Exeter Advocate., 1905-05-04, Page 704, ,
I414
11111i6 0 1111E E
,CT
9
retQutk of. Indie doub orile
tb Ilritieh people re.cognize tbe
c r it that hs nove eozne Oyer the
«TAXAN. c at.Onit bet on Asia and Europe.
ttist7,teset: .....,,seeeteeseettl*". •
,A,PS• opzDEN
; 1, •
VAN, 7*tiottlte povviv..xtis. *tt •••
DaseleSS ChtlittgeSie
9 Xs NOW- the Di'ctater
Of tint 30../ted1Se
Putpletie
:14"•44-lisvelsi4144,14 Ii '
_t
1ukiIia1fl(L ,3,
i.41,0444.44 it, ,44,,,c9 .$ ,„ondroti.**titilia-Oc
• .
, • ', 71,- 4 ii. i!..,nce.72,,,,ot__ t
.., c that leer e.allitte. elatitipeser iiiititit p letifeatiiiiirl*Iiit
'toatnI 10') t A,900',:',itcr-dtk ,,,7,14$„ii4:1,:1aive-;,arituvkk,l Ao•itt4Aket-4,,,,111.
, ...
s Illtk :AtO:'alir
kik' ''',gr,cift.0 that), -aii ettesietirtt Isettlitm 1.'4'43' tit:tt4ttreo* 1, ,4 '
. X I it,.i4. Meow.9 tainal , ittrioitiatibeteeeS;OtllOgintek.1.7:01i*rx:.
44 :.t#11)1,:41te4gli :de.Pis •efe the.' tie tit'S telly etteropttate, 'Manlier sat
tot , ',Cleeolliel° Writes. AetI0Itt WItittt cle*IiiPig tk, ,ith 'tl* JitittSitsets antl;witittt
iU itet ...10,10nel 1/4, ,W1iU- l'Ite- . *at 'the „Iteetitaii. •1;,, etigiane tiresii-tikitettloi•
4,littiiteeSttilisiittPulate.ftin,e tress Ite, Mikado •as .4iii:leitriet,. :there Van
— (
Ui."Ii..tFtil WO her 'tittle ,e,o orgetnite, no, otitnurst of teelignationS `
ta rtsetiecee Of' China. Itetsei.en naval . ...There Was -almost complete eile.nce
Alteltit.11Sit will find:: lite teItt in he also oxer Alia painful intraticel of the
e.
reportstielfietr areetitiltappilytttndisPute
ded3
-.-- 4.."1.;011. 4
Totelo' nerrenjui "t
Instrizctors will teach 'the
compe w t t ngiisli actory
endeZ ic artisans. A share of
•t10 emir ets ley the world is the re-
Ward.sot auneees in 'war. The .tapan-
:i4e4Jeafet_ stotes'' Sistetdralf. There is
the merchant, e'71 -MTS. :white -hams ateeatly
Wit , up .ft commercial system by
meando not always cora-
Vein& themselves to sound morality.
Japanese Imre/tants have no senile ot
)3tIt11de. Fierce energy will' be
throWit into the organization . of
China. zetentied- commerce- be-
came the chief aim of Bistnarck af-
ter the Franco-German warso the
ines
to
r ,
Ituseiarti4 upon the persons and pro\
perftes Tertiron-cWi tt Met—
Anethen grievance borne in stadie
silence by the Japanese concerns the
prisoners:, The Jepailese Official Ga-
zette publishes a list famished • by
Russia.of the Jepartese prisoners 5h0
bolds. •This numbers 339 men, of
whow, only 36 belong to the Combat-
ant services -and 303 are peacefel
Japanese e Who have been .held as
prisoners' for months.
On the other hand in Japan before
the ,fall of Port Arthur there were
3,673 Russian Prisoners. Not a
single non-coinba.tant was included in.
444.3
-4
UR HEATING APPARATUS
.4.7.17ar'S WU" Or grvaING
YOU WRM..
liAldrathazokiX
tlee Beal canse ,of OtItt
Warntthe
4.11 bine, :the ecodste 'Ott
0 tell mei
Me an
•
tom
title
BILLION FIRItS BURN IN U8s
ilThee we examine our breath. wn
find there precisely the same products
of combeetion tliatiwe founel when
tbe ete41learnt, showing an eXatticv
proceSs has been followotl.
The carbonic-acid stos. is easily de-
ttiMi•I'''brttlitt7401410140*4[F4,01tiet-Oit
breinteing„' tlintaigh,„ a Oise •clitpthig
tato. liniesevateie itvhen the 'Carneritee
• at.itVitnii:•fertherSeotnliineo with -the
thee 'st*Poit
I dee dthStriltee_ .
