,_ --..._-.J- At Kingston yesterday a rat. gnawed a hole in the gas pipe in the window of \Vade‘a drug store. The plumber struck a match to see where the leak was and caused an explosion which was heard blocks away, and which demolished tho ilate glasa and oontenta of the window. he rat which caused all the mischief Was found dying of suffocation. Shorifl' Glass and Mr. 11. Bayley. barris- ter. London. were passing on Saturday under the scaffolding in front of Kingamill‘s new carpet warehouse on Carling street, when a pot of paint fell down and the con. tents were beI-pattered over their clothing. They presented a Dolly Vardcn appearance In conformity with the traditional one tom of the hereditary Princess of Prussia Prince William. the Emperor's eldest grandson, In about to enter .the Civil Service. in order to obtain a practical knowledge of the working of tho various branches of the executive and administra- ‘ tive organization of tho‘ country. AA It- . Henry Barton. of Toronto. has auc- cumbed to an injury receivad at. the hands of one Richard Jones. naar Uxbridge. The circumstances of the case are suspicious. It in said the couple quarrclled. , J-.__n nu" nun Avunu lying in u. ï¬Ã©ldi on her father‘s farm in Southwold on Sunday with her skull frac- tured. It is euppmcd she was kicked by a horse. A Kingston despauoh says : On Saturday night the propeller Celtic, of Hamilton, laden with dynuinite and gunpowder, broke a. stesmpipe on the way up the river, and run into the city slip for repairs. Her cargo was detected, and the captain ordered to take her off. He did. but had only reached Nine Mile l’oiut when the severity of the gale caused him to return. She lay opposite Kingston. at Garden Island, all yesterday, but when the Wind shifted and darkness set in she got in shelter of the harbor until an early hour this morning. when she proceeded west. The explosives are a. full cargo consigned to Duluth. The mate. second engineer and deck hands resigned before the boat left Montreal. Her freight bill is $4,000. Linusâ€"The Celtic left port without a. crew, but expects to get one at the canal. The Dominion had also dynamite. ~ “ Yeg, the books of the bcuï¬old. You see we had sent all um pluulu below. I was saved by the l-kiu of my teeth."â€"Cincinnati Enquirer. 3*...†uuu "‘CJ would not: have suspected that I was hung- iug by the neck. “ Than pull stretched me eighteen inches. As soon as I realized the trouble I reached below, and. tal-iug hold of a. rope. pulled back on it until my haudkerchiaf came out the sheave and I dumped on to the hooks below. I could barely touch them wi‘h my feet.†"Do you mean to say that you lmd nothing but. hooks to stand on ‘2" “ It was a curious one. You see I was on top of St. Paul‘s spire on Spring street. \Ve had rigged ropes to remove the planks of the scaï¬olding. The way we do that is to fasten a block to a post or tree on the other side of the street and another to the steeple and splice the ends of the rope together to make an endless rope of it. If you fasten to it anything you want to send below the weight of the load takes it. down. I had tied the last plank to the rope and it was going down. I wore a handkerchief tied loosely around my threat. The wind blew out an end of it and it caught on the remov- ing rope and wrapred around it. I was imme- diately caught up, ï¬rst the handkerchief and then my hand passing into the block. Now. if I had had an assistant. in the street ' d the plank n} .. below he would have noglcgay and, as lie when Ir:l5't""lié§e anything wrong ubmï¬rJ'Q mdlh‘mfl'e been choked to death by my handkerchief and my beard and part of my faco would have been torn oil’. Persons in the street below would have noticed, perhaps. that I was very quiet, but they‘ \nnn III ..n. I.“ ... Ada Joiner. u. yogng git}, was found 1‘“ " The longer you live the more you ï¬nd out," remarked Mr. Jo \Veston, the steeple- olimber, to a. couple of newspaper men lately. “ I had an accident recently which taught me uomqtlgipg.