The New Era, 1884-01-18, Page 40
I/
c,
•-•••
441aluary I 81884.
of time e.nd .custone -have. co ehanged. the
. .
A 4•14.1.WILIBEAN '
.. .. . . . . , .
epoiel etructure that leep year righte are no
10011er
ViiiiiitarAlgt.
—
Peewee
rimsg.,0 ism, new AND ISE 14.
•
BAUM: DElill4E. IN ISCORDOX4,
blebbne.
. . .
- TUE CIBRIPENTER 110.4X0
,
LEAP YEAR OURIOSITIES
• .. . •.
OBOOStary tO OM fear eea., einok they
noil praet400 what amounts to neerlY the
earact _thing 111, kill Yeexe• yet the ancilent
tradttons are nottorgotten,if not obeerv.ed,
.Illewit Who Have. Never /Been PI* t•
. • periled.
In one of the moot yonlete andaeetuded
valleys in the mountain's of. northern
as wrIghtews Mille Ma *elk teetterillaturet
niokos•• .
laaet Hight we gat to tab g .. about
heunted bonnet and pft 'Paid- there Wee no
Great Eteueles• Arising /reps Iligsswhos
frapills griseronstolv DisciPlIned*
there fie no more mobil Wallah of gamma
tion
10.1.0.0.
91199 Ilisory of th stamtb, 4, 00
ineners Walling ter Them.
1;W/conversation yesterday with mr; .
. a......., -.0._-„a .
An Old Cwitout ' which • illa 110
Ld
• onger ObatIrVCi. ' •
anO efforts to revive thent In tionee degree
are frequently Medea Thus It happene
that on New Year's day in leap year Bonn
people try to bave the ladiee niake the °elle
Galilee, intye.a, porrespondent...of the. New
York Sun, lies *village, the email populee
time of whieh posseesee an interest alto-
gather. unique. Aft I looked down it
Ouch thing as a taaented beetle. Ele fieki
wheaever any unmet. noise Wite beard in
e 11011801 instead Of ltlIfeetigeding it* People
IMIE1,0311 to the pupils in the Publio
Schools ot Hamilton thau, the ere drill.
At a .fgiyen. eignal they eis-e and march out
of the 'Wilding ee geiehlY as possible,
eTames Usher' ot No 9 Murray etreet, Na
York " • h -it .' c ' ' i ''
o att. been nvestigat nit the ..)
oriel,' who the'aitrp. outer fethilyesaid teryb24
to bring together the
, ..-----te---. •
-
A CHARTEit FOR THE LAMBS.
Vh.en the nations of the earth firet began
to .tuessure time they aid it iii a happy.ge.
*holy sort ef Way that sometime, go thorn.
seellY Mixed up. The old Roma elnPet
ors, used to ax tho conidar 0. putt thew.
selves, soh after his ow, ,hothion. Thus
it happened that thmetimes, there would be
00 mOothe ha IIN year, sometimes but 10, and
at one tune there were ais cles that were
not. in the year at all, bat simply thread to
fill. up betweeu the end of an old, year and
the beginning of a new one. , The matter
"ambled the enoient calendar makers
-
•at they really dida't know a year
they
of .the season, while th.e gentlemen remain
at home to entettein. Othiety, bowever, is
veVY•43°11"8"1"11" as regards 4e ceE'ime• "
not oi regard to whore it, admIts within itl3
charmed apd oharmingefrole. All attenipts
to introduoe. leap year practices have ended
in ham. There is a• obas- out8ide. the
saoreO pale of what is eelf-styled " society',"
but, nevertheless,. quite atc.. good as that
which pparkles in Vanity Fair, who. are not
tio ultra formal but that they oan enjoy a
little inument huh audio thie 040161es%
year palsies are sometimes hedulgedia, bat
rarely; and take,theoyear All around, the
bachelor's liberty is a,boati as secure aa in
an other
Y •
upon
from the precipitous and dangeroue path
by mettles of whioli I was eldrting the flank
ef the ranunt9412 I thought. I had rarely
Seen a spot of Imo weal beauty. It was an
oaele-anot exaotlyin a desert, for the roOkY
mountain ranges were •covered With wild
herbage -but in a savage wilderness of
desolaton, in the naidlit Of Whloh the vil•
loge nestled in a forest .of orange, atmond,
fig and pOmegranate troth, the tiny rills of
water by which they ware irrigated ghe-
.teninglike eilverthreads in the snulight. and
the yellow °rope beyond eentresting
with the dull green of the MU verdure,
long deprived -of water, and the gray reeks
whit% reared their craggy pinnaeles above
pit, .
gee soared and went aroundtalking • Abdul'
_the Ileum being Itealuted, and before long
' "
everybody believed It, the reputation ot the
heath was ruined', and everybody was per.
VOW, Ta. said that haunted bongos was on
a Par.with Viral:MOM aril peOPle of sense
never took any stook ill either. lie- said ll
I over heard of:a haunted house to let him
know and be Would go through It and
investigate it in the dark. I thOngbt to
myself, "beset you. can't 1001. Hennerar
and 1 laid for pa. That evening my °holt 'fi
oat mime over to visit our Oat, and. When it
was thine. to go to bed the two eltt3 were
sleeping by the stove, and pa told me I had
betterput the oats out doors and go to bed.
So. I took the oats up morally and raised
.
avoiding, of course, any uuneoessar, yorowd•
lag. Tbe theft time 'thoupied in -clearing
the, Maim in this way is almoet itateedible
and Bowe have thought that it was unduly
interfaring with the Studies, twin case of
an 110n1n1 fire the Seholors would forgot
thair Provions training. But of the nem
city for this doll„ especially in our three.
storey high'-•achools• there oan be no
question.. A Praltticial illustration of Its
great benefit Wasgiveaatterontoyesterdtty,
*hetithe large HoPe street Publio, Reboot
was burped down. When; Headmaster
gilt bliaeovered the basement in lames,
seam the Ilfael, without a imamate; delay
he gave the usual lire drill alarm to each
class -room. The obelus t the
o
people of that name;
he thus referred to 02e -estate iu which isa
number of persons m this dietrice are Field, •
to be interested; "Among the first of the
fenItly to leave England was Samuel Oar -
pouter, of the pennayivania Minch; who,
through the perseoutions of the, priende in ,
that country in "Ie05, during the reign of
°aeries II., went; with many Othere, to the
Island of Barbadoes. aUe was born in 1,630,,
He left Barbadoett in 1602 and joined
William Penn in Philadelphia, and engaged
in foreign commeme. He died in 1714,
aged 64, years. He was a prominent
member of' the Friende Society in Phila.,
delpbia, ,O, meneber • of the Provincial .
Aeseelbly, and a member of the Connell of
'
W saw it.. They would just go on
saying that ao nila SO many days made a.
