Loading...
The Sentinel, 1883-06-15, Page 3• 4. 4 r • ORTIELMEE CHIMES. and 128 are open for private power• : BM Mr.. Deane Cowan, •P.R.G.S., an Euglieti eleroyinan who- votutmod, tO aaooedres clergyman H000rabie Acquitted land about a year and a helfago from of a"Serious harke. Madageeear, where be had resided for eight C Years, is shout to set out age,in for that island with a tarty of Scottish gentlemen • end several reitovee who have been educated 310V,EMBNTS *ItiTISTEAS, in England in order to establish trading . , Bev, Kr, Metniedale has been appcinted.statios.s to take charge of St. Patil% om h, Monnt Yeetrraea of Aoreent Chureb. New Forest. He arrived in the from. York, has ed epecifications sod plans for °minion the eia country in April Bin ala since bac balm fila marble spire to -the oburoh 'Which will residiug in Hamilton. weigh about six hundred tons, cost .$60,- -' The income of the missionary society 000, and tower to a height of 219 feet from of the Methodist Church of Canada during the street. The 8pie is to be ef white . l the past year was6159,243.51, an inerease marble, andwilbe surmounted by a of 024,400.69 over the previous Year, Ex-111:iPtIP:tredanhdygniaigabst' ,9roBs' to be "Me' pen.diture, 6148,400.72. • Amount raised Within the boundaries of . the Mon- treal Conference was 40,153.46. Of that *amount 01,517.22 was raised in the IN A unipA Eta, PlallGAT., Ottawa district. The society eupporte 322 • . domeetio reissionslind 644 missionaries, 43 . The Temple l!xt'llonee". ol n' "end Indian missions, 27 nlis810uurieg, 12 native • Jidghthouse-lieeper's 1Fanotly. passistants, 89 teachers and 11'interpreters ; 9 Frencln, missions, and 9 missionaries, foreign nussione, 4 in J'apAnd2 in Ber. inuda„ and 14 missionaries. Some time ago Rev. Mr. Allan, of Met - grille, had trouble. *with members• Of the congregation which resulted, in the, rev. gentlemen enteriog•an action for slander_ and claim Of damages.,He Wee unsuooess- ftil in the courts, and soMa grave accuse - tions having been made a committee of the Methodist Conference, of which he is a member, Made an inveetigation of the, charge and to -day their report exonerated Mr..Allan. An Ottawa telegram says : • At the Mon- . tFeal Methodist.Conferencethis morning a resolution was introduced for the appointmint 'of a committee to determine what applicants: forsuperannuation have ,: been Worn chit In the work Of the ministry. A lively .discussion followed as to Whether or if& th diseipline of 1882 IS really, the law o lution was cerri aparefer con e church. The reti0- . Mo y roorningis Set. atiOn u the etate of the church work. • • At the meeting of the Primitive Metho- ' dist.Conference, in.Toronto, the Coreratttee on Statistics preeented a report, Which Was adopted. It said: "The report shows e memberehip of 8,091. We have lost during • the year by deaths and removals 915. We have &lee seffered a loss in membership from lack ofministers in our . fields, whoso. places we :did net deem it. wise •to fill in view of. Methodist union, but this will involvenoloss to our common Methodism. ' The reports Allow that. the Church has not been forgetful of her missions during the year, as 862 have • been 'withered into :her fellowship. ,The ordinary ixtoome of the • statione aggregates 635;011, showing . an • • increase ,of about 112,000 forthe year. We are pleased to find our Clint& prpperty is valued it 4402,266, showing a net increase • of $13,920 for the year. This estimate is exclusive of furniture in parsonages, which is.not valued." • ' • • . B. Clarkson, M.A., ••• at Present • Stationed at Owen 'Sound,. has been • in.; . oiled, to become pasta: of the.tridge Street 'Methodist ChUrah, Belleville. Reit, R. R. Maitland, of Trafalgar Circuit, his received official invitationsfrogi three circuits -Washington, Lowville, and Nestle-, gaweyao • / ' . ' analysis of of the voting to 'date in the Quarterly;Conferences of the, Methodist •Bi'dsooPal Church shoire that out of 19 Quarterly Conferences held to date 16 .I'voted.for union, two against it, and in Ione , the vote Was e tie.. •- • An interesting service Was , held at the Carlton Street Primitive Methodist