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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1887-9-23, Page 2THE HURON SIGNAL. £RWUAV, SEPT. '', 1887. DELHI. t* .1111141ther of Indfa'n (Brent Otte* Visited. t Br ur't.-'7 thMas esti ewes be sus Wee ---A Mbar Merneet - teeswsssce seed nane - WeeMy M Me hese•,- A mares seen as agaves. Hove we reached it at last 1 Yes ! this b"Delhi the Beautiful!" alas. its Minto a prayer from • ,n1.•res swells, 111 en t srtW his tiro NU et perfume Is MeVrie .t use altar. • sone of sweet bells of .one Our India. deriver 4R to a�soa�kaiby moosingbt, when melleCy ine Itdmt o'er its palaces. gardens sad arise;Ves the water -1i IJ gleam. like a quick 1.11 of .tan M� ate etgbtwR«i s byma trews the LW of Oma1N tteeke1•ogbs and light echoes et fest What a charming sight this, even vet, beautiful city of Delhi meet hive been when Ib...Princess Lslbh Kookh in re edify oe is the poetical imagimatiom of Tom Moore took her departure •acid the splendor and pageantry tit barges and banners 10 her wettest Anon, in Boehm rim How gorgeous the bassets most bare been, what s superb cavalcade c( Rajah and Moghels to .eoompany her outride the city with their shi.ise sr - amour and rude embroidered trappings, gad heir numerous elephants bearing t Wee peculiar mieiatere temple•like b,” and the array of prancing ,ratan horses ; in short it must hose been • sight at once magnificent, bril- Laet and fairy-like. -As we peer the famous city by train (bow prosaic it seamed to our wary. half dreamy and half romantic thoughts to be entering this most wonderful of '•Arabian Night's" cities by train .t 30 Iles au Boer)) the high turreted was Ent attract the l e attention, then the taintless white domes end missals some le view, sod then the great iron bridge, measly; half • mile long, spanning t • dumps is erased. All eluog the river's bank, even at this early hoar, 5 o'clock, then are teeming multitudes of natives bathing, washiug clothes, and filling donkey•skins with water, which are then placed on the b•oka of unfortunate don keys scarcely able to crawl under the combined weight of two skins of their own brotherhood filled to bunting, and the drivers who stride the poor beasts to help bantam the load. We had been anxiously locking forward to seeing Delhi -in fact,it and Bemires were the only cities we thought worthy of • long journey, but ono, un the wing the tourist soon finds that plaos be thought of !Mk importance becoments of strong attractiop, While i. treppe we found Cairo, Sees, fantails., Alexandria and Pout Said se interesting to us as the Great Pyramids, the latter of wht'b only in anticipation were the sights of interest ; .oil the same might be said of out visit W Palestine, Jerumletn only 'eras the pant of interest before we set lout in the Sacred Lind. but once there, Juppe, Sharon, Remleh, Bethlehem. Dothan', Jordan, Jericho, a11, had near- ly as deep an interest as the famous old e ty of Salem. But to return to the City of Delhi. 1t is not neeewiy here to give en account of the gorgeous pois- es; of this famous Indian capital, even if it were eaten the ability of pen to do them justice. Suffice it to say that at one time this city was one of the tickeot in the world in mild, silver. and precious Moues ; sed ;hen the Penises invaded it, a century and • half ago, over one hundred millions of pouods sterling, were carried away, but still the empty marble halls and palaces stand as than monuments of its magnificence. Arrengemeots were made with the landlord for t gaol carriage and pair to "do" the sights, and at seven o'clock a •splendid turnout was brought rep. Delhi 1s thes�tisly city in India where we had the plelaure of riding after Rood horse tech. This pair were perfect mates in color and size, fresh and sleek, doubtless fresh importations. A landau and pair, two naives to run ahead and clear the streets, two driven and • boy as postil- lion, were, we thought, • princely equipage for two modest, unw.mimg, &noure travellers, not even reveilieg in .. .. -... n .. _ w•ute, but we ln/• •u...