The hard tlmn have efleoted women or well on men. Jennie Collins. 0! Boston, ï¬ned for her employment bureau. says in ' her lest report: "Many kind ladies. who hired their servants at me in the past years. have been obliged to apply (or employment themselves of late.†f 7 4 Budget 0! lye-.53! Ilium: to It. good advice in aspeeeh on the subject oi “Home." He said every man should own his homo ii he ean. That philosophy which tells a man todriit over this uncertain life without a home oi his own. is wrong. The‘ man who owns not his own home in like a ship out in the open seaâ€"at the hazard oi the storm. A man who owns his home is like a ship that has arrived in port, and is moored in a sale harbor. One man ehould be no more eontent to live in a home that is not his ownâ€"ii he can build oneâ€"than one bird should take the risk oi hatehing in another one's nest; and to: my own part. I‘ would rather be able to own a cottage than to hire a palm. I would say to every men. buy ahoms it you can, and own it. Ii a windiallhas come to you. buy a home with it. It you have laid up money enough by toil, buy a home. I! you have made money in stocks. buy a home. Do not let anybody tempt you to put all your earnings beck into the pool. Take out enough to buy a home and buy it. Put the rest back it you will. Gamble on it you must; but buy the home ï¬rst. Buy it and tell it not. Then the roses that bloom there are yours; the clematis and jasmine that climb upon the porch belong to you. You have planted them and seen them grow. When you are at work upon them. you are working for yourselves, not for others. It there are children. there are flowers within the house and without. Buy a home. To Yum-n a Boomâ€"To ventilate a room wlthout drought, make a hole through the well to the outer air. in a corner 0! the room just above the skirting. Through the hole put one arm of atube three inehee in diameter, and bent at right anglee. The arm of the tube reeehlng to the outer air should be In length equal to the thickness of, the wall, and the otherarm should betwo feet long, standing vertically In the earner o! the room; it deelred, it can be covered with pope: o! the name pattern an that on the wall. A tube of the diameter given above le sufï¬cient to ventilate a room of moderate elze. A Goon Wonn ron me Primâ€"It is certein thet the smell oi e room is not improved by the odor oi stele tobsooo. smoke, end this ep- piies with double {ores ii cigers heve been smoked; even the most inveterete smoker will ï¬nd e room unpleesent in the morning where cigers heve been smoked over night. It only good tobeoeo be smoked in one's dining-room during the evening the smell is immedieteiy removed by opening the windows {or hell en hour in the morning; on the contrary. ii eigere be smoked, itwill teke deye before the room loses the odor oi stele ciger smoke, which is sickening to most people.â€"Gsntleman‘s Magazine. v Mos! Harness: Ar Hons.â€"Bhskspeere wrote long ego: " ’Tis ever common thet men are merriest when they ere from home.†end, more’s the pity, it is es true now es it was in Btretiord end London, neerly three hundred years syne. It is e common but not by any means e universal experience. Men ought to be the merriest under their on roof tree. end emong their own kith end kin. yet it often is not their own {suit thet they ere not. But. wherever the bleme lies. one thing is certsin; the men who ere “ merriest ewey irom home.†end who oennot share their pleasures with their own iemily. mey get some heppinese out oi their lives but they pay en unnecessarily high price {or en interior ertieie. Now all you young Benediots. cut thet chunk of wisdom out end pests it in your hat! BI Youna Wmu You Our-When girls midway in their teene throw ofl their natural girlish habits end attire, don long skirts. Ihoot up their hair And affect the hire and dreu 0! young women, they would otten he .9â€;an to_ know what their olden really think 0! the improvements. One such young mile went to the depot recently to meet on aged Mend of the lemlly, end wee empdeed to ï¬nd hereell not recognized upon greeting the vieitou on she Itepped from the en. -' Don't you know me. euntie 7†“ Why, thin iln’t Merle. ie it?