HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-1-11, Page 7inietell,--E-11"="11•16"*.—
Ily hadea
holy is not over tall,
II 000tt a little maiden she,
Wet1 who am beneeel her teran
Am more conteet therein to be
Than ever =heed yet, I Wein),
To bow before hie righbfol queen...
Slylady bath an eye of blue,
elihat bears its ehading from the skY,
403d_ealePoses to pure and true
ehothin her timid breast do he
TAW every thought arising there
eagle deop the blue as with a prayer.
lidelady'efialr Is like the light
1311:mining a falling mist
It dents adown her ehdulders white
en waves that nothing can resist,
'eeet nun& her very lightest touch
When strayeng o'er her face too much.
21'7 VOWS bath said to me
" oleo sweetest words that one rney bear,
Tot Midi every simile
That to the 'met's hearb is dear
3 mold not liken it to aught,
With so much IDESIE is it fraught.
1 hevo my lady, not as those
Who sip thefragrance or an 'atonal
arm every moment dote( disclose
an ber eoree yet more priceless dower;
43.14. if it brings me weal or woo
I O&M not, or I love her so.
STUART LITTNGSTON.
• IN FLOWERY cl.AFAN.
A Visit to Nikko ad Its Fens
Temples,
VAST ARCHITECTURAL PILES,
They Cover Intedreds of Aoretedgermee
seasneemnenthinations of ennurto end
Mt—Studies of the dameneme.
hirtemenina TO HIE.
linnaitzil Scent at the Kneen' ion of rea meal
Noy. the Wrench needier.
"As tie the confemer," said Marshal Noy,
blikTel me alesie, I heave tie need et biotite
emote." At thee blue plume, one of the two
neeneedime damersig, said to hito :
"Yon
are wrong, l'bienho,i," and thowireg
Igen lde OM ornamented with several
edemorene, added : "1 Am net se illustrithe
youplents 1 na also a veteren. Well,
meaner leave I borne expel! es boldly under
Ain TA when I heel previeuely recommended
my moil to
tame few worths, pronounced in tenet: of
munition and rtaletnaiey by this coleslaw,
reppeneendte make a deep impremion en the
T.demeleel. He appreaohon the grenadir mad
maid to him with gentlenem, teppleg him St
oleenkler " Ygtil are nark:ape right, my
need Miner. Thab is geed advice •ohich
yen have given me." Thin turning to Oen
Mont/guy ; " What peleeteen I memo to be
lasurnmented r "Abbe ale Pierre, Cute de
Sendai: Snip/ea." " Beg bins to come. I wil
antenve him tater my won)." iree counsel of
the reltd soldier had been listened to.
Noy refused, naturally, to place 'Mention
emmitin know and to allow Ins eyes to he
ementiaged., He only naked Commandant
Satiet-Bias be theme birn wham he was tee
astead. Be faced the platoon, which held
thee zee:Attie 0./3 "the receven" and then,
reet nettlieide which I shall never forget, elo
noble wake it, cairn and dignified, withent
nay owagger, he took off his hat, and
parefitlog by the ether's meneetit - which
nem teamed by the Adjettanb de place having
no eve the signal foe firing, be preneeneed
Nunn esteede, 'Which I heard very diet/nobly ;
'"Fienehanno,1 velvet agekeet my sentence,
13 banor-en At them killS WardS, hewao
placing hie hand* on Ede heart, the delmna-
itlEM WAG heard. He fell as 11 ehruck by
Unlit:Aug. A rell of &nine and the ortes of
og ea Poll" by the teeeps formed in
orpatee brought to a ohne tide lupin:tome
nprererony.
Mote fine death ramie a grant in:premien
• on zee. Ttoresitig to Augments de lei
79.4eginjoque1in, colonel el the grenadier'',
whe wets by stay side, and lint0 deplored,
like =leen, the death of the brave dee
breve" 3 tad to him: "Thom, my dear
Rrend lees= in leaning to die."
--Generate Roclachouart
AN esteSEIDAN'S 'Mane
WOO, Nem— Pee -
pared as I wen to be
p teemed with Japans, the
more I :leo of the emn.
try the mere it fiseol•
name me. The orate -
op mind putt: aro a
eef, owationous g r d e n,
every renere fool: util-
ized. Where the land
rieee above the level a poesible irrigatiela
pine trotei aft! piented. Mulberries toe the
food of the silk worm, and fruit trees give
variety to the strettehes el rice, millet and
vegetables. There level anciterraceid fielde ere
hounded by weeded' beightm Often be-
t:When the fields are hedges, not to melte a
augerhellending the epenetion.
Om aeon, of the temples are either ehin.
ing wiih laequer or covered by iremtheolate
mete, aecl the vilifier tei obliged to reemyei
hie beetiesti the threahold, putties on a pair
of twit soled ;dippers.
