Loading...
The Sentinel, 1883-08-03, Page 5• ten THE 'OtAGPF, OF': CHOLERA., , t'errib'Ice Ravages of thee Di4t-stee4o in Calcutta, , ' .H,11.••••••—• TH4 MARCII Or THE' 'DI!INTIO. • A ideepetele -from :London • etlye : The Sanitary -COintaiseies ie meleevoeiog to 'purify Cairo and to hiolete the hommeiu which cholera hes oppeared e bet if the dis- geese ;ekes a firm holden the city it n prob. able that it .will be alloyed to take, its couree, and thet general preeautioue only • 'will be taken to gleeck its progreore 1?.pelser•. . Paehe having expteseecl the opleien, that •• the, enra0120 Mind the Vozione iutecced places are now ueeless„, they wilt probably. • be ehortlY all removed. there is :reasoie to believe that many !Mattered ease* meter in ':Villagee • dailY which the uativea conceal , pee as to avoid'the impoeitioneef cordeo, • " The . cholera is , spreading generally tlircregholet tbe masentree. The. Sanitary ▪ Conanneekm has rejected the peopeeal to " iselate Alexendsia, in which, .city a WEI. : thought to beeholera was anfleneeed te-day- Tiventpeight• (loathe :Irina the disease . occurred at Damietta', yesteediey, thirty- eight at lifausurah . and fifteen, at Same- . :Twelve death's occierred at Cairo yestere day and foroy.taoci aMenaalish. The Spanish Governmeat has ihtrodolied • a bill in the.Cortes for a credit of 1;000,000' • pesetaelp defray the cost of. the adoption ' :of all possible•meueures against the intro, dUotion of cholera into „ Dr. John t..Nagleeethe-registrar of Vital: • statistics, was yesterday in recirsitie Of the. • annual report of the Board of _Health -of Calcutta, whioh 0Ontaine alarming reports • ot the spreed Of cholera in that- Mty. supplementary report 'of the first quarter ..• Of . this year. announces that out; of. a popu- lation of 288,000 nearly six hundred have succumbed to the effects • of this deeadful • scourge.... This is an ' excese of• Over . two . hundred deathsfor the ebtresponriieg quarter of 1882: During the • inontlei of •, April and gay ,of this year there was a • steady increase in the death rate from- .oholera,averegingaboet four inindredeleaths, • . for each Month. :Ditrieg• the year 1882 theta • were .2,240deaths from cholera. in Cal- otitthe , :Of this number .1,597 were, males .e.nd-.643eferOaleseeeThee-paste-yearAPM-been- . an exceedingly nefamorable one in -reaped eneeholera-ineCaloettae---o-- yeareires-e • 1.860:hos there been fso large en.aggregate ereiele-rielkeyefeeliereoilieregiiat-e,LLLLCk• -o- ''appeteitmeete the deathly 'during tbie year of .1883"-Wi11be greatly itniteasect The Month in which Most . deaths from cholera occur. •.ted, during last year wee ie December,' there being ° 411., , May bated next with 380eand ee April with 318.: The letiet number for any. • month was in September, there being but 38, deatles:from thie diSeame.• . MARCH or THE DISEASE. • . the Figaro . published a long despatch from Alexandria which' ..descetbes the detain as rapidly spreading.; it gays tbe cholera exists at '8amanand, Zegazig; and Hem, in the, veter• centre of ehe. - delta. "The march of the epidemie seen's.; to be regulated' by Abe direction of tee , wind, With a north -Wind 'elm' ,moetality. decreases, -Whereat it anctitents with south wiud. ;The .town of Maileurah is partly deserted. The die:dors' are beginning e to believe that _none of the 'important. ••tOwns Will escape the contagion.' , correspondent proceeds to explain Ithat the Ramands;n•fast has begun, and that during a whole niOnth all Muisulinithe Will fast from sunrise to sunset, He heath 'eat the • want of sufficient , nourishment • ,• and the drunken revelry indulged in by. tbe lower : datums.. of society after... sunset should predispose the population to catoh. • the &Okra. I -. • • The invite:Atte dislike of the Arab to enter a hospital is.aiso considered likely to spread the disease; but the Figaro Corres- pondent contends that the 'profound • repugnanee.of the Arabe to enter a hospi- tal is • justified by , the