The Sentinel, 1883-08-31, Page 3'044rerrerermeeereereeereeewiteem-
welt
ffoisie et• their Peouliariiiiee-ek Seedy 'Lie&
The Messelaw ATOM 1104,1 "Tie event
of the week bee been the arrival of Piapot
• and bio band on their tray ta their new
reserve.. For eeveral Jaye the advance.
• gnard f the hand have been encamp:if:baser
. the city. Bepainted aid bedizened specie
• Teens of the brave and the fair have been
wandering about the streete, putting their
- meads m at open waridows, and gazing at
the many Orange thingswhich the -whites
• keep anent them shops and houses. It is
an interesting study to watioh• their counte-
nances ite they enter the printing oice, or
peer in at the ,perlor wiudow. The men,
true to the studied stoiciam of the race, look
° onfor a moment with imperturbable faces,
taking, care to betrayby no change of
.eountiniance spy special interest, though
occasionally 0011010g from between the'
lir a little souud expreseive of astonish-
ment or satisfaction. The wonion, tees
philotiophieal, gaze long and duriously, and
• often betray their pleasure by a 'change of
• features, rough* all the way from a slight
• and transieet en:We, to 4 hearty laugh,
Judging by the opeoimens. we have /Men,
• the Orees . are .a fine-looking tribe of
Indiene: Piapot lihnself has ,a eomeWbot
sinister and forbidding castef countenanoe,
but mapy, Of his followers have
:intelligent twee. Schne of: the younger
men are tall, straight ;and -quite manly -
looking; and some • of .the daines need
• nothing but Culture and cleanliness to make
them tolerably handsome. • The clothing
. of the whole band is of the most grotesqne
pattern. Blankets and rags of . all shades
of color, and of all degrees of filthiness are
• wrapped in.. ever -varying styles around
their bodies. Their faces are daubed over
•with paints, in some wee the brightest
• vermillion, in others a ghastly yellow
overlaid hero and there with patohes of
Md. .Pi0,1711 matted hair and pierced ears.
• •ore onspendect teholtetneote-mi44;:eshellte
•
' igh5t-ean eesireely-
-
• ,• be called imitation, inasmuch as it was
• no doubtpreetieed long before they had
an opportunityof studying ' the fairer
models. But the, ornamentation ia clearly
• the earoe, in kind, With that in vogue
• sanongettheir . white sietere, .however differ-
ent in entitle' execution and effect; EiV
':dently the same strong sense cif duty must
in both oseeienerve the timid sex to endure
the torture .of hevini thefieeh af the Sar
lobes pierced to receive the profit:Us deco.,
• :ration, which ean,?we: suppose, in no °that
*ay be suspended in • the proper position.
• -:One Cannot look upon -these 'poor .barbit-
• .rianii-withent 'feelings of sympathy and
• ,pity. We have rio doiiht that it is &ivies
and beriefteent laviTel nature. which decrees
• :that the broad .doMaini.-Whibli has beeu so
• long the hunting, ground of the race, shall
. • be taken possession of by those who' will
• ' turn it to better aebount for .supplying the
• world With food. But We may and do
,veriously • doulet.Whether we have done and,
are doing our whale duty l to those whom
we are feet crowding off their , ancient
•: hunting grounds. NO one Cali look-
•.. upon the • finely formedbeads and
• • thoughtful faces which •,•are often to be
.inet with .--ainongfit .thein • without feeling.
that they are capable of higher -things. It
• is too,much the fashion to mistime that, the,
Indian is incapable of eivilizetion, and that
• the. race, is. •dcenned • to extinction. This
• 'may after all be bet au exiiuse for lazinOSO
and indifferenceit.00nvenient beim toease
a troubled dbueoienee.. They are, 110 doubt,
lard to mead to our 'fiabite and 'Ways of
•• thinking. : But the iltuty • steel; though
.. harder to shape, auiakea a better Weap'on
•.than the more malleable inetale. The•very
• tenacity with '.whiolf the Indian .chugs to
• ..bis own views ua *aye shows en element
of character which, rightly directed, would
make &nation mighty fee. geed. We hope
the 'Very best wile may be made cif the hinds
which ...Lieu. tenant,Governor Devellieir-has-
seetired for Indian sohcale, and WO truetthe
• day may.sait be distant when.therroteetent
•Chureh'es of Canada 'Will begin to inquire
whether they are doing all their duty in the
• way of bringing the itfinence of. religion,
. eevhieliisafter....eathe.greateivilizerdejlear
seer at their very doors.
