Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-8-8, Page 333 Our Span Is omusing trad settled in W tern:Med to provement of ed the oaut he instituted hill conntry, Oen of dams the drainsg That system his ranch, ar quent allund _next rainy se thunder -she inventive for while his a about on th lake. A similar tr countrymen t the approac Our homer; a the giant II the bugbear and all the etructive ski mitigate the titre ; bat of those Pe of sericite dis ten compels i Bight. In th of the swum 8. ' intl the n tructioz: pletely r ch Nature • emperatu est Americ veg where rattier neon Mt 01)1)8018011 throw their d mit every bre currents of th often stirred througholit life merest° heat. The cities to Inge that heat. briole interce the fall glare chen dreg, b eil(1their she millions don physical mise children of z tival. But even in ions of Pluto tolerable tnral wonders in midsummer s a lady physic ed. a veranda the proprieta planter)were ateamiug hob "1 ace 7013 elan," said t would hew° mea11 to put "Nob boil Wets, willeun 10 stmada to ''sornothine "Would yo inquired the That quail easy to ausw artificial mee. of a body alr bincd ielittea auperfluctus ci thet asoribes human organ modern "alia strikingly ref tality during days; and it niatio fevers parte of the 11 but inhabited has taught th tenet unhos Sir Emers laistotyof Ce ions fact that ature of tropi tree, is 561813 surroundinga "seem to ha diming the te mer, just aa tore of their 13 fruit, a000rdii Davwin, form guided ano e cendants in 1 ily vigor. ages have ten itiye nations seem to con Grnetze (cold sweet milk) attractive to a and cakee of 1113 (grape.oure e bre a delight, us that in en for weeks ex rice and fruit and sherbet. dishes bece • the belief in' hot meals is stance in the tors, is more that the mos contented th a half a da and a liber end of the and rest g for digestion. low'a similar months of th March, gener the cool of tit a supply of ri of the house, slice of iceo Northerner hot tea. In other re midsummer cl Southern nei judioe can h necessity of 02 just When th cool,. when fl perfume, and the shadow o moonlight medal!' or pub can cities are hottest hours sunset ice -ire portable con their, -instru mounted ple prineipal aye whole park s romping chi' with utter d grass. At ha and nine 7014 • , ,.., • , RE. . ALTEE, i ing lig-IMO:0ns end:rennin rtMee throtigh . grass aaci bush. and not only telartgeoare of themselvetobut encotwa,giog thehstakyeung. er .0symete8 to join te . their , sport, feed wvoid, the prommtade roads co ac0000t of the thick oxide nt toe"oo mote stttteundieg evpry group of Welts. Nevertheless these young night•revellere ere up with the snit, the cool of the morning being. too precious. to . . be keit in sleep, but nnake up for a deficit/ of rest by e, long blesta an after-dinner imp of two or three home. , . With cooling diet frequent bathe ... light drese' a'nd-. 11844inn' ere* eea c;lit '1°4' rem. Wes 'in the cool of Inc evening even famine, of moderate. Means may naitig4e the afilic-,. ti enc of the bake.oven mason ; but twice happy they who can combine the advantage of Mat habits witn the blessing of a shady country home or of A aojourn oz the airy haghte et a etietto „Inn,- tair reeort-ie the uelande of the southern Alleghenies, for in- 8t8131.(.-equelly remote feign the malarie of the festestpg coast swamp and the dusty . , , .. ... , .. mpiootatzintlip.eariksers Y:festr Onzatt rgialthhiatie. e + _ . oteoee, an enormous areo of that. far w est xs indeed only a repetition of the far East -the worn-out, treelem tabledand of central Asia -and the firth explorers, of mir contioeut really discovered. all thet Wee new about the New World. The coast regiene of that ge.ab American Eden, on the other hand, .exhibit the "faults of their virtnes''--a immune= fecundity in fevers, reptites, and moequitoes, as well toe in vegetable products. Sultry heat and - - ''' - • ' ' tipulary inegete =he the eternal Bummer of our teetheattean coast region on Memel torment • Ideetteitoea and malari11. sil along the Atlantic seaboard/ from Brea to New jereey. Hero mid there art and Moil:lent have combined to red.eene the netural Meath vantagee of that region, Water -fowl, eeti- nob, daily melte, or dully ceek•fightsattract thoesmide to the itelf•Sperdel; seoPorts Of southetu Florida, Surf loithattoo, recoecile many healtiogeehere to the wuaged leeehet of the North. American IWAInp nelle But in the uplends of the southern Al. legbeniee or in dime pine gardexas of the , Sou* California Sierras, Where "All meadows and all woeds are evergreen th every dein sun " „ pg re.urn6 ev .. : And aP"1. . f h d I t aniume.r. h e. can e yea. a p easau enough, M convince eV= An.invalfd? th *1 title lovsekre. of cloture have not mat their gortsty p ; rase, SCENES OF , 13Spx,DFIFI...RING Iti. , Bie , , 1 wwh:ss ostintre.diTrohme. tfilanesit;ilesosi abhairreesr,rwithatha 1 t 9 wounds. much and pot the vict„lin-he'great .ha gevonk ehTroh:000to izoscescmtvin000Nve4rtschminsoki ettarier ,, and commeincetien, which is spreed ag peer Siberia, like the tramp Leasesge itt this -Whose ,_.e. . , . . _ . . emPabg, that the fernier dieclof his wounde,- " X remember a gonviet et, Nerchwe i named