• o. ...... .0 Una bad rade • cheap arson for the ear- ring+ derisg the few days we remained in the city at the rate of eight !tepees a! dee, or about $3 50, and considered the stteods'ce thrown in, Such, hcwerer, esu not the esu, se we learned by the bill when presented. We had the plas- ters of • splendid turnout, at had to pay for our whistle. The mein business street of Delhi is celled the Chandei Cbouk, a lag, wide shaded uterongli- fare with good shops, as shops go ie India, of either side where you ea buy $ diamond Dahlia, a Calmest, shawl, a good eager, a bottle of wine or say - thing else you might not expect to find outside • European set•bliabment. Hen your rye stasis the advertisement of '"Jemwtjw" & Sops, (late Jehangcer & O.) "Boots &n.4 ahode, hosiery, hale sad stationery. Fancy mud miseel- lineoes goods, lamps, glassware, &a, !e." A little further 00 yen reed in Sassing red letters "Rem.nri, two nights °ply 1" .gain the hoards .of se Opera troop set forth the attractions to be plead before the public by eons marvel- ous prina dorm who in England was in ell probability a burlesque sense Oh, Ise! Delhi is not so native- not en foreign -not so outlandish as our pr4eotneeired motions heel leO no to expect. 11�4t a drove lip to a money dealer's to get rupees for sovereignsand were instantly sorrowed - ed by • dean or more ttedewmen,dealen and moneychangers, .sett of whom bed ' emeashing to show us particularly in Lia atop if we world only step m. The Chespsile Jew is not more solicit- i stns hq petreeage than are those some l of dsiJwa Bootees@ cards are threat tete your hep, thrown kite your tarries as yew drive tItroegh theorise; salesman Waith dewple• n( their wares roe after yew or Ind at your hotel and ire to get an intKview with yew ; r miens ads for honesty of denies and segerinr seal. limes of wehawe•bip are ehewa from my lord this --his exeelle ey that. and general eameliely else ; the nay ..y to envenom these anonyneei is to he el - isms ready with emir mediae Mink or 1� fawllk • If�I! IugMd non become assestem.d to It. and a dry would pees M eery eao•utuaotrly iedmd i( you did mot Meek down halt e demes natives sad Idea as assay mere, ..$d the areal d that aate\ was 1s da..... I. the evamiag we deers eat to the Salinas sedate, a pines el wee - earful heathy. li.aarslttg, we Ida the eaeri•RS and examine* the battered wad w oad the Celksaese Ante, a spot where every one visits who Ress to Dslhl Hage when Lha 00,000 matiaeers had killed all the British inhabitants and had atrvrrgl fabled themselves within the Feet, the British,awmbssiag about seven thousand worked night and day for nearly lour months to effects breach. It oust the E..lb► over 4,000 men, bet Delhi wee tease and the traitorous ruler ad his two tams were shot. The wall near the gate is • mase of battered stone work Iestifyleg W the 'woe and dorm tion cl the siege. On our way to the hotel we meet • marriage pr,oemioc. The bey is eight years old end his bride lire. The marriage has been arranged h_ v the nations. an a d it is not a necessary mutter that di; young peop.e sevum ve is love with ,atilt other. Such a foolish iseptsctilal sestimest is unknown. At six ur eiahi years old the marriage wren ay is performed with great pomp and splendour, the yang temple may not have seen each other beton ; end in may oases du not again sotil they are 12 or 15 when they ere old enough to set op house for themselves. Should the husband unfortunately die. the wife must remain a widow for the remainder of bee 111.. It is estimated that thea are over one hpadred thou- sand widows in Bengal Presidency whose husbands t ted when they were still in their teens, and who by the strange re- ligious laws u( the land, have to dreg through a weary, lonely existence Its the rest of their natural life. Next morning we peas oat through the Lahore gate, and soon an amidst the ruins of the earliest known Delhi, for there have been many Delius, the mod- ern one being small in masa in oott!