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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-11-11, Page 7• -"•!, eliiiimloomarommoor EE ROBSED 41,0 /Ws, iltrAlri, 0. Itykert 8windie4 Out or .0,800 •tby.ii Dishonest cierk-" Mort" Darteh by His Ttl!tiell-Fli.der. the 0.,reat Doodler,. • A ,startling rtnner is .0nrrent., IttPett the .etreete of S. Catharines regarding the eeca•. 'POO of a student in Neoax's. Rykert & Ingersoll'e office named Mort. Burtch, son of •Josiue. l3urtch,- who resides on the •.Great Western Hill, near the 'pity; It .-seetnethet Mr. Itykort received twO drafts .yesterdaY morning for 03,300 and 03.000 respectively. The fernier was made on the • QuebecBank, There'd, and the other on thelliank of Toronto, this city. He desired Burtch to proceed to 'Iliorold. and cash', the draft drawn upon the bank there, and .deposit-. the proceeds, togetherwith the .draft upon. the Bank Of .Toronto, to hia. account.. at the Imperial Bank. Burch went to Thorold as directed and ,seoureci. the • 03;800 . andthen ' proceeded" to the Bank • of Ter/into and endeavored to cashtla other draft. 2,1r. Leitch, thi; paYOlerk, offered t� ease the draft in notes of email denomination, but these Burtch refused to accept,' and left. There is little doubt that he succeeded in getting •• larger notes elsewhere, °lee he Would have . taken the $5 bille. tendered.,_ This occurred at.about 2,30 yesterday afternoon, since hichtime-nohing has been seen of 'the - young Man or the mOney. Every possible effort was made this morning to .ascertain Iturteli's where'll:0CM.. Finally Mr. Art. Camp, another student in, Mr. nykert's .•Office, waa sent to Lockport to find the . young mantf possible and procure all Or a • part Of the funds. • Young Burtch was in • the habit .Of going to Lockport to 'visit friends every fewweeks, and this is why • he '.ia.auppesed.to.haire gone there now: The offenee.is net an extraditable one, and if • Burtch chooses to hang on to his ill-gotten gains and remains under the, protection of the 'United States thelaw cannot tonolx -31A hundrd 1-)lititagiaPhe of -the fugitive have been struels.off and sent to the, Chiefs .:_nf.Polide of the different 'American, cities. The police here have the matter in hand; but the St.Catherinen, poliee• are not. very. • Well up in this Work: There is not much ehanoe of there accomplishing much. : • • • Oisitner7. ' Vienna despatch attys./al:manes dito • lt0oiutta rrrs . 427deatts-":-...ifr.,.. plifidetiffitsayTho • „fie to ;A.A. 4 314 Coleinan,for more than 25 years oity editor of the Ledger, died yesterday:. ' ?Wilbert Rey, Ca,tholio.bhaPlain in • Penetangeishene• Reformatory, , died there yesterday,•eged 54: years. • '• • : ' • John B. Cornell,' head of the •well-known firm of J. 43. • lit Cornell, the Now . York' • iron t.' founders, died yesterday , •, • The death is announced of ; Rev. Mr, Logie.. Presbyterian minister of Valetta; :The winds!, of October : have this year •.: proved Midenally. fetal. AO • London ntihionairee. The late '. Hugh MoCedinont, . banker, who died last week at, his home ,in GrosvenorPleze, waseneof the richest 'Men in London.. New Baron ilernien de Stein . • has also passed 'away. '' Mr. MoCalnionthi fortune will probably exceed £4,000,000. In; 'his lifetime hegave the hire Lord Cairns $100.000on hie becoming Lord Chancellor and is said • th beve given-„hini- a- similar • sum afterward. Ho. becjiniatha about L3,600,000 to a nephew, Mr. MoCalniont; a popular subaltern in the Scots Guards, with a tvealAhese, for boating, subject to, an m- eanie till he id 27, while the' capital •still further fructitioe. •Ife gives 2100;000 to St. ' George's Efespital, close to his, house, but. ' • • nothing at all to the preeent...Lord • Cairns, whoseroarriegeLte-Miss 'Olive Berens will , take place at the end