The Sentinel, 1884-05-02, Page 6•
gar
.woreither of Mi. Hose
' tne given whO undertook the w
detective of _ Landon, -itud '
married a million will prebab
up in Parliament: .Edgar
adviser the Khedive and b
London, where everybody thou
business was to get. Money for h
-Lord Stafford is 'going to in
. Erskine; and go elm
fast career. :Tennysop's he
Oscar Wilde *Melee a poetic fl
: matrimonial market, and the
be represented by -the Bishop of
. Man, an elderly member of the
who -married a sister, of
-Pirebyp,.-Comptreller of the -
Wales, and One of the -steady
Set. ,
The Queen is reported to be
lumbago, -- at Dainietadt.
message of thanks to the peep'
pathy in the Duke of. -Alban
pleased ever body wo
The -Queen will rernairt at Perm
after. she his. had a coefetenee
peror regarding the sett
Princess Aimee family.- s She. i
of, raising a fund of t150;600 to
- it is reported, to relieve. the -de
Grand Duke* Louis, and to see
- permanent fund for the benefi
• 'family, and she wirihes the Einper
-- her, in contributing thisamou
• /stated, however,' that the Empe
disposed to -open pockets th
curtails incident happened , in
tio viith the Duke Of Albany's
The officer comn2anth
-ding e dater
the Seetorth. Highlanders found
menivere unable to carry the bo
the Windsor Railviarstation. -.Th
were made in France, and were of
. dinky thickness and size, and
- about a ten. The officer,. witho
• municating with the authorities,-- ---e two outer coffins -and took out
,•oontaining the body, *wend it
- Union 'lack and the pall and the
. procession followed the shell.- Th
• oeffine.were replaced after the.-cere
The celebration of the Edinbur
centenary has _filled -several days
.r• elaborate program of speeches,
— academic cerenionies .and eve
of attraction for Men et theTiret s
• and literay.celebrity from every qu
Europe,- the University conferring n
than 120 degrees of Doctor of La
• fourteen of Doctor. of Divinity, th
including divines of the widest theological
diversity, Mr. Lowell, Mr. Browning, - M.
de Leaseps, Count,. Nigro,- Prof, Helmholz
-ond M.E'asteur were among the -
A minister haideclared that the associa -
Mon for AedaliAng marriage with. a- de.
ceased "-wife'S sister -is, easting its deluded
-. victims body and soul into perdition; and-
. an Orange orator announces that Mr.
. • Gladstone's -highest ambition is to be 'the
.first President. Of. a British republic.
The Duke of. Marlborough; refused ad.'
• inissicin to the Carlton, the _ow. Tory
• resat, istaking his revenge by _supporting
his uncle, a Liberal, for the seat at Wood-
• stock which the' vivacious Reny is leaving
for his chances at Birminghein. • •
A Lendoneablegram says: Mr. Gladstone
• .continues to: improve in 'health, strength
and spirite. ..-lEte - driving and. walking,
• daily in spite of the bitter .east wind whith.
keeps Mr. Bright in doors. . •
• -A `Deionahire ..agriculturtil- laborer has.
•- been sentenced to three months' imprison-
ment for ranting away with .the wife and
some of the property -of his apple.' -
'The stage -drivers Of London -work sixteen
hours a day.. .
• Cook-Aghting has been vitally revived:
Tax 1{EA.14 TAEANTIJI.A.
- -; •
•
un
Vincent. Mr
ard Vincent,
ork of chief
now having
ly neat turn
he financial
as - juerieft
ght his Only
is employer.
arry Lady
up a rather
ir and our
aver to gie-
Church will
Soder and
episcopate,
ir Dighton
,Prinee
men in -his
ill with
er parting.
e for -13yen-
y's death
manlin ries
stadt until
with Em-
leinent for
ti desirous
£250,000,
bts of the
tablish 'a
t .-of the
or to join
Bt. It is
ror is in.
is extent.
connect--
funeral.
hment of
-that bis
dy from
e OOfliUB
extraor-
weighed
ut corn -
removed
he shell
with the
funeral ,
p outer
mony.
gh ters
With an
dinners,
ry kind
oientifio
arter of
o fewer
we and
e latter
Aimaputailoia Blade Necessary by the Poi-
. . son of the -Giant spider.'
