HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-08-12, Page 304,
•••4.7..1',..•••04=1,1=.4i•tethir.$7•71,
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-,..,...r. , •
IL Husband 1dnidere4h* :the beetroyer ei
the Peeve of Hie Pantile,
A Pet 4049.1;4 Bari : Peter W.
Darelies al, _ IldineWn, leeeretitiVe engineer
,onthelfiehigen Central Kailwey. mewled
with hie wife and two children until hat
ovening„,e prettyhome on. Indian avenue.
Dinelta, was a 'hearty, well-to-do man, and
•. seemed altogether, wrapped tin tn, his
fathily. He fteqiuntly !Tent hontsplayieg
• with his:children, 4 little boy aged 7 years
and a little girl about 0; awl the happitehe
•, and eociahility' ef% the Berehee was coin,
' Mented. nPen in the neighborhood. Aborit
a year ago they took to hoard' with them
it
,Thhard I. Landon, -20 yeatierage. He
-18-thegen et a commetal traveller named
. • 'Landon, who ' committedsuicide in this
• city a few months ago, who genie from:
Toronto about a year previous,Tinand being
‘bles1 to eitemployment,: -a .fit. of
lif
. pendency ended his life:. The yonng
' 'man was a friend of the family.
His business was pedling teas. and,
• coffees!. - There . . was, nothing pais.
tioularly • attractive' .about, him, - and
it never entered Burella's inind he would
be a cense of trouble in his 'household,
• Xstriden: had lived there , about six - months
•when the husband coming hems one, even.I
, ing eetirely =expected 'awoke tothe real,-
ization that a place in. the affectienclothje.
wife was oecupied-hy Land:* when he was
:away from home. Matters wit from had
.to worse, until.Burehaappliedfer a diverge.
• His wife, however. influenced hint to with.,
draw the bill. Landon was dismissed. from,
• the house and the. heel:and 'and wifeati--
peered to live happy again. Landcin left
the house in january. and rented a knell
, cottage about two blocks further rip Indian
„le:avenue, where he has since lived :alone..
‘ Though Landon was forbidden to ,enter the
house,' subsequent ' developments show. his
•controunkation with MM. Bersha, though
' irregular, eteadily continued. Bureha re-
turned .from a trip' at ,'neon yesterday.
• After dinner he left to collect, the tent for
1 house he. owned on, michigan avenue. On
- ,returning • home about .6 o'olook be
inet ' Landon on : the common. . . The
men „ met first:near, •, the . sidewalk
• at VineWood aVenue, and had seine words.
• :They 'wet& evidently quarrelling; :Persons
'were' frequently crossing the common,' but
. at this time no one.neticed there except an
"oldledy....She was returning froth the' dited=
tion of ' Michigan avenue, . and was quite.
nearthe quarrellipg. Men.' They didnot
aP° ar , to - notite „t,' Fittelly 13nrshok.
"•"---,_. -raufeallig'singeetkiiihinilylndeOlingititinl
'''-•-•---1-'''-'7.-• ' ‘Iiiesnatinizefete,;:'steettlie Men -then parted„;
lluti1izi turned ata.v.rglkiid..loward beme:'
'. • Landon started in, the oppoeitedirection,
• • • then stopped, hesitated a 'moment, 'then
• ran, back toWaids Btirshit. The engineer
•• heard • his .steps . and tutted around.,
.Alreost 'simultaneously with hie turning
'about Landon pulled a revolver from his
pocket, and taking deliberate aim at
Bursha,. who was hardly three feet away,'
flied. The engineer threw up bothhends
Ind fell heavily to. ,the 'ground. Landon
,koked on him a moment, ceelly tuned
from his prestrate viothit and walked away:
• 'In theee'ruieuteeBuisha was dead. Landon
' iciacksulisequently 'arrested and locked up:
. Retakes the matter coolly, claims Bursha
NM threatened him and that he•wes justi-
. .
fled inshooting . • •
..• ' ..:
"Died frOin a Sudden Shock.
„ ' A car horse was lyingffead on a track in-
$eventh aVenue'on. Monday surrounded by
a Crowd of mei and boys. •
.,",Whet, did he dip of?," asked one of tbe
Mend a passenger on the hoesehiss Cat.
