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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-6-13, Page 7HEALTH. H Nettling Can ever retrieve the reistakee I you make now In these respects ; you are Notes on ealth. ISUMMER HINTS TO OIHLS. egese Terry CeoUe epeeks Seine eenstel now "making hestorY -the history of Panels aWarnertg thet somethngis wrCng. Wbittt to 1("Ing "'IL" YQ011r dlifnen" e admoig all the eXcptisite and often an indication forebsolute rot. It"Sumer i Tooreen Int" One the old thinge f creetiona Mere lovely, enehenting, lets been old that "pain is the payer of a Eugliete dittYr and soon the elfels of or land exquisite, adeoirahle creature than a. freeh neevefor bealthy bleoe." SoMetircies it is it rill he evewaing. he "'Free t% seaside Awl TIM, charming young girl, WI of unselfish sure sign otiehete the -0001e sometimee elene'tefe' IPr'nga dbealing-titciugh t47 th°Pghb °atm, gentle" Meilen!' "4 l'Pcit' et 4 misieudeog u" erne "npeten neon, do not need *Om wetern-end to nooke in less. Not the milk -white and stately JPPe sarily an indieation of the oeverite' el disease.,1 the forest where great barn e have lseen built 1 lilies are so radiant ha their etelnless candor Sim{ CwirainEe.-eei often a pee eixa beside acme loeely lake, and christereed au Audi a girl ; no tronio bloom tree with summer tiotelst Joy go with you, pretty her be olgred t,dth.cfeco bottling with the for a child, who is oriensly ill, to eierldenly become ooze. It es then he begins, tee feel i cre44"sNay all yew new garments lighe of the sweeteerd within her; ehe is the his weakerese, emit° give wet to hiefeelinge °DIA° of h°1°' Y'latale°" Unk ee 1224. Aswer and or°r41 of httmeoltY. .Ah t Par wriokled and free ; may each one of yen dear, fetfilthie doting wetting or you and you will become to year honeelmiti and the World one 0 the "angels that are Oho," one tho ,Wnigican vee shall help to redeem their country and their people from tee stigma that -I say it with pain and re- geet-our owe cenatrymen have ease upeie these where they should hove been the first to defend I Enjey yonr flight, Q pretty mallows, mi- grating toward monntain and shore s but flT true to your wings, upward and enward. "Gletbdren are einleet alwaye coo when i. ;Kneeing from 44 0.14C44, however patient they may have liege dnriag 04;1;0,70re:it mom eiste, • ,asid the plieeemeneu le net by Any wane corifirted to ehildren,". Teexstgong„-Dr. Shattnels'e plats for deadening the nerves: of teeth. is to -put gime isreeeious acid leto an melee vial and pour A little mere eeeesete on It than wilt cover ▪ Whee you Withto tese the paste, tip tbelP0ttle tie there you can reaCh the memo, and apply, directly to the prdp; or you may take a pellet 0 eritten a' apply that. way, he potst 14 ready for inereediate ws.e. and and Wilt atop the. Moat Tteieet. toetleache Omni five neoeuten he .additten, ef other drOgss he regard* eassoletrineent to the paste; hue ere rimy .add filet It ahead be +egad with Pantie's, Vritxgrs. ni* Oncin 444 Dem -,,,,,What tho moat atrengthening feed for a cenvolde e.eut Well, ertin know. the beettea 'theory has been .exPleded. The moo . iffsagiving sued digestible food that eau he vez o mie. 544 re:wearing; front an illness Is Ohopped bent Jest. take, ;spend el the finest toned d raw beef, gut off ail the fat, elice two melons, med pepper etla oh, Then (+imp the. _oeitiner an 'Wee tegether, 'booing them. over Arid .eeeir until both are reduced'almost ▪ kintlp, Then: 'reed +.01iete. of rya bread and egi ete sandwiches, p§.9_01._§ talk about celery being aeileVirie, bee let nie tell have quite the prettiesb attire at the Place you 01104Se to abide in, the c,orner front roo? at every hotelthe bese henna and the gayeee season. After all these good wishes will yore my desire, lirsten to a few werde of catitien and advice? Ad that my words meer iieein leers general, I will addrees myself to each of yeti, my pretty readers, singly, as if yen and 1 were talking to pitch ether. T1ia i, Perhape, our firee seasoeat watexing place;.; you are J aet °et a ;elan', and aa giddy a rtioet giers, bet 1 will do yon the jaetice to say that you are ono of tho very, few girls who will %ten to their elderte •a4VICe. XRET TOMO; 3IRN" AT A DISTANCE: Iu tho Oret RIAD°, my dear, T would conn - eel you to he very eerefel abob Yenr. con- duce toWatd the yetnig men whe yen will, Meet, 1 Will esker Ib tir grated that you en pretty, end PbthP Ut1ege.Y eed thougbilem ex well. U 1 Iteite petered Yon correctly, remember that to be tleeeghtleee conuteracto being pretty. You know the proverb ? "As *lewd of gold in A liwine's eeout, go is a fair women Witheut dieerotion," and TM Modem preverli vendor or neeeder saki atetier thing, Ito he dieereet ; de net thiek that yonng men are the only delight, M people4 tale world, er act es It you thought' ere. Keep them at a proper distarng; „ no Men like4 or reepeate a41/4,14 who rune Yen the* there ,,c 10 olhl°11 .1?