The Exeter Times, 1888-4-12, Page 6R is Absurd
'or people to expect a cure for Iudigee•
tion, miens they eefrain front eatbag
what is enwholesorrie ; butUanytnieg
will sharpen the appetite and give tone
to the ingestive organs, it is Ayee's San- "
saparilla. Teousands all over the land
testify te the merits of this medicine,
Mrs. Saran Burrougns, of 248 Eighth.
etreet, South. Boston, writers "31y hue
-
baud as taken Ayer's Sarsaparilla, for
ZesPePsia rine torpid liver, and has
been greatly benefited,"
A Confirmed Dyspeptic
0. Canterbury, of 141 Franklin st.,
Boston, Mass., writes, that, suffering
for years from Ineligestien, he Wail at
last induced to try Ayer's Sarsapartlla,
nod, by its use, was,entirely cured.
Mrs. Joseph Aubin, of High street,
niolyolce, Mass., suffered for over a year
from Dyspepsia, so that she could not
eat substantial food, became very wean,
and was unable to care for ner family.
Neither the medicines prescribed by
Physicians, nor any of the remedies
advertised for the cure of Dyspepsia,
helped her, until she commenced the
use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Three
bottles of this medicine," she writes,
" oared me."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED nY
Dr. J. C. Ayer ee Co., Lowell, Mass.
Price si; stx bottles, $5. Worth es a bottle.
THE EXET.ER TIME S.
Is publisned every Thursday morning,at the
TIMES STEAM PRINTINO HOUSE
lesen-streetnearly opposite Fittoan Tewelery
Store ;Exeter, ont.eby John White Le Son, Pro-
rorietorm.
neens Or •
e'er s t insertion, per line .. . ,, .
. . cents.
Each sub seguec tinsertion ,per .... „,...S ants
To insure insertion, ad-vertisoments should
be Elentin not lo.ter them Wednesday morning
OurSOB PRINTING DEPARTMIINT is one
f the largest and best eguippedin the County
Huron, All work entrusted us will receir
lz peompt attention:
Decisions Regarding News-
papers.
Any person who takes ftpaperregularlyfrom
he post.oitee, whether directs d in big name or
another's. or whether he has subscribed or not
Is responsible for payment,
2 If &person orders his paper discontinued
be must pay all tuners- or the publisher may
continneto send it until the payment is made,
slid, then collect the 'whole amount, whether
idie paper is taken from the office or not.
3 In suits for subscription a, the suit maybe
-Instituted in the pleats where the paper is pub.
„Thilied, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of miles away.
The courts haye decided that refusing to
take newspapers or periodicals from the post -
*Moe, or removing ana leaving them nnealled
fox is prima facie evidence of intentionsafrana
Zixe-ter 13utcher Shop.
R.DAVIS,
Butcher :4 General Dealer
—IN XLIA KINDS COP—
M
...sterner e supplied TUESDAYS, TRUES:
DAYS ./.1133 SATURDAYS at their reeideuee
ORDER8 LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
CElleE PROMPT ATTENTION.
PENNYROYAL WAFERS.
Prescription of a physician who
has had a rife long experience in
treating female diseases. Is used
monthly with perfect success by
ovet 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, safe,
. effeetuan Ladies ask your drug
-
Met for Pennyroyal wafers anct
take no snbstitute,or inclose
age for sealed particulars. llo d by
all druggists, $1 per box. Address
WE EUREKA. Ciene eiCAL COe. Darsorr, Ku"
vas Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning,
41. Lutz, and all druggiate.
A GI I1T
Sandie cents postage
and we will send yon
fres a royal, valuable
sample box of goo At
that willput you in the way of I:Baking moVI
money at once,than anything elsein America.
Bothsexes of all ages can live at home and
Work in op a re time'or all LW. time. Capital
notreguirnd. We will start you. Immense
pay BUY of or those who start at once. STINSON
a Oo .Portlancl Maine
"BELL"
ORGANS
Unapproached for
Tone and Quality
CATALOGUES FREE.
