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The Sentinel, 1883-09-07, Page 20 AS -D DEATH0 ett. ttoottltit of• thee e blindeeesotat • PONS., KILLED AND WOUNDED. Sarair wad Crops Ail Carried • *Way. xis,4ug. - The ottion of of Rochester north of the railroad, Lower received' the Meet Net * house Waa eneMiUredv Real enty are etilmlingt It leas * as if there hail never been a build - that portion, while in other sections "ns of the houses ehowthe terribly tive force of the wind. As 8004 as one pawed and the people in the vend portion began to learn ot the • they went to Lower Town der Resistance, many working t- While all knew the destruo- haa " IMOD fearful, no idea tent could be obtained until neat g, when its horrors were appalling. tieing at J. R. Gook's, house, on St. ',Which was 'entirely' demolished, Lone took Leland'a residence, barn buildings, not leaving a iitiok stand,. thence sweeping through lower It seemed as though a terrilic flood ept over this nation. In maity where there had been residences a board is left. The grass is filled rt. and sand, as if eerquddy ,stream over it. AtT4. Aug. et. North or Viola the swept the 'strops ;and buildings ; Amen named Wells was seriously Along the railroad people eesy 'floods over with &Tearing noise. sone, ' Aug. - Ten betsinets were unroofed and two hundred damaged; lose, 0400,000.. Tieedead itleklokre-prominetrt--Wih nig four mills. He was picked up ft7 Wind . and hurled to the breaking every bone in ' his body. 99t.tillituelgrstee nw.ekg;li; tiotzeu, wort, MreeQuirk Id, IlisslitoCormiolt. Eight bodies en into the otifintrsi by friends their s -names , were known. o etill Unclaimed; Making 26 killed, uhded. Those, sufficiently butte -to er the doptor's care are as follows *nick eve children badly outrylif: wife and child; Frank -, Schultz; hurt; Annie Zirearth, badly out; end, internally ; John Hauer, John ocsk, Milo Weeneyo, Dan. O'Brien; etherhYt Geo. Hansen, Gager C. Hall, they were intoxicated and engaged in &row * DULA** liok.ovvom.. Flva People Surnt to Pealh In a Tenement . 'House fioston. • - !PfllikiEfo UM PAIN flint% A. Boston telegram says: Fire broke out in a two-story tenennont' i Thatcher's neurt on Sunday night, occupied by eight and spread with frightful rapidity. Before the inniatee could be rammed four were smothered and one fatally injured by jumping. The killed are George and Thee. MeGlaughlin, aged 14 and 11,, Mrs. Fred.' Savage,' and Mentle Savage. The -utile for help frotnthe-peisonsimprisoned amid the flames were heartrending, but the People outside could do nothing. The fire waszubdued in lese.thad'half an hour. The Preroptuess and vigor of thefiremen saved the neighboring houses, which were mostly wooden: John McGlaughlin, his wife and six children occupied. the front tenement "itucl attic; Fred. Sa,eage, hid wife and two girls the rear tenentents. The four of Mc-- Glaughlint3 children were asleep in the attic, himself, wife and two girls downstairs, and Savage's wife and two children in another attio. john Savage fitst discovered' the fire' and. giving the *starlit and springing front the , window, thirty feet, had his leg injured: MeGlaughlin, who was awakened' by the -cries, saved his wife, and girls, and succeeded bringing down two of his boys. In a second attempt to • return he* Was driven book by the flames. Little George MoGlaughlin was smutted and reached the roof. The Canvas was spread in the street below,. and he was tom by his father to jump into his anis. The boy jumped, but missed the oanvanand was fatally injured. Hie mother, crazed with aiiguisheattempted three times to enter the burning building to save the other boy, and received • such injuries that she is not expected to live. Mrs. • dre suffocated, and • the bodies were found where theyalept. The fire started at Savage's apartments, and is b'elieyed, to have been _oar epthrt ,:v4;9,,7417414,111,11§1Lt=t1W-eri-.721.n":1 • kadbeen been boarding with his brother,. at Fred, or by the latter at John. It , is thought alao that Ahn 110Intosh, who had had