HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-03-04, Page 39
WIT ikt Tlii•COVitir
The Adventoo era Gentienianwh„o Won*,
*et sleep with, me nippier.
One night, Writes Bob 13urdette in the
. Brooklyn Eayle, 1.resehed Erie the pleasant
• just as the. gleeke in • the Lord. Mayor's
castle struck 21. it was bitter, biting,
, stinging cold, and there was no ambulance
at the station, while there was a good hotel
there. I went in and 'iegistered, .and
teen of commanding presence tailor built
' clothes and a brown beard of most refined
'culture followed ite; and tinder my plebeian
..serawl made the register luminous with
patrician cognomen. 10i:fed a little in
awe of this majestic being,. about ,as little
as I ustially,stand in the presence of any
• ..... majestic creature, and, when. in 'a dean,
bass, commanding voice he'ordered a room,
I had a great mind -Something that I
• always. carry with me when I trayel-
• to..-4-_go,---put.--aii —get
• • The gentlemanly and urbanenight clerk,
wheals° seemed to be deeply impressed—
as is the habit of the night clerk—with the
gentleman's responsible -to -any -amount
• toot on sawinbel, said he was sorry, blithe
• had but one vacant room . and it contained
but one bed. " Still," he said, as became
a znan who was, houtikto' stand; for his
. house if• it hadn't a .bed in it,.." it was, a
very wide bed; Very' wide and 'quite long.
Two gentlemen could eleepin it quite- Cbm-•*
, fortably„ and But the comniand-
ingbeing at my gide said that was qffite
'altpgether .out--of-the question efitirely.'
• , Quite, He was sorry for the—here he
' ;looked at me, hesitated, but finally Said—,
•. • gentleman, but Ile conldn't share Rio room.
him: -He wier-On'rer.l'Or'ilie—lentle-7
,'nian,,srid hoped he might find comforteble
• hidginge„-litit-He-couldnIt-permithini.-to.
occupy even a pertiOn. of His bed. ...Then
the Clerk begged pardon, and was sorry,
-Alia . that; but this ' ether: gen-
tIemanhad.r rcgistered—first,-- and-- it,
was—for--:-him—toT-say what -diep
thin: should • 'he made , of this lonely
'rooni and solitary bed. I hastened toasettre
the mejestiebeingthat it weirall-rightl-hif
: was welcome to two-thirdeef the roam, all.
the .looking -glass and , ane -half ofthe bed.
"'No," he saidiavery abruptly, '4‘ I Will 'sit'
here -bY the stove, and -sleep ins; chair.' I
-thank you, sir, 'butt Would not sleep with
my own brother. I 'prefer a roe* to my-
• self." I'meeldy told him that I aidn'tlmow
what. kind of a Man hiebrotheratas,„bnt,
• no doubt, he, did, mut therefore, t.,Inuat
*include that he Vitinet 11,;fir 16."sleep.
. with. But his brother was outof the ques:
• tion, and if he Wanted part of my couch; he
might have it and welcome, and I would
. agree :Mit to :think of his brother. "No,
'tar," he said, "1 will Sleep in no
,; I said I wouldn't either, if I wintst sleepy;
but when I *Eta :sleepy I didn't eare;. I'd
sleep with the Ring oflijngland Orthe
'dent, and wouldn't care a centwhoknew it.
• • Well, ',went to bed. 'I curled up under
the Warm, sat blankets; ' and heard* the
winds shriek and *ail and whistle and yell
. .,—how like alt-creetiOn the wind can blow
. Erie --:and as the night grew colder and
*Ada every minute, I fell asleep . and
dreamed that heaven Was just 48 miles
.west of•Duitkirk., ; About 2.30 or 3 o'clock,
there canie a thundering rap at the door,
and with a vague,' impression
• in my • dream that .somebody from the
• other plate was trying to get in; I said:
,," Whit it ?", • • - • •
"It is 1," answered- O. splendid voice,
' which I redognized at once. " I ant, the
gentleman came on the .train with
• " Yes ".I said " and 'wherftthe *mat -
The splendid voice ,vOice Vois ' trifle hurnble
'• , . . •
!‘ have changed my mind about sleeping
•vith.another,inan.." • •
.,c'Sb have I howled; so joyously tbat
the Very winds . laughed in. merry ' echo.;
warit tied. to open :that door: for- pwit
" have Il I Wouldn't , out Ithis
, I will elede this story here. If should
write the language that • went , down that
• -cairn, Cold • hall outside •door you
w4u1a,n't, print it, _And when next .morning
• I went skipping down stairs as fresh as a
rose, -and'saw that riaajeatfe" being knotted
.,up in a hard; arin-chair; looking It iniiidted
• years old, I ealci-: . • , • , .