IA%
'Ewa Queer mission Duchy.
•
-7-The warm season is the seafiedbf
• While gentleinen shoot eith other .Witlf
, pistols' or pierceeach other with swords.
• the common felk eettle their troubles in
• their ciwn way. • Recently near Kalish two
. Palish peasanteekilackinnithe-hy trade; had
to settle the question t Which . one ,'ot them
. shimid have a girl with 'whom both . were in
love: Without In:40h ado they armed them-
•
• selves with,the heaviest hammers they had
•• and began the fight, The one swung his
dreadful Weapon straight at the head of his
antagonist, but the -hitter skilfully avoided
the blow; and then•in his turn he streing his
hammer and brushed .the head of his .rivel.-
• He got the girl.. '
•. In the Crimea two Tartars quarrelled on
• account of theiecomnion sweetheart', .and,
they agreed to Settle their troiiblei in their
• awn Way. •. Without ant artificial weapons,
theyinertte,Oh other as bucks do, striking
each other with their foreheads.' They
.made half a clegen rotieds ; blood Sowed
az; , f ro zit both of them, yet neither of the Tar-
• tars 'Would. yield:: ,.Alter another furious
• Ain't,. one of them fell down, •exhausted.
• 'Being orided , by defeat, he drew his knife
and out his throat on the spot; The win-
ter, crowned with a *Wreath of bumps, re-
paired to his sweetheart, whore' he now
possesses alOne.-.31Oseeto New -
The Theiratitsul Rey.
•A Boston boy .hearda fanner say that he
,. had a jackass eo strong that it could kick
•• a barn over. .•
"That's a pretty strong' ..jaokesp, Isn't
it-1".said the boy.. ••• .
"es," returned the farmer; " imd that
1its• why' I ciall it Jerdes Laweence
• Tani" • • • • ' '
The lad stuck a pin in that idea Mid kept
• it there. At Sdnda3i school the following
• . Sabbath a '
fternoon . when the teacher &eked
. each menibet *of thee .olass to ;repeat ;a Bible
preveth, this thoughtful boy, Was first to
• reopoud with. : • '; • • •
" Getn the eiee, then shigger, cionsider its
Ways and be *Ise'. • •, •
An Irish heiress is one Of the soolal
atteoeiffien at (Jape VeY. She is young, and.
brilliant conversationalito „; a briniette,
• .with,, the most howitchirer manners, and
• drefuteiiwith great taste, treating few (lit'',
• monde. k
r
COMD.BE at'e CUhi71E.
Cnn an Eiglis.-yearwele Stay be illauged
,Ier Murder T -The .14cgal Precedents
on tise Subject,
A Philadelphia boy, 8 Ars old, named
Edward Trodden, is under arrest for the
mtirdi3r of another lad. The question
arising as, to the liability of sucha child
for a felony, a reporter of the News: visited
the olficiels to learn their purpose in the
Matter.
Certainly we will try him for Murder
when the case odmes before us," said Asst.
Diet, Atty. Charles F. Warwick, although
the trial would probably be a farce unifies
it was clearly proved that the boy's inind
was feeble and he was incapable of delib-
erately planning crime: or had not reaohed
what Blackstonecello the age. of die
oretion, which is 'Inelall3r fixed at 7 years.
"tinder the old civil law," said Pdr, War -
wink; " this was fixed at seven years. % This:
code, which we derived from the ' Romano,
dividedthe stages of !Amon responsibility
into three 'periods. First, there Wee the
age of infancy extending up to seven years.
