Loading...
The Sentinel, 1884-04-11, Page 3•-r• EE• - A. Grand Old Feta. Vbo shall judge a man. from Manners 9 • Who shall know himby his dretis ? Paupers raa,y be fit for prinoes, - Princes fit for Something less; Crumpled shirt and dirty jacket, • May beelbthe the golden ore Of the dee-pest thought and feeling -- Satin vestS could. dello more. There are springs of crystat‘necia.i. Ever welling out of stone, .There are purple buds and golden, -• Hidden, crushed andovergrowo. Gfad, wha counts by souls, not dresses, Loves and prospers -yon and.me, While Ile_Valnes thrones the highest But asilebbles ui the sea . • Man, upraised above hierfellaWs; - Oft forgets his fellows then ; liasters,rulers, lords, remember - t your raeanest hinds are men; - Men • honor, men by feeling, -- Me by thourtht andraen by faille,- • Clai ing equal rights to sunshine, In a man s ennobling name. -4 ' There are foam embroidered oceans, There are little Weed -clad rills, - There are feeble inebhigh saplings, Tr ere are cedars on .the hills God, who counts by &MIS, not statiOris, _ LOVES- and prospers you and me, For to Him all famed distinctions Are as pebbles in the sea. Toiling hands alone-a.re builders - Of a. nation -s wealth or fame, Titled laziness,is pensioned, Fed and fattened mil the - By the sweat of otheraT foreheads; Lwrn oniy to rejoice ; While the poor raan's Du -raged freedom • Vainly lifteth up its voice. - Truth and justice arv eternal, Born with lovelinesS eta light.; Secret wrongs shall never yrosper- While there is a sunny right; . vea, wht se: wor.d-heard voice is singing Bound1e!3s love to you and Me, - - Sinks oppression with itst As -pebbleain the sea. ' , A V AUK" Irkttpia TOUR isOIV'Ell; — • A Note,' Brought -bya Robin, From a -:• • South Ca.rolista Girl. . 'CABLE' *GOSSIP. , Tie Talk sit the Greet , The Prose- nee. oithe Dtiksof,Consiatight;‘, Prince _Arthiir, at an elephant fight 'given by the Rajah of Bhurtpore, India; will. be.:. -made the subject of a queetionin Varlia4 meta. Elephants are made .i to 'fight by 'giving them copious draughts o rum. Some become--so'drunk • that they can scarce! stand, :while otlierg are rendered-ft:mom.. The correspondents of staiiety jot:in:Wel rave about Mrs. Milford', an - American belle in Paris, and Mlle. Nevada's tasteless dresses are explained by the fact thot she could not get any dreaanialter.to work in Mi canine, season, and had to make her dreases. herself, and. Was so • engaged' until half -past 7 on the night of her appearance. The worry of the dressmaking had a -great deal to do with. the nervousness whioh paralyzed her in the first few imoments of her appearance. ' . 4 • Three Lords have figured largelyduring the week.' Lord Oolin CampllelPa divOree case had to be heard with closed doors, and the details cannot be even hinted. It was decided in favor of his - wife, a • celebrated liondon beauty, -. Lord-, Ailsa has returned horn Asia Minor, having killed thirty boars and two panthers. Lord Soatsdale, follow= ing the exaMple of Lord Vernon, is going to set tip.a large butter factory.z . • j The -grotesque items of the lweek are the enunciation by a clergyman of -a -. recite , - tion at the Young Men's Christian A890041 - den by A. professional, -actress as a too worldly, entertainment.. The allegedTformo- don in - a _London* suburb -of a boys' eat league, bound by (*the, fines nd- -rewards), and employed in- stealing' and torturing oats, and the "suggestion. by the ..oreniation,- ists that they should have at - the forth - ;doming National Health Exhibition crematorium. in full working -Order. - On Saturday afternoon Xt. deo,- W. Johnson, while in.. his garden ort.Auguta street, saw a bird fluttering about, evidently A London Cablegram gays - The officials digabiod in some way.