• Retter is a' Poet' and wise child than an
-
old and foolish -king, whet knoweth net how
• to be adinonished. • For out of prison he
• cometli, to • reign; "whereas, Also he that is.
born in his kingdorn'heeometh.poor."•,.Thie
• also is vanity.
.Just„Artinnil the Cortr.r.
- Inebriate Young Man (to pelicernan; who
invited him to "tome along")—I say
,(hic) offiiihur, ish this joke? If ti (hie) y'
muslin't earry it -too far.• • , '
Policeinan-.-I'll only *carry it as far as
the station hotise.—Neur York Sun.
• A Dill Endorited. .
" Martha,"' said her • father, "'"Williana
asked me 'for, your hand :!as t flight and I
• coilsented:" • •' . •
, pa, that's the ,Arst bill of mine
yOn haven' f objected tu."—Nen? •I'ork Sin
• , la 11114 It waftn't the Cat:•
The'..Ciar considers women his :test
.efacient detectives" It was always our
mothers who fdana out who stole theginger»
• bread andiant.--7Besten.Globe. • .•
. . .
'There is a Bill new before the Nevada
disqualifying from 'hOlding
Offide•arty One Who is a .vidtitit of strong
drink. • , • '
• mesmerist, of Detroit obtained, ouch
Control over ili:e...nfinde of his audience in a
..recent lecitire make thorn SCO (111
•*orange treegierv maturity. trent,
.; seed which he thi•ew erithe platform before
S() groat •WaS' the deinSiOn that men
ruthea mai began to fill :their pockets
with the itnaginary . fruit, end wrangled
, and fctight for its posaession. When he
brad:the ripen the . scene. pas triost
. On and -after the ist prOx.theStietGentil
Will he liglited• by electricity, ' • •
le ,• . y ,se ze
• *a. printing press in Genev
• • The new. rulee of procedure. Which aro to
be itittOdnoed• int() the Imperial Parliament.
On IVronday, will be IT„et,,, with intidh Op-
• position. ,
• Advidee frolit.Tenga; One Of the Friendly
*state that OM lititiVOB,AithO 'Were
• • OOt(10111iidd to death for einiplidity in the
#esittilt Ott :Iiissiertary pa,kor amtiiia family
have been • eteetitea.
t
• rOttrapr Sowo „
*atOld Tdta Irerr'Weria aa Night
Abash Great Vnleara
.When Sir Henry ' Demmer- hegan his
experiments castateel railroad bars were
Worth there than 0200 'a ton; that, is the
eitme thing as saying, they Were worth so
much•that they could not be used at all.
Now they can he bought for $13 to $21) a
tour and it is certainly impossible to say
the limit has been readherl,, The difficulty
with the costly steel plates for armor for
shins. and forts lies in the: fad that they
have to 'be . east by.. a opstly , pro-
cess, 'their edges • planed; - • and then
they mnat • be -holted. together and
fitted in place. To make a ;fort
is h tedious and very costly process., But
Sir Henry himself sap that it is not neces-
sary: No one hasettempted to oliviate
and. no individnal, can; but a nation could
sided- a fort' in steel, say 200 feet long; 16
feet high and 3 feet thick. We haire OnlY to
build a gigantic) mold Slit of brick and con-
crete, build on top of thig- mold, say eight
or ten 20 -ton Besseiner converters, capable
of turning out three charges in twenty-four
hours; they would run into the mold.a ion
of moltensteel every thirty seconds 8,nd:
the meld would bq filled in sixteen, hours.
The Melted steel ' would solidify as it was
poured in, go thatthere Would Only be six
or eightinohes of melted' metalonthe sur-
face at any stage of the filling.
. It sounds preposterous to speak of cast-
ing the *Whole side of 'a fort in one Plate or
piece, embrasures and all: But Sir Henry
says itcan be done. He will undertelt_e_also
ter6detthe tiirretherit'Werfiline inIcele 6310
plebe of steel. It makes no differAee What.