†“What was it?†'{vas the simultaneous inqu_iry. The question of organ or no organ. which has been agitating St. Andrew’s Presby- terian Church. London, fur some time past was brought to a. decision lest night. The matter has been voted on during the past. two Sabbaths. and last evening the session met to count. the ballots, with the following result: Yeasâ€"Church membership. 168; adherents, 114 ; total. 282. Naysâ€"â€" Church membership, 208 ; udhereute, 68 ; total, 276. Majority in favor of the organ 6. The vote is small. as the membership of St. Andrew‘s is about 7(‘0. and the adherents number far more thauthe bal~ ioting would indicate. On Sunday Rev. Mr. Connolly died at Cataraqui, to the euperinteudency of which circuit be Was appointed at the last general meeting of the Montreal Conference. In 1857 he entered the ministry of tho Wes leyan Methodist Church, and in 1861 was ordained. He had labored at Morris, St. Mary's. Howiok, Strntford. Paisley, Kiuoar- dine. L'Orignal, Richmond, Bberbrooke and Newburg. At the hut moctingo! the Barrie l’rehby- tery. Rev. L‘. W. Puntou, u‘l Bradford. was called to the Superintendeutehip of the Muskoku. Miahiou ï¬eld. which poaitiou he has since declined. Tho congregation of St. Andrew’s Church. Scrutlord. moderated in a. call on the 23rdinst., which came out unanimously in Iavor of the Rev. E. \V. Punton, which, in all probability. he wxll accept. Mr. Bray. of Montreal, who has just ref turned from England. took for the subject. of his sermon on Sunday “ The Egyptian Question." Arabi Psalm was extolled as a. patriot ï¬ghting for freedom. The discourse was wound up with u. eulogium of the late Dr. Pusey. Rev. Geo.- 0. Troop. late of Hamilton has been inducted into the reowrship of St James’ Episcopal Church, 80. John. NB. mlucllonâ€"Cnllâ€" Obituarvâ€" l‘he Organ Qucnuou. London South is to have a. Presbyterian Church. 'l‘lm (,‘rlllc‘n Dnugoronn ('nruo. In a Thrilling Prullcunwnt. CLERICAL JOI‘TINGQ. wnao the Pope says. an’ gin ye tak’ an authority on Kirk matters ye‘ll lung beadle 0' this parish X" Beadle (to aged pariahioner) : “ What think yo 0' wir new minister. Jeema ?" Jeema : “ Wee], John. I reckon he's a uuid eneuch preacher. but hehaa a dreedfu’ poor appearance i' the pulpit." John: " Toots. man. that‘s no criteenan ; ye min‘ what Pope save, ' Tho mind’s the standard of the man.‘ " Joems: " I dinna gie a dite what the Pope says._an’ gin ye tak’flhim aa Mr. 1". W. Fearman, a successful and active pork packer of Hamilton,Canada. was among the notable Visitors at the yards. Mr. F. was under the guidance of Mr. M. Foster. and made a thorough inspection of the various external and internalpacking-houseimprovementswhioh have been made here since his visit {our years ago. It is needless to say he was surprised at. the growth made here in that ime.â€"('hicngo Stock Journal. Mrs. Maxwell. the novelist, better known as Miss M. E. Braddon, is just passing the prime of life and enjoys the most vigorous. robust. health. She lives in a. ï¬ne house near London and is fond of driving a. team of spirited chestnut horses. A singular and probably fatal accident occurred at St. Thomas on Thursday. A young lady named MoKonkey fell against a. waggou. which striking her temple, she fell aeuseleas,and has remained so ever since. A wire 6.000 feet long over the river Kietuah. in India, is the longest in the world. It is stretched between two hills each 1,200 feet high. -â€"-Wlnen you fret and fume at. the petty ills of life remember that the wheels which go round without creaking last longest. ~â€"A week of prayer. boginnimz January 7012,1193 been ordered by the Evangelical Alliance. ~All variety of trimming with udull surface is in demand. -â€"Ca.slimere turbnua to match the dress are worn by children. â€"Flowered eatinee are employed as linings for dressy cloaks. â€"Tho little people will display 9. great deal of red this season. â€"November 30th has been prncluimed Thanksgiving Day in the United States. "‘ Of course you can tell," snorted Mr. Spoopendyko. verifying his wife‘s assertion wnbh u. glance. “ It I had your insight and upack ot curds. I'd hire 8. sho: tower and set. up for an astronomer.