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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-03-30, Page 6, - ••••.- • --1.-..70.4-40000.40000 • - • „t. A MU WO.. MOO Mar,dage to Ma MUUOlt JO Buena, ROMIG :4WEhl:fift 9017AT8112. • A London cableseri: There Was: aVerY large nuraher of'Mats, at the wedding cf ,Prbace.Oficeir of Sweden and: Mies Mruaok **Bournemouth yesterday. The Queen of Sweden, Prince Carl andliincoEngene of gin3den, the, Crown Princess, Of De°41a* . and theDuchese • of Albany were present. The Weather Was brilliant. • The marriage of Wince Oscar of Sweden • -with fdtee• Ahba. Munek, one etthemaide oL hInier to hiliTtnYal MO .thertQueenSerdaa, and the' young man's, reilunomtion otalthis. rights; prerogatives And title e in order to wed the woman he lirees,. have been a severe shock to thUreYaities of Europeand ail , these who, believewith the late Prince Winclleachnatz of AnStria, that "man only llegine With -a baron." With the P39Ple of Sweden and NorireY; kii*ever by whom. 'the Prince' has always been greatly admired, iiiiel'heloved on account of his manly ✓ edities; this last stop has but added tohie PoPularitY. Prince ()east, Duke of Gotland, is the S eeend-sert Ring Oticar II.i and was born 'November 15th, 1859. -gels a young man of sterling character and an efficient officer 'bathe Swedish service. He is ota religion!? • 'diepoeition,A•vality not often met With in -rincesiendfclevotesmnch of his time And money to the clause Of charity. /lobes tra- •• welted extensively 6)44. has writtena history 0thi4trevelfib.eoplihnotion with his bro. •ther....' His love 'affair with Mies Munck dates back for to years, but hot till recently am, he divnlge his leelinge, :even to Mies Mtincli herself..., According to the Swedish • Constitution anyprince qf the Royal Fam- ily "e.ontraiding a raerganatio marriage mud =ounce his right to the succession to the ' Thiene, tegetlie.rwith 111 thetitlesprero- gatives and enaolumentS ineidenttoilbsiposi- *ion. 'Thie Prince Oscar has done. It was only., After muoh_•-• earned and petsevering Ailed that ho obtained Itoyal assent to Iiig Marriage with Miss Muni*, and then it VIE =MR% Trim 0111,POteCtive for Earglar7--Startling ; -Orldelle9 bY a G.T.F., °Meer. THE HOE:EAL SENSATION. . nosinir Ceremonies at the .Dead Eines • Irrinerol. A. Berlin' .cable says The funeral of Enamor William took.. place, to -day.' The weather was [4044, extremely. • cold, • and the troops, who were ranged. form deep along the route taken by the :cortege, were heavy cloaks. The kivz stemeerature " had no -gapparent effect uponthe people, andhundreds of thousands of epeetatoro , occupied the space, behind the 'seldiere, whileeVer'Y Windian, along the OA* den Lindon Was crowded, 411 the houses on the thoroughfare wet° covered with mourning and exhibited Asp with black drapery. At -the street erossinge massive pillars draped with black and sur- mounted by Prusaian eagles had been erected. .The lampposts were covered with crape and at (Way fiftv. paceethere were large, vandelabrit bearmg flaming owin- mainly to the leitdme of his . . „ prekented a moat • solemn and • imposin▪ ve saother. cm • ' 46,0 =SA organ „prelude crossets. The Mite of the funeral Proms- sionesented ii• Meet imposing aspect, entire y in' keeping with the deep sorrow and reVerenceof the people. The centre of the road was strewn with gravel and fir branches. In the Peniser plat; latge, crape festoons entwined with laurel were hung, The Brandenburg Gate was draped, and there was a large arch in front of it, upon which were the words, "God bless yon." The funeral service took place in the cathedral in accordance with the pro- gramme. Emperor . Frederick was not present, 'the weather being too severe to permit of Iiii-apraeliag hinaself:- Dr. ' Koegegihe• Court Chapliihi,,.:ffelriThWilie Sermon, standing Weide the, coffin. His