.shapethefort,or turret is -to take; -or -where
or ho*- many ere to be its '-loop Judea or
posts; it is merely, a question of building
the matrix in the first instance inthis or
.that:shape,Suppose-thit-the-faceoFa-
•fortereighs--2;000 ton-EfTit iir-Oleatnet ft 1
.could be..ceit in a single. Piece for about
$40,000... •Built up of pleteslin the usual
-style-it might *kit en times t at sum. It
is but .etep from. Ufa theory to one for
e casting of an entire fortress. Wirth
turrets can he east asproposed is ,anoth
.question, beeausethe iffieulty. of casting
them in situ would heveto be surmounted.
It would not be difficult to cast theturret to
,
a matrix on there but to put itinposition
afterward Would tax the ingenuity of the
ezigineere: • .•
• Sir Henry that a, fort cast in one
Apiece three feet thick could not bedestroyed
by any artillery now in .existence.' At any
rateitheproceas Of casting being cheap and
easy;the.thiekness can be increesed to any
required extent. It is only necessary that
there,shmild he enough converters inopera.to supply h sufficient fie* of molten
steel..'. It would* need al0-tonconVerter for
every 75 square feet of beiizotitaLsection.
There is no limit practically to the•humber
of cenverters•Which could be caused to pour
their floods into a, matrix for a7fort,'bitt it
would burst the matrix. if too many eon -
trotters were emptying intO., it at the same
time. .It Would not . be unreitionable
for Congress toantherize in experiment on
theselifies.lsteiv. Weans. ,Piccirnie• • •
sToBiBia or THE B0TB8OBIT.DS.
„poi), ,rieeetz er Advice Given by. the 4tieli
• Banker. ` • „
It is related of Baron Nathan .46 Rothe -
child thet on one occasion he gave a lady
the following pithy piece of advice Seated
at dinner table, she informed him that she
had an only:son, when: she'was anxious. to
See placed well in linsineee, and begged him
fie give her a hint on the subject.. For a
long time. the Baron; hesitated,. and at
length, when urged by the lady, half geed
natiiredly and. half • wOrried; he turned
round and said : ." Well, 'madam,: I will
tell you. .Selling matches iEra Very.
good business if you have plenty Of it."
The. lint English' Rothschild came. to
England ,with 42,000, whichhe'soon turned
into. 260,000, " My success," he said to
Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, "all, turned
on-oneanaxim,---1- said: I- can -do whit
another man can. Another ,advantage I
hinl, I was an off hand man. I ma& A
bargain at once. When I was settled in
London, the East India- 'Company had
R800,01)0 worth Of gold to sell. I went #.
the ,sale and bought it all. 'I. knew' the
Dnkeof Wellington must.htive it. I had
bought good many of his bills at a dis-
count. The Government sent for the, and
said they inuat have it., When. they:had-
&tit they did not knew hew to got it t
Portugal. I underto9lt all that and I sent
it through France' ; and that Was the best
,business I ever did." Another rule of his
was never to have anything to do .with un.
lucky men. " have seen, aaidle. "many
Clever nien-who he'd no shoes totheir fest
ieVeract7WitlillfeffirlYelrf ialigesirolends
Very well, but fate is against them ;.;they
oennot go.on-thems,elvevraniFV'they-eiiii-
not do good to thtmselves; how'. can, they
do good tome ?"7:-Savanna/e (0(4) News. ,
"'.1."6119-6-Itiiiiiii-for_thit...Care-of Ears. '
1. Never put anything into the"ear for
the relief of toothache • ;
' '2. Never wear cotton in the ears. if they
are disaluitging pus;• • . • '
. ever attempt. to apply a poultice. to
ur.„the inside of the canal of the
er
- • •
•• Not Yet.
George, ' said the senior partner to the
junior in a law :firth Ofthree;?"-t--,thitight
you told me that Alfred had gone out of
town on lege' business. I understand he's
down the on 'a visit to a young lady."
if Welt:Mr," saki -George, with an injured
look; "it' not illegal to call. on , a• young
lady, .1 believe"—.Pueli, • • •
., • iner Honey.. .
Said a little sehool-girl to her teacher:
"Manima gives me 2 cents every day for
titkitg'a'dose Of thontighwiert tee without
making any fuss about it." Indeed!
And what do you cid with so itnich money ?"
,34‘ Ciht mamma tikes care of it for me and
uses•it to buy more thorOughwort, tea I"—
tetzeys ' • ••• • •
, • .