BELL & CO Guelph 011t,
C. & S. GIDLEy,
UNDERTAKERS
FUrniture ManufaC11,011
--A FULL STOCK OF—
Furniture, Coffins, Caskets, fa";
by
And everything in the ahoy, line, to vet at sti
HEALTEI
Glanders.
This dieeese, known also as faroyeprevails
among homers, assert and mules. It is highly
contagioua. It is oharacterized by it well-
ing and suppuratiou, the glands, Minim-
mation, tending to eappuration of the nmeeus
membrene of the nose and respiratory °tzar%)
pins in the joint, anti great prostration.
There is no evidence that it ever originates
in man; it seeme in every human ease, to have
neen communicated from a diseased animal.
It is believed that it is mayor communicat•
ed by diseased emanations diffused in the
air. This in part accounts for the fact that
it is ootnparatively rare among men, while
it 1E1 frequent among horses, arid has a strong
tendency te spread. Horses are very soci-
able among themselves, and as the morbid
disehargea from the nostrils and lenge are
profuse, they are thus easily inoculated.
ft is plain, however, that man is not as sus.
ceptible to the disease as are animals; but
while it is thus rare among human beings,
it is exceedingly fatal.
In most oases, the affected person has tak-
en it by inoculation • infected matter has
come in contact with a wound, a scratch,
a chafed surface, or a chapped hand. The
poison lies inert from three to eight days,
and sometimes for seve :al weeks. The
wound may even have wholly healed; but
the spot at length becomes intensely inflam
ed, end later ulcerates. The neighboring
lympnatio vessels ewe% and becomes hard
and cord-like.
The glands also enlarge, end the whole
part becomes swellein then follow, general-
ly, anecesses and unserating cavities. The
mucous membrane of the nose sooner or,
later inflames and ulcerates as does also
that of the mouth, larynx, lungs and eyes.
Then follow a severe cough and profuse ex-
pectoration.
In the early stages of the disease, and also
when the disease is of a milder type, it is
difficult to determine its nature. It man be
confounded with rbetunetisra, typhoid fever,
or some other ferns of blood -poisoning. The
patient's relation to a horns affected with
the diseaee is an important fact in the deter-
mination,
We have said that the mortality in man
is very great. Yet if the symptoms develop
slowly, and are less severe, and the disease the story formed one of the most attractive
assemes a chronic form, one-half of the pa- pieces, are no longer in use.
tients may recover. The story, as it is still told in Switzerland,
Of course, the attending physician must is that Gessler, aa Austrian bailiff, at the
time that the country was still under the
tyranny of Austria, placed his cap on a pole
inthe village of Ahern and commanded all
passers-by to bow before it, as a sign of their
submission to Austria.
Tell, who was a famous markeraan with
fortunately neep our skins healtby and fair
without resorting to thee extreme mea•
eures. Fin a full leugth beth a bag of
bran will oaten the water and reake
the skip deliciously smooth and. felt ;
but let me here remark that no beth ie per -
feet in its results without the long and.
XISCELLIANEQ1:18
To barden plaster of Paris, mix it with,
alum -teeter.
John Runyan, Daniel 1)efoe and Sir leas.°
Watts all lie Bunhill Fields cemetery,
break friction a hands or a coarse towel London.
afterward. Frietion not only stimulates eir- Tee, cents an Agee was all a feral, Of 954
culation, bet it Makes the flesh firm and 1)0- sores knell& recently in Greene routine,
Belied like Perkin marble, It is sometimes Ala., when oold under mortgage,
astonishing to eee the change made in an
ugly skin by friction, awl any lady who There le a five-year-old cow in Clay
wishes to possess a healthful body, firm to county, Dakota that Attains 161 hapds high
tbe touch nd fair to the eye, with the and weighs 1,888 pounds. Circus men are
bargaining for her,
elastioity of youth well proiceged. into old
age must give willingly of her strength to Mrs. Sarah P, Bertlett, of Hopes Me., is
thetask of rubbing the body thoroughly. 90 years old, and has just taren her first
spoonful of medicine. She has decided not
" Williana Tell's Prison." to be a centenarian.
