Flesherton Advance, 11 Aug 1887, p. 2

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SHOT IN HIS TBA0K8. U^ AN UNHHABD OF HOBXIOB. A TruKMly «ii the Uitaka of tke Mlacr*nt~ nital Knd of • QtUVTcI. A lait (Thursday) iiiKht's Buffalo do- â- Dfttoh Bays : On Sund»^ last George HMvena ana I'ctor Nettle i«et at » drinkiu){ place at Victoria and had some words. They quarrelled for some time and would h*ve come to blows if bystanders had not interfered and prevented it. They parted, each threatening that he would get even the first time that an opportunity presented itself. That opportunity camu last even- ing for the lirsi time, and at the hour named Nettle was walking quietly down the Canadian shore with a double -barrelled breech-loading shotgun in his hand. Ue had been shooting at blackbirds. When a little over a mile below thn ' ridge he came •croM Jim Ludridge, .jitcK ileller, George Stevens and another man seated in a boat and finishing the hauling of the seine. When Nettle came abreast of the boat Stevens looked up quickly and said, " Who are you thooting at." Nettle replied, "I am shooting at birds, but, you, I'll shoot you if you don't get out of the road." Nettle then fired again bat wide of the boat. 'Diis enraged the men, and as if by impulse they all sprang to the beach. Stevens was in front, and as he came rapidly up the bank Nettle told him to keep back. Stevens, however, tept comia& end when he was within forty feet ofjRsIRs the Utter deliberately pla«cd the gyi to liiB shoulder, took aim and pulled the trigger. Stevens threw up his arms, nttered a groan and fell dead, shot through the heart. He neier spoke and scarcely aeemed to move, so quickly had death re- loltod. The other men seemed dazed and â- tanned for a minute and then, after partly realizing the awful tragedy which they had witnessed, darted for the murderer. lie was game and stood his groand, but he dropped the gun. One of the party picked this up, and saying, "D you, I'll brain jon," struck at hiq). l^be butt of the gun only glanced from his head, but the blow had been suflicicnt to cut the scalp and cause the blood to flow freely. Nettle then started ap the river, and for an hour after the shooting seems to have been doing •boat as he liked. He then went towards Victoria, and was met by Constable Bichard Griffin, who took him into custody, and •fter being locked up for a short time he ac- knowledged the shooting, but said it was 4one in self-defence. 'Ihe body of Stevens â- till lay on the river bank, but was finally re- moved by order of Coroner Douglass and placed in Sherman's boathouse for the night. The murdered man, George Stevens, was about 27 vears of age and unmarried, and had a bad reputation. lie had served â- everal terms in the large Canadian prisons, and about three years ago broke out from the Toronto Central Prison in rompanV with another convict. They were seen by the guards and fired upon. Stevens' companion was shot dead, but he escaped and came to this city. Since then he has led a vaga- bond life along both shores of the Niagara Biver. His mother lives about three miles below the bridge and is in ]>oor circum- stances. Peter Nettle, the man who did the shoot- ing, is 47 years of age and has a wife and one son. They live on Nettle's I'oiut and have been known as quiet, respectable people, though it is said the father rather tOud to bra(( a little mhtml flxtiMbf;, and was not averse to taking a hand in a row. An inqaest was held to-day by Coroner Brewster, of Bligeway. Keveuteen jury- men were cmpannelled,and the verdict was that " George Stevens came to his death at the hands of Peter Nettle while acting in â- eU-defence." The community appear to bo well satisfied with the verdict. Nettle >â-  a {armer and bears a good reputation. Chicago Woman and Baby Boa«ted Alive lu Hld-alrâ€" HeroUm of Twa Firemen. A last (Friday) night's Chioago despatch says: The story of the attentpted rescue of Mrs. Trugo and her babe, as described in later accounts, is one of pecnliar horror and pathos. The police and firemen had rescued her husband and fonr eldest chil- dren, but she was in some manner â€" readily ascribed to the confusion of the moment â€" neglected and left with her 'i-year-old baby Mary. The poor woman resorted to the window. A fireman saw her, and plunging back through the smoke he re- turned to her chambBr. All escape from the rear with such