A Romance â€bowing Ilow 'I‘lucly .‘drlcfl .Vlu)‘ llllnu “veal Joy. (Chicago Tribune | “ [3 ma bymeneul-lmppemngn editor in ?" Avery pretty young lady stood in the doorway and glanced in an appealing may at 2.113 occupant» of the room. 7"7 Hyluelfeul means something about. getting umrricd. doesn't It? said the norm: tepnfvur. _ ..,. I‘m-“A “ 011.1 know you don t." suit] the friend of Maud S. " Guln uewr do. They spend most. at [heir time trying tu escape from the dreadful ab)“ 0! iuutriiuuuy into which c llulIeBb yuuug iueu meeudeuvoriug to plunge them." ‘ “ Thu object. of my visit." mud the young lady. " in to see some editor in regard to a. poem. and It occurred to me that perhapa the gentleman fur whom I naked might be ‘he person huvmg such mulera in charge I have mat. with a. rut] disappointment and have wriuou this poem in commemoration of the event." V :‘ You, sir." replied the young lady," but I don't. want to luxury "-â€"â€"_-‘â€"- V " I'm sorry he got away," Maid the hon-e reporter, "but. purhupu you ware lucky to lose him. There im't am thing In this poem about. the brown mantle of Odtubt-r mining llghlly on the hills, in there? 0r the deep green of the pines being reflected sgumun the turquoiw bloom of an autumn Iky ? Because if there in we can't take in There in more brown-mantle.“-Oumber poetry atowad away here now than the winduw-cleuuer can use in a. year. If you've got. anything uhout. the White men- sengera of heaven drifting silently down through the keen air. or thu gaunt outline of the leuflem oaks slaudmg haggard against. an unpityiug sky we uuuhn do buziuess with you. Our stock of Novem- ber poetry is rather light this season. If you could ring in aomollnug about a. boon. black dying on the steps of a banker’s residence Clxriatnmu Eva, while inside the house the wasmil bnvl was going round, fl would be u duiny." “ I'm afraid my poem will hardly meet the requireumms you suggest.†and the young lady “ because the theme is a and one. and the treatmenu in naturally in accord with this fact. I can read it; to you. however. " Nothing about ‘ put. away his little rattla' in It, is there ?" “ No. Fit." " Nut ' the beautiful nummer is dead, Ilas.’ " “ Certainly not.“ " Well, then, you nmy read it.†and the hone reporter seitlul hiuu-cif in a critical attitude. The young lady produced a. roll of manuscript and rend an follows : And this is the «ml of all. l-ancst! The Ullll m‘ our happy \lrmnus. A Walk tn the quiet graveyard, where the snowy nmrhlu glvamis; Tabluts of blighted hopes. and broken hearts that mun-i For their lmrieil loves and the weary years that must. be lived alum). And this in the 0nd of all. (iuodAby! Perhaps it. llml cuuswl less [min To lmvu ;‘uut' our separate ways “ ithou’. seeing ouch ullu-rugniu; For want of one little word. Ernest, lives often \ll'IfL mum. You spake Hint word. but it came mulaite; it only broke my liuurt. “ Nico, ain't. it?" remarked the horse reporter when the reading was ï¬nished. "Are yoii the girl that's been up to the graveyard and taken a. look at the tablets of blighted hopes 2‘" " Yes. sir." “ Ernest. in going back to the world, he ? What. has he been doing in 55. Louis tll thin time '3" You go buck to the world, Ernestâ€"~1uen's hearts so schlum brcnk~ And under new stuns, in new skies sot,sn0n other tics will make; But l :10 hack to u. desolate lifeâ€"nu mun mm ever be, Thuuhn l mam tho wide world over, what once you \Vrru 10 um. “I hardly think you appreciate the cir- cumumucen under which this poem wuu wrihgun." will _tho 3'9qu lady. “ Oh, yes I do. Ernest is your young man, and you have quarrelled with him be name he only called you histootsey-wootsey eighteen times, instead of tWeuty, as you had ï¬gured on. You think your heart. in broken, and you want. to get even by break- ing other people's hearts with your pot try. That‘s wrong. J ust now the world seems desolate, and the horizon of your life is o'ercast with lesden ulonds. But. time heals all Wounds. and about. a. mouth from now. when some young mun mentions oysters, the chances are you will beat the record getting your seulskln juokat oil the hat-ruck." “ You are very much mistaken. sir.