A non of Sir Andrew Lnak. M.P. for Finabnry and once Lord Mayor of London, has adopted the stage as a. profession. and is now unveiling in the English provinces with Mr. Forbes Robertson's company. Under the will of on English dust con- tractor 31 y of £9,000 was left by the teetator to isdoetor. to be paid only in the event of the teetetor living for two ears alter the date of the will.to be noreeeed to £3,000 should he live for ï¬ve years; and so the testetor died a. week after meking his will the bequest of course lnpsee. The plan of contracting with a doctor to keep his patient alive by offering him'peonninry rewards in en inoressin ratio for oontinued existence is one that i generally adopted might produce the hep. pielt results: ‘ At London the other day a passenger found three tiles in .hia tea at the eating- hcuse. He called the waiter to him and said : “ You are in error about me. You evidently think I am tr veilinf in a special car and putting on a t den of dig. I‘m riding second class. without b c. and am only entitled to one fly. Give is cup to that big fat man at the corner table. He is a director of the road, and is entitled to three flies in his tea and a dead 000th between his pancakes. I cannot travel ; second class and usurp the rights of ï¬rst? class assengera. Please pass the entomo- ‘ 10 i mustard before on go. and set the amantine' prunes w are I can reach them. I may want to throw one at the head waiter occasionally to attract his attention." be the right wing of the apdcaly‘ptic an cl. The cylinders of the Christian printgng press will be the front wheels of the Lord’s chariot. The music that it makes I mark not in diminuendo. but in crescendo l" In conclusion, Dr. Talmsge said: “ The newspaï¬ers serve an important function as the c toniclers of passing events. They describe {or the beneï¬t of future historians all eventsâ€"ecclesiastical, literary, social, Elolitical‘, international. hemispherical. hey are the reservoirs of history. They are also a blessin in their evangelizinï¬ inflnenees.‘ The 0‘ ristisn newspaper wil throw your pocketâ€"book into your wife's lap. and rush up to Bloomingdale Asylum and surrender yourself before you do some- thing desperate. Meanwhile let the dead newspapers be carried out to their burial week by week, and let the newspapers that live give your obituary. _ ‘ _ _ ___ established. Do not take the idea. so pre- valent that when a men can no nothing else he can edit a. newspaper. It you can. not climb the hill back of your house you had better not try the sides of the Matter- horn; it you cannot navigate a. sloop up the North River you had better not try to engineer the Great Esstern over to Liverpool. To publish a newspaper requires the skill, the precision, the vigil- ance, the strategy, the boldness of a. oommnnder-imohief; to edit snewspsper one needs to be a. statesmen. an essayist, s geographer, a. statistician. and. so for as all acquisition is concerned, enoylopmdio. To men and to propel s newepe rrequires more qualities than eny~other usiness on earth. I say this to ssve men from bank- rugtoy. If you-feel called to stert or pub. lie 3 newsps r take it for granted you ere threaten vvith softening oLthe brsin; smitten with the newspaper mania; start a newspa r or have stock in one he must or die. rhisis often the recess: A liter- ary man has an idea, mo ,sooial,political or religious, which he wishes to ventilate. He has no money of his ownâ€"1i men seldom haveâ€"but he talks his idea among conï¬dential friends, and forthwith they are inflamed with the idea, and they buy type andd press and ran: acomposing room, an an ego ace 0 $002, sad theni a press . igch ea ns con ue everythmggoes orth, andthentheflrslt issueisthrcwnn nthe attention of an admiring.wcrld. ter a few weeks or months a plain stockholder ï¬nds that there is ,no especial revolution, and that neither the sun nor the moon has stood still, and that the world still goes on lying and cheating and stealing just as it did before the ï¬rst issue of the New York Thunderer or the Universal Gazette or the Hallelujah Advocate. Forthwith the plain stockholder wants to sell his stock. but _ nobody wants to buy it, and others dis. gusted with the investment want tosell their stock. and an enormous bill of