badoess of those • institutione. Moreover, there is no hospi- ', titat, hereat Damietta or Samanoudeor an any of the little town, ' • There are hospi- •'teAs for the native pophlatitniat Cairci and • Alexandria, • but they are bad in •ietotity • respect., A.. European doctor is generally • Alm nominal, though net the reale director of ' the Areh hoepitabe. At Alexandria Warenhorstis at the head of the native hospital.. It is true there is the European • hospital lie& by the Sisters Of Onseity, and • also the German hospital,. ;Which are both • model eistahlishinehts." The medical ser- vice in the province is, according to this ' - than one doctor. As for niedioine there is . none, and the only remedy prescribed is' • laudanum. In conclusion he says that the • • Sanitary Inspector -General of Lower Egypt, who is an Italian,cannot possibly do all the work which will fall to his share. The Local Government Board has issued u memorandum enjoining measures of pre- • caution against cholera in the cities of • Great Britain. advices from Cairo say there have beenfifty deaths in twelve hears since the last official retUrn. Cholera' is raging • - in many villages not mentioned in the returns. , Four hundred OareaSSOS of cattle have been removed from the Nile. A Cairo despatoh says the Government ' 'had accepted the offer of England to send twelve doctors to the infected- districts. The Wooden huts where the cholera Origi- nated have been butited. eittiEEI;13,111W 1i Iliql,l1,44,1% . • Condisien ol ,thhig,i4 Ilt- cshcIrd by re vieirie jeoeerees. Ali(- 111, Ilark, 'writing to the, London I Chroele/e• 1.sleye A.e I have 'only jelet efel 'named from virsitieg.• with: 1115' 1.11-sit)044,4 GWecelore tied ether dietreeeed dietriete 0 * Doeegel, 1 onotil4 be glad if you would eilow .0.16 to say it, few. ,words t,() the tketnk4 Oi the paean te in -that, pert 'of Ireland. Lek emu: the potete crop wee. Net throughout. the !whole of ,Doliegal, lord to add to tine dieuteer, fel- 1usingSe it, did in feet' $1.10efieiVs harvests, a terrible e.tArin„ liWept over Douegul. on Oet, lst, uliroofieg and levellieg, the •bot- tages and sweeping away the whale of the oate, and hay. The people thus found theineelveli • obliged , to leee • -this wieter with no store of food for their familiesand stook, and no •seed.potar We forethe following. spring: Enormeue, exertionhey° been made by. Dr. Logue, the•Biehop - of Replicas,' • arid' his clergy to find funds 'Wherewith to • feed the 'people end to buy !seed potatoes, and in these efforts they have been tided by the Society of Friends and tine Fewer Lam ()WPM tootbeir exertions a great extent of Donegal has been rersowri with potatoes, and up to the eresenttime -tenant farniere and their families hate beee kept • from actual stareatioLi. by selling /beer 'Stock, and by •receiving gifts Of Indian meal.. The funds n the halideof, the clergy are, however, inearly exhausted; Ithd hew to keep off th famine till the newly -sown potatocrop has been gathered is filling their minds with The gravest anxiety. " For three years," said the bishoptolast week, ."1 have been fighting thefeanineeand now it theme' that at the moment of watery •-as if it would prevail." In Gweecloree to which Capt. Hill has sent . his beelill to collect rente:iheetenants are.redieced to the lowest Abb of poyertyi,' In an testate, every irich of which is eitherbege reek, or seed, some • portien ofthelandhits been. brought into a stete,of cultivation by the' untirineeNbor of the- peasants: Thel, farime" ititstrips, Often 'not mons thaneight or den 'feet wide, run 'trent the bog to the shore, and 'are Whig yea,thy year encroached upon, by the see, sand; 'others. lying More inland hate 'Wee reclaimed from the bog by, years of toil. Everything—building, draining; ditching -- has been dolma by, the tenauts • unhelped. To stimulate industry the tenth on the Vb'Perllr-havetbecu—tabgedfr-ortr-E4()0-te nsaTlY. 