A New York telegram says A consults;
-tion was held to -day by Dr. Turner, of No.
7 Broadway, and two of his colleagues at
the -Stevens House, to examipe thehand,
arm and leg Of Captain John Kerr, of Lon-
• don, England; a native of Edinburgh,
Boatload; who was stung by a -tarantula, or
giant spider, *bile asleep': at the
Europa Hotel, _in Havanai -five weeks
ago. - „ Already he heat' undergone
1, one 'surgical operation, pausing -
him
the lake of twofingerson his right hand,
*, and it is thought that it will be necessary
to .amputate the hand above the wrist: It
thought in Patio that the sting
. • of this spider -can be cured by a -epeeists of
• -weird muslithat is -performed by the old• •
!slaves. Captain. -Kerr :said to -day that he
was in a hospital at Havittatqwelve day's,
.. and When he was discharged was told that
Filtdairger. horn the bite ;was Passed. The
• doctor -is oikopinjon: that the bite is that of
- the tarantula, -
• Tzs weather ofihe immediete future is
.how thelabiorbing topio. - According to a
- killable meteorologist, the interruptions- to
fheinaroh of temperature from this. this
-to the second week Of May are [due to the
— visages of atmospherics pressure produced-
_ by increased. sun .heat Within! the! Arctic
• Circle. While we are liable at any time
low . to belie- a touch: Of the se -:ailed
• " second. winter;"- with light frosts" north of
the 40th parallel, the niost inarked devia-
Cons frOm-mean vernal temperature are
not likely to wet& until after -'the close of
this month. It -will be. will to point out,
-eepsoially for the benefit Of farriers and her-.
tieulturists, that • any cold weveif severe
7enough to bring -damaging fiesta during the
next three weeks will probrikkfollow in the
_rear of large and deep oyeldAur depressions.
In districts not reached by the daily
- weather reports the wise couree is to look
• out frosty waves'a daY behind- this vio -
spring storms -attended by heavy•
• Deep depresgjons crostdng the 'northern -
sections of the crOmitry de not linvariably
. *dui* the outflow of' cold from the
• high latitudes. But obiertatien: ahem-
- that such 18. frequently the *we, so that in
the abtishoe of better -indications the Aarge
depresston shonkl: prudentdaliY be Viewed
• as the . precursor of a-deolded. fall to - the
thermoinetet. , .• ' , '• • •
g4A min -can't help whiit hail -been . done
bekind his bitok;" as the scamp said when
he was- kiCked out of doors: 7. .
-
„Ayasation
- a rival of Monte
eatre for sensational suicides
o ruinee. ganiesters. The heroine of this
latesttri5i gedy, was a lady of great beauty,
distinginrd • manziers .and aristocratic
bearing, ho has for menthe -occupied the
Villa Ole?mdintina. The mysterious strati -
ger prat
known
the few &
to her e'
Ived a strict inoognito, being
ty as " •the Giantess " to: the
bointances she Made, and even
ants,- of 'whom he • engaged
quite a reit'bue after her arrival at Monaco.
Ramer, Lcever,
thver credited her with being
;the wife t
•1
pies a p
Court, an
her infat
led her to
at Moniori-
corn anie
,
.aged ab
Oppe red
constant
she. playa :or _tremendously high stakee,
, a German -nobleman Who OOOU
Minens• post at the Imperial
t was further whispered -that
•Nan for the gaming table had
.don her husband and -reside
The .Countess "- was :.�
lyy an - -infant daughter,
. 2 yearP., • to whom she
uch - attached. She was a
time at the Casino where
-
and latel wit . a Seedy run of ill luck.
She'remaib i at the roulette stable Until -a
Veri 'late iur laid night and hist Several
thousand ; 6.140111. This morning the ser-
vants at he found -" the Countess
lying in a 611"of blood On the flake of her
bedchamb „„) .- She still clutched in her.