In one of the templea are three eoloesal
gill: Iluddhae, 27 feet high, onehaving the
heed of a horse. In meet:hoe buildbag he a
revel vieg heeler:ante beaubifully,decoreted.
It hi about 20 fiteti in height cend 2ia &ante -
ter, And couteline all the DaddhisCio saeretV.
heeke, which are very volumietons.
hem 13.V'elded giveng ialorMetilm con-
:•airied ia ile;!guide heolise whinidts of libelee
ozobtit to one', in 'the epet arid it le
in:potable to couvey to otherm the impree.
MAUS Wade
by ail' tale invlith :lone:ration,
Bab wean I tell :eon that teeee abruoterte
liTTOITO OVEli DairDEEDS Or AODriS, .
sad that there are milee of stateiy avenue',
yen an !orm some Wee, of the extent: el the
tamoue Nikko temples, The amount of
haman Leo f epereled here ---and generally
hborrif high order of artietio
omen, Meg enennuate. The tiohnone of the
materials ueed ie also' to be considered. It
eatitneted thet theee teraplee could not he
reproduced to -day for $50,000,000.
Deferring all spirituel queetioue to tho
Chaplain, 1 weeder what Is the ethical value
tif snob tenaplee as these be the people of
:Tepee. They are vietteci by thousands of
pilgrame who show all the outward 'orate
oevieion. Centel:: ie it: that the own, -
by to see such worke ef art: mutt be an
barrier, but rather to kedioate a boundary. epithet:0 education. The ethical iesbruobion
There are so fences "icon ha adayle ride—that f Je rude, beg ib Benne be inolude all that 4e
in no real femme ; semi:tinfoil one corneae to f considered ementiel by the greet body of
a fight latticework of bemboo, like the work "
of nldren. The trees renge trent the slim
and symmetrical bamboo:, otith tope am
grill:end as ostrich Asthma, to maanive
pines, oe,rophers tend aryptomeriae, uniting
elegance) with amplitude.
THE PEOPLE INTEREST ME
more than the landscapes. They preeent
to the traveller coneeent adapeetlent of
means te endo approaching perfection.
Mesta of them aro peer, butt with-
out ;squalor; half naked, yet nob
Ohriettane. They heve
' A SUPREME GOD, AMIDA,
and mealy euberdinabe *deittitte, to whom
they appeal for special blessings. They
heave e eyetern of rewards and pm:either:mats
sifter death, and the mese elaborate phil-
osophy of prayer. I tell the ohaplein that
so loaret as n great majoriby of the beetnau
race sbill neea to Wife a fire built under
than to keep them :anywhere near correete
I do not gee ohat the Oh) istien mieeionaries
have anything new to offer to these peeple
anitomati ; industrioue, but nob without egill be Lkely to be accepted. They
lelmixe and its fruits. Everything they ete already taught reverent:a, charity, kind.
heve, feats the bamboo gutters end eon-
duotors on their simple houses up to the
beet prodnete fif their arta serves; ita par -
pose admirably. Even their woollen pat -
bene and °logs, their (thaw rain coats
and oiled paper umbrelleas seem to be the frleolono „and ohildieh in their theolegy.
very bent fer them. They have arrived ab Some ef tneir gods are
their methods by long experience). If their RA.T3-ERGEOTESQ11E
civilizetiosa Le net of the highest charaater;
iatnidsecheameptfluetein46,Adthdethoathnieinettels:iort trvbactibity. I
av5eariePraEBveettrbey filen:m-1e eking bully. The god
of thunder weave a halo of drums, whit& he
For inetanee, the god of
dren, the perfect manners:- of the EftaaliCHS,
and, indeed, of the whole pepulatime, zed sapposed te be vigereuely beating. The
ono gate the impreealon theft here le a Rea of winti carries around his neak anin-
ono „iv,* „rt telgAz th, Tni„1,33„jea slim fleeted ban and is very evidently a great
to them many useful lemons.
Alter returning from Aloud te Yoko -
and spendiog ono detytreing to
Nikko has" natural beauties enough to
&goat 144.12.11 we had sees, end yielding to
the tempbatiene el curions whion are never atteeht vieiters, even if it had no wonderful
tomplee. Its mountahas preseut a great
duplicated, but always new end original,
varieby of by lines, but the humldieyof the
we started one morning far Nikko. At
climate +moors them from base to eum-
Nikko ere the meat famous and elle noels
etegenb temples, in the highest state of
precervatioxf, placed In econery ab once
avian and beautiful. These (featly wenista
of tab am not se touch temple s te-day AS
NATIONAL MONUMENTS.
It is national pride rather bluer: religious
°zee which keeps them in the beet condi-
time °tap who visits Japan cantina pain
Nikko by. Hence they etend among the •
country'e resources as =ale as its porce-
lains and lacquers).
