HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1888-3-15, Page 3.,..0"1/EllIOPN, • •
• Vert*o Eooe eon VOA,
They COAtelnpineeiseree, which is Pelmet.
feted, eed Anljahnr, Which perfornmeirerieey
of innotion4 in the .eceinoin.y.: And they,aee
Olo 'Rot of nutriment for childeen, . for in
• conmeet fern), they emitedueeerything .thet
is •ieeceesery or •tie growth of the yiniehlei
frame. Egge ewe, however. eot,:eolY feed,—
they ar4 rnedicine ale°, The. 'white is the
.nseet ktacui0ua of remediee, for 'hem, and
tlig, ofl,txtimetable from the yolk ie regard
. by the Ems Imes * su alteest vairecelona
Rive for eine, brni4e4 444 04reite1).47,
. A esswegg, if /wallowed - thine will
effeetuelly detaeh fiele leene finitened in
• the !threet, mai the 'whits of two .eega..will
render the (leerily - corrosive Ambit:gate as
'haritilsea• as a dose of calomel. They
atreiegthers the coesumptive. •Ievigerate the
• feeble. •44,1: reutierthe most enteeptible alt
but prof itgeitist janudieelA it reoet naeligm
Met pharie, They ems Wee he ',drunk Jo t.hti
thepe of that ."egg 11ip which etoiteltie the
oretorfeal 00* oemeideres eta:IT-Men . The
write of .egge do net even WI !here. • In
'-7.raAce Alen@ the *tee clexifiere ute more.
• then SOA0,00Q a • year, wed tbeAfeatimm.
leopenme •tu4 ufitosea in 01L10 pzieting,
and for dreetieg the feathet neeid u reakieg
the Attet .01 :P.rencli lad gloves. .
Mit to treeritien e,ariesie other enspleymeute
fer "egge in the ark pe they!' Ineyeef.ceioree,
nacetWitheut treelole on the ferinefe • •
be Oneerted tete fewle, which in any.
•aro prefitable to the Keller -and- weleenire
the 'buyer. tven eg,g 4r0 veluable,
fonalopieth fool hereeepatle. elike agreein re,
rdiug thema the-pureet • Of .certeenate of
ceding for egga b the prbecipal thleg
•- ter whet breed 044 MAK keep fe
34.eeherl petettiee to the soft
4 very eleeit•ahle one or WO thou A
W1 . Vegetebles are. neeeatrary ex welt at
.grain -And ixt1feed fee a full rievelopment
of the leybig capaeltleir exiy breed of
peultry.
PnelettliNelinie PY . ne• Stie
It reoultaftnee a epecial renort wide to the
French Mieleter 4 Agricultere. •thiat auger
le an excellent agent ter preeersing Mote
and 'tee wee adventaged over *R.
In fit tt• abeeehe *pettier, el the nut
ri& ti eye eral of the- Omer Of 'meet,
Whenaxtly*le le node ef .4014t104 gI
the sielt iseeleed by water e-totieeed see
•eneate we find elburabeeldextron.
•aubsteeeen- pet**, Mid •Asseplierio
echl. -Salt &woo* *neat ot the* 411141%4C.
e4 40 141104 the mere rmidily hi worried= los
it ente.re the Woo* more: deeply or arta ter
e Imager time. It then melte diet the
tetesst, When taken. Mon the iodine aolotion,
hoe led outage° elements of genrilee fru-
portene,e.
Powdered s.uger, moths: •eontrary, hely
lose soluble, produce* less liquid. h forms
around the. meat *lad crust, width re.
move/ very little weter.from it arid does riot
Meer ite tut:. Thies preServed, it eufficee
to immetee the meet. in weter before ueing
It. Although title treettileut coete A little
:more •than preservothin by*Alt, eceonnt
ultzetbo taken 'of the field result :and of tle.
loes preveated,. which effete the difference
in coat heeween the mpresereative agent*.
Wo think tb.e.t navigators iniellt peek by
tide.
IT AND VSUOI.
ou eau u0t, jedge Mart by hie coat; it ie
promissory uotee thea give hire AWAY.
" MO 14 hew withoat a mother '?"'
plaee where the girle ears sit up with their
follows until they hear the eld man /ageing
in the gete abont midnight.
