how to play; no tom up ov’ry single sing he pomr-biHy an. Ln' even tried to break. one my. my mammn’s beaten (an. Ho's ul'nyu tumblln’ 'bont Io noonan'givou us swtul men. An' when he goes to bed ut night. he never says hhpn on. On Sunday. , ho mum up my sodommtln clothe-z An'onyoflLhund him hard at work n-pino'ln' was lion'- ulna-y. (8t. Nicholu.) 1 tan no whu our bsby boy udoodtor, anyway Ho dqn't kpow_how to walk or talk. he don't know a’poso you sink ‘2) Upset a droat big bottle of mï¬ptga'a writln' hi: An', 'stead of kg 11' dood and u . as course he ought to one, He hushed. and kicked his hand 'moat 01!, as tough he sought 'twu luu. He even tries to reach up high, an' pull zlngs of! 20 she". An' he's al'nya‘wantgn'gou. of course. jus' when Dolly 'a nose . An‘ so pane: day at naughty boy (now what you _ “966Wizitd you'serr. ' ‘ I nthter (11033, I really do. hom how he pulls my I): s, Zuy ull'qg made a purpose for to 'aoy as little __, "db-ls; An’ I wish gore wasn't. no such zing as naughty baby boysâ€" ' Why-4m . nt’s mm a kyin' now; he makes a are ul noise, 1 done I better run an' see, for i! he hasâ€"booâ€" hoo [â€" Felled down no atairuud killed his self.whatovor s-s-s'au I do! Personal. The Princess Louise is to sail by the Parisian on the 20th October. The King 0! Greece has entered Arta. in the ceded territory, amid unbounded enthusiasm. It is expected that Sir Leonard Tilley and Sir Charles Tapper will visit St. Stephen, N.B., some|tune in October. The monument to Dean Stanley will probably take the form of an altar-tomb, with a recumbent statue, to be placed near the Dean’s grave in; Westminster Abbey. The Gotham ï¬hpere say that Rossi is engaged to one o! the richest and hand- somest American heir-eases. Others say that he in already married. It is stated that the ex-EmpreasEugenie. on a recent visit toParis. made a will leav- ing all her fortune to Prince Victor, and declaring him head of the Bonapartiet 935‘!- .. 7. , _,_ n... -_:-I _:_JAâ€"- :n r Tie erection of a memorial window in Dunfermline Abbey to the late Dean Stanley has been mooted in Scotland and the proposal has received the supper of Principal Tullooh. - ..â€"v- â€"â€" ._ __V- Lord Desert states that the Duke of Bedford is living at Norris Castle, East Cowes. in strict seclusion, tempered by two housemeids and a cook, by reason of his disgust wit!) QoHths. , I, “-.__l_-..JL I.-- V“ VVVVV The Berlin Panadok says it has good authority for stating that the Shah of Persia. will arrive in Russia. in April next, to greet the Czar personally. It is not settled whether he will visit other courts. Mr. Henry Irving has received from the Duke of Sue-Meiningen, in recognition of his services to dramatic art, the decoration or me Might-Cm u! the Ducal Sax Ernes- tine House order. It is reported that Sarah Bernhardt has agreed to create in the winter of 1882-83 the role of Jam: in a. tragedy called “ Jane Grey," by Mlle. Simone Amend, author of “ La. Carmggnola." _- ... â€,1 â€" _.v.â€"--v â€"â€"â€"v_v A Petition for liquidation was ï¬led at the Dud ev County Court, in England. recently, by a. general dealer bearing the extraor- dinary name of West. Angel Honorable Deptheny Mason: One photographer m Washington keeps eight men employed constantly in printing Guiteau’s photographs. and then they can. not turn them oï¬ fast enough to keep pace Evith the demand. Queer taste some people avel Crown Prince Rudolph and Princess Stephanie are going to make a lon stay at the Castle of Moran in the Tyro . It is whispered that there is at present no danger of the Austrian dynasty becoming extinct. Dr. Hewkee. formerly tutor to the Ger. ï¬eld boys. has been appointed Acting Assistant-Surgeon in the Army, in accord- ance with the request of the late President a. short time before his death. The London Standard says it under- stands that Lord Lorne intends to visit England on the completion of his tour, and the Princess will probably return with him in January. Sophie Victoria. Princess of Baden and bride of the Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway, is a tall young ledy,blonde, lovely, wise and accomplished. The bridegroom is tell and dark, and of a clever and kindly countenenoe. No wonder the Duke of Marlborough is selling the Sunderland Librar , if it be true. as Vanity Fair asserts, t at he has no fewer than 5,000 acres of land on his hands. This is nearly one quarter of his whole landed