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Flesherton Advance, 31 Oct 1889, p. 6

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Â¥' f A DASH TO DEATH. Another Terrible Aooident on the Oinoin- nati Inolioed Railway. MAKT KILLED AND INJURED. tx. xaeadty eveniog s Ciocinnati deapktch â- aye : The moat appallicg acoident ever koowD on the iDclintd plkue railways of this city bippentd to-d*y between 12 and 1 D'olock. It was on the Moant Aabarn Icolined place, which lies at the head of Maia street, and reaching to a height of between 250 and 300 feet in a space of ptr- baps 2,000 feet or less. Two cars are amployed, one on each track. They are drawn by two steel wire cables that are wonnd op on a drnm at the top of the hill by an eD^jine located there. Nine passen- gei( entered the car at the foot of the plane and a nomber were on the other car at the top. The passage of the ascending car was all right oniil it reached the top, when, to bia nnspeakable horror, the faithfal en^iDeer foaad that the machinery would not respond and that he conld not stop the •Dgine. Only one reanlt was possible. The ear was arrt-ated by the strong hamper which stopa its progress, and as the engine ooDtinued all its force was expended on the two oablea, and they BNAlTKli LIKE WB.*11 IN(i TnP.EAD nrnler its unormoas power. Then the car with its nine pas^rngera locked within be- gan the descent of the fri^tbtful slope. The crash at the foot of the pUno waa terrible. The iron i^ate that formed the lower end of the trnck on which the car rested was thrown sixty feet down the street. The top of the car wiii lying almost as far in the gutter. The truck itself and the lloor and sealH ol the car formed a shapeless wreck, mingled with the bleeding and mangled bodies of the nine passengers. Two passengers were taken out dead, one a middle a^ed lady, named Mrs. Ives, the other a k>'' u' -0. Miaa Lillian Uakamp, Another, Mr. N. Kueisa, a teacher, died â- oon afterwards. Kive others were injured, perhaps fatally, and one man escaped miracnlouBly with but a alight injury. Th" nauies of the injured are not yet fully aaocrtained. J. B. UoUister and a Mr. Mcl-'aaden are said to be two of them. Judge UoUiater is nearly TO years old and oau hardly survive such a shock. This iaoliiied plane was built twenty. one years *^o, anil this is the tirst accident attended with losa of life to any of the four inclined planes now in use. Mr. Kneiea was a teacher in a public â- chool. Ue was on his way home to dinner. Uis body was badly disfigured. Mrs. Ives was the wife of ( aleb Ives, Treasurer of the Globe Bosp Works. Bhe was on her way to vitii her son, who was married a few weeks ago. Mrs. Ives was aged about GO, and her ueck was broken. Joseph Mc- i'adden, aged 00, died at 2.20 p. oi. Charles MoFadUeu is his eon. THE CLT-Cl'l' UEAH EAILII). The accident is dtsoribed as follows : As car No. 2',) reached the top of the plane, Goebel, the cabman, forced down the lever which ahnta of the steam. Kor some reason the apparatus refused to work, and the car roBhud on upon the iron railing. Uoebel bent all his strength upon the lever, but it failed to move. (Jn the car rushed initdiy. The iron work pierced deeply iutu the wroden flooring, and still thu cable tuteged. Kiiiall) , Willi a grating iiuisu tliu cabku sli|ii>*d from iht^ brass c^Hiiipti that helil liiiui.ilii iKilt thiki leciind lln in njiennd, add ttiff ear was fr*re, 'L ^mj p4r•rir.|lg^^^, ii'i 1:01 »â-  1' uo (f liuuljle, V I ru aloiit id hi. p ' from Die verticiB <*b«n u shot iiti*iiw..iu. â- J h«5 I ssdtiiiieiu who li»d aiiteii (,11 ii g. Itn r , upon ilie ll'fr (jf iht) c»r. I^ovn Un- i^Uiit. 01 >i<'\eral liuiiiiri'd ti-it it hbul, k <ii |i wv,- \ ing lii rci ly 11) > 11 ilu' railiui; at ili' i"i>i< in | Wah '.a»nt-d to |/it oj-H. i he rur ..trti. U, ntrnt ' !*r r ,11 ijpdii ^ll«lil btrei t, and whi; ui.ivt ri.<i '.jiOKili ii.'-u d {rat.uii lit).. j Cljhn. (iiM li'l, wild wi>n the 111411 nt thn ' lever aijil tiiiitb.** t(j bii'p ilie i-i i^iiji , rny^ he i<nii l»ii el that 111'. ' . ut tfl w»h iuM. voihiit: |r.|irly. ' I luld lie i in. ii ir ( alH^i t it tli'H ini.rnii.i..'' Im: rnid, " n> <l u>.