.‘1311.:•:
t 0..40p rhie411.1tes "iitat's
fcel 1i, hi .,tenilierature _inside is
Itt4.1:01:atned.. et!r4 vori4t4ut: iovet
one, of of .the rti ea; inept:Pads .and times;
;it1ttattid.devieee't1.st4wit. toemplei.Ilis
-Storestat degree': tretnaitte. 'Steady, dee
Gpftc tortwitt-0lititetie variatienes.
This perineneneit 'of otireititiMal hettt,
regented Manys.eenturies •of itiveatigtte
tthi Stefore its '4' ex,p1enaitort,te1utn
s-eertifiared with Nit; inntdmate-bo
iitroefftSillebtictirsethstassettesiMird
'grow cooler. 'With other \suite
stances, the contrary happens.
OBJECT 'TO Itte1tN0. ROASTED,
Throughout the„ world there is one
everlastine exchange of heal; all Mat-
ter, whetger it. ie llquid. eoitd, or
gaseous, posseesing , more than the,
average etegree of heat, is forced to•
part with' its 'surplus to its poorer
brethren. Nature is inflexiblyi. brjogo
e,.
"+4
ROYALTY 4RAVELS LEADING MARKETS!
11:411WAY AND • S S,FfIV
COMP.114LES AIM, TA
1:/,!*7 Thelleanda of D
lints; 'and1White chiaik PreeiOltitte
"0-1,4,‘Stt#rl ••conit.
that
eWti rt ntti
40i1,t4„i0 110 9, 14419
.:449014S, ,firO's toetatitly' burning
Iflet'itttrelieirt. tete' ' ,
, neeeesity ot 'a 'peeper tboilesei
• • •,
lily lee eef toitrite, eetiniente Stret t., "
not.: estentiel that,: the. :food eletitild,. be
".130! • C'04ilig the ,process 'Of
(ligesi lop, but iteciees', qs lee
the keeping ,tit our' notenii•VOSt
-deg-eFes.„*. f2.fteft'Pettl....
heatotsellst,tfttEitntl tii)et*"•-trtii.
a •
i
tsilittstitisfitAttn-
into_
'one of Ike MieroSCopic atonni.
-we matt go withater, food for one or
to days, and yet not grow solder.
This is true, but if no food is ;Assiut-
iletedesas the days pass bythe tem-
perature gra.ditally ditties from 981
tkg• to 00 deg-, and the miserable
victim dies in a dreadful state of
emaciution., Ile has wasted away
Ing, not only the earth. but the timply becaueo, the Invading oxygen
whole universe, to one commofl level atoms, finding no • food -carbon to
of temperature. At, first sight, living amalgamate with, seize upon those
organisms seem to be eicempt from
this perpetual law, but In- reality we
do tesit escape.
in his adipose tissue, and take them
away instead. • His. annual -heat has
been kept up at his. own. expense. Ile
—4 • •
•re4's 01 Chine. and Japan Is neces" ter who pleaded old agq was liber-
toorganfze tlre armies re- itaLL_Ths pan terikeltut
S and
silently the retention of theie peace-
--enahle the•latter to 'build the
Onlred to guarantee her safety. ful countrymen. and it was natural
• ENGLAND AND ASIA. e that retaliation should be expecteel
Aftingolian competition with Weste When Port Arthur MI. „
ern industry Is War. Orientals But such an ideaif-it oceorred.to
ltznow nothieg of the dignity of Ites them, was never expressed, and every
blitesttieseelgtetelionnedueethe rights- noro.eontbstant-in-,Port Arthur was
onsenan, -thee Parlirementary----7.fraii;
• Jake, • employera! ellabilityi-ereeethe thereewere- Sfoinal-enly- 76 Japanese
Taff Vale decisitin. Thar tare is it prisoners, representing the total- talt-
handful of rice or coarse grain a en by the- Ruseians during the siege.
,lietteLehee_oleteeie_a• Oat, a scrap of Hundreds of wounded Japanese must
•sheed_ fish, _sonot, life4n the Far VI fit11ez witbin the Russian lines,
fiopeirtlitit many would bessfolin
the hospitals.- But only the 70 men-
tioned above were discovered. and
these ineluded some who bad not
been wounded. The rest, must have
perished by exposure, ...p.civation or
torture.
Even when Gen. Stoessel in his
despatches accused the Japanese of
deliberately firing, on the hospital, a
charge which has now been die-
eleeelp
49444
War threatened with Western
civlflra-
ilon, Whoever controls China, for
_ ten yeara is anistrese Of. the Poetilc,
, and whoever controls China and the
'Pa,ctfic controls Asia.
lint England is an Asiatie power.