-, He at :once pio,. of the British Association for th� Advance.. Es ceeded to investigate.; and discovered- it to reentOf Science are alread making * th be a splendid specimen 'Of the. robin,: e rangenients with the steamship companies kte of which Were entangled n a: piece of for the conveyance of Members to attend .- i - Ford, tied to one of the wings' amall A.the meeting at Montreal in August. The m mud, doubled up and -sewed at the edges, Allan Line will Bend a SPeoial ifiteamet, frd, was attached to one end of the string. On • evening the card Mr. Johnson _ - Beautiful rabiti, Why will you go To the bleak; cruel north, That homer of snow, . • While wei in the south Are ever warm, And Analways Firer: d area. To protect you from harm? • Farther pencilling on the card stated that -of the present large olitflow of immigrants, the writer, Lilly Ranson, of Meadville„Land the likelihood of its increase; the GeNe ernment do not think it necessaryto in troduce a Bohemia to stirmilate emigration." -- - The Spectator' refers to Nisi. Andersonlr an actress -who draws crimp mainly V the lathe of *her beauty,. end-eayethe Arch- bishop .of Canterbury is fortunately mar- ried, but - for that protection. he -under, the new degradation:10f - the public mind, be given Away twice at week to soMe American.The Topical Titn4s says 0. -The • reports are unworthyadvertising tricks. Nobody carescent whether -Anflerson espoUses a count .or -a cos - • monger. . . , -.SOCIETY ,soanie NotableBe 4ings in the British, HP. • t. s : Club gossip is y killers who went :.. 'Me onciOn letter busylwith- the sixty . „,_ on Thetidaytothe liv;niarket Theatre to Ille# an 14194M0,118 - ' respohdent.... Eaoki .believed himself tbe f,'. ored main, and one Wailfatuous enough : 4 advertise: his good fortune in the :nines , The town- 'ia now , laugbing at them ail. - . - t. Labonehere '111.1fbghtprg Miss Fortes- cue titild*Mr. Gilbert .pe for showing her as ' 'a: ouriosity,A$e other -for makir g money out of the sow' -al. • He thinks that 4 the jilted fairy as n • '.1,ost much by a deser- tient Which has rOsedil yr salary from £3-a week to In' o Week. - ' • In the current nt.t$- ber of the -3foitth4 Magazine,-_ published Win &or,' the editor thus oonoludes a .p __I-egyiie . of - the • . heir apparent: "The _ Pfalreist. With. . all - his experientie. Would rie.-"'i have written,' 'Put not ;jtoiir trust in .p.ri slifid he ilia known thejPrinee Of Wales. Five- o'clook tea of enin Belgravia have I - been thrown iiito Aisternation :-by the .. news, reported by M Iaabouchere, that the maid of "one of our St known peeresses," smarting from a :tab ;Add a dismissal, tied the :peeress' bait to he back - of a their, slapped - thepeeressi --:-„Itlie face and departed in -Scab whioh awai til her at the door. ' , Liverpool •August 6th. The lines running to New York are arranging facilities ..to. take parties by way of the Spates. ' -In the House of Lords Friday night the Bari - of Derby, Colonial 'Secretary id State, iii assentipg to the motion of the -Earl of Carnarvon, esiling for the prodeo-- tion of bapers upon the subject of State - aided emigration to Canada, said "in view' South Carolina, had the bird caged for two weeks prior to the. /4th of February, but on that date she was constrained to . let him free, his efforts to get away being such as touched -her pity. If Lilly sees this para- graph she will be delighted to hear that her pet is beingproperlycared for in the cruel north,"t and that until he is prepared to journey back to his Southern home he will be in every way" protected from harna.0 Late Scottish News:. Mr. Lavirenee -Drew, of Merryton,- the Well-known.breeder of Clydesdale- horses. died at hisresidenise. on Friday "midnight after' a brief illness Dr. Drew was in his . 