> 11), II. 11 r II lit II. • l.i l.iil ri paiMil 11. • II It wbm I lid lit:) etill lilt I't ijii.ir, I.I II ills iniiHt liit\i I*. II v^liol rmii-eit ihi a luiii '1 |.i' irnninr, How ••111 WmU'i. i mil I io< In li.uiiii, ilioii>.ti iliiH Ih noi in in luii. • 111). lilt iviili'iif ilinl III. IH hidii., . Till? Lurt lui Mill II hKi k limit ii^li luveiiti|.i.iioii ; THE POISONED OANDY CASE. TIio Jury In tha Oandy FolsouInK Cane riud a Verdict Against Mollouald, A Bi. John, N. B., despatch says : The MacKae inquest is still dragging along, and will probably last half of this week, as about a dozen witnesses are still to be ex- amined. At Saturday evening's seasion liubort Christie, general clerk in Messrs. liarkcrs', said he had seen McDonald hand, ling poisonous drugs, such as opium, sugar of load, etc., bat never remembered seeing hia. touch strychnine. Wm. Barker had asked him on Friday, the 4th iust., if be hau any suapicions of McDonald in con- nectiun with the poisoned candy. He knew McDonald carried a key of the store, and had spoken to the bookkeeper about it, but the latter said a new lock was to be put on, and it would bo all right. Mo- Donald once told him he did not believe in Gyd. Charles L. Nebon, paper dealer, said the piece of brown wrapping paper foand iu McDonald's pocket was not the same as that around the parcel. Both were mauilla, but had been made at different times and not from the name roam. D. C Clench, banker, said that McDon- ald drew an account from him on Saturday morning, Oct. 5tb, saying he was going to deposit with Ueesrs- Barker, as they would allow interest. W . J. llaines, assistant bookkeeper with the Barkers, admitted having lent McDon- ald his key on several occasions. Ou Tues day evening, the Ist inst., be returned to the ofiice auout Seven o'clock. Ue did not thiek any one would then be in the build- ing and baw no light, but a few minutes later McDonald walked into the otiice, and picking up a pen wtni outside to the dusk and did sumo writing, lie saw no parcels, and could no say what he wrote ou. A few moments after Wasson came in, then Geiuw, the electric bell on the front door, which can be abut on or oil, did not ring when be entered the store, nor when he saw McDonald, but it did when Wasson and Cierow came in. lie supposed Mc- Donald fixed it give an alarm. Mc- DjuaU left the desk when the bell an. nouiiced Uerow's arrival, and ho thought be went out, but as Uerow did not meet him he supposed he went somewhere elae in the building. Ou Saturday morning, Oct. 6th, Spittle and he were talking about the poisoning, and Spittle said the (lerson who sent it might be among them. Mo- Douald once told him he did not believe in Uod. John Doberty, another of the Barkers' clerks, could throw nolinht on the mystery- llowara Barker, a cousin of McDonald, was iu thu store on Saturday evening after thu arreat and saw I'elers throw McUouald's overcoat down stairs to Sergt. Uaaiiugs, but could not say who picked it up, or whether it had been searched before given to the police. Detuulive King told of the arreat of Mc. Donald and of going to Barkers' store after, wards and searching among thu boxes, where ho discovered some similar to those ooutaiiuug the candy. Lie alsj dmcoverel that a bottle of strychnine was mixsing. A St. John, N.B., despatch eays: Two sesmons of the inijuest were held today, bui no iiioie deflniie eviileiice wad aliiii. ,:ii 'Ihu excileniuiil over ilu inntter is fuuie- what dying out, ai (1 ilm atiLinlaiicu a. I lie I itiiuiuaiion IS iKUth eiiialier i'mii m i'libt. It id likely the eviiii ucu will b.. In i,l:t d to-morrow evening, ai'l tliii cane will bu given to tbu,tii> on Weill. nd-ij or 'I'hurB. u II y . .'oiaiio Eu'low, n ileik :ii I'.^rkers' r.ii*ii i'.».|mriii.' I.I, liie-v ot v'iiil^ i{. aii's 1- .>i i; hi. Key ,| III ..il (j'l , I, .! I ..iurt ui' III 1.1 11 eir «'i.ri I r .>1. I lo: •>.il, •»! il lie 111. I hn:i> •I 1' \\. i< ilcL. <1 III 1:11 III li . II • H . I. life lo .].*lji. .* J I II litl II M DiiliiM>rH Kej U.. I I.- • b-.;.'. , In I o.i; I ' lie hluri nil, ; lliwlii^ IHi II iliu 1 < t' , . I II ttl 1,.-. lei^u '< I. 11-. Irtiiei f^ t i VI t. ?iit 111, »! r ii|M r M ii "â- i i.i â-  ; 111. I i.i »i u .