Flesherton Advance, 18 Sep 1890, p. 2

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X A SPOKANE FALLS HORROR. Forty or Fifty Men Onuhed to Dwtb or Blown to Atoini BY A BLAST EXPLOSION. A Spokane Fall*, \Vseh., despatch says : On Saturday evening * premature blast in th Northern Pacific yardi killed fift. n persons ami possibly more. The fall ex- teol of the disaster ii not known. U wan jait before the hoar of quitting work. A Urge force of men WM engaged in blasting oat a hone rook pile in the Northern Pacific freight yards in the eastern prt of tbeoity. Frcm AO to 76 men were el work in tbe out I tbe time. Borne of the workmen were preparing blasts to be touched off After other workmen and teams had departed for the night. One bUit had been prepared In patting in the second it wai exploded, the jar alto touching off the fint blast Twenty -five thousand cubic feet of rook were thrown over upon tbe nniniprcting man of humanity with terrible results. WOK-K 1M> WORKS'. Time only heightens the horror* wrought by the premature explosion of a blait in tbe Northern Paoinufreigbl yirdi here last night. At lip. m. tbe men engaged in taking ont tbe mangled victim! were forced to deiiit, because among the rooks wbioh were being cleared away were five other NBW TUBK'S NW LAW. Two OlsjiwetUi-llmoklBS; While r i. Roya Arrested IveellUsrally- A TcBder-alearttd Policeman. A New York espateh of last Tuesday night says : Polioen an Do* ntng, of tbe Elizabeth cireet station, was on doty on the Bowery yesterday when he was approached by a grim-faced individual, who said harshly : " Where have you been ?" " I have been here all tbe while," replied Downing. " Why, what'* tbe trouble?' " A great deal," said the man. " A person ii wilfully violating the law on your poll, and here I've been looking for yon for ten minutes. The criminal has probably escaped by this time." The policeman followed the man to the corner of Canal street, pointed to a dirty-faced, where the man weak-kneed lad PBUULIAB BUFFALO 80ABDAL. In Wbioh a Former Beamirille Figures- Belle UP IN A BALLOON. blanks that might be exploded in tbe task of removing tbe mass of debris that buried the victims. I'p to that hoar eighteen bodies had been taken oat. There are yet 37 man unaccounted for, all of whom are probably boned beneath the mi*hty mas* of rook. The fatality was terrible. Tb* men were given no chance for life. It was either instant death or slight injury. There wers aoout 800 poandi of giant powder in the blast. The accident was oansed by some one's oareleesness. Tbe man in charge of tbi blast and three assistants were blown to atom*. It U ths custom to prepare blaits and charge them and at the hoars of IS noon and 6 p.m., after tb* men have left work and gone to a place of safety, to eboot them. In this oas* it aeems that one blast had been prepared and tbe foreman, C. McPherson, wai preparing second. Tbe snen bad all finished their work, and were patting on their ooals and picking op their lunch pails ready to gn to their homes after tbe day's work, when they met a, horrible and expected death. Hither the rock was too hot from the action of Ibs drills or elae tbe tamping exploded tbe second blast, and that exploded tbe first. A man who was tamping paid the penally with his life. A man who stood beside him escaped with stunt brume*. although '20,000 cubic feet of rook were hnrlod for hundred* of feet in every direc- tion. Another man who was near the deadly blast, and who was supposed to bo dead, was seen shortly after the explosion in a half oread condition, walking around with hi* clothing torn to shreds. THE curr FF.I.I. ON Turn. Tbe men were working in a oat, levelling off ths ground for tbe new freight yard*. The cliff of rook on the lide of the cut which wa* being removed was twenty feet high. The blasts are 10 arranged that the rook is thrown toward the ont. Not antici- pating the blast, akx.nl 80 men were under the cliff when the blast exploded. A great mass of rock and earth rose in the air and pitched over into the oat, barying tbe men beneath it* awful weight. None of them bad time to ran, bat