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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-03-27, Page 6• 4.4 • _ tiGUN ' . CiKT STORM Railway Trains Snowed up and Pas- sengers Suffer Severely, 9e - W"'..va� Csa�SwnS „aAN�;, D LOSS OSS OF LtNI".*FB ?n;w....A eTgw"SEA. The Storm Paralyzing'. Train all Over the Until, A last (Tuesday) night's London gable says : The blizzard in the South of Eng- land oontinnee, though the weather in Lon- •. BNOWBOTIND T81JNe. d mill trate yens MOWS up near Doses land, in Devonshire, and eo reniiined for two days. When it became evident that there wing no means of moving the train to Doneland or returning the way it had some, the railroad porters and conductors, after a oonterenoe with the imprisoned pae- sengere, decided to. try to push on to Dons - land on foot in order to obtain supplies .of rovieione for the paeeengere and, if pos, con - '14 n- ' b or other o e sleighs e' sin them e ible to bring 8 tr United States may not ' assert an extraordinary juriediotion over the seal -fishery -by xeas=-0 .i.1a..-01of the breeding islands, the European 'Cabinets would probably and promptly signify their intention not to regard the arbitration as a settlement of enoh a quiestion, however it might unit. The practical consequence of Lord Balie- bnry's latest despatch appears to be tbatk'lr. Blaine will have to make a further retreat than he chested by hie note of lset Decent t British Minis ter if he wish e e t o toheB s em toto t the her enable them Governments o would ern n whish o dand the Go he 'THE BEHRING SEA SEALS. Favorable Turn in the Negotia- tions for a Settlement: ARBITRATION NOW PROBABLE. A Washington deepettoh eeye • The et have taken a mo tiatione ha in Sea ne o Bahr K Behring v roesfavorable e tarna are ! ver bltion b t r ea nes ..`bo ,�. :3' � L. �]e a '��`����31�'s��st�•`�'��e���Y�' �te���'euuiecroa:�s�x�w'iii'��itid'���i;'�a`�.�[��'''-i'bitv'�s#�rpji�us +.�z -��t,a�-nF��vkti�-i�a�,iyY�CZsYi='�tsitar railroad men etarted on their journey, and after terrible sufferings reached Doneland. But they were unable to return, and, in addition, eo terribly wee the storm raging, that they, were enable to perspade- others to form a rescuing party. During this time the half -frozen paeengere who included a number of ladies, nearly perished. They built fires in the oars and ,..I. Sussex are completely blocked, and the neighboring country is deep with snow. The hurricane which acoompanied the snowstorm piled 'snowdrifts on all sides, stopping all traffic on railway linea and country roade. Two trains full of pitmen - germ in the Midlands were snowed up last night and the paeeengere were hot reeoned until this morning. The rescued people suffered terribly from sold during the night, owing to the unheated condition of the oars. A train on the North Kent Railroad tonna for the oity was snowed up last night, and still re- mains in the rail ant where it was etopped•by a drift. A number of engines have been sent to the sone, but they have been arable to move the train. The Sheer- ness mail oar cannot be found. It hoe been` lost somewhere along the line of the rail- road between this oily and Sheerness. A leaching party sent out after the miming mail oar rearmed the clerk. He was found half frozen in a snowdrift. Two clergy- men were snowed rep in a carriage on the Favereville road last night, and were reeoned with difficulty atterr hewing suffered. severely. Reports from the Provinces -show that the blizzard. prevailed. from the Bt. George's Channel to the North Bea. -One-of-the effeoae-of-the storm -has -been -the - stoppage of the South Wales iron works. AU road traffic ie stopped,' and the trains ,there are delayed. In Somereetehire, Dor- eetehire, Hampshire and Gloucestershire there are snowdrifts everywhere many feet deep, rendering field work impossible. In these counties the mail eervioe has been cordpetelggtoppedeand_ahe rmers_snffer_ immense loss in °stile and sheep. Taken altogether the storm has been unequalled in severity for a deoade. A paseenger train whioh left Charing Orme station- at midnight for Folkestone was caught in a huge snowdrift outside of Folkestone. The passengers were not reeoned until 8 o'olook this morning, when many of them were seriously ill, owing. to the fast that they were in a half -frozen oondition. The