56th year, and wasunmarried. The- Seriatim of Aberdeen -University on Saturday.00nferred thelonorary degree of on. Mr. Archibald Forbes journalist ' and war -correspondent ; Mr. R.,G.Hamil Under-Secretary . for Ireland, , Dr. George 'King, Director of the Botanical . Gardens, Calcutta r,Sheriff Dove Wilson, Aberdeen, and Mr. Charles Lapwerth, Pro - lessor of Geology, Bitmingharn. . At the High Ccent of Justioiary,, Edin- . burgb, last week, Robert Flockhart Vickers - and William Lines Were charged with the - murder of two gamekeepers on Lord Rose- burg estate near Gorebridge on. the 15th of Deceraber last. Beth prisoners Rleaded not guilty, and the evidence ' on their behalf was directed to prove an alibi in, each . instance. The jury by a majority -returned- & verdict of guilty against both prisoners*, and they were sentenced to d'eath. • Struck it Bich. Some prospectors in the Mountains have struck "Ile.' At Quartz'Creek, which.* lips about forty nines north of Kicking Horse -...... i :River, in British Columbia, have been dis- covered. placer diggings, which, it is antici- - A. Queer Qui. , pated, will pay- from, 610 to up a dby. A story of domestic trouble Was told at They at first imagined they were the first the Woolwich Police,Cotirtt / esterdaywhich- discoverers, but further observation proved teabhes a "useful motel. A wife desired to that this wasone of several mines, which have her husband bound Over to keep the had been worked BOM8 -twenty years ago, peace. But how had theaccpeace been difil.r but had to be abandoned on account of turbed ? The husband h a simple -et- ' the ooet of transporting provisions and planation to offer.. His 'wife -neglected her ' othe;an Pacific Railway will, however, Moody and Sankey; and the admitted facts iiecessaries... The approaoh. of the household, duties in order' to _go to hear Can an . . put an. end to this difficulty, and there is certainly indiaated that -they must. maces- • little doubt that there will be a pretty airily have been negletotedJ For the wife • lively stampede in that direction as soon as Went on Wednesday and on Thursday and , spring opens up. . The excitement among on Friday. !, Three. times in three days. miners is intense, and all of them are long- Be reasonable," was Mr: Balguy's senten- -.bag for the disappearance of the snow, tious precept. • Something, rperhaps„maY whithnowiroPedeetbeir liassegee-CoiggrY-t be added. Eniotienal religion - seems louri- . 14,1.1V.T., Herald. • . . ously apt to. unfit peop11for• the . plain . duties of life. Only the ot2 er day. a soldier. of the Salvation Army was .convicted ot - .. . kTerre Haute, Ind., man • employs his having,Paid his subsoriptions out of Stolen divorced wife as a servant girt; and her funds.'. And lottemees 02 ithe same kind. neighbors pay she has a better wardrobe . than when she was his *He. . - - • are too common.—St. James' Gazette. 1 . A Parkdale teacher, bag been fined for - whippings ohild. ' • Irregularities are _alleged in Connection with the Montreal peer -lists of corporation -finds his. trusted friend a rascal euid a. •eseeeelnd.,laborers. . . . to be that too many men live in 6,5,000 fugitive frem justice. The trouble seems style -on a $1;500 salary: To do so they steal. Once stealing, they never quit until some train of oirounistances expose them,— American JOIRIZal. . i '- -I • .' -4 • - .VerY Ilard Steel. iss er. Truth has i this.n lawsuit between , Dowager . Duchess cannot agree on; - eh Cid be placed up ,. one of the olaiises in.. her will. Mr. Williti Lowther takes one side and the °the `is represented larhis colleagues,: Mr. lei Fane and - Mt. Ca, endisrBentino Another oharita entertainment was the Veglione of th ItaliOn Club; given at Freemasons' Taver for the benefit of the Ittilion-poor in Lorain. It *Very gay ball,' the oely clieef $ being oeused by the Italian Ambassador ho, thinking more of his dignity than of t ' needii-of his eimintry; Men, refused eithe e to AO or to make his exouses. - ., . Several leaders fashion and artists of. 12, gev.e. • ei. eerie f tableavx vivants last night,- an:tinged, fr ga TennYson's- "Dream of! • Fair Wome& Much praise: Was awarded to Mr. Lo. e? s setting of the story of.