tot was, "Lord, now ;lotted Thou: Thy. servant depart in peace according to Thy word; for mine eyes have seen -Thy salvo - tion." At 12.45 &dock Dr. Raegel pro- nounced the benediction'While at the same time volleys were fired by infantry on the outside? The cathedral ceremony domed with the ' singelig of "Hely, Holy is 'the Lord." The preoessiontO escort the Raiser's remain° to the, reaueolouni then began . to form. , • • • Prinife Bismarck and Gen. Von Moltke :were not present at the serviees• in the cathedral, 'nordid-ther take- part- in the• procession to the mansoleuro.ii The cathedral A Montreal despatch dated 'Pit (Friday) night says': The proceedingsin the fani. one detective case were of a more interest- ing notate to -day, and some important testimony was adduced. Several Witnessee were' dicaminedi, butthere was nothing in. their evidence • directly incriminating the aocuesed. A sensation was products' when Detective Thos. Flynn, one of 'the -principal witnesses, was called. He swore that he had known the prisoner for fourteen Years, but did not 'know Naegle and Bureau. •be- fore the let; of. December, • Tcusw siPereeP 'Relned.: Frank Wilson; first met Wilson in Detroit Bepeived a telegram. 'front W. J. Spicer, 'eensiral Manager' a the, Chicago ez Grand- Trunk- Railway at • De- troit, and met him there . at . his office.' . Spicer said, - meet a man . here in .a shorti Yon may have togete. Mon- treal Shortly." • HSalSo Mentioned that it. :waein'.pennection. withthe, robbery at the ,Bonaventure that he wanted hina.. e'oloell a inini.iiMiyed. at. the .ofileo,, „Who -afterwatde told him that, his 'name was .Prank. Haynee„ and that he was .0100.known. as Frank Wilson. Witness., was with the general manager • when this Man arrived, It was errangedzi-thatHPrank7Vilsoo,--44a •Witneae, •Should: go. to Montreal. Hisvibit to Xontrealwas..,0ith.the objeokrst, to have Wileon 'lay'. the matter before Mr. !Mason; and secoodly,,for the' porposepf getting e.• letter . which,.Wilson said was going to e 8ent tohim-at: he : Adame -and,...Witnees. • Went to Colborne, where whet° his family' •74tuese; to BtaitOn- He saw' WilSonin,Boston on the 26th November. ' Went to Boston . for, the' 'pnrpOse. of getting' any lettere thatmight be sent to:Woof:4.0a to witne& hie* 'open them ab the. Adams: House,' Itwassr, ranged' to try to get: more &Wee • from i tho:. othe patty; The clerk at the: Adams House •handed. Wiletinaletter;. when , 'son tend,. "'Yon open 'that letter; Flynn,: and reed it .y.enreelf.'" Witness: then. pro- ducad ;the Iiie:fitaiiiiting • letters,: but divide arose, as to whether they should.be admitted s evidence: or not, and the- court tholaririntittetrift delibers-.7-•• , • - ..04.4. 6441$6444 %11,mitY4 441;9`es9"%exactscAitaLizteamotara,:mie? 13-134"t'Y6ts'* u'uflUbloglattitall6;•VbMAtalbtreal 0 • od `110144iflhOlialiii alma' ' —inglb :-E -re's - - - --"ti ' *Nen 09.;ltihar.Fr of cosit:v.aMIlini. 6wainfgatvoo6noteurta.A. Pape; -holding the Imperial standard, insignia en. -trine ho was 'forced to fly to Italy in 1792,laced himself at the head of the coffin: , wheralie WO an 'tenon. count at the ago tount Lehildoihif and Prince Badehrillt *igit'ir*I'ari3; The'PiimiPa inelr'kber a *11° the latatiwoBrdinePesitbarnidaintiaonerleadoeb-erfiimdetio'f hwimth, i dirdin.. His father, Cot Minieli, had a half- sde-camp° stall:tail together at , the -foot of x m..,„ --,a.:,- ...; the•00 .•-: While _ _g.