HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-12-5, Page 6Fact
ORTH knowing is that blood dire,
eases which all other reined -les fail
Vies, yield to Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Fresh confirraa-
tion of this state-
ment cometo
liana daily. Even
such deep-seated
sUC t stubborn QOM-.
plaints as Rhea-
-- matieni, Rheumy. -
tic Gout, and the
like, are thorough-
ly eradicated by
the use of this won-
derful alterative.
Mrs. B. Irving
Dotage, 110 West
125th. street, New
York, certifies
" Ab011t two years ago, after suffering
lee nearly two years -from rheumatic
went, being able to walk only with great
discomfort, and havingtried various
remedies, including mineral waters,
without relief, I saw by an advertise-
ment in a Chicago paper that a man had
been relieved of this distressing com-
plaint, after long suffering, by taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I then decided to
make a trial of this medicine, and took
fie regularly for eight months. 1 e,a
pleased to say that ie effected a com-
pkte cure, and that I have since had no
return of the disease."
Mrs. L. A. Stark, Nashua, N. H.
-writes: "One year ago I was taken ill
-with rheumatism, being confined to my
louse six months. I came out of the
oickness very mach debilitated, with no
appetite, and my system disordered in
-every way. I commenced to use Ayer's
Sarsaparilla and began to improve at
once, gaining in strength and soon re-
covering my usual health. I cannot say
too much in praise of this well-known
_medicine."
"I have taken a great, deal of rnedi-
e.tene, but nothing has done me so
much good as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I
Sett its beneficial effects before I had
.quite finished one bottle, and I can
freely testify that it is the best blood..
_medicine I know of." —L. W. Ward, Sr,
-Woodland, Texas.
Sarsaparma,
PRILFASED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
...Frice $1; eix bottles, $5. Worth $50 bottle.
THE BEST
VIKING POWDER
-4.15 I—
&LAREN'S GENUINE
Coors Meg
Alinn.
„ Nothing Injurious
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.=.1.•111
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536 CRAIG STREET,
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CHADWICK'S
SPOOL
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For Hand and
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.14AS NO SUPERIOR.
ASK FOR IT.
LEATHEROID
STEEL -LINED TRUNKS
In Semple, Ladies' and
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WIWI aiiffStr011ZOSt
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In the World.
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SOIO DS, for tin D01%1111011
tiOTEL BALMORAL.
MONTREAL.
Irotre Dame St., one of the most central
.mand elegantly furnished Hotels lathe City.
,.0.ecommodatfoa for 400 guests.
Rates:
32 to $3 per day. St Vs TATOODROFF, II Manager.
PEARS
Aels ior Ganda,
ji PALMER &SON
Wholesale IMpqrs of
tilUGGISTS' SUNDRIES,
1743 OTR DEE BT.,
MONTREAL
SOAP.*
DOMINION
LEATHER BOARD
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Manufacturera of
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Stam Packing,
FRICTION,
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ir a Perfect Friction
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PAPERS
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NEWS,
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21 DeBrosoies st,
MILLD*•
POIET1ET7P, P.O.
rtulDBEEE
41 'OM • ••••••.
HE GREAT
STRENGTH GIVER
PERFECT FOOD
....A FOR THE SICK
"TA WARMING 8(
110TRITIOUSOLFERAGE
A POWERFUL
INVIGORATOR
A SURE CURE
(clan BILIOUSNESS. CONSTIPATION,
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' ;give ANC MILD.THOROLIGH AND PROMPT
kN ACTIaltt, Alan t'ORM A 'VALUABLE AID
trd Earrrens IN THZ
irlIMATalrnrr AND CUR arnwpoNie
Meta lett refe
PADRUfe AQUA.
The NOW Yotit breviers have aubsoribed
nearly half a million dollars foe the purpose
of eeouring the World's Fair. There iii some.
thing tonohing in Ili" eimple *sat &et the
visitors to the World', Fair will drink
bete
The Americen Consul anFore Ede oora-
plains in his last official tepert of the Cane-
dian system of appraimmet for duty. He
says the offioial vathation set upon mmorte
is far in mores of the actual value at the
point at which the goods one purehased.