- iJeeilitha's • da - ter. = Lord .Tennyson sl pt. on a batik sealuring-the exhibition: The Court -is 'Wring privately the suit of Lady Colin Cam, )e11 for divorce. Lord Campbell is . a -b"ether of the Marquis of Lorne., . - ' - . - - Theis is US bea exeollteTs- of the -Cleveland, as they. ocinstruction which, .'• • - FASHIONS sN Geetetrespi.- _ The Latest .Styles In Ladies' and Gentle./ • usen' s Weer. - All the loading haberdashers' have now gotten in full. hoes -of geutlemen's furnigh, ing goods for -spring and -early 'bumpier wear:-* -There is probe* no -oxie article of wearing apparel which in its, different styles goesfurther towards. establishing , the boundailea of the seasoint than does: the glove. . For gentlemen's wear the 'darker terra-cotta shades prevail -for the street and Ordinary- • use. They ..are .still Made , with heavy- -emliroiderectbacks in: fancy Silken stitelies, and contain from One: to three buttons.: For ' everting anddreas ;lighter weight and lighter -shades are the rile. • -Lemon and vanilla shades are . -the: most popular, with :plain, unembreiderek :backs. 1- - Where gentlemen's gloves are concerned: the dude question hasto be - largely; ;Considered:- : The dude like's to be -welt gloved at SA times, no matter . what the weather is *; but in the OW- -Of .gentlemen not quite 80 fastidious as to .dress-;:- when the .weather becomes- *sufficiently . warm gloves are diaoarded except for evening, and dress oticasions:! The': styles' in ladies' &lies are naturally more Varied. _ There is; however,. very little -change • from the favorite Shapes and shades whieh prevailed ;during the winter.. The many -buttoned glove is a thing of the past. It is -entirely eupeteeded- by the Difousquetaire and the Camille. The former -reaches nearly or quite to -the elbow, but' is only fastened -at . :thewrist with four. at five buttons.' -TIUr Camille is laced • and. ig several inches .shorter. ' The favorite Shades are different tints of tan and anew shade of gray, which could; properly be • -termed monsquetaite. These two steletiMousquetaire and every imaginable shade, from ten* cotta through different tints of tan down to pure white, are the proper thing in gloves, and the assortment, so' far as color 15 cioncerifed, is Varied enough to suit. the requirements of the ,most exacting tatir- °pager. ' • ' , . . High Frii.V.,sti.tor Jerseys. . T.:S.:Cooper; CcOersbUrg; Pa.; sold lad week to Mr. Shoerr ker, Of Baltimore the , i - „A I- Baltimore, the bull Black :Prince of .-Linden, by Darling's Black Pt)iicer of HanoVer, out of M#jorain 2nd, fukfisister to Stoke POgis- 3rd for $15000 -11r , Shoemaker is the 4 1 • (‘?,.•,,. • , owner of Princes '.ir,A, that recently agtoni. ished thedairyw: d with a -yield ,of OW 106 pounds of butt.':;;in ,28 days.. ' '. • The product of t: 6 sale of imported &Ir- aqis to -Mr..: Qoo.-- .numbering 84, was 640 560.: The hi fit price - paid Was kg ' - . the 4 -year-old co Moth Of: St, Limbert. She was told to H . Pierce, ot Boston, for 66;200.- Next- tot oath& Nina of St. Lam- - bert,- for Which :- Pierce paid $3,800. A new 'steel .is said to ave been pro- Van Ness, n, for wfoars$715d0Qt-ti. Thilaelle78- 11 . ducedat Sheffield, England, which which is ex- year-old: cow Gol ark went -tie Moulton peoted to - beof incalculable value to the. manufacturing and tailroad world. lila, said to he made "by addirg from 7 to 20 per cent. of the ordinary - ferro-manganese of commerce to iron either t7ho11y or t� a good extent .decarbonised and refined. and - treated by -any of •the ,ordinery -prOpesees, or to steel produced by s oh proaese." It is stated that a small-tesbar_ contain. ' mg • 12 pet cent. of manganese was ent • tly ing ver 05 es.' er, '1.AT•13 ciltinaCelt ceeeklexit: - It has been decided to bold brew* of she Methodist'Cbur Toronto on the seoond A Jinie; not atlictmeitil former the letter- plape not being able reqiiisiteaccanimodatient The Bishop of -Lahore eta bourne receetly thatt from w Allies' Con- et.Oanadie esdey_. arranged, fford the at East - the -knew •••,4 of India and l'ersis%personallhiptklearned RiodOog and .Perinan philotectgsers were now more than ever etre:lents pi the Bible, and full of thoughtful. inquir ,Jss to the doOtfines otOnristianity.. ' * - - Rev.. Dr:edtiolaraiie will g� Japin in a.