It has been foued that the turtle is alrenet
ioseeeibie to electricity. A. shock Viet weeld
knoek down 4114r4e orkill a MEM WAY li1408
the encalteet turtle 4 little tired.
Old gentleman (to bey, on twelfth birth-
4ay)-- I hope pet will improve in wisdom,
knowledge and virtue, Teearey l" By ire -
The eaMts WI you 4M7'.
ft is *aid thet the rein fails alike rea the
just and nejuet. In the ease where the no-,
Jost has appropriated the umbrella beloeg-
ing to the just ;hie does not hold good.
Lecterer'n wife—Well, John, boa from
yoier lecture teip at last, Did you carry
You an4ie4c04 With yen? Ieeterer—Nie ;
but I could have dope am Tact) were small
;lough.
Wife (looking up from her book)---" You
know e greet limey thieve 4tobn. oW
what de you think eltoeld b: dime In A caw
f drowelog? Tfueband—" Have A funeral,
f comm."
hfr. Betopere—WeEl, good bye, old beeio
e'reeeee, Are yen taking yorix wife with
ou or ere yen omit fee pleesteret" Vette
remillee ideepeueleutiPee Oh, I Oike my fem.
ith me.
' (who le *lee est entheideetie Arti
tOgrepber,414 PAW/ wa$nleitieg d
r0Ailloge eeevice);—" Awl mew,
n that :stork OA the woll,an
J4 Wattt
breoght a gimeof beero
wkh owver, there wee very little beer
hat a deel of froth and teem. ".Wo
tha-4- gald tho Major, "1 dot wAtt
to sleeve nut uvw,"
"You get your deughtere up woo Ixautl-
fully, Mrs, Bebe." " Yee ; that is Art,"
And yell get thent into eociety as eArly,"
44 net is Mart," "M4 you ideal rich hue.
banda for them," 'c Thet la *tart."
It Is field the number of language* and
Midgets epekee in the woad le 3,01.14, and
et a, man can't find worde eneugla tom:pros
carrot whee he Mk* a *eat on the Ade.
a ireet ea he Wee* his
at to A pretty
girl.
TeechereeTehri, 'bet are enir boote made
Iley—Ot leather, " 'flatus deco the
MO IOTA2 "ie the hille el'
What imeiniat, therefore; suP'
Itit toot* ini,1 elves yoe. meat te
" Illy father."
yr e old boy wee thee eildreewed
by hie mother. *Bair some vbiteris
house re -e" Why, bow well you
eon, Male the cavilers were in."
Ha sea, " I hod to, mother.
Ipperl."
t two years the teedyites of
have beep taken in end
•e bogus lorile, four bogoe
agIE counts, to soy nothing
tweney leirbere who have
leg earl.
Whig been told to pro-
duee th worpotzt article when ho 'aimed•
le rentne1 by & slew out., mid ; "If you
ir we want another piece of
seep.," and tbongbttully Interrogated ; "Do
you want te theold pir
A echoed teacher is. litiMI0 County, l)a-
kota, whew wife was ono of hie pupils, luid
occasion to popish her one day. The next
day the aeluxdhonee door bero this inscrip.
'lion :—" School closed for ono we owing
to the Matta of the school teacher."
When Loaldsieer, the greetanimid pit ,
wile introduced to tho king of Portugal, the
latter, whore knowledge of Boglieb was
etrietly lted, 'welcomed him with :—"
An1 delighted to vitae year aetujaintanco,
Landseer—I an o fond of besets."
church la ei country _down had been
erec
ted and A dialler woe gtven at the con
-
elution of veluolt the 'mettle oethe builder
was proposed. Thereupon ho rather anis.
matically replied that ho was " more fitted
Lor the aceffold than for public speaking."
Abont the hardest thing in the world for
a womaa to ptesorve while epgaged in the
preserving buieness Is her temper, when oho
la obliged to set her preeereingkettle offthe
etovo to answer a ring at the door -boll, and
finds a patent -medicine eiroular on the front
step.
m.. -
Tb O Jileigite Cooky
We retind bellied a clump of hnehee And
pa down to await vietline, A lend crow
from the decoy was soon answered by One
front it co14 SOMe way off. Our bird on
hearing it good more upright emleeenied
to liatea fore few iseconde before reepond-
big, which he did leetiloe mud defiantly.