Natheiniel Hawthorne wrote so small a
hand that he would often put fifteen ilend.
red words on a page of ordinary letter paper.
Frig son Julian writes a hand nearly as
email as that. The son's manuacripte, how.
over, are absolutely neat, which could not
be said always of the father's.
A young man who died in Whmipeg re-
cently left $2,000 of life assurance to a young
woman whom he loved. The young wonaan
ded not reciprocate his love, ben she 1404
no objection to the $2,0011, which she hag
formally claimed. It will strike the casual
observer that she is nob lacking either
Ln assurance or polloy.
The English peplos have not been slow to
note that by the deposition of the Emperor
Pedro of Brazil the Amadeu* continent has
get rid of the last of its sovereigns. The New
Teak Pout point' out that Podro's manner of
diseeppearing shows how commercial is the
age in which we live, He agreed to take a
sum in cash and an annuity fer hie "divine
right," end, having gob both, stepped on
baud ship and wits gone.
eopleally ignorant j Ilyllaill hag been
found 'In Iowa. He oould name *sly
eight States of the Union and three presi-
dents, He was firmly of the ophulon that
*gland ie in Maze, and that Caned& is
"rent somewhere beyond California." This
*ream ehonld be thoroughly ssompetent to
give e prisoner a fair trial. He has not got
his tread fined with the nonsense which the
Common &heels pat into people's head".
In the year ending September 30, 1889,
the New York elevated railwey oars ear-
ried 179,497,433 peaseugers. This is an
average of about one hundred tipsier every
man, WOMia and ohild in New York. The
farm amounted to nearly nine million dol-
lars. Since the roads "were opened the
Number of persons carried was 1.202,920,-
842. This represents reoelpte of aixey
million dollars. Hereseem to be a
charm for New York th Make money by
owning those roads.
Wherever the World's Fair of 1892 may
be held—either in Chicago er in New 'York—,
it appears th be taken for granted that one
of theleatares of the show must be a ooloseal
aeruoture of aome sort which will cast the
Eeffel tower in the shade. In the meantime,
however, Sb. Paul proposes to do something
in this line at her next winter carnival, the
present scheme being the construction of an
lee tower 150 feet in diameter at the base
and 250 feet high. What ill Montreal going
to do abont this? Is there to be a carnival at
all there this winter?
Oar countrymen shovld not be singled out
alone for eriticism of their apparent lack of
aympathy and reverence for the antique. the
historio and sentimental. Daring the
present year the English allowed the house
in which Byron was born to be pulled down,
and the French permitted the cottage at
Barbizon to be rszed to the ground where
Millet lived for the greater part of his life. Wherein the host, as I have said
The lease to Mme. Iiillet having run out, Had laid two travellers by •
the owner of the ground would not Then taking one, the tenth and laab,
renew it, owing to the rise of values oon- He lodged him safe in I.
eequent on the fame brought upon 6he vil-
lage by Millet, Bowman, Corot, and their
frienda and admirer,.
There will be no ice palace at St. Paul
this season. Instead of it there will be an
Io e tower, 150 feet in diameter and 250 feet
high. Forty feet from the ground, outside
the tower, is a gallery, the starting point
of the toboggan slide, which proceeds spir-
ally at -out the tower to the base, where the
taboggan, having a tremendous impetus,
may shoot over the surface of the ice on the
river 3.000 or 4,000 feet. The portion of the
toboggan slide round the tower is protected
on the outside by * bieh ioa balustrade,
which will keep gee toboggan from jumping
the traok. A spa toboggan slide may be
a briliant ides, but we are harassed with
anxiety for the heads end stomachs of the
sliders.
Complaints of injury to business by reason
of the lack of freight cars are quite as lend
and as frequent in the 'United Staten as in
Canada. For some weeks past the rolling
etook of nearly every railroad in the oountry
Mae been entirely inadequate to meet the
demands made upon ite Oa one line it is
tatimeted that 2000,additional oars could
have been need, while an offisial of another
states that he has been short 400 oars per day
for through freight alone. The Pennsylvania
and some other Eastern roads made prepara-
tions to accommodate the rush of autumn
business, bat even they have not • been able
to move their freight' as fast as they
intended.
