HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-10-28, Page 6J,.
ELASD.
• . The MCitohell>ntown Policemen Funnel Guilty
o murder..
• A lastWeneedaonight'sLondoncabl.
e
says•x,=Teegra.furfranca reportt at
Lord Salisbury's condition mimes anxi,ety.
Hie rest at Dieppe,has improvedhishealth,
but he `ser be robust. It is stated`,
can ..
on what, • appears to • be only too•' reliable
t orit that Hae Lordship:"is's suffering
swab ,y',,� t, .. u#. g
from Bright a disease of the. kidneys.: For
• years he has been developing the tempers
*lent and Sen10, of the habits of a valetudi-
agsitian. . To :English :statesman ever` lived
lel& tnuoh apart from his colleagues as Lord
Salisbury. His clever wife _plays a great
• part in the political, as well as the social,
' relation of Lord Salisbury's position. It is.
wbelieved..that: her . inAiience. pOtento. Lord•
Randelph Churchill's readm sion to, favor..
There is much anxiety among the Gov
ernment supporters respecting the outcome.
,of tile: Diibhn Castle appeal in tithe Lord
Mayor's case. ' Should the verdict • be -sup.
• ported the defeat in the ' new law will be so.
glaring that the Castle will haveto adopt.
• oneof two•courses; either .smuggle inform-'
ere intoproaoribed meetings,. or refuse ,
__VOW Mined
put the. law into force.. When the measure__VOWpassed throngh;;the Commons the•, eak,
point just revealed was 'abscessed, but the
, . GGovernment---allowed: no. disposition ---to-
realize_ the_ expediency..of.,.af alteration.._ The:
f.•
rumors of Mr. Balfour's and Load' Aeh-
bourne's. resignation inconsequence ; of the
• failure of the prosecution are untrue.
Thele is. reason' for believing that . there
is no. foundation • whatever for the.. report,
• 'which has been widely circulated that; Prof..
Goldwin Smith , contemplates returning to
England with a view to entering the House
of Commons. When Mi. Smith went bank
to. Canada a nadrecently he told some .:of his
p y
oldeiti hind most intimate friends that he
:greatly whether he would ever
again cross the Atlantic
At . the inquest • 'in the Mitohelletown
• ;shooting caseto-day attention was drawn
;.to the fact that the policemen'oharged with
the shooting had been 'removed, from•the
district on the eveof the jury's verdict.`
•The Police Inspector said the• men had
been removed because. their, ,duties in , the
lace had: ceased, but they ' would retura l!
necessary. The Coronet deolared'that the
' removal of the 'police ' was illegal, improper,
'Meter', gvhioh under. • �'� ' cur atanoe
would submit to it. (t ! of 'c Netter,!',
44:004 by this. spirit, the time
never .comm when Ulster men would a
to be citizens of the -United Kingdom.
THE RUTH ' ta,RLOWP•CA8N
1r c J. C Bright Tried rex. Murdor xi
Aequittc!. .
A
deepatch from Sandwich. (dal:
da led
last',' Wednesday 'night) sayer At ` the•
assizes, here to. -day the whole of the day
has been oconpied in, trying, the oafs of'.
Queen.
vs. Bright, murder. The
prisoner,
Dr. ner,
J.C. Bright, o f Chatham, was charged
with committing. an abortion; upon Ruth
Harlow, a girl from Hamilton.. Ruth.
Harlow was seduced, it is alleged, by.George:
1'. Holden, a commercial 'traveller;, of
Hamilton. The girlwent to Chatham, it
ie said, under the direction of Holds .• The
ag
Crown•"'endeavored to,, sho`w.,an rra go
meat between the prisoner, and Holden,
that • the • pirisoner. '. should perform the•
abortion:, Miss: Harlow' went to an hotel in
Chatham. She was, there visited, by the
prisoner, who procured, a boarding pled°for
her, where it; is. , alleged the .offence was
committed,',• Several mnedieal• men. were
Balled to show that an'rabortion had been
committed upon the dectased. "
The.defence rested mainly on attacking
the veraoity of the w tiiesees. put in the
box by the Crown. who•apoke;regarding.the_
pri'soner's connection withthe offence..,
Though th defence., called. a. number ,of.
medical men,there. wasa veryslight :differ-
encebetween them and, the doctors • put, in.
the box by the Crown. Theprisoner was
defended by Mr. E., Meredith, Q. 0., Mr.