of next month or, the beginning of December. Baia Herman de Stein, Who died in his 63rd year on 'Thrirs- • day, at Hyde. Park Gate, has, like Mr. Me, •.:Ctilmont, left a fortune of deVeral , He Was tliehead of, the financial houses in Angel Court • which ,• floated successfully ;half dozen foreign leans, ' He diap. for •, Portugal what Mr. 1 MaCitimont---did for Amanda, and was Made • a' baron by the, :grateful king of that country. , He, gave largesm s to allJewish charities. He gavo. his daughter as a marriage portion . needy' • half a iniiiion when she married Sir David Solomon. The Ilirthniace of,.,iionst,ncits. • The site of theold Con. •Virginia rain. is to be used henceforth. awe, oldingtfor wasterock, the Mill having been torn down ..and moved elsewhere. Perhaps there, is not other' Mill intbe world that has turned etc; :the , coffere of ceminerce eo many 'dollars as this one has. From her:teeth, its eterend Mackay • ,picked it is said, $50,000,000, and Fair, ,Flood and. O'Brien each, !warty s" Mitch. Itundrecle of „others Were made oecitrnousty rich and thOneands Of , • in i nevi , and: employees; have received eXcellent wages for riunther of years. Now the mill is n1:flied , down and the site mist or weste.dirup. " To what baso a . ,usee de we come st . last th-iieno• plod 401.1-1t, VQ1.1$1:!Alit'Y Lima). • How cane*" le Divf(len •leraut Alee thiltim Ntates. • • s •Idoldett Days. it 0.) A glance at the map of theUnited States shoWe that its .bomidary adjoining Canada follows, the larger part of; the 'distance, an irregular waterline formed: by the great lakes and their outlets. Thence, from the 'Lake of theWoods,, on the north of Minnesota. a moredireat course is taken through the sondem/N:4a and over the mountable, Of the 'Wild wet to the Pacific meet. • This boundary between the countries is marked at regular intervals by pillarp of weed, and. , earth mounds or atone °sirup. • . • 13eginning•at the Lake of the Woods,cast. iron pillars have been placed alternately by the English and our Government, one mileepart, until reaching the Red' River Those set by our neighbor were brought from over the poen,while ours; were Made; in Detroit. They are a hollow basting of a pyramidal form eight 'feet in height, hay-. inga base eight inches square and octagon flange one moh .in thickness, with a top four inches enuare, ourniquated: by a solid —Lite -these hollow---posts-are-ftted weIl seasoned .cedar. Joiste..wih - spikes driven through apertures niade for that -purpose in the casting. One half, of the length of the pillars are thinly. imbedded in the ground, 89 that the inscription ,on their sides, in raised letters two inches high; face the north and south, the first reading "Convention of London," the latter "Octo- ber 20, 1818." • • • • Beyond the Red Hiatt.; earth mounds and stone 'cairns seven'feet by eight gener- ally denote the. boundary line. 'Whenever wooden posts are used they are of the dame height as the iron pillars and painted red above the ground: . • • , • • ,Through-fereste-a-elearing-has--beeli made' a rod wide, so that the, coeree is pininly indicated: Where bodies, of water are croinied-nionuments of stone have been raised Several feet,abare high tide, . Over the • Mountains ghats: of granite like grim Sentinels geard the•way... Alto- gether the fixing of the boundary marks waa'expensive, but it was well done. ; • witam1eabkmiplekniik-V-1601 -8.62-3.4aciaegii-aiwzoity-xdbfrom-gh. there is no certainty as. to ' his whereabouts. \• A man simmering MOdarigle's description arrived here on Tuesday evening and was seen in. conversation • with the .police.