Anowaway landed at Waterford from the ommahip OrMamoro. 1mm Liverwol for Bunmom. He was ill. the doom:- uy. of Autumn chalets. Three other stow- Mnyl landed are naw missing . 1th better h be a boggu than no ignorant non: for u begga- only man many. 3 un ignorant person wants humunlty. The mail Humor VIlMyI, for Cuba. has returned to G, n. her honor having ox. olrdod, by winch seven of her crew were .4“, I The Burmese authorities hnvn captured 235 robbers bum-en mama, 1nd Bhuno. rim of mem hhh‘ been cmumcd. Dating the day ending at 9 o‘clock Int nigh. there were ï¬fteen deaths a Museillea nd two 1» Toulou. with ï¬ve new cases. " Your sweetheart alv’nys bores you with her singing, I uuderatnnd. when you oallon her." aid at Bumem‘lle young man to 3 friend the min I" day. “ She does." was the mouthful reply; “ aha does; Iliuga all the time. II wouidn't be no bad if she had a good voice. Inn “'3 a regular aoreooh." “ A port of vocal mam. she's got, I suppose ?" 1 _ “I- 3- “ WC]! Ln" ll}uh null i! r "A‘- .A .v- v. v“ - nun-u- uuun 508. I. nuppoual ' “ Well, you may call it a vocal munia if you like. bu: I on in I sort of yoller-fevat.†-80mervillc Journal. seems to blast her. Long conversations oeuse her to turn purple end bloat. She has no desire to est, end her thirst is satis- ï¬ed by holding wster in her mouth and ejecting it. 'l'hie she does seversl times e do}. Her stomach feels full. as though she had recently eaten a heerty meel. Her sickness is socompenied b no delusion whstever, end her mind is eu- end rations]. She would he sled to out it she could, and. at the request of her physicien. has made attempts to enter drink, but with theresult described. All eflortstoieed her in other mys than by mouth have proved lutile. There is no deniul ol the met that for 163 de 5 at noon to-dsy she has not tested! ,end thet for eight weeks she has not swellowed.‘ Her case stands without parallel. Dr. Zoller. ettenuing physncten. says she looks as though i-he had normal dropsy. Dr. Ayers thinks it is a peculiar form of St. Vitul' deuce. days wee in terrible distress. Her body bloated until it measured nearly twice ehe natural size nboui the wniet. For eigln weeks bhe has not swallowed a drop of wneer or other nourishment. Attempte hnve been made to give her a teaepoontul of Inter. bun in invariebly brought on eon- vuleione and urea» diners“. Every exertion her; and since Much 11th she hes not eaten e mom]. For some time she was able to drink either milk or water. and drank two or three glasses each dey. After a time she could not. drink milk. end water only was teken. and mat in small quantiï¬es. At lengeh she could not drink even water. One a.) she drank a glass of water and yes Mixed with convulsions, fend for two During tue early psri 0! he: sickness she relished delicacies, and the neighbors sent in snob little dnahes as they thought would please her. Her sppetih was not ravenous, still she ate as much as an invalid ordin- _u'ily anld. A5. yang“! solid food distressed Iinoe e you ego leet October. there is none. Snuee January let ehe use not been nhle to raise her heed from the pillow. About three months ago ehe began to have trouble with her eyes, end nmong light was paiulul to her. She now liee 1n eduk room and weere blue glnnee. The color or the gleeeee oontreete strongly with the pole. white face md mgwy‘beddmg. _ h In none cases where persona ere conï¬ned to their bed for a long period some show themselves and become very troublesome. In her one. though one by not lett her bed body reeumed its motion. She leele the reeult 0! thus treatment yet, and says that there is not n rpot on her person that is not lore. The wugnt of a pm in actually pain. In! and cannot be endured. Her arms are larger and harder than one would expect forayoung women 0! her size in perfect health. To the touch they indicate strong muscles. In fact, all the muscles or her body are well developed. This is accounted for by we constant motion of her body. which keepe them in exercise. Another remarkable thing about it is that she he. not on her person any bed eoree. Some thuught the constant moving wee voluntuy. Ole physiclan us by her aide to: three hour-e. during which time there was not the alighsea; diminution of the . Another phyawian said he could Ilop it it he wneheu. and. seizing her by the shoulders. held her tightly a. few minutes. pug the luataui he released his hold her o! the rum. In; and 900:. Atlength her ‘11.