• ,'" Why you. see, he got balky, and the
driver, instead of poking -the oar hook
through hia'ribegot ciff-the ear and speke
'kindly to the, horse, and the shook proved
too great." -New York' Evening Sun. •
A Use lobe Is
•
, . .
• Proud Father-LWeicente batik to the old
farm, myboy. So you -got through college
all right ? • ' •
Farmer's Son -Yes, father. • .
-; -P.P.-To know I told yon to study upon
chemistry end:things .R0 YORia, know best
whit to do with different lands -121 hind.
What do you think of that , flat medder
fot•instante ?:. • • • ,
F. S.-Otacky, whata place for a base.
• ' ball gaine I • ••• ' •
Fires Leve'S Fiame'Won't Hindle.
• " I love yet," he pietested, "better than
:my life:. 1 would die for you If nedeceary:"
• " 0, honsense I" replied the ptacticalgul.
"Swear to•me that you'll:get up and make
the fires and i'll oonsiaer -your proposi-
tion." -Judge,
A Novel Idea Sir Some Huslosnds.
An,atticle is printed on " HoviterTreat
• Tour Wife." One geed' way would be t�
treat4her AS well as you did hefore you mats
tied heti, but few married: men do that.-• -
Somervine,./eurnid.•
They Seldom Do.
*:Jiidge--The'prisonet is discharged. • •
begorra, didn't: know
01., was leaded !-Sellingten Free Frees. • '
' The teenier:Si jSbilee offering Ace ths
Queen somewhat puzzled Burmese ladies
who were asked to join in the royal gift.
'
"Why. .should . their sovereign 'want
=key," they inquired, "eepecially 'so soon
aftet the annexation of Burtnalr?" -"Has
ihe no rice?" and ".Can it be that she has
no tobacco?" were frequent queried. For,
as ,all Burmese ladies.' smoke several
cheroots.dailt, they became deeply eympa-
thet"e.et the idea that their Queen should
itt
be out the solace of tobacco antid her
Stat cares. - • • ,
• In this poetic style a California land
agency Offers job lets of •scetiery cind (di;
Mate:, On this.Wedneeday :afternoon, at 4
•'O'clock; lit Letiis" Hall, on Fifth street, we
' will pall • at pliblie outcry to the highest
bidder, the Paoifie Ocean, draped with a
western sky of Bearlet and gold ; we Will
sell a bay filled with white:winged ships ;
we,Will sell a southetnhorizon rimmedwith
•it :choke collection �f purple mountains
carved in castles and turrets •and, domes ;
we will sell a fro:Sloss, braising, warm, yet
=languid air, braidedin and in with sun-
. zdrine,and edema with the breath of flowerg.
Money; nucleic:. and testimonials: are
, pouting id on 'Arthur Hohineon, the
'rescuer ofnine of the Itryetety'Sdrownieg
passengers in Jamaica Bey:', , The eolored
• bete beers his hondrit modestly. :
' The importg of.Canadian lember!st the
port :of Buffalo from. January to July
• amotinted to 43831,830 feet.
. • .
sii ST-l'EV*? To REATife
c
Vsk aglferahle. , ad er *Mj,ierly Otd.hflitd
" • in 48,witeebuty. ,
Miss -Maxwell, dedighter of •Mr, Maxwell,
who taught oehool th Montreal many years
age, died at Hawkesbury, Ont., .last week
from sheer want of proper food: She had
a good bank aeeolint ancl. inn* meePla
the•house to make Abe; Comfortable, but
preferred to stem. The father removed»t
Hawkesbary many years ago;and' opened a
school assisted by his daughter, thisbeing
oontinliki un tn the time of his death. Mies
Maxwellhas hem living alone for tzeveral
years, carrying on a little tonsiness in period-
icals. books, newepapere and music.
