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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-10-7, Page 2A Common A d c I la often the beginning of serious affec.• *Ma Of the Throat, Bronchial Tubes, and Lungs. Therefere, tbe iMportance of early and effective treatMent cannot be elrerestlinated. Ayer's C'herry Pectoral may always be relied upen for the speedy cure of a COM or cough. Last January I was attached with a severe L'oltl, whichby neglect and fre, (went expeSures, became worse, finally settling on my lungs. .A. terrible cough soon followed eccompied by pains in I. • ., the chest, from which suffered intentelYi After tryin,•, various remedies, witliottt obtaining relief, I commenced taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was Speedily Cured. I am satisfied that this remedy saved ruy e,—Jo. Webster, Pawtucket, 1. L I contracted a severe cold, which sud- denly developed into Pneumonia, present- ing dangerous and obstinate symptoms. My peysician at once ordered the use of Ayer's Cherry. Pectoral. }Is instructione were followea, and the result, was a rapid and permanent cure. —11. E. Simpson, Rogers }Weide, Texas. Two .years ago I suffered from a seyere Cold which settled on my Lungs, 1 eon. salted Vttriot1S phySieians,• and took the Medicines they- yreScribed, but received only temporary, relief.. •A. friend induced me to try Aver s•Cherrv Pectoral. . After taking two bottles • of this' Medicine I was cured. Since then I have giVen the Pec, toted to my children,and consider it The Best Remedy for Colds, Coughs, and all Throat and Lung diseases, ever used in my family. — Robert Vanderpool, Meadville, Pa. Some time ago I,- took a slight Cold, which, being neglected, grew worse, and settled: On my lum„ts. J. had a hacking cough, and was very weak. Those who knew me best considered' my life to be in great danger. I continued to suffer until I commeneed using Ayer's .Cherry Peetoral. Less than one bottle of this val- uable meditine cured me, and I feel that I owe the preservation of my life• to its curative powers. —Mrs. Ann Lockwood, Akron, New York. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is considered, here. the on great remedy for all diseases 4)f the throat and lungs, and is more in demand than any other medicine of its class, — J. 1'. Roberts, Magnolia, Ark. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co„ Lowell, Mass. Sold by Druggists. Price $1; BiX bottles, *5., THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday morning,at the TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE .Main-street,nearly opposite Fitton's Jeweler}, Store, Exeter, Ont„ by John White St Son, Pro- prietors. ItAu,Es op ADvErausiNo eirst insertion, per line • 10 cents. .Each subsequeJtinsertion, per line......3 cents, To insure insertion, 'advertisements should be sent in not later than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one f the largest and best equipped in the County f Huron, All work entrusted to us will receiv in: prompt attention. Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person who tales a papery egularly from ne post -office, whether directed in his name or another's, or whether he has subscribed or not is responsible for payment. 2 If a person orders his paper a iscontinued. he must pay all atrears or the publisher may continue to send it until the payment is made, and then collect the whole aniount, whether the paper is taken from the office or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be instituted in the place where the paper is pub. lished, although the subscriber natty reside hundreds of miles away, 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or periodicals from the post - office, or removing, and leaving them uncalled for is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud A GIFT Send 10 cents postage and we win send you free a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you in the way of making Snore money at once, than anything else in America. Bothsexes of all ages can live • at home and -work in spare time, or all the time. 'Capital notrequirud. We will start you. Immense pay Buie for those who start at once. ST15'5oN dz Co , Portlana Maine Exeter Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butcher IL General Dealer --IN ALL KINDS op— M 1-,1J A T Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS AND SATURDAYS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. MAN 0.011 How Lost, How Restored We have recently published a new edition of DR.cruLvEliNvirta,'s 0ELE13RATED ES- SAY on the radica,landpermanent cure (with- out meclicine)of Nervous Debnity,Mentaland physical capacity.impediments to Marriage, etc.,resuiting from excesses. Price,in sealed envelope,only 0 cents, ortwo postape stamps. , The celebrated author of this admirable es sayelearly demonstrates, from thirty years successfulpractice, that alarm ing eonsegueri. een maybe radically cured without tbe clang - exons use of internal medicines or the use of the knife ; Point out a mode of cure at once simple certain and effectual, by means of whichevery sufferer, no matter whatbis con. ditionmay be,may cure himself ch.raply, pri vatelv and radically. 