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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-05-25, Page 2letegrelit VLVB oritmcdn. - Thereiab: Leader Didn't Approve; ofthe Pie, Interview With caratervent-Tee.trish end'the Pope, • A 140444 0010 tetYs The Eighti Club vo e'benelle.t to Br, Parnell on Tuesday evening. Mr. Herbertfiledstone, the Earl of (term aid ail the leading Parnellites were Present, Ali, Parnell, on rising to meale wearemeived with prolonged cheers. He 'thanked the cluli for tlte honor done Idm, Arid said that the occasion wetdd have le great effect:in Ireland, reminding. Trish. mon that they were not alone et the etrugg.let and what. was, more important, that their responsibility was not the sole responsibility. in this matter.. With refer- : once to Lord. Carnarvon; • he said: "Hie Leidehip has sought ;refuge in evasion, but • 'he has never denied any "statement that I .lievemade. sI-shotild not lave referred to " Lord Carnarvon in hisabsence had not • Lind,Saliebery attacked us in our omeneg. tion With the Liberals as &seagoing, unfit • to be entrusted with the goveenreent, of Ireland: That, I 'think, eetitled. me to retort.- The Conservatives have not always considered it derogatory to invite us to inter- • view and dinners and luncheons in order to - •00,fistat no in regard to the manner in Which • 'Ireland shoteld bo governed. -Lord'esnier: von had • ample opportunity te deny the otatements made by me, three months, ago " by letter, but, instead of doing . se, he waited until. my friend, Dwyer Gray, to whom he ;nada the 'communication, was dead' before he attempted to contradict me." In further oonfirniation of Mr. eiraT's statement Mr,' Parnell then reed. Violater from Mr: Gray to Lord Carnar.whieb was written a year afterthe ifiterview, when Lord Carnarvon was 40 longer ID °fife°. In this letter . Mr. Gray remmeld Tend Carnarvon of thelatter'e , deoisien that the Crosernaglen prisonbro (Hight to be liberated,and iteked him to im. 11,1xt that decision to the: present Lora: Mentenant: fiord,' Carnarvon replied, eduelng Mi. Gray of a breiteli of cenfi, " • dencie. /dr. Parnell then told of ininter- view between himself and Lord Carnarvon et the' letterer invitation, at which Career - von agreed' that :it would be advisable to •• • give Ireland a , Parliament ,and to protect her industries, and Mr. Parnell admitted , that in.. snob an event the League o mould ' firecenciedemnder ..r•T ee.42feerd.C-ereamonPeeentingedell1ii ,,ienever ectenlea,AlitesestateMentie and I'never said he Pledged' hiinself to • there. He adinits • however/ that Lord • Salisbury knew hetiraised that the Meet-, view wee, coming, . and he Was afterward .informed ofitetenor. He !Mouses me of. a breach of confidence in having invited him so eon)* the text et hisviritten communi- cation to. Lard Salisbury immediately after the. interview." Mr. Parnell then pre, aided to speak et the Pope's reeeript: He S aid he ': approached the subject with.. un- williegnees, and aid net think it • nein as • a Protestant to viedicetethe freedom Of Catholics. -HeTwesconyincea that Irieh Catholics lmew' their' political •• .4dy *and how to vindicate themselyee. '. They would:not .4110Wanybody,. however • h-endinfinetittal.-to-influencetheM a 'jos iit their pciliticil dutyto their country, • .thing that -bad beenrepeetedly tried from ,Rome, but had elwitys idled. Vir,ith regard tit the Plan of Campeign, when that Was 'ieditated he was • dengercenely ill end ooaneUedto refrain from all work., • Be .cionteseed, however, that although the plan ' bad benefited thousands and 'pacified .the , Cannily, he ;Would then • have advieed ' spinet it becatute it contained. featnees winked to, the widened situation, and wane terve as a pretext tenths Times to ,ibifllot further coercion: 'Wberl,:: in 1887, • was able to speak, it was too late. The Government had alreedy struck at Dillon ' add O'Brien and he thought it better to • let