property. Count Waldburg. the Arctic explorer, who has just returned toHammerfest from a journey to the lower Yenisei in a Bremen merchant steamer. is reported as declaring euoh navigation possible every year. despite the difï¬culties which have hitherto been held to surround it. Dr. James Luke. F.R.S.. died recently in En land at the e of 82. He was twice Preei ent of the 9.! College of Sur- eone, studied under A rnet‘ny and Aetley _o_eper. and pleoedjhe‘yvorld upt‘ier notable A“ A:-._ v.1..." _ ooper. :Eéiaiaeei ï¬ne wen-1d m'lder notable 0in ations to him for the special attention he evoted to hernia. A deep etch {tom Alderehott states that Maj or- Gpenerel Sir Henry Heveloek Allen. eon Jof the Indian hero Sir Henry Heveloek, end for many years member of Parliament. for Sunderland. is re ported to be slightly derelnged from the effects of a former enn atro e COLIIookwell. the late President's bosom friend and constant attendant during his last illness. has placed his resi nation as Commissioner of Public Build age at the disposal of the President, and it as under. stood that he will be replaced. Monneigueur lo Comte do Ch'ambord. whom they Erench Legitimiata call 1199:): V., King 0! France and Navarre. completea his Glut year on Thursday. Sept. 29m, He does not seem nearer to the position of King «le faclo than he was a twelvemonth sinee.bnt he belongs to a family that is rather (anions for longevity. and so he may remain King dcjurc for many years to come, to annoy the French Republicans. In these asaasainating times it in but fair to mention that his father. M. le Duo do Berri. was murdered more than seven *montha before he (M. do Chambord) was born, in February. 1820. Resorts received in Dundee show that the evie Straits whale ï¬shing has this season been very unsuccessful: The construction has lately been ï¬nished of a. residence which the Queen has built for John Brown within the grounds at Balmoral. _ _ ,_.. . Hula-unwa- The coal trade about Kilmarnook has considerably improved. Mines are working full time. and there is rather a scarcity of man. nave-- Business in the bum trade of Fife keeps up a. decidedly improved aspect. and an inclination to do more business at present. prices is experienced. “AA The members of the venerable Potato and Herring Incorporation of Paisley met recently in the hoetelryat Rentrew kept by Miss Adam, and dined on the annual " hamely fare †ot potatoes and herring. There is likely to be a. keen contest for the Beotorship of the Aberdeen University in November. It is thought that Dr. Bsin will he the choice of the Liberalsmnd Lord Oranbrook of the Conservatives. At the Aberdeen Circuit Court recently the jury before whom Charles Dinnie was tried for the murder of his sweetheart, Elizabeth Stott, returned a verdict to the effect that the prisoner was insane at the time the crime was_oommi_tted._ Dinnie "no-v vanâ€"v ‘â€"-_- was ordered to gewdeï¬ained during Her Majesty’s pleasure. During Mr. Gladetone’s visit to Scotland about the endof October it is expected that he will address his constituents in Mid- Lothisn. It is believed that he will hold three meetingsâ€"one in Edinburgh, another is}: ï¬alkeith and the third probably at West 3 er. A review of the past angling season on Loehleven, which closed on the 3lst, together with a tabular statement of the v ions club competitions that have taken lace during the season, has been published. he total number of trout caught is stated to have been 16.398, weighing 17,124 lbs., which is 2.965 fewer than in the previous 3688011. It is absolutely untrue that under toler- ably fair conditions, a woman is (if we may repeat that crude phrase) “ played out " when she has seen forty-ï¬ve. If all goes well, or even not very ill, a woman more frequently than not takes a new departure at about ï¬fty. It is preposterous to assume that a woman of mature age is likely to be behind her growmg daughters, or her grow- ing sons, in effectiveness of intellect, in aptitude for “ subjects " new or old, in gen- eral brightness and susceptibility. In what might be called " quahty,†in the French sense of the word, she is, upon the supposi- tions we have just made, so much the supe- rior being that if the daughters, and the sons, too, do not feel it, there is something wrong with them. It must, indeed. be granted as a preliminary that there is love between the husband and the wife, and that the young people