Miss Maxwell wee known to be, eccentric
and no one wae erer seen in theta:defied:used
as'a dwelling. Last Friday she Wrs missed,
and a neighbor ventured in: -to find 'her
lying •in misery and poverty, Thelady
brought her. something nonrishingy but the
doctor pronounced her to be dying front
want of prOper nouriehtnent. • A stove was
found in the house; but. without any, pipes,
and it is eurthised she passed the winter in
the same way. A large quantity of wooden
blocks were sent her, thinking: she was in
went, but these are said-'-be:still piled Up
.in the shed: 'She lingered on until Satur-
day, and search Was made for some elite ,to
her funds --Then, much to their surprise,
over 000 inizaehrnisfound,in...the..lettves,
of an old book, and 'various small
Emma were found in other parts, to-
gethet_with-shanhaeconet-of--over $2 000. -
The Board of ,Ilealth had her buried on
Monday, and owing to the 4g:sanitary
state of the premises with dirt; it, was
found necessary to board' up the house.and
have it fumigated: ;,.Facts heti come to
light since showing that' she must have
lived entitely on bread and 'water for some
time. The eddies:I of a young man in
Philadelphia wag found in a letter, and he
was telegraphed tot, hut he replied that
there was a neayerrelative in Algoma. An
inventory was taken . of the variousnums,
which are held by a person appointed by
the Boerd, until such time as e heirs are
known.-Witnies.
She Doted on Bagpipe Music.
It was said of-Lady'llandelph Churchill
that she came to ,England with 'the firm
intent and purpolle of Americanizing the
British Empire. The •cisme-mimic:A be said
of Mts. Carnegie,. wile, thisigh a, New
Yorker • born and bred; has -taken to the
'institutions of Caledonia, "stern and wild,"
:with menclerful reedit:sae ‹IllestAg EifZliet-
teatimes isteof etweeff, tariff alseintie ihriOvetk
heetherendhtoom4teffiercfavaritodewerey
A few days age,•inan neguarded moment;
Mr. •Carnegie reinarked in public that his
wife doted on bagpipe Music, and that she
had said that the only thing wanting to
Make her. , home at Kilgraston perfect
paradise was the presence of a bagpiper.
Thenext morning. the" glen •of Kilgreston
Was awaken:A.0.= early ,hour bythe weir
of the pilireCh,-:,-the weird croon • of the'
„corona:eh and a thunderous notificatientliat
the Campbells were coming; B.3/ breakfeet
time there•were 104 pipers playing away at
Mr. Cainegie'gpiazza, At list, in despera7
tient, Mr: Carnegie chose one of .the Mc-
Phersons te be his bagpiper in order:ay;
which very much incensed the other High-
land Musicians, *he matched off ;snorting
their. dissatistactiOn.-,Cor. •N: 7. World. •
Cure for Ivy Poison. •
: A ()tureen:indent of the Philadelphia
Record writes : I suffered from having
been PoisonedbyIty twelve ,years ago. I
was completely covered with ill, and I tried
all of the Old.and new MUSS for it without
any griod resulting from them, , until one
day a druggist's clerk gave . ine,ten,,e,szete
worth of sulphite of soda, diseolved in one
pint of.water, and told me to bathe withit
'Melly.' acted like magic; allayed the
itching and was ;very soothing,••and Ives
well in a week. I have told a' great •inciity
people, of it, and those, who used it have
been invariably 'cured. I keep a battle of
it constantly nanted;and When I have been
among the ivy, ivhich I, often am, I always
bathe with it; and I am not bothered with
poison after using it once or twice. It is
not poison; likesegarof lead -and , some -of
the•Other remedies that Cannot be kept in
the way of children." .
,
• Ilis' Business Qualifications.
Father -Well, what can you soy tot the
young man?, Danghter-He's yeung and
handeOme; and had good business qualifies-
tions..Fether-How dOyeu know anything
about his business ,qualifications? Daugh,
'ter+Why, he has figured out for me time -
and again how. nicely we could get along if
you wouldmake us a present of $50,0Q0.
A Libel on the Sex.
Wife -Can you tell MO, my dear, why a
widower is like e young baby ? •
Husband Er-er=beeenee--because--.
• Wife, -.The first six months he cries a
great deal, the, second six months he begins
to take notice, and , aliesys' experiences
great diffiefilty in getting through his second
year alone. . •
Liked the Cockade.
Barber -4‘ Bay NMI?" Granger (whose
shave has been supplemented -by an appli;
'cation of the powder puffhall)--" No; I'm
temp'rance; but, ,friend, you'd, jest 's•
Hove pass the,t 'air cockade over my face
agin you'd obleege me."-Tid Bite.
,
.Botter More APprOsi4able.
butter ia being Made •in such quantifies
here that the price for the -best crimples ,has
'fallen fient 40 to 30cents
katcheman Herald. •.