As we approach Nikae, inountaine of
varied forme come into view. At the aba-
tion we have climbed '2600 feet frern tide
water. and a ride of two milee in jiurikiehan
steadily up a long, etraight village street In-
oreases our elevation 200 feet more. As see
near the hotel we orese a rapid river, the 0„, a„pp„ottmity for „oiug m„y pH,
Delyugawe, by a nedistoeltial hoige, quiteminas, pnotany in mon moods, eaela led
near to another, the sacred bridge of red by a
lacqeor, guide who desteribed to them tbe
used only by the Motedo, and gee thiegs they were seeing in a not unnaueloal
to our renting place tty the mush) of stag-eong, /or the Japan(se 'speech is evident'
oamades, Welch came from every direction 1 daegresable to the ear. Thome pilgrims,.
out of the neighboring MAMS9.4110. 1 NVIII MEC WIG women, were peopkt of the poorer
nob undertake to eunmerate he huildinge revel clam Troy were generally bere-
legged be the knee, and in the case of the
eme wemes, tbe eireot wee not pleaeleg.
Speaking about days of rest, the Japanese
are entree:it:clew Suteday, with other Ideas
from the Wort, into their pablio .efficee ;
bub it Is nob generally el:nerved among the
people. They have their own days of rest,
howeter, the let, 15th and 28 oh of the
menth, hoe a geed meey festival deys
throneh the year tn addibion.
One thingl hevo noted Is the absence of
imagery, which detraots so muoh from the
pinafore of travel in ;tome oometriee.
nese, honesty, veracity. The result of this
toenbing be a Madly, urbane, deceit: people,
comperlogfavorably in alb the fundamental
virtnea with any weeteen people. It Is true
that there aro many thine which semiear
--
Ne Dieepoves of. a erarge Arnoures of Rroffortr
Not His cern,
LS the SEEMS of God, Amen I I, Timothy
Denim, .of Berrydoenaderry, in the county
Ceiero, termer, bring doh awl wake on
my kr, but of enamel mind end waryo
emevert—Glory be to God i—ds easko this,
zoy first and hot will, en °old arid Now
Teetruerritne,
Bierso---1 give my eon/ to God, when it
plerne Ban to lake it, ewe pothooks to me,
ler II ranee help lb thin; and my body to be
tented en the ground ef' Berrydowe dairy
rbirsiaal, -vinare all kith and 'kin that have
robe beheeeinc thooe naio live after,
Toeloaglog lie me, aro berielloopace to their
weave iend may the sod not tightly over
their kfment.
Barry ma near my godfather end mother,
who lee egnemtely altogether at tbe etlaer
Ade el the nbepel yard:
1 lave The bit of ground, conntadiabog eight
areeremeoralo ould heat aeree—to my onideet
one nee efter bbs deed* of hie mother, if
ohe Wee to eurrive loim.
dongintor Mary and her laushend,
'Paddy (Meagan, aro to lows, the blear now
eitalee to have 12 black: hoolen.
ireelidee.my seemed boy, who wee killed in
the war In Ameriky, might lame get hie
Ink. a the poultry, but as be hoe gone I'll
*NM Is hie wife, who died a week
basalt -:tdree
1 bequeath to nib rotbokine freelt eir from
.eenevere, all the Bekaa ef robe tea they Gen
taleeisd the birdo they eren *hoof,. I lave
awn the env, enema and stars. 1 lave to
Paten Brefferey a plot a reetikeen thee I can't
Sento% and may God leo mouth.' to him.—
ellareireage.
ITeleffe IN Iran Vizor soon.
Ali Endstelat Pkyafithue on the Value el
SetuUihs in lidekonsa.
• Dr. B. W. Richard:wee says that austere
0011 preveile, deepite all our emitary towell-
ing% that the oecupente of e stoic reem in
rhs private hotem should be kept et all thine
In a derkeno4 room. • Not one time in ten
de Wa.e.tilsn a *tole room. In nit:0 daytime .te
-AOitt, Mooed .with the Ughtof the enle
alremee inverlibly, before we can get re look
ati the ftwe orthe pettetet, we are 4e -bilged to
'request that the blinds be drawn up, ie
enter that the rap of a much goatee bealee
Roth the meet able phydolan OtNe ever hope
to be may be admitted. Teo lten the
vorapitenee with this repeat: revere/es
ditten el the room, Which, 123 the Oahe of
darknoes) it Almost) inevitably one of die.