21;260 a year, and to teackiliegrie lessen of poverty, 12;000 aces of n4ountain , congppnage grazing,±Vintelibelongadeeto the lientlIkcci6lielreteelWeattiel4teelgroine ,years ago taken from them without opne, peneation, and thew a people who Once -owned • 'floelts . and beide, and wereproud of iheir hempttality. to 'Strangers, bitY6been eedueed,to a State Of penury. m64.12,140* •behold. While Captain Hill ispress- ing • for rents, • hundreds of 'his wretched tenantry are being teptircm actualetarvae. tiOn by doles of a pennyworth of nieeli day, and all the :children on . the property are being fed by the gift eottvio bisciitte per. client. 'Poverty and .misery 'Mime asare now to be seen in .Gweedoee are enough to ereake the most stony-hearted weep..., In 'one single:romped cottage we entered 'a • evemedetub And.a board did duty for a .table; and a brokenlron' pcite containing stir -about, was the sol e cooking utensil, the only article of furniture in theplace being the wooden cradle in 'Which the :wretched Mother. rocked her now -born baby. The father, in rags, was busy planting out the 'seed potatoes just given him. ,. But it is not -only in ,Gweedoto that the ..peasants are starving. In Glencolutabkill 3,300 persons are being, fed by public charity outeit. popnlation. of 4,600, and theoughout. Done. galthe distresseie moat &into, about 14,0.00 persons reqUiringlood. 1.4,14444.1. ..*::•-•*; • In' the Jewish trial atNyteghhize,-Hut-• • gary, yesterday, the President of the Court strongly censured the anti-SemetieDeputy, • Onody, who threatened to strike the, public, • prosecutor in the street; and challenged him to fight it duel. On the demandof the ▪ • public proseoutor proceedings were begun . against Onody. • •• A.„despatch frotaa the Colonial Secretary to the Government of Queensland in regard to the proposed annexation of Now Gables is Published. In it Earl Derby states that • the official inquiry at Farm and Berlin sleeks that fears of the foreign annexation • of New Guinea are groundless, afia bo emphasizes the objection of the Home Government to the annexation of that island by Queensland, whoee Parliament, he says, represents the Interests of, whites • who are suspeoted of desiring to acquire a ' snippily pf .016red labor fa:w the sugair • dUstry. „ NOII1HWESTERN ONTARIO. ! .-- • , ontsirlo Officials' in Undistairlbed Posses. • Aion • Mininaebsin Chnraer. ' A- Net (Wednesday) niglit'd Bat Portage despatch says . While there is muoh excitement in Winnipeg over Ontario's taking possession, the utmost quietude reigns here.' .-No lumber- *mere nag yet been made, but on Monday it was deemed desirable by the Magistraeyto swear in tbirty Special .constahles in view of possi- ble contingencies. They were dismissed Nit night, and it he not likely they will be again required. No further,Movenimit has been attempted by the Norquay Govern- ment, and their licenees..isSued a week before the revocation of the Public Works Act here, and net paid for by the recipients,. are regarded as, useless. . The Ontario .1icensesmi1l-be-Qiesned.4hiszweek. ..Three_ lez:L2:27,eteeee'et7thge.je; 1,7 fmtiquirsmia WILT!' 15:ornvtnitwztirfgsnner a Manitoba chatter of incorporation, say .they are -ready to resign and reorganize under Ontario if the latter Province will aelinMe all their legitimate indeletedness, imputed since their formation last year. The amount, which is said to be in the neighborhood 'of $2,000, was principally in - (turfed during the smallpox visitation last winter. The feeling of thepeople generally is excellent, but a few hot Tories, interested in timber dealing and land wanting, would create a 'disturbance it they saw . any chance of success. Some of the statements in the Winnipeg papers about affairs .liere are ludicrous from their untruthfulness and sensationalieine • , , filvivapping Lies. • A.Pioneer preacher who held forth in the neighborhood of COlumbtiai 0.; SWIM years ago, occasionally drewonhis imagination fa. his facts. On one odeasion he tasted an instance of it chimney in a house where he