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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-07-01, Page 6r MDUE MYRON" Ito (Thursday)nght'S .London cable • Pay;: In the lion*,�l ,C .pinniona. this • afternoon Under, 'Seeretiit7 for Ireland, in reply to the gziefri- *ion of Mr.ePenin.4 Liberal, said the 00vern• • 424..IF4014184 fANON'a, „ =DPP* "were powerless tO append I/v*11°u in Ireland'. They iveuld -Powerful TemPeriteoe Lecture to, an. X.M. , • =Vended, however, during the period that ; mense.liudienee in New Yorh. • Parliament devoted to the Jubilee. golebra- A. New York despatch says: large Vona. ' •audienee. gathered in 'Chit:kering Hall yea- Onthe resumption of the. -debate an the terdaY afternoon to hear canon Wither- CriMes Bill,. Mr; Dillon moved to adjourn force, of England, who was announced to • is order tooall the attention of the Henan epeak under the • &novices ,of the, National to the Ylodyke evictions. , The Government, he said, had refused, to appoint it. committee Preeirre4lueka9nedX4rneaanguYe'iciititramewel)nrfetT-vaahilrioagn: to inquire into the matter. He was there. dendminationakneWn, in connection with ' f fere bound to demandan, open discussion, the temperance cause' had ,seats onthe: in Parliament. The eviction:of-thirty:five platform. -The Canon spoke -energetically fsmiliejbad dieclOsea'tiatu-Tiaot the great: and rapidly for an'Ivotir, and awoke great , eat harshness. 1.1saidlord Callaghan, over enthusiasm. Amongthe things he said ' *ince he got possession of:. the 'estate, had were: The ncblest of enthusiasm is the been raising the rents withoutexpending a love of the Lord, and the basest the pas- shilling'for; improving the property. The Bien for . drink • The only . thing that result wae that one of 'the moat industrious Christianity wants just now .. Christ,jans. lets of tenants in Ireland had been ruined:. There are too many people with tem Much It was on recta that Mr.'Cidlaghan, in re- religion to enjoy the weed,* and too many fusing to abate tents; had: said that with .too much worldlinessto-eajoy religion. 'he would have no greater compunction in 1 feel that in speaking in New 'York I am putting a tenant out on the_roadeid. speaking-to-AmericaTand-Americar-is-the •. :he wouldlave in shooting a, bird. (Cries vest Anglo-Saionizing machine of the of "Shame.") .The consomme of the whole universe, and I wish to warn you report Of, 'Prees.-ArreSpondents_and-other- notte-lettheliquOttraffid-coritrol-Atierica vntnessesof the evictions was against the as it controls Eng,land. There isan aristo- Tba Pcgee hacl aoted- -brutally, Toracy-inzthis-countryi-but–it- is an aristo" making wanton ettaoke upon women and crecy of Intellectual power, of character, of • childre. n. Seeing the public interest in the beauty ,mia.,;taIgnme., In England we put, matter, the Government ought to grant a our hrghiewers mthe House of Commons, committee, of inquiry the same' as it had indeed Of putting thlm in jail as .they do after the -Belfast riots. • . ; in Maine. . in Maine 'they lock up the 3fit Balkan.' said 'there wee no justice in liquor:before it gets into a Man, while in •• cOmParinglhe events it " liodyke with the Ne* York you only look it up after." events in Belfast.. He asked why Mr, • • • . ton rajeeci -the,Tipition at the present time; CivimitztpiG" ...'when the Members, knew flat' the Meuse 'Pula reporr ffie Crimee'Bill on Friday. Ole and Thousand Barrels • The precious hours that were being wasted Going to the Dark Continent. ' 'had better he devoted to the Crimes Bill. . AlWashington despatch says: In i report Regarding the , conduct-, of the, polie,e, no, totheDepartmentd State from GoreeDuka, Government could, accept mere newspaper Africa, United' States Consul Strickland reports as a 'lassie for:procedure, 'especially cells attention to the absorption of African when such rePorte. were highly ,colored. trade by Germane. He Says: "Formerly (Cries of "'Oh, and "Hear, hear:" Americans had quite a ;Monopoly of 'African •He had no knowledge Of the details.' of the liquor -traffic, and net longer ; than_ si2c •-alleged peliCatissaults.