Pegley, and Mr. White. Mr. Lister sated,
UE OAFP¢RE1 f81CN84TION
, tory p f a rat;oof Parise Advert
ttrjril a=- peral, .Cafrowers £•rreet-
syph awl • 'OOlrportunity to Commit
Sutcidy, ;�
A London cable ' says . The Calera
lt,izso. , ossa in; Paris lea_ -sad scandal..
Medante` imonzin•le avulger adventuress.
She, 41 years of •oge-a little, yellow,
wrinkled, limping, humpbacked creature,.
with onall,piercing eyes, extreme volubility
of speech and considerable elegance of, qui
ggunge. Last year.•she lived in theBoulevard
Beaumarchais with a companionwhocalled
h self. Comtesse de Boissier,'Baronne,de
herself,
Beauregard,; or Mergnisede Cletnenca,, and
whose real name is Henriette Boissy,, a ea -
code of the commercial type, who used to
keep a house at Paris where: yon drank tea,
played baccaret and placed a louie under a
candlestigkresch time yoe took the cards.
hi , as
adame�iniiouzin al"ao�as ss-tiand
'hn ,.
adventurer: of smaller calibre..,
This. triocarried on the business of an
influence agency" for the benefit of per
sOris desiring :employment in:. the Minis-
tries, _promotions, Government, contracts,
etc. Well in viewin the drawing -room
were visitin cards f eminent political
personages, en which were written a few
words, cards and writing being forged if
necessar , The da ; :a: en entering ,were
Y •-and:-the--and
struck by this;�riise en scene
interview ended . by a de • osit destined to
grease the • palms of a Ministers, .= ens-
tors, Deputiee and other notabiiities, with
whom Madame . Limouzioorofessed to be
on the best of tonne. In ,'reality Madame,
Limouzin and. the. "Comtesae" passed
their time writing, politicians -notably M.
Thibaudin and General Boulanger—lettere.'
- .. .. , :Containing flattery, threats,.oalumnies,
for the ,Crotvnn. . `offers of servioe.and propositions of a ,most,
Thr, ol•thiotner is , , old medical l m n. co romising character. , Both . M. Thi-
inn ,
Hie wife,; •otwam,rand is s ringthy:man, ,baudin and General Boulanger finally
:His. who was present during the trial, •
Stepped: up and kissed her . husband when : warned the'. trio, through the Pollee, to
he•''i t the box o trial.. The doctor cease their manceavres• f into upwards d raref- Then Madame Limonzin `and the "'•.Com.
is a frail man. e ju turned with oa vet..
bide " Barrelled and the former removed
*Clap. m. the fury: returned aver= ? q -
diet ofnot guilty.His Lordship,in die- to'a_ gorgeous suite of rooms iii' the Avenue
e° - Wa. ram, where she continued her agency
'charging the•.prisoner,': remarked that the . Wag
eviden against him was of such char- and entered' into. relations with General
hs 'not hive complained. if Caffarel, an officer wile was overwhelmed
they thathe d himd v p with debts and had, no longer an sense of
they had found guilty, b Heduo the honor or decency, The ''"Court sse," first
him with a , caution • to• be careful , in. the Y
future. , • of all, denounced her former"''accomplice to•.
the police; then followed. coniplaints,from
•FIRE" AMONG THE INSANE.. various sources,. and at length the -.police
proceeded to , watch Madame Limoulin,
•
and =unconstitutional.: After all the eve ;Cleveland Insane Asylum Scorched by iris' thinking it was'eiinplya question of. one of
-HarringtonLose Their Lives. x ,. ,those Jnnpmerable..4flash :a::envies which
dance had been submitted Mmurder be .. and six Patients •, • • 1 , • c^ ;
-isasked that Ya,;verdict of Wilful„ ��ai: ' i tb't”-. (11 1 Z • s'
'1: dT W'E►atil 4 dy
�, tc'lr:Q , ey va��,;fin,�e,,,on' �•r;.,�.