a few eioeped in a miraoulon* manner. Over 100 men were at work in the adjoining ruts and at once wers on the scene of theaocidrnlend began with picks and shovels to search for bodies From all over tbe hage mass of rook groans and shrieks isiued, and the air wa* tilled with the horrible noises and thesppe>als of tbe woonded and dying. A short half hoar and all was still, t xorpt fcr tbe working- men with picki in band, who by th* light of lantrrni worked late into the night remov- ing dtad bodies. BMOI.UH NKiHT MAIL Co in M to OrUf on It* Way to Farlt A Van UMOv*r BB Embank* mtVu* Man KllUd. A Farm cable say* : Early thii morning Paris wa* startled with a rerort that a frightful aooident had happened on tbe Northern Railway. Information wa* soon forthcoming that the English night mail from London to I'aris had come to grief. Tbe following ii tbe official report of the disaster whiob was embodied ia the report made by tbe Chemin de Ker duNord to the Minister of tb* Interior : " Detween Ailly and La Faloias, tb* night mail from Lon- don ran into a pisce of iron work that had been dropped by a good* train. Ths oonarqnenoe was that the engine, two car- riage* sod the mail van left the rail* and went over an embankment between tUc and lii metre* in height. Fortunately there was only one passenger in tbe car- riage that went over theernbankment. He wai an employee of the Chemin de Ker da Nord, and he wa* killed. Tbe driver and fireman escaped. The goard had compound fracture of the leg and other injuries. Tbe passengers eeoaped withool injury. They were conveyed back to Amiens and brought on to Paris by another route, and reached 1'arn at half pail nine witb tbe mail* Thar* wa* no interruption to the London- Paris traffic except a delay of about a quart*' of an hour to the half-pait eleven expflf* IMIB throdfcb having to wtrk tern- pr . iy on a single line. not two feet high, who was (tending com placently on the corner with a lighted cigarette in his hand. "I'm not going to arrest that kid," de- clared the policeman. " It's yoar duty to do it, sir !" shouted the man. " What is yonr number ? I'll report you for neglect of doty." When tbe lad felt the poliueman's hand on his shoulder be cried, and MX) persons gathered in the space of five minute*. Abase was heaped on the head of the polios- man by the onlookers, who declared it an outrage to arrest a child. Th* policeman never felt more uncomfortable, bat he was unable to explain that he had made the arrest against bis own inclination. Tbe man who bad caused the trouble disappeared. Tb* boy wa* Meyer Levy, aged 7, of No. nice little boy," 810,000 DAMAGES DEMANDED. (Buffalo News ) If a bridegroom was to cudgel bit braini for a month could be think of anythiog more embarraieing than to be made de- fendant, on tbe eve of bis own wedding, in a toit for alienating a wife's afTeation. Booh a case ii before the Supreme Court. Cards were issued for tbe marriage of Edward C. Burkbardt, of the well-known real eitate firm of Burkbardt Brothers, end MIPS Lanra Schmidt, daughter of Loreitz Bohmidt. a well-known German citizen of High meet. The oom plaint in an action bronght by John P. MoLaughlin against Edward C Bnrkhard 1 ' for ilO.OOO damagee, for alien- ating his .fe's affections and debauching her, was filed with tbe clerk of the Bnprtme Court this m >rning. John K. MoLaughlin isa newspaperman. For a number of years h* wa* Bufl.lo man ager for tbe Elmira Tel'ijnm. At preaent he it ipeoial correspondent for a number of ont of town newspapers. He alleges in his oomplaint that bii wife, Myra MoLaughlio, wai asiaulted by Edward C. Barkbardt at 184 Main street, in October, 1887, and that by threat* Mri. MoLangblin wa* made to 16 Lndlow street. " Don't cry, there's tenderly laid the newly-appointed Juitioe, Clarence W. Meade, who i* being " broke in " by Justice Bmith. Justice Smith laid, "Go right home Don't *mok* any more cigarettes. It i* against th* law." Richard MoManni, aged 15 year*, of No. 242 East Thirty-ninth street, wss standing al the corner of Thirty-ninth street and Second avenue smoking a cigarette Tuesday night, and Policeman O'Neil, of the East Thirty fifth station arrested him. In tbe Yorkvill* Police Court yesterday tbe lad pleaded ignorance of Ibe law, and Justice MoMabon discharged him after be bad promised to give np cigarette smoking until he attained tbe proper age. with Barkbardt for He claim* tlO.OOO HTKEKT OAK HoKKoK .