„_(1* 11 t? "43 after him, deto deers his opinion, lets him a.ay nerves: Wi4heelt' Pea reme44 ttao gum". rude thinge to her and take little liberttea the nee el them mcluees elope and =Mee et spoon " etrength °Weed from them. Tbat g Long ago I Ituarr a young girl who bed the ideal food. for conveleaeleg, ier for any. me aQ9d oploon ot Jer .renow men tho Wlici is in n weak *get* ef health. S. Verati Dee -A physician et the Ciiarlte Ifoopital, in Perin hait made en ire tereetleg coearennireetkna to the hiedieel Society Ot the Peel% hasped* on this subject. Plepresented A patient of middle ego, who fer upwarda et leur Teem had been A mertyr to the dance of Se. Vieux to *echo degree that he was ableintely unable to cerry a cup t,a bie Ups, to tchke aoup withoat Ateistateee, to button hie clothe*, to mita hie rotme, 41. The petient, says the phyeiclen, wee placed ender ide treatment, which ma be owned up In the war& hypnatiern wed rotating mit- ram For A we; the inveild wee reed° to gezeitmodfoatly at the moving mirrors from about twenty to thirty minuted et A time. Improvement (Arne very grednelly at first ; whenever one ague WO the home he pat on ad the greees Oeld Mester, ladled up to there, ceek dieWn her vete oe gave little, appeadieg *etc glanwt, untied at twery meaning -4m weed me home generally feel in her egret and convene/Jere She gtggleel read prarumed up her mouth with au eepreetion of melt teretfie sweetues 1 alweya wanted, to laugh, alma when I'm* here In the street else would go round oornere, into shop', by hotel% walkieg abroad Reek log whom she could dirt with in A =neer ebeurd that ell the youths' who were at firit Attracted by her heenme disgueted and left her to heeseelf. The girl ditl nob amen my ham ; she liked young nun* society, is most girls do, but mon aro wide to pr not to be hunted down. This poor girl bnt at the expireeion et a fortnight eapid ehcapeued boreafl from the beginning, and progrelewes reported,andotthe end of three WAS never reepeeted. Den't forget, my week's the patient was entirely cured of tbe dear, that now is your time to ei nb fah your trooblesorne complaint. chereeter for life ea A well bead, cbarreiag, modest air' ; do not, beg of you, lose the FOOD Berens Own° re Ben. -A t oppor en y. known ;lector writes: -"It's a common bac, realms that to take food Immediately be fore gang to heel and to *loop la tumble. such a et:notion is ittetWered by a reteind. etthat the inetluee of animate ptempte them to Sleep Al soon as they have eaten ; and in enturrter an after.dinner nap, espeeial- ly when thee wee is taken at mid-day, in luxury indulged in by many, If the ordin- ary hour of the everung meal la SIX or SaVen &ohmic, and of the lirsemorniog meolseven or eight o'clock, an interval of 22 hours or ra0r4 elapsea WIthont food; and for pereone -whose nutrition is at fauite this la altogether too long a period of fasting. That suale an intervel witnoub food is permitted explains =ally restless night, and much of the head end heck mho end the languid half- reateei condition on tiling, wheelx are amen penied by no appetite for beetiltfast. Thie moil itself often dissipates these seneatIons. It lie therefore deartible, if not eementise, when nutriment is required, that tho lase thing before going to bed ehould be tho tok. ing of food. Sleoplossneee :is often (mused by starvation, and a tumbler of milk it drunkin the middle of the night, will often tend people to sleep when hypaotica woted fail ot their purpose." Rotten Snonenzus.-A. stooping figure and a halting gait, accompanied by the nn - voidable we -Maoris of lungs inciaental to a narrow obese, may be entirely cared by the very eimple and easily -per- formed exercise of raising one's ftelf upon the toes leisurely in. a perpendic- ular position several times deny. To take this exorcise properly one must take a perfectly upright position, with the heels to. gather and the toes at an angle of forty-five degrees. Then drop the arms lifelessly by the sides, animating and raising the °hot to its frill capacity muscularly, the chinwell drawn in, and the orown of the heed feeling se if attached to a strine atuspended from the ceiling above. Slowly rise up on the balls of both feet to the greatest possible height, thereby exeroising all the muscles of the legs and body; come again into standing position without swaying the body back- ward out of the perfecb line. Repeat this same exercise, first on one foot then on the other. It is wonderful whet a atraightening- out this exercise has upon round shoulders and crooked banks, and ono will bs anrpris- ed to note how soon the lungs begie to show the effect ot such expansive development. PURE AIR UT BED•RO0319,--An extraor- dinary fallacy, says a writer, is the dread of night air. What air can we breathe at nighe but night air 1 The choice is between pure night air from without and foul air from within. Moat people prefer "the latter -an unaccountable choice. What will they say if it is proved to be true that fully one half of all the diseases we suffer from are occasion- ed by people sleeping with their windows shut ? An open window posh nights • in the year can never hurt any one. In great cities night air is often the best and purest `to be had in twenty.fours hours. One could better understand shutting the windows In town during the day than 'during the night, for the