“ had a Mduwlou muvumeut to the right The doctors J-Ingzmded the me u 8!. Vltlll' dludu. Tue usual remedies were ed. bug with un bone!“ to the peï¬eut. 8 egrew worse. and r...» mouone. at ï¬rst conï¬ned to me hmbe on one side, seized her whyle body. _ The motion_ wen hm her same body tram hide to side with 3 lsy of a pendulum at the at: of ï¬lly per minute. This molion la rpetual for menu-mu or meaty-three ours out the "not; ~luur, and is wholly involuutuy. For n hour or moreâ€"never over twoâ€" in the niguu she sleeps lrom eheer exhaus- tionmun In awakened by the slightest noise. The moment. the: she wakena the ceaseless rolling begun-s, no stop only when, worn out. lhg Igniu alu'ue to real. perpendicular. and like thee o! a person luring wood, only no: so violent. In time. m nuts mosiou was added one My roihug. and the two were combined. Luely the moflon hoe been telling only. sue rolle oonetenigly, moving we on)», u . . low 5011mm. hm la mu ooueolouu Ami :ukl. Mien Bmuley wean drwmuur,uurl when able :0 work bod plenty t; do. Bueie 20 you: of age. end 'u nltumlly bright and inmmgont. Two yarn-301mg: July aha was «ten ill. end wee oompcuu! w rennin in bed. She im- roved some» me, and was oble to be shout. t in Ozluber was compelled main hue her but. and hen never since been able to lenv: u. The ï¬rst opprooeh o! the M was: (rumbling :surl choking o! the right laud. {allowed by involunhry motion of the right. leg and woe. Allenath her A am In". in. hlved 163 mu- Will- «I run and It.“ Week! “nu-om Dunk. A Fun. ["111“, N. Y.. Mt» uyu: Min Kuetium. .~ .nugono without toodtor 168 a»... ,, . . (_ low_tg-nigpt. but is nil] I 0le WITHOUT I Pflllfllu. What no Called ll. Meine in opening her eyee over the for- tnne she line in poteto huge every year in the form of Perie green. Ono deeler in Portlend nye he bee eold ten tme thle yeer. end he has no doubt thet the for- mere of Meine hove scattered over their poteto ï¬elde e hundred tone of the poison. et e ooet of over 050.000. Glastly Belles at the Dread llavec Call-ed. The scene of the terrible eruption in Java last August has been witnessed by two French scientiï¬c commissioners. who graphically describe the deplorable condi- ticn of the region nearly a year alter the disaster. A distinct line of desolation marks the affected district. The land is either perfectly here or covered with a thick layer of mud or stones. Every tree has disappeared. stagnant salt pools breathe fever in every direction and a tew wretched bamboo huts afford the only sign of life. The fertile, closely-populated spot where the town of Anjer formerly stood is a deserted. marshy plain. without a vestige of either houses. plantations orinhahitauts. and the small town of Telok-Belang has similarly vanished. In the nelghborin Island of Bibeei tidal waves have washe away the crust of stones and laid bare the remains o! a village. with the skeletons o! the inhabitants lying in the midst of their domestic surroundings. Over four miles inland is ahig steamer. which was carried ashore by a huge wave into the forest. and still spans a small river like a bridge. The three little islands which ap cared alter the eruption are gone. and a cone vapor- one cloud hangs over the volcano Krakatos. This cloud, however. is nothing but the dust raised by constant avalanches of stones rolling down the mountain side. Till TERRIBLE EARTHQUAKE teen rounds. She immediately began to prsot es the faith healing afl herself among acqueintenoes. Recently she was in White Pleins'.‘N.Â¥_., snd before thet in Norris- ,V--__ -_â€"- on. -‘vnnlu‘ town. Pa. She in now in a. amnll town in Connecticut. A New York deepateh says: Miss M. M. Hutchins. daughter of the Rev. Hiram Hutchins, ot the Bedford Avenue Baptist Church, Brooklyn. was sick for twenty- three years with a spinal disease. Physi- cians could not relieve her. At times she suffered gent pain, and was compelled to keep to er bed for weeks. Once in a while she was able to walk feehly around. the house. but a new attack would speedily restore her to her former helpless condition. In January last Miss Hutchins deter-‘ mined to try the faith cure. and she sum- moned to her bedside. at 456 Willonghby avenue, Mrs. G. 8. Whitney, of 