Year, and thee when tbey found themselves
dropping babied, or-outrnntaug the sun,
they would at the ease might demand,
drop Or add a few MOUthil or • days, ikwas
ilprnaterial to theta whith, and then live
ofi contentedly until the neceasity for an
other patching up arose. If an emperor
thad a friend whom he partionlarly wished,
-to honoraer felt leolitaid to propitiate ttey
of the nutnerous. gods and goddethes that
maiusguaeelostisiaattaatorroutaha awn m
those day they simply added a new month
'to the year, nained after the patty the taffy
Wee intended for, and the thing woe' done.
' Those old Bewails weregoodeet chaps, and"
000asiorially one woulttnarne,e, month after
. himself. -- .. ..
' When Salim Ciesttr assumed.' control of
Matters in 'the Eternal. Oity he found the
calendar. in • an Whims.' mess: With an
energetic) promptitude that was character-
istio of the man, he at once rearranged
things acoordiug . to leis owu 'notion, and
ETIQUETTIE AT *OWE. .
-..._.,
''''' ' Al' t ill • Reserved tor $ociety
as Fsh,edd 0. e.. ,
_ Atone.
The ease and neglige of hOnle Often
induce .eareieeeneee . as to etiquette., the
presston beingthat politeness and polish
are Only needed iii society, and that care.
legsness ,or manner is appropriate to hone
fife. All such. views are erroneous. There
is positive - oomferli in _politeness, and
etiquetteis as iropprtant athoine as abroad
Wit distinguish itiquette Re the outward
expression of politenese. It has to do. with.
forms and attentions which are external.
A lady in society ifl treated with a certain
-deference, which maniteste. iteelf in,deit.
oate attentione. Children. in , Impiety are
• treatedwith oonsiderate kindness,. which is
'always considerately expreesed.. There
inc rules eta. etiquette which
relate' to the .• neatly little- ,atten-
done and formulas,;• These in society are
carefully graded, and often rigidly enfotoed.
The nadie of thia village was Bukeia,
I had heard vaguely of the existence of a
spot in Galilee where a cornmunity (Vows
I'ved who o ai d to be the the admits of
s I me d . e . . .
families who had tilled the land m this
sante looa,litY Prior to . the destruction of
Jerusalem atia alto subsequent &Wird=
of the race ; and fte, it had never been eue.
peoted that any remnant of the nation had
clung, to the soil a their Where from tame
immemorisioto as it le certain that this
is the only remnant that has, I took some
trouble to ascertain the name of the vil-•
lage, and feltthat it. was, worth apilgrimage
to visit it, Although hitherto unknown to
Europeans and tend*, iii has , been • for
mally years a spot much frequented by
the.aewe of sated aud. Tiberias, and this
eurnmeraespecielly, when the cholera; panic;
ere 'El a.
prevailed in the oonidtTy, there was . per10
feet rush of the wealthier Jews and rabbis
Of thee° Owns tilts pure • air and hawing
climate. In a small 'way• it Al a sore of
Jeddah sanitarium,
up the cover to the piano, and laid the oats
• •
down in the baok side of the instrument,
&Meng the striogs, and petted them, and
they went to sleep, and I shot down the
cover and we all went to bed. •Pa all4,333e,
sleep right' over the, parlor, and I eleep'at
the back 'o1 the house. Along about two
otdoca in the morning, about the time eats
usually geOwohe up and begin to prowl
around, there *aa "a, faint thratobing of
toe -nails on the strings, and a yowl,
that itounded es. though it mune from the
sewer. It was evidently' Music' 'Imoltait
you get, at hoarding heneeewhere aboarder
practices on the phial& for her board. -I
listened and pretty peon there was two
'. Me01113 ' and a 'Spit,' and the strings aided'
all thoUgh theY Were being walked on the
way a -Oat does when she puts her paws up
' your lap and lets, her toe -nails go through
your •pants. Jaatot ..up and went to pa's
robin, and ma was sitting up in bed with
her night-cap off, heel:lair standing right np
ettaight, . and gho Was trying to get pa to
listen,
, 0 number
of neatly 400 rose at the' wordot e wor o command,
and as eteadily as if on parade filed. out
. and down the etairwaY into theconsiderable'
play-
ground. Bach lady teacher eavathe last of
her soholare out, and then closing the door
...followed them down stairs. Not till they
were outside did three.fourths.of the chit.
.dren suspeot that. anything was wrong.
When they did; some turned batik to save
their claps, th'
eta or books but were met at
the • - stairways by • Mr. GUI ,atid
another. gentleman, who tunied them
haok. In -a couple of the olasia•rooths the
smoke: was begioning to pour in ' pretty
heavily before. their Min_ came_to.leave, hut
'the assurarice of the teachers thaf all was
right and their ,self •pessesition quieted
the echolars. As soon as the , school was
clear an alarm Was • soundt34. With the
exception of the heed master the teachers
'
in this school are- all ladies They .ser.
'tainly,•deserve some mark of recognition
from the School Board for their admirable
theduct under the trying io4leal of yester-
State. He intent a great portion of his later
years in public) service. He died worth e.
large amount' of money and ossessed of a,
f P ' •
amount o real estate. m
rennsylvania. Samuel Carpenter had 6.
children two girls and four boys Of th .
,, Q . a. . ,... e •
Maisachusette branch of the family William
Carpenter was the first, and he came to
title country in 1631$ and lived .and died at.
Weyroeuth, B1ass.- He had 4 children." .
Mr, tither then gave some inferestiog
detaila about the succeeding generations. .
of the family in Ithode-lelandanaltiong - •
Mend, with the names of the descendants
"atultit list of the moneys that it Wail alleged
were in. truet • for various members of the
family and where they were repotted to
have been deposited. His research in be-
half of the heirs of the Carpenter family
. a
have been e ormous and 1 a p h t e
iit . , n a.mp le .h
has lathed he gives an interesting history .
of the efforts that have been made to dis?
oover who the Members were ,wliere they
belonged and all their antecedents. • Vie
claims . of the family to the trust in Eng-
• succeeded in doing 4 better job than any of
his predetheeors. • But ia order to do this
he had to mix 0.1113 up so 'that neither'
They maybe made onerous and so wpm-
ave. But etiquette is dearly defined. We
dertot advociate an etiquette for the home
.
piambikoe inmiEs OF INDIA. '
• • . • -. a _ -
searvels ot mogoitade That
raise up and but it wasn't peas night
to Bitten, and he put his head under the
bed clothes and tried' to snore, hut I knew
day. Had they shown an fear or recta
. . y g
fully feinted there ia no sayieg What' the
.aoxiseationanett might have been. ,. '
land of £40 000 000 was not entertained b
, • Y.
the Lord Chancellor: ' .' . •
.. ,
year ,.
to be burdenserae,' 'it
are hurtling,'
pat was .flOated. I. told pa that I Wasn't
" • • . •
, . . .._,.....
