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Lucknow Sentinel, 1890-06-20, Page 3a 4- - Importnnt to 011ie. Two lovers went to the baseball pine One afternoon in May. .Tie was a crank ; she never had seen Professional players play. Pie faithfully tried to explain She tried to understand ; Britthe more he talked, the less she knew Wby he thought the game was grand. He cheered, be danced, he yelled " Bit hi I" '8he calmly looked about ; And if any one made a three -base kit bhe asked if the man was out. She tried her best to keep the score, But when the same was done awJ13aa given the man a run. it dampened his ardor to have her say t " Why, aeeept the umpire bat 2" And each question she asked diminished love, • Though he wouldn't have owned to that. Till at last she asked in her guileless way : Which nine is playing now ?" He broke the engagement theh and there, And how they don't even bow. hie Miss Beauty (most ooldly)-" Possibly, yet one can't judge from seeming. Many persons eeem very different -for a time - from what they really are." The Young Man--" Miss Beauty (severelt)-" Meaning no one in particular." The Young Man-" —1,,fr ITT71,77,"..,...T.,• c. Watillg LOVERS' QUARREL. 4•••• (Mrs. Packer, Crush's drawing -room. Although doing one's best to listen to the Hada Quintus Qtioaum'a eynopide last five-hour wadi, one cannot help hearing Mimi Bessie Beauty's olear soprano from the curtain niche near by.) • Min Beauty (ooldly)-" Ate good even- ing. Yee, if you chow, but I think I can- not stay here longer. However, there% room enough on this divan, I suppose." Some Young Man (in an indiatinguish. able murmur)-.' " ssast fp- ri oil' di !int. Why ehould I be offended ?" •The Young Man (same)-" — save the Teeth. An eminent Englieh dentist protests -4004433,04-*.60."- n-,,..6-,..-.-, =an teeth by eurgeone and inoompeten dentists, and deolaree that while there are maybe, sufficient reasons for extracting tooth, it is never neoetentry to do so morel to e ye pain. In at lead 90 -per cent. o the cm s ooming to an active dentiet, pain in the teeth are due to what may be oalle primary and secondary toothaohe. Primer toothache, the pain of whioh ie oftener fel in the nerve terminals in the face than i the tooth itself, is congestion of the toot pulp...and it may be relieved very easily b careful excavetion, saffioienta_to_ allow a aa..-.-- - -••-- - • ---' escape of bleed ' front . the titilP, Vihicili ma then be,devitalized by an arsenical arose big. To complete the operation, whioh ma he postponed for weeks without birth() inconvenience, the pulp must be removed -from the root canals and these filled to the time Secondary toothache, or alveolar a a, is caused by gangrene of the pulp and is regarded by most surgeons as so serionef as to call for the, removal of the tooth, ,_ which, in nine oases out of ten, mighti4, e retained and made ' useful and eomfo table. The course of treatment is an opening to the pulp to relieve the pain, followed by a series of antieceptio dressings in the roots to cleanse them from all puree - tent matter, and then, as in the other case, filling them to the apex. ---New York Com- mercial Advertiser. a f d y t n h y • r 4 ' A weuacade Beds It is well known that many persona, par- tionlarly children, are restless after retir- ing. In the morning sheets and bed quilts are askew and the bed in anything but a comfortable condition. And then perhaps the remark is heard, " Etow I wish the bed- clothes were buttoned, or nailed down, or fixed some way so that they would stay where they belong." But the bed if made properly will always etay right, says an exchange. Turn the lower sheet well under •st the head of the bed, Turn under a foot M least. It does not make any differenoe' whether the sheet is tnoked in at the bottom or not. The strain on it always comes from the head of the bed downward, Per contra the attain on clothes over a sleeper comes -from the opposite direction. Hence they need to be well tucked in at the bottom. Tuck in all clothes, both upper and under, along the side°. But the main point is that the udder clothes should be welt turned in at the top and the p_pps_r_onee_m_the_ bottom. al`hatilifieTielet of reeking them stay where they belong, no matter how restless -the oocupents • are. This is the theory and I have often proved it in ,practicer AL Maid On Marriage, Mise Francis E. Willard gives her views on marriage as follows " My theory of • marriage in its relation to society would give this postulate: Husband and wife are one, and that one is -husband and wife. I .believe they will never come to the heights of purity, of power and peace for which they were designed in Heaven until this better law prevails. One undivided .half of the