Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 23 May 1889, p. 6

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THE " TIMEa " 00MMIB8I0N. of Purneir* KxainlniOioH â€" Arvh- bUbop W»Uh oil the buuid. A last (WtJaeudky) ni);bl'a London cable Myb : Mr. ParneU's ezaicination waa finiihed before the CommiaBton today. He testified that the Booeption Committee in America comprised the leading merchants of New York, reprebentative citizens and ministers of religion. In his speeches in New York, witness declared that not a farthing oontribnted to the Irish cease woald (jo towards or^aniziDg rebellion in Ireland. Tbroaghoat bistoarot the United States he ht<l never even swerved a band's breadth from that declaration. Attorney General Webster, the witness ssiii, bad qaoted from tive oat of sixty speeches he had made in the United Kiatee, ijjnorin^ the general tenor of his speucbeH, so as to misrepresent bis words. All the uameBthe Attorney-General had mentioned of per- sons associated with the meetings were only a small fraction of those who attended. Men of prominent positions and nndoabted respectability attended these meetings. In no sense coald the American reception be identified with the proceedings of the I'bvsi- oal Force Party. Witness firmly believed that none of Ins collesKues. hinoe joining the Irish Parliamentary party, bad bad anything to do with the Fenians. Only oasaally ilid the Fenians oome within the orbit of the constitutional movement. Here Mr. Parnell scored by remarking that the Tories were more certainly associated with the movemt-nt ; far instance, when they cooperated with the Parnellites to obatract the Criminal Code Uill to the death. IWerring to some letters of his, Mr. Parnell said be had oopits made from bis Moretary'B shorthand notiB. Attorney-Oeneral Websterâ€" It seems that there exists a book of Mr. Parnell's letters. I woald like to see that book. Kir Charles Buseell-Ily all means. I'residiijg Jostioe ilsnnenâ€" It these letters refer to the League they oaght to have been disclcbud. Mr. Parnell â€" Vonr Lordships are wel- come to see any letter I ever wrote or re- ceived. Attorney-General Webster, recurring to Mr. Parnell's private bank account, wanted to trace a uamber of che<jue8. A warm iliscuB^ion ensued, Bir Charles IlnShL-ll declaring that such action woald be aufair. Justice llanncn suggested a postponment of the matter antil fuller tlocunients were before the court. Archbishop Walsh tCKtified that he came tothe concluHiou before IVTJ that there was need of a defensive land organization, and was proceeding to give his opinion on the subject. Justice iiannen said the imjuiry must be limited to whether or not the Land League waa necessary. Attorney General Webster submitted that matters of opinion were not admis- •ible. Mr. Biifgar urged that opinion evidence bad been given over and over again by *' hirelinijB " of the Ciovernment. Justice Uannen warned Mr. Biggar not to use such expressions. Mr. IliiigarHaid that aoless inch evidence was aitiiutted the whole inquiry woald end in a faruu. 7'he judges retired to consider the matter privately. ( )n their return Justice llannen stauouiioed tb<'y had decided that it waa not permiisible tu ask any witness, however diHtingaished, abstract (jueations of opinion. The facts known to the witness ought to be laid Ix-foro the court before opinions bastil thereon were mentioned. The Archbishop, continuing, said that in the course of liis visits through his diocese he had abundant means of knowing that the League denounced outrages. Many |.riests had joined the I^eague with his approval. lie saw nothing in the action of the Les^iio to forbid the clergy joining. A TltlO or HDICIUEN. Tliroa l.'iifortuiiute* Hliitnlf) uir tliln Mortal Coll. Joseiih Arcand Rtromi committed anioide yesterday morning at Hi. Philippe, Lanraine C/Ounly. I^ne , by hanging him. â- elf in a abed. Iieceascd was a middle, aged iiisn, lately married. It is stated, nii what appears to be good authority, that P. II. DouglsH, late Assist- ant Secretary of the Department of the Interior, Ottawa, committed suicide by ootting his throat with a razor. A cli)lil>erate case of suicide