1. --*Thi lecture should be i n the hands of ev- ery. youth and every man in th e landEE . Address CULTERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY, 41 ANN Sr., Nnw YORK Post Office Box 450 ADVERTISERS can learn the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers: ''by addressing . . Geo. P.-11.Owell & Co. ifetree'pnperi 'Advertising itmeeniai end 1100eStirteoer Slt.60-11Peri;oic'ertit phiet r -WS Aotr4Z-0 , " Oce *he chief °beams 0 Perk kite okeeihkee, The street, atai thereleihly swept every night, and wiebed when thee need it, arid the beefier fronts are pitied. lcolly moped oesee0X0da under been' Pea" Alter for peeled. The Town Council of Edinburgh hatte struoted the Lord Provost, of they ,eity te, cable to like Andrew Catefighta 'Pate* burgh, the thanks of Elbaburgh for hie donation to, It of $250,000 to, found a free library, mei an timeitieum thenift. , , Mists Delores Leonarny-Casanevie has re - mitred the degree OM. D, from the Uni- versity of 134reelertat after eleven otters ef ytudy, many pilzes, and tbe drat heron in all her exazoinatIone. She entered the University at eight and lo.now nineteen.' ' t About :midway '• between St Poterehert and Minicewt Prince Putiatin beetritiee the inapertaut atehheoleilleal 'dieetivery of an image of tbe constellition att Casa Major engraved on agririditened of the BtentiAge. A similar discerernhad ebteady been midi, near Weimar in Oermany. ' . The honor sal being tbe first Woman to makeedsuccemful went of the jungfrem in Switneelatid, intuit bo accordedt to Mles Anne Solteene a Young lady ef Driamiderf, who tioaemparried by tWo guide, toothed the summit after i weer, journey of our teen hours. The demerit wasaboomplialied In elteut ten home. ,In,oider te. settle the question aa to the proper treatment for persons who have been frozen', Dr. Laptehinkskehas xuade a Hernia et vettotoareitiaeXperintents upon dogs, He forted, 'that t: twenty animals treated by Whe meehed af graduel resuscitation in a cold room fourteen: perished ; ef throaty - three placed at once in a warm room, eight died, while twenty put inanaediateiy Ante a hot bath reeevered quiokly and witlecut ao- trident. The women ef Teherane Persia, recently out a deputation to the Shah to represent to His high Mightiness that their bushands were accueteraed to prolong their sittinge the oleo of the capital to ti very late hour, and that this conclunt " was contrary to the development of family life and domeetie happineas in , general." The Shah replied that be would adopt means ta make their husbands stay at home, and he hieued an order immediately closing all the Mks in the kingdom. ' Ooloring Baelsetra. • To give a bleek oelor tee the willew ailed for basketo end other woven ware the NI loving process hos been recommended Lot thermateriai remallu front twelye to twenty. tone hours in lukewarm water, mid then dip it a stile not leugth ef time in a dye Qom - petted of five parts of ground fustio, three of SUIPhate Of upper, five of eulphete of iron, and four of mom el tartar. The dye eheuld be kept at a boiling heat to half an hour, to extract the oelor from the fustier and die. Joliet the other kareclients, after whittle It tiny he allowed to cool. A email quentity of logsvoed addeie will lioraetimes improve Ore color. The Same proems may be used for coloring various fabrics of which sum. Pam hats &remade, Bach as straw, paim-leafe grass, etc. •HinatelleICI Hints. Where a filter is unattainable, a very little alum will purify foul water, An ennoe of Mem will purify a. whole hogshead of foul water. Chloride of lime is an infallible preeen- tive for rata, as they Ilse front Ito eder os from a pestilence, it should be thrown down their iaeles, and spread about where ever they are likely te 00MS, and'alleuld be renewed once a fortnight ' To extinguleh kerosene flames, if no °loth is at bend, throw flour on the flames, Flour rapidly absorb e the flaid and deadens the Tin canned goods, when opened, should be immediately transferred to glass or earthenware receptaeles, Reoent 'weed- gatiens Mow that oases of poleening from eativg canned goods have arisen from the c;.d of the winned feed attacking the solder of the tine, and onnetimee from decomposi- tion accelerated by an electrical action be- tween tee Heider and the iron of the tin. Never leave