Church, Toronto, last. night, five youeg Man being 'ordained into the fellowship' of the Church, viz. : (Revs. C. J. Curtis, J. A. Trollope, S. Fitihei, SoStooehoutie and W. Walker. Rev. W. Reid deliVered an admirable ordination • charge. • • • A disgraeeful hoax. has been played on Rev. F...Mettialtpurate of St: Bartoolemew's Chtirch, Clayercsis London.. The ofilier NiiITEtOUT- FOOD FOR ME. DAS.S. , . -AS the Steamer Quebeo, oil her first trip of this -nation, '. was at Prince Arthur's Landing, a man named Singleton, keeper' of the lighthouse on Passage Ieland, was killed by the care on the track of the C. P. R. The unfortunate man was Walking on the Wharf, and stumbled on the track in frontof the train, which ran over his body; literally. cutting it in two. He had started from his home a small sail -boat as SOOn. as navigation opened, and come to Prince Arthur's Landing, forty miIet„ to pur- chase supplies for his family, the unusual length of *. the. winter having reduced, his provisions to . a very lona compass. When the Quebec passed the island, corher return trip, a bell was rung in the light- house, which WAS taken by the caPtitin of the Quebec to be a,,signal for help. The steamer was immediately Ostopped and a beat layered and manned. Captain Moore himself taking coromahd. When • they reached the lighthouse .they ' found, the keeper's wife and five children in a famish- ing condition.. They had keen without food for five days, and .on . short, allowance for eeverel days 'before. They were hardly able to stand. Capt: Kora ordered • an ample' supply of provisions from the Quebec,. for the But did not; owing to the week condition of Mrs. Singleton, ocimmunicate to her the death of her husband, in such a shooking Manner. ' . • • , , Ladies' reideion Jottings. _ *Plain silk mitts for • children proihise to beguile popular fer the stimmet months. . Drake's neck green is one of the new summer tints for dresses and hats.. • Ding silk gloves Come in. all the fashioh- able anddesirable shades to match 'coo- tumes. , Cat's heads are the coining ,fancy and will soon rival spiders for ornaments of all deeariptions. . •• Black silk stockings are new wornalta- getlier with white ,dresime, and indeed May be said to be di.rigeur for allooclasione, • Shert Mantles and Shoulder-oapes of open work chehille in black are extremely elegant for tiommer wrapd: 'Silk embroidered nun's veiling in delicate tints one of the favorite materials for young ladies'. *summer.? Brown in thadee, from the most &H - eats- to the deepest and PartioularlY cigar or tobacco brown, is. much used for street . . . • .. . .. • . • • Echbroideryla Used more profusely than' ever on white • dreises, and otliere, are trimmed With alternatingruffiewcif ehibrot: dory and lees. . "• ,.. • ', ; . ' . • Velvet ribbon viarYing In width* from's, quartet of -an inoh to an .inch and a half' is . the' faney for trirriming.light woOlendresies. at the present time,, . • • ... .' . . . The Unto known as kidio Shadettoelie. .. ..trriee-eoelti;oolill4k.lebriee2,,Miit,ototyoo -.. : g-A4ka-4, ki,24oiko , _ IlAfkwacie7iirir.f.i'idoliiiIii idl=agredations o . ,,,..,..:„..„4„.- •0• .,_''....,-4.,.1 ' 10c.iAs•TM.IEWWtlfi3T-TfftVitiiiiif6iiliiii'' litiiiiia" ‹celor., from the palest to the deepest pinkish ..*•1,...,...-.4:,*.v4,--m'at,o.va--b'•0*..."'•"7..°`4hecOOT.Itentfi Of `the, wine bottle into a silver . -purple-or-purpluerrenk,• and promiees to ,---enp.----It-waietheir. foundtbalthe iiiinti'l , been abstracted and itik snbstituterl—The become more 9,04_moreworn • • . t — — • trick was • at onoe_deteoted,and- when-, - soother bottle:had been procured service proceeded as usual: • Among the ewe° of Us who rushed into ; Rev. Mr. Goad willie, of Catitladhie. :and a reamed eating; house in Mississippi at 'formerly of Heipelbr, has aCeepted a oall the:call' of "twenty minutes for dinner." from the • Presbyterian. congregation Of was &chip who had his mind Made up to say • Newmarket, and will be • induoted „on the something unpleasent when he came to pay ..!,12th of June. , for his meal, Thoivae *groveling when h : **St. Andrew's Vhutoli, Guelph, . is now went_ in and