seem of the iick. The absence of smoke, the quiet, all tend to make night, the best time for airing the patient. One of our highest medical autherities on coneump. tion and climate has told me theft the air of London is never as good as after 10 o'clock at night. Always air your room, then, from the outside air, if possible. Windows are maae to open, doors are made to iihut-a truth which memo extremely ditfioult of apprehen- sion. Every room must be aired from with- out, every passage from within. FAST Mier. • Again, don't go out driving or walkfcg or eeilteg alone with myyattog men. Perhaps you will tell me ULM gide all do it Not well bred gide, my deer ; if yonheve no reel, (deeper= take another girl with you. Bali die ecandale and tragedies el worrien begin In their orelenneas *bent this very thing. Anil over all do ha name particular about the young men with wbone you assoolts, Avoid " lost " men al you would lepers. Alen who am diasipeted ato iaberently low: no matter haw rich, how hentleome, how highly pieced in what its called neaten mole men aro uo associates for a pure young girl. Yon do not know Mything about their real lives and characters, end they know you do not; they take advantage of your natural end lovely inflow:too and admite it; though they know thotasolves they are not lit to ton& the hem of your dress even. Do your pert toward making moiety what It should be by your marked, avoidance of young mon who drink, •gamble, or have a bed reputation in any way. If ovary girl would do this' wo thould have it very differ- ent steno of things in the world. No girl who accepts a high standard of character by which to select her friends ar her aiso. ciatea will do such a revolting thing as to elope with her fathet's coachman or her neighbor's groom, and thereby lose all that makes a woman's life desirable. You have doubtless been too well brought up to be in danger of any ouch fatal step; butt you may he just as thoroughly shipwrecked by mar - tying an elegant, wealthy, good looking youth from any "first family,' if he is not a man of high principle atid pure life, as by allyieg yourself wita a servant having no such advantages. A Soldier's Conundrum, VeteranSoldier (to his comrade)-rve got a conundrum for yen, Sergeant. Sergeant--Spit'er out, as the dentist Raid to the patient whose tooth he had jerked to the surface. Why are postage etamps like the defeated and routed. enemy? Because they can't be used again ? IiINTS ABOUT swami unass. I must eay another thing about your clothes. Don't be too fine; simplicity and exquisite fresh neatness are more attraotive in 1. irl's costume than any extravagance of iashion or costliness of material but even thee plainest dress may be made flaunting by its immodest style. I see young girla go out into society so much like our first parenta in Eden, "naked and not ashamed," that my heart sinks and my eyes are abashed at the sight; for we are not in Eden now; nor sinless and ignor- ant in innocence. I cannot think a young girl is instinctively modest who wears a very decollete these' no mattcr who she ie. I have heardib ,aid that girls dress so as to attract men. Poor things 1 they do not know what that excuse implies. Pi is an apology even worse than the offence ; but the truth is that such exposures do not attract butinstead repel respectable young men. I have never known a man who want- ed his wife or Ms daughters to wear ouch dreams. Not long ago a silly young portion of my acquaintance, invited to a small evening party, wore a square necked dress cut inde- cently low, though it was only a wool dress with longsloeves. She made a Emulation, I assure you, but not of the kind she intended. If she could have heard the young men whom she met that evening express themselves aboalt her coatume to their mothere, as I happen to know they did, I think -at least hope- that girl would blush to her finger tip* at the Toole:lotion. Never dress for the evening wiehont sbowing yourself when you are ready to go down to your mother. Then you will be Nair. GIRL PRIENDEL Again, be kind and sweet and forbearing to other girls; do not deprive them of their ohancee in life, however great your own social sumo may be. Do not monopolize a younkman just to exhibit your powere so some girls, do it is unkind. And be rust as careful winii young woman you are friendly yeith, e as I would have you to be about young men. •A. girlie always judged by her friends ; keep civilly aloof from the " fast" the slangy, the giggling girls yen will tho surelynneet. Choose your company more carefully than your dress, for your No. Because you tee their backs when Mods are the true index of your moot and you lick 'en:. mental steins. • Oar Qirle and the Depots., There is an, eejoyable faocinatien fee all aleone the teeming and outgoing of an en. preen train, veititt its motley crowd of pas. winters each in eager lonb silent puranit of Ide own deetimetton and purpotea. Stub a eaaoe fureishee one Of the hest opportunities fer the etody of berms* mature in ito many verled phases, eepeeielly in our large cities or town* ; while in *or *troller towns aud I villages, tho Iceemotive4 whietle the ex- change