trouble with the Savage brothers, may have had.a hand -in (sensing the fire. It is known he visited the Savage's during the night. McIntosh denies he was there. John 'Flynn, who sletit hear Savage's; states that just before the fire he heard some One Cry, "For God's sake don't throw that lamp 1". McIntosh and the two Savages have been arrested. The arrested men tt311 pontradiotory stories. There is tittle doubt *Inns, Wm, Lee, injured externally ; eloh, not "lotions ; Mrs. Irwin' and damn, Nelsen Hamm, wife and. badly out; hIrs..0aborn and &legit - y bruised. Three children are so brnieed it is thought they cannot be 'zed by their parents. The above the hospital. Zonis Poise, Mrs. Frank Clement, with broken limbs, th friends. The cyclone started near nna and followed a line nearly a mile of Winona Railroad crossing, at ter, and followin north • of the road east 26,• hree miles north toi,d it Varied in width foliage dries up. The potato itself becomes Miles, and did not skip as usual, from one to effected and decay& • A large number of potato -growers who a few days ago were estop 'everything- clear: .Hoeseo? anticdpieting an abundant yteld now forsee and crops are all gone. As far as the almost complete destruction Of this from, -about eiX persons were .hinea °rot Thediatise attributed the moist, e Ilmthest"; 1°40t6t.'"Pas §i30°I. an unusually cloudy summer., The price: • Orr, Minn., ;Aug.ie--; A, cyclone of early gardened potatoes has been,raisad about BiX es seutb".- We° many of immediate villagee. e• • Three 'women, Wives Of Net- St. Catharinee report says: There n farmers, were and atlatene -fieetappearedin-thisttlistrict; to ben -siderite Otheril badly injured. noises were ble extent, a Night on thepotito vinesthat totct and live stook killed. mi.. has arreseee,geotetit and willprobablyiesde DGE CENT"' Minn" Atig! Aue the orop less than half what was 'angel-. in the path of the cyclone- twn,•iniles pate& Everything like growth has of hare .-were ' destroyed. : Heavy stoppedsuddenly, and; toilets We rive rais- e was done to buildingse A tnan Elbereoh and his wife, working tem taken, the sooner the tubers-, small' though o field,saw the storm coming end clung y are, are taken from the ground, the ,better. . . • • Wother.' He was kneolied • senseless,. • „ she blown gis detains and horribly Aiwa e (Ally -111 ihic Bold*" when' the fire oaught, and one of them is .responsible forit. . , • A 1PitUtte Blight. . A Warsaw; N. Y.; telegram says: The potato crop of western New York and probably throughout the State is threatened with disease.' -The ',vine is attacked 'with, a black rust, which is firstnoted ' by brown spots on themargin of the leaves, corrugating the entire plant as it spreads. A rapid extensiim of the disease to - nearly all of the teems and stalks ensuesand the OW Her `arta watt' twisted off. : A • t • _ • • - Pitches' Irene thetnorthern and Cot' to'errytettanke ....,,:tatnteteetg,.ete-peveleteeett. tbette t ot-tMichigenetattateeett • et -tett . etr-te• etitteteettecteWhirdelltt. titvfieittl tiliandtitsteaati C:ou)lisd'otre;i:Iiliso and rook§ f the .thete, ahd thereby, gem everlasting fame Andes many eliekels act. Voseible. Hoff- man. iiiittee his intention Of making the attempt without . previous Warning. ,tlee went two &bye at. theerapids last week,' oarofedly studying the oorrenteitrookstend probabihties earae away eatiefied that the feat can lie lately; acoorepliehed. Heft: man pan Ithodetetittottorank; and doedn't intend to swini the rankle at all. HOffinitie reiterates his -determinationtto sWim the Tepid& :His 'Wendt do; not doittit his sincerity, and Whim.. they toll, him ' of:the impreotiotbility of the. seheme he simply . • • . laughs. atthein: of Others Were jet ate& , A Buffalo despatch says. ; • The .erepe of who propose to swiin Niagara Falls ft,:vezzlir,,,,, rz 6 Hoff- -omit lirood;noulattt- 2128.1.9ateiltt iiBuffaram.4;annatimiae. bra rionaly injured by the_ffYingtdittetet whirlpool .rap ti attempt to9'eWini Orfila of Stookton, arid New, Ilop,e were " by _terrible -hail storm; °orb, oats other ortips were badly damaged, and, stock was killed by flying rads: rid Green Bay Wind and hail did. simi- enrage': • • Chicago telegraM nye Nob tist arrived here. .11e saysilt ?o'clock aay evehing he eeaoliediReeheetege, The -entire nortleparttOttbetgitie that:Mow and NortliWeetern tracks emetteled moat debris. . 