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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-05-27, Page 344.4;••• 'FY 4.r.r .1: , THE PEOIIE'S • EPTalflage.44t 04 the •Opeuk0 of the . Palace bygr lifaiiety*". • t47' irEll:EMON'T AND TE •PITIIMPich A. last (Sunday) night's. London' cable Jaya; •Liniclon.wa�a1i.ah1ae vi.ith excite. ment, yeeterday,- afternoon, the occasion being the visit of the Queen for the purpose of epening the People'e Palen -eat Mile EEO. • The reuteselected for :the-HOY0,1 progress ' extended from Paddington • station in the western portion of London' to Mile End at the extreine -e-ilifit-eqee: of sbout'eightniilee. • ' . ' •. ' • • The buildifiga along the ' entire, way were • gaily decorated with banners,: wreathe, ., colored: trophies and flags,. the 40h:co1ors. and the Stare and Stiipee being conspionona in many place. Whitechaper road pre- ••14.0ented in, perspective fromehtiost any.point a long vista of • triumphal • arches. The carriages were, escorted by a , troop of 'cavalry.' The 'line of the peoceseio .0 was Lft"arded-byt10,0007-voltintetirs--end---5',600- •. 'regular troops, 'comprising • artillery,'ha- ' fantry and etive,lrY,, all selecl et largely with is a vie.* to:7the brilliancy , a. eontraet. of- • thctir„differintrmiforme as . ,ditiope to the: ' "pageent. - .• The. Lord Mayor' and ' the inimicipel ofiltersof the city of London. Went...iit Oar- ; *Iageti7iiiini'llie 'Manikineinfectolh5'.4 •c•ty'e, boundary line at Holborn. They' • .... alightedand awaited 'the 'Queen, who Was - ; in, ,an open ,carriage.' At the ' Queens • .• approaCh • the Lord Mayor received. the pearl si*Ord from the,swordbearer., . His . ,VVorshiP,Iew,ered,the point, and congratu- -.1ated Her Majestynn Wining, to the most : loyal city and ,presented :the . sword, to . the. • 'Omen. She tookit and returned it. The 5 Lord' ,Mayor and retinue , then Placed . themeelveeimmediately in•adVaneelif the, .. Queen's carriage •and 'escOrted ' her. norms - • ".• the eity. teethe eastern boundary atAldgate., • .!' There they. bade her fete/Fell; for, a '•brief . time, and repaired tethe •Maneion Ilblise ; to swirit•Her7Majestes return. 4- •••• - ,-,' • .- :,' • ••• .',' The - Queen proceeded to the.. People's ' 7:Taliree, and ' ascended ',to. 'the deii,,where ' ' 'the..PrinceetWeles, the Mitcode of Lorne, ::the. pats acambridge mid tbe3roubishop s;p1,11014E14VolfAit3§40.1.04.:raroAlii-oit. 1iiiigiligvai.lswional:;42x.the*,.. ,..V4,07:grieen then received the told key; Anne.; 'Milani . . sang ..,;", gorgei ' Sweet. Home," and.. .. and.. the •T'n,:rrioce of • Wales. .deolared • the ' People's : 'Palace • open, ..The announcement ‘. ' was greeted with a, greet.fieUrish Of trumpets, t .follewed .. by " a ::' grand ohottie rendering Old Viindied." :, Subeequenti,ythe•QUeeri - :Jaid the first- *tone, ' Of the foundation. for ... the technical sehoole Sttac,hed to .,the . People's- • Palace.. :The ..Arolibishop•. 14 ,Canteilinty prayed„ . for and, 'blessed. the • people: and,pionOurteed the 'benediction.' ' 'UtiOn the conclusion of the ,ceremonies :the •11,oya1iprocession.,. startedOn its tetinvii; • 1•••• '.;By . command of ' the Qnden, the . longest' -:- route back was . the procession inov,: : .ing•off .into Butdette : read; :going: thence • along,CoutinercieVroad to••41dgate.;„,,Thie 'deviation:Was-ordered.tii4deasetheifititens,' • Who regneeted, it. ' ,..,Arrivirig.' agein.:•at the , pity 'HMOs the Boyar earriegewaa; met :by, , the : .Lord. ,Ms.,y.Or ' and eivio: officials. ;end ••;epcorted back to the.MinsionliOnset which. •:-. ' the Queen entered in state for the firsttime ' in 'her lack': The Lord • Mayor wore crinieon ' • and oriejnerehes;OnlYesenmed when •the . ' Wyereign, VigitOlim,„.. He ,Wityluoted the •'•••Queento the 'ten ronin., :The' . weather '.nati . fine .., all day. , ,.... The Queen:..stibeequently ..' Xettatned. te. Windebr.. : ...Her • receptign 'all. • .,•:,elongtheroute.,waii *nit onthiniiiistio., .4., . After the QUeenand the,Prinee and Prig- „...._,,,..L.L.....