e pager factory rolls in like an avalanche, an the printers refuse to work until they have their back pay, and the subscribers wonder why their paper does not come. Let me tell you, oh, man, that if you have anaidea on any moral. social. political or religious subject you had better charge on the ,_wcrld_th1;cugh ‘the columns already ‘ ' ‘ ' I think I could arouse your ap. preciation of this great blessing it I told on of the money, the brain. the exasperat on. the anxieties. the losses. the wear and tear of heart strings involved in the publication of a news per. On the theory abroad in the worl that anybody. can make one inexperienced capitalists every year are entering the lists. and it is a simple statis. tie that there is an average of a dead news aper every day of the year. Gener- ‘ ally t me or four fortunes are swallowed up beforeanewspa iseetablished. The large papers sw low up the small papersâ€"one whale taking‘ down titty minnows. Altho we have _ over seven thousand ailies and weeklies in the United States and the Canadas only thirt .six at them are a half century old. 1‘ 0 average of newspa- lite is ï¬ve years. Most of them die of per cholera infantum. (brighten) It is high time it were understood that the most sue- eeasiul wa of sinking a fortune and keep- ing it su is to start a newspaper. Almost every intelligent man during his life is smitten with the newspaper mania; start Rev. Dr.'.l‘almngo preached in the Brook- lyn Tainan-ole on Band: on the modern um roll yin; t a tribute. Ho £33.; at tliopzowo .pors 0 this con- flnent were pre-ominen the oduoatora of we mums. Ho toga. ed the stun-tin o! s newspsger as the boot wsy to sin a. fortune. “(1.110: II. “LINE TILL! I." I. SIIK I NITUIB. The Oval. which Attacks Lover- 61‘ Pet Theorlod. 'STARTINGA NEW PAPER Travelling Style. Recent statistics show that the mortality among the French troops in Tunis hes ‘been very great. About H.000 have been on the sick-list since the commencement of the expedition and 900 cases have ended fatally. Tyfhoid lever was the cause of 85 per cont. 0 the mortalitv -- -â€" uvvvâ€"av vuvnwlu The disease {dinâ€"6t conï¬ned to eh: poorer class. but invaded the families of the boat citizens. rtiona of the city notsubject to the same nfluenOes. As many as fourteen cases were reported in one day from this locality; but the disease has diminished, until now but two cases a day are bein found. The exhaustion of material in t a locality is believed to be the cause of the decrease. The health ofï¬cer informed Dr. Speed that vaccination had been resorted to in every family that would permit it.butalargo portion of the population resisted. and would not permit it to become generalH 'I'ILA 1:_r__, A, (From the Louisville Courier-Journal.) Dr. J. J. Speed, Seoretar of the State Board of Health. returned .ome on Tues- day niï¬ht from an oflicial visit to Caving- ton, w are he was sent by the Boardto obtain deï¬nite information concerning the revalence of small- x in that city. The Sector stated that a learned from the Health Ofï¬cer of Oovington that 139 cases had occurred irom’August 17th to October. 18th,ot which 41 proved fatal. He made 3min inquiry as to the origin of the ase, and found it to be the pro. vailing o inion that it was indigenous. as no ev dence of its introduction could be found. It made its a pearance in, and has been conï¬ned to. t e vicinity of some slaughter-houses, which are situated on a ravine into which the ofl‘al from these establishments flow. A sewer has been constructed down the ravine. which is not rovided with a proper outlet and the octor thinks that this matter, while under- going the process of decomposition in the sewer. produced a lowered condition of vitality, which rendered those persons living near susceptible to the disease. The malarial product of this int is not believed to be the origin of a small- x. but it is a question for the me ioal rolession to decide whether this owered condition of 'vitality is not sufllcient to account for the prevalence of the disease there rather than in other town. As the Duke of Sutherland is Lord Lieutenant of both Cromarty- and Suther- land. Lord Stair of both Wigtown and Ayr, and Mr. Dundae both Orkney and Shetland, the number of Liberal lord lieutenants ie thirteen. ‘ Taking Orkney and Shetland as separate counties, Scotland has thirty~four counties. Seventeen of these counties have Conserva- tive lord lieutenants, sixteen have Liberal lord lieutenants and one is vacant: When this vacancy is ï¬lled up both attics will be equal. The counties having iberal lord lieutenants are Aberdeen, Argyll, Ayr, Bute, Cathness, Cromarty, Dumbarton, ‘ Elgin. File, Inverness. Lanark, Liulithgow; \ Qrkney,_ Shetland, Sutherland and Wig-l The Dowager-Marchioness of Lothian comes to the rescue in the Times in the matter of “hop ing" scandals. She pro. poses a gigantic op Harvest Reform As- sociation, with the hopoountry mapped out into districts, contracts to supply gangs of registered hop rs.encampments, mis- sionaries, hospi , canteens,.responsible ‘wagc-payers, savings banks, hoppers’ trains “ thoroughly cleansed before use for ordi- nary traflic," etc. It is just conceivoble that so vast a scheme might collapse under its own weight, or from the unwnllingness or incapacity of hop-pickers to submit to the rules, or {armors to pay the requisite price for a more orderly class at harvesters. ' The Bishop of St. Andrews, speaking at a diocesan synod at Perth the other‘day on the subject of the revision of the New Testament, in which he took a part, said that with all his regard for his colleagues in that work. and with the highest estimate of their learning and abilit , he had cer-‘ tainly felt thatthe result ' ‘which, as a.1 body, the revisers had deliberately come showed less consideration for the work of our predecessors‘than it might have done; and consequently they had less reason to complain if some severity was shown to their own work. The subject of the decrease of the mem- bership in the United Presbyterian Church cropped u more than -once at fa late meeting' 0 the‘ Edinburgh Presbytery c! that denomination. and while carping references were made to the correspondence which had taken place on the subject, Mr. J. Dick Peddie. P., and others admitted that the fact we; denieble. the member for the Kilmerneck District of Burghs attributing it to, the insnflioient represen- tation of the Icy element in the courts of the Church. I The Early Scottish Text Society, as soon as its com lament of 300 subscribers in ‘pude pp,_viy?ll_edit mg! publigh the‘moxe made up, will edit and ublieh the'more important texts in early eottieh literature down to the time when ‘ the written language began to lose its distinctive cher- eoterietioe. The Earl of Aberdeen in its patron. and the lending eoholers and men of letters threug'hout Scotland are inter- ested in its euooeee. Until quite recent date old Vomen in the Orkney: end Hebriden made 3 living h selling “ fair winds" to cellarsâ€"n knot string being given to the meriner. end n breeze. a strong wind. or n ale being eup- Egeed to follow the loose ' g of oenun ota. Love philten could be purchased which would turn the most indifferent lover into an ardent suitor. ‘ LATEIT SCOTTISH NB W8. A judge onoe aid to enouneel: “ Your client had better make eeompmwm: “3 herwhet ehe will the." ‘ Conneelâ€"“ My good women. Hie herdehlp uh whet you will teke." Wherenpon the old women, with e ourtee . re lied.. “ I’m much obleeged to Hi: p. u he'e lee kind I'll just tnk' e glue 0’ epeerlte.†Twelve Aberdeenehlre pro tore reply- inf to e oironler iron the umbre' Com- m ttee meeting, reepeotin the reduction 0! rente. eeid they were eh e to deel with then' teuente without onteide interference. The Free Church in Oreebridge. High~ lends of Bootlend. he. been on e wrengle on the tnre mumed in preyer. Some ere in nor of eitting. egeinet which meny protested. threatening thet it the oom- munion were bended to them under such conditions they would fling them into the eldere' teoee. Small-Pox and Filth. Tho rule forbidding tha employment of married women as teachers in the Chicago schools has been cancelled. M; the ball ivcn recently by the Prince of Wales at A r g.oldie the Qyuccn danced in a qnadrlllo with the Prince as her partncn place to live in. At Milwaukee. Wis.. a few evenings ago. ‘ae Miss Nellieltogers was preparing supper ‘two men walked into the kitchen by the back door and demanded her money. She took her pocket-book out of her pocket, and taking a tight grasp of it, refused to surrender it, at the same time hacking into an adjoining room. After getting into the sitting-room she went to a dressing- oase, took arevolvor therefrom and ordered the men to leave the house. As quick as‘ lightning the burglars wrenched the re.