passengers bad neither food norlight from ' the time they were imprisoned in the snow -bound care. On the London, Chatham & Dover Rail- road the trains were delayed for hours. Meidetone, Sherness and - Sittingbonrne have been out off from communication with the eurronndingoountry. The Thames is rising rapidly, and already deeply inun- dates the low lying districts. Work about the dooke has been partially -suspended, owing to the mase of snow. All the market wag - gone are snowed .up along the country roads, and vegetables, oto., are very scarce in' the City. ' In South Devonshire the snowstorm con- tinues. The railroads are blooked and the mail train from Southampton for London is snowed up somewhere. The towns in the Channel Islands have been °nt 'aff from communication with each other. At Lynd, in Bent, while the coastguard lifeboat was gging to the rescue of the Drew of anendangered vessel, the lifeboat capsized and several of its gallant occu- pants were drowned. ' Near Hastings five fishing smacks weye wrecked and three fishermen drowned. It was reported thatthe mail boat plying between Dover and Calais had foundered, but this report was incorrect, the mail boat having reached Calais in safety but in a terribly battered- condition, and atter hav- e ing been eighteen hours ,adrift in the Channel.. The passengers were half dead with `seseickneaa and fright.. This afternoon only meagre telegram° have been received froth various parte in England and Wales. The line, according to these deapatchea, are generally blocked. A despatch from Sh.eerneas aaye the passengers bound for London from the Continent here been for eed to stop at Sheerness, the treizr tieing unable to pro- ceed any farther on seareunt of the,enow. Traffic on the Greet Western Railway ie ooffipletely a1 -agreed;, and a number of trains are €1:011411i rip the the read. The sea wall anpperei g tea Great. Western Railroad lige, bet weer.. De wash and Exeter has been l ter.*: try the po-nnding of the heavy see. The ys,r;nt Sapphire, owned by Mr. Mao - Lan, of GIs.rgow,'has been driven aehore at . Harwich Mi. " acLarr was washed over- board and drowned. Information from Cardiff this afternoon is to the effect that the storm rages in the neighbnrbood with unabated fury. Much damage has been done. The Admiralty Pier at Dover has been so battered by the' waves that stones weighing ten tone have been displaced, and blocks of iron weighing two tons each have been carried away by theangry waters. A man wag found .frozen to death near Dorking today. All the'continental mail boats were sev- eral.honrs late. A Norwegian bark took fire in the Channel had night while trying to light signals of distress and was de- stroyed. A London sable says : One of the (Ani- mal incidents of the storm was the snowing rip near Exeter of ane of those old-faehiobed tour horse ooaohee which still do duty in many parts of England. The passengers were compelled to camp by the roadside near the onowbonnd 'coach. They built a large fire, improvised• a rude het made of branches torn from trees, and kept nptheir spirits as best they could. The alfnoet entire leek of food soon reduced them to A ' stake of oemi•etervation, whioh eii reduced their etrength that only a few of the ATOM -Lei. moil Bad doiit9 en ugh to keep - the tempted burning; end when reamed have at length reached a basis upon which to settle their difficulties, as ie evidenced by a communication from Lord Saliebury to Sir Julian Pannoefote, British Minieter here, whioh was laid before Secretary Blaine. In this communication Lord Salisbury aaye : It is now quite clear that advisers of the President do not claim Behring Sea as a mare clausum, and indeed is that be will oomplete the retrograde movement then begun, by availing himeelf of Lord Salisbury's admission that the United States now have ell the righte that Reeds had in Behring Sea, and Agreeing that an arbitration shall deoide what these rights were fat the time Russia poeeeesed them. ' _- - -: �-�+,w.