- few months as -Missionary of tr, Methodist Church. His formerlyworked i? that , - . oouu- try as -a missionOry for WT.; years, and acquired- considerable fluency IA the native tongtie. Five year age he liCAA3 dompelled to return,..oveing to the of lin. Coolititne. • Rev. -Dr. -Nelle, Ch.ancellitifi pi Victoria College, and Rev. -DI.' Aylesieereb, of . the Methodist Episcopal Church, • /live been appointed as; delegates to the floneral Con- ference of the Methodist Epiieepal Church of. the United States, to be heid delphia -in May next: The 18th of that "month hassbeen fixed for receiving delegates fronivutstde*Chnrches. . *, The Baptist 'Weekly thinks women capable. of taking part in the . business meetings of the Churches, and eaks: "The signal ability .and success with Which they conduct their home and foreign missionary societies have opened multitudes Of eyes as to what they _are -capable of doing. The Christian *omen of to -day are not the aort Of .women that so great a man 843 Paul would -have kept silent in the Churches . double when Cold, and Mill -Wade hard to turn -iron ; that an axe contain the same per mintage, and which had n been hardened or tempered out in t bar of iron half an inch square. A cot pondent oV The American Manufactu giving these facts, . says that the steel is capable of being hammered or rolled the same as_ ordinary steel, and showedno magnetic qualities. If these accounts are in any measure correct the discovery is e I e likely. to, prove of great economic . import- - sine. •' - • . . , rote, of Verniceete,;or .14,150. Pentine, ,a W. Hi Cunyngba :'- oi-Wilkesborough, fo t -6--year7old. cow si ,,,-* by Brownie, went to 14;100. Gold BA iii , cow, 7 -years -old, sold fot $1,100 to 11.-Mtehoemaker,of Baltimore, . i - - • who also paid. $1, ''''? for the 4 -year -old -cow Westphalia. The ale ale took place at New YOrk.on sThursdak, "A Hass mt. a 'Ors.e- Bo'x.'' i Theie was a,sq4 Lin a Certain English petish wile* trAr V1084 was anxious to abolish the pew sie 111. The. whole parish Wes in favor of tik step, with. the exception of the -squire; - w J said they might do as , they liked, but should keep his pew; :The requisiteialt :.1 ions were made, and on the re-openin A -day we marched - the quire into his - tiv and. the service pro-' . ceded. The no '.•,- day going down to the -tillage, - the P . ec,-- met . Tomkins, the butcher,,and 849 him how he looked in his pew,- and, -* . t people said of _biro: 'I : ter some pre;V.ang -Tonakins replied Well, sorr, the -,,;.1do say as now : you do look loik a 'less if 'orae -box." The squire' f;lttwent home and velete. to the 'Vicar to get hat'he wasp a Wrong position and rid of his . pew, ' enclosed a cheque for 1 500 for the rest tion of the church.. An InaccesSible,Editori The newspapers of 'Scotland are far be- hind us iiienterprise and news, their forte is heavy leaders and long speeches: Thje offices are conducted in a manner which is novel to an American: Having occia.sion to visit the office of the Scotsman, 1 was Met by a female dragon, who guarded the .ap- proith to the sanctum. Her brilliancy startled me •from -my usual composure, have not been accustomed to see rn news- paper Offices women at :- all, but more especially one wearing . diamonds in her ears and pearls around. her neck, with an eye -glass tipped gracefully onher nose, dut :of' whioh—the eye -glasses, not •the nose -L: she viewed -me suepiolously. • • In a voice not :Sweet but ' strong she. demandedthy business. "1 *ant to Elfie the editor," I answered.1!. "The- •editot • is - never .seen," • was the reply. . • - • - • ' Never seen I": I exclaimed; . . "Never seen exoept by those who' knot,/ him," Was the answer.. it "What's his name?" I asked. "is name is never given to people Who don'tknow it," she said. ' .1- . " How-ottn.I Communicate with him?" 1 - "By letter," Ireplied the fait - getbeitike Such was my experience in the office of the Edinburgh- Scotsman—Edinburgh Letter to. 