„ whoffin ' the organ still playe • brother, Lieut. -Co . IK married' tWice, the e.ea-on• d---tim-7; ivi---th- the .e1",6Vatie° anterea'Priace Williar4 arriv; • • , . Two ing at noon. At, a signal from the chief Baroness Henrietta Cedertatrons. . ... children were bore . of this marriage -B. piaster of ceremonies the organ . brake Munck,1857,• now lieutenant in , a caValrY into a's/oiling tones . and. the service . regiment in smaktakano gbba Henrietta was :•begun. Prince Williem stood in the Mnnek,' the betrothed of Prince °soar, born raiddle of the nave behind • the imperial Oct. 24th, 1858. Her , father, _riew_deaa, standard. , Alongside him were the Ring ,wae colonel:, et a cavaw regiment in. the of...Semi:my; the•King-of-:Belgins---and•-the- ODD DFIUSIONt3.. Singular instances or Monomania.' in Por- ' -sons Who are otherwise Perfectly Sane. Among the instances ot Aingular mono - Mania which I have 'diet's:meted is that of an important °Meer of &State government in New England, His special delusion is that the other members of the family are inflano and are Plotting to injure him, and that: they might to be put in an asylum. He is an able -and Oen, celebrated lawyer, and - conduct s twee With marked effective,, nen and envies& his briefs and arguments 'allowing unusual vigor and continuity of thought. Nobody knotva of his mental condition outside of his own family and a few intimate friends, to whom they have said cerifidently If any of ns should disappear suddenly, look for us in an *tinily to -day is Captain Eugene Mundt, of and the Ad'uitint-General and Other saideal the.SWedielt ASTI, who msides at Stook- • • Another Moat ouri011s,oaBe is that of a *smithy banker- ot Ncw York city,' who Mote, that he, itc a ripe cherry.' that the birds are eager to pick. He has a terror of all frait-eating birds, and seldom walks or appears anywhere in the open eir. He mak* his trips to and from his bank in a carriage and keeps. doors and; windowsAlways phut tight, test a .sParroW shonld get in and swallow him I He knows per- fectly well that the piepooterons belief would damage him and probably rain him if itweregenerally known that he harbored it, so he conceal the consciOnsness of his fearful ,peril from his business associates and contents himself withkeePing carefully out of the way of birds. ' . . ' An interesting society lady. Of Troy imagines that --a big -Newfoundland dog -always accompanies her; walks -when -she Walk& stops when she stops. "I know perfectly well that it is not there," she. ,says,." but I always see it, andthat is what troubles me." Whenlgo to -bed it always lies down upon my feet:, There is a lady who has ,been A:teacher for the lest twelve years in the pohoold of New :York oil-yea:ad is still ho employed, who imagines herself a wheelbarrow. "1 know ram not a Wheelbarrow, of course," she says ' to her,physioirin, DvHaramond; "but that ceetainly, makes no difference with the appearanceand my sensations. When In school I am always a .wheel - •barrow,.._ and_ImY.:_feet are the handles and My head. is the wheel, and .1 seem , to be trundling myself down . the , aisles. and through the hallo, It is • ridiculous and lat,43ffillornUemtagitylailibitAtenglisPirat:* itiaasAlrezeintltdattenervoureisomen , ii6Mffike,tifttlifIrelintinationto • HOHHIT44E ATROCITY.•••:. • ' . ' . •• , • '1:41arlt!.1:44-C774.1i444ilikg,17412t44071:4.11!,,Zitiiiegerad. 04,,..0.04.40;.400400•400 040440. ...,004 a‘•-• . " &Troy, and • interwar& i)ostmaster Of JOnlsopinga. Her mother is still living at gtobliholm:. Mies Min,* was Chosen in 1882 a maid' of honor to .the Crown PrinC400 aud occupied her slace. at court till 18E46. 'She then left an deveted. her- self to muffing 'the sick in the :Queen's • Hospital; an institition built through the munificence Of Her Majesty the QueSn of iSWeden, Miss'llfunek Was, betrothed Kane. Years ago to ,Lient. Count Taldenntr von Rosen, but the engagement was broken off at the instance ". of Miss Minoki :Who, aceOrding to 'gossip, did not approve of:the •Cotint's,rather gay life.' .: • °The betrothal • between His Highness Prince Oscar and Mies' Mundt 'teak place. ;Annuli 29th in the royal palace; Stook - holm.. After the young couple; in the .preeence• •Of their ' Royal Highnesses the Bing and Queen, had exchanged rings, the King, Queen, Crown Print.