- pari.on wits the ancient oases. This one, of which we view acme trace of the ruins, ousted two thoueamd years before Christ, and covered an ares of thirty square miles, the modern Delhi was be- gun only 250 years ago, and its present wells an seven miles ip cheait. We visit in turn the Emperor Ham.you's tomb. the Kumb• or 64 pillared hall, the poet Keelson's tomb. who it is said win the author of the Araban Nights Enter- tainment, ntertainment, the tomb cf Jebangir, • prince who killed himself about 50 years ago by drinking cherry brandy ; and the sacred tomb of the great poet and writer Nis- san-Ooden who dud boo years ago, and who it is believed was the originator of the murderous sect the Thugs, who climb the g tiden stairs by strangling off all the unionisation they can who do not bekt.F to their sect. While warded'( among ilea strange sights • sight stranger still attracted our attention. A half donee naked natives had climbed it! the top of an old mosque standing beside a deep port,' or tank of dirty thick green water. They wanted to jump ism the top of the mosque, feet foremost into thin cede pool fur the consideration of a few rupee*, but not wishing to be ac oedeory before the fact ur aiders or abettor in self destruction even, of • "nigger," we declined peremptorily. Nothing daunted at the hecksheshe re- tail, they ran rapidly down the round- ed surface of the dome, and springing far out with their legs wide alert and then bringing Oben quickly together again, they shot down into the tank with a dull thud, thee green water closing over them vne after the other, bat they soon emerged and .crumbled up amending us for leoksheshe, which amid not be refused. The height frost the cupola let the water'. surface mu. have been sixty or seventy feet, fur the tank was deep and the water low, het the jump wee repeated several times to tier utoei•hed eyes. A few miles farther out el the cit u the celebrated Kootab-Minar, the highest pillar in the world -no one knows when et was built, why, nr by whom. On Friday, the Mahommedaa &today, at one o'clock, we repaired to the Brest Jammu Masjid to see the faithful rooming to prayers. This beautiful maps was boilt250years ago, and is as celebrated e. the fuses mosque of Haman in Cairo, St. Sophia in Constantinople, or Omar in Jerusa- lem. Entering at one of the wide gate- w ays opening into the marble pared quadrangle we s,,' et one side. the greet mosque 200 feet long by 120 1eri. ''vsad, surmounted by three whits glittering while cupolas, crowned with colicas or spires of copper richly gilt, and flanked by tw3 minarets 130 feet high. In the cease of the quadrangle is the marble reservoir of w•t.r,wherethe faithful wash their hands, their feet and mouth before going to prayers. A crowd of worship- pers are seen gathered by the priests or atieodente crying from the top of the minarets "Coate to prayershen d pre ers, some to ; tis no gobut Cod, sad M.ommod is ham phophet." The faith- ful are strict observers of prayers, pray- ing at 12 o'clock (nooe) one, four, seven and pine p m. , daily. Their belief is that prayer beings them halt way W Cod, !sating yanks them up sloes to the Rid- den gate, and sloe seances them into the premium of Adak. We were shown • shaded ailit at the top of one of the gsllerisa ..Resmdimlr the greet square and thew* era o'ekook, with the theronmdd'';1f . 110' in the shade, we Slated bid ' stewed for an hoer, watchitrgg the strange worship. &z thousand people were •esemAed, six priest• es a raised plotless took pert in the 'swim No women were present ; they haven't yet gets beeves fixed foe Makestu eden warren. The six those - ad mea were all dressed in epodes white Aananate,th,ir heeds covered with %Sea red, yellow or blue turbans, and they all stood ie regei•r rows. The worship began by the priests re dineralo.ad parte of the Korea ; thew f.dlowevl Eve vain - sae '.f gebrobes atoms .a they all knelt sod bowed their foreheads to thev neat, then the prison cried eat "Abe - bey, Akbar," to whish the faithful pertly same Mod respoodeil, sod thea bowed again. Then they ride and a beatingpostai prays aloud, thee agate sad bow he is the sad wether five mantes of Sleet prayer. This is ,,ennead her w ben, idea • path* Masai is piam ani they all .wMl' off like • diarist sobbed kat est ler ply. 