She holds India partly by the sword,
and partly by the sentiment of 800,-
000,000 of people, who speak eigh-
teen languages and profess one hun-
dred forms of faith. Can we con -
u . "I'd'IzSidr-ftelsys42tstkOW
urea Our Pathan, Sikh, and Goork-
- -sreginienteseotttimareltreethetet-
,e
Aer, and, live on scantier fare. than
',oar, own troops, and while the forrri-
e,r Instinctively• acquire great CS -
Veit de eerps owing to the. admir-
able ieedershlp of Selected British-
ofilters. there is 'no sentiment of
• patriotism on • their part. They
soldier for There
such word ae patelotism, in their SILK- 01;ILTITtra.-
47444444
„combeettoicef 0W-.10943ePt.iteett4: eltlee*, to tempt to peeeserve
iiping,,;_tlipLair we Inheilii”
real cause. Our lungs are the Iowa
which create the necetsary. draught,
and our blood is the furnace where
-the combustion, °emirs, while the
lood.we eat keens up the proner sup-
ply of fuel.
WIIERE- IS IlEAT4N-C-0,A.I...?
Ilide_timibustienestself is not quite
eh .a simple- thing__ ass it appears .at
Itele .so nnnao
event that u -e overlook it, and never
trouble to wonder ,where the heat of
burniraecoal comes from. Yet just
lesaeteeeee tia cif
dal lestinetold is tanyttrineesteou-
in handle it with impunity, and it
cannot send the thermometer up a
solitary degree If ,you grind it into
powder, the same results continue.
App.arently it has rio secret hoard of
heat stored sotnewhere away inside
It. The air proves oguetily beeTen.
Yet we all know that when the coal
burns a marked change) takes place.
The question is, where was its heat
concealede-where has it come from?
Oa
a• chemical combination
heels et,- the accusation the wires
bre-night , „
1 lieved in England. The comment of
the Japanese jouniats • was simple.
They- printed the London telegrams
with the heading: --"They See That;
Lookett •
means that
/
USEPUL 1,17r,ORD.TATION.
,
Bits of Knowledge Which It WouldBo Well to Unow.
tetresstsssoot resisgste-frowl.s-
tiurning of 100 tons of ccutt.-7
Altereturnerattway• tickets in 2411S-,
• fti-ri. -ore- geode -for -itte-leeste forty fiv
days.
The ordinary sparrow cai,4 fly
Theereate pf seventy-two miles
•h0444%444.44,4m4444,44:4444*44.4.4.11•44.4444.*7m•
a,t
an
On a rongh aye go 40,000 sover-
eigns pass over the Bank of England
• counters -daily.
- The average- birth-rate for Europe
shews that for every 100 girls 106
boys are born.
Moscow's orphan asylum, founded
by Catherine IL, is supported by a
tax on playing cards. •
'Fully 800,000 domestic animals,
• valued at $0,000,000, are annually
urrfte,-,-
A stone house 'is not so durable as
eleeitousee--wel
constructed, will outlast one buUt
of granite.
It is supposed by a eeientist, of cm-
inence. 'that ihe aentritge nian's - ose
The "elephant beetle' SirsVe
- . • . for the crowds are invariably kept
waving of lifers and fusty cheetitin
ig traveliing._ Ithiere is little
lida openetend _shut 4,000.000 times' rg'n't
Iduring. the year.-- -
et
•
Beiggaga.",,
BREAD:0 ItF.R.
Toronto, May 2. „, beateeOntarloit
Uteri No. 2 red and White eold at $1. wine
'0‘40401..tike0g4-tiPtintee:
, ,.•4#41 eQ9SO, 14.13q4; Matiltitti*
(714'41 'few driliVOY -at lake' 4)04 •
tlw41411, tolnAnik-'
• ' the oPcnieg ef SinettgatiOni
'the stit4ittlOtts ex• 'ant. ,Ittertheent , tplOted Set' 960te N'tee
tame keeps-, tee te
tria -ciuswe. •
411
'two -
4,43, sti
ineetS itixtieitnitimatuttelptitUi SSA: Si; • cast and eveatzett,A,
** - tite ehteit'd; ••441,114 , •
etteentitt "conetititeted „tee • • Om at, *fiti50' 1n 46, j• t.44.°
• n lent'P 1140110,Valtk!ll -1t4 *5.10 1,4 .10 tor oecoo4 p.4
..ezu
6 ad, ' ""
tor, Uele:sisah'etlie-an°Cri :7,,a37:ty,,%°e.r, -41,o' $41194 ft: St,15'tet"r7ts'343;
It divitledl Witt ttkv otikt.et°4-sie*.,?140.. • Millf!iette-$17-• 'foe attt,t
ttii• Istiinart1141,474,134,417.5rfOliro.#2.0".:..4:c ftr
14..•
1,14:6141:::lit.,Pitrjslin4e11!:e1:1,a;;;Intia.,e1:401me1;1,7.,1,7:;e:ti, 'it_retti,91;g7111107161_,7;0:3•4N1:17,2it,
teen/sly' fu
ierap,,,. white
fittings.