There has lately been rernoved from a Four generatione live in a house in Cen-
near Lucerne, in tral Falls, et. L There are a mother,
hill -top at Etuisnacht,
SWitSerlanclo the last vestige of 00 ancient daughter, daughter's daughter, and daugh-
structure known as " Gessler's Castleee ter's daughter's daughter.
where tredition said Wiliam Tell the
Swiss patriot, Was imprisoned by his Aus- glue and in applying first fill the port% of
T k t t *th
n ores ears rong join wi glue, use new
trian tyrant. The fate of this ruin, which was the weed with thin glue and let it dry, and
once the residence of the berons of Russ.
naoht is an excellent illustration of the olean off, and glue it at the joint with otrong
e glue.
workings of Swiss ,thrift. The farmer to There is a large and healthy moral in the
whom the land belonged, the Swiss news-
papers say, became tired of having great boast of a saloon keeper of Danville, Ill.,
that his two grown sons have never tasted
numbers of sightneers tramp over his
whiskey, never used tobacco, and seldom
land to look at the last remaining frag-
ments of Gessler's castle, $o he struok wear'
e bargain with a neighbor, who hap. A large copper medalminted '
, nig
pened to need stone to build the lower George's time, and evidently worn by some
part of a barn, and the fragments of the British soldier in the Revolution, was
Mon -
been carted away, and been built into a
faded castle of the loede of Kussnaeht have roe, N.
up recently in a field near Mon -
SWISS peasant's barn. A " size " in a coat le an inch; in under.
Perhaps the sight -seers, a good many of wear it is 2 inches; in a sock, 1 inch; in a
whom are understood to be Citnadians, will collar, e inch; in a shirt, e inch ; in shoes,
resume their pilgrimages, not this time to A inch ; in pants, 1 inch ; in gloves, n inch,
the hill.top where the ruin used to stand, and in hats, e of an inch.
but to the peasant% barn; for the legend of
William Tell, in spite of the judgment of In order to cure whooping cough in War -
has Ny1011E/hire village, Eine, they cut a piece of
historians that it is altcgether a fable,
hair from the nape of the child's neck, chop
a strong hold upon the popular imagination.
it very fine, and spread it on. a piece of bread
In this country. however, the story of
William Tell is not so often as formerly told and give to a' dog'
to the young, partly, perhaps, for the reason John Lamar Acme, of Lower Lee county,
that it is no longer believed to have a found- Geoigia, died recently from a brass har-
ation upon fact, and partly because the monica. The harmonica was a Christmas
"readers," in which a dramatized form of present, and in blowing it the harmonica
poisoned his mouth and lungs.
determine the treatment, whi ei should be
of a supporting, stimulating and soothing
character. .All who have anything to do
with the patient should wear rubber gloves,
and be very careful of any scratch on the
The Period of Incubation.
Most contagious and infectious diseases
undergo a certain period ol incubation after
exposure, before the first symptoms make
their appearance. Thiel period is some-
what variable. As a rule, the shorter the
period of incubation, the more severe
will be the attaok. The following list
includes the most common contagious mala-
dies
Measles, seven to fourteen days.
Chicken -pox, one to two weeks.
Scarlet fever, one to fourteen. days.
Dipbheria, two days to two weeks.
Small -pox, one to three weeks.
Whoopmg-cough, four to foirteen days.
Mumps, one to three weeks.
Typhoid fever, twelve days.
i!ow to Save Doctors' 'Bills.
"Never go to bed with cold or damp feet.
Never lean with the back upon anything
that is cold.
Never begin a journey until the breakfast
has been eaten.
Never take warm drinks and then imme-
diately go out into the cold.
