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Lucknow Sentinel, 1893-08-11, Page 2'RASHED INTO " ICEBERG. TAYLOR'S TERRIBLE he Captain of ihe 'Cashmere Says it Stood, LSO raei Above Water.. • MING -ESCAPE OF Tug nAnQuS.. .IST, ye landsmen 'to this stirring story of the s.ea that Capt. Thompson, sof . the assiBritish_be.rqttedish- fi• - naere, 204 days.from, eel . AS "44P1eagua, Chili,. - to ---e,e- thie pert, told to his e i - wondering audience _ 1 ,, *st When the Ve8sel, ‘ reachecl-her dock in , ,. -1- Erie .Basin at 0 r. ----te-'-----„.'-:-.;;°? o'clook last night.. Capt. rLhompu .: .-FL";-. • - :'::. .-----'1?--: . Is a hale old Scotch - =044 011i 6 65 or 10 years, with -grizzled- 1Whii-le°:ral, eun-tanned features and. r011in. g !gait. ' - . - • --. Like his Protott pis of the storybooks; he . . !tell* se good -take ge here be goea 1, We set. sell on January 2nd .with a well eitrimined, earge,".•said. the Ceptain last night. "'The, Wind was -all right, _I iia& a geed ere* .m.nt-T everything went Well.'N.Se_rounded the !Cape on February 28th, and. ttre we Cam�'. on the., easterly side we ran into.. a thin inlet sind. _met with tte -Small icebekgs.i 4 - - - • • - didn't worry ninth - abOut. the' ice, beeanse -I lead•bien.,-eround the Hart ttwenty - • tiniest,' andlad.sieenfote of it. . , "I: decided to put ettet0 men onewetch and 1 rigged out *Thisd- Mate:1'614ft . with Sneysioerine-glasats when I pit.hini 62i the e lookout- on. the evenieg_ of March let.... We were &bent 'three- hundred Miles off the _Falkland Islands - at _their time. - "With the extra inaleoutond the. 'Watch. alert we crashed into a beek at itt- evok. that night.- . The Cashmere is an iron. ship of 1,200tens: .. The bowsprit lain two see- flons,-cont.tposed of bellow steel." twenty-four- inehesi in diameter at -the bass& the feewetdsection of the bowsprit: was just- -telescoped inteetbe Other part,' and then the whole thing Wea:-.j.abbed right into'thefere -wardSbnikhead and Olean, throtigh'2te the. hold. - Our deck . beanie. were - broken s and: the timberswere-ripped. up; , - The tete that was broken away by . the force of the' colli4en CaM.13 tumblingdewn, en the forward deck in misaiVe chunks- une Le til it was. plied- high- tibotre the: buivearkse and. the veesel looked Olt she Was turtle backs- The deo* steppe back a good • dea-i- i _toward thoistetn. • and immense pieces . of l• lee-. rolled Cloven *off -the heap andslid right 1, along' thaUeys. en -the port and sterboard -*sides untilethey struck :the stern rail and - careened over Into -the -water. • • _ . . "-The: sailor men whdwere asleep in th-e deck :house. grabbed -theii.ciethee and zea boots. and rushed. out. One of 'them, known. gaily as •Duteh- Albert was struck by, one of Horrible _ Scene at an Elect' ocution. TWICE PLACED IN THE DEA - In detailing tbe burgled attein trocute Writ. G. Taylor; theii - Solomon Johneon, an Auburn," N Vat& alts - Not since the-. el oflieniniler three ye/Ili-ago has tion of the' deaeh penelty caused *spread 'sensation ate the double el of- Wm. t(4.- Taylor its . the death --Auburnprisonyeiterday. Witent had been liberate4 after two hoti confinement, they began relathi -rOviiiig scenes they had Obiterved the entire city 'was. discussing -tla ;the State's etecationer. The, se first attempt to electrocute) the something iedescribable. The full Voltage was. se itolued into these, big hunks_ of -ice and hewers - Iittect on . top *-seenee-esey. nee passed no eniilssa,diletema. The labored bre strange seat With one hand holding his- sew- victim Conii•ntluls. and bis c- fell convulslvely ba0t4' and the other -easpirWhet ig his hair. - "The. wo Wind e-0111in atOund-- the berg'. wasethe stineition that forded ETH. urn t to , elec. rderer of Y., de. ctrocution ny exSeue doh wide: ctrocution harnbet of mitre sses si enforced - the .hitri and soon _failare Of neat the ictim *as oment the -his body the rigidity of the. mus Fes hemline so great that the front sum-. Iris' to the chair to which his legs were strap torn : from their faateninga uponthe floor with an -ominous •the powerful current still held t the chair, to which it was stripip ed were :and - fell atter. But e body and 4 In a firm embrace.