-....OeSeef....W,alealiedt_akeri,:.tert at the Mensien ''•• - ' '. •'' House :two gold: tee:spoons. :Were. mieseC. .• They were probably taken as menitiliteea of •,the`oocasiOn•bytome Of ,thir attendants- • The People's Palace .10, the'.Argt. ,resillt, Of :- :a bequesemade nearly half:a century eintie, ' by .• Barber' Seinnunit4 ....The L. Drapers! ” SeCietY and otheirehaVe contributed leately,. ,'• nearly _half-a-thillion.'-dellarel_havitigjaeen", :raised 'Within kbrief period. :Mt,: Walter '• Bedent le'credited With giving a • powerful impels, to this ,generosity, having for its -' end . intellectual improvement, ,•rational •• recreation.and'the amusement afthe people 'Of the.'•East'..end: - Mr.': Bestint'e literary -•getiitie,:entleympathetio anclieeef life in his • gaieli, 4. 411.SOrts and Conditicins Of illenr,, ....got a just tribute in the Tiniea and elsewhere,. • " He, had a.place ofhonor in ; to -day's . core- • ineny; and was .presented to :the ,QUeen.. Lerd'ItOsebery;Whe :has given 315,000, was • Chitirnian, of •the ' :Board- Of . Stewards, and •',Ilir'EdmundQuirie Chairman of the•Board• ofTrustees,' • , ., - . . ....--, ,_ • ._ ' , ... •• ':._: •',..._::, , 'As much Of: the palace -as is, already done . • .consisteetalargey,finely propOrtiOned hall, ,dicoratedin light lalue;.pink eaidge,:ild; stone , .Odlarpredeniihating, An, Italian :coffered ceiling , presents, in an; oval arch, some , ;stained t Mee which, besides the Reyalatme •• and r:.,iiionogreins... end , Trinee,. of • Wales •. • feathers,' depicts -the• eschtcheenb of 'Scot,' • • land., Wales, %Wand,' Canada,: Auettalie ;and the Stet of Inde, giving an Imperial ..chareeter to the general design of the • reef. At :the tktiou,, *here . Meet the'galleries, • ctirVedinto bays, and supported' • by eculti, : turdd eitrYatidesf are statues in Roman batten, which is used' in the seulpthree, on the Hotel de yipo,iii Paris., ' ' '.,,,,:',i • : ' TwentY-tlitecgteattitieensatetepresented' . *beginning with Either,' Of *Bible .fanie,.- end ..., ending with 'Victoria'. 'Penh Statuaebeupies si niche between ' two COrinthiatik 'columns. ' . Thew statues Were &witted. bythe f4ouiptor Ver g.eyden. •,' It was ho, it ,Will be ' remere,-: bered, who; inilie car Of' Bolt va. Lewes. * 4 PEFR'O8T. • rJr0Poiei 11,0 IVITniversal PennY ,PPetaito. A London oable. says: gainilton aton, member of Parliament, whe. is advOeating a universal penny post,, •has„addressed letter to the Postihaster-General of. Great Britain, from which it appears that: &penny post could be established. between Great B• ritain and Ameriea, °Vim without any increase in the volume. of correspondence. ilis letter shows that in the year ending the 31st 6f Deeember, 1876,: therewere despatched from the United Kingdom to the Ilnited States 116;444 'lbs. of letters, end 1,031,908 lbs. of newspapers'and Other undies.-- During -the year ending the, 81st of itepteinlier,. 1886, no less than 837,855 lbs. of letters end 3,780,625 lbs. of news- paPers and other artiolea were deepatohed, se that the quantity of mails has more than doubled in these ten years. The total sum paid for the sea conveyance of " all mails sent to.New 'York in the year ending the,3fith of September, 1886, was £99,927. This year the cost, under the new arrange- ment,. will be Z80,000, but the income wilt be---X1974972F-egainst-art- expenditurerof -X80,000, showing a. prolit-of -£117;979:An ;increase being certain in thides in fermi& Ileitto34-iakee- the--actuat•ptefit- roundly as $120,900. From. this 220,000 may.lardy dedifoted--aff-thembetil tif takingthe mails to' Cork and Putting them on the steamers, ',tie that the net profit rAieeeraes--a160011. 