• • Now We Undeistand It: • •
Canada is girding up its loins to annex
the., . United; States.—San • Etti,s 'Obispo
Tribune:. ' , • ° , • •
•' A Delicate Compliinent.
. . ,
Mary—Stop yeiir flatteries Pr shall hold
toy hands, to my face. .
• John (wishing -to . be complimentary)_.
Ah, your loyely. hands are . too
•Boston Beueon.
•
An Incurable brie.;,
'In it, pellet, court. What is% Your pro-
fession !lake the magistrate of the• .accused,
4 Prisoner (With much dignity)I, am a
tragic poet. . „ • *
' Magistrate-7•But that's not $1,.profeasian
7 --it's a' disease, "
Lawrence Donovan, the Brooklyn Bridge
Inniper,lettped, into. the Schuylkill 'River,
at. •frOni' Cliestnut • street
bridge, at 7.06'elock yesterday morning., He
was arrested, held' in $500 bail.
John Buckinghain, tiged'87i and his wife,
aged 85f a wealthy couple living in Dalton
Ohio, met With a horrible fate early yester-
day niorning. The house was. discovered •
on fire byteighlforS, who burst in the aoors
and, found the-aged--eouple asphyxiated.
The Man died at once-;. his 'wife fctill lives
but cannot reeover.
They are try ing introduce grOen chalk
in 'some of the. billiard rooms of Chicago;
It ' is alaimed that the chalk loses none of
its adhesiveness by :reason. Of its artificial
*nor,: and that it possesses the Merit of
preserving the color oreloth. 'Chalk, as it
le used' at, present, soon fade's the heavieet
-eilieteld cloth; and Makes:the fables appeet
unsightly and worn. • .•
—"1• do not desire Wealth for iteelff", re.
triarked the philOsopher. replied
the. eyelet I etqlpose yon desire it for
' •
111. Hector :111elot, the wel I kn o w n Frei dli
novelist, has taken the 'recent CreWford,
ease tor the phit of a new Work to be en-
titled " Los Vice! •Franeais," the title of
Mr3. CratvfercHteri '
trial • greatly irritated : publie)opinion in
Prance.' ,
The Imperial Government haS, arranged
te,construct a now and • imPortant railway
lit India, and also one connecting India:and;
Mandalay. Theqinblic works willebo :of
immediate interest to the stool trade ana
will EitihSequently have vent beaficial
effect upon the Cotton industry, for which
it will Open now markets Of great extent.
•
4. Never drop anythieg ititO the 'ear un-
less it has been preliouely warmed: . • .
.5. Never lige anything but a Syringe and
Warm Water for cleaning the ears from pus:,
6. Never strike or box a child's ears; this'
has been known to rupture the drum -head,
and, dense incurable deafness. ,
7:Never wet the hair, if yeti have any
tendency to deafness; Wear an oiled -silk
cap when bathing; and refrain from diving..
9. Never seratoh the 'euro With anything
but the finget; if they itch. Dototurze the
head of a pin, heir pins, pencil tips or Any.
thing of that nature.
' 9. Never let the feet become cold en&
damp, or sit .With the back towards the
'window; as these things tend to. aggravate
any (tasting hardness othearing.)
• 10: Neriier,put niilk, fat or -any , oily sub-
stance into the.ear for the relief of pain, for
they soon beeome rancid and tend to incite
inflammation. Simple warm water Will
answer the purpose better than anything
11. Never be. elarroed• if a, living insect
" -
enters the ear: , Pouring warin water into.
the, canal will drown it, when it ;Fill gener-
al& come to the surface, and can be easily
removed by the -fingees: "A few puffs of
tobacco; smoke. blown into the ear • will
stupefy the insect •
12 Never Meddle with the -ear if a foreign w
body, Such as a h-elid, , button or seed enters n
_
, 'SHIFTING A WG TALVAG.O.PX1'.
atraerdinarv,Preeantions Taken to Pre-
-ventite-Being injured. .
pito', eoAt'7irw°hforhe great
el se onrsse!sCfiarr kt.heeI ClieltmeiCitecigees:
have been BO long at work, are now practi-
cally completed, and will soon be .sent to
their destination. The plan adopted for
shipping the •aolible :len% worked out by
Capt. Fraser, is as follows: The two
glasses will fitit. • be wrapped in fifteen or
twenty thicknesses of oleth, drawn. very
fight. The cloth will be cotton,. and, iii
circler to maim it . soft and perfectly free
from -grit, it will; be washed men* times
and thoroughly beaten. Next to the cloth:
come tin* layer of . cotton betting,
and then a layer of paper. A box made of
wood and lined -With felt will contain the
glasses When so prepared, the felt linin
the box -dre---1-nng-next-tO theTriaper
lenses with their. covering will be packed,
tightly in this Nix. The shape of this box
will vox:form to the shape of . the lenses.
