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The Sentinel, 1882-05-12, Page 6i•••••••+ , t, DO' Dld ?ARM thetoommittee . any charges except those 'what if Proven, would justify the removal of the Judge from office, Then in that , TEX SENATE case they should not refer to the camas - on all thele charges forirtvestigation. He OTTAWA, May 1.—Li the Senate to day, suggested that the matter should be -Ieft Hon. Mr. Vidal moved the third reeding- over for a few days until the papers could of the Presbyterian Church- Tempotelities be printed and put in the members' hands. ; Fund Bill. theft by the consent of the Ministry a Hen. Mr.-- Odell., after a, few -petsonal motion cotillbe madenn Government days: ... explenatiotie as to the position taken by - - After genie further' discussion this was him in conaniittee, . expreesed the opinion_ agreed to, and the debate -adjourned; 'that this Pattie/1E16ot was not the proper Mr. Mackenzie moved. the reepluthins of tribunal to determin'ethis Metter; as It was which he had given. notice on the sebjeot Of Et questital of Ile*. He mentioned that the dont-tact with H. jtlieemer . for the - fori teefive petitons egainat the Bill and only ,conetruction of works on section 27 or the sevenfor , it had been_ presented to. the Welland Ce;nal, declaring that the said Renee. e . • - ' contract -was made in -violation of the law, Ated: etrOOk *40-- etpeaker leftthe chair.. -and, that, this_ House cannot approve of the _ _ , , After recess, - • The -13111 was read a third ti -MS on s divie „„etteeettat-ett • THE •theit` AL thiAltiitAkiti. - • teresting Note s OL: the Newly wedded Prince d Princess. . "His. Royal Highness Prince Leopold.,_ edge Duecan Albert, Duke of Albany, erl,or Clarence and.Baron Arklow, Prince f the -United KiugdomtDuke of Saxony, rtnele of ttobourg tand. Gotha, Knight of: be Most NOble Orderof the Garter,Knight 1 the Most Anaie-nt and Most Nolte Order f the Thistle, Knight Grand Commander of.thee'Most Etalted Order of the Star of India, Knight Grand Cross .of etie.• Most Distinguished Order 9f St:Micheel. and Ste George, and a. Member . of Her Majesty's Most Honorable Privy Council inGreat Britaint” to give him big full title, is the• youngest son and the youngest child, but :same. He saidthe emboli. wee intended. one, Queen Ylotoria.- Ire was born - at to cover the question of the letting of large Buckingham Palace on APtil,7th,:1853, and aim and passed. - - - contracts by means of Private circulars. studied et OxfOrd, Whiotellniversity.heleft - An address to Her Majesty concerning Parliament had not yet adopted that prin. -. with the repritation of a q•uiet and studious the Well resell:At:lea transmitted from. the • ciple. and white the reasons assigned by young .men- of - amiable disposition and Commons was ordered he ha taken into -Mc Page (or recommending- such- a- course more . than : Ordineay capacity: From his conetderation to -morrow. • 7idthis instance might testify a change .in infauci be has been of •very delicate . . • The: Senate adjourned at II -otolock. • • - . • . iSof Medium height with a fair figure, dark hair, beoad, erliiie. forehead, geed eyes: and mouth; and .saMplee pretty manners. She has spent all her life, at her father's little -ciPital of Aroleetne On -the 21st of Novem- ber laid. her -et:le-nen:tent was announced as hating taken 'Place on the lteh, at Frank- fort; on the 29th Queen Victoria sanotioned it in Council. -.Chi the .2tst of February the Prineesi - arrived -he England- to vieit the Royal . Fareily, 2 Her trousseau was pre- pared at Paris, her sister, the Queen Of Holland, whose old husband is tremend- ously rich, fleeting, the bilis. . - • .' The Ducattitle of Albany was ootifeered on Prince Leopold in. May last. It is curious that not one o! the the Queen's sons hits a title taken from any part of or place in England- •-•-• Wales, Edinburgh, . Con- naught, and ,•Steallearn and Albany - all beizig withont its limits. . The .first Sere - fish dukedom, created in 1398, was that of 'Albeny, conferred on '.