'Ib - ease them of the atgan hat, /Woe tie gwdraatrl• were obliged to stop ev- ery few yids sad put Mete Gutta heed Moths oe terata es the bot unsettle lags to prevent Ms soles e( their Met awe Next My we did the albeit: thing toseisM woo visd Delhi, we Seated i • C.shesere shawl for oar better half, who, like her sex is general, has t weakness for See raiment A aeeber of mardetew sheath kens awe feet long, said to hare hems made is D ceascus for ea of the isle R•js .. at- tracted our station too, sod by jsdi- Sous bangelsiag we purchased or owe foeeth the original price asked. The charm, however, has wore off them Sea we fumed they were sande in Birming- ham, and weld be penb•wd then foe one (mirth whet we paid in Delhi. D. IL MvC. t.renets• Amori:se artiste, to gold, silver, silk and wool are rivaling those of the Old World, sone mon successfully than the ;, ;•-r +t makers. The Gleams Witte. carpets abandon set designs. They are simply beds of flowers in graceful relief on grounds of mellow ivory, °ream rotor or gray, dive or inseam blue. Nodding white lilies, golden rod, white alder sod leafage of the darkest shaded grass trail over the soft, velvety surface ; or there are green branches, like plumes, brown - orange blooms of walltIower, fathered grasses, and • tangled mass of varied green feline on • Week ground. Large, dull -ted Oriental flowers, with red and g reen foliage, closely cover a mustard - colored grimed. Then are naturally, to please all tastes, some bluet-shaped est designs is cashmere colors on dark blase, Mire and citron grounds Thew Wilton carpets in color end design an spiel, if not superior, to the Eogitsh A:minister. A oeladon blue ground is seen in glimpeca between the graceful branches of the Mimosa trees and some blossoms of white, and the pink of apple blossom/I ; sod a delicate insatic ground is a wilder- ness of the golden pstheies of plain flowers exquisitely shaded and colored and " lush and lusty " gray's. tither styles are in light olive, with Indian pink and flowers and huge leaves. A light fawn ground is covered with tropical plants and dowers sod trailing branches ; hire and there are glimpse of • bit of trellis work. The body of Brussels carpets are also in brilliant contrasts of ground and design, • bleu du roi ground shows dark golden arabesques in lights and shadows coo - treated with others of a lighter tint, mingled with acanthus leafage and pomegranate blossoms. Shade' citron calor Mauresque designs on a white ground, in seeded golden dote, kok like bneat embossed work with blue stitches int in here and there. Japanese designs in quiet colors corer an ecru ground. Some other elaborate styles closely re- semble the intricacies of a camel's hair shawl ; the general ,Jett is rich and mellow, having almost the appearance of work by hand. All of thew carpets are sccompwied by wide and beautiful borders, embodying all the colors and smaller designs with additions of corner stroll work or medallions with realities !lower, of b:ackberry vines and golden rays radiating from the centre. The present ingrain carpets offer the etroogest possible 000trast to those of • few years ago, of hideous colon and styles- These copy the more curtly pro- ductions of the locos, For instaoce : A creamy groan] seems sown and bunched w ith feathery ferns and catkins, sod s mixed ground of olive and white is cov- ered with red branches of flowers and sprays. There are set designs on other grounds of gold color, doll reds and Ori- ental red and black shaded arabesques. Pretty chintz patten show pale roes with gray in quaint little design, and the Maturates effect. are also copied. The im`--mise are not by any means to be de_ spited. reedy sae me maths,. The late Dr Guthrie was very diligent in visiting, and quit. equal to any emergency. One day hs came to the door of en Irishman who was determin- ed that the doctor should peter enter kis house. "Yoe cannot cua, in hen," said h., "you're not needed or wanted." "Mr friead," said the doctor, ' I'm only visiting round my parish to become ac- quainted with my people, and have called on you only sa • p•rishoner." "It don't matter." says Paddy, "you shan't ease in here," and with that, lifting the poker, be said, "if you Dome in ben I'tl knock you down." Most of men would have retired or tried to reasor ; the doctor did neither, but drawing himself up to his full height, and looking the Irishman fair in the face, he said, "Come now, that's ton bad : weuid you strike • wan unarmed 1 Head mo the tons, then we shall be on equal teras." Th • taro looked epos him is groat ensue - meet, mud said, "Oak sun, year • guars mass for a animister. Dome imide ;" and, Valise ratter ashamed of hie attended. be laid lows the poker. The doctor metered .d talked, se he could so well do, in a wry both m entertaining and so isatruetive es to