canned fruits, meats, or fish in voted tin cane. At this season of the year napkins, table- cloths and often handkerohiefo and child- ren's clothing are liable te be atained with fruit. It is a good plan to keep a bottle of Javelle water handy and wet the stained ertioles whit this before they are put into the wash. If this la done the etaine will be cempletely removed. If you cannot get the Javelle water, the next beet thing is a solution ef chloride of lime put into ene quart of water; shake it thoroughly, and allowing it to eettle, pour eff the clear fluid arid bottle for me. Thies is used the earne as Javelle water, ,except that the articles to which this solution has been applied must be thoroughly rimed bi clear water before being put into anda. Choice Recipes. Tweeze Caowlima.—One-half a bushel of green temateee, one dezen onions (or leave them out if preferred), ene dozen green pep- pery, all chopped fine. Sprinkle ene pint dealt over this and let atand all night, drain off the brine, oover with good vinegar, and nook ene hour, then drain and pack' in a jar. Take twe pounds brown sugar, two tableepeonfula of cinnamon, ene of allspice, one of cloves, one of pepper, half oup of ground :Dotard, ene pint grated horse. redline Vinegar to mix, Bail this and pour over the contents of the jar. CREAM Fla.—Line a pan with paste and pour in the fallowing mixture and bake: One oup of anger, three tablespoonfuls of flour, one cup of cream. Stir well before putting into the paste. SP/CE CU:U.—Two cups of flour -' one cup ef ene ana one-half cup) of brown sugar, ene•balf cup of butter, twe toupees]. Ma et baking powder, ene etaepoonful of cloves, cinnamon, and allspice, and the yellea of two eggs, If net stiff enough, add a little more flour. LIGHT CAKE.—Take the white of twe eggs, one and one-half cops of vrialte. sugar,. °temp ef milk, ene-half oup of butter, twe cups of flour'and two tempoonfula of bak- ing power. After flavor with lemon or add oarrante(abent a op), or nee ralaine, can- died peel, .or a few, caraway aeedsi Foa CURING HAMS.—The following mix- ture has bees) used by our family (she coun- trified °nee) for about three generations. The hams are Imre to keep and are noted fer their exollent flavor. For 100 pounds of meat take four pounds of fine mit, four ouncee of ealtpeter'and one pound of brown Linger, Rub the bane with the mixture every other day, until all is absorbed. No more salt is required. ' FRIED A Priate.--Wipe a few nice, ernooth- eithirent apple, bave ready a epider with a little butter and lard in it, let it get het, and slice the e,pples into it, aprinkle a little eugar over them, and fry slow to a Woe brown, taking great care not to let burn, Sr/ammo Cowmen Pornente.--One cap of white sugar, one egg, butter the sized an egg, one cup ef niftk, .two cups of sifted nor, and two tableepoonftda of baking powder, Same—One :tablespoonful . of flour, one fourth op of anger, make into a smooth paste with milk, and pour en het water till thick eneugh, and let it coma te a bell, stirring continently. Flavor to taste. Vie:inhale the afoot. A MARINE PHENOMENON, The Inyeterions Whim Waters air Nova gotta. " The Cape fisheries have soddeniy dwindl- ed down to almost nothing. A short time ago the boats and inshore oraftewere getting good catches daily. One day. last week the *bite water, aa it is collegalally termed; made its appearance on the ground, ,moving tower& the went This le a pkieneraenen rarely if ever witnemed hereabut well known to bank fishermen, who leek upon it sea very discouraging alma, The fish, they say, either retreet before this milky current or elae will not bite while it is passing, From last week's experleoce al the Cape there gores to be some reason for leech a belief. The day before the white water we noticed, the beate totted the fish quits plentiful everywhere, The next dew few of them caught over tvverity, and the scareity atili prevails, though the sea hat Mourned Mt uauivl elearneesone man describes the sight as a meat singular and unaccountable oirt curne.tanoc, The white watertvhich show- ed a long dietance on the sedum aid seemed full of minute fibres of curdeike consietenity. :Was on ite western edge ea perpendlouler as the well of a bonsai' and apparently eached the:bottom in thirty fathoms; It was boy. ingirlewIy ; not so fast, he thought, a tkie tide generally runs in that place, but, straege tome., the ebb tide did not Seem to catty It backward. It would be iatereatIngi to litudy title phenomenein both se to Its (Jame and he died an the'fishery. ' „ We've just ettunteci that wei have saved tioveral hurtdred dollars by smoking the pipe instead of agate but Where k At The Queen of Portugal weara the Paris Ilfe saver's medal. In 1874 abe was bath- ing