4,4
, t+ tiie<"dve 1gif101414guier ^theedole.an"ilobitfastei of which etalked the expected.
.
a a Lade C 1
- his gerioral order. Mr. Harrington.acoused resents of grim death in;hie, most terrible A detective' sent to entrap ' Maadero°
Constable. Brownrigg ;o! deliberately plan rm; visited the great• insane asylum on. Litioouzin was taken by her to the Minister
nin the murders. the' southern• limits of the City • for the'of War and introduced to General, Caffarel;
The Coroner has issued warrants for'the second tithe to=night: It was,the. occasion to whom• the ,detective, handed: a' sum of'
arrest of the men found guilty. ::of , the .weekly :dance given the ' more money, in: return. for which, it was : under-
". "The inquest in.the,cae° of John Kinsella, stood,.l�e.,would.:receipt the Cross• `of •the
and ,kihedaby=
manageable ..of th., aatienta as • a healthq
the old man who was shots sans :o recreation- ' •g on g0 of them, Legion..of Honor.:,Thia stirpri'sing discovery
M ke in charge of their attendants, were enjoy. brought: matters to a• crisis. • The Minister
emergency men on the estate'; of Mr. Brooke,
at Coolgreany, County •Wexford, on. Sep- ing the, diversion thus afforded them :when -al War, in the presence of Ma Bouvier, • m-
tember 28thrhas : resulted yin a verdict of the cry. •of "' fire " .erose,,: and flames and terrogated General, Caffarel, who confessed..
•
•
BOPT Taal . RId?1Zt .
Parttoalarii .of alae !freak-'.f'he Captain
Caved..
d despatch receivedThursdaymight•from
Dunkirk; I X., says : Dnring 'the, fearful
storm on Lake Erie last night the schooner
Manzanilla; of Hamilton, Opt., was driven
ashore six miles above this city, andhas
become a.• total' wreck. She .was, com-
mendedby Capt. Geo. O'Brien, and bound
from Cleveland to Toronto with a load,, of
blook stone.. All the orew were saved. The
vessel was built by Joe. ;Shicklana; of St.
Catharines, and owned by R. Williamson,
of Hamilton, end, 3. S. - Murphy, timber
Merchant,. of Quebec. •The Manzanilla was,
valued at.gbout,d7,OQ0 and. is hot, partially.
insured,
Another despatch says; The orew left
the: ca
'Another
and:: vessel whenthe craft. was
a mile and a.,hal ff $arooton, and .had
great diff icnity' : in getting ashore.They
afterwards triad to take.. the captain off,
but the breakers w re: so; wicked and
the boat so unservioeable th 'the
perilous undertaking, was. given up.
The: crew reported the..veasel''s port , side
stove in, and'ber rigging all' gone, and that
'she is, entirelyat; the, nercy.-'of' the waves•
The Customs authorities madeevery effort,
to get a •tug to go•,to the._,resce° of:: the.
captain,of,the Vessel,: but all refused.. The
lifsaving crow'lield itself in readiness all
o'.gu.
.day -f r - d � marine
A Buffalo:=despatoh---says- .No .
digesters of consequence are reported as the
result of Wednesday night's gale. in this
section ,except the schooner 'Manzanilla,.
which was reported ashore last night. The
Manzanilla went'on between Brooten. and.
Dunkirk, on the southern shore of. Lake.