†said the young lady. “ My love is no ephemeral pasalou." " Do you still want. Emeat 1’" “ Yen, air.“ “ Well. 1 can tell you how to get him." "0h! can you?" mked the girl enthuui- annually. “ 1 blmll be so thankful If you will." “ You take this poem," said the horse reporter. “ and m-nd it. to him. Then drop him a line mtying “no papers have agreed to print. it. {or you. If he doman't. weaken when it comes to huvmg his name mixed up with 8. lat of graveyard“. blighu-d hnpr-s. broken henna aud u. deuoluto life I nlmll mian my guena." “ Do you ruully think no 1‘" naked lho girl. “ You; really and truly." †And I will toll you whether or not. your plan NllC(‘.(fl('ll!l." ulm coutinuml. “ Nnvor mind that. pint. of it." replied the compiler of the 2.30 lint. " 'I‘houoliome will work all right. Come arnund again utter you are married and i will give you a pointer on how to keep Ernest. at. home nights." A cm‘ioua feature of the craze for apecu lotion fostered by the recent. oil discovmien In the Pennsylvania. (in-trick in the hold which the pprculntwo lt-vr-r han obtained upon tho hm in x. who crowd the gallery o! the Exchange at 'I‘Itunvrllo eagerly watch ing tho Iltmltmtlmm of tho nmrkvt nnd gambling; With more or lens nucccm in nutr- gina. It in mgniï¬cnnt of tho chanum] palitiml omnhtinu of ln-hmd that. neither of her ‘wo Duhoa has mm or bruthor in tho llnuï¬o of Cvmmmm returned by an lriuh con. Mimeuuy. and this thmmh tho Duke 0! Imlmtel‘a nm-nml sun in Lord [.ivnu-unnt of Waxfmd. and his wile in almond. tho Ifgeut propvl‘ty huldel‘_ in that county. Lava AN I) II‘DIIHI-i-IENHI! . 1w 0" I‘rnu'. Do 'I tic-y lujnrc Ilw “IN-mule Foru- Dlvine Q"~â€".‘ Dot-lot"- 'l‘eulnmou). Dr. Alfred Chadwick says in “ Know- ledge" that he doee not “ believe for one moment that fully 90 per cent. of women are deformed by ate) H. ’ “ If such Were the case," he adds. “ I should not‘ her-irate to ray that 99 per cent. of women knew nothing of lacing, for it lactug the ï¬gure in pruotlned in a judicious manter iuntead of deformity would come elegance and health. A Well applied corset leaVen the upper part of the cheat perfectly free end deVelope the capacity of the luuge in that iiituatiouâ€"tlie meat important altuuliou. by the key. eeptcially in the female sex. 'l‘ubercular coiir-umption ur-uaily attacks the apexee of the tunge. a part far removed from the pres- Hire of a coreet. however tight; in feet the tighter the corset in the lower part of the cheat the greater amount of were and expaueion in the upper partâ€"but this would not lead to consumption. The doctor DLlleveu that a women is in better health in eVnIy renlmut when wearing a groper li'~ Hut: con-ct, but he deprecateu the legiti- niug suddenly of tight lacing. “ What I connider to be the perfection to the female. ï¬gure or to the male," he eaya. “ iii to begin early in life, say at the age of 7 or 10 years. and then only with very yielding materials, permitting the comet eimply to touch the contour of the body. though a little ï¬rmer at the waist. AM the girl growe up and the chest expands the nut-it of the con-let may be very properly uiwlelarger, the waist at the same time being kept witl2izi bounds. If such a uyetem be carefully carried out there never would be any undue preaeure any- where, and the girl who reaches woman- hood will pnseeee the perfection of a ï¬gure, with iti-i round and taper waist, broad shoulders .und well-developed chest. It aIWay-J was and WI" be uecesmry to re- htlaiu, limit