†Mr. Spoopen~ dyke, who evidently meant astrologer. wore that piece of blood stumped court plaster on his hand all day long rather than ud~ min, by making It 011‘. than his wife had ever been right in anything. “ That, was my piece after all.†growled Mr. Spoopeudyke, eyeing the job and glancing at the palm of his hand to ï¬nd his piece of plaster gonu. “ You always come in after the funeral.’ "I guest you’ll ï¬nd your piece sticking in the other hand, Gear," said Mm. Spoopendyke pleasantly. u tfn‘e_of morn determwgflop.flum mu “me appruachiug him Mm a. smile. and gently drawing away his hand aha defcly adjusted another piece of plaster. mea m woévwaanétkamam “a". “ Then why didn’t. ye do it ï¬rst ?†howled Mr. Spoopendyke. “ What did ye want to wait until I’d lost three gallons of gore for ? Oh. you know how to do it You onlv want a. linen back and a. bottle of mucilage up your side to be a. county hos- pital. Stick!" and he clapped his wrong hand over his jaw.†“ I'll hold ya there till ye stick. if I hold ye till my wife earns “ Think it is, do ye ?" raved Mr. Spoop- endyke, with a. fearful grin. "Maybe you've got the same idea that the court plaster has! P’r’aps you think that mouth was cut with a. razor ! Maybe you’re under the impression that this hole in my visage was meant to succumb to the persuasion of a. bit of plaster! Come off! Let go that mouth!†and us he gave it awipe it stuck to the palm of his hand as though it had been born there. “ Let. me try," suggested Mrs. Spoopen; dyke_;‘ “ I linpw how to do it." “ Now it's all right, dear,†smiled Mrs. Spoopendyke, anxious to secure peace in the_ fï¬ngibnh _“ Ig'u all_1f7ight nqw !f’ “What’s the matter with the measly business '1" Come ofl, will ye ?†and as he plucked it; off his ï¬nger it. grew to his thumb. "Stick, will ye?" he squealed, tugging at the out in bus chin. " Leave go than thumb!†and he whirled around on his heel and pegged at it again. “ \Vhy don’t you bring me some courb plaster ?" he shrieked, turning on his trembling wife. “ Who asked yo for a. leech? Bring me spynethxng_that knows a. thumb from a chin !" and be planted his thumb on the wound and screwed it around vindiotlvely. This time the plaster let go and slipped up to the corner of his mouth. Mr. Spoopendyke put it. on the end of his tongue, holding his thumb over the wound. When it was thoroughly wanted, it stuck fast. to his ï¬nger, while carnage ran down his chin. He jabbed away at his cut, but the plaster hung to his digit until ï¬nally his patience was thoroughlypxhausted. » Jhat. then it occurred to Mm. Spoopeu- dyke that she had put the plaster in the clock. " Hereit is. dear? †and she snapped off a. gipcehund handgd it to him. "Quick!" roared Mr. Spoopendyke, “I'm bleeding to death! fetch me that court. planter l " “ Uh. dear I " moaned Mrs. Spoopendyke, “ I put itâ€"oh, where did I put it? †“ Never mind the putty!†yelled Mr. Spoopeudyke, who had heard his wife imperfectly. “ What. d‘ye think this a. cruckiu the wall? Got some sort. of a. uubiou that; there is u. draught through here? Court plaster. I tell you! Bring me some court plaster before I pull one the side of this house and get some from the neighbors! †“ Let me see ! " demanded Mrs. Spoopen- dyke, bobbing up and fluttering around her husband. “ Great gracious. what a. cut! Wait a minute I †and she shot into the closet; and out again._ The Sequel to Mr. upoopcndrue'l shav- lnx Experience. “ My dear,†exclaimed Mr. Spoopendyke, drag mg his razor and examining his chin wit startling eyes, “ my dear, bring me some court plaster, quick ! I've slowed off halt_my chin 1'" A DESPERATE SITUATION. .ndard At Bldorado.1{en.. awntneee said that adite he would be compelled to tell where he ‘im as bought the whiskey, for two (it three of no berthe jury were with him and he did not dare to lie about it. - The many friends of Hon. John Mc- Murricll will be pleased to learn that he took a change for the better yesterday afternoon. and last night was getting on very favorably. Hie attending physicians hold out good hopes of his ultimate re- covery. It is the sure badge of a clown not to mind what pleases or displeaaes those he is withâ€"J. Locke. Americana leave their goodness behind when they go to Paris. 