a burden as a woman and child was impossible. He thought of the bed cord, and tearing it out bound the woman and her baby with it and pushed them through the window. He played oat tne rope until from the heat and smoke he was ready to fall to the floor, when he fastened the upper end to the bedpost and fied. Far from accomplishing his gallant purpose he bad but too surely compassed the destruction of those he sought to save. His rope was too short, and instead of dropping woman and child to the ground or withm reach of those below, he had sus- pended them in front of the first floor window, from which fire poured. She swung there ten or twelve feet from the ground, writhing, shrieking and struggling as the fire swept off her garments and choked and broiled her alive, the baby in her arms. By the most singular fatality the flames which were destroying her left the rope intact. It became a necessity if not to save the woman to at least vemove the revolting sight. Thi« duty was assumed by Capt. Wm. A. Cowan, of truck No. 8, who might have ordered another man to the task, but who chose to chance the fate which he was told by the spectators a waited his efforts. Seizing a ladder he threw it ap to the blazing w^dow, and with aa axe mounted and stood on its blazing rung. He deliberately entered the flames, and, as they encircled him from helmet to boots, he struck at the rope. He could not see the rope, and struck with inaccurate aim once, twice, as the clothing fell from him, but he struck in vain. At the third stroke the blade cat the rope. Simultaneously the burning ladder broke and the three blazing human beings fell tD the groand. The )>aby was already dead, and the mother died a few hours later, and the captain lies in his homo in death agonies. * Two bakers, Kssen and Unsbetter, who are believed to be responsible for the neglect which caused the fire, have been arrested. The police say the pair became drowsy from drink, and instead of watch- ing the stove fell into a stupor, from which they only awoke when they and the ten- ants were at the mercy of the flames. WATCUINU THK FIHH. Oemplnint of n Hcftrrlty or Cruiser*â€" VesK«'U fur the tit. Ljiwrenof*. A Halifax despatch says: The Domin- ion fishery cruiser Acadia arrived at Port Uawkesbary yesterday from Halifax, and sailed to return westward. The cruiser Advance, which arrived here from Bhel- burne last night, proceeded to-night for North Bay, to watch the American fishing fleet. It IS proposed to have three cruisers in the Gulf of St. Lawrenco on fishery pro- tection within a few days, as the Critic is now there and the Advance will bo followed in a few days by the Intrepid, which was recently commissioned for the service in New Brunswick. Capt. Knowlton states that when he seized the Gloucester schooner Annie W. Hodgson at bhelburne he had no doubt the vessel was going to leave the ooast without making her report at the Custom house. With reference to the fish found on her deck, he states that they wore ood, which he never heard were used for bait : he had no reason for supposing she violated the treaty in this respect. Further more, he found no evidence whatever of i treaty violation. Capt. Knowlton's official statement of the Hodgson case was taken here to-day and will be sent to the Fisheries Department at Ottawa. The Prince Kdward Island papers complain that the fishery protection service on that coast is not sufficient, and state that there should be more cruisers to'keep off or arrest the Americans, who are constantly poaching without the slightest molestation. They â- ay that were more of the fishery proteo tion fleeton the ground there woatd probably be numerous seizures. Resrued by a Home fruiii Drowning;. A Detroit despatch oaya: At Higgins' Lake, Boscommoa bounty, yesterday Mrs. Charles H. Pettit and her little daaghter, aged 3 years, were boating, when the child fell into the water. The mother, in her anxiety and fright, upset the boat, and, as they were alone, the chances were they would both be drowned. Such would have been the caHo had not their horse, an intel- ligent French i>ony, which had been turned loose to graze on the shore of the lake, oome to their rescue. It swam out to them, and when they had taken secure hold of its mane, struggled back to shore, a tired, but heroic pony. The animal is fKelined to be balky, and he never would pull anything bat a light load ; but he is a prime favorite now. How He Managed. " My dear old friend, how were you able to acquire such an immense fortune?" " By a very simple method." " When I was poor I made out that I wa8 rich, and when fgot rich I made out that I was poor." MB. UAMS* PARLOK-WlMtOW KIKS It Disorderly Cimdnct to Osculate With u Cblcacu tilrl ? A Chicago telegram says: Justice Lyon was to-day called upon to decide whether kissing in a parlor where it could be seen across the street was disorderly conduct. The complainant was Mrs. Oleson, keeper of a fashionable boardiiui house at No. I,4UU Michigan avenue, a neighborhood which in days gone by furninhed many a onrious scandal. Among Mrs. Oleson's lady boarders was a Miss Hanson, whose face and form were undeniably fair to see, and who, if some ratber vinegary-looking witnesses were to be believed, was as com- placent as she was beautiful. These wit- nesses included numerous members of both sexes, all of whom were got np in elaborate style, and certainly gave efl'ect to Mrs. Oleson's statement that her eatabliihment was a fashionable one. The terms of familiarity which have for some time existed between Miss Hanson and Gas. K. Gans,a male admirer,have been the occasion of much gossip among the othor boarders and the scandal culminated last evening, when Mrs. Oleson swore oat a warrant for the arrest of Cans on the charge of disorderly conduct. George Boss, who lives across the street from the boarding-house, said he had seen the prisoner fondle the young lady's hair and kiss her or bite her, witness couldn't tell which. The ladies living there gave similar testi- mony, and several declared that the prisoner " acted very disorderly." " Do you consider it disorderly conduct to be kissed by a young man before a win- dow 7 " asked the Court of the tallest wit- ness. " Of course I do," she replied with a proud elevation of her shapely nose. At this the rest tittered and blushed pro- fusely. Justice Ijyon meditated a moment and then said : " Well, I think there is more jealousy here than disorderly conduct. I'll discharge the prisoner. There seems to have been no harm done, and as Mr. Gans is handsome and Miss Uansou beautiful, I will forgive them. There are quite too many misses and young bachelors on the stand to make the prosecution effective." A GREAT FOBGES SET FBEE. ene of the Bank of Kogland '• ForgeM Given Bis Uberty trvm Frl«o>>. A London cablegram sayf : George Bid.^ well, who was sentenced to life imprison-' ment for fortjing Bank of England motes, has been released from confinement on the groand of ill health. He sailed for New York on Saturday last. O.orge Bidwell, the forger, who, accord- ing to a cablegram, has just been released from prison in England on account of ill health, and who intends coming to this country, is one of the Bidwell brothers who were associated with George Engles, MacDonald and Williamson in the stupendous Bank of England forgeries sixteen years ago. The gang in 1871 left this city and went to England. They began operations in Liverpool, where in a short time they netted »3C,000. They then went to London, and there opened a com- mission house for the discounting and shaving of commercial paper. The spuri- ous firm was organized by MacDonald under the name of " Warner it Co." The forgers ojiencd an account with one of the leading banks, and bmia fide transactions were conducted for several months. When the confidence of tiie officers of the bank had been gained, the paper of Warner & Co., presented by some of the leading mer- chants of London, was discounted without suspicion. Before the consummation of the gigantic scheme George MacDonald and one of the Bidwells became infatuated with two women with whom they lived. Upondis covering this fact Engles became afraid that his associates would divalge the scheme to their mistresses. MacDonald and Bidwell were then residing in St. John's Wood, Kensington, London. Engles objected to the women and threatened to cut off business relations unless his companions gave them up. Bis companions laughed at him, and after a quarter of a million pounds sterling had been realized Macdonald and Bidwell admitted that their women knew all about the scheme. Engles thereupon vanished- and when Ma^ouald and Bidwell under, took to contimft the business the plot leaked out, and the sdjuel showed thatif it had not been for the women, in whom they had