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Lucknow Sentinel, 1887-05-06, Page 2• Tag GREAT CYCLONE. 1 THE BRITISH 13UDGET. i NOLO. reirtkellere Of the rod sac Gamboa TakesaPonny Ole the income Bl000tr000, Blow Tax mid Reduces the. WNW", ilhitr- r ,Iliare01:40 lead Churchill Criticise the O. • 8ate/n.111 . ... aOrMik, [.1014413B IND POIDEML A London cablegram says ,•• Mr. Gcsshen_ . , __ I -__ A -13t. i LOWS telegrarP:, 49-daY -811Y° ; i Chancellor of the 'Elehequet'i iniman9eu '13Pecial desnatehes ,ahote that • 1=100*i:the Budget'', in the , Molise' of COinniOnS eYolones, tornadoes and hall **rms. iiiiePt,', Thuraday'afterncOn. From this it aP oar' •over a il4nsidersible ,Part of western -inn item during lest year the exPelisee 0 the • southwestern Miiimiun, southeaetern Ken- :•,. at amounted to £90,000,000 and . 118 and northern A4Kan!" on Thursday that the revenues reached the same sum, ' evening, COTOdog. great 101311 Of life SO , There has been a saving of ge63,000, in the , destruction of property, killing and maim- i annYeetineatee and 1347.000, in the esti- inga largo number of „people: 'The esti= mates for the Civil Service. , The revenue mated loss to PfoPertY In PPWurilfl'ef,,,110.0,L i obtained by taxes on alcoholic liquors had 000. Many PeOPie *ere ',Wiled. ln„. he -decreased £190,000, while that derivedfrom -neighborhOodef the taivais of-Mume and_ thtbeer tax had increased t45$000. The Spragige'en& a, number seriOuldrand some : reeeipts from the wine taxes had fallen off " fatally injured. Hanibie station, on the 1298,000, and those from the.tax On tea had Pacific Road, aa ilettrgY.eA,00Yreill hOusel, largely , Increased. Sir William' Vernon being left... Dr. Sinit 's houce, three Miles , Harcourt had, estimated that the soirees frimi Rich Hill; ..was blown to stoma eorthe.year would be ,z25,9,000, while it and 31r0. .8Mitil 44..113' injured., Her reelly reached £776,000. - The -.lindget•esti. daughter-in•law- *re. E,Yak and hr 'tWo Mates the revenue for the coming year at chltdren were dly hurt. Two hired men z91,155,000, Ind the expenditure at -£P0,- i on the:plate/eel .-reoeived injuries. All the mom It is proposed to raise 1100,000 stables and granaries on the Billtes.e_LPLa-erth - --r-chargieg-tew'shillingetrimsfer-dutron re • emeushed:arthelfille-ifarin, three eaoli'100 debentures Of stock which has L miles'west of Sprague, a eplendidrandence. I hitherto escaped dutY. To dearth° Budget barns and outbuildings Tare •destroyed and of local lciiins it is intended to caned 237). , nine cattle and a numberof hogs and other 000.000 of other portions et the..Pnblio_deht atook_wereldiled.---„Idx-Miller-and hiswife-and -c-rente, the earn° amount of local loan and baby Were blown into. the well and stock, charging the local loan budget With . drowned. Tho farm houses of :the follow-, an annuity of 2100,000.• . I , . . • ing persons were : entirely :. destroyed: It is also Proposed to take one penny per •' Samna. Porter, George.HiNer, L. Maranon pound sterling off the income tax, and four. J. liough,r/1., Overman, Geo. Daniels, Mr. Gandiiiii; Samuel Beatty, L. C. Robinson, Robert Robinson, WM.., Betty and Nihilism • Pettitt. ,T jtelatt,r'ft., housS. took • fire :and, burned.' Wm, Itennett's,home ,was blown down ' and then titirnad •'up.,-* Mit, Kennett h ada verk,moriote:eacepalrbei burning, as • she was TiniOnedl MOO , 'aoaiet, timber2 -and was only rescued hy -,tlinlictroic .-eftorta of her htiiibind: ,:ThellfontgbmilrYiiid Qnetth Ridge tioltholhOdie were briried;* It is re; Ported that-ebrother -.1iiid,,•sister named Finn are dead,. but this. is not 'verified. ' The Methodist , Episcopal"' "Church . at --•:'------ Sprigne.was demolished. B. F. Baker_ Az " Co.'s lumber yard Was ',Iicilit'ired-"Over the : Prairie. ,,The following houses Were demolished:- 0 Mrs.', ' ,Wainseat's; ' Will Grave's; Mrs... ,Bilties, Wesley •Moeller's, .liandan's blacksmith shop and . : .Massett's livery stable, . In the lower part of Lynn County, Kansas, a „ regular funnel, • shaped twister made a descent about .6 o'clock seVenniiles northweit of Piescotts Every farmhouse in the .path of the storni was demolished and every. house in Pres- • cott was ruined. Four mil' es froni Prescott, Mr. 