- The epectators were vertr-much startled at this unlooked-for occurrence. Thevictim at motionless in th even twitChingettalid of foot, b • current - turned off the bed from- ite rigid posMODI and -the ant its frOnt lege:tipped forwar slipped percipttblyeand if the -bad notheicl.it Weiredd lave' pit -upon thelloori - . - . - . TREssrEetrATons. _snit There .Was & smothered "-Oh spectators, bat not .i manmote had SS itetirealiied that anyth Iarly had taken" pi tikenfor granted the -victim ha firsteconfact: BO in a mord Shudder paaled - over. the -li Froth and salive hid ape' Mouth of the-vitt:tiro, which _posed by the mnarrow leather strange -noi061- was then. beard, peated,- and was then- teeogn" for breath." HE STILL He's alive," Was- the aWfu oppressed every epeetater. T weeping -continued; but Snag; by-stenterods breathilig, and more nervous :spectators we would loon 'come to life. . ordered the eketrician to rents and the switch was again to Davis'. surprise ..no eurren . announced in ti.low toes that Or the dynamo had broken -do etrery tspectator. t It seeme, Taylor might revive at any hotly had aktureed a redllnu .the chetrovith the legs etre on the floor., :Mr: Devis. again, but- still , no responsie. .now-hreathing regulaity, bu and those who ;did nciteltee It seemed as *though the a had. gone to tellehe engineer • Of the dynamo would never r .Warden- Stout. paced th. nervous. go. myself . 'the Metter," said Davie; -an out to the' poweriheusei GASPING -TORBB TH. "tforniecla sort of eddy and drove' no against the reonstor a seeond time, butlhe impact en -was light and we suffered no iejury. - We sheered- off & bit with the rebound and I bad a chance to size nee -the -berg. 44 It waseasily three thnes higher that the truck of onr mainmast. - - That Would leaveit s.bout 800 feet above water. It lees rms-c-k- ifi. en-rosial--Crei: sfAirse-e'iett; Weviust tut right under that overhanging break of the birdlike hitt, and as -we passed tinder the keel grated on the projecting pe:rteStid- listed us to starboard. - , . As soonas vie -get cleee I had soundings • nide and the; pumps were -examined. • We made no- water, though some, .of our • plates were -strained. -Our collision bulkheads held mit in great Shape. _ •. - .Wifioniedered aiontul hi a region -of 'ice- bergs for- eight days. On March 9-th in the afternoon it Iegati, to rain. I-B&W:deliver- - since near, fo rain* in that sectienis usually followed by -a Southwest wind. -Sure enough; the wind eame up and we made Rio Janeiro ion 'May' 28%2' - The captain regrets the ofthe. fignre- bead of the Cashmere. . - --t`It was modelled after the ltfahare-fah of -annititio," he -" He dropped off the day after the ,collision, and the iron. on his, - feet dragged -him down feet fokentost." A TERRIBLE WEAPON.. A Wonderful_' French .Gun. That Rail& Deadly .Ilissile0h. ' • The Paris. Autorite on. Wednesday pub- lished •an . interview - with Ms Temp*: the invent* of neelinite, on the enbject of. the. new gun designed by biro.. g" It issaidthat With your weapon fortredisChargesaieuld be effee.ted :in Outer of an . hour, --sending 000 projectiles- a distance of one -league n, several direction', 'covering an area of • 000 -vinare niebres at each dischaegei • All --eppeere .fermidableiand.may.have.been- ewhat etaggerated,'" °heaved the inter- -leer; - Turplit snilleel and . eeplied, litee- pee -des. represent a miniThittni.- • I 8001A to-.be:able -in an instant whole plain covered -with seVeral. army eorps. A few volleya.wonldsuffiCe._ .The sesepparatus is- light. 