After exercise of any kind never ride in
an open carriage or near the window of a
car for a moment; it is dangerous to health
and even life.
Never omit regular bathing, for, unless
the skin is in regular condition, the cold
wilt dose the pores and favor congestion or
other diseases,
Merely warm the back by the fire, and
never continue keeping the back exposed to
the heat after it has become comfortably
warm. To do otherwise is debilitating.
Never stand still in cold weather, espe-
cially after having taken a slight degree of
exercise, and always avoid standing on ice
or snow where the person is exposed to cold
wind.
When going from a warm atmosphere into
a cooler one keep the mouth almost closed,
so that the air may be warmed by its pass-
age through the nose ere it reaches the
lungs.
The Dom.estio Doctor.
Rubbing a bruise in sweet -oil and then in
spirits of turpentine will usually prevent the
unsightly black-and-blue spots.
•It is now the rule according to "medical
authority," not to abstain from drinking
water, but to take three and a half pints
daily.
For a cold on the chest a flannel rag
wrung out in boiling water and sprinkled
with turpentine, laid on the chest, gives the
greatest relief.
A hornet's nest which has been deserted
by the hornets, bound on the throat with
a piece of flannel, will care the most main.
nant sore throat.
When hoarse, speak as little as possible
An impervious enamel for. paper, wood,
no., is a selutlon of shellacs m methylated
spirit. A coating of this is applied, and
then another coating laid. on at a high tem-
perature and under great pressure.
A young man is digging for a red tin box
containing $600 in gold, buried in the woods
at Villa Rica, Ga. He claims to have been
the bow and arrow, refused to do so. He celled out of the hour% to the front gate of
Ms sentenced to death, but was pardoned hits yard by a ghost, and told where to find
X7,259,000 sterling (over e36,000,000), Ito
tonnage IS Pow only inferior te that of the
German Empire by 'about 55,000 tewh
and exeeeds that of Franco, Italy, Russia,
Spain, Austria, eto, The combined exporto
end imports of Canadian ports in 1887
readied 7,640,000 tons, which le very nearly
Nue' to those of all the other British colon-
ies combined.
.A. St, LOUIS pork -packer told tile IJ. S
Congressional cOmull'ctett on egrioulture the
other day thet "hogs affected with hog
cholera were often out up arid peened in
slaughteringshoupee. He had freguently
done it himself, and had no doubt that every
pork-paoker in the country had done so.'
And yet these infamous scoundrels who
thus deliberatelyesow broadcast the eeeds of
disease raise a protecting howl and shut
"retaliation" because Great Britain and
other European countries exclude their
filthy and pestilence -breeding products.
Mr. Henry George's assertion that "the
rich are growing richer and the poor are
growing poorer" is not borne out, so far ae
England is concerned by the income tax re-
turns of that eountry. These show that dor-
ing the past ten years the,number of incomes
between $750 and $2,500 has increased
twenty-two per aeon Those between $2,500
and $5,000 have not increased at all, while
those between $5,000 and $10,000 heve
slightly decreased, These facts prove that
the tendency of modern produotion in Eng-
- land, at least, is fevourable teethe poorer
classes.
They say in 13loonaington, Ill., that Delp
Rieherdson who spent all his time in poli-
ties, out of vshiela he tnede precious little
money, much to the discouragement of his
hard-working wife was cured of his bad
habit very suddenly. One day he rushed
into the house and. demanded dinner instant-
ly, saying that he muat be back to the poll-
ing place in five minutes. He eat at the
table and Mrs. Richardson placed before
him a pitcher of water and a platter heaped
up with election tickets. Mr. Richardson
eaw the point, and has since devoted mach
of his energy to providing for his family.
