 05011.0d, having had a free g - :1 with it, pai f Or his *meaty With his lit for he Wee; Old prisoner or seven days nd then . ooft :riv,biirg prieopzeat eu-gp • tswteergnie wrkniteoet; . 6 ' 4 t,1: • , r `a • ' • • teled unto aeath. T . e' captain Eak. th0 „ °tally as the flight regarded as the result ot family- government, ebildren no personal 'Veen Mr. MeireSilli reached theeity be went to Police Headquexters and excitedly asked* Inspector Byrnes. Beitag told that no information concerning the run- away couple - had. yet been •received, Mr. Morosini exclaimed': ' "Spare no Dlehl213 or trouble to find thein: Do allin Our power to • biing back my, daughter 1" and - he orderettSchelling's arrest on the oharge of abduction.: Patraraell were instructed to ,. visit every- clew man -and hotel on their ' respective posts, and half a dozen detec- tives were detailed to board all the out- going ocean and river steamers and trains ' and searoh .-: for the missing _pair. ..At 10 o'clook Et. Mo-unt, of the Nineteenth Pre - 87v dad, te aphed that be had heard of the fugitiv The Rev. Gustive. Itiaszer, a . Methodist minister, of No. 810 East Fifty-. fifth street, had married them the stoning • before ' and they immediately started for the Troy boat. - - - • lbs. HautZer "said she waisitting it the . front door of her residence, a four story flat house, at about 4.45 o'clook,--wben-the* : young "-ootiple walked hurriedly up to a -.neighbor and the ma; asked:if the "Rev. Me Hauezer was in the- hones:. They were _told yes, : and they ran up one _flight. of 1 stairs: ,They. . had ' just engaged the ' clergyman's 17 -year-old_ -daughter in conversation - when her mother came up and informed them that her Mistimed was not in, but might be within an hour, as be was visiting sick in Seventy-first street. . "'Bah the -young, folks seemed much -flustered and very uneasy,- and the infor- mation that my husband was . not here apparently- troubled them." "We are: In a greet hurry," stammered inguponBelgium .-The d'Aurnale.uts been the gOst writer in the Londo World: I hea. that, he went to propose a daughter ot the Co of the Comte de condition would he a the reyal- Owner of Chantilly is in Situ- ation to guarantee. Not that the, Royal Family or,Belgium need money. nay are itnmensely rich.' But prtidence id one of their hereditary *. Virtues, and comes in eating. The first Loopold received from Eogland,-- up to the,date of his setiond morriage, : with the. POincess Louise, of Orleans,- b lesethan: 21020,000 as the widower of t The entire direct Or English match • was the King of the Belgians, at Ostend, ROys a etch between the ter•de Paris an& A:son Leandro., - A necessary large dowry, Whioh - One of the greatest pieces of engineering -work in coursed conetruction is the canti- lever- bridge over the Forth hi -Scotland; The London Times deecribes the operations; and supplements the written acootmt With an ilhistration---a neW deperture. for that :old 'and respeoted newspaper. Although ,troin 900 to 1,200 men are employed in the work of-prepering the steel, laying founda- tions . for piers, eto.,,, and the capital in - listed In plant amouhts to half a Milli011 of dollare, the contraotore Will consider themselvee toittuiate if they oan .coinplete the bridge 'within -1 years. Immense workshopis fOr prep.aring the , metal .work have been 'eteoted•on the ground, where the workmen also reside, and work is . carried on uight and day by the aid of electric lights. The cantilevers are so long that,iheteed of attempting to. cerry,them, through the Workshops - where I WS parts are put together, the workshop itself is movatee with- . all its ponderous machinery. Hy- draulic .presses &reemployed to Make steel tubes out of :plates over twelve fear in length, four feet in width and an inoh and on eigiith thickness. . Ten of these plotes bent to form, and riveted together, make up se etsei.