Again the unteett jungle cock crowed; It
wits evidently approothing the decoy, whose
excitement was teenifist. He tugged at the
yard, Repplug hie wing* and. citlinigougrily
so lie tried to free hie leg. Am tho atranger
grew near the listen:halve of crown became
less vigoroae, and et lestshealightel on the
ground with a flutter outside the ring of
nom: which were almost invisible from our
ambush. With sullied feathers and out-
stretched head he maneenvred rouud the
decoy, (which stood impatiently waiting
his attack. With* shrill cry he came oe,
straight at the foe, thiratiog for battle.
Alas for his hopes;1 A noose tightened
ttrettlad his leg, and bending double with the
atrithe the springy bamboo converts his
charge Into an ignominious sprawl and
whips him tack a foot with ontspreed wings.
Plucky little chap, he Is up again, and with
a shake of his firtideee.rdwegled leg makes
another cherge at the excited deooy with the
same retain The boy beside me, who has
been watching the proceedings with open-
mouthed interest, does not seem in a hur-
ry to complete the 'capture, but aftera poke
or two from my Stick springs up and seizes
the snared reek just as be euccumbs to his
fourth rush. Viphting his human foe game-
ly with beak mad epurs be ia deposited in a
bag his captor earriee, where he soon gives
up atruggling and lies naotheiless. The com-
mon Ituogle cock is one of the handsomest
birth in India. Reaembling a large baetiain
in shape, with bold, upright tatriage,
splendidly -varied plumage, and long spurs,
he looks a game cook all over A determin-
edfighter he does not know when he is
beaten, and X have eon a bird too exhaust-
ed to nee his spurs seize his opponent by
the hackle and cling to it with the fmnaeity
of a bulldog. The Burnt= enjoys few sports
more than this, and in many district's seven
paddy boats out of ten may be -seen with
the owner's bird on board tied by the leg,
for a bout of fighting, if opportutaxy immure,
—[Macmillan's Magazine.
Assam Er
Stretching a Point.
A dyspeptic whose ailment is as teneh
matter of the nerees as anything is ateua,
tomed to ask his relations sth trucial'cines-
tions as these—'Will it hurt me to eat a
tart! What is your °pluton...?" 1.f the an-
swer is unwaveringlymneoeraging, he enjoys
his meal, and is seVlon Eorry that he indulg-
ed in it. "rank," Bald he to his *other,
as they sat down to their dinner one day,
'do you think I might eat 's. bit of fowl?"
" Vndoubteelly." "You don't think it will
hurt mo?" '1 am 'quite rate of it. Ac-
cordingly the dyspeptic yielded, and gave
himself up without stint to the pleasure of
the table, An hour later he !sought his,
brother. Frank," old he solemnly, "1
hall never believe he you againIfollowed
your advice, and I'd better have eaten a
crust—.a try crust." The adviser was not
going to relinquish, without O struggle, his
reputetion as oraele. " My dear fellow"
said he, with upraised brows and outstretch-
ed hands, "you asked me if I thought you
mould indulge in a bit of the fewle, I didn't
,inty you were equal to the entio bird."
OR1CULTLI4L.
• Il0V4r, tr,41irn, 134.$1r,prS„ Re•o„
wally 4 04004...IA the ugliest thing in all
ve,geteble ereation,: but *ben it hieeeonis
there is nothing meris beeoldful, mad one gen
weli aliord. teeleere: for thee), for yore only
to get .thern to b140494k.040A.. Cemeeea du
note :requite a great deel of water at ariy
Ow, end ottr_•plen is to eet• them. :beek freee
the lightinNoyeesher and eint water there
ofteoet than •onese e, -mouth nail ;Tries: :
Then we give' them a good zoirkleg and
ureter then) Tether. •eperingly theremelader
of the seaatio, and•they will do well and put
era* bit:Wipes; if • they are of the peek/. .
e- ponies* PO:with a meld ef
rettseleede.