are good in harness, and above all, in themselves ; but with these inclusions, little more is needed. And the battle is to be Won along the whole line. A gray hair is a gray hair, a crow's- foot a crow’s footâ€"and these rarely come to the young; but “ certainly," as Lord Bacon says, “ it is no marvel though persons in years seem, many times more amiable, pulchrorum antumnus pulcher; for no youth can be comely but by pardon, and considering the youth as to make up the comeliness." It is the mistake c giddy adolescence, or sand-blind conceit, ' to sup so that a woman of ï¬fty cannot be exquisitely beautiful, cannot command a man throughout the whole range of his nature ; cannot take up all the gladnese of life and beautifully radiate it again for him and for others. In all this, we are. of course, leaving out, with a sad heart, the miserable life of the very poor. But even with the poor the general rule holds; and among them some of the pleasantest. brightest, handsomest women are women of advanced maturity, but released from the pressure of the cares and toils which young children bring. Such women may even be observed to take a fresh start in mental growth; they read more, and,mixing more with men, pick up general knowledge, and become more agreeable companions than ever. These remarks become more strik- ingly true as we carry our eyes upward in the scale of money and culture. Rahel, who was always ill, wrote at 50 years of age that she felt in most particulars just as she did at 14 or 15; that she had, on the whole, the same opinions and inclinations as at 30, only that the background of her life was richer with gathered eiperience and well-connected thought. She laid stress u on the connectedness, meaning, no doubt, t at she could take bird’s-e 9 views better than in earlier life; and s e adds, that at her ripe age a joyful yearning or tendency to look forward had sprung up in ‘ her, which was a kind of echo of the feel- w ing of early youth. 01 course. every‘ woman is not Rahel, but it was certainly no fault of hers to expect too much oi the young; why. she asks. should they believe‘ the old ? “ Wrinkles are no testimony." No; but one may add that they can believe. " for the work’s sake "; and. in spite of prejudice of nearness, apprehend alittle of what Rahel meant, and what is exem- pliï¬ed in the lives and letters of numbers of women of ripe ago. Not to quote other ladies of great ability and culture, take a very ignorant old country dame, William Godwin's mother. She puts “succeges†for sausages, and had, on the whole, a hide-bound sort of intellect; but what wise,hearty. lively, penetratin let- ters sho writesl The cold Godwin. im- selt 45, says at her death that he felt as if he had now no one to counsel him and take care of him. But. to go to a typo common enou h, something between Dame Durden and {ahel. take the mother of Frederick, in Mr. Coventry Patmore‘s “ Faithful for Ever ;" you may meet her any day in ordinary society. Nothing can be more beautifully wise than her letters; and though it is true that epoet writes the felicitone things for her, yet the poet has something of Richardson’s truthfulnes Such a lady had no need to a sk for tole a tion from clover young people .â€" The Spc- lator. The memorial windows to Lord Beacons- fleld in nu hondon Church am to illustrate the prino pal “ angelic a. pentances “ recorded in tho Bible. This i on, it is sup- Sosed. was auggested bÂ¥ Beaconsfleld‘a xiord declaration, that no was "always on the side of the angels." Laws"l Scottish News. Women at Filty. An exciting and romantic lite came to a close at Damascus on the 12th of August, when the wife of the Shaikh Medj-joel, a local celebrity known to all travellers, gassed away at the ripe age of 75. This amascene lady once were an English coronet. and came of the famous En lish race of Sir Kenelm Digby. a scion of w ich not long ago married the daughter of Mr. Groesbeck,Aot_Qinein_nati.