Next there was that of puertie, s hirm
tend,edJintil the fourteenth year. Then.
there was that Of Puberty,: which extended
from the fourteenth year upward. During
theliret or infantile stage no one could be.
puniehed for any crime. After the seventh
year,however, they. Were held to have
reached the 'age of discretion and to be
amenable to the law. The laws inregard
to capital crimes, which we derive frora
our Anglo-Saxon ancestry, are , still' more
cireunispect in regard to punishment. of
Crimes by minors. As a rule a long line of
deoisions inapt that reason and under,
standing do not begin to develop until 12
years have been retched, but it is receg-
nized in numerous instances that while' an
infant, as children under 7 years of age,can
not be guilty of felony, after a child ,has
e1tra7-7-1PgatiV.-trlif freinintinviealth
and Blackstone contain numerous pre -
(*dente. / Of course in, all such cases it
must be 'definitely aecertaried that the
child possessed full reasoning Powers and
that the 'felony was deliberately planned
and executed; and that he was in no sense
irresponsible. , It is on retioedin the old
rdports-I am sorry. I have not ttiern at
handlust now," said Mi. Warwiels--T" that
girl•of 14 W,ini burned to death for killing
her mistress, and .1 reinember
in nyread-
ing a bey of lir years :fingereddeath
on thepublic-soaffeld- fori- killing another
youth of 9: Since the Sine Of Edward III.;
the thirteenth seintury, it has been; held
that the •capacity_of evil -doors shall not
so nancih by years as by under
standing. . To illustrate_I'll cite aoase
which this ' Trodden affair, haerecalled to
my memory," said Mr.- Warwick, as he
took down a law book, and glanced at it for
inoment. "In; 1029,', at the Arlington
Assizes, John ,Dean, between the
ages of 8 and 9, years,. the, age of
•this Trodden boy, • by the Way, was
indicted; arraigned, and -found guilty and
sentenced to death for having barned
'several'
barna, Malice entered into the
case and her wee hanged..., At the Burg
Assizes in 1748, William York; aged 8 years
age, too -was convieted .of
killing a girl 5 years old,- and sentenced to
bo hanged. The 'verdict was sustained by
the .•full bench on appeal, but the -boy
escaped the, gallowii by the .elemency of the
Crown and by enlisting in,. the English
navy. In our Own country, in Ne* Jersey,
in 1818, a colored bey, Aston, 12 years of
age, was iainvicted. Of murder in the Aid
degree for the killing of a ,2-yearold child,
and the conviction was sustained.. .Ten
years later a oolered boy of the same age;
was convicted'in the same state tinder the
same cirolinistatices, and suffered the 'Bathe
penalty. Beth' 00000were carried to the
JSupreme Court,andthe- ekined judges
decided in both, .after a careful judgment,
that the boy: had reached a. reforming age
and must be held .responsible. There are
other masa in this, country, but
retail there." , • "
t eAteltanners.
We beard the following a few„ days ago
which is very appropriate, in these *arni.
days'when .sufferipwburnanity.---haii- to - re-
sort to alt 111001113rof beverages to ' keep
cool. . •
A eertain weeithyold gentleman, living
here, who was,'very Much' of a businees
man, but a child in regard td alang and
new,fangled'elpreqiene„ Was blessed With
a worthlese nephew, whom he had not seen
for some nitmths.Meeting him unexpect-
edly, the gen:auk:am inquired of the,
vagabond • ••
" Well,•Robert, what are you doing noit-
a-dayeL-eating ;the bread of idleness, as
usual -2" . ' , • , .
• "No, sir ;" was she repiy. "I've: got
steadyemployment at a very .laborious
business."
"What is it ?" • • . '
Eniptiing schooners." •, , •
You don't tell.kne so? • 'Lis hard work,
I know, but it is better than loafing around
the saloone and doing nothing," replied the
iinele, who really imagined . that his
nephew was hired as a 'longshoreman • in
lightering vessels, and pusting hia hand' in
bis ' pocket be brought put, tendollars,
whioh he bestowed' on hie gracelesenepheire
to enimurage hurl to cultivate habits of in -
The oitiner`pi Preview' integers:
A recently:\ published atitternent of, the
, yield of peeognui metals Shows that in 1882
the outPut of gold inthe \ entire 'world wad
valued 0118,000,000..1"nd of silver 494,000,-
000. It is a fact not generally understood'
that Russia is the third ,greateet producer
of gold, the yield of that country being,
.130,000,000, only $21,400,000 tees than the
united states 03d. 0,000,000 less then
Australia, The Milted State a the
greatest .ailvor producer, the -yield
in 1882 being 446,950;000. Australia,
though ranking sewed' in the production
of gold, contributes sourcelY ' any
silver to the world's supply, while Mexico,
great oilier producer, pails but little
geld. The comparaWe data elbow that
the Milted Statesis the Only nation in
which both of the precious Metals are
found in great itainclatice, ,
•
•
ig tiOtea to t e• &edit of Ameriean
traos-Atleatic trovellere this eetisor: that
very many of them prefer the slower-goig
but roomy and eetolOrtable old-fathioned
eteamere t . the e prase sailers of the
modern typ s.