†“ Cert-ink: don't you think I look better then I did lent summer when you were here 2" " No, " replied the hone-t eon). looking the girl over. “ to tell you the truth I don’t. Go home and let down your heir Ind be young while you on. lor it will not be many years belore you will be gledto have people take you for a girl." m: woman or To nu. English ladle. nu adopting the Spanish custom of smoking cigarettes. It having become known um Mm Laugh-y mnkoa her own bonus“. the Graphic expect: ‘0 no a revolution 'in the mulinery bull- no". The Arohduchoss Christine 0! Austria. the sï¬isneed oi King Alloneo, is said to be ex- tremely unwilling to part from her relatives and friends ; end she will see but little of them on the etiquette oi the Bpsnish court will not permit her to choose even her ladies ol honor irom smong her own country women. '7 v- Ulla-Illum- wrun- II "In Ilw II- l-va-l 'ï¬m'n 'm be one of the {norm 0°10" Sixty-seven thousand tom of old iron rails nu. winter mdwlllbo Icon in . out "mg have been purchased in England {or mean- 0' .h‘do... One 0! ‘ho “0'05: is 0.1105 13“" Ioooum in Philadelphh Ind New YOIk. 4 “won." and u mlhoaany â€10,. A put of mono nun an on the wâ€. Anne Meyer, 0! Louisville, was told by her perents topreotioe steadily It the piano for two hours. They heerd her pounding the keys about hell the prescribed time, and then the sound sensed. Mr. Meyer soon went to the psxlor and found her lying on the floor. unconscious irom chloroform, while two negro thieves were rensncking in n adjoining room. Block canvas bolts are seen in all widths and will probably anpplons the whim nnroln- ale boll: worn this summer. Lm will be more- In (no: this winter than for a number 0! union: put. A (norm m! o! trimgiqa with it _wil_l boAln jqbota. ‘ Anowlaoo, that comes in both black and white, is called " point d’ospril," and bids hit to be a iormidnbio rival to the Breton hoe. Ii will he much used inrmlllinory in no Scotch plcida will remtlntn favor. Some of the ht. importation: of dress material show then pick]: in new and ï¬ne materials. The twin trimming used on those goods are thg hundaggng Scotch plald‘velvota_._ _ _ By! A_ Hospâ€"Hon. Gporzo par-Co! guq TR] IAIKIONS 0!‘ 1'0 DAY. m now mm W ï¬nd-om ln slap. chm thou at In! your. und m llnlnhod 'llh I hood. vhloh. when. untapped und pnllod up our the bud. torm- nup. who: and .1! couple“. Man. to mloh lulu will be unlod this vital». When the trlmmlng ol aooatumo ll 01 ouhmoro, the mnfl wlll ollhor have a cub- moro border or else wlll be made of lhut maloxlul {it}: _| In: (rimming, It in aid that Ihort bxï¬inl drum with court trains us to be the “:10 thla winter. him. Mueterman had the appearance of a men in a sound sleep. and Mr. Baisley shook him roughly. but could not awake him. Dr. Bowlesby, oi Eest New York, applied restoreo tives without effect. On Friday Dr. Ingrehem, oi Flatbush, wee called. and he. too, was un- able to awake Mustermen from his Rip Van Winkle-like sleep. Dr. Ingraham thought it was a case of apoplexy, the result of drinking too much etrong liquor. He ordered bee! tea and nourishing diets to be torced down the sleeping man’s throat. No change was noticed in Muetermen's con- dition until Monday. Then his eyes opened for a iew minutes and closed again. Much interest was taken in this sleeping phenome- non. Musterman lay in the garret of Mr. Baieleg storey-and-a-helt house on the On- narsle road. He seemed to sleep calmly, snored loudly, end perspired treely. Before his death he gasped convulsively a few times, but did not evoke. He had been sleeping six days and four hours. The Remarkable Case at Robert lilwu levmamwho Slept {or n “'eck and D‘Cdo Robert Muttermen. oi Fletlonde, L. 1.. who went to flow on Wednerdny a week 330 end could not be uwekened, died the follow- ing Wedneodoy at two o'clock. Muetermen. who woe o mtlve oi Germeny. and about 29 yeerl oi ego. woe employ ed by Tex Collector Bel-icy. oi Flotlende, to do work about the term. Being extraordinarily strong. ho was ebie to do the work 0! two ordimry men. Muttermeuwu in the hebit oi drinking a grootdeol oi strong liquor eiler his (in: 'e work. On Wedneedoy night 0! last week Muetermnn retired to bed at ten o clock. 