jawedallthe-,while-telia -4reeof-debt; the-mortgagef:'itniceintieg to eating, and When -he" slouched up to •the ' 13,000 haying been disoharged this week. desk to pay his seventy-five cents he broke • The new _Baptist church •looated on Vic- out With: • toria Square, Brantford, is to be opened " Them sandwiches are enough to kill . a with three special eeriicee to -morrow: dog I" 7- • • .. • President Castle and Rev, Elmore Harrill, .. B. A., of Toronto, aro the preachers for the • • occasion;• * • • • .'Rev. C.. Whitoonibe, late of SUMO ' Creek, the newly appointed aisietant to . Bey': Atha Langtry, rector of St. Luke's Church, Toronto, Will imminence his duties and preach to-morrowniorning. • , • • Bev. Phillips Brooks writee from the Himalaya:0 that he has not eeen anything . so high as theseo mountains. abide he last • visited a certain ultraritualietio church in •• Beaton. •• , • • Cardinahlanning i atillin ety delicate _ . health'. filtippressed gout is a treacherous malady,i , and n the Cardinal's case the) inxiety*of his friends isnaturally in- • oreseed by the fact that the eldest brother, the lets Mrofiliarles Manning, suooembed to thiedisease.' • , • Mr. Walter •Cojohee, whoohine years ago, gave the Eliglish Church Missionary Se. • ,:ciety 3360,000 for the work • in China .and JaPane.haexeceiltly-madeer-thankoffering- ▪ of 4400,000 for the recovery of his eonfrom siehrtess: ' Pour years ago he gave 0175,000 taoryfvonnda. the Indian Native 'Church Mission. Rev. James C. Eon', of St. john'e Protes- tant Episcopal Church, Delhi, hits created ontieh diseension among his congregation by his ritualistic practices. ' He has the church **open two days in the week to hear tionfee-' • SlOWIt and, though his salary is only 61,200 s year, he cooploys three aesistants, and expetided 61,700 during the .past year for MOSUL • Belt said to be very wealthy. • Of the 023 Anglican churches in London, within a radius of twelve miles, there are thirty-seven in whieh Vitae:rift* vest. ents, in ten incense, in eirtylotiraltar hts iire.need in littpone are candles un - They :WiereseS Eesidwiehes. " What sandwiches ?" . "Why, them on the ..table." ' But we have no sandwiches on the table. sir," proteited the landlord.' ." You haven't? Well, I should like to know what you °air them . retested brick- bats on that bine platter rio . _ You didn't try to eat one of those 7" YON/ did !" •,, "Then, in friend, you had better go fOr a doctor at once! Them are table orna- ments, made of terra-cottio, and were pieced there to help fill_up_space I Land 0' Oat0 I. but You mint have lived , in a cane -brake all your life I" •• . The traveller, rafted into the oar and began to at a brandy -flask, andhe didn't get over looking pale for three hours. And they were sitnilwiehes after all - real good ham sandwiches Made that day. The landlord had adopted that particular stYleoltistelid of using a olub.-De4roit Free Press. ' • 'Cate visitor. • "Ain't you ashamed, sir, • to °erne home a drunken man at this dead hour .of mid-. night, to your wife ?" ' • Who elsh 'would yer'speo" me to come home to. I ain't that sorter a man. Sharra, you elaimsk to be a stiPecahle 'ootnan, don't yin! 1" • • . • " Of course, I ani a respectable Woman, yeti Shameless:maim"! • "Then if you are a 'speoable* 'oorrian ain't yeti %hated to be talking to &drunken man at the dead hoer of midnight? •pho whatsher 2" • Setesiok piemenge're are most inclined to heave When the VesSel heaveti to. tited On the altar; and in 304 the -clergy ' . Anew book ici called " People I fccmc t the eastward position at the oonamu-yMet." Another book might be 'Called. The 600AS are/ree and open at 385, t Men 1 gays Been Out to see.5) • z• . EIGHTEIV4 Arnow, VThotritiADISICata, Win int With Itkie Prophos ft Clow. Eighteen of Brigham's widoWe live here etill. writes a Salt Lake oorreepondent. Ann Eliza (No. 9), the apostate, who took the leoterre held, is said to be married and living in Chicago, but I could not learn her husband.