with her two sone, Cearles and Alfonso, aged 11 and 9 years, at the waterieg place of Casettes, A big wave carried eff the twe children, and the Queen boldly swam out to their relief. The am was running high, and the lady and her boys were nearly lest In the oaf, when the lighthouse keeper, seeing their danger, (imbed into the water and outmoded in bringhtg all three to shore in safety. Her Majesty soma her medal proudly as the reward of her bravery; but there is no record of any medal or any ether reward having b'een given to the light- , house man., In Canton Neuchatel, Switzerland; a good handicraft IS taught to every prisoner, and all whe are well behaved are after a petted placed with a master of the trade which they have severally learned, under the over. sight of the police and a tnember eta vol. untary committee. In this way, If hie ma- dam remains geod, the man's liberty is gradnally restored, and he molten hit Peel- tien in aociety, with the additionai advan. tages of experience, of discipline, and know- ledge of a trade. The Parliament; of Cape Town, Africa, is a queer body. Not log age a bill wail in- troduced placing rest -dolma on the sale of brandy, or "Cape Smeite" to the natives, But the farmer', strongly objected, if, mid they, the natives are to be treated aa children, they are not fit to receive the franohiae ; if, en the ether hand, they are really men, let them drink all the brandy Shay want. As aeon aa the restrictive bill was defeated by this argument, a bill was intreduced giving the natives the franchlem It was at ono appealed and defeated by the same membere, en the ground that the natives had become drunken sots and were not fit to be citizens. It may be added that the brandy is aupplied to the natives by these higleminded legislators, moat of whom are in the business ef making it, and all of wbern are very noisy in their proles. alone of Cinistianity, The London correspondent ef the New' castle Chronicle writes :—" Members of Parliament are comparing amongot them. eelvea the cost of the twe last elections, and they find that, directly and indirectly, the average of moderate sized censtitnenoles is about £500 to £700, sad of the larger ones from £1,000 to £1,200. When men not overburdened with cash have to pay meth a sum twice in six menthe, besides submit- ting to the trouble and anxiety, it is not a very pleasant experience.* I know of one member who fought a South -country comet, Menet, and beat hie opponent handsomely, whe had no agent, and who election moratarial work svae done entirely by his daughter. She wrote the letters, addressed the circulars, and generally superintended the arrangements, while bet father made speeches. The expenditure in this election Is relatively the least that has been re- turned." • Annivereary of a Belt The busy city of Breelau, in Prussia, found time recently te celebrate the five hundredth birthday of a church bell, A tragic atory of the orating of this bell has kept it litmus throughout Germany for a longer period than has elapeed since the dis- covery of America. The founder of the bell, on the seven- teenth of July 1386, when the molten me- tal was ant ready to tun into the mould, haft the foundry for a few moments in chew oi a boy, yearning %him not to meddle with She apparatus, The by dieoltayed the in- janotioni and act the metal running, Ter- rified, he called the founder, who, on liming the mischief, supposing the bell ruined, struck the boy 50 the earth and killed him, When the metal °doled and the boll was tried, it was found to be el admirable tone and ie finieh —the founderai mesterpleoe, Stricken with remorse, he gave. Meagan np to the magietrate, and Was condemned te expiate his Mere by death. He walked to the plao of execution to the toiling of his Own bent balling upon an the peopie to ptay for "the poor sinner." The belt hate ever eine° borne the name of the Poor Sinnetes "Bali that stony period Breolit'u was 'a noun- ht or y 10: Ititface:ft liOft et note,lieifn'enItult nfoitawttigrratrWauf ailealiae and nett to Berne, the largest pity of ?ramie, The entaimeniaity, of the band- ing of the Poor Sinner's Dell wad nob ler. gotten, however. The bell was rung morn - mg and etionibig, Mid the potter of the ehurob preaohed a Mennen ib bowie ei the oecaoke, he tvhieh he told oho more the well -remembered tale, Ircm•Nqf Foxixs, Nye Who Be mo !IMMO, - , , Alteration wail wearing toward evening in the west of England, and darkness wa already beginnieg to creep ever the ithietl- owy chambers and long harrow passagorn of an old English gauntry bovine although it was stinkweed daylight eutaide. Darkest of ail was it deep recoil 11 the wall at tbe end of the great corridor in the third story, where* boy seemed to be bard at wok te ur