ooourrsil in Montreal on Thursday evening. A batcher called Oeorge Liissier, residing nn Ht. Catharine street, was threatened with |iru aecntiim for keeping a stall without a license. Deing involved in Hnanoial diOi. oaltles at the same time, the trouble so preyed U|K>n his iniml that yesterday lie attempted to throw hiiDHelf under a Cans. dian Pacific Kailway ttiiin, but waa nru. vented from doing so by the vigilance of the oflicjals. Ha then prnoerded to Mon an)ue street and deliberately threw himself into the Bt. Lawrence. He rnue to the siir. face and was heard tn i^ry for assiutam.e, bht the current being very strung the nn fortunate man was gradually borne swiiy, and was soon seen to sink to rise no more. An OklahnoiM lloonier. Among the wild riders who croi.iiod the Canadian was Mrs. Dorranoe, a charming matron of Purcell, who Mwam a faet horse through the roaring river and Hocured a line farm on the otlur shore.â€" .S'(. Louit ItrpuU Uc'i Quihrie Special. Hereafter the boata to be oarrie<l by Atlantic steamers, instead of being madu of wood, will bo made of steel, in one piece. Wooiiuii boats rot ami are easily ornsluil. The now boats will Ihi built by machinery eapooially made for rolling them oat in all Bi/.ea in a single plate. Perhaps the[Heorct egrets of life are the weightiest, and chiefly on this aooount - that they are inoommunioable. J. W. CofTey, a I'hiladelphia skeleton, weighing only W pounds, recently silver- tised for a wife. Ko far he has received over two handrtd answcrH and they are still pouring ill. What Mr. CofTey lacks ihysirally he makes up for linanoially. lence the rush for the prize. Who said the Chinaman would not assimilate with nx ? At Denver the other <lay he ran away with another Oleslial's wife and HOO.â€" WateThury Amtriean. I "I MUSr HATB HBLPr Deluded Iffrs. Fox Dies in Agonj Underthe Care of a Faltli Heuler, A Hyracase despatch saya: The funeral of Mrs. Royal £. I'ox took place at her boms, No. 30 Erie atreet, this afternoon To morrow the remains will be buried in Oawego. Mrs. I'ox died the day before yesterday. The responsibility for the fatal termination of her illness is laid by public opinion at the door of what in called Coristian science. Mrs. Fox had been aobject to bilious attaoka for several years. When the first one came on Dr. Jay W. Sheldon waa oalled. When the patient had began to recover she was left to the obargo of I>r. K. H. Flint. Mrs. Fox was to some extent a believer in Christian science at that time, and her husband was, tLS he is yet, " very firm in the faith," to ijuote an expression used today by one of the friends of the family. Daring a recur recce of her illness some weeks ago Mrs. Fox relied entirely upon Christian science, .Mrs. E. P. Bates attending her, and she got better. Hhe was told then that having once been cured by Christian science she would be free from the malady thereafter, and she entirely believed it. fAITU CCIIE IiIlJ NOT llELl' IIEB. Last Saturday the disease came on again with unusual severity. Mrs. Bates was out of town, and another apostle of Christian science, Mrs. Morris, was called. Mrs. i'ox's daughters urged that a physician be called, but their entreaties went for nothing. Mr. Fox bad unbounded confidence in Christian science of a curative power and felt sure hie wife would again recover. The patient, it is said, suffered terribly, andfre- i|aectly called out in her a^ony, " I must have help 1 I must have help! " Khe was told that all she needed was courage, and she would be sure to triumph over the malady. Mrs. 1 ox took scarcely any nouriahment daring the attack. Dr. Flint was sammoned at the last moment. A I>0CI01l CAIJJtD TOM I.ATE. " When I entered the house, " he said to day, " Mrs. I'ox had just passed away. The body was still warm, but there were no signs of life. I was called to make out the death certificate, 1 suppose. I assigned as the cause of death intlammation of the liver." Dr. Flint expressed the opinion that if Mrs. Fox had been allowed her own way she would have haii the services of a physi- cian. One of the neighbors said that the body immediately after death was " all twiattd up," its position leading her to