31
fa.s
,-,
on , an eno oust nItaer
ranks and personal lugga not in-
frequently exceeding 200 tons, that
taken en the visit; to Ireland a
couple ef years ago.-imarediately
precedes their Majesties, and is TO-
ceiv,ed by the -King's equerries.
These gentlemein when theie Ma-
jesties are travelling abroad. arrange
all railway journeys, settle upon
hotels, and see to the number of
rooms for the suite,
THE' NECESSARY PRIVACY,
the attendance of servants, ,,Vhe en-
gagement of a superior chef, and so
Wk.
11P.
44,'No
ItfhVtttd'ttkrJlVi#' 11,049.04r
our railway companies place special
saloons at the,ir dipposal, while the
King permits . Royal guests to
make free, use of his stables end cite-
riages, says Peaxson's .Weekly. Of
course, a °large number of Irtkilitary
-411"43"--'7alwayi aboeffe tha ralltriens. Ant
tions. -n4- - the routestos the
Royal -palaces, mere -as neglected ei
honor then of: arty fear of disturb-
•
,
anyceete
there are exceptions. All mon-
arghs---seisen-seisiting their eeneeete_ni
Ck enjoy •e rem o o
m•ovement as does our Kingacherever
be travels,:
The Riag -of Italy and the Kaiser
invariably take elaborate precatec•
tions when embaeking upon a , Jour-
ney, the railway lines being kept
clear for hours, the strete being
lined with military, and hundreds of
plain -clothes pollee mingling with
t.he crowds.
When the Tsar of Russia travels,
eseseve , rectoverimsestalkett"as 1-
More than extraordinary.. Often
three trams will be run at -e in
fixed for the Royal -departure, _ea_
that any evilly -disposed Nihilist will
not know to which precise one the
fir
i4431.
• atignageeteenstveattelaitilititet9. their
erte saltend nothing meere.
tfitTIOTAIWINT1IA.:-
•
H , istory repeats itself.The story
Of the -wars hi 1Tindustan-ahcw4
• brigades trained by European officers
such as De I3oigne, Perron and Tho-
' mas fought splendidly. but once
--beaten-- were ready -to nerve the vie-
see -
••••••••••11,
s senttftrnteThertiftegtreWhieltetlt
° Staple Passes.
1.1Y41 Abe -culture of tea. salt Prot comlesstion. 'Iliese are found to be
• rznous _bnaixet • , •
benefit on China, and has now be- showing that 'froth the hydrogen and
come an indispensable indtistry to carben atoms entered into 0i/tames
the world. is the most modeit °c'' with :those of, the osityg.l.n. What we
ces to King Edward. and .their ate. son...describer the varioue progressive - when we
. (Chime with en Ittrineratt, Mit 'Ilkonte atomic man- age.
.eupaissm. imaginable. In **Through enii _elm/mill.. is
new turn to Ow- Qw11
nothing but an
orse'rrheloYeltYof the native plea:
o t oms t ang p ace.
carbon and he drogen atoms which
principally constitute the coal are
erigorousty uniting With the, oxygen
eatoms front our atmosphere, As each
conjenetion odours,. the etemic heat
intensifies in degree, and is eagerly
absorbed by the cooler air. When one
recollects the incalculable hordes of
atoms that exist in a. poundtof coal,
it no longer remains a puzzle to nay
wheirthe &arr.-Thal-It
is due to chemical combination in
proved by examining the products of
01111111115111•111=11111111;Vil4iWittil
•
itikirtityik It- 41.4Q
reeses• =
own self-interest. The Japanese In-
telligente-Pepartmentesia„ tizulerstoo
to have recently examined the eon-
Rion's' under which England holds
Ulna. and -the ,con
are not flattering to the amour pro -
Clear thiningsis
required if Itriglishmen would save
the Empire.
What is the ison of lifukden ,to
the atneer of Afghanistan, to the
dhe ----the-PatitanitreGoorkh
and Sikhs? • It is that in the great-
estestruggie of the world yellow men
wad Iluddhistit have beaten white men
and Christians, Consider the effect
in the bazaars of India. Among the
Countries forming the British Em -
PIM India is 'second in the volum
tee tesole. Tefietthiros- of the Tiio:
hin IMports tire iariirthirrillti.
• u r of the eitiorts
tame here. Forty million pounds'
worth of English cotton, inachinery,
' Weals, hardware. Woollen garments,
• glees, then:deals and sundries are
ht b the natives of India from
arisi re. •
-China or Lyons.