and correct the growing figure. Without aid nature Stalduul forms a good waint. Gradual and eerly correction. in- ntuud of violent and sudden reduction of ‘ deformity. is the way to achieve eucceee »- no evil t {facts can poi-'sibly ensue. In the wearing of the corset, the degree of com- i'urt with which it is borne ehould be the tent of utility. Early care and judicious management. will iii chry case buccrcd in attaining elegance and in preeervtng health." Happening to look as the sun one day hm: \Verk through a pair of those very dark rpcct'tclen which ure lined in tho manipula- tmu of the electric light. the reporter unw a diminct black blfl‘ck on its dibc. " That. must- be u. very large sun spot,“ he thuughb, and immediately bemok him- mftf to the obmzrvuiory of his friend the antrouomer. Did â€-1- (70an Gin-1|“- Nun n [Huck Eu f ‘ Ycï¬," raid the ustronvmer, “ that‘s a truly remurkaula spun. In‘u we black 93c than the great. come: gave the ruler of the 501er syn-tun! Al. 1::th there is u theory which thH H). and. ma the rum has shuwu black eyed before after greut cumets have. been engaged with him at close quarters, perhaps the theory in not so very in: out 01 the \my." “ DJ you mean that the cumet hit the sun ‘2" " No, not exactly that, for if it had it would have been the end of the comet. But it undonbtully passed through the aunt).- phere oi the sun. and if it had gone , much close-r would have touched what ap- I pairs to us as the sun‘s actual surface! You know that one of the discoveries ol' recent yearsis that meteors follow in the tracks of comets. The tremendous spot that adorned the sun's face after the peri- helion of the comet of IBM has been ascribed to the fall into the sun of a huge meteor following the cometmnd the present spot, or rather spotsâ€"for there are several which made their appearance about the time of the perihelion of our great comet. â€"may have had a similar origin. There is another \iew that can be taken oi it. It has been shown that a comet going very close to the sun is liable to be torn to pieces by the divellent forces operating upon it. The present comet. you know. has a divided nucleus : in fact. it has probably thrown off several cometary masses of considerable magnitude, and the work of disintegration appears to be still going on. Now, it may have parted with a portion of its mass when it was nearest the sun. and the fall of this may have produced the spots. There in yet another way of looking at it which does not involve the fall ot anything upon the sun, and that is this : the exceedingly close approach of the comet may by itself have caused the spots. It is true no comet has ever shown that it pos- sessed mass enough to affect by its attrac- tion the motion of any planet near which it passed, but the gaseous surface of the sun Is in a condition far dillerent from that of the solid globes which revolve around it. At any rate. the great spot which you now 810 on the face of the sun. and some of the smaller ones too. undoubtedly made their appearance when the comet was at its perihelion; and moreover, they appeared on that side of the sun which was then turned toward the comet. " So you see there in really some reason fnr Buying that the comm. gave the sun a black eye. In return for this pugilmtio unlum. however. If ullthe observations are to be trusted, the King of Dny reduced the comet’s hum! to fragments.“ ’I‘MI l‘nr Lona- ol ï¬nalluh lor lflnhâ€" Srollnnd and Irrlnml l'nrc-pu-nrnlnl. A last (Sunday) night‘n Bnfl'alo despatcli says : 'I‘en oar loath of immigrants pushed the International Bridge to-night m route for Utah. A singular fact in regard to the wake up of the party in that it. in entirely Englnh. noitln-r Scotland nor Ireland being rr-promrutr'd. Tho grmt American inter- vwwvr will not. be permitted to gather much inlormaliun in regard to the pariy as guanh nro stationed at each door. and no one in purmim-d topmm Without ore- dontmls from llm elders. who are occupying tho that car. ’I'lio party mmpriaoa a num her of families intact. an wall as many nmglo men and wmnnn. 