the matter rest, but he stipulated thaL • neither the Leagne.nor the Paniellite party 'ehouldbe 'identified with the • plan,and that thatch* of the plan should be as rearicted as.peesible. While:leaning to Itilion;,0'Beein and others to deal' with the reeiript," he said,' "I then &dine° to our nuatonewhee the GOiereinent strikee • an Irishman to fight icer him whether he be right Or wrolig." He concluded with a beg defence of political coiribination, and • • drew* cOmpar3son between law, in' Eng- land itna law ni Irelend. He predicted •,00niing tremble lee' Ireland over • evidione, . which he belleend the Government feared' •: ea much ed did the tenants.,-. He counseled • Ids ootintrymeri to keep 'Stith:AV within the ' law as understood in England.. In respond' • • to Many calls, •Mr. John , Morley ,speke, ' ' briefly, concludingby proposing a • vote of thanks te ;Mr: Parnell. . A ThUnderStorm Panic. • , , • A • last (Thursday) nightie Kingston !net& cars: About 11,30 o'clock last night a violent rain storm, accompanied by hereyy 'thunder and lightning, visited this • section. People were suddenly startled by a flash of lightning, entady-followed by a • ,-elap of thunder which ' made the bowies shae. Some received 'such a shook that they were tuieble . to sleep for the rest of the night. Mr. Campbell, manager of the • Electric Light Coinpany; gave an. account -of the storm as affecting the lighting , station. The wires Were' heavily eherRA • and the edeotrieity Could be seen playing • freely on them. . It ,ran eking them to the station when the thunder was loudest. • The Mom immediately. ' ' filled with electricity and the dynamos began to blize. -The employees became inglitened, etc th- - e, and ranout of the •• .1fee1! •or ,e engine, • at when she arrived it was found that she was, not needed. The only damage found was thee one of the wires in the magnet of one ef the dynamos had • been burned Several telephones were destroyed. Four men in onebotel rnshed the office frightened; and fore tune refesed.to be comforted. . ' 4_, STRADDLING THE notlNPARY!! How a Sharp Yankee Bodo Das** to , Canadian 'Constables. ;. A Montreal special says: Deputy High ConeteblesSiesonette and Champagne have just arrived from United States territory, but not at all favorably impressed with the manner in which they were treated by the Amerietin. authorities. Some time ago it was related in the Empire that John Tolmie, of Fort Covington, whose store was situated .exaotly on the boundary line, had pur- rro,rerrt";•• RUSSIA'S "PAIR OIT3C." 7 George, Keenan •Gilieti a DeiOription . of Nishiii Novgorod. A Cit'y Iltterly Desertedat one Season of the Tear oxl44SwikriOloT With Busy multi- tudes, at. Another Time -Curious Con- troatav, To a traveller visiting Nishiti Novgorod chased 31,000 worth of goods m Montreal; ewe the 'era time them is something sur - and, rint'wzahing: to pay for the MAIO, had prising, and almost startling, in the .ap- evaded all attempts at ,SeiZUre by quietly pearanee of what he. supposed to lie the moving the goods from' the Canadian . te city, and, in the sane predentea to: Yiim as the American ,side of the • establish- lie emerges frgin the railway station and inent. A few weeks. einee Tolnite, walks etiay fromthe' low bank of the ,Oka hang in :Pamitreal as , a witeeea in a ..River in the direction Of the Volga. The civil ease, was arrested', but having ,p43, Clean,well pavettstreets ; the long rows of viously claimed the preteaitel of the court, substantiel braidings, the !Macioce!, beide, Judge Doherty ordered his release 4;4 020 vend; shadedby leafy birches liod PoPlere ; him book horde under a Wilco 43090. The the 'canal, spanned at intervals by gracebli ether day Mr.' Brundado bailiff, who had bridges; the picturempie tower of the water - been charged to 'make ,the seizure, of tile :.works; the enormond cathedral of Alexan- gond& Ave Yeare ago, obtained a new war- (ler Nevski; the bourse; the, theatres; the