----.,-----r:7- • -Moritliiing01,Wir7England turn and alcohol Mr. T. P. 'Healy—More Shame for ' you. arrived at Gore° eometimea in.. quantitiee Balfour -'-But Considering the treat-. of -1,000 barrels in one .shipment. The 'zient the police ,haie recelied it is **Bur- Germans by establishing a' line of steamers 4ing J,44.4critsilfghtcreteciihic.,-,4they• ativislzmtlroaraitaReitr, RAft.4t0,;:ti*..igkte 447.ezsrarateeztheircit liv.741"evirawit 'AM Eifitirivitlr awilego,akiafoiskiiyhtlan,n, di- droll in empptsotawilft4..vant , ihiOlin Would net Imre occurred if Mr. -C ... German' 'manufacture.:. The '• Germane „1,sghan had 'taken hie advice; (Cries of begin business here by.sending one steamer "Hear, hear.") What' really prevented the Per month; which at first .did not attract - Government's • amending this •etate of Mut& -attention. Now they have eight new • attain was ' the action of these wlie,inter- (pies, averaging perhaps sixteen hundred posed' between the Government's ''''Land tons' each. They, Beene to be gainingon - Bill an endless and useless discussion over -the English and other competitors on ae- , the Crimes 'Bill,: (Chest* from, the Con- count . of the extreme • cheapness of their- Sertativett.) Theresistance to the la* at geode and: their -'willingness to ammonia- DidYko was incited by persons who ought date Onstomere. Hamburg alcohol is offered tn.hstre known better, (Hear; hear.) He St 32 dents per .gailon, and,,forms the bade, „ Mita to be Subjected to TitruSllits rule." THE 01144,1RpAIN irnmED. The letter concludes as follows: "I grieve that I cannot sot With You as in Yeain but my judgment and conscience forbid it. If I have said a word that seems' harsh or unfriendly, I will ask you to, forgive it." protested against the &chino that was of Most qr the sparkling .bevereges with . growing daily intim minds of certain per, which the simon ipure African loves to re - sons that the proper way to amend the law gale himself. It, is surprising to see the was to break 7-(Cheers4: Therefore; •ho 'odorineuaquantities'of runi,ginand alcohol , urged: that the best 'means. to Secure a which block up the Wharves when a steamer . remedy wae.. to prequre the' legal ante na 'Oconee On Tumid,* evening. the. windows Of the . . 'A TERRIBLE FAMINE. Presbyterian Church at Pttrionstciwn were , 'meshed, and the furniture in the vestry '9°6 Ilundre4 Thousand Pe*B"sin Danger was destroyed. The Catholic inhabitants ' , ' of starvation: . a. meeting to-day—the parish priest Pre- A Boston, telegram says: The American siding-rpledged, themselves te. do .itheir Poeta of Foreign 2. Missions has received: nfiniest to bring the iniscreants to justice, tidings of a terrible famine in Asia Minor, A last (Friday) night's Landon cable bordering on the Mediterranean„ and eirr, . says: When the debate was resumed on bracing • the , ancient city ofTarsusand the Crimes Bill this evening Mt..Fowlet ,Adana. The state of ' affairs is so' deplore,' • (Liberttl)inoved ell- ainendment, requiring hie air to render an appeal to the benevolent that before. the enforcing, of clause inX public an immediate. duty. . The , harvest • (which. deals with the proclaiming 'of. . dan- time has just' passed, but not a single, sheaf • gerous teriOciations), the • Consent of both Of grain will be: cut . all the plain ordi- Houees of Parliament be obtained.' This, mrrily do fertile, save in a few fields art - ho said, was the Most dangerous clans° of Melly watered, One hundred thousand the Bill, and ought to be ' resisted to the Ireople are in danger :of starvation. There uttermost. If there was national danger is to grass and the -flocks and herds are ' deinandingtaadhexCePtiOnalpOwers Perlis- mostly destroyed. , , anent