142 East Forty~ninth street. this city. Mrs. Whit. ney practises the faith cnre. On January 39th she anointed Miss Hutchins and prayed. Miss Hutchins immediately arose from her bed. dressed, went down two flights of stairs to the basement, and ate dinner with the family. Alter dinner she walked to the Bedford Avenue Baptist Church, a quarter of a mile from the house, and told the congregation the circumstances attending her recovery. Four days afterward she baked a lot of pies. She has since remained in perfect health. and has inoreasedflin weight thir- ‘g-uâ€" --â€"_J- I‘L- 2,, nun Hutchin- W'alk- to Church uul Bake- Ple- Alter 23 You- at Help- [ecu-en. to the light. Again the cat presented _her left ' lorepaw,and again the pilot struck viciously ‘ at it. only to again miss and to receive the violent right-hander alongside the head. This was repeated four times. when the ‘ snake, weakened and thoroughly dispuited. turned and tried to drag itself away. In- stantly the cat sprang upon the retreating reptile, and with two or three strokes 01‘ her sharp claws tore it to pieces. She‘ carried the remains of the dead snake to a distant part of the yard. where she dug. a hole and buried it. Bellas went on to a rocky hill not far away, thinking the kittens might be there. He saw a crevice in the rocks which looked like a snug hiding place for them. and he thrust his hand into it. Instantly he teltasharp, stinging pain in his ï¬ngers, and it quickly shot up his arm to the shoulder. A rattlesnake had sunk its fangs into his tore ï¬nger, and retained its hold with such tenacity that Bellas could scarcely shake it off. He killed the snake and hurried home. An old woman named Bailey sucked the wound. while Belles drank plentifully of whiskey. After suck- ing the bite thoroughly Mrs. Bailey ap- plied table salt to it. This and thewhiskey was kept up, and after 24 hours Belles. who ‘had passed into delirium. was restored to consciousness. At the end of three days he was pronounced out of danger. The old cat has killed several snakes since the dis- appearance ot her kittens. She never hunted snakes beiore. From that circum- “ stance it is believed that her kittens were j eaten by snakes, and that she knows it and is avenglng their death by killing snakes. proper time. The one stop . and reï¬ning not left lorepew centioualy old it out to- werd the ilot. Like n flesh the letter struck at t e pew, but the cat. was quicker still. end bringing her tight pow lmo ploy deal: the enuke a blow on the side of the head dint knocked it back a toot or more. The reptile, evidently greatly cut-prised end meddened by ï¬ne en's attack. gcturned Plnne No. 4 on the line of that road. One day lut week a couple oi smell kit were mining irom his house. mid he star out to look for them. nthey were greet pets with his inmily. As he was going through his heck yud he now the mother of the kittens etenllng elon through the gun. Bella stopped. and noting nhend ot the out. new 3 large pilot snake lying in the green. about nix feet dietcut. There‘ wu no doubting the loot thnt the cat wu‘ ‘etenling on the ante. end it won equnlly loin thnt the choke knew it And was ready or the nttnck. At ï¬rst Bella thought he would kill the entire at once. but he chwgcd hll mind and wctched to see what the reeult oi the impending ii ht would he. The cat crept to within 5 oot of the snake. which in randy to etrike ot_ the All old 0-: lim- u-hu II . Bela-um: MCI-tr. A Hnwloy (Penn) upon I. I: Anduw Bella. 3 cu mum on the onus Ivnni. 99d ggmwy'q aggvmyfgngoui.‘ veg n AVINGING IIIIII KITTENS. CUBE!) BY FA l'l'll. A New York despetch seys: While pess- ing through North Fifth street. Willisms- burg, shortly after midnight, oflioer Phelen of the Fifth Precinct police. heerd e crush. end then sew the body of e men lying on the flagging below the basement steps of the house occu ied by Theodore Kornorhis. at No. 159. hen the ofï¬cer reeohed the prostrate form the men wee deed. An open window on the thirdfloor end it regged hole through the wooden porch over the stoop ‘ showed thet the men hed fallen from the height ebove. The oceupente of the house were eroused. end Miss Bettie ran from the house, end throwing herself et the side of the body lifted his heed in her erms end begged in piteoue tones for him to speeh. The ofï¬cer informed the young