Our neighbours are about to show the
world that they have a brand new navy
In a few days the four reoently completed
orniiers—the Chicago, Borten Atlanta, and
Yorktown—will set sail for the Mediterran-
ean under the command of Rtar•Admiral
John G. Walker, late Chief of the Bureau of
Navigation. The equadron will be the most
formidable that has ever left an American
port, we are told, and it is going abroad
"for the double purpose of showing foreign-
er' thee the United States does have a navy,
and for exercising effieers and men ln the
evolutions of a squadron,' which now for
the drat time can be attempted with the new
ships of war." Uncle Sam is very proud of
the fact that he has at least' a fleet which
will not provoke the derision of the effete
monarchies of the Old World.
Love's Miracles.
All, love, they know not, they who tea&
That deet) between the dearest souls,
Thee (ding together each to each,
A barren sea forever rens ;
That from bleak, separate Ohara they lean,
Wnat time the homesick winds make
• Moan,
With eyes that strain to the unseen,
With hearts that yearn to the unknown;
That clothed in utter lonelineas,
Through life they mourn life's greateet
loos,
The skill to meke the distance less,—
The power to build a bridge aortas.
Sad legend, writ for us in vain:
Have we not known, have wo not fele,
The same thought tingle in eath brain,
The some mood make our hearts to melt?
When the sore burden of our race
Sonae moment acme without dieguise,
I see my pain within your faoe,
Your tears are risleg to my eyes.
Once, in my veins the tide ran low;
Bub when I felt my hand entwine
With yours, how warm the overflow
Of your strong life poured into mine 1
Your strength was mine'my joy was yours
Nay, rather, strengthand toy were ours
Alike for us while life endures
Come ran and sun, and thorns and flowers.
Whether we pore the written page;
Or pace June -haunted paths at eve,
Or watch the pale moon's pilgrimage,
Or hear afar the night -winds grieve,
Or wander yearn and miles apart
The streams shall re unite again;
My love shell still renew your heart,
Your words shall quicken all my brain.
For nu abider' one life, one thought,
One melody that never dull.;
The arch -magician Love has wrought
This miracle of miracles.
The Ten Travellers.
Ten weary, footsore traveller',
All in a woeful plight,
Sought, ehelter at a wayside inn
One dark and stormy night.
"Nine rooms, no more," the landlord said,
" Have I to offeryou ;
To each of eight a single bed,
But the ninth must serve for two.'
A din arose. The troubled host
Could only scratch hie head,
For of tbose tired men no two
Would occupy one bed.
The puzzled host was soon at ease—
He was a clever man.
And so to please his guests devised
A most; ingenious pian:
IAIBIOIDIEIFIGIHIII
In room marked A two men were placed,
The third was lodged in B,
The fourth to C was then assigned,
The fifth retired to D.
In E the' sixth he turned away.
In F the seventh man,
The eighth and ninth in G and H,
And then to A he ran.
EfadBeen There Before.
Dlok Turner, an aged oolored gentleman
well known about Toronto, whose profession
in that of a whitewasher, appeared before
Colonel Denison the other day, charged
with drnuirennese and acknowledged the
corn with a deep blush.
" Were you ever here before, Turner?"
"Yam, Rah, but not fo bein' drank."
"Well, what then? '
"Chickens."
"Diechargecl." (tanglater, )
•
A Remarkable Dog.
IMMO; a good dog you have there," said
one travelling man to another.
"Very good, indeed."
"Ratter ?"
"WclI he isn't much on rata, but he's a
great raoe doe 4
A race dog ?"
"Yee, sir, He oan 001RO OUt ahead of a
rat at any distance."
Proof,
" Vhat'e a great mine, / tell you theren
money in
"Bow do you know there is ?"
"Well / pat fifty theme. sd in it myself,'
Nine single rooms, a room:for eaoh,
Were made to serve foriten ;
And this it is that puzzleseme
And many wiser men.