% l.nt-iiMHitUr CrMhM luto Car Injuring A bout a Doiea People, (torn* I in. A Cleveland despatch says : A frightful aooident occurred at the Will n avenns crossing of tbe New York, Chicago, and Bl. Loais railway in this city about 7.30 Satur- day evening, by which at least a dozen persona were terrible injured, some fatally. I'bx crossing is on a steep grade, down which runs an electric street railway line. At the time the accident occurred a f night train was standing close to the crossing on the sonth track. An electric motor, draw- ing on* oar, was spproaohing from the soath. Tbe safety gates were pot up, and tbe road apparently clear. Just a* the motor had oroteed the railway track a locomotive, running twenty miles an hour, dsihed out from behind tbe freight train. The pilot of the engine struck tbe electric train between tb* motor and trail oa . . tear- ing them apart and hurling one to each lide of the track. At least a loore of persona were on tbe trail oar, and they were tumbled about in all direction*, tome being hurled about a ilo/.en feet away, and other* pinned under the oar, which was demolished. Tbe itrret railway barns were close to tbe soene of the wreck, and a rescuing party wai loon on hand. The victims were hurried away in ambulance! to the hos|itals. Following ii a list of irjnred : Minnie Mock, crushed, died at hospital ; J. A. Moore, right arm cruibed, leg lacerated , Annis Nieman^ollar bone broken, face cut ; Looiia Mock, out on bead and arrns ; Kdward Watson, right foot crushed ; Ohas. Woods, b dy braised : Oeo. Homer*, leg ont; George Neff, several braises ; lj/./ie Cable, badly bruised ; Li//.ie and Kli/.a Bragg, oat on head and braised , Mrs. Moouey, leg iprained ; Frank Hot*, braised about the hip, arm, and shoulder . Leona lluwi-ll, cat about the legi and bead. continue an intimacy two yaar* thereafter, damage*. plaoe indicated wsi the Buffalo cffioe of the Elmira paper, and Mr*. MoLanghlin wai frequently there alone in charge of the office while her bniband wai away gather- ing niw* and collecting money. Mr. MoLanghlin WM found at hi* mother's residence, 432 Michigan street, and wai at first tdverse to talk about the case. It will do no good to talk about it," he said. "The public will get to know all about it when the trial come* on." Where i* yoar wife now?" Living witb some friends at 49 Seventh ttreet." " Apart from yon?" " Ye*. I am living with my mother." " When did yon discover yoar wife's dis- loyalty 7" This summer not very many weeks ago." " How did yea discover It ?" " I foand some letters." " What sort of letters?" " Letters from Bnrkbardt. Bhe called heraelf Ida Brown and carried on a olande*- tine correspondence with him under that name. They were ordinary love letter*." "What did you do then?" " Confronted her witb what I found ont. She denied everything at first and after- ward ranfesaed all." Mr*. MoLaughlin is a brunette, petite of flgnre, Hresaei well and i* rather good look- ing. Bhe i* 27 yean old. Her maiden name wa* Myra House and she oams from Beamiville, Out., a village lying between Hamilton and Hi. Catharine*. She wa* married to McLaoghlin in thi* oily July Hlh, IHriJ, by Rev. O. Chapman .Joins, formerly pa*tor of Aibnry M. E. Cnuroh. McLaughlin ii one year older and ii a dark- haired, bright-eyed, handsome young man. Mri. MoLanghlin olaimi, her hasband lay*, that she was loyal to her marriage vows until she met Barkhardt. Louis Uranolein is McLaughlin'* attor- ney. He appeared before Judge Lewi* ynsier Jay and secured denial of a demand from the other side for a bill of particulars. The oomplaint was served several days ago. bul not (lied till to day. The defendant, through Roberts, Alexander A Messer, his attorneys, makes a general denial. Divorce proceedings were begun, it i* aid, some time ago, but abandoned for a peculiar reason. Mrs. MoLanghlin fell ill nd h.