world for wife and husband equally; co-eduestion to mate them on the plane ot mind; equal property rights, to e make her God'e own free woman, dot' coerced into marriage for the eake of sup - pori nor a bondadave after she ie married. . . woman left free to go her honored and self-respecting way as a maiden in parpetno rather than marry a . man whose deterioration through the alcohol and hiett• tine habits is a deadly menace to herself and the deticendants that finch a marriage hue invoked. These are the out -looks of a future the&ehell make the marriage eye- teraaneveittasiailureaftersitatedanne mono- gaznotte, and assured & permanent, a para- disaical success." . The Germans in Paris. .. Frenchmen are waking up to the fact that the German oolorftr in beloved Paris is rapidly increasing. There are nearly 36,000 of them -in other words twelve persons out of every thousand of the population are Germans. The total has doubled in die last ten or eleven yeara, and ia more than double that of the British, who are just under 15,0,00 strong. The English have „,- their own quartere, but the Germans dis- tribute themselves over every arroedisse- ment.-Paria Letter. \. i , Sparrows and Larks. As Mir, oar folk and macaroni restaurant diners. eat venom, in New York, so are larks eaten in London. In that city dead larks of the value of close upon $12,500 aro annually disposed of, and this, taking the all round wholesale price at fifty cents per dozen -which is,prebsbly below rather than above the mark -gives a grand total of no lees than 300,000 of these birds for London t alone.-Chaiter. . . • ..----.40..—..—. ^A bout This Time of Year. Begley -Go • heavens 1 Dolliver, how wretched you-leoe I Bean siok ? Dolliver-No been on my vacation. A Ratketing Moon. 'Mabel -How pale the m'oor, io ! , Jeeephue-Yee ; it has been Ott until quite late for several nights. _............... An Anetralian mneioiart has invented a trombone that is played. by [deans. It's "' God Save the Qneen " oan be heard a dietanoe of four miles. He had hard Inok with it, however, for the people of his own town drove him, out as a nuicancsa. Mr. Brown." The Young Man-„ — Mies Beauty (feyerishly)-" Yon nameis ' Mr. Brown' as well as 'Charles,' isn't it ? Well, I prefer the former." The Young Man--" — Miss Beauty_-' We were engaged." The Young ••-•-••-••• •/I Mist; Beauty (judicially)-" Became, sir, I feel that we are far from, being a con- genial- (with sudden energy) Because I -desire itaabecausa I want to -Wei -nee thaVe my wish -because- because- because -I hate yon, Charley Brown r' The Young Man-" — --" Mies Beauty (pessionetely)-" Yse, 1 will say that-it'e what I mean, and I loin say it -I hate yon, and always did —" The Young Man (interrupting)_s' Miele Beauty (much agitated)-" Yes, I always did -and I always 46 The Young Man (again interrupting) - Miss Beauty (same)," Yes, I always will, I say -always, always-unlees (voioe breake)-unless you behave very differently from what yon have to -night." The Young Man (speaks a long time). Mies Beauty (with great majesty)-" I have no doubt she is a very charming girl, knee you say so, although I must confess I've never beard her generally described as aelneshatareerrif-I-di ma e e mistake of letting another man have your number, yet to dance with her without first epeek- ing to me---" The Young Man- — -" Mita; Beaaty-" Oh, the fact that yon couldn't get near me has nothing whatever to do with it. Well, you might have been more to blame. Perhaps you couldn't help it.' And she's a very charming girl." The Young Man-" OU VO one nothing - Magi Beauty (loftily-" 0E, -yes, I'll excuse you. .You might have been more -a /nit no matter. And ehe'e extremely charm- ing! Well, let'a drop the whole subject and never mention it again." The Young Man-" Miss Beauty (stiffly)-" Why, I don't see what more I oan do than excuse you. Let tie talk about something elm Don't you think thio a pleasant ball ?" Miee Beauty (indifferently)-" Yee, I forgive you. Now, will you ,take me to nianirtitt'?" • The Young Ma-"--__ Mies Beauty (with a mixture of manners)-" I'M afraid we can never again be quite as we used, although I'll try my best. Noait isn't a trifle -it's a very serious thing, and I'm surprised at your calling it a trifle. I hope you will never more be guilty of such an act -Pm sure I do -and I don't believe I cad ever forget it. Yee, have forgiven you. Please don as take my hand. Yon are forgiven, Mr. Brown." • The Young Man. " Mies Beauty-" Yes, this • woman Alls forgiveness." The Young Man-" — ,Theond .11 is what a Mies Beauty-" Oh, if you don't so re- gard it I will take it back," The Young Man-" Miele Beauty (all ine)-" Very well. Here it is -your ring. Good -by." The Young Man-... Mise