- the 'regent, Robert Stuart, Esti of 'Fife, flee of Robert tie "Albany." eignifyieg to hint and his coo-. temporaries that part of : Scotland lying north of the Firths of Clyde and Forth. Since ' then - the' title has always been -te- - _ . served for princes- 'eery- near the throne. There have been tee: dukes of .Albanyete all—five dukes in Scotland only, two dukes "of Albany in Scotland and Of York in. ;England by -.separate ereittione, and three -dukee of :fork and Albany (compound) in the peerege-of Greattritein. • It has been an unlucky title. . The first -duke; a •sue- ceseful - Bather and eteteemen, Was zee- cerned in ' the minder of - his - .young nephew, - the Duke of Rothesay. IThe second, his son, Murdoch, was beheaded by James L - The title was revived in favor of Alexander, iletn . of -James II., killed. in a tournament at. Parts in 1455. Hie son Sohn, regent • of Scotland, was �f -feeble mina, was desetted by his nobles dining the war with Ungland,•in.1522 , and died, in exile in France. • Darnley w .,‘ the -next Duke of .Albany, having receivd the title nine -days before- his ill-omened marriage With Maty, Queen of Scots. Charles I., the next bearer Of the !tithe.: was beheaded by his subjects. . -Histson and eucceesor in the. titles of York and Albany(who-, gate their names to the capital -and metropolis of blew York) was James IL, who died in *tile., The other dukes of York and Albany were the brother Of George.L„ who died unitise- eied-in .172.8; the grandson. ef George II:, Edward Augustus, Who died unmarriedin 1767, and second Ban of George III:, commander,in-chiet of the army. - " The exiled' Stuarts, it may. bp said, adopted- the title of Albany, but . the Counts.' &Albania one of Whom died recently, were bogus, thouglethey affected to be descendants_ of the .Pretender. . ,. -the lawethey_furnished ho reason for' vio- -healeh, being -afflicted with a feebleness itating the taw as it now stands. of the bone Or joints, whittle Wes eitcently tt)135OF COMMONS. Sir Charles Tupper said that while responsible ter three, bed lolls --within a, •OTTAWA, May 1.—The Speaker • took the admitting the right of . the Member for. _month.' some unfethouiable „affection of the :chair at 3.‘ - • • . 1,titinbtOix to move the resolution, he did epidermis leading to chills and 'Weiltnettst On the Speaker calling the Orders of thenot think . that the hon. gentlemen would .eted a- tendency to - litenorrheen on the Mitt. . annul the_contraitt if theyhad thetpower. slightest :exeition, so that, as one London _ MreStahe asked what was the- position The hontgentleinanhad rightly stated that newspaper gritoefillty.. pet it, "his 'wife o!a Bill introduced by leave of the House the • law requires contrents to be let- by •should be one capable of taking tender cate and teed et first, time.. He: understood that !tender. • This case wasnot one of: an ordi- Of her husband in sickness'.as well all ill: under the rules no Bill could be introdececl. nary ciontrant, but was of pressing- emir- 'health." He is certainly the best educated iu blank or in tamer/ea shape. Many Many ,geney, is had beep statedby Mt. Paget the and moat intellectual of the'Qeeen's, members Of _the House wale desirous of ,,engineer. The edviCe. -given by him, that No scandal has ever ateecnedto his nente- : understanding the pteviiiioOe of the Bill !cirteilats •should be sent out privately to —for thebeet of reasons,unkincloriticemay for readjueting the -represeutation: of thethese contraetort whom he he believed to be eay—and his tastes- are . scholarly .and:re,- ". people, yet it was not in the peskession, of ;competent to do the wail, was advice flued. He is, like the Duke of .Edinburgh, ethe Clerk end no access could be obtained :which the Goternment Were very relectan a musician, - sings tenor very nicely, and to it. .