-hand a raidattwith•whith she had out her
throat, cairs:-Ag almost instantaneous death.
On the be, 6bich had 'not been Occupied;
was the be her ;little °Mid, strangled
to death byitga ciiother, se was indicated by.
the,finger en the-ehild's throat. The
theory is t "-the Countess "-had ruined
lieggelf by 1, passion for play,. .and, being
afraid to ni the reproaches pf her bus -
band, had termined to -Qua the disgrace.
by asdouble qrae.- :The offieials at Mon.;
ace are to k g every effort to otniceat the
facts, and h$, seized upon ;all the papers
in the lady' Asidence, eci that it. is impos-
sible at presh to ascertain- her real nanie
and historY.
tam
Inquest on. 4e Bodies. of Victims—The
.- judge's C ailie to the Grand Jury.
CinOinn despatch says: Coroner
Muscro. ft .has egun an inqatiat on the vie: -
tuns of -:the-:.te riot; and has selected
thirteenof th dead, intending to -let the
examination b these oases etiver the.entire
-number.. So.1u nothing has been elicited
_beyond the ido difioation of the dead bodies.
is said the corOner will not make a
isearoldng inv,e igation, leavjng that tr.) be-
. -
:done by the sp
• uti grend.jury, which began
;its -duties thie;- morning. .The -testiMe
•before the grad jury was -given private!
• sworn to Ramsey. . Jud
o the jury was fearless and-
tructed them to thoroughly
artier :trial,- inehiding.the
i and jurymen- connected
riot its details; and
ce killed. the militiamen
The jeryWasalso charged
on those who fired . the
9.41, and -directed tce.issue-
ounties of the State, if
e-witnesies -
all were
Avery's charge
vigorous. He i •
investigate the
attorneys, °fhb
with it ; alsot.
to indict those
and policemen.
to indict /Or si7
court house and
processes in all
necessary 'twee
".•
it; fripe'. inter
, .
, .
w-r�rht: dined at- faney restart -
rants so long that he contrasted dyspepsia;
Be tried NI/Aerie remedies for it without
avail,- and Consulted- several high -Priced
doctors with not the slightest benefit. He
then thought be would -.study nature and
ties if he _eould not And relief: He observed
chickens" and Other barplard fowls were
never troubled -with indigestion to such' an
-extent as to make them comilam about it;
Ile -also observed that they swallowed large
quantities of pebbles, !rand, pieces of brick
and bits of. OSSS with their food. : He re -
'solved' to imitate their example. He did so
with the best results. He used marble -dust
instead of -salt on his beefsteak, and filled
his. pepper -box With sea sand. Receiving
so.rauch benefit from these kinds ofgrit, he
proceeded to swallow gravel and pieces of
plastering. In a few Months he was en -
tinily cared: He oan now eat-tite ranch as
an'ostrich, and never suffers on account of
he kind or amount of she food he %eon-.
Umes. He is thankful that he .went to the.
hioken- and considered her ways,andrecom--
mends the grand reinedy to all who are
affering from indigestion. Sand is cheep
nd abundant, especially on the seashore.
here are other Sorts of good grit in nearly
vempart of the 'country. A Philadelphia
miter approves the . grit. cure, 'hut, not
eivg f6 havii-his profession iejured
y the introduction -ef -a domestic teroady,
e ineisits that it should not he popula,rized,
e siva the services of a regular. physician
e necessary to determine what kind of
tto use, how erten to take, and the size
the three.. Possibly the diseovery ef this
speptiomay.lead to the formation OL- a
w school of Medicine. If such should be
e case, theezily persons to sutler . be
e draggle*
a „
ar
gri
of
dy
ne
th
th
• ,
Fie Does -Not Belicre In the Latter'
,
•
Theology, if Ile has Any.
. .