Bstomgra wen was an inerniy esaisor i oat' often brought penishreent upon hi lf i lie used to t 200 SOO I h • - . . go . oe, . el .e,tae 04, thee ter i etea ing from the other e: i , u Recation he was ve:ti.01144eddraiteokorno scrook ralideo,inde by being thrown i teution. being to beep- bite there teo'c lietwa: Bet the overeeer, whu was o droodren follow, ' . forgot inm easel ho woo ,,Datio. g. /th4.niahtt th, :gotblireerlecrustets heard an &Wild yelling coming from the seller i to - , „o, ..., .. . .., A.. ,Whrovi. outoteka heti been thrown. In the owning there was nothing so be seen in the oiler 'biitBatouitke's bons?, The rats bad, eaten the rest of kfm„ ,. price-le:reef° "IlIntam- aetZlaolrtnlve°TeteileIYei pt;12-n° gro-a youngmen of high rank Who h d been a captain e eei, ',set,: reouleute, reae 'w- am- Taixeh helaved by " all Woeh and run dow11. bY the hard life of the rainee he found - himself ufterahly linable, to work ono day, ano woe!), they tried to make him keep at it bwein4re:ueetkeepteuwee:zedfoohdefecemultwce nenetyt. 40Rue; was taken to the hospiten where he died . . .. . . , . WO TA Our Dominic:1o. - -Ad' °I bread riv6rs E'ud r4allug' 4tre94118' wOf hw9isled,w, miuldgiabte;IvesA itTrdeee.,..44terlettIgol'eeramiz, A foethiag maee, from their reeky wall ; pathless. prairies iinineaeured roll, In walre co waves to the Nerthern Pole ; Whoge tracitlege foreete ungeognered stand, . A. Wing tYpe of their netive land ; WhIlat, fall 04a tweet. ao Pathless Plains Are guarded w. ell by the parointain cheine, , Two, Meow; break on thy aturdY Alivrai It; „kcrlykstsonwtra-artehtrytg:947ernr's, And qraw-enthee for till,* everYtthed: Yet tar rea-unrcea. 2 er- betiedeoe ff,ttlle. _ ain,ygstilraleaniogLisotwnon !Ilia tzr:egamp,t)1,, . . T.,",h'in"Y 783;:ebilsenlesnebl:erriinvaenryelt.7ngile.rrl „,,,,, _ Thy grewleg, tome to the poles ii lieu& Thy deede are thng by a world-wide choir, Thou hardy gm of A bawdy eire I ktrdleegiplaCtrvae48Olf rallycrelnetntt'ine. I lmew thee net " a PIO" of blrOP Thou freeet child of a (Wield:lag earth I 33e4 "e ntY ettremere 1144 numb ed three' XS' mfant fortunes Were east QA thee.. SVIthia ntV Pelage) thy breeze** Strife Stirred all the blood into quicker life, wTwtihiusitlicuttorany7suktiareeirtiollmdtaire.osaaplealli egil:ntat.. 3, 1, Ixnteat Were braced aliko by tho bracing wind Whet *mild thy eana end thy doughtere bel Stoet heeded, germ:roma pure, end free, stottt,heartild* gentrens, vnre aee MIN And free Indeed Al the Rohe of daS% x0h1.5royteletclaairoldaotikehloe mattbr alobralle7 I agsiltitnrornd wintry. beneath the stut i fr„,,,,,,00 rah, fa hat ea a rabe heiea i °I;lr uAberu ebUdreu 041 Ors re tsa The glorious limo in atm for thees Foe OM eerVI) to the vhioro dire SPeePaii And thee Area sAcoyn, giBOELLANEOTTS. BUMMER LIFE. -e-e- 4aRphinasthistel, a4netixweio..selx 1,S.34etetltdiesresloo,lNit7::091 it were sent eg the 'Volgo for tide purge" The Niusicod DiXtf#04,-,40111. Young11.440 haed--Well, Arnt JAM: le9W did Yon like the symplesny coneart 1 AnntlItme (from the eamatrY)-`Q4* PrettY Wellt Dnt it klud e' apollt. the effeo. t to goe„ o that fool me M the fteet PteteluitEdi to drum in Uothle" • Irate ettizeOm•Who Wrote that artiole About Me in to•day's paper! Mac -'i, %lie riarg-tteb.in."17, eacirer,'—'11;41tha gthlterliduoi2ii'illr; lih lap awl the doehle chin op his biceps, iGuit;"1:1784?(4 41:r 1 71°4 134ve 3 6cliu"-°;oder'. g goca sty P. - . Loaielano Pogtmon (who Jo assisted io bpi dutiea 13Y 1118 YoUng buat)-0 why, Mary, wht are oil thegt poorel carob: doing hers t They ehoold hove gooe itt tho Jam mail. Yezieg Bride (who 11.3 11,3Aloaaehtleetohool miterest)-.00b, 1 hevo jaM peethem, iseide UAW I ahall bAve tiMe te cerreet the epelle 1-41V . . is.. submorine bridge XS' about te be mode between. Eleinere sod lieleingleorg. le will be mooed. in a deghle tube, having the wot Inc thr4i0x7:::ar 00b ttfo .t wi:oeuietnu ulibutehbos 40 tuetutiozbri an t logfy sfit elsloe 441: merged to edlow Aldpa to paae ever it . - ' A 2011.0 18t ;Ka thot it regeiree, the ana Of eXtlY heol'ottyloney bees to .kin a Man in feir health. This int cennot be too widely dieseminaten, -When 41440 Eri feir health wiettes to commit Suicide ',4 0.40414ga of bogey beep it behoove& 'hiin to eelect sixty that are ..j 1_t good health, ' Whether tide Pan be determined by feeling the andee a tbm fospot or looking at tr4 tengtie the achollet deeee't expleim The othcer of. a bank in vamont vosideo rallteeTedea2rOardthtrbealrreitelenhgie 71744/8044117 NOW the WaShingtori (faelal* are trying te i biro lute th lr c t (1017 i I b r in-eg ' - -or a''a- a A 'Q '" ItettatieS mulct centroct. .If he were reali7 tO beCOMe an immigrant, by f . V t 14 It RA* $ Ming te rem some .0 t c n , . teethe _. , _ onuord-woguemnarg40"-teduetutitliowa•- teheuwottrordgaimh_ear the law 13 1130 TeAten, (1_(.I8 being trouble 1116 Wa6hing all g M616 are* be'WeVer2 vPerluaePsa trebr6.geet timp "bert coteortnheo Ch. 16 34".fevbablY ' riT11 iooaVse iwaYe• Tle UoedStotee Govmenbox 11) 4 ' Pilanted Professor Toed, of Aothetat College OtlAervAtary ablef or an eXpedition svh* '11 h ' • * — sal a.seut to Afro* next foll to cbgerve the tooted oclipit ith p It her 