° and. Crown Princess followed the affianced pair to the "aeon's appartments • where the invited guests were assembled. The Ring there publicly announced the betrothal and toasted the young couple in the presence of the invited guests, who included' Miss 3i/wick's nearest relatives, the Swedish and Norwegian 'Prime Ministers,the court leinctionarieff, the ,;diploniatio corps, and .thetutord and military icomrades of Prince akar.' Prince Oscar ' and', wife will be known after their naarriage as Prince and Princess. Bernadotte; the PrinOe'a, family name. Ring' of Roumania. Ohio by. stood the doer. . Leaving ,him after a second blow,. Grand Duke Of . Boden, . Princes. Albrecht Barber went into the oharaher where Mre. and Henry, and other princes of the royal Prussia, the Prince house ' Imperial of Mason was lying in bed and hammered bar to death With the Same weapon. •• The Austria, the Prince Imperial of Russia, the Grand Dukes Michael and i. Nicholas of fainting ' husband heard his ' wife's' loud cries of 'agony subside into , means: The: Russia; the „Prince of . Wales; the Crown Prince of Italy, the Crotvn Prbice of Den. euli" heed paid by the miscreant to Mason's appeal for mercy . for his wife and himself mark and the Crown Prince of Greece, all return to the onslaught on in the uniforms of their 'respective cothe husband.. The murderer then emptied- rm.: w" a tries. The Princes 'of Havana, the -Grand the contents Of the oil. lamp . upon the- old Puke of Hesse and other' notables and fOr.: mail and the carpet, ' and; ignitingit, tied .eign representatives, including Gen. Billet, from the house'. Mason recovered , suffiot. of Fiance, and his allite, forma theqiiinit rows in the nave: The diplominiepew wits drift, to crawl trona' his house into a 'snow- drift; leaving the body of his dead wife for orowded. ". ' `‘:-. , - - - .. cremation in the blaze which soon consumed . •the !hose. * The fire Was discovered by neighbors, two of whom cenieyedthe Mini - • .....W.'0:,,,A04474,if'4 An Ithaca, despatoli pays: Itiolard Barbet;li farm hand employed -by -Thomas Donahue the past winter, was lodged in jail here this ,noon, charged with the most atrocione crime committed in this section in half a century. Richard Mason and his wifely an inoffensive. childless couple aged about 70, have Wed for 'thirty years in a little house on two acres of landtwo miles east of Trumansburg. On Friday night ,an alarm at the door aroused Mason, who admitted Barber, with whom the Masons were well acqua.Mted. Lighting h lamp, Meilen started to go down In thecellar for a dish of apples. . Barber seized a heavy stove poker or shaker and otruok ,the, old M011 on the hindlifilie stood -at tbe cellar MUMS cr TEE X.00ON0TIVE. • Whet ,0a0 Engineer Has Efdled the Traelo.:LEver3thing fro* Teat's. to Nen. I killed a buzzard this, fm.rning,", ire- • miztoaardkeato alt.% °Alatlartaginceoeser titttiStl;ie reporter, the other afternoon. ' 4.1lather strange game to be hutting with a locomotive. • Bow did it happen ?" "A dog or something had been killed the " day before, and the buzzard was so inter- ested thepareass that be any notice of me until eot Open him; - and be was knocked off into the ditch. I hit him a pretty hard lick, and I guees it killed _ ' "Isn't it an unusual occurrence to run over birds and the like?" " 0 no, not at all • we frequenEly . partridges; doves and • sparrows with° number. Sometimes a whole be ohiokenif ere ground ' up at one Although all kinds of poultry are run OVOlir from time to time,i. I believe guineas are, smartest in getting out of the way. When - a flock -of them' is encountered • on a track they usually strike out on a -run directly ahead of you, 'Sticking to the traek until you get right upon them, andthen dart a ,to one side. If one gets off the rest follow,. tIhneerov,eryoirieswetittbtoOv,ifehieLl ftIofoky.0,,O. get. one of .