0n Thuredey morning. on he did not urine as utuel. Mr. Beieley went to hie room to oweke The Rev. Mr. anlll. of Owns-o, Departs Willa Ills Neighbor’- “’He â€"He Appears in Hamilton. For some low days past a man and women. who registered their names as Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone. have been staying at one oi the hotels in the city. There wae nothing un- usual about them and nothing was suspected till the man tried to sell a horse and buggy for a sum considerably below its value. This aroused ths suspicion of the detectives and the parties were watched. At last it was discovered in a New York paper that a Rev. Mr. Baylls, o! Owasso, had left for parts unknown with the wile of a neighbor named Phoenix, and on being accused by the detec- tives of being that person Mr. Gladstone alias Baylis contessed. The detectives, with their usual zeal. at once took the man into custody on the charge 0! stealing the horse and buggy, but on telegraphing to Owasso it was discovered that they were his own and the zeal of the detectives come to nought. Mrs. Phoenix says she prefers Baylie to her husband, end the pair left Hamilton for parts again unknownw-iflamiltoniTimes. It is not surprising that from time to time attention is recalled to the barbarous nature at the mode oi executing the death-penalty in this country. Hanging by the neck till the criminal is dead is obviouslye relic of barbariem ; it is the most primitive. the most various, the least prompt and uniform and certain oi the modes oi execution which have been or could be devised. It the object of an execution nowadays be to insure the rapid and certain death oi the criminal without any probability of intervening accident, delay, or torture. hanging by a cord. and trusting to the rough adjustment of weight and fall which the “ eye and experience" 0! an ignorant hangman can aï¬ord, is the most iallible oi methods, and must of necessity from time to time lead to painful scenes at torture. The garotillo is, perhaps, of all existing European methods oi legal execution the most rapid and certain; but without proposing any one substitute on our own responsibilityâ€"whether the carbonic acid chamber, the massive electric discharge or any other methodâ€"it is certain that any scientiï¬c man or commission could very speedily devise a prompt and bloodless certain mode of execution which should be free from the clumsiness and uncertainty oi hanging. The retention of this ancient relic of past barbarism is not creditable to our jurisprudenceâ€"British Medical Journal. About ten o’clock on Sunday morning. a young women. about twenty-four years at age. was found lying in an apparently dying condition at the foot of Brook street. Toronto, near the Northern Railway track. She was at once taken to the Western Police Station. Dr. Spragge was immediately brought to her aid; restoratives were administered. and in a snort time she was sufï¬ciently recovered to make the following etatement: She came to Toronto from Hamilton on Thursday last with a young man, who took her to a house 01 \iil-fame in Jarvis street. They remained to- gether until Saturday. when they left. and moved to a house in the west end of the city. While there her companion deserted her. In the evening, as she was walking on the street. she was met by a man who took her to a vacant house in the Garrison Common, where ten other men were congregated. During the night they all became drunk and treated her most brutally. Towards morning she succeeded in making her escape, but on reaching Brock street was so exhausted that she fell in a swoon. The unfortunate woman was an inmate of the Western station last night. She