• . • That Man-Beird.•
They arenursing.the man who has no
mere right to sit in Parliament than a
tramp off the highway. And' they ask
honest men to endorse this...likeireal
A. Lost secret.
Her moth'er and his mother-in-law-•
He'se'
. bride my ' dear, and don't cry. I
gave you to hint beceuse he said he knew
thesecret cif making. yen hapny. Daughter
-,--W,e11, he's tent Ins secret aerairably.
,On the maiden of the Queen's Jubilee a
batonetoy, was •offered to Mr. T. C. Lister,
a rich silk manufacturer of Bradford, who'
also happens to '‘,•bo High Sheriff of York -
'shire but he declined the honor.' ,
Xri New York,. Philadelphia and ,sonie
other titles the reef in the tenementohouse
dietrict is a general retfOtt te hot nights.
Sometintes whole fernlike camp out. •
•
0.908. OKRAI4N
Hew they ere Defiled to Act sus .gfeesenrars
• 'for fkatInets- - •
A correspondent of the New York,- Tri-
bune. writes, front Berlin: "Among the
thousand and one: inVentiene, aPPlianeee
and Wonderful *We Of men and Imitate
which Gorniangenins has devised to defeat
Frenoe in case of GenerekBoulingeen •stiee
:maser becoming unpleasset, the dog playa
a significant role; emPlbyed as, he 18 as
'meesenger and, sentinel: . Experiments have
•heen made, for nearly a year Rovicand have
proved highly eatisfaatory, I The dog
manceuvre of the Hunter Battalion watt de,
eidedly the most interesting of the tecent
eamPalgn. Several regimente, have been
funizehed with the German ehePherd doge,
known for thew wisdom the worldover.
Each one is attached, po to speak, to the
perconof a soldier, in whom the dog soot'
recogniMs hie master, and who condnots
his training; While doing duty, the dog is
,kept , with- the' sentinel; and 'easily
learns the requirements of hie- post.
IA few of the experiments performed before
Colonel 'Wonder Goltz • Pasha, who. repre-
sented the Sultan at the 90th birthday of
the,Emperor, and has' since remained', to
witnees the reviews, were surpriging. A
soldier taking the animal from the sentinel
matched:off one. reconnoitering expedition:
After-writing-hicrobservatiobs and placing
'them in a casket about' the neck_ Of the -
brute, the latt,er was told to :return to his
masterrwhith he did in an asionishingl
short time. One dog employed in this
service arrived'at his post ten. minutes be -
;fore, a mounted Uhlan .oharged With the
MIMS liStriletiOnS, though the latter rodent
desperate, speed. But even:mere than this
was accomplished. With a. message: tied
about the neck, asin the fornter ease, the
dog was told„teeeelt a dietant sentinel, and
bring a return anstver. This he did with
great speed, carrying his message direatly
to his master withont fail. : • .•
"It is little --wonder- that Pasha Goltz
was surptitied at the emcees of the' experi-
ments given in his honor. • And they are
truly wonderful for the present, though
Bidding fair to hecome a commonplace in-
btitution in that great, machine, the Ger-
man Army.,' The consequences and Peed'
bilities of the shepherd -,dog service are
apparent to-all--who-iteow anything of,
military science; :and make their citation
superfluous. • One thing is certain, that a
future war between Germany, end any of
Itie4n:gigtxhborseatteLmll not be:;doullsceitsva4,dwit„.12m011t
oioditialfttioo,t"*Axogroxik
amicaisitori, .47,01101-ble,41240,,4the,,VAX.S...84
-ancient Egypt" .
Startling Itredietient_
• TWQ hundred years ago in China there
was just suth a craze about natural ,ges as
we haVein this country. to -day, Gig wells
were sunk With as much viii and vigor as
the celestials were oat:able of, but owing' to
a gee exproeiceathat killed several millions
of people and tire up and destroyed a large
district of country, leaving, a large inland
sea, know -n on the inape azi, Lake Foo
Chang, the boring of any more gag welle
was then and there prohibited by law. It
seems, :according to the. Chineee history,
that many large and heavy' pressure gas
wells'were struck, ,..and • in some districts
'wells were c:unk.quite neer to each other.'