so much confidence, they would have escaped. In their recklessness MacDonald and Bid- well presented a forged note which had not been dated. The clerk discovered the error and forwarded it to the firm by whom it was supposed ttfJiave been issued. It was then pronounced a forgery. To avoid arrest the gang scattered. One oi the Bid- wells escaped to Scotland, where he was arrested, and his brother was apprehended in Havana, Cuba. MacDonald tried to get clear of his mistress, but failed. He induced her, however, to accept a passage ticket from Liverpool to New York, telling her that he would meet her at the Northern Hotel before the steamer sailed. He did not attempt to meet ber, but took a train to Folkestone, crossed to France, and at Havre engaged passage for this city. Becoming enraged at the disappointment and suspecting the route her lover would most likely take, MacDonald's mistress betrayed him to the English police. A cablegram was flashed to this city, and MacDonald was arrested on board the in- coming vessel in the lower bay. After fighting the oaao ^^i>* oourts the fugitive watt tiually retuikjld to Knglaud, where he was conviijted and sentenced to life im- prisonment. The Bidwell brothers received tike sentences. BKMABKABI.E BAIXUCIJfATION. A 'Counc L^tdjr with • Wealthy Xover who YlTed Only iS| Imagination, A Boston despatch .savs ; Invsstlgations made yesterday and to-day malfe plain the faot that the oltimate phase of the Crowp- insfaield-Stone affair is a vary sad one, sad- der in every way than if there had been a lover of Miss Florence Stone and be bad really died just as she was about to sail for England to be married, for now the most charitable constroction that can be put upon the lady's conduct is that she was the victim of a strange hallucination and did not consciously deceive ber friends, who placed every confidence in her till the de- nouement proved that the whole story of her coortship and marriage to the wealthy English Crowninshield was the creation of her own brain. The Advertiter says ; " The wealthy lover does not exist, nor ever did • the letters which the unfortunate woman would read so readily to those who were in her confidence came through no mail, and were received only at the delivery of her own diseased imagina- tion ; the royal gift that her fatare hus- band was to present to her on her wedding day was as mythical as the golden treasures of El Dorado. The pitif al part of the mat- ter is that those who knew her best and> trusted and loved ber most now realize that her whole life for the past two years has been one continned deceit, and they are fain to conclude that she was not herself in all this, which conclusion must be the correct one, for it is impossible that a woman of her character cotUd have systematically and consistently carried on such a farce for so long a time had she been in her right mind. As it is, it is wonderful that she could bring her friends into such complete participation in all her plans, with never a flaw appearing to cause suspicion. They believed in the far-off Mr. Crowninshield, believed in his immense wealth, believed in the ocean voyage to meet him, and for a long time believed in bis death." Said a gentleman who knew Miss Stone intimately : " If she has pat others to expense, she has certainly spent a great deal of money herself in her hallacinaticn. She had me make her two big oak chests to carry her things over to England in. I turned out two splendid ones for her, but in a short time they came back because I had put pine bottoms in them. She wanted them solid oak tbrougboat, she said, to show Mr. Crowninshield how we do things over here. She also told me of the memorial chapel that the lover was to erect in Brooklyn. She said he wanted to build one in honor of his father, either in Brooklyn or New York, bat that she per- suaded him to locate in Brooklyn, since he A WARM DISCUSSION, WMat Broaght About Healy's Suspenslon- â€" Vernon Uarcouit en Hla Ear. A last (Friday) night's London cable says : On the resumption of the debate on the Land Bill in the House of Commons last evening Mr. Smith, the Government leader, appealed to the Bouse to expedite the passa^ of the Bill, which, he said, would prevent harsh evictions. He would not use any threat, but he would remind the House that unless the Bill were through the committee stage early next week it ^ would be difficult to