22 Th ela id: "U.' U "ern b 4a' 0 natty w ; e up Oa e..tation A 01110 123 'Wee inland from St. Paul de lamed in th Portuguese proricce I Aug I Theileclip4 w e w et4 e - 'ge 441 " ° la t hi 13,-- ill - k ph, ° beg 4' 'elm* ' ' he afterneen, Wilt het it little over two hoot audit Is expected That the Observers 'will hove a free view of the color corona. The 1161111* 13 of the party will rhk their liveit In the Wort:see of toieutte, ler the mime -to DE Augola is moat don er us to stray a . . g o Set A Pareeeportere or whom die within three, rout . he aiter their arrival Thom who wish to nye ion d ' ' g-ou Who dope not t-ewill be cheered by the infermos den that this duration of human life appears to be extending. Common Hose applied to the problems at existence fa dein muds to . remove the emelt whoolt make for estx/y dig. solution. People are indeed leaniug to Mold the death traps, and to operate. the human machine withauch oare thet it will lase long. The point to be remembered le that in youth there la *reserve power which must not, by dissipatiou or .ether unnottiral agenciet, be drowu ripen. Lot that power be economized, oed it will stand Ito poises - tor in good gaud when sickness or old sga overtakes him. The wilful waste of vitality on the other hand will lead. to the proverblei wain wan in due time. Gayer= Beaver. of Pettkeylvatils, edit mates that about $2.500,009 has .heen ex - ponded for the robot of the sufferers by the. Conemaugh flood ; end of thie *um nearly. $1,100,000 in cash, hes passed through his hands The flow of contributions has hy no means matted yet, as on Friday last the Govereor received $11.000-$8.000 of which came trom Germ:my-and on the following day between 62,000 and $3,000.. The people of Jolanstonli aro now proteating against any .further expenditures except in the way of dired gaze of money. They assert that the greatest extravagance and carelessness boen have en displayed, and that they have re, ceived no adequete return for the expend': tom Grave statmente are made with reference to the condition of theincliene on the British Colunittia watt Ie is alleged by Mr. R. A.. Pocock in tx letter th the Victoria press that the aborigines are, se a whole, even more immoral than when the white man found' theni. As art illustration of the • result of immorality upon them it is mentioned tha one tribe, the Kwaguthi, numbering nye in 1853, has been redueed to 1,898. The decimation of the tribes is marked even in the later Indian reports. In 1888, for natance, the Cowichan band is reported to he.ve decreased by, eighty-four persons, the west coe,st Indians by 20S, and the Kwagntla by thirty-eight. Vice all its forms reigns in supreme and the officials are powerless to check it Al Ica der Baranoff, er 911 4 .a ti.„ Bsoobxfoio rotriayloiaT, c ., W , P vvas sentence. to i er a or e ,eg- i• •t • i' t• ear eoh met, ea omp lei sr in reyo u up. Y_ e -I id to a Boztoa " Advertiser " rePorter .14.4- e .1.• 1 ' - '''''`."4; . • “ eer. ere it .n. ot for the charity of ,the Pete- Pie et 118 1.1 awl Slbetla 9° eeirrlar w°1-44 ever liee to see the end of mil?, , i,,,(,) 4 Tr 0, ,,,, T." eizadtiaa af the. ettY °I -9- ..". which. NO soznanylprisonerettarlafo-r W:ter:a. A "'great' it la ta" eattwa °I t° ch°°,3,e "eel:Ilir e9eweeneluTb'ethrZ fi:Xe' matt ws'ea a Q - -. Q . - ag When ou co an of 800 men itiurneYt ' . r zuP Y . ' Lend.trreP: e,scot:t.:ci !If the soldier" with '''''3" uaY"m's' Mm i'Lur 66ar aar 4ereman went nn„ end down athe hnee of. eo le gotto F V 11 ered to „mum our ...„,elereture.. Eee co,.C1..0 1' Ine foul the.erewd the lltoneY being 1..)a 'ate baga ana' earrieg alsag to Inc 161.26 ataton) where it. wes dAvided, The .ansount i .vory an leed 204leete4 was 89 great that em oo thle`, 3mtg°.vlotagtac;oeutti:°;a4rutato-mi,ttehtoierpeeowplitelt. Iia eve little thwn throueh which You page • !-Y ' o - IJOU - each villager takes elf his hat and crosses - - * ' • - jelfitetifttberaa:IPteb°17:5Uankliartulk illtneusY:* tar': tthilea 1:014114 vide are termed by thepeople. " All time the Americod people have izeard Ana rest/ atw" tb°,4Tfr"4.1/A4 erl4tIrea-17 till PriEmsre exiled to. theria is true. The holt haa :Rover been told. The giddier* le Siberia h • holt a ' are a "fir for eile =Moto w to we ex. 1)1e48e8 thaw "14°10' It ma)" be transluted fora!,1Y au, 4,904 are deadx but •not hurled,' Ulla 'a 'a° tr°11* it lall' nrtav.4eatb' "Typhoid favor le the womb see. urge of Ile mil"; More conivitets ellae of b that bthhea ° lauY 14%ZZ% boble°,1/1 aml° a.. tgl'utteuri a! 90. „ .... the .. - . . 13.: al,ta..?.ePiler et iairtia4,_ alaerPgdraer! a° ''"e 64"4"6 """mlg tat' route 8108 m -KW tug- sure breeders of the ditietsee, which masee (heedful ravages outoog the pdocom, frho fever broke out a..nithig ue "Mee NCO were at Tebalek, and the prmonere died at the rate of thirty or forty& day. 