-- • 7 40, ecceptt brit they gave Mr, -Pogo th has set to range a. very peaty leve -song, Sir Rhin Macdonald said that when he piettei to take this course. believing that Dir 'Allein ;" is fond of -obese • and teadt ._ int:rodeo:a:tit he Went into the meet minute -werthl- only 'act in the public intereiC------ Al big; end his a tattle' for.reetheeteisre In the details- regarding it. It printed' but thepapersrelatingete the vierS Win Matter of holisetlecotatiene ; takes & good - - ,only in "t galley "'form, and could not. be printed, and. when brought dawn the deal of interest in charitahle:and, teferinee distributedt . They would 'of course see went& be foundto furnish the fullest par tory institutieus; writes a very geed speech, that it was distributed before the • seoend.- Oculars. - - I - but speaks it tillaieously is a' prominent reading was called for. 'He 'thought it Mr: Charlton caned attention to the fen Freemason; hEi,vingbeen Provincial G.M. for would be he Vim heeds of the Members this . that his Bill to punish offences against th Oxfordshire and W. M. of the London Lodge afternooet• • - persciu would not be • reached_ ie time t of Antiquity, tbe ohleet English lodge in the: Mr. Blake said la was not simply , that :secure its passage during the present ewe craft; is a D. g: L. of . Oxford, and was wee neetabet Of the - °Idol union.: He has et breaetful of foreigu.. orders, iholadingithe Dutch order :ef the Lion, the Prussian erder of the.Bleek Eagle, and the Ottimilaii order of the Osmanli. At. couple Of ,. years age Prince: Leopold was .understood to be on the point of takieg holy . orders and. going into training . for the Primacy, so that : when Albeit Edward 'I. ascended the .throne he would have (me brother Lord nigh Admiral, another Corataander-ha-Chief and e third: Archbishop ol Canterbury,- a Peeitibatilatch by the way, George III:thought .of gieltig, to his brother, the -Duke qf Gloucester, if e Silly Billy" hadn't . been, too silly; -"t but nothing eame of the tumor, 'end the gossips declared that the 'project had been ote- ciouragedltom fear that he might g6 front. High Church over to Rome, and • die a. Cardinal, like the last of the Stuarts. . few weeks ego'. the: Duke , of Albany was made a colonel in _the-- army, without pay, so as to -haye a 'uniform .in which to be- -married, hie peer's robes or the uniform Of the Trinity House of Which he is a brother) not being thought suitable, -while for a 'piince to be .married in plain clotheswas not to be thought of; -Oa coming of: age, io 1874, the .Price W59 given gleten annual allowance Of $75,000. Wheel:tie fertlicom- ing Marriage' -*as :announced this • was increased to $125,000 e year, -while in the: event ,of.his death . his widow hetet receive. 030,000 a year for life. , The grantwas vigorously opposed in the Commone,bet wee carried by 'a vote of 387to 42, the minority ineluding 15 Home Rulers and 29 advanced Liberals. like Cowen, the younger Dilke, Sir Wilfred: Lawson, Lebow:here: Thomas Bayley Potter,- the Hon. E. L. Stanley, and P. A. Taylor, In 1871 the Maribioness of Lorne was gieen her 'dowry by 350 to 10, aed when -in 1872 'Dilke- attacked the civil list only Lowson,eApaitrion Auheron Herbert suppottd him. 'This year three Ministers, DilkaPoStmaeter-Geeeral. Faw- cett -and George *Otto -Tteeetyeti, declined :to vote, as did absent thirty Liberals, while --seyetal --prominent Libeiele and Cabinet Miuittera paid the .Queen's message asking for a grant -lthe discourtesy- :of keeping on their hate. -Prince Leopold, as teadeteof TIMESareaware, visited Chicago in. --1880e te_The Princess Helena Frederica Augusta is thefourthdaughter and child of George VietOrePrinee of WeldecitePyrinont, by his wife the:Fein-Casa Helena, daughter of -A -e- late William, Duke of Nassau, and was bore on February 17th, 1861. •• Her eldest sister, .Pattliee, Married 'a' Prince -of Bete theim ; *the second, -Marie; married Prince William of 1,Wurtentburg, and the. thitel, Emma, espoused, in 1879, the old Meg of. HollandifOrty-one years her senior, to Whom.. she has • borne Et. daughter. Waldeck-Pyr- mont is. a -small German State, . with an area 'et 46.6 schiare' mites and -a -"popula- tion,: deoreatling through " emigration, et. about 54;000' inhabitants.