had visited that drew so hard when lite was lighted on the hearth that the fatnily had to be watchful of any small thiugjest it should be dawn out of the house. One day, he said, a thrtevfooted stool was caught itt the draught and thrown 60 feet abase the top of the ohimney. "Why, elder," exclain2ed one of his goads!! auditors, "1 knew a teuie a great deal mote wends nl than that:I knew a man who built it ho e; f And when it was done the chimney wand draw no way but down. To remedy the matter the man built a chimney in the other end of bile hoeuse, and then one ohininey drew up guid the other drew down in a way that was jnet imaging. One day a nice little dog the folks made a pet Of got in the way of the dtatight and went up one chimney and down the -other until he was I completely wan out." Pit—tbe teederest partof OM THUMB'S it•••-,••rr • . Who a.tcoic: eVidote •of tigi oteneriti coettram • ' , skt. (1.40 CiraVv. ....The .remaitti of Gell. Tem Timm. were buried with Naeonio horioris in. the Oonii- tatc, Grr/Ve *Ce atetery-. at.. 1,3 ridgepert;•Veto o on Tburday afteknoon.• wkwectituateo- tnat.„ 19,000 people attended the :Ceremenie.e. f ,•thes. throng,. lolly 8,000, were • vfornen‘ t.ta • girle The • body': lay eXeeee4 in, Vi VV;. ino Bt. • .John's Epiecopal 'CfierchiN, airbeld ,avenne, baritig 01° forenoon.It reposed in.' an dfltee udliu tleree 'feet ie4ijuelles in length and eovered with black cloth. Silver bars ran aioug the ad* . ,Masonic enibletee. ,engraved in eilVer•' Were faetened above the bars., The .silver plate on the lid was engraved With .the tlasenio all-Seeingeye, and altar, , the insdiption in the pentre being: "Charles 8, Stratton, aged 45 years, 6 months and 11 days,'!, ,The taco of, the (lead dwarf looked perfectly natural.,1.The body was dressed in a broad. 'Cloth suit. 1110od•stoue studs °roan:looted the shirt-tront. Onthe left coat , lapel glittered a gold badge migraved •with the thirty-second Me:genic' 'degree': A. white luoo veil'*as spread over the face. On the lid 'rooted the Knight Templar chapeau 'and; BilVer Mead. of the General. , The !scabbard was inlaid 1 with chased , eilver, and the hilt,. was of silver and" 'ebony. The weapon was only twenty Welles long. 'Besides -the .hat and sword resthd a floral enclior and erose intertwined, • sent by gr. 'and Mrs. Phineas T. Barnum. .e toot lay a Square andealpipeeis Of i TO8138 'presented by Mr. William.lte t igliY,and a cross of flOvieriethe gift of the 'Hamilton Cortimahilery of Knights tempters: Hun- dreds; Of the women brought children, with them .itud lifted them up to Hee. The funeral !services were at 2 30 o'clock. Every !mat was filled, and 1,000 p'oople Were crowded on the grace Plot in front Of the church. Mith. Stratton; the tinywidow, was dressed in deep black, and'a tong black veil entirely. conoealed her faceereAs•-stion as she was liftedinto her spat her head fell against her mother's !shoulder, and -she lay ip that way motioniess. • throughout theMr . gerytee. • . Southworth lifted gm Strattche fienee the canine when it reached the grave at 4'o'clack. , She teas too weak to stand, and a "Cushion was brought froththe. carriage and laid On the..grened a:teethe_ edge of the grave. The Idle widow seat upon.,it,':supported by: her mother and mOtherm:law; Kale Stratton. becamo. el„...4.„..encireeLieteeedo,lkeekee4eeeee ndeeusteeaeeBieeiestte..--Butteneiltopteeilee-eths toial Masonic emblem into the grave, and the Knights • cemeserl, their !sword's,and began tleCheitt the 'toeing hymn, her little figure !shook for a raiment , with strong emotion, and ehe fell . beck .senseleim into the ante of her, mother, .There were cries of pity from the embed tbat looked on; and hundeedi of Women Watched with anxiety the efforts to ratite the tittle Women.'-'. Mt, South •finally lifted her in in his arms and carried her to the carriage,: See rGvived as the carriage Wasre:idling hotnewarde '•.