'Ottly two-'hersei, 'are -eqerred to draw it and_lour -men to Work It. The projectiles- are =dinitnntiVe eh.elis. With this. the.strengeoteforti could be. swerit away . within &few houre:" gg Might' ask on 'esbat• principle, your invention la based? •said the interviewee: "For obvious reas.onei I cannot -just zeiw divulge - secret," Wrea- the reply,- 44 bat May say -shies tbat ib mita - lin a. new. electrieal . principle. - ..- It I15. the simplest _thing in - the WOKId, and eVerythie: will wonder whenit heconttes known. whY. it . was not discovered long since.' the. choir . WhO.:" had. -suffered by a_ taw& electreinution.. . The. doetorst• 401)16614es State that Taylor's muscular • development -wit4 ,iirer.v- Marked, -There was an absence of rigor:.! Mortis. Brain,:.: -heart,. hinge and kidneys,.. =filial: 7 Upon being ; belied- the queetion alirofithe . pliyidelans :agreed that TaYier was insensibleto pain after -the firat 'contacit . . - - , ; . ei sElootrichin DeiVifi was asked i ti zeitilain the failure of the dynamo. 1 . He replied that it Was :eimpli thebtirtihig.'ont Of the arma- ture,- iioniething that could not be foreseen and yet Was likely ..ise.happento any dynamo. He wanted- to say,: however, z that all Of:the State's dynamos- were crowded ' beyond. their capacity at electrOctitione. iTheyisvere sniallidynemosi not intended to _generate Mere thani1;000 volts ordinarily,. but .they were repeatediy runup- tomearlyiwice That -Voltage.- Before the - etecution that .moining. 1;80 volts Were: attained, and nearly.. that Millibar was registered iiviien-thechairbroke. • "Why did itinot kilt him Otiteights"• was the-,riext question. -. - ..t. _ • . . _ Mr Davis thought that the giving way of:the fOot rest _might have Impaired:the context. with theolectrode on:. the head and Tayler• could not have recettred the full -face - :of 'the current forimoie than an instant. In some easel two or three shrickS - are given. -before death 'enrolee , He considered It very Et* lortnnate that the dela emerged' from the difficulty ei. well a _they did. sWarden &Olt* econsiderably dieturbed. bytthe neithap. ' He tdid. not .. feel that he , was .blameworthy - -in ....the least ' for thiefeilnee of theeleetricai appliancee; for they . were . In „thee- exclusive ' charge Of -the- St ate".1 electrician, Who had: pronounced everything all -The -.chair- certainly looked roilaive enough- to .withstand - any. [Arlin., - The foot -piece Shotildi have been bolted:toidied of tscrewed. :.Fitibenii made no inipeeitdon on : it OW 'or:month agiii,but Taylor Was Much mere- mur scular He -would_ - - .- - . = s . . - have a new chair Of • his own . deaign- ready for -the nett electrocution, and*ould make certain -it would- not -cone. apart: "33itite" he conidnet help adding, "if. 4he.. current hid not.giVen out- the electrocution 'would bitOe been inceessful." . .... . .. -• .1TaYlor's tenni:tins were buried in the - pri- ten graveyerd- last evening, fir.stl reeeiving-a f oovering oqiiidirtime, as provided' by law. . . _ . . . .. -- - :chide, not when the sank li&fle heir with-. the body out -straps hed•• prone r from the . Nobody ng • pirtieu- e, as- it Wets _died atthe nt More a throng. red :at the as lett Or-. MatijK. It Wes re-. d a gasp -- -thought that e speamodie on succeeded sone of the e - afraid he The Warden the contact, ed, but much - came. - Be belt was off, ni Here was thing cf the est tom and to -be done itself home to• .thouoh onient.. The g position .in ched well out tied .his lever Taylor was stentorously, -ititittifru tend auto who of the failure turn. floor visibly nd see what's he hastened 1, C EP • Isissama., ith his uncle of Edinburgh , a par. LONDON GOSSIP a 0 thiaalriteswyfiddling. a point in which once again his �rman tastes are apparent. He is a t&li1nanlY