- The „people ate -Franconiatue 'and Protestants,' • and very well educated, though poor. After the seven _weeks' War of 1866 the Prince offered .16:abdicate in favor of the King of Prussia, but the offer was deolinedethough in 1867, a conventionWawiigned under Which all but the nominal power Went to the present Emperor of Germany. - -The e,ountry. is -Stony and hilly and without .-railroads. It has fine niountein scenery and mineral: Waters famous in the days of Charlentagne. aitd even of Cosier. • 'The famile. is: 'one or the eldest:. in North Germany, the lino tracing directly to Couet Wittekind, : 'vied died in 1137, and whose grandson firsttook the title of Count of . Waldeck.- 'The :head. • I MURDER, Olt MIREIGE YOUNG EN I Tragic Drams Between a Love•Sick Swain and - a Beauty with a Mat . it was not distributed. but that 'ne access Obeid be had: to it. When the Bili was. eut teocluced it passed out of the hinde of the - gentleman_ Who introduced it and became . the propetty of the House. He did not • understand that hon. members took,charge of the prieting of the Bills they introduced, . but that it was,iat to the Clerk to attend to. There were various reports as to what the Bill t contanzed and - whet- the hen. gmitletnan lied said about it. Various effortsltd been made to aecure. the Bill itself, but witnout success, and it seemed to him a Most extraordinary thing that access to it should be deuied. " . Sir Jolie. Macdonald said, since he. bad been in Parliament it had been the practice for -members introducing a Bid to endeavor • to herryttorwerd the printing of it so at to 4'1 went over and sat in the lap . of a get it ready for the- use of the Rohn. corpulent old lady from Menitobe, •iled a. Mr. Blake moved a resolutioa respecting ,girlftom Chicago dumped over nine sea s Dominic)i' tends adjacent to railway lines,- and sat down on the plug hat of a preach r °f which i 'e haa' given notice, as feffewe : from. La Cross with se much timidegirli li • "That the present system of administering enthusiasm that it shoved his hat Ole' the Dominion lands situate: along the lines_ 'down over his shoulders. . . Of railway is likely to result practically in "Everybody- teemed to lay -aside t the acquisition by the • railway- OomPanies llama cool reserve of strangers, and . -or alreoet .all the enhanced value, not - Made Mired:VW entirely at tenni& . . merely Of their own lands, laintst but else or the .7. "k shy young men With an emaciated Dominion lands in itninediate proximity Oil -cloth valise left his Own seat ind.we t to the stations on • such railways, and that over and sat down in a lunch basket whe re - steps ehould be taken with: Et veew to secure a bridal couple seemed to be wrestling wi h to the public as far as ,praleiceffile such en- their first picnic: Do you suppose th,.t hawed valetain cases Of stations hereafter reticent,yeungetian would have done such to be established." He was told. that a a thing on ordinary occasion? Do you system prevailed of tiendingeent_- persona to think if he had been at a celebration t homestead_ and pre-exerant lILWEI along the - home that he would. have risenimpetteen y sem if not taken -up to. -night. . Sir Hector Lengevio said it was too let to take up the Bill at the present sitting. The House adjourned at 1I.10. • • Railroad SOciability. „ "Speaking about the sociability rai road travellers" said. We man with • th crutches and watch pocket over his ey , "I; never got BO well acquainted with the passengers on train as • I did the othe day on the -Milwaukee . SC, Pat 1 Railroad. We were going at : tho rate 'f Unity miles an hour, and another trai from the other direction telescoped u We were all. thrown auto each other society, andbrought into immediate soci cootaot, se to speak. - • lute -of railway, not with the ,intentiou of by themselves and sat down in the •cr people were eata becoming bona fide settlers, but in order to. and gone where these secure to the, railway the best locations.. and to give to them_ the en-hanced valets a the Dominion landsas well as those Inds :belongieg to the company. . Sir -Sohn A. btateloualti said he presumed the hon. gentleman had naovedethe resolu- tion at this period of