Gee Was lighted as: soon as struck; as is
donein this country: It is stated that one
well, with. its unusual preesure, by indrietion
or back draught, pulled down into the earth.
the burning gas bf a smeller well, resulting
in a dreadful explosion of a'largo district,
destroying the' inhabitants theetrif. Lake
Foo Chang: rests onthis district. The
sante cetestrophe is • imminent in this
country unless the laws restriat further
developments in boring so many, wells.
Should a similar explosion occur there.will
be sib% an .upheaval as . will dWari the
most terrible earthquakes ever known:iThe
country, along the gas beit trent _Toledo
through 011ie, Indiana anti Kentucky will
be tipped up to the depth of 1,200 to 1,500
feet and flopped over like a pancake; leaving
a ahaeni through which the waters of Lake
Erie will.come howling down 'filling the
Ohit•-and Miszliesippi-.-valiere'Ld blotting
them forever.-Citicinnati •Oninzerrial
Gazette. , : •
• .•
A Trained Left Hand. '
Many are the advantages Missed by the
nen-at:Ideation of the , left hand, Oc-
casionally an artigan iS sein whole equelly
able to handle took with eitherhand. Stich'
a One , had, constant edventageover his
Mosel, not Only, in the ,avoiclance of
fatigne;but in doing nice work and over-
coming withease diffieulties that present
themselves to those skilled only 'with • one
hand. The man who can use a hammer
or knife Or Perform Stay Other feat with'.
the left hand at the same time 4hlit' the
right is busy will find frequent occasion
to exercise hie , skill. Another and inG
portant reaeon fer training the'bit hand
to act with its great ease, and preoisien, as
possible is that if injury.occure tothe right
hand the left cen exercise readily all the
functionspossibletoone-hand-urtaided.-By
training the left band in 'youth one. Would
be peered, in' such a ease, lion'. spending
much Valuahletime in educating muscles
hardened by age and unaccustomed to obey
themandates Of, the will: ' • .
'A Faithal Dog.
• • A faithful little, dog saved' a young boy
called Maher, living in Douglasfield, N.B.,
the other day, from heir g gored to death
by an infuriated °Me. The boy NyRS pretty
badliburt as, it wag:. • ' " •
•
A Plea tor "•,icatiori. '
Ah I how the tdor of a daily teivepaner
would like to be a, beloved pastor or a faith:
ful school te cher during thie torrid
eutnnier.-D ayten Joy:ism/I. '
: The' .P-7-- '
Proper Thatch, .
•'Experience and. hot Weather hive at
length convinced the bald-lieaded man that
A babbagerleif 18 less irtititingthan n lariat
in:the hit.--Pittsbuig Commercial Gazette.
• ,, , The Fateful Hainmpolk ' b
NOW is the, time of year w n -love's
young dream gets jolted fill out of shape
because the hammock lett: sq.-Me:theta
Traveler. • ' • '
Jacob fieliginan, of.Michigan, is a millien.
alio and director df nip§ birdie and four
railrdeds. 'He is less than five feet and
went •toMiehige,e. wenty-,five y are, ego
with lees than 0100 in his rocket,
TagrAFXPrd NEM fo,44t8:
Haw lEskibitimis Have Helppd the Ontitrio
Nommen ,• •
lifth annual convention of the Inter.
national, Anessiation of Fairs ,and Expogi-
dons was commenced in To;onto
Wednesday. Between. 30 and 40 delegates
are in attendance.
liar. Thomas Shaw, of Hamilton, editor
Of the Live Stock Journal, ieed a paper on
"The. Influence of Pales on the Improve-
ment of Live Stock," He rapidly reviewed
the 'history of exhibitionand the great
progress made in stock through them, and
laid down the proposition that exhibitions
have had a 4onderfu1 effect in theinsproVe-
••••'
• CIININIPTE NILSSON AT RE
The Charming liongliird's
in the'lrashionahle District of London,
(Olive IseSedin tbe New York Mail and Express.)