rant against Toledo and Meson. Bissonette hotels- the market seem to in - end Champagne left town on Friday even- dicate a great populous metre of hie and ing to temente the same. The wide-awake, commercial atitivity ; blit. of Wiring inhabi- betrict strictly honest, trader has his tea- : tants there is not a sign. Gram and weeds -clenceem Canadian soil, btit-hie 'place ef;' are growing in the. Middle of the empty businees is crossed diagonally by the streets and in the cliinks of' the. boundary line. It appears that he has: s: travel -ion -4u' sidewalks; birds are sing. good many men in his employ; so that the ing fearlessly ie the trees thee shade rePrietor has very little work to de, and the •lonely and '.deflieed boulevardthe or the last month or two Tolmie, while in his shop, remained seated on the line which divides, Canada from the United States. When coming into Canada to take his meals' he ' is erecorMa ' by armed men, while • Other faithful watchers keep a sharp loOleent for any One who might approach the house. •The entry of the stem is from American territoryebet constable Champagne on Saturday man- aged to get in by the beck way, and seeing. Toimie seated on a 'bomb, an inch. or two over the Canadian line .was about to ad- vance to exeente the warrent in the officer!s possession, when One of Six, armed men present on the other side Of the frontier jumped • lip and .cried out, "11 You arrest him I Willishoot 1" 'It Was time made: evi- dent that Tolmie's arrest- is impossible under present oircumitances, and the two Canadians returned to Montreal. They., Dtuteithetfonekeiranarstragr he-.wasanAmericandonutvi shairiffrandaas4deterianeld thirtheliberlf of, an , American, citizen Should not be DROWNED OCT OF WATICIt..- :I • _ • Singular Cause or Death, the, Only Otie of .• its Hind ou Record. " ' A Cincinnati despatch says: One of the strangest eines of accidental death ever known, and said to be the only one of its kind on record,' occurred' here on Tuesday. The victim was Willie Reehrwein, aged 2/ year's. The little tocialer went to ahydrant .firt the yard, and, standing even his toes, managed to.olose hillips over the end-ief the nezeleathehydMnt. Then he tinned' On the water to its fullest force. The child's seemed glued to the 'countless shope and warehouses are all elosed; barred end padlocked ; the belle are, silent in the gildedhelfriee of the churches, and the astonished stranger may perhaps wander for a mile between solid bloelis Of buildings Without seeing an open door, a vehicle or a Single human being. .The city seethe to have been strieken by a pestilence and deberted. If the nee/coiner remembers for what Nizhni Novgorod is celebrated', he is net long, of course, in aiming to the cote. elusion that he is on the site of the famous fair; but the first realization of thefeotthat the fair is in itself a separate and indepen- dent city, and city • which . during nine months of every year stands empty and deserted', amok to him witlfthe shook of a great surprise. The fair city of Nizhni Novgorod is situated on a few penitents be. tween the Rivers Oka and Volga, just above their junction, very much as New York ,ekreivrettedgettortkilisetatetteezie—kcael, •e•4e'.4• .osn',Diat.-11,iver---,:aaldrthem Fizzas .1.1mgezetc&,-E=tfirsi7 thve-wsze'-`7.A geographiedvoretionedebearathe . . llama re, Stirre and loose,. and slim 'keep a careful latioh to the old town of- '•Nizlirei Novgeroa wateh for the rose beige. that New York' .would-. 