'I'luv are an a rulo Well drosstd. and am in; pun-ml) ol p-nporior wcial cm (lilion as com} and With the an crnge ilnllligrant. Smallp ox is cuxtiuually spreading at 1‘Mermn.N. J. “'I‘i .l II I N“ (‘0 "88TH. .VI 0 "1|le R ET“ I} l 'I‘!. A nlru “II-I lh-cnmr- Blind. but cnn DI:- lluvlh T: It Ilw. 'I‘Imr rum in c Color-â€" llc-r \"undrrlul men. A girl who has been lying rich in Peter. boro' for acute time in commanding a hair share of public attention there thiotigh phenomenal circumstances connected “ith her iilneer. Mint! \Vinnie Tl‘uuny wan employed in the dinivgquoni of tho Urier.tal Hotel. and on October 28m she was attacked, after some previonn flicklieuu, by convulsions and lockjaw. IIt'f nutter- inge continued till Tuesday, October 3lat, when she aluimit. recovered. During this interval Mice Tracey exhibited nonie Very curious phenomena. The patient. was unable to see. but surprised the doctor and those pretent by saying that nt a. particular time it. was 10 minutes to one. No clock was in the room and the time was correct to aminutc. Not only wan nlie blind. but evrn it she “'ch not so there We.» no clock for her to bee irorn whore ehe lay. MoreoVer she was blindtoltltd at (I told the time with accuracy. While blindfolded she felt and designated the color of gloves, diatingui-hcd the color of two widen of a. paper one of which Wan white the other red. In fact the parties about her bed were n-ttonie‘ne-l on the mar- vellouo way in which ishe dintinguhhcd colon: which by no purlhiblllly could one see. The girl eteu could tell on what part of a paper was printed matter if there hap pened to be any. More tlinn this, iihe recognized her friends by touching their lmnttn and if the [)t‘l'ntHJ preneiited to her wee a. etranger ehe readily recognind the fact. A reporter of the l’cterboro‘ Rc'i‘iut‘ Vieited the girl, and he was netonn-hed. Below is an extract from his remarks on i the occueion of his vii-it: “ Was it. this angel that told you the colors and the time. and the other things you told us yesterday 2’“ asked the reporter. " Yen. it wan the name angel," ehe replied; “ when I toucLed n. color it would tr“ me What it th8 and it Wt iild tell me the time. \Vhen Dr. O'Shea. brought in his Gout-in I could not mac him and never knew hitn, but the angel ‘told me who he was." Again was her ntaiteinent conï¬rmed by Mm. Intyre and the doctor, in so far as they mud Dr. O'Shen‘s cousin did call to ace her. and although his name was not mentioned blle told at once that he was a contain of the doctor. â€On Monday evenin v," she said, in answer to a quotation. “ I could not nee any one, and it. mm then the angels ï¬rst came to we, and they stayed with me until I could nee last. evening. and then they bald ‘goodbye’ three tiinee, and have not returned. I cannot tell anything now, only by 1in ordinary eight.†The l‘ulorlumuc I'rullculm-ul at an Chicago l-‘irl. Miss Minnie Schultreixe ie a D]..‘Zl“ll'lt' spoken German girl of about 2:3 )eurb of age, who has only been in Amerim two years. She has been working in that Yer} wicked city. Chicago, as udi ineettc s»r\‘n1.t in a. rich lmnily, and while there loved one of the mun not Wisely but too well. When her condition became known the family ‘ oust her on the street to shift for hermit ua‘ bent she might. thus giving one more example of men's inhumanity to woman. Minnie obtuined Work enough to get roomy to buy a. ticket for Detroit, and htstyed in that city for a. hhort time. In her greut trouble the was encleevoring to reach the only friends she has in this country, a. family who