win the edmtr.tioa of the man, so that wish he rose to to, Paddy shook bis heed warmly, and said, "Ite share, air, don't pen say door withal giving one • all " Whamming. papas misers frees Asth- ma remise meek and penman. relief by miss f oothern Mathias Oast tte'd by drr--. - mail or e lb gp, w - ' reverts send dire. "For the past fifteen years," amid s misoh.uiw, ''I here had a lively 'reels' with poverty and disease, and daring that time I've naturally termed surae things that I did not know before, ad I here most decidedly stp.g.d my wisdom on several matter, that bate seine under my observation. Oce of tie !hinge that I'te learned is, that if • pesos is poor, seeds aid, .oietaaee or 4harity, if you Flew, it is a greats.,; better fur him w be dirty and ragged thee it is to keep i<iwnelf clean, neat sed respectable looking. "Doe Monday morning on going to any shop I met a man, • stringer, who was in search of .one one to do • job of work for him its my line of business as a mechanic* I took the job &ad did the work. When ha was paying h.. expressed himself greatly pleased with the way in which the work was dose. 'Now,' mid he, 'do you know that I am very agnrably diaappototed in you 1 When I met you that Monday morning I new of gnat mind not to em- ploy yea, for I thought that a mss that was around Monday morning dressed up M you were could not bs worth much,' It was summer time, and I bad on • blue dune' mit that cost mo $4. I bought it second hand of • friend that it did not 6t. My boots were blacked, and I had on • paper collar that cost • cant -I think all the clothes that 1 had on did at coat oyer $10. So much fur being 'dressed up.' Rut I was neat and Sean. "On another occasion, • mechanic iia a similar line of bminess to mise, which is quite a Dirty vne, said to me : 'How coo you afford to go •rt-und dressed up all the time as you do 1' 'Well, now,' sail I, 'how much did you pay for those pants you bare on 1' Eight dollars.' 'Well, mime cwt at. 12' 'Oh, well,' said he, 'you always have a clean Dollar ne, and have Tour boots blacked.' 'Weld,' said 1, 'paper collars don't cost but • cwt, and • little exertion will keep year boots blacked.' That was just the differ- ence between him and me. His c'ethes cist him four or five times what mine did me, but he locked slouchy sod dirty, while I looked neat and clean. "In talking to &kwyet ofmysnguaiut- aam," my informant went on, "about the times, and how hard it was to make both ends meet, he expressed surprise and ssid : 'Why, you always look neat and clean and respectable.' That's it exactly. He instinctively associated poverty with squalor and dirt, and couldn't imagine that a person who was poor and in distress could keep himself clean. "I find that manycharitiesare conduct- ed in • manner calculated to fester just this feeling, and destroy the to:f-respect and ambition in the recipients of their charity. Some time ago my hearing b.- gan to fail, and it became evident that I must hare an operation performed on my ears. I was advised to go to the Eye and Ear in6rinsry, and was told that it would cost ma nothing. So oee morning I dressed etyml( in the best I bad, washed, shaved, blacked my boots, pat on a clean shirt and • new paper eviler -fatal mistake ! On entering the reception room I found quite a collection of people waiting to be operated on., and although the window was open for vent- iktion, the air had that close, fetid smell that always comes from s collection of prtp'e who are not peril:ulre about keeping their clothes and persons se clean u they might. "After waiting quite a while my term come, and I was ushered into the oper- ating coon. On taking my seat in the revolving chair before the operating doct.r, he whirled me round two or three times and then said, 'Yon have no business here."'Why not? I asked. Thu a eharitable institution, and you can afford to pry,' saki he. I suppose 1 did look pretty nits, but all I had on, overcoat and all, didn't asst over 120• Not caring to enlighten him as to the de- tails of the petty economies that • poor men hos t practise, i simply asked him what i should do. He said he would gine me the e•rd of • doctor lb•t l could go In, who would not sharp tee maelt. Coaseoluently i went to his He chars. el me $5 Now that $3, in the state of my finances