'Philadelphia Press. • • • • For s▪ ome- Vine past it. has- beenin con- ternplation to -adept some more effeetive meets for the Christianization of the Arabs of the desert. They have been ap- proached succiessfullYin the towns, but not much impreision has yet been made upon those who dwell in tqnts A bazaar Wig just beenheld in Edinburgh in aid Of a mission to the Bedouin Arab tribes inthe region about Darciasone. - The POpahas given orders fOr the re- moval of the body of Innocent 111. from Perugia to Rome, where a splendid monu- ment- will be erected to blip. The remains of Gregory VII. will also le brought from Salerno and buried next to Alexander III., the author of the Lombard League. So the three Popes who have fought most for the Church will all be buried together in the grand Beetles. - The Ontario Court of Appealyesterday ., gave judgment in the suit of tlifellev. J. T. Wright against the Synod of the 'Diocese of Enron, reversing the deeision the.Chan- eery -Court, thereby dieraissing the - plaintiff's bill with (sesta. The plaintiff filed a bill .on behalf of - himself and other clergymen; declaring that • they.wete en- titled -to rank upon the commutation fund of the Diocese to, the extent if 62,000 a year.' • - . - tow mum sTyrg FOR HIS UBE wakes .up in 'ithmorning and e Tore es. temperance people .Propose to bring out capdidatatifor•both naunicipal and Parliamentary honors, --How contrary butntui nature is any- way. Last weekthe despatches told Of four men in different parts of the country- who . committed suicide because they Could not. get -married and this week several Men . killed themselves b.ecienie they had got mar - tied . On Friday the body of an infant was found beside -a fence in the subnrbs of • z Elora. A post mortem .exannnation was held on Saturday,' and it was found that the infant had been suffocated -shortly after birth with it" pieee of cigar . folioed • down its throatand into its stomaiili.; The body was tied in in -old -apron With tna letters" L. P." workedby hand. Noone is yet inspected.' • - • * Bridgeport, Conn., pinta with pride to. old Joe Lander, a sailor who &eon Mille. For weeks he Was alone on the drifting hull of a barque, with nothing but the 'nice ner that it oan be held at the t he hold. to eat.- 'shoulder and sinied vrit the left eye. ' HEADING -OFF .TOB15ADOES. -. , ' - .• . r- - .- - - • We lie gradually - learning soniething about .tornadoes... The one 'which has just devastated a large part oflOhiofollowed the. .track 000upied by its predeoesior- two yeara ago. If the paths of these tornadoes could be thus established, theconamunitiew effected ootdd move Out of therd and devote the exposed territorytoBOB-Which, violent winds would not matenisily interfere with; such, for instanee,-,as potato cUltute.--.—WY.r. Mgt, ' : • . . - ,": - - i • : .. . ,. • —Sportsmen who have been unfortunate in osing their right eye, and . who are unable to shoot left-handed,- can once more have thepleasure:of going bunting. - A gut-, smith in North Oarolina bas - inVented tb, gun with the stook ourved in Buell itn*.iefi. . .. • • - UNDE here Igained it ere Itold yo ove. that:dares bo AN UMBRELLA. inay seek it, . ay speak itr: wind and weather " , rawa the maid at. 4man together, - ' econciles to Apri 4-111, cowers_- astening May (an,..?;,!Drange) ilowere-- - Love and I at4-,1 Annabelle 1 . All were unde0 n umbrella! . . d fast to Me, • _.., • shot