-r hasband was sent for and ipent the night at tbe lick woman's bedside oar- ing for her. Constructively this was a condoning of the alleged offence. Some larprinei are expected when the case oomes to trial. At noon to day it wa* learned that Mr. llurkhardt and Miss Schmidt were married this morning at St. Louis' Church. ROBE AND FELL 1,000 FEET. Yesterday the people attending the fair, lay* the Kingston Whig, saw a successful balloon asoension by Prof. MoEwtn. Jack- son, Mich., a famous aeronaut. He is a tall, wiry young man and a hostler in very sense of the word. The balloon, a brand new one mad* of cotton, was used for the first time. It'was inflated in tbe centre of the field, and the operation was seen distinctly from all parts of she gronndi. Before the canvas was ready to be filled there was a great deal of confusion. Small boy* and men insisted upon crowding the professor in his wcrk, and only by atanm- ing a eavage and determined attitude could he gat along. He did the work of lhre- policemen in keeping tbe amall boys out of the way. He secured twenty men to hold tbe balloon while it was being filled. Henry MoCambridge acted as engineer in lide. Tbe fire wai made out of barrel Have* and, witb a iplendid draft, made hot air rapidly. Gradually the canvas began to swell, and tbe professor remarked to the engineer : "Harry, is she filling rapidly " He replied : "Yon bet she ii, and it is get ting pretty hot innide." " We'll not be long on tbe ground," shouted Mr. MoEwen, as he leaped over tbe sod. In an instant he divested himself of hi* frock coat and silk hat, and appeared in a glittering blue costume, fringed with ailvery lace. He got hit parachute in order and in a short time wa* ready for th* asoeneion. Slowly the balloon began to rise upwards, while the ople watched it with intense interest. 'hen it left the earth the professor sprang on the bar hanging from tbe oanva* and in hit Might tang oat, " Good bye, Good bye, remember Josie Mills to night." He rose over 1.000 feet, drifting to the south. Be then jumped with hi* parachute wbioh bad been attached to tbe ltd* of the balloon. Tbe supreme moment in the affair wa* 'ben he left the balloon, and before the parachute opened. The drop wa* very ino- ceufnl and the professor lacded on Caton'i property near the Montreal road, in view of hand red* of people, who had followed him. On* young lady wa* *o overcome by tbe light of the man coming down that ibe fainted away. The balloon wai recovered a ibort distance from where the professor landed. Tbe Senator's Daughter. The Chicago Nttci say* : If you ihonld ask a rustic for what Grosse Pointe De- troit'* amateorith Newport i* noted, yon would probably receive the information : for rrnyi and for being the summer home of Senator McMillan." Here the croaking of the very terrestrial frog seems celestial music in the ear* of the knowing one*, and tbe anticipation* of petite sonper for wbioh this little French suburb is famous arouses a keen appetite. Surrounded by rolling green lawns, ten- nis courts, palm*, and blossoming hedge*, hereitands the summer home of Michigan'* senator, James McMillan. It* russet tints are thrown out effectively by tbe contrast- ing blue of July skies. Close to tbe pier, in light from its plaz- xas, lie a number of gay steam launches, dipping about merrily in the waters of Lake Bt. Clair, and with them the yachts Lela and Truant. Upon the shining dsck of tbe latter may be often seen a slender, refined-looking girl with a demure, fresh faoe and modest manner*. Here yachting suit clings affeotionly to tbe person of Senator McMillan'* only daughter, Mm Amy McMillan. Ihe white yachting cap covers a small, ele- gant shaped head. The brown eyes express a quiet enjoyment of life, which have been in th eir owner's possession just twenty one years. Sedate, reticent, limple in manner, Mill McMillan i* atterly unspoiled by her host of admirer*. -HOKT TOUfUBLTsW." What Happened at Wholesale Wedding la Pennsylvania. There lived some year* ago In We*trn