order everywhere, foods, needle:Mee, furni-
ture; bedding treatelaced, duet, stray lea.%
tage in ell direction%
in brief, there is nothigie go bad as a
dark Mok room. It be as if the attendants
were expecting the death of the pablent,
And if the reason for it is risked, the renewer,
asteconeineent am the sot The reason
vainelly oft ed ea that the patient eannet
bear the Babb • as though the light could
net be cat off from the patient by a otattedn
or soretan and as though to darken one part
ef the reora it were necetsary to darken the
whole of 11. The reel reason is an old
superetitions one, which SEISS PPOYailed so
inteneely, that the seek, nuffering from bias
moot terrible &settee—smallpox, far lostence
—were shuts up in darkness", their beds ma -
rounded with red curtains dewing the whole
of their illneee. The rod ourtatne are new
pretty nearly given up, but tho darkness is
still credited with some mysterious curative
virtue. A more injemious practice really
ocrald not be melatelned then: that of aerie -
nese in a sick room. Ib is not only thab dieb
Ewe{ disorder are rettults of dierkneee—a great
remedy is la&
Sunlight is the remedy loot, and the loes
is mementoes. Sntelight &filmed through a
room warms and clarifies the air, it has a
direob influence° en the minute organic
poisons—a dietinative influence which be
mot precious—and lb has a cheerful effect
en the mind, The sick should never be
gloomy, and in the presence of light the
ehadewe of gleam fly away. Happily, tho
hospital ward, notwithstanding its many
defecte—and it has many—le no far favored
that it le bleed with the light of the sun
whenever the elm shine. In private prac-
tice ttte same remedy ought be be extended
to tbe patients of the households, and the
flint words of the physician or surgeon en
entering the dark sick room eheuld be the
dying words of Goethe: "Mors light
mere light t"—The Druggists' and Chemists'
Gazette.
net A.- neetniteei,mice teee ee tee ,
blower. One of the three coleseal Buddha
we see here has the head of a home, for
;some reason which I have not learne&
L Nor, ,Lak for W ha German.
Thee oteenteror raw talking ever college
atiltY.S 611, tit7.0 *lab the other night.
an remember Professor Heintemenu,
•Oleede you 1" linked Blake. "Be wan the
neln Gorman prebeescr."
reeine. ether fallews smiled, nodded and
welted.
" WOO," Blake coneinued, "1 Atoll
menu 'gonad bow one day he tried to ex-
- pbcte to the difference in menningbetween
'We Glenn= lima 'gine' and taesent'
aleie Bait he didn't mem to )(scow just how to
G`41 ib, but fireelly he saihad in. .
"'Vora, shmatiemene," he reatil, "dor
.fietalhertenee be stasis does very. El you nhoulel
vane zoom oeffee you vonld ray: Vaiter,
redoes roe ZIPSi Meson cafe, alreeny I' But
mad yen Amid vent soom voter yeti voald
erey
'Vatter, ming me zwei glee beer, so
Igreleik like yen con Verstehen, de, shwa.
%Immo ei "—Boston Buflgei.
, A girlie Beet etweetea.
fool oenvinced, and this feeling Is bailed
eepeio modal inquiry, writee Edward W.
Bac
in the Ladies' Rome Journal, that four
,tenleoleard besaolum of otudy, with ote or
tare, lel the ores, are eufficamb for the beMtb-
iti
oirmorption by may Oriel sererage reentel
ireipeettna AM if 1 tvero esked to entline
0.,07.4 p4114001,4 studiere they would, cottelet,
ities a thermagb Enghlah CORSON covering
Walla) gam,,, gramenale, oempoeltdon and 'hate,
etio mewed, hide* ; thJxd, literature ;
atriditeateth, mathetinitien And add te theme,
•oulempltehasetete, the eienfly of mete
Owe:wed are emends, end a girl has n euffi.,
eateneneentee of Andy beifete her, with a due
maned leer her phyeteal Wafer% Where
other braneltee af etncly are deemed bedb ur
emenemany it le wisen to debt:tit:As rather
Mena ad&
mit with the riebest or feilage. Dermot -1y
hppesite the hotel aro sharp peaks, which
'nowhere eke woeld be naked rook, but
thane are covered with fraebery pine and
bamboo. Tale region ie famous' for its
autumn colors, in their fine etagee ef glory
at the time ref our viaib. Tam are higher
mountains beyond, and from them flow
none of streams, tumbling dome the de -
olivine', in (swedes of the meet varied
charm:ter. You can scarcely walk a hund-
red latepe without coming upon% new water-
fall width differs from all the ethers, eaoh
having its special feature% of bean y.
A wend vitit be elle great tenpin on a
rainy Smithey, whioh happened to cointside
,vrteh
A jAPANESE REST DAY,
Mleare swims to he no geed reason Why a
Veheilettireel student elecontd, nob heleng to e
feenieteli teem% If his team ,getis beaten all
to hoe get to de is, to delegate the worldly potty, whieh profit:3 by the bounty of
Weembetee to Make the natal objurgatory yielterr, gettlog o sinall feeneifel of beaue bad the deepening anteme ooleetr Of their
Osenatke, far every penny eentrIlanted, an old Pledisa Whig% dEti teeet by reit Co Tektee
. ,
composing this
FAMOUS GROUP OF TEMPLES,
Urnal lees to &north(' them.