-�a:- --• J "- ` Cly_— em-eft--�:a". .r- r�ast, _:®si-:a�rx®r/m. only means of heating English railroad expreeeed terme. Nor do they rely as a oars—and thus did their beet to keep justifioation for the seizure of British ships themselves warm, but with little success, in the open sea upon the contention that enoh was the Intense sold that prevailed. the interests of the seal fisheries give to the When, after 48 hours of this distressing United States Government any right for experience, the paseengers were regioned,the purpose, whish, according to inter - they were in a pitiable condition. So ter- national law, it would not otherwise pos. ribly did the ladies suffer that a number of sees, whatever importance they attach to them are now at Doneland confined to preservation of the, far seal epeoies, and their beds and ander constant medical they justly look on it as an object deeerv- treatment, while several of the male pas- ing the moot serious eolioitude. They do sengere suffered almost as mnoh from the mot conceive that it confers upon any marl - exposure and want of food whioh they time powers rights over the open ocean endured. Several trains were derailed by whioh that power could not assert on other Doming in collision with trees that had grounds. been hurled across the rails, but no loss of Lord Saliebury asserts that the treaty lite is reported from this cause. between Great Britain and Russia in 1825, CORNWALL ISOLATED. on whioh Mr. Blaine lays etreee, does not West Cornwall has `been in a state of contain a word to signify the acquiescence complete isolation eine Monday last. The of Great Britain in the claim put forward first communications with that dietriot by Ramie to control the waters of the sea were opened up to -day to the internee relief for 100 miles from her coast. Lord Belie - of many of those who were the heaviest bury says no objection will be offered by sufferers by the snow blockade. It' is not his Government to the first and eeoond an unusual 000nrrenoe to see snow drifts questions proposed for arbitration ,by Mr. 10 feet high. Blaine. They are : THE IMAM WRECKED. What exoldpive jurisdiction, in Behring Sea and what exclusive rights in the seal fisheries - The eteamehip - wtiioh was wreaked off therein did -Russia assert and exercise up to the Start Point Monday, last during a revere titatmees ? of the cession of Alaska to the United S gele-wav-the1Iyrama-ot-Liverpool:. -When--Beerfar'were usage oledmatieurisd1otionwrai- ths steamer struck upon the reef the orew the seal fieheriee recognized and conceded by took to the boats in an effort to reach the Great Britain ? shore, though the -heavy eea and the huge, Th third question is : breakers made such such an attempt, one Was the body of water now known as Behring of pure de19 eration. One of the boats Sea included in the phrase "Paoifia Ocean," ae p p , used in the treaty of 18.26 between Great Britain containing the steamer a ofiioerewee struck and Russia, and what rights, if any; in Behring by a heavy Flea and foundered, and all the Sea were given or conceded to Great Britain,by offioare-were-drowned.--The--eeoond-boat the eai4 treater ? containing the sailors and firemen, 'oap Lord Salisbury does "does not objeot to sized twioe and twine righted herself. referring the first part of the quessien to Eaoh time ohs went over a number of men arbitration, but will not admit the decision were dro Riled, while the otbere auooeeded of it can oonolude the larger question in- in righting the boat, whioh was almost volved. He excepts to the part concerning entirely filled with water, but kept afloat the rights in Behring Sea conceded by by reason of her water -tight compartments. treaty, and Bays Russia did not give any Eventually four Swedish ,seamen .reached rights to Great Britain in Behring Sea the shore, but„one of them died from ex- because they -were never here to give away. hanetion soon after being hauled out of He is Willing to accept the proposition the surf. The three survivors were terribly implied in the fourth question that Russia's battered by the surf, and were halt dead rights an to jurisdiction in Eehring Sea when they were palled out of the water. passed unimpeaohed to the United States. A COLLISION. As to the fifth question, Lord Saliebury The Western Railway,. is still .snow says the first dense, ” What are now the e rights of the United States as to the fur blocked. A snow plough, which was trying Beal fisheries in the waters of Behring Sea to clear the line at Jones, crashed into a outside of the ordinary territorial limits 2" train buried ander the snow, ' in j aring a would be very properly referred to an fireman and