ef mad, oto, bringa a thrill of life from the ontaide world that Is felt by all. To the yotrog, le pertIonler, the depot or station. withits quickely ahliting panorama, hes 4 ebarirs that it Well nth irreeletthle, judging from the nembere oire plurally finchien thoeo pleeee et train time, 2•Iothers, aro 72n blind te the dangers that lurk here for your children l-giri or looy, I me pot which. Do you think be. mese you live in a small towneued knew the amide% agent, that no harm cm mine to year deughter there? Perhaps atm and her mates tease eo to go that you consent, though with a proteeting tndeetion, and an ;Anima. gen not to he rude or boisterous. Peesibly, yen have vetoed her going there at all; but eetin tisee, le to wise to know whether or not your commando are heeded. I ate auto that have soon yeneggiria around the atetloo, whole parent; would not appreve et it, and who did not even dream of tie* beingthere. Feeble abandant and, atertling, prove that in them pleote many a young and nano:meet girl Inee teken her fleet hesitotieg, but fetal atop In 4 life of ehatue. Ile ono of our enntiler town, Tome elm whole °utiles foll of xollickleg, oereleett aohool-girla dein to the depot. They were very noisy, nob to say rude, ettraoting the etiolation of everyouct, and flirtleg oud. ting wIth the train MO with an C440 end abandon tinit wee alelionieg and &terming. It was evidently a customary recreation with m Then they were trotted with c'gerettel by the express agent, which (me or ewe et once lighted; and amid the wavieg of kerchiefs, acetres 040, two, or three„-whielt was lei -of this tregedy for onto item was ended 1 Now, theta Orb were not from low or poor femilies, hut every ono of them was from our ea celled higheet circlet; and I could hat think to myeelf, thee had I eat once gone to their mothers, evened with proof the moat convincing, I could not have persuaded on0 of there that her girl did anything out of the way; and I might bevel even found dt. cattyitt mnkieg them believe their girls were there, -for auch nniternal blindnees is by no moans unoorrimen. The moral earnoephere all railroad station it not wholesome or elevating to our girle. It Is the resort of leaup,ora and looae cher. rioters, and in no other place can a young girl so quickly and effectually rub off the sweet blush of maidenly modesty and reserve. Tho habit' of frtquenting these plum Is be- coming so oiarmingly prevalent among our voung poopei that the 'natter ought to be agitated, and mothers put on their guard. Allowiog our girls to go to the depota with their mates lob for the fun of the thing," is encouraging an idlo, loafing habits which is just aa deepicablo in a woman a in a man, and which as surely loads to vice. Mrs C. T. Colo, thee superintendent, of the W. C. T. U. department of social purity in Iowa, mentione this fl taking of our young people to the depots as one of the moat fruitful sources of impurity. Shall wo not, then as mothers, see that our loved ones do not 'frequent those placea ? If they are already ought, within this lining, datiger- one mare, shall wo not rusk determinedly to luir rescue Marline by Surprise. An extraordinary occurrence has taken place in ono of the principal churches of Madrid, in the perien of Santa Cruz. A priest had nearly finished his mess, and was isa the ace of prononuoing the sacramental words'Ile, mina est," when a young man, aged twerity-one, and a beautiful girl of twen. ty suddenly approached the alter -railing with three middle-aged men, and the young couple cried aloud. "We wish to be, hue bane and wife. Here are our three wit- nesses." Now, it seems that under the canon- ical laws still regulating marriages in Spain, Roman Catiaolice oan thus intim to be con- sidered married by surprise if they are akin ful enough to do so just after the priest has uttered the benediction at the dose of mass. Formerly this stranagem was, as ia the pres- ent case, resorted to by young people whose parents oppood their union. When this oo curred in the Church of Santa Cruz a scene of confusion ensued.' The priest retir- ed to the sacristy, aud sent for the po. lice, who conduotedthe offenders and witness- es into the presence of the municipal judge. He declared the marriage valid, much to the delight of the young couple, and to the in- tense disgust of the parents of both sides, who had reeisted the union. B1UThIt ADER. ',COLONIES, f STUFF TRAT DREAMS ARE MADE OE ON A EliOATING Inger. The Ties -wields Bina Ike Mother Vountre Au Alleinpt 40 Tarn Them to &dentine nie TeIrril" E'Z°erie1114'es "the Crew :11 4r-' and her Chiedrein -British courageVee Wrecked, stei. anti Eadiseanee ettlinxtant. Account by eaoee Etude', oommome "polio/tow, of every -nay The Atlas Una steamer Claribel, on her At Eenelegton recently a lecture was life are freeneatly those which are meet in- 1144 V9Yaga to New Yorks salted port of the given to the membere of the ImPerial Federa- terestiog to istedY, and they are also ie °"5v of the v"IPI S' ll'icr4h); while th6' tient Leegue by Sir fe. Badee Pewell, 11. G. Rimy instences thew Make moat succu,„ vessel Wee,a 'bating wreok and surrounded If. as M. P., on " OttrFoapire arse Fighting fully elude the grasp a scientific precision, byshsre,which were eXpectiog every', Machine," In intrOde4ig the inihjeCiti of hie Medical nonzero of all agea leave pondered 4awlientl 119 ZeP417° the4 1:"Y* The (7' leeture, Sir G. Daden PoWell referred to the over the mystery of dreams and 01.0?p with- Mealtsen bed previously lose her captain mirk close intim(/' el the Celoniea And the plether out getting mug 4 farther then spectiletions a sqld'19x4 Country, andbe epeke of the etrong desire of of 4 very _personal natant. This penteuel `e.e" te-nnee'ere" -reeneee-"b the Geleetee to increase and strengthen the element le meviteeess nieoo expozionc,,,,shovro Preen h4.0 Val+eei (Jape .witorise terrifrog ties that bond them, no 'Enterer did not that irt every accennt of A deesatz there are _We we l eneenntered. The seas wexe ran-. hesitate to exerese in the ="eot erePhatle awkward hiennee where the !levee:genteel:7d- manitife w7,uuntoludiecich*Nsbiennthee °le:4n ant: a-tnb! meteor tbet the desire of the Volontes ty brought into play. There le a modest wheel celled to them to "leek ent,"' JEtah Wes a closer union, and. that nothing like heeltation in the wakingstateabeee reeouut. Apathy or lektiwarninees ou the seht'eet ex- ing isa censeoutive form The disconnected tbe4 Tetziassmovs wow Wed in any Pritibb Colony at the present partielea which have ferreted the nomPene t Menlent. Soeh, an expression of confidenee 1 perks' Of the dream_ , and the resule that in the sympathn and brotherhood of our vase oedinae.ly a veli la woven to hide the de- Coloniea was opportune, for there have been foots of memory, or *oaaiiadventitiona times when some paesing lunation may have linker are inserted to give a logieel seecence given rise to the ides, that eome of cur Qoio. to what 1st:east illegteal. nres had less regard for the did oonntry than, Individuals do not believe sufficiently in ha timers past. Bet suck an irepreasion has the acouracy of their Owe Aeoccents to trust been may *momentaryone and whenever those narrated by others. Dreamers of it boa c000rred has been sp:eedily dispelled dresnut jet the peek ordinarily foretoll their by own assereemett, and theta eneenetemed their OVamErRamxtm Time boozers to unfamiller idees • more reeently of popular feeling ee our favour. le bas noVeliSt, has oenfeesed ta' having worked been witnessed on many oneadone e for in. up much of the periloue einff thee dreams etanee what Pori' *its have been paid to are meele of into literary form, and to have the edoetee ; sted nothing 00011 SOrpkaa reaped 14404 a4irautag4 fora 041 4e,e7.141"f', the kindly feeling displayed on the (+moltenT,,,he,httotP„.ohliet4t_efeen whielltenelle* 43• 4°1n of the Q4eini'll JUNtiee., We take it, then, tr. "or&o %T11344 Prolleeee a more Sea" that the leeturor was perfeogy justified 1 Quo t@ftlet for It ti Not thAri an oittoenPt to epeekleg with the greatest confidence tutetn,t1nem, the nature et 044.4004$ 404; .44,4 ot to the atreugth of the tits -we may almeet °r4Vo em, tun 4aCtl .4 41"an P % oreame• any the affectinn-of theee Teat and ever. The difference between the dreaming and lecreesieg populatieris speeking our leo. the wekleg cor.selonsoese asenneed tO pap, follevang oar toohtvo, Ileeung east the absence of all acirnat 14a the latter eon. lo Otir repreeentalive systems, and spite of ditic9s wbile ali the stiterdhlate oculres are ourne and digtauee ague& end ualeg ann. feinetieeless. The dreaming cense:ens:Igoe the rc,aeaer et 'the reel faent sameh11 ouppostal to be rie the tilde to WAtreh, Over • they are descended, The entnelpeasessiona tho aleoPIng orgorft4me "WboP 4"13 POr• of the British Bemire have to be borne in ,rolittods-P IIS*4‘44,4 zo PoTratf ft. mind when we speak of seouriog ite lefety. xontx, *leap IllaY at it 'at bo drosm!ess with The British Empire niekee indeed lese imager to the organism." Alticongh there la much then le extremely A NUM= WOW= ix TUE wOlienletereeting in this peper, the coneinaloniar. its aro being equal to one sixth of the etved at are eomewheeeeoetung, ee may he entire area eif the &hes and flaming oPo• hesitatingly eencedealthat "dreaneversonab 4fth of the woritre population- ge-vittn 901 Ity twine Meitedtielitee;" but Many wilt de - A vaat etake le the world Sir George Baden nun at she notion that "through physiolog- Powell naturally itqUirod whethee all pet. kat veyenoleo we catch agUrapto of the dale geglialtmen Were net deetr011e O 4#00 Fctoczta WW1 that, lab heat, ire are tho,h' great emigre reteotell, and teco,re4l, all the eetne ;" white to my thet teireem akeanet chance of attiOx „frm_ rtwat philoeophy teaches religion and syncuathr Pomo. It may be tukkede Aar- wow 11 to eltelinge oontredieliee, Dr Weld's 'And en ether nie tht Oa Ammo C"4' are AO if= Herd thenetrikinin A id Memom, where la toe danger, and WISO IS likely taugusge oftao boa a Irmtkal tura ;dogleg tootle our possession'? To that eteery Str with acientific phraseology that is entertain 134., den Pnw.e.11.,.h3s„rtlx' a re, ifeeere,_ ; for example in ilia Oerldtulbs WOrdi menace, mast =gammen Snenio* *HUM' dream calolnunins he Hays, 4114 omn leetancea thee% grand