'Wag dole with the fever myself. The nrigoners reoeived moil. 1 - ' a li: - - T h lir ca atten Alice, sue at it was. o o s was a great Mopping piece 'for trenelents, awl at that; time t„izare 'see" re ;051 convicts emadded in vat -lout_ harroose opeeieg opoao _we iii. oloeuro, whit:1z woo etroney fortmed, N* ,Anoeher woe from which rho emoiete eutTer in Siberlo la the coldTimcolosv Siheriawiter is iatuerandthe oonlot en the line of meretebleto walk fat their blood in circulation boosise ea their cliabee, suffer much. I remember one day oesx the el of Tare in the Province . -* city *two. ' he z Tobolsk whee it WM 90 era- t 11 ores o„ _ _ ,s h sotY a d, fnsolit e baggage *nee even y _ !WA AU en Wri-leab three women and ali ve men 00 da who chilled throe h. and *rota ix , „o Is wdf I id emitod d di as thee ;cadre heSedi " aa„, by itlel:, one loud I" r - h " - II° - - brouttht along to t e next eta ora 44 Some of the prisonere died in this way ry week eapecially in the Brataki atom . evt , „ A , I th din sib - - Moja le we"e On 3r 0 or ary erten wtgaa,".r. 1.: viot life in the mines of Siberio it ,, on d it • 'been we 1 illuttrottal hy cur a y routme at the 1 glad. mines of Norchinak. Wo gots up At 4 look in the month: and had a breakfast o c st - ay of black bread ond a bowl of gruel W. nd ' h d Morked in the mines till rt on then A a; ! re gruel and sok b "dr' elnistIlls lu I I" f - t. Th t rel. saw , 0 a 13 000 c ,iale* h a raaa ern let was °item norlie_MeAV,_anti yettlig _ .1 me tell you leo% hall bad elm y le you ris ' • ria ,. tire a I) °niI or n i e . S . "We worked in tee mines again un. , —it dark, Supper coexisted of cabbage or some other kind. of soup, meat every two or three which days, potatoes or other vegotobles, wh were frequently rotten. and black bread. In the mines we worked in true miner faehion tvith pick. and shovel and hum on hat. We still wore our Oudot . They 130101 083110 off The, conviote had to live in them Alla die be them. " Such a life, of °envie, sooner or later calmed the death of many convicts. The politico' prisonere, many of whom were of high rank and totally unused to ,manual labor ond to such a diet and manner ofliv Inge suffered the Mot, and emanated gen- erally the fastest. The ordinsi7 offenders. :thieves, common malefactors, eta, who stood prison came from the lower chimes,ishment life much better, for it more nearly reseno bled in its diet and daily toil their former life. I have known ordinary offenders, '‚° from the lower classes, who Nemo stout and strong, who had lived and worked In the mines for twenty y.oars. "Tho women pnsoners at the inmea Were .. employed In serubbing, waahing, and clothes making. The delicaxely nurtured ladies among them who were political offenders did not genetally live long. . "Some of .the severities practiced uPon convicts in Siberia aro justified, it must be 'said. Many of the convicts are the wont sort of humanity, including murderers, thieves, highwaymen, and all kinds of offenders. We have one murderer in :our oomrannity who killed. twenty•seien men. . ' "The political prisonere were &road' to mingle with this Clamed convicts, some f ---- "- them the dregs of humanity. fi 0111- - - I cone -" M pally of'800 which left °scow there were forte: eight political prisoners, four of whoni were women. Sixteen of us were the offi. Gera of the Shleselburg re eiment, who had been court•martialled for alleged complicity with Polish conspirator% Three of us offi- ore stuck together and worked together. I ,do nob know what ever became of the others. I suppose they are all dead by now. . .. "There is only one discos in 1000! ever getting back 'to Russia when one. is omen sen o i ria,. or a convict ts suspeote4 t t Sim ' f 11 ' ' .t. haying further political whop* ie, de- • stroye hie hope of a pardon.• . "Many of the convicts, as I have said, are dsperate men. Here is a story of the re- venge some of them took upon a Siberian who had murdered one of their ' number .: Thief Siberian was one of the Mongolian race . called Bralski, and he had a farm about 200 vents from Nerehinak. Ib lay in the way by which convicts escaping froin the mines generally passed. The region was Mostly a dry deserb, but this Brataki farmer had a 'good well of Water, which • -atti eel e ' the ,convicts, especially the green. oaeo who had never heard of him. , '.' .91) was this farmer's custom to call to a convict whom he saw passing by wearing a goo4 pair of shoes or, a good. 001811, and entice. him within reach, and then slot him irae a round hut, which he ilia, 'loop -holed all about He killed arid robbed a number of , cenobite in 'Ads way. " One day a portly of seven.ieen convicts went by the farm, and some of the younger ories were for stopping. The more experi. 'enced convicts dissuaded them from doing . this, saying that they would surely be ohm. BY means of a stratagem five,,ef the convicts captured the farmer unarmed 1411(1 away from •hit:lithe his loop•holed hut . Then the best means of putting to death the murderer were : dia.'', cussed. Some were for hanging him, but, one convict said : 'I'll show' ,You a better. t,eict:htnit.' wey than that., The farmer s lege were' :ripped up with a knife, font. the 'inside' of the ankle, and a lot ot finely ohopped horse hair was rubbed into the wounds, The hair max L. OS\VALD,-* P. h Areerion neighbors have en Mon of a Yankee ieventor who 'stern Mexico: awl. . at Moe de- adlize his gerdoe 'tor the Ma his stock farm. Having notio- less of the imed water. eullItlYe A serveY of the ueig/111"m° and