= The latter, however, .refuse totalk on the -13tritgeiniyin.the Money, .market in the' eiet hap extended to. Manitoba, and all hanks ' are now raising their' 'rates of interest. • The general impression here is that the 'Globe.. was right in ita intimation that the Bank of Montreal was trying to 'block th:e Stalls 'of ,the -Red ',River bonds hY. drawing from circulation 63;000,b00. • A rich find in anthracite coal has been: made in Crow's Neat Palm, just heyornithe. 'Summit of the Rookies. Twenty men. are now developing it. • The Coal is 'Mid to , equal to the Banff anthracite, and there are unlimited quantities of it.. • 'A Tritunph.ot Jonrnaihno*. . We begin the publiestion eV The llocy Mountain Cyclone with some phew diphi- cuities in the way: The type,phourider phrmii 'wham we bought our outphit phor this printing ophice .pheiled to supply us. with any ephs or °eye; and it will be phoer or phive•weex hephore we can get any. The Mistaque•Wad not phoxind out till a day or two ago. We. have ordered the miseing letters, and will have to get along without them till they COMO.' We don't lique the foox ov this varietroy'dpelling any better' than onr readers, but *tete-if Will happen in the bent ,regulated phamiliese• and . iph • the ph's and o's and x's and q's hold out we shall 'ceep (second the a herd) ,The Cyclone whirling aphter a phesien the sorteorrive. It is no jeque• to us -it's a serious aphair,-.Reey Mountain Cyclone. Tricycling,gado miles. • , . An A:Merle/in and his wife, writes a cor- respondent, Mr. and Mrs.' Harold:R. Lewis, of Philadelphia, on a tandem tricycle, have since jubileeLdaY_Atavelled-all-over-the- sonth of England; and then, from ,Dieppe; ridden to Geneva, by way of Rouen,Paris and Dijon, thence over the St. Gothard to Milan, by way of the ; back over the Sphigen, by easy stages through Switzer- land, clown the Rhine from its source to the sen; around Holland, only ending their trip of 2,200 tnilestin Brussels because they found themaelves riding; not on the itthher, but on the steal rims of their- wheels, the tires being entirely worn out. -Path. Niles: ilootrein South Africa. , TWelve months ego," says the 'Caps „arguu; " Johannesburg had no existence beyond the ten shanties of prospectors. To;daY Johannesburg is as much atown as nything we have te show. It hasits wide treets, its hotels, its five newspapere and it ' tla,tette. • ' • • She Knew Efer Mamma. "Pa, Won't, yOti give me a new dress' ? I wanton° so much." , " 'IA speak to your motherebOut it," - The child's Wistful expilissionwasterned • td diuppoi utment • romximti. will knoWif it'sneces. Gary, " 1. • • " Yea, " rpplied the child, deintirely, 1. is peopled with some of the most. energetic And lament people in South Africa. In 110 country has there ever been an example "of a new centre" of industry More rapidly eatablishing, itself and imnreeeing Melt upon theptiblic mind as one of the perman- ent features of „the country." me Might Bavo Been paved. oc or- ou see, wifey, dear, I have tilled-Mypetient threugh, after ell; a very P Stiehl ease / can telkyotil . : His Wife -Yes: ,dear hubby': :hitt then on are so clever in your prolessiOn. Ab! I had only known yon five years earlier. feel certain my ..first huaberid-rny poor hoinas;-,Would linve,been, saved: • • suppose so: But when you sneak to her d 'touch hr easy papa, or she -night Want, - •one for herself. Y • , 4, .1 .... _ - if in Wood or the I*#nesk.' • ' X Manitoba dettlere are aFitai,Cd over an 1, ennouncetnezitbY the Interior Department at Ottawa that ail money due on 'pro -Orap. tins•roust he paid before the end bf Decem. her er. the entries will be cancelle,c1. 14'a:titer and, ,Daughter. • A yotnigwornan giving testinidny in a case at Lu.neriburg, N. S., said : 1(10 not re . A tooi Tramp: A•tratrip coolly walked. into a Brantford fa hotel and • Without • consul tin gAhe..I ancl lord • aeleeted onO of the beet Nal:line-arid Went to bed', and was wrapped itt adweet Sleep When of ho Was diseevered end ejeetecl. .