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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-11-26, Page 3, .., cti q e Safest ..,..,(4, .4,0., Moat powerful alterative is L Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and laze alike benefited by its use, For en" the eruptive dis- _ eases peculiar to ---- n cbildren nothing en en-------d—ed: else is so effective --,, '---o, as this medicine, evidie its engem?, We flavor manes it easy to admin. ister. "My little boy had large serene. lous Wore On Ws neck- aud throat -a I ro ro 'which he /s----' ne- suffered terribly. n— T vr o pbysicians 1 laded him, but be grew continually ::tetlitle: Z `dr' Inga:lvtriairldit remarnahle cures effected by Ayer's saparilla and decided to bare my try it '. Shortly after be began to e this medicine the ulcers come need bealiug, and:after using several ties be was entirely cured. Ile is w st.; healthy and strong as any boy hie age."—William Is. Dougherty, pton, Va. 'In May last, me, youngest child, teen months old, begen to nave sores 1 er on lie head awl body. We ape 'el various eimple reenedtes without 1. The sores increased in number diseliargen copiously. A physician called, but the sores continued to • tiply until in a few months they rly covered the cbild's head awl body, last we began the use of ede'er'e Sere eatilla. In a few days a neaelted lingo for the better was roanifesn no ins assumed a. more healthy condition, ii discharges were gradually elinain- Id, and finally ceased eltegethen child is livelier, its enin is fresher, its oppetite bezter than we have ob: mtl aer menthe.' es -Fronk X. Grillin, g Points Tuxtls. formula of Aye's Sarsaparilla enta, for cbronie diseases of almost y bad, the best remetly_InMevn to medical world."—D. 41. Wileoin, Wiggs, Athaissas. er's Sarsaparilla; ZrJ411104 Xrr C. Ayer & Co. Lowell, Mast. tant:1.15. worth c• a bottle. WS SPECIFIC (vmkoc 3.11441K IRXG4tilTritsa ) a Sole Proprietor, IT. Vilinne. ticuettarn DrUfg Store, Etat ST, Tito nasty Deme:ly which will per - 1y cute Gnu:wed:fru. tile et. and allprivata e. no matte e howl -Jug bt nulling'. N% ao long sf 11. 1 _ I i I, . . g Is. ti.'WO bOttle5 guavauttea to curd the se. rriee.S1 lafia on le* n ver y -V Cho la. My * imps other in a. Thoao have tried 0- remedide vitt:unit avaL'wflt uot be (Beep* li ia tttie. this parr. A ROBS. OF YOUTH. Ne tervous De- mente& noses told Inemature Dece.y, Need pininanently cured by Jct or u &tad occupy -mu _sterol Itzt vigor anii inuuteg novfeet, per um, :1,,tor, II. S'ertornaz, Sniterne 1:01tONTO. !LOH'S RI MOM CURE. success of this Great Cotzgh Cure is at a parallel in the history of medicine. ggists are authonzed to sell it on a pos. arantee, a. test thatno other cure can sue- ly stand. That it may become known, oprietors, at an enormous expense, are a Sample Bottle Free into every home United States and Canada. If you have h, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for cure you. If your child has the Croup, ping Cough, use it promptly, and relief . If you dread that insidious disease mption, use it. Ask your Druggist for OH'S CURE, Peke eo cts., so cts. and If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, Ioh's Porous Plaster, Price as ma I SEE MUM II colvaDoutio 188 Lexington Ave., New York City, Sept. 19, ISM e lima the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of , and have been well pleased with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, MX. SUENT141 Brooklyn, N.Y., Feb. 1402,1889. your Emulsion in a case of Fhthisis on) with beneficial results, where patient t use Cod Liver Oil in any form. J. H. DRoGE, 88. D. 'RU PRO& Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. Mae Man strongly recomMend Flax Seed Emulsion as to thc relief and possibly the cure of all