Might be trusted to confer the neces7; • ,48.3 . :sary 'authority; Peel Porntere 'and' tbe drain "Faker.," Mr. • Balfour opposed tfie 'ainendirtent. Mr. Gladstone said the section' of the of A Brampton despatch says: The farmers the County of Peel, who were induced to • Hem meet realJanaible as figailiaue of the give theirinotes for wheat at $15 per bushel Irish libertiee Were, the Irish members. . Was it henceforth to be understood , that to the Ontario Grain and Seed Company, of the desires of the -Irish members- on such London, are advertising cautioning any per.: son against • purchasing the notes, as .they • subjects would be ,sufdaiept to make it the were given .without consideration; and they duty of the Gfovernment to provide oppor-. intend to. contest their liability to the ut., tgnsties.for dismission? (Cries Of Rear.”) , • Mr. Dillon declared that the belief was This' is the company to which Mr. universe] • in Ireland -..that .thO Bin was K; Chisholm,M.P.P., drew the attention Of mainly directed against the National the Ontario Legislature 'during the last Logue.' The Powers which the clause put session. . • - • • into the hands .of the. Viceroy 'Would be used for the itiippression of 'the. League, which would result in a greater crop of misery and hatred in Ireland: ' Mr. Fowler's amendment was rejected' by • a vote of 233 to 161: . • Several more • amendments having, been 'disposed of the Chairman put the question whether the clam* should- stand a part of the Bill. Sir Charles Russell entreated the Rouse to consider the gravely Objectionable character of the clause. While he Was •. ?Peaking the hour Of 10' arrived. ' The Min- mterial benches rapidly filled, members pouring in trona the lobbies. The Parnel- lites simultaneously arose° and left the Hondo Chairmen twice calling upon them resume their Beate. Ainid great confusion a division was ordered and the clause was adopted by 332 to 1:65. The Clladetonians who went out; returned after the voting, but the division having been declared they ihainediately, ',arose in, a body and withdrew, amid Conservative cheers ana4ipghter;rr-The-renuitning deluge svere then put and carried without es:ambient and 4he Bill passed the committee stage,. , the Conservatives again cheering. The report stage of the,Bill fixed, fOrthe 27th iist..- John 'Bright has Written to Mr. Glad-. stone an apology for inaccurately quoting si,3wans(st speech . and accusing hint of talking of Ireland," as if there , was no. Pro, Vine° of Vistert,, the feet 'being that Mr. Gladstone made long anddistinct references ' to Ulster -arid its peculiar interest in the Rome Ilule question. Mr. Bright says he .niade his somew.hatinaccUrate quotation nient'needed:: ".; • • .• from memory."' He adds: I still con-. tend,,however, that 'there is no hope in Mr. :Gladstone's PrOMISe to consider the case of , the ;Ulster Protestants in hie plan Of settling the Irish question. Mr. Gladstone must know that any plan of dealing with the Protestanti apart from the reit of "the To Girl Graduates. Be just as sweet as, you :can. The man Who doesn't like to look upon a sweet girl graduate rs a villain—or married. Tie your essay with a. blue ribbon, and be pre.cticalin the choice of a subject. •We suggest The. Coming Man.' -7,Buffeao Exprey. 'A special; Odin Laurens, 5. C., reports that the newer; near there have formed "a secret organization' to 'demand 01 a day for farm work, and threaten murder if necessary to accomplish their ends: They are organized onderithe guise of Knights of Labor; An,tigitator. named Hoover, who was recently phot hear Warrenton, Ga.; is the organizer. The Whites have organized a cavalry Company for protection. , The N.Y. World -balloon, which ascended at St. Louis on Friday, attained the height o116,000 feet above the markice Of the earth on Saturday at 5.20 according to the markings of the instrumente of United. States ,Signal --Service Officer