possetelem have phantasuiai exiateace upberne won the ablinaYathlwpir ar;a°11114°111"43nrwILQ't4)11, tircezPily "ee tied to reelity by the tenegus thread of a tly wings of put sorrow eud py, and our aide, W0044; 040t SO=00 to tette nem 01 momentsrily Interrupted eentettoren some of oar uobleat wiz te. There need never be the alighteab feu as to whether the old Britieh bulldog courage and mime= is atilt extant, We need outer mail exiliZIAGNIRCENT VT= of the ceetpe ot 11. M. 1. Celliope ab Sanwa. It was a glorious viatory over the elemeuta glorieue a record of Bridal pluck, en- durance, and ekill went twit a little beyond diet ot other netiona thet WO have this wonderful feat to add to thouends of snob thxillion records of the aen. Wo regard thia eireple effort of the opteln of the Ctilliope and. his crow AI better calaulat- ed to-is:west other nations than anytbing of the kind that has taken place for yens, end it gout to our hurts, too, to hear of tbet trernentione cheer the orow of the American vessel gave when, expeeting every moment to go to the bottom themselves, they eased a, shoot louder than the roaring wavee end the terrible hurricane in recognition of the genulue old British pluck, daring, and ball. limit seamanship. lilven the Gerinana could not vvithhold their tribute of admiration for the bravery and ability of the oaptain, who carried the flag, of old England triumphantly into the open, sea against all the coiribined forces of Nature. IRE CONGO RAILROAD. fl le111 Cost 85,440,060, and Ground will be Broken This Fall. The engineers who have been making the eurveys and preparing the plans for the Congo railroad arounci the cataracts have completed their work. At aapsoiai meeting of the Royal Geographical Society at Ant - warp they have made known the conditions wader which the road will be built They say that it will take e5 000,000 to build the road, equip it with rolling stook, and pay interest on the investment during the parted of construction, which is fixed at four years. The total length of the road will be 426 kilo- metres, or about 261 miles, and it will ex- tend. from Matadi, at the head of navigation on the lower Congo, to the village of Male, on the south shore of Stanley Pool. In the first sixteen miles between Matadi and Palehalla are found the only difficulties of construction, which are occasioned by the rooky and rollisg nature ef the land. The rest of the route is laid along the plateau behind the hills that skirt the left bank of the Congo, and is exceptionally favorable for railroad building. Oaly three important briars will be re- quired. One of them will be 330 feet long over the Inkisel River and the others wiU eech be 250 feet long over the rivers lipoza and £wilu. The complete plane are to be published without delay. It is expected that ground will be broken this fall. A Baoliwaid Shipping Season at Quebec. - Reported Disaster at Lake Bt. Peter. QUEBEC, June 6a -The shipping season is very backward. Sailing vessels are arriving very slowly. Only about twenty ships have so far come ine (tempered with double that number at this time last year. A fleet of about forty vessels are now somewhat ever - due. Reports come from Lake Si. Piter of some I nall craft being dismasted and driven ' aahore by the gale. There is no definite news, however, as to the extent of the dims - ter. The violent tempest which has pre- vailed hete during the lase few days has almost entirely subsided. No damage is reported in this vicinity. • What He Heard. In Chicago: Stranger: ''Can you tell me what teat sound Is?" Policeman: "I'm slightly deaf, and don't hear it. What is it like ?'' Stranger: "Like a drove of horses on a trot, but 2 don t see any." P011eeman: "It's the Young Ladiesseminary out walk- ing. Here they °onto 'round the corner," Mexican Pottery. Charles Dadley Warner discovered during a recent tour in Mexico, which he described under the title of Mexican Notes, that the art aupposed to be lost of making iridescent tiles and pottery, which was ktown to the Saracens in Spain, has been preserved in Mexico. Iridescent tiles, but little inferior to those of the Saracens, found in the Al- hambra, are made in a remote mountain vil- lage in the State of Guanjueto. Mr. Warn- er took much -pains to trace the origin of some pottery he purchaeed in Western Mex- ico. The discovery is worthy attention. Some other curious arts till live in Mexico. There are but few makers of this rare pot- tery, and the produot of their labour has on- ly a local sale. Some effort should be made to seek out the possessore of the ancient art With a view to its preservation and commer- cial use.-[Rooliester Democrat. Physicians will be interested to know that Dr. Page, of the Royal Library of Berlin has found there a Latin manual of anatomy in manuscript, written in 1304 by Henri de Mondeville, surgeon to Philip the Handsome of France and teacher of anatomy and sur - goy inPeris. • These beautiful words were on the floral pillow sent from the White House for the funeral of Mr. Justice Matthewa : " Say not good night, but in some fairer olime bid me good morning," It appears thee were taken from Mrs, lierhauld, one of Mrs. Harrison's favorite write_s. What Wolin lido Of. 040 Of the meat interesting collections+ in theNational Museum at Washington le that ninpoced 01 epeelmera and cherte illuetret- WU the tompeeition of our bailee and of the [Dada nrhieb uouritit them. Tinto aptreiment and oherte WM explained reosutly in A lecture by Prof, W. O. Atwater. 