\- \ 1 ii. I N.I » 'V 1> i"% it r lit: li.l..eU II 'O ill. t [' .Hi.' ^i"I ,. ui t .t \ , Kf l*K". li.'.'t III 1 '1^ r I. I . J II, I n . 11 >. n,. iliK I'll;,. II ' ii .llln \ I, •-,. (ei ' ,:'!) «, I;, itlliii.i i,ll II nil- I. mile:. II U'. ' u •> I.I (I'll-'D I. III! 'Al.iie In ll".,. 1 .'^i 1 J .i.nl.l I* .»ci e .iinl.'i. 1 .1 I (. I t I I. , a .1 ( 1 I . \\ I I II (1 I. »i^i n r .- i:l . 1.1 I II I I ' ^1 U I MM J. I- t,l«: ii II 'i I H iiilii 1 ill' â-  ti, ooaiin of McDonald, was a playmate of his. Un Saturday morning a week ago, the day of the arrest, he went into Bakers' retail store, and, in going oehind the counter to the bock shop, heard Arthur tell his elder brother Howard that their mother, Mrs. Qeorge Barker, got some oandy and had burned it. He knew nothing further, but gave the names of several others who heard the conversation. A St. John, N. B., despatch of Tuesday saja: The Coroner's Court aat morning and evening and examined aevcral wit- nesses. Mrs Ann Heans, mother of Barkers' olerk, said her sou had told her of lending bia key to McDonald, but had »'aid nothing about mailing packages for him. Young Heana was recalled and denied that he had ever mailed any package for Mo- Donald. J. U. Wa^HOn, recalled, aaid he thoui^ht Peters told him the reason he went to the Coioner'a to examine the boxes was beoause he thought they had similar ones in tha store. Arthur Barker, 11 years of ago, son of George Barker, remembered going to his uncle's store on Saturday morning. Out. lOth, in oompany with other boys, but denied the statement made laet evening by Harry Taylor, that he said his mother had received a box of candy and burned it. Hs said the conversation took place in the cellar of their house, and be told Taylor his mother aaid that if she bad received a box of candy she would burn it. Clarence Bucbingbam and Colin Clark, aged 11 and 14 respectively, were called and substan- tiated Taylor's statement in every par- ticular. Sergt. Hastings told of going for Mc. Donald's ooat on the evening of bis arrest iu company with Uuward Barker. He was kept waiting, he eaid, for some time, and the coat was finally paused out ta him through the retail store. Macaulay, turn- key of the jtil, eaid he was walking in the yard on Saturday evening, and on bearing voices looked into the surgeou's room, where McDonald was oonQued, and heard him tell Howard Barker to go get his coat hanging ii. the wholesale and bring it back without dietarbing anything in the pockits. Frank Crabe, head of Barkers' retail department, teatitied sstothe ralea govern- ing the aales of puiann, etc., which he said uid not apply to the wbolesals clerks. He threw no light en the myaliry. S.Kerr, Principal of tlio Uusineea College and teacher of writing, was shown theaidresaes on the candy paekitgeg, and said they bad evidently been uriticn with a blunt pen. He noticed the lignre '• " on the Deecy res and Dienstadt packskfes and also saw the same peculiarity in the numbers male by McDonald on some boxes iu Barkers' store. The Coroner then said this was nearly all the evidence, and that Hesiioiis would be held on Tburnday alturnuou and evening, when any addiiiuniil siatemeutii would be taken and the caae aubmitied to the jury. The general opinion hero is that while the evidence is autliLiienl to send McDonald up for trial, it is not sufficient to convict him. A St. John, N. B., drapitoh Bays : The inijueat in thn candy poisoning oases finished this evenii g. Most if ihii time of thu sfternoon ami (veuing Sierions was spent iu reading overthe deponitiuna. >Sume fi w i|iieBtioii8 were salted, but no import. Alt iiitiirmaii III wan briititiht oat. Coroner Ii rrymaii be^aii his aiulrtsa to the jury at '.t ^0 o'clock and it whs a fe^i ininnti-a after »*elv« wnuii he I'm Hhed Ue rev e*ed all the pel i,!-. it tlieonsu and charged utrnngly a|;«I: HI ^UI) l.&M. 'iliii jiirv V.I le 1 III exactly an 1 'ur, "^nd rLluriiiii ihu full 1^, uiK v...-.iict ; "(Ja It r ill' II Mite.rnti .! I I III lo her II* i4Wl ll ^in eHt- iKg a villi ity iiiiuii wiiiti'i i,t ill whiiili eir\iliiii». had men p m' d, niid whi. h "tll'ly 'iil«d ll 1!|. H I.I lll|.'llt.ll ll e I'Oal !«.