No werde eat convey an idea of their
elegence or the ricimest of then. decoration.
Ne Earepeau cethedrel or pelece Den coin-
pree with thorn in the letter eeepoot. Of
COMESE, elegy beak the enajeei,te peep:eel:ions ol
the fateoue Chiteatten cinirokas, but in
variety, originality and rlohneon el erne-
mentabion they raurpeee the finest produe-
blew' 4)1 European bulldoze. Metal of teem
eave substructures o atoee, but tho rich
eireete ere produced by breeze and lecqaer
werk, and by each carving RE 00Iy 'Tomato°
artiste heave nocompliehod. The carvings
ere generally on the exteriore. Memy arsa
gtoteepe, but all are full of life and action.
reatella frieze of targe enotakeye, :me of
whieh preesee hie peeve on he: lips, eaother
on hie SSTS, mad a third on hie eyeo. Also
elaepleg cart over a gereway, es lirelike
that ene erpeete to sae her move if die-
turbed. Oarside end inside the most
CHARMING HARMONIES OF COLOR.
aereet the ateention. We &Aymara) from
()our); to °sure, through these wonderful
gateways. finding oech mere ,beauhilial than
the ethers, And :wound all, and among all,
the stately oryptetuerie,e, edernieg e Inoue
stairway here, stretching to right end to
left in grand avenues. Nowhere else have I
then geoh combat:indorse of nature end ark
As weadvance we constantly s menet, open-
ing new vistaco:Oh:amity, Red Witer we
leave the hitt oeurb of the temple there are
200 atone steps, divided in nur groat stair-
ways, which lead up to the
mansotzum OF IETAStr.
Tho tomb itself, shaped like a small
pageda, is a single breeze owning, ofa lighb
calor, produced by the admixturo of gold.
The mummeries include a stone tathie bearing
an immense" bronze stork with a brim weredle.
stick in itSI mouth, an acceese burner of
breeze, end a vase with ertificial lotus flow-
eret and leaven in beets,
Turtling from this we pane on to ether
tempter, through other stately aventeee and
speoures court('to tho mausoleum of
lernitem equally 'beautiful, though leen pro.
ineely deeerated. You meet imagist:a tort,
thone peouliar temple gates of grin:tine and
breeze great stone lamberts, huge belle,
etoste fountain% so •fiesely levelled that the
wester flows ever every inch ef their o'reum-
bronco in a ellver film, the rich cetera of the
breeze and the lacquer werke-the lubber
tiomothoesi vividly xeete-leaping ceecedee,
colonel eoulpturee, and, above all, elm
oaermone trunks sato' the gracefai eeliage of
the treen.
Ira the of the minor baiiclitige Mee wit.
needed a religious
DANCE BY A IMIEST.ESS
Me wee neibber young nor beautiful, and the
darning wee not erlifyine to ye, althotigh
hor toovemeate wore full of greoe. She held
in owe head sorbmil in the
other et fen, aud mho was (fled in it diaphee
nom, flowing Tett, whkoh awAyed Wide her
movement%
A litmerous exhibitlen Wee that of a pie
bald email home, known Me the ,setarpel
. SELDOM IS A BEGGAR SEEN.
I remember only one, and that one bit
Yokohama:. And one Dees very few cripples'
ore melformed people of any kiwi. , ;rho
Jepatease 4E0 generally 'cued, ereob and
rugged, even these who feas indloete
great ago. Blind people are rather oommon,
wad especially coneplouous, as they have a
tegulear oceppetion, that of " shampseere,"
or " misseure," They walk through' the
.streete, especially in the evening,conetantly
Wowing a peculiar whittle with two note'',
Witi011 is their way of ethistling up busi-
MEP. Tbey are &molt always reheat and
erect men,
and the busineee they tollew le
lefts entireiy to them. The lower chyme
are better developed phyeicially than the
hiVor.had planned to go to Lake Clauzenji
axed Yumoto, eixteen miles farther Into tne
eneunteine, but is pereistent rain prevented,
as we were essureci that the reads would be
irrapreetiteeble fat jiterikishae for forty-eight
haute alter the robe ceased. The Nikko
mountains are
GREAT RAIN PRODUCERS.
WIthin a recline of twenty five miles from
Nikko there are a dozen meuntaine ranging
from 6,600 to 8,200 feet in height, and all
withba fifty rellea of the ma. When the
eenthearib, wind blown over the Warm Japan.
eve current:Which flown nertheatitorly near
the moot and Endless ageineb this mountain
barrier it les like tthreveing a wet sponge
!spinet a wall. So this whole region has a
great rainfall, which acipounte for the Lamer -
ens eweame and case adee.