Pennsylvania, according to " Harp**," an old circuit preacher, Father Weal by name, whose gsnial humor ami kindliness of heart bad grratiy endeared him to all tbe people of bis distrut. He wa* a particular favorite with Ihe young folks matrimonially inclined, and his opportunities 10 " tie the knot " were numerous. On one occasion he found upon bis arrival at a oertain town several couples availing bis bleaiing. Th* old man wa* tired and wished to make short work of the joo. " Stand up," he began, " and jine hands." Which being done, be rattled tbrough a marriage service tbat, like himself, wan original. " Then," he laid, when it wa* finished, " ye oan go ; yo'ro man and wife, ev'ry one o' ye." Two of the ooupU* hesitated, and finally made it ap[>rant tbat in the sudden " jinmg " they had be-'ome confused, and had taken the hanrli of tbe wrong person*. The preacher'! eye* twinkled as he took in situation, but he instantly straightened and witb a wave of bis band die; them. " I married ye all." be said ; yojrselve*." raMlonato Heroine*. The "Speaker's" second article add to lady novelists is " on heroine* who Durst ' and roll across tbe floor." This heroine (we read) is a* " untiring in her efforts to please' as an actress, and she begin* at one*. Bhe never merely laughs or cries she bursts, whether it be into laughter or tear*, as recklessly a* tbe circa* ladies burst through tiisoe paper. Bhe doe* nothing, indeed, in tbe common way. When she visits friend* she sit* down (plump) on their invitation, and after the Guardsman goe* she falls heavily on hi* departure. In ber agony she roll* acres* her bedroom floor with ber hair down. In real life, perhaps, she oould not be quite *o regardless of ber person (not to (peak of her clothes), but she i* a delicious sensa- tion to read about. I notice that she ia aine timei in ten a married woman. Tb* moit extraordinary ihmg about ber and her hasband, the earl, i* that they are madly, wildly passionately in love, bat each thinks tbe other hate* him or her. Bhe discovers immediately after th* wedding that he i* sup- posed to have married ber for ber money , or he discovers that the other man once kissed her on the lip*, and after that they pa** with a cold bow. They meet, how- ever, at dano** at their own bouse ; and in tbe conservatory hs ask* her hoarsely to dano* with him. All thi* lime her eye* are b'a/.ing like two furnace*, on* on each lid* of ber uose though they used to be lakes with a forest of pines planted round about and drawing her figure op until she could fan the ceiling with her ripe hair she says that if he dares to touch ber waist she will out it off. He then strides hoarsely away, and no sooner baa tbe door closed than she moan* " Ob, my God '" and Hing- ing herse'f at the trader begin* to roll across the floor with her hair down. Back and forwsrd she rolls, back and forward, and any man'* heart would be touched to see her thus. If the earl were only to re- turn now ! But there is no us* hoping for tbat, and by and by sbe i* back in th* ball- room tlirting outrageously and cold exter- nally a* ice, though still on the boil inside, and tbe earl gets hoarser than ever. 51. Jame$' (iatettt. BTemea Po Poultry-breeder* may read with interest tba following statistics which have been collected, says oar correspondent, for the r'renoh Department of Agriculture. The income derived by French people who rear fowl*, according to octroi and market re- turns, ii U37, 100,000 francs, of which 16M 600,000 francs represent th* value of the flesh and lNS.600,000 francs th'.i of the eggs. Tbe<|uantity*old in poultry yard* is immense, a* i* also the mimbvr ussd in ths homes of thoee who rear I owl*. These figurss do not find their way into statis lion. Lundon l>ail\/ Ntiri. ToUtoi's last crusade I* laid to be against tobacco and alcohol. It ii stated tbat he ha* a work nearly ready for the pies. in wbioh hs strongly inveighs against gluttony and drunkenness, and shows in vivid manner ths tffsct of narcotics and intoxicating drink* on Ibe human lyitem. A Mew Variety. " Hammer brave" ii, according to the New York Sun, the very latest