1210arCe ie standing ; the fete whioh were. had. Shattered as by an earthquake. -The ted t eurvivere. were resouing the in- nd the dead. BefOre midnight t -three corpses lay in the'. hotel, e ,figures, some Mangled (Mita htiman mlanoe." Nearly all were injured ut•the head and 'fade, and: appeared as &they had been dragged in the earth. y were • wounded. At Was theught nty bodies 0 reMained in the s. The portions of the °by tweet by eyolone included generally the poorer lltngs.. The storm appeared to have id about 18 Milt* northwest of Roches- ; gathering violence as it progressed. A erbigo dunliolored; funnel shciped Cloud seen approkishing, and -in a • few enter the slaughter was Accomplished. ere Was no time to esoape.:' The place dthe dead ,lay was indescribably 'Had. there Wildly searched for • children, Ile Immolate waifs were found whoa tempeet.fii!d orphaned. One child was only., survivorof a family of seven*. e passengers.of the train were not aware 6 0y0101:10 Until their' attention was acted to it by feather bode and wear, apparel lodged'agahint the barbed-wire At a oonferenoe of Irish members ' of gement last nighti a Pthdramine Was pared kir a convention, of the Trish tional League of Great Britain at Leede, tember 27th. The programme demands .government for Ireland, and the direet esentatkm4011 klaborintolasai ant: • - . r, • • Arinand by her Tresses. Virilliesbarre (Pa.) special to the Phila- delphia Prez* NAYS MOS Duly Stormer, a young „woman employed it the , Trimks. ville woollen mill, near hetet was standing hear the mein shaft' to -day, when the maohinery was started up, and her apron was Caught. She succeeded in pullingit loose, but in the effort her hair, which was very long, and Worn in a angle plait down her beak, was °aught by the rapidly. revolving shalt, In ' an instant ;the was whirled monad the shaft ' with terrible Violence, and before the machinery oeuld be 'stopped and the unfortunate girl extri- /wed, she had received fatal injuries. Her hair was partly - torn from her head, and her body and head terribly bruised. She also received injuries to her spine and has since been lying, in 'a paralyzed condition. She is about 20 years ot age; of great personal beauty, and Of a highly respected family. She had been employed in the factory for several years.: : The Berlin North German Gazette says nobody outside nonce believes the -aseur- emit Of the French press that Franoe always desired peace. NO untieual warlike preparations are contemplated here. A Meeting between Bisinarok and the Austro- Hungarian Minister of Vorely,Adie " I 1I a a; a on Tto omoiapitrate that • I the warlike rtittore are tinfonndeclt • 4414414SIBLEP — — - ,..etetree.-"ettil 4100 it e,f1.1!••• -114,1-rregerier htgaenuarlikleillkileir l'fitivroehlFselkua6ita • Air, A Pars. cablegram (taxis; At Royon on taronde there was on rridaylk ecene per- haps unprecedented in the amide et balloening, ' Gratin!, a. well-known aeronaut, was, ahont to alto his ascent in a bot -air balloon, called Vidouvillaise. Albertine, heroine of ,several balloon Regents, was seated in the oar, and M. Gratien was hOldiRght ill:Bright hand a Iowa coil tied to one of the Oprda that served t� attach the lballooie. The 'balloon. unex. pectedly broke etathe C9rd unrolling itself with lightning rapidity caught in a sort of &got artaind the fiat and second fingers of Gratieu's right hand, and he was inutediately whisked off into t} .air 600 meters :high. In veto be tiled to haul himself up on the cord and loop it over his arm. After ' fraeatic'efforts he became exhausted and hung at the end of the cords, suspended solely by his two tinge" and suffering excruciating agony, owing to the jerking of the balloon and