• enteller el4te4.101ettlifie, 1 be (timer Cityes4 seal, With tielevies its0)101rg MO 4140 Strerike. The British Acting 06.,inail at Nagetoulai, Mr. 111 Q. Hall, has written biteinipreeelonli ef Corea', derived frczu vieit peicl to .11 an, y on g or Soui,its °vital. The entire west (*oast of Coitrit is hedged in by Niue& ea thickly luotered that, the mainland earl rarely be been. Thoiniande of .kquari3 miles (.1 mud - Hate. are Nal:etre by the fall Of 'the tide, risesreine thirty feet Thus ti harbor, such as Nara -Yang, which appears at high Wet° be cornwoeious,, .is at low ticle.buly a :narrow chaenel f terrowed by the \ tidal current as it eeours ite way out.. The oast ,lise is hilly, bluffs • of granite and trap tieing item two lanndred to eight • hundredfeet. These bine are covered with (mime grass, but there is a great soarcity of timber, a stunted fir tree Hemetenfeethigh being the Only tree in this pert .Of the. country. Leaves and brill:mho burn like' touchweod, and this 'fuel seems the staple Of, valid coasting trade there ie, ' Itt a small village on the islet at the eutleniee ON6M- )(meg barhor Mr: 1411 found, as in' Japan, Shinte, phrine as Well tiatt Buddhist tem- ' Plee-hoth diminutive !straw hute.' In 'a Shinto shrine the visible representation Of the Diety, isa bundle sof strips of white paper. The natives would not allow their visitor to enter the Shinto ehrinte but niadp • no opposition to his : presence within that of °13uddha. Shrines and. templea are rare in Corea, and neither inthe cone* nor in the capital did the visitors eee a easeock or a. !shaven pate. • ° " - The house Of a derean of a small inner room with a :raised floor; Under Which the smoke and heated air iremthe heaeth peeises.0 a low chimney at An iron pot, a few coarse crockery jam and some wicker .beiekete and • oalabashes are all -the futnitare. The inner room is lighted by apaper Covered aperture in the mud wall, andthe trapdoor, about three teet.093.eareetletttletedi_toit, iselbeed Tit.bigicia that it scenes strange that the whole family .can sleep jn it without being suffooated. There seeries to be , no middle or Well -0 -do class—tbe population appears tri.consiet of Oultivatora and officials, and. the moat �f the former'are but just above starvation point. ' Most of the 'houses are' mud huts thatched With.. straw; the citi4s. are usually untvalled. etragglieg -andethe-itoreseinlhe isimellerecities° are but .1Treodadilleartieit.paolletilkolintilea_.:Ibtouairtsggil:,0,0ne .0i dd., :or.. scarce that thejunke and boats are &aliened, ,ELT— ' made in some places Cast iron Webs are set hpin everlasting teraeinbramie of the, cleMent•ailininistration of such and isuenie. • Governor. Rice theins to he the ptincipal crop, then • etiesicartioeieteouliiiiitthell.' - Tele 6nihnst 'Toting relieve 'who Only : . old Has Duty: • • . Mies Millie 1)00mb-p,. a :beautiful orphan of 17; and an heiress With some $100000 in her own right,. arrived at ,Long Breneh froni • St. Louis with. her aunt last' week. Just before !Sundown the -other evening Miss Coonibs went in bathing. - When out 'about 200 feet a scream 461d that ehe was in danger.. A young man, her 0011Bin, has- tened 'with two ladies, fainting to the Shore. • The keeper launched•the life -boat. The Screams. :ceased. ' Suddenly's dark object was seen to mount a wave, and a cry was heard, " Here! here 1"'' The boat was direoted towards the e'pot, d two William Whittlesey, who had • be�n !swim: pea Persons, , Miss Coombs; and her duet, ming some distance Out in the sea, climbed into it. When she reached the arms of her Mint on the beitih, a shout Went, up from the- erosd.