A Louisville, KY., telegrana says In the
mune of: an interview to -day President
'MoCosh, of „ Prineeten College, was-
ad-
dieseed as follows
"Henry Ward Beeelier claims that :you
ire a believer- in the theory, of evolution as
connected with . lel that true,
Doctor?" . 1 "
Itis true and it is not true," he replied,
with. quaint emphasis. " I -believe -ih the
phythea1 theory of evolution, certainly -in
the growth of the oak from the acorn and
the .law of heredity in the generation of the
human retie. I believe that the fittest will
suiviire; as Herbert Spencer affirms. Bu t
_if Mr. Beet:4er intends' by. claiming me, as
-a representative Presbyterian evolutionist
to pledge the -88 a- believer in his religieus.
theories, he hoe neither reason nor Warrant;
Jud,,.
don't believe Bee -other- has any theology,
and what litileIte has I don't believe in. 1 I
hold to evolution. as*a -scientific dedactiOn,.
perfectly-I:consistent with the sowed Scrip. -
tures arid; as fortifying. their divine au:
thenticity.".
FALSIC -ALARM.
Lo Fears OF an Indian Reit*.
.-A . Winnipeg deepatth saYs Sat
.m-ortileg's Free Press. contains: the toll
telegram--; "Battleford; N,W.T
1.8.1'elegraphio.communioation has
interrupted'. between this place and
neat eastern office during the past two
owing to the wire being grounded.
the line being,repaired this evening ihre
-astopished to learn that the report Was
rent in Winnipeg that at - latest 'wee
2000,Indians were marching on the
.iind that a general - masSaore was fo
Friends !tithe east Must necessarily
greatly alarmed. Kindly contradict
statement, as-there:1a no foundation fo
Many Indians from the ourrounding
trietts,-histigated Pouridinaker
Big - Bier, are 'lathering here to ho
--Oottneil regardtotheir grievances an
appoint delegates to send- to Regina
Ottawa.- The Mounted Police are being
inforced .ftern7Regina; but troubl
anticipated and no one pays the sligh
:attention to the 'doings of the Indians:"
-
_TillaebrAPres ctooss Ltrt K.
Nils Indian- F
- that Bri
"
•A St. Paiil (Mi
ads :Telt HIM ar. tSecre
c Mini a 1Fortune.
despatch says: -Oliver-
Daunms, who - at Prince Arthur's
Landing, is in St. Paul. He arranged for
the sale of four Mining locations, 160-aores
each, at. the Ra
.of them to a syn
other to Chicago
for a like. amen
trapper among. t
and became very
them. As a -re
kindness; an Ind
it Motmtitin Mines,to
eats for $200,000, and the
nd Milwaukee capitalists
t. paunais has been a
Lithans for many years,
itimate and friendly with
d for his many sAts of
In named P.agopep gin'
revealed the loce4on of -these rich silver
mines to him: TIe
southwest of Port
of the railway, a
Kammistiquia
locatiatfrom the
of his discovery.
shipped to New
'ton., - Daunais att
which has made a
to his kind treat
y are twenty-five miles
thur, nine miles south
eight miles from the
ver. He bought the
overnment at the time
en tong of ore recently
sey realizes 65,000 per
butes this good fortune
althy man of a trapper,
t of his Indian friends.
• A Danville, P
ployees of the Mort
pany, while diggin
Insane Hospital;
Indian skeletons,
one Indian buckle
one clay pipe over
with stem three in
the Ekeletons are
white. Tradition
which Danville er-
°timed by a warlikela
and the exhumed
belong to that
hunters flocked to I.
eer
• _
desPatoh says : Em-
ur Iron- clt Steel COM -
mind near the State
nearthed two •larg
so eleven small bells,
'th pin attaohed, and
o inches in diameter,
es long. • The teeth of
iierfeetly forizied and
rms that the delta on'
ds was formerly oci-
Abe, the -Mahonings;
ains are supposed to
Crowds of relio
e place.
The Pi4111.0ity a
proved of a new e
use in -schools..