Erie. • A, Broxton, N.Y., oorreepondent,
sends the following details: The •Man.
zanilla, •a.three-master, Capt. Geo. O'Brien,
of Kingston, master, sprung a leak off Van
Buren:Point, end: w'as rtir ashore west of
the Point at about 8.30 o'clock: yesterday,
(Thursday), morning. She Was bound front
Cleveland to. Toronto with a cargo of :block
stone and grindstones. There was• a crew
of seven men besides the captain. ""The.
Drew went ashore, in a':ema boat, leaving.
the captain on the vessel. The boat was:.
smashed by the waves soon . after the 'ore*
landed. The,life-saving stations at Buffalo,
and Erie were notified by .telephone,but
failed' to respond, and• ,Captain O'Brien
remained on the wreck until late in the
afternoon; when he was teemed by Sher-
man Oats, and .two ,other mon ; who casae .
Srtin�l a calx sin•. ' • c hen (DOW/ eche!•„:
�3tnhb'le tt`
•114N0 en IN Eie't�,tcf ,. .:
The Severe Crib plana or Cleveland and Me
'Wife Which X ed to Troablein Mlnnw-
A Minneapolis:despatch gays . The fol-
lowing
too
lowing• is from the article in the, Tribute en.. ._
the occasion of the visit of 'President „end
Mrs. Cleveland,•which has caused a great
sensation and indignation among Cleveland's
friends. • " And it is extremely hard. for
respect either member of this familynow
tourin for votes. Mrs. Cleveland is R
handsome, mature woman, , ap arently
o'v. r ears olderha she is said to be.,
e e.aly.t n
At least she was old enough to have exer,-'
cieed her .o•wn, free• choice in: marrying"
Grover Cleveland. Xis inconceivable that'
she should have married him except :to-
p n
obtain the deltic of mistress of the Whites.
Hood._ Such a marriage would never have
been,thought-of--•lint-'•for'-the.._astoniohin
political coo a is which, in' the course ci
P, a id u, , „ co
two or three years, brought Mr. Cleveland
out. of the. obscurity,• which; 'is his proper
element, to the• highest position in the..
nation: • • •
" It is hard to have reaped for a woman
who would sell herself' to so gross' and, re-
,ptsive a man •es Grover Cleveland, and one
with a private record so malodorous, for
the bauble, n! a :brief social ascendancy.
She ie. now -an; object of.;curiosity-=and--re- - •
Mark. for gaping ,crowds, and her photo
--ggrr aphe--are•-sold-;'aliost,, :if" no Bite, as
freelyas-Mrs.-Lan t ' .-Suoh-is her re-
ward. If she can_.aecu a a re-election for
Grover she will have fear. more years of
the gratification which the highest. social'
prominence gives and. Of the delight of un-
flagging :newspapernotoriety.. After that •
she will simply have, to• put' up with being •
the wife of as insignificant and obaonre a •
man as an ex -President could possibly: be.
On cannot•,help a pang of sympathy for , •
her, but shehaa chosen her lot deliberately." •
About 10 o'oiock•.last night a • hundred,,
Men end boys,'mostly members. 'of an
association of the lowest'class ` sof the loose
'democracy, known as the: Algonquin Club,
democrao ., q
athered at a .saloon of a rather• hard repu-
tation
e u
tation and, after drinking heavily, repaired
to a -secluded s of in a. side street and fired ' •
the. usual straw man, which had' been used
on:euoh occasions from time immemoriewl..
•
The mob was led by .Mayor A. A. AMIN,
who Was. foremost in the; Cleveland recep-
tion, and. takes no pains to conceal his self-
proposed candidacy for the 'Pion
Presidency.
• ??ve .• ,l�;e sag ariTiwere •
r,. `than �:?�$ Fain, Buren end were obliged eta', frringthe'
h they
Darikir
°411e
exhausted captain to? • k, w ere . 'ey
arrived at 8.30 last evening.. The vesselis,
a total' wreck. • She had an insurance in the
Western Assurance, of • Toronto, of $4,000.
The vessel was built by Shicklnna, of St.