Hazen, Whiv was one. of the four in the car of the balloon. This is the highest on record in America. At this: point the therm'ometer marked' 31 Fahrenheit. • 'Hazen reports the voyage a success. The balloon be taken back to St 14,ortis and make another ascent. , , The 24th .Battalion, to which' young Shaw, the than v?ho canto to ,his death at the hands of Stevenson, ' at London„ on Saturday night, belonged, paraded' yester- day forenoon in full force and marched to Ferguien Eassori's undertaking 'ware: roonts, where the body of " their late COM. rade was laid out, and, after 'the arrange- nionta neeeigs,ry • for the removal • of the, orders. t 'corpse had been completed, it was placed . L fashionable New York would not on the Ammon; of six members of the sit down to a table at a dinner party . Until battalion, and the procession, headed by a 8tuffed Owl, Perched on A eabitiet Opposite POPUlation of Ulster is impossible. The , the band, marched to the, G. T. R. station, her Place* had been removed. , recent astounding revelations made by the where the 12,80 train for Chatham WAS There is a County in Florida which 18 , 21flei ,batist lutv,.insreased„thedtead,ot taken,• , coniposdd entirely of islands • ' • The Passengers Jump -lute the PliKe-A Xumber or Them Drowned. A special. from Charlevoix says: The steamer ,Champlain, of the Northern Michi- gen. line, bound for Cheboygan. from - Chicago, was burned at midnight between Norwood and Charlevoix, at the month of the Grand Traverse Bay. The :boat was running ten miles an ,hour when flames Ouddenly shot up from beneath the engine, driving the engineeldfrom his post with his clothe s on fire. Iirran to the hmatiosine deck, plunged into, a tank, and then returned` to his work, but was toe late to atop his engine or connect the hose. The alarm was given, the Bleeping passengers were aronet and when life PreServers had been fastened to all, they gathered on the forward deck. Two We boats and life rafts were lowered, but the steamer was run.• ring soled that they ` got away. In ten' minutes from the time the -boat caught fire the passenger e woke all compelled to jump into the lake. The steward says there ,were 52 persons on board, including the crew. • The. lost are as follows: -Ella Cooper Smith, Ikektert Wilkes and George W. Ris- Ier, of "Charleir-airFlati7K-Ilic liehoe;Jt. BUM, Steward Beare, two children, aged 3 and Tars, of Chicago: •Captam Lucke, Stewardess Kate Powley, wife of Peter. Port Clinton, Olio; ate- Jas. Flora, of Port Clinton; George and Ikey Gillespie, sons of the. captain. The survivors were brought to this city. 47,w. 1"AiltatilWic SUNK. Poisons rerevreed• hr, tile Ellehtedef the F. Walters. . • lest quefidavy. -pight'e, Cleveland despatch says: The steambaige P. H. Walters was sunk in '11 storm off Black River, Ohio, last evening and eight lives were hist. The vessel -left Marblehead yesterday -afternoon, afternO0n, snit when off Bleck River the captain's wife, who !moon board, beggedthe'master to Putin at Lorrain . as the threeteninitweather alarmed her. 'The vessel was headed tbwards the harbor, but had scarcely turned about when she . was struck by a terrible squall. The wind bore the barge rennet and , round. The hole filled, with Water and in a half minute she sank The captain, the mate and two. of the captain's sons saved themselyee by clinging to floating fenders:morning about 3 o'clock, the , cries of the ship- wrecked quartette ,attraoted the , attention VOLTINTEEB, MUBPEREO- Mernber of the Ohatham Battalion Stabbed. to Death in London. PART/OULARS OP THE 11,110QDY. TRAGEDY. A last (Sunday) night's. London ,(Ont.): deapatch Bays: A terrible tragedy , Was . enacted in the eastern end of the city last night, in the vicinity of the camp, in which one -of the volunteers lost his life. In the excitement attendant on the ead occurrence', and, in the absence of the magisterial in- vestigation, the accounts