'Upon the platform ware arranged a largo number at bottlea. Theme the lecturer explained, contal rie a ape oiniera at the elleenicaleiernente and aoropOU MU of which bodice* are made up. Oxygen 1 oxen one-fittit of the sir ea EihOlIt sixty.two per cant, at the body, so that the body of an average men, my a men weigh- ing ono hundred and forty pentads, mutants about ninety. two paunds at oxygen. The quentity of bydrogen in the body of such A Man is ebenb towboat and. oneetali penuche and in the form of gm would fill about twenty-six hundred cubic, in other words, the hydrogen in a neen'a body, if set free in the formal gae, would fill a room twen- ty foot ]ong, thirteen feet wide staid ten feet h gin The mime body contains about irty-one pounda of carbon. These three elements therefore together make up abant one eundred nl thirty.eight of the one hundred arel forty.elght pounds. Tho psinoipal compound le water. More then one-lialf the relight; of our bones, three- quarters al the weight of our musolea and sevenotighthe of our blood, or about three. fifths of the weight of the Ilhole body, are sinter. Baeides water, niuscle bones and sien contain wbet °herniate calf "porteinee corn. pounds. These ceneists mainly of four chemical elements: carbon, oxygen, hydro- gen and nitrogen. The albumen, or white of eggs, the caseine-curd-of milk, and myosin, the basis of muscle, are proteine compounds. When country boys chew wheat, and get what they call "wheat gum," they make a sorb of chemical analysis in their months, separating out the starch and sugar, and some el the other ingredients ofwheat. The residue, which they call wheat -gum, consists chiefly of gluten a proteh. sub- stance. A bottle containing about twenty pounds of tallow was shown to illusterete the fat in the average man's body. Fat forms about fifteen per cent. of the whole weight of the average adult. The bodies of stout people have more fat, and those of lean people less. Our foods, like our bodies, contain water, proteine and fats, and also two other clasees of compounds . carbohydrates. Vegetable foods. much as wheat, corn and potatoes, contain a large proportion of carbohydrates. In meats the proportion of carbohydratee is small. There are small quantities of carbohydra- tes ha the human body. Thus igosito some- times celled "muscle sugar," -substance somewhat similar to ordinary sugar, -is found in the muscles and other parts of the body. Oar bones and teeth contain agreat deal of phosphate of lime and other mineral mattersin all parts of the body aol in all our foods. The Feast of Weeks. TORONTO, June 11. -The Jewish syna- gogue, on Richmond street, is prettily de- corated with evergreens and other plants in honor of the .Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost, which is among the most irnportanb festivals held by the Jews. The off,ring of first fruits is one of the principal ceremonienbut, betides this, there are many other +totems connected with this perioi, which have been brought down from the remotest antiquity. The firat day of Pentecost is the day on wbioh God ap- peared on Mount °Sinai and gave the Holy Law to the Israelites, and on this account the more 'pious Jews spent last night in prayer and in reading portions of the Bible and Mirth- na. The wonien attached to the Corean Em- bassy are very popular in Washington. They are working hard to acquire an Eng- lish Education. They have their own par - in which they receive their lady cell. ers, but no gentlemen. Gentlemen calling , with ladies in their party are received by the men of the legation, while the ladies f are invited up stairs to meet the Cerean ' • wives in their own apartments. cline -over tlin ship, earrying away the only • boab the vesirel then bred, the quarter relt and the steering gear. 13stere the men could. properly recover tom Vie wave another - struck the Teasel front tee, opposite diree- tion, cerreing ceerboard Ointain Cole and e#, sonninP tkarned Thompson, Both were never :seen again. The mate was afterwarae fennel with WS heed entangled in the rigging,„, where he bad hsen hurled by theme. 