‘ volver from her grasp, threw her upon the floor and took her pocketbook, containing 816. As they turned toleave the house they fired three shots at her, all of which missed her. . Milwaukee must be a nice run to save time on‘ a voyage, it being rememb‘ered that the adverse current on the coast in question isnot nearly so strong near the shore as out at sea. Aiurther fact which ought to be well noted by steam- boat inspectors was that the Teuton was markedly deï¬cient in life-boat accounnoda- tion. Had the sea been otherwise than calm, though all the captain's efforts had been devoted to sav- those on board. there must‘ certainly have been loss of life through this‘ defect ; but had a disaster occurred on the main voyage from England, when there were nearly a hundred assengers more. the situation would_have en worse. The ins ctor had, however. passed the Teuton at outhampton as properly equipped, and one needs only to note the number of passengers in comparison with the life- saving accommodation on many well known steamers of well known lines between New York and Liverpool to be convinced of the gross disregard of life evinced in the matter of steamship ins ction. The reader may well extend the nference in all the above points to our own Canadian lakes. . A Captain Mlle Wanted to Make 'h Rapid Bunâ€"Terrible Results of his Desire to Save his Vesselâ€"Lack 01'â€th . The court of inquiry held at Cape Town in the case of the Tuton. by whose founder- ‘ ing near Cape Agulhas over 200 lives were lost, brings to prominence certain ï¬rst principles with regard to .seamanship which, well-known though they should be, require to be graves fresh upon the minds of all commanders of steamers. One chief point is that where the danger is palpable the safety of a vessel and her cargo ought not tobe laced in the scale against the precious 'ves of passengers and crew; another is that, valuable as time is, human lives should not be imperilled by the ambition to save an hour or two, or even half a day, on a passage. The evidence given makes it clear that the whole ships load of passes era was sacriï¬ced in the desire to place e steamer itseli in safety in Simon’s Bay. From 7.80 p. m., when she struck, till nearly «10.30 p. m.. when she went down, she was taking in water at the rate of eight feet an hour and was at last stop , not to avoid the danger of burst- ing e already staved-in bulkheads through the pressure of water at her high rate of speed, but because her head had ï¬nally settled down till her screw would not wor and she would no longer answer her helm. The weather was calm and nothing prevented all the passengers from being got safely away from the steamer ‘ but the desire to save a vessel of which the ‘ company happened to be their own insur- ers. The fact that the course ï¬xed before : dark was such as to take the vessel only a couple of miles 03 a dangerous point is evi ence of what risks ships’ ofï¬cers will ' run to save time on'a voyage, it being u..__L\_-: "4-; n -. M tho MAW .zeoewy by the Prince judge the motives of our Pnnoess nor accuse her of dislike to Canada without knowin the us why she has been so longan aosadl’ ‘pmtodtrom us. now 5300 LIVE! WERE L0" Anent this subject ï¬r. Du uis, of King- ston. writes to the Kin-ton em as follows: Dm Briaâ€"I notice that in your issue of Tuesday eveninf ya excuse the long absence of the Pr noe- Louise from Canada by stating that she was seriously ill from the effects of the bruise which she received when thrown from her sleigh. I was glad to see that you had the facts of the case. as many persons and some newspapers incline to the o inion that she made use of that acciden as a pretext for being absent from Canada. I am able to state on the best of authority that she was hurt so badly b the accident that her ultimate recovery rom its after effects was for a time considered ‘ doubtful. In July last, at the Royal College ‘ of Surgeons, I was introduced to Erasmus Wilson, one of the oldest and most eminent surgeons of England. As soon as he knew “that I was from Canada he entered into a conversation respecting our country. In the course of his remarks he spoke something as follows : “ I always like to meet Canadians; but I tell you I shall not think so much of them hereafter if they do not use our Princesses better when we send them over there.