of the affair are ' Very , contradictory. From parties who. were present at the time, however, it is .. piSeaahsflowine,agotfthhCettotrilbp:daunentyce111.341aat IalPh to Cleveland from Detroit. A lifeboat WAS 560 Adelaide street, b:oet1WheneatnihtlieFr:B:teeeavatetBnaaal;(11: s I o the lookout on the steamer lPearl, bound (24th), with a number of companions, was: brought to Cleveland.' The lost are Mrs: cries of ." help" and "murder", from some Central„. avenues,- when the party heard lowered andthe ship-Wreeked mariners were J. dG J. lnliees pGi ;hews htehniepiassterste,gre;hAjurdrphenoo; one in the house,. and at the 'same time- • Some one in the FiremanJohn 3,0Phentepr e`Irsinenes;,wohf eeChnlettine:pn_adji• Pashnaoorttiewrteharhreerhwi heard rawdaosi tndhsnei dea er whicht bedo liwas e . Peter POW ley, of LighthOuse,St'ationc,Ohiano fol- lowed'hya-volleref stonessome o --which Shaffer, : of kia.udusity, "Mc:71-D broke the windows. Just then a. femalo . appeared at an upper window, and r'houted, "Go -ii-way from the • door, or my husband you." By this. time semo, of the.paty had jumped , over Abe fence, 'while others entered the lane ihe side of the house. In 'another minute 'the front' door opened' and. Walter Stevertson, -the man of the house, rushed out wake,. Brook- .16,. ing revolver in one hand and a.large knife T inthe other, • By this time all the party ' in the yard had dispersed' with. the excep- tion of Ralph Shaw, who • was in the act of climbing Over the fence when Stevenson _ made a lunge at him with tlia-knife,-the blade of which entered Shaw's right Side, between the tenth and eleventh ribe and penetrated four inches into the, liver. Rising to his feet, the.Wounded man, 'stag- gered %IOW feet -and tell into the emus of a', - Companion named Jarnes 'Ramsbury; a ; member of • the same company to which! Shaw ,belonged. A passing waggon wee. hailed-and:She'd-wits -taken-to-the- main guard tent at the ..'entrance to the canna, where, in ten minutes after receiving his- wound,Ilae unfortunate yocmg fellow died.The only. . words Shaw was , to his cprnpziubeart-:90‘.t044,240,4-,e,:n.. az, Jim °guingaeto.Olin,0"4-4.want .dt-917,Faisako, hands with •,3ioU. It is •' gated that, •?,'' • after Shaw , received ,his death wound; Stevenson tote a picket from. the fence:and, with it struck ' Lieut..' Gray, of 'the 22,nd , Battalion„inflicting a serious wound in the • neck. Early this morning. Stevenson was. ' arrested by Detective Rider on:a charge 'of ' mtirder and remanded to 'jail until Friday', the 24th inst. ' The . post-tifortem revealed . the fact • that Shaw ' died' of, hemorrhage., ' He was in every respect healthy and of fine, phyebrie, but his Wound was such that. ... under no circumstances could lie,have lived . more than fifteen minutia tafterreceiving ,7 , the -terrible stab. A jury was empannelled, who viewed the body and adjourned until Wednesday. Stevenson; the alleged ' mar- • deter, is, a painter, 30 years of age:- He had served one year in jail for illegally„selling limier On the Western Fait grounds, and was sentenced to another term for assatilt- bag his wife, but , her request his impi sonmeni, was out !theft. .Ile has , three : children. Shaw, the victim Was also a painter bytraclei 20 years old' and 'unmar- ried. He recently was working in Toronto. • He- is gala to have been' very quiet •and inoffensive and a -general -favorite with his. comrades.' I • ; • In. an interview with a, reporter...Mrs. . . Stevenson stated that there was no outcry or disturbance in lhe liense; nothing : to at- tract'attention ; that her husband had no pietol.. The. first they knew • of any dis- turbance was when a volley of stones struck: . the door. Then her little girl went out and told the party *lo go' away' or her father.. would come to them.' The men outside -made e rough anewer4o the girl-',-when-tbe• ,husband ran Out with the knife. in his hand, • with which be