7 bear,- tn, - 1 - ear y enong. o plant Jersey City, if the, latter : were Juno will landed bans. Nothing will bogainedby•; elevated • .on a steep terraced bluff getting the seed in before the weather shall '400'feet above the level of the Hudson , e mine warm. • Where the tops of YOung 'Lima haVe been , DRIVEN' To *SE GRANzi • How a Penurious Employer Drove a Sweet Scotch Girl, to the Grave. The Pilgrim's Progress" reporter of the Telegram heard a pathetic story last evening.. It's true every word of it, and latisrtoti.d by the Paster Of Fifth avenue He said 1, conducted the funeral of a young girl who died of conefimption the other clay. It was one of the saddest funerals I ever held. • ' tie was a working girl, a member of my arch, industrious and good. She and two Other young &hated a room 011%1E01. ington square, and went out regularly every morning to work. .. "The bride for whom Katie worked refused to haat his building last December. "Katie caught a terrible cold, Which de- veloped into consumption. Stee.wasforced to go to a, hospital and FAB attervFaatalteu to her aunt's, where she died after weeke of great suffering. The parente aro new Aeta aea, the re- • rILANGIOXNQ IN JAPAN:' , Odd Experiences of a European Visitor - Tickets Three Feet, Long -Plays that Last for WeekS-NO 4dinhisiou Till.You Tachheceh0e4frATwoanyr. Boot and Have. iliPm "The theatres and the dramatiu litera. tura of Japan are far iii advance of tboSe. of Chins,' said Joseph Arthur, maeageeof pinhet.teheatillotnlaateleeni" empire, elpoenat ,olivftrviie x.yotliak.. arwriabirs et/4r eerfrotrelign::vTishite011r. re:04,4er. 1)4eJapanesethat theatre hi the ticket` he receives in exchange for the money he halide in at the, box office, ' This is a stick of wood about' three . feet long, and incised with some native 'characters. The man who receives this adds it •to a pile in the corner of • the auditorium, and the audience, if they wanted to, could "coed \the hewn' almost as readily we the manager does.' Another surprise is, the demand for the. visitor' shoes. No one is elbowed in the theatre • with Ws shoes on, .but. all Maining children ire wildly scattered, Borne !noire about, in ; their' Stocking feet. M the west. :The only on re at the funeral The . floor is of belantifully, peliehed .was a younger sister: She was iecoesol- wood, or covered with'a fine grass.matting, able for the loss of her little mother,. and / mud say theleaving of the floes is "Tho presence4.t the- feeeree: .0e -tyre a plarethet7works--welli though 17 -don't imp- Cloinamen touched me very deeply,” the pose it would be easy to get our people to clergymen continued. "They were Katie'e adopt it. Those Who ere already 14 'their echolars at the Spring Street . Sabbath seats are not disturbed by the footstep of School. As the Chinamen passed by, the late comers, and there is .no rustling of pro - coffin and looked at her for the last time grammes, as "they are .printed soft ride ' their eyes filled With tears. ' , . paper .• A check is given.. for . your shoes, "Now, I had not thought of that girl as and you can nese that as a Oho* to pine in dointanything special for the faster, and or otit, but if you Once regale your foot - 1 felt rebuked. Doubtless she felt too much. wear, there is no 're -admission Without exhausted with the week's work to attend 'repayment. However, as the streets of the our own Sabbath School in the ' morning, principal cities aro marvellously clean, the but she had faithfully given her Stinday nativee often .go into the streets in. !march , afternoon to teachingin theChinese school. of refreshment, and I and friends With me "It's not easy work teaohingthe Chinese, have followed their example., Prices of„ f 'although they are intensely grateful; and admission range from 1 to 60 conte. The • will do anything for a teacher who gales theatre is: generall3r . provided with-, one , their confidence. One iii a class is the balcony. In the • older' houses access' to tested number, and a teacher who can in. this was gained ' by ' means ' Of a ' terest two is doing remarkably well. ' , , ladder,. but An : the • • more Modern " It impressed 10213 . an ft forcible seggete structuree • 'there are • staircases:: The tion id the promised Christian unity teeing balcony is the 'swell' part, and here one • all natio:nib and peopleethepresenee-of those is T allowed to smoke, •A very singular - • two Orientals