The felt will be attached with. glee, so that
no nails will be anyivhere near the glass.
Outside of this wooden box and incloeing it
will be a strong steel box, about the shape
of a cube. The wooden box will he tightly
packed into the steel -box with curled hair.
To inclose this, steel hex will be Still another
steel box or chest, and the inner steel box
kept from touching it by a largo
1
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y •
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1:01.41•!11cP.O.014.Wigiigoic.8.,
ecelpto for. an Theire _nitfre cOmpaBY
When°0314.07P;74)071iihea°71:110nutZdenlY to
dinner or tea,. and. the. family larder is _
almpet empty the good housekeeper is al.
most worried Into an early grave. to knew
what to get for the.niesh It must be some- •
thing that will; cook ittiokly and taste '
'nicely, and of course cost hdt. little. * Here ,
area few receipts that May 'aid them at '
such moment. ' If there are apple -a -in':
the howls wash them and put into a hot
oven to bake. They will Make a nice dee: •
sert eaten with ,trearn and sugar, or if the • . ;
'milk is, net plentiful put a little molasses in •
the dish while baking, or the pores may be•
, .
removed and -the centres_ filled with cinna-
mon cloves and , and a' little; hot
g.of, water. poured • , • -'
The • Every one knows ho* th make quick Pis
nie healthy
y 69:;„ Psteady0 rS e tit?, baurteareneptaiaatti. bailie 1 .1
•for any emergency. They should be made • •
with a little spur milk, if possible,. and a
little. butter Ete well as lard. will to the*.
taste.. The secret of having them light is •
to work them quickly . and bake IMMO-. ,.• .
diately: •
Any cold meat that may be on hand; it ' . . •
not in Sufficiently good shape to set sliced; , • . 7
illftir converted into croquettes„, If beef;. •
lamb, thicken corned beef or.vear ch9p to
number of spiral springs covering the wh
interior Of the.outsteel 'chest. • This • outer chest Will be pocked witlfiisliestps; to r
der it fireproof, and both of the steel be
.Will be made airtight_and.'Waterprciof—T
suspended by pivots i
strong wooden . flame, and a contrive
baEebe'erradepteatdrtdiaiTnr'th-e-eliest c)
quarter around 'every' 'day during its p
gress to California.. This late prevent a
mo ecular disarrangement in the glass „a,
to aan a 'of-• olarliation
ear a e jarring of the train will d
turf) the present errangerneet of the mo
°Wei unless the position of the glass lade
changed and all lines of disturbance th
broken up: Thegless,will be insuffa to.
full vilue—Or ratherits ,cost—$51,000, a
all the, precautions mentioned. are taken
prevent' any. aecident to it. it • well
probably be inappssible , to replace it,
Fell, who oast it, and the elder Clark,
ground ire' both oId Men; The gla
will be shipped by express.
There is sotnething almost romantic
the design and construction of the nionst
Lick telescope, Being the greatest wo
ver imaerteken, presenting difficidtiesth
e a mince, make moist with one or two eggs, • ' '
•
- ,
*. : •
ter_ Ada a little raashea potato, salt, pepper '
en and enough milk to. make bleb a thick
xes Paste, roll in little oblong shapes
p_sin
n a little squares of buttered toast . and Withnce .
_eold_eelery,....11.janicanget-it:--Vwdeor-tiiren-;•-•‘--;-,
ne- of- meat and fowl may. be used for
rieu thesercroquettes, and a little him or baton t •
ny will add to the flavor. • ,
nd Plebes Of c.ord.ohickenzorturkey.-mey be
• g marnied.up-with-a littkr-butterit-a-frying-
is- pan; put on 'a .platter into the Oen, and ,' •:. •
le- surrounded by . biscuits .halved' -or small,
ily thick-iiliees-of-bread:---ThidiTilike the fol.
xis lowing gravy to. point-. over all Into the .
its frying -pan pute large piece of .butter; cup..