ï¬8he was the only; A18ECOND LADY HESTER STAN HOPE -vâ€"â€"-'-_ -_ -V711_ï¬ daughter of Admiral Sir Henry Digby, and was two years older than her brother. the present Lord Digby. When a girl of 17 she married as his second wife the second Lord Ellenborough. afterwards known in English politics as “ the wild elephant,†who was made Earlof Ellenborough. on his return from the Governor-Generalship of India. in 1844. The marriage was an unhappy one from the ï¬rst. One child was born to the ill-matched pairâ€"a sonâ€" who died when but 2 years old, in 1830. In that same year London society was elec- triï¬ed by the elopement of Lady Ellen- borough with Prince Felix Schwarzenberg, then a handsome and dashing young Aus- ‘trian diplomat, who twenty years after- wards proved himself to be both a soldier } and a statesman. and rescued the House of Hapsburg from the revolutionary abyss of 1848. Lord Ellenborough obtained a divorce from his wife by special Act of Parliament, allowing her a large income. She continued to live abroad and a few years after her elopement with Prince Schwarzenburg she married in Bavaria the Baron von Venningen. Him tooshe deserted. and then led a strange life of it “ between the Alps and the Mediterranean." How many times she was married in Europe is not well ascer- tained, but about the year 1850 she went to the east. There she travelled from Palmyra to Damascus under the escort of the Shaikh Medj-joel. who for many years has monopolized the best travellers between those famous spots, and startled him on their arrival at Damascus with the infor- mation that she intended to marry him. The Shaikh took to flight and made for the desert, but the determined lady followed him, overtook him and married him duly according to the _Bedouin rites. there being _.__-_L -vvv-‘.-_n -v -__ , no witnesses of the ceremony except} his Arab companions. She purchased in his name a splendid house and garden in Damascus,where she has ever since resided during part of the year, spending several months annually in the desert in her hus~ band’s tent. Stormy as her earlier life had been, her latter days ‘were calm and con- tented. Her last and most extraordinary marriage proved a happy one. In Damas- 1 one she became the idol of the poor‘ Mahommedan residents, who found in her the Kindest of friends and counsellors ; and amid them she has died at last. respected and beloved. Unlike her prototype, Lady Hester Stanhope, “Lady Digbyâ€â€"so she called herselfâ€"never became a Mahom. medan, but was of late years a regular attendant at the English services of the Damascus Missionf or the conversion of the Jews. AFBAID 0F IIIB 0“'N SHADOW. Guinean Realize- “ The! the Way 01‘ Tranlxrenors is Hard.†} A Washington letter says Guitteau’s fear becomes daily more and more abject. He starts at the least sound, even that of the guard, and is ever imagining a crowd watching their chance to break into the prison. The other day during the after- noon his cell door was opened so that he was at liberty to exercise in the corridor. and four or ï¬ve times he came out, but he evidently was not in a condition of mind to exercise. and spent but a few moments at atime in the corridor. While fearing some outside parties, he is equally afraid of the soldiers. and indeed he does not like to see one. As he is at present conï¬ned, he cannot see outside of the jail, unlesshe stands on his bed, and this he never does now. The guards in special charge of him are three of the strongest men in the force, and one of them is somewhat over six feet in :height. This one seems to be_ afavorite height. This one seems to be a xavoute with Guitteau. Thinking that the stronger the guard the more secure he will be. some days since he requested that this one be detailed for his especial retention. Though he sleeps well, the soun made in relieving guard always woken? him. -n _A_A_L_I_l_ 1.- 0A8 Guittemi'a defence will probably be insanity,the Washington Diatriot-Attoryney is conferring with experts. If Guitteau'a counsel ask for delay, the Court will undoubtedly grant it, ybut the District- Attorney believes that no longer tnan a week w1ll be g.ranted It is thou ht that the uestion of the jurisdiction of t eCourt willqbe raised and Jcarried to the highest Court. Killing lllmseir Thinking lle was Guinean. Dr. Hayes. of Clifton street. was this morning summoned to attend J. E. Myle- craine, who had attempted to kill himself while suffering from delirium, the result olalong and continuous debauch. Myle- eraine boards at 40 South Francis street and is a painter and frescoer by occupation. He is about 42 years 0! age. is single and for a long time pasthas been grossly intem.‘ perate. His continued drinking had brought on a severe attack of mania a pots, and this morning he labored under the hallu- cination that he was Guitteau, the mur- derer of the late President. As he had concluded that he could not be hanged. but was anxious that justice should not be defrauded of her due, he decidedtotake the matter into his own hands. 