an mourners at the -fettered °Adorn prevails. of .allowing 'a visitor who ' of thet poor . Scotch' .girl, —N. i''. Eremite pays a !mall extra fee to stand..up;ane the, . Telegram. - ". ' ' unfortunate individual behind him has no : right to remonstrate or to rite and trY tete .e:•-:...' o•r getsn\Tolparititheratwt,4../NkmeTAie0,,drit ..,..,;-4,-- 44.,. .,.., cltimet ,.,e4l744,'Thisaslair---z•woreefonset-4- ...t. . ceive, than the laden' high hat nuisance which 'is so vigorously protested against ' here: . Aeother-peoulieritYtsthat-the-ex,,-,7---r •--- tratia.genttyciispoded :visitor may purchase the right to sit epee the -stage whenever he likes, and the ' otora go on with their Parte a\ekb in apparent un ode:loneness of his pre- sence:: I have se�n a, brimdsword combat • fotie,ht all around levisitbe, and he never , showed any disposition to budge. ,,It. is singular how this privile e of sitting, upon \ the stage had Marked the arly • history of . theatres in nearly every con try,. : . "The stage is not as much raised above thelloor-of the euditorinra as isn,sual with ' tee the elevation being probably two led: 7 .. \I Their staged are often 70 ' or 80 fee 'wide, but not tesually.of any great -depth, a act . due to the same lack of sense of persPeo 'pe ID their stage Settings as is conspicuous -, - ' their paintings: , All changes of scene are • recede in full -view of the audience, no cur- tain being used, and the work :of the • cerperiter and property -man • being con- ' sidered as much a part of the entertainment as the efforts of actors. I have seen .a couple of leveed come wit' of a house and take their seats upon e the stage, and re- main; them while the carpenters pulled down the house and built a garden sem* around When it -is desired to convey the idea that the moon is rising, 'the Pro- perty Man carries a lighted moon across the stage, and, On, reaching the further side,' Stops and. blows out the light. All thein . things seem very absurd, to .the foreign' : visitor, - but, doubtless, we have eareen- tiOnaltties and itraditione in our theatres that would, be almost as surprising to the , Ainnese, Stile they are not above taking - valuable' hints, and in some of the theatres. , of Yokohama many of. our modern deg° : effects are being introduced. Muth of their scenery is very beautiful. It . is generally . painted on rice paper,- but they use curtains and hangings a great deal more than we do. • The Japanese plays are almost as. longas the Chinese and some take weeks. in per- formance. 'This is due, however, more to the intersperried entertainments than to , the story of the play: • In Many , eased the plot of a ' piece will, be entirely sue, pendea during a week's performance, while some grand fete, in which singing, dancing, music, aoeobatism and jugglery ' are •e principal feature% , will hold the as a ferule performances begin in the. AN ErnEBEERAL larE• . The Russian fair city; however, Mere destroyed cut off thewhole of the tops, 11 from New York city in that it is a mere dead, and allow.eprouts to grow out again temporary market --0 a huge. commercial.from.the main stem. • caravansary where 500,000 traders assemble • Salt should be placed where all. kinds of every, year to buy and sell e.ommodities:. le September it has frequently e population food can get it.. At this season when green is becoming plentiful, salt will be of more than 100,000 souls and contains 000-vveile i -n- -Thend-excellent,--,as-itr-will-often-prevent merchandize valuediii-e75400- of ite bowel 'diseases and. stave off injury.from January, February or liareh' all' nozzle with lips inhabitants might be fed and. sheltered in she .Y°11ng gres6" • . _. -ffr..Dimhoff states that in new comb the ...stich-cohestvenetilithat-heelittle-body-hung the smallest. of ne hotels, and all of its goods might rut,intu_a_...eingie,one.et_its_ thielmese_of-thelicime.PLthexellsialtit_the. eitsPended kern. it. ,Melinvibile the stream