by an lufieulme eetublue,' and dikes managed to collect of a considerable territory. if ditches he concentrated tlime id greatly enjeyed the owe. non of detail water ; but the ison opened with a magnificeet 'er, and two hours? later the igtier had to run for hie late, oonished cattle Were tossed / billows of a rapidly._ Heins demo obliges thousenos of our a abandon their city homes, at x ef the midsummer iteaeonx re winter form, Jack Proet, cymir ef the 'Edda. thYth: watt al our Northlond forobothere, resources of science anti con- 11 have been exhaueted to affliction of a km' ternPera- 6iter May the eaulPleteneee atriVangea become?: a eatiee lomfort, end in raideummer of 'A inventor to gook safety in e Art of octunteraoting the heat r aue, we ath: indeed, sadly thins of the tropics ,• naY the :I our Northern (Atha often )verees tbe, arrengeinents hY himself moderotee an excets e. In the verY midst ef eur m demote, there .are hoiatedt A traVeller may Paaa A Mid, in Puled 0116.1-ert, Whsu the Lea the meridion, leaf trees niteat shade, but withal, ad. . ttli ex air, or even meate air elr MU, since their foliage ia by a lively breeze, wh 1 open fields every pulse jo; %gnats in the geeee, breeding thhitecture of our Northern IlettelY contrived to aggravate Gr zollee the high ramparte of It every air eurrent, but admit I1 ho vercalaunwhblasts rc efololfow men to th,un-ace ukit. ike-oveue, rs dooming caloricamaximmo . en the ry, at the very time wiz atilt° celebrate Me as a fee. , Hades the favorite compata manned to pas* their time in csr.t, and common 801130 Call do tallying the 'martyrdom of the Men. Ono But:morning in July [tin of ray acquaintance enter- arbor were the youngaters of , (the widow of a Tonneasee itrugglime with a breakfast of milk.. L are folk/Wing MY prescrin• m dootresa ; "hue fresh ruilk answered better. I did not you to the trouble of boiling it 1" exclaimed the materfant. liaguised amazement. "Why, reason that & person needs mum for breakfast" aplease specify that reation •l'' nulled reformer. on would, indeed, not be quite sr. Why shotild we euleloY oi to increese the temperature ready suffering from the corn- at: of atmospheric heat and othing? The popular theory Y eine out of tett disorders of the tin to the effect of "Cour to a" of the bugbear Brymir) is sited by the increase of min% the ollinax period of the dog- is .a auggestive fact that oli- are ,almost unknown in nianY copies, reeking with. swamne: by people whom experience wisdom of the plan, to Conn- xt by a refrigerating diet. m Tennant, in his oNatural don," calls attention to the cur- in warm weather the temper- oaI fruit,pluoked,fresh fromthe a degrees below that of the traosphere, “Plante," hesays, e a faculty of organically re• coperature of their sap in sum- minas increase the tempera- lood in winter." Now, tropical . sig to Genesis, as well as to id the staple diet of oin nature- ,tors, who exceeded their de- ngevity, and certainly in bed- l refrigerating diet must for ipered the aummersnn to print- , and the lessone of instinct firm . that conolusion. Rothe . raspberry pudding with cold ,akes the Rhineland restaurant 11 annimervisitort Thegrapes a Provencal hotels de vendange bablishmenta)makesanotorium and lady Mary Montagu tells ainer, the Turks often subsist 1usively on cooling food : cold , milk and darrha bread, pastry Sonata of our favorite • made. me . Insipid by cooling, but he ' importance of three daily rholly gratuitous. No oircum• domestic history of our armee- 'idly establiehed than .the fact civilized nations Of antiquity smselyes with " a meal and i 1887 light brealsfast, 1 supper, postponed to the werking.day, when 'delve !ranteed abandanb facilities The American Spaniards fol. plan during the eight warmest i year'and, after the end of . . . ally eet their peincipal meal in e evening, but are apt to, store pefruit ,in the coolest earner and often go downitairs for a Ild melont as a frosb•numbed 'mild go in-clOore for a sip of , . . . • , . , lpeots, too; the martyrs of , our imate could learn' a lemson from Others. What strange pre- Nye .begOo . the i belief in the neding our ' children to bed, evening ' bet:antes pleasantly mars, breathe their sweated fawns and going rabbits leave , . ! the ,thiokets to play on the ountain meadows? The ale- So parks Of the Spanish Ameri. all:Cost abandoned during the . of ,the'affiuucon ; but about; am *enders arrive, w*th their 'eaten:ales, musicians tune up nente, . troop . after ' troop cit, cure.iseekers ,gallop .down oho cue, and half an hour after, the !mums with promenaders ,And [vine eisjoYing' the balmy night I:negated:of 46* and "damp" '.1 past ten youngsters of eight ra are still met in bevies. chase. . Death Goasecl by Illegal Ilogring, Tit G 0 1 f c,_ ft - „o, repstere :4,7 rtutleri elatrate4tertecto27;h7C4 teen„ gu!„lti of„oatiedng the aeaeotiono a Men Vrize..Qtril.Arkinceahno,rwil:wiaawittibili eingua eir, tre..te ot cbiou 8 1)012* 4144 % ShiantIgn Alga:: en-- „___ e .11 , , yap% oy mons 41,0 Wee A lietteP, *1'; 74;44t9e.1...i.,, .....1 %.....1 .........1......3 „Tom rrrria "44' .444" r41...q4"4-• OiCle44 e 0 ten or t epee miming rens:meg ley %ray- thirro lam ogo la the or:entry ayaluat e - e ew vier. "n0440,041 41739134t yinetetiareat.ofewhifillepenotte &mitt labeeer weal: te the laced morket and bought two haeltets fi sl• r W'len . . 