% name. Some of the widows live With their families in The LionHolme" —139 °ailed from the carved stones that cap the.pillars. of the entraness-wbere they lived during. Brigbam'a lifetime, but the main 'building in which be lived is now the headquarters Of the Church. None of the widows have remarried, reports to thecontrary notivithstandiug., Atolls, it will be femembered, was the most &Woo. tive of 13righam's plbrality; ,and was the recipient of his most conspicuous favors. She was too geed to live in the prophet's harem' . and he built for her, e.oroas the street from the Lion HMO, an elegant mansion of stone, similar to some of the residences that adorn Prairie avenue in. Chicago. It was furnished by him with wetly luxuriance, and here he abode dmilig: the last years of his life in the bosom el his favorite, while moos the way in the old' adobe, structure,' which was erected soon after the exodus from Nat1VOQ, the other 17 remained without a murmur. Courtiers came to woo her, and it was reported at one time that she had been " sealed " to one of the apostles, a business man who lives at Ogden, but 'she tejeoted his addresses and • still .wears 'a *widow% weeds. • The Gentiles know little about tier, but the Mormons say she is true to Brigham,, and believes that she will sit with him in glory: She Was the wife of his old age, and never had any children. ....----, Nexte-Door , - ighhoys. l 0 It is SitnPly.frightf to think what a great numb& of pe ple Suffer from cao- tanketous . and ill- uditioned .neighbors. anet let anybody watch the reports of the Police Court and theywill soon pee. And better still, let ,e, great number 'compare notes with each' other and eee .whet has been the state of :t Inge with theniselves and their _friends fo ' . e last thirty or forty years. Sometimes theoemplaint isthat thine neighbors are cold and reserved ; that they have lived next door for years without so tonioh. as exchanging the time of day.; that • they keep themselvett to themselves t that • they are proud, and ee on, and so On. It is a matter for great thankful- ness when this., is the base.At least ten tittles better this ' than 'have the familiarity or . the warfare with. , which Many are • tried: . Think of the easy familiarity, whick leads a neighbor to be 'continually, punning in and .. out, and still more, which leads servants to spend half their time in idle gossip. over the feriae. Think of , themoms of ,promis. MOUS and tie:Minna borrowing extending •toall Manner . cd articles, .from as garden hoe to a cupful of porridge or a ' draw- ing " of tea I",' , Those who knew the tecrot' and Worry of S11012 a 'state of friendliness will -be the first to cry for perfect non. acquaintance, or at the •last for a condi- tion of: armed, neutrality.. -01i, the awful- ness of a 'neighbor Who bolts in . at ,any time; and doge not hesitate to make her way either into the kitchen or thebed- room., on pretence Or being " friends!" And they, what is to be said of neigh: bors ' who . have a taste for monstrous and ,ditia-greeable. pets? Wb.o. keep poultry , in the bat* yard, andrriain. tain a continual.. cackle, the cockcrow - big under one's wind**, whose dog cen- tinually either .bays the Moon or mourns its absence; whese oat has feline concerts every lawful evening, to which the ea:them:I' of the neighborhood are invited, or wiles° pigti-oete. ? 0, Then think of a neighbor, . musical but not Melodious, havling like a flogged hound at all timely And Unseason- able hour, and their •houses all so undeaf- tined! ' It sets one% teeth on edge, and makes the heart sink'down`whether it. likes elornethenthe,,Absehitelyrkiinevollit ".•''' ii •--- --4*-44.6;ain-ntin,enort trivcaring, quarrelling, abusive One, the one with-noiliyorapideritc-fireciiditiblierehilic mu. the One who thrashes his wife.OrVilibte , -InTiThetter loalf_chastisesveith-hertongue: Be thankful for a passably quiet neighbor-, hood, 'Oen . for : neighbors,whoi after rultaY years, gee ." etrangers yet.". _ • Freaks of ioightaing: Alice Carr, of Cuba, Mo., woe killed by lightning. Herolothing and the .wells of the room Were set on fire:„ • _ John English Was struck by lightning.in his house near Cadillac, Mich. He was not inihred above his Waist, but his lege were paralyzed. . • ' A man rode under a %large oak tree at Mound City, Rano during