337,855 pounds of letters • were carried for id, indeed of nd. ' per half -ounce (again reckoning thirty-five, to the pound), 'they ,would yield only 249,428.9f income, a de- crees° of44£73,059,,,gethere !quit' still be a 'profit of 226,941. •Butof course thatcal, oulation assumed' that the number of letters !would not inorease,_whereas they would not improbably raultiPly tenfold': . • CHANGESAN: 1.110141041'41. L4W I• -- Which .4ffeet the ElOcters of elitY; Tolirfl and ToWethly. • The following is a summer, of the more important, changes; made in the intinicipal law at the late elision of the Legislature:. The •qnalifications of mayors., reeves, aldermen and connoillora in the various municipalities is reduced to 3200 freehold •or $401) leasehold in villages 3400 or $800 intownships; 3600 or 31,203 in towns,. and 31,0Q6 or 32,000 in cities. • In municipalities where electors are die - qualified unless they have paid their taxes• by. the 14th of December, those on • the defaulters' list are to be permitted to vote if they have paid -their taxes any--time- before. they vote, and, produce a certificate to that effect. Section 138 of the Municipal Act is amended tomake it clear that an elector must vote for Mayor in the polling division resides in, er, if not qualified there, then Where he first Votes in the municipality. In the case. of a tie in the election, of Warden; the rounkiipality having 'the greatest equalized assessment is to have the -desting-voterinsteadot: the -one haying -the greatest number Of ratepayers. • In case an Auditor appointed ,by the' County-Council'-refusei--orneglects-tosetv the head of the Council. is given -authority • • A change' is made in the returns to be madeto the GOvetninent,, so that Auditors vindarea.sureistranstaitdraferreationstathO: Bureau of Industries.• . • Where from money on hand, or increased • 'able of property liable t� assessment; it is • not necesary to raise the fell rate under a. • by -la, Counoils are given power to'pass a by-law reducing the rate for ftature. years, -instead of having te plise a by-lawannuallY, eta at present., • «• •4 -- • The powers Cotincils he,ve hitherto had •in regulating size and number of doors, eto., in,ehurches, theatres, halls or other huildings used for places of worship, public meetings -or plebes of amusement, ere ex- tended to hospitals,. schoele, collegee -or buildings of a like nathretend the etrength • of walls„. beams, joistsend their sttpports are to be subjeat to regulation ; and pewer is given -to coMpel- production:- of , Plane • all mach buildings for inspection.. oeso. mbe4an.137,.. 0311.7rea,..aveal, fixe%twohy by-aucilaw% the 4D1Orkis given ownr.,6to (Cheese Ahtu neatest suitable "bending., itYallableforthe purpose„ giving dee netice tethe voters.. • ' The Council of an incorporated Village is given power to'purchase land for a emu, • tery within:the, Village; On epprcrval of -the LOcalBoard Of Health, ratified* tlie.Vro;. vinoial Board.: ' ••• ; • Power is given to charge 4:license fee on :circuses, etc' .. tip to $500, instead of ,3100, as. at present, ' • ' By-lawe changing name Of streets are made subject to approval. of _the County • : Power is giverit te licen_se "and • regulate shops where tobaccos ,andaigareare sold, :and to prevent the ealelo‘obildien under 1.40hileini on the Written order of parents. .,A,4171tDER0,1i13 OAT.. ' .es .to such the. Breath of a . Toting • and Fights the *other. . . - . A Pittsburg, Ta.„, despetoh "Bays Mr.' AtkiniOn,:of...Alleghen.Ynteeedheriiiiiiiery ..,Yeeterdefandwashorrified. at 'whet:eke saw. 'The fainily 'oat had attacked. her 6,. yi3er,Old dhild, who Was 'lying :eick' • on the '.Xlie,cat•was.sitting on the jireast pieWe warly fixed itv,the.ehild"la ,oheek .-and its mouth was to that Of the boy, : He was •etrugglingheranch its be ..nould, andivith , one hand 'was 'trying. tolluieh thepat away. As.socin ' as tbs&nimaI ettiv the lady showed ,fight;: It sotatcheil the child's face in. a,tetrible Meinier; and 'Sprinting' tipihis the'niothee bit her -on • the shoulder., She.