â- '- ' liLroid t • ilii Jiv. I I iilil M.t.'rii >, iMiri i-e,ii,il ll . it.i t . '. .1 ,1 iiii W'e.I;-' rt.lnv iniiri.iii.^, I 1 t. ;ii I I "' .1 . rtiiil, f ir bi.r'ii â- â- , I. Ill I .- â-  V 11 I. .1 I. .- It' I {|. Ill !• e\ nl'H I r 1 111 I J III'. I I ' â- ' l ti f . '. I.'. Ill .iiij A (111 He. t , 1 .1 'll I ) ,1 e '. I. Mill h > I 111. ( Jl.f 11 t .,1. Ill^t 111- ".ll I i I 11 . ll .. :i.|- iii..ii-li, I 1 I .r.i.- •â-  i.i, mil. u^iii t.i)l ! I . r^Ul t,'»ll.elil M III I'. -I uld will hi I ln'1.1 ll j l.iu i^uit I/) Iiupiocur; RAILWAY WB8CK8. A Dlsastroas Kmaali-ap at Omahaâ€" BIk Wreck at Bruiiii«la. An Omaha despatch of Wednesday says : A terrible wreck occurred on the Burling- ton ik Missouri River Kailway at Gibson, a few miles from Omaha, at C 43 last even- ing. About fifty passengers were injured. Two engines were completely demolished, and a chair car and oombioation car were thrown from the tracks and reduced to atoms. Train No. U, the local between Lincoln and Chicago, ran into No. 9. The former was east and the latter west bound. Gibaon ia the meeting point and the place where the crew on No. 9, which is a stub train that makes connections with the Kansas ( ity expresj, steps to register. Both trains were due at Gibson at 43 p.m., bat last ni!<ht No. 9 was elightly be. hind. When the accident occurred the latter had juiit crossed the spur, and the engine on No. 6 struck the end, burling both engines and the two coaches from the track. The combination coach and the chair oar were both crowded with passen. gers, all of whom were more or less iujared, while Peter Reuland, proprietor of the Tremont House, was injured so badly that he died shortly after being taken to the hospital. The chair car after being over- turned caagbt fire, and many paasengera were burned in addition to their other in- juriea, but those who bad escaped compara- tively safe aided in relieving their oompan. ions. The number of the injured has not yet been ascertained. titlier Ulriastera. A Braasels cable says : As a passenger train from Mona, running at full speed, was approaching the siation in tnia city to- day the engineer applied the brakes to slow up. The brakes did not work and the train dashed into the station and against the buffers at the end of the track. A number of carriages were wrecked and thirty passengers injured. A Leabonau, Iiid., despatch says : A construction train bearing section men on the Midland liiilway three miles from here backed into a freight train to day. Sherman Moore, brakesman, was killed. Oliver Heath and John Fitoh were fatally hurt and several others Keriounly injured. The freiijbt train had failed to clear the main track in switching. Vv ll J I'l I, .1.' ll . . I. u .1 11 11 .1 i> • I'll,. , I* . '. . mill III ' . ill r Mil. r„„ M if,. .11" 1 en 1 »il. SMUKbLKvS "COKi)Il-E." A Mew 111 v«iitl»ii of tlie Modern Science of UeAtruetloii, A London cable aays: Experiments which the Britieb Government have been intking for the past two weeks with Lord Ariiiatroog's new explosive, " oordiie," have so far proved highly satisfactory, and well- informed inilitaiy men already say it is the explosive cf the future (or small arms as well as artillery. It ia abiiolutely smoke. le«B, which cannot be said of the so called "smokeless pusvder " juiit introauced by Germany, and the deadly fumes which rise from the latter are entirely abeent in the " cordite." It is contl.lently predicted that this new explrsive wUl work a revolu. tion in modern ariii>inieiit, and (|aick tiring guns, which, with ordinary powder, are of little ujo after the t>anuers are enveloped in aeiitfiioatiDg cloud cf suioke, will become powi rful weapons of dostruotion in the future. .Simiileluiis of |.'iiiil l^luy. A Montreal dii^pmoh of Wednes lay BHya: Thib iiuriiing Cor, iiir He 1 n was iiotilli-d of the sudden I'.entli nf i» \i_iiiis; in«n named rM.tfiii^y, ti^ lj'Vi.-i, d'lrint; iiu- iii.^iit. 'Ii'.h ci iMinirtI kiicen KUnouiiding tie uasx are M I'dp^ieil 111 rii)Mt. ry, niui il iii tiered iri.it f ll p'ay tiitri b(ii nt wiik. It apfi.K'H lirt* on M'iiuta\ 11I..11I 1* .Wr T.nitiiiuy, it 1. viw, who id eiiiploj eit on III a d lb btrbiir r, ui'rivid ll ui" ritllii r iatti Mill iliuiiI hi-. wU. , riiii an.! itniiilrr man in nu iiil'Xioliil riKti, l> iiiAi ill od '.OifctI.er IIo iinmeiii- nieiy 1 j 1 nd liiii ntrai.j.er frii u the hoil-e, mill iioihiig iiiiiie 1^1*4 liiiovti fif t'li* m-itiii'nt III. Ill It U.11. rniii ri'.l ibis n ormi g llial 1 eli^lMV. j',1'., i»i 1- 1 l%loi.l '. j V.