„of-thaesilleseorne
hatched about the middle of
•
41•4100141•411
46e to..47n tor•-neltted „f.o.b.. Chatham
fretiflits; American terrier; No 3 yel-
low, 55e to 5e; naked, 54,1,13 to
55c on track Toronto. •
Dists-eFirtn: 40; to 41c for' NC'. 2
white west, 41c to 42c - east.
Rolled Oats -$4.35 for cars of
bags and $4.60 for barrels on track
here; 25c more for broken lots kero
and 400 ontside.
Pear -68c to 69e for No. 2 west
and east and 70e for milling.
Buc.awbeat-59c to 60c east and ,
west.
•
ssrOirst
ttlOo."41•Wkdif-4$4_04k&WW. osssilnigstie s,.so ••"ss 4•`;'•'
itlftfketi-htt-s-anLeaay tone- - -
• Creamery, prints .. 23c to 25o,
do solids 22e to gac
Dairy t ubs, vied' . ..... lace() 17c
-eo inferior-...,... • 14C t° )15G
Dairy lb. eons, good. to .
choice 21c to 2o •
•
-do- large -rolls- ---
- medium' . • 17c to 1$0
ttievee-7-Ire firm in tette told is quitte-
ed unchanged at-Telettleir large andt
12tc or twins.
Egge---Quotationseare unchanged:at
D+ -le
".-Pctittoese,41. 60c., Con_ traelt,
and 65e to 70c out store;. eastern
_60c to 65e on track. and 70c •to ,
75c out of store. , •
Baled ritty--18 per ton for No. li
timothy and 17 for Mixed or clover
le.ear tote en- track „ , est .
Baled ' Straw---Cae lots itn track "
here are quoted oneliangeorat $6 per
ton.
back a hi -nub -y(1 yards fr011a the -rout
I A full-grown one weighs about half TAICEN BY 1115 MAJESTY.
entride_
Every inhabitant or e,ontion rats
178 lbs. of potatoes in a year. A
n
Parisiaconsumes on an average but
di Tbs. per annum.
3
city. The sap is driven out by a
strong current„ and Its place is taken
bY„0. notation sat norax. and resin. --
A Japanese bride gives her wed-
ding presentss, to the parents as
OM .11% •dna t-roodel
stints •wind im...„-Ass -4104,-----eur- inn ssar e•71-11•11,11107-7---trr"--41
solely designed to keep us warm. The 1001"-"Y- 1'114
-,foodsweseate being-salwayseassseganisfellsjectsitsilurmasisssuPPoLvastosi,WAY.
____LtvreneevItenetheereart,teaenelneahrett-
similar precautions are adopted.
During the visit to the Kaiser at
Wiesbaden two years back. More
than 9.000 Guards lined the entire
MONTREAL MARKETS.
Montr-esti, May 2.°:=TIOur-' MaiC�
eat patents, 15,50 to,
$5.60; strong _bakere. 15.20
30; winter Wheat patents, $5.50 to
15.00; straight roller. $5.25 to 55.4
30, and in bags, $2.45 to $2.fifi.
Millfeed-Manitoba bran, in bags,
119, shorts, $21- per ton; Ontario
winter whet bratteirt... bulk, $18,501
to $19; shorts, $20 to *1.2te enendire.
$24 to $28 per ton, as to quality.
Oatmeale-The demand is still lime
tea- n n0 -fie iirarrert rghli3t tit -
to 12.221 per bag. Cornmeal • is
alo quiet at 11.85 to 11.45 per bag.
1, $9 to $9.50; No. 2.
to $8.50; clover, mixed, 17 to
$7.50, and pure, c' ..-44.50 -to
$6.75 per ton, in car 1013.
Ileans-Cheitte primes, 11.70 to- -
$1:75 per bushel, $1.50 to $1.60 in
car Iota.
pa is the larg-eat insect. la the world. i
Piscinteitees-IlternyeeirnacliatrethorC•
the. castle. No one in the vicinity
Of the castle was allowed in the
tetiteetterewhitSsiitrirlfirther safeguard, '
tie inhabitants of the houses along
the road taken by the Tsar were not
4 4 1
• atinee*
April. structure, eonsesittently very rich that the donor has been very wicked
in carbon, and is reduced by our
The best season to obtain them or
ginning of April. The young worms,
wben hateleed; areeptated on bout- throngh thie 'thoracic duet iuto tlie
boo frames and fed on mulberry wee. All through our system runs
leaves cut up into entail sheeds. As, a great network 'of vein'. Pittethg.t.4)
the worms increase in site they aro! every part, and penetrating • every
transferred• to a larger number of I tissue through whieh the blood cir-
frames. and are fed with leaves not 1 ciliates. Kept, Jo contieuaLcirculae
se finely mete andio tifiSpriet -Ore
theses until, iittheirefiest stagit. the
leaves • are • given to them entire.