• finallY beat i off by stabbing it with a pair of sheers. Tho mother ' found the 'ehildr • unconscious. • Her cries brought assistance 'and after restoratives had been adminis- • tered he Child wee able 'to Wk. He line** nothing excepttliat the,. vat had. Wakened him up, trying, is' he paid,: 44, totake my breath",;The ' fellow is in & pre- carious cnditlon... ' . h . . , • • . tate itews14Totesi.. • • _11131LAMP'S t.Asr .:Ipivg:NE. • fileolVe ,th!). *hry40 ;4etebege.nee .,frern. the, *• • i At Wina.11eX the CIti,Y w PilBee4 ili, the 121431drunip staid stYle, Whieb, ,040 NOAH have ekpeeted under Farmer "George. A whole ox wee roasted, and the Queen with four dandified' saw and, one. rosy-cheeked daughter, wept to ,inspeit and taste this delicacy: The cooks WOra new bluastaits and -white silk etookMgai whieh- appear- to have created an immense excitement among the good people'of Windsor. They cheered Her Majesty, the silk stockings„the bowing .Princesnd the roasting ox, and every one, .170.8 exceedingly jubilant, sir; a writer, in 'the_ Cernhill."_,The jnejonching incident in this somewhat -prosaic pietnre is thejabsence of the good old self. "It vnte, only a year; remember, before his insanity vitie again openly declared, and the courage°, us_ little Queen had, probably good reasons of her . own for Iceelting hiinnot only froin. the metropolis; but Mao as far as she could from the Windsor goo - 'sips ripen qua an exciting clay as that, of the.jubilee. He Wall visible at chapel, and nom when they fired eiXcn de joie. :in the Long willi-a-nd he rade ,pk-st the -nieraiiiid- eesporided silently idtheir salute, but this .-was.:411.Even at the grand "fete which Queen Charlotte gave at Frogmore,. where -for °nee the -etiquette -loving -women -laid aside- her notions of what was peril:deep:de; and invited notenly the nobility,but the tradesmen and their wives; and where for -"oii-ce-,-067.'4"6* • sonrthrbd then be1tno1 the -slowness of the court in hearty enjoy - leant of the iiovelty-even at Frogmore the King did not put in an appearance.. This unexplained-absenca is the one -touch Which redeems the -whole useless and restiltless• pageant; and thethought of the old man wandering almiethrotightherecninapf_hie palace holds more poetry than any or. every . grandiloquent • verse which -was written for the occasion and echeed across the dinner tables of enthusiastic and toatit- loying subjects. • . • • . • • 8O)flTHINGLIKE A SEICSATI0i41. V •was disbelieved by; a jury when hesaid that be and not Belt had done certain sculpture • in dispute. - •• , . , • It ishelieved ;that the Minitoba Govern- Metit will refttse 'to.' entertain 'Mr,;,'.,StIther, land'S pro.positiOn, to. lain°. FroVinCial : de- bentures in aid Of the Hudson's Hay *BY, :and that a, collision_rlietweir-the Opposition,and the cloVernment °Vet the; question is probable. " • - Cantin WilberfOree, .Of England,. new travelling in this country, a Man cf Wm - pea aboufetliire feet nine. inched in height: His facesis,clea:nly shaven find '_his features are He .1stis a high, 'retreating -Wehead, 'talent' which clusters alnuidantheir.;:rapid.lY grow.ing_graY His face le extremely intellectual and has eyes are 'clear. :and' penetrating': ...He 'always wears a 'Atte ribbon in the lapel °this 'cOat tereignify•hia'advocaey Of the tensperance , tient. Col. Fynmore, of the Royal Marines, whole death at the age of .93 bas. lately been recorded;•was the last surviving Officer who served at Trafalgar, ,On that gloriousday he was a' middy on the Africa, a ..,,SeventY- four of Collingwood'S squadron. Dur'ing the'battle•Capt. D'igey fotindlim at work �n themeet exposed. parton the upper deck - and .Ordered a: safer . place below. P. 0, sir," replied the little fellow,,P I could tint do that. What Would father -Stly ?” y • • • , TELEGRAPH -1p SUld1WC• Y., oWing to grave, charges alleged against the llie0tre4 Ott Police patrol, taw WO., has been diehanflecli- f • • F. Payne, , of Eloothwold, while forking hay, fell iron?" a• MOW, SeriOUSIY. injUring • his hip and side and dielocating his wrist. • Intelligence has been 'received in Ottawa'. that the BatOohe lualf-breede have refused al -bad -of seed -grain, and will -not 'cultivate their,lind this year. • • • Last evening Bishop Cleary, of Kingston, in his sermon, denounced strongly the word- ing of an *advertisement' announoingthe visit of certain American doctors to that city. - --. • ; g , Mrs. Aurelia Tazer, of Malithide , aged 70, while crossing a field to a neighbo;r'i on Friday.placed her pipe in her pocket- Her" dress, caught fire, and wharfound bef.7". clothes and hair were bt:rned off and ber flesh burned to ,a cripp.:.