- The cousin of Blida Clocinlbe approached young Whittlesey, and; piecing it well-filled wallet in Whittlesees hind, said: "Here, take this." *" Oh, no," re- plied the young man," I only did niY, duty." He finally consente-to accept a gold watch and chain, which the girl Will purohase for him. Miss Coombs said: "1 have been dying all my life to be the vietim of some teal komanoe, and I guess have got one --s.I.,....i that williast irie for some time: •The ladies said it was a real ° shame Mr. • Whittlesey was engaged to be married to a young lady at Sioux City. ' . • ...,,:ar;:ezafxrA-A=Ara, 4,trze*::'3r,r"–tti7r ,,,vravabLa, 4,4'• e, • •Tittl: %%NO Eft Ol? railway' Minn larcenies g Child Aug 'Jflr, Ztr., rrn .04 otrolemcir sfdlilgt 1. (Wcoproo, N.Y. Obb•c. heroe tine eleveloptede,i 300111 tipre pdays Of ' Z>0.VVIni 444 at sorve then over bermes -smut: ;r.e. Atnenian eaates. A ihan. Lio: t meats of pnysical pots: look. c, . 9 IN% than in tne ^days of ear. 0440494 pussie cause • tuero are fewer spec,ei,:-; • of developed manhood than then. .1,$ +quiti this pto..eer ;net u iuu1niUco • 4it et:, ''t cid eeweica few clays since in toi. 1.,1 :Jen .4. W. McNamee, of' Waterivo,.. Abe ,•xa whieli showed' unuettai ecveimeeeei, w hard as wood. At his request taw vali,ur to. pinch him iu .U43 t.ruis or lege, 1)1.4 to wholly iiflpoLlSibIo. A rev:neatent ot w meani. by au irou .,ntatt was ftnlynaade Jest. ^ • gaVelOu always been Se italveeie as inquired the news gatherer— • , • "Net by guy means," was the:reply.' " young Wait I•was always strong anti aoti bit tbstn, could acomplisn feeling so took poseeesfou or ilia oe Otto o that 1. attempted to lift • it box which to found it *Intposilible w :more. 1eeeee Placing it 'On ' the waggon, bat 'A minutes from that tune I was sueceneeio remained BO for houri3, and, wilon I kilo Consciousness 1 ;Vothited it large quart blood. From .that day 1 began to grow we sickly. I believed that I had:seaweed internal injury, and experioneed . tv,hieh seemed • similar to .tbee 'produced by nialerie. My ha,e4 'OS vex I had no appetite, andAt vintesjoathed I lips .were parched 'and craolte,dr•My betta though it•were entirely open' at' the top painednie on the side .iliteuselV. in six time I load fallen away 'trent giti /vela% than 270. I was in a most wretehou coati* was completely discouraged." _. • " What did the doetora Astir obent you • :...!!..A1inoet..0Verything. I consulfed no le -six different physicians.- They 'all trea and 'none did me any good; Al that Tim suffering intensely. 1 couid not sib :04 Was obliged to rest in a cramped.. luxes tion."_ I was compelled: to urinate :eve taintites and 1 passed* over three qnatt day; I was not living,, 1 was /rods tjhg. ".00e night (how well I togiornber ittj had put the children alLin bed When tile Came over me that I should live but short time. My wifo. and • I talked ma, O'er, and .1 gave:the minutest :(ireOtion what she should do do *after 1 wakf gone. I :in a flighty condition 14 'anyineana .doetor,.en ieavingtowe .tne day folletvia me good-bye,seering he never .eximeted to again, for I Was suffering with„,inho$ the kidneys in its last tivages.. Within t few days days more . than twenty friende eani me good:bye. Among the number weed) L. He sekeil me. •what° I ha in the. • way' of Medicines.. I told hi then retOinniended • ti 'remedy ' of w had heard muoli,. .but Aeon; tviiich tter,Y,"skeeliegl- -eIt.taitbe_eeteree'eeneee of power, it certainly , ' wa$ liteking ” And so you try it i" "tin the Contrary; I clittitry it and to• . efenea,P940,19,411.M447s0,ORAPti;-•4 4 WitaVartM7t41ftn, ii../44•1041--'1410 my mouth ea menthe,. roe:shoe. le' • And did it cure you?" " I look as if X6 did?" "Ire's; indeed. Whatvas it Warner's :wife tmr.e.." A proprietary medicine!" " 'course. What of that? supposo millet, next beans and bailey. Cotton Ice :had at13 great a prejudice &pelmet:Avenel° also grown, and olOse to every --Village -a eines asanyone could have. When 'I wit) arge quantity of red ohiliti can 'always ,be seen. These are the. principal condiment in corean eoeltety (as in the Spaniel* The only green °rope 'then were picklieg cabbage and *he large white radish; the only fruit,. petsimieou. The eastor oil plant IS largely ;grey/Os:kid very largely used as .inedieitie. React.pestsetermieatioglii hideous °fueled beads, and in various Stages of decornposie then, meant to 'show the distance .from the