%,1. THK MAODDITF KILT. A Bit ofEngMnh Hlatory In the Moderm Amerieau flown. An English princeaa does't marry an earl every day, and ei<p cially an earl who is a direct descendant of that MacduS who has been requested to " lay on " by every tragedian, from him who delighted the gallery gods in tire Bowery to him who received kid gloved applause at the swell playhouse, eavs a writer in the Philadel- phia rim^ii. If you have any Eentiment at all, and are a woman (I do not adviae it for men), you will ap; ear in a kilt skirt of Macduff plaidâ€" it is a beautiful rich plaid, a red backtiroand crossed by dark blue and green linesâ€" you bave kilt of thia and wear with it a scarlet cloth coat, and on your head a scarlet felt hat caagbt up at the side with the blackest of blackbirds that ever was ahot or served in a pie. Yoa can then try and think that yon own the ( astle of Wemysa (pronounced Weems) where Mary, Queen of Scots, met and loved Darnley â€" that yua own the ild house neat East Wemyas, where Macduff was born, and you can think that in the castle sweet Mary Beaton talked with the other Maries of their gentle and lovely lady. You oaa keep saying over toyourself those four lines that tell their names : " Yestreen the Queen bad (our Mar'os, The nicbt she'll bae bui three. There was Mary Heatuu, and Mary SeatODr And Mary Carmlchaul and me." If wearing the Macduff kiit would only make the average girl as womanly and sweet, with as little knowleiige of things better lett unknown, as had three of these four Maries, it would be a good idea for the United States to buy ti-o or three cloth factories and devote them to the making of the rich, warm plaid, that the women of the nation might be clothed in it, and catch, not the fever of discontent, but the glorious summer of awettnees, amiaoility and love. TaK fLlOUK. The Advance of Cliolera CaaslOK Alarm In Kurope. A Paris cable says : The cholera spectre has appeared again, and it was recently a subject of discudsion at the Auadamie de Medecin. Dr. Proust road an exhaustive paper, which meets with the approval of the medical and sanitary auinurities of France. Three months ago cholera ap- peared in Mesopotamia, and it has now been propatiated in fersia. Ou August 24^h thu epidemic was raging at Bagdad. At that place from the 20ih to the 3l8t of August the death rate from cholera was from '200 to 400 peisins per day. Since the pest of 1H31 no epi'ieinio has been 80 fatal. In September the cholera rpread to the Euphrates and ttc i'iatrie. Thescoarga has reached the Persian gulf. The aoatfa- crn portion of Percia is invaded, and Sobiraz is threatened. The city of Reoht has several times been tliti point of de- parture or the place of pissaKe for cholera epidemics coming from Uuuloutiiau and Afghanistan to Persia. Two i^f these epidemics invaded Europe in 1830 and 1840. Recht is not yet couiaminated -, bat if the cholnra does reach Uecht, it being already at Kirmanf>i<ab and UamtiUm, the sole safeguard cf Eunpe will be to iiepend upon tbo meaHures taken by ihe Kujsiao Government ou the Runuian frontier. V... I ir III 1 â-  I Ml-: fAbl" \I.1I1. â-  1'. W«I4 .In I^c W. .M. 1 I •111. lie lli'liih'ir whn Mm ,J ij.ljjt. Di' I'm 11 W' s line I'f w, iiiiitHil !â- ) itii . 'I lie I HiHiini. ; ,IiiHii. l>irl.s II, ,' M e. Liimi. (Ml .iti| , Ml. I ,1 h |)»l lloel.Hlilli r W ear. ill.. Ill l-«dil.i, li-.lh I. gi ^'-•â- l.lell mil IIII el.Ii-.. li 11 jii'l. ^ ; .\lrM lliiiilii I I ml 11. J iiitii ; .M . B. .Ii'ii Air iiiMil lititi if < l<i)On • ll' lint »H on III.' lie lir.i 1 :t of d«i«'l \fi <'n|. I. -<l Km . <â-  iii.ri. 1-1 lir Ki 11 , JuBI |il . ll iiot^ nii'i ll I I'll r, 1 Ills nnii I ,h Ml Taddei . • '* nil 1 r I Kliiiri. ll .1. .- if I I .; .!