••• an • ; , ha iTaistono i a Anil believer. in the go0a of athletics, and his son, 'Herbert Glad., of stabs', is. the President of a gational.rhytiiiii - cal Recreation Society that has recently pr been Of gatifmci in Liverpool. ' apect my father Morethan I would an old g; because lie beat me With it boardfive et lone' - , • . ' The London Standard advides Ahe•People Britisli:COlurtibitt-nor.4cehreed 'rabbits, poietse to the •plAgtio- those - animals' to become in New South Wales. . It is expected that nroit of'the membets the tugIish l'eaco Contruiscion will meet Washington on ,StAttieday to arrange for esenting the address on behalf' Of inter - t ional arbitration to Prolident 'Cleveland' .0... fccel\,4 a atO • ti %so° tAvo „Aa or • .. 7• WITO .TB_E OlitiroPB. B_t.lif; ...._..; BeW .80141 pualnt, Pop.i' Bright IrazIelea and Odd Sitangsrell Ill• ' Pune Into Wn.s.7; . tittle Oates. ' • hi ' • Did°, Otie9P9f TYtV St4S01704 een, %. • •„silt 01.1/ BIIII1B0T: .• 4--- - PM, 'dthlt itightm ttiridi before Christ, after, „ gsband had •.A. small American (*peel ot 4 years bo - been put to death by her brnthOge,d144.0M ing once. °hided by a growit,up *tor or that, city and establish4d al nOlony, nns.the, talking of marriage_with the advii* Wirth coast of Africa* Having bargained that taw girls should not think:4, esktings I., , . . Ii with the natives for AS nVieh land as could martied_tepiieo, with the utmost •amam., territdo be surrounded with a bull's hide, she out the pont at her eider siater,a ignorance : "Why, ri:40, pro, hide into narrow Orli" tied them together I thought about when I -was. only 1,,_ two • and claimed the land that Wald" be our- arolluouwdeettohYbatvhoebleirnewtahytr amoadden.°0wSheviwheens '11.41 Time8' . - . ' • ' nthiatoarrith‘e . 'Go imin, 4 one plays a sharp trick, he is said t0 "otit The fathe4r4oPfu:nhTttB1411O 831,y7exa°rN-.old Boston dlahtetivaeo #411341.sh'cl 'the d'doe'rt:lit , a dido." . lamP.' Witli; aWaY X go and 4.14 mYtAtiel boy is travelling in the South, and in a re - a street leading to the buryingground, kept ; A tailor of Samareand', Asia, who lived on Gce9nofrgleiettberadhnornote.beseanida good boy bloeyardntiinrign.„gthhei! no oriseneealitettr door lafell:P/: alonnilgi tTmakea; 7a'tgrelaa‘sai - near hisop an earthen pot, in -which he absence, he would 'square am:mate with a headmith a night.pap acmes. ont of the° was accustomed to deposit 4 Pebble when.- 4114 On his return. The,mother read that window, and asks me what ever a body Was earried by to its final rest: Part of the letter to the Youthful misde- want.. 'The Commissaire de Police,' says I. ' ing his .shop deserted a person inquired a neighbor what the father had Written what' de You want'?' 'There. is a man being ' in. the world r . hag place. Finally the tailol:died, and see- meanoriat, and the latter subsetjuently told ' Well, X am the commissaire de 'police ; what had becbMo. of its former occupant. "What did,Y, AOusrpfaapthkiner,noiea,snve?o"1.fr wheal :tee !AssaiTi3ge:ilide.nitihteh:tal4er.c, oCahyzeheniidlf. . " ge.has goneri.to per himself," • was the neighbor. ' • • • . rPlalY 1?Y one of the deceased's/neighbors.. rePlY.,-,4300071#U4Yet, . , ',did not h'ilow anything about one tads or During o battle between Abe Missions' . sprioven AND Anoerin. and Tartars a private soldier of the former the gutter or the other dide,. so I my at cried out, "Captain, I've caught a Tartar.", where the concluding amen of theparson's A Hartford youngsier goes :to church donoweenbitlYst:ree'tT,he rAighh! hsiedessayss,Y*01 ntheoatn198 Bring 'him along," said the officer. - "He prayer is song by the choir. The other in the. other- arrondisseMent • go to ..gwaotnio'tn7pletrortiveed," t'hwaarthheere:aPpotniveee•, hIandve ts Lip" night, after he---hosi said Ma prayer9-he other"ooMmrstaire, NO: -; liue.,--.."" go _ .4aptpr,,by_tha..artn__and_wouidnot_allovirliith, i_Pr_:_o_d_tiaeLa_herm. onioa,frora-beneath-his.