engine driver, and doing mush arbitrator, but the eubeequent clause whioh damage. assumes that such right could have grown In addition to the enormous losses out- out of the ownership o,tthe breedingislande fared by the farmers . in sheep and cattle, and the habits of the reale in resorting whioh have either been frozen to death in thereto involve an assumption as to the the fields or have been smothered beneath prescriptions of international law -to -whioh the 'monntainbus snowdrifts to be found on Her Majesty's Government are not prepared all sides, -large numbers, of horses have to accede. perished in a like manner. - The farmers Lord Salisbury concludes as follows and villagers, as a result of the storm of There is an omission 111 the questions the last few days,• are living on their re- whioh I have no dpubt the Government of serve stooks of bacon and ham. and are the President will be very glad to repair turning to their ben roosts and pig houses and that is the reference to the arbitration for a further supply of food. of the question what damages are due to MYBTERIOUt9LIt BILLED. the persona who heve.been' injured in oaee _ _ ,it shall be determined by hem that the A Kansas City Tragedy Which Puzzles the motion of the United States in,seizing Pence Authorities. British vessels hes been without warrant A Kansas City d�spatsays : Nicholas in international law. Subject to these Eaton �nwas City desp lyto shaty. and killed reservations, Her Majesty's Government will have great, eritiefeotion in joining with last night. Whether he committed suicide the. Government . oLthe United _ States in or was murdered is not known. • Late in seeking by merino of arbitration anad adjust. the afternoon Eaton drove to the farm of went of the international questions whioh Seth Ward to look at some stook. About have so long formed a matter of oontro- 7 30 o'clock his dead body was found .twd verey between the two -governments. squares from his reeidenoe, at she corner of Mr. Blaine, ,I am . credibly told, is Vine and Linwood avennee, on the oat- anything lint eetiefied with Lord Belie - skirts -of the -city-, -There-was-s-bullet-hole bnry'e response to hie arbitration p>•opoea in the right side of the head, and a revol in the Behring Sea matter. Mr. Blaine, it ver with two chambers empty was lying by will be remembered, more than onoe told his left side. About two feet to his right the British Minieter in enbetanoe was found bis hat with two bullet boles in lest year that this country • had it, one through the rim and one at the certain • rights in Behring See whioh back, corresponding to the wounds in the it would never share with another power, head. Mr. Eaton owned a ranohe in Texas and which President Harrison would never Mines, Joplin district, and considerable consent to refer to the judgment of any property in this city. Big wealth ire esti- arbitrator. All the same, he proposed to meted at $500,000. - His family relatione Sir . Julien -Pannoefote last December to were of the moat pleasant character and submit these exceptional claims to arbitre- hie bueinee was in the best condition. tion by proposing that the arbitrator His wife saes he never carried a revolver, should pass upon the question as to It is thought probable that he commit ted the rights of the United States as to the suicide. ,. fur 8831 fisheries in the waters of A Rich Gold Streak. . Behring See growing_ out of the ownership - A Victoria, B. C., deepatoh says : • Et' of the breeding islands end the habits of Bell, one of the owners of the Bonanza the settle in resorting thither. From the mine, Cayoosh Creek, Lillooet dietriot, etendpoint of his previous position Mr. arrived from Clinton Wednesday night, Blaine'soffer to eubmit this question to bringing news et a 'marvellously riph strike arbitration was a large conoeeezon to the in the Bonanza. He brought' with him interests of pedoe. But Lord Salisbury several pieces of ore, which were literally now delle -Mr. Blaine, through the British studded with gold. 