As we could nob go father into themonn-
tales, wo made the meet ef 'Nikko, and for
three days explored its neighberheed, tak-
bog long winkes through the stately avenuee
-which rut it every direction over the mem.
tatn eloped, mad up the banks of the eWife
Daigawa, whom) banke at one pellet of
eepeciel beauty aro adotneel by
A HUNDRED STATUES OP IIIIDDNA
itea sow. presided over by me of colonial
size. , Wherever We ge about) here, while
elea notural deanery ts Wildly pleturetque,
wo find tho evi fence of a long ooeupebani,
awl the remeiteetatione of 9, religioue cult
pervreive and biehly oropte. Libble
templet: wad shrinee, soulptured Deddhee
and probosciy a neribed monnmente line'
every penh through the wont. Thoueande
of weremen have toiled, and hundreds Of
aeineee of re) mean talent hew' Greeted, at
the heheet f,:f a rellg one meat:100ton willoh
MOOS httvp °amebae, oe the revonaee of
Intoner& No (tartlet the art:tots were poorly
petit, en they eke to.day,
inetuotteeny wo turned away from Nikki:,
pop an 4nne seri (lime out to glorify ite'
sun asnoo" TO A CAT.
But the Cat Was ea:trifled and Defused to
Budge.
A cab turned to done I
Leberers vvere excavating in the Gelber of
the Forby-seveuter Regiment Armory en
Marcy avenue, Wrilierneburg, Pao yester-
day, when they °erne upon en extraordinary
sight. A workree.n removed some debris
whit Iris pick and BeW before him a oat with
hie tall in the air, He eon bent beak and its
spine arched.
Hesatd "Shoo there 1" but the oat re -
maenad anotlenters. The laborers ran up to
see the cat. They found that lb had turned
to stone. Ib looked as netural as life. The
bead and lege, the arched spine and the tail
were parka.
Ib was a petrified oat. How it °ems there
and how it gob petrified is a mystery. In-
quiry wao made. Ib iran learned that
Vitlila.m Godfrey, who WWI the armorer of
the regiment ben years age, had a pat cab.
Itt the year 1883 the cat dinappeareel. The
armorer theught as much of bee eat that he
offered a reward for its return. No trace ef
the int eat wee fennd.
It is Puppeerd that the oat ren under the
cellar floor ef the armory in pureult of a
rat. In he eagerness it entered some email
aperature, from which ib toned retreat im-
petrate, and perished Will%
There were small springs in the gronead
and :he earth was impregnated with lime.
As the oat withered away, pertiele by par-
ticle, the time in aviation was deposited in
place of the thane, and in a few Tears the
oat was stone. The petrifiel cat le now OR
exhibition in the armory.
American Railroad nompsrisons.
Amerleare railroad property eppears te
have become says Begineering, less produce
tive during bbs laet Eve years. In 1887 tho
aggregate length of line worked was 136,989
miles; the revenue aneeired was $931,885,-
154. and the net inoome realized was $331,-
135,676. la 1892 the aggregate length of
Ibne wetked had increased to 170,607 milea ;
the rough revenue acquired waa $1,191,-
857,099, !nut tbe net profit realised diel nob
exceed 8352,817,405. It ether worda,while
the net receipts per mile worked were
$2444. in 1887, the corresponding return In
1892 did not exceed $2,068 nor fertile worked,
ersarzTanoomasaterreerratemmainrekmaamerossaamode,
Cis CI'
9004 bread p;a.„
gand 1,)S-ri) bh .but ;s
,)
to mach. N.,(.s affricate.
oaaatk
Th
altm
COOk7 butwas
ifre..4 and siekoftii.
la,te 4a n atsrhe 11 of iard,
he. .bot3slit
6¢ leen/ Shortn rtifetet9 arta
ett
116Y 'lb
more *aft e..4.1;1 be.,
cause she Irma@ bettor
foodjatici :Igo:J/41d eat it
Aleut .11 uttPleaseott
alter effect Now
glir PR E
hair/5 foond the BEV"
allot *opt heAttlifur shelf.
)13.eAr made •
OTTOLENZ,
ff
made °My by let„
Wellington and Ana Streeta,
AIONTHHAlo
•14
•
14. 1.01'
'44 ,is t
"•••,:ga.
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescraptiort for Infants
and Children. Xt contains meitber Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregerie„ Drops, 3oothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
Et is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' 1311 ;0 by
Milieus of Mothers. Castoria, destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting- Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles) cures COT1Stipati,0131. and flatulency.