The home of hristine Nilsson' in Ian -
einem court is one of the Most luxurious
bonbonieres in London. • It MRS? really be
looked SPen as her bridal boWer, • for
previously she occupied shouseinBelitevise
which, though very fineend expensive,,was
not half secharmings s beautiful nesti
in which the nightiy", 'low reposes. I
made one ot the cliv ' 1.1 any at her last
reception and pas0. our or or two ar „
that =alloyed enjOy.,• it is cod-. '
casionelly wen its ni• lis *to experience
ment of live dock, finding irrefutable. .The _wort trenowned-songstress-receivecl----7
demonetrationin the Acts (11Yearly ill me with engaging and hospitable 'warmth
the substantial progress made in the '
provement •of live stock in lands , whete
exhibitions prevail has, been, made since
their introductiOn.- (2) That in countries
'without live stock exhibitions no substan-
tial progress" has been made in their
improvement,. (3) That. the progress has
been meat Iliarhedin thosecountries which
have given the most prominence te live
stock at their exhibitions-- . In support of
•these propositions :these interesting -facts
were 'mentioned,: The average weight
of a dressed bullock at 5 years, in the Lon-
.
at e ,cor o her drawing -room, an aparj.
znent crowded with artistic f urniturce richly;
carved and gilded, enthreidered 'draperiea.
and an almost indescribable quantity oil
;ore bibelots. A gilded cabinet bearing
her monogram is quite filled ,with- •
exquisite ancient fans, several .
witich prehistoric,•haying belonged to queens •
and princeguee ; Chickering concert grand!
piano is pertially coveted with an unusually
fine Chine crape shawl •embroidered
colors, trimmed with a multi -colored frin
and looped up here and thetemith rare
dews ket_m_17.19,,,tegivenat,3701bs.,-an silver elaepe--,Seulptured-iveries, tenniehed
'
• average which, is attained by many . of our enamels, an ancient ormolu clock with, it
modern breede Kadin theshambles at little face set round with Costly 'crystals, which's, 4'
morethanoneyear and-thereisreason--to eparkle-almost-likediammide;it-nicirlit.
believe that thie a'-dvance is equalled in bust of the diva standing on a held:table •
other live .stock lines. • A. letter. to Lord under the graeefelioliage of 'a palm, andit
Sumertille by Mr. Pitt, of PenderfOrd, lest ,c". Scare of photographs of ctovinedl.
1799, in respect to Shropshire sheep, said. : heade, whose givereign fingers have offered!
" It requires eight fleeces. and a half :to the these tribetes; with their autographs, to •
atone of fourteen piends,"snd, the weight Christine Nilsson, are a few of the many
per quarter. of the wether 'le given'. at from . interesting objects upon' which the charreea
twelge. teeighteen, pounds; a weight that is, :eye .of the visitor fence The lovely.. !
attained by well-fed lariaba of this breed Queen Mercedes of • Spain; the Ens- j
now at '9 °'months, while 'the 'average preeses • of. Ruieili and Austria. . the
washed fleece of geld Shropshire sheep ie Owens of '.Greece; • Sweden. .and.Norwayp': .
ten nounde! • The:first Previnoial-Exhibi'• the.Princees',..ef .Wales, the iDucheris,dt j:
Lion in this Province was held ' in Temente Edinburgh and many other great,
forty-two years ago:, :Then' there were not 'ladies. hive given their photos'with ante- -
a. score sot men Who were possessors of graphs and phrases _.ef admiration_tothe._
proved cattle. Now. thereSre 443' members celebrated singer. Bight Well and happy.:
in the- Dominion Shorthorn Breeders* does the celebrated potigtregs look ..to -day
Association, most of whom • are in the in her dark bine gown Of satin faced suraFj,
Province Ontario,' while there are RS made Without tram; high neck and with thd
many Shotthern breeders..., who ' Aro not 'elbew sleeves which show .such advs.*.
members, making .about 8.00.,•Shertheen tage thewhiteehapely, antis: touchot •
•liteeders Onteeio, ,•The fitst Shorthorn pink ribbon and a v.olturtinotis cascade
cow on `record in. Oefaii0 4013 im- fine old point lace form an admitable beefs -
ported in; 1832., The ptogregitis largely due ground for the :, wonderful perure Ol
to the exhibitions, of *Walt, there aro over ' essaisidiensonsigatithsilikliketerim„.
