Narrow Escape of an American Bark from Destruction in the South Atlantic. Ajuggler of Cashmgre, ail in white, with a lizard crawling in his head- dress. after 25 years wandering in tiopic and Arctic seas. lies in many fathoms 1n the South Aziamic, about 5H) miles nonh- east of the Falkland Islands. He was the ï¬gurehead of the British hark Cashmere, one of the (in: of iron sailing craft. The immacui: to j'w .gier who vanished under "19 sea had seen ea'nugh to suppi} him with )1;an that, we 011111 have made the aii‘enzdimuidii 011.21 ï¬111reheacls seem 11.111111 lr-Sn‘it‘e in comnarison. The story 1241:1513 ii gnre mad 1:111:01); reii to its 5112;): mite-5 was reinhi yeaserday by Gap pi. Thompson. the skipéerof 1: me bark Casi mime. 3).: Thompson is a grizzled Scotch- man who at face has 11131111 but it to a chocoiate has by he fervent suns of southern, 1319.11.05 for the las: 40 years. He has been 20 times around the Horn, and he has seen lots of ice in both the Westeiu 1111! Southern oceans, but he says 11:1. ne“er s am in so brief a pcri 11} so much ice as he saw afler 1' 'lindln" the Horn 'emnd from Pisagua. Chiii, to ti. is port, deep laden .1 ith ni txate oi S"6.3. thumpud and pounded by immeasurable tons of it. And that is why the Cash- merian juggle: du'm't come ptoudiy into port under the 3:091 howspric of the Cashnure. That is also the reason why the steel bowsprit was brought in on the bark’s deck. The Cashmere warped inn: Erie Basin last. evening, bartereul an“: rusty above the vater line, with a green slim} clinging to her immersed surface as t xick as the hair on a Cashmcru goat. Her nose was twisted, and a jury bow- spm :1:an ungracnï¬u tilt, suppiicd the lace of the hem-y steel spar. She had een I more than six months making hex way from Pisagua. The skipper says he remembers the Antarctic ice in the Southern Ocean, just north of the Horn, away back in 1854. wiwn he was master of the Bri=ish clipper Eagle. That was the greatest year before this one for ice in that neigh- borhood. ‘he cli per Indian Queen, plying between Eng and and Australia, the Captain says, ran into a big burg in 1854, knocked out hermasts and smashed in her cutwater. . The Indian Queen’s skipper. mate and ï¬ve or six men launched the lifeboat and abandoned the ship. The second mate tinned to, pumped her out, stopped the leak, rigged jury masts. and took the vessel mto Valparaiso. The skipper and his boat’s crew were never heard of. In was not seeing the ice that bothered him. however; It waijrzttmg it and being On being reminded that the yarn cf the Indian Queen was another story. Capt. Thompson told how he lost his ï¬gure'uead. and how close he came to losing the Cashmere, too. The bark was about 300 miles east of the Falkland Islands on February 23th, when the cap- tain noticed on glancing over the star- board quarter, a white square in the water. zon. The captain. remembering the fate of the Royal Alfred, an iron bark owned by the owners of the Cashmere, which is supposed to have been lost by collision with an iceberg about 11 months ago, ordered a double lookout on duty, and kept his own eyes peeled for bergs. The wind was aft, and the bark sailed serene- ly along until February 28th. ' At dawn a towering berg was seen away 05 to the westward. There were no other glacial apparitions on that or the following day. But the captain feared the approach of ni ht, which doesn’t begin down off the cm until about 9 p.311. - .. c mi ‘ He looked clo§er and made out that the square was xce. The axr was clear, and no_pergs wqre vmble on_ any hori- It was; the mate’s watch, and Tth Mate Pontet, with a. pair of the skip er’s ï¬eld glasses, was stretched on the ore~ castle head, peering forward. The wind Lad shifted,’ and the bark was on the $0" tack under easy canvas. Third Mate ontot suddenly saw a green. u. -m than annamt-lv rile 0‘3 93 IOU/{DID 0N M5317 INTO TONS OF ICE. “ SUILIGII‘I' ’{_ PILLIII sunucmmgm CLEAN/SI NG LABOR SAVING PURIFYWG P ITY We are boyind t clothe the Yeoman of the Coun- try iI/We V9 to do it for almost nothing. Our IWin r attack 0351 hard time â€"â€"$40 000 . Worth of blcg: x;- :m.’~v\ï¬â€œ(‘ét§!’w““*m ‘r' .. I We found a manufacturer in a: hole, we dangled before his eyes the bait of cash. _ He bit, and we secured the ï¬nest and best bargain lot of goods ever got 110101 of. Great 391131120 110 {aha Over 2,600 Men’s Youth’s and boys Overcoats. Overcoats $18, $16 and $15, going for $9. Ask to see our overcoats, Men’s size, 553.90. Elegant Cape Overcoats for Boys 332, $3 and $3.50, worth double. Over $15,000 pairs Men’s, Ladies, Boys and Children’s Boots and Shoes} the water dead ahead. He said it 1001-:- ed as if it were four times as tall asï¬he bat-R‘s main truck. It was of canons form for an iceberv. A gigantic cornice extended several hundred fee: from on. side. It look ed as if it had been originally an ice arch, Ind had been divided at the keystqna. Pontet didn't wait to makea note of these things. He ran aft. and. as he passed the forecastle, which is in a. deck- house on the Cashmere, he shouted: “Ice dead ahead 2†' ' The wooden jibboom of the bark speared the Side of tho berg and broke off like a. toothpick. Then the steel bow- sprit, a thick tube tw 0 