80 Mr. Moody said in his ï¬rst sermon in that city. Their desire is to see all the sights, and those, he thinks. Christiana should avoid. John Laehoy and Louis Pecon sentenced at Kingston last spring to ten years each in the Penitentary for an outrage com. mitted on Addie Wheeler at Gananoque were released on Thursday, having been pardoned by the Minister of Justice. Such circumstance is in accordance with popular opinion. C. R. Gardiner. manager of “ Only a. Farmer's Daughter." has just purchased a. $30,000 country seat at. Stamford, Conn. He will not. occupy it until spring. A pohtical economist. says †the beat wives are cheapest." Yet every man who has a. good wnfe looks upon her as a. “ nlictle dear." A Dungannon telegram states that at Coal Inland Chapel. in the County Tyrone, a man named Hamilton. who is boycotted for having taken a. boycotted farm. attended mass on Sunday, accompanied by two policemen. As soon as he entered the congregation left, and one of the police escort had to help the priest to celebrate mass. Three men have been sent to prison under the Crimea Act for intimi- dating Hamilton on a. former occasion.‘ He was hooted from another chapel the‘ previous Sunday. In a. recent conversation with Mr. Conner, {oyul Opera. House (Toronto), he spoke as follows to a. representative of a. prominent journal in reply to a. question concerning his health : " During the early part of last October I had u. severe attack in my right knee of what my physicians pronounced acute rheumatism. I used many swculled rheumatic remedies, With- out receiving any apparent beneï¬t. Ubeerv ing that St. Jacobs Oil was being constantly recommended by many of the leading mem~ bars of our profession. I decided to give it a trial. Accordingly I purchased a. bottle of the article and applied it as directed. From the ï¬rst application I commenced to im- prove. and before I used two thirds of a. bottle 1 was entirely cured. and have experienced no return of my ailment." 1â€" “Mammoth. Mensa, and has 'thrce chil- dren. Ellis ta. -a .ï¬â€"f‘n a Inn of â€hiked laaio‘flï¬g ex acting to a re eased. bu: 3's poatpouexnéns a now in order. As Mrs. Rose Shanda by him his ï¬ne may bu puid. Ellis became celebrated by his evangelistic labors among the Baptists in Nova. Scotia. llc Elopeu with Another fllnn’e \Vlleâ€"Bul is now in Trouble. A St. John (N.B.) despatoh dated Satur~ day says: Four weeks ago Edwin H. Ellis. who has been travelling through the State of Maine as an evangelist, and Mrs. Jno. E. Rose, of Thomaston. Me.. arrived here and registered at a hotel under assumed names as man and wife. Mrs. Rose‘s husband tracked the sloping pair as far west as Chicago and then back to the east, and ï¬nally traced them to this city and procured Ellia' arrest here under an old law on a. charge of adultery. Ellis was charged today in the County Court and was found guilty and ï¬ned $400 or two years’ imprisonment in jailâ€"the full penalty of the law. Mrs. Rose returned to her parents at Thomaston. She has one child. Ellis deserted his wife, who lives It is not often that one can see himself as others see him, and especially as Boston sees him. and more than all as Boston clergymen see him. I am reduced to pulp; but. thank heaven. not to ashes. When you suggest a reply to these I am sure you can have no conception of the subdued and enlightened state of my mind. I am bent on improvement. Laying aside all my old notions of my beliefs and of my standing. I am carefully putting together the real ‘ man that I now am taught that I am. When ‘I get my new personal identity together and in a