!•• A irked wee reemPlaitieg that the 44414
not eneeeed with" bengfog• beeket. Thie
lieVe fel:mato be e. very cornmeri complaints
,444 neerly every time the ressan is leek of
Water. 1 Awed a thereeemeter Among the
dewereon the window ishelvea, eied thezi
• hung it evith *hanging :brisket ithent seven
feenfrom the fiver' and two •feet from the
eeilim, ;rod foetid that the bangle% haeket
wee ut s. temperetnee •over .tee degreeshigh-
er then the other flowere, end nearer the
getting
it W44 'wolves yet. Of • course,
•nreder thee.e eireeneiteowee, the wth ix, ehe
leenging beeket w.etild! elry 54Q4Vr than
that lett re fleeter Iota- - 4gelejpes geed.
hanging beehet there ere i4ere le45-4 14
eminently exhide Meletare• then :these are
slcztu flower • pole, runi this woniel
C$1$4.44. rioe moisture. to tbe
We • meter a.. lianeing :healed,
it lito4,114 htto pailful
tang le get thorooghly beak
beeidee ,giviing It **ter w
owere are watered. • We
vy, ptrlor ivy1 wet derlog je
eing'beekete, mid liev
is fit.0 with lexifrege,
Ie e plant for thiepur-
' Mid by *owe, bat We
it up•over the Whitlows instead
,inee to bees domn., Ivy
very good elee, if gran' is ta-
t • A welbgrowia hanging bee.
he prettiest Ditt%elfiete thot
axt . demeatiog a ZOOM, and it le
worth on °whjle to vend seine time io
caritao kr 1 •
I do notknew why we are aoineeemled
eur iowgating,. but tiny gm
an deurith, mad every eeti exclaim* at thei
homey. Ont. thieg, thiekole that my wif.
mail I ;axe ***ye Inning with them when we
. here alittio time, mid i doze reelly atm
that Sewere appreelete petting. We bete
Iiuioelesteel, gereaduses of high
,aiillowdegreee, leutrinesepenaniwohegeniae,
eVeu tO lebig, Malty rex. Nearly every oue
of themle vigorous" Ara hearty. We try to
keep OUr bootie from getting too warm. for
Mir • owp. health, mid tho towere are mit
subleeted to .greet extreme', for we keep
fi.rce i*y anil tiight and the temperature
Io es, not var,y touch. I think Ine$Z boneee
ere kept too warns for the beelth of .fieweee,
mid I frequently go into heave thet lire so
wane) the; the turopir4tiau starts from every
novo. :and veryoirequently Miele lierieete Att
knOW ..Are not kept warmed u,; the
night, 'Such olterratiegalling aud freezing
would be thelieoth of me and I am oot
.briuse plane, by auy means
Mitten Ptoevis.
A Noted Inventor.
T. J Maya% who died at rola home itt
Beading, Mese., an Saturday evening, was
one of the moot noted inventors in the 'Unit-
ed States, and ilea procured mere patents,
it is said, than any oth,r known man. He
began his career as a bobbin boy, and suffer-
ed msny privations in his early life. When
a young man he made a model of the first
cylinder printing machine ever produced,
and from it has grown not only the present
industry of wall -paper printing, but of cali-
co printing as well. Re discovered the vul-
canization of rubber, and was one of the
largest inventors of rubber goods and at-
tioles, and. has taken out over 200 patents in
this country and over 70 in England.
Among his other inventions were revolvets,
guns and automatic' batteries and revolving
cannons, cannon tiells, whose edges were
sharpened like a 'chisel, so that they would
bore through the armor of ships s a coffee
hulling machine, which he introdoced into
Brazil; printing presses -self-acting draw
bridges for mint:Ads, and at the time of his
death was at work on an 41ectrie cable road
and s pneumatic elevated railroad, which he
intended to put in operation in Boston and
Washington. '
_
Lord Randolph Churchill's motion for a
'Commission of Inquire into the charges of
malfeasance against the Metropolitan Board
of Works has been agreed to in the British
Commone. The list of alleged abuses of
trust into which it will be the duty,of the
•Commission to inquire, as recited in Lord
Randolph's speech', is certainly it MOSt for.
midable one. If one-half or one•fourth of
the allegations prove to be well founded,
American cities will shortly have to yield
the bad pre-eminence they 'have hitherto
maintained in municipal' corruption. The
enormous Scale, on which the operations of
the London' tatril ^have necessarily been.
carried on have afforded opportunities gni
temptatiom unique in their magnitude, and
there ie unhappily remain to fear beyond the
power of ordinary civic or aldermanio virtue
to withstand. Astounding revelation s may
be expected, and the investigation will give
an impetus to the impendieg revolution 'in
the 'civic administration of the great oity
which is in itself a kingdom and a little
New ond beautiful elirysepthemurns atflt
Appear, The growing epprecletion of tin
sturdy 'dent le to be eueoureged.