Catharines, and -was one of the fleet owned,.
by Captain James, Murray, of St, Catha-
rines, which laid•the basis of his fortune
before he beoame•a contractor for Govern-
ment works. She was a mate to the ill-
fated Magellan.,
• 'murder against Captain Hamilton, • the smoke. poured in•upon them with bewilder, Timne was theimplicitly given him toblow
.:agent of • the estate, ; and .the,. men' and ing suddenness. A stampede was the hie brains out; but, he did not . have, the
bailiffs who: were engaged in the affair. result, and the attendants had scarcely courage to take advantage of this•auprenne
A London, . ,cable. .says: „ : Mr. T.' B. time to ' realize. the". situation • when . the privilege; He wee arrested sidle tiow in
Buchanan, . member for.West 'Edinburgh' room,' was filled with•.. leeping,;Ake ,,and prison with:Madame Limonzin ,,;
y..
(Liberal), hitherto, opposed . to Mr.: :Glad- dense smoke ; As soon;as :the. first excite . ;The case will be a formidable: washing of
stone's Irish policy, has intimated his con menthad abated the attendants made a dirty linen in the facts andpersonages in-'
version, to Home Rule.•'
A .Dublin• :sable says:'.:in ao -rdance
. with the__order;, Witted.by__the, 'Inspector..-
• General of .Constables, Ins actor : Brown-
ri and:, the other oonstableis who; were .met death krasphyxiaand;burnin were
found guilty of murder ;'by the coroner's. recovered, ad. re ore were f null• in
jury. at . Mitchellstown have •not .been an.injured condition. The fire started at
arrested...They have, however; been ans.the laundry, a one. story;bui dine;;; which.
`vendedfrom duty pending the appeal' from adjoins the wing in,the• chapel -ie'-
the verdict of the pry., located.• The prompt response and active
Much surprise has • been caused by the ,.work of the firemen prevented a disastrous
announcement. of the appointment of eMr. ,s .read of the flames.. 'Thelon to property
Valentine Hinds its new .Land Commis will fall' below• $25,000.
`• ' sioner. Mr. Hinds' ' is a• bailiff on Lord
::Lansdowne's ,Luggacurran property. He. :AN EXAMP.LE.. TO • THE •mi'
courageous --rush into the suffocating -
smoke. and rescued. all they Could ' of the
unfortunateswho. had' -been' overcome.
The bodies of six insane women who had
managed the- reoent-eviotion-of 80=• -tenants,
Lord Lansdowne on hie advice refusing to !.!✓mates and. Architesot. Fight at a School
grant the reduction. of 15 per cent. which Board, Meeting.
they a wnanded•f the A last (Friday) night's Kingston despatch
Pe% r. aE.
Nationalist h,o pprop proprietor
s0! ae. says : '.Lest'' night's' meeting of the Public
School Board was .one which attached
Wexford,. hes received six: suminorises.:to much'<disgrace'to. that .body. One, of the
appear in court for alleged illegal publics= trustees asked te ' .privilege . of ' .cross•
tions relating to the'Netional League. • questioning the architect of the new Central
A Belfast cable says : Mr. Chamberlain, chool', andthe result was the examination
speaking •;at Bashmills, County Antrim, grew so warm that several trustees left`the
yesterday, said that it was•. not the upper room, when the Chairman -declared -t `.
theses, but the poorer •classes oft Ulster was no quorum and'"dismissed the re ain-:
that• were opposed to the Parnelhte pro- ing 'Members: The.architect and the
• posals. The artisans•and farmers did not tr iistee who had questioned him . went into
sae' any chance of improvingtheir condition an adjoining room, where they mounted the
under the .rale of men like the Home Stile discussion. The architect 'told the trustee
members' .,of. Parliament. The poorer he was mixed,•: when the latter called. him a
• classes rightly looked , forward with the liar.: The architect then remarked that if
greatest dread to the changes that :would they were outside he •would• use . hie fist:
be involved in the creation of'aParliament Like a flash the trustee let' fly.his .left, 'and
at Dublin. He admitted that a part of the blood Dame freze the architect's' nose. The
north of Ireland was strongly in favor of blow_was returned, and then„ the. pugilists
' ' Home Rule, but he was certain that” Wife took hold and'.' wired into each other for
I could infuse'into the people of Donegal the :,several minutes .until_ the other trustees
same resolute, law-abiding disposition as went into the -room and separated the
that shown by the people of Antrim, the combatantoand held them till tinily pee.