capital but generally illegible , from the washing Out of the Indian ink insult tion, are very Conspicuous and the grave -mounds. are OuriCiUsi.' . A Careen must be bailed On &hill, a geoniancier ig called in teeelicithe ing medicine at Ann. Arbor, leichigen, 1, •Vow with the reit . of the Wass that :vh fight all such yemedies at tituea.,W, heal oomeselown iastliour, hmeetei, aJ his witeand friends good-bye, %lab ;bigot judices as these all vanish, I can astaral any remedy that can cure is gladly,weit1 " And how have ygu been eines thon "As well—or better than before' "' ; "Do you still exert:yet* strength oo certainty. .leue I do not ovel^.4iart;. InwaerelsYs:veikidYb7W8::::leriB'et.41:0;8411nrge)e::11:171:.rt my health is nnfaber °pie. I Snow that:, it is the ?seat medicine lttat was SIVO poUndecl by aey-eheiniat Or phystelau. willing the doctors boom* miser at inh a statement if they choose, I have lar trutbrand preparet1 stand layet." The above experience mud be of gre spot; and a circular mound, five or six feet to all who are 'suffering. ' shewstlie d ature of thisterrible malady; that al ° otns are common to it ancelhat there is way by which it can be absolutely aeol , • Stagesare now pinning :between( and Elkhorn; „ale() between ,310980Min,,, conneotiet with tho • 'Runaways have become freq morose and two or three'. feet .high, the place of sepulture. .No tombstone, inscrip- tion, nor sign of any kind distinguishesany of these, except in the case of nobles. Soul,- the capital, has a population of about 240,001)., The houses are,' eight Or nine feet high,. built of stone or mud, and mostly roofed with tiles. 16 the 'centre is the Chong-kalPer bell kiosk, containing: a :P2Prbsa #aniso bali seven feet high, yvhich , is. rung as signal for opening and shutting the three great gates of the city: From thoChong- kak radiate the mainqiatreets, one of whieh, one hundred feet wide; tune through from east to west, with a gate at eaoh end, while another, as wide, runs Routhwest,': to the third gate, and a narrower one. divides the northern half of the city into eastern and western quarters. The northern enoloeure, entered • by three; , wooden - gates, , and containing two palaces; is In the nottiv- ern half of , the city.. In the central part OX the city is a row of. two-storey warehouses some twenty feet `high, seenaingigrand coin - pared with the houses. Silk and betton goads, boots, paper and'brassWare of native production are the principal wafts. Drains 'Toronto that ,Ciiiet of Police Pr issued &stringent order to the Men cite fig pariOne leaving bases' Senator &mete of Florida,' nativ. land,. who hail:just returned from ,tie, itia .birthplacie, Held to it reporter: enjoyed to, the Old Ce :botild net lite there again. That libuntry of the past—this irthe ea tbe future." . ' • •' • , . According to Otangevilk(Ste* iscperlispei no county .considering the ntigiber. Ur' aim* tried, linnuOlypitYs se nine& to ilia witnesses the County Duffetink 11432 1$98;4.15.WaSpaid to CroWA, at the side of the streets, heaps Of filt,hand: and, Of . thia1Stitii .ths4,younW:t0 Lrizerim.12annotr4.1149.:z.47,ildiatri.. (233;k22. -z " homatezautnictbe,oights-andionslin last Sunday mornitiga woman go het .altiep and went. into the str amused herself hi, ringingtrarious in the vioinity,Of her .hotne. • A te dellpgil0h lath sent to the pohcantat two men were detailed to rouge the from her 'Oomnanabuligtio. oonaito pilot her home. Mrs. 