Beauty (without emotion)--" You say so, and you've often said it. Bat I prefer to see love manifested in something besides' empty words."' The Young Man (appeare to adopt some tieseerate resolution). Mise„ Beauty (in rapid gradation from repelling eoorn to its diametrical opposite) -" Mr. Brown! Will yon be kind enough to release me ? Your impertinence ie -oh, are you sure no one can see ne ? I'm just as miserable as -I oan be -yes, I do love you, Charley, and you know it -oh, I wish I didn't -and yet it's rather nice, too -it was all my fault, every Monet -what a •little wretoh am 1 -you ought to have some other -girl, like— ." The Young Man," Mien Beauty (in a voice much muuadta ars but joyous)-" Oh, you mustn't say '000 - found' anybody, particularly a woman, Charley, for, although I don't positively consider her charming, as yon think—." The Young Man-"--- •" Mies Beauty (ecstatically-" Why, why, why did you Say yon did, then ? That caused the whole trouble. Yes, I began it before, I know, but it was because I knew I was wrong about the dance and that you were going to blame me for it and I had to anticipate you -ha, ha, hal And though you afteraiiird did right and let me forgive you -ha, ha !-it didn't atone ter that charming I' " The Young Miss Beauty (in proud apology)-" You me you don't quite understand all about irk;even let; Mk; Chaffee 1"--.Pu7,. A St. Pani gembler'slife was saved from a fatal bullet by poker chips in his pookot. The incident points several morels, none of them, however, as moral as could be de. sired. We notice in a little tale at hand the etatement, " He kissed her nnder the tulips." Bad ehot. Right plumb on the t lip g t e e. OI Tialia.PERANCE. The Advice or several well Known Speakers on the eurneet, Last evening, notwithstanding the heat and aatateettent discomfort in $ crowded auditorium, a large audience assembled in Gore Street Church, the occasion being the delivering of addreases by seyeral well- known temperance orators. On the plat- form were Rev. John Kay, _Brantford, President of the conference; Rev. William Kettlewell, Oakville • Rev. D. W. Snider ev. 3. Pickering. The pletform soar pulpit were profusely decorated with flowers and plants. Rev. D. W. Snider was the drat speaker and gave a vivid disoriptien ot the evils of the liquor traffic° stating that it was the cause of more sorrow and greater woe than war or pestilence or famine. He thought the time had come when men had either steeled their heart(' against the sufferere from the drink traffia or else had grown indifferent from despair. He quoted insurance statistics in sup - •xi of the contention t twenty years than that of a moderate drinker. By the .same means he proved that total abstainers procured insurance ()beeper by this longevity. He also thought that the liquor traffic was not, comparatively epeaking, an employee of lobar. The anneal returns of a large brewing company in England showed a profit of £33,000 with an outlay of £16,000 for labor. A boot and shoe merchant of London had proved that in his business to produce the same profit it would re- quira the outlay of a3240. The !meeker thought prohibitionmeant a large increase in, the national wealth. He then went on to find the liquor traffic) guilty, of in- numerable orimee, such as theft, arson and murder. In urging upon those preeent the neceseity for total prohibition he stated that in this country annually 66,000,000 is lost to the people through the curse of intemperance. Dr. Lowry, of Brantford, then addressed the meeting at Some length, ,confining his remarks chiefly to the legisla- tive side of the question. He said "As far as the Scott Aot is concerned, it was discouraging the way they carried it, it was dispiritingthe way they enforced it and it was disgueting the way the people repealed it." (Laughter.) The speaker then oritioieed the various arguments of the Anti -Scott Aot party against the temper. anoe measure, and called on temperance-, of I I seste-son-earerseip'e anal hot for party. He said: "Governments will give us tone of • legislation and but ounces of enforoement. But we have had some good legislation'however. The Crooks Act is one of thefineet and best license laws in existence, and the amendments introduced at the last session have largely added to its effioienoy. Although the Ontario Govern. ment is one of the best Government the can has ever shone on, still there is room for improvement. I think the only solution of the great problem of intemperanoe is com- pensation to the liquor dealers. If we can- not fight them out, let us buy them out, like Great Britain did the slave -dealers." Rev. W. Kettlewell was then called on, and made a very eloquent appeal to the audience to stay home and not vote