Eiiseignement
God ?" inquires t12 -
nothing . about -Hi
"You deny the mu itence of a God ? 10 the
neat question. " 1N,qt neither deny . nor ad-
mit -Hie existenodY" - retorts 'the little
Materialist; "We),iipere- what the term'
Godeignifies." "T140eoptinues the
•siihoolmaster, "'is irOti to be our Creator
and to govern thligs.". What. do you
know on that poi Yi." tinquireethaohild ;-
" or what do -others o* who have neither
seen nor heardhim 15 18 all mire fiction,
-which does not rit. attention." In
anothen. part of work the '. pupil, in
answer to qUestio . Pitt to .him by his'
teethe; is required a Bay that the Virgin
Mary was a wom of it profligate lite; -
Child to. forget the
it which it owes its
Octrines. of the Roman
zre prejudicial to
blle. to illicit unionst
ducted barbarism intO
1a,- until this laique
end, Comment- is
widow - of Lewis .0.
TO& raillionairee;is
wealthy convert in
iaorities have juin ap-
&Venal cateUnsm for
is called a "Manual
que : ".What is
teacher.' " We know
_replies the ti
. that rehgion induce
affeotion and respe
parents; that the
*Catholic Churcth
'marriage; but favor
that Christianity intt‘
the world; and so 1 -
catechism comes to
unnecessary.
hies. Hameriley,
Hamersley, the New',
Mgr: Copal's first ver
the United.States.
- '•
urday
owing
April
been
the
days
'Upon
were
our-
unts
town
ared.
• feel
• the
r i.
and
Id a
d to
and
ett7
e -is
test
• Discredited -111uhstinen...
.Bings,-the English hangman, is.a subject;
of 'Parliamentary talk and 41 is proposed tol
thin Win . out. of his -piece. It May -be a
satisfaetion to ,hini to know that Jack
Ketch, the -greatest of hangmen, was.
similarly' ejected. „Luttiell says in his
diary, Jan. 20th. 1686: "Jack Ketch, the
hangman, for affronting the sheriffs of Lon-
-don, Wei -committed to Bridewell and is
turned out of his place and one Rose, a
.butoher, put in," It is seldom One hears of
a hangs:tat behig hoisted --with his own
'petard: -Ltittrell writes a few. months
later; • "Five men of • these- lately. ceiv
.deruned at the Beisjions Were exeouted
Tyburn -3 one0!theni Yrtui-Pasoha Rose, t
new hangman, BO that now Jag Ketoh
*adored tiihittplace.-
IFoolhprilk Feat.'
Three • Sirotehman—Dr. Watson, 'Mr
John Mad-menial/a Mr; Robert .Maokenzi
—were wilking--evee.---the-- Reichs Bnidg
which spans the,Piteitibe, in 'Vienne, att
lieightled seventy feet, on Math 29t1t, whe
the two -younger men -teatied Dr. Watson
. saying that his courage vr.eild fail him ha
he to jutrip from the bridge into the liver
All at once Dr. Watson nieiinted the pica
pet, and, before his friends could hinde
him, jumped- into the - river, which ran
seventy- feet below. Despith thecOldness o
the water and the current, - Dr. Watson
swam to the shore, -vihere he was taken into
witody by . the police. .
• . imAsseitifit AND -tikOm
The Vaileart's pen't;,-_ct- eons ot secret
. -
-
• Societies—The /en Advised
A .1:tozne oorrespon0,49. telegraphs the
folio*** : In an enc. .:al letter of the
Tope, which will be .pnOtabid :next week,• .
Lee XIII. lays speenk). 4ress - upon Free-
thesonry and the mea,41!00 be employed to:
defend the, "'City of ,/,‘"' against -" The
City of Saten.". The wing is a resume
of the letter: • The la- of the Becret,,
-societies is no longer 6,- yetery. It is a
struggle against the'?OhLurotif and the
various Popes have ve,--"torOperly excom-
municated Freenissentfe:' ,.!Siece 150 years
the secret sooietuni ha t -z :#_acreased fright;
fully, ., A grave peril tlitie:Ohreatens society.