80. having brouï¬ht his razor ton. ï¬ne edge. he slashed into iis neck twice on each side, making a gash two inches long in each instance. ‘These gashes were not very deep and it was not difï¬cult to stench the flow of blood. There is now no longer any fear of death. thanks _lo Dr. Hayes, and itis to be sup- THE END OF A ROMANCE. A man who died in Nashville left. direc- tions to send his body to the l’enns ivsnis furnace [or cremation. Ilia wife re uses to have it done. and has placed a. mud over his grave; but his two sons are otormiusd to carry out his wish. and have begun a law suit to get possession of the remains. weed that M leoiraine has given up tï¬Ã© dea that he is Guitteau. ~Rochcstcr Union. Euuu-h Noblemnn‘l Divorced Duoâ€"Tho Mme of a numb. A Beautiful Girl Supposed to [lave Been Murdered. A Rochester despatch says that on Sun- day last the body of a human being was seen floating in the Erie Canal.near Albion, 21 miles from that city, by a boatman. He notiï¬ed James Lewis. who pulled the body to the shore and went for Coroner Coch- rane, of Albion. They soon discovered that the corpse, which was that of a bean- tiful girl 20 years of age, had been wounded, as there were several severe cuts about the head and over the left eye. The clothing was terribly disarranged. The dress was put on back side before, the stockings were only partially pulled on, both garters were upon one limb, and a long heavy twine was attached to the other. In the pocket \of the dress were two letters, which estab- lished the girl’s identity and fastened the crime of her probable murder upon a young man named Fred. Hopkins. The letters were addressed to James Wright and Sarah Wright respectively, the father and mother of deceased,whose name was Nellie Wright. This led the coroner to suspect foul play, and he summoned Dr. Tous ey to make an autops . They removed the stomach and liver 0 the deceased to be examined for poison, as the letters stated that she was about to take poison because she had been betrayed and then deserted by Fred. Hopkins. The autopsy revealed the fact that the lungs contained no water whatever, an impossibility when death results from drowning, also that the girl was enceinte. The coroner empan- nelled a jury, but swore only two witnesses, one who saw her have the poison alluded to in her letter, and the other that he sold her the same. Her remains were taken care of by her brother. She was a remarkably beautiful and well-formed girl, and was the daughter of a moderately prosperous farmer. The prisoner, her seducer, as the letters state, is a son of very respectable and very wealthy parents. He is 31 years old and has been married,but was divorced because he was irregular in his domestic habits. Fred Hopkins was arrested by Deputy Sheriff Daniels. He at ï¬rst seemed unconcerned, and actually forgot to ask why he was arrested. Later in the day he said that Nellie slept with him on Thursday night, but left at 4 o'clock in the morning, and said she was going to Albion, six miles away. He claimed that that was the last he ever saw of her. He is now conï¬ned in the Genesee County jail, where he has been refused bail, and is charged in the warrant for his arrest with wilfully and maliciously murdering Nellie Wright. In- dignation over the case for miles around hardly knowa any bounds, as the girl had, before she knew Hopkins, been reserved, modest and well liked. The coroner's jury will continue the investigation on Monday, October 13th. Vanderbilt has been criticized because he went to Europe with Herter to order all the glasswork, chandeliers, carpets, hang- ings, marble-work and much of the new furniture. Having made his money in America. he ought to spend it here, it has been said. The only art work done in this country for the house are the bronze rail. ings around the house and the bronze crestings around the roof. This work was done in nine months by a Philadelphia ï¬rm for $42,000. It was offered to Mitchell (i: Vance, of New York, who declined it be- cause it was stipulatedthat it should bedone in three months. The chandeliers,including one of solid silver, weighing halt a ton, for the ball-room or picture gallery, are now bein made by Barbedienne, of Paris. Vanderbi t has two of Herter’s men scour- ing Europe for whatever may be unique in furniture. Cost is said to be of no impor- tance whatever. " The more the house costs the better," Vanderbilt is said to have remarked to an old friend disposed to lecture him upon the sin of extravagance. From careful estimates it is thought that the three houses on that one plot of ground will have cost when ready for house warming about 84,500,000â€"not one year‘s income of this same Billy Vanderbilt, who 25 years ago was hard pressed to pay taxes on his farm, and, perhaps, wondered why a poor man like him had ten children to subporbcâ€"C'or. Troy Times. It is with the following words that Dr.