fellow, who stands a good . clic feet in his stockings. • Be is not exactly handsome, but he is' essentially clever, and he is married.to the winsome Princess Irene ° ot Hesse. • * • Some kfterthought,s and linpublished Incidents of the RoyalWedding, QUEEN VICTORIA'S MARMAGE .120VERB. A KING EARNING HIS 'LIVING. AtFeweithe Itoyel Guests and all 'About Them—The Czar's -Son and _ His rew- Gerter—ileney- eir'srrusita sew -Feet in 'stockings—Queen victoria's mars rieges Proverb—The 'teat's Castle .in the Fatherland and theLegend in Oen. nection With it—Funny. In eidentofthe Wedding,. I Everybody -remained qui° , and the -pain - fill stillness was only broke of the -victim -while the • inouth had now saturated his chin:- Igr. Davis return formatioh that the az burned out. It oeuld be n dey. The ppectaters still .was to' be. done with the, victim. Finally the strap!) Cbt Wa8 *2 and he It end carried into the net • now groaning. aloud, and from Bidet) side. His e but . features were ne paini The -witnesses were leave. *Taylor's pulse- gre his 'breathing seemed is might recover.. He was e ing to -rise from his cote Nary for the'. keepers -to Pi - . legs. - Fruit la stone.- A collector of odds mad ends irt thbi ,city Sas a remarkable representatien efirnit in -stone: It is a _bunch. of. - grapes oarVed from imethyst'of eiob purple, with stem, lerivesi and -tendrils eunninglytwrought ftom mak- -elite, serpentine and Jade. _ A I basket is sitio heaped with applee. peaches, oranges, punts, aprioots and raspberries that prove , on inspeetten :to be .- made -.of malachite, ' ibodontteejesper and oddlroolored marbles. The Rnestants are clever- at kind of wort " they make bandiome tables of Malachite. —.Yew- York . Sun. - GAVE HIM MO -Dr: Conway gave.biin jecti-O.n of morphine to qu He was eekedif the petit) with.sufficient time, and. assuredly? . The three.. coincided in the cipinton- absolutely uneonicious fr tact, and they. did notith for a rooment. He *as Condition precisely as.a epoplety. . His coyest:4o There Was certainly nob In 15 -minutes snore a e form was adnistitre& one way to corky out la*i mitt; iniminan as eonseious form Must be -chair once irtore. s Line -work stringing wires fro light plant through the the death chamber, mak the switch -board for the Taylor's extinction! _ . KILLED RIM IN THE END. In one hour all was ready. _ The Hone) form of Taylor was ca tied to the, death - chair' by three' keeperee The . broken foot- rest, had been repaire • - He washeld in position_ by straps, an thee current Was ttirned.on. The body s iffened up, but. not with. half the force oft e first attempte and for half a 'minute 1,240 ltscoorsedthrough his system. : The mince t was then. turned off,- the stethaecope Plied, and he was o1fibia.14 pronounced d d. lbw Witnesees then 'signed the .death ertifir ate,' and were excuied from further st endsnces The Ant Ow. - : The first eleetrocaio took place at12.46 G d I dropped a and the oecond. at 14 - Mr. Suildimiy- oe — ten- lowed at 3. 30,, and w dollar bili -in the 'oantribution box in chttroh BrownetWright and -loot Sunda*. Hie friend CYnic--Did yon, - Weal emit imarked: an Indeed f. What was the matter_ with ib.? pavanes .:from any eft by the gasping fiaid from his he strap -abed's- With the in- ure thed been ed ne mere that wondered .what apidiy-revivhig ere removed, -a was lifted upon room. He was-, oving his _head es were..Oloted, :distorted. with striicted not to stronger,' and a labored.: -. Ile en new attempt - It Was neces... en his ants -and POISON IN In MILL naoitsaultable Poisoning of Many -People by 1c6 0.seens. T HAS --taken mere than - a week to re- move.' the -miles of Stands and hear4. hip erected along the route of the wedding procession whilst the gasmen have been -Keeping a -golden bar. veat taleng down. the illumineting pipes they were at -such- pains to erect, One by one the wedding guests have departed and of all the gorgeousness of the past the enlY foreign royalties now left are the King end. Queen orDenmerk, whO are ons. privates visit to their daughter -and son -In- law, the Pripet) and Princess of Wides.. The preience ofthe Xing and Qtteen in London -Considering their age has attracted no little _notice. 