THIiBGRAPHlO SUMMAKY. The attendance at the Paris Exposition has thua far averaged 71,000 persona daily. It is reported that Kir Charles BuBBeU's fee for acting as counsel for the Parnellites is 810,000. A landlord baa been arrested in Kingston charged with evicting a tenant at the point of a revolver. Rev. Mr. Evans, Church of England cler- gyman, of Buckingham, Que., waa drowned yeaterday while oat sailing. The death is announced of Dr. Alex. Harvey, Emeritus Professor of Msteria Medioa in the University of Aberdeen. Work on the Kingston dry-dock was oommenced yesterday morning, and it is expected to take two years to complete it. Misb Kate Sherman, a buxom Tennessee girl, met her father at the depot the other day, and broke two of his ribs at a single bug. An immense quantity of the plates of the Great Kastern, recently broken up, has been received in Montreal for the iron factories and rolling mills. Bones were found in the well at Spring- field into which it baa been rumored a man was thrown eeventeen yeara ago, bat whether the bones are human or not re- mains to be established. A little boy named Eddie Btansfield, son of Mr. Isaac Stansfleld, traveller for B. S. Williams lV Co. 'a music boaae, London, waa missing on Wednesday and at a late boar last night bis body was found in the river. Von liulow saystbat every pianist should learn to sing and play the violin, " as their ears would hear more critically the sounds they prodaoe and thereby teach tbem bow to phrase." Some pianists we have heard should lesrn to cook and to make shoos â€" and let the piano ilone.â€"S nrrittvitn Herald The hoaae at "West Lome, St. Thomas, to which the smallpox baa been auooessfnlly confined by the exertiona of the Chairman of the Board of Ilealth, waa burned last night, and the Chairman waa entertained to aapper and presented with a cane. Thomas Elvert, a demented man, at Tweed, attempted to commit suicide by drowning on Sunday, but waa rescued by parties retarning from churoh aervices. A medical commission procoanoed him dan- gerously insane, and to day he was com- mitted to the county jail. Mrs. Maria Elliott, formerly Mrs. O'Flaherty, who has kept the Wellington believe that Mrt. Fox was writhing inL House, London, for some time, is mourning I _l..J^-J ., 1 .a.t _i j__ I ti.\ t\m\ ;_li.. agony when she died HE KILI.KI> BII18KLF. A Vuuii( Man Palo L'|> at a ilotcl and hbuotn Ulojieir. A Detroit despatch says : On Wednesday evening a nioely dressed man, apparently '20 years old, took room tX. third fioor, Uutsell House, registering as D. K. Cady. of Auburn, N.T. He had no baggage, and paid for one da> in advance. Meals were served in his room. ()» Thursday mornisg he came downstairs and told the clerk he would stay another day, and paid for it. Friday morning one of the employees called Mr. McCUeary's attention to the fact that no meals had been sent to the room since Thursday noon. The door of the room was locked, and no response was made from within to the rapping. A ladder was pro cured, and through the transom the lifeless form of the young man, fully dressed, was seen lying on the bed in a jiool of blood. The door was forced 0|ien and it was found that Cady had been dead some time. His egs were crossed and bis arms folded on bis breast. His right hand clutclipil a self acting revolver, with which he had shut himself in the bead over the right ear. On the centre table was an envelope addressed to the proprietor cf the Uussull House, containing a note with Ihsse words : " Please notify Charles Cady, Auburn, N.Y.. Cayuga oounty, if anything hapiicns to mo." lx>iiadal«' SpliiDlns Yarns. A Winnipeg despatch says : Lord Lons dale says it was with the greatest difiiuulty that the Indians could bo persuaded to go north, as they were terribly afraid of tliu KHi|nimaui, who up there are called " Huskeys," and instead of being short of stature stand six feet in height. When Lord Loneilalo arriveil among them tlioy made a half-circle as he advanced, each of the natives holding in his hand a knife about six inches long. Against the advioe of his interpreter ho went into their chasm snow hoiis", where meetings were held. The natives informed the interpret<>r