-tube _twelve feet- in diameter. Each cantilever is to rise to a height oC 850 feet above the immense ettnie piers, and will stretch out ,itrdlei 650 - feet ill length, -right and lift soda° centre. A novel feature ot the oonstruotion _of the viaduct 'piers, which.form the approaches to the -canta- loiters, is that the girders are put upon. them as soon asthey are built above the -Water level, and the whole upper structure e P11110000 Cli,•-orlotte. fit he derived 4 -tom his 21 960 000. 'est of the income' that plin Bull allod him after he went to Belgium was Gamed, and so judioiously invetted that he - ww.I able to leave eaoh of his thi e children upgards of ii4 *a million sterlinfl. The share of the ex - Empress. of Me - Will be evdatually1 divided &Mom her brothers. As Or establishment doei3ii not coat rucza than a few thousands a car, the accumulated interest ot. her fortune is alrmatly enor. - I - mous -Father Hyacinthe Oinks o° s. • and says he is too old to learn. - Mr. T. D. blilfar, of Inge= cheese maker and buyer, -liet•reoeived c.., eitblegram stating that his ethibit of cheer,/ t th Ameterdain ex.hibition lie& leas ed first bees without 1,7 sag e - • importance of bee oultuie as a miner I prize. , 1 _ active ',co Palmer,. ment de tion of h estiblis Ediribur - .m -branohe tion ham be pr leasing satisfiotordy--notably. t a . in Berkshire, which is -honored bribe Pregide oy of the. Princess_ 'Christian, and its Viceirreeidents include the Marquis. of Ailesbury (Lord Lieutenant), the 'Bishop of the Diocese, Earl Radnor, Sir R. Lloydl- Lindeity,. V.C., Sir Gilbert it. Palmer, and Mr. R. Bi01111Xd11011- o(Reading, Under his -manage- ts for the oolleotion and dietribu- no in large quantities have .been e& in that town and in London,. h and -Dublin. , st of the counties of England of the British Beekeepers' Assoc*. been formed, and are reported to ton -East, Sir Boger. Palmer, M. la: Gardner, Xi. It is intended to hold a honey fair" in. a hall at Beading this autumn, when prizes will ha offered for the encouragement of beekeeping on humane and improved princliples, and also for the largest amount of 'ipure honey shown. by Berkshire beekeepers and raised by- their • - The „ Cable, and while :continuing "Rs up, an immense whale cOme aplo ' entangled in the cable: lIt seemed - 'about seventy feet in length. In its • . . stra„,gles to get free the cable outrig tin . itS40-e, the whole of .its entrails coming . outizand great streams of blood. lIn italast kfitzg struggle it parted the cable on the bo.*-tebeaves and floated wiedwaed of the stettMer. The oable was twisted up in the , fergt of a wire rope for about two fathoms,' 0,443 live or s'ixplaoes it had the ,ppearatioe ogliSOing been bitten through eufaciently E$Op all _oonimmiicatiote There is no d,gphe the whale has beep tile CiallSe of the'. ie'tettuption.! Our manager _eleo - writes.: 01141101 of the breakage of the cable; as limS'been pointed out to yo U in Captain Wetion's report, was a huge whale. which s-C,-,-,aMe entangled in the Mime the cable, rot114., was held prisoner for seven] days;• the -; 3k-fierrtiption was unfrirtunate, !tat it is at . satisfactory to . know tho the cable imtgive way naturally, and that where up the sheathing, yeirn and corefouud to be in an almost i„erfeot state) - peeservatimi ; in foot, looks as good tes' e day the:Gable was first Lid.' "1. - t I 1.7 Chinsbling en Ocean OtcaNsere. • * then co -stied uv gradually as the hiaemey pwiseteter.. btoopedgroie 