pass the measure at all. Mr. O'Kelly, Nationalist, moved to give the tenant six months for re^mption after receiving written notice of eviction. After some discussion Mr. Smith re- peated his appeal, remarking that saoh amendments, if persisted in, would endanger the passage of the Bill. Parnell retorted that if there was no time for a reasonable discussion of this amendment there was no time for the dis- cussion of any other amendment. The amendment was rejected â€" 164 to 142. Mr. Morley suggested that the Govern- ment allow the tenant one month of undis- turbed possession between the service of notice and the execution of the decree. Mr. Balfoor accepted the amendment, expressing the hope that the Opposition would attempt to press the Government no farther. After farther discassion a passage at arms occurred between Timothy Healy and the Chairman, the former complaining of Conservative interruptions. The inci- dent was ended by Mr. Healy apologising. The excitement continuing, the Chairman reproved Mr. de Lisle, Conservative, for being disorderly, and refusing him an - explanation suspended the sitting in com- .'^ mittee and sammoned the Speaker to tho chair. The Chairman then rsjported that during the last division fdlowing the Healy incident, Mr. de Lisle oama to him and remonstrated for not being allowed to explain, whereupon Mr. Healy approached and said, "Come out, de Lisle, if you are a man. If you interrupt me again I will break your neck." The Speaker demanded an explanation. Mr. Healy said he felt no regret for the course he had taken, and was willing to abide the consequences. The Speaker named Mr. Healy and Mr. Smith moved that he be suspended. Mr. Healy imme- diately took his hat and, standing in the centre of the House before retiring, said : " I beg that none of my friends vote against this motion." The motion to suspend him was carried without a division. The sitting in committee being resumed, Mr. Chance, Nationalist, arose to speak. was an Englishman and it woald make uoj Being interrupted, he called the attention special difference to him. How it could' - ' ' -*-- have happened I certainly am at a loss to know. She was sane enough on every other topic." Miss Stone has gone to Chicago with her sister, who immediately came east for ber when the result of the affair became known. It is a strange case, and there may yet be parts in it to clear up. DB. PARKKR'8 FAREWKLL. AN UNPAID BOARD BILL Bla Friends Under the Impreasiou Ue Will Beuiain In the States. h UaaioD caUoMaya .- Dr. Parker, at the*^****â„¢** o* ayetematio close of his usual Thursday afternoon ser- vice in the City Temple, Holborn Viaduct, announced to a crowded congregation that that was the last occasion on which he would preach or conduct any religious ser- vice in England until his return trem the United States of America on the seo<ind Sunday in April next. He said that be had been wondering ever since the announce- ment was first made that he intended visit- ing America this year why people thought UrluK* About the Murder of the Land- lady anil the Balcldr of thi< Boarder. A last (Wednesday) night's Grand Bapids, Mich., despatch says: A terrible murder was committed here this morning, followed by a suicide. A quarrel over a board bill caused it. ('harlea J. Wernan, of Paterson, N.J., where his family is, has been for a year past located here as agent for the Metropolitan Insurance Company. He lived at Susan Bonfoey's boarding house, and found the place so pleasant that he frequently took her out riding and to pic- nics. Ue is 56 years old, and she over 50, expressions of good-will and wishes for his and she has had fhree husbands (all dead), safe return to Englaud. The conclusion of but is still good-looking and vivacious, and one letter, which he dearly prized, con- has two daugbtors and a son. Wernan tsined these words : " We sincerely wish managed to keep in the good graces of the you a safe and happy expedition." " That landlady, anti was ]>ermitted to be_ in wish," said Dr. Parker, " loses nothing in of the Chairman to the jeers from the Government side. (Cries of •â-  de Lisle.") Sir William Vernon Harcourt implored the Chairman to use his authority to pre- vent systematic insult and provocation from below the gangway opposite. (Crieo of " Order.") The members opposite, be â- aid, might move to suspend him if they liked. (Opposition cheers.) At this