lunnethbg that eilleared te require al hie attentiem Had there been light entugh to see his face, any ono he saw it would have been struck by the finenete 01 151 outline and the thoughtful depth of expression in the large bright epee which attraoted the notice of all who mot him for the first thne, sitben,gh no one could eaelly have guested then What he Wrie one day to be. But jeet at thet moment" wild Davie," ea he was very justly, called, was busy With a very naeohleveue piece ef sport, indeed, nothing lees than the dreastng up ef a " ghost " to frighten his playfellows, . In the dark recess at the end of the tier - Wider stood a marble statue of Apollo the Archer, with one arm outstretched as If lit the meet ant of bending hia fatal bow. Out lined an ite ghoetly wbiteneas againat the deep gloom behind it, it was a 'startling eight at the best ot theee ; but untie/m*34th the ekiliful hands of our here it was feet growing into a monster that might have soared the bravest aoldiers. Leaving tab none white neck stenciling out bare and spectral against the darknem, he folded a black cloak around ,the body letting the cold dead whiteneas of the marble peep over every here and there, Upon the face he fixed a hideous red and bleck mask with atarivg eyes, while over She extended ann he hung a white cloth with a crimson handkerchief pinned to it, whieh at a • little distance looked terribly like a broad dein of blood. Around the lower limbs he wrapped a piece of yellow Ohlhese etik, twistea up so se to look like a coillog make ; and then, by way of.a finish- ing touch, he placed at the monster's feet a email lantern, lighting up all the ghastly detail's with a weird, unearthly gime. " oa't It mahe 'em jamp I" chuckled he, as he stepped back to look at the effect of hie work. If any one had told Davie at that me• ment that he was playing a very cruel and cowardly trick, which bed frightened many children to death and soared many more in- to hepelees Mote, he would have been greatly eurprised and shocked ; for with all his thoaghtleasness he was thoroughly kind.hearted. But all tbat he thought of was the fun that it would be to himself, little dreaming that he was jut about to receive a lesson which would oure him of playing snoh tricks for the rest of his life. Just then a load voice was heard calling out frorn the foot of the stair: "Davie I Davie 1 where are yea? Come along, quick; we're plug to drive round by the lake, and watch the sun set over the mountains." And n Witd Die" went off like a ehot The drive laeted' es lepg and there ware so many things to be looked at on the way that by the thaw they got home again our friend Davie had forgotten all about the frightful sentinel that he bed left standing at the end of the upper corridor, and went racing along It at lull speed 'to get to his room. The next moment a howl of terror atart- led the whole house, arid three on. four of She servants, hurrying to the apet in alarm, found Davie lying on the floor, half fainting with fright, in /rent of the monater which he had himself dresaed up. All that followed may easily be imagin- ed—the rnah of the whole honeehold to see what had happened, the wonder, the dia. may, the scenting heaped upon poor Davie and (hardeet of all for him to bear) the loud laugh of the ether boy e as they real- ized hew neatly he had been caught in his own trap. But there was one person there who did net join in the heighten and that win quiet old gentleman with a long gray beard —at that time one, of the moat celebrated artists in Britain—who had jnat oome down to the country for a weekai holiday. This bey has the eye of artiet, ' mid be looking keenly at the terrible figure. "He tvill be heard of yet." And the old man was right. Net many years later "Wild Davie" wan famous throughout all England as David 'Scott, the painter, WORTH LAUGHING AT. It la not the anonymous writer's name that Interested parties want: 15 18 the scai tti3. Wh'at, do you suppose I'll leek like when I get Out Sof title?' snapped a young lady ata conductor of an eventreerded street oar. "A good deal like crushed sugar, Mild " said the 'bell•rInger. And the young lided'hung on to the strap and ,rede four miles further, with the smile ef an angel. A Versatile Genius. --Maud-e-" Mr. All- round is a sort ef universal getting ; Isn't het' Mabel—" Yes, he is exceedingly clever," Maud—"He is eomethink of a lawyer and something of a musician, What la hie profession ?" Mabel—" Well, the lawyers call him a musician and the muelcians call him a lawyer." "You Must de a let of fishing nowadaya," said a friend to an impeounious acquaint. an0e, with a fishing.basket slang over his shoulder. "Well, you see, it's just this way. My clothes are getting kind of Needy - looking, and