;
.Theirsloplittr WeiatON,' •
The ,Thilletiftleein lhe way.ef Mc B. C.
"
The authorities of the 'Oseadian Bible
Christian' Conference have takeu legal
'advice upon the question whether they can
unite with -the eider Methodist bodies
without the. 00neent of the Engiish Ponfer.
ohne and still hold their property. The
opinion given is that if the Canadian Con-
ference is united in taking such tuition the
Bnglish, Conference will have no power
over the property, but that if the Confer-
ence is divided on the matter the English
Conference may possibly be able to eettere
it. . Since the year 1054 the Canadian
Conference has maintained a separate
finaricisil• existence, and the property,
amounting to nearly half a natilien.of dol-
lars, has been ^mostly ,collected since that
time. There is a strong feeling in favor of
going into the union without the oOrthent of
theThiglieh Ctauferenee, but the Canadian
Conference will hesitate before taking that
sten, • bectinee it is net known how far the
lormer opponents of union are prepared to
go, and opposition by them might endanger .
the property:. 4Anotherpoint which will
i
require consideration s whether the
English Conference would stop the .money
paid to eight Canadian superannuated
ministers. The • Canadian Conference
might deoide to take the Ails and provide
for theee men in the event of the money
being stopped. These with other points
will be considered by. the Conference which
meets at Exeter on the 29th inst.
• '• whinge, Thing., :slangs.
The coldest things in the ;world -The
kitehen oilcloth to, your bare feet in a
winter's night.
The hettest thing -A villein lying in am-
bush in a mouthful of hot pluunauddingx.i.-
f•ww..4; 1;1
story:. • '
The shortest thing -The memory of the
perpetualbo'rrower. • • •
The biggest thing -The fortune you
ex-
peot to Make by stools speculation. •
The smallest -The fortune which you do
make. • '
The toughest thing -The young wife's
pie-orust. 4 '
The softest Oonversation
Which passes between a duels and a deary.
The highest thing -The mercury in the
thermometer, about this time:
-The hardest thing -The bit of bone that
you " comeright down on,"' when eating
ohops. .
The easiest thing -Lying. - -
The tightest thing -The marriage the;
that is to say, it used to be, • but now it is
the loosest. •
The prettiest thing -Leek lathe niirrar,
and you will'aewit. • : • ,
The brightest thing -The Shot
into' your eye is it comes reflected from the
woe of looking -glass in the hands 'of the
mischievous small boy- ' • '
•
The silliest thing -T. -Thinking that weathe
produoes, happiness.. (Wouldn't you loor
to be lmcioked silly, provided the moonk
came?) - • ; ' • •
The, freshest thing -You know him ;
is everywhere. • HOWElVer, he will -get
salted in time. • • 's
The stalest thing -Common sense.' •
The quickest thing -The ilea.
The sioiVeet thing -An amateur drama
by nMatehrperformers. . •
The heaviest thing -7-A long sermon, On a
hot Sunday afternoon. • . •
The lightest thing -A lover's vow. :
The thickest thing -Tour tongue when
Doming home from the "lodge." • .
• The thinnest.thing--The story you tell.
your wife next morning. • • • .
The Wettest thing -The footelthe small.
boy with a new pair of rubber boots,
--The driest • thing -You have just been
reading it.7713oston Transcript. .