straight through me, thanks for kindness, • 4my faint resignedness, an they stumbled, which never grumbled), -- Annabelle I an umbrella! - ' !Eyes bands that 1114' : • . . • . . Eyes whOse: glan(4'ff Lips that naurrour ' Cheeks that nioek I'Daintyleet that, Touched my he i LoveandI a All were un ,Walked We, talkedisIll Cupid; weary, • • - , ads her answer.1 '‘,.6 my query: it., 1 ' Why I like the y reason? - - - Oh, because I"- :13 :.gavetheseason,. Tbeneeblush her ,ilnples hollowed you raayncver kn ki 'whatfollowed— - Among • the ranks of tricyelists :it Ibis gravely stated that for two years petit the Queen has enjoyed her trloy.ole. . Not as a rider,' I should imagine, with her bad leg. Ibis very well known; however, that other :members of • the -royal family may be termed votaries -Of the wheel, while the .members of the House of Peers who have -gone in for the pursuit are very ' numerous. Not the least notable are Lord Granville, who odours the country round Walniet Castle, and Lord,. Sherbrooke (Match -tax :Lowe), who. has discarded his .bioycle :in favor of its more seetire rival: How the Old gentlemarioan ride I do Mit pretend to.say, for his eyesight is ao: bad that -he cannot read print unless with a; microscpe. Per- haps he prefers an iron steed, which costa nothing to feed; as I am told -that. in his personal expenditure he is very "near." _Sir Charles Dilke, the President- of the Local .Government 'Board, also acknow- ledges hirnself a beginner, but although, he was present the other evening at an annual dinner. Of .a- tricyolieg club and - made ,a speeoh reconimending the pastime to the .attentimeof dwellers in towns as being in every way suited to their peculiar necessi- ties; I do not take it that he is an ardent disciple of the treadle:-;-LondoltZetter. • LcTveandIa. --. All were und.r —Be cheeriu so, but keep up make,others abdr, hard 'to do it ''. better way to o * - "I have. l l ,ttll; " IlOyt movemInt ourg Siei .el ".0h,”. spited. len thein,to sit e''411 for five -pin" ute ,." , ' —It may be 1 -'little letiOn the Season, but we want torgive our _gardening ft/midis a brand new an Strictly. reliable Method of Amaking a hot b7,4in.a short Space of time. 'This is the wa-i,:;1 Apply s lighted match thetot_straw tiesi: ngt- : -: * . - at Min ar4"-at a diecount in Phtladel- -phial That is have, decided tli /0.. -They tak tog through, a -, was * time, one belatk-but nott[. Annabelle ' an umbrella! You -Cannot alwayaleet heetful appearance .and you na_ppy; It may be all tithes, but it is. the the blues. a 'great deal of -the amothir to e phy- lipplied• 'to children 7" 2phYsioiani, you just - • . • Stealing a Aide in Engiland. „ A man wishing to travel free from Wolb • verhampton,. England, to --Liverpool, pro- . - cured two stout pieces of rope; which he fastened to the axles Of a railway carriage, . leaving a noosetat the end of each. Into one noose lie put his legs while he inserted • -' hisshoulders into the other. In this posi- tion he hung when the train started. The 'train was an express and did not atop until • Crewe was reached,.which is about 70 miles from Liverpool. He was rather uncorn-; fortable when the train began to move, but when it got info ,1 nil swinglitehad real torture, and when he reached Crewe he was - nearly dead with fright. Here he was taken into oustody.