point Mr. Bruce, Liberal, arose, bnt the Chairman ruled him out of order. Sir William Vernon Harcourt, continuing, said that Mr. Bruee was one of those im- pugned. The members had witnessed i-f^- â-  • - -â-  insult night after aWbt. The Chairman noting that there was no qaeetion before th^ House, the discussion of amendments was continued. Mr. De Lisle again called for a cessation of the debate, bat it was refused. Mr. Chance moved an amendment providing that whiln ^tenant is in actual occupation he shall not lose the privilege of voting at elections. Mr. Smith promised that the Government would arrange the matter, and the amend- he would not retnrn, and after much cogitation he supposed it was because they fancied that when he got there he would find that there were no Dissenters there. Every one in America stood for what he was worth, while here a Dissenter was almost obliged to apologize for his convic- , tious. He had received from all classes of ment was withdrawn. Mr. Smith called the Speaker's attention to the accusation of Sir Wm. Vernon Har- court that the Opposition had be^n sub- jected to studied insult. Such language, he saiil, was absolutely irregular. The Speaker agreed with Mr. Smith, and said he had not noticed that any particular sec- Boinance of the Pren-Rooni. A St. Louis despatch says: The mar- riage of E. C. Woodward, of the Woodward A Tiernan Printing Company, one of the wealthiest establishments ia the city, to Miss Lizzie Bierks, who has for five years been a press-feeder in the house, is an- nounced to-day. The couple were married on January 2Uth, bat fear of parental wrath led yonng Woodward to defer the announcement. The yonng wife oonti^ned to feed presses until two weeks ago. WiX>d- ward's fears appear to be well founded, as his father is said to be willing to give him a chance to try the world single-handed. arrears for fifteen weeks' board. This morning he siraiittod his intention of leav- ing and Mrs. Bonfoey presented his bill, and a quarrel ensned, she objecting to l^ia departure until satisfactory arrangements for payment of his bill were made. He, in a rage, pulled a revolver and shot the woman in the head, killing her instantly. Then, apparently in horror, he turned the weapon on himsilt and planted a bullet in his brain, and fall dead to the floor. From photographs and letters found in the be- longings of Wernan he is thought to have a family consisting of a wife and five child- ren â€" three dauditers and two sons. His wife is an invalid, and in her last letter to him expresses fears of her recovery and hopes he might soon return home. Upon Wernan's person were found an empty flask that smelled strongly of whiskey, two empty pocket books and an unsigned chetjne for 9100 upon the First National Bank, Paterson, N.t). The coroner has taken charge of the remainj, and the in. ciuest will be held to-morrow. people, in high and low stations, the kindest '"O" "' 'ha Hon»e was guUty of provocation. Mr. Smith theu declared that he was satisfied. At this point Sir Wm. Veraon Harcourt, who in the meantime had been absent, returned to the House. He invited Mr. Smith to make any charges in his pre- sence, but the Speaker having repeated his remarks and the Chairman having con- firmed them the incident closed. Mr. Healy's suspension is for two weeks. Mr. Dillon said much had been said about the Bill taking away the stock-in- trade of the agitator. He would rejoice to see that happen, for a more thankless, cruel, wearing life than that of the agita- tors had not yet been discovered. Lord Salisbury, speaking at Norwich yesterday, warned the Conservative party value and worth beoaase the letter bears the signature of ' WiUiam Ewart Glad- stone.' " "BOUOU ON KAT8." A Victim ef WhUkey Endi Ber Life With Poison. An Ottawa despatch says : Mrs. Poitvin> wife of Jerry Poitvin, a mill hand who resides on the Richmond road, committed Costume for Comfort. The Oriental races who have had to find out for themsalres how best to bear torrid temperature from which suicide on Monday by taking " Bongh on to prepare for a possible dissolution of Bats." The woman was addicted to drink, Parliament. He said that Parliament had and yesterday when her husband came often met with au early termination when home at noon he saw no preparation for its life seemed unendangered, and that the dinner. Soon his wife came down and Conservative party