- a.w.aY-I-goimith-mytne,nbeing-assassinatM , inflow and astonished his mother by blow all the time, and 1 find 'my ()Hid coMmill... to °3°ve. S° ." "catching a tartar" la 'ak ing a bleat where the amen .came in; re- plicabletoo him. to one•who has found an antagonist marking, "That's the way we do in . church. -Hattferd Peat.' . • ' • • • nes."s, nrAtx,n mueNess oinitnicen. ' A Weet-side.3-year-old showed an appre- ciation of things, the other city. "Won't you give me akise, dear ?" coaxed a lady. " I don't want to," said thelittleone. "Oh, give_the lady a kiss; Florence," Said her father. , " 0o, kiss her, papa, oo like tot__ Chicago Tribune. ` A 001n71111111711. . 111XN0 NEWS OF A BoRTABB. Aitir 10.,„ . ic,m1 elat°74(Pf' 1.'44.40 1.4d - .../..i........ o 1,,,...44..... .... „ ., ......4„.. ..,:. • "Now X 'will.% Jaw they..:;,. things in those days. iall WM. You 4.t.130. it to tats who was assassinated. While I - I: i 14 in the corps de gardii( I itt*0 ^Pa 41)Pre was le - ting la ft-i0,telti. . hilp asst. Which side of the gutter?' 8,1'8" he. So I thought at any rate I would stick to my story, and I say: The right side coining down the street.' ' Ah! me regarde. But how long is it since they have been assassinating him?' About • three-quarters of, an hour,' says I. '4 Ah 1' then he ' is dead by this time; we must get two men and a stretcher to carry him ' away.' So away we go with our stretcher, and, I went with them, for I wanted to • see whether the Man was on the right side of the gutter or not -and we found hina lyingstone'•dead;---with-hisfiWed-qn the . gutter. But he was more on the right side than on the left,.and.:he wad -stabbed through the heart, 'ea the three-quarters at an hour ara-iiorsignity. But that • is the way they do things here." f- tatest Scottish New& On the • 8th of October Mr. and ,Mrs. Lindsay -Carnegie, Hinblethmont, Forfar - shire, were on the occasion of their silver wedding presented by their servants with a silver epergne. , • • On returning from Balmoral the •Queen Will stop at Edinburgh to unveil the memorial to tbelate Duke of Bum:leach, in -Parlian3ent-Sous"-Iier-tMole-sty 18i7eit- peeted to renialk.over , night at Holyrood Palace. , , : • , Mr. George 'Johnston, head gardener•.at Glamis Castle for the last twenty-eight years; died at Edinburgh on the 30th of September. , ."..Mamma/t:saidalittlegirl-of-47-whose , father pays very little attention to the dinner hour,: "Paps is just like the moon, isn't he I"- • , . • "Why, my dear f" ".Because he comes a little later every night." -,Epoch. ' , • • „. Mr: James Moir,' bank agent, 'PortsoY# -• Canadian Cheese.; ,died'on:the 3rd Of October, aged 75. years. Lathrop; .United Stites Pewit& at He was an enterprising agrioulturist, beside' Bristol, makes the. ;following cipert to r. g.„.x.ttic7atoode.420..p&callwkiy,-serktnnuff 04* •4' 417"4 4.37A.11MtlYcito- otg*re4fgatrit H. ra h» coi tefingtrr-Cti-nattinthentov4nrognecreig, elthe legal 411ilti1lerfqa1tntenil• • import trade .01 Bristol islargely ; The Queen has approved of Mr. Donald niadenp of provisions. In this connection Cameron; of Loohiel, being appointed I Wishtedrawepecial attention to the way Lord, Lieutenant of the"County of Inverness Canadian cheese him supplanted thethlited in piece of the late Lord Lovat. • • .States product. The Canadian cheese is The ancient Town Creed of ' SiOnehav,en, imported each year in increasing quanti, which has stood for ages near We steeple, ties in the Bristol district, andfinds.eaoli and whiell•was certainly :.e.