thesessionfor the puepose of expressing the opinion: whible. he • had now done. - The Gtovernment was quite • alive to the necessity of remedying the evil to which the hoe. gentleman had- referred, and were keeping steadily in view the object aimed at in the resolution. He hoped the leader of the Opposition, having had an • opPortutlityof expressinghisopinion,Would- uot press the resolution._ Mr. Casey said.' that oases had dome to . his knowledge in which_ speculators had taken numbers of squatters into the North- west with a ;view of getting hold of the best . lands. He thought thee *as nothing unfair in a settler speculating as to Where a, town site Would likely, be placed, and benefitting by the rise of value( which would consequently take place.After. *some further discussion the resolution was with- drawn, • Mr. Satellite movedIer a reading of the journals of the House an Monday, March 7th, Nat, 80 far aathey_ relate to the peti- , , time Or Itenry S. Clark, Q.C., and. others; ',Betting forth certain charges. against Hon.. Edmund Burke Wood, ChietIustice of the Overt of Qiieen'et Bench for the PrOvinee of Manitoba. Mr. Blake said lie -understood from whit theleader of the Governmentthad said that • before -this matter was proceeded with, the , petition against justice Wood and his • answer were to be printed and distributed, so that nienebers: could know What they were doing. - • Mr.. Stephenson, Chairman of the Print- ing Committee, 0_ eid everything . possible • had been done to hurry theprinting of the • docuramte_ forward-, but they were not yet teen of wealth who have fought the II ready. , - - in every nook And corner of the street,- •Beveint Hon. Members-WitharaW the have vanquished him." motion. Mr. Schultz—On.Friday nexte•-".Thateit spacial• committee, censisting of Meseta. . Ryan (Marquette), 'Royal, Scott, Schultz, Robertson (Harnittoe), Rykeet, Gironard • jatiques•Cartierit WeldoneDaleelfeCarthy, Kirkpatrick, Colby, Ives • and Sir A. J. his `instructions: A young gentleman Smith, be appointed to inquire into the, wait...called as a witness. My _ ol ent • administratiott of. justice in the Province suggested a question:. Blindly• ut of Manitoba, and that the petiticin Of Henry it, and • V71113 WA- by direct negat ve. S. Clark, q. 0.tand others- and 'all other "Whate; lie I" ejaculated= my client, nd petitiOnS 1 complaining- of 'the,- oonduot of dilltatied another Vieetion. Thesapagre ult Justice Wood, Chief Justice.0f- Manitoba, followed, and &similar elantilation. • ' 13 his be referred:* to the said coramitteet• and further instrtiotion I pet ‘a third, he' that the said committee have- power tusetid answer to which' completely knocked us- - for persons and pavane and records,. and over. bly client -threw himself b ok. • report from time to tuna. - lir. Owner= .said he had read the charges, and with one possible exception they were not in his opinion such. as would justify theImpea.chrnent athe ledge:. He understood that they would' not refer to berry jelly of a total stranger?" "1 should rather think not.'.!: • " why. one old men who probably - home led the class meeting, and who * as dignified as Roscoe Conkling'a lath, was ekting a piece of custard pie,. when Met the other train, and he left hie a seat and Went over to the front end of ear and shot that piece of custard pie i the, ear of a beautiful widow from tows,. , "People travelling. soraehow fOrget the austerity of their home - lives, and fet- acquaintances that sometimes last thro life."—Laramie • CiNitlal:S:1* JAIVE.RIS .0.14. ChICAGO. ' On Wednesday morning lest - Andrew ' Moffat, a ted employed in.achieasce drug . store, shot Mrs: Clara Stant* who was up t ' to quite 'recent times a resident of Ste -.