must organize to went hurriedly to the kitchen, whore her instruct the people against the deception of husband heard her mixing up some decoo- the separatist apostates, who were only too tion in a glass. A moment afterwards she numerous. appeared in the dining-room doorway, and, I Col. King Ilarman, II nder. Secretary for raising the glass, exclaimed, " Bee that, Ireland, intimated in the House of Corn- Jerry t" She immediately swallowed the i mons this evening that the Government contents of the tumbler before her hus- j had proclaimed Dublin only under the band,who sprang toward her, ooald prevent ' section of the Crimes Act dealing with her. The unfortunate woman staggered forcible possession and asnaalts on the and fell. Mr. Poitvin almost instantly police, mixed an emetic of salt and water and forced it down his wife's throat, despite her struggles to eject it. He then immediately went off for a doctor, bnt when the phyti- ages ago adopted costumes cian arrived it was too late. The everything tight, stiff and , victim of drink had breathed her last. How to CcK>l a Watermelon. The perfect Georgia watermelon is that whioh has been cooled in a dry well. To lite Sunilse Photographed. A successful attempt to make a photo- graph of a sunrise from the summit of Pike's Peak has been made by C. F. Snyder, a member of the Signal Corps. â€" Omaha (Neb.) Bee. There are over 300,000 children in the United States between 1 and 1'2 years old whose lives are insured. Hector Berlioz's grand â- â-  Messe des Morts, was 'A'i years of age and from Merrickville. g^ freeze so genial a thing in a refrigerator is came originally .Halvatlon Army Wedding. A St. John, N. B., despatch says: Adjutant Southall, of Halifax, was marriea here last night to Captain Jennie Langtry, " " the piesence of foir Both are officers of the Salvation Army, and the services were to impair its tropical tone and to deaden certain honeyful impulses that beat in its warm heart. A melon in placid reflection at the bottom of a dry well, harmonizing slowly with the delicious coolness of the earth, is a melon approaching idealization. â€" Atlanta Constitution. heavy is exoladsd. Loose garments of soft, light, openmeshed material constitute their principal dress. The turban, as all know who have tried it, is infinitely cooler and hygienically safer than any kind of hot weather headgear worn by western peoples. Probably the latter would never adoct the ._ flowing oriental robas, whioh certainly are of Toronto, in ^ _ not well designed for the violent physical thousand people. Both are oificers of the Says an advertisement in the Britiih exertions required for the catching of fer- Salvation Army, and the services were Aledical Journal : " Skeletons have ruled rie^ and trains. Bnt why should not the perfornled by Commissioner Coombes and Arm and active throughout the year, with central idea, the banishment of all stiff, Rev. Dr. Pope. I prices anohanged. We have been able to hard, close-fitting garments be utilized ? â€" ^ | supply the demand for the common varieties New Yi'rk Wbunt, ^ A Doo Stokv.â€" The Youngstown News promptly, but the finer grades were scarce, -â€" â€" â€" • ^ ' says : A dog of the water spaniel species, and orders for deformitits could not always â€" w..„„„ ISâ€".." -i™«. ,.» . Seventy-flve pianos with five hnndrsd belonging to Mr. W. G. Donnelly, was taken be supplied at once. In this regard the which was first introduced into trunks of valuables, fine paintings, jewellery over to 'Toronto by the steamer Chicora market is still unchanged, although our this country by the late Dr. Damrosoh, will be performed at the next Birmingham Musical Festival. Handel'soratorio'-Saul " will likewise be heard on this occasion, and Dr. Hubert Parry will contribute an ode. and silverware were destroyed by the re- one day last week, and two or three days broker in Pari»|has orders to buy everything cent burning of a large storage bnilding in afterwards he presented himself to his offered at the usual rates." New York city. master, having returned all the way from Louisville Democrat's advice : If yon In Cincinnati smoking is prohibited on Toronto to Niagara by land. Mr. Donnelly want to go to heaven when you die, yon any part of the horse oars. i will vouch for the truth of this assertion. best start now. <^ 1 â- v4 '&: % . » -l-^ V-^

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