ledy thet the men wee deed, but she re- fused to believe it. end es she kissed the 1pellid lips. excleimed: “Oh, my Williem, jspeek to me." The young women wee led into the house. where it wes leerned thet the deed men wee William Mooney, 33 yeers old. e lewyer of No. 247 Broedwey, this city. He wee engeged to be married to Miss Bettie Kornohie. He celled et her house Bundey efternoon end remeined until evening. When ebout to leeve he beceme ill. end ee he did not recover it wee considered wise for him to remain over night. He wee given the hell bed-room on the third floor end retired ehont 10 o'clock. The bed wes on e level with the open window. It is believed thet Mooney ewoke suddenly. and feilingh remember where he wes rolled out the wrong side of the bed through the window. His skull wee freetured end his neck broken. JUST BEFORE Ill! MARRIAGE. Killed by Falling In- the Home OI Ill- lllelded Bride. and received end enawered the message, signing the reply “ 0. K." " X " in the initiel of one of she operators here. The Fletcher message he deetroyed. The ac- onned we: brought before the Police Megiemte this thornoon, end was ï¬ned 834.60. Alex. Gen. ohuged with being on memory, wee lined e like mount. ASt. Thomas despatoh says: Edward Gouge, operator on the Canada Southern at Taylor. was arrested and placed in the lockup this afternoon on a charge of tam- pering with the wires. Some weeks ago Superintendent Moriord. of the Canada Southern Railway, discovered that the wany’e telegraph lines had been suc- ully manipulated b outside parties. Mr. Morlord set energet oally to work in- vestigating. On August let. a deepatch was sent m the operator at Fletcher station to the Superintendent re rting that Con duotor Fiddler h passed the depot without getting his order.1 The operator at Fletcher received an answer signed “X." the signa- ture of the St. Thomas oflioe. ‘ stating that the message had been received. As a matter of fact. however, the report never reached St. Thomas, showing that the wire had been tapped. The result 01 the investigation is the arrest of Gongs. and evidence has been abtained which shows that when the operator at Fletcher called up St. Thomas. the accused success- fully attached the ground wire to the main line at Taylor station. and the electric cur- rent was oonduoted into the earth. His instrument was then put in operation and on the Fletcher operator inquiring. “ Is that St. Thomas?" Gangs answered “ Yes." An Operator Tap. the Wire: and order- . Tn!- “ Proceed. to be oomminder-in-ohiet.†There is always. at least to us “onto: barbarians," a comic nudeflone 1n the most serious ut~ tonnes of Ohineio wisdom. paioe aBoioty dominant in thos‘e days?) building the gran wall to keep out the gram. and apppintjngjlaq pair-gppuept Perhaps the moat interesting of all these writersia Chung Tan. of the lourth cen- tury B. 0.. a heterodox philosopher. l. 4.. a dissenter lrom the orthodox Conlucian. ism. says the London Spectator. Here is o of his utterances; it is put into the *th of a dying man: “ What have I to f ? Ere long I shall be decomposed. My left shoulder may become a cock. and I shall herald the approach of morn. My right shoulder will become a crossbow. and I shall be able t) get broiled duck. My buttocks will become wheels; and. with my soul for a horse. I shall be able to ride in my own chariot. I am now working out my destiny on earth. I shall then be com- pletisg it in the inevitable. Content with the natural sequence of these states. joy and sorrow touch me not." This last sentence is very Lucretian. Somewhat different is the sense in which he delivered himself to a friend who would have condoled with him on the death of his wife. The friend was very much scandal- . ized to llnd him beating time on a bowl and singing. The philoso ner defended him- self : " When she di I could not help being affected by her death. Soon. how- ever. I remembered that she had already existed in a previous state before birth. without form. or even substance ; that while in that unconditioned condition sub stance was added to s int ; that this sub. stance then assumed orm; and that the next stage was birth. And now. by vir- tue of a former change. she is dead. pass- ing from one phase to another. like the sequence of spring. summer. autumn and winter. And while she is thus