• She cannot Bur.: • jacque,s• ofCornell itation, t. •Thetnas on iriday, leareing four sinall'chil. dreir with a hired erl, They. found' a rThir-olveit,;" and7one bey, ard -shot his • ▪ HypeOtised French Young Lady's -prone -- with the King of Beasts. - • , Parka cable :says : , 'A • highly eeriest- tionerhypnotio! experiment' Was aehieved ificalOvatespurfiormenee4eatirstey,Athe' W elke :Bergare,, 'rmitigin. 'Omuta. irevialedvelarge,mageopntaliiinglire'eliens. Signor :Giasitnnetti, the lien tattier, then entered. the 'page:and mad&the lions jump about and roar. Then& pretty Yotmg lady in a white dress appeared e.ad was ,hypno-, flea by M. • de' Torey• • Recording, to the inethods.of ',Dr; Charcot.7 De Torcy and his hypnotised young lady entered the ,cage, ' heemmile being,keptin, check by the lion ,tamer. DeToroy,compeliedtheyoung lady to fall en the liens' backs, n4 to.plabe her head in a lion's; *nth,. held Open for the purpose by the lion • tamer'.,,,, The ' seance wound'nti by ,the. young lady-who been putin a,' rigid, acute. cataleptic' •state„. testing with herheaddn onestool andher feet on another, while , the tions :.jumped over her. One 'lion 'pieced its paws onsthe • 'Wherean action is hrolight to reviver patient's thighs and:caught inits month a damages Iron a nuinun al corporation on me ofnies,t-Tettached to -a 'cord, thereby 'account of an • obstruet excavationor opening in a street or -bridge, •the corpora,' tion is to have a remedYOver against Alie.pereon.',Wh&-cansed the 'Obstruetion.pr. Opening. ;, • ' • ' ' • The legislation. Of , last year, on the' "bridge"' question is repealed, and . thelivir• Is left ••as was previously. .Where -O, •Councii,ly two-thirds vete decide that the Constructing or erecting Of: any bridge, 'culvert or embankment; 'is for thegeneral benefit; end that it, vietild:beineqtaitehle 'to Sewed the whole , &silt Yon the locality, they May "paitirs-by,leiraiid'herrow- money -to. -pay one half bythe municipality. 1 •Two 'hundred • eleeters in towns, or a hindied in villages and •townships, are given Power by -petition to compel Coimeils, to submitby-laws got. the 'construction of 'wetetWorks, • ,• • • The'Why of tp:fitiris. • Giris all have, a. kind of wait code.. You •knOW how itis. you are introduced to a She invites you ,to call. You Call; Shainvites, yoni,to a party., You g0, She intrOduces you to. a whole circle.. That whole circle diseusses you, calmly appor- liens pinto three or, four ; they gradhally reduce, themselves 'to cum. Then yon're lost. She wearies of you and you hicked. 'out of the dirtile. • Well,. all .of those gide have discussed every One el your young men friends the someVvay. This is what a cynical girl told me. I don't knoW of my own knowledge. But bilk of trades unions • and Knights of Labor Their organization. dwindles into, absolute crudenees •wheli compared. with Alio U. O.', M; G. Waited Order of Marriageable Girls.)-Ckisage 4 .'• Aeolic° of Hypnotism. , • The operator has rendered his subjea insensible. •Ile. then , drops Molten tallow into each of`, his eyes, places lighted match in each: eat and then pours 'bettleful 6f 'Assaf retitle into ,mouth, 4' Tell me what you ,feel now?" be' asks. . 