thing out in way of polite slang. A summer brave, ssysMr. Dana., is not a dude, though his apparel IH gorgeous and his general appear- ance wonderful to behold ; he is not a masher, though he is a heart breaker, and he is not necessarily a brainless fop, though Ihe preinmption i* strong tbat ha coma* does to it. lie differs from these varieties of the tailor mad* man in that h* make* nil appearance in the warm season of the year alone, and at fashionable inniini r reeorti exclusively. He ii not to be seen at Coney Island, Cheltenham Beach, or other plaoei where common people congregate, but he is numerous at Saratoga, Newport, Lung Branch, Wankesha, and Ooonomo woo. Whether be has come to stay, or whether be will gradually fade away like the dude, i* yet to early to tell. Chicago Ntvi. 9 Ouiupi>alB*j Machine. There ha* been on view for some llttie time in the city an ingenious composing and justifying machine. It doe* not dis pen** with the service* of a oompoiitor, but assist* him in his work. He picks np his type and drop* it down * funnel, the machine automatically placing it, th* right end and side uppermost, and a* each line i* completed it i* fed into a galley. The galley is then taken to tb* justifying machine, when the lines are ipaoed so a* to axsotly fill a oolomn. Htveral machines ar* in operation at the printing work* of Messrs. Olay and Boos, limited, Bread Btrevl Hill, E C. Particulars oan b* ob- tained from Mr. U. Hsgborg, of the Lager- mann Typolheter and Juitifler Company, 36 Queen Victoria Street, E. Q. -Indiutriti. Bait Tawa*, Mich., ii mostly run by ladies. One is postmaster, another runs tbe telegraph ofno* and has female m***en- ger*, another run* th* belt hotel, lady printer* get out the weekly newspaper, a ton* woman manage* a big tea boo**, and two other* have g*n*ral stores, ths school teachiriar* women, and so are the store think- U> li.-liirli.h.T. Never fail to keep an appointment. Never delay in answering letter* or re- turning book*. Nsver tell long storie* of which you yourself are the hero. Never inconvenience people by com- ing in late at church, theatre lecture or concert. Never itop people who are harrying along the street and detain them for ten or twenty minutes. Never call on people just at bedtime, or daring dinner or before they are downstairs in the morning. Never, when you *e* two people engaged In earnest talk, step in and enter upon a miscellaneous conversation. Never speak disrespectfully of yoar parents nor of your sister*. People may laugh at yoar wit, bat they will despite you for it. Never begin to talk about " this, tbat and everything " to one who i* trying to nad th* morning paper or a book or anything else Never talk when other* are singing or doing anything else for yonr amusement ; and never Ihe initant they are ftniihed begin to talk upon a different topio. Ntw York World. Uyelnf Hoar*. It ii laid that Ihe prooeu of dyeing rose* i* becoming a remunerative branch of in- dustry with Knglish horticulturists. In- stead of growing new varieties of roses, Inch is a process of years, they simply grow ordinary white roses and din them into a chemical solution, wbioh in an hour converts them into the most magnificent yellow tea roses, the rare scarlet red or the peculiar shade of bluish violet which has been one of the favorites of the season. In a similar way pink rose* are turned into blossom* of the deepest red. Borne years sgo, before this branch of " flora! chemis- try" wa* developed, the first experiment* were successfully made in Franc* with the popular pink hortensia, which, by being watered with a solution of iron, assumed a blue shade. UentlaU In BeutUud. " In Scotland," said a dentist, who Is a native of ths land of the heather, " there ar* many people who do not know who or what a dentiet i*. But canned fruits are being inlroduoed there, and so destructive are thev anon tbe teeth that many more people will require the services of a den- tist." Detroit t'rtt Freu. How i iti.- Qrow. New York oily put np 6,722 new build- ings last year, at a ooat of 75. 