The explanation of the above puzzle,
which we find credited to the Pittsburg
Bulletin, is very simple, though it may not
at first sight occur to the reader. If man
No. 1 and man No. 2 were the only ones
placed in room A, man No. 10 could not be
taken from there in room 1. Obviously,
therefore, there must have been three men
originally there or else one of the three was
" left oat in the cold."
STOWAWAYS.
Terenty•Eire of Them on Owe Bat—flow
They Finally Escaped.
TI18 ship was hardly well club on the
ocean, says a writer in Chambers' Journal,
when two stowaways made their appear-
ance, and later in the day five more. The
next morning six more came up, and during
the two following days they kept coming up
in twos and threes until they numbered
twenty-five all told, The ship seemed to be
teeming with atowaways, and the officer on
watoh was fairly b.wilderea. There was a
plaintive pleading in his voice as ne said to
the last comer: "Say, hadn't you better
send the rest up at once ?" "They are all
up now, sir," replied the stowaway with re-
pressed cheerfulness, and the °fiber gave a
sieh of relief. When the vessel arrived at
Quebec' the captain sent a dispatch ether.,
with the pilot 1309.8 80 be forwarded tto
Montreal, asking that a detachment of the
harbour police be at hand when the vessel
came alongeide to arrest the men. The
police were in readiness on the whart, but
the steamer etra,nded in midstream, and
lightere had to be sent c ff to relieve her of
part of the cargo. One of the lightere was
alongside when darkness came on iOnd she
had to lie to midi sunrise. When the lighter
was fully loaded she drew to the wharf to
discharge, but; herdly was ahe moored when
there was a movement among some sacks and
a stowaway leaped out and made a break for
the wharf. Another immediately sprang out
from the other side and in another instant
the whole deok of the lighter was alive with
stowaways, running up the wherven and
leaping over the obstacles that came in their
way. The captain was powerless with
amazement and did nothing bat stand and
look on in a dazed sort of a way. When the
laet of them had cleared the vessel's side and
things had quieted down a bit he recovered
himself, and walking over to the monks he
poked carefully about among them, but find
ing nothing he resumed his former position'
Suddenly another stowaway, who had been
unable to get out with the rest, jumped up
and °leered. This was too much and the
captain shouted : "10 there's any more
pamengere goiny aehore they had better go
now.' But the whole consignment had es-
caped free of duty.
A Deduction.
"The Prohibitionists will never gain the
ascendancy. '
"Think?"
"No. Isn't the rainbow a reminder ef the
promise that man will never again bo over.
whelmed by water ?"
A man who beate the goeg at a raiiwsy
eating station makes a big noitte in the
world, but be does not get there. Some
other ;fellow sate the dinner. He simply
maket the din.
SOMOthiug Now,
isolomes was very nearly right when he
"aid, There is no new thing under the
sun." Bug think that even Solomon would
have th admit that he had never seen or
heard of such a thing as a Dieter Album 1
In feet, 1 think no one ever did, until this
year when they have sprung suddenly Into
fashion among Englith girle. Dress
Albuin is made by having a blank -book of
geed thick paper (molt as ie made for mount-
ing photographs), and in it pasting A sow
atone two inches square, of eaoh new dress
whioh the owner ot the album parohans.
Under each sample is written the date when
the dress was drat worn, and the coat may
alio be added in cipher, for private refer -
eine. There are some great advantage')
attending this new hobby, but first let us
look at is from the side of sentiment only.
Imagine for a moment that your mother
had always kept such a record; could any-
thing be more faeumating than to turn over
its pages and look with pleased interest at a
bit of the pink gingham whioh the wore to
her first picnic, or the 'scrap like the laven-
der Bilk which she had 011 the day when she
met your father for the first time I Could
anything be more delightful to children
(bill steam of their mother's youth thus
illustrated? And would not tender love
and spnapethy fill their ohildish hearts as
they came to the little square of blaok
hornbeams which marked their mother's
grief for the baby brother who died before
they were born? The power of association
would bring back many a poene to the
mother's mind, as the turned over the old
book, and thus allow her to add to the liat
of those much -loved home stories which
begin, "When I was s. little girl."