innuinerable shops. Its life, therefore; is a 180th of aninch. Such delicate work ie ot water forced itself into hitesteiniach and hardly coneeiVeible, and yet bees often make • knigie Coining euffocation. His dreietful it m the dark on cool, blond5i dretee or in , predicament was witnessed „byshis Mother, the night' appearing never'to reet4t • • • . who, when she attempted tali& him, found, The gooseberry is often sent to market to her horror that' she 'Could not. Horror green, and Many cases Of sickness occur stricken, she fairly wrenchedher babe from . from its use. It bl Bniti when ripe, and . the the spout., the vMlent separation , tearing color is a brownish,. or purge red. Cook. the skin inside the month. ,A• stream of ing the green berries impeoves their quality, blood and water flowed from. between his but if, eincooked they should never be used lips is she :lifted him in 'her' arms. A unless ripe. . • . - . , physiioian Was summoned and found the . Plum trees will thrive Well in a poultry. ehila beyond aid. : The little fellow ,died yard and be testi subject to the attacke of within five :minutes having ' literally the curctdio. ' The. trees Will require. :the drowned out of water. 'The theory. advanced usual jarring, however, but the Maeda will that obtains the most credence ,is that the be destroyed by the poultry, thereby lessen - ' sudden rush of Witter paralyzed the muscles Mg the liability of damage the succeeding of the throat to that., the child coidd not year. . All:pion% trent should in poultry - open itemouth. ' . . The lettere Pig Must Tate more flesh and . • Chicken, Hatched in a Tree -Top. ' . less fat. It must net be a mere .lard keg., . sort of 'intermittent commercial fever, in which an anneal paroxysm of intense and it,unatinal activity is followed by a long 'interval of torpor and stagnation. : It seems tamest incredible at first that a eitty of each niagnitede-eie city which contains churches, mosques; theatreei Markets; banks, hotels, a merchants' exchange 'and. nearly 7,000 shops and habitable buildings, should. have so ephemeral a. life, and should be so completely abandoned every year after . it has served the purpose for which it was cireated. When I saw this unique city for the fleet • time; on a clear frosty night in 4lizmary, 1868, it predented an extraordinary 'picture �f 'loneliness.end desolation. The moonlight streamed down into its hong empty streets where' the tuibrokeri snow lay twei feet deep upon -the sidewalks 1, it-tone:he'd with sitver'ihe white walls end. sweating domes of, the old .fair cathedral, frem ;whose towers there came no,ialiingor of belle ;, it . sparkled On great seowdrifts heaped up against the doors of the eiiipty houses, and peered flood of Pale light oyer thousands of: enovecovered rods ; but it did not ideal anywhere a A Cadiz IQ.). despateh daYs: .Mrs. It must be fed ',upon flesh forming . foods Samuel Jones, of this country, discovered until grown and then fattened. It means 0 hen a week or two ago sitting on top of tharmore clever, peas, oats, milk and such an old snag in her door -yard. She sup- articles of diet be used.and leas Corn. posed a the time that the hen was sunning We will then have healthier., and more hersele'and dismissed the subject from her palatable pork, and hog cholera. will be mind. Yesterday she heard a cackling in come a thing of the pad. her yard, and, on johig to • the door, saw• ' • Warned of His Death in a Dream. . . • . , A. F. McNeal, a • Well-known citizen of Rawson, died yesterday after a 'short *- nese, and WV/ Gonne a Weird story, con- nected with this fact, Which is as fully authenticated as his death. On the night of the 281h of January of this year he; like Joseph, "dreamed a dream" thet.he died and went ' to heaven., In his •dream the date of his death, ,April 26th, was firmly fned upon his min : In "the beautiful alga of a hunian being. The- city seemed the hen on the ground • with two young to -he not only uninhabited, but wholly chicks. "chip, chirp," from the tree indicated there were more to follow. Toting • chick peeped over the edge of the nest, and, after gem!' time spent pro- speettng and Conjecturing on the conse- quences of a fall, trembled's:id and down to the ground. Much to the consternation of Hrs. &Mee, the little leaper rolled over once Or twice; sive° to its feetand ran un- hurt to its Mother. This: performance rad repeeted from the nest in the tree 'until it dozen „,youret -ehitheine-were."enceesafully landed on the ground. The topef the snag is twenty feet from the ground, and • free from !wetland. When, the old hen hid wanted her breed, and found all present, she clucked a satisfied Cluck, and strutted around in a way that Wail proud, / . Beauties of Mormonism. A' Nebraska City despatch Bays: In 1859 John B. Craddock and • Miss Mary it, ;Wilkes were married in Brownell, Stafford.: shire, England, ' In 1864 they boom° con- verted to. the Mormon faith, name to America and made their Way to Salt Lake City, the wife going ahead with a waggon tram of emigrant" women. When, Crad, • • Easily Incased. „ She (just threat -3h playing) -1-" I fear, Mr. ' Sitiggies, MY music is too poor to give yen t ' • empyrean , He (assuringlyte-," Oh, 'indeed ! I*" do enjoy. it. It does not take much to please • roe in the' line Of Music, you. kn Jnage. • Ella Wheeler Wilook writes 'et 'great aeiti • of her poetry, while sitting a reeking •Chair with a pea of paper ie her lap. Very • . often, too, her black cat .perches itself on . therbeek of 'the chair and, genes gravely • down at, ita miaress while her Fork is pro - *relit* • • abindoned to the arctic spirits of solitude and frost. • ' ' .A.BCST MULTITUD!. When I saw it next, it the height of the 'annual fair' in the autumn • of 1870; it was so changed as to ahneet unrecogniza- ble. It Was then summated by a great fend of iihiepirig ; • its, hot; ' dusty atmosphere thrilled' with the inces- eent whistling of steamers; merchandise 125,000,040 rubies lay on its shores or was packed'int,o its 7,000 shops; every. building within its limits wite crowded; 60000 people • Were crobsin every 'ditythe pontoon bridge Which do nected it with the Old town; inilita band was playing airs from. Off bac 's operas on the great boulev r • fro of the, governor's house, and through all the streets of the reanimated and reawakened pity poured a great 'tumultuous Seed of burette ,life. I did not see the fair city agtiin until June, 1885; when I found it almost as completely deserted is en the occasion of my :first visit, but, in other ways greatly changed and improved. Sub- stantial' brick' buildingshad taken the place of the ion rows " ef in 8; streets many parts of the city had ebeen 'neatly paved 4 the -number of stores and warehouses had latgely, increased, and the lower end of the peninsula had been improved axiddienified by the erection of the greet Ale:nutlet Nevski cathed.M1.--George Kerman in the trace of his wife, who, it seems, was kept ID captivity several monthsty a Mormon elder. She finally escaped, and failing to find her husband returned to England in 1866. Craddceck Meanwhile was informed that -his w'ffe was dead and he again mar- red, removing to this city. His. firat wife eutury. eight, months ago learned of la where, &bouts from letters written byOraddock to relatives England. , She came to the! city recently and after talking the -matter !over relinquished all claire to 'Creddoek and ieft yesterday for home. ..rits Best Fileod. "1 see," lemarked,the Duke' of Toronto, tookiiig over a New J Olney paper, " that OVerdraft, *lie banker, is dead. •He waa yOttetriertd, Mtn he not laci6a the Duke kindly, seeing the tars gather. tn the " 'Yes," Baia theedile, "*0 Was. 4,11 that 1 I have hi tine world / owe to that Man. I, was his cashier."