The Socialist has his tseurOe of strength in
.4fationry: - The "Atipaes it‘ platted in an
intolerable _situation. trasoory does. not
avow its real •obje3t ; i ipeeives the inno-
cent by a varnish elk toleration. The
rnarriage, ed.,t.4on, the -sever--
eigoty • Of the people„.- t4e atheism of
the State, Radicalism;: •C.,-timmueisin, all
tend- toward a retkitti-.•'. of Paganism:
-Masonry flatters p-rin6.1, J'.in 1 he hope of •
having them for auxilia Governments
should. 'choose between - iigasoury, and the:
Church, which Sustains 6.tithority and in-
finitudes obedience. .
The Pepe thus preseribea, to bishops their
duties :-Firet,-by.pisteg--0144teis unmask
seerat seinetiesand inAtce'( people abhor
them ; second, extend -Cti*.-4tihim "education ;
third, agriculturists anif 'workingmen to
organize ,eatholio sesociftons and -con-
ferences of St. "Vincenti. k* Paul fourth,
*etch schools and ealieRk loath never to
become-inenibers of any. Society without
first ootistiltieg their The Pope
ends his eneyolical by insiAring the aid of
the blessed Virgin. -•
This eneyclical will nottietoublit-hed bere
before next Week.. The t?...41i.Areatore Romano
will -give-extracts on 8atai0-4.
suggestions to-., es.
• Do remeinberthat you' _ inarried to a
roan and not to god be ,anared for ire -
-
perfections. . 7
Do antioipate the discoVo, by zour hue.
band thav. you are "only k.kizonaff, if you
were not he would not calk -gieut you. ,
• Do, once in a while, let4pur hut -band
have the last word ; is will41,t, ify *him, and
be nO itatiotilar loss to Yo41-•,, • •
Do be:reasonable ; it 188 r'lleatdeal to ask
under some eircumstanc44 but do try;
reasonable women are rare. rare.
rare. •.
DO remember that servi(Of Made- of
the same . material as „ yog. :Ore; a little
maser -grained, perhaps, e same in
essentiais. ;, - . •
- Do try and forget_ yours4iii as for - your
husband, forget that you .134-4ried him, and
remember that he married, ; he will
then probably do the revero;-„i' -
• Do let him read the DeveaSper at break:
fast table; it is tutioeiabp-el tout then it's
only a trifle after all, and htilttes it.
Do lethim.know more th.44-you de once
in a while ; j keeps up his (3447Fespeet, and
you will be none the, wore,4ifor admitting
that you are not actually
IDo remember that the rp:: test of life is
„
net centered_ in yOur circle; do
.
familiarize yourself in outs vents. .
Do readsomething in .theoers besides•
fashion- notes and society umns ; have
some - knowledge of what `g,L going on in
foreign gauntries. . - -
- Do be a: companion to e husband if
he i lee wise roan ; and if 4.40 not, try AO
ze:
make ktrai become your cto onion ; raise
his standard, do not let hirail.„Wer yours; .
. Do respect your busbani,i-s-torejudicies;
do respect his relations, -qteeially his
Mother; she • is not the mother
because she is your inott4ir-in-law3 gibe
loved- hini before you ad.—q: t to Do."
Christian Agnosilei.
-7(4,1
The title at the head of thk. artiele may
appear to BOMB a !tiontradiot-4 - in terms
But it isnot really 80. An cl' It? religions
man need shrink from say, "1 " ani a
Christian agnostic-. - I hold 1 ,=r:r pply by the
dootrinkof St. Paul, who exek ,Ihe. Plaapv
despair
0 the
are his
'ways l'
prophek
by seare
the ant
man h
a Spirit
seen an
beholdi
Chttroh.11
now b
cornprell
one Eki4
Nbeo31short,°anoda
1,800 ye
a and out
he Pm* 8g
• GodreadiTei
Assure
turY,,r?
• able,
TI1E sati.WEIt...!1!-- -P,RA--littL •
,
-
.1 - - -
I "It!, d..ess Toiictti: 7oreti Through
, •
AV Portland; ,14e, despatch says: Mrs-
.