- Themes,: GA.' Her -age:is5 years. In\ • person she is :of tvoluptueue figure, tali, finely formed, with a lento title nienner.t, : Well calculated to infatuato axi impression,: - able young: mane:. Finely educated, - of toady wit and a fluenteenveriatienalist,. _... she -has been • knolee on MOretthen one -.. occasion pievionslyto incite a hopeless pasetori in the breast Of a tender-hearted : youth. t Her beauty is of a rich; lieguish- • : ing type, and her eelegant. appearance and A • visacioustee:mete:Mentz will ;bespeak -the ton:mutes career she has enjoyed hi being. thriceenerriedt 'Her fleet •hlisbatict was a Dr. Carter, o! Erie, Perin, . by whomt she . earl's daughter, now 14 tear; old, vtlio is:, . atischool toDettoit, ' Mrs. Ctrter divorced .- • her husband,- and, reverting to her Maiden , name or Minter, , married Dr. Bradley, ' • of • Buffalo, , who died, after --.Whicle - • she renioved- to, St. Thom* where her .mother still resides with her '; brother,. Mr..' W. M. Hunter, Ticket Agent 0! the C. S. R. -_.: Here she fascinated a susceptible youth, .. Charles _ Stanton, eon of Octunty !Crewe, . Attorney of Elgin-. After their - marriage they - removed to.. Chicago, Whenas she alleged,- finding him a worthless fellow, ... • she discarded him, he •going to Manitoba, . and. eeliethig in the..Moente-d Police, she Settling down iu 'Chicago fok.a time till she - -• got e situation as book-keeper at: •Detroit. - 4. Hero she became an object of adoration to: \- • " Vietor" Andrew G. -Moffat, a piling man of 24, a Canadian by birth, and of fair edue eation.and bringing up. His family,exeept . . his father who is in Michigan City, i live in Owen Sound. •-: The lady afterwards .re- moved to•Chicago,where the youngreatietee-:-.. - knitted het with hieattentiohenntil on- the . day of the tragedy he Celled at her:board- ing-house and asked her to. take Imich with . bine and his sister, but be refused: Bentg : further importuned, elle, With the intention ol intimidatinghine stepped td the door, . and, opening it, told him to leave:- Stepping -_ tOWatd. her, he said, "Clark when can .1 '• see you agate:" "Never," replied . the woman; "you - have persecuted me With • your silly nonsense as long as I natittear• it. You :are eiob. only draggle% me down hut yourself, - Ge- to *Ink, and.be a man; : and leave tee to make my Oivit way in the world;"; _. . . . .. . t, Tfl fe ` - -Choice Morsels from Rey. Mr. Seca In hi In at Brooklyn on Sin night Mr: Beecher said many strik things. Among Others he said : "Kicked as He is in his countrymen 'world over, you and I have a Se* for • divinity." . • • "Niagara is not half so Wonderful to as the growth of a dandelion." ' "One-half of the temptations the d are the temptations of the belly; temptations ...seemed by the effects or and whiskey." • • . "bLany men are only butterflies, dipp in flower after flower to find pleaser them and :tucking honette Honey is go but it is not good to eat nothing but ho all the time." . • . "Many women think there is no higher than their husbands; and th a .mighty poor, one. . They think t children are the general assembly chinch Of the first-born." n Men say the mound -builders as a r ce have disappeared. I tell eyou, they hitve not.. They are in New York, heaping up goldengolden dirt, each one trying tie. see hew -W much higher he can get than his here But some o! the bestmen in New York re .vit er. he Ur Good Wiieti4y 00 Ile iet:Necessaril C k • • . If a young Map Marries for the purpose of getting, a good cook,and nothing more, it is all well enough. But 1! he wants a wife who will reflect eteditupori hinit under all . . the conditions of- life other qualities sheeld. also be taken into consideration. _ And it is possible that these Other qualities will tett- Weigh eulinary considerations. she Who fails' as a cok May be a complete suecess. in eenie other direction. It is ; more necessary that every wornau be a good eook•theet that every Men should be gardener—not a bit. And the y011llg W0111/Ulmhtifiais a whelesomeor unwhole- some • loathing for the kitchen and its drudgery should take a Careful- inventory of. . her oapabillties' to -mei! her mission Ely - • not be foetid in some More congenial:- - Don't be discouraged: Don't give up. _ -- -- -If you eiiiinot in the kitchen -Bake the pies and roast the meat; • If you cannot cookthevictuals • So that they'll be tit to eat; - • • . You can sit doWn to the table,. With your knife