Castoric. assiTnilates the food, regulates the stomach
Send bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Caste
tOria is the Ch.ildren's Panac.ea--the Mother's Friend.
eastoria.
"CaStOria Is an mreenent ;medicine fc.r chil-
dren. Nall= have repeatedly told. mo le;
good caeca upon their children."
De. G. C. OsGooD,
Lovt.ell, Masa,
4°Castorin IS the best remedy for children of
which I am acquainted. I hope the day is rot
for distant -when mothers win consider thereto
hitc.rest of their children. and USe Castoria in-
stead of thevarioue quack nostrUms which are
destroyieg their loved ones, byforeingopium,
morplaine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sending
them to premature graves."
Da. J. Zernmmeor,
Conway, 1-0.
Castork„
Castoria ia so well adnpted to children that
a:cora:need it as suporiorto any prescription
Imowa to me."
It A. linemen, K. D.,
111 flo. Oxford. Se, 13rOoklyre N. Y.
"Onrphyeiciate• in the children's depart -
merit have spoken highly of their experi-
ence in their outtdde practice with Castoria,
and although we only have among- our
medical supplies what is /mown as regular
products, yet %ye aro free ta confess that the
merimet Castoria. has won tie to look with
favor upon it."
UNIT= Hosen./..t, J1iD DISPniainr,
Boston, Masa
ALT= C. Surrn, Pres.,
Tao Canto.= Conenseeen, tra Hammy febeset, New nedoek City.
Menem. trireme TemeneanmeneenneeM wenn s z "g07
-BEER BY A. NEW METHOD.
Citargleg the Liquid With Pure :Carbonic
Acid Gas.
M. Schwarz, whe is the founder of the
first' solentifio echoed for the art el brewiog
in the United States, be said by the New
York Herald to have discovered is method
that will greatly improve the quality of
beer and make it much more wholereeme, as
well se mere agreeable in ante, and beeides,
cause it to keep tomer in good condition.
The new method of producing foam in the
beer and giving it the neoesaary life is by
butpregnating or saturating the fermented
product with pure carbonic add gas from
cylinders containing the chemically pure
liquid carbonic) acid gas.
The ordinary method is to dere the
brewed, fermented beer in large ...nit% or
flanks, when it remains for three, four or
five months. Then vete are stored in
moms where a very haw tempehature, of
aboub 36 to 40 degreeo Fahrenheit, in main-
tained by the working of pewerful refriger-
ating machines. At ilia low tempetature
any after -fermentation is prevented, and tits
yeasb suspended in the beer :which was
taken from the fermenting tube has time to
settle at the bottom of these vat% thereby
agbag and ripening the beer. From blame
vats bhe beer rano into lenge casks or 'rata,
wherein beer in the first: seege of fermenta-
tion is added to produce is lively after -
fermentation, which gives the beer it high
peroentage af carbonic acid as, called
"We," the cause of the foaming of the
beer when it Le poured into n glean Tbie
carbonic acid gam in, of course, created by
tbe aotion of multitudes of yeant cells which
are eaerled into the old beer with the aew
beer.
By the new preemie the beer is brewed
and stored in large vete as in the eld way.
FPOIR theoe rats, under a certain air pres
sure the old, sound beer is run into vats
wherein it le saturated vet% pure carbonbe
acid gee from oylluders which contain the
chemically pure liquid carbenio gee. As
seen as tho vent on a cylinder is opened the
preeanre, of °emcee, hi reduced, and by itt
well-known phyeioal law the liquid ill
ohm -Igen into gate and absorbed wider eon-
too/table presaure by the beer rename
direetly through the apparatus bit tb.e
racking bench. where it is filled into the
email shipping keine The principle of the
premiss is somewhat eirollar to the
charging of water with carbonic said gas,
as ie done in the making ef sada, water.
Dress of Short Women..
IN omen who aro short and slender ?mutt
avoid much trimmieg on their skirts, be
they stout, or slender, as they are shorter in
proportion from the waisb to the feet, writes
Emma H. Hooper. For the same reason
they must ereib wearing large plaids and
dosages. All full portleas of tne weld must
be moderate in size see the eleven bertha,
belt and vent. The short, wide revere now
worn are becoming, also round =lite and
thorn pointed battquee. Jacket fronts are
in good tante, but the umbrolle-beok hasquee
give a short figure n cub -off appearence, as
do tiny capes, while a closeeettleg jacket
adds, apparently, several inekee, Materiale
most be selected with itt view to making the
wearer leok teller.
Thankful, Net Freud.
Pleased as David Livingstenent motber
Wait with her sores earn°, and wbbh the den
formica shown to herself, her religious
trainieg prevented the induigenoe of
materhel pride.
"Yen are no doubt prated of your eon,"
Mid an &etch gentiles:eat to the aged
mother of the groat mindoestry-explerer. "1
son tharakful for him," annwered the vener-
able manna
An Ambiguous Answer.