at the time, Burt more than it tickled, and I have come to the con - elusion that if i have anything more to be done in that line, 1 .Pall go in soy working clothes, with a dirty shirt un- shaved, bests unblacked, sod without say collar on. 1 haven't any doubt that any wants will be promptly attended to without a word.' -Boston Transcript. **neer Tremble Aar be txKrted- If you do not bead the waning, of Ba- ton and at ones pay attentioa to the maintainaooe of your health. How often we sin a person pet off from day to day the purchase of • medicine whish if pro- mised at the °st.tart of • disease would Aare remedied it almost immediately Now if Johnston '• Tonic Liver rills had been taken when the first onessiness made its impasses the illness wooled here been "nipped is the bed." John - ma's Tonic Bitters and Liver Pills are decidedly the best medteine ne the mar- ket for general took and iuvigo.stieg properties. P4. Us. per bottle. Hitter 10 oats and 11 per boltle, sold Nor the ireggist, N►•'----. - .seem Me Foss t mar bowie peasess' ',compote's of Citation Keeled ate as absurd es slat of a very penurious a1d women who wan lot iced to tea at the home of a family with whom • very worthy and dearly beloved c'erjy- man vw staying. He woe a .,an of re- markable parity of aerator and geode - n ese cl amasser, sod was universally lured and respected. After lee he ea• cured himself on recount I 9 a headache, end sent to kit ewe wove, "Were you but greatly phwrd e i i h 1,' 1' aktd the lady of the house of ibis old lady, after the minister bad retired. "Oh, purty well," was the doebtfil reply. •'I knew you would be," mid the lady, warmly ; "be u ciao of the loveliest Christian charseten I ever met," 'But he ain't perfect," was the cold rei.ly. "Oh, no, perhaps not ; none of se ass absolutely perfect, but I really think Nr. B=o.,mes nearer perfection than any man I ever met in my lite." "Weld that may he, yet he leu his faint," "He bee sever revealed them 11010." said the lads,a little irritated ; "end I am sun he would try way bard W ear - come them if pointed est," "Well," mid the discoverer of faults, 'everybody has their own way of thiukin', bet whoa I see • Man, u I saw that Mao to -night, put two beside' teaspoons of sugar in oneoup ones, why, Ts. gut my own idea 'bunt his Christianity, sow' that's what I here." "That is not • great fault," said the haat. But ilea old lady shook her cap solemnly.-Ark•nsew Traveler. Delights .1 a Mee aeess Jar. Cather the rose petal. in the morning, lot them stand in • cool place, tossed up lightly for one hour to dry off, thea put them in layers with salt sprinkled over each layer into • large covered dish -a glass berry dish is • ocncenient reap teal,. You can add to the for several mornings till you have enough stock - from one pint to s quart, according to the sits of the jar -stir every morning sod let the whole stand for ten days Theo transfer it to a glass fruit jar, in the bottom of which you bate placed two ounces of allspice, coarsely ground, and m much stick cinnamon, broken coarsely. This may stand new for nix weeks, closely covered, when it is ready fur the permanent jar, which may he u pretty as your ingenuity can devise or your means purchase. Have reedy one onn.e each of doves, allspice, cinaamoa and mace, all ground (not fine), one ounce of oris rout bruis- ed and shredded, two ounces of lavender flowers and a smell quantity of any other sweet scented dried flowers or herbs ; mix together and put into the jar in al- ternate layers with the row stock ; tied a few drop of oil of robe geranium or violet, and pour over the whole one- quarter pint of good cologne. This will last for years, though from time to time you Duty add s little laves der or orange dower water, or soy nice perfume, sod some seasons a few fresh rose petals. You wall derive a satisfac- tion from the labor aly to be estimated by the happy owners of similar jun.-- Mil+Mikes Sentinel. I found it • sere cure. I bare been tr,obled with catarrhal deafness for toren or eight years with s roaring noise to any heed. I bought medicine in 13 States but nothing helped me till I pro. eared • bottle of Ely's Cram Bolen. In four days I mold bear u well as ever. I am cored of the catarrh as well. I consider Ely's Cream Balm the beet me- dicine every .4..