nd or two cups of milk, and any .gravy'that • •
to nay be left over. " Bring it to a boil ; • then
ld add sufficientliour, 6rst wet in a little cola
is or water, to make' the consistency Of . •
1:1°1; ocrfetahrrid'.darte ianseQaut cwIltPhnesdaittonan'amiandee little
•
• the sauce cook for few nienients„then
in pour over the 'biscuits and fowl. This will' • "'
er' be found a really. nice dish, and but•little.
rk chicken or turkey is needed to Make it. ge,- •
at around .* . • : • '
had never before been encountered, .inviti
and euffering drawbacks and disasters th
Seemed to be sufficient to stagger the me
persistent ' and painstaking skill, Width
from 'clay to day by , world Of Eirizdo
observers hovered. over and caressed by t
United ,Wisdom ,of '' a 'generation; the ie
,fiaa come into the world with gre
. .
cyclopean eye ready to pierce the Mysteri
of the heaVene. CaPtem Monne Frase
ng • '
at Offild IPields,, •••••
61-t that Pan out riehly.are not. sb abundant as in- •
ed the early‘Califormo days, but those who write , •
us to Hallett .& ..c_e„p_ortland. Maine, will, by return ••
• ecetve free, full information abont work -
whichrthey Oen do, and live at home. wherever
ns they ore located, that Win iay them fro*" $5 to ` - • '
, $25 per day, and upwards. •• Either se*, young or
es
• old. Capital not required; you are started in .'
business free. Those who start at once are • •
r, absolutely sure of snug little fortunes. • " • • •
•
r
• • •
Superintendent- of the Observatory, fu
nieheS• some hitherto iinpnblislied a
'highly", interesting information .clineerni
the grinding of the •crownglass leit; an
r- • • • • " , •
The French •steamee. -Burgundfa, -
ng leaving..Naplea for Naw York , with 834 : • • : -
•
the plan adopted for teanspertnig it fro
CambridgepOrt, to 'San Jose. 0
the subject, Of the grinding . he, says th
the citified' measurement' at command
the 110,009th part ot)ininch, but in grin
ing the great lens' it Was discovered th
even this • infinitesimal ft:talon was to
d .riasiengere on board-, *is striek ataidsh*
qJ
in' by the spur of the Man -Of -war Italia and . .
n was so badly damaged. that the captain , ' t ,• '-
at beached her. The main afterholds are: ''.' ''. , . ,... ...
as &II of miter.- . . .. •: : _ ' . , , .... :
d- • ---,a-,-*---.: ' , ' ' '.. E ' • ' ';' ". ..•
at . ' Let the4WorltiHno It ' ' ' • '''''' •
o..., • .. ' • , - • '' • . .
You can purchase a bottle 'of polson.8 . '-.. ,.. .
. . . ,
it; leave it, absolutely alone, . but . have a. (i
physician attend to it. More damage lies. tr
been done by Injudicious attempts . the th
extraction of a foreign body than could la
ever come from ale presence in the oar.— fl
Health and Home. .
fo
go. still. finer. measurement
ea.,...reqUired_in-redncingr-the-Aene-7in-
unibeiless Places • :to' a • thickness'
Melt unequal) that would exactly coneen-
ate parallel rays of a -circle.
me feat in diameter; a paitik,a.littlo
rger.than a ' In Order to reduce, the
ie Mem:lire:tent already at :03ipilliand the
Hewing ingenious arrangernent Was: exii
eyed by Arvin Clark di' Sone; the makers
neer,. whielesent the rayEi a light titiongh
telescope to the great lens; thus magnify:.
g'the ray's. The magnificent light, pass,:
gthrough the great lens, was still further
!tensely 'magnified, and:- after having
.ssed th ough the lens it ' was observed
rough :a second telescope and thus further'
agnified. In this , way the least ,failure
the great lens,' to cOncentrate:.perfectly
Ei detected,-aira-trere; *tie also deter -
nod the amount .ot Oise in . it, . at any
yen Point, thet, ha to be ground Off' in
de,r to Bemire a..perfect foetid:. ; Thus a
easnrenient cit,the 2,000;000thpart of an
c • was It to:* very little
*ling tell:lir:eve so sniall tbielmess of
ss from egiyen paint; gentle rubbing
't•iso-filieerththunaanb''!3ceoliVizisiri 'earlegoltivs
tiie glass
stint ,Trans,eript. . . .