Barrels are now being made of hard and
soft wood, each alternate stave being of the,
soft variety and slightly thicker than the;
hard wood stave. The edges of the stave,
are out square and, when placed together to I
form the barrel, the outsides are even, and
there is a V-shaped creek between each stave
frem top to bottom. In this arrangement
the operation of driving the hoops forces the;
edges of the hard staves into the soft ones
until the cracks aro closed, and the extra -
thickness of the latter causes its inner
edges to lap over those of the hard wood
staves, thus making the joint doubly se
caree
on condition that he would shoot an apple it. The rumor goes that Lord Salisbury's
Last week a St. Luis Wheelmen had health is so much impaired by the continued
a twely.e•mile race with a greyhound, but and severe nature of his official labors that
before en: miles had been run the dog show. it may very soon be neeessery to have a re-
ed signs of fatigue, and had to be watered construction ot the British cabinet, and the
and sponged. The canine was completely question is who will be the next Tore,
"used up" at the finish.
from his Ben's head. He made the shot, buh
Gessler noticed when the apple had been out
in two by the arrow, that Tell had another
arrow in his quiver.
"Why did you put two arrows in your
quiver 1" he asked.
"To kill thee tyrant," boldly answered
Tell, "had I slam my son 1"
Tell was, upon this confession, again put
in chains, to be taken across Lake Lucerne,
and thrust into the castle of Kussnacht ;
but on the way a terrible storm arose, and
he was unbound in order that he might Ser7f3
as pilot.
Steering the boat near the shore, he leap-
ed upon the bank, eacaped, lay in ambush in
a rocky defile through which the Austrians
must pass on their way to Kussnaeht, and the experience of Vienna, where typhoid fe- ist ranks is going rapidly forward. ,
shot Gesaler dead as he passed. His brave ver has entirely disappeared since the town .
In spite of the efforts to create the im-
deed caused the Swiss to rise in insurrec- has been supplied with pure water,
tion, and the canton's were freed from the pression that the health of the Emperor
Austrian yoke. Albert Frazer, a convict in the Michigan Frederick is improving, there are indica.
This is the stray, and a very picturesque penitentiary, escaped, and a reward was of- tions that no such hope ra felt either by him -
tared for his capture. He communicated self or by those officially associated with
and spirited one it is ; but it does not appear
with his wife, who was having a hard strug- him. The strongest evidence of the truth
at all m the early Swiss chronieles, and it
gle with poverty, end induced her to deliv- of this is afforded by the decree shortly to
does appear in the traditions of many other
countries besides Switzerland. Its serincipal er him up and get the reward. So she did, be proclaimed throughout the Empire an.
features are found in the Perairm poem of and Frazer is happier than he has been for thorizing Crown Prince William to repre-
sent the Einperor in the transaction of offi-
Ferid ed -Din Attar, in the Icelandic sagas, years,
in the Danish traditionary poetry, in the dal business in the Fent of his father's in -
The cook in a cowboy camp near Chey- .
Prime aliniste LordR dl h Churchill
ran o p
has ,views and expectistions while a good
Four fishermen at Knoxville, Tenn., re-
port that while crossing the Tennessee in a
small boat a fish like a serpent, and fully ten
feet long, capsized the boat and broke it
many would far rather have a coalition in
name as well as it already is in reality,
with Lord Hartington as the figure -head
nd th I
with their lives. Is nob at an Improbable that the whole sit -
some leg more. n the meantime, it
into pieces the men barely getting ashoree'n
nation raa eedil under o such h
Mr. Brouardel, the French savant, says that Lord Salisbury may, if uecessa,ry, re
that in eighty cases out of one hundred ty- tire without any successor as Minister being
phoid fever is caused by polluted water. M. necessary, for iti spite of all pretests to the
Bronardel's opinion is fully borne out by contrary disintegration in the Ministerial-
andit to act for himself. Although this
English popular song on "William of Cloud- enne was told that he had dra,wn a lottery
esly," and elsewhere. decree alone will not create a regency. it
prizeof $15,000. He at once 'invited the
ennable the much -feared junker Prince
The Swiss seem merely' to have adopted will
of 'Prussia to thrust his hooks of steel into
filet which he will shortly hold as his own.