'Wall
he nor anybody else could make head Or
tail of it, and thin period has sinoe been
. . known to atone who are interested in these •
xaatters as the • • • '
• •• ",TEAli OF CONFUSION," •
. W i Was a very . appropriate appellation.
V .. . he haat brought hei,planiato Nanning
•orde he,had whittitekno.wit au the lull=
•th• rigid; as Yet ma
eaohin oliteneas to
be the means of t g p . . t•
children. Those who have • an instino we
politenees easily fall in with the rules of
_to.
etiquette. But all have -not this instinct.
Some are careless, rude, .selfish, Moons'.
donde. These need discipline. to. giVe'
this 'Soot to leoture . on the toles of.good
.. -. szesiewn, • .
' The English•are , beginning in a vague
way to retitle° the magnitude of India and
. ... . • . . t
comprehena mat it materna some
- • • e - - -
50 000 00a . more people than all Europe
1 , . •
- • west'of • the Vistina. Few, howeyer, .a,re
quite eaware of the nuriaber a its oitiesam
.
afraid, but I wished he would.let me sleep
on the thunge in hietaceanaara pa teased up
and 'wanted to _knew what the row was, and
t then the catrin -the lane teemed to
have come 'together for their regular even -
. • . . . . •
iiag fight, and all -of the niusio you: ever
, heard, that b t th- • P l* t d
me, ist ene ,
and it
. . . .
- . etavertiiiine : . •
'
hi a bad thin but Dr. Pierce's "Pa orite
„ a . ,. * _ . . • v -
-t" reseription cieserves .itename... It. is a,
certain cute fot,those painful nialadies and
Weaknesses which etnbtt r th lt of
• • 1 e • ' e 'yes .80
111 a ' Vivomen• ,Or. druggists. ' .` i,
. t..t..„._,. .,
. A who lithe in Vain lithe worse than
.. .
in vain. Eth who lives to-firejturpose, lives •
to a;bad purpese.-Nevins. •
(Seene-A sniall parloth ' in Sootlend).
rs..13lair. (an old imighbor
14 Who has been •
absent from the vdlage for a aumber of -
•
Years)-" Whit Ye 'thiakin' o' makin' a
Johnny, Mrs !Brother' Brown-
.
• calendar, which contained 12 moiethit named.
as at preseut. re bruory had 2l) days orda.
eerily, but every tour years had 30. This
may be *called the first regular •Inseallation
e •
,order or politeness.' It must. be tostilled
,, more by example them preeept, - And where
the parents ath careful to observe the forms
.•
o po s eness, i.s pppor (Mee la UF, SI,
f pll 1 ' 1 - nat all
impressed and ititrulee are speedily Itemize a
believe *het it inoludes sixty.two With mom
than .50,000 people, and twenty•twe with
ne'ofe than' 100,000, . namety : Bombay,
Calcutta, • Madras,• Hyderabad, .1.4nolx-
now . Benitres • Delhi, . . Patna
P 7 • '
waesa somebodyeeery
t de,
itaphi cipera sidn'eainerhr* trying
B
in theYbouse, and I told a tBit: house Wail
PO4 0,we
h' • t d• d f h• t
sun e and or im o get up and inves ii-
gate Pa was kind of 'shamed to be afraid,
•
.
- • Virtue Will catch as. well as. vice aby
00Hteet ; and the „public ., stook of honest,
naanly principle .will, &My, ..aeenneulate.-
.. , , , . .
.1,flirice,
:MM.'
"Weel, his father bertsays he'd mak' a*
paten minister.". Pdre. Illair (who is not ,
passionately fonO athe''cloth "tee,. lltia's •
that, Mr. Broon r Mr, Browp-" Wed. 4,
..of leap year on' a petrattuent basis. Atter
he had secured the general Management of
• .the earth ane, had the title' of ,Augurstue
added to his oameaa day was taken from
..
Therefore, all deferethe that would be
shownin public society should • mark inter.
-
coat e at home. And if hothead and wife
• P
'
. ,
Agra, • Bangalore, 'Umritsur, Cawnpore,•
Lahme, Allahabad, Xeypore, Rangoon;
Poona, Ahmeda.bad, Bereilly, Surat,Hownit
Barroda. We them :in
so he. got up and all was -still,
and . he -got . hie ' •d t t
the.... pants . on an wen otti,
ln .. hall, .a.rICIN 34". thee tketcate got o
' gratang apotner. tound„and rushed into
' •• - • ' - • • • •• .
' Being entirely vegetable, no particular
care iill •requieed. while using Dr,- Pierce
"Pleasant. Purgative Pellets: ! • They oper-
ameeng Rhea things, . he'd. gotten plenty o'
self-eonceit, an' ta .ancommoztly • fond o'
siller." . • • ' '
• • ' e
' February, which atready had lees than the
n t h'Idr bit and notice
°IcraneeTle8iiils erne:tut). itetlehet Pin
sod give order of
pa
the! bathroomend
ate withont disturbance. to the constitution,
others, and added.. to. August, , whioh had
beennemed•.from himself, because july,
which wait named after the firratCmear, had,
.31 days, and Augustus did not propose •to
have dnybody own a bigger. tnonth that he
• • did. Having thee &milled himself (it is•
ir lira this
Late. , , e a e •, -
--
Beyond this deurtesy Siena O very
decided infliienth bri oharaoter. • Trained
to the etiquette of atoliteneuegives a battier:et
a . - i h- i fta ihoe •
an evenness. o o arse er.. .very . p•
poputation ; but. preperly. speaking, in the •
English way of ,ociunting, H.owra, the
South Wark of Oalcutta, 811914 be inoluded .
in the. capital, whittle with it contains
abstit sag,000 sews, and *. it . is the.
greatest,. ,isii, • it ` • iii . b'Y ' fat the '
closed. the door, .and
•yelle..d for .me to ..epeu :thewindeer audholler.
„
I'lr door,6nePtl•iwe. ,I got up a.eaar:' •
through the 18..v,"1,,afraid,In" . P
Hau!.'"• "".. '
h w' La"Irl'e mu "h1Pougalt.
. ' theetg e was -in a et •room, EV would
take a bate and I told Itineeit he
diet. or occupation. For .siek headache,
constipation, impure blood, dizziness, sear
etiotations from the stotnaoh, bad taste in
mouth, biliouh atteeks, ' pain in region of
kidimy; interraal fever, bloated feeling about
stoniaoh,xush of blood to heatt, lekti-D-r.
tatom• ,
til0 , 4.. p„ t§ ,,
HAS.•BE.Eri PROVED'
a The SUREST CURESor -. .
ICIDINEY DISEASES.
• t'• - ' - -
g
•
Said he did it to flatter the .vanity 'of • Oa;
• a
taNTAUS), h0
, tion involves self-oonttol and . conscious
• . 5.* ' - II i ' ' d
restraint I 1113, Wit most sewn nature.
wealthiest aity ; in the Empire. .Be-•
. • . •
low the limit of 00,000 the thwns become
was afraid.