'There ie Certainly no European . ruler who ,enjoys so isingeler position' as • King Christian, for while personally, per- haps, the most -popular monarch now politically be is by fienteani a favorite with his Danish subjects. Butithen Paga Chris!' !Han- Wen& to the Old sichoel. He has little - • or no sympathy With the strongly developed emocratic. tendencies of the Danish nation. A KING:WHO EARNED HIS OWN LIVING. - The Demobratic Danes do not forget that Victoria, like her grandsonyitilliant, a certainly tbs. greatest matchmaker of the dey. The Empress Eugenie Used to say she Was " une graudematieuse," and the title was a just one. _Not long age the wished to make up a Marriage between a lady and gentleman of her court. The former did reit seem to see it, 'and proved rebel to the. royal advice, quoting St. Paul's Unions worde, 44 He wlio marries doeth well, but •he who-dees not Jittery deeth still better." My child," said the Q116013) "be content doing well ; , 'those who can do etter." DI'S AND OUTS OF ROYAL =NNE. • - PROBABLY • A PT0iilAINE.- New York despatch says: !Fate( eeple have been severely pOisoned :dice Sattirday. night by eating ides iereon, purchased at the eetehlisbment Nair .Brothers, No: 1,527 Broadway, Brooklyn. :Great,. excitement kelps in the seighborhood,•encleinany of tbe ,peopleire not yet out of A -angers. , The first family affected wase -that of Buliding Inepiector -Jamest Cettlfield, who -lives at Igoe 152 Winfield street. Dr. Frank E: Wilsons. d No. 1,242 BitshWicli- avenue, . • ., -hypodermic) in- eli his struggles. 12 would recover he . replied most hysicians present that Taylor was m the first cons nk he had -suffered ow in the same an stricken .with s. were the same, ruing ef the flesh: ay dose of chloro There was only he sentenced the t seemed, the tine _strapped into the en were already at the city's electric rated windows of g connection -with econd attempt at was called, and attended Mr. Caulfield, his wife and ehild and • mother-in-law. ey it ,eitis only by, in the world:how truly lov,ed are the King' Were all seriously ill, and 'Queen of Denmark that every year hard work that they. were brought around. aia. the! their sfettitnately7marriede children gather The 'family of Ftederick Hornbyt at corner of Bushysick avenue and Winfieldi lumina them at the old lime or their child r- ot. I Aocordinito tbe rules Of royal- iouette • r . s - it is .only the lady of the highest reek in the Aii Carriage -or in the company whet is pe itted. o reapendtO the -cheers and . selutati ne of bepeople, -80 Meiv of -Cambridge hied to ib like a dumniy tarpon the occasion in glue - pen. Thus, if. the I:Sieben of Edintatigh - happenit to be driving witb.-heretster-irelsere he PrInceSs. of Wales, the Dueliess, though the daeghter of. a Czar,: is preluded- from bowing midis cemeelied to is4ve that ditty .to the consort (4 tile heirdipperent in spite - ofthe foot that the Princes Alexendre, as the daughter -of a petty Danish Prince was net even entitled by birth- to. the tide of 64 Roy -4 Highteeee" andher prOntss Were so Straightened. in 'their means that the girls . were forced tee make their own frocks) send - - gowns and trine their own bass - . MORE. ROYAL HITS13ANDS WANTED. • As regards the succession the Crown 1of England it is now tied uPe th George and May, or Lcu!se and ;Mean , after the , Princesof Wako, and .ietiseig all Queen , Victoria's grardchticiren nebody, elie can wield.. much influence . In the Stete. The ten -royal bridermaids and an 'interesting • -variety of princelets have. yet to be dia. posed of in the . matrimonial market, but their weddings- wkll be of little moment . • . heir King was in his _early years called l'beyond the court circle, and may eis well . upon to earn his own livelihood. That Was came off at Balcaor&i or Osborne ah, in in the days when he had but Small chance London. . • of sucCeeding to the Opine of Denmark. • THE TECKS' HOME iN THE FATHICRLAND. Bui-Wben Ferdinand -VII. died 'without an heir, Christian; as tho_husband of his suc- Duroo* g the -flood ofeiefotmaetion as to the doinge of the Teck family,1 - nothing hats -cesson's sister; was selected as Be Suitable been said: respecting the pfctureseue Ger- ler for the Mt* Daniel kingdom.- What man cast* from which the new Duchess of 'cared, he that he. Wall 'Chaffed 58 ' itthe Pro- York's aneentors take th.eir name, The tecol King." He has reigned now for thirty Bohlen hie ruin and.has been uninhabited • year's over -a nation which has probably -only for soree thiee huraired years and more regtainiadlaithful in- its allegiance to the 'excetit by ghoits. . I : 'monarchical priecipie out Of reSpect for the It wits in a revelt tif the peasentrie early :present soccupen.13 of ,the dirone, and his in the sititeeilth centuty, that tbe greater eicarcely-less beloved consort Queen Louise- ' • • ' number of the nobles' ce sties throughout - 1 THE MOTHEK•IN•LAW OF EUROPE. • Swabia were Lacked and destroyed, and the As, for the Queen . item whom . the ancient home Of the Tek faintly share- d the . °. Princess of Waks has inherited thitt unfor- fate ot its fellows. The °Bette for many Aurae' deafness:frOre whieh she is so acute generations had been In the -posiesaion -of ; a sufferer, her actitity of Mind ama hit.erest the Tecke, the issue of a youtigcr branch .of ID everythirg ' artistic and literaey have the house, a &tsetse -en, which Bali rults long endeared . her to all brought in contact ever the Duchy if Baden. Since the death with her. -- It is, perhaps, the best evidence of the last Male heir direct cf the family the - title has • been held in - abeyanie by the reigning house of - Wurterehurgeby which, hovvever, it wee revived ein tasvoe of the children ef the marriage of Duke ,Aftettender _ . of Win temburg with -the Ccuntess Claudine erra.Rhedeee se • - . es* - - - . LEGEND OF IIIIE CAStLE. . hosicitti And this year the family gren sseleaur ecehrousayt together, wit tresn asee _ reigning mem:Arch in posse to thr) remarkable family of a Qtteen who -has not inapproi priately talon nicknamed la belle mere de it Europe: • -stratur44). magiu4t ' -teateriBgriu flfe doatoes. statement, -he had over fifteen oases Of this, kind.: . • t'Dr: Samuel -.Eden of .1-Buittwiak •avenue .end Schoeffer Street, Eden, over tiventy- cases,' &Mont -them -being the fievilies, of Mr. len, 400 Chaunbey street, and ,Mr.:-Emale.Y.s 43 Eidert Streets. - . . `Dr, George Buitner of 1,210 Bushwicki . . . venue, - attended- a number of perms whose names he retusiid to give, .who claimed to have been poisoned by eating ice creaml purchased at -Naber Bros.' place, The Nabers, while -admitting that .theyi bad similar trouble three weeks age are-at4 ,a loss to:account for it, as they use only the purest ingredients. Samples of the ice cream have been submitted tele chemist. for • - amity ses. SISSECT... - - " • • gew te is Made From.a. Plant That Grows in .Dabuatiao : - dOMIN.G RULERS 'AS WEDDING Ou.gsTs. Three of the Wedding - guests wereeyourig men whom a etroke.Of Fate. might seddenly I call to positions of -supreme -authority Prince Heery.of Prussia, in the event ot -.the present German Emperor's death heti:pre - the.Crown.Prince conies of age, would be Begent of putted% while the Regency of the Empire would most prebahly devolve on one of Garman kings. Prince Albert