Now for the practical aide. 10 a girl starts
a Dress Album and keeps it carefully, I am
sure that the result will be to make her more
prudent and economical in her parch:nes,
as she nes before her mach a faithful
mirror of her expenditure. Will not her
heart sink for shame as her eyes fall upon
a sample of the heliotrope nun's veiling
which she insists on buying, against her
mother's advice, and whioh one brighe sun
faded beyond remedy? An object lesion
like this will do more good than a thousand
lectures 1 A thoughtful girl will begin th
consider, as she looks over her album,
whether she is dolt% right to apend oh much
money on her dress, when so many good
sausea are standing still for laok of means,
and before Me buys a new dress she will
ask hereelf, " Do I really need it ?" nob
"Will it be becoming V'
A good and !eating lemon in prudence
may be learned from the pattern of the thin
dreas whioh was worn on a yachting ex-
cursion in spite of grave remonetrance from
those older and wiser, and which remelted
in an attack of bronchitis and three weeks
spent in bed. So by all means begin to keep
a Dress Album, and do not fail to learn
from it the lessons in prudence and economy
which it will teaob to a thinking mind.
As you show i:, to your friends I think that
you may safely say (notwithstanding Solo•
coon's aseertion), "See this is new."—(Julia
B. Sohanffier.
eielle141111110.—.
Lord Brassey on the Colonies.
On behalf of the funds of the Groavenor
Museum at Chester, Lord Braesey last night
delivered a lecture in the music hall of that
city on "Oar Colonial Empire." The Duke
of Westminster presided, and the Duchess
of Teck was one ofthe audience. Lord Braasey
said he had visithi as a yaohteman every
part of that Great British Empire on which
the sun never seta; and having seen go much
of that vast Empire it was natural to cherish
a patriotic hope that we should not by any
failure of statesmanship or want of sympathy
allow those branches to be severed from the
grand old trunk. (Cheers,) Daring the 50
years auceeeding the accession of lase Majes-
ty, the area governed by the Q leen, exclus-
ive of Great Britain, increased from 1,100,-
000 to 8,400,000 square miles. The Euro-
pean noptdation of the colonies increases
from 2,000,000 to 10,000 000: the colored
population from 93,000,000 to 262,000,000;
and the state revenues of our possessiour
beyond the seas from £24,000,000 to £122,-
000,000 a year. Of our over -sea trade, one-
third was carried on between the colonies
and the mother country; and of our trade
In manufactured goods one-half was conduct.
ed with our colonial customers. In short,
in siiite ot protective barriere, we found
the most sure markets in our colonial
poesessions.
TRADE FOLLOWED THE FLAG;
but the colonial connection was a reserve of
atrength for the maintenance of the Empire,
as well as an outlet for our commerce. If
we in our little Empire were to hold our own
against thetfieete and armies of our powerful
neighbors, ie was eesential that the British
nation should remain undivided. (Uheeren
Every step to consolidation and unity
strengthened the defence of the Empire.
In support of this view, he reminded his
audience of the offers which we had from
time to time thoeived of assistance from onr
various colonies, spoke of the hearty volun-
teering spirit amonst their population, and
ahowed how this could be utilized for re
serves of Imperial strength. As yet, the
colonies had not looked beyond their own
local selfdefenee ; but hereafter they would,
he thought, do more.—(Edinburgh Scots-
man.
More Truthful Than Funny.
"Pop, what does non oompos mends
mean ?'
"That, my son, is a mind without a corn -
pea."
Had to Take After Him,
"Do you take after your father?'
"Yep: these trousern were his'n before 1
got'em. Yer see hthebigger'n me."
It Covered the Ground.
Spiritualist—I have related my wonderful
experience; upon what theory OAD you ex-
plain it V'
liSrkeptio—Upen the theory that you are
a.e
A clergyman in Minneapolis recently hor-
rified his oongregatien by denying his belief
in the Bible and Chrietianity. And then
when he had got everybody ea the tenter-
hooks of auspenee, he closed his sermon by
saying that his dismal was a lit ble ruse for the
purpose of waking them up and musing
their interest. That clergyman would be
much more useful iri a minstrel troupe than
In the ministry.