I would' go down and investigate, because.
•
Pierce's 1! pellets." By.druggiste.. •
. ___...‘„,_ .
_, : -
macs el lame beak ,or dicordered, nrinolnai-
onto that you, are a *Jahn P TEEN DO NOT
.
-
I
WWI oonateilee. te alter the
length of the later months 'in order ' that .
three . long . months might not "me
. .. . • ,
ditNether* • . .4 • ° . • '
- Though toline Orem did he
,
The formeatala rules aro acquired and the
babits elowlgrafted Where "this. is
y. on.
80 MUG • as been &mow :is e in
done'h 'h ' b • • 1* h a '
aniline" of seit-oinitrol that' its influe 1400
rau,oh more • numercele; . .
i and;' Ihire
are hundreds ' with Vopu.ations above
20,090. Tb,e majority a the -latter. are
.; . ,. .. . .
E ' ' ti
quite unanown to-- uropeans, an ad ve
there was • no haunted house that had ale
t .1 31•• - --A 1 • ' t d' 'iri
(Ter tart eunery, an wen , own all
let d the • ot on. the ,baolt
tbe -ea s out, and . „ Y g . ... . :-•
. fence and had a real sociable time, and
'till • *th
. . - -
• The eiiport ' of diamonds from the Cape
between -Aug, lst and Nov. 30th, inelusive,
amounted 1i:testae to base than $5;000a ' 17 '
.--• . •
ITESITATA'use,/ildney.I'Vort at OPOO7 WT.
One reoommentl Wand it willirpeedily 'eve
ome the' disease and ;esters healthy action.
s .....ii; demm • Per complaints peculiar
'Ikea I Tv*. 111 to 'Your Sati Siell'agi pain
andweekneeces,Xidney•Worticuneuriassed.
.
cd •
,,.
ea
A•
.11
.
pretty well.
-didn't quite altalfil both emds Meet. The
'
extends to feriaper and' habillriff Mind.
Stich ersons are a t, -to • be selfeiontahied
Paineraenoierly
magistrate or. two excepted, and, Bo fat as.
Ye e are isivare, there ie ne.hook in,
aftei it as- all. a (lain t Iv
t 1 • wh• h a . Pd t ' de t" wilt '
owe in ot an . on ne . o me, ,e as
' It bilious, or thiffering trona imptirity of
a. a
it will act promptly and safely. . ,,
allaitherees. Tucontinenee,retentionortimii,e
.
solar year contained. 805 days; 5 hours,48
• minutes- and '46.05. •semindta
Emperor's rex t contained 366e • days-
4.., .2 . , A entleman.will 'be
-.sue un er. A pretheation an . amt a •
. h d ' - 11 • • g ' d 'd 11
.English
Which gives the slightest account Of. their
'inanimation, or of the life and people • in
them. Yet many. of thein,have histories
d taken a bath at 2 otafook in.
holievehe'ha . .. ,, .-. -
II
t 9 morning with cold water. . 1 don 1 thtn.a
1 is n ht for .a father to tr ..to deceive his
l. Y...
mom .orwe*Iungs and fear consumptioh
'
(ectofialotis • .esaie of -the lungs), take Dr.'
- Pierce's •• Golden Medical Discovery " and.
•
ereetaustorropadeposite,anduen dra—if.
.vield to its tiveNzower
Pai4BAILBP".4i15%. - °Ura • - ' ' •
4.3., - SOia, Br ALL DEEIGGE3T13,. Trice $1
i
rgi
.about 11 maeutes and. 13' Beclouds longer
thanthe eolar things rau • along in
trials ortesta. Hence children thus edu...
.
cede receive something more thanp° is .
d • " '*- 'I' li
of 2 000 years, and in all oris faiitilies
• t . • .
. .g . — - • a
littie nog that way. .ra must have washea
himself
.
15 will cure the Be deuggiete. . .. . a
. .. , . . en • ..
g
.a
10 DN EY -WORT
11,
--
year.
It lasomething to -lady
which thirik thereettlyesatiebthaatisl_h.ave,
real hard for bo was nate as a ghost
' •••
.
' - •• • - a - •
ibis way until 1682, wan Pope Geogery
graoefull timed a
,to dinher, • t••maintain''Y . '
long and'etirring taleit te oarrate.
..,-- . ... t • - ,
when he came out of the heth•ro,om; but he
A lady . was &eked the reason Why the
'XIII. tried hie head at. tinkering' theteden-
dar, and fixed up 11. 37eNittr wich.865. days„ 6
hours-, 49 minutes and .12 Moonds, which
. ..
' leas been in• 'ever since, and seemato
, or , o en agrees e con-
lel
versatiori, orto. show, at all tidies the itir
of good hrOeding ; but the' value of' it anis-
the traits of mind that Wm beer( iinparted.
pedigrees
We hear every now .and -then much • of
Ladiatt princes whoon India, are' hardly
n',upictionerlf and' of " edueated . natives," 4
„
was paler 0111 in 'the morning when .he
f • dth ' • f 11 ' f t la - -
Inn - e plan% u oa.oct . , ab -r.. •
'Ate sat 1 !' t inthe
ta e. reatster . r . e.
alveays 'came so. early ;to &lurch. • " Be-'
cause," 'satd she, " it is part of my 'religion
wrier,' to 'disturb' • theteligion of others." •
veitt.e," aicia-attosiiitiaA owe
• " -
1 ts/I P ROVE. D .'
.
•.: - ••
ose
linswer the purpose very well Tobe sure,
A..olean - person.: will feel-olean, arid one
scarcely perceptible -class, but 'of ' the true
" "'es
Fire:ea
piano.- eck's Sun-. . , -.
A VIONG THE. WE FitE.
'BUTT E R LG
-
it exceeds the • solar year by • -nearly. 26
athustomed to politeness ?will naturally
. realiee the elevation • t'f I- tt • d
on o mgthatoa en a-
British India little is known at heine
• Oa of thei_eacitern,..Proyinoes_pf Pere -a -Jaen-
TheiLunaticti VirboVisil 'on 4,„omia.k,„ria,
• • • • • • • ' . - •
.AGED'
, .. .. - •. •
..ei... QIIENTLY observe an ahnost-complete.
.
...GO
lawn* ;. but as tbea.would. only -make one
day in'3,825,yeare, . caia,
. .th
courteey. • So habits 'fern:Led at home are
don Bpeeta. tor: . .. • . . .•
.• . .
-7-41err '-dit)frrelOtirtktiPttrbar tura .of the.
suspension of the functions, of newton. The .
machinery of tlfe body •being• nearly= warn ottt, •
.
,A NEW DISCOVF.RY..
we struggle along
important, and the habit of courtesy ranks
.___. . •
'''. " • ' ' ' ' "
.00urt. for. Osborne, Windsor Ceade - wee
the feeble storciach is unable to, digest . and.