working shape I intend to study theology somewhere, though in my present confusion I cannot yet see whether I shall study at Andover or Boston. New Haven is nearer. but Dr. Smyth has been settled there and I fear laxity of doctrine in his neighborhood. Princeton is not far to the south of me, but Dr. McCosh isa Christian evolutionist, and it would be folly after what 1 have suffered to come under the malarial influence or that philosophy. On the Whole, I incline to study at Park street. But Wherever I may go I am determined before I die to ï¬nd a. theology which will pass muster at Bangor, at- Andover, at Cambridge. at New Haven, at Princeton. at Alleghany, at Oberlin, at Chicago and at Park street, then I shall willingly dieâ€"Yours. A “'itly mul Caustic Ito-ply to a Boston Query. ABoston telegram says: Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. who Wee invnted by the Traveller to express his views of the criti- cisms of his recent withdrawal made by various ministers of New England. says: Bnooxm'x. N.Y.. Oct. 26. 1882. MY DEAR Sm,â€"â€"I thank you for the letter and papers. I have read the somewhat large expressions of these many and excel lent men in regard to my orthodoxy, con- sistency. influence and general merit without wishing for u. moment to reply. as you kindly request me. When a dead man is lying on the die- secting table, under the hands of expert-I, it uould he unbecoming in him to rise up end- deuly and discuss with his surgeons the propriety of their methods and the truth of results. llnppiuneun in Extraordinary Home. In It fllnnu. BEBCIIBR 0N III! a BI'I‘IIJH. A NAIJGII'I‘Y EVANGELIS‘I‘. the Royal Opera House. HENRY WARD Blancmm. It was not till 1866 that the modern system of fortiï¬cations was applied to the town of Metz, when the construction of the four detached forts of St. Quentin. Plappeville, Queleu and St. Julien was begun. In 1870 only the ï¬rst two of these Were completed. The others have been ï¬nished under the German military au- thorities. who have likewise added one by one the powerful forts of Mansteln, Prince August von \Vurtemberg.and Zastrow. The last of the series is the little fort of Hin- dersin. us to be positively disgusting. A large portion of the passengers who have returned since the close of August are full of indig- nation at the misrepresentations made and the treatment received, and ever that they will never again patronize the lines.that have virtually swindled them.â€"London Free Press. 0"" ___... -4u.vrv as to the poor accommodations on the vessels. Many old and experienced travel- lers say they never before had such uncom- fortable treatment; that the state-rooms were unsatisfactorv; that the taliin service was inadequate, and that everything has been the opposite of convenient or agreeable. The objections made are not applicable to any particular line,but to all of the dozen or more lines running. The complaints have continued for weeks. and are so uniform and concurrent as to leave no doubt of‘ their justiï¬cation. In some instances, second-class rooms Were given to ï¬rst-class passengers at first-class rates, and fre- quently. the bedding was in such condition Frequent complaint has of late been made by returned passengers from Europe as to the Door (lccnmmnflntinnn nn H... 7. AH yohng men have :‘innlienable rights," among which none is greater or more sacred than the privilege to be “ some- body." 5. He should never be discouraged by small beginnings. but remember that all great results have been wrought out from slight causes. 6. He should never. under any circum- stances, be idle. If he cannot lind the employment he prefers. let him come as near his desires as possibleâ€"he will thus reach the object of his ambition. 4. If he is unfortunate enough to have a. rich and indulgent father, he must do the best he can under the circumstances, which will be to conduc: himself very much as though he had not those obstacles to overcome. 