After "hatching, the worms continue
ceding during five days„ and then
sleop for the first time Inc two days.
When they again asake, their ap-
-petitteis not quite so good, end they
T,-stetesteteleittesetitteinettielltt--an_
sleep, again fat two days more. Then
they-eate-ter-the-ahird-time-for-1
days and repose for two-. This eat-
ing and repose is iisuaily repeated
four times, and then, having gained
full strength,• they proceed to epin
±11141
and wishes to show his penitence.
-( 10 g to -00 ITXVO7letfe-1,
U011. 'rho indk of this is Poured' heads of hair, 140S0179-fii-Ii10,0
btngsi'llitioTairoP scar t
head of a fair tnao or woman.
• Telegraph wires will -last for forty
years near the ecneehore. In • .tho
manufacturing adistriets the same
wires last. only ..tyears. and even
tioneby heartrit TITPakin that tilt) esi. _
In South Australia there exist.s a
ligilefied tood is distrihuted by the
blood -stream to every Part. and ft ia,nguage test for !Mewling 'itamie
incorporated into ourozelvan. But. no grants. Unleas a man can speak or
wermth clan °clew yet. These billions write English, he not permitted to
of earbon atoms ere awaiting the land.
arrival of their mates, the: oxygen
atoms, before they will consent to The wontan tennis champion tor
New Zealand hae but one hand, and
• yeldeeinefe,litiett a wenn! eft one; ---liffr'IbT'ENtr
• UNIQUE', Set -DIME& serve a bait that is OkCeeditiglY Tir-
in 'Mitt rieeltern way, 'Nature la/ setift to return. -
• tointri%ed a rchente so thet the union - Ilite' :ongest Underground thorough -
becomes poBsible. $he fitii a' world fare in Great Britain is in Central
branehing sestem of pipes and tubee Derbye-hire, where you can walk GOV-
These, ramify dowilWaruf end eealeminee.
, en milee upon a road connecting ser -
Englishmen and Scietchinen. Exports: our lungs. .
occupies them from four to seven
growing -finer and finer, till they end
and imports together amount to I dare more: and. when this -business
In a mesh of minute little air -cells. Itunela. with a population of 12 ,
t60,0(X) 000 the bulk of which is • three is completed thr days are spent, in placethII et e . aro'. i 000,000, has only 18,384 phyeiciane.
0 0 e
sib -divided, and • totiii bunches of
hair-like -tunes, calkd capillarie% 120,000 physicians.
tion of about, 75,000,000. there are
4 a -'-' t In the Sinited Statee,swith -a- POPX1141-'
which enclose the little ale -cells.
Though the,two stnteins aro illeX•
tricably eetangled, they are ecliar-at-
into our hotly. which Mk 'will Call
. their cocotens. The task of spinning!
Omit. /t)n. wages., stripping oft the cocoon, and, some
' DANGIolit_OP IlinttlinITION. Pseven days later each small cultiva-
. - •
This prOsntsrotixe trade is menaced !' tor brings his silken harVest to the
• *by Mukoen, for intelligent tuitite-S -es isineal iriarket and dieposes of it to
India Will learn as Much from Mon- 1 native traders, who Mike it up into
4 1,,,•,..,. ti t• 1.1"(10k11.11111'V tH
.441.41.11_1,hel_p_i • ""-`-; liutai,,tiwimtii,.4,__P.X .,. . _A_ -,....._ ,I.,11. 11Xf_MIt_TraX12A;
H.. ity id the Japanese over Muscovite . _ ,,,,,, see ee , . e , et, i. w Rh, -howev&v, ti,,,,ve the !Arany+.
wirer. We have educated twenty • fin 4frctletz itt" ""t"'" t" •tim-i proeerty of allowing the oxygen to
Iihnes as many person s in India as wormi.. that spin itth
, en by the! pass through. but which do not ale
quality of the leaves and the mode.
e Tete the blood to come out. Here it
Can ever be accommodated with Gov-
_
-ititent 'fi'finsittatincetitle. MISuccetttlit -°1-- ---t°:-tllig----j'-'-1-J-"5-159-rll--tt --JAT-P-iqqr5.• 48.4;irAt.,•tho--oxyg4m-_,otlt....,c,t_t,bo-r,ir
Liei .noise. by tbe, ,presence, alit' •s"' which we have . inhaled passzs Into
,,,,pi,l'icaots iticren.se yearly; they be- 1
4t4itne Soured; 41.txurateraptl and dif5xil'cciallY the, hen -Ming, atifr.,,,,setyrazinigetir:t. sttrypt along to .the trature_cartiton,
the bloodettreatu. The atoms aro
od. They , ire. in facts a ciate end by noXious striae.
fed *t regular PA:air, and Vit::.1 And ell. ove.r :tin body a miniontoki
rifitict-toth#Itn-,odar, rev-olutionistst.-P-t.e.
emr'..yature 1? te apartments must
partnersidif is ---tont i. acted, . i n each
hoz.ie discontent IS the circa of cdu- 4 ' -
not he too high.