and fork at play; You can lend a bald to help them, • . ; As they:stow the food away. . BOOM- the last -word Of the above een-: tettee had been .fielly etteted the hisane :levet placed t the muzzle . of a revelver, withirieix fiches of:the winhan's face and . urea. Mrs.:Stanton fell .4 the floor, and 1 . he. then turned the revOlvertni himself and fired two shots. .0ne, lodged- in the alining . . of the main; the other entered behind' his. right ear. '• He -fell on the floor apparently 'dead: : Mrs. -Stanton: recovered' beforo. the physician - arrived; and, teaching: into her . ' mouth drew out two teeth end the bullet. : The bullet struck her in the right • eheek, along the: 'line of the jawbone; knocked out to, teeth • and ' dropped -under the tongue.; The weund is not' dangerous, but twill met • • •the lady's beauty and compel her to -keep her Mouth elosedlor itinie tiine; and at any - rate pieeent her leoni talking -freely, N.vhiel ; . to a wOman is torture, ...I • . . Moffatt's whited wit thought 41 be more - serious,. but it was:foimd,•that - only ii. scalp . wound had been inflicted. The ball was. '- found lodged -behind the right -e.ai between the scatp and the eke% -flattened into two pieces. When Medea recovered his senses, he cried, " Oh I • elate, if you had only - loved me, if you had oele 'loved Me." He. ' -also :said, "1 7:8,13:..niad, 'but I loved the woman and could not live: ,without her." - vil he ea ng in d, ey •oa Vs eir YOB, indeed. ,Thit we repeat., a good cook is a good-. thing. We all bow before her mirk while grace is being said. We lookup -to her, -and ask her to please _pass the biscuits. - She is worthy of all honor. We treat -that the lesson • here taught will . do' good; that the young lady- who eney read it will adopt -le; as her guide and do as she pleases—and -- she usually -does—and that young men- will follow 'her—which they • Me Knew Ihe Witness.. . • was intrusted with a- brief by a rather Shady attorney, and being at. that tme without experience, I yielded implicitly to . • - . • usually do.. ' eWell," said he, "he is &--liar,he al ays was e liar, and always will be a likr.." "Why," remarked I. "you seem to k OW all about him." "0! course I do," was the reply, "he is'iny own son."—Serg ant Bailantine's Memoirs. • • .of the amity twit princely Tank at the Mushrooms in the Ear. It was long ago .discovered that .every parasite was troubled with other parasitee.. The flea bites the dog,l, smeller - bug bites the Acme and BO mi,..4ndefinitely. More recent investigations revealed the fact that many diseases were caused by fling!, which is either inhaled or beceines attached to the body. Throat diseases and catarrhal affec- tions are often caused in this Way. More recently it has been ;discovered thetthe cavity. of the 'hetean ear is -a: most favorable" place • for the propagation of fungus growths. The fungi, which, is known by the -teehetcal 'Janie of aepereitha +Ogre, -are .perfecit.Milshroems: with.whitieh stalk and black head. They are so small that it -requires a. Microscope of epoWer sufficient to magnify three hundred times to render: their forme clear and dietinot. The growth spreads around the walls of the auditory -- canal and over the ear -drum,: causing: itching and dullness : of hearing. The growth is strengthened by the tise Of oil or water in the ger, and there is no doubt but many o! those who suffer from dirtiness of hearing are raising a :crop ef mushrooms in their ears, and their efforts to 14 soften the wax"7- are the Most potent. Meats of iat di -eating -11M tttoithte: - • te • • - Cnieme "litc:--eAn ingetait - - An • Odorous Rail itY 'Snit; • i There is n millets and malodorous tail - read and court coMplicatian in Connecticut. _ An Aet was passed in.: 10617 providiug that any railroad .neglecting to.Maintain imitable t water -closets it each passenger. edition on its should forfeit l00 for each offence one-half to go to hime who sues therefor; and otte-half to tthe State. The railroads red no attention to the statute. •,In 1881 se- ' resident of Norwich, Louie Rivard, brought . ninety-five snits under this statute agaitutt Various Corporations' in the State. After. - dilatory pleadings, final ju.d ent. was gs entered in each. of the eases to the full i penalty. ' The- railroads Were re r sehtett. by the best lawyers in the State, but they • forgot to perfect appeals, :and they :found after a tinie, that the executions would bother them. -They went to the Legisla- ture and precured the passage .of an Acl. for the repeal of the statute under Which- _ . : .. . . , the Rivard suits - were -btought: The Su-, preine- Court had once' :decided ihat, all actions an a repealed statute :pending at - the time the appeal 111i1St felt, and :the combined railroad - law talent of the State was delighted. ; But to _their, dismay the _- lawyers soon: found that an Act had been - passed in 1881. providing that the passage or repeal of any Act shall not affect a pending proceeding. Their next resource wasto (moved - into an ortinibles bill a pro. vision that the Rivard -cases be brought 'within the jurisdiction: of the -Coart of . IN, Comm* Pleas : as tuur as - they had, been properly anpealedi - Ravin • had no , , difficulty .in securing what legisla 'On they wanted, the railroads are not worried about theirchances in a court of record. -- - coronation. of the Emperor Charles VL Pyemout. was associated with Waldeck in the: seventeenth century. Should the male line fail Waldeck•would go to the female heirs and Pyrpaont to the Hohenzolleins, with whom, by the .way, the -little principality sided in . 1866. The, most ; famous. of all the Vireaclecks Was -Francis, Bishop of Munster at the time of the Anabaptist rising of itja4, which he, finally repressed with merciless severity,. torturing to death, John Boiicold, the "King of Siam," elected by theineutgents ; the next, perhaps; Count Getirge Frederick,' the wise emd•discreet Chanehilor of Bran- denburg, at the title° Of the Thirty Years' War. The Waldecks, are Lutluirens, curiously enough, thrOugh the -mPrganatio marriage of • peitice Albert with Miss Dori. Gage, the dashing :daughter of an .Itish clergyman. Prince Leopold will have one of his mother's -subjects as his - aunt • by marriagee-morganatio at that. The bride olititetheilied 01 arriving -It targeetiniate of the numbers o!. whoeteccefad in evading the ..toneptileotte byateWS _Of the h.stsbeen.;,44,oNted by the Ragged SOlkol V4ikr,0-14iverpooltar-Abaed. of tntisie eeteeletrideteeptey or teeetcoers e day•cluruti eelatOtteuts ut tIffetent partst *of the city; andTh ieecitdqvtalekept- Of all the uvenilas wAb'At_ere rediltledted Ay the Ink tont; days they-Aonnted...-no fewer- than _3,020, children of --whoa age; -for.ehe meet 'part Squalid andill-fed, etaniing round the bend at a time When they, oughtto have -hem at sell:001e', - • . Minister Lowell has commuted to. preeide, at the cerenianyop 'May -171h of the Open ingt of the; Garfield - House- in Brixton, London, London, founded- in memoryofOf the late President as a . home for working-A:4e. There . ate'r0oU1S- HamptonCourt. , . . . •Vitlitee:. which. various needy and worthy - people are from time totieene permitted to occupy as their- honiest Recently there died _there the Widow Of col. Wyndham, • - leaving her daughter ib very Peer ciretunt stances.- - She has petitionedlerthefurther use of' thUV000213,,An event. Which has been themeans of calling •attention to certain alleged- jobbery'in the )testateal of these apartments. Not long t ago it was said that a former occupant left a Will -.which - was proved iendet f.)300;000, While! a :lady f_itho.-rtrecentlY erehettedea. suite MijOyed . a -116,1140MPiricerne ilia kept a dozen. -servants:. • smite Parts Of England: the *air letter boxes have been paintedatound the aperture luminous paint; that people may see where to post their letters at zught. Protound regret isnxpressed in Montreal eirelee at the approachiegdepartere of REM Dr. Sullivan; who hat been appointed Bishop of Alpine,. In all the principal . churches on Sunday reference wasmadeto - the Eacrifice he Was malting in inanypeints . of view at the call of diity.