the cord, which out like a razor through the itesh to the bone. that ,situatioh Gra- lien carried a distance. of nearly four miles, at a -height of 600.metres above the earth. Albertine, °vermin° '13•y.. horror of the situation fainted away, and Bank' helpless to the bottom Of the eer. As the sir in the balloon became cool the balloon desoehded, but bumped against the earth in the midst of a dense MR88 of thorny shrubbery. Gratieh was ,not • only stripped of his olOthes, but his akin was literally torn in strips tromthis body, and he was dragged for ' neatly half &mile through thorny brambles. Finally, Rome peasants managed to Cut the cord. Gratien appeared to be a mass of wounds, and to be near bleeding to death. Strut/go to say be did not lose consciousness for a single instant. H thateintereal-einttuw and although his condition is critical; he will probably recover. When the rope was out and the balloon was freed from the weight of Gratien'a bodyttiittettetteeretetti timulgit-loFFAK-4:„itzirysu,,,..rmuzgi-L4v,;,;-4 • 114.1't and soade4;mt;oiiitieltiallsttl'5s'Itot on iirre, firrize. She was sorely distressed in mind, and badly misted, but 'otherwise safe and sound., ' • INEANCili AND GRA MANY. The .presneets et War--Avittiten • linnienvres. , A Louden cablegram says: The posel- bility of another Franco-German war absorbs interest at this moment.. Bis- marck's -game iseupposed to ,be that by inciting the German mid to make wanton and baseless charges- against - he will dieoredit the Republic - and contribute: to the restdration of the monarchy: The time is opportune. In oomiequence of Count de . ,Chatnlioard'a death there are symptoms of 41, monarchic coalition in Europe. The King of Rothhania, the King of &rids, the Sing of Greece amt. the Prittee of Bulgaria are on a 'Visit to the GOMM and Austrian Courts. During the autumn manoeuvres the .Emperor William gathers at Hamburg the King of Saxony, the Dukes of Heim and Saxe -Coburg, the Crown Prince, the Prince of Wales and other leading tnembees of the mai familitie. The Dukes of Connaught; Cambridge' and Edinburgh will be present at the German manceuvres, which will be the ;most imitate ing military ' demonstration :since' the Franco -Gorman war. . • A letistitihettr IN FULL •BL00111... Ihc voigeoas Array et et ihe. Period. . A Chicago' reporter was ensconced in a Street oar inthat city .theother day when in tripped it young lady, a pure type of the genus dtidelet. Men folded up their new,s- papene•women 'stopped taking and stared with open eyes and mouth at the bewitch.; ihg figure, Who seated herself about the centre of the box car. She wore so much bustle; or tournure, as ,modistes say, that she was 'Obliged to balance herself on the very edge of the Beat. To begin at the top zidvilao_m---tahirsforo4cohrJasir....:414A .1.ThoiV-Vittytivniutivifr .00 or, at the nape-ofet-thetheckTrolled in two doughnut tultspestt- -ttitehgtry bang, whit% had been curled to perfection, WRS pulled out and _up_ into :little -billows, - giving her face , a parallelogram shape. Between the bangs it the top of he; head and the doiighnute atthe base was perched a little bleat bilk Scull Asp, which nobedy but a woman could ever' have pinned onl -Her- eyes were ' beautiful dark, tiesem hazel,with dark lathes and brows that had been strengthened With frankincense and Maeda thet priceless Misters; proof against perspiration; The -roses. in ' her cheeks came from the rouge pot, but with .that fidelity, to nature which could not &soaps admiration. Near the left temple was a reetangulat ;piece of court plaster. Her black jersey was faultless, and, draping a black. silk" skirt, she wc,e long and perfectly plain overdress of fine black cashmere. Her feet were gezierounin both section); .though the made" no 'secret , of there', showed Aci advantage a pith of long button boots tipped with bits of patent leather. A high thergy- man's collar' was closed With a large„gold button, beneath which rested a grasshop- per, large as life and twioe as natural,. made of gold. In her earls were