outcryfor great •constitutional. changes stone cooled down. The fight created;. unite
• THE 'GAT O' NDE 'TAILS
pidn't Appeair'to Hart' Sim eery Muioh.',
A lasi(Thtiredap) night's Montreal des-
atot .sit s •:: For the fo rth . time i the
p. h y o ,n n
volved. Even theson=in-law- of President
Criminal records of Montreal, the'lash Wes
appliedrto.day_ ' at. Montreal jail: upon the
pereonof a man named Desormiiers, who,
some monthsago, while dreosed in s• priest's
gab, committed. an. indecent assault upon a
young . aC St. Martine. . Desornaiers was•
tried at' the last. term 'of the Courtof
Queen's Ben* and sentenced to one year's
imprisonment,, with the addition of; twenty
lashes. '-To.day .Desormiers. received ten
Mit of the tiwenty,-lashes.i The' operation
took plate in the: presence .of , the deputy
'sheriff and a small knot of tpeotatore.; • The
pprisoder was seoarelytied to a' triangle by
his arms. and lege,' his' back bared,' and a
-Mufflertied a un :hta neok.to prevent the:
-lash-reaching-that:portion of his body. •The.
• lash :was applied by one of the ' prisoners,
.and the whole operation: only lasted a' few
minutes. After a few . lashes •Desormiers
was heard exclaim,'° Not so:hard t". 'but;
no other remarks escaped him; and:ho'to'bk
theremainder of his 'punishment without
Sinchingi, The whipping was certainly not
very severe in its•nature, and did not neem,
to have ranch effect upon the pr Boner,::who,
beyond it few.bruises on his back, was not
ngnah. hurt, ; ,•
Gravy, :M Daniel :Watson, , is involved in
many of Madame Limonzin's, tried ;-tripe
tages. With such $hese as this before us,
shall we saythatoorruption inthe•Republi
is less interesting than the depravity of the
Empire',?; . ' - ..
• A "l1&PLTAL"'• BREEZE.
b iteresting. Letter of :One 'Ottawa Lady to
An Ottawa despatch says,:, in the Assize
Court; yesterday, the local cause cefebre 'of
Walker.vs. Birkett waa:heard. Both' par -
ties are prominently -connected -in -the pity.
The .oharge'againot,Mrs. Birkett is of send
ing letters: to Mrs. W, H. Walker with- in=.
tent to extort: money. The prisoner' pleaded
becomeprisoner. The letter complained, pf is, se
fellews ;4, The Lord is the ledge -of -the
you, for ' you. don't lesetve that 'name.
small pretensions are disgusting, of
ceursei as all sensible people . have felt- for
years in Ottala, but I must confess that I
did not believe you were .ccirssuminitte tier,
pents and thievee until I received your
wohld.qnietly pick my ioaks end carry away,
25 hundred dollars I led Would be respette-
Me Compared to yourSelf. Now for a little
pleasant. preaching, ' He that is guilty of
breaking the least of theee,' viz., the 'Holy
Commandments, is guilty of ell."
chain is only as strong as the wealreet link.'