came out from Germany in the same ship with her. and who liVe in New York city. Minnie made money enough in Detroit to buy a. thronth ticlu-t to New York city, and had got as far on her journey on the Grand Trunk Rail- wny as Brnntford, when the conductor, M‘elllg that the was ill. advised her to get off at that. elation. She did so, and was Ill'lVCl) in a. hack to the American Hotel. She wuun pretty sick women when the reached that hostelry, and the people con- nected with the hotel watched her move- ments an the stepped into the hall and eat on the floor, when her child. a girl. wan born. A doctor was immediately rent for and Mrs. Cutler, wife of the hotel keeper. did all in her power for the hufl'erer and the new comer. Mother and child are now doing well, and are being excellently cared for by the good people of the hotel. The following item in given for the con. nideration of those of our readers who are in aeurch of just. such an article an that. referred to in the following statement of Mrs. Geo. A. Clark. a. Well known lady of St. Calliurinea: “ i cannot refrain." says Mra. C., " from bearing toatimony to the wonderful effects produced by the use of the very beat. remedy in the world: Sb. Jacobs Oil. for rheumatinn. I had rheumatimn and dropay and did not walk a Map for fifteen years. [tried nearly everything our moan skilful pliyi-iciana preacribed.â€"t lif ton Springa,â€"â€"3t. Catherine Sprinua. etc . reaiding with a celebrated German doctor. who pronounced my cane incurable Think- ing awry thing of no nae [ was induud to try Sb. Jacoba Oil. and it has certainly done wondura for me. 1 heartily recommend it to nny who may be enduring an 1 did. I have not haul any line of my right, arm for more than a year: now. howmrr, 1 can raise it vury nearly to my hem ." A PB’I‘BBIIUIIU' PIIENO.IISNON. The Cmmdiun Lumber Company's mill and confer-h. at L'Asmmptiou. Qu .. was consumed by ï¬re on Thurndny. Loni. about 830 000: insured for $20,000 in English companies. An Erie (I’m) telegram says : A horrible accident. happened at. the Poor [loin-e last night, rennlciug III the incineration of Maggie Heron. a. blind inmate. The woman had been ullowad permission to smoke. and got up in the night to Booth her mind With u. whiff. The match fell from her ï¬ngers and ignited her dress. She ran screaming into a ward occtxpied by a number of in- ï¬rm old Women. and tho ihmen of her burning clothes come near cunning another llulifnx holoouunt, She rurhed back to her own room and enveloped herself in her beilclolheu. where she burned to u. cinder. Sentinels are still guarding the tomb of General (hum-Id. Rev. Thomas I). Auderson.jun.. of Part. land. Mo . has bvou uunnimnunly culled to become the successor of tho lamented Dr W. T. Brunt‘lpy in the pastomto of (In- h‘wcuth Buplixt. Church. Baltimore. llnrrlhlo l-‘mnlllt lo a \"onmn. 'l‘hr SpI-lngn Did no Good. .-\ \VA Yfll I! E \" A I i". For eighteen hundred yi-ara (lhiintian Women have mu-kly bent their lioadn at the altar and vchd to obey the mule creatures blulltllllg beeide them " until death did them part." and none of them. until within the laat few )eare 0! thin progrennive and levelling nineteenth century. thought that it was amthiug but right and in accordance with human and divine law that they ehould N) do. " Wilt thou. Mary Smith." eaye the clerical gentleman etanding in front of the pair who are in procee-t ol uniï¬cation, “ have John Jt-nea to love. honor and obey." eto. “ I Will." aunts/ere Mary, nothing loth. and tnueehe haa bound hen-elf to be the lile-aervant of John. who in perhaps her interior mentally, and in almost certain to be her inferior morally But. a Wedding took place in bt. Tlltllll’th' Church recently in which the bride found it hard to bend her neck to the yoke though it. promised to be light. and easy to