that they had heard that all white men were brave, und they were going to try them. The braves then formed in lino before Lord Lonsdale as he sat on a box, and each drawing his knife rnahtil upon him ready to strike. They stopped at his feit.aad the leader, advancing, put bis oar over the explorer's heart and listened to its binting. Lord Lonsdale took no notice, but asked to see them dance. During the progress of the dniioo the braves would stop and rush at tliu white man with their knives up rallied. I'ortniiately his nerve did not fail him. and lie was afterwards received with every mark of oorisidcration. T. (iiuNciEU Btewaut, M. D.. F. B.B.lv, ordinary pliyaician to II. M. the (jueen in Scotland, Professor of Practice of Physio in the University of Kdinburgh, writes of Bright s disease as follows : " Catarrh of the intestine also occasionally oocurs, soiiie times prodncing an (xhaiisting diarrlnit" Warner's HafeCuro cures the diarrlma by first remdving the cause. ' Pickwick" has been dramatized in i>anish. Word comes of the death of John Kidd, the last survivor of the passengers of the Forfarshire, who were resoned by Grace Darling in lH;m. Mr. Charles Hantley, the great Knglish baritone singer, is a capital painter, both in water and in oils. Mr. Jess Woddo (to his bride) " Pleasa pass the sugar, sweetness." Iiooka up in some confusion as the waitress hands him the sugar IkiwI with unusual alacrity. Hup pressed laughtor from tnu other boarders. Katis Putnam Is going to Australia, and sho is to take ( leorgu (1. Itonifane with her. Mrs. Alice Shaw, the whistler, will shortly go abroad to fill engagements. the loss of a husband and ^2 000, especially thu latter. Elliott by some means got hold of the money, which was to have been paid on some property, and is now far away from his better half. Kufus Huntley, a farmer, who formerly lived a short distance from Hanover, left the (Queen's Hotel to take the early train yesterday morning tor Miobigau and was found dead on the sidewalk a short time afterwards. He was taken into Mr. Mea singer's house near by, and Coroner Landerkin sent for. A large woand was found across the left cheek, how received is a mystery I >r. Cassan, physician to the Hospital of the Insane ot the Bon Bauveur, Albi France, was murdered on Wednesday night. I'pou entering bis room next morn ing bis attendants found bim lying on his bed in his night shirt. His body was literally covered with knife wounds, and his head nearly separated from the trunk. Dr. Cassan was a i|uiot man. much re Bjiected by all who knew him. He was Maire of Albi under the PImpireand during the regime of " Sei.'.s Mai." .Vmerican visitors fairly rained upon Loudon on Wednesday. The City of Now York, the City of Itome and the Trave arrived, landing altogether nearly a thou- sand Americans. By every possible train these, or a majority of them at least, went to London. Where they all found a roof to cover them is a mystery. The hotels were already full to thu sky parlors, and turnisg away each from a do/en to a lain, dred a day, but presumably all found a place in wbich to run up a bill for the necessities and luxuries of life. White Caps have notified Rev. (ieorgo Jacob Bchwelufurtb to leave Bookford, 111., in ten days. If he dots not go they say they will break into his house, take hiin to the woods, strip him, tar and feather him and ruast him alive. They claim he is breaking up families. If any one interferes they will be siiiiilarly treated. Subwoinfurth has employed a night watchman, puruhaaed guns and dogs, and proposes to be ready for them. Bev. Mr. Suhweinfurth is the head of what is known as the Beekraanite sect, and is worshippeil by his followers as the Christ. The civic expenditure of Kingston for the year Ihhh was 1$1'21.H»7. <)iidgo Barrett at New York yesterday dissolved the Klootrii- Scalar Botiuiug C'ompany. A receiver was appointed. Theistimated expenditure for the cur. rent year for the city of Toronto is 11^ mills cii the dollar, as agaiust 1 ti| last year. The Mayor of Collingwood yesterday laid the foundation stone of the Marino and (ieneral Hospital which it is proposed to build. A lady interested in the Montreal Boys' Home has hamled the Huperintendcnt a cheijue for ?1,UUU, to bo devoted to build- ing purposes. The Mayor, Aid. McMillan, Aid. Uilles pie and City Treaeiiror Coady, of Toronto, will visit Kngland on an early date to fioat city debentures amounting to throe million dollars. The funeral of Count Tolstoi, late Min- ister ot the Interior, took place at St. Petersburg yesterday. The (!zar was pre- sent. He has donatod to thu widow '.