diamond lenge, a jewel of the same kindWas set in a narrow bracelet, while from the Other hung and rattled and-jiligled about 00 ,worth of gold coins. These gettrgaWs were •worn over a pair of black kid gloves "philed over ,her wrists in studied wrinkles, -and her left booa engaged a silk umbrella with a forked hahdle•of natural wood:. But the glory of the whole outfit was eritonstroUs bunch of yellow satin rose's, pinned midway bettveen belt and throat, and quite concealing the Whole front Of the jersey. She yawned frequently, and always covered her pretty mouth with a email kangaroo skin pocket- book on which was a large silver R. • 1 -The light guard--glatis chimney. .‘ Somebody put a email mud turtle, about the size of a silver dollar, in a bed at a New Jersey hotel, and the aranget . who was maenad to that room, upon retiring, caught sight Of it. He at onesresumed his rho artnicreal e e ave it'eretty lively night Of .it, but if they're as big as that 1 don't propose to get in with On the onenting faleY of the Pareele,Post an Aberdeen gentleman, in appreeiatien otthe boon, slant lir. Fawcett, latetrasater-Gen- eral, a ,ealinen, which he gratefully aelsnow. ledged. The vast extent of the. everting range of Sectlend will be aPPare t when it Matadi that seven of tho 1,4 ighland counties, ocoupy an area of eleven and a half of acree,a fourth ,part of 'vitiate Is seared to deer and • - Two girls at North Tolsta, about 16 miles from Stornoway, while gathering flowers were surpieed by the tide. In climbing a high cliff Mery, daughter of Angiis MeIver, Tolsta, fed and was killed. The &bee girl also fell, but was not seriouely hurt, The McKie collection of Burns literature and relics has been formally handed over by the committee of subscribers to the Kil- roarnook Town Council, the oustodiers ot the Kiln:tante& Burns Monentent Minieum. At the same time a portrait of the poet, believed to have been painted by Nasmyth, was presented to the corporation by Mr. Rae -Brown; of London, and else a portrait of the late Mr, Archibald Mackay, historian Of Itilmarnoek, by her relative; Mr, A. S. Mackay, artist; Edinburgh, t't • The" agitation throughout Seoiland in favor of the release from prison, of the Streme Ferry • fleherinen, convicted of rioting, is extending. ' Several Presbyteries have petitioned' the Home Secretary,' • and the Commission of the Free Church' at Edinburgh have agreed to memorialize Sir William Harcourt to reconsider the case and Mitigate the sentence, expressing the 'teak% at the same time that means should be taken to secure the application Of the law of the land in regard to the Sabbath labor on the railways an well as labor of all other descriptions. Dr.. Begg, -who moved this resoluticei, •ottictustil_gio Ittrif-triewee, -approach the Queen•herself oh the • matter. He also stated he had visited the men in prison, and had found them being treated as cam. , seconded the motion, which WWI adopted by the Com- mission of Asitembly, whit& is the Suprente Court of the Church. Messrs. Edward & Son, of Glasgow, have beentoommissioned to prepare the sword for :preeentation to Mr Archibald Allison. The orhamentef theseibbard is -divided into three parts, that at the point being intended. to aot as a chime and is cork:mead of the winged Moon, surmountedby two Egyptian figures. Above a scroll is 'a band. with figures retteesenthig Highlanders "fleet in the fray" above which is a collection Of war implements:, The *hole is surmounted by a female figuretwielding the sword and scalesttiftJnetioe.' The hilt is 'formed on, Medallions entwined by Scotch thistles and acanthus foliage. In the tentre medallion the Sootoh, coat -of -arms is wrought and medallions on either Bide contain scenes from Tel-eleliebir. The hilt is finished' by the Imperial Crown. It is intended.. that the hilt shall be wrought in gold, set with gems where oonsideredsuitablett The blade shall hive on one side • mines from the Egyptian wee, Ohninencing with - embark- ation of troopErand leading up to the vicitory Of Tel-el-Kebir, and on