-1209,-17,, relic of year in -Creasing' Aimee, yoth with dealers ancient timed' long before the steeple .was and cOnsurnersi. •I'Vhile the 'import of all erected, after heying fallen into disrepair, foreign Cheeses fell off, in Liverpool in 1886, has been -renewed by Mrs. Knowles, wife of by 250,000 hointa, the 'invert in Btistol BaillieKnovids, is her Jubilee gift. . r from Montreal increased by 12000 hoxes--:.-• Signe of ancearly and severe winter' ere total for year 201,000 boxes; and the Ta- unted in ell patteof Scotland. • ' • • eetpre, from New York fell off considerably. ' Mr.' W. B. Dunbar, .Procurator -Fiscal, Great Britain ininufectnrel each year Dundee, died suddenly at his residence on 185,090tone,valued at about 435,000,000: the 14th of October.• . ' Now, the very prince of /English cheese is It has been decided to hob:Yet Edinburgh held to be Cheddar, Made in Somerset, and next year an exhibition, of reiici of queen yet Canadianoheetie triede on the Cheddar principle has actually, tight here in Som ereet,.where 1 Write'been sold for a penny a pound -mere than a cheese actually Made in Cheddar Valley. , There id• a hot•oon- treversynoW,raging in the _English papers as to whether cheddatcheese .is the reedit of particular herbage and peeturage,, or of a partieular mode of manipulating the miIk; and I.think that all. but Somerset. shire Men are pretty well ,greed that, thin tdotheenAe -cheese is the result Of superior methods • rathef' than of special, grasses. And -the Canadians have gene on improving. tuitilthey ,he.ve .surpassed their 'teachers but the---United-States de not appear; t� have proportionately advanced, or if they have :they consume their best makes at Onthe 6th Of October Bei': Dr:William Peddie, Edinburgh, entered the •• sixtieth Year of his ininistry., His father: -Rev. Dr James Peddie -had :attained, when he diedthe 63rd year ofhis ministry oyet the same Congregation, Btiste U. P. Church. • The hotel on the summit of Beni Nevis has now been closed fer the season. % Up. wards of 4,000 ascended between the lat of April and the 30th of September. Mr. W. B. Masson (late of the Inverness telegraph office) has been appointed Foreign Secretary to the Engineering 43nrean, and tinittuctor in the Telegraph( College at Tokio, Japan. •••-•--,•••• • • • Mts. Alex. Carlyle, niece of Thornas Car- lyle, has since June :,of the present year sent down ' to the 'birthplace of her 'illus. trious uncle at tealefechan several inter, *ire cure torchapped .Lips. . eating:. relied , heel 'the house in Cheyne ' "As soon as the cold Winds begin to Row. , On a well of the .apartment ; blow,: repiarkecl a Nati Yorknhyeiontri,- " which Carlyle .was born hangs the Old ani overrun With patients suffering from 'Data' clock from the Chelsea kitchen; chapod line. -The trouble.genetally inani. and in the room -there is alsochair from feats Itself in one wide ut i • tit id the drawing-room,a readingrtable• and teadinglamp and shade, it tobaoco-eutter. from Carlyle's bed -room • cupboard, and a Medallion of. Sartor as he appeared about 1854-:-r-Mtd. .0odriar-tlie tenant;. takes great , pleaetn•e in showing to strangers what is perhaps the Most impressive birth- place of &hero to be seen in Scotland. The epiciernie of measles is •assuming serious aspeos • in', Eriskay,' . Barra and Mingle), jelands. Eriskay whole families are,doeun with the disease, and sonte,'very distressing cases ' have occurred' hi that The late•ReV. J. Sharp, of A.herdaigie was the oldest member. of the ;Perth Pres- bytery; ,fie was horn in 1800. , • Mr. '11....17i..Gitlbraith, Sheriff •;and •Com- Misiary Clerk,. Stirling, has one way and.another over 22366 Of an income, ex,. elusive of private practice and conveyancer. Besides 'the peerages .enjoyed . by the deacenclants Of lifitoCallem' More there are no fewer than twenty:eight CaitiPlielle in Scotland, each possessing ' 5,000 acres and upwards; end the total' extent Of , their estates is 538,801 acres. ' • Aniong.the records. of