â- * II \S III I I I ri It all I ^lil. l 1- II m I e «iiu 11 li'vi- iriiiliie. Ml b' \\\\.t, I u ,! •â- f'l'ii r • 'I on Itiln I rune 'Alll, 'Inr I" mill I.i .. ll, vs nti hi I I It iilU ll"il 111 (^ 1(1 I 11 fl. IP'l! <,\ .Vl.f' ll I 11. I "I" II . , ill ' I'l Hill I I I . I Itarki "h' •^ll tilll i.illlp nil I iiy I 111- ;i^i.r'. I .iiili I I.I. ' I i I.I* olllt:i- I • 1 11 II the I fi' ii I, e .1 mi. t- I%1|. , Milll 'â- â-  n-- "I- > I I Kl ^ II.. i-li-rl.. I.I- Ill-Ill .\.«r â- , .1 d r.lit ll. I t. !â-  I I .1 I'l S I ii.|ii II i aiile HUM ; fin it. I'll 'r Mnit4, tje:i'l:t.i|.K I'l I 111- ( "llLHl .1 S.CMil M,. (.ii.ii pir I . mil: III III I » II (.Ah- i-i teiB ' •' i •' 1,1 a I'lenni'i 1 "p 111 I iii> , Ml II' iiilii ri Hi Kl .1111.1,11111 I.iiil'i. I;, n, 'iiiipy a ( ••â-  'i I 1 ». K V nH - 1 1.1 1.1 1 1 I. II I uwil'^ to hi r I .111 } i-rtiiiDii till- \i Nf-t I le.-iiiii' a lotnl w 1 1- V. A 1 nil b'.a^il tal.ded i.iif. ly 1 Xilepl Oln' I'f I tll»- htol-:' Ih. ',* liO WHM it I Oil 1,1 ll . 1 he Mllil* w ivH a lint^ f'.iii.il iron .-i ri w ni iiriier i.f " '1 1)2 lona. Mie WRH lunl- nt (.i.tb^uw in Ifjiij. .*. ii A ufiil iVIlMHiir. ' Beisii>-Th%t i.iwly KHr led 'a ly J. in il t null. ceil II. 1* eliiiAiil hi- k liivi ly i. . |l<;iiir I aKidliirifi'Maii a weddii-g |.ri M I.I aiiil t.i' ei.i ini d ij iii*. hurt, Il Mill No wi.ii. ir fii'iiui to toll Jon that tiLe elopiil wiili h. r linetjand, A iti.il I'ei |.i< 11] . I'roiipfrtive !â- '.• Ii- r in l.^iv Hnwdoyou ( X| eel In ^(t ii i ll i wiiln ill a SMlnry if i oil %t' .Jiillli; In (il I 1. nnie' ? I Yolii u Hiiiili > ll^Bler-T^»t 'B not Ihe j pr.ii.tâ€" Iniv am 1 lo i^i i alon): if I iiou t get married V " What wrtJ till- iiiiii.t melnii holy s|iflola. i cIs yiiil ever witn. h-i.i1 '/ ' itbKi d ^'iiiiiilH. " A timn with IriiiM B ll I wllitikeis in SAiiil ming," re|ilte.i <;iiiii o .Il iitiinB "nd Ins nlfeare out. ll.'.Bil he ••leitliliii a f i 1," an i nlie pmd bl.o diitu't a.:e ai.y reaboii why he sticiuiaii't. .-h b n I'l II. I |. . inii.i ll 111 i,liu 1'.-. 1 ' I 111. n i» 1 11 .-1 di- ' .. 1. Ill 111 ll liil â- ,-*; I I.I ji. 1 ivl. 1 . |-!vii , i-lnpl >.d L Iu â-  II • 111) ,\ ! II 111 .. I . .1, ( bI , I'l |.paii )i I i \Vi ll > -I' . B»\.- : I ll u i.it'i iii'it .Mil. r Iiu- 1. i'l nil VVitH : .ll. I 111 III r I UCnil lit ,1 1 !' 'i frti hlfiil I III II. 1.1 r iiii itt t er ... le ill''- IMi.i I hi'd. el , 'I li'_\ ii(i 'i -- i.iil KLi'd .1. il'-.o With Ilii. r .' lull l-/ie liM. ii.iiid I', ll In r cl. 1..11 I .1 ll II |ii I. Ill kit 1 1 rri ll. ll IB : lie . V ill 1 ..I'Vi-r. A I'uli i-HHt. kiiif. .i.ii(. e.. .' \.<« itiv ll ed Iroiii 1 er I â-  h. I-;, i-^t'ii.'ll. It.,'. ]»i III s ago, ''..vi 1 .1. ,, .1-111,, I.f lii,, clitlilreii a*, r i H . .|i:l, .S.'tli.l ntend suit \i gi i.ii-iii .\ 1 I he liiKlriii, and tL -i w rniiii'.- "1 â-  l,e Ol lu.'l. ilii III. liie \i III 1 ll .; .' .•iliil'li'li, .lei r.ltl li. W ll I t- mill li .ji.il (..' Inlll 'till-' .'hi l< l^ , 11 llll iMr.'W III! '. r '11 ll' l.i (lii/a'i, ri ii.lei, >»ini 'I » , .111. iii.ii'i III . k hi It iidi ll till e. IIU. j i 1 lll.iirili. e il'/i.ui III. 1^ /. 1 ll tile li„uio ' (I, " BB I 111 1 1 liy \\ B-li I'. At ll 1- iv 1 j. n ri-Ds'i n W Y I!" I, 111111- I l>l.l^»il lli.l'ilrt, V 9,1 r .lilil.li ill l-'lli . .x.ii'ii.il I .iiiii-H ii( ilie pnjii'rni ilm ' ' t.'ii, ^. I t. â-  1.1. Miiil nidi) h. Ilie I', per f .1 .' • *:• )i .i.aI.i'.j I'l r^on In |. iii)'lij ..' II (1 1. ill I- ilij iiii'iiiiC'j" . .ihuliiiier ll .1 .; â- ,â- â- : '111' iiiifm- hihi ii.in nf ii.ii- -'III' It I. .,' I.i.ili |ii.,,irB line i.'i iitliiiil ill 1-1 'I p-il I ll lilar. S 'lull \>\v-\\ i-liNliiii nil |i>, i" 1.1 1 ' ll'i tyii.>: ivifii fn, ,1 I'mirt ll I'll Ili'll4,.lit. ll. sl-o imii I ,11, 1 1 I, . ( Alill^li'all a- ryri , fr, ni )i y. V .'it r-' HI. 1 lliitl llll I ll" i::. II ly , i^iid I , ,1- I I. 1 .1 1 I ll". IT- iiitli I I'iDlli i; .. nHIIK-. 1 W 1. .11. e.- i'l I' I 1.1 '> i-'ii.lliti ily II v.' â-  11 ilie ll. nil a if Ml I) II iild'b nil iiu) ll .\ iii'ii. llll Hiijie Bill llll I iiiiilierti uu lliH ll . II X '"I r It*- III I Vv. !f l'\y, iitii 1 >â-  , 'Mil 1 ll ' .1 n rl'l. " III I I (mil'l Wl i ' - I " .11 M uii III |-i|i'r !' till 1 nil Mijl'onail, . ll unid i'l V. .iH I'lti. .' vriijiia I. Ill . I ll. V nlBi) t xmiiii eit M 'I) 11 I'l I'a wi t i; » .1 ilwl . II 11.1. i....