was in a very low condition at a late hour. The poor creature gave her name a! Margaret Johnson. Recently, at the Orsetel Palace, London, a tngedy. entitled “ Oount Maroon," and writ- ten by the Eu! of Beeconefleld when in his 84th year. was performed before a large audience. The events of the play. which is founded on an old ballad, are ascribed to the 18th century. and take place in the antuuen «pit-l. SLEEP ENDING IN DEATH. A PBUFLIGATE PASTOR. Improved Method orlixecnllon. A Brutal Outrage. The unfortunate girl in the case is about nineteen years of age, is a native oi England and is rather prepossessing in appearanee and modest in demeanor. She is an orphan. without any relatives in this country, and was regarded as an honest. industrious girl. About two years and a hall ago she engaged as a domestic in her betrayer‘e house. he being a married man. From his ï¬rst ac- quaintance with her he treated her with the greatest iamiiiarity and alter a time succeeded in accomplishing her ruin. Fearing that her disgrace would become known to her friends she threatened to destroy herself. Re, how- ever. assured her that she need tear nothing and to leave the matter in his hands. 0n the same evening he gaveher abottle of medicine, which he told her to take according to the directions. . She reinsed to accede to his request. and he leit her. He returned shortly alterwards in company with the elderly woman alluded to, to whom he introduced her with the remark, “ She‘ll convince you, little girl." After some conversation with the woman. the girl was persuaded to take the medicine. The medieine- had the effect intended. but, at the same time, nearly pro- duced death. A year aiterwards the same scene was enacted, the girl being terriï¬ed into submission by the threats 0! her rascully master. The shocking story was told by the girl herself to Dr. Lan gstaii. oi Springhill, when he was attending 8her in her conï¬nement. She informed the 8doctor: that she still had a bottle of the medicine in her trunk. The doctor secured the concoction and sent it to Toronto to be analyzed. The matter was reported to Mr. Wood, J .P., and he held an investigation at the village on Saturday, but other than deciding that it was a most serious case. no decision was some to. The case was referred to the County Grown Attorney. Mr. Fenton. who on Saturday instructed Mr. J. T. Jones. the High Constable of York. to proceed to Springhill and make enquires. Mr. Jones attributes the whole story to village gossip. But there was one important point that Mr. Jones neglected, and that was to interview the girl who makes these startling accusations against her employer. The accused was in town on Sat- urday, and Dr. Langstefl telegraphed him about the impending investigation. So in as heis concerned. the matter has been hushed up since the tn quiry. An analytical chemistin the city has the bottle in his possession. and will report the result of his analysis of its contents at an early day.â€" ALLEGED annulus cnmw. Excitement at the VillageVQIIpa-ingull-A ï¬lm-tor Accused or" the urineâ€"A Servant Girl Wrong“ by I!" lila- pieyer-ner- Conic-aha no u Country Doctor-Investigation oi the (lane. One oi those melancholy and deplorable events that occasionally throw usually quiet and peaceiullocslities into the sreateot pom. ble ierment oi excitement. happened in the pretty little Village oi Springhiii. in the Township oi King. a few days ago. The ia- mentable nature of :the circumstance is greatly increased when the respectability oi the pcreons directly involved in it is considered. as well as that oi their iriends, who undoubt- edly irel most deeply the disgrace thus brought upon them. It will also be noticed that the accused person has not the extenu- ating circumstance o! a desire to extricate himself from a dimcnlty in which he had involved himself. On the contrary, it will be seen that he reduced his nefarious practice to a regular syatem, and there is no reaaon to believe that he had any intention oi aban- doning it. had not circumstanees conspired to expose what his unfortunate victim was con- etrgined by threats to heepgecret. TORONTO, Ontario.