for either party to -day, as they were both sup- porters of the license system. He then gave a graphic portrayal of the various ills attendant on thp love of strong drink, and particular/ in referenconstaset. _ co -0. w • • a . TrELJAIGRA21110 SUMMARY. - itxtgo, the Sioilien merchant, reoently ceptured by nation brigand°, has been re. leased on payment of 650,000. The Royal Commisoion appointed to in- vestigate the Whelan-Peoend gonadal held its &et meeting in Montreal yesterday. Wm. Payne, G. T. R. fireman, aged. 22, was drowned at Port Stanley yesterday, close to the pier, by his host upsetting. The lake w ermante Franck Ruda and Switzer- land have signed a treaty for the suppres- sion of Anarchists. England is still un- willing to join. • The Newfoundlend delegates have form- ally presented a written etatement of their case to the Colonial Office at the suggestion of Lord Knutsford. , It hi said that Major Panitza's friends had formed a plot to capture Prince Ferdi- nand and hold him as., a hostage, but their scheme was fruetrated. ---Clonsistavealt " ' of the Sheriff of Cumberland County dropped dead in the Baptiet ChurchM .. Amherst, N. a, yesterdey. forenoon (adrift a a the reeding of the Scripture Ie8aQn. Cam* heart disease. 4•. It is ruroored in San Francisco that the •r Canadian Pacific Steamship Company in- tends resuming eteatner service between Vancouver and San Francine, the result of whioh, it is stated, will be a general slaughter of rates. VOTIEWter9tirt Erivere tU traanflarishilippe Fawcett, daughter of Crlty havel, '61:5mr' the late Prof. Fawoett, who is bracketed as the superior of the male senior wranlers on. the mathematical Wpm Frederick T. McLeod, an ex- miniate found guilty of living with a woman. ha. Chit:time when he had a legal wife in Movie &Oise_ wee aentermed to one year innate House of Correction the heaviest punish-. ment provided by the statute. A despatch from Victoria, B.C., says the seal pirates in Behring Sea are iegenionelv ss.s. or ere a ouise Michel be liberated from prison. Tho doctors declare that she is suffering from lunacy. Constans has given her the option of remaining in prison or going to an infirmary. ' President Carnot has granted a pardon to the Duke of Orleans, who was sent to prison in February last' for violating the deoree of exile issued against the members of his family. The Duke was conducted to the frontier during the night. A stranger entered the residence of Geo. Menzie, Sarnia township yesterday and stole $150. Hewitt- pursued to the woods by Menzie and some neighbors, but has not been captured. Menzie had received the money yesterday for cattle sold. • Meagre reports received from Bradshaw, a hamlet of tonr or five hundred inhabi- tants, about fifty miles west of Lincoln, Neb., state that the town was swept away last night by a oyalone. Six persons are reported killed and twenty-six or more injured.------------------------------ The inquest on the death of Adam John- ston and Ida Doherty, who were drowned in the Thames by being swept over the waterworks dam on Monday, May 26th, was held before Coroner Smith last night. A verdiot was brought in of accidental death by drowning. No blame was attached to anyone. Gracie Ridley, the 19 -year-old daughter asatapiettanesite_bngase. sansa • Ill., has been sleeping soundly for nearly two months. Her cheeks are rosy and her breathing regular, and her sleep is seem- ingly as normal as that of an infant. All attempts to arouse her are fruitless. She is fed regularly with liquids. An urgent Parnellite whip has been issued calling upon the Nationalist memr bers of the House of Commons to be in their seats to -day. It is reported that a motion will be made to adjourn 'the House in order to censure the • Government for proclaiming the recent meetings at Tip- perary ABerlin correspondent says the Gov- ment ittnot likely to accede to the petitions of the Chambers of Commerce aeking it to protest against the proposed changes in the United States tariff. Many manufacturers in Saxony have been notified by American houses that their orders will be enamelled unless the goods are delivered in America • The United States House of Represents yo--- tivee has adopted the enbetitute silver bill. Yeas '135, nays 119. An unknown negro outraged a white widow near Monte Vallo, Ala., on Sitar - day. The negro is now dead. Major Wituunann says the presence of armed cruisers on the African coed ie not sufficient to stop the slave trade. It has been deoided to increase the staff of the Ontario Lew School by the appoint- ment of two additional lecturers. General Viscount Wolseley has declined the chief command of the forces in India in succession to the Duke of Connaught. A number of Franciscan monks