A.• leather who Vargas Ina Baby,
' Yes; we lied a great manylhings," said
.tha.40„riarietor.,;as*,..riationkedover
itepetiktiinthe next ear;
What_de you do with them 711 , , • '
"Turn them over to the chief baggage-,
man atthe end ofthe trip. There is away -a
useTiliked up, and he generally finds
Ownerfi for things; Yee, many,people are
very Careless when travelling. • They leave
ail sorts of thinge in pie eara-canes and
umbrellas ofteneet. rsuppotie,yOu've heard
the oldryarnahient the manvitho got on the'
train and fiatas if he'd 'forgotten sowe-
thing.
.4fter• the train. had started, you
remember, he . happened 10 think . he'd left
his wife eating in the depot waiting -room.
Well, I•had a teitl,Catie itbout as bad ah that
lest spring. &than and woman tint their
baby to sleep on the seat behind theni, and
when they reached their , destination. a lot,
of friends Met. them and carried off 'their
bundles and traps, but everybody forgot the
baby. A telegram caught tis.at the next
station, and the agent took dare of the little
chap until the cablese father came with a
buggy. Scene people • would forget their
heads if they Weren't faitened
on.' -
Chicago Herald. ' •
,
772,7
• MEN 11471.10 111.41/411. P,1441,119.
mr,
Sew 'Elluneve of OW Are1.4,Spe; Magiileig*
"1 Want a set of plane," wee the 00oase
statement .of a primplittle Woman in an
.arohiMot'e trfEtoe to -day. She went on to
state that she wished a bowie .of 10 r0Onni,
which was to. otand On a 10t, 54100 feet,
and that oho had 03,500 to expend upon it.
And baying .made her imam with the
architeet, she went sway, .
That's the kind of customers I'd like to
deet every day," said the arehitect wiles
she hadgone. " They're a rate article,. sir:
Not one man in 20 know0 What Iv Wants
_beforehe goes to an otchiteot. The latter
usually determines the coat and the size, if
he knows anything of the size of the lot and
•the location. Our visitors are of every
class, frinn the man who has never built a
house before, and who knows mote about
it than the architect, to the num who
spends thousands of dollars yearly. That
. clef* of men generally; leave all to the
'architect; from the drawing ot Plano lad
letting of contracts to the final seoeptanoe
of the structure. Some people haven't the
slightest idea of the esnietiruotibii of build-
ings for the particular purpose • for which
they May be designed. In each easesthe
architect must deetde every important
question about the building."
" How'are architects paid for their ser-
vices ?" • °.
"For small buildings' such as ordinary
residences, a fee is paidfor the drawing of
the plans and an occasional look at the
building during its conottuestion. For large
buildings and in .08•888 where the architect
is required to superintend the work, an
amount is paid varyingfrom 2 to 5 per
cent. of the contract pries. FrOM 02,000
to 5,000 is not an unoommon sum, to be
paid for *Planning and superintending. ts
34„ • irc‘.4--A10641,,,.41;107,nv
'4
.rentezz'aaV' atet,41tti./174-jotilt; tedlene, and
require.. a . vast. amount ;of menta labor.
Full and Very' detailed seta of plane have to
be made for plumbere,. carvers - and. 'One
,mations,• ...Beeidee -thole, partial, seta are
required for other artisans. When
oonelderable amonntof heating apparatus..
is put in full Sete of plane ,have;' to be drawn
far it, -; This wok -Outtalk .much: .drawing,
.Whieh lain rio wajiihettp...WOrke 'There is,.
then, beeldeethe merely' meohanioal part,.
largeitmoinatof intellectual work' to be
done in ...planning Jorge. • buildings... The
.architeot Entist be an artist .. as ..Well as .6
ekilled attieen.•, He must have a. tarots for
the beainiful and expreia that litetainhis
designs. Our mostoorapetelitandetiocees-
ful.'exeniteote are 'ebb artiste, who, invie a
hive and an lettered in their calling. You
-see it is flo menial. work, and should be well
paid for... Besides that, the etiperintendent
mild -put upwithmost of the:. annoyances
of building, He muet• keep ' his.eyes,open
to the triekery of huildere,. and ;see after
things generally," • „.- • •
":What.annoyanOes? • ..7
-7-41 lEfe mast explain away.' all tha diffitntl-
dee Of *atm:fuer, and keep, the. .builder.10
the *ins- of his oontraet.. Tha greitteat
evil whichrepittable*obiteets have ln do
with is .the .system of . offering, prentiuMs
for the bet sets • of ...plane. •Peteene who
want to. :erect ..buildingic_ifor.' epecilfie tour-.
pestle get valuable suggestionsin this way.