0 n tan Co ti,. en gem' g aewaY he Fit a shirt end a purge an the top .(olrootwhilesdh;abakszostes.lioloszes.sbsessperseliCeetle ,setdat:ltettne4g: a___ __.„ ., .g" •Alro arttaseti wtthout beteg petheived, Al *on ea he nothed, the len he reputed ib to ctawho APted ae street olleemou,mut The lotto: otowe impeded *hat a certain tTVhAtiealocaosubstakhleaud to a abelindier nbaotutoilLthn vaebood, ho oe cooeteatlpilferg ego, roue 14.4W Mutt ,g a li , 0 theta lie therefore got hold ot the fellow a u ea Jum a a al his an ones OA 4 an u ng sae: plciont to be correct, mode him deliver up .„_,,_ , ., _ we PrePerrY TO MA owner. The thief begged herd thet he might hot he tome were the motet/dee, heteethieg and falling °nide kilos The soldier there. ore a c in a ow ows cot ea att f trn k bi f blows hie le d d bade hira get out of the neighborhood. The thief, however, determined to boom hie revenge. Next ' I h t t tlt men ng e vren, o a tallier t ' a e a Milo awl load A .Complainb age net the soldier. He old that he heel coming home to see his mother when the eoldier -sto e4 him mid took by force f fa .h, PP ram to a * r au a purse con mu ng two i t d t ' I th a II Qum uss • The meglekete Watt much, incensed by the story of such misoonduct on tho part of a men acting ail police ofdeer eopeciolly as the viotim h "IT t f tie Wm.*: meta oy. o aen or a r au 0 Eddie eV tiered 'him to restore valet he had token. The soldier told the truth kof . the cese, Unit failed to convince the mas- ,__,e, who gave fon creme to the on. SU ms ted to E th thi f Th Idi .rted Iv o 8 e . 6 4o er — - got back tile purse and abirt from their owner, but erhen ordered to produce the money, too, he spoke out plainly and boldl The =estate la a rage mode two ef Ii; Baton seize tho man and dog him with whip" fenced of ox sinewe, without counting the . blows. As a memo booting indicted on his arm azid back failed to reek() the money . forthcoming, the eoldier was thrown into prion, where he died lathe night from ex IntuitionThe magistrate re per the . ted case as one of death from disease but the matter ; having been brought to the memoritilist's noticea postonortem examination was held , , and it vises found that the cause of the death was the infliction of too severe corporal pun. . The magistrate was therefore stripped of his rank and regularly tried when the fads above =rated were clearly roved p. The raemorisliett then recounts the gen- ences a e as passe upon e i eren t th th h d th d'ff t persons concern ed in the affair. The thief is d a • • - con emne to stranmelation after impnson- , men; such being the penalty laid downin the law for any one whobrings a false charge age a ano er, iin e reen a sac- in t th *th II le th t th ousted dies under examination by ecourgbg. The magistrate was guilty. of claming the death of the soldier by flogging him in an 11- legal manner, as a whip of orsinews is a for- bidden instrument, and the beck and arms` are puts of the body which are not allowed to be beaten. His sentence is therefore one hundred blows and threeyears' ba.niehment,thousand as the law requires in cases where theoffend- ing.officer has acted on public ground, and has not been influenced by private motives. The two lictors, by whose instrumentality •the fatal boating was inflicted, must be pun- ished one degree more lightly- namely, by ninety blows and two year& banishment. Referred to the Board of Punishments. . Twenty-five Kite of Oaten, Gilliflower leit't mach of tx. Rieder, and the other night when, he Wae reading te his old, fashioned w.ife oat of. a newerper h '4' ' g CAale accrete AU Areal OVA Getne Wantan hosing letafte hoftwteW04Atyublvee bitlirturdreragahrrner4dTirb) "taienty five kind er setters" ' Law Sakeal" oxelainded the Old holy, Alt e3lle s1nwaltecehuesde.d ctaober YP.-PeCte,ciietlit ineOniarlt "twosty-five kindor gotten No wonder thereoea meay ungd peope atd rePYtaulns newaat lwhen Ieeo kale "am or 'Una Orin ila 1 3* Audit we wonted eon:Mid:3g right litinatotne A we get* abridge a um cloth when th 0 . . )3 , e beri got a poir of troueera medo out Osten Oath. NOW everybody 'hove "lasties, Twen- - 'lire kind le gorterel An', et course, other logs to:match! Title it 'whot Stroh They ani Nory Ganeett Peer's dein' for us" Th he plotted her epthe a cl, ' ono x,c „ , o woo. es ool., Wan her knittu3S.