bear. She had cheerfully given her consent to take the bridegroom as her Wedded hue- band, but when the clergy man put the question whether ahe would love. honor and ubry him. there was a pause. That little wt-rd “obey " had auddenly ewolled to gigantic proportions fro var-it aa to obscure the remainder of the eervice in her eyea. She could hear nothing, think of nothing, out " obey " rang in her eare like a warning: l‘ell, prophetic of danuem and difficulties ahead. She tried to slur it over but the clergyman would not permit of tltnl. and tepeated the queatiou. There was a painful silence at the altar. Then the white-rubedclergyman repeated the quee- tion. But the tumult was still raging within the calm, paaaionleee exterior of the bride, and she could not reply. Again there was a death-like bileuce, and agaiu‘it ; was broken by the measured Cadence of the iolergyman as he repeated the all-important queetiou. The lriende around the altar began to fear that there would be an unpleaaant hiatus in the ceremony. when after another pause. the bride bowed her head, and Willi a low " I will." took upon herself her life- yoke. A Iluullllon llrldr llr-Unlr- Io Flu) There are Churches in which the hm:- benr “obey†is left out. of the marriage service. and ladies u. ho are ubuut lulu-(301118 brides have therefore the option of binding themselves to obey their hu~bundu for life. or merely to love and huuur them. But after all It. matters little whether or no: the orange blossom-crowned bride whispers the ach‘mbuegmiug " I will,“ for she \vill.1u the vast- nmjoriby of 08.9996, alter the blon- noms of passion have fulh 11 away, and the fruits of affection have taken their piece. prove the truth of Um poet's line: ('omlitlnu ol the Young Jlun who w: a .hhnl by but \"uml. For twenty-four cr forty-eight hours after the shooting of \Ventwm‘th Day by Miss Wood it was COHHdelell that he l‘nd not one chance out. If ten them-and for life. but hut llxedicnl attendants, Dre. Pitcher and Harris, nmv think hi8 chances of recovery are at least eVenly balanced. At the first examination of the wounded man it was discovered thut there was an abrasion at. the buck, nearly opporite where the on.“ entered at the front, but when the pair in: wan turned over the bull. if there. erexued to elude the FBal‘L‘h. It was reasonably concluded that ii the foreign substance was there that. it would gravltate to the surface again if the wounded man was placed on his back and kept in this position. This was done, and on Tuesday the ball was so near the nurfuce that a. slight. incipiun runon-d it. Since then no unfavorable ti) tnptutns have appeared. and it is alur ht Certain that the bowels Were not perforated. 1f Day recovers. his will he a marvellounly narrow escape, for the bullet must have diverged from a. straight line and thus escaped a vital part.â€"l»’mntfurd 1-.‘xpmilor. A romantic story of love, tragedy and good fortune has just been brought t) light. An'elia Graham was a young and pretty Irish girl who went to Baltimore about. two years ago to make her fortune. She had been there but a short time whena wealthy old gentleman named John Ritchie became smitten with her charms. Friend- ehip ripened into love. They soon became engaged. and the day was set for the wed. ding. Then adifliculty aroseâ€"he wanted to be married by the Episcopal Church and who in the Roman Catholic. Afters. lover‘s quarrel Ritchie ï¬nally agreed to his inveet- heart.‘u terms, and the Wedding day was set. Again the old trouble arose, his friends persuading him not to marry in the Catholic Church. This reunited in the engagement bring broken, and the young girl was persuaded to return to Ireland. Then he began writing to her. ruqllentiiiu her to return and marry him. Accordingly i-he returned. Courting recomineuced, and in a few months they a ere married. 