â€"-The villa e oi Springhill Township of Kinï¬i is egita over certain disclosures which ave recently come to light there. The County Crown Attorney here was informed by a letter from the doctor attending a girl in the employ of the Rev. LB. Bows.“ that village, that she had been\ delivered of achild and had charged its parent- age on Hallows. ’I‘he letter also stated that the girl had alleged that Bows had entered her room some years ago and had outra ed her teen. and it was suspected that medic es had een given her with the view 0! pro- curing an abortion. Subsequently a letter from County Constable Crossley was received, stating that the lrl refused to make any further disclosures. an that Rowe admitted that he was the parent 0! the child, but denied that he had used any danrerous medicine wherewith to procure an abortion. Instructions were then sent to the local authorities at Springhill to seize any medicines found inthe possession of the girl. and accordingly a bottle round in her trunk was sent on here and is now being analysed bya Toronto chemist. If the analysis should show that the contents of the bottle were used to procure an abortion. Bows will be prosecuted. The betrayal of the girl occurred about two years and six months ago, and it seems that Bowe has been continu- ing the unlawiul intercourse ever since, until it culminated in the birth 01 a child. Mail. All Extensive Comings-anon Yesterdayâ€"- Neal-l! Two Hundred Building-lie- slroyed. Duvwooo, Montsne.-â€"At two o‘clock this morning s ï¬re broke out, which consumed al- most the entire business portion 0! the city. Thousands exe homeless and in a destitute condition, and the loss is roughly estimated st $1,500,000 to 82,000,000; little or no in~ One hundred and eighty-ï¬ve buildings were laid in ashes. The tire department was a very inefï¬cient one, and the ï¬re spread with wonderiul rapidity. All along its course ter- riï¬c explosions oi gunpowder. petroleum and liquor were frequent. Buildings were blown into atoms. The hook and ladder apparatus and hose carriage were the ï¬rst to burn, leaving nothing but a iew test of worthless hose with which to battle the devouring ele- ment. The new water works were put to their full capacity, but with little success in sub- duing the flames, on account oi the scarcity of water. The hill sides were almost a solid sheet oi flame, and water from the boulder ditch could not be had. otherwise considerable property would probably have been saved, as the ditch ran almost directly over the worst spot. The wildest excitement prevailed on account oi the ieariul force of the flames.- People thought oi little besides saving their own lives. Hundreds escaped with only their night clothes on and every team within miles of the city has been called into service to_h_elp save what could be got out. “1781108. Thin are probnbly 2,000 people homeless animapy gre (igugltntq. The ï¬re is still burning, but all its material is exhauated and there is no danger oi m apreadlng unless an unfavorable change In the wind oocura. Eastern Siberia is manned by famine. Gnln in dearer thin over before. ond'the poor are Indexing severely; Tho ham“ *5 very bad. DEADWOOD IN ASHES. imprisonment. In the you 1870 he went to New 0: eens. mmied m estimable widow. squandered her fortune. was arrested for forgery. esoe gnnishment. fled to San Francisco, robbed s usinees partner of nearly 660.000. and diap- peered. Forgeries mounting from £10,000 to £15,000. on American letters credit. were reoeni'lfv oom- mitted.8mith. Payne a: Go. beinl the cums. The forgets got a thousand and: Bank oi England notes from Smith's. en went to the Bank of England, represented they were going to South America, em: wanted old. The Bunk Beople gave them gold and em notes. No clue as been discovered. a stock broker, committed numerous tor cries and fled. Bis forgery on Glynn Mills 00. was tor ammo. and he would no doubt