'Flynn's .fine reffidenCe was. smashed , flat, and.'" Mrs.' Flyim ,and three „small children were mortallY injured and two ' Visitors -dangerously kart, jecnh Brook himself for not having touched upon the and las wife and.- one son. Willisein-Mollold question of goldtkintig, on the 'ground of and hie wife' and: a aim, also of ",.`"41 lack of time to deal thoroughly with the• ' vicinitY, were fatallyinjured. A few miles subject. He defended his proposal, ad4ing. from 04 scene.' :W. , Begat, ,MrsesM. that be would be glad if the House shou'd ' O'Dell-, and Mi. 'Hogan, hie wife ,and two definitely express its wishes ,with regard to • • children had taken refuge in a 'Om* .cellar the Cipendituree fiir defence. His experi- Where eight eptys fell on ,them through 'the ence reepecting further reductions had been rod and all were severely hurt. W. Brown- that they were almost always followed by • inghurgh's family found'refuge in a storm .8pasmodie increases under the influence of cave while a 15,000 honse.wes FlOatterod over' the fields.- Ten , miles norqlwest of ,r—The budget was a CemPlete surprise to Prescott Mrs. Sarah Crane well lulled. and the /ionise of Commons Many of . its pro- . • her fernilY injured by the crushing of the• posais (notably those relating • to the 4 • house. In a distance 22 aliYal 01117 ram National Debt 'chargep) will he vigorously ' house is knelen to hnve with steed the at°11'44 opposed. • It is maintainedthat Mr. Goschen H. C. Tripp, of Kansas City, was standing has resorted to unsound measures of finance • in •thedOotivay of a grocerY store In Preece° :in order to present a budget that may ierve, when the bililding Wag 1)19wn down,,aarl -7-11a the Constervatives at the next general elec.- 'onus killed. The buildings left stanumfl 111 Um, The Conservatives are much irritated ' Prescott are stuck full of timbers. C. R UnderWood'e residence, the Baptist and -Methodist . churches; W. H., Ilfilingeby's. harnessisktre; Perkins' 'tnee,t market and theftescott..Honse a,reaniongother inks destroyed. Nearly every house at Junction,:-, five miles north of Pres - nett, was blown' dOwn, and several persons pence per pound sterling tiff' the Vibes= tax, and to reduce •the taxation on marine. policies.' ' •• ' • • Sir Vernon Harcourt congratu- lated Mr. Gosohen upon the ability -lie -had laYed. 4e -regretted, however, .that 'itot g had been said about gold 'boipage. 'Hectindemned the.: proposal-to'reduce the .tepliyment. of the debt, which -be• thought' would .estalilish 1i -reprehensible precedent. Lord -Bandolph--,Olitirchill aloe regretted the absenceof anY reference to ,'*the gold- coinage.- He criticised.' :adverdely. • Mr. GOechen'aestiniates.,• Thetiudget,hesaid, •gave no •real indication -Of, economy: and. retrenchment. beli'eifed-a reduction of at least 1150,000 was pOsiable 'in the Civil Service' estimates. If an increase in :the expenditures for nstional defences was necessary..the amount required should he relied taiation, net by reducing the repayment of the debt.: He also objected t� ,the pritinOsed contriliutions in aid of local rates as to retard Government reform. • He Mild that. it Mr. Goschen's proposals had been made by hire, they would have arqueed the indignation of the whole country and . probably have been rejected. • • • ' Mr.:Goachen a general replYi excused at Lord Randolph Churchill's attitude. ' FALL :air TflArN • • Two men initatitie glued. • A last (Friday) mght's, Merrieburg (Ont.) despatch says: A terrible Accident occur- ininred. Seventeen persons are knawn to red one mile itiet of here about t O'clock L