' eirFor we have, furnished tb,.
with it -tor ettrne at least..., . : ... • .. •
The neeessity for leap yeir.•erifiesa ea
• .
amorig-the-firat..-Philadelphia &ill.
. . a , . . ,
..: .' .
, . ••' .
•-- • .. .. • ei
Giese • • ••
. semeteing.New. la . •
. . . • a •
. . . . . .,
voided by some insane • peonle .desirceis • of •
taming an audience -
Ole - '• h -H ' M " -
. assimilate. food • • to.. nourish' and:. repair the
exhausted 'frame end suetain the vital Come.
-- ' • •
several years
Dairymen of 'America, ulith: en excellent. art!.
fleialcolorforbutter; someritorions that it met
• -
everybed'y know% train the feet that the
earth does not move aro.Mal tlietho in a oar.
' - teen number of Whole days, hot fiade at the
end or lite Joitney thas Wiwi.. a' fractiott.of
a day, approximating oae,fourthi to dispose
'
w.
•' . a A. Brereet eicateit varmer....
• * . • . • . . • .
At -a recent 'meeting in London of :the
British' Royal Eititaane . Stalietyaa Weer
Medal was -unanimously voted • to Mr. D.
McCulloch, a. fernier, -Canine
....,eye
.. A hieve York. correspondent a go -...0.0,iti;•-
• fOrd Tones says : Among the lateafinewi e .
,te.a &sit. bathtub. Thu. idea, is ,not yet
qutteepetfeeteOabatet 'am assured' thaVit.
,thon ..Will be. The personeworking at out,
with . er Nes y
t
under aratiois pretexts. One • of these
una lovas a co ore person. a, P moe
- — --
pecalber -ease the 'applicant 'averred that
he invented Or disoovereda•magnet °enable
ofatUayIng, the. most 'violent storm. die
ue
le h t 1
ems hay ng feeble e of res stance
power 1 •
suffer,mnch from extiemes of temporattire, and
euccumb e atty. to .disease, frodr-whieh they
kallymith difficulty, for • want Of constitutional
vigor. Here Dr. Wheeler's Compound Elixir of s
• .1.,!iiesphateil and Calisaya, is invaluabeittottoenstora.
5°1
-
.
with great Semis everrebere receng. the-
. gliest abd obly prizes tit both International
. . ,
Dairlraa'a : •. . • '.. : ..,
=-.rfTleit by patient and scientific chemical re.-
searchwellaventnprordinurbeerittlier. Ittotlit
al t° wIN9f13:8t Cworo';•rtrie Buttermilk.. it '
of ; so, to mitAe matters easy and con-
venient for all o noerued., 'an extta day..is
young. .of
Drummers,. Stratireer, Wigtownshire, for, a
are . confident • that it " wilr The tat greet
.thooess.
.
stated that he had' come 'from Ainatioa, and
gOlelOWIZtiligiTriultavienngqi.
_he° el:Mentnf
• bons, muscle and :Wire, in an easilYfassimilable-
Will Not Turn Rancid; It Is the
.
aliPped in every year, and eta
ga ilantitit performed b bim on the lith
. , The chief difficulty • is that of •
for-.
that during e dreadful•hurricaite while On
.f0r131' .: . • • . - ' • • : • ' - . .' '
• Strongest,. Brightest sand • • • ,
,fourth ,
February, siuoe it. was• -the 'vititim of the
November : w ereby
• last,.. h 'Y ' h • - 't ' •
e was. me ru .
providing expeneion and oodtreotion.
.hisrvoyegefreinathere te England:he had
,
Every.nien
-*
.
.
And this, It is Bald,: is nearly overcome
in stilling.the angry with
. hits three characters a•thot"
-
• • Cheapest -Color -Made,. . .
Roman. spiAer, i4 .Worse oft than. eVer, it- is
thrown this Vagrant day. fetich as one would
throw a picked boas to 0, dog, . i,.
•
mental in saving the lives of six' persons.
Oa • that date. .the . barque Ennerais; was
Wreaked, during a heavrgale, on the rooks
beheath the Wale, some 200" feat high, at
,
The maOufaeture. of .mallesible•'ghise . is
.. counted as one of the keit arts, but iPwititt
is alleged iisi to the experiment; with gates
.sineteeded waves
his • eninderful. talisman.- The , althe
P--- --
authorities considerately offered to.show
the possentionof this treastire a plitoewhere
which he eahibits, • • that 'which he has, .
• and that whith -7' he. 'thinks . he. 'Inue-A.•
.R.,„.2. . a ' . • . e..„ - ' • - •
." • - . - " ' ,.• •
-
- •
lize-Andoilille prepared•inoil, is sacomplaind..
'edthatit is inipossible fee it to become rancid.
reBEWARBibiltancus,..sncl of idi
0 colors, for they:. are liable to beeente
•
•
THE tarn BET, , . . . '
• ..
• who to tell 'the -truth are not slow .to
, „ • • „ .. , . .
1 18 a
observe anything neve, °venally t at
(./arnegaVON, Where Peter Ilicol,.the master a
an five o e ore e . ,. , •
d fi of w .w re washed Op" -Ow
ing to the temp -est it Wait found • impossible
for beth -tabs her all true, • it will soon be
rthovered. theprobees ef annealing' Oath
' • • he f li'' • d
se -that it may -used tie t is purpose au.
man otberefor which it has hitherto
he could display itereniatkahle poWere, and
sent hint safely back tnLondona• '- One •of
• •• . • . ' • ;
shelunatios,•whoseappearance led the castle.
'linseed
. .
'lea, Diamond .Dyes ,:iste so perfect and Se
beeutiful . that it iS a pleasure , to Mos, • them.
Equally good fordark or li lit colors • 10 cents
• . , ' • . 6. . . . ' • !
. '..
rancid and spoil the butter. • • • . • . .
sarHyou cannot got the "improved" write us
to know where and how to got it wl theca cum
axlv
• - • ' ' • = . • , •
t.
•
-'—bennetrapoirsaw-thaStimea• hod changed,
._
to: path a tope to; the poor. sailors, and,
not
• Y • •I bl - '
oustodiana to - that ' he wail 'in a
• ' • • , ;_ '..
-. . • - :-r-010.--- • .
' •
'
• MTLES laieninDSON k ce:, Berlinetho, l •
• • , . .
SO to speak, and at OnCe • Het Shout cowrie-
th h ' 1 reo r alized the.
°lig. severe, pe as e perilous
th
been avai it alit . e illY0II 1011 O. r..•
t' f M C.
'"Hyditsulie
- - •• .-
destitute Mate; was -proymea with. a nearby:
• . Ati advertisement says •that a• parlor'
..
_ - - •
. . . .
mg to turn t e new or er o tega. 0 r position, no one ventured a rescuenntil Mr.
Wa McLean, The and Senitary
meal beforehis removal .frora..the palace.