• • '
Tho steamer Greet Eastern viiiii•dofil yes, of
terclay at Liverpoolfor 6130,000: m
•
a
Proceedings .have ueeninstituted to un-, in
seat Ave of the aldermen of St, ;Catharines in
on the groundof itisuffieient property quail im
AoatiOn. . • .
•
William Gander had his . lipid and arm th
badly mangled yesterday Morning m
ing contact with a eirliullirse* in Smith qf
Co.'s Saw workei.St. Catharines. we
„ . ,
It is thought Antoine Bedard, e French- nil
Man living two mileswestof7P-rairie Siding, gi
Ont., Was ,drowned in the floOd.Which has er
covered the prairie: Bedard lived.* a hut
alone; and no treceden be founaddlibt by ul,.11
his neighbor:3i' • ' . gr1
The 'Beneathinel reports recently pub- g•T'
lished. of intense suffering :among the •
Iv'
inhabitante of Northern , Newfoundland ps
from cold • Starvation are stated to be '17
:the lens : A Os jet•Was. pieced before
. P
-Tho Supreme Cdert 'T'hursday .
the hearing of the list of appeals hero the 'eon
Maritime P.rovinces, and • adjourned till •tiln
Mirth' When. the 9u-615W..litif *alio, '1,,
ftelkeii ' . •
TI
-
At
- . • , re
A% e nieeting Thursday, the vestry of St. he
Jaime' Cathedral, Toronto, Oeided to pal: wh
tion the Priyy Council . for leave to appeal Me
againet the jzidgment of the Suprenie Court to it
in the °aid, tit Langtry -„ ' the
he' .Derninion Government has called fts
the
fro
the
also
tbi
rles
eati
, • A Cat's Hentarhalge reat:' '• .
Mk: Jelin A. Thompson, . Of: lot 12; 3rd
cession, . O. s., , Meltincilion, has a eat;
geetronanical. performances .of which
. Worthy of mete. The- other dey'Mr.
oniPson Carried from the' baro to the
uag thirty-four raiee Which he had killed
ile moving Sheaf : Oats; and onpftozen,
Use: . These mice he etnintenced, to•feed
.9.montlno:old at. In tens:ninnies bY
•
watch the eat had eaten,and taken into
little ,Eitoniach .thirty46ar mice out of
:' thirty-five; • ,•;;The• • thirty-tiftlit being
zen, took upnearly tet Minutes raore of
cat's time; but. the feline disposed Of it
before,quittiiig the jolt • 'The truth of
story is:yonehed for bYtwO ether wit -
see, whe ay, it wasn't a good day for
!''' When 'Found 'Take • a Note 04'4'
,:
ng olio ., either,-8//e/berW, ',4reyiee..
noni4gto,.: .• '. . , . , • , ,..2:-,
I aniviolcl-that• there aro in, the English.
language, but tour words endingie ii.eeed;''
I call name " proceed;" " ekceed," . and
" stioceek" but I Cannot lind ' a ' feurth,
Will you or any of the retiaers Of the bfitly
Nete8 1161p:niel out ef,the,dilemina which I•
find- sti exceedingly ' aggravating `?'-•-Chiealp
Neu.. .‘ . • ' • .,' . ,‘.
for tenders for steamships capable Of Main -
a fortnightly,: service with, the
British Wein' With a Vie* of pit,:
'Meting our trede relatidnif with the colony.
A fast liee of steamers will be selected and
liberally subsidized. .
Tfie queen. has written ithid letter ::of
condolence to Wihtain Jenner. Who. litie
lost survivingliister Miss Hannah
termer; .who lived , Rip'hop • Walther:1;
Where•Slit Proved o,n untiring benefactor to
the peor Otthe toWn. ••'
'on -day, end Tuesday pbservea as
hOlidayein Madrie ' celentatipner the
Queen's ,Tubilee..' The feasting ada ferege-
ing were ;universal. The native. qiiatters
wet* • gaily decorated and illtlinnateci in
*intik' of the odeaeion " •
„
Holub, the'exPlor-er; has reached*
"Shoehong, BeChuttnalando in a destitete.
condition. Hie eanqi on take liapgwelo.
was attacked and plundered .by natiVeSiata
his follow.e*plorcril Zoldner, was 'itintdered.
Irolub 'was, absent at the 'Olio of the
a ad .
••Advieeefroni Mileaowali etty___80kIttilian
troops, with Gatling IcaldeEthae Oil.
the Mgt"; ,aoa that 2000,More men
Wore expected. The Italians. have raised it
*doP's 'Of -14)00 lia2inilts and have
anted the inhabits,nts of Vassewah. Ras
,AloUle, luis gone to ineet the King OE Abyg.