when I patilt this creel around felka thinla I've put on my old clothes to go fishing." ' One of the meat trying times In a young lady's lite is when In church sheifeela a great big .overgrown sneeze coming on, and she starts out en a voyage of discovery to find the pocket of her dress to get her handker- ohlef. .The emale pocket used to be in a gettitable plum but now it is wherever the architect's teeny Makes it An exchange says that "a book rapidly becoming popular among our golden youth is a volume of convenient size and of neat but humble binding, which contains inetead of lettere and leaven a fleek of whieky." By oboe application to such a book a youth will become a eit3II,tect' Man, about the nose A Otilifornia man'tried to run away from his wife and boarded le sailing veined, for Honolulu. His wife went by steamer, got there fltiit, niet hint When he landed and oteorted., the ;unhappy men baok honie. At firat her conduct was atributted, to her strong love for her husband, but it waa teitorivatd aseertaleed that he had eencioal. ed her ,faise teeth before he letf Aientletnan drove up. ter .the doer of a backWoodeman end inquiredithe dietetic° to the next town. " Wain," 'mid the Boob% at he bit a quarter ;motion off a plug ef to. Wimp, gimes, its nigh eater three mile.' "Are there any Itnighte 01 Pythiaa izi the' town ?" I (1031,101°w, 8,traugor ; but guess they is. Lettetwaye our chickens ie Ohl! Soaleer every Piga, , "The 11001149at raXte.11 There i 1to of tbp, earth?, 'enlace thet eXplerers, IkelvonattirorP, or tredexo beve pot minted, and, for that very reatein, no doubt, people ere m itch Interested la finding out what mey be knewn aboue the few remain.. lug unettpiored portion*. To tent nothing about the Polar regiens, ebot which there is, we may euppose, little that is interesting metept thet they are inameasible ; nor about Thiben wizen° people will t et perunt fen Wieners to visit there ; there are still a few muntriee ibout white: we are just beginning to know through the vieite of observant solentifie explorers, whom titmice are cer- Miele, very intereethrin Tit ere le Nevt Guinea, for indium, a great ie kind aorth.eatof Auetralia, which, though many ships he primed by ie Ithores, hes ong been markea "Unexplored" on the mama Itta now not only pretty well ex- piered, but is being colonized by Earopeamt Dr. Miklueho Maeley, a lineelau man of won enoe, Will seion leave Rime& with a muty of two nu red and fifty emigrants to start a eettlement at Astrolab D How strange that Reed% with her im- mense demain in Asia, slaeuld set about es. tabliehieg a colony in Polynesia 1 When Dr. Maclay decided to explore north -et New Gaines, Seven care ago, he bad him. Dolt put an shore in the dark at Aetrolabe Bayi and wae Id; alone, There the natives Nand him in the morning, flitting on his portmanteau on the beaoh. They did not know that there were any white men in the world, and they thought he had descended fora the sky. He en- coureged them in thet belief; but they eet about making experiments to find out whether he was of ravine origin, which near- ly killed lain, They ehot errowa at him; If he was a god, they amid, these could not hurt him,. Two of the arrows wounded him severely. They tied him to a tree and primed their epeaxa againet his teeth till they node him open his mouth. They etairved him, believing a god needed no foodh They finally decided that he came from the moan, and treateol him well, becauee whether he was a gad or not, be did them wadi service with late medicine. Dr, Manley remained there twe yearn, Other Earopoans have followed him and declare tlae coast to woisarld. of the mosebee,utiful regions in the The Weide= Soudan, in Africa, other great and popnloue region wh jot opening to the knowledge of the It is for the most pait a rather level try, fertile, with mattered hills lik Western button The black Malink Barnbarra races, pagans, possessed gion until El Hadj Omar, whose sone rule over the greater part of the w Soudan, marl who belong to the Foulah also Mack, but Meheanmedana, came, ing the sword of Islam, Tim Foulabs epread deetruction eve country ; and El HArIj Oinar set up a Meantime:I empire. He did some for he planted trees over a wide este country, so thee many towns have w and thickets around them where no ve tion existed before. But the Fenian: have fallen Into dim and strife since El Hadj Omar died, branch of them, the Tonoonleurs, have gled with the pagan population to am extent that the French, who are tryi get posseesion of the counny, hope to no of them to everceninthe fieroe and like Foulah sultana, The Great Shan States, in the inter! Farther India, met of Bunnell and we Anna and south of China, have until la been lmot as much an unknown regia Thibet, They