the other side or the blade are etiptds plaoing laurels on a High- lander; on this side theinscription can, be. engraved in full.. (Su the reverse 'side of the scabbard equally appropriate ornament scones and ernblehts &mild be given, more partioulatly with eeference to the Crimea, India and Ashantee. • A FlINNENOT,A. TOICNADO. GraphicDserIpijon et whit it Leeks ' Like and Bow the idealisation Peels. A cloud, *sat is ;the raven's wing, ap- potted in the west. iteddenlyit splitiand between. the .two blaok trains) ,expanded the most fearful, dismal elcy I ever (jaw. .The color was green -grey -yellow; and it darkened the sun so it 'became as twilight. The oexpenters had gathered together with Us on the porch: • • "This billet be altailsteeel," one of them seed t "now we'vallnettneheare&dinenterett litettIttontlttttlareiettt-ttteittelesa4-Attiettlt4 bJaoh�boud wings,and the upperone eanle withIThrribha„. tipeedi -flurrying baltk towards us. "Let us walk int" I said; "It seems as if weetoci,. shall got a taste of tt.". We went-int-andenur-perlort-Itieke& quite dark. We had ecateely kicked the door before we heard the toaring, of the stormnoening.: In a moment we were sur- rounded by e White clout and the wind and an; lashed the hciuse, whiohigreanedand -eltivered:t It was not - ram ; it •Wae furious; torrents of water mixed with heavy hale which ; poureci_dowxte.lromit-heaveter The stem tried to burst open the door, but five .nien pressed against it with all their might. The wall, • seemed to give way, and stood in a bosv't ithe build- ing shook as in tionvulsions. 1 felt. la tightening oftmy heart every time' the house seereed to be lifted from the .ground .and dropped down' again. ',Twice,we hLd these terrible shooks; then in a Moneta. house, men, finhiture Were hurled through the air 100 feet away. I do not remeeiber. anything till I found room. on the ground crawling among the ruin* of My home. The first I discovered was 'ita4 wile, with ohildire ea& arm; lying at my 'aide. Men and children wereepattered around among lumber and sidings, whether alive ordeal, nobedy -could tell, A table .and a staircase OaMe flying through the air; some mot met them and pushed them awaY, eo they did. not kill my wife and children; bite of : wall and roof whirled round us ; here it. Was impessible, to remain. We crept and crawled ' and ran 'for our lives down to the forest. As We found Oriole ether there, we were onlyeix ; a friend of .Ourii, a farmer, had one of the small girls , his arms, my wife another, and one of my ;sops' clung to mebut where -wets the Met, of the children? 1. had teself seen one of the carpenters run withmy third little girl -but the eldest and youngest boy? Killed, perhaps, or 104mutilated among the 'Mina, and it wasimpossible to look for them. The hur- ricane would have swept us ivy as (molts as we had moved from the weed. The only thing to do was to erose the children to us and give them so much shelter its we could with our broader backs. The rain and the sliedtn, ttethe-eak-slitubrWifie own flat to the ground, and their limbs atm& our heads and ehoeldete like *hips. - Boston Globe. •,;lypt0110 ‘02.01‘. @SNOW 'A. Law ,Discuesion• in me florae elbow ttettettter .11 wage Hughes' Decision It was wonderfuf how many men in the • . eityfeund time to take their paper up and see what the news was, 'before they went out last night. They would Ant eill their wives' attention to tlio cholera in Egypt, or Capt . -Rhodes' preposed attempt town= , Niagara, and, while, the female part of the firin was all atteutieut the lords of creation would accidently notice his 4onor'e judg- Mont in the late wife -heating case. Some kind inishands who alwaye monopolize the - paper after tea, deviated from their usual customs andread t aloed, and 0' te get," • - and while they ducked their heads to save their ears from being boxed, the paper WR8 confiscated and the judgmeht eat aside.. . Another benediet, who had a•eimple, con- fiding wife whom he loved, as the apple of him eye, said in a lordly tone to her, Re she was