Castle- Mona, lale of Mat, was it decree printed in Wittig 'attars; by which it was Ordained that if a man was proyetli to have wronged it maid the Deemster was 10 hand her an axe, it rope and it ring, that she might deal. with the recalcitrant lover; She had the choice to behead him with the axe to hang him ' ' with h " with the rope, or marry him wt t e ring. Tradition Bays. the maids were. usually 'enAlefnetvi'..niontheago Prof. Fife, Aber. , PreSentdd to ;the Estoblishecl Kirk; ace:nr: myllie, a harmOnium. A Carrnyllie plough- man's Wife went to chtirobto hear it,. fin. inedietely Oben the blessing was Raid Bile hurried mit ease her young child should be out.' of tamper. In the afternoon 'a neighbor edited herhew aliened the Medic. Sheliald ; I iiitod it britwley, but the best eit was to dome When 1 left, for juist as 1 dam' eet at the door they* began to Play !Pop Gees tho Weasel.' " ' • 1.K • --Ainerican Thitialtagiving Day' will 'be November 24th. • ,_.'A colliaiOn hetween the' Pi:Octal 'and ,, . , , .. .,. . State sitthotitice is iminimiit in uniirernia .. over the evietion of eliyon.herderp 60 . set. tiers tiOn1' the' Round Valley Indian Reser, , 'ration. ' , . ..,..4...! ' 1 e o the lip.I used to trot such things as: a laughable matter and prescribe some eirdple emollient,such as glycerine, for. instance. But I soon fennclibatauCh treatment was only a temporary remedy, for after partially healing the ent Would reopen • at the slight. est,exertion of the lips'. The • mere /Mt of biting anything hard, laughing or yawning would make the Unfortunate -bawlwith pain: , If thepatient was addicted to the use of tobacco the chances were that he would have a bad Wall through the winter. -In-my-researched for it pernianent cure. I ran:across an oldtramp printer, Who had' rubbed against the, rough ,aide of the World all his life andlor whom every season had been it cold day. He told me 'that if I inveetigated the matter' wituld find that. the people addicted to Chapped !IPS were in the habit of toddling them With their tongues. Allure bure;,Saicl he is to keen year tongue in-Yettr month. I have since, followed his seggestion in My practice and never kilew it to fail. The rough. skin, of the tongue scratches' the lips, •end When therhave once .become chapped the least contact is. enough to keep th,e cut. tipen:". On the Ap#1,int Of 04vea. ,T11,6 tower which is being erected by the Rusisieris On the' highest point -On the, Mount of Olives is alreadY Several steries,higir, and but orternOre is to be added. /Chita be so high. that beth the, Mediterranean and the Dead Seas; may be Beet.; from its top. A number of belle will be placed itt the tower. ,In digging the foundation seven Chrjstinii grime werefontid together, with an'ineerip.,; tion in Greek, iti • which the wetcls' '4 ,Sto. phanue cOtild „be deciphered. ' • . • There are, at the present tithe, MOO. tin: =titled .wotneff Working in the foreign mission field.„t ' • John Torranee, who oft Friday' night was stabbed •onpesite Borth*, meiceene natant/Apt; 32 ' Adelaide street west, Toronto., succumbed to hieWounds ,at '•the hospital shortly after 7'o'clock on Saturday evening. .• A ,G eve-rem/mt. &genre 7 Moniroal, in' an artiele supposed to be inspired, insinnatee that the question, of the international boundary along theState of Maine will probably be laid before, tho approaohing, Fishery Oommisalori by the Dominion Government, with it view to securing Sortie 'revision of the Ashburton award. .• :‘• ' Farm and Garden. , , The cultivation of haniboo for 'fencing Flaterial.basheen bgun1nCa1if,rja rt. 41Letgais,..113Arisgaimilr.gratinee "AtIgh4.-VLICSONAWaSaliar,rdia;r4tireAii-'-' . • The American Cultivator p'recliota that •the' time id not far oft when many disappointed farmers inthe West • will • return to Now England and take up farms,. 