'Ple#y Moore, of this city, is a little past 51*
plaza of . age, and a member of the First
Baptist Church,* .Sliehad a 131100k of para..
limb he1874, again in 1882, and in Febru.
telny,c 1884. :She says that in January A
conceit of physicians - declared that she
oould not 'be cured. Now she is well. In
rkget'd tothe cure she .eaye :
.
"2n the 12th of March, somewhere about
10 teclock a.w., I was thinking of the good-
ness:1ot Jeeue and Of Hili power to baI.
wheti He wasUpcin earth, and pray r.
nesely that I might be wholly oenseora 4
to Eifini, Whatever His will to me might be,
whe4 all of a- Sudden 'Something . dame'
overi me !of -extreme -beauty.- . lt seemed
to tee as . if .I was not here. . It
wined as the -
ugh I was in the very
• presence- of my Master. I was not
asleep. - I was .awake. I yrae•ell alone. It
lasted about iin beer. I OSIMOt describe
it. When I.,ettine out of it I ielt oattefied
that 1 • should be. Made perfectly whole.
The twat morning, March 13th, I told my
daugliiter that I was !going to get up and -
dose Myself ; that I needed no assietance -
trete her, Mir from -my eratekwhieli I had
been„obligeceto use ,for years, Whepever I
ward _rise, I got up, ' put on my clothes,
and *alked about the room. Pain hat left
irte, the swelling has left my arms and
limbs:, and they feel natural Nein. I believe
I shall regain my former' natural -st
ren
all of •which I ascribe to the healingpo
of fail% in Jesus 011Ziat." .
II. 116 lady has abandoned all medicines,
and 4rusts only in the power of Jesus -
Christ. On Sunday she attended the First
13aptifst Church in this city, it being the
first tine she had attended church in nearly
ben ..yeirs. ' To weeks before she sat up .
only long enoogh tohave her bed made.
She hks since Made a Visit to Boston.
es
.
„ ' '
,
1. Ikverybodes Hoy. ; .
- I
' My on, drop 'that dime novel or flash
i,
paper !nd let's have a little chat. • 1
Yes,, Indian and detective stories are
thrilliathg, but don't go too fast. The chane
are tharyote: will metier see a live Indian •
oritsidek of a circus or a street parade, and
as for Itilling 'em, don't, . .
. No doubt you could strap a bowie=knife
and telolver aroundyour waist, and fake a
loaf of bread nridet one arm and the pam-
phlet lite of Buffalo bill under the other,
and go West and slay Indiana by - the cord,
but don't, think of it. • a *
.. An Iiidian - has feelings, the -same as a
white Man, and as few of them have laid by°
any bonds ormortgages, or invested to _ .
i
any gres ' t extent in life insurance, you.meet
realize - hat the widows and orphans of
your vii tims would be left in a Sad plight.
As foi detective sterieb, go and talk with ,•
. a real dll/tective or a county Sheriff: • Ask
'em Cheat "Old Sleuth's ' diegaiees and
expleiti' and .nasgie 'luck and - then listen '
,caieftiq while they tell , you what . a fool
you Eire _ making of - yourself by grinding
the et/didaw -ynose against pages of suoh
trash, lotion. We want you to read, but -
'for the 14d'ti -sake look -about .ifor..sonae.
thing different ! There -are good boy -books,
your :tether takes i the, daily : papers, '
3
and 12 yi'iti. should read a page or. • two of
baster?' ow and then yen wouldn't waste
YaTuhr:tratT of New Thrli:Publ.ishers who
are flood ug the country with -gash papers
and dim6, novels are your 'worst enemies,
No matteir to them whether you grow up a
respectaltle man or a murderer so long as
they get our money. Their Stories are the
basest iid#,.tod silly even for a boy 10 years
old to hel eve. • -- • •
Now, en, jerk about you and see now
many trie in Our stores and factories and
Maas a d
upon the streets are getting
gray arid ' inkled '
old. na Twenty years
from neWziot one -in ten of us whom ycni.
see in business to -day. will be able to put
our shoi4eneto the wheel. -Even a decade
will retire' tens ef thousands. What then t
Von,,this is a world which knows -
hill is a life which knowsno rest
d i compel a it.