1.,Inspes,kablo • joy!". - is- Iva a., , Sir. Arthur 1:10,Volocif,. the Governor: of ' Natal, has been instructed to pretClaith " Zululand, ,ekcepting that portion eon 'Aug Om NOW Beier Itetrillilie, t British PosOessiOn." The .NOW Beer Republic o eetipies the western' part of Zululand. and not 'reach ',the coast. Its, eree • is about 1,800 square miles, e• ,The capital -Vrybeiti, 44 „It's all ,very, ' sa.id the, grave. diggor, to advise a young, ratinfebegin at thebettom and work tip but in my bitaineeit it ain't practicable. g - • • rrollibition A tall, lank, rod nosed man canae. into a country storewith &large jug; which he placed. on the counter with the rernark : L went a gallon of rinil--baby's siok."Beslon 0a2ette. r,. v.. • • 'Gtood 334. • J ape,” said the new thinieter, meeting ope of our best yoUng men, " that you smoke eigatettes, ", •• • "Yes," replied the noble yonth, '" I prim - hied hay.mether that I would 7 holier use tobaceo an any form.",---Burdette. „ Ten Rides for Father's. : 1. When euffering from violent excitement do not blithe:. , 2. When out:feting:from suddenly occhr.., ring or ' from . continued illness, do pot The death is annatmeed of Lieut.' -Col Osborne Smith in England. . • Missouri, girl waved,;,liet hand at a stranger and in three days they Were mar- ried, Two days later the young wife waved fiat -iron at her linshand and the h`eit evenhig, he came liOrrio waving a divorCe: What are the • wild wavat . saying 1 purtington lisree Press. Itrapp is again making what will 10'the largest gun in tlio 'orld.Jt comes in go SCOMOTI., The '06squitofroMises o be more like a•Win god': Mastodon than ever' judging frora the, Size of limb and voice of the advance guard.--41ThspIno Avalanche, • 3., „After ifeepless nights or: excessive exercise, d0 not bathe, thiliiii fon ,firetreat a few hours• . • , :••.- • but the broad Scotch burr is perceptible, guage a most, remarkable bee- They are in their pronunciation making their len. 4. After mettle; ainfeepecially after taking alcoholic liqtiorigdOnot bathe, • , • , . ., „ 5. •Take your 'Arne on the way • to the famous hunters and trappers,and, when • , . : , . not drunk, very iieiceable. " They took . no bathing house or. beaoh. •' • part in the recent Uprising in the Northr .6. • On arriving ha. th?3 beach inquire about 'detith and. aurrenteof water.. . Weet, •as they hair° no affiliatiens with the Frenoh hilt -breeds dr Indians, "nit form a 7. ! ' Undress slowly, hilt then go directly , , little" a inniunity by themselves. As' into the water. • ,. , . ; - g. Jump in•hoo• tiro, or, at toast, dip voyagenrs they are unequalled, and are the ender quicklyy if you do not like- to do' the happiest beings J 'ever eavr• They. do • net first; ' : - •'' . . . ' take kindly ici life in villagelterlowne and • .9: Do not remain too long in the water are fast' moving away before . the „advance of civihiation, but 1 •fear that those who .- especially ff. not Veer robilet... ' ' ' . body, IO'• take their place will not have their virtues. -; 10...After bathing; rah'•the ' -Washington Star. , , • stimulatocirculation, arid then dresequicklY; then take moderate exercise. ' •' . ringe; fastened to the .roof ' of -.the 'Cage. Tlie--lione--411. itonlica about and reared furiously; land•in the Midst of :the eitatement De ToicybrOught the patient: out of the hypnOtie ;trance and reinoved her, fronithe_eage,....The_Prefeet 1 Felice has, not yet alloteed performice'to be given hipublicf,but the private Perfortaanee was se, vaCifercalely. 'applandepi!. that it is • be- lieVedthe rei3trictionwill soon be removed. brother, aged 0; in the" E74 The hell boa **- beini extractd, and hopes of the child's recovery. are ntertained. at -John Lyle's; Seuth- . ---,- weld, on.oFtiday evening, a timber fe1- from the, top Of the. building. James Law* ton and Wm. Somervp, who Were nnder- neECth the head of the former, but Somerville • trippeclend.fell„dthe timber falling scrods . him,- Ile • suitamed" serious and .painfti/ though not' fatal injurierp. . A team of horses belonging' to John • Fisher, of Miirray, ran away On' Saturday • morning Coleman street, Belleville. The' waggon npset and athree-montla3'-old which Mrs. Fisher. 