†This brought up the subject of her injury, and I tol him that most persons here supposed that she was not seriously injured, and that her absence was caused by her dislike to Canada. He said; " Well. I know better than that; I know that she was badly injured, for I was consulted on her case as soon as she came home, and I... can tell you, sir, that she was very seriously injured.†.The old gentleman than went on and detailed‘to me the nature of the injury and the consequences that had resulted from it. and convinced me that what we had ignorantly considered as a trifling bruise, not knowing the facts, was an injug of grave import. And he further inform me that it was by the advice of her medical advisers and of her friends that she remained at home. Also. another gentleman who is personally acquainted with the Princess informed me that she was anxious to have returned to Canada. but on account of the serious results that had followed the severe bruise she received on the side of hhr head her friends and ‘ medical advisers would not allow her to Tu Pllflflu LOUII'. A: WI... Am'pl o! Ila Indispo- Nellie Win a Lady. :, therpfore, ye should néi; â€"Two sharpers work this swindle : One buys a horse and makes a sale at a very low rice to some farmer, telling some plans his story to mount for his willing- ness to take half what the animal is worth. In the course of four or ï¬ve days along comes the second man, who claims to run a livery stable, and he identiï¬es the horse as the one stolen from him. He talks big. blusters around. end either scares the farmer into givin up the horse or " settling the oese " by pay ng a good round sum. ‘ Hens are Gnu-ranted to flourish Endei-Wiï¬sâ€" treatment. A correspondent writes to the horticul- tured editor of the Eye and asks him how to treat fowle. Treat them kindly end with consideration. The aching void in the breast of the modern hen ie want of sym- pathy. Always look on them with a. gentle eye and greet them with a.- hright smile. â€"An eooentrio minieter wee called upon to merry three oonplee at once. The parties were standing around promisenously. waiting for the arrival of the minister, and when he came in he marched up to them exolelming. " Sort yourselves! " â€"The missionaries refuse to admit Chinese converts to church membership unless they give up opium-smoking. That is right. Unless the barberisn can give up 0 ium and take to whiskey he isn’t half vilized. â€"Prol. Fiake thinks that by the end of the twentieth century the English language will be spoken by 800,000,000 people, and that ultimately it will become the universal language of mankind. .. Yes, yes."'he replied, .. of o6hiéé'1'hb. I’m merely hunting in these other places for it to kill time.†'â€"A budJempered man. He had lost his k_mfe and they asked him the want! ques- txon : “ Do you know where you lost It ?" N Van 11m: " In: Mh‘hal‘ u n! Mun-non “r a- â€"There is less than half an apple orop this year, but don’t be foolish enough to suppose that this will be followed by half the usual yield of cider. It does not need applee‘to make older. â€"“ Momma. where do the cows get their milk?" inquired Willie. “ Where do you get your tears, my son?" “ Memme, do ‘the cows have to be spanked ? " thought- ‘ fully inquired Willie. â€"I:edy lodgerâ€"" Your dog, air. is unbearable. He howls all night." Male lodgerâ€"“ Indeed 1 Well, he might do worse than that ; he might play the piano 3 all day." â€"When e mm and a women leave 9. neighborhood because it is, in their opinion, Populated by a “low class of people,†the utter generally look upon the move as a good one for the locality. -â€"-Wiehing to pay his friend aoompli- ment, a gentleman remarked: “ I hear you have a very industrious wife." “ Yes," replied his friend. with a melancholy smile. “ lhe'a never idleâ€"she’s always ï¬nding something for me to do." " No. mum hour's oil." â€"A ledy called at a drug store where the ilsokep tbooks. and inquired of one of“ e‘ ï¬rm: “ gave you ‘ Grade Gmeeoelu " â€"It might have been : A fashionable young lady accidentally dragged one of her false eyebrows in her opera x endgreetly frightened her been, who. on seeing it, thought it Was his moustache. â€"Whoea.n settle this momentous quee- tion‘b If you put two persons into the samefreom. one with the toothache and the other in love, Which will go to sleep ï¬rst? .