lying asleep in eternity. for me to go about weeping and wailing would be to proclaim myself igno- rant of these natural laws." The practical outcome or his philosophy may be thus exhibited. One day. when he was ï¬shing. message came to him from the prince oï¬ering high ofï¬ce. He replied: “I have heard there is a sacred tortoise which has been dead three thousand years. and which the prince keeps packed up in a box on the altar of his ancestral shrine. Now. do you think that that tortoise would rather be dead and have its remains thus honored. or be alive and wagging its tail in the mud ?" The messenger replied thatnodoubt it would rather be alive. Thereupcn Chung Tau said: “ Begone l I. too. elect to remain wagging my tail in the mud." It is amus- ing to read. among the utterances of an- other sage. that among the ten follies which overthrew the Oh'in dynasty were “ melt- ing down all weapons and making twelve huge ï¬gures with the metal? (was the The (Jo-lo Undo"... that Perv-den their no“ Dem-u Productions. 0N8 SOURCE OF DISAB'I‘BBS. CHIN-ll WBI I‘BII. " Well, how did you know that they hed been drinking? †“ ’Ceuee, when they oeme heck pep. kissed me. end his breath smelt just like the stuff you pm in mince piee."-â€"Nw York Journal. Another plot of the Roenien Nihiiiete bee come to grief. The intended victim was 001. Senoroff. ot the Rneeinn gender. maria. The plot, however, wee dieoovered in time. end twenty or thirty nrreete heve been made. “ Let's Decor-u.†" Msmms. is doom-“ion mmsthing good to think ? " " Why, child, of course not! When makes you uk such a ridiculous question 7 ' “ ’Oause I heard psps any to Uncle Tom, ' Let’s dooonts.’ sud they went out." U W." Inn- 331‘ cu“. L_-_ AL-‘ AL ,,, n c ,ï¬ -- _-â€"-, u-vvv.‘ 000 ; but the provisions of hie will beve been kept entries secret. and the document hoe never been ' proved.‘ The Queen mum also have saved 3 net enm out of her income, which has nlwnye been very well managed. Since the denlh of the Prince Consort the generel edlninielrnion of the Queen’s rivete elfeire has been conï¬ded to Lord 8y ney. who in n ccnemnmete mm of bneineee." Tm London Truth, referring to the en- nouncement thet the Queen in ebont to melxe a new will. seys: “ Her Mejeety possesses en immense fortune. The eetete cl Osborne is et least ï¬ve times es velueble esit was when it wee purchesed by the Queen end Prince Albert ebout forty yeers ego. The Belmorel property of Her Majesty now extends over 30,000 eores. Oleremont wee greeted to the Queen for life in 1866. with reversion to the country; zend Her Msjeety purcheeed the property outright three yeere ego for £78,000. Prob- ebly its merket wine is not much under £150,000. The Queen elso poeeeeeee some property et Oobonrg, end the Princees Hohenlohe left her the Ville Hohenlohe et Baden, one of the best residences in the lace. With regerd to per-none! property. r. Nield left the Queen over £500,000. end the pro rty lelt by the Prince Consort is believe to have amounted to neerly £6m.~ Mn . I._L .I._ __4,,5, mule. Dr. Fleming, chiei veterinery euro goon in the army. acid thet for twenty years docking hcd been stopped in the eer- vice. and his experience wee thet homes which were allowed to retain their teile were more useful. The following motion. propoeed by Professor Ake, wee edopted uncnimoualy: " Thet in the opinion of this meeting the operation of docking hone: in 3 means of averting dunger to men. end is not. cruel operation when shown to be A'r the National Veterinu'y Alumin- tlon’e general meeting at Manchester, on July slat. an nnimetod dieoneeion nose during the afternoon on 3 paper reed on the subject of docking home of their tails. levers! eponkere defended the preotioo. and it was etrongly oondomnedgby others, petitioninrly i‘i‘a‘the mot the f' polo " mi- Ansmmu: private Act, the Earl of Devon’s Estate Bill, was recently intro- duced in the House at Commons. It em- ‘ powers Lord D. and his son. Lord Courtenay, to sell every acre of the vast family estates. preserving no other house but Powderhnm, and deals with mor debts amounting to $1,250,000. The Bill has become a necessity through the conduct of Lord Courtenay. who a few years ago psssed through the Bankruptcy Court with debts amounting to 33.500.000. The Conrtenays. who are. o! to al descent. owned in time past no inoon