Matches tide the only true .matches kir the
" ' '
•
own account. .Yettetaer a 'general cOnveii-• McCulloch appeared Upon the scene. •Ere at
tion ot duly appointed delegate's . was held, 01100' centiented. to. alio* ..hirasalt to be
. or an - underittaliding was arrived at by lowered over. the:aim:ie.. ef, . the • cliffs by'a
• correspondence or Intuition (intuition le eipagle snaallxope tiede•exotint- his waiit,
one of the. attributes . of . women), this: baying another rope hie hand, to the
Plumber" enea,ke of it as ••• °neat the most
•••b' fi I 1 d= - f tii , Prof..
• Deoliree m(3uc'ts• a eltres(3. 7titiegRreoat saileitlgreycalue1e .
beyond•' t " 'Ifb • s
.gime ion. glass oan ti, suooes •
full used in the manufacture of bath•tubs
• y d f ." ' d there-
.W• dee Ca tle le not th on'. ro' alaresa
in t ii _ - ' - i •. 'f • •
;tffuelliaotee• oersioonn:11yo• kiviiisoirtneed-bry:i JitnoBalumnoroari
' ' ' P' ' It t• ' f th ' demented'
• axe. .just as ti, rac me o. e ..
Ones- And it ' needs ail the ,alertnesta. of the •
' •
'
he h Id
•• 4280 -0 • • e • 04 now that.
W A 't kabout'
We thinkaorne, very. satisfactory' engage..
nietatithave been reit4e at the !tont gate, or .
out •the piazza: ."..•
.
, ' :—•••"7-a.
.H.Pinkhairt, .ace)s
ea
atate,
aa
l'
, .,. - .. ,
-..
4)
historian.doolines to sta,te,.though it detain men b low .In this 'nodded and at the
follow that he ooulde't it he" Would -bat at • • a ''. •••• • • '• . . .
merey•of •the-wmd,whieh. blew with ter bl
ri a
all events the uuderetaareine Was arrived force, the bream young farmer . passed the.
. at that•on any day of the 36G inleap 'year rope down to •the Bogota; who were subse-
' i4
ie no
metea q eFopper,..an. •zinci. a
,
reason why it should, -.not be available -for
'nks tanks wash -tubs,. refrigerators ;
Ell ' 1
even .or.. llr19, „ORB
r b '' I' • kets ' ' d 1 Incioes
-building n
I • tabu 4 9° Ira toles
44 d A t ' t-th -
oaattereon uty in. or ,or . o. proven . eir
ehddete and unwetoonte, nitruitionopon the
.• pr elude of the abvereige • Some • niake•
- ' the 1- .with th d ' '
pilgrimages to. . e pa ite.es _ e. !ante
iT*Lydia whose benevolent
shadowed •in sanest every. PaPer we plait hp,
appo,„es to have, diecovered. what Addison • calls
" The grand elixir,.to auPport the .spirit's of
.hotnan nature."' It is' gaffe evident that She. has
' the' patent I 'has' 'secured • the
e•
' •
.1' . ..
•. ,
'
-would , __, . .
tv-wom ,
AT- eu".111r1 8 . .• Amer
• or widow to propeee Marriage to the man
purposes. , e .ease o .r ..
plied m awetlingeot Would innately have
of. entering, into matrimomai relations
with exalted .persehages. Others have
an °marmot
making overand.improving theinvalid corps. of
ATaerican Womanhood,--cllobd.
,
•-• ' ,
of her thole°witheutloitieg or in' any viay In inn 'Province*
the adVantake.of bel4 it great deal dottier
.
partiouler . Owns . to orave or important
.. ,
. a - —....---- .
••,,, .0 K s
.Disease - • • '
.
• endangeeing, dal/1644g or. otherwire affeote , . The •provincial health . bulletin for 'apt'
ing that 'feminine dolicany and reserve •
"week is to the follevaing effect • Influenza
- • ' ' ' ' ' - - - - - - • - - ' • ' •
which is the thief charm of epmsters • • • •
- " • d ' ' t I •
• than copper an Zino romp ao es. now
. jua
u 'rP reel'ain comes nextincleanlinees
h- t 8e." t)easily.f • ti d hi ' h l'
u It le. rao ate w a e;t e aralea •
- - ' ' • b ' • - h • 'd f
projects to su mit to e cons' eration o
th Q' their' . '
e , but efforts to gem °Amis..
' 8 4 ' Gn ' d i ' -
. .•
• - orty stu outs an ,e • . Texas oteraity
• F d' ' th T 'Ili' ' •
• are women. •
•
' • ' .
'''• . ;,
BEST
..
• and pneumonia have made a decided ad •
,
mon are.. trnitlesean term nate in t e
h
.
. t..•••
•pc" '
maids stud wido-wd liforesaul. It WU* alto vanoe.- Re amain neuralgia and rheum,.
unanimously euaoted that proposals Made t• • •t • g ffi • ' ° • that ti la
ninao. is-su eient, to sayt ey ave
in accordance with the above law must be , t at -ally henged in their prevalence'
-aedepted, bat • it 'was found no m en o , . .
ed glass ole said is tte strong andaturable•
1. ' ' f h a -Id d
BOOM. ExtieraPs 0 , ea,P ae . go . . 0
not affeot iti.ctud, in fad, its disooveryis ef
4.1.. ' h• 1.1 * ' t• ' * Tb 'b
ig ee..'impor_smae. e.p
workh wee or a return to the. ,thsted'f-OT
i'l ' ' ' ' ' D '1
their :keepers and :friends.e-Lotidee .ai, y
Nevis . . • ' ..
' "
.
.. ',;*,,ebTiiiiecitom friends /or the sake of now,
'lad lose both,'' nut remember that Sidury-.
I_
wort la a...friend you eannet afford to negl.ct.
• Plasters way relieve! but they can't cure that
;•0,
oL .,
,•,.',
• i ,„,•
in praetice .
that Of fevers .it may bo said. that interniittent:
' ' ' Wan likelyateupset the Whole ••• •
18 P1.0V181°8 - has not deorease mime .t e prevame Wee ,
' d ' h ' - ' k.
stter, •t was amended • to mquire that •
8° 11
uud 1 uut ere are
much intereated1015,as a Matter of °tame%
It k b lel t fi t 1 a that too s =pro a e • a re
ano '
. = ., • ,p • . . . . _ laraO back, Pot the . knlnoys .are the trouble and
A.U. Earthquake la Canada. • " -you want a remedy to wit direlitly on their silere-
. . .
tions • tO y ' ' r ' ' ' •
tirif e.nd rest() a heir ireaitb condi-
A
i
.. :•:,,v ,41.•.,
,,, , 1
... - • . . • • •
h Id b e • ' V il ' ' t • but that ot ta ageiii exhibiting the flame
. a 1 prepeaa a a ou. e r epee u y. en et. ohmmeter. of. persistency ',during the .Winter
-thine& and vilfais the melon woe thought .
onthe thatat did last ' ear Thold v
i dvisable or undesirable. 'the peaty atiked• 311 • ' ' . 5 • .. - P
might get out ot .it i . . . .e u ., . , . „(entetio) has ehown a .alight. tendeficy to
n tueutti way or nelddeorethe, hut Ha"' ptevalenoein total °seep
ing time to consider, und then Oeolitung - .. • . • • . . • • _ -
• , pi yet very consideranle.. Tahoe as a whole
finally in a polite note. . . . , the dontagioul zymoties .' show ci. tele.