have escaped but for his toolhardiness in returning to their bank and demandingto know what all this talk about atorged cheque meant. He was prompt] arrested and it then leaked out that be h presented a forged cheque for £100 on the Bank 0! England on June 88th. He drove up lna carriage and sentabo on with the cheque. when the boy was question the forger- ordered the carriage to drive on and disappeared. Wlth the most brazen audacity Cooper soon afterwards opened an account at the Bank of England, but was not recognised. The detectives avowed that he had been residing at a beautiful country seat called East Lodge at Hemmel Hem stead. Berk iordshlre. 'Here he ilved n a sum )- tuous fashion, and hunted and shot vi the nelghborlng gentry. attended church regularly. glave grand dinners and helped the poor llbera ly. He wal highly respected. He aid frequent visitetoLondon in disguise and orged the names olhls ne hbors in Hertlord- ehire. Be stoutly main a his innocence. Cooper was born at Bmymia. Delaware. no en- listed in the navy in 1861. and alter the war secured an appointment in the Navy Depart- ment. Be there forged arequisltion pnrportlng tocome from Paymaster Bpaldlng for 8175500. He married the daughter of the Government printer Delrees and was arrested the day after the .oeremony and sentenced to nve_y9_ars' A Converted Iluebnnd Buns Away with the vonverted Wile oinn Unrepentant Sinner. Not very long ego e Gospel tent was pitched in a. village not 3 hundred miles irom New- merket. : The preachers we re neelous; their him! were successful. and they had the grstiflcstion oi ï¬nding that e genuine revive! oi religion had begun. The revive! spread. It took hold of streggiers; it excited the villegers; it even emptied the churches. One minister had the misery oi ï¬nding thet his entire congregation had been swept into the gospel tent on the revival wave. The church was empty ior coverel Sundeys. end while the revlvsliets were preeching to crowded and enthusiastic houees, the minister was looking to empty benches. Hie sorrow, how. ever. had mingled with it one drop oi joy. The excitement could not continue forever, it must subside. end when it did subside. people would return to the even tenor oi their weys, no doubt wiser and better then ever. Presently the agitation did beg in to ting sud people went back to church end to business as before.- Msny. however. con- tinued in the good path into which the reviveliets had essisted to put them. Among these low were 3 lady and s gentlemenâ€"both msrried. but not to each other. The lady wss "snother’s" end the gentlemen wee. well, some one else' s. But the " another" to whom the ledy wsl merried and the ‘ “ some one else †with whom the gentlemen had been. by iegel proeers, nude one. were emong the few who hed resisted the simple eloquence oi revivslist presch- ere. In other words. they were uncon- vertedâ€"and worse still. unrepentant. Their respective better halves endeavored to per- suede them to iorsnke their wicked wsys. but without success. Whet were the good two to do 2 They could not conscientiously live with their wicked partners. It won their duty LONDON. Enaimd.â€"The mu: mooted int week tor iorsory on GlynnJliul a 00 . beaten. has been identified an Wm. Binnold Cooper. 10:- met): of the United States Navy. “toward: 5 derin and upon forget. In Wallingion be for the names 0! seven] paymuieu, an by re resenting himeelt u my. mate: drew me mum of money. He wee melted and ii was reported he died in prison. but in reality he went to San Francisco. became n gtogkpxojer. _eommltted nnmerongniorgeriee ARREST OF A NOTE!) FORGER. The Bank or England and Prominent Business Mon , Swindled. to shun even the appearance of evil. Acci- dentelly they discovered a liking {or one encther. They told their lovel, and deter- mined to desert the individuals they ind sworn to love and obey. it theeeid individneis did not desert their evil census. The letter deeertion did not take piece, so the former was teeorted to, and the coupleleit the village. They