British farmers are about to settle in a
arge region north of the district ivhere Dr,
boys into town, and in the carouse that
it, and changed it sufficiently to fit it to followed spentnvery cent that he had saved
their history and geography. It seems to for a year. When he got sober he learned
be the common property of the .Aryan races; that he had been fooled, and then he mede
but nowhere has the legend taken such pop- a desperate but ineffectual attempt to kill
ular form, and become so widespread, as
. . himself. Livingston began his missionary labors in
from this S miss adaptatton. It is oe good
that it is a pity it is not time.
---aern—steseree—ran
The Debut of a Soldier.
There was a young cfficer of the Nine-
tieth Regiment, whom a casual observer
would call a strangely bright•looking boy.
Now, however—with pickaxe in hand this
boy (as he seems) was devoting a mighty
zeal—zeal governed by knowledge and skill
—to the cardinal purpose in hand. He was
one who (as now the world knows) had a
life of warlike glory before him. Though
seeming much younger, he was really 21
years of age. Twenty-one yeara of age, yet
already distinguished for the number and
the brilliancy of his warlike service, Captain
—then Lieutenant--Wolsele had come out
to the Crimea in the midstof the terrible
Winter. Within a few days r,f the time of
his landing, he had courted hardship and
work by volunteering to serve as an engi-
neer in the trenches, and it is still as an
The Rev. Bartholomew Edwards, rector South Africa. This is in Bechuanaland, the
of Ashill, Norfolk, is the oldest clergyman country stretching almost to the Zambesi,
in England. He has just completed his that Great Britain took under her wing a
100th year. He has been rector of Ash- while ago. One large party are now on the
vine just seventy-five years. He is also way to their new homes, and another will
the oldest living Cantata having taken
his fa?riltrchneaxsbmig°ansbilth.
B. A. in 1811. He is in good health and e mErmhmeeotlhonwishbewatillfahramves
still occasionally conducts the services at of Dakota, and the Government helps the
his church. ,. pioneers by slipplying each with a house,
10) head of sheep, twenty-five cattle, two
Mr. Clarence Catn.u, of Corinth, Mich.,
horses, and all needed implements. A part
of Beahuanaland, like our great Northwest,
has been greatly maligned, and there is no
doubt that the industrious Anglo-Saxon is
destined to thrive there in a large region
where Livingstone found only the untutored
has attained notoriety in the easiest possible
way, simply by putting this -badly written
note in a barrel of apples, Nvhieh was opened
recently in Oshkosh I's I write this line to a
frend unknowen, won't the furot young lady
that its apples ought of this barl to right
natives; but why not give the sheep, cattle
me a eter gust for the away of it and if
and horses to settlers in the Northern part
you due I will make you a present of a barl
et Americo, rather than in the Southern
of ohous apples next fall."
part of Africa?
A French physioian inentione a curio -as A man of 29 years, erect, square•should-
case of left-handedness. One child in a cer- d
, an a seem of the railway station here yesterday after
appeared at the age of 1 year also to be lefv-
ere ,lithe, powerful and austere, strode out
tain family was left-handed d d
seeing a batch of royal guests depart. He
acting engineer that we first see him busied • handed. t was then earned that the had a strong, heavily, lined and moody face.
in this evening of the 7s11 of June. From a mother always ctsrried her child on her left The guards presented arms and a brilliant
work—discontinued soon afterward—on a arm. 9fie was advised to carry the child on retinue of generals hurried after the master.
part of the ground further east he was eum. her riglat. The infant, having las right arm ful looking German. It was the Crown
moned to replace an engineer officer whohad
been killed at the Quarries, and thenceforth
till the morning hour lenient found him ex-
changing all other toil for the toil of a des.
free began to grasp objects with it, e,nd soon
became right-handed.