--Thw •
. . .. . . g •
glass Oen beer be made ta take.the'place of
ordinary -metals in . the helmet:told or mita
' • • • • . •• .. - • '
safe but It would not do nowadays t & flaY
.that it is imposeible, ley any moats. ' 'Wine
knows hut the bundis near. when , even the.
• oluus .•ttousas , of. the • well-kciown - moral
' • ' -11 • ' ' '
,.- All - , taws, o °grain says : . ..00rres- Y
Ot t I A N
tion.' I<I ney-Wort has •tbat spocioo motion:: •
pondent, writing under •date ot the 22nd of . • , . . .. .• . _ _..._._,a,a..„.a.-' .; .. , ..-.,... ea -:--
• last mouth, from Eippetia, a lumbering A minietei in 04tndy, used to pray that
eettleinent 100 miles'ep the ,Ottilwa titter) all . good, influences ,.• might• althea to the
states- that a; heavy shook of earthquake hearts of his congregation.' and te 'their
• a is, li;_tii• ' . th d f ' • • ' - ' t - b
tetese_a_aaMU_ .. ere-ou. 0 BY .0 .oluldren.e heeds, like butter o bare an. •
• nots s . . 0 • --
writing at ten miuuteti past 10 o'clock • k 1"
.
i
ea
... , -..-....,„:.....--..7,..•_......;....
•
i-
; , .
myeterieue. rtaait thitae-whole-. • ' , , , • •.,.. .
• • twel3r 10 last
la b t. t• I l`t`
°atom wi. • e .au a eu is rea i tes. .... , •
2'
travellieg from north to south, and lasting • - .
•• . • 1
. • pre than, wows, out
matter is, why did-0477mA er sex elect to this thineoine degree accounted for by the
-reverse tlio .laitablimiatel ' circlet Of . thinge .iiiiireitsed number of 'cases of 'diseesea
fourth ? •Aud • Plata/
. • •
•
• Wale 'Aix ../Itai3., .
. • a a • , .
.a
. ..
Sa
ten monde. After the passing a treinbling • • ,. ./zikrzevaaas, ohici,••rob.. 1418 . •
110ifie could be heard for over thirty fletleidde: I am Very giad to-smiths:re iried Flop Eiders,
,
,g,
,.-91.D.BYA
'•,
;
L CiR
C . . ,
' , ';',":50.../c..:.:1 v. T7; ... •.,.••,' .I•Ve i, r,.' • •
every ,thar Sqn.i, on. . Nationally affecting. therespiratery orgenta
consideration it env 'peteably be- aCeouuth =air 1
'and
, kind n ea • l•
' t• MrnPu.co it ; man is he . .0.8.te ft
•Oneobuld see the fence: etas shaking. • a e
min ver took anything that . did. red itif &WWI
. . . .. . .. , good. f only' toOk two bettled,,and'1... Would not
0040.• , 0...•
• A i.... ..bisbow
naleaesee • whooping oototh are bath pre-
. for. In the oldeu time .wlieu the .isuetom- sent in.00neiderable enemata but thole,'
women were, . under -Muth • a .
originated, . d t • - • t h t• t
.. • ken. oes no appear tonongs t e wen y
greater reidettint in thetel mitten; than at . meet prevaleot diseases. 'Diphtheria, how.
gentleman about.a.yonng siaciVaillalt,......-.
" Oh, bili mighty popaler .with.the wo-
men.' • • t• • • - • , ... , . • • ,
_j . •
1.1 i lli 't 2" •
" 8.-8 'lite gen - • •
..___,,... ••••.-- ..,_.....-..--.7-7-',.. _-----..--take,8100.-ter:_tlingoolthevalikiinci4...reeemmenci-
re-are.soraer-heautifiarlFewere .whibh tktem to ray patients, and. get the beat refloat!.
li'ful cone Mira their use. .
are twentieth,. tisa wine heatta , W p , - •
. C. H. Mintrims, AND, ,
who are anlovable.-Laneetis.. . . •
•
,
„
thepresent day. Theo they were kept in .ever, thews. 'in different ithalites a great
Ve, . ' . • •
the houee alitioet -consteatly ,and ner preva1enee
. . . . ... i .
allowed to stir Out isf •all, es(ce'pt-in the
. • .
" atti,:not partioolar. 'Mitt ea tiliHE le
not, mn§11 dengand for intelligence ia SO-
day:" • .
`
,
' The Missouri Bivari which ' • foram a new • ' thinkers are as scathe as gold ; but he
bee foritaelthonaewhere with every freehet,' . whose 'thought 'embraces ell his subjecit,
is threittenhig to Inittven*orth in.
•
DR
• company ot thine old Auenna in the. pay 'of '. - '
. , . . ,.
" DOW. hdan
snake. an . who pursues .it uninterruptedly and, tear.,
• i '
'
. =Annaba Cold. • . ,
Adam wants,' who' would no more beat or .Bir ;r. It. Shantz Writhe from Emerson
an innocent flirtatien then they would cut t the Berlin Nevis :. " I arrived atGretnit
e ce?"
Otoouree. • • . -
" Enow whet'a going •on _6 . thee, ruks.s,
' i ' • t • 1
an
ett.ar oi.y. . . • b . . less •of consequences, lea, dianiond of ,enore
• • ' ' • ize.-Lattater. • . ' ,
: The, repotts that *gateau Victoria would brUti a . .
'Unable "-:', ' - •
nt •
'
''•
a
their own heads • off The maids were not B°1 n't le ' on rrida evening14t,li Mat:*
even allowed to. teceive a proposal of mar- Previouse t °. a• , . ., . ,Y -1 d ad-
to that arty it was sett an roe y
riage, exoept through their - guerdians t on the streets • but thetinorning theretthea
--d-h-"--•!-Wella.....Itantga.....iithe.
• much -less to make -dime -It witenotathene e•-•,.... - • • ---t -le . " '
..
re'llBi°' er r, .'
' .." 0$ terse." • •
• . • , . .• . • . .-•,. ,,
a " A att. in-eVerything, T pFesuata.,
titer hi etees
be to 'held draWing-toonis during, ,- • -•--.-.. •
• • 441{0.0011 ON COUOTIOP '
the ' Coming Spring: are • untmea The • • . , .
kaueenti health is goOd and her presence at , A k for "Rough on Cou_ghs,', for Coti_hAi Clolilik
the_State ealrawittaarcithieraieportitin. _. , . oroThroat Hoarseness Troches leo Liquid 50
- • .
l .1,'
r
i AI or'
4... •,••
f ,-
.