heve not been heard 01 since, end the nnrepented but deserted husband and wife are sesrching anxiously for the convenes; but eloped wile and husband. Aicw deys ago. as e iarmer named David Blougb, oi the Township oi King. was pro- ceeding homewsrd irom Toronto. late in the evening. he was overtaken by a pedestrian a little north of Oherry's tavern. who asked permission to ride with him as is: as Thorn- hili. Mr. Blough acceded to his request, and the stranger ascended to the seat beside him. They hsd not proceeded isr bsiore the stranger produced a flask, and requested thst he might be allowed to treet Mr. Biough for his courtesy in permitting him to occupy a place on the waggon. Mr. Blough drank some oi the stud, which he believes to have been drugged whiskey. It had scarcely passed his lips when an overpowering drowsiness seized him and he sank helpless to the bottom oi the waggon. Strange to say. he retained his consciousness although his limbs were en- tirely paralysed. His ungrateful passenger. without loss oi time, proceeded to ride his pockets, but iortunstely Mr. Blougb had taken the precaution to conceal the money which he realized on his load in a pocket in his shirt beiore leaving the city. The this! had just begun to search ior this pocket when for- tunately a wsggon overtook them. This alarmed the villain. who at once jumped oi! the conveyance and started the horse oil at a gallop. When Mr. Blough recovered his consciousness he was ten miles north oi the scene oi the attempted robbery. He wss ill iecveraldeys irom the efleets oi the drug. Martha Yen Valen. an lnmete ol the Pain- eon elmehouee, claims to be 100 you: old. She says she wee born In Glugov. Scotland. In 1780. In the reign of George IV. The old lady is evidently “mixed " ellher about the year or the Georg e. Illa believed ehe la In the neighborhood of 90. Twenty-ï¬ve impoflunt political prisoners will be Med u 8:. Peternbntg next month. The British wn mums: Mommy. lately completed and tented. in ma to b9 the owl“- out vuaol In the world. She mlkOI twenty- lwo mile: a: hour. A Farmer‘s Adventure with n 'llnlel. An Unparalleled Career of 011-0. RESULTS OF A REVIVAL. ALMOST FLEECED. A unopened Aha-met Fired or by I Detectiveâ€"A lad Shotâ€"ll. me... Ill- Alue and Nearly little a Child- Thenullee Found in I Dwell“. ll... -â€"'l‘he Detective Given once and 0-.- eureeLIIh m». on York Benetâ€"l. Woman the cnuee oi the Trouble. Yeeterdey ebout e querter to twelve an exciting occurrence took place on the com- oi John end Main etreete. It eppeere thee on Mondey night e young men neared Oeeer Foeter, who hcile irom Ouliele. put up at Sweyzie'e hotel with e young minimum re gietering ee men end wile. The leu V ‘ heed hie euepieione concerning the reletlou oi the young couple. iron the ieet thet tb men hed eeverel monthe previouely been It the hotel with mother women. but O queetioninghirn he wee eeenred thetthi preeent pertner wee ectuelly Foeter‘e wit. 0n Tueedey morning the mother ; brother oi the girl errived end their etory to the lendiord. Th 1 thet the girl was the inheritor oi manai property 8end they hed ieere that themed mony oi metrimony hed not been perlcruel'.z 3 Whether the young yieliow eew the uotherw not ie not known. but he certainly took uni eerly opportunity to leeve with hie horee _ «a buggy end girl. He wee trecked to enothR: hotel near the etetion. but no evidence on he iound thet he hed leit town. In them ing he returned to the hotel where he hefli ï¬ret put up. seeking hie veliee. but“ a mother in lew hed eeenred it eheed cl NI. end he left without thet ueeiui eppew Thie morning. about eleven o'clock. Meophereon. with the brother oi theenp m1 injured iemeie. whoee name ie 80 phle Cumminge, and who ie aid to hevepro amounting to 83, 000 end to be under†proceeded8 to eeereh tor the pertlee. driving up John etreet. when neerly op the Court House. e men in e buggy p them, end the brother immedieteiy out Detective Mucphemn jumpsd out u culled on Foster to stop, but thll ohm was only met by