In 1855 Charles Strong came to Boston
from Germany and began trying to make
Prince who will soon be emperor of the na-
tion of warriors. The waiting multitude at
the sight of him gave a single yell that came
from their very hearts. The prince listened
mint the hoarseness is recovered from, else peritte fight, he shared in the strenuous et. a living by repairing clocks. The other with a rapt look, then threw back hie head
the voice may be permanently lost, or diffi- forts by which our people were striving to day he was found dead in the house where with a sudden motion and showed his teeth
oulties of the throat be produced. connect the works newly captured with Eg. he lived alone. Four rooms were full of in a smile of savage exultation. The
The following is a sure cure for chilblains ertonn Pit, and to form, lsefore break of raga, one heap serving as the miser's bed. fierce light that beats about the Ger-
-take a handful of dried peach leaves and day, what, howevet bnperfeet, might prove Gold and silver watches and chains, a great man throne leaves the dumb and sickly
pour boiling water on them, and let them
stand until cool enough not to burn the
patient, then plaiie the feet in the water for
fifteen minutes, Do this two or three times,
and it will effect a cum
Whoever drinks' tea let him do so in
moderation. Do not take it between meals
or on an empty stomach. Allow it to form
O pltrt of the regular meal. Make the in-
fusion by steeping—never by boiling. Those
who are troubled with insomnia should riot
use it any form, Brain workera cannot af.
ford to overwork 011 the stimulus of string
tea. The poor and ecairbily.fed canna ma
d to touch. ib, .l10 dyspeptic% we say, tea
grairates V011, and many crazes are cured
disusing it. Persona troubled with con.
pation ohould not use it either Weak or
immediate wante.
ttr
Tepid water is preferable for every Sea-
n of the year. Milk baths have been In
or front timeimmemorial; with [ladies,
d nothing is 'settee than a daily hot bath
milk. Mine. Tullien wits among the his.
so
fay
We have one of the very best an
Hearses in the County, wh
'f
tor
irtmeralo ttunishod and conductell VA'
eittremely low priedif, he
gir
ican women who bathed in zftk, in
toli ehe added crushed strawberries to
an agreeable perfinte. X have also
ard of ari old lady ef 80 who retained a
Irsh complexion like cream and roses by
Deuaractre Or ALL TEIZ ili Itnnatt 600131/1211
to be a tenable lodgment. The loos of blood
caused by a wound received at an earlier
hour did not slacken his powerful energies,
and, although he was destined to touch—
was destined even to pass—the actual phy-
sical limit, of what angry nature allows in
number of old and new clocks, copper come, monarch in the shadow plodding slowly on
and other like articles were strewn around towards the nearing and inevitable end,
the rooms. It is said that Strong left while it throws the stalwart, warlike and ag-
property worth at least $70,000. gressive figure of Crown Prince William out
with a vivid distinctness. The name of
The paper doors now coming into use are
d vo advantage d the e,oming Emperor is heard in the councilo
the way of bodily effort, we shall not see of neither sEreeeing, oruging, nor of all sovereigns and diplomata of Europe.
him robbed of his strength by either the warping, They are formed of two thick pa.
work or the fighting he chose to go through mNaont °wi ni erd e tdh tt reNmaePn6d1 has
e ar ayso Igl
per boarda, stamped and moulded into pan- fall to the lot of this headstrong, violent and
till the object of hie toil had been reached eee and glazed
and the difficult victory won. --en together with glue and pot- revengeful prince. He will have two million
of the Crimea. - 46 rtmet9i" janshgAfteraann .bdeci being ne% onevr o° lrleetdah wati tishthroughfiarwe heavypartoe or pf,r ot hor fe°- yiel ocaarrt8e.- 3.11Sha'a. nt ed8s0 mEt ihinelion s hemmusketsanodph eea:phi hea 1.tse sblaite heky0
paint,ed, varnished, arid hung in the rietial detest' th00 eir present English Emprese he.