have been killed iii Lynn County'And shout thi. luorich,.. •fifty were setiouily wounded. •In Bourbon g Nash's creek, now a foam- ., ing stream; is here spanned ,,by • an iron • cOulitY, Hanse0; • reports are corning W bridge resting on two stone piers s A freight slCivly of terrible devastation. D. train going west went throughthe bridge, feria wasesweptelearof.buildings and ive carryingthe engineer ' and.. fireman- to in- • stock. Nearly all the M.ille family was • - Stant death.' A briikesnian , was • thrOwn exterminated. • Two 1•children and • • the father and Mother were killed &ed.. a into the creek, but-Weeresoned nearly dead. Thirteen leaded care were • piled_ in the : nieoe and child were found barely alive,but.; smashed to atoms. rwill recover; •The etene • regiclence. . of Me The driver's .„„ name is Stewart... It is said tliat the bridge - Samuel Coles In Anderson was. inspected last, ...week; and 'Pronounced '• 'county the nyclone badlY claniegidthe town • Safe. The lose. will be very heavy. Ex, • of Colony, At Rine Mound, a tewn of 900 land two ;pentane kilfed.'„' -Josepli:Dunean's • Toronto was to cross the enfortunate train . bowie Was hurled away in the miclat of a • here, ' The 'cause, 'of , the 'collapse 6f the • wedding ceremony, but the party found refuge in the Cellar and escap. , • bridge is a inyetery. It Is .PUPPtc_sed that • • the dime piers. had been underniined by . The cyclone Passed the. Outskirts" of froet, but an eiamination Made since the Shell ' City, Mo., doing., great . daniage. • Several houses were demolished. :John D. alioldInt shows that they are perfectly High 'was killed,' and his vvife and child p"" mortally'hart., Not a fragment reliable • 'Latest From tfie.'Nerthweit. of their : • The •heusie of the Sam Jones will be here next month. • Gibson leanly was blown a*a.Y;• and -ene Telegraphic deepatthes from all `parts of 'child stifferM breken arm., The, loss i11. the province And•Tereitories show that on this (Vetnon)county ispla,ced at 570,000. an average seeding is more .than hall win. A spethal from Grreenville; Nino.; saY° pleted. in seeneportione the work has been that section wee, -visited by a . terrible. done some time: tliurideistorni, .folloWed.by heavy that' it proposition .i• iss 'boon by Mr; did greet damage to hire stockand injured Greenway tO.the Lobel Government that it many colored' Persons in: :Boliver :eellotY. should purchase lands sold for ta.ices, and if The town was -nearly demolished, 'Itt; not redeemed it Would be in a Position to despatch from Hannibal; Mo., says that diepose of lands of its own to immigrants about midnight a terrific:* sterm Unroofed .ort, favorable teems. ' Ai Manlier bitildings and the rain • which followed damaged' a great deal of teetchenclige. SOMO twelve or fifteen dwelt, • • ings and stores at Blot:bone Prairie, Tex., •. were deetroyed: , • , *, • • • -- ••••••A Nevada, Mo., despatoh says ; • Front • Evansville, Ind.; • it is learned that on p men • , • *Friday night a tornado painted White There have been 'a coupleof landslides• : Rieer, crossing the Evansville se Terre in the momitains within the liest feW-daYs press train's had crossed the bridge only an inhabitants; trenty4.hoesea *erry*re9'"'" our before, and the morning Apnea lioni • Mr. Norquay has had a second residing 'given to, the Government Bill ler the con- struction of 'aline to the boundary.. •,• McCurdy, a , deserter from the Moarited Police was to -day sentenced in Winnipeg to. pay. a ne of 1)50 and two months im- flaute Railroad, at Hazleton, thirty-eight - miles.' north of here; doing great damege and killing Jas. H. Nott; a fisherman'•,,and • Scott Selby, a mechanie Working on abarn, • and fatally injuring . another than. The, • email village �f Weet Duette-Nista-aware • completely wrecked, only two houses re- •maining uninjured.