Lord Armstrong saye, in referenoe to the
reoent criticisms of the great guns that the
110 ton gun principally considered has been
unfairly tried by the British Governtnent,
ae it had been fired with allergen amounting
to over a thousand pounds of power, or more
than the ineximum charge calculated for a
battle, He does nob say that the great
gnus are jadicious weapons, bet the inj erg
which would incapaoltate them will COMO
freed the ercedon of the bore from the exam -
Ivo powder ohargee rather than from the
strain of the explosion.
PEARLSIII TOTH.
He is the best gentleman who is the son
of his own deserts.
The reproach of a friend ehould he Ptriet.
ly just—but not too frequent.—Budgell.
)(meth ahould be eavinge banix,-411ine.
de Swetohine.
be Tpaaki de. —gittlowlanitt oaysleig0h1R; Meioleant.men give 1)()
A departure from tenth le hardly ever
known to be a single one.—[Rioleardeon.
It does nob do to war with the world ; the
wonidia toe strong for the individual. --[Mme
de Stnel.
Modesty in woman is a virtue moat de-
eerving, since we do all we oan to euro her of
it.— [Lingree.
Vanity is a strange passion ; rather than
be out of a job it will brag of its vicee.—(a,
W. Shaw.
It is seldom thrill We find out how great
are our resources until we are thrown upon
them. --Bovie.
rine may be better than his reputation or
his oonduct, but never better than his prin-
ciples.—(Latena.
Men are sinful jtHit as they,are foolieh, and
good just as,they are a., very mixed
in botb respects, --(Channing.
Wits, like drunken men with evrorde, are
apt to draw their steel twin their best AO.
quaintanoes.—[Douglas Jerrold.
Friendship le like the earthen ware, if it
Is broken it) oan be mended. But love is like a
mirror, 0008 broken tlitt ends it.
Forgive us ell 1
Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fedL
—Sleakespere.
Perhaps the iamb delightful friendships
are those in whioh there is nauth agreement,
much disputation, and yet more personal Lik-
ing.
A true man never freta about his plaoe in
the world ; but jut slidea into it by gravita-
tion of his nature, and swings there as easi-
ly as a star.
Eoonotny in love is peace to nature, much
like economy in worldly matters. We should
bs prudent; never love too fast. • Profusioa
will not, oanacit alwaye Iamb.
When the dist et death has choked a
great man's voice, the contmon words he
mid turn to omelet, ; the oommon thoughts
he yoked like horses draw like griffins.
True glory oonsiste in doing what; deserves
to be written '• in writing what deserves to
be read ; and in so living as to make the
world happier and beater for our living in
Ideas go booming through tke world
louder than cannon. Theughte are might.
ier than armies. Prinolples have athieved
more victories then horsemen and chariots.
W H. Pexton.
If misery be the effect of virtue it ought
to be reverenced, if of ill fortune, to be pitied;
and if ef vice, not to be insulted, became it
is perhaps iteelf,a punishment Adequate to the
crime by which it Its produced.--fDr. Johneon
Dom Pedro,
Dom Pedro II. of Breell, whose personality
recent events have again made , interesting,
wear born December 2, 1825, and WAS crown-
ed " Emperor and Perpetual Defender of
Brazil," April 7,1831. His father, the head
of the royal bourse of Bragamen had 'achieved
the independence of Braull from Portugal,
but hie leaping toward almolutisna brought
about a crisis which compelled his abdication,
and establishing his eon on the throne under
alregeney, be retired to Europe to spend the
remainder ot his days in quieb. It was a
peaceable revolution, and until 1841 the in.
fent head of the ancient house of Braganz a
was the eubjeot of hie tutor and the Regent
Minister. Oa July 18, 1831, Dom Pedro II,
Ives crowned with due solemnities in Rio
Janeiro, being then only eixteen year's old.