the appliottion o! whim to the horse. which started 01!. unit] comer 0! Main and John streets was prompt turned. At the nonhwolt comer Ital Hiby‘n saloon, and when Foster Maud atop the detective and ï¬red, he eeye. into the ground. Whet thle was the one or not, reminl to proved. There in. however. one thing 4 tein, e child in Mr. Hiby’e npetelre to new the fleeh of e pistol and u bullet nl through the western window. etrlklna well. upsetting eome thinge in n brakes: unmowu momma mo 3 boby of ten momhu old who nu not there. The mm who no ï¬red st (120* npldly up Man street Ind Moophouonl turning to the buggy of the girl’l broth! started in punnil. Am: driving out I! I as the Valley Inn and ï¬nding tho‘ the flu the bud not passed that way, Muphuu returned to the any, and when on Yon skeet neat Caroline, ho ' uw me In . driving towerde him in his buggy. To in! out wee the work oi a moment, end thou Foster whipped up his hom Muphul pinekily grabbed hie heed, ioreed himon the eideweik end secured hie men. depoeill him eventnelly in the Itetion. The girl ‘ hen secured. being ioundhuiting in Emil Hotel, and the inte motherin-dl' d oppoued on the Ieene. Meantime the; goee home with her mother end Home 1: min: in custodyâ€"Hamilton Time. ' Probable murder and Suicide TI" Joule-.1. New You, N Y.-â€"A probnble mull (allowed by suicide. occurred noon other In: to dny ln Ohflnopher etreet at the home 01 German named Henry Von Gerllohon. '2! oeoupant ol the house hnd come or“ in t1 skeet. when he was met by John emu who drew n revolver and polnted it 3% V: Gnritohen. Sheehm ï¬red, nnd the bl penelrekd the bank 0! Von Gnrltohen’e me causing a. fetal wound. As rho Injured Ill tell Bhoehnn shot himself in tho tom ple. Von Glrltohen wee carried into own p.houee nnd Shoehnn taken to the howl! in a dy lug condition. The Intel qurrel believed to be the result olj jealousy“I on 11 out of Bheehnn. It was mi to do: You Gnrltohen had shown Bheohen’l '1 mgny nttenllonl,__ Mm: lime, Colorado. â€"â€" Thornbt command were attacked in Bad Oenyon on a mile south 0! here. on the march to the ac 'lhey retreated in good order to the I: train where they are now entrenchlng as 11 poeeihle. Thornh was killed inst during the tetrea . Captain Payne wonn ed slightly. bent. Paddock andOa} Grimes were wounded, but not dangerously. enlisted men and waggon-master oKinstry killed. At least twenty-ï¬ve men and team were wounded. The command is now vet sheltered. and new and then are guns 0! new bouillon who hen arrived. The male: and horses no under! the Indleqs ï¬red the gran to burn an cut. 1 man is digging trenches and hauling out mule: for our defence tomorrow. The In no expected bnok M dungbt. Linnâ€"John Bhoehm, who shot hind in the had shot htving shot Henry V4 Gunmen thin morning. diod this evening. Brsnop'e Mums, 0ntmio.â€"A and neat occurred in this vicinit Easter-any morning young man named Hug yford, while atten‘ a. ihreehing mill. It up an be weein the a walking across the mil when his head mu beam overhead, and. loelng hie belenoe. I into the cylinder mengllng hie leg lee l Dre. Sport-n end Potter were soon herel Kemptville. and. together with Dr. Kilbonm this piece soon had the limb amputated ï¬xed np.but the cords were no drum from body that he only survived the operetlon M time. He died at hell-pen seven o'clock night. He was much reupeoted end his 4! has thrown a. shadow over the whole new hood. The 8:. Catharina Ohiei of Police I noiiflod all owners of billiard uloon prohibit minor. irom pinying billiardo. ‘ Tho Marquis oi Lorna will lhoriiy pro: to 8:. ommmm duck uhooiing. Ho ‘31:. um oi the North Oinnmi Gun h o The fastest run on record of I It.“ was that ol the Durbsn. from Tub“ BI Cap 00! Good Ho pogJOEn Ind, 6000“ in 18 doyc. 16 honu' aomsl n'umlnl, I flange of 13 1 knots an hour. It II In on! tornn3000mllea 111911. “1131:6000 Ill days. because of the can ywelght of call ll moat be carried. THE GREEN-EYE†MON- ETEB. ATTACHED BY INDIANC. AN EXCITING SCENE. SAD ACCIDENT. " mu 1: rm: ma 1" DREW ms “VOLVIB