^00,- 000 roubles and granted her a yearly pension of li.OOO roubles. .\ gigantic raft, comprising 'J, 000,000 feet of timber, is now en nnur from Detroit toBulTalo. The raft reached Detroit late in the fall, when it was thought too risky to let it proceed further. By the time this lumlier roaches its destination it will have been over five months on thu journey. Five young men, representing the sport ing friiteruity, were before thu Kingston Police Court yesterday for participating in a nocking main, uonduotud in an cfl'ico in the centre of the city. Three wero fined / #50 and costs and two i'2S and coats, with the nenal option. It transpired daring the trial that a well-known alderman had acted ai referee, and he will now be at- tended to. Judge Lizars, of Stratford, who baa been serioasly ill, is much better. The work of counting the $200,000,000 in the United Htatea Treasury is to be began at once. A httlo lad named Pronli, while playing on the banka of the canal at Montreal last night, fell in and waa drowned. Mr. Donald Chisbolm, M.P., Vancouver, B.C., who has been serioualy ill in Ottawa for Bome months, is slowly recovering. A gunner named Herbert Skinner, of the marine artillery, baa bad a windfall of 1:530,000 and a large property in Hereford. Five negroes and seven wbitea were flogged at Newcastle, Del., on Saturday for differ- ent offences, and afterwards exposed for one hour in the pillory. Fully three-quartera of a million dollars worth of new buildings are going up at Stratford this season. The contractors all have their hands fall. The statistics of the recent smallpox epi- demic in the neighborhood of St. Thomas are quoted as affording strong evidence of the value of vaccination. The Algoma expedition arrived at Sault Ste. Marie on Friday night, and report the trouble with the lumbermen to be over. They are expected in Toronto to-morrow. The argument on the motion in reply to the exception to form in the Jeaait-i/ii/ case was heard on Saturday before Judge Loranger in Montreal. Judgment was re- served. Bev. S. G. Bland appeared in the pulpit of Queen Btreet Churc. Ivingaton, yester- day, the first time ainc<; •.^e serious accident wbich befel him occiured. bis uaefalnees promises to be in no wa) impaired. Six Chinamen passed through Montreal on Friday night from New York in bond for China, they having daring eight years' real deuce saved safiicient money at laundry work to enable tbem to spend the rest of their days in comfort in their native land. Mrs. Felicite Laframboise, Hi years of age, attended the o o clock service on Saturday morning at Bonsecours Church, Montreal, and a tew minutes later was discovered lying on the seat of her pew quite dead. Every effort waa made to restore anima- tion, but without success. Patrick Ford, aged t'>0, a watchman in Armour 8 packing-houees, Chicago, shot and killed bis wife, 2'i years of age, on Saturday morning, and then put a ballet into his own breast. Ue cannot recover. The couple had been married three months, but quarrelled and were not living together. A number of Conservative members of the British UouBe of Commons, under the leadership of Mr. Henry Chaplin, have endeavored to impress upon the mind of Mr. Gosohen the extent of the hardship imposed upon the landed classes by the pro- (Kisal of the Chancellor of the Exche>iuer to increase the death tax of properties valued at over JU 10,000, and Mr. Cioachen liBtenod to their arguments, but declined to modify his proposals. A largely. attended meeting was held at Anderton's Hotel, London, (<n Saturday afternoon for the purpose ot discussing thu feasibility of founding an Elsmerian Church, which shall be free from dogma and bend its energies to finding the milieu, mum on earth, leaving the