\ ,1 K.'il Oil Il«;ureh B il 1 i.rii. I . ti,,\ I i'l, ll' 11 I i4. tint ivonlil 111 B ..1'. «ll till 1 1. II lii.ii, l,> i|.i> 8i.ni" |.i'i- . in i|.i' y 1.1- 1. ir, 1. ii-.iiii: Kihi'illii'i , 1 i I I . .1: . .. 1 l|i I i. . I . ,., .,. I . . ' .. 1 I.- I'.'ii 1 1' i'li.t 'i I '1 I.' (. .; 1- 1 -, i\ I . - -r tilt .s t| per IVa*- I nuM-l. .\ Kii. Ill ruy iit.'pnti.l' B*' : A i r,i. 1 11 . 1. r I f 1 iiii.il ln,ili(tl8ty H' r I . - 11- I'lii red I'l 1 1' I ' r n.tiy. The pull'-. )vv.. .i|i I .111 r ll ii'.ii ll • innitii inrn H V ' '.. II t. d ( f Bll.i.. I Ili'Nrt, an ,1 'lOln Illnl... Ill V,. II. ren' ll' ly I'liimizet untdi'id ii m iiiv'-H • (v plum KiiI'b pi Ih." i"i'i- III- in 1). ii. «ri' Ir mid !•> lilijod itiritlini> i-'ilm iiol III 11 vibI iliu Biorits I f tie Unli r, mni all liii ir I'iBi'H i^i-ii) OBiriiit I tit Hui oiiitni! to v I II 111' I ilii rn Hill eil in lined liini ihe Bi nil. 1 f â- !.'. \( till ; cn Bi ernd'.i fl. Thu h rt 1. I In ijf Ilie I ai.ii uie iiniit r ainst. .% I ii''-lii.iB It'-tiqui-r. Tin Q 1. ell o! ll"Mii'l ncntly Htrpri""!! hirluh ^llâ- l III » vrv imvei in mner. Oi liM li'iiii'.iN H'li.' [lie. n'e.i I iiii With mi I 11 .1 11, .I'll nil". ,11 '. Ill 11 ,,vi rii, if thti Bind ii-i-it , n ii-i , 11'. I. );li B ai npuft i.. lay, bo II Bvv iii^t It r. {(.i.iei) B-vi rill n. r\ iii)^ ineii tiiii'.uv il. A.i ll v-,is I ri ii_hi 1 :i le Kl ihii iii.ne i(i« ol'l Kii'i', B ii"|i'd fijr.vard ti I'Aivininii It, .« lien mniilni tt.i iKiiiiTii thH lend i>( Inn lilll,. il (ntlt il|illi,hl.f |>l 1 peil (lilt, ti ilu Biii|irtai I f Ilie inuinr h aiicl lllH iliiiUselneit of the wbnln Oi ll't. iin.ii'.iid ilii'iiii; iiiH i.itlit II15 1)1 uur nil*, aiu-ill 11 tilled Ij..V!*lien Weiep'il tl .(ll T an ' HI VI IB niuriiiiit; i.|i<l ITOn^tii tii town, iliiilioly I I Ine d c <»ej lieillu still nil 1 he hii.l will re I c ixpil' ll. 1.1. vallle deiMH n.1 y Km w^i il/H lit itlH illnli, llmiigii lie m a.i i.rii.i I, ii wi'li i>e. lib ll B'ld liifi iiiO' Iter Us I 'thi 1 h" UI er r. liis.-.i to i-a) an) laiii,^. 'I il il ij'iei.1. (i[i. lid lO.iiiiirruw. .% r.o'd (t.iiiit,l..r H |. i.rHi»4il .. A I-v'iiie^ii I'm ii.--|i.it :h uf Widiutidiiv : An 1- .\ MtllifcJ K.....;n I. iltl >rll|ieBMMl t-V rt- -1-1 1,1 I'.- 1 11 I* I- Wislll-h ll'till fiCIll I, 11 H ii'iH iti iniiii).;. .\ln.-rt M.iit, ni lii'lli . .M 1 , ii'i III . xtyi.Sntln W T . hii 1 li.iviii^ >i mr 1' i\ ll- irt I)! iniii.ey, wm H s iii'-h d I'll*, if i'JoO liy 1.1(1 I'lfi-d e'inl III .nil' nil-.. VV'ieii i im iin ii liters i- ti."ip(jti a 1 I ll ., v-. 1 ll. triiii r - ». if tie I r, i*i.iti;.eiB jii.-u :,.l,. 1 111 iii» nil olt'l '"I". II. J [lined line I.f Ihi-in UII. It. hir.,,1. In ttm . .\i it. iii.-iil tliiit eii-ifil il'i- iiiiiiii' men .1 .pel. Th. I'll., .ith t 1 (;f iitT-ltrB \\\'\ d't.viiiil nil ililit |.y i^'..*! I line, ii'-.l to rinvti.-.; a e, viil'i)!- Im .:«\.. â-  I.H-... Ill ill â-  S.H llnr". lie 11. pt ifml i.i... f 11.111 .tn; i.ii-H-'ti. it t-iiM t»*..-H l.i I'll' ir. n 't ill |)iii"l iif 1. rev.' V'.r. At \li-i I .V < I iHl IU till tl.o iL C'auKlit Iu the Heltlutr. A Montreal di spatcli of Wnl. edday says; A youth named Alb<-ric I'ruvoxi met with » rorriijlu iliaib early ihH Miornini' in the iM.'iiin b1 r.i'lii.t; iiiill:!. TI.e t .,i\ , who w«< II 1. 14 yiBr.1 iilii, woB Wdrki' ^. in the I'vlit y»i 1; III 1(111 lolili'g reji.'.nii riit, anil kIliui .1 ij'u'O k ihiB 111.11 nil . w' ll'. 8tun''iiii< i.enr ,.iii. (i( ii'io whi lis of tie I inline, li;- aiiu ii»a on ht il iiiti tl I'irt; and hn was whirli d arijti'.d. Ids limd i'tiik'n.i a..ain-t an iriiii I rijfCi.tu niiliivii^ ii,\oiuli('ii if ihi) whei I. Till iQicliii ery was qui kly it In.'di!, lint liiH ll ml WBB ' nipi'id, liijurt'i I" ueii ant leiB Uii»raied. H- wan k ill b'iv.i wh. ll 1 x iioiiii-, „, |i, t .iiiKii'K llial K'liii tl.inj tiiu'l till d I'l- Iiir • nn, ihn iiiii. iiii'i\nni 1 f 111' N .irt- L'liiiii- n .^pital w»a inll'd rl,..l ill Ml kn'(i tiny cuiivi J.1I til thij liniliiitii'ii, iiiii le ll' llll ll a lum in me-nit) -fer HdniiB-i' 11. li..j.i...r i.t;a;,itd lou- ocifiidiiiMi III u .1 r ... X i 1 in. Mr 1 ilHlii > I nbii f. U <vH.i iLarBcierii'iii 1.1 l^ir Edwin .