4$100.or 4)200 is Offered her, the,
*get...set-of plateilor the building„ which..to.
.get planneie in the ordinary way -Woul&cofit-
peobably $1.000. Arohiteets who desire to
compete tenet Study Upthe best models for
such • .buildings, and after they .have all.,
dtawn•plane but lone. ie..reingitineed.• The
system. now gaining ...favor in the east ie to.
pay ali. cOmpetiters. for ..theinechanioat
pottion.. ofthe work, and to award .the
prize fot the. merit of the plane. .• • /list* is
thus done . to all ofitiepetttersetnd w,hoevOrie -
desired.,Cate-,,bcCemptOyed- lo.-auperititend
the work. Thio latter iti as tedious a part
, the: arohitecit's . work 88 :.any. •, other::
.Builders have a reckless:way: of.enbetitut.
ing• •Ueseeteened, for:. seationed
uaing 1,4010.'
'-;'r4 . ;it''.tatiVh1fres.ofetoeV tele1Z.1.4%
Make the :„ contractor do Avhatie.itight,",
potioiteipx, • • • ' '
0111171311i.
. • .
Lively 'Thames at a. littaights-Timplare'• :
. Gathering. •
•LDNDRN. GARDEN rialainten
VeRatire nil thy fi4ect0*-1.00dr
dessiVentte as an Entertainer..
The feature a tbie Wake is lindOebtedlY
the enormous growth of' garden` end Other
Afternoon parties. The garden pullet •
already mentioned Were /WV attended and
exCeedingly brilliant; LOY-Ilurdett-COutte.
has lopg, ben in the habit or ,giving
exCeptionally fine garden parties at her
belligauhtigsfutel.'stnhbeubrohuatinertosiudgebutoeb,.yH.oblelyr .8rXioodals
fAtathrref4T.xtoemliotien,Clefinrottte‘afeeOriehbti:teeeed naod.trWeisife:
then lire. °mitts, and afterward Pueliesie
of St. Albans. It was this extremely head -
some and clever woman who left to Mise
Angelo, afterward the Baroness • Iturdeti,
Colitt0,,a great part Of the immense fortuntt
enjoyed by that lady, whose eiitertainmeitto.
are alm.ost as oelebiated as her. charities..
Without being in the slightest degree a
httnireint of hone, Lady Bordett-Coutte
finds Celebrated Peopled all nation e gravi-
tate toward her dinner table at 'Stratton
Street, Piccadilly, Where she occupies 020_ .
henna from which her • father, Bit Pranoni
Burdett. .. .was taken • to the " tower.:
This, the • town -house proper, Is the
scene of perpetual • dinners ' and even-, •
ing parties during the season, toward
the end .of which , th% • baroness and W.
Burdett -Coutts Ashmead ;
brother) go to Highgate and give thefionritut
garden parties, at which sometimes
.mediotal congress and sometimes an
exbibi-
tion council are entertained as well lie
numeroueisliBtillgUiShed guests, as vitrionll •
in pursuit,' rank and wealth -as 14ord.
Wolseley, of Cairo, and Sir Samuel Wiloon
the great Australian equatter, as the Xini
of theBelgians and the Sing of the Band-.
Wich Islands 'Mr:. Stanley; :the
,
Ono repreenints. him as-Ifatakt and the, *
The' fashion of , garden parties has'betat •
tlediog;', .B.A., were. Panted !orthe
Baronet's and are OW at Stratton. 'street.