next world to take care of itself. It was proposed to name the new institution the Christian Ethical Church, and it was also decided to eruct a buildiug for purposes ot worship in London. The London police made a raid on the Field Club at '2 o'clock yeaterday morning and found gambling going on. Most of the players were engaged at baccarat, and large sums were being staked. Twenty-one per- sons were arrested, among whom were three English and several French and Bel- gian noblemen. The prisoners were taken to the police station and bailed in illOO each. They are to appear in court to-mor- row. The police seized i.'6,000 in the rooms of the club. A raid was also made on the Adelphi Club, where a number of barristers and solicitors were gambling. All were taken to the police station and bail waa in most cases rufusod. Among those arrested at the Field Club were the Earl of Dudley, Lord Lurgan, Lord Paulet and Baron Feraro. MAKY ANN IMITATK.S DIUO. Creiuated lleri*«ir on n llriiali Heap for Love of n Voiiug Man, A Cheboygan, Mich., despatch says: Mary Ann Collagher, aged 23, went into the woods on her father's farm, lighted a pUe ot brush, lay down in the fiamos, and was burned to a crisp. The reason assigned for the deed is that her parents objected to her receiving the attentions of ayoungman whom they disliked. Iiuportaiit to TpHchors niid .Scholars. The High School entrance examination will be held on the 4th, 6th and tith days of July, beginning at l.;)0 p. m. on the tth. The tbird, second and first. class teachers' examinations will begin on Tuesday, the nth of July. Applications stating age and optional subjects and enolosing a fee of 95 must be sent to the inspector before the 21th of May. The Provincial examination for Kinder- ijarten aaaistanta and directors will be huld in the last two weeks in June. Examina- tion in practical teaching will be held at Ottawa, Toronto and Hamilton, beginning respectively on the 13th, 17th and 21th days of Jane. The written examination will begin at Toronto on the 2lith of June. Applioationa must be sent to the Secretary of the Education Department before the 1st of Jane. Ubv. F.L.H. Potts, a young Episcopalian minister who went to China a\earago. has married Miaa Wong, the daughter of his first convert. " Dorutta," the new opera, was an utter failure, and was withdrawn at the end of the t\r8t week. Edward Soovel, loading tenor of the Bos ton Ideal Opera Company, haa lost hia T lice. Manager Harris has added Mr, Mo- Onckon, of the late Carl Rosa's Opera Company to his list ot loners for the Lon- don season of lliilian opera. ODB OinZKN 80LDIEB8. ArrauKcmenta for tlie HoldlDg of the ABBoal Oampa. A special telegram from Ottawa says : The dates for the aeveral camps of exerciae have been decided as follows : District No. 1â€" 18fh June. 8- 11th June. »â€" ISthJune. 4â€" 18th June, fr-iilh June. &-25th June. Jâ€" and July. 8â€" 25th June. 9â€" ard Beptember. The locations of the camps have not been decided upon, exoept with regard to Dis- trict No. 2, which, as usaal, will be held at Niagara. For District No. 1 the choice lies between Windsor aod London, and for the united camps of districts 3 and 4 it is expected that Kingston will be selected. The matter will not, however, be settled before next week. The maximam namber of officers, non-commisaioned officers and men to receive pay for drill in each district will be: District No. 1â€" Western Ontario No. 2â€" Toronto district. ..«....« " No. 3â€" Eastern Ontario No. 4â€" K&steru Ontario No. 5â€" Queljec No. 6 â€" Quetitic No. 7â€" l^uetjec No. t^New Bmuswick No. a-Nov» Scotia No. 10- Manitoba " No. 11â€" British Columbia No. 13â€" Prince Edward Island.. Total....„ l'J.2!S "A " Company, Infantry School Corps, will join tbecamp in New Brans r'ick ; "B" Company, the camp in District No. 5 : and " C " Company, the campat Niagara, and a two-gun detachment from "A" Battery will join the camp in districts 3 and 4. As these are paid as permanent corps, they will be in addition to the strength author- ized for districts 2, 3. 