- O.rt err WIDnIel, Hastings, N. Y. I have stied Ely'. Cream Balm for dry Catarrh (to which every Eastern person is subject who comes to live in • high altitude ! It has proved • cure in my Osseo -B. F. M. Wages, Denver, Cut Our esteemed Chita** eoutemporsry. The Western Rnrul, inclines to prescribe rather than preeeriSe, doctors fur either family or animals : "We are all familiar with the development of medical science. It has become more sensible and mon effective as it hes become more simple, and where through exceeding ignorance s physician fears to give anything but water and bread pills, or through re makable intelligence hes leented that them are better than dregs, the practice of medicine, with him, has made signal advancement. In olden times it required a herculean constitution and • copper -lined stomach to enable a homae pitient to go through • course of midi• eat treatment. The poor fellow wee bled until he In -*ked like a half -irked biscuit or he was fed eskers! and jalap until bis teeth rattled, and stuffed with quinine until hie tars rang. Bet after • while the doctors had • gleam of sees - mon sense, and concluded that they gala not eon a man by killing him Hence they stopped bleeding, and eon - pared with what they formerly did. now give very little medicine, though giving too mach est." blethers' If yrtsr daughter are lit ill health• nr troubled with • paleness that seems iaesrable, or if they refer t;ss.r.l debility, nervousness, leaner,weeklies., or lass of apatite, prosily at ones a bottle of Joboeu.'s Tonle Biomes ease*om will at 7 (egret regret the th- h1. The Tents ani gravelly Mr+MtI• estate ..et el this median* is treaty asrvefoea, 10 .is. sad *1 per e-J.t- Poultry Notes. F. ed turkeys daily ease lo iadnes them to Meet home regale'ly at night. Leg weakness in fuels is the result M repel growth, and is test met with w tal fond end tunics A hallo meat or w ries should he added to the loud ,resp day, and • hails tincture of iron dr.,l•p„ d to the dnakiog water. Fate are easily rid of lice by dust15g them with Persian ioasct powder, ur dry air slaked hes strongly fiwonni with kerosene oil Bot if the boar is kept ellen, well waited with tot lime wash and the peaches thonw:4'1! acyked with kerosene oil, the fowl. will then keg, themselves free from all blade of vermis. An experisttoed poultry o raiser salvias peep!. to reduce the stock of fowls •. .uta as the year's batch is well 1.„rill for, but hold eu t., old turkey sod vld `ease ; they Ret used to the rays of the Lam aced are worth much anon as breed- e.:a than young ones. Ducks are also loud naafi three years old. A turkey is in her prime et fire, s poo., at twenty years if age. Has the farm yielded you any profit within the pest year? Yue know et has at lesat furnished you a good tieing -- which a more than some other kinds ill business lave done for their operators -- but Inas it not in that time, despite dim a,ura.tetnents of season and circum- stance., yielded you a morn be ides T Can you tell, in fact, whether you have made or lost money in the last twelve months I And if you are iia dotet•t about it. is Mere any good reason tut your un- certainty 1 Oughtou not rather posi- tively to know whether you have .dvsre- ed or retrograded in the matter of Wet- ness success 1 It you do cwt know is not your management open to st least severe criticism 1 Is then any more tenable ground for your ignore,s of what yon Imre done in the year than for a similar ignorance on the part of the merchant or ran ifecturer respecting the outcomes of hie business 1 If you do not know how your w..rk hes turned out, and aro arnvinc.d that you hate born losing, you are satisfied that the loss is wholly attributed to dell times and adverse financial avnditio.. ! Are thaw sums cant explanations for • faders to gain ou the work of the preo.ding year els the verge es a •rase,. "Fur three months I could not eat a full meal or do • day's work. I bought a bottle of Burdock Blued Bitten, began wing it and in three days my appetite returned, in a weak I felt like • new an. It was weeder's' whet that one bottle and for sue," writes Arthur AIM chin, of Huntsville. Muskoka, who suf- fered fres Dyspepsia. Then is just as maob difference in feeding for erre es then is in feeding for lean meat or fat. The