have, altogether, an niated pepulatien of thirty million, altho the independent Shan States !twee but t million. The rest of the country belong the surrounding kingdoms. The oity of Ziname, or Taoherg• mai, capital of the portion of the Shan conn that belongs to Slava, has iteelf a popula seven hundred.thousand, It ie rather d eult, however, to make quite ono what population of these towns really is, a Chrnese census offiaial once found out. He was sent to enumerate the people Wneningdiefen, somewhere in this regi Be deputed the work to two assistante, w returned -Such widely different figurate t he discharged them after punishing th severely. Jle then sent two more dada who get together and agreed to return t same number, twenty thouria,nd fear hu dud and one. The menus offielal shut them up separa ly, aeked each whether the odd one wit male or a female, and, receiving conflictl replies, reported both mem for punishmen He then tried to take the census himee but the people flad to the woods and hanged himeeli deepalr, On hi's pore was found the followleg Census or TER CITY OF WII•IIIING-ESIEN The beet tea of Chine comes from South ern Yun.nan, which Is meetly inhabited b Shan people, and from the Shan State them/trivet The Roglish traveller, M Cobenhoun, mem that the Sham are peace able, industrious, civilized and lettered, an seem to be by nature a race of oeddlers There is an English soherae for a reliant from Burmah into the Shan States, le an- kh is world, ootin- e our a and him re• now einem race, wield - ✓ the great good, at of oeds gent- nien One /RIM h an ng to make war• or of at of tely n as esti. ugh hree te the try den ifie- the 85 of on, he hat ezn Is, he n• te. 8 ng t, if, he on a et in the Province of Alei-y2424. Men—none, Wonien--none. Children under 14, of both sexee—none. Grand total—none. wenteemi—naan Hard Work. Mr, Smiles gays that many mere men die of selfishness, indulgence and idleness than die of overwork. Even those whe seem to break down by overwork generally fail to order their livee rightly, and neglect the ordinary onditiens of physioal health, Mr. Smiles quotes Lord Stanley att saying to the students of Glasgow, that he doubt- ed whether "hard work, staidly and roma, lady married on, ever yet hurt anybody," The same author aleo attempte to prove Shat those authors who heve Wen the bighorn dunces irt literature have not been men of leisure, who devet'ed their whole time to lettere, but men motive in public affair° or be private life, who brat only open home fer writing, Dante, Petrarch, Rowell° a»d Ariento, In Italy, wore all men of affaire %eon, Spenser and Milton, In Englerid, wore also In public life, Shakespeare wail menager of the drama, to which work he memo to have given More time than to hie Inatnortin conapositiont Lord Mao/Imlay wart prepar- ed to write history by hie experiencefn Parliantent and in India, and John Stuart Mill Wrote meny of his earlier Werke, while in the employ of the Feet hulk Company. ' When a oiergyeriem remarked there Would bo a nave in the Ann% the society waa building) an old lady whispered that ehe knew the party to Whom he refatreci, A new belt, "1.fintS to Pootei" Ia Net Mit It will be followed by a Wiqueli ti There's the Daor," for WM ki editorial name, - SOROFULA Humors, Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with I do not believe that, Ayer's Sarsaparilla has. ips equa/ :le a reinetly for ,Scrofulotes news, 15 is pleaeant. to take, gives etrengilt end Niger to the body., sed produees15 lllQrl3 permanent, hittine, re- euit thau any inetitene I ever uted.—E. Hai nes, No. Lindele, 0. I have tlieti Ayers Sareaparillie lis my fem. ily, for Serefithi,nimit know, if it is taken faltlifilliy, it Will thorOUghly orittlieate this terrible dinease.. — W. le. Fowler, M. D., Greenvillea'T mi. Itor forty re 1 bave suffered e t mEvy- sipelts. 1 alive tried an sorts of relaedieS for my complaint, bet foetid no relief until I commenced using - A a e s Sarsaparilla - Atter takieg ten bot - net of this inediefue am completely cured. —.Mary 0. reenesbery, Rookport, Me. I have suffered, for years, from Catarrh, \Witch was 4zo Serere that it destroyed my appetite and weakened my system. After try- ing other nineteen and getting 110 relief, I began to take Ayer's Seven parIlle, and, in a few mon th t, was cured. —Susan L. Coots, 900 Albany st., Bonen Highlands, Mass. _ewer's Sarsaparilla is superior to anv blood • purifier that lave ever tried. I have taken it for St:reheat Canker, and Salt - Rheum, and received much benefit from it. It is good, also, for a weak stomach.—Millie Jane Peirce, South Bradford, Mass, Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa. Price 81; six bottles, 815. 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