a shower. Lightning:struck' the tree and lulled the horseelut the man escaped with a slight shook. • • • As John Lbvfder of Eureka, Ill., was tying ehorse, in -his stable lightning struck them, killing•the horse and giving Lowder such a shook that he died in a few days. The three little daughters of . jacith .Morowiz; of Winona, Mina., were playiug in the street under an umbrella during a thunder storm. A stroke of lightning killed two of . them •-9.0 paralyzedthe third. '• Lightning Struck the house of Mts. 0, W. Jennings, &Greenville, Conn., Making a hole in the roof large enough for•a• man to crawl through.. An oak rafter was knocked to splinters, and the lightntng ran down between the clapboards and, plaster to the waste pipe. This it followed until it reached and shattered the main. ' A Big, Ings Hain. , One of the largest dams in the world is that recently completed across the Ottawa 'liver, about 40 miles above Montreal. The rapide &re two miles long, With a fall Of 10 feet, The dam was built to raise" the level of the Ottawa Biter, to supply a new 'canal ennstracted at the Seine time, and se it citified 'Rivera channels in the rapids, through which the greater portion 'of the, square timber out en the upper Ottawa ancl itetributeries • passed, it. negessitateul. the building of a slide 600 feet long by 28 feet wide ,for 'its passage. • Where the clam is ,built the river is 1,800 feet wide,/ with a depth ,ranging,from 2. to -10 feet, and la, current of nine miles an hour. A orib af timber will 'ASS through this elide (6001 feet) in one minute, •'Poinagione stirmismiLss. Vitee, Powers, that Peer' •ei • • WHO* Otesbanti IS THIS TOUR LmexEsef? One Of the subtlest fovms of .pellishnesti is that which comes ftoto .selfathserption in .work. When they are. Ant married the husbandis everything to the Wife, lilonse- • ,keeping eareS are email,' or none at all; there IS little 'moiety; the days are long and lonely; the• wife Counts the hours and even the minutes for, her husband's return, and everything is ready for his coining, as • though he were all the•werld contained, as, indeed he is to her. But this cannot cow Urine tong. Children come and divide attention, care and love. -Soelety inter- poses its °bane. The Church deMands tinie and thought. There are balls to return, and meetings to attend,: and dresses to make, and 'baby to care for; and, the hus- band has to take • a fleet:Sid pla0e. NOW, though it is never easy, for an idol , to step off from his pedestal, or put another one alongside hiniself, the husband Who his. moderate 'hare of common mete will not expeot the wife and mother to give the same exclusive, thought to him that the young Mae gave. But it is no rare ex- perience for the wife and mother to beecone BO absorbed in Other duties that her hus- band reoedes steadily from the first place to the third, the fourth, and finally goes out of sight altogether. Sne no longer watches for his coming; she is surprised when he ePl'e.Srs, and ?elf disappointed: km, that he et -home so 'mon; • for this bit of household Work . is not quite done, Qr that last -ititelo is not Yet taken, and 'eh° is really more anxiohs.°4111th ;the 'Ream than :to see her husbind..., The little thinge, that mike home happy are for-. gotten because Of the supposed larger duties due to society or the church.; and the -Wile by her 'seltabsortion in It busy; bustling life oatside does More to make her husband pagan than. to Make pagans Christian, be. cause the one she touches vary nearly, and 004:Aber she influences only afar 'off. ' We call this life' of sself-absorption a subtle. form 'of selfiehttess, because Waal, amble, tion Makes sooial cete a delight and eopial duty sk pleasure t and whatthe good woman imagines to be a self-denial is really an enjoy•ment, if, not a passion. We live known women who: were never 'Weary Of inveighing against soisiety who would die of ennui ' if they Were taken out of it. But this seibtle forth of eelfishnes 18 far oftener seen in, the husband than in the; wife.: He gives lilmeelf up to his business, 'and gives only Si fringe and, fragment Of thought to the Welt= Whom he idolized for a month, or