- To the magistrate who adju- dicated ora the case be explained that his sensations when swaying to and fro were . something . awful, and the effect of the • sleepers as they rushed past him nearly robbed him of reason, and be was afraid that every moment the rope would slip frorci his shoulders and hang him." The _magistrate decided that he had had enough punishment, and, remaking that he was not likely to repeat the experiment, sent him about his business. This must be .s good . deal Worse than riding on a truck, _which- American tranip,s sometimes do. ilk street oar4corepanies all fat conthictors must too ninth room pass= to collect fare. There en an men- wanted to at is a crime thin men that le on Phila. delphialstieet e IS er chance- for the living sk.elePns to get a. job when the museum buaIuc i plays out. • . lAtting a Sister Fremiller Death -Be to Bob Her ot $800. -- August Sithluetter, of.503 North Halsted street, Chicago; Was robbed of about $800 in oash recently by his *brother-in-law, a young fellow known in this -country as Fritz Frank, although his realname is Frederioh Kleinert. The robbery was one both bold, daring and reckless.. -His sister' was lying on a siok bed from which it was thought she would never rise.- The money was kept in a small box in the mattress, the location -being known to :Frank,/who has boarded there for five or IfiX months: raised his dying sister from the bed, - took the box from beneath her pillow and then secured all. the oash in the box, the 841110Ullt being but little short of 6800. Al- though there was some valuable jewellery In the box, be took nothing but the money. The matter was promptly reported to the Police, but no Iroise of Frank had been found by the _force, although' Sohluetter claims that Frank was seen on the North Side Tuesday night—Chicago Herald. e A. /Satiable Nicknante. "Isn't • Collar Button' rather anodd niakbame to give your boyc?" asked a gewe tleinen Of a friend, who had just addressed his son by that - "Arfeltil dOn't know," teppedethe. father; laughingly. "It may sound -a little outieUet but it stilts the laiy first Vate:'.' *., - fig Why' do" you think the _nickname 'suits the boy.P. " Becasiee,"?, was the Preply, ewhen he slips outtiirthe evening I -ani never able to • The Exhibition Celan:4443e of :Montreal' find bitir.":=..Phitade/phitt Call. rooted .te, invite an Rrovernoze • ot. A ,‘ neral and Lay Landow,* tole present , . An Italii bottespendent vniteithat at the opening of the aunt* Olitibition of Qineen.. Maegheelea grow handsomer, and home prodnotions on • the 'Pth of August from, a Rayelso is beComing a Juno. next. , JtassW to*Boil Wateo. I roust tell you theold story of how the. late Charles .Delnionioo used to talk • about the newhot water cure. He said the Del- -monicees were the first to recommend it to - guests who complained of having no appe- tite. "Take a oup of hot water and lemon and youiwillleel better," was the formula adopted, and the cup of hot water and lemon Waieeim.ply a little hot water with a drop of lemon Juice in it to. take away the insipidity. For this antibilioue remedy the caterers charged the price of Asir" best liquors --25 cents or more—and it -Certainly wItiEVa, wiser way. to spend small change than inalcohol. "Few people know how to cook water," Charlet; used to affirm. The secret. ./ le in pctting•good, fresh -water into a neat /kettle; already quite Warm, and setting the water to boiling quickly, and then taking it - right off for use in tea coffee or other drinks, before it is spoileLTo let it steam and simmer and evaporate until the good Water ie in theatmosphere,' and the lime ' and iron and dregs only left in the kettle-- e bah 1 thst is what makes a greM many ' people siok and is worse than 32.0 water at all.- Every lady who reads this reoipe .of thegreat and careful cook should 'lever for - 'get howto cook water.—.Neto York Times. •et. & Queer Parrett. ' Pa*ots are queer 'creatures, and, like , monkeys, sometimes seem like a very burlesque 'upon' humanity. •One South Amnia= bird had unfortunately learned on shipboard the habit of profane language. The mate, lb little 'ailiataed of theoreature's profanity, undertook a oure bei dotting it with a bucket- of water at 011011 offence. Polly evidently imbihed the reproof, for - during a gale, when a heavy ses broke over -a hen-eoop and deluged here and books. pretty 'thoroughly, she marched up tolhe -dripping fowls and screamed- out, Been ,sweanng again, hain't ye 2"