• The greatest detect in Chinese silk
,has been tine to the primitive raode
of reeling vihieh the natives , adopt.
Shanghai 'is the great silk mart
aed there, about June 1st, the sea6-
011*S Silk is eisually brought , down.
It ls 'never the grOivers tisho bring
Isdk 10 -the foreign market.
0101) Ott an empty stornacb. They
• tire too proud to work, too poor 10
• idle. They agitate. Never to t,te
lieterg of the world has a - Sq. -item
dentocraty. negligent of its own
,health, of agriculture, and of- -physi-
cal efficiency" attempted the Atisk of
contl oiling a population of go0.000.-
-
also .accampt,iniei by lite ineVitalA
relinquishing of mome rif the 13t4 111 1°T117 h°111Pine" ‘Fas d'ugging their
.heitt 1)o5s,251_,---e4 t.Y tlie atittils .when,4 seizes to' drown their ritteery.. The
separated. - tide inteersioes' ate
rangement our entire body is equally
warmed, In OTIS S.nue, we do not
keep oureelves -warm ot alt., It. is
&me for us by pillions of 'visiting
atoals_. Wo are simple a vast 're,45-
rsc--wff;--.-,'-3w/terz6,-t%trttffetw-etietit
„pion*, are, .forniedr tho,...‘atonrs
eseetsiess eetti tee trr
Lnt as a 'ke; •
there is still work to do.
the atoms have parted wi
their wealth they are no lanser Ositde
Td• It woold ,neyer do to 0,111W the
olo:ules fOrtned to aectimulate, else
e system would 'Soon. he cicirMed„
thtl ar'e volaad the tdood
riles till tin envie tr,tec to 'the'
midi:work ct aire'41s, and catilatIO3
oXy-c,,en atofas pont
11Cis are1•.‘.;,1te4 out
tweattle them
• ° 'Odom Court.
GLASGOW'S ONLY TIOPE.
_
The chief constable. el alcogo
nmde a remarkable speech to a meet',
ing called for the promotion �f the
teligioue interests of the poor. Last
r-..--he-salk-fittmgdw-slormv----- hat
provided 17,000 cams of ftrunkcit.•
nets. "Theee 17,000 epreprieed a
class who knee: neither liappirettes tor
Chriettiteitte. and In fater art
grasp ilia decencies of life. Their
I *
iTATe,ATaIrs7litti.P. _
•
•
Buteinebeewhenea-ioreignepoteritate.
deterrnipes to leave his native land
to travel nitre -sad that the resources
W -a
are taxed to the utmost• :
The -Shah tif PersiaSsior one,
have, his fads and fancies considered
to the timeliest detail, No railway
-driver must exceed twenty miles an
hour when the Shah in his, passenger,
d-woo-betide-tho-captatn-twhose
vessel rocks to eui extent, likelY to
give the monarch fin• attack of sea-
sickness. He usually takes with him
an enormous retinue -some forty,
Mipisterie and thirty ttervants - and
many tong 01 luggage.
The latit • time the Shah vteited'
GeireatOriteline she eteent 12,500,000,
fin; hotel' Senien-Sci;
.stail tretpleptiv_amount beg, to $1,250
a day. Some 11.750 was .
DISTRIBUTED TIPS
among the servants at Marlborough
Houee when he took his de,parture of
'King, Edward.
Auother monarch who has all the
Shah's disliptelor the sea is King
Lewartifta. of Ilitrottiefana. lie has
nOt visitrd King -Edward- sitictst the -
Coronation, but his Roeal tour wilt
ver be forgotten If citify for the
luggage he took back with him.
44
fir app,
iheit;i111.16Zifiadia./LA.,Itirirtrzit
„cut clear_ fat back, $20; compoiind
lard, Oic to 7c; Canto 1 .
to 7 -le; kettle rendered, Ste to ' •
MItttfmnsstoteritiatitter--henteee-12.3eseto— et_
18c. bacon, 18c; frteeth- it1Tred &Vat -
1 1 fee --$S1:75 -to-410; einiettelye$.6.-
75 to ISZ; select at $7.25 to 17.e01,
oil cars. ,
Ilintere-Clioice creamery, line to
20e; mottled, 18e to 1.14:n*,,,waalry roll
16.10. •, •
.--gggs-eStraIght Ste -eke, 14e 16.-1.44e;
1‘76, 11131c to 14c. . ote
Cheese -On -tin -to fell .121oj
colored, 12c; fodder, 1,10 to 111c. e,
3, ..