WhO is 'ditipieased On' itedount. of the
attack upon the Italians;
• incighao)y, and
They ecodorti129 space 111 'Guth. 11) ,m;
three,room 'house .in Ogden :live! 'Willard
Dinglatin, two Wived,- twenty inntatried
children, .-114.e. Married'. tons, With their
-Wivea azal-fitteen,thildreni...and; tWOLIvirea,
'men in the attic. ; ••
The ltederder6f. Galway give" it dinner
• party last evening in Itiltlystirt4 and aniong
the giteets W6it 1:04gigtrAtego 'Maid
tild guests woie..seateciaMe table the police
iiatrol thatteed rt men rtireiing rapidly away
froni theliortsa. foiind, On ono of
the window sills a bog of dynainit*
laSe attached. The fuse Wes
quenched: The culprit escaped.
1.0
_
painNervilite,.thegre,atest--tremeay in the
world.'Neriiline cures headache, neuralgia, 5
toothache, pains in the side or back.: rhen-
matistr4 etc. As an internal remedy, • . • •
Nerviline is prompt, effective and Peasant. . • ' .
to take.. Nerviline has no equal as a pain'. ' , •
subchiingrernedY, and a test bottle costa • •
only 10 cents. Call. on your druggists and • :
invest 10 cents. ervi1ine, Nerviline, nerve , ' ' •
Pia:core- . , .
„. It is stated that three: of the fastest , • • : • •
steamships of the Cunard line have been ' ' •
purchased by the Canadian Pacific Railway , •
Company for the prone:nal service betWeen .:-• • ' *. -
British Columbia andAustralia; and that • •
thtvesse s. will be placed on he mine .
A 'new hospital for' ,t e treatment,of if•
patients suffering from infections diseases '
has been erected in Montreal.... The lot"!
nig, Which lonteins aceoMedation for '124 •
patients, will cost V26,060 when finished.. • ' ' •
• I was Much troubled ,with rlieumatistnt. ; , . .: , . ' , •
through imy, system, and in great pain..":. I".
took a flbottle of MeCollena's lithe:Militia . . ..= ' '. : . •
Repellent tee months ago, •and obtained' .1.-- •.•
. .,,
permanent relief.
W. H. SWEET,'MotititIldn-. %. i '' . •
The commemorative diplcinias of the, , • .
„ .
Colonial Exhibition are being 'mailed • to ", '" •
Canadian exhibitors by the clerks in the ' , ,
Department of Agriculture AS rapidly as • • t
possible...The niedalS will not be forwarded.. ' • 1,";
for about a fortnight. •• • ' • •, 7
• . •
. The Nike and ...Thichess of Nassau and •
their Son Prince Williain,...have Arrived,- at • '
•
Calinese[Ori a. visit to the'Crown Prince and'
Princes s of • Baden.-: Prinde, William of'
Nassau, Who was born in 1852, is the 'best
royal parti jin Europe, as he will inherit
ari iminense fortune from his father; and .
he.ie net encumbered by the possession of a
dThe Chairmanof the Midland .itailiveY.
ompanY 'denies that railway' compainee.. •
areunreasonable' towards the puhue. If
the. ,C4ovetnntent, botVeVef;'are dissatisfied;
they otialit, to purchase' the railways ' at, a,
fair price. It as.expected that tbe'O-teerii-.
Merit's ,Itailway totes 'Bill ivill be otttingly.
oppOeed. ' • ' •
•
tit 6 ' .. TION I
..
1 linvo A ;WNW Ve •,,,,, .dy lee the.olalvo dilleARO ; lif It, nee • .
(90 1100115 ote,Ases el t, o worst 10t1,1 aw, of Fong atiktillflig
have, been cured. In, Opri, so atlyMg ,,10 my faith In It ,
" ettieney, that I Nel FACT! I TWO BOTTI.tB F50,, tofther'"-
*119 a VA LOAIILF: ,'I BEA 11,:" tin Oda ,d1seabe to an,),,
. . f15. r. A. SLOCUM,
inarirce. ante tdirrear and P. 0, adrli•eas.,
Itraholi Office, 37,Yonge $t., Tana*
. • D 13 N t. o.. 8/.
..
•
IE S :BEST .:PRIE:
• ' t
•