4, j and 8, but will not be included for drill pay. The New- castle Field Battery will drill In camp near its local headquarters. THE MIS6IMG UUCTUR. He Turns Oat to be u SI. Culliariues Mao, A St. Loais despatch to the New York U\rld gives the following information as to the career in that city of Dr. ( ronin, who disappeared so mysteriously in Chicago on Saturday night last : Dr. Patrick Henry Cronin came to 8t. Louis in 186'J from St. Catharines, Canada, when 27 years old. He was a tailor, but never worked at bis trade here. He secured employment as a porter in a wholesale grocery, but having a good tenor voice got a position in the Second Baptist Church choir, and tbi^< enabled him to obtain the position of omnibus ticket collector for the Transfer Company. He held this position two years, and waa then for four years local ticket agent for the St. Louis and Southeaatern liailroad, now the Louiaville Air Line. Next he opened a drug store in the fashionable west end, at- tended a pharmacy school and the Missouri Medical College, and afterwards practised medicine, making a specialty of throat antl lung diseases. In 1880 be went to Europe as an honorary commissioner to the Paris Exposition, and soon afterwards removed to Cbicsgo. For a time he was professor of eye and ear diseases at the St. Louis College cf Physicians and Burgeons. He was a tine looking man and a hard worker. Dr. Cronin is a brolher-iiilaw of Mr. John Carroll and an uncle of Mr. Andrew J. Carroll, cf Bt. Catharines. His family reeided on Welland avenue, next door to the fire atation. At one time he worked for his father in the shoe store, in the premises now occupied by the " Beehive, " and was quite a popular vocalist at that time. TKM MKN KILLKU. T«-rrlbU' Accldt-ut Inn 1',-d iiHjIvHnlii Cuat Mine. A Pottsville, Pa., despatch stys : At Kaska. William Colliery, near Middleport, this evening the cage containing ten miners was ascending the shaft and was 1^ feet from the bottom when an empty car was pushed over the top of the shaft by two Hungarian laborers. The oar struck the cage with awful momentum, shattering it to splinters and killing every one of its occupants. The victims are Michael Bohle, assistant inside foreman ; Hugh Carlin, Patrick McDonald, George Bendal, John Pottovistb, Frank Strakovisch, John Moorv, Albert Dwyer, Edward Kurtz and Stephen Watson. 'The cage was harled into a bole at the bottom where the water from the workings sooumulated. The mine is operated by the Alliance Coal Company. The abaft is .'>00 feet duL-p. Her Hiisbaud's I mac*. A singular case of mistaken identity occurred to-day, when Mrs. James i'uke, of Beloit, Wis., arrived hire in company with Bix interesting children, and claimed as her lost husband a cigarmaker named David liobinson, who is the foreman in the factory of Messrs. Bobiusou ,v Watson. The lady, who is well dressed and .|uite preposseBsing, confronted her alleged hus- band this evening, and even after convers- ing with him was not satisfied that he was not her lost husband until she examined his wrist for a scar. Failing to find this she broke down and admitted that she was mistaken in the man. How ranch Robinson must have resembled I'uko is attested by the fact that the children clung sroand him affectionately calling him papa. Mrs. Duke's husband, who was a cigarmaker, disappeared mysteriously about a year ago, and she waa led to believe he was located hero through information received from a travelling tobacco Balesman. Tiucola I III. > corr. Chicago InterOcean. The Ntiw NtngarM Ili-ld(<>. Counsel for various American railroads have asked for a hearing on the Bill incor- porating the Niagara Biver Bridge Com- pany, now pending in the New York Legis- lature, and it has been appointed for next Tuesday. The object of the company is to build a bridge across Niagara Bivtr at some point between Niagara Fall!* and Lewiston, and, it is believed, in the interest of the Canadian Pacific. The project is to be opposed. TiiK late Dr. Dio Ijewia, whose name is a household word all over the globe, warmly endorsul the nsa of Warner's Safe Cure in cases of kidney disorder. He said over his own signature : "If I found myself a victim of serious kidney trouble. 1 would. oas Warner's Safe (hire.' 1

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