'rhe eemples assayed Minister, that Her-Majeety a Government to -day showed results : No. 1,; solid vein, will not concent to arbitrate such a q'nea- 9 360 minces, equal to $193,471 per ton ; tion. ' He twits Mr. Blaine with eeeaming No. 2, broken ruck. and duet from drill that something is in the law of nations holes, X640 ounces, or $13,235 to the ton. whioh is not there. Namely, a continuing The fortunate owners have refused en offer pro pls by to and the mine for $30,000. a power to whose territorial dominions snob animals at times resort.erty in wild and common anima Orange Grand Officers, Diplomatic opinion here encasing Lord A Peterboro' deepatoh says The Grand Salisbury's refusal to arbitrate the above Lodge of Ontario East closed last evening.' stated queetion. Diploimate say that to The following officers were elected : James submit to arbitration i-nything already Clarke, of Ottawa, re. elected Grand clearly settled by interna;'onel, law would Master ; .1 H. Delemere,'Depnty Grand be to invite en erbitrator 'etween two dice Master ; T. A. Kidd, jun., Deputy Grand pntants, to alter the law of nations accord - Master ; Rev. A. Wilson, M. A , Grand tug to hie own view end judgment, a con - Chaplain ; A. J. Van lege, Grand Secre- tingency that would redline international tart' ; Robert Gordon, Grand Treasurer ; saw to chaos end whioh the nation's R. H. Ffolland, Grand Leotnrer ; W. li would never tolerate. Snrprisf is expressed (Craig, Grand Director of Ceremonies ; et some of the legations that Mr. Blaine Deputy Grand Chaplains, Rev, S, A. hue not sought a concerted declaration Dupree, Rev. L. H. Leitch, Rev. Rooney, from the powers se to the oirtamstanoee Rev. W. C. Mercer, Rev. John Hellowell. ander whioh any of them migg t exercise an exceptional end protective j -iediotion The Princess 'of Waleo writes on a paper over wildaani a e in thehpareeeei bttiioon of of tt; i36.ti i _. rr.r of l;r eeu, --and 'lettere, ,` •, v o . se :_me, came with her name iii neeiallfe- letter, Intereett�I err :ad ie d- bat t. rdLeSeli The Jury Attribute It to Accldent, bnt Make Some Recommendations. A Springhill, N. S., despatch says : The coroner's jury has returned the following verdict on the resent disaster : The jury do say upon their oath that the late John Connonton and others came to their death by an explosion whioh originated in No. 3 bord of No. 7 balance in the west Bide of the east elope, on the 21st Feb. 1891. They further believe said explosion was sauced by flame from a shot fired in Bald bord igniting coal duet and a certain portion of gee whioh might have been present at the time. They also believe that there was an unusual flame.from same shot, owing to a Blip: in the stone. They believe, the ex- plosion was accidental, that no blame at• taobed to the management. and that they' have taken every precaution for the eafety of their workmen. The jurors make , the following recommendations: (1) In future, where safety lamps are used and in very dusty planes, powder should not be allowed. (2). They recommend that in gaseous por- tions of the mine, before the men resume work after dinner, the plane should ' be ex- amined by competent bffioiale. (3) -They recommend that ' the Local Government pfoatite for-thetiee• ot'the-depntyinepeotor- of mines a l:Shal�.rbaohine for testing gas." The Springhill relief fund now amounts to $31,000. Halifax contributed $10,000. It ie estimated that $75,000 ie required to relieve the distress. A Bad case is that of a young Cape Bretoner, 'who started for Springhill to take home the body of his brother-and-became-irisane-from-grief-wh-ile- on hie gad mission. the entire party was badly frozen and in a and the three feathers and the royal tree state of exhaustion. on either,gilde. to bury and Mr. Blaine ehonld ever rt, ree to arbitrate the question whether; the QUEEN OF TISH L&UNDRESSES. 'rpm Procession of Parse}an Laundresses This. Year.. - . ........ - A Paris deepatoh says : The proceeei of the lannarseses in Paris, which is always one of the eights of the oily, was this year a most marked snooeee. In fast people say it bas not been equalled' in years. There ware hundreds of thoaeende of people .along the boulevards, all eager to sea the parade and a!1 testifying to its excellence as compared with the last onee. The heroine of the oceaeion, she who has ab�i"ii�t�-ii�'e"r�r�iti}-fi".�x rusei�m`�=�'�-.���� . ���.ti.