Tbou shalt'not steaV .$ Thou shill' 'not
angel dabriel may be bribed, to open the
heatenly gate, but according. to; the real
regulation order of thing's it Will be inipoit;
Bible. One must nOt only repent, but make
looking ppthat grand old doctrine. 'I re-
9uite fire hundred dollard: at your harids
if it ie not forthcoming in' a few days I will
'give myself the pleasure of treathig you tO
some -open, lettere .on the object, viz.,
wetdd a, sensationout both Vitaies• are prominent
'modifleatiens Of Mt; Glodetone'e origintil smothers, Baby alici Sets Fire to is Iliuse
phut, het many eernest Liberalst remained • --.••• Beigeos Her Foster Parent#0 „Cow
' • t otally unable to gather frOm Mr. Glad:. ' Itather Than miih jack, ,
, atalle'8.tItterairieeit What the changes 'really •
weke, (criee ,„ near, beer)) it, ea A Manistee, Mich., telegrem leo :
intended scheme existed, Why did nof Mt. ni°43otilcirseo the adopted dinghteridJaznes
, ? It wee not' feir for leader ta the real semiatiOn in the case has Piet Corinle
:plain' the absobitii trest et his fdlowers,
while iefeeing to giie a clear. ineight " into t°. This. Mr.' tlynderson's
coW died, aid her milk jud previous,to her
.his'intentinna hpon'a matter of life or death.
death killed nine pige. The •girl confesses
. •.,t1 the ,Erabirei gri.grliad°°°° °light 'Oen' Ohe Poisoned the cow because -she did hot
to milk Mr. Henaersenss' hens°
at thia;litte hour make a" definite. *ant
,;;Iisitacteain. hien could tinder-,:
weeke ogoond the girl Coefesees she did
that. too, 'Mt. 'Ho-Actin:in% ,bitby:. died
he.declared that it 4a4
• of the destinies of tiny pert a theKingdom,
Parliament migjet relieve 'Ulster of its Alio-
'glance and cut ft Adrift from the Empire,
but , it'. *a not competent to trarisfer the
allegiatice of -111 ter to ii Parliament at
',Dublin, In co neelling . Ulster td ofter
-resistance, he t id hot Mean a resert to
Physical force. He put that aside. (Cries
want_the ttouble tO care for it. Oho is 18
Years Old and Wes adopted fitteedyeers ago:
The French Government haVe deoided to
picioe a notnber of life-saving buoys, .sue -
plied'. With refreehnients, -oh , the most
dangerotts parte of the Englitill Channel.
and:Oroftece to *tattle Britieb. Columbia.
ultiMately th Home Bele was destrable , 'Wednesday :in 8cOtia toWnslup, Chic).
• 'for the soeth f ItelencV that would not Kent' HVitlie and James trVin Were bun to
Rochefort on the control. scandal.
editor of the Intraneiseant, reigning to the
Cafferel. affair, eaid : think the affair
was:originally got up by the Ministry to
injure General Beulanget.' Tliey did not
succeed, sct they tried to ruin' the Presi..
dent• • When they began /they had ne taco
that suok hig people would be dragged
into the sCandal, and now every one ie
afraid and woukt give the world to hush it
up, In reply to the question as te'whether
he thought . Geo. Boulerager would he
injered, he' said No, what has he klone ?
How. ban a puhlio .man help receiving
tihadt, people who ask to lee haw./ . HIS
position compels him to receive+ alisorts of
pehple: Why. ityou Were to ge on that
principle yen mould convict. Mms. 'Carnet
for letting Marehenden,., the murderer,
bite her houisci. Upon being asked w t
will come of the scsedal, he replie : it
will Cause the , defeat of ihe Ministry,' it
Will. not upset "Ore He vit Old
Mme7 Limousin, take m 'word for it,
comptonosed only then:lard; -Ati" for
mentif she goea to prison ; at all, which
"I" -doubt,' bet whoever dee escapoft the
Minietvi will not.
. Did you ever hear ine singusy' new solo,
Emily, Under the Silentlitars ." NO,
" Tatheticolly so." " Please sine it. I have
the neurelgia so bad that l'anYthmg Will, be
•
The Loss of the camomile. •
At aninvestigatien into the loss, of the
thief- Engineet Ellie, Second Engieeer
Mills Ube!, Captain Trowell were examioed.