'That:410i �f toistiodei awakening the other night and And child dead by her aide, was thro spasms of terror and screamed mrai htitrY Width, aged 65, living and hearing the screams, pat her .tif the window And Oried: 11 Thtt killing hid.Wife I wish I Was* in won't somebodygOl" and then 'Lightning realm* 'struck pied by Milton, Iitinter;iii.No .H. •Mrs.Bunker and a son ,of were la tim, house, ehesitandingin doorway. ':,Thit lady wan ,prestra WO: Her gold beads „VW° 'mei parfOrated.her nook, and :her lhn severely burned.. She remained itt coneolene statefOr an hour,, I*" valeecingt 'Bow a Ponderous Ontario Woman 14ost of this squalid capital. The Japanese Flesh in junnitobn, , . Consul at Soul informed Mr. Hall that the , hue • total population of Corea, aeoording tO,,the o•Government census, is about 13,340,000. The revenue of the.king is derived entirely from the land tax, and oattriet anionnt 0 much more than 61,000,000. ' • The effott matter o er Bay Sentinel makes a big rip ite contemporaries in the y chronicling. It strikes, rom the ordinary run of big pr out anew r • squashes, hen fruit, fish stories, etc:, and trots out a farmer's wife as the monstrosity of the season. Mrs. Thomas:Ritchie, it says, is the wife of a stook meet at Glad- stone, Man., who moved with her husband from Clinton, Ont., four years ago. . When she left Ontario she tipped the beams at 631 lbs., but since. that dine' she has lost in weight the remarkably large amount of 140' lbs. Another peculiarity of this wonderful ' woman is that Sheirs the mother of 4wehty- feurehildren, Seventeen of 'whom are still living. She was leaving home the other day on board the steamer Empire, but net- v4thatanding her reduced dimensions she was unable to get the state -room, and had to. be acootrunodated as eletik pas- senger. , . • An extraordinary projeat has been sug- gested in Paris. 'It is to conned, the capital with thecity of Rouen by a, tunnel. The length 'of the work would be over 73 'miles, while the cost calculated at £5,000,000 sterling. The projeotorti contend that there are great etrategic as well as commercial advantagee Connected with the Adman, but sober-minded critics regard it as the Mere dream of a visionary. _ A lady having accidently; broken her senelling-bottle, her husband who was very petulantsaid to her," I declare, my dear, everything that belongs to you is more or less breken." " Tine," replied the lady, for even yott are a little cracked." The Bethlehene,Pai4 steel mill continued itt opertition .yesterday. The union men made no attempt to interfere 'with the men at work., Swimming Soirees. • A lady...writing from Washington, D.C., 'Jays that this summer the swell beau fiends delicately perfumed notes to his female friends which contain an invitation to take The great rink which was need all winter for rollerskating shah bap turned into a natatorium by a youn Washingtonian, and he has begun a eerie of •eerm-weekly swimming soirees. A fine hand is in attendanee, and the interior is brilliatitlylighted with electric) jets..Broad. balconies utroutidthe basinwhere opera chairs ara provided for speptsitors, and friends of t e winitnerg who dettot caxe to participate. Along either side Ira oleset- like rooms, one room being assigned to the gentlemen and the other to their fair partners, a check being Wen for Omit. Upon entering they retire to their rove°. ti,ve sides of the hall, and, in ten minutia appear in gay bathing suits. The couple meet at the spring -board at the heed of the bath and away they go with a piano) * concert. It is lots of fun, they say, and no* that it has suddenly grown polite the soities are jammed each night to the full capacity of the bath, which is about 60 trf 800 feet. The man who started tjari regale the 'kill of hour, and nothing Wee eone., Mends the attention of the quality folk who have nothing to do ,exoept amnia themeelVes with Rome new thing. 'Where Was a shook of earthquake kit Panama yesterday afternoon in the Aired - ion front west to east. - Zia* litems&de at. "So you have found hotel - source of great profit 2". queried Yorker Of a Colorado Man whom in Chicago the other day. " Willli the betel has Met expense", than& sure," was the 'reply.' " But they you have nada f000,000." "Te, seal IlaNa ilaklOtiatilatilolla 110 and &silver Mine !ittiaelied to the &IAA 'We root* ,fitialhei 1011c itt sot as judge at,, all itoree•racei umpire at a prite.fighti. •011, expect aVresteirti hoist to make a Street News.' Who Empress Augwrba,otGi suffering from partial paralyidia