‘ Pichon closes his account of the epizcotic I of 1879-80 : " Most authors are silent as to the quaility of the milk yielded by cattle during the prevalence of epizootics. It is possible that experience has not yet sup- plied sufï¬cient ground for its condemna- tion, and it is true that while a diminution of milk secretion is usually an early symptom in almost all diseases of the cow, complete suppression of that secretion accompanies any aggravation or prolonga- tion of disease. The source of danger is thus removed to the question of natural causes. and the discussion is narrowed to the question whether milk secreted at the very onset may not have ac uired hurtful properties. In this state 0 uncertainty, pwhich has not been cleared up by any authority on hygiene. the precaution ol boiling the milk should be adopted. Boiling destroys any infective germs that it may contain.†lmrge Cast Iron \Vheels. Three flywheels have been lately east at Mr. Lycett‘s foundry, Wolverhampton, England, each wheel weighing 40 tons in the rim. and cast in one piece. The diame- ter is 26 feet: de th. 23 inches; and mea- sure across the ace. 16 inches. Each rim will have eight arms afï¬xed. which will Weigh about 25 tons. making the total weight of each wheel 65 tons. Flywheels Weighing 60 tons have been cast in this district before. and some of them with a diameter of 30 feet, but it is believed that they have all been cast in either two or four segments, one great reason for this being that it would be impossible to con. vey such a ponder-ens piece of machinery en masso along a road. Casting them whole reduces the cost. The operation of casting occupied seven minutes. Guiteau'a mail is every day very large. and consists mostly of post-9.1 curds. Some writers condemn him to hell ; others volun- toer to be his counsel ‘for the sake of the notoriety. One Texas man sends him a. bundle of switches with which to whip himself to death : a. Georgia man wanta to ho hangmau. Thom are pictures also. Guiteau is not aware that these things are sent to him. THE OLD STORY. Vanderbilt’s N ew Home. Boll Iionbmu mnk. Kissing the [land that Beal- Then. Frederick Wagner.a saloon-keeper of No. 80 Ridge street, was charged before J ustioe Flammer yesterday. at Essex Market Police Court, with having assaulted his wife and set a bloodhound upon her. The woman was unwilling to press the charge. but the Justice ï¬ned Wagner 85 and held him in $600 to keep the peace for six months. Wagner failed to give bonds, and was committed for three months. Yesterday afternoon a World reporter ‘went to No. 80 Ridge street. The bar- ‘room is a low room in the basement of a ‘ tenement house in a very unpleasant neigh- borhood. Behind the bar stood swell-pro- portioned woman about 85 years old. Around one muscular arm was bound a cloth. A long scar. evidently fresh, ran along her neck, just under the jaw. She was Mrs. Wagner. She spoke with a strong German accent. She said that she had been married to Wagner a few months more than a year. “ I own the store." she said, “ and I sugport my husband. He drinks all day an comes home at ni ht drunk. He spends all my money and t at makes me mad. He did not know what he was doing last night ; he was too drunk, and when he is drunk he is crazy." “ Did he actually set the dog on you? †“ Yes ; it was a big bloodhound. He was lying back there chained to the wall. and my husband turned out the gas and set him on me. He made him bite me. The dog knew me well, and I didn’t think he would bite me ; but he did, here in the arm,†said the woman. pulling down the bandage and showintghfour deep gashes that told of four long tee . “ How did you get rid of the dog ‘2" “I had a broomstick in my hand and beat him 06. My husband pulled him 011 as soon as he bit me and tied him to the bedstead in the back room." “ What were you doing with the broom- stick “I" “ Oh. :I had that for my husband; I wanted to give him a couple of licks. He was behind the bar and I was in front, and I was just going to hit him when he slipped down and loosened the dog." Noticing a. amok in the counter, the women said: “ I must buy a new counter; my husband broke this with the axe. 0h, he’ll take an axe or anything when he's drinking. He broke that door. too, and tore the paper on the wall. He ooets me more _money than he’s worth." â€"“ Then w'hfivivould you not appearagainat him in court this mognipg ?"