derahle por- tion of Devonshire. besides holding one of the largest properties in Ireland. flush of their Irish property has been sold. Turn are now about a dozen bridges acroee the Thames at London. and the corporation has just decided to build another. Two centuries ago London bridge was the only one, and the hold propoaition to throw aoroee another as tar up an Put- ney was kicked out of the House 0! Com- mone. The people were afraid that another bridge would “ make the skirts of the metropolin too big for the whole body."and would ruin the property on which the maintenance of London bridge depended. One statesman went so tar as to urge that the second bridge would be an end of Lou. don’e prosperity. _ Tm: late Duke of Wellington was not wealthy for a British peer. The Strath- fleldeaye property. the nucleus of which was purchased by the nation. extends over 16,000 acres. and produces a rental of about 85 an acre. Three or tour thoueand more acres in Harte, Somerset and Berke make up the whole of the entailed property. which is worth some $110,000 a year. The Duke had also an estate in Spain voted to his father by the Cortes. and described in maguiloquent language by Spanish writers. though not worth much. ‘ Camus going ebroed for the ï¬rst time ere advised by e correspondent to make up their minds. it they are 0! moderate meene. to lookto their pennies. The eervente on board treneetlentio eteemere hove been averted. They ehould be only moderately tipped. Ten ehillinge. Englieh money. at the onteide, or ï¬ve ehlllinge when no epeeiel service is rendered. ere deelered to be the right emonnte. The sovereign fee is e mistake. unleee some ettentione are re- quired. Mas. E. M. Kmo, the London dress relormer, wishes to know whet is more beautilnl. smong all God's crested things. than the ï¬gure 0! as women ? 0! course the answer to this must depend upon the women. It is by no menu difï¬cult. while walking along the prinoip street 0! sny oity tooonnt by the score women whose ï¬gures are unbesutifnl beyond redemption and made so by tight lsoing. Tan pin: 0! using the enormous water power of the Alp. for working electric reiL wnye in Bwitzerlnnd in About to tote n deï¬nite ehe . the idea being to connect the town 0 St. Moritz nnd Pontreeinn by on electric reflwey (our end thrceqnertere milee long. the motive power to beenppiied by the mountein etrcnme; the line. in once the plan proves n encccee. to be extended 5 eonuderable distance. CURREN T 1OPICB. The New York Graphic one: They eey Sheknpeere used along. but they Y will here e herd time to meke poo le believe he ever eeked e men to " wipe off in chin." Well. if he didn't, he eeme mighty nee: ‘it. In " As You Like It." i; 9. he eeye: " Stroke your china." Agein in Henry IV., i: 3, there is the phreee: “ Hie chin new ree ." which ehowed thet the young men h just wiped off his chin with e reror. It in herdly eeie to any thet there in enything the mmortel Williem did not write ebent. a -___- .._v_- w‘vvv†000 hue been psid to tone. grendeone. ooueine. etc., o! titled funnies for more or leesâ€"genenlly lees-noun services ren- dered to the Sate. Neuly hell 3he mem- bere of the upper Home hold or heve held oommieetonein the umy and any. and seventy new peengee hnva been created within the put ten yenn. - The House of Lords is oiten celled the house of lendlorde, uye a London letter. and not without res-on, sinee out of 509 privileged to legislete for the countryâ€"or. as some eey. themselvesâ€"no lees than 448 no lsndlorde in the fullest sense of the term ; thet is, they derive the whole or the greeter put of their revenues from tend. Fifteen million notes of lend. with n taste-gets rent roll of neuly £15,000,000, represent their property and income. while mother £750,000 in the shape of pensions, annuities and eelsriee also tau annually to the lot of this privileged class. In nddition t3 this. no one on yet proper] calculate the sums whioh ere drawn yeer y by their relations end hengers-on from the netionnl exohequer, but it hes been reokoned thet flthip the lust thirty years about £70000,- his house. where. hnving killed him with n mallet, end censured the fragments of the body. with the exception of ‘he heed. which be boiled. to the four winds. wnl trucked. discovered, and executed on Sept. th, 1880.