Haiccide—I thouelit yeu was pan' te
merry the vvidder Drown and her farm oe
fart. Raba you popped yet!
Tornero-Yas. I told her I thought a
heap of her, but I'm dinged if I know
whether rat aocopted er not. All oho said
was "For the land'e make 1"
THE TIDE ISLAND LIGHT.
Emile Insprovemcnts Which Will IllakeAt
the Greatest or Its EDW.
The present flash light 8.13 Fire iaiand
to be thenged by the sulentitution ef an
eleotrio ligisit, the new light to have is
strength et about 240.000,000 candle-power.
Thie will, says the Elect, ical Review, make
it by far the melt powerful light ever
Placed in is lighthouse tower. Oas of the
lergest tenses ever construated has been
recently purahated from Eremite'tend will
be brought from Ceice.go weere it was on
exhibition during the Air. This lees Is
ever 9 feet in diameter.
The present light at Fire Wend fleshes at
minute intervals, eaoh fieth being of five
moon de' duration. The raew light
will Slash eery five moon& and
will be less than is amend in dura-
tion. Tea, fleshes will come with the rapid-
iby of lightning, and will be se quick that
beanbags can easily be taken during inter -
vols. The old lighe le visible under favor-
able coadetiote about 18 miles, but ib is
estimated teab the pewerfnl eleatrio rays
will be discereible rally .24 ranee under
similes condition% By the aid of the new
lens the light will be threwn en the
heavene, and Its refisctien will be seen with
eaze by vessele appreaohlog 100 mike' away.
The only light in existence whir& will
approaole it in power hi the see riff Hoare,
Prance, vehleh eac be aeon reileoer d on
the heavens 00 miles at nese Dia candle-
power is about 130,000,000. The greet ad -
ventage of the new light wile be its power
to penstreets &leg. Ot (Leerily °nights can
be seen a short) donned only, ben it ill
believed the new lighb ab Fit's Dhoti will
pierce the lege and be vleible 10 miks at
5513.
Down With nigh Prices FO2
Electric Belts.
$1.55, $2.65, $3.70 ; former prices $5, $7,
$10. Qualty remains the some -16
ferent styles; dry battery and mid belie
—mild or strong current. Less than half
the price of any -other company and3nore
home testimonials than all the rest taa
gether. Full list free. Mention this
'Raper. W. T. BAER 4fat CO. Windsor, Out:
• A Strange Coincidence.
One of tho te coinoidoecou thee are as
neyoteeleae ne they Ore Itakreethig occurred
itt connection e. ibis the 'teeth of John Nolan,
an offiier euprior court ef New York.
Legit Bei:today he "took e. notion "tis make
hie vat, ena, A3 he wee iu excellent health,
was chaffed by friends whom he naked to
witness itlt wee eigneel Dna P.:ealed that
afternoon and tee mxr. dee, he died of heart
diorama.
otl/}141,0.5,1t1.7.>44.11.,,,,14,144.1..1411,,,Wegftql1U1.4,11:091tWete.M.4
linweriby of Notice.
Freshielgh—Slowboy is no use; tfti might
as well drep his acquaintance.
Sportlekine—Whetie the wetter with
him?
Freehleigh--He'e only got ene notioe from
the dean Waked on his door
Itt Lehentee parrieides ate tied hand and
foot to stake:: driven ha the ground near a
large ant hill. The ants are theft' /Minted
by eticke thrust into the entianee of thelr
dweilinge, a guard te get at a respectful
dietance to prevent) ramie, and the primmer'
kfb to be eaten attar. In forty-eight
home nothing le left of the orlminal butt
neatly (fleeted skeleton. .•
1,4
Sick Neadaehe add relieve all the troubles inet
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsines ,s Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, ke. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
4‘A
z
Pieadacho, yet CeaTna's 'LITTLE LTV= Pitts
are equally valuable in Constipation, etrink
and preventing this annoying. complaint, while
they also cOrrect all diaorders of the stomach,
stimulate the 'liver and regulate the bowels.
Zven if they only cured
HEA
Alai° they would be almost prieeless to those
who enger from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodneee does not end
here, and those who ante try the will fine
thole little pills valuable in so many Ways that
they will not be xvilling to do without them,
But after all sick head
I
is the bane of so many lives that 'Mae leerhere
we make our great boast. Our pills euro 15
while others do not.
Centreas tame Liven. Prete are very small
and very easy to Woe Oen or two pills nieke
a 'dose. They are strictly vegetable and de
net grino or purge, but by tbeir mettle action
ease ell who use there ite viers &tire cote:
livo eor $1. Sold everywhere, or eent by omit,
CAT 11Et1011111 00,, Son Volt
411 II imal D- :la rtioe,