3. He should In Willing to take advice from those competent- to give it, and to follow such advice, unless his own judg- ment or cpuv-iction. properly founded, should otherwiae direct. Ewery young man should make the most of himself, intellectually, morally and physically. 2. He aliould depend on his own efforts to accomplish these results. In": uuuluy B 18.08, 1113‘} two seconds before}; sword tbnnl: put him {or ever out of pam from his broken leg The man; had always been uhneakiug fellow on board. and We Were hurpriscd enough at the heroism of his end. When his loss was reported home, in came out; through HOIDG relative that he was a convicz. l’oor wretch; he made a. plucky ending at any rate ! †“ Bravery ! †An old British ofï¬cer of marines said lately, when talking over the newspaper reports about the daring of some of our soldiers in Egypt, " very often bravery only means the devil getting into you for the time. You lose your head and your fears. Now, the bravest man I ever knew was a convicted thief. He had smug- gled himself into the marines somehow, without letting it be known that he was a ticket-of-leave man. My lieutenant had once to take my men on shore to garrison, temporarily, a small fort near Gargenti, in Sicily, and among them was the ex-thief. Hardly were our men landed and in com- mand of the guns than two of the enemy’s ships hove in sight and soon they were launching a landing-party under cover of the ships‘ guns. We were buta handful and no match for the boatfuls attacking us. Our ï¬re was kept up steadily but so was the ï¬re from the ships. The men in the fort were dropping fast. The thief had a leg smashed. At lastâ€".1 am forced to confess itâ€"the two or three marines who had still whole skins took to their heels into the sorubwood behind. Poor chaps, there was some excuse. Certain death was crawling up the hill upon them in that landing party, which neared the rampart with rounds of cheers. ‘ Shame! ’ cried the thief after his running comrades, and up amgygagdï¬aww éoï¬ggé‘oéfag‘ï¬â€˜; airs: tho extraordinary powers of Jerseys to pexiorm the work claimed for them as butter makers. Bomba. is of the Rioter family, the blood of which is in many herds in Canada. there being many inbred Rioters in the different Jersey herds in this country. Extraordinary l'ubuc 'l‘uioi u 8l0,000 Jersey Ila-ll". Many people have doubted the accuracy of the tests of Jerseys which have been from time to time made, and the claims put forth by their owuers as to their extra- ordinary weekly yields of butter. A mem- ber of the Tunas staff has been shown a letter from a very reliable source in New York. stating that on the 17th of October an oï¬er of $10,000 was made by Mr. G. W. Farlee, of Trenton, N.J., for the 3-year- old Jersey heifer Bomba. and was declined. This summer Bombs. made 21 lbs. 1 oz. of butter in a week, and 89 lbs. 14 oz. in 31 days. This trial excited incredulity. being so far in excess of any other yield for so young an‘animal. and her owner requested the directors of the American Jersey Cattle Club to appoint a committee to witness and verify another week‘s test of this heifer. They appointed Mr. Edward Burnett, a well- ienown expert in dairy matters, and one of their directors, who witnessed and guarded each connected detail, holding the milk under lock and key. The yield for the seven days was 21 lbs. 11.} oz., and Mr. Burnett, who was sceptical as to those reported yields, expressed his faith in the possibility and probability of other yields not nearly so great at the same age being accurate. There were certain disadvan- tages connected with the test, as the cow 1 was nearly four months gone in milk. The above test would seem to indicate. carried on as it was under very strict supervision, 0cm": Lin-mun Accommodnllonu. “'hm, You ug .Vi (- AN (DCEQN 0F "IIIIKI A .‘Vlnu “’llhoul Fear. u Should Do. INSTITUTION (ESTABLISHED 167‘ 4 QUEEN R’I‘RBBT BAI’I'.’I‘0RON'I‘ NERVOUS DEBILI'PY, leumntlam. Lav}, Back Neuralï¬inmomlysia and nllLivcrand Cnnu Com mints mmedlotely relieved and porn". nont f cured by using these BELTS. BAND AND NSOIJBS Circutan and Consultation FREE 1N ORM.AN’S ELEL’ Tfl/C BEN ..,..... ya .u uuu \\.l ‘u ( ‘umbcrlund \Id. '“us'curc‘l ( t xhcum "ism by <1: JACOBS OIL. .l.