�� �,.. the laundresses, is Mademoiselle Loniee Siaard, a beautiful brunette of twenty-eix mummers. She is a etatueegne creature of - a tall and commanding figure, whish, though powerfully built, is nevertheless exceedingly graceful. Her profile is olaseioal, out of a type whioh is common enough in the province of whish she is a native. She has a low forehead, THE ANNEHE .TANS ESTATE. A Will 0' the Wisp Which Flashes Periodi- cally and Lightens. Confiding People's Pockets, A Cincinnati Correspondent of the New York- Sun writes to that paper : " Please tell me something about the Anneke Jana estate. Clara M. T." The Sun replies as follows : There is no enoh . estate. That is, the heirs of Anneke Jens—and perhaps there ere seine of her heirs still alive—are not entitled to any interest in the property which once was hers, whioh the Trinity Chnroii oorporation•of this city has held for 185 years. For nearly eighty years suite used to be brought to try to " reodver " the property for " the heirs." But about twenty snob suite have been decided against the heirs ; the last of them were so decided more than forty, years ago, the courts hold- ing that Trinity Church lied held the property so long that it couldn't be taken from it. Various persons go about starting " Anneke Jane Aseooietiona,"• pod " the heirs " join and pay some m{y—they always pay money—and then the men who started the association disappears, and the money disappears with him, and " the heirs" wait until the next man comes along, and then they do the same thing over again." This will be interesting for the " heirs " in this city. BUTCHERED HIS MATE. ,Oruesome Confession of a Dying Swede in Tacoma. ardent eyes and an open-hearted smile. She wee not long in winning a popular place in the good emcee of 'the aeseenol d multitude. After her election ea queen held a reception et one of the pn ho laundries, where she received the dev ire of her faithful eubjeots for the nonce. Her hair was decorated with flowerer, end she wore a beautiful bouquet in her cot sage. The coach whioh is reserved for the triumphal procession of her soapsuds majesty is a brake, draped with crimson velvet, heavily fringed with gold. 11 ie decorated with real camellias and the seat behind the box is canopied with there flowers, whioh were so mush affected by the heroine of Dumas' celebrated novel, The coachman extraordinary to the queen drove four horses and took his seat eup ported on each gide by a negro deoked out in fentaetio clothing. CLAUDE'S LOVIB FOR CAKE. A Boy Shoots Himself When Chided His Mother. A Newtown deepatoh says : Claude 1 Spenser, a lad 15 years of age, lives at r' Fresh Pond with his stepfather, Le Grand Smith. He was inclined to be quarrel- some with -other children; and • especially -- with hie half-brother. Several times to. day the. .half brother oomplained to Mrs. Smith that Claude was annoying him, and finally the mother called the boy into the house,.. giving him a severe reprimand. She oon- olnded by threatening not to allow him to enjoy any of the cake she was at the -time-baking,--and---of----whioh-,-Clande wag by A Tricoma deepatoh Saye A. prominent- Tacoma rominentTacoma physiciaI1 has made a startling revelation, in whiohhe alleges that he was oalled two months ago to the deathbed of a poor man named Larry Pedersen. He GORED TO DEATH. •• t ld theh h wished h' d' known to be particularly fond. The boy remonstrated and became very angry,. finally leaving the house in a rage. Secur- ing a loaded gun he went to the farni-yard and proceeded deliberately to tie a string to one of his feet. The loose`eyid of the string he attached to the trigger of the gun., He planed the muzzle, of the weapon close under his shin and pulled the trigger with hie foot. The charge of shot [reseed through the boy's jaw, tearing away his tongue and had gone out through his left eye, leaving e wound as large as a silver dollar. He will die. WRINKLES AT 8300 APIECE.' Beautiful and Rich Mrs. Huntington Tells About a Big Bili. A New York deepatoh says : Mrs. Collie P, Huntington is not at all disturbed over the published story whioh told of a suit a massage. dootress has brought against her husband for $900 for reducing -hie wife's neck of surplus flesh• so that a dia- mond necklace would fit it, and for taking three wrinkle° out of her Lace at $300 per wrinkle. Mrs. Huntington is a beautiful women— not at all too stout—and one marvels that she ehonld have thought it neoeseary• to consult Mme. Rowland at all. "I found that I was becoming stout, and yon know what that means to a woman ; so I concluded to try massage," said lire. Huntington. ." I do not think I called sit her plane more than . twenty times, and she charged me $900. When she handed me my bill I did not even. look at it until I reached home. Then you can imagine my aetoniebment when I caw the amount. She evidently -thinks' that we are -able- to pair, and that she is at liberty to charge what- ever she pleases." o p ystolan, a win a ie ying onfession written, and it was to h 301• owing effeot : Pedereen worlllled in Armour's pork house in Chicago unti11887, then went to Sioux City to . Silverthorn's packing house, where he worked until the spring of 1889, when he killed a man named Larson Haretrum, who worked with him °leaning the floors in the killing:rooms. He stabbed him 'many times, and hie blood flowed down ,the gutter to the fertilizer, mixing with the blood of the ewine killed that day. He then ran the body among ten thousand caroe'eses killed that day. Next morning he took the body to the ohopping-blooke, ant it in pieces, covered it with salt, and ran it to the fertilizing rooms, among piles of pork left there for the month. He then burned the clothes in the furnace. Pedersen lived in Sioux City for two months atter the murder and then oame here. Down on Screeching Whistles. A White Plaine, N. J., despatch says-: An interesting suit for damages was tried before Judge Dykmen here yesterday. In July, 1888, Dr. James H. Albee, a promin- ent physician of Woonsocket, R. I., wee boarding at Chappegna. One day he went out riding aid stopped in front of the Har- lem Railroad depot, opposite the Chappa - qua shoe' factory. While he was there the factory whistle was blown. This whistle oan be heard seven miles. The 'loud noise of the whistle startled the doctor's horse and it ran away, throwing Dr. Albee between the wheels and breaking his leg. Dr. Albee ened the shoe company, of which Wm. H. Bishop is President. The jury rendered a verdict of $6 00(1 for the plain. tiff. This was the eocond time the case bad been tried. A fight is being waged in England over the use of the letter " n " in ,nab orde ae labor, honor, eta. Extreme' conservative° in orthography ere highly indignant that the government ehonld have permitted the elision of the letter from words in the now -An—Ex-/yeg-lalator—H-filled—by—� �uii—env. Another Man Injured. A Haverhill, Meas,, despatch says : Hon,. John E. Carr, of this plane, ex -member of the New Hampehir°Legislature, was killed. this morning by a mad bull. Mr. Carr went into the pasture where the bull was confined,: armed with a pitohfork. The animal rushed M him and tossed him in the air. Mr. Carr, although dazed, rose to his feet and plunged at the bull with the pitchfork, severely wounding the beast. This enraged • the animal, whioh again rnehed upon him. Mr. Carr drove the prongs of the fork into the -beast's shoulder, but being weak from many bruiees, it threw him to the ground. The bnll'rnshed upon him, gored him frightfully, and stamped upon hie senseless bodyuntil life wee eitinot. A neighbor, who ran to Mr. Ceres sseietence, wag tweed by the bull; but escaped through the gate. The bull was then killed, and the mangled body of Mr. Carr removed to his house. • Bloody Election Fight. A Yarmouth, N. S., deepatoh mere a bloody affray occurred at Eelbrook, in that• county, on election night between William. Porter, John White, Jahn B. White, Joseph Borgne, henry White and Sylvin-Mniese. The two latter were terribly beaten. Blood marks on the ice show that Melee) reached home, but Henry White leas not been heard of since, and it is believed he was murdered. Hundreds of men have einoe been engaged searching for his body without euooesee Porter and the two John Whites are ander arreat, _ 1-!rw dirt yen 'gr t 130 bald --too m nob brain fag?. Diggs---No--hair restorer. In a ref1entfve mood Joe Howard has been stumbling npon some trntho when be says :' Yonr wife{works quite as hard as you,; her holidaye are few ; the break° in the roetine of her labor ere very rare, and the Strain upon her mind and the tog upon - her heart are not lightened or loosened aft._ and:. 4requentr R p the-worid lino askitt the haleidiareapi " of affairs. Yon go- out, she site in ; you • a ad .she, ought to Rene the _great saving .ottitnof: space and money aobieved by leaving out naelesa,lettere.