The only new of:importance brought
out was that the steainer had nOt a full
cargo and the officers neglected to pnt in
shifting boaids:
Capt. Harbottle intruded as not
quite satisfied that the Most etranttene
exertiono had been made to save the Cali-
fornia, suggesting sevetal things that might
have boost doe° ; to' Which Capt. TroWell
replied that it was easy enough tO plan in
an easy chair aml cetpeted offiCe but it
wee a far different matter on a sinking ship
tossed hy moteatainoue seas.
Out Toronto . correepondent telegraphs
of the steatriergaliforbia was resumed this
'Morning befote ,Mr. W. J. Meneilly and
Cept. Harbottle. Capt. Ttovveli .detailed
the particulara the. disastet retch the
same ass they haVe alreally been given in
dui telegraph &Vetches. Ths inquiry
• itonoiada of 7,000 tons each, callable of
attaining opeed cif from eiiteen to twenty
miles an hoer, also fotir large and .sixty
detail tortiedo :boats). ,
The Perla jouinal des 'Debata sap) t
an official cleepatob has been ' reneived
aimouticieg that the -Sultan of tforeeco
id. ether tied' that he rhounted his horse
the people,
'; AO Ottawa despatch eays A. remarkable
und daring feat Was occomPlisbed • here
yesterday, wheu.a..couregeous-Rienohman.-7.,,-.
threaded his tray along the edge of the
Chaudiere Palls, pessing stalely from shore
to shore. Tile man wad. Franeie Petvin„
who -has worked' the various mills in the
!summer and the, shantiee during the winter
sirice he was ahoy, and is now a splendid
Mari.. He- made a Wager With eonsefriende '
in IT011 thet he Could walk through the. big:
kettle. • The wager Was taken and the .
money„ abbut 010 in &Mount; put, .up,
friencle, proceeded. aortas the 'large table
rooks On the Hull side of the Chandlers •
the °. water falls. Owing to the phes-
nonienallY low water in the -rivet and the ,
addition of ',the hew •,dam to the foriner
series Of danisobove the falle; only -about
fonr inohes of Water Was peecang over the:
falls, except iii one place, near the Ontatie
shore, • where the,,water was ten i•nchesi
deep.:; Potvin; after putting on . a pair of
raftspien's boots,: well caulked; with the
uttual sharp neils. in the soles started to:
vaalk across the face of the,fells, 'Eta
leaders of the WAY acroesoylien-thOL-eur
rent became very strOng and the- wider • •
deeper...*"Steadying himself, he .proceeded
the rocks befdre lifting the other, and in it
few, minutes from., the time be stetted
Pattee!ssawmill. . The feat was watched, •
by a large number of -peeple,' Moony men
who were employed in the mill, be it wait ,
not generally, known that Potvm • intended
make the attempt. bldwithetanding '.
daegeraus one: Had he mimed his feoti
for a moMent he would have' been hur
into the cauldron below, with no
hope of escaping death,
•
She.. Saw Through:Aim.
are getting mighty Smart nowaday •
Why, they've got instrumento .and • thie
made so that they nay 'see dein ilitott
'don't bee anything. particularly. smart in
that., I',ve been Married to you frit thirty
years, but 1, east threugh.'yon tive week,s
Mr. Joeee rubbed his bald". head -for ei •
*lenient , and thoughtfully, teeumed • :hie
•
A..ixistethat will hold. firmly, and which
can be preserved.for months an' 'a step: t
pored bottle, is made' by 'ilissoiving
Of shim the size of a walnut in' a pint Of •
boiling water, 'to Whiolf tWQ BOOnfliI8 of
fimiri Made emeeth little Cold water
:Jainea--," The papers ate , Of thie
Smith—" wish they hadput it Off mita
Pect•Atse'haeon dined* better in
•
Barber' (to customer);-,:Tottare Oita .
t Was born thai'isay.4--
ths oedema department tegord-,'
Mg the duty On imported detfits for volitte•
to the Nil &sty Will be allowed' On iititiefed.'
tory proof beitiggiVen Of the gooda be4
for.tibe sole use of the .VOlattcers their '
military capacity.