Wo my now Vault dahlia and clime:Abe-
mein seed* in boxee or pots, plaeing them in
swirly window& They will bloom next
Roses, new and old, galore. We will
epcsk of these ister. Tho estalcumes must
lie enroll:led. There MO few Among liar
roses, that are equal to the beat of the old.
Swett Peas (plant them as early as pos-
sible), striped einnies, Spinea Van Houttei,
lariped eingle delilhei are entente the inter.
eating new and 01a seeds and. plants now
eifered,
New strains of penile, continue to com-
mand the "beat positions" in the cats.
logues of 1898. Only give these fine streins
a imitable place and good care and one is de-
lighted with the nutny-feced blooms until
frosts and often in Mid -winter.
Verbenas hone been greatly improved of
late. The flowers ars larger, the colors
more varied and intense. There are few
plants more satiafaetory as hadders. They
bloom from early 'in the season oontinnouely
natal long after frost. If to be grown from
seedie it is well to sow no.
Many so -celled new varieties of musk and
watermelons find a conspicuous place in the
18,98 cetalognes. We have spent much time
during a few years past in trying all the
new kinds of melons, but are not prepared
to give any preference of the new over the
eld. It Id well to try these varieties in it
email we if one has the kelination and the
time,
STA:. I.
Orlamtrrrualia"lest"QyAlfleer.49Tgilekenees die isewo7ne.
t.T41a3e4.°1/.'"Olited'. ...States in IS.ddtoek front L'e$
fend one 'fourth of the whole leen ancl ateei
exporte, In )SW097,03 trine Were taken*
value g4,100.10 ; itt 1835, .7p6No t0eA,
value 45,592,501. •
There .are 197 4`. towns" in New Ze*Iaisel,,''
but S. et them have lees then 100
inhabi-
tpt while Devonport, the Moat populinie,
his Only 2 W.Inhabitentit TerolighOut the
:whole erilony there are Only .5.,5.01
to the armee mile. Out of tise Who
bitten el Now Zea1end-624 451e 51)8
..cent, are native horn,. t21772'.' come from
lng-
ltuid, 948 from Scotland, $e/i9 from Ireleo
end (134 born Wale. • •
On ef the liglateet -tobacco crepe ever
grove, :eppeani to have:beets produced in the
Velted Stateelaetyeer, .4 touleville ewe -
rpm ;estimates., the the tot -al Weedern crop
at onlY 76.,200,004 lb.„ ese eempared with
20-5,300Al0 lb. le 18E0, arid :30I,Obil,0(0 lb.
in Issr,, the eoreeepondieg •figuese for the
leeetern Stet*, ,m tto, saine orderi. bele; .-
n t 135,4/00,030 11. aed 147, -
SCAM ih.
Intl:teams, Zeit
Veg. •
The • 4014114 average ..esnistitoUtion et ts
the Ahetralian Coandee le iti,ex1/40%)ib.;
'New Zealeod. ; Tomei*.
.;•01 lb, ; • in Oreet Mingo, 1'Al.733„GOO
; itt Ne.Whimullood, :$24,00. tho
herons Settlemente, 2,C05432.0 Ib. iuthe
thiltred :Stetee, 7072.633 .11n • in Canada,
.,049410 ; ii nollernie 4.k..0.373 11..t
(Ape :Celerity, 1,12%50Q 11), ; in • Delude,
,40%500 Rao; ir, Deureark, 14000 11), ;
rordoi I041t the; M. renege], 501,0.
; xuAusteie Reqary, •f••ge. nee,
elernieny, 3,11-3,5M Ib. t in
11N rptitoo., liQ29,60.1 11. 111
Ilia, 133,83F. lb, .; mikealn, 130,040
teat wee • wow on 2,3.7,:3i•1 acres itt
resit Da:Min !mit yeer, thie being •en
• of 1,4 per eget 44 Compered with
eleellue•of ti per •eent, as cern.
tb Barley wee grown. On
tide being the *Allot re.