Of _Belgium may be expected to !succeed his uncle, -King-Leopold that monarch dieet as the Count Flanderie . Albert's father and the King's brother' is, steno deef and little. inclined:for -cares of State. - many ybars the heittehite. of the Belgian Crown has carried i: strong element of ili- luck-with it: The King has seen two his Teek. Coquetry apparently was. not tin - hare die, one after the Other—the Duke I known tit the Middle Age si and so anomie - Brabant and _Prince Baldwin—and hei has fully did thin artless toaided encourage each only thiS one nephew' left to represent his. , united brothers declared thet thecontestfor of her suitors that finally the once closely Prince Albert Islip the -more valueble on that account AS for the Csarowiizs his .the for one eould alone be bled by tiring. :very title indicates. the important position. A fearful combat_ €11211 between the' ID store for him, should ehe Survive his • jealous brothers, 'ail three o' -whom fell -father. 7 Mortally wounded.- The local legend runs . that in expiation of their firetrioidal crime - ONE G-ARTERED KNIGHT TOO the three- brothers - are condenined to fight The bestowalofthe ,Garter on the Czaro- over again each night in their ruined home et Wits by. Queen Victoria raises the number of Wielandstein till the Creek �f deem, anti the nthineeks, noigf htws hoofmthaftojratrneeonus_ were ir eltiiectforty- superstitious ptaeentry of the 16Cality will - • -assert that onpaesing the ePot late, at night -.foreign setrereigns, three as foreign .princits the sounds of tho igeceely. molester can and seven is descendants- of George " diStinalY be heard. Tiest fight. lasts until t: weatY-five- a.re"dill'arY the combitants, whie Witli the girl, the the appearance of the unhappy mother -of knlghte.. Twenty-five is the full number. of ordinakY cause of all this jealous strife, rides over knights.' The .aiithoeities Wroiig when the. castle el Teck .1n a ehaelet Of fire, and they gave the'Garterto Lord-lisistberYi the separates her mortally-wotuided offspring. Order being then ,complete. If they now such Is two, legend of the etifeed easels -of Teck, which the Duke of i York and his brideswill make a point .ef visiting during their coming tour through rany. There are few people who have any ide to what extent • the &Were of chrystuef themmii cinerarixfolium are, cultivated in' Dalmatia, for the sole purpose of making, the powder -which has such a, reputation as an insect destroyer. : '; • - - The wholeofthe supply' those flowers hashitherto been s derived from. the.Atuitriani -Proviebe of Dalmatia and the' neighboring "State,. Montenegro. Trieste Is the market, to which. these fiewera a.rebrenght and from: Wheinee they are distributed to the average annual value o1-40,000 to r£50,000: The plant is one that Is etteiiy cultivated in any kind of poil;- and altnest in. steel climate. Within Otte recient --years it- is.: maid te have been introduced into Australia; California and South Afrida, -In-r-each e. cultivation On an extended scale; for :commercial .Perposeeri leententpletedi In the neighliorhoed of Btin * abei stated that the plebrdebi grown largely, bub up teethe_present time Dalmaitsito is the chief , leave the -Garter alone until there istan- seurce from, Whence Eurogel:and: AmeriOa I- other- vacancy they 4 will put themselves draw their principal supplies. The harvesti eight. Their mistake arose from ' their commences the beginnbag Scif June, and :regarding- the Prince of Wales as a deseond! in face of the report- that the plants bad i ant; of George I. • But in, the .modetn an ffered. much from the severity of .the pastel etatutegs:proViding for the: admission ef "11 111 ' • . The entopsy fol - conducted by .Dre. coney. The' body id- not differ *•ap- _Other viotims of Of course, there. !s a Itgend attech.ed to the caable beneath which exists