from France are expected to arrive next week in Montreal, where they will start a novi- tiate. Usefuleement. The following mixture has been used with the greatest possible success for the cementing of iron railing tops, iron gratinge to stoves, etc. • in fact, with 'mob effect as to raja the etc.; of a sledge hammer. The mixture is composed of equal parts of sulphur and white lead, with about one- sixth proportion of borax, the three being thoroughly incorporated together, so as to form one homogeneous mass. When the application is to be made of this composi. tion it is wet. with etrong sulphuric acid, and a thin layer of 12 18 placed between the two pieces of iron, them being at once pressed together. In five day e it will be perfectly dry, all traces of the cement hate ing vaniehed, and the work having every appearance of welding. -=Hall's Journal of Health. Under Allowance. " What take three glasses of beer every day? Why, I ohly allowed you one." " It's all right, doctor. • I consulted two physicians before I called you in, and each doctor allowed me on e Annie. " Her Daughter% Literature. Mre. Jayemith-What . are you reading Lou ? • 'Mies Jayemith-Pope's poems, ma. Mrs. Jayemith-Are they the poems of the present Pope ur the last ? The Ladder Would Be Expensive. " Let me see! Was it not Emerson wbo said Hitch your waggon to a star '?" " Yee ; I believe so," "What a beentifal thought 1" " Yee • and how much cheaper it would be than 'keeping a horse." 1 1 -Fly screens are selling. - The girl in white is about. -It is ice cream saloon etiquette to keep on the kid glovee. -It's fashionable to carry a raised par. asol on the shady side. -Tbe fork is more bon -ton than the knife to scoop up' pese with. - In the stammer the sales of shoes are doubled, as compared with the winter trade. A STEP TOO FAR. be could figure to a ftaction the exact testhetic action of each prismatic shading down to infinite detail. Her taste was undisputed and 'twas everywhere reputed that in color conibinationd she was never known to fail. She'dexpend upon a ribbon all flit, energy of Gibbon, and re him a sliniflo threading would transform the face of day. in the art of woman's dressing she was great be- yond expressing; but she bought hot hub a necktie- mid be fainted dead away, -Census Enumerator -Are there any mortgages o"n your property ? House- holder -No, but my younger daughter is soon to be married, and if she brings her husband home to live as the other four &In- dia, reckon I'll have to shove the old home up for its whole value. - Antonia Gerabossi, the Italian who was wanted for murder, was arrested yesterday afternoon in, a peanut stand on Rideau street, Ottawa. The boy. Neff, who wee burned at -the eleotion bonfire at Stratford, is dead, and at the instance of the Crown" Attorney an investigation will be made. The Tpronto striking builders' laborers eo and avi • tive eervice by having a steamer to receive their catch of skins, too swift to be over- taken by the American gunboats. . President Carnot has granted pardons to seventy-two workingmen sent to prison for offences in connection with the re- cent etrikee. He has refused pardons to twenty-four others, mostly foreigners, sentenced to imprisonment for similar offences. The gang working at the scene of the washout on the G. T. R. near HydesParke erecting trestlework underneath -the track - as a temporary scpport, completed the job Saturday evening. Communication was then opened and all trains are running as usual. The German official press has beisn re- quested to allude to Prince Biemseck only when neceseary, and to thentmeek of him with courtesy as a statesman who has rendered the greatest services to his country but who bee probably outlived hie ()amity to guide the affairs of thenation. There is considerable excitement hi . - North Dorchester owing tet a number of animals being bitten by, dogs supposed to. • be mad. Mr. Barnard has killed one cove that showed "symptome of hydrophobia. The Courioil hag issued orders to destroy all doge going at large without muzzles. Burglare blew open a safe in Brown's bank, Chatsworth, 111., Sunday morning. ug lire,,r,, seventeen Store buildings were burned. Fireman Prather was badly hart. The bank vaulte oontained $15,000. It has not yet been aeoertained whether this is missing. The total lose is 690,000. Samuel Smith, of Lewiston, and John L. Settles, of Muskegon. Mich., have made the announcement that they will swim a race through the whirlpool at the Falls on the , Fourth of July. The steamer " Maid of the Mist " will convey the contestants to the avhirlpool,the men will then don their life preservers and swim for the opposite shore, and the first one reaching it will win the stakes -$100, and