7 It per .emeh len then
;own on 3,4, S7,959 aeree,
over the aro* id the previous
loue te note thet, while bar-
. aunditet *Tenon record,
ri tile Urged, the reasen.
* ofthe latter crop la
k -feed In whiter. The
erepl WAA W448,14'4,
.1 agree len then in IfiS0
-"$ per mot, Mcoon
of the .peeeeding tem
tit dtere.ae last .yeer was 021,
aa a greet reduction
wellies A very email
e Air.
be e/6)%iti of dead plants and animals is
nearly always -present in air, but it ia only
under certain conditions that it can be re-
garded as an impurity from a hygienic point
of view—that is to say, when, by reason of
its abundance, it deoxidises the air to any
appreciable extent, or when it is specially
irritating in eharaoter. Far more important
are the produces of putrefaction—heavy
gases and vapoars, charged with suspended
organic matter, banging about over localities
in which they originate. These vapours do
not enix readily with the surrounding air,
and the moist matters they hold in suspen-
sion do not readily become broken up.
Such vapours love the lower air, requiring
nothing less than a storm to disperse them,
and the matter tiny contain seems to re-
quire a specially active oxygen to burn it
up. The air in towns is much polluted by
the products of putrefaction; wholly rural
districts and little villages may however
suffer from the same cause. The exhalatione
are derived Mainly from dustbins compound
middens, ceopools, all sewers not regularly
and frequently, flushed, and also from
churchyards, vaults and cemeteries. The
air .in, and around dustbins,eraiddens, and
ceespciols nearly always contains the dead
Organic Matter just noticed, an 'excess of
carbonic Acid, and a defimeney of oxygen.,
Though workers in copper seldom suffer
any ill health from their work, yet the par-
ticles of the mineral enter their system so
as to completely satnreite them in process of
time, Some told coppersmith have had
their hair turn green =steed of gray, and
their bones hays) been found green after
.111101110. -
The Maga extzty River.
'Ixe river le probably the deepest etream
world; excepting la A few lilac* the
al depth is from. 60.1 to 000 feet; and
IbO bottom of the &gummy et its mouth 13
GOO feet below the bottom of the Se. Law.
rem.Thee a low pelut el rock et the shore
or an itlend is really the top of it great toll
springing up steeply from the button), and
many of the etas aro not haat out el water.
Ari the spring tide" rise about eighteen feet,
dm current* of the river aro violent aud cc -
aside t inmine places the ebb atrearis roes
from four to six miles au hour; the eddies
alono the *bores are like thee on a rapid;
and. the undereurrents sometimes ley eold
of A mod and turn her About or hold her
atill in spite of h tow -boat. Bcfcre the use
of tow boats, it owl left helpless by a calm
metimes drifted against the rocks, lodged
on a ledge, end when the tide fell capez
deep water, At anchorage ia very
rarely found, largo iron rings wore let
Jnto the rookie and veesela even now
sometimes tie up to the owe and await
it fair wind. The tido for Immo unexplain-
ed reason, advances with extraordinary
rapidity in the &gummy ; thus, notwith-
standing tho fact thee the ebb current very
rarely ceases to flow out of the laver, yet
high tide Aram) at Chicoutimi only forty-
five minutes later than at Tederisac—severt-
ty inilos. On the St. Lawience the tide ad-
vances in the same time only from Talton -
sae to Murray Bay—abontthirey,eve
The source ot the Saguenay, Lake St. John,
news like it Northern sea The pale twi-
light lasts far into the night—until the
aurora borealis hangs its mystic veil across
the sky. Tho beachesa Mile or more wide
he summer, the sharp ewaves raised by a
wind on this very shallow basin, the wean).-
ing gall all undo you look for a tide and
for whiteewinged ships. Bat only e bark
canoe now and then comes along from one
of the thirteen rivers deeeencling by many
falls and easeades from the forest -covered
mountains' ; and the pinched -up farms scat -
tared along the shores add to the arctic
sentiment, hat even on it Summer's day.
The S•4guentty comes into being as lusty
twins, the Little and the Grand Discharge
—deep narrow channels wore in the rook.