• - -First Girl: "Why, what's the Matter, -teetiblY despondent:" Second Girl : I am afraid George has • beeo engaged ever go 'many times before, and I thought I was his first end only love." • "Well, how do you know You are .not" After he proposed last -night I told lien. nittet never kiss ine until ,we wake maiiied, • because 1 think it, was proper, • "Vee I" 'Well, lie kissed meruOit off, but no damage has reaulted. . • Captain 'Phonies Howard has been elected President cif the society 'formed by the eurvivore 'of the Red River :expedition H. T. Buckingham, • Treasurer of the Canadian Pacific Society', has _been arrested for embezzleinent,•' , A 'merciful' critic. Well." said Raz.orpen, More kindly than was his custom, " ca ii tell you, 'how you can iniproirethe play' a little.", ' VA.:Asked Inkwell; gratefully: • "You Bee, yon the tast act ' that- is good. Now make him and said 1 didn't Mean it 'word of it. Hekill all the ether eharactete iri th0first."- knows too MuCh.." " • -Baracta. ' ' • VIE FISH DISPUTE.I OLD IRELAND'S TROUBLES: Whet' fe Thought of Belehuree Offer Of A Iasi Sa1urd7 night's London cable Canadian trip for a week pending the - the -osnadiati •says : ;Mr., O.'S_ en hail PostPoned his 80017.An.AND 7111 aroujor. negoteitiatio:brees' for *We° ttive:teint betiv0:110e0sdliord A ivatingten: cable es0's:• The, El -.yr; ri4anadttilLiggai7liourrine'llaglniot.redaineyd.00ti:reptenin'lewtineiths7eni:ist. deny the statement cabIed from London smile lisire boon evicted. The police and that Lord Salis' bury hes sent a despatch o tgahhig.3' riGeZePlmoffergetto; on nrpvtehrte at?. irthe old the Idwareialefigie .0-hfavLeansblenvnnewi'hthasdraoffwileresiThfr• Teshhe dition of affairs, ..without penumary.c.°InnC pteronniters gthaextteladnedts, of o iii'heoe:Itateleastottohge tdoenndexpts. .Saneeyreotpainryip"134, allwittrdh regard erreanto tic; Inund s the hreationdr:Oi, Tali:1;111;11 n;edellretxhsecIdo:i subject matter of the despatch as «age& • The subject matter et the,prepoodion. re. te,...1-06 to those tenants who haveheen evicted eus spring: The tenants :have taken -the States bi Lord Salisbury ie. net exactly Chamberlain,- speaking at, StornOW,lY, te- news * qiPhmlatte °hell"' the Palm Mr' night, said that the land. was the gift of the sition havuig emanated from. a Canadian source Berne time ago. Well informed per. Almighty Ited ought to be treated lie- n trust, not as an absolute possession- by sons incline to the opinion that the'offer re- private owners. ,This trust-mm.04. gamed fermi to in the cablegram hag heen thus in- dirsotiy and unofficially madeas s "feeler" while the land did not provide substance to ascertainin -advance 0i an actual for the greatest possibleniunber of the Peo- e. He saw, a hepe feo a gloanlef -tender,how,suekroposition-would-- staii&ii-speetali" before the Eighty Club. received by the Amencsapeople. As the Renardin_ . representatives of the United States oath° 6 g the • reunion of the Liberals Commission that. negotiated the Tre.strY mGlaaddestatonetheae itntihonatistpertooPeosals-operhitatde.-bekt! Washington, and the Hahfax Commission, though -they -had -7 not -been -made to -him, -winch fixed the award made for, the, use of the Canadian inshore fishenes, expressly Chamberlain. rejoiced' thet they had been denied tho . the privilege, accorded, .to made at all. •He was content to follow in united states yesids in canadian waters the'rear of thosewho would again fight by Gladetene7s Side in the -pr,osecution orthe was more .,,valuable than the concession privilege in waters of the 13.nited States and tion that Gladstone either postpone the Liberal programme, but only on the conch. tarY Of 0 te dechnuo-to---eithe-r-O-01-ifiFin Altogether forty tenant°, representing 800 ported to have Iron mada tf_f the Urii,ted Offer under 'consideration. made to -Canadian fishermen of a like Irish question this session 'or meet the free entry of their fish; it is sfife'to assume Unionist objections to his plans tabled the i ea of rensnI,: that the Derirtment of . State never ent,er John Dillon, M.P., says: "Since January ng the TreatY 9f lat evictions have increased to an appalling Washington with the tinderstanding that a , ,._ extent. 