....„ ,
t h
hen"11-a-gb*-swantt4-43-Inarr'.'„ „_. a enOW Write, a out our arm es, an t e.
. .. . .
' t '• '
'
an euw• - meroury•fell to vire 'en the' 15th, and con-
• dude( ven•though see Outlet aek.. lien,.the a, - - - • f 1 • - .
nen him to uuderstaud . t ued going clown at the ol (twang rate :
Fay Or not, bat T know he o wee about every
Well of my eaelnaintexce. Who . is Fay?
Me. S. Si Jeekson, ownet o - , aores , 2 400 ' ' f la' h th ' t
Love is a religion o w to . e grea .
d • f 1 ' • th • '• '•'f t•ft • -t • '.
Of land, meat .6 i in e, municipality 0 on i is no, ure. •
. • . _ ..... P . • •
Rock Man. to tip;
, a . .• 'eh
eat
gi ouite plainly a
()an the 16th it was 18. 17th 26 • 181,11 3.'
that tepropmition he may have to mite° - - . • - • is ' •'''
and on the leant was 46 below zero. o Ou
id tha line Will be -received, the odetomary ' . - . Y
r11 leek hina tip rend see if he dint't owe him.
too .I•1I• bet he doetta. . ..a... • . •
• •
. .. . •
wood attends out LUG .
a a • . . , a „ ,
traotinta farms ot 150 eared than, ereot . . pactnutato oli, mittee
goO4, buildings on eaolt, and rent them.. Eetvouti viteakneiti, itylipeesla Impotence,
.
-
ElEr.ORE ....4WD. -.... AI. TER 0
, 30
apellantes • 'DA
and decent oonfutoon endnig inassent. It
. , - a ,_ . ..,..., _ ...,
igas the Mate 01 seclueien in wrnon mar
may sno* that I had it taste of Manitoba.
. . . . . - ,.., .., .. .
ematner tit wtneer. ttutat was no b bad to
, be
,. . .
. . .
The life-size poittait of ttlisti • jenme.
' b ' can. tient which
Chem enema the Amen b
iti W li i Et
....t. - , can, Sexual Debility, cured by, a s ealth ite.
A mini t wan ened preaching as a . „„,„„,r.„ a, . ... .
dictate end took hie text,. " And Bitting
Mettle are Sent on ys
to mEN o.. a i... ......... ...o
NUS You”
riageablo girls were. kept in those days
that probably iettited_ thereto demand
Emu pltiVILEM1 Voit'Istav loan,-
they eelected that. time
out On tlae leth• Iliad a sleigli ride-
ao • i i h' ' ' 18 -I " Ili ut t p '
ss s e g mg- net ea wi, o a 0 ping
or ' • ft • from. • id On the Ilth I
., °rangco . 0
drove 8 miles, sod on the 19th Wart eat and
in Otetria,
. y,
Wes ordered by the Ptince. of Wa,the, has
. .. .. . ..... .._ . , .,... _ ,
men ra 111 tuarwereugu Aleuee• Tue.
Chana erlmn feanil are about to visit 'the
Y • n i — k . .
Mahon of Edinburgh at i astwe 11 ar
.for .""'" ................—
'' h a h'in there " An old Good b tiding °angst -MI -living no par-
down they wet° e ! a . • a_ ,re , . , . . _ .
a on said AB he' Wail oino out, " xes ; he teenier raerk of any profeeston but a gen,
-8114 ' • g ' a - . - .
le not the first. one we have sat an erai &puce: of manitere, , , . ...
• ' - a h will not be the last either." a-................
watched, an 0
Term eie cofferin(Itom ItsaVoas_leuinlr
re lost I/MUM ANAOR. Or 11171trit, soften ratT
tioon, w Xtiam4O3VEntramelaa, ami all those diseee
*IR PRIOWAIN II:ArVIIII M.:Mini* II0M Alums ono
orate tame. evade teat and complete rotes
ratiotot Jtamzu,vuoinitrid MAN.:rum) Ow . Arenas%
toaineeteet al
(
and probably on
the strength Of their kiulialedga that men
generally spend -about three-fourths of their
around and, walked twerailee to
a village•in Dakota. I passed a lot oar-
posters working in the. open air, putting tip
. . . . . .. ,
' ss • or at Berlin latel
' The E'rench Arabs acl . y
paid Prince Itiatairok a yisit Ob his country
. a . t 'd ' hth - a.e
A &lout a esteem says e expe i ton
.
agents b •the Ateha tribe entered the Mobile
. . r ttP
eittrraiteta...taWatithel •IVOBIS1 SIM
.
'. intallibte, tatitelees, hartatess, cathartic ; for
emerandeiteteeeereer f atoll ,
Bend at once tor DIVINLIMAvi PAM pli.lotIon. ...ddr909.
. , _ , -..;
•,,
'MUM 0E1,7 Ph MAMMAL'. Melt.
;,,,, .. A.,..,..
' earnhigs Ott then:melees and the remaining
a teak hone°. Next day,
to be
.
thio• 17'h I et. and rapidly•
On t
fmriBB0080, restlemine50/ wOrrda ' aonstipa-
,...„ . ,.y. .
.0.0.00,04000.6.000.
fourth on theirWomatikilal, Mid Bereasolied
• with raereury at
'46.belowathey Were
that and returned prOfessing perteody
.1 etelatiene between France
ad te h
country was
.R 9_ . , _
advancing to the regime of the °mere of
ben, • 950. .. . . . , ,
,•,/- t.--
. - ' • ' to Butanes'
•
that perhape they Might give up oneefourth
. . . ale° working there. ,
/ . .. • • •
sittieded
and Elarineany, Theevisit was aptly timed
,
arra
g . I C1' • • - - y and Oblate pereons
the ase Ian
.
Sloth like rust mainlines taster than '
. PLACE setarlis
or • theorem Pea,
• ' . Educated . Op
• of their pnvileges With teopeet to courtship,
Thoughatleelmeerceptible encroach/I:Mate
„. . .
?•-•Chief ,COnetable Roes, of Prestonahas
beetAimointed is O. T. R. atdookietv:
' Im r al of Ger.
to occur while the Prince pe I . ,
manv WEE junketing in Seale
a. . . . .
oeptured &king the.raid, of the tribe into*
I - • • 0 f th ' • t' 1 av a - . •
- seam. ne o e Can Ives as e . . _
. • . • ..
t ' d •
tabor wears,- While the key ot auntie IS'.
a - bright.-Pisintain. - • 4. • A ' • :.
cows
_ __ _
inanely at , tee SPENorgii
. IAN BUSINESS, pOtitaBOR ,
.......... smiAl. fli00,7171.1.0 Iran ... ' '
0
I/
c,
•-•••