â€"Philadu,hia Times. furnished epertmentin the Rue de Riche- lieu. 0n the following dey Oetherin. dlseppeered. and three deye later portions of her body. mutilated with e hetohet. were discovered in the Seine. the legs neer the bridge of Le Concorde end the root of the body at Chiillot. Lhuieesier had killed her with e hammer, and out up the body, put the pieces in e. beg. and earned them in a. wheelbarrow to the river. He was arrested e tew’ deye leter enjoying himself with the money or he victim. He wes executed March 30th, 1836. He died like u cowerd, crying end complaining thet the peine in his leg made him feel es it they hed been out of below the knees. Alter a. long and bloody series of eimiler: crimes. Figaro leevee Frence for a moment to recell the cone of Mseetdeg, the butcher of Antwerp. Belgiummho out his wife into 133 pieces, boiled the fragments in e pot for melding soup, end then oerried them ewey for hunt! in a. deserted cemetery. Thin crime nerved es e model for thct o! Provost, the Perle policemen. who men~ aged to get u jeweller named Lenoble into hie house. where. hnvinn killed him .ilh - After e time there ceme the ease of Regey. the policemen. An old oflioer nemed.Remus wee the cashier of Mr. Febre. e tex receiver of the eepitel. The letter left his oflice in Paris on August 80th. 1882. to teke e sum of 3.000 frames to the treasury. He never returned. On‘ the following morning. et 5 o'clock, some boet- men sew a men throw e box into the Seine end then tehe to his heels. The buetmen went efter the box end found the baud of e men freshly severed from the body. Two deys leter the trunk was found in e sewer of the Rue Huohette. end in the river. user the Point Nenf. two legs were found. The pieces were brought toâ€" gether end the body of the unfor- tunete Remus reconstituted. Suspicion fell upon his iatimete friend Regey. who hed been seen drinking with himon August 30th preceding. Regey fled from Peris end wee peerched for everywhere in vein. But, heving leerned on October 8th thet his son hed been errested, he returned end surrendered himself to the police. Re mede e eleen breest of it; muowledged beving decayed Remus to his room, where. under pretext of giving him e glesebf brendy. he mede him swellow~e smell quantity of prussio eeid. Remus fell es if struck by lightning, end then Regey dis- membered the body. He contradicted him- self leter before the court, chiming thet Remus' deeth hed been the result of e mieteke in the glessee. but he wee cone demned to deeth end executed on Merck 2nd, 1833. at the Berriere 8t. ‘Jecquee. Then ceme the Lhuissier eï¬eir. At the beflnning of April. 1835, e journeymen weaver nemed Merin Lhuissier. 44 yeersof ego. applied at e metrimoniel egeney for e wife. The seoundrel wee elreedy merried. which Cetherine Ferneuld, e young person of rether doubtful ehereeter who consented to leeve the egeneyinhis eempeny. wee unewere_ of. She retired with him toe y 091:. use were confronted at lest with the mutilated bodies whose identity they ha! sought to deettoy. The ï¬rst case we: thnt of Ohulee Dnntnn, lientennnt o! the “In light infantry. I htndsome (allow. 85 you- ot age, who murdered his Aunt, Mme. Venues. and his brother. Auguste Dentin. He out the bodies up, end made ï¬ttyor sixty smell pentagon of them. and sent them to vuious parts of Puis.hut he wu- disoovered. arrested. condemned to denth on Feb. 25th, 1825. and gmllotxned on the Plume de Grove on Much 28m of the same .u'u Basin; mara’aih"wi.:."aiig‘zi: last halt century attempted to conceal mau- ctimea by this _me§u§. bm_wl_:o ippvoyy jielle 50mm... nation the theory 0! wine Puie Figaro. shot when a murderer onus up the body oi hie victim t) oouoesi mu ozimo ii invaiubiy leads to hie deter - lion one] conviction. Thin murderer per- hupe showed his wisdom in not cutting tee body into emeiier pieces. The detection of the men who cut up the body oi Hey is in in degree n oonflrmeiion o! Figaro? theory. It is from ehe none!- 0! crime in Frenoe. however. thee we alweyo expect to derive the moat pioinrcaqnely horrible nuniivee. Figaro quotes the ones of sixteen French The tsiluro of t“ “tempts to uuuvol ghg mysteryp! the Wimshmkou mun!" ï¬lm-dem- Wlo lllvo Quill-0M the loan on their Victimâ€"Attempt.“ Dupes. on tho I“! AIw-yu follow“ by â€not“... “ Wipe ofl Yalr Chin.†none on Mldlofls. CUTTING UP 0089!. D.