'In 'terry alone, in three months, cashAndeninity Was again to be paid Lo sog .fikmiliew mahwere ing 1,756' 'people,- ... Great 'Britain for the 'nght-t9- enjoy the , !Whited; 5;190 persons altogether have been, inshore ' fisheries., of Canada: , Secretary aieprussessefi. .meanwhile,, an -the returns Bayard to -day said that he was glad !-ti of crime for the last quarter there is no 'notethe inciessing interest nramfeamm in the -subject. . He felt that the people ofthe increase, a fact unparalleled in Irish agrarian _country, cutside of Massachusetts, ,had history, and winch attributed to the great faith of people " the moo onlybe - never realized its importance -or appreCiated in. the PI- - - , the gravity;of the alternative left to the Ad-- - Area inee - - t ' • ti"n was hall • g :"":131: Ititerath g6n ministration -La declaration of non -inter- course if they failed to effect a, peaceable adjustment of the difficulties between, the "'United- States and Great Britain' respecting tbe constitution of the treaty' rights ,of our fishermen. It is doubtful, he Said; if the intetests of San. Francisco in Maine Common to-daY to protest against the Coercion Bills Fully 10,000 persons were present:* Several membeed of Parliainent were present.' Resolutionsdenouncing coercion wereadoptedbyan Almost unani- mous 'vote. ' •' Mr. Wm. Aleisinder;Hiiitterdaladlitoniati "tellinehnr•Preniilit ' end °VAS' member for Aberdeen, thinks the whole of from British Columbia, aside :from the importance of the great Chicago bUsiness connections. with Canada and of, the vast trade that ebbs and flows acithis the three thousand miles of our 'northern boundary do not exceed the intermit of Masisaghu- •'setts in the results' of the application of such an alternative as commercial non. intercourse. The negotiations with Great . Britain • on thie subject were progressing and the Secretary hopes they will result in a-harnainimpiand satisfactory understied ing :between that country • and the United States.- •" • . ifIERVANT MDRDE!LED. Desperate Deedln a raidilonable Beildence Of Leitisville In Open Day -Light.. • A Louithrilliedespatch lays:: A horrible murder was perpetrated in broad day -light in one of the most fashionable resident 'por- tions of this city yesterday morning about 31 o'clock. The pollee authoritieshave.juit been informer:1.ot the terrible criine: and as yet it is -shrouded in inylitery. -About le; • o'clock in. the iing Mrs. A. Y. Johnson, the wife . of a well-known Main: street Merchant, left her home on Brook'street in company with . her ' children and Jennie Rownian; a,servant girkwho is_white and ithdiir.24-4-Carli:iif Age. It appears the latter accompanied Mrs. 'Johnson °only a short ,4ista,nce--, on . spine spedial mission,' after which slia returned to the house. •ShOrtly.tifter this a little colored girl living next door to the Johnson farthly went into :the kitchen of the hOuse' and discovered blood on the flOor, and sigsle of disorder: 'She coaled for: help, and reeeiving no •aiisWer started en the back stairway tO her room. . There the child discovered the servant lying -upon the floor horribly beaten about the head and breathing herlast. The child: gave the alarm, but the wontan died heforethe physician's &nivel. Two, sus, Ticious char,acters are known to have been leafing across' the street when Mrs. John - eon and the children went 'out, and it is thought they entered the house and • were discovered upqn the return of the servant. A poker was found with the !Mir and blood of a man upon it, and it, is supposed the woman' opposed theburclire with the above result. 