'other as As:chard gr. . •
endorsed by the PA110.300A Wales, who .
will.•ptesently .'give one at Marlborought
House, and ,the traditions of '.01itewietkanti
Holland likinse, an • well as Of flbrayrberry.: '
Rill, have been:Owripletely revived.More.
than this, the faehiori. has been taken holt'
ot by an army at people who have no tme-,
tension to.enterteinle that way,nr indeed. •
at all. Itis very Waffler persona titt give a ,
garden party became° their house, &Mee
as it is, ,could • not._ be - Made to
hold-. a 'fifth' 'of ., ilieir :trioxide, but ib
savors of whit at *Eton -the • boys
call *"cheek" for people to gitie..garderi
parties who were toO poor, or ma Mean AO 4
entertain legitimately.: lb is onething frgi •
heaslied.to meet Mt. Tennyson and a ',More
of •eelebritiese and quite anotherto be wet -
tied into the suburban villa of a second-
rate *titbit or author who con not give hie
friends even a .glies of champagne : Thu,
kind of, thing.will be the deathof afternoon •
parties, which are already,. With a. fete .
exCeptinne,• such sal have .named, ,shunned
by the male kind.' When. no 'More, Weak
husbands' and idle baphelors Will go, the
wholething Will fell to the ground.
• 'Yet nothing is more delightful' than
properly Organised afternoon, eintteepeoially
a garden patty. Speaktrig of MYielf as on
of' the Male perlittasiOn,lgO in *my erdiniiry
town walking- dress,' substituting only kid,
gloves for dogskins or rents de Suede: One,
may step frOrii tvireitty minutes' lo two •
hoursitthe whole sift& having a charming
"go-asypikplealie . At ovary
good .entertainment of this kindthere in,
too, some kind ot a "show." Artiste rally
. -
round .each other, . and those who: are
not Bidets engage, for the . con-
sideration .•ot a . .iiheek,!'.- 'Abe.
cleverest singers • and atitersi of the day.
.At afternemi, patties may be heard„ Mr.
Corney Groin, 117.r.. Arthur Caen, Mt. Geo.
Grosenlith, Mr.' Cliffeed-*--Hartieen,
Mansfield, and noisiest talent ivithent end*
This 4,4430W.."..Vrt-tititheithkrinaZhetolo
--trraufrov.,
Alias/king io(,each,other,And thus heasins •
here .but, ludiciously-.-managed,- it -heltit 7.•
matters along. iioriiiideritbly..,:_,The -eseetine-7.
-titafternotin-partinnis to give Musical and . .,
• dramatic entertainment ad a relief, not as
the main object of . the gathering, which '-•:ti
• shOUld be . purely Bernal. . „These remark.. I
do not, of course, apply to .the ' 'Weekly "a
'Mines" of argotic folk,..attended like Other.; •
1 •.• A San Prandial° telegram says: Religious "salons" . without special 'inVitatioii., '
services under thesAipliiiis of the Kniglete• Landau Letter.: .... ' • ' "
Ternydars were held in the pavilion this •
(Sunday) afternoon .• There was a terrible
ernsh, 8,000 persons being in the building,
and 4,000 outside, who Continued:to make
every effort to, obtain entrance. Although
a large police:force was pretient, they Were
unable to control the 'crowds, the greater
:number of officers being employed in carrying• Off fainting womett and children: The
interior- of the pavilion was no hot that
before serviod Watehalf ever the people com-
menced atreaniing jOut,thankful . to have
eticaped being cruphed to death. , Twioe tett
many ttokets were hisued.: .
11"WIrheY 11111111e Itt011er•
I ' • ,
Some p001:018 p000000'Moreaoney than sense.
m
The latest exaple is,Mann aker. . thaPhilaz.
IcitigiNreittsilirtfrY:11111,° glro:rixteerict
profit of a million in the transaction,m-Yrin!ti-
pril Times, • ;
Then there is Barnum.' That foolish
old man hires a lot Of Men at high ealaries
every Year to do 'nothing but go around, the
country vi
ending hie Money n advertising,
and the oonsecitience is that he cannot be
with his circus, but has to stay at borne or
up in the White Mountains eounting the
money that is sent to him. Such Peeple
bring' a let of trouble" on themselves by
advertising. -London Advertiser.
• •
A naritegraph dealer -A note broker.