had been cutting bread, and that was all the • ,The news of the. ,.tragedy spread quickly , through the camp;aita the, men of the 24th gatherectlong before gun -fire this niorning in excited groups, talking the matter over, and not a few suggested the lynching of Steventithi. ' In view of such a contingency, the' London Field Battery and the., Oxford Rifles Were specially detaile.:1 aCt as a guard -and prevent any ,inember'''of ' the 24th . from, 'leaving • the . camp. , Chief , Sheriff Glass and Mayor, Cowan ,were apptieeir of the state Of.feelint, ,in the . camp, and "proper Precautions ha been ; taken to prevent any breach of I eace. of Fetes ey ; Henry Brennan, the cletkand The rescued are: Capt. J. G. Gillespie of fireman, a scond. cook and cabin ,boy, •,of Chicago; •Mr. Russell, of the 'Jackson, Mich., Corset Company; a gentleman a boy from Milwaukee bound for Maeltin'ao, one waiter and four Indian -deekliande, lady and her daughter from Frankford, names unknown. • . ' Those Saved floated an hour andit half, yawn they were rescued by a, yawl and fish boats from the shore. . Several of the saved Were 'badly burned. There are seven *mad - counted -for,- the above list of lost cempris: ing only these known to have perished. The boat burned to the AWL and ..,bae...bee towed here. It hi impossible now to 'tell the cantle of the fire, but it is thought it may have been caused by a lampeciploding. Seven bodies have alreadyltbeen recovered. The Champlain WAS inside t 010,000.: • A ToRovro--MAN-- , At litigate Wants Pessessicin of His Two „ Daughters and $20,000. • 4k:',Bnffalo despatch.saye: Quite a <sense. .tional-asrreetsttalitstatatonsElmisaay=itlit Alstiontakokitstfirgby 'apetative'vWstita:7.11 appears that a , day. or ,two ago Hugh' Cameron,,aeominercial.tilveller living in Toronto, arrived in the city and registered atthe Breeze' House. Carneronat is stated, up to it couple of years age had a pleasant home in Toronto, with a wife and two ail- dtert, both girls, and now aged reepeotively 5 and 7 years. Everything, apparently, did not go just arvit should, and he and his wife parted company. She went to a bearding house and he continued his bust - nese on the road, the twOlittle.girls.having, been placed in a private boerding-sohool in A ,sTR.DgEws tram sENTglicg. iteinining Found Guilty of , Murder Dur- ing the AfiSsouri Pacific Strike. 'A Fort :'Worth -,(Texas) despatch says: The jury in the Herruning' murder ease. came into court at 5 o'olookyeeterdaY after. noon. The foreman handed the indictment to the clerk with the indorsement: "We, theirel,-find the defendant guilty of mur- der in the first degree and assess his punish.: ment at confinement in the penitentiary for life." On the, 3rd of April, 186, Richard Townsend, a deputy sheriff, was. shot while executing. tlielaw, in Moving -a, coal train on - the Missouri Pacific 'iiRailroad diving the strike. After several/ induths had elapsed Henry Hemming Went tiring County and asked employment fromDr.A.M. Douglass, tarlmmitiuSut. eplvaltianv,411e <said -41e Pirnlo.tithe vonator ,asilitai,,dttutitlu,,,Wincheatters had fired on the. officers' -guarding the coal train. .The °Meer, Richard Townsend, in front of thecoaltrain, dropped, and. died& ,few . The' defence was that the officers fired Arai. " BARING TRAIN igospERY. BighWaynien Secure About $10,000 Worth • • • • , or fseeti: , 4 Houston, Tex:, despatch says: • This morning about 1.30, at Schulenburg, on the . Toronto. . This arrangement • .went along Southern Pacific drew up at the statRailiway, as the train on two men with for a while, but it is claimed Mrs. Cameron drawn reiolvers' mounted: the engine, coy - finally left that city and came toDu :. _ ffel° ered the.: inetir .and forded him to pull as the wife of A. T. Kerr, who has a eng broker's office in this city and the train to the Open prairie, a few him. other towns. During Cameron's several dred yards to the