'carriedin her Arnie, was 'so serieuslyhert that its recoil. ery .is doubtful. .11fre., Fisher was badly brrienidebotit the face. . ' ' Samuel - Macdonald; of Muirliirk, was, taking bricks out of an old well. When, eight -feet d.ownthesuface'cavedin, carry- ing'himfialf Way to the baton]. where remamed wedged, :surrounded to the nick in lotrie earth, With fifteen feet•of' wateit,••• beneath, till a neighbor &ye the 4PlItNillageglifonedAlthit4mptdik-kMilhd,;With the bottom: • ' . . •. . . •. „ 4,cenferenee of ditizeile in *entreat an,,. Friday to discuss the questionof protection • from !Mode; areoIutionurging the City:O.:, • grant it once the $178,000 for the construe; tion of a tenapoiasy dyke was .adopted,.and:, an influential deputation Was appointed to proceed tcl'OttaWa to lay' 'before the Oar.' eininent Other. resolutions..adetited• by the, meeting for the :hater' protect:m.6f the,' ' • Red Men • with Sky bine Eyes ' • Along. the Red' River :Valley is to be d-oneettlie1nost-curious--populatiOns- to be found • anywhere :in the world. I refer to the hall: and quarter bands; the descendants of the Scotohmen who came tothis Country in the days Of the Hudson's By Company, • and their Indian wives., They present a Most 'peculiar combination of the Scotch and Iiidian types, the dark skin -and 'high cheekbones' of the Indian with the light hair • and blue _eyesof the Seetchnian. Physically; they •e•re •splen. did req.:), being lithe, tall , and ninsenlar, end firethe beet and most enduring runners 'ever, sew, travelling hundreds of miles through the woods in; the' dead of winter with -incredible rapidity. -All speakFrenchi „ dealing with a Cellar in springy 'ground,,the first thing ta.be done to ?make it 'dry', Says the Sanitary Engineer, provide sortie•chanco for the water t� an away :before getting ' into the , Cellar. This maybe done by laying a•tive-inchtile draM pipe in s trench•dtig all areund the founda- tion outside of the walls, and from one feet to two feet below the cellar floor. Pia this pipe together without ,.mortar and cover' it with Cobblestonee to keep out the dirt and sand. If it be not practicable to lay the drain outside it inay he laid inside ' of the directly -un the cellar door ; but the operation of such& drain is leas effioient The bank -filling of.the &liar • Walls elieuld be porous enough to allow the Watet to go .directly into the drain. • • • . • • - The ,wharyes at llentreal are' still Sub- merged, causing considerable delay' and irieenvenience tei• shipping.. The river is i3,t,111tisiillg• ' adstone's 11rla. revived • Carlyle's characteristic criticism of the 'fleshy poet who recently grossly: inisrEpre." sefited the great stateSinan : Swinburne, Algernon SWifiburne, Wiehcs to be introduced to no. What3 that young man who sits in a cesspit and iiddstaits filth ? No, thank yeti," -; •: • . •• "Sales are how inado so delidate tlntt the signature ori a pieed of poor, with a soft leadpCncil can bo weighed. A coquette. is like a war votdkan!;-..Slad goep throtigh Many engageinents.. • 4 • • . • ,• A Division. of Leber. • aro • ' going, nay pretty e- eryou maid? i• - ' ' ' She-,I'in going e-inilking,, sir (she He -Can .1 hot help , you, my pretty 121. allhaci...1 You sit (she said).--Proin puck. Science , shows . that arnanisOOper cent aGnIawrisihn,RSmith's la o. • The latter %If p l rroayn fessoar .. to aatteelri a bTohraettiosawrhyyliipt. never does any:xy gdod al . atter tiOn to anti -coercion resolutions passed 4 • AlWaYs ',stranded on the same rbck'A by ,Aservile politicians or •corrupt Legisia baby who haf.3 but one eradich' . tures'.• They do not represent real Ameri- , :The freshet' in the dier 8t.'lehiii N. 11, is'falling, rapitily •. and Vredetiotoniii ont danger. : The gas marks' and waterworks... wil reshme operat'ions in 'ft few days.