'The'inen can hordlyAscape. Atreetensoetrige.; , •• , A St. Louis telegram iniyat., Adespatch from the City of Moxico gives an aepount of a horrible affair committed in the City ,of Patzcuoro last Wedneeday • night. The Wife of.duanRamierez Was the belle of the town and a great favorite. Three police- -Men enterediiito a plot to outrage her, and on the nightmentiotted went toltainierea's house which Was in the suburbs; -enteredhis bedroom and butchereclhim With knives. The spouting bleed deluged the Wife asshe lay betide her, husband and She. fainted. After Ittimierez,was dead they restored the wife to consciousness and then carried put their -hellish plot, leaving the,poor woman almost dead. The men fled to the interior on .hcireebsek, but two of there were captured and the third will be, as,the whole country was aroused and • intense --63thitement, prevailed. • • . hineen'a on its Dignity.. / Alingston despatch, says i A cominittee Of -prominent citizens , has undertaken to raise 150,000 ef the increased endowment f6r Queen's. The professors Will subscribe 110,000-, and De. Grant will • solicit aid in other places.. Probably never before did prominentmen display such interest in the college as at present, and the probabilities are that within a few weeks the desired financial positiod .of Queen's: will be ob- tained:. The Boston Tranicript has evidentlisuf. feral at the hands of the compeeltot, and thus takes...its revenge 4' Ah I vehat'ii thin ?' eXclitimed the intelligent compost. 'tot 'Sermons in stoliee, books in the running broas 1. That mini be right. I have it He •means BeralOOO in , books, stonein the r,mining broOks, That's sense,' ..And that is how the writer found the now famoue letter attributed to- Mr. Parnell, sieniture and all, was the work of one pen, and that the thieg was a forgery from the start, which was imposed on the Time:. Aul article to this effect will appear in, the Weekly Dispatch to -day, and a fee. simile of a genuine letter written by Hr. Parnell about the same •titne as the alleged date Of the Times' letter is published, in orderto facilitate a fair comparison between the • real and the . alleged • auto: •• An election was held yesterday at Taun- ton to, fill the Parliantentaiy gest made vacant ty the removal of Mr. Samuel Charles Allscipp from the Sense Of. Cont - mons to the lionise of Lords. At the 'last election Mr..Allsopp wasreturned without opposition. Yesterday- the ConserVatiee candidate, Mrs Allsopp, a member of the eathe family,. received 1,426 votes, and MT. Saunders, Gladstonian, 890- A. DIG BLOW hp. A Number of People,' Hurt by aNtolier ' Explosion. • „ • A Petition,: N, destii,tch says : • terrible wreck *as. caused- b,,y the explosion of a retarY rag boiler in the_ Ivanhoe paper: 'Efritiiidiiiir"--Therliefler was old and Weak, s was shown by the condi- tion of the fragments. 1t wreck0d a lerge pOrtion ,Of the' Mill, Went up through , the roof, soared into the .siir, and Came down in 3, H. Booth's silk mill across .the Street, playing havoc with that also About twenty-five persons are injured. Thenames s ,t WHOSE WIVE 'IS SHE Pail Pivot!** _tag atogilaire and DATeeese TAWS, Of ThFibli. Conntries. geton (N. Y.). despatch says: A. ph tad case of 'matrimonial 'Mande, bag _bee brought. to light through -a hear- ing before jedge.Perkerni Supreme •Court Chambers!, on Saturday last. The cost, eanieuttin PAO= for diV0P3.0 by William, H. Stewart againet, Annie Stewart, It. involeeit. many .fine points as. to the marriage and -fliverce Jaws of three• countries -England,, , Canada and the. United State. . The facto are as follows; ; On Feb. 1076., Annie Mints, it:: buxom English maiden of 20; was married. ' to Charlet: Tateat the parish church in the • perishOf St. John's, IliddleberthiglioSeun y of York England. In 1878 Mrs. Tate' brought an action for diyotce, against, , her " husband on 'the ground of adultery, On' IdaY, 5th, 1879, an order was entered, :Aim,'• lating, atneng other things„."