\mn_~‘()n.. Concerningthe eflimt‘y of this won- derful substance. the thllowim; must, imprms tho mulchâ€"lion. Thomas L. Jaunrs. I’mtmustor- General ofthe United States, when l‘ostmnstoruf the City of New York. concurred in the following testimonial from Wm. H. “'ureit: I. Es .. Atst. Ht-neml Superintendent; Third Division lniling uml Distributinrr Department New York Post- ntliee: “I take pensum in mlvisingtlmt the sam- ples of StJAeons OILIL‘R for (“xtl'ihlltltlil among the clerk's (“this oflice, have, us 1hr 11% thev hm’c hcentrietl. proved equal to all Hunt is claimed for the 011.. The reports from the tavern] super- intemlonts and clerlu} yjlm have. used the On. Our correspondent telegraphiug thiE afternoon says: The youug woman who came nearly beiuv {Mum poisoned last night. lives with her 5314‘. r. Mrs. AIL-Kev. on Buy street. The man “ho is char 'ed with gin iug her the poihun ie one Prom. 21. porter in a. wholesale drugginb a. '1“ we uial refuses to glve him 1..way The poison used was oil of tuuey. Scene: Fashionable Hamilton boarding house recently vacated by u. newiy married copple. New wife (viaitiug former landlady)â€" “ 0b. We just perfectly splendid, this keep- ing house! " Prosaic lundludyâ€"â€"“I~Iuw am you getting algyg‘.‘ Age you_f_u!ly seztlgd?†New w:feâ€"â€"u We're getting on nicely. John has got. the stove all upâ€"except the pipe. And what do you think? †Landladyâ€"“ Really I don’tknow. What?†Now WifBâ€"â€"" I never thought. of anything to eat, and we got up Sunday morning without a. mouthful in the house. so we had. to go to a. reatauranp" l l'ouug Toronto t‘iil illegal to in l'l'it’l‘lltd by a Drug Neill. News of a. strange case of poisoning comes from Toronto. It appears that a ‘girl. whose married sister keeps a boarding- houee on Bay street, was seized With faint- ing ï¬ts last night. A drug clerk, who boarded in the house, and with whom she had been keeping company. being present etated that he could bring her too, and took her toabed-room in the house. She did not recover quickly, however, and Dr. Zim- merman was sent for. On arriving he examined the girl. and i-iihwiluently con- sulted with Dr. Wagner. Finally it was concluded that the girl had been poisoned. The girl’s two brothers thereupon charged the drug clerk with having given her medi- cine for illegitiiiinto ends. and forthwith set upon him and punished .him severely, leaving him with a black eye. It iooksome time to revive the girl. the having become very sick and helpless from the oï¬'eota of some drug. A policeman arrived on the scene after the disturbance haul abated somewhat, but no arrests were made. Landladyâ€""VVell. you are getting on nicely, indeed.†It will do more than any other piece of paper of its size and value in the world. It. flt‘t‘oll‘h plishes what would, a few years ago, have been deemed inipOSsihlc. That; talismanic placard on the corner of an envelope or mekage commands the use of capaeions and )eautit'ul buildings wherein to receive your letters, orders trains of ears to carry them. and starts an army of men to deliver them. It brings intimnation from every section of the country and tidings of pleasure as well. But the crowning consideration is the fact that, a three-cent stamp sent, to A. VOGELER C0. Ballimure, ML. with the applicant's name am address will procure a copy of Sr. J ACORS (Eden. dar, replete with interesting readingmatter.aml, better than all, containing s recitic instructions for the treatment and cure 0t rhcnmatisin. new ralgia. and all painful diseazes by the use of Sr. What a Three-Cent Stamp Will Do. I1- 13 so PLEASANT.â€"SO certain and easy in its action. Itinvig- Grates nerve. brain and muscle. 7.0mm does them thingn simply by giving active Digestion. and regulating the stomach and liver. POISONED BY HER LOVER. Gelling on Ni“ Lo .