They run on separately for some miles
through rapids and pools, and finally come
together at the foot of Alma Island, at the
Vache Caille. There begin the Gervais
Rapids, three or four miles long; at their
foot the river enters a smooth, quiet
stretch of fifteen miles to the Grand
Remons—the most furious casoade and
the most turbulent eddy of the river ;
and then, after a few more miles of falls and
cascades, the Saguenay ends its rapid career
where it meets the tide near Chicoutimi.
With the exception of it few clearings, the
forest ti1l COVer8 the abrupt hills crowding
upon the river. The Grand Discharge is a
beautiful region; the stream is filled with
an archipelago of email islands, some. Mack
bare rocks, others tree -crowned or decked
with rick mosses ; it has all the virgin sect)),
sion and quiet of a lake, enclosed by it shore
of bold picturesque bastions and walls of
rock, aurmouhted by stately balsams that
rise like sentinels above thebirches, poplars,
cedars, and nooks full of tender green gress.
But this quietness is full of life; the islands
divide the river into a labyrinth of streams;
the water runs silently and swiftly in meny
opposite directions—clown, across, even up
the general oeurse!of the river; one is piqued,
surprised; at this cognetry and shyness.
And farther down itdeaps.away in, the furi-
ous rapids of Ile, 1aJine The Little Dis-
charge is so rapid that it destroys logs in its
falls and eateadne ; the government thetefore
built an aqueduct, " the Slide," for running
the timber over these dangerous places.
After fishing it few days for the active wao-
noniche—said to he the landlocked salmon—
and exploring the waters of these twin Dile
chargee, 1 joined the men driving loge at the
Vache Wile, and began my acquaintance
with the voyageure.
tory
onsettai
TOLEDO, Isfarelt
Merhable insteseee Of AURA
Inwital* end reeuecitation, after
to servo the emis of aeirseee on tho dtsaeoxing
Miele, were made known here the other ,day
Cheries Alartliidaledied sudden)), ie thia city -
live or * yeaxe eget* a result of 4 eihrekis of
Apoplexy which cerae upon him during 4
*reeding match with ecompanien, itt was
buried with the Metal forma last night he
ppeeard in the tIeh at the hem@ of hie
proem, in the %rat ward, and had the fel.
teWleg Story to tell of his experienee. Re
knew that his parent,* were weepiog aver
Lien, and lottery/0.rd he wee conscious that
he Was being Aid mit Sall he was unable
to let any one know that he Wae alive. The
meet horrible BeneAtio4C4414 over hint when
the 00frin W## ieWered le the graVesaud as
the *de fell upon the lid be lett even what
little =Ind he /ALL tee. everYtla"g' waY
bleak. When next enitiwieuenfiee elikeee to
hint he was 'meted ,tetteaen two men, who
wereriding ha n lighe weave. Although hie
eyes, felt so heavy and iiwollen that be Mild
not see, he heaid enouell t,.t eenvinnie hien
thot he vent in !she city, but the eanymetion
of 040 two itixet WAgt Whet attreeteel Meat -
*Wien eepeciagy. " I tell yee:,geld 'Me,
in leW tones, "Well giV# 01V l'fal # bigger
me than hei linked leer any etisty. It.ettk,tl
good welt ef eletheare.dey font), the hoop,
nd when we feet tbllAtitr Shred up hell be
fuming."
"De mighty heevye" anawered the OtlAer.ts
AS he posted the vedy over towards Ina
CO11411194, " Geed, eubjecr," mad No, I
IP A whisper, mud thee Charlee begau
Dee they he had it *Men On; of the
4 for * medic.%) college. The thOlight
we by ma rAeAlle cheerful. but (Tx as
would, Charlo eculd not get tint of his
senit-
uneonoie.n etete. thither the news tweet.
tied him'ited anefeloet eoreciouseeete
When he knew auythingalgae' he wee
eteedirig bolt upright. le 4 km, tgosre,
ly lighted room, lie could feel imentitie
en every side et Mee holditi,. him up,
thought be wee in A dietecong norm art
reAllred that Whatever W44 41eati Meat he
dona thee or never. NeQeSsity Id ie .teeter,
mid the gravity of tie position eeemed
felie new Weed iuto Li wine, $eddenle
felt the throlibieg of hie her, aud then the
sense el teeth seemed to come heck to bins.