- At. • Woodstock 'the Waterworks and' eleatrio; light stations ire also once more free from, thuflood..:, The siffering along th& fiondect tclietrict in•Sunbury andQueen's iestillin-• tense. Communication With thelligh land has been opened steam-ferrY boate.,7sn&-- relieve parties,. e.re ACtiVeli .succoringthose, most in.AistreSA The New , Briniswiek • Railway will 'alit trains on schedule tim&, tO4nortow awileVy rain falls.ndashean • thereWil . Le nefurther interruption. .The' damage to the Intercolonial alight ,Brithe, . say Will teach $20,000, as 'a 'large piece oF' the traiikWill hive'to be rebuilt. • Latest. , estimates put theletai leen! at censiderably" trier!), dollars. • • ' • , • .. • • Sevin:al _eattligliAlershocks lutie been -felt at Sn7ride, derpia the past woek . • Sheik Abed Henda hag been exiled' froin. Turkey' s for' aiintlpiring - dethrone' the . Sultan.' He • was • for. a.: long tinie i'ntimate adviser of the Sultan. • • The ptbeeeds from Saterday's • sales, Of the , French •trewri jewels amounted to, ' 672,0001f The' agent of the-Duc d'Orleana bought a chain of ,bfrilliants ft.4181,250f, , J&. Gall, 'art Ainericen,_beught a Cinetuit, of brilliants for 132,500f. ••• • ' • A sttikintljetlieclist revival is proceed-, ing in Saxony; having'•its centre in SchWar.: ienberg„ where % ;the Methodists have collected feriae forthe erection i3f. a large church. They have established a chapel. at . Schetaeoberg; and are sending preachers •tliteughclut the country.' Empress Augusta : left yesterday for Baden. • The, Emperor goes. to Kiel oh lime 9t,li to be-preeentat the cerenioniee attend- .'; • ing the beginningi.t. work on..theNorth Sea and:Baltic Canal. "Prznce Bismatels, a../:•7 'number Of the;ntembers of the BUndesrath . and the President.of.the Reichstag will 46 - company him. " ,Emperor, after • hia. stay at Kiel, Will take a: course Of' water at Ems. ,He Will net revisiE„.Glinitien in the auttimn. . ,• . , Trofessor.GOldwin Smith is again express- ing in , the London •Tfineit his VieW8 on; things 'Canadian and American. • COM- niercial men, the thiefd of industry *on the,'" 'American .continent,, are • in his opinion, equal in probity and every , Moral'. quality, while Superior inenergy and enterprise, to their rivals in any 'other Country. Mit the American ;and Canadian • politician .is, in most •cases 0. peIiiikei slave; Thelriah vete', is largelytespontible for this; .The Irieh- inen ie. the Worst,of citizens- in 'the United States, and Canada is beedming politically -The reason of 44 the rem putting out • a can, er otirtaditul, opinion, , fire is thus.eeglained: ' At the tinieof day . •: : Ceanciller ' Ihitlet, of' Orodetieli, in warand rarefy the air in the room ,a deectibing,his•kocent visit , o London, Opt., mech. as die fire warble the air. panel:3g over • , said at a' recent nieeting of the Counkil l it ". up the..phimney, • ,lithipti ,the draught '" Down in London 'they run the Crooks' .ceases, and the tie geeSciet. To reinedy the Act by eleetricity. The bar,roothe are lit iimolivenience open the dem. or the window, ep by electric light, and at 11 o'clock p.m.., • to let the warm air out and cold in. hi . • nt i shut offiall around thrown when the Bain ines int ea.' „room the fire Et , 4n imaginative *leiter. , ;"••• often aildwed to get dull, andthe sun's rayS The' GOVetethent telegtap , lane an th • • into, arkness enalhe .fellows • in tho bat NorthWest is being built it front, Battle- I reorri become paralved.' (tend laughter)" ford td Edmonton with ireti poles. • , The councillor's 014 is yet to bo heard • A. NeviYork young lady 61 fashionwho.' hem', •• • • ree'cived a little silver flatiron as a• gerrthin . fait): asked what ;it was. She never savv the r rd article. •' • In London the other day, file Prince of ' Waite efiristened the $5,000,000 'diamond Iran tho Cape 'of • Obisl_,,-Hoile -"Tho lrepnritil,"It dashineS the Roli-x-rioe* • „ . `. • Two ritli ell memof-war are reported to , haVebeelLsent- to Hayti foeitcraii fficial; protest against the admits of Tortuga Island by • the j3rftihdoVeiiifliOtit in settle - Anent of it$ ciai» ob it�ncmillion dol- lars against Ilayti....- ' 77, • ' 4