1-e men ei to -day .are laid up in
1
;he boys of50day will be the
le, f hands millet:Von 'deck to work
' They will • be the merchants,
annfacturers and -professional
& future. You will have to heir
i,ti and anxieties of keeping this
' the track of peaoe and Rios -
your voioes will sound from
4 Congress and year pens Write
b Burn in the memory of future
a cie. •• - .
ilw, 'begin right. Don't get it
• t h 'ad that an Indian-killerie s
boi
6- elhove • a-- Stifle Senator. Don
a detective wouldn't trade
ithia lawyer very quickly if he had
/halt iti Don't you believe *area
ag,, aurglar or murderer is a hero,
. t then admire . him. Drop your
nit itish papers as a starter. -The
-mr f edit on such. trash gets false ,
4epts,14.if the "world, and is . more °er-
asing up. in State Prisop then in
Me Omployment. If you. have a
11,6 it) aside: The Man who osrries
attliii. streets is a ootvard, and men
li, t,
m - Such; If you- have a bowie -
hat turn it over to your mother
iat cd bread kni.te. - If you haveib a
lyihig around loose shy is into the
foie it,nybody. finds out how empty
d hi4 been. - That pair of braes-
Can be tossedinto therivermwld
arta :ii Buffalo Bili' will mike a
futop.ti and then you are ready to
-P:e and to-ask-youreelf what trade or -
- on 3h411 be Yotire when 'done in the
i-lif 9?iad in Detroit Free Press.
aineelemeemmitememml
•
bold thi -
e
of Akar
e' that Mat
a
to its de,
-a tio, aiw4
' rather
d. pop2t-
. Extent of North Country Estates.
The Secretary of the- Financial.fteforne
Assooiation, and editor of - the Financial
Reformer, speaking at a meeting in Aber-
deen recently, - said the Duke and Duo:these
of Sutherland owned between theirs 2,125
square mules of land in Scotland. alone, and
the „Duke of•Richmond_held n� fiwer than
448' -square. miles of land. Re had a list
in 7 his possession of fifteen landowners, all
Scottish gentlemen, noblemen and others
Who among them possess . as •mtioh as
-7;073 equare miles of land. There were, he
-
/might state, 143 individuals in the United
Kingdom who held 21,167 square miles of
laid. • •
• A national neer*, ohmic,. is to beheld at
Salisbury; in England, this[ year, in the
, naive and charming grounds of the
. '1 Bishop's Palacei
The
Paris.;
"oiher
fashion ,
to attk
and d
self a
potion
to be
wadi
that: 13,
years. '
dared
sad-
Finall
that an
SEE .THEIVL----?,;
-ward faU
to convince his quon
tVintaii.-
.. tailor
ther house was cheaper af..g better,
the late client pulled out the b4,-.1or the
garments he wore. - The nan30',::, ' •
„-
address, etc., were read aloud and n-
inouthed crowd _ drank it in; ?-
prising tailor who got up this litre emuna
found_ his profit."• —
• There omit .be a greater riidertEk--1 than
to interrupt another * the.. ourrenk:O1 his
discourse.—LoOd•
--""-'!'""——"I•1•--•'--•T—.---g,_,. .
oxen's • Recipes for Getting*
oddrel:Vanderbilt's recipe for mak..
Hone with . oertainty and celebrity
• er to sfrin.ii note ; William E. Dodge
not ! hi4 any pecuniary interest in
pride '
12
at was at all active en Stin-
nnyr, he fif ly,believed that,his wealth
was A reWs4 it•Or Conscientiously observing .
the Sabbath iday; the first John JacobAstor's ,ioudeo "charm lay *investigating
• nothing aside from his regular business •
exoept the Wad estate; and Alexander T.
Stewart viouldfiave anticipated misfortune
if he had brokeit.ouly;the smallest personal
engageitit!lt- - •' • - .
_.
'If Tffirsiire 01Thebrain hi the prix4iii:-
telleotual;poweff how is it that an elephant,
NW'S climb A . ?
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