farmer's wife exaplains that her hens don't lay, al- though she gives them all the ones they will eat. But len is just where the trouble comes in. The egg u composed largely of.lowmen, and to produce it the ben must hate albuminous food. She can't make eggs without albumen any more than the children GI Neel could make brick without strew. Feed the hen on fattening food, such as torn, and she lines herself with fat, takes thing& easy, and lays no etre. Major Bartellot, enmmsnder of the comp on the Aruwimi, received Dewe from Henry M. Stanley, dated July 12. Stanley was then ten days' marsh ID dill interior and still proceeding up tate Anwimi,which be found Desirable above the rapids. A caravan of 400menfollowed the ezpedition on the left bank of the rive and an advance guard of 40 satires of lwnziber, led by Lieut. Stairs, for- aged for supplies. Stanley expected t. arrive July 22 et the carter of Mabodi District sod reach WadeW try the middle of August. The advance bee been en peaceably lambed that Staley had �oso�mp instructed of that he would short- ly seed bit. orders to follow the ex- pedition by the lasso route. 71, DssNe'a. There is no remedy k terve to method seams that ea extol Dr Fowler's Ex- tract • f Wild Stawberry as a cure for Stolen' morbus, diarrhoea, dysentery, or any form of simmer soseplsiat aeiotisg- eWidren or adults. g The following fasts is regionalist-WM. working of the Scutt Ad in Middlesex,. tarnished by Ju. Noble, polies msgis- tet., will be of interest to the readers of Tse Staw•r.: Nester of convictions made from Jam. 1, 1887, to Sept. 1, 1887, 173 ; total Seem allotted during mine period and paid to County Tresses - •r, 1:7,000 ; toed committals in default during the ..me period, 4. Of the al- ines of Saes new releai.ing unpaid, Dearly one-half will not be allocated in the meantime, as the defendants have amoved, and some have left the soantre, the other half will so doubt be atheist* by the date of the eest returns. 5...—. Mrs J M Phalen, of Sydney Mines, 14. S., had chronic rheumatism for two pare, end got no relief wail the tried Beranek Riad Bitters, Two bottles sited bar. ' -I was like • skeletal," says she, "before seine B B B., new th•taks to the discovery of seek a vaIo•bte remedy. I .o entirely reelwred Ike health." 2 • "11 uteri scald sere Ira d a. • f1lgldul ordely 's dui n la►1 optative A • apsesaK would reoeiatt Tan dolts rustling not boa we 6t derr, • 11 Ind, hat own bit! ask papa for to help alae to some chs and food to had Leen pet ing the night Enema ens One of her Deist faced, font eats, w Ksudsy. 13. "1 Karen' dolefully. paint, 1 don' The only sea Fla o, every intheway7ci Why,Mattie for her situ story if I year ,,. '•I awe Dan lean, who Iasi the progress o "I am atop eompliahmeui bow tv nook, so omelet in a stitches and 1 sot do withni Dread -all yo and then you "You parts ma,b,atoeini •'yen areel dr praise I covet and must hes Emu sun mina ono, wand friends ,oink and to a 1i school in gree $hewas gc who s, when i morning ,wen, wlam a• , "Though I able to cheer her ro sin con pillow, and 5 thought swath. • $mn.a did ao Just as she 1.11 on • 1111 bright with p "I'll take t resolved. brother may i them b. kept Idly twain s&pag.wb a street scene s woman witl needles, tbret Tbo cut was a missionary rise cities, the her trade in o!. ject. She the perces wt by some shot for bosra, do with tare and isin eotril all on lin 1 ed d sweet euhesonr. 13• Whatever tit cheer. Wta City. They t peering to to they are sun' the dear Mat pine," and AfteronEat glee went to .toed • ample m.nsk is thewinds on the walla Kenna w. Ateber's owl her quiet tit had bsf•Ilren "I .. k wry merryf , pawentL,, "I t►int Arebee," sal ea11y. ••Y.s,1e quireas mil '' W here t ethsll dare ti Mr Arbow cwt of the h ttohave itp know I am myrSlees A rta.lgrl Should she hhertshf d' Oatamnwct. blame r.0.. O.t.. Mee 11tb. ails►. Me wife sabred fee ave ran w$ib that eistressi.w Mama. catarrh. 11., ease Was ewe of the worst k.ews la these parts. Mar tried sit of the catarrh remit dI s 1 ever saw edrertl.A. bra Mee weft at ..sues. 1 Many pneeree • Mar K Nasal balm. Me ►os ended sale sae Inn of n. mad sew heir Ma a saw puma•. 1 reel It my date te ey that Nasal hales rooms he TOO II IQ N 1, y rwo esiowerided for rararrh trembles, set sin elease4 tee