•thet the Mar-. •riage be dissolved unlee's sufficient camie shown to the Court why the said 'decree • should not: be made absolute Within six months from the Making thereof."- Before .. • , the expiration 4$ the six monthe the ' . ' to this. this eity,', where .ehe was slightly, ac- quainted. Here . she became acquamted with Stewart, and . they were. mar- ried. ' _ 1,879-_33,efOre-•-- the Marriage . she ' informed him of her marital relations ' in • England and the divorce proceedings. Both at that • time Were wider the impression that the' Tate' marriage was dissolved..A ' order in the English divorce was entered. in January, 1680. •After Stewart ,lived with the woream for two yeses, and two ohildteil were beim to them, some doubt Annie to the Ensile& divorce. proceeding. She re- queated •Stewart to have the marriage cere- moily performed over; bat this -he refused to do. • They then -separated, and have not . lived, together•since. Soonalter the sePli- ration Meg., Stewart went to the. Province • on, :Septeniber, 20th, 1864, she Married • one Lilac Ayes, at tliet • Province, and has, ithice-liVed With him: Her Canadian bus--- •.• band-At-prese. lives •Stnitfeed; 'Ont.; -• and is a wealthyet** raiser. He also was. • made aware of • her -pectidier.„ alliancee. ',• • : • Stewart hie brought his action fee divorce in the Bitpreine Court 'of this State for adultery on account of ,the• defithdanes latione with,AValin Canada,. •The defend- ant in her answer admits , all the facts! ase regards! the marriage and divorce proceed-. ' inge.in'England, but alleges that .sbe had. not in fact been dieor.ced from Tate at the tinie ef her nierriege to Stewart, and that. At the time she married Stewart elie* was r the Wife, of Charles Tate, who • Was • stffl: living. She therefore denies any adultery: withAves, and aske for a dennissal of •the complaint and that. judgment:- enter. ' de- claringher reartiege contract. With Stewart.' • void.' • • .• . •. The leading quotition-itthinitted- to ;tha.L.- Conxt , to determine 'is whether the second' Order entered in the English Omit dispol'ied the martiageon Sept. 5th. .1879, which Was: Six mthithe after' the hist • eider Was. tered,,:6r,whether the second. ordet.sithply Rive effect to the first Order; and the mar- ., nage Was': dieseleed when the first order/ . Nati entered . all. events, at places, the. fair ; defendant in a very peculiar position.: • She is thewife of somebody, and wbo is it/ • .1.f•her niarriage ' this city is' • declared legal, then her marriagein Capadels illegal. • , The'papers in the' case 'Were Served . pon here few days age While one visit. to this city, Where ehe 'sat present awaiting the • densioe, of, the equit.- • ' • • - . MIII3T COVE 1:nii !FRANCE. Ishiloo*ok's.-RalliOes Plan Of ,CerMallifIbillr- , • •9astice-ierrii4ne. ' A Berlin cable -says Prince Bieme.rck is. deterinined to stamp otit French Conspira- tors in Alsace-Lorraine. French sympa- , thisers Must either remain_ inactive or go - to French territory. Germanising inea- eres are being carried out .sYsteniatic.ally hrougheut Alsace-Lorraine; FOr instance; one merchantsof the town of Dienze haile been expelled since Illonday • for adhering te.their,French,nationality. 'Each Of them ' received twenty-four hours', notice iceq,nift.. At Chateau Saline 4 man Was arrested for. flaunting the French milers at a' local ball. . At :the Sairegnimes3 triblinal a working- man named Gotip •: was sentenced to tbree• months'. imprisonment for -shouting 14 Vivre a France.," Workinan' Schmitt was Mu, tensed by the flame court to one thonthee imprisonent for -wearing tri -colored rib- • 'ns, an • orkman Siebord to ten ,weeks' Mprisonnient for aeting as a correspondent or the French Patriotic League. This . reatment of French Adherente may have a - great effect upon the -FrenCh,.public,; and eaten a Collision between. the twit tiatione; ut these ineasgres ate believed tobe forced, poti , the Gersnan authorities, who have, structione to. deal With all peaceftil habitants as German Subjects. of the remit wouuded are asi fol-„ lows Wm. Jenkins, Married, a• piece of scalp taken off by flying fragments ; he was blown 'into thee-laiefray. •• Michael Berke, who with Jenkins, had charge of the boiler, is relining, and is .euppenled to be under the ruins • seaeoblor him was kept up till•darkind 'then •-aban#oned. 