-ETerts owengs. AN MAINE EBRO. a, ow aMount:intguideSved the Zvesorkee pla Companion and a Traveler. While in. Interlachen several Years lame: we were told of the daring attempt made by an Englishman and guidea to athend the Jougfreu very early in the Spring, The asceigo at all times dangeroue. wait at th soon almaet Impracticable, but the Bug. lishmeno Intent upon malang the earliesst secant known for years, with difficulty per. Bustled twc guides to Accompany him. nee left the village one bright morning, with ropes and Alpine atocks, their only prote(tion, againat the treaoherous ice and maw. Upon rooting the mountain the first guide and hero bound the rope so:steely about his waist), 'leaving sword yards ho„ fore tying it about the waiat of the English. man -then severs' yards betWeen the Eggliehman and second guide, and then, bound together, they began the meat. After climbing for hours, and haring poet the line of perpetual snow, their path led near & yawning prat:Woe, 'where a tretteher- . ous reek giving way, caueed the on. ond guide to faU, and unable. tio regain his footing, he wag hurled over the edge of the ohasm, . The Englishmen, not knowing howto auto port himself, was dregged with him. But the fi rat guide understanding in e noel: their perilous anxious threw „himself upon the ground, bracing his Alpine stock against) s. boulder dice, and so supported, with almoet superhuman strength, suatained the Shock of their fall. . . Imagine the horror of the Wm -mu 1 That wilderness of ice and anovr-no human being near save the two helpless men dangling over that awful chasm -the guide's only eupport the rook of ice which might atany momeut give way, methane heavy Weights on the rope which bound and out deep. into his body. in Yet the hero, though knowing the impos• sibility of saving the men himself =tithe itn• probability of others ascending the mountain for weeke or months, could easily have cut the rope and set himself free, yet he deter. mined to be faithful unto death, and aa long as strength. would last to held his two cam- peptone. . , . For hours he held the dangling bodies, and etrength was well nigh -gone when sounde' of voices came froni above, growing steadily nearer and nearer.. He fancied it a delnahm, yet* cried for help, scarce hoping that aid was near. .1. party of six -foolhardy as these three: though more fortunate -had ascended the mountain from the opposite side, and, hearing the cry for help, 'hastened to their' Resistance. With difficulty, they raised the Englishman and guide, who were only atunned and terrified, the hero'astrength lasting until he knew the two Were safe and then he lost consolcuenese, and so remained for many weeks. - When elating' Interlached the following year we inquired for the faithful guide and were told teat he still lived, but the rope, having cut almost .through • his body, ' had left this strong, ,courageous man a helplees paralytic. ----, &time line, French (pronelly)-Nom ha" mein en e, - - TIM ' ' ' (Terme empire anything so toll as oe great EitT°1Teleer* German (ludignantly)-No, And you don't got nodding*. so Moub like Limbo nor ..I weller'e We klv ah"" /"."1 1 - . es .........., Nude by a Religious Maniac', Wootaaw. Ind., July 2s- -lire, hisrthe /links has been =Med, charged Withnutr. der, and her hushandDoniel aa an 'ageetteory. D auks recently became a Crank ou xeligiou, and, it is *Id, compelled hie evlie to strangle their afteen mouthie old *Mid as essaorldee, 4 - al Leung the Almighty had peomitted to re. parrot the child on the third ugq. When Hulks was arrested he had been corrying the dead infent in his exms for two days. --..-•-..--.0.------, _ _ - '-.:-7--...7.---,a. , :-. Why ite was inva on =se zignying 44 So neighbor Yager, you aro down on . * . , * prize fighting, en ? "Vell, ne 'yonder, Dab punnets got mo down on vow"e "How long ego?" " Vell, dot vett aboud dirdy year long go, *hen I met mit dor ehow vent yin, Dat VOS der Robinson and Like .Show. Dot Yoe on Buffalo, New "York. Dere was a leedle feller fon Itiehumlande vhat eay he grawle der .ganyras under und gone der show in midont pay- I say: t Youm don (1. Und he say:'Yonm bets my seaweed life Ivill Und den I valk mit him up to deka hie coat col. 1 holtd dhrow him der lo" oud • aber eat Mi " a .i. no could gatch him. Him some herdt fisds make nod ahunip und &Moe MO,pefore die vay und dot yay like some mongeys, vlien pefore I eoMedinge know I somedings on now und lay der groundb dereon so d 'd k dee& like some mackerels fishes. Und vhen I vas to life come againa, some feller say: lager, youni peen some fools. Dot vas a brim fighter.' 'find den I say; S I -13 - feels.'" " That, then, is why you're so down on prize fighting, eh? I "Dot's vhat I say, peosiuse dot brize : fightin vaa down on me vonce. " ...• • ome re erenoe o enomma ion ElhHdS P f fD ' t. e a One of the assistants at the Posteoffice happened to be standing at one of the dello. ere. windows the other dey when a buxom damsel of eighteen Summers stepped up and asked it stamps were sold there. Upon • being told tint they wete she esud that she wanted to buy a dollar's worth. "A dollar's worth ?" replied the aesietant "01 what denomination?" The damsel showed symptons of ember- rassmenti and hesitated to reply. ' She twirled her ahead fringe nervously and cast her eyes about to see if any one was near, moved a little closer to the wmdow and final- ly asked in timorous voice: "Do you lief to write it down ?" ' "By no means," anewered the courteous assietant ; "that is not necessary, but I pre• sume you have some preference as to the denomination." ' "Ah -well -yes," replied the stranger, hex face' turning soerlet," I lief siame. I generally go to the Piscapa1 .Methodist mY• .aelf, but the fellow I'm buyin' the stamps far he's a Universal Orthodox." -Sunday National. ' __-.