â€"Young men, don’t be deceived by the girleu It 13 not cheaper for you to get 1!: ed, but it is mighty pleasant it she is ybun and wealthy. -â€"â€"‘t J. Cl Hal-eon Butter " in the heading of an; article in a country exohmge. Those who live in the city are accustomed to ï¬nd plenty of hair on butter. ,â€"‘.‘ Whet ii: your income? " was once asked of a noted Bohemim. “ It is hard to tell.†was the reply ; “ but in good years I can borrow at least 810,000.", â€"The heart of the youngster will be glsddened. Chestnuts in the wholoule mukets down Esst are rapidly falling in price. â€"â€"Jones. getting up from his dinner. in a quiet wsy remarkodp to hislsndlsdy that he had found everything on the table oold except the' ice-cream. -Is getting oï¬ an old joke a poor rela- tion 7â€"N. Y. Emu-en. Yes; and you have a great many poor relations. â€"-Old gold or amber minglea well with Venetian red for evening dresses. So does lemon or cream color. m BABY. Who never has 3 word to ny. BM alwny a has his own sweet ms ? May hea‘vion prolong!“ earthly a ho bub y.â€" â€"The funds already nixed for the pro- posed testimonid to the late Dr. Tunic, of Galt, amount-mo .183: â€"-You'd notursll lfth thine lkypolioemen would play baseball we so thoroughly understand runmng mene m. . be accepted by a believer in the Bible." -â€"The average Ebgllah jail-bird got: 2600mm of food, the average pan 166 ounces. This is hardly a. fair “ di .†â€"Dr. Thomas thinks “ the doctrine of evolution is probably right and ecu easily be accepted by a believer in the Bible.†â€"-Tho Toronto 'Minlstorid Alsooiuflon condemns the Credit Valley Bdlwoy for running a. Sunday train. 1 â€"-'l‘ho mun who would ï¬gure in the world mutt not conï¬ne himself to ciphers. â€"-Tho p0 ulu “ Tom and‘ Jerry †oom- blnntlon noon put in m up moo. -â€"8helby. Pullmm a Hnmmon I circus will go into winter quarter: It ï¬t. Oath- nines. --A wine aw : Don't judge 3 mm'a chu- noter by the umbrella he carries. It may not be his. â€"le Ad is a nice girl to has n s dinner, it she' I well dressed. â€"A penny edition of \“ Uncle Tom's Cabin " he: been published in London. â€"-Oold â€W A dud m â€"Louuomo pooplo. Plum “game ï¬nishing we» of Bundon. â€Mud- 0118mm ha 5 “Dilupidtbd Silk Est u H flu brown in Rimmed with copper. oolo satin. TBA TABLE GOSSIP. ; but ï¬e’vo some exoeuént Miee Lillie Glover. the wings, who is c member of the stock com of the Chestnut Street Theetre. Phi ede phie, hoe received a legacy. veriouely estimated at from M0. 000 to 880. 000. from on uncle of her father, who died recentlyin Toronto. [ â€"-- President Arthur nominated Mr. Folger as Secretary of the Treasury. Jsmes es Postmester-Genersl,snd Hutton “First Assistant Postmaster-General. The Benste subsequently conï¬rmed the appointments. Universe] sstislsotlon' will ensue at the retention of J smes. He has msde an excel- lent Postmeeter-Genersl, his ex rienee as postmaster of New York stend ng him in good stead. The President has shown his good sense in retaining him. So for so they have gone, the new nominetionssre of aged men. Garï¬eld, es lsr as he could. gathered around him young men. The Pope, when addressing the Italian pilgrims in St. Peter’s the other evening, was deeply moved. He looked thin. worn. and anxious ; his face had a feverish ow and its muscles visibly twitched as he at low down.tirst on one side. then on the other. blessing the people with outstretched arms and sweeping gesture. and from time to time throwing himself back in his chair and gazing upward as it praying all the time. 