even, with rare fididitypf author affection, for a twelvemonth. ,When he immesh -ewe he lewees his Mind in the counting -room, and only brings his body to the poppexotable. He is generally abstracted and often positively .cross. . wife has received. so in 'rebuffs: frtinehiin that, If she be sensitive, she learns to titnd.Y. bira furtively before .she venturesto &dames him, even in the quiet of theevening fire- side:: and if she be not iiiinsitive. she ansWera, back, and each shatii battle of words separates thein farther and farther feenetnich Other., •!.' The best men are Most, easily subject to his Unoonseimis forth of Subtle eelfishixese.'Thebigher thelhoughte and the larger the work, the .greater th-e danger and the easier the self-exinise. ' Reader! we Will notsayas' Nathan, to David; "Thou art the man ;" but we 'Oil •saY interrogatively, Art thou the Man? If you want to know, ask your mate -hue - b dud or wife -to • read • this article, And . then to -night tell rig whether anything of your face can •beneen in this initror.,40hristian Union: ' . -JE LIFL Vegisie. Refeede et the Brookirn'IltrOiriet and thshtstr•IPIMes, (1`1.0W York World) • TWO little tchildren played on the front • stoop of 41 Watts street Yesterday Salt badge of mourning hung from Jambs - The little Weil Were the, children George Smith, aged 36, who before the Brooklyn Bridge accident Was a trunk driver in the •employ Baker k Clhrke, grocers, of No. 335 Greenwich etreet. The whick.:eOnsieted of Mr. and trio Stith and four children, the oldest habit: girl of 19 and the youngest a baby boio oceupy the parley floor, - In the batik -room WiftlYththtelieb°d/ao:'egf 'thireisheljd8bairourtdbelayttipbedr' recognition and the of his body. oreehecisintoe: itro shapeless heon2er ; mreimiolsaw, siel4 her pitiful story ;' Her own injuries though severeappeared , not to trouble her in ; leant: • "George :had a liciliday. and he hid promisedtei take roe • acroes the bridge. We atartedio the afternoon..; •The obildren! wanted to but . we feared * or9Wd istri lett them at home. We had proceeded almost to the weir when siiiiiebody tiaaV that the bridge had hooken down.. Then the crowd from Brocildpi surged towardetto. "George told nie to take held of his hand 1,141 clid BO joet as we were being primed . oeward towards the stake, We kept together until the stelra were reached and ' then we were separated. The last I sate Of him he had a deathlike expression On ids,, countegatioe and was being* borne over be.o.,krwarst thTiohen rfoirowsxt udigirniootyhitma6, 0 and landed on the struggling people helow.1:In Oonp,hior :letand1112eOt waswdbelohminpieleity.P.ibrure OLT, olon e button:utak. Ido net knew heW long was '.thertio t 'Ahmed like an age. tehtekil:, 04" ring re20:40,e, otlitoe inc,mthvecallauge4are - under the arms'and attempted to extrleille inc. 1 Wee Wedged in se tightly that they ' could not ;neve meat first; but I:begged so eerritietly Oho taken out that the Y were urged to. superhuman -efforts and • they flnally eueceeded begetting me out: I wkit . sent.frephtvoininthers• Street Hospital mid . afterwards* borne. My husband died at theTnhel°001111rtii;IO'u' n‘g. Wonieh here' biir. db: eifikOe- in• her ;hands and broke . eoropletrity dOWn: Her Ineiband'Was the only-supporeot. the s. family, and they ate Without. Means." • _;``YoU doiii?to take papa away ?" asked the little boy as the reporter,withdrew. "No,MY boy." ' 'Alt yight: DOod-bye." The poor little fellow could net eitelize that his father lay 'still in death 'in the • beck room of the humble •home. • • -Wa and •Eductistent . The following figures, giving thecon _)'00.0tf..0.10).at'•46,..,. =A..„...'av---'''zila7 thot1on States; which have heekhempiled.by.,M. -Loon-DennaVa-Belgian statistician, are every suggestive: fir :.--r: s. • a. nee:in. F r.. 500 i - 2 --'-ance ,,-.77 • En land .'i.' gatony .lio land. , , ;SI ,,... 996,. ' ,.,' ' . 113 i II., 17 9,, 8. (2.. Wp. rUtikaitZbarg , Bavaria t . .. ".$. 11 9 '. '2 a , 1. 