A Chinese lady matchmaker had a good tease
looking but humpbacked girl to procure a " cause she makes her children talk Englioh,
husband for. She discovered that there wee ft looks at if the deye of the Legislative and has prevailed upon the Emperor to have
a hunapbeaked youth who had also found Chamber of New trinasivick are numbered. an English physician. They have tried to
difficulty in obtaining a wife, so she set out The Premier of the Provinee has introduced mob Dr. Mackenzie, and they look coldly at
to arratge the breech, but, as both parties s resolution in the House of Assembly aim- Frederick kII., because he spends the
were vety eligible in other 'respects, each ing at the abolition of the- Legislative Conn- last hours of his mailing life ennobling men
respective parent insisted upon ebb/Ming a ell at the close of the present Parliament, of Semitic blood. They adore the very
and if the Ornairialtient Mad upoh it the name of the coming ruler) Who has all their
surreptitious view of their daughter in-law
or son-in-law. It was arranged that the „uppers chamber will go, The Council, prejudices intensified a thousand fold. Rio
girl should be interviewed while spinniag though made up of highly respectable .gens aversioa to the English extends to his own
with her hump inserted i
. tiemen, has oueliyed ite ueefulnese. It re an ,1 mother,
nto a niche ins°
the mud wall, and ghe than was introduced expensive appendage and deserves the fate
as he was leading home a waterbuffalo,
leaning over its /1110k WW1 a 1.0111 coat thrown
over hie beck. The marriage teok lace
alWays *fishing in the tinee of crushed end a was too late for in erfetence ore
trawberries and nothing else, But we can the humps Wein discovered
that Premter Fieldin has m rked out f r it
g a .
Canada noW holds fifth place among the
maritime nations et the Woelcl, and very
neatly forth among the eonarneroial fleets,
Ite fleet gauges 1,218000 tons, valued at
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No News Prom Stanley Yet.
No news comes yet from Mr. Stanley and
Emile Pasha, and anxiety for their welfare
naturally increases. No news is not always
good news. In this me it becomes daily
more ominous of evil. There is not, how-
ever, serious reasons for alarm at present.
Since he was last heard from Mr. Stanley
has had to travel through a region inhabited
by ticattered and diverse tribes • the very
country through which it is easies't to force a
passage and hardest to send back news.
Moreover, while it would require a formid-
able opposition to stop the progress of the ex
pedition, any cne of a thousand rifles might
uitercept &solitary messenger. If Mr. Stan-
ley reached Wadelat safely six menthe ago,
AS 40 reasonably believed, it is not strange
that no definite news has reached us. Such
ne vs would have to come either by
way of &umber or by. way of the
Congo. The latter route 10, as has been
said, uncertain. The former is still more
so. With Uganda and Unyoro in a state of
utmost disturbance, ib will be alined impos-
sible to send a dispatch from Wadelai to the
East Coast. re is to the Congo that we are
to look for the earliest news, and each
steamer coming down will be watched for
eagerly for tidings of the great explorer.
The next steamer that can bring any such
message is the Stanley, 'which is due at Leo-
poldville about March 15. It will inform us
whether Major Barttelot at Yambunga has
heard anything of the expedition which set
out from his camp into the wildenness. If
he had not, anxiety will be enha.tic 1. ut
hope will not be destroyed nor evs 0005 -
denim shaken.—N. Y. Tribune.''
Notes on Noses.
Mania the only animal that blows hie nose.
The alligator has a nose nearly two feet long,
and he riever blows it. 'Tho elephant can
reps& over his nose and tickle his hind legs,
and he often deo, but he never wipes it.
The blue -nosed babooe has a derulean pro,
besets of which the noblest animal might be
proud, but it gees unblown. The double -
nosed pointer has hurnentie eapacity for
blowing, but he never will; ami the oyster,
whose nolo reaches clear round his back,
refrains from exercising it. Man alone hail
reached the height of a pocket -handker-
chief, and he proudly waves his eambrie as
a euffislent evidence of his superiority,
"Pa," amid Bettie the other day, " why
doethey call a ship she
"Because, my son, she is always on its
lookout for some of the buoys."