'He appeared feeble, and he has certainly grown to look much older in the past two years than the time would warrant. The emotion with which he spoke again and again brought tears to his eyes. The locomotive is the highest type of machine work in point of durability. We cite this one in evidence. It was made at the Rode Island a Pacific shops in Chicago. Engine No. 3 of that road has been in ser- vice'since J one, 1878, when it was new. It has neverbeen in the shop since,and none of the brasses except those on the cross-heads have been taken out for reï¬tting, and these only once. Its mileage during the three years has been 116,869. miles and it is con- sidered good for 50,000 more before going in to the shop. Its driving wheels are‘fllty-seve'n inches in diameter, and have Kru p's steel tires. Master Mechanic Twomb y ives the credit of this performance to erry‘ Shea. the en ‘ eer. who is constitutionally good Estates?“ and never gets his engine excite . A Good-natured Engineer and M- Ball-o. v ‘_ .â€".__â€"o â€"- wss then at a distance of about two-thirds of s mile. The light used wee worked by one of the “steam suppers" end was so powerful thst the garrison could not only easily follow the movements of the enemy, but could also see them even loading'their rifles. A ï¬re was opened by the investing force and for nearly. an hour 3 sharp tusilede was keptu . during the whole of which time the ï¬t was successfully used by the garrison. These experiments are very important as showing whet en importsnt port the electric ' ht will plsy in the siege operations of the ture. as by its menns every potion of the enem can becloeely watched during the who e of the night. while so little of the ground on which the light is worked is shown that the enemy would not be aware of it. rsonal direction of the Secretary of State or War, the Right Hon. H. O. Childers. to ascertain whether the use of the electric light would enable a besieged garrison to earn the movements of an attacking force during darkness. The experiments proved in every way successful, for when n force advanced from the direction of Dover to invest Chatham garrison, by the aid of the electric light the besieged force learned that the enemy . was approaching and LL_‘ A London correspondent writes : Some interesting ex rimente have recently beenmgdent _0 when: ggrrieon, under the position. obli‘ ‘ g in his manner. and warm in his friendï¬p, his loss will be long felt. and his untimely death deeply an sin. cerely lamented. . 7 "‘ VV‘ "'â€"‘ -'-_' was caused in getting the unfortunate young man out of his dreadftilnposition. asthe machine had to be p ytaken asunder. yet he made , no complaint, although nearly torn to pieces. He was taken to his father's house, and a memen- gr at once despatohed to Nelsenville for r. Wilson, but subsequent events proved that he was beyond human aid, and he breathed his last about 8 o'clock in the 1evening. The leg was not only shattered, but was almost torn from the body, and there were several internal injuries. A feeling of the deepest sorrow exists in the district. where. on account of his many excellent qualities, the young man was a universal favorite. In any undertakin where strength and activity were requirog he was always ï¬rst: _Amiable in his dis- A Young in“ Draw. Into the Cylinder of Q Thu-Mn. We. The Pilot Mound (Manitoba) ï¬rst! gives the following particulars of a a accident that shocked the community. and which happened on the afternoon/o! Monday of last week. The large new machine of the Woodside Threshing Co. was being started on the farm of F . Parsonage : and Ta!- bert Wood. eldest son of AWood. and one of the ï¬nest young men the settle- ment. while adjusting a belt. had his right foot caught by the teeth of the cylinder. and was in a moment dragged into the very jaws of death with such ï¬rmness that the ï¬ve span of horses attached to the horse- power were suddenly stopped. Some delay "In nan-".2 ... _._aa.-_m “Nobody In“ In I «Mull, Pain 0. nuwhmuo hflo (No. mun, «ï¬lm tho doom" D“ And It mt mud hid. Why. 0! ooum u did. For I‘ve human how 0: more. “ Nobod tore at You know th will Toni ou'ro lining in“ nook-o no It!!! I W 133! 9.9m our 0» 19mâ€" Nobody Did It. “ Nobodyl b’okc It I It Mod “IOU. B wuo loaf yo} up on mum-u u I'bul' not my a on You shoalo and w st you‘ve Ion; h to my 00». Inovorlgn notodol , ,_ Nobody! Wtohd Bh- Nobod on“ Plums such trick. anon mv V---_.-_._.' 'w' _wâ€"‘w I in: int Ju'lnpins over tho {onco- hm‘ I tom. .aadro u on top. And you hue Below you on: but commence." A: mama.“ "' '“rou. 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