9 - .DMIdatniaark •1200 n.2 : 20 Su Don mark 7 Itsly,i, iWio ' 41 ..ABuelegtrti .. r . , 6 8 ' s i 6 ,.. ,, 6 2. • 2 8 ,. Switzerland , A 10 ; , 4 2 This .clonlpiritiOn; of OoniSep takes no ac - Count of •the frightful *este entailed by the Beeville° Of the labor of able-bodied men. Miring the period of militaryserviceo• . , 104 Sleep tot Iflillionaires. , Amapa Stoneethe Cleveland millionaire who committed 'inlaid% did so because be could not bleep. How may millioitaires• are there: who would give one of ,their nlione if they could , sleep as well nights, as Pat who takes care of their horses, or the pope man who works in their garden o Every million dollars a. Man acetpriiilates after- he -has -a----couitie;: tem*, is a weight , of lead upon his brat. He does not enjoy the money, and nobody else can. What does it profit a men to gain bu:shel of money, and lay awake nights and • see epooks, and roll and tumble on a oft had until, every nerve is • on a strike. A millionaire who oan take a fish pole. and go off to a pond and oatoh bull heads, and forget that he is worth a latindred.dollars,has gob an -easylimet;tift few of them can do it. • The spectacle Of a Man who has got six million dollars blowing his brains out, ought to make thousetale who . are rich and who are ,rtistlieg for More,• stop and think, and then quit besineee and go fishing. -Pecks Bun., Intelligence has been received at Berlin of the death of Dr. Gabriel Gustav Valet. tin, the distinguished German physiologist. aged 73, at Berne, •Switzerland, freak .8, lung affectiOn, for the treattnent of which ho had goue•south, The Chicago Inter", .4e4un ear ' "Groat wealth cities not Matte great •11.apress ; indeed it itt, Often the 0 uite of much misery." HOW trite tha obse vation is. We have often felt unhappy, even miserablk and attributed it to ihatorfiattate or our liver. , that ailed us. , • • ,, /.;. When are Watobee elisilYsteten?-Wheti hey UM off their guava, , lint WO Were wrong. t was ',our wealth A shower of Hiram. - The Most yemarkable'phehpmenon re- lating to Iowa dorms 00eurred at InaePena- snot) not 1°440; when tbe,Peeldent 14'40 ware szotteed by fond pelting against the windowm. which °Old not be accounted for until the next Morning; when thousands of birds were found dead all over the city. It had been a literal ahOwer of birds,' stranger etill, nobody had ever seen stieh birds before. .In size they were a trifle larger .than a snowbird , and their:color .much like a quail. • It is: snooped they Were drawn into a vortex way down ,South and rushed through the atinesphere those • thousands of miles. • Since Edward Holman was Sent*, jeal Om. phx.otver Peruvian patriots. The Milian, K "kirVe2 sbered :another tri - in St. Luia a eeks ago his fellow. t.T ffit-wait-a-3e,andismil Litimonerelntie,a0rbiredhhvwVe's,c9nsfauCt; wbat saemed to be an absurd nuspieion and devotion' and envied; Lam the fine,. bananas . Which she. brought* altruist -- daily, to " gratify, as BS She Often explained,. .andopened-Onee'llieSelanas which the Wife had info brought. It d'Ontained a- a11-411e*--Am4--in-2--the-:Oelletif---te- prisoners Were foundsixSaW0 and three whieh the 'woman had ingeniously Al` conveyed to her ihusband ;in the sate. ` manner. The discovery Was tide just in • tinTeh:•jdtitehveOnftliaitg;nornitiOlilen iighldelivery. f the , eciktriy of Victoria, is just enhouneed. No more, remarkable oolonial politician' heti 'ever lived, He was, several ahem' Prime' Minister, and really' was the founder of the Home Rule Constitution of the colony, for which service he was' knighted, though for a time he WaS regarded • as..a.rebel: Ho always id:entifted sprang from the 'I.hriialinnepiefaswitintht ohltasil, and uisb . fellow cielonists, hewing been for years *et*, leader of theCatholici pitrtY;' as it is called in Victoria. He . was the promoter Of the iplendid contribution from Australia ' the relief of the last Irish famine.': a keen lover of his native land, Ite_wier, after • the O'Connell type, ever loyal 30 Queen 'Victoria and the Imperial Govetits; 1 meht. , • • 0. " Let, no one now onlit to buy._: _ The fragrent-"-tesUlintri" and tty 'Upon the Teeth its chiansingvotrena and gain a Breath like seent or iloitar Vito gm' matt* 1 pleasant melts. peraments hayl • Theta. Obi - tented by In turprisisaho defeat ,tli• allY a ne •