'Jaines Simpson, who was carrying ashes:from the boiler when the e4plosion occurred, was horribly brushed,' and is dying. Denier Bergin Was seriously injured. Mary Keis• 'bury, E iza Farrell, Mrs. McCormick and •Bridget, wan, all employees -tit the paper mill, were -badly hurt: The seven -last naretedare in the, hesnital. ,Three girls in f Booth's silk mill Were Wig, hurt: . Their I t names ate Maggie Vansill,: Rachel ikulla-fractured," and the 40 • -Maggie Stafford. The heat two theiri h ceived several scalp wounds, °Win Burns n Was dug out.and is badly bruised. • in , • BleXICatt Aftir, . CRUE11181) TO ;PULP. A, City , of Mexico . despatch says: 'The . . . a doubly fatal duel. Lieut.-Cohn:fel Tunoz; . A Spokane peas, W.. T. despia-66.-sais : .. — 0 the •8th- Battalim' and M. 11(' Sa*all' It has just, beealearned that on Thursday ' musical director attached to the commartd, afternoon a, terrible accident oCourred on eilarrelled in a saloon in -San Luis' P°t°Ber the Cascade division of thelgorthernPacihe •. where they were stationed, and a challenge Railroad, four Miles, beyond Chelum. -, A ' was accepted at CIOCe. The two officers, ; west -bound train pushing a flat par loaded iieminipanied only by a• captain �f the regi- I *its, ethorem was going around the curve ,rnent, were. driven to the Lodrillora, and leading to a trestle when it ran • into an at the word both shot at once and both fell..., engine' which was running east, backing up. dead. " . ' - - . The hit car passed half Way through the .r." Two beadings on the Pena Colorado tender of the engine and the other end Saturday. rancho, near, Dolores, were burned In one were twin brothers sick hound trait:e'en which were twO inen, who .' on crashed up agehist the pilot of the West - with typhus fever. Their mother at. were °roiled to a -pulp. rhe, light engme :totted tepave 'them, and all thrr.., Per. ,was knocked 80 feet. Five men were killed ' ChOlera i8. raging a .t mardan an, ..dGuaY'' number 18. All of thephysicians of Aliens. ' male. Peopie are leaving t e infected dis- burg were immediately sent to the•scene by teicts in large numbers. sPecutt train and hair() been rendering all Cajerns, the notorious Yaqui, chief, was the '' service possible. 'rife scene of -the ' ehot tedeath on • Friday at Modano, near aceident as'desorated.by those present beg- Guaymag, by the Mexiesinsothorities. -1 gees description: Blood is scattered inevery - - direction and the neig ring roc a bear .• -Pap-Well, , Lent as !low o er, • the evidence of fearful carnage: The am- end now, What have you done for the good dent was the 'Ault of one of the train's crew ' of thechtircliduringthe semion of penatice/ .neglecting to flag as per orders. The dead BMs, -with a 'sudden attack of bravery-- a an injured were btought tri Cheltith on Mollie hasn't done much of anything,Thursdaynight, ' .. :Mir Department makes known the facts of fi• llx Men Meet Death lika Railway Accident. l'Outright mid one leis Since died, The injured I-,:hm-er0-Na' p-promisecl to in -merry i he new rector. ' • . • • 1 A. Boston barqtte recently sailed/0r th ee , ' -Boston is beteltia more and Mill hours through a cloud: of dust; near New mare teethed°, for her people noW spell jail Zealand, lust after a . volcanic eruption on *solo' but we rise 1,0 remark ,that the the island. . . . , '-- walls are just as thili, the bedi just all ' The goods in It.outreal are ,reoeding hard and the food just as plain. : ' ' thoughthe people:Still suffef frluch: . 1 ... a •