'l‘wo daye after the wedding. from some un- known cause. Ritchie cuininitted suicide by blowing his hraiim out. and tho ~\oung widow was left Wllh a large fortune. She creased the nee-in again. and. after a short time on the Emerald Ida. recently ('Jlllu to America. and it is announced now. will in a. few d‘IVH marry a wealthy ixmuulac- iurer of Boston. Lima advicen state that. the Into war cnn~ tribuliona have Mruck the prople wuh (mn- atematmn. and aeveml have uulicited (ion. Lynch (or permisuiuu to mortgage their property. but. the privnlego WM denim]. [‘wo contribulimm havn hem-u paid. ()uo pornon declarcn his inability to pay. and uthers have llcd to the ()ormllerm. Mr. Charles Fallon. the young Montreal luau whoao atrango hallucination that God had commanded him to ab‘tain from food caused auch a wideapread feeling of interest, died yesterday from the effects of his thirty-three days of abstinence from food. Fallon waa only 21 years of age, and was a member of an influential family in Mon- treal. 110 had preViom-ly been noted for his deep piety and the intensity of Ina re- ligious feelings. [lo mu an active member of the Young Men‘a Christian Aesooiation. Ilia case maybe regarded an the roault of a naturally lnmglnallVe and unbalanced mind wrought upon by powerful religious emotion. Principal Grant. of Kiwatnn, hm: returned from a visit to the Old Country. 'l‘llla‘. J IL‘RS'EYYI LLB: 'I‘IKJG EDT. ’l‘lll‘ E"EIKI.AII‘INl-' “‘ \‘KA; Mun has his will. but. “Oman bus her \\ "Huh from \‘nlunlnry fllnrvnllon. A Romance 01 Itrnl Lite. uy .\ I’mher [tn-lulu:- Ills Bummerâ€"Pli- Nhie I‘liounisud Dollar- lu ller Ila-d. About eighteen years ago there lqutl in the Scotch Block. (1‘ Allan Tract (lhllml alter the father of Senator Allan. Toronto), nine miles lrotn here. a farmer imtnul Andrew Porteoue. Hie wile lelt him and run ttl' “iih unother limo. huvuig tin-t htripped hie house of all etleote of value. She levented wuh is young men who Wish engaged to one of the liendnoweet girl-i Hi the ’l‘ownehip of Aiieeeter. A Will~ to do luiuiur nriined Mofl'et allowed hie daughter Mury to go and keep house [or l‘orteoue. Will) the reeult that in the court-e of time the young: liouet keeper bore a. daughter to l’orteoue. l’orteoue lied to lcuVu toe townehip in con- m-quence and went. ewey to California. Nothing Won henid of him for â€Mrs. At luet he heard that his Wife was dead and he returned to (humdn. intending to iunke Mary Millet lllH “i'o and none {or the WI'( i-g he had done her. He mine as fer ue lltuniltnu. wont into lhtvy \\'iiitc‘i~ hotel. met. an old neighbor and learned from him that the mother of hie child “he iimrried and living in Caledonia. He felt no bid at the tit We tliub he never Went. to M4! llit-lii. but [inuki d up and left at noon for the Staten. The other day he ft'lllll'md to Canadaaeeuond time, bound to hrfl his child it not. hu- iiiother. He rcpuirod tn ti (3 Scotch block. got. an old neighbor to tell him of the whereabouts of Mary hll‘ffab and to uucninpnny hiin thereto. They drove to Caledonia end up to the home of Mary Mt'ffut’s llllh‘bhlld. The husband was away and «he was VlHlllug a. neighbor. The girl was there doing the homework. She was told tum men wished to see her. She would not receive them till she had changed her attire. In E few minutes she was introduced to her father who put 99.000 in bills in her hand. and u'ter u. few iniuutee‘converaution left. telling her he had lots of more money for her and for liimrelf and would be back hOOD again. llle girl lied indeed a strange tale to tell her mother when the letter returned. Mine l’orteous. an the young Women might. now to he called, is 17 )euro of age end well known in Cnledonin and in the Sootcli block. This nilnple narration might. be made still more romantic. but for the present LlilH inuet sumac.