\i.n.'il 111 mm bin fmo i.i'.nl ti-.e E .ss I' hel. I'mniill:; b\ Ih" (iul il G •!<' ai.d bit Ins lii'tiH I t Irii iid.-i 1,111111 111.. I.., in thn f |. li.w.i.K 111 e-i. w-: 1. ll h I1.1t. B. lit til till pnaj for ]iu lici inn ; \ r.iiii.Mi I.I. .Inii rieiil .It '111- llll ti 'di-n imic. '-- w 11*1. ill .1 ir ti.i i;r,-. 11 .-Vil -iitie covep, ill t III'- 1 iiiu: u iiiv leii'iiu i- : l' l„.ii.Kive< ^'- I- ll I II, I1V...11 . i-j i. 11. n ll I, iji.i , n in i.liitii. l.oi.ii 1 I'l II. I liiiiili, ill Bi Inn- 1,1.11 in.u and ( I I I.I. Ill 11 i-s l.ii died lij.s Ml Ill 1,1 I hiftrd 1 I â-  I 1. I.. I liBjii-i . hi. - 1,1... ll. itilllH>. l-Wi. I fl ml. 1 . 1.!., n- ii IS i.i: liii' d I . 11'. e. .V 1 r. I ll. . lit ll III .S 1 ..1 ii; s! I.iililnl li.i.dl .-1. ' nil tilt II ll 11 .-.1 Ku ..|.' ; .^. ilKr.' 11 M • f. J. llll 1 i*'- on l.iiii'i. r . IHrd. leiir, that I I'll 111. .11. it ili.l l-ii. ,1. pi|-i>iii " -li.ng in i.[i. .1 »..i. (S'l.li til * IH I' i. t 1 t < 11. ' I mill,... 18 >1 li.y Willi H 1 IB' ill, i j'liii,' .1 I If III.; i.'ir j'l^i in UiB trtiiu W13 itu vie^ on' . ri'iiiiii II ll. i-'i. Oei, IV I'. I.- .. i." I I... I'.li'i.',>Z.. I .1 . I '..â- ' i;:.-.vi\ .Ml'-., - t' .11 I In I.-. I'lh - I'l nil iieil A \' w 11 it III'.!, M-1.S , Dm liii 1 I"' lll"W (111 Sll:i t'.' li-lilli,; I'l'i', (.i il'jji p iri, tinr f.ir V 11 '.iiiir«t-.e. V I rt'i', i ; II. .V 'f I'l III, (.) Ill Bi'l oinifTf* Q iil|i 11- fl pin Into <ji.l..y hn k M'.ii Hny . riiri' I,' I hi' l- » i v i rt'i', I "i, lei Be';! 1:1 fl.i 1 I. U' Ml. . â- ; 111: (MI..V .f th.. N iMiin t. III. til till. iT.ei- V . .^ 1, ill, (>> ill(l Fi'1,1- tiii^ilmt t-fit'i vi H-.iH ii-iiidl iifrt,.' itiihiire, til - Drew (.' th" t^tililp. tjiin .l.ilin Fl-.li ler.i Ar'lHir Ui'iileu und S.niu-I 1'. iklinni, et irliil lo rriw iis^'cr- in ileir .1 null li m III f I 'h ' l|i|.h. Villi: i"eii- til I'll..' I I'l. un w of ihe Nn nil- 1 ft 1 tin Ii.mt eii| « / -1 111 d all tlir 11 iiii-ii .11 ri- clri.. I'l'il, Iu- ereiv 11 ihn lluruBiie -eie'v i..^iiniil I'rii. ir .0 y( thu i»iiiii(' ".ill (lilf'i uUy. rht' Qnilp afii niautB Mem bhUcu'. The I'l-i,!-, I I f til I-, Piiif. l''l .wer, I liiliir- 1)1). k's 1. I * tins vie li. Iliti^tleaii, Bit I ll.Ht ti.ei.' (.1 1 . r M-,.!.. It )iH it lY. Ill I f- 1 1 fd-lil Hii;lit ; III ll e.. 11 ,1 ll 'I'l. B I.f ntlr II I M s j,.u 1 11. Ill- H Kiliii J ..I'. I. v. Bli.t II. .v- II.. ll If.-ic t I. Ii-i-li M-« I,,,-. I; . ,.-.1. a i I "'is.li I I ; ll I' ji mini.:' II I'll.' f li.ni.i'.ti u- ln«\ tl 1.1 1.1 til 1 ni Iiintn 11/ HI' B (1 «ll 111 W|. .11 . mIl.'Ii ll. r I. 11.. I -^r' , (.f we a-.ii...i llll.. 1 ., . ' I'l- t h .\if>ncia- I .Sir J.hii Lab- 1 if 11 i|n'i'\ is n.fij I'l. " iflfiy 111 .111 R ^A !.OUIld 1 .^ I Iliu 11 . boun- I'lert 1 f.. ri' inav be Ml' i'A.i' HI, tieur, B r 'I .'ll ni iri en of ' I'-i' 'â-  ,' 111 1. 'I ll ." .ind I" (11 1. I) ;( f' iii.i'n for ml .11,- u .. ' â-  t.''-ii Hur- 14 Iiilil ly . .it'l';...! t |iUi_a I i.ai lo full litiir, if color ii'tiiiiij which I U t I A I BelOHii I ' I'lii'orful Pre 111 ,,'a't- h* J, it,'. ll jii.-..'ii. -11 I bI' I Im i ll' 1, ! ' • â- i(h. 1.1 I ( i< 111 I , - : V Mien Iu ,,... ui>h nil riglii. ^Viilli iir4. |l, y 1 ii'ie R,ll ready <l, i- II. iiieo til li-t 1 I .11 killed, old knnw. iifl niid non- mc. I'll gj â€" Threw r 11 11 tti .i wjis pasuiniJ along a Ofiif 1 ly mill meet old firni'-r. Eirit wit -G 'o < moirnw, F^Jhi r Atdahairi. b nmid wi â€" OO'id nnirio.'',T . her I-^aio. Tiit'l wi'.â€" Oixid ni"'riiw, F • hi r Juvb Oil I I I v- r i't: 1'. \\ 111. Mil. I Mr. Etfi Un \\ i.ni'iK .4,.. ,11 tl.ntod him- I B. If 'iflegai... e.\.f ..), iii.-i'. n- 111, ,;J „ i)„. j II 11,100. Hscup ll'.' if '. .. {â- .:: ^ ,8rt at il'e I Iltl rti.).iimeiit .jiven by li'-i m. fli«gara FbIIb w»b n I li.vcr nit o7 di,l'jm«cy, and llll iinpriiviiuent if hn opporiubity to put :-.! miis'i vieiv.ii Pun A.nerio-.ii nff 'r» Hi l.fi f 1: nil r â€" I an 11 'hi .1 1: b, hilt H'. I, r- ' ir t . ( k 1 1- 'r. â-  1.: I nave foiiuil ttmai. \b".>'. I. if Kl li'iiail 1 I.e.^ wii I i'.i i!i { â-  'A htii;; U'l . al' -/-/.I lid. ^ t" M, I ,. >V no [Uaiiy > ^' •V A I i V A wrT* ••Jv W":^ iNi ^:il^ • r / 1

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