- Fonts Of Habit. ' "Why is it that Cawdle hail each a gait? /reacts all the time as if he were walking on tiptoe." ' ' , , . - ‘• Well, you see he had three ' babies in tptickittooession up at his house, and the poor fellow •actuallycan't break himself of gang around as if he were afraid of disturb- ing somebody." ' ' , , - • He Knew. A teacher was telling her little boys about temptation, and showing how ill sometimes came in the most attractive attire. She used man illustration the pa* of a cat. ., "Now," said she, "yon have all Seen the paw of a oat. It b, as soft as , velvet, isn't 10., t: yemu,,,, from the class. . "And you have seen the paw of a dog ?" ••yeaero,•• " Well, although the cat's paw seems like velvet, there is, nevertheless, concealed in itieoniething that hurts. What is it ?" No answer. if The dog biters," staid the teacher, " when ho is in anger : but what does the oat do ?" ::.Soratohee," replied the boyf 41 Correct," said the teacher, nodding her head approvingly. "Now, what .has the 1 cat got that the dos hasn't." if. Whiskers," said a boy on the beck seat ; andt•the titter that ran around the class brought the lesson to an end. • The Yonelis Mate Lost. Tonoireo; Aug. 1. -Mr. Thomas Adams, mate of the schooner Olara Youel], was drowned on. her last. voyage from Toronto to Fairhaven.. The Clara 7Zouell lett here last Wednesday morning for Fairhaven. About . six in the evening while' the mew were at supper, Adams, who was on the roof of the cabin, slipped and fell overboard. 4 seaman named Norton. threw a line to him, but he miesed it, . The boat was lowered and the oeptain and a sailor pulled to his rescue, but when they had almost reached him he went down. Considerable, searc11 was made, but without ' avail. ,Adams was about SO years of age, and leaves a wife and a large family. The accident I:warred at Thirty - Mile Point and a. few miles from shore. * - - HOW GLUCO3B 18 MADE - ' A Description of the Process °fan Interest! . • . • - - hie -m. anufacture , ''' - ,of .The process ,of making glucose will behest understood, says the ,American.• Analyst, by. following the corn, from the time it enters the factory until it: runs out at a spigot, a °tear, odorless liquid. The shell corn is first soaked for several days in water to soften . the hull and prepare it for the cracking pro. cess.The eoftenedcorn is conYetrad by eleya toreto one of the highestritorieed the factory and ahovebo4. into large hoppers,frein which it; passes into mink that tnerey crack' the grains without reducing them at onoe to fine. meal. The cracked grain is then conducted . to alarge•tanie filledwith riming water The hulls' co the Ccirn float at the bap of the Water; the germs sinks tit the bottom, Mid thepor. tions of the, grain containing the starch, be. timing graduallyreduced to flour by friction, are neld in solntioninthe water, 13yaii ingen• Lone ,procesi both' the bane and: the germs are reinevekatid the flour part now held insolu• tion contains nothing but starch,and gluten. Thisliquid is then made .to flow:over a iteeieeof tables, . representing esgerel some in, arm and, the difference. iu the epecific , , . - . . . . gravity . of the two substances. causes 'the. gluten and starch. to , separate without, the .use 'ouch's:ideals, The glute,n is, of a .gelden• 'yellSyreepler. aed the starch snow whi!te. Tly, thetimetie4 ' eliten. has boon .cereiletely eliminated the starch assumese pleetio form and ie ollected ftere the tieparating tibias hyWheelbarrotaful endotellen tO a dialog. ,CS the sfarch,, room •where 11 10 preparedd i commerce or, splaced ins ohernicalapparatua to be converted into glucose. , . - Wanted Things in Yee,ging. . Mrs. Roneymoon-"Algernon; deer, 1: wish you would put on your red necktie- for diener.". *. Mr. . 'Honeyonoen-.."Why, my love " gra. Honeymoon -"Because we are have radishes, tontatoes, straevberriee and claret." • st • , . Preparations have just been completed in I Buffalo for an electric street railroad, form- ing, an extension of the ordinary house -car lines Out to one of the Suburbs. The system , „ . is that im.which an overhead wire is ivied,. and it he now isa operation in 20 or more Cities ' Of the 'United gtates. • Four motor cars have .'been provided, . each . capable of 'dr -airing, ,,,i'irri • ordinary street cars, and of isttainiug a speed,• if necessary, of 12 miles The street railroad 'offteials are 'eenudene that as Boon- as the Ruffalonians , have bad en opportunity of judging of the ' new system all objections Meta generel use , will vanish. 8-" She Had Aged, Young Husband -"What? You aro: . . . twenty•five years , old to.day ? . Why yet:, told me e year age juit before the weddiing that you were onlY twenty." . Young Wfieo (wearily) --"I. have aged rapidly , ,since, married."' . , . babble of k Tewes- , The land on yr , , , , bury took platie-APiecerif ground of about' fifty acres in extent -is to be 'offered tor sale $iriall atilt is, there.are,nob many.spots.more Memorable in England. thou th0 field -where- on the long struggle between the houses of York and Letmester Was brought to 4 eleso. London Daily Telegraph. " The pigeity Should not stand so'near the house. It is unwholesome:" "013, no, . doctor, you are wrong,: My pig has nog' been sick an hour yet."