912,816 Boston followed with 4,431 building*, coil- ing 13^,400,000. Philadelphia came third with 11,965 building*, coiling (26,000,000 ; Brooklyn, fourth, with 4,*>00 buildings costing |25,679,400, and Chicago fifth, with 4.931 buildings coating $25,065,500. The next oily to Chicago wa* Denver, where 2,741 new bailding* 00*1 S10.H07 :t77. The amount of new building* in no other oily reached 10,000,000, although Si. Loui* oame prettv near that figure, and Minne- apolis, Bt. 1'aul and Pitubnrg Hood each ai about |s,000,000. A Scotch Mermaid. An interesting spectacle ha* recently been seen in tbe Orkneys. It is probably the first of it* kind ever authenticated in living memory. A correspondent write* to a contemporary : " What ii laid to be a mermaid has been seen for some week* at staled time at South side, Ueerness. Hi* about six to seven feet in length, with a little black bead, white neck and a snow- white body and two arm*. In swimming il appears just like a human being. At time* it will come very doe* inshore and appear to be silling on a sunken rook, and will wave and work it* hand*. It bai ntver been teeo entirely out of water. Many person* who doabteu ill genuineness now snppoe* it to be a deformed seal." Thf Ttblt. A TV lu pent n e Hun's Offer. Here is a holiness offer from a grocer in Kirkuville, Missouri. Could not any Can- adian grocer make a similar proposal ? Th* sum would be 173. Here i* the pro- posal : " Any man who drinks two drams of whiskey per day for a year, and pays 10 cents a drink for it, oan have at oar store thirty sacks of dour, 220 pounds of granu- lated ingar and 72 pound* of good green coffee for the same money and gel |'2.50> premium for making tbe change in hi* expenditures." Tbat ii a temperance lee- tore in a very few lines. She Lived to Learn. Mr. Caoitiqn* And so old Mr*. Gadd i* dead ' Mr. Carry News Ye*, dead and buried. Mr. Canitiiine Dead and buried f Humph ' I'll wager that by this time aha knows all the family antecedents of tb* woman in tb* adjacent lot. Life THI IUMPLB HUB CHEEK. clerk*. Aii Advantageous fnaltlon. Mr. Knight From where would yon like to view the parade ? Mr*. Knight- from a Given Point. Mr. Knight Where'* tbat ? Mr*. Knight I don't know , bat I notice that all parade* are, so long in passing that plaoe. 0. B. Wheaton ha* resigned Ib* Pr**|. denoy of Ihe Independent Order of Railway Conductors, ami E. D Nash, of Bt. Albani, VI., inooaad* him. A miftd W. CX T. V. In Northern Wisconsin there is a W. C. T. U. composed of Americans, Germans and Norwegians. One week Ihe devotional exercise* will b* conducted in one language and the next week in another. Sometimes the Bible will be read in Knglish, Ibe prayer made in Norwegian and the songs sung in Herman, bnt tbe entire audience is always attentive, and a remarkably friendly feeling prevails among the different nation- alilit*. Too Had. ' Did yon propose to Henrietta ? " 11 Te*." Engage*?" " No. I wa* for th* League, but she pre- ferred Ihe Brotherhood." Owing to tbe almost total destruction cf the crop* in portion* of Northern Dakota, it I* expected that tbe destitution of last year will be eclipsed by tbat of tb* coming wtBtar. tibe really lao t handsome, for bur bair's an ugly sliatla ; Her eyee are like a pale blue glass of circus lemonade ; Her DOM la short, her obln Is long, ber voice has lot asqaeak ; Bat. ah! you'd bo dellfhted with tb* diiutle la ber oheek. I'm often sorely constrained her looks to criti- cise ; I'm sorry tbat I can t admire her hair, ber nose bar eyes ; But of tba unattractive things I'm powerless toipeak Whenever I may gaxe upon tbe dimple in bar ohH>k. Of all th* many pretty (Iris my bsart has ever known. Tie sue of all tbe lot I would gladly oall my owu 4 . For while in many ways her claim to bt-auty very weak I'd siuiply like to own for life the dimple iu her eueek. _ Prats* Indeed. Father I tell yon, young man, it i* pretty hard for a father to see hi* daughter leave home and take up life'* burdens with a young man. Young man Wall, Emily i* an especially good girl. Father Good t Why, air, ike i worlb bar weight in ioe.

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