3t.duit hebeightsags bighezet shouighes unabodevre. ,Juititygoatait000eenme, during its et: assagys theltwthasel.. Death, and its upper worke wilt tower more 6 fOritabie gambling de* ;. ,egular- boo,: than 350 feet above the water level. • Okotbank was established *oil board, and ill built underneath, until it has been teased homes Hughes (Toni Brow4, of Rugby). Tim Frew* Government pug' a Amu of Bntlah ' agtiettltlir industry receive& 5 $40 for evert wolf' which has -latitoked * reoognition in the f t that at the last show .htimai being, and -nine wirelilifed lad Of the Royal Agria tired Society 'Moore - year in, three of the centril dePartroente of -modation was specially - provided -..for the f‘ranite. • A reward, of 030 is given or every ethibits of the British liJeekeepers'..Aisooia- sbe wolf With yodng,.- and I thiz6y-two of goo.' -_ • - - - • -- i - them were killed lest year. IA" cum of $20 . -: ---r.r"------f"------- •". - 1 Ritmo for every ..,other weef klled, and The E*Phange bank -liquidators have 774 were killed, this being -eXclmtAre of 495 surrendered the bank.PreMisea in Montreal otitis; for. each of, ioh a rewitt4 of 08 is. to the :British Mutual Life Inaurenoe Omn- i given. Altogethe . 1,508 ; ho',15d Were .Pas,1, Whose Manager, Mr.. Stonoliffe, has destroyed latit year at a 008t to tile govern- .P*0. over the purehasis money, snick000. number :.of wolves were ,killea in' the. Aust- aliaisare wropped separately in- paper northern and'eostern departmet4a; border: and -t ei carefully peeked hi ' tin .bcitnad- * and•laerMany,', • 100 feet higher than at primer+ •The 00m- protesting &pima the proctice of gam:. -- • „tviSy was kept up nearly all tI*4 way acrosi; • . M; POmail has written is neW drains for I.:•(.14t this is not tne first case - which theee - the CoMedie Francaise, Paris, to be pro- gambling praotioes have bee brought 16 1. - . - 411004 t4113 w,h2tsf. 1 .. i "'" t. Not -very long ago th Wits a set.4. - ..Mr.:S.- Creighton, Warden Of the Singe.. *011 oast. the mobbing of s tilar bluetit*, ton Penitentiary, Was on Saturday very 4.1 Who had skiiined several assengers on , seriously ill and . very low. -.A opuple of rcibe, way- from. Liverpool. Wen the pas. phypioione• were Gelled in and he its under- Jaengers disoovered that he golly was a stood to be better to -day._ . , -.- . . - , Meg they came near t. -rowing Min S ttirdity afternoon's Meeting of Rierboard. ,They did make. im give Op theAt tbe Beard of Governors of the 111'01091. ttmost. of the money he had pi' up on the lege -IIiiiversitY a letter from Tar. DOnoldr-15)4. He had been in the habit, !iis itturned A. Smith was reed; offering 00,000 for thelF).#1, of making many trips * the Course or - - travel season and osEturitig all the ea* AC could teach on each.. Thee are .said to _ about a dozen regular gamblers Who do. . be thing. it la as mueli a. business 4i•th them to fleeoethe stesiaship peestii- . • • meat of 020,750 mfeeti alone. Tle greatest - shipped 'from the Pectin° coast to • . endowmeot of 01 oollege' for women m 0011, 1100tiOn with McGill. • ' • . Mr. -Bedford, a respectable farniei oharf I bout 'Que.,-was alnipat asphyxiated ft night or two ego in his bed -room. • H , „, _ had left lila pipe alight /11 the Pocket of hiti l':',gers at pekes and other gamie 111 the cabms , vest, apatite .s « oke which arose from th° q ae it has been with bunko steer -erste :lie in smouldering Of the cloth -hod .all but useit*ait for victima along BroadWay.• . . . . his death wnen his oondition.was.disiovere0 il, ..------......--- • - bynieinbers of bill iam• ill'ead relietseeur It isnot ex oted that the' infant Duke: 4 Albany survive the winter: . . - . • f