-" How' is it with other aninials ? IgUestt..i • you have run, over nearly' every -kind in . your time `?" , , • "Yea, I reckon I have," Paid • the engi- near, thoughtfully, a shadow peening over his kindly face as bp finished the sentence. ..!• I suppose.,1„_have run over. everything_ -frOma man ton tos-7-V _ ' , "One day 1 Was running- at a high - • speed, considerably behind tithe. Just ars' . I tufted a chive a colored 'man, seated -OD .7 • I a load of wood arid driving a mule, was crossing the track shoed of me. AlthOu he had ample time to get, over, involun- tarily shut °lithe steam and threw on the , brakes, It was too late), however. The poor fellow became: frightened and struck his' Mule it, blow with a Switch; and the,' stubborn animal mune to a dead stop. right . inthie tracks. • The. Man was paralyzed with fear and finable tr. move. , The next • instant 1 attack the waggon- and knecke4 it into a thousand' pieces,' carrying • uff- forionetrinenhiere-thihrthirty4-yards be- fore I could stop.. • The Mule plodded on the lead as unconcernedly as though he. •eaall14-ttatirectge,gaitale,adta.hdepathiog dmdimppeared. .• Now Prima Donna: " . A' London correspondent writes: "1 have juin had the privilege of seeing and Irearingthe singing of a yeting Scotch lady whom Mr. A.ugurnue•Harris has engaged as a prima donna ferhip opera season, which is • to commence in May: Her naraeleMaciti- . ' tyre and she is •the daughter Of a general ' officer residing at Brighton. ff Many 'con- '. noissetirs are enthusiastic about her Ohm, .prootinaing her the best debutante eine° Nilsson, whom she sonnfivhat resembles. • She is eWeetly pretty, and wpronouncedly • SteitOla alike in feature., coMplexion and. build. Her lower register ie exquisite, but she min Also command those •highnotes which bring down the gallery." . A. FATHER'S it7EVENOE. Ife lated farmer to an adjacenthouse,by which time the entire neighborhood had become aroused, and when Moon informed them of the facts, enraged parties of ' aearollere set out to apprehend the Murderer. Barber was encountered on the read and kept in custody bye. throng of men until the arri- val of Deputy Sheriff Barton, win succeeded in getting him to Trumansburg and pro. toting him until the train brought them to o4;nimits a Terrible Ontrnie, on • a* : • „ Woman for Raining Ms Son. Springfield (AI.) odespatch says: Dr. • h George M. Cox, 13': S. pension :exaniinei it. Springfield, induced Effie Ellie; the mistress of Fenton C(); the grin Of the physician, to. enter a carriage Withhim, and when she was • seated he struck her Over the 'head With a,bottle of vitriol, breaking the Vessel • A Static, of Lord , , A London despatch Biqa z. The Dufferin Manorial. Committee at Calcutta has de- cided to place in front of the Town Hall a states Of Lord•Dufferiri and within the hall. it portrait of •Lady/reifferin. The native oppoeitioia to this project has all along been and is still Very Strong, but the 'Committee 'toted filmostLimaniteonsli to ' thus honor the retiring Viceroy in splte of the objeo- • tione raised. • • thiratige for Broken Heart, etc. • • A,NOW York despatch says: The suit of Mies A. Case, a widow, „against Wm, B. Bnglish, of Indianapolis,' son , of ex - Governor 'Wm. H. English; for seduction and breach of promise of marriage has , Mr. W.'