4 rope, • wen then tightly round ;bopoor fellow'amela 'and he wiee befog gradually strangler?. .'The J. S. Moelton wee left a fleating wreck), and for Icor daps the went dirfeing ehenn Mcat 4E the crew were in an iviored eeteedire gene bet they weld do nothing to meaty, their anfferinge. The /resit water lead goon* and the only heed that the nes u had were* low biscuit' soaked in the te,alt water. They had practically GIvV„I 1t' 5LQE of ever reaching land when the giterilea vrae seen beerieg down te the help. Teta Marilee' bad herself been he tile etorin Atirl had lot all her boete. Tee oeptain there/9m took his steamer as teemto the floating erre* aa he could with aaftty, and thea ;Rot 1110- bueya Atterdied to reptie, lty thebe rlICAUle• tile survivors, live in unocherwere rescued., The shipwrecked people, before the abandon- ment, could see munereno shark% atelier:dem &bent in the water. Tee decke at that time; were a wash, and the Wedeln§ moneteza threatened at any moment to ;904 VIS deck - The deck, it hisaid, ceuld nee beve eemained. stint more than heeTa 10PgerA so thAt badi the resew net been sill'eted the poor fellow* whould have been food for dee sharint the.. next day. The palatOg„Fre and mew of thee Ciaribel wore meat leinto the ahipwrecheil eeeele, who wece left at Fortune Telma. The Attu Idue steamer .Alvene enteequente. ly leek them from the Island to Near York - ¥isgovernnient of area Citlea, "nu iniegoverement of eeegreat writee Prof, O. B. I'VrtGle Hs Ecrilener's, "is line largely to the teem that ittcompara- tively small part of tteir inhabitants ores native to them, that a great portion el their inhabitant* are but temperary eneldeuts them, and. that of their nerramene resident/A the greater part helm in the toweee of & time chenecil their ;do Data. The 4e1244, in the irelivi heel a respemilledity far the geed of the community Is neekened by tho coue *tent aldttiog and alteration of it'll Mel:Ober/4 A emu naturally takes less interest In the- tiffeir.e that concern the welfare et emnpere. 'deo straugern then in those which effect Tole itter.de ; auct neturelly cares lege for the welfare of the commueity ef syhtch he is a mere transient member then any one to which he Is Nand for Ilte, and with whoato past and intere ho !emitted by indintoluble don New York le a city of changers to each other, without common traditions or controlling common intereets. Se out An aggregation of men with so few of the ale - menta of o true community lute never before been seen Iti such a city the eaciil lenti- trout is feeble, mid its part is largely tekert by the more "met et the necesaity of main- taining the iestitriticua requisite tor tee de-. fame of material interests. Civic: pride, one of the moat powerful motives in the history of the progrees of civilizstioe, hao • lost Ito force among us." Crossing Africa in a Balloon. .An aeronaizt in this city makes an inter- esting euggeation, says tho New York "eun". Has anybody," he says, "ever need the bal- loon in the exploration of Central Africa or proved that it would not be serviceable r Look at Stanley strugeling for years amid. forests, awampa, and eavage tribea yet un- able to rnake bis way into the intaior ; but would it not be possible for a skilful aeronaut to take him in a ballecia from the eset coast of Africa, proceed in the direction of UjiP,. and fronitb ere towards tbo source of the Nile, surveying tbe country as they went along r They would swecp actoes the country at the rate of four or five hundred milea a day, se taut they would meet with no obstruction. from swamps, forestu, or seveges. The bat - loon would easily carry all the provisions antie water required by the party during the tripe and the aeronauts might travel only during: the day, descending for rest et night. Years. ago Professor Wise tcpeenedly made voyages ot a thousand miles in it, and competent sky. flyers might now be found to solve the African problem through a voyage in an air ship. It is the only way to do it, end I shall' tell Stanley so when he gets back here to • lecture." It is to be understood that the amine nant who made the foregoing remerke is art. enthusiast on his favorite subject. Oaniages Run by Steam. A Munich firm has made a carriage pro- pelled by gas, which it generates from ben- zine or analagous material. The motor, which is not visible from the outside, is placed in the rear of the threnwheeled carri- - erre over tbe main axle, and the benzine used', in its propuhion is carried in a cloud cop- • per receptacle ocured under the seat, from which it paseee drop by drop to the gen- erator, and which holds enough benzine for a journey of about seventy-five miles. The - gas mixture is ignited in a closed cylinder - by means of an electric spark. After regul- ating tbe admission of the gas, the motor' can be started by simply turning a hand lever. Power is applied. by the medium of a -link chain belted to a toothed wheel on, ehe rear axle. The epeed of the motor cam be increased or diminished at will by turn-- ing the lever backwards or toward, and int can be stopped by pulling the lever. Thee vehicle is steered in the same manner as ae tricycle, by a small front wheel. It can. attain a speed of about tele miles an hour, but ha crowded streets it can be made to. move as slowly as an ordinary vehicle.. le quart of benzine is suffittient for an hour's, trip. What She Was Thinking. ' Young Boston wife ;(at meat stall): "le realy don't know what to get for dinner to. • day." Butcher: "Why not try some of these mutton chops? Good, healthy food; 18 cents - a pound." Yonne. Boston wife (puts hand to-- ferehead): "Let me see." Butcher: "What --the ohops ?Here they are." Young Boston wife: "No; I wag thinking." Butcher : - "About the price ?" Young Boston •wife : "No I was thinking whether you ought not to have said wholesome instead oe. healthy."-ntankee Blade.