'where the- : land Can be werked to a• certain profit by resolute and enterprising men,. •'.• The .average shrinkage of , steer going: , from Texas to Chicago is 100 pounds. The. State furnialies an average 400,000 'steam, 'Which' ,Makes it shrinkage of 40,000,000.' • pounds, or, putting the average Weight Of a._ steer at $50 pounds, 47;058 heed. • For keeping small quantities of 'seeds,.. paper begs are prefentble taclotb, as, they . are better proteetion against 'nioisture and. insects. Always 'mark each package With ' the name of the seed • contained in it, ant the year in 'which' it grew. Cold does injure the vitality of seeds, bet.moisture is- . detrimental to all ktncli.•• • • ' • • For it horse that. is weak in the knees,. rub thelinibs briskly With a woollen cloth; :, then bathe with ;Palt---and-- Wati3r.--wipe -dry and apply it mixture of • one Pint of aloohcil and one drachin tineture of Spanish rubbing in a tablespoonful twice a' day with the hand. Let the horse runNiie 'Nees" stall deeply littered.with saWdits co nit aix„ earth.fleeir., Almoet any kind cif reeterialk„ ground under fruit trees will selrifeN imer. - It will it. eas tonlien --;tilel-Acivitit of grass ankweeds,. and thus ,cheek'losS af' moisture and fertility that the tree needs - to perfect its crop. It is as it mulch that the advantage of straw in an orehard'oin. • sista. • Its fertilililig, value. is 'very small; • none Of this being'available until the straw had rotted. . ' • * • y 0. . . 'Abandoned Corsets. It is said that Years age Mrs. Scott: Sid, • dons' dresernaker edvieed h�r to leave Off' her corsets. "What, lose my. stage figure !” 'she Milker niged•that she Was losing .her figure. • anyhow, and the only .means of saving itr was to take' 'radical theitsdres at. once. , 1, Well; here. go my stays," said the mitre*, and the milliner --proceeded to fit her ok. twenty.fivo'inch waigt. , At the 'end Of the: SeasOkshe mune baCkagain. "Make mo it. • twentneeven,inch waiSti", she demanded,: . but in the .ineantime her figure below and. ' above -the waist had reenined their , normal' - proportions; her skiri;had grown two shildne; -fairer and clearer, aba.she looked younger. . Sin'ie then she .hai never worn a stay, and , sbo says that Whereto before She itboodonecl them it was all she 'could do to drag through the bird e.et,'after she had ; dispeneed..-Witla. them'she was so fresh 'arid vigorous that. . she could have done it sixth , net and no. ' mindedit: 13be still ocintindee to Wear 'very gorgeous gowns. • " • • • litis.Oeyetam4 proWIng Rotund,' ; By the 'Way, vlittlehorsebeek exercise; would do Mrs. Cleveland no . harm.. It rather 'a,hateful thing to say, but I an going to tell the truth a,t all events -Mrs. Cleveland is greWing fat. She is no longe the .willowy, girlish White, /I 'Ouse bride, bait • a solid 170-poOnder Of the settled married woman type. The gushers who stieut• : aboiat the. Presiclent'e schoolgirl wife WIN have to revise 'their opinions if they aro desirous of stating the,ttuth., The ailing* in Mre. CleVeland'sjigure has, lidded td hat bandy, and silo never looked as well in her life assho &eft-to-atty.-00am Traeellersit .Washington • Get her Pay sOineWticre . e to husband --I caught Bridget. starting the fire • this tnorningvvith • koro. • , eerie, John. Hushand-HeW mrich do w0 ,owa' her ? Wife-,-Faur menthe.' wagad. . ;XI usbaod----Well, let her go on with the' , • 'keroseee.-Neiv Yerk &at.. . • • itt Beaton there ere - nine lintidred • . ........... . negroefi ,who Were born sabject'S of the pritisli Crown. • , . ' ' Tho Canatlimi Gazette alit idipetee the Set-, ' tlement of the &hence questionby tile United States atici Canade entering into a i reciprocal treaty for the) intitual eltellang , of speallie,preaucts of the two counties. . . • 1.