• A. Croffut, a journalist and RIO- cossfa inesmerisl, gives me the •following opinion: "Hallucinations are . evidently closely akin to dreams. I can fill any, one of my. sensitives full of delusions in a minute; can make him think he is Wash- ington or Grant or 'Victoria, peddler, an opera singer,' a teacher of languages, rooster or a telegraph poled -,--ancan. banish •the delnsion in twoseconds.. ,Now, it seems o Me that this hallucination is 'exactly, the, se e kind as the hallucination Of lunatics or the dreams of those who sleep, the Only difference being that the sleeper holds the key of dreamland andl• the operator holds the key of a similar trance called meemer- ism,. while to the permanent trailee--thlled- insanity and the 'partial trance called Monomania' the key is last. ' I have Wondered if -it might not, be Feasible to re- cover the hist key -4o often .waken • the insane from their dream as somnambulists and the mesmerized are 'wakened." -Pitts- burg Press New York Lefler. and smearing her face, and head with the Ithaca. Bailer is an Englishman and has 'fwd. Her screams attracted the attention been in this country .eight years. The only of a policeman, who released, her from the frenzied physician, but not until her eyes had been burned out and her .handsOme features destroyed. The agony of tho poor creathre is intense, and she now lies at the point of death.. Fenton Cox met Effie at a' Wisconsin watering place 'eat summer and brought her to. Springfield, where he has . pinned a course of debauchery. and' railroads," eaid H. Carter,. a ralircald' since pi ruin.,The.d9otor,,.hy legal means, brae contra"one of lit. josePh, the Other . &sir:, tp.. a earicti chow which the , hey had diffimalty of frequent °eminence was Met with; vvhieh,As far as my experience started,' with Effie As leading lady, and is unique in railroad history. I refer drove her out ' toWn; but the boy fol., goes,. to t lowed her to St. Louis.. Before Meeting he ' trouble arieing from quicksands. mu he had heee a pieraideg young them,. From Western. tenses th the mountains' :Hid sudden ruin distracted his parents, and ,quieksands are t� be found in nearly. every 'stream no matter how aunt'', and to if:M- ateyo his father .to. commit his terrible cessfa:y bridge them required an expendi- . crime. tare out Of all proportion to `the size of " • , stream to be 'crossed: We tried pile -driving, 'The 'Prairie 'Proviieb. , • . • hot the longest 'piles disappeared :without Xavier •Batodhe will primed to Ottawa touching bottom. Then filling with earth as a representative of.the half-breeds of -the and stone was attenipted • and met 'BatOche district to lay before the Govern- with equally poor !faeces& as the quicksand ment their grievances On the geed wheat wap apparently.capable of swallowing: the dueetiOn. • Rocky Mountains. . The only means of The Mounted Police and the rnifil•car- 'crossing a quicksand was found ...to be to Tiers on. the Prince Albert trail have heard, build ,ebott tress Wages across them. As that Gabriel Dumont Lias written letters to an instance of :the practically bottomless several of the halfdateeds in the Bateche nature of the •quicksands, I,may cite the county : stating that he has received a pat. ease of an engine that ran off the track at don from the Queen, but is (dill anxious to. Itiver Bend, about ninety mile* fro,. Ben. live in the 'Chatted States., Ile sari further 'vet; on.the Kansas Pacific. " The 'engine, a that ho has poured 75 square miles of ter- large: freight, fell into& quicksand and in ritory in Dakota, and aeks his people to g9 twenty minutes had entirely disappeared. over there and settle. 'thin tWo days tbe ompany sent out . a , , .• -to A. K. Switzer was run over byan engine -gang of men and $ wreckingtrain to raise near Rosser :Station last night and killed; thelengine. Totheir etirpriee they eonld The body waelound by a 'section man this natlfind a trace of it; Candid match was morning, • . made, magnified .roaa Were Mink ` to the •Speaker Glass' to -day Adjourned the depth of texty.five feet, but no engine could • Legislature to Venda/L.and ideclares • Jae, be found. , , It had sunk beyond hUMMi•kono will do tine every day,.tritil a qhotara 'Of 0,O6 from that day to thi has neva been members is secured to transact business Or disenversd,__TrichigaBe-acon,„ theory accounting for the crime is alleged to be his knowledge that the Magmas bad $100 