about leaving the table, " Uoicl Susan 1 we have, been married a good many years, and 1 never understood my privilege , as e husband till now, and in epee 1 exer- cise my tighta as a married man I want you to know what the law is on the subject ; here it ise-e At common la,ve a men has tight to resort to the moderate ooreectient. of his . wife for her misbehavior, ancl administer proper castigation for her faults, -and you see, wife, I ,can 'sault and hatter you because you are my Wife. Here is the lett on that point ; ' And Atilt / am not prepared to say that in the, stria BenSe of the term, that was an assault and bat- , tery which he did, owing to his right to, correct and even punish her,' If 1 should make a wrong- calculation and kick 'a few ribs in, it wall right. I will read you an, extract from the, Judgment to dispel any doubts you may have on that point It is not, however, for magistrates or courts to etep in and interfere with the rights of a ' .:. • M-rdlifiCLOVerkin oWn The law gives him rights which no authority- , may invade.' I don't want to exercise my . rights at common 'law as long as you do. ' yourdirtylandetrietly tpd*",,17..aliu;aPiLeeeinatT&V;,-,- ••• • gatiod will be in Order." ' The little women grabbedher lord b% the nose and pulled it till he begged for mercy. Then she sat down beside him and oried,, not that the' common law had .any terrors.' for her t but she, cried for the poor women who were daily kicked and thumped by brutal husbands, whose newly acquired knowledge of the common,law Would add ' violence to the kicks; Then she knew that • every brute in the city would cut this judgment •. out ,and • paste it in his hat, to, have it handy to read. to 'their wives after the '0 itorrectioriSI was finished. " This May have been law,'" she said, "established , and_quoted-by -judges in the dark ages, - when Britons were in a semi -barbarous, condition,' bilt,1 don'tbelieve it's law now,. John; if the •intelligent women of Canada • seriously thought it was, there would be a.• • Bill passed at the next Session. of Parliat- ' ment, and don't you forget it, my dear I " -St. Thomas Journal. LVIflW'fl'. _iaoluiti ..__Tairicrozsvirox•euvricifrula. • ere is only ode way bywhich any disease can be cured, and that is by removing the cause= - • Whatever it may be,The:great-medieal---authinc-7-7— -itierottliti-day declare that nearly every disease is caused by deranged kidneys or liver. To restore thee „herefore is the only way by Which health can be twinged. Here is,where Werner's-Sate ' Cure has achieved ita great repiitstio It Eketa directly upon the kidneys and liver And by plea - them in ei healthy condition drives disuse() and pain from -the system: -'1rOr all Kidney, Liver and Urinary troubles, for' the, distressing dia. 'orders of women, for Malaria and physical ' ,Aroubles-generally, thiii great remedy has no equal. Beware of impostors, , imitations and coneoctious said to be just as good. For Diabetes ask for Warner's Nate Dia - hetes (lure: ' . For sale by all dealers. ' .11: WAIIIVEllt & CO., Toronto, Ont. Roeliester, N. F.'; London Eng. .:rrnje 011611k:1164g° Company,..Tpist 1 o0,000.snat,e6i: • $2.00 per pilares:.: NV.E1241111ONT ors.88,RD f TO Tin0 'CANADIAN •PiTillq. Eterki bard for'..kosOectu, ete„' to .• J. ib. Guelph, Ont., Canada , A CURE GUARAN,IEED.' T•ED ICI 11 a TRADE MARK. 1N,4 -> rottl4'13-14-S-RAIll&IVERV-P006.).4 Weak MemoryiLoss of Brain PoWilt,Sexual Pros- , - 16°'"014 and Vouiiilt and leentakii Positively cures Nervousness in ALL its atages tratiou Night Sweats- OptatilatorrhOia, Leucor.- rhtta, Barrennees and' General tics* oi Power It restores Surpriaing,` Tone. and Vigor to the Exhunated Generative organs.a*rWith ,e&eh • order' for Twer..yo packages aotiompanied with $ We Will send our Written • Guarantee to refini the momiy.thatreatineuanf tarait-edeocira phiet-tanWtnail to o.ny addvess.Sold — by droggiata at 50e# per box, or 0' box& for $2 50, ;nailed iroe Of postag on receipt ci money . iv; magnetic editie - Co , •.••••..1.• 01.4. •••,*. tt„ •••• • •• •