The full name of the Emperor is Pedro John
Charles Leopold Salvador Vivien Franois
Xavier Franoie de Paul Leocardio Michael
Gabriel Raphael Gongligue d'Alcantart. All
of these names have some historical algal&
canoe, and are derived either from family
patron saints or from a long line of ancestors
that extends back to "the twilight of fehle.'
Pedro Segundo warfthe son of Pedro Primero,
Emperor of Brazil, and of Leopoldina, Arch.duohss of.Auntria. The coronation of the
young Emperor was answered by the repub-
lican!! of Brazil witb a rebellion, which,
however, was put down after eighteen
months of turmoil. From the beginning of
his reign Dom Pedro has been the friend of
liberty, and through the efforts! of the young
Emperor a Bresilian contingent fought with
the Argentine,, for the independence of that
country from Spain in 1851 and 1852,
In 1843 Dom Pedro married Therm,
daughter of Franc!" I., titular King of
Naples and the two Sloilies. By her he had
two danghtera, Leopoldina and Ieabella,
• The principal events of hie, reign have been
• the troubles with England in 1862, which
were arbitrated by the King of the Belgians,
the war with Paraguay,' beginuing in 1866,
and ending in 1870; and the decree provid-
ing for the gradual emancipation of the eleven'
in Brazil, promulgated in 1871, The war
with reragnay was long and bloody. and it
was in this war that the imperial navy, under
the great Admiral Barrosso, won itr first
laurels. Since that the Emperor has, nein
the outbreak of last week's "revolution,"
reigned in peace disturbed only by the
intrigues of politabrna and the natural canoe
that encompase a thione. A more sonnte
politician never wielded a sceptre. Never
did a monaroh see such change in the country
and the people he governed. When in the
throne -room of the old palace in Rle, the fair-
haired boy Of sixteen first felt the preasure of a
crown, his vast empire was an unexplored
wildernese, with egaalid olden strung along
ite coast. The capital iteelf reeked with
fever, and wan a tangle of narrow, ill -paved,
andrained streets. Now the smoke of
sugar refineries hangs over the Bey of Rio,
and the noise of the cotton -mill is heard by
the walls of Maranham. Throughout the
entire length of the Amazon the busy abeam.
beets ply, and every harboris crowned with
commerce. A navy has been created whioh
ranks only after the navies of the great
European powers. Every art and every
science las a home In Brazil, and the capita
los one of the finest cities in the world.
It is proposed to establieh direct Awn.
ship Communication between Arbroath and
Locden.
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Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine.
tf•IN=.•:•[......./I.•••=1=0.4.11C•JASOMIIMM31•••••121m...11=IM, .1••1•1•11,..
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lany so-called diseases are simply symptoms of
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neglected cold in head results in Catarrh, followed
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„ Beware of imitations similar in name. I
685 Solid Cold Watch. HER
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tether with our large ancloal-
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*BALTjMQREMD.
0110 of the New Y ork paperediscussing IngdaInk onour to writo
the Weldon Extradition Act says : The
United States cannot reoolve surrendered
fugitives from Canada under its provisions
without ea -operating with a dependent State
in ditiorecliting the eupreine treaty -making
power of the Imperial Government." Hew
wonderfully careful of British feeling our
neig bourn are when it comes *0ri question
of reoeiving baok their own criminals. But
there need be no qualms of conscience on
this score, If the Imperial Government
consents to the Weldon Act it will not feel
foiluiteel when the measure goes Into oper.
Won.
Sishoeto paper II ono filling
Petiliwa
tt,PoaZoled.
and lnkstanid
roma, PEN. '41 it
Viten any pen or kind °Pink; illied by the antomatioetetkin of
Indio -rubber rosorrotre fettle itself by thereesure Of trIttngg
BheU In rtfrleIrgigli taalftlyloigliptlineannd
'with rtioh. samples, postpaid, xis ermine 4
5 Pons, $1 bill. f'. 0. Stamps tel5en, hut sliver preferred.
A 100p Picture Book sent FREE. Mention this paean
A. W. ICCLINEY, 1-Carmoutiz,