Of their sayings hoarded in the house, %L000m�tivo Lest. in the 'Outekiand. • ";In. the ..eenstrnetiOn the••• Kansas Pacific & Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe been,Pettled Mit& dourt.ii-Itiamtatod-that: ,Slae received $1000' Mid' that all her ex: • " pint4ep Were paid. i •" jorenil Chamberlain believes that the • new fishenei tteatywill postponed con- sideration by the fionate, until "after 010 Presidential 'election: ' kl*t.'Gladetone has disearded his ehablay old rig, and noW,drives a Spankingturn•dut. . •Jnst.Like Weinan. • "You and Your husband ifliould settle these little: tronbles between yourselves," said the minister, and net come to me. From what yon have -said I should judge you were rather obstinate." Oh, no,' she replied, "indeed 'I'm not. But I must admit I always like, to . have my own way," -Judge- . Cericned Prim the Wreck. • . • ; At Mee. Trick-Scored's reception: She -Did you manage to get me some supper in that awful oruphlifinfild-tho table? Ho -Yes; I have three fried oysterein my.vest' pocket and some chicken salad in my handkerchief.' • . • • • She -Oh, how'geod of you! -Town Topics 'Looking out for Censonneicee. Wife (in tile night) -What's the matter with Fido? „. ' " • . • , Husband -It bounds asithehad got bola Of a burglar. • Wife -Oh, John! De burry down and call Fido Off. I don't want to have any gentlenaan suing yon for, not keeping' Vide 't,,i'Evautrillviiiikicili41:11-1 1- the engineer,. "sheep 'keno . to latie less pen'se than -anything else._ if_ A_flook of them should happen to be grazing the tiack, when a train conaes along, and they don't manage to , get in the way Of it, it ,won't he their fault. I have killed. as Many ne ii -dozen' at a time. We don't kill many. nowadays, though, because there are eery , few -in the. country. , " Goatrare just the opposite. I have . never killed more than One ot two. . They are :smart enough to 'get out Of the way from the time they ate two days old. Let • • one be in the way . of an apprOitehing engine; mid- When want to get , off lb° track that is just what he does and: with- out happen to be in a 'cut he sterts. right .up77-:• :` the bank, and Oa there, too. ." While running a 'freight One night .. ram into a drove of about half a dozen . horses. It was quite dark, and I Could see thein Only when I would get oleo upon ' them'. With their characteristic stupidity - under such snob ciraumetanods, tlie frightened 'aniraals made straight ahead of me at the,/ ' top of their epee& suppose ran thee? in this way for several miles, sometimes ptOpping•;entiiely to let them Out. of the way, but whenever I reached a descending, . grade I *maid be upon. them 'Again. . At last they were •caught and two of their!: killed before thereat got off the track ". A good many hogs and cattle were also killed on the . track.. Of Course, these all have. to he paid for, and there is something' remarkable in the fact ; that only. Jersey& Berkehires and the like' are so unfortunate - seta get in our way. Whenever a Ow does get oftthe track and 'out of danger we • bate no reason to be ,gratified; because we " know she is only a scrub, and, of no Value anyway:" 4* A Reputation Eaffil* Earned._ ' Old lady" (te Saleinvoman)-Yoti don't 'seem to possess the patience of Jo), young. woman I Saleswoman -No, ma'am 4.. but Job never olerked in a dry goods store. ' voveet lonier adjoUrrittinent. ... , i'Mlittletetolf-rd algal With the ha ur, Last year the Church of Englandraised der of john Ingo,' in this city, last fitilVwas iti. ,alf a million eterling for Church extension, found guilty by the). jury at 11 o'clock it/' ieitorationv eridownient of 'benefices, pro - night.. Sentence Will • probably be given vision of burial grounds and erection) f Esireenageok 'The apnnal • average • of soh. to.morrow or Monday. . , . . gmations for the nxne years, coding , • -Chicago .litterbeecoP-'X'he oared will .1 waa 3 66,000, while, that f -or suci, not give up his nor the leopord deeding flame years was nearlY 204,000-.4 Jf change his spots, but fashion is diacessing growth Of over 22 ner e,mat. The donfirma, the diSearding of the hustle. " A Mortifying Cirminstance. • Mise Ethel -I was so sorry. to heat of your papa's failure, Clam. And ie it really true ?' Miss Clara -Yes, and for only 960,000. Mamma and I feel . too mod ified for any:. thing 1 -Texas Siftlngs: ' -REferrE'..