•' 44 Let's go aria Baia breo4g the tong silentie.,-43reieklyre tn ineeeritte Posteeriement. ' Ittvas et beautiful moonlight night as they left the theatre, and he. had resolved , to pet the important question without further delay, when she said: 44 I think we had better take 6 "street eat, Mr. Simpson, rather than 'intik. We will get home so much quicker." Then theytook a street car, and he post- poned the important queotionl--Harpers Edtar. and last till midnight. There are ref •sh- meet 'Mande in the auditmium, but, as / • ity,whose maker and builder is God,i, ye -said before, you can go out on your feet and • reamed that he met ,Mr. Manion Povent mire, of Ada, an old acquaintance and friend, and asked him ' when he had died and left the earth.. ,Poverimire replied that he had died and ome te, the etefnal world a week before. There were other :striking circumstances in the dream equally as pass in on your,ehees.' The Japanese noters are ,extrernely clever, ne May be imagined when I tell you that nearly brae • , man in the company can play wonesee roles. There are no actresses. The power of the best eaters Over their audiences ie extraordinary. I have seen the whole •• strange, and the next motmng whed .,itudience weeping with the sorrows Of the . heroine or rising en masse forinathe Manuscript a few-deys extensive, asthey IniVe tragediete.coniddies ,' • to threaten the McNeal Awoke he reduced the detaile to writing. He was then in excellent health.. villain. • Their dramatic literattire is very histOcal plays and evew farces." • • after it was written, tied it worried the ; wife •a•good deal,bet slie said nothing to her husband concerning it. Yesterday, April 261h, 'McNeal died, while Povenniire joined the .silent majority one week age erda , ee te it cannot be lapelled down, for every word of it ,is true, and the substance of AloNeare dream ie in Manuscript, just as he wrote it three menthe ago."---Pitteburg Dispatch. , • • • Meditated gOAP8*. ; • According to Professor Shoemaker, sed‘ soaps ere' more irritating than potash. deeps. Soaps,that contain free alkali are in yotezig children, the rause of meet? skin eruptions. Alien soap 19 good for chafing. B0i0 glycerine soap is useful in acine: and rough skin. Chamomile Soap is Mildly stimulating, and the . beet soap for dandruff. Naphtlfal soap is the best.appli- caticie for parasites on any part of the bedy. Belie) lie acid soap is a tion.irri, ,taeing aotiseptio soap, ' and is. good for toilet pertieses, ' Corrosive sublimate Soep. 18 serviceable for teiMOVing teedklea; The eta Red Hord inn" at Sudbury, rough skin, for ehatigiiig, a muddy to a Heed,: • 'mid° famous by • Longfellow's sleet conipleilen„, end- :ni. all kinds of "Tales of a Wayside tie," was sold Itt , tern three 9Onieritaithe in the Kir, whiet section Tneaday afternoon, It dates heck agile :feet is rather hard to accomplish, to mid; was possession of the Howe Reiristateneral is 611 excellent eign ; it especially by dome of the corpulent negrdete fetidly for genadiod. • eekis•the peisage into the tinknown • world, of the present day'. ' ..Fregro guperstitions. • The Ann shining "'bright. On the wedding daY, iticiieates stems 'after lege ae , •4,„ Never, even in basting; pet ee titch of black thread in 'white garmeilepr that needle will` ere long be wanted in meking , • If a pereon'oarries ax, hoe or spade iiitoihe house on his shoulder, the house .• doomed thenceforth unless the culprit walks backward out of the house. ,• A,garnient ticeidentally put ,on with the , seams outside must 1:16 worn 96 tlll it is 120 longer fit to be worn, or flee ,presented,to a friend, provided always that the friend is ' not a relation. .4 . , There ilea beautiful belief %tient itmOng , , them. They believe" 'wen • our earthly course is almost spent, and the•death clews ' are gathering on brow stid lips, the de- parted soul can bear ‘a message to, friends, "e ' on the ether side. , If theyoung Moon is at first aeon through the branches of a • tree, the beholder is in clinger unlese he Or she will iinenediletel • t ' e