the loser will get $50. Mr. Smith saye that this will be no "take,' -- Over 200 people lined Ontario and Mar. ket streets. Stratford Saturday, to see MT- • T. B. Mothersill, of the New York Life, wheel Mr. D. D. Hay, Deputy Registrae, two blocks in a wheelbarrow, in fulfilment of an election bet. The crowd chtered_end_ enoonnagest little man between the , handles, who puffed over the unwonted • exertion. The deputy registrar bobbed up and down till bis ssilk election hat came down over hie classic ears and almost ex- tinguished his victorious grin. . • The Admiralty Court yesterday awarded £7,500 to the British steamer Alderegate, and £600 to the American steamer Ohio, for the services they rendered to theInman line steamer City of Paris, in towing her to Queenstown after the breaking down of her machinery in mid -ocean Met March. Jus- tice Bntt, wbo heard the case, stated that if the weather had been bad after the send - dent occurred the City of Paris would have fottndered or drifted ashore. He praised the conduct of everybody on board the City of Paris. • . 'et 1 • Why Woman. is Man's Best Friend. • First and foremost, woman is man's best friend : Because ebe is his mother. Second, because she is his wife. • Because she is patient with him in ill- ness, endures hie fretfulness and" mothers') him. Because she will ti k e c to him through treport a always -believe -in "f I • have come to an agreement with the mas- him, ' she louse ter builders and will resume work to -day. Because without er he would be rude, rotegh and ungodly, Stonemasons are negotiating a settlement. BOOtttl80 she teaches him the value of In the matter of Edvserd Rumford, gentle words, of kindly thought and of Logan township on June 3rd, the coroner'e &canoed of murdering his workmate in Because she can with him endure pain ' . consideration. jury Saturday brought in a verdict of wil- • quietly and meet joy gladly. fulJniosueprahB. Became, on her breast, he can ehed tears . Hunting one of the moat prom- of repentance, and he is never reminded of dineernant itoeirtizoefnetr outstEfanantaWs tiloli`athme, erjx.tied' thjoaf Because when he is behaving like a fret. afterward. $21,000. He is 's lawyer of previous high ful boy -and we all do, you know, at times de taamyn drbsiy.n gi-with no reason in the world Air it, Susan Noy, Boston, aged 45, yeeter- Woman's soft word, touch or glance will mistake drank n glass ef lemonade make him salaamed of himself, as he ought in whioh she had put strychnine with the to be. . intention of giving it to her husband. She 13egwurEloewl la tzhyo ti; tt hheerre &nawsould i nbeee nnt 01. v good, fit in died in a few hours. would work done ; there would be no noble books Archbishop Fabre has issued a pastoral written ; there would be no beautiful pia - letter calling upon members of the Chards in the archdiocese of Montreal to discon- tures painted; there Would be no divine tinue attending places of amusement and Because she has !made for us e beautiful stream of melody. excursions on Sruiday. , world, in which we should be proud to live . The full court has rendered a verdict on and contented to die. the Best teat ease, sustaining the former • Because -and this le the best reason of position of the Chief Justice of Manitoba all -when the vzorld had reached an man. by whioh tax sales were upset because of viable etete of wickedness, the blessed talk the 10 per dent; interest charged. of bringing it a ,Saviour for All mankind Mrs. Rhoda Swayne, of owetonna, was given to a woman which was God's Minn., has jest died at the age of 101 years. way of setting His seal of'approval on her She was a cousin of General Robert E. who is Mother, wife, daughter and awe t Lee, etnd she remembered a visit of Gev. heart, and, therefore, mann] ' beet friend. e - „ The accomhetrtrrt - of the .Dnehozo Weehington to her father's house. Ladies' Home Journal. Sparta, sister of Emperor William. is ex- pected to take place next month. If obild is a son the King of Greece will ab- dicate id laVor of the Doke of Sparta. In Quebec city the other day a golden wedding wags celebrated, the ceremony being repeated with the same grooreemen and bridesmaid se on the first marriage ; and the same •Iteokman conveyed the party to the church. Irish seloon-keepers in • Chicago are refusing to bay boor from the breweries • controlled by the Engliah syndicate. i; • -1' The Qatien Dowager ofPortugal on ono occasion took home from Paris 1,000 pairs of shoes. Subsegitently she ordered no WS than 70 dresses from Worth, tote delivered ,) together, which on their way home were loot at nee. Her Majesty nate* co sent word to eupply-70-diaplieatetteridathesea ' ' ----MissaJane=Logant ,ita•ratide-elflifdy, sisfer Liebon safely. f •