• The Bipy INhii Got His Thither and Hinnielf Into. a Great pes.i or Trouble. ' Mrs. Shamni gavcfa mall but very, ele: gant tea the otherevening, and, as a relent for being good for two hours, she all her son Bettie, Aged 10, to di at table - the pests. . As an example of cold -blood villainy,. says the 'Detroit Free R.70807, wo give a few of the remarks made by Matter ' • Bettie during the ptiagrees oe the meal: " Me," he Aldred first, "' whose spoOnn,_. ate these?',' • ' "Bush, dear," said Mrs..Shamin..... •• Rehashed for a second, then : "Ma, whose-biggliiss dish is that ?" "Little , boys should be seen and not heard;" snid, Mrs. ShArana; with a sickly, mile that did not conceal from the guests the fact that there was a fearful re:Ilan:ling: in store ft:* Bertie on their departure. ' Sayona," he put in, Interrupting old Mrs. Meneyweight,who was!. the special guest Of the occasion, " that ain't our , , silver cake basket, is it ?" . o' Bertie; didn't you hear , Mrs. Money- - parent. ' weight speaking ?" ehides distrer Well, be quiet if: you'll tell me Whose pretty ,glaeses those. are. They!re Mrs. Baxter's, ain't they 7'! ' • .‘",,B0h,tns ertie1"; I forgot to 'tell you that Ilfra. Hooker wants you to lie sure and send back her teaspoons to -night, and -oh, ma, did you know that Sally ,broke one of Mtg. Walker's nice teacups, and -;-;oh, what a pretty plate this is! Who does it belong The, doors had .hardly closed on last' guest when the neighbors were, apprised by a sound whose; import could not be mis- takon that Bertie'e time of reckoning had It net generally known that Phil Arinottr, the Chicago pork Man, was one of. the Argonauts who (noised the 'plains in '40 in search of thegolden fleece. He re- mained iniCalifoinia for several • years and laid the foundation of hie fortune in 1851 by establishing a" waterworks for the muiete. He, came east to Milwaukee in 1851 and remained there until' he •reradved• to, Chicago. • r • The question of Ministerial Inefacienoy„ which has been creating so :Much disOns- Sien in -Scotland, has not hitherto been, publicly dealt with in the oonrts of the English Presbyterian' Church. This silence !is to be observed no longer. Tho subject is 'to be hMuglat befere the Newcaetle Presby- tery at its ordinary , meeting in March by Rev. James Mackenzie, of Smith Shields,: 'Who will move the traiismiseion:of-anoVer. ttire to the Synod' thereon: Other Presby- terio are expected to raovti in -the .sarao direction, • ' , At Tunbridge Wells, on a recent, Sunday the Rev. rather Searle delivered' a lecture in reply to a redtint addrese by Lord Itoljint Montage,in the same: town. In the course Of his, address he, StatOd that t110.4nnen's mother, the Duchess of Rent; as Cardinal Wiseman told hint in 1862 at St: L'einlard'a arrintekeetieg convertation. Was receive tions tor 1886 teas ed 213,688. (into the Catholic Church before hOr death. • • • correspondent, writing from Havana, says that he never saW a people so clean in regard to theft dress. A Cuban Stevedore . Will lead 'molasses On a vessel for a week and, one cein hardly find 'a epet 'even his • white suit when Saturday night comes: The Clerks , in Havana look as if they had just stepped out of bandboxes. They ato. usually dreesed in patent leather gaiter& , 'silk atocItings and linen, frodeeretand shirts ‘that are spotleaely• white. - • , • , •:0,1