Ile eeuid feel the worretli frena the gave,
while sharp peins (Meted throuell bill whole
body. I'lie sense of Mei came next, and het
almeet feinted as the odors from a deems
medical cempounla posed into hii notrile.
And, night came to him, and alribr.
ly his eyes epetieti and he **sable *otitis:wen
iiegisheue him. Awl what a eight Ito
44 mit in le dhatectiog room, but Ina don,
'i filet ehelves tilled. with bottles, *ay.
origin of the odore. A bookcase well
cd otood in the corner, while in another
mbination chair itt whioh at patient
•laced into $14108,t any posn. A.
ekeletert strung on wires, with the ghastly
akuU4114 piece* of shied flesh 'till liensime
rCP the bones, was alt unpitrmant reminder of
hie own ettuation. Ile know now how he •
me there. The men were two reedleal atm.
dente who baa robbed hs grave; And wito
propoacd to out hira up after having a little
fun with one of the profeszoie. The pane
of hunger mede him faille, and he se/meted
tho °Mee for a mood. lie found it behind
the curtein, where it hail evidently beert
laced by the doetor'e wife, who intended it
or her husband when he should returri home
from a midnight call. He never got it that
night, for the eorpee did not lo:Wei 03 much
as e crumb beh,ind. The meal despatched,
Cherlea felt leo like a dead iner.
Young hlartindale had more nerve then
the ordinary young man, but even he shud-
dered so he thought, of u hat he hal peeeed,„
through. Tito next thing was to get away.
Now that he was himself agein, lichad no
idea, of beiug Rouged into A pickling tub not,
of orns,menting n dissteting ta ble, Ho be-
lieved that be lied another destiny, and
then the thought of Ws past follins came to
him, and he tainost wished that he Ina not
returned to this world, which at best hes
unpleasant side. Unmindful of his fitther's,
warnings, he had borrowed rooneY until be
could borrow 40 more, and he was iolzamed'
to go home. He went Weat and found em-
ployment, and has been'thare until his and- -
den reappearance to his astonished parentes
the other inght.
Moral Strength, -
Moral strength is gained ehieflyethroughe
etruggles of the stuoralene.ture. Every time
a temptation is resietede an evil inclination
conquered, a duty performed, moral strength
Id accuniulated. The one whom all men
honour for his virtue and integrity, to
whom wrong -doing seems to offer no attrac-
tion, and whc performs each duty asitarises
apparently without an effort, has notgained
this power by treading flowery beds of ease.
It has COMO to him through effortatta
filiCrifiCO, and the reiore it has cost the
greater the reward. The poor weak victim.
of temptation and indulgence, who is 'power-
less to deny his appetite or to stiledue ite'
craving or to resist the persuasion of,en evil
-companion, is incteed to be pitied; buthis
deplorable condition is due togong years of
--
moral idleness, during which he drifted
into evil, instead of having stemmed the
current and resolutelypressed forward in:
the opposite direction. , t •
What to do in.a.liiizzard.
When exposed to it blizzard immediately
envelop the head and upper part plthe,body
in a thick shawl orblankit, and itt no case
allow the .fine, powdered snow lb:satin j".
the air to enter the mouth or *lungs.
This I wrote from ',personal, experience,
havine some years agnbeen exposed,to it,
blizzard in Minnesota, with the thermometer
at 45 does. below zoo. Thefiest fewbreathe -
sent a sensation like an icicle through my
• chest. I grew weak and trembling. lt
seemed as though thebloodwiielhickening
in my veins and the heart could neteirculate
it. Respiration 'grew rapid. fleas being
smothere& 1 eoncluded that that would nob
do, so withwhatmeaneIhadIwrappednpmY
nose and mouth and breathed onlyqhrough
4he covering. 1 was exposed for more then an
hour and got througTi allright. I afterwards
Saw the Indians adopting the same plan, for
they had a large blanket— a government
one—wrappeclearound their heads and bodies
seed they resembled unveiled moving statues
or Turkish women on the etreets. When lost
ha such a storm get on the lee inde of it snow
bank and burrow it hole in' it and doe the
opening, or, as they say," Crawl into A
hole and haul the hole maltat you."