_ “ I thought I would when I went there. but when he spoke to me I could not help feeling pity for him. I always think he will do better, but he never does and he never will.â€â€"New York World. Telegraphic nlnmage on a Mountain'l‘op. (Denver Tribune.) For a. romantic marriage, a Boston couple are entitled to the ï¬rst prize. About ten days ago Mr. C. A. Button and Miss Nellie J. Throcmorton. both or this city, accom- panied by Herman A. Throcmcrton and Mrs. H. A. Throcmorton. appeared at the Manitou House at Colorado Sprin s. and made inquiry concerning the difllcu ties of ascending Pike’s Peak, and in the course of the evening engaged the Rev. Dr. J. Edwards Smith to go with themto the sum~ mit of the peak for the purpose of perform- ing a marriage ceremony. Next morning at l sunrise six bronchos stood in front of the }Manitou House, and in a few minutes the entire party were in the saddle. The Rev. Dr. Smith was mounted upon a particu- larly lively brute, which, after waltzin on two legs down the road, from the bots to the bridge over the fountain, wound up his performance by bucking the clergyman over the railing into the stream. Mr. Smith was rescued. and although not seriously injured, the accident deranged the plans of the wedding party. for the clergyman declined to risk his health by continuing the trip. in spite of all persuasion â€and the ‘ offer of A AA__ a safe and quite animal. After much consultation, the young gentleman suggested that Dr. Smith should come to Colorado Springs and from the United States telegra h ofï¬ce, which is connected with the signs station on the ak, perform the marriage ceremony by te egraph. The doctor consented to t is arrangement and thus, by accident, another element of romance was added to this already romantic affair. The summit was reached about noon and Sergeant O’Keefe was found in charge of the station. He received his visitors with his usual hospitality, and, when their inten- ‘tion of celebrating a wedding was an- nounced, was overjoyed, and set about making arangements. The instrument-room of the signal station was decorated with flowers and flags, and then the Sergeant seated himself at the telegraph instrument and sent a call down to the Springs ofï¬ce, 10,000 feet below. Ofï¬cer Jones, who was in charge, replied and informed the Sergeant that the Rev. Dr. Smith had arrived and was ready to pro- ceed with the ceremony. The young eople joined hands and stood before the ergeant, the father and mother of the bride standing on either side, and the Ser- geant at the instrument read off the usa- tions of the clergyman as they came t ril- ling over the wires. There was a rapid clicking for a moment, and then Sergeant O‘Keefe, in a solemn voice, repeated the message : " Charles A. Dutton,do you take Nellie J. Throcmorton to be your lawful and wedded wife ?†" I do," responded the bridegroom, with evident emotion. The ser- geant tapped the telegraph instrument, and in a moment another message came and was read by him : " Nellie J. Throcmor- ton, do you take Charles A. Button to be your lawful and wedded husband ‘2“ “ I do," said the bride, in slow voice. The Sergeanthoard it, however. and transmitted the reply. There was a moment's ause, and then came the solemn eeuc udin words. Up from the valley to that sum] stone keep, 14,000 feet a ove the ocean, came that mossage,making two hearts one: “ Then I pronounce you man and wife." -â€"â€"It is aaenaiblo whim of fashion that makes rugs as much common-fan: moat-pets, for ring; will ï¬t any room. and need not ultere in one of moving from one liou to another. The printing buaineas must be boo up in Morris. Manitoba. Mr. J Iloopor, of the IIrrald (formerly of I my announces that he has purchased a.’ lot. and in oing to erect thoroy spring. a brie block containing in! JUST LIKE WODIAN.