â€"Correspon- (Inn-v Toronto World. Chance in a. word void of sewn. Nothing can: exist without a. cuuae.-â€"â€" l’ultuirc. A son of the late Rev. Marlo-y Puuuhnn is Btu Iying tor the Mcthodisb luiuiutry it: Victoria. College, C Ibuurg \Vuumn’s rights are obtaining recugni‘iou in Nurwuy. The Paxlbnucnb has Just pasmed a. law which the king has r-igned, giving women the privilvge of attendingtbe universuies and applying for degm ('3 in all the arts and sciences; but the right to hold nï¬we in tho servicw uf the Scam and of partinipaviuu in the competitive exmnina- tione 'or such pomtions is not yet accorded to them. Tim (‘Xi‘li‘llz‘c uf gm ii :3 Hit-Jul} the purl m' lLv I’rcnrh Nuiinn iur thrpuw picni‘lhiu‘uunlry isrlunuz by â€w prrNHililliull M :I miuwul hrnnzu- 112m“ 1-: Fl't't'llflln huliiing aim! [in inn-I1 ul' Lilwrly. Bunny. niili llx'l'lllili-xx, is 4min him-«l in lhis imnn-im WHI‘K 0f 2m. us lln- high, Liming lurrll \iill .«u'h Hn- l-nrpmc (if n h‘unm iinil inlhu hurlu-r 1-! NW \ nrk. 'l'ln-rc is unuiiw Hum-u “hirli “ill rimv liniurlurgrr pmiw inn] ti'i minniun llnin run lin- giuan \i'urk nlch n-li'rr-ui In. It is iilmlrnu-(l In “21thny l"h}‘w»v'..:\ il'c um! and Wurlh)’ v: .I \. ini:.|:--luiin~;:.ius: inhi~ hum] llnu Imm-oinfliiI 1, “an gum-mum :zH Nliliug upon thvsuwl mm \thu- \mu-ii nimnnal wil'n llic slamilsnnul dun m-runsplnu-iwm‘ \irMn-w and Aim-me. '“ll' huh: ii (‘tbls is ulo~ignml In >him‘ Hull 51‘. .l.\«‘m:< (n I. i~ â€H‘U‘UUZUH‘ ll‘uflxhl nun-ins 1.1‘ lumping (hr hm!) nn its 1m qwri-unru‘, ullll nl‘ whiny. mm â€riulniu' ii >huulul n he nnlui‘lnnuu-ly (‘ml Ilpun the rhi UfX‘lli-llllll|li~~m nrnilwr painful uiinmnls. 'l‘hun,» "wk of L'rulrl'nl unw lhrunghnut llic “orld hum [mm-ll lho \‘nlni- uinl Irlt “w «ml "1' Iliis mm: 1-i-l‘nnm llvnn-uly. ll'lll me 141le (U ll'i'llllillu‘nd ii in :I“ nvwlin: lin- M’lVivrs ni‘jilsl Mich u rum in; In [hh I'Hlllu'l'liun .\Ir. J. lili 8. liriyp. n “1:†kl|l|\\'ll(‘ili:1“ll ul‘tlinnim, NM. tultl u iii-\\'.~)unu-r mun Ilnn [w “m li-rril-ly ufllirlml will: an unau- aillawk of rhcunnilimn in his I‘m-k. 'lllt'l|i~!'il.\|'. \\ Iiirh lino! lwcu pn‘ying upnn him l'ur wars hm! clmwn him out "1' 511mm. llc rcsnru-J luvwly roinwly kin-m n in lllly>i0i rns, Inn found no rrl‘u'l until he trial 51‘. J.“ nus (HI .«nv lmulc ui‘whirh M‘w-lwl “minim-lo uml iii-Hull l‘lllc. .-"IUlIn-r ruw inuyjmlily n-l'vri-nw : ‘ If/lilnr luh r-lh-um, ('III'UIIIIIID, 1/1.: I N‘ml you Ihi~ ("m-linkr Hun tlw inl‘nrmulluu (mun-3'01!“illlwn: Inulx-riul lqu-m lu umny nl‘ yunr waders. (hu- ul‘nur nldvxlcilizcm. (‘uptuin ('. \\'. Buynu-n, flu "Monument l.i;:hl~hnu~u ku-m-rntlhlslminl.i-‘ .rul-uloly um- ul‘ llu- uhlml M'zlllll'll in Amt-rim‘ unit“: suilwl hn-nly-‘ix yrurs nu null \mlvr Alll‘l‘ [his lbrly~t~ix yuus' erviu‘ his t-yc'~iu|ul ï¬lilwl him uml ln- krlvl the Hull! m l‘hh munli! llu- timw-rmm-m lulill tlu- Urn» "uinl Li: H hs-nu “In-n lu‘mu Imusu-rml. “'llilu M'nlt'II in my Mum this manningr lhv (ulnmin \‘ulunlwntl the full-m in: wrium shun-mm“: “ 'l‘llis Ix In (-vlmy (hut l lnu'clwvn “mun-«l with rlu-umulism :m luvnly (3H _\'rur<. lmlh in my ~~i1lu and limbs. ‘. nun Imp vyln‘nyll‘nt.:lt‘lrl'll~illg l1‘.~~â€lnll| mum-I- UN ofl m 81; .l_u my “1].. lmu entirely l‘ru- "rum pain. Hum-4h «an “lupin-,1 Mum-“‘Llll when \ank muJ‘mm lull}: I‘urm- nl' hth. I‘. \\‘. lhwxmx ' lk-I‘crring lullu- [Rm-wring tin-(5.! miuhl nllmh- 1n mum-rum >imilm‘ (-uu ~ llmt huvo Hnm- w my nuliw. but "M mm! In lhv “iw is sunk-inn." .IUIISHHI’III I. I'Hv'rHuu-ifl. limumm. ll! IIOJIANC‘I‘ IN IRBAI. I‘ll'l. IT [:4 .«m â€wantâ€"So curtain and may in its action. It invig- ‘nrau-n nerve, brain and mmclv. 2mm“ does them thing» nimplv by giving active Digestion. and regulating the stomach and liver 1 .‘ :157‘12‘IL'JX SILLVJX‘S Tl:l)('l»‘l.lf. 'Wnl." “"1" 1m. The Illuminate