feet in diameter, smashed into the ice. The mighty tube broke' 111 two. the upper half telescoping the 10“ er which 1\ as d1 1ve11 tinough the forecastle head clear hrough t1; 0 11o:ds. twistiicig:1 and break mg the deck tianers and making itself so fast that it stuck where the impact with the me put it 1111111 it was hauled out by a crane at Rio Janeiro. The headway of the bark was only _siightiy chegked by the break- 113’ you hav been thinking of placing a Furnace in in our ho e is fall you will consult your own in- te Sts by ving us a call before placing your order. In toves e can give you anything from the small- est Box ove to the ï¬nest Range manufactured. Don’t for t us in the meare line and Eavetroughâ€" mg the bowsprit. The cutwater was crushed in and the white jugvler was torn 011'. He was held above t :e sea by a. tangle of .steel wire stays and rigging. When the stem of the bark hit the berg an avalanche of ice crashed on the forward deck. The ï¬rst sevexal hun- dred tons were crushed to snowy ï¬neness by the ice boulders that followed, and all the forward deck was, as the skipper sand, a turtle back of ice. The big chunks, some eight feet square. 52m from the Crystal turtle back into the sea and aiung the deck aft. . Just as a. huge cake tore along the starboard scuppers, a German seaman. who was known only as Albert, came out of the forward house with his rub- ber boots in his hands. The cake scooped him up and took him along past the captain’s cabin all the way to the taif- rail. He yelled as he dashed by the cabin. "Oh, mein Kopf!†and that is why his shipmates now call his Albert Kopf. Every other seamen went aft in a hurry, but not. on ice (3:11:51~ Hats;CapS, Drawefs; ‘ THOMA§ an. cabinetmake/r @6533; Bedroom. Parlor and all other kinds of Furniture. hand-made. at; lowest prices. 323' Do 110% fail to call and see him, l-ly. Km: 5 on hand a large stock of COFFINS, CA KETS and all kinds of Undertakcrs’ Millbmo 8tove and 3345155“? 355:? 315;??? F1 8 CLOTHING The Wonderful Cheapzfllen, Llndsay and Peterborough. \Vhen you come to Peterboro be sure you visit Shirts, Béomï¬zShm? ___. «um» hdertaker, T'i ' . S. PICKUP. Says HENRY HUDSON, of the J 3.1183 Smith Woolen Machinery Co. ., Philadelphia, Pa., who certi- ï¬es as follows: “ Among the many testimoni- als which I see in regard to cer- tain medicines p e r f o r min g cures, cleansing the blood, etc., none impress me more than my 3-0 w n c a s e . Twenty y e ars , ago, at )be‘age of 8 .- ’ars, Ihad llings come . n m y le g s , which broke and e b e c ame r u n- n i n g s o r e s . I . L Our family phy- ' sician could do me no good, and it was feared that the bones would be aflected. At last, my good old Mother Urged "Me Wimvmavs , and it was 1 me no good to try Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. I took three bottles, the sores healed, and I have not been troubled since. Only the scars remain, and the memory of the past, to remind me of the good Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. has done me. I now weigh two hundred and twenty pounds, and am in the best of health. I have been on the road for the past twelve years, have noticed Ayer’s Sar- saparilla advertised in all parts of the United States, and always take pleas- ure in telling what good it did. for me.†Preparâ€"ed by Dr. J. C. Ayer 8: Co., Lowell,Maas. Cures others,willcu re you «Ayer’s Sarsaparilig Only the Scars ‘ Remain,†WASTENG TߣUSANf Raw? Every Thursday Friday Mgrket Days. Fowl of all kigï¬Ã© bOughtzand the higtest cash price f/ pa1d. We have just received a large and varied stock of ,xBoots and §hoes of every description. Ladieél Boots from 60;:to $3. a 'W Men’s Boots from 7 50. to $4. | Market !“ [LO/0K pERE TO EXCHANGEâ€"A good thew lumber wagon made by Mr. H. Larmer.â€"â€"For a. hervy young horse. The best Enedium priced harness offered in this district. Our own manufacture throughout. Bound to satisfy. Watches and Jewellery. Buy a Set of Single 3 1,. mess till you have n our - Atthe ALEBORQ MARKET REPAIRING A:SPEGIALTY. lest Make O‘f Watches in ï¬eld And Silver D0 Nï¬tww __ Tyreaded and dreadful disease! What sh stay its ravages? Thousands cry 8 tt’s Emulsion of pure Norwegian .1 cod liver oil and hypophosphites of lime and soda has cured us of consumption in its ï¬rst stages. Have you a cough or cold acute or leading to consumption? Make no delay but take Scott’s Emulsion cures Coughs, Golds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Anaemia and Wasting Diseases. Prevents Wasting In Children. Almost as palatable a lull. Get only the genuine.‘ Pre- pand by Soon a Bowue, Bellevme. Sold by all was. 60 cents and OM». rockery in Elegant Designs. A Fï¬Ie’Line of Platedwape at Lowest Prices. gog/N STEELE T. B. JENKENS. :SPECIALTY. ‘LARGE STOCK 0F SPECTACLES OPPOSITE TOWN HALL, MILLBROOK. Mcy China, Silverware, and other lines of goodsâ€"for cashâ€"~22 O to 30 per cent. cheaper tan any one else 111 town. Reason Whyâ€"reiring from business as advertised. Don’t you fo1get it. Give us a. call and see for yourself. Eggs and good butter taken In exchange for ogoods. lsï¬g iGrocptfies, Crockery, Glassware, RMUEYE LL MAKES IN TE MARKET. HAS ON HAND A FINE LINE OF M. PARKE R. Scofl’ s « Emulsion R. IEYELL.