older- * •ranean vault, knoWn in the dietrict SE " 4,4 Sybilti _Cave." Sybil wee the mother of libel three mons„ three valiantinights, whose exploits filled Swabia with their faille. The three young fellows, the younger i merobers of see. ancient but impoverished tbese, had succeeded in carving with their stecorda characteristic ined!aevel .fashicn, goo'cily slice of Swabian tenitoiy. They -settled he Wielandstein, and their friindlv amity was the falls of the- countryside. In times of --peace they, Shared the loborat of tlaeir estates, in times of war- they fouOts side by side. • ALL LOVED THE SAME' WOMAN. • This brotherly affection wes doomed to be dispelled_ by the :appearance- Of e -woman. The thee knights in love with the daughter of *their neighboK the Lord of Winter, the -crepes are looked -forward to With some anxiety. • repel knights Win expreesly declared that the- Prince of Wales,if a Knight of .the Garter,- is i ii constituent part": of itstliat - teiveigiino Lobsters:, . . is, he isi as he was in the original creation In the neighborhood. of the -Brained-es-the by ' Edward IrLp. One of the twenty -fie knights. . There.are-now twentitleur Bilt- lie& i8 'extremely transparent, se that the . readily , see.. the horns of •. ish-,peerii out et royal blood in Ole Order in fishernien -.rem fil addition to His.Royal Highness. lobsters protruding:from their hiding-platiei . .111-- the Tooke at considerebles depthre TO _HENRY PR17bSIA A..,GOOD :SORT. entice the crustaceans -from these crannf -e From every point of view- It has been a they tie a lot of snail in a bell and dangle matter of congratulation that it Was Pried!) them In front of the cautious lobster... When Henry -of Preemie who came to the wedding he grabs the ball they haul him up. - Jenkinee-That • is Professor- Sofinaffele hausen, the eminent Oriental scholar. Tutwiler—Ah 1 and. what has he done? pretence by the end - of the month, when elenkinti—He -has invented an entirely new - emweS week ewnnieness• Prince' HenrY and original way of spelling " Mahomet"i - The hen may be jitstly called a lay- mein- ber of seciety. te represent -the :Gentian Court instead of -his brother, the Kaiser, who, however, to give the British nation -the.benefit of his has little or none of -William a apparently uncontrollable Manner for placing hinidelf first and foremest wherever he mey be. He Is perhaps More of a "military sailor " than ii I like Chicago/1 remarked young Soft- the English appreoiate but then he 10 OM . 0 le.igh. "One sees so much , -bustle there." of the first German princes Who has eirer . . And then he wondered - why tire Boston turned his attention to naval matters to girl frowned, and a the other girls the excluelon of those military affairs which giggled. ' . ' '-, • EIUM08013S INCIDENT OF tAla WEDDING. One of the most' anenelnglincidents in eeit- nection With the late weridingwEas created on the parade of the troops at Whitehall by • a dozen of the very _dirtiest, raggedest little boys ever sew, who had Unearthed, from goodneds knows where some old ertillery. busbies, and armed withswords, made from pieces of wood and ;toy guns, gravely marched in front of the reeiiments told of to line the *streets. I aiked. their letidere-at very grubby, dirty -nosed little urchin ailiout 10 years old—who hisl .friends were: "We're Princsess Guatd of Honor, we is." A truly delightful exhibition of ioyalty: Mr. Bowers -That yOune Walker bat been calling on Marion -quitet a lOng time now ; I wonder what -he intends doing Mr. BoWee—I think -his intentions are all right, but .at Present, I belieidt, be has not quite salary enough to Marion' " me," 'Sighed the lever, " I'm fired with love, .And I'm afraid to declare myself." " What are you afraid ef I'm afraid that i'll git fired—fired With- . : I BO exclusively interest the Kaiser.. HenryL out lot& -