*ng almost every stiffkla •linder--
sun. -There - were forty boxes,
• containing a silk top -het, crates
of patent boots, highly -colored silk
itrat-
boxeS Upon brixe-/ of guns, umbrellas,
rocking-horszs, cameras.,
ratnopharat.n. end similor articles.
ot
Kii Edward two or three
back, his luggage was also exl,
tenshe and redulinr. There were
thirty • tom; ot MrsOortil luggage
licAtics bas'.,.'.,ic-4•ttes, magic
lanterns. bicycle:1, sewing machines.
and Yachanical toys, thitt, .had
pumnascd gn Paris, be bw
ro, with
_im 'kacred• god Sal Ont.,
. 10 permit his crossing
the -god were also huge •eine
rid six other brge vestalsfufl
froni• the' .ttes,..- Each
e Was go hl-avy that it
en, to trtiVJ
he warlike racoi or the°rid, ttltb
hite-sOldierft7rntrnr
are !if hogpital. If
as not -forgotten, tit,' bjet
tip„.1.4f -Plessey.. the electors
tot cie the: conseatpences of the'
tattto of Afiltetled...Tite„stCPC1IM0tt.
Mbt nititted ti mid:116e ittittry up -
t the
ritlah workman than on the
ma or the priestis, in the'
tcastayat Gyangtse., The snot*
ea liftrdi military cantontnei:ts itt
ignorced Iry ,the House nI
and 'plain facts, however
pllld%e or dslpforaide„ are likewise
eh render the continued d
,-;
d lands; and eating of
&the prodnctimioi, silk
monopolize the whole
, It is clay 11. spiting
lttri for the 'women and
Etis a Thar Pa/attic
Old Woman (to (*intl.( )....,41,m0
think • ther'll te a co `
Itt-
,"' EngUne Priver-".1 bde nett.
t makes XOtt asOld Wo-
, ye tt.e. rtn taking
tdt etc to tonn
•
ropresmve method as reereeenteel
the• police •ecuete. Intel ',been a con-
plete failure. The oiVly hope lay lit
the Work of the 141.11anthropie
tre and the rescuing of the rithig
lett,
te
ot-ktehold
•treated wit
raise4 iti gat
*all, so that reith ' nof
There. as, the no
the unPed '
&ttto the lt:re,
11114 tito Or,
bcalit eat ,get **wort, tito t
plactS.. 'At' the time of the braves
thew oiler:Virg the' 1va,t41,1'rnrs
at4ta1n from e.aing that the5r
bit-Otith may not spoil the aroma
'the fea; ithfw ort lotlio *tree tint
daet avel. 13sailklition„ „ntr!d,
11,lov(9 tittitto pielting 0.0 tc,- for
41•1•4,11,64.4•4
BUIVALO MARKET. ,
Borialo, tray 2.-Flotir-Stiglit
northern, 1; No. 2 rekOJ51,e'.---ro'rrir----'"
r
corn, Tilt. Oat's -Easy. No. 2
white, 84.1c; No. 2 mixed, 82.
••••••••••4011•1
3
, LIVE STOCK MARICETL,
Toronto. May 2. --The following
wasAlie range of quotations:-
. Exporters..
Export' steers. choice...15.70 $0.00 . •
. 5.00- 5,65
enee. 4.00 4;50
Thatchers' Cat tle.
llutcherte catide, picked. 5.00 5.50 "
4:90 5.15
Do.. choice
fair to gdod 4,10 4.90
Do . common . 4-.15 - -
3.75 4.40
Po, mivs. good
.•••••„ 3.25 3.75
Do., .. 8.00 3.30,
Do.. earme;41- .... . -
Feeders and Stockers.
Feeders, short -keeps, 1,1()0
to 1.200 tbs. ...• 4.00 5•50.
Do,' 850 tb\liitui.o lbs. asO
stockers, nowt° 900 lbs 3.25 4.42.3
Yearlings, 350 to 450
• pounds.. 3.00 a;lo
• Sheep And
Linil-
I'xport- ewes, per eWt4 3.50
Do..' bucks, per 8 50 4.041
Ilutchers' sheep per e..7ey
t., 5.0Ioa
vetaiings, evo.-it, and irt,..
('TS, cwt.
cwt. 5.00
Ilo capeehr 0 2,00
:60 _
liogs. •
•
, tctct, 1.60 t4 200 Ths
44.4444 . .. i11.040 •
11., fttttt, °0 ears ,*,..w.1...*
A.**4.0 1.004
"
vd
Thdt earlies
Oat iwi &
for their c.trillribro
net oni4lntSi/4' your AilVrt
bv enlarging ',n t1n failing of
'lye way tto ,get glil to ru*
you is *to lOve to /set' 1.
WOW. ,
rek
114