' The Denver Nevis euggests a, pratiticial
way.to•stamp Mormon rule out Of Utah,
and that ie for,i,he Gentiles to pour in and
outnumber them. • "Lot the ,preaohers,"
it says," gall 'upon their ilooks to furnish
' recruits.; and if the feelieg egainet pelygeany
is. as deep as its titteratiee ia loud, an army
of peaceful invaders 'can be Ponied into the
territory within a year that will outvote the
Morn:lees and 1111 all'the °Moen with Chris-
tian etateemeri." •
-There are 17,000 dentists in theitnited
State*, and they eVery veer put over
41,000,006 of gold in theleeth. A thousand
years from now it will pay to mine old
graveyar et.
•J
--A, ohambermaid Ma- de bold to ask John
Whittier the other day for his autograph.
He complied with the request, sigreng hie
while after the following impromptu lines:
' The truth the English poet saw.
. Two centuries 'back is thine-
" Who Sweeps a room as by God's law
Makers room and action IWO," •
And in thy quiet ministry .
To wants alul needs of ours,.,I see
How grace and toil may well agree.
-Centuries unfit centuries ago, Whil
yet the World was in its "salad days," the
true relation lietWeen Man atic1170111011 was
recognized. Therie two quaint lines contain,
the history of domeetio fife from the
beginning, and they are not likely to be
proven false by the future:
As the good man saith, se say •we
" But as the good woman saith, so must it be: .
-On him way • to the Fills to take hut
last Swim, Capt. Webb Said to his agent:
"1 wish this exhibition business was over t,
there is not much money init, and no fun,
but won't.there be a let of money in these
new ideae of mite when ,x get them pa-
tented I" The ideas died with the man, as
he had tot •perfeetted them. They are
said to relate to ' improved ,inethed of
propelling abate. *•'
• ' if iron want to drive yonibindliesti,
And hard any leve for fame,
• NOVer spare the ink and paper,
Let the 1)0000 060 your name. ,
'Energy's the life of bUsines13,
o Industry Will always pay: •
Never rest, but aIwaya labor,. ,
Advertise Mon day to day.
Victor Hogo's Milne is publisbed minting
ha delinquent te.ttpsyere of J'ertiey for nen,
paynient of tate* on two dogs.,
-
aIi..uing. 41
11 is difficult to 'Understand what people
event to gain by reedit wild experie
roents in'seroiiautios. No 'meatiest advance
has ever been made in the oft' Of &Meeting
balloons, Alines* immediately after the
Montgolfiere made 'their discovery the
Channel was &wiled in a balloon, and ih
has sinoe _„been crossed' several tiMent
though& number of attempts have bees
failures. 11 is hard to see whatis gained. '
or what in ' learned by multiplying either
teamed or fluoiesses, The latest attempt,
to orosii from the French beast to Algeria,
may per,hips be regaided•as an ineident in .•
the celebrated oolonial ' policy" of th�
grand nage*. , Perhaps the baloonish
expeots to establish amonapelY in the right
Of waylrom France to Algiers,; it is cer-
tainly a Monopoly to whieh 'they, are per- .
featly welcome. Since Phryzus and Hella
steered on the liaok of the golden rain 40 ,
Colehis from the Thessalian 00110t 110 such ,
wild-gooee flight has been attempted. On,
of the esronauts.was a newipaper man, and
kis Motive' was intelligible, He was im
soar& of 44 imipy,"' which the gallant press.
man will Helsk in the cannon'a niouth. go,
with the tit° unaccountable persons Who
encomnanield him, threw all their provisionn
overboard near Genie& Than a ,tyrannous
wind drove them to; Minoan shores; and
finally, with more luck than than they
deosneLnvedo,r4tpheh,
yielanded ely pear Florencet
London
r
A company has Purchased th' steamship.
Great Eastern for the coal trapriehetweee the
loirth of Forth and the .Thatnee. Twenty
thousand tons of coal can be stowed away
in her.in gecko. Theta° to which he heti '1
cores may not bo Without pathos to those
who recall the dreams of bet designers, but
it natty be I oompentiating remembranos
that so notable an histetie MeMOrial ' as
Capt. Coolee 'Resolution; Was aloe employed ' •
in the coal traffic,. '
-Moody and Sankey hav,snever touched
a dollar of the $400,000 profitson their
hymn book. The money has been paid*
sho publiohoro to a Co , and devpiod
to charity. •• A