east, - where a firewas ' ' ', stay here he had obtained anorder from the burning, and around' which stood eight or Courts, with the assistance of_f-; ten men, all aimed With Winchester .rifies; attorney,.Leroy Andtne, . , or the his W. NeWbirger, of Now York,. was struck ' • . -$ enstody of the twolittle girls who have on.theheed with a revolver, and 75 in cash, several' diamonds and a gold- watch,: for some Months past been et the Hely valued at about $1,000; takenfromhim. . . Angels' Academy, on to avenue, '1 '' Lou Meyer, of Cincinnati, was relieved of -tending to take them to Toronto.: __Their 535. , mother had in the meantime got wind of R. L. Armetead, of New York, gave up $20. A gentleman from. Mexico ' lord whet was going on, went to the convent and 5400. Wells, Fargo & Co.'s express ear Minutes before the of took her children away, in only a. 'few: was also gone through, but the Amount of ficers, in eompany with money taken hi not ' yet known. The total swore out a warrant for the:attest of Kerr. ,Stvoq or $10,000. He was found Mlle home, and spent last, • • . - night.. in a Cell at the 'teflon house on a .. Th° F"'s to a'lln° a'n114exinnt charge of attempted abduction. He said to The fees to a Clear, ruddy, smoothi Cern.- a Courier'reporter that the whole thing was Pleaion, though manifold,mayusually, be a Piece of .spite cwork ie. punish him. He classed under the following: heedi ; First, was very indignant over his arrest and said overheating, and of -oUt;deitir and other he could .square himself. when the proper exercises; Second, instifficient friction of tithe -came. Mts. Cameron and her two the neck and face,withdeeVrubbing and children were before Judge Hatch yesterday massae; third, the too ,general nee of afternoon. Lawyer Andrus, for Cameron cosmetics and face powders; fourth, an urged an immediate settlement of the casei, improper'ise of (map and watet.;--Dress: but as ' Mrs. Cameron's, lawyer was not ready the mite Vent .over until to -morrow J, nilsension in PliYinconth church; morning. : Meantime Sheriff Gilbert takes _,_ A New.- Yorkde'spatcb says: Plymouthcharge of the- children. Mr. Kerr, .who. is Church will be closed for the summer.' No under arrest in a civil suit brought by such a thing ever happened • to it ,before. Cameron. for $20,000 damages for alienation There are those that predict that it will not of his, Wife's affections, had not up , to a be openedagainby its old congregation. late hour succeeded in finditig-brul. Tkerti-arieliii dissensions in the con- , gregation concerning the selection of a pastor to Succeed 'Beecher, which may dis- rnpt the organization. .. 11r. Cameron, arrived for the Bann purpose. am•ount aecured by the robbers is placed at .This created music, and Mr. Cameron then Picnic. The picnic season is here in hill blast. A.),611(editor Who . 'evidently' " has been th e" thus Soliloquizes : ," Now let us to the woodlands hie where trees their verdure wrap, for spring no longer lingers in old burly winter's lap'.Tit pleriie garb' vre'll arable forth andaltbeneath the trees, and have Our hides all chopped and hacked, with stings of butable bees. 'well gaily don Our linen coats, and thin seersucker ,pants, and sit beside the gurgling stream; while e'er us, crawl the ants. We'll swallow picnic lemonade, to moisten down our grub, which people make by soaking ,one cheap lemon in a tub. The .guillefia. sandwich We shall eat, devour the clammy 'pip, .and sit (*bowls of custard While a tear 'bedians our eye. ,We'll tip the mustard in thejam, the pepper in the tea, and try with all our might to show that we are filled With glee. Then let tis to the picnic hie, our basket' in our band and homeward 'erste filled, up with woe, and leaves end dust and sand." Parneirs Health., , . „ .4 'London cablegram days It is stat&l, on What appears to be reliable' 'authority, that Mr. Parnell is not improvingin health. Doubts, indeed,. are ,expressed in private quarters -if he Will be a figure in the rest ,of the session., There is,,indeed, a statement that Mr. Parnell's physician has confided to a friend that Mr. Parnell ' really has cancer in the stomach. A'North Carolina; clergyman not Only refused to .marry an . eloping couple, but attested :the lrido ' and telegraphed her father that , he . held her subject to his •' Hard Travelling for the Bummer. . Gen. Sherman, in hig march to the sea, •used to go put 'of his way to avoid e bridge. .. . ' • ' THE csmnamkes Joy.. , . , To lilie-fringed suburban lanes . . lie comes again, "the spring reminder," He was very fond of ferds. ote day the. / 'Aud'Pouteth forth his duket strains-,- ,.,: airily was to lord a, river. For miles before no plays Ammer waltz end song-. . ' :The swartkv-visaged organ grinder. ., they -reached -it -they watled-knee--dts'qrtit. „ -Airs tender, siniple; Unambitiotis ; swamps. One bummer Said to another : The happy children round him throng, ' , "Say, Bill, I guess' we struck this river And think, the melody delieiouS:, . lengthways." , ' - • Play On, oh, organ grinder;•play I'• , . Though• • h culture ath thy music slighted, • Ile Only Had Two Teeth. , , , And at thy coming they:re delighted. • The children's friend thou art .n1WOY.,• 'Grange diedrecently,of pneninonia. ' A°: tittlett•ti -Payne, who lived' near Kid ' .Pl• wayboons-coirnAltlety,hyattnretiestreAnigdalmothpnlity.; . singtilar thing about Jtira Was that he Wes „. Here's health to gip() end tby monkey.., „, Thee bringest us hack our yonth again; born with Awes teeth, and, although 70 years • -•=-The. , . of. age, these teeth he was born with Were .. • . re Is n6 , rest for the man who tallea ,,,.. the only ofies''''''ntiture ever Votichsafea .to a. vacauon. ' .' , , - , , . • him...,-4'itolo Hill ,r' Aid.) Shield. • ''• —Stand to reason -the gentleMni; who . . has the &ion . • , . ' Itr ' ' . "'The Beatrice!! is ii.narrie suggested in -"The'rnan. Who 4' 'strikes 04 r, is never New ,York for e projected apartment7,hOuse arrested foraesault. , ' • - , for working -women. . • .'. ' -.."*. inigi..who wanted 11 little here be, '., low '' went ilito the neWspaper business, ,' —There iti*any. amount of good, reading' in the dictionary, but ' it iiii distributed in 'a. „ Very tantalizing manner. ' • the Vi0Elltil (potion, board tho inogt; •,' And one most apt to litir roan'S eholer,, Becausahe wears it table Cost • • Is, • Ifinkband, haven't you got a dolleirs?"" , 10 , Bean a sz The Mayor of St. • • Hellet is autlierity for the' stateinent that . ,--A man who gets caught in,. ii." Wheat , . , corner'gets no More pity than. the, iniiia • with Ow toothache; says the,, Detroit Free Prey. 'And he deserves still less. . —Cidquet is , not' dying out. Ono firth , . . , Sends out 30,000 sets every year'. The balls are .rnade by a , machine Whieh cont;erts, '' thein front a rough stick four feet long in 'ten minutes., . , . " . ' ' , * Mr. Gladstolierieply.i0-aninvitatieti, from a Waehington gentleman to visit.tho ' 'United, ,gtates, !Jaya that his age Ana' e'n- 04er/write preclude his„ undertaking 'the . jonrnep " • ,,The electric -light wires are still killing a good trimly, people , all over the Country. Grip of these fine daye, says the Piiiiadelphia' Press, shall all of us realize ths,tit would be far cheaper, to bury the 'wires than it is to bury their; victims. • • • Even the diminutive, island Of Jersey has at a late eleetion shoes were 'purchased from Vetere at $175 a pair', and eggs at $25 each:. " • • ' • The German erown Prince-. reviewed's, body of school children at Sydenhafri to- day. ,• Ile • 'Apologized for not replying to the Welcome' which he, received., He was ttneble'to speak above a WhisPer. Prominent Politicians in Montreal aro Still confident that Mr. Chapleau's appoint- mont as Lientenent-Governor 01 ,Quebec will be announced immediately after the close of the Oession: I