tottau. Am' oalto1inco.' aptio,00.a.4...,nactu 111.02 ifiV rAKEE:4Mitalr t
own4irothiceltes.<giverenitteltettentiondit. alirtrivaitafrauat v,itfite,,..4111.69..wo •
.12celivestock .ile:Partreente onto:di/bi-' Years'Sge •wlionCavaiel •peinted
'tbat 'ex -
tions, what are the reciulte? :Why, qriisitefulthingth of .her. as Opeefia :which. •
one of '9m...counties, 'Ontario,. More than hangs Yonder. , • •
200.puM-hiedglydee are to helOund at the .4,1 wits young and Peer then," ihe
present moment, some of then of the.firrit strieking her nowplump cheeks, and by:the
order. In aeothee of them, 'Want, from .ase of -the ivotff "poor " • in the:Time:ON •
200 to 390, pure bred Shorthorns are to be "thin" showing how great an hifluence heie .
found in one herd, end in anotherof then!, American connection ',hes' had in form'
Wentworth,is kept the Most fan:mut:herd of • her English speech, for in England "poo"
Jerseys in the world, While wehave many and "lean" are' not considered identical ite
breeds of 'cattle, swine andoheep and other
glasses of live stook of so- high in :ordet
that they form" a standing temptation to
hundreds of our Americeneouginsto tome
'and pay us Rh annnal visit., We are glad
to see them come,_4nd-hopeAhe daYis not
far distant ;when they' May conic, whenever.
they please, and get from Mt .whatever they
may. 'choose Without; having to • congult
any one along their' border. (Applause.)
Twenty years' age we had next to no:cattle
fit for 'shinning .; ,nOW. we :•export 600,000'
annually.te Greet. Btitain
Dually to out brethren' comfit Of 'Lake
Ontarie in, the face.of restrictiveduty of
20..por :lent." • ,
' A pight Ender.water..,
• 'A diver named Quintree, says' 'the Lon-
don Telegraph, had a remarkable
fight .with :a formidable' fish celled the
boultautt or bondro„altind of shark Which
infests the Breton coast, at Douainener,
the other day. Accordingt� accounts
Qeintree had a natioireseape,suid his own
,r,epottof his terrible submarine' encounter_
reads liltea stanza from Schiller'e 'fitnoug
Poem, or a Page. teem one of Jules Vetn,e'e.
tenancies. The ' an eld salt; Was
employed by: the Government, and in intr.
suit 'Of his daily, laberdely descended. ni a
diving apparatus off- the •Dotstmelekyier
for the pur-P--Oie-s3flity-iiirtheleundation of
anadditionto that structure. .While he.
was 14AI:bottom. of the sea the men who
Were working the air, p.untp. in: the poetoon.'
boot above . were suddenly 'frightened
feeling the alarm signal. They 'instantly
pulled up 'and brought a large bOultotie,
nearly eight feet long, to the surface' The
matine monster's head 'feinted three.
quarters of his : length. and his: under
jaws were. of immense die : Skutt
meaning, • With a hearty admiration th
has truth tinging in every .syllable, Chrie•
tine speaks Of. her fondness for America.
and her gratification inthe knowledge thali
she, belongs' :to the Scanditieviime. ,
rice,., a people, • ,letko,. more • 'perhaps
than any" other,• agsittilate wellwith our ,
native -been poPtdation ; and one can quite
easily .believe that if 'she were but one olt - •
the -many Swedishwomen who inhabib
America, instead of tieing one of -the great-
esti:trims donnaswho ever lived, she would!
-like, even almost as,much. as now she does,
the free Altana the Romany noble institu-
tion of the United StateK-- • •-- •
• The fair ehtietine hi now the Counting
Cant de Miranda,.and 1, *as interested in
the personality of her,happy spouse. ',This, .
Count is a.slender man of middle agile"
about Nileson'a oWn-height,with dark •
complexion; and eyes which require
less glass :Stick in one of them only: Im-
meagurably prOnd, and naturallyAio, the%
good gentleman seems to be of: his re-
nowned and fascinating yrife; . and the •
„
pleasantlittlesianghter-, who-has:brought
them together, flits from, one .patent to the
other, as joyous as a hied in the win:Mine. ,
She is quite Spanish in her''coloring, anal
though'- she has' fine black 'eYes would .
scarcely he called a beauty: With the jo
'appymotherhood and wifehood -gleam- .
ing brightly :from her sapphire eyes,
son herself is a beauty ;, and her voice •ie •
the angel's prayer it ever. WSW., Am I DA
to be envied? r ,ho write te,you,
on a golden,divan,hy Nilseon'ssidoas ebri
sings Schubert's Serenade, Nettie Carpen-
ter •accompanying per On the” violin . anti
ORSS at .the piano I will hear no ',lesser
vocalizing alter that exquisite dream- di.
melody, and so departe down the Gobelinl-
tapestried.oak stairetse, past the dining- '
afterward Qumtree came up, his hana room in cilaret veltret, the dining -room in"
on the air pipe of his helmet and his diving'. Spanish leacher, the quaint hall with staineal •
apparatus sciniewhat damaged..., .It appears glue windows, in which stand three men
I
that. *hen he 'went down to, his work he servants in livery, and then out into the
had scarcely got to the last 'rung of the , weak World of spoken sPecoh, theQueen's '
ladder when he sate the sea monster lyin'highways of ' Piecadilly, Bond street anO. •
between two huge lumps of rock. • He ha
ID hieliand only his stone chisel and a
liatinner, and he intended to go np for a
erowher at once, but the fish was too fast
for hini. It 'Mime toward him ,through -the'
green watet with its enotmons jaws wide
open. Without lesing a moment Qpintree
Managed to wound the animal in the throat
with his el:Midland then held it down on a,
stone while he drew his knife and made a
hole in its body, through whioh he passed
tope and time sent the fish to. the .surface.
Had it not been or :his quickness and
dexterity thediver, owing to therents-Whitii
'the fish would Make in his apparatus,
would have, been drowned- and thee
devoured. -As it/ happened, it 'was the
beultoue that wag not only defeated but
eaten, for its body. was divided among the
victor and his comrades, who made a
Capital bouillabosse of tteptime parte
'Death Irote,n Bee -sting.
A tfartferd, Conn4 despatch's:viz Sarah
MciFarland, aged 19, daughter of the over-
seet of • the Bookville-woollen-- mills,. • of
ROokvilie, 1was ,stung on tho:. hp
butuble-bee on Sunday: The poison entered
the girl's system and the body swelled to an
enormotie eke.. Last 'night tale died in
i'w,fal agony. ' • • •
the Strand:,
-Lien?' lobed -Ply els-- that yen candressWOU.
Fabie BeonoMy.
To d art of to -morrow's weik to -day..
'Going to law about anything that .yrrai
can cothpronise.
To emphy, a botch, bet:a-gee he deisn't •
charge much.. " •
Sitting in the twilight 'doing, nothing in
Order tri save oil, . •
It:lying things you:don't want just be-arrying .
cense they„nres_heep.
yoer daughter to in adVenttirer
so as to have her offyour hands. '
• To take your money out of the bankand
invest it in a Wild -cat Scheme. "
•• Taking your .boy from school and-anew-
ing him to grew up in ignorance for the
sake of two dollars a week he can earn.
, A SoOlal Event. •
Chioago Lady (to caller) ---Did you know
that Mrs, p. has obtained her divorce.?
Caller -0 yea; we' received catdcoyester-
day' .
. sa• sit cii ihty abems;rattrztlpietitro;g•t-4117pinoteanere.....oiloCity," "..;
'the veraeciotts,,Cji.ilageoa*LIsrnev2,r,,,cparedyittlec.ani,,Huaebn. a.: :
'waiftohot.folerniPr ofte're"d in tt and desitably t•
I :
locate -tvi I bring $20 per front feet ; the -
'average price fs 12 pr front feet, Our •
pictures arc divided into two claseeci--im-
proved and nniroproVed ; the one framed,
and the other unframed.' 'When a- gentle- '
bun fancies a picture we let him out off o
slump e of it (just aa.thay do dress goods) to
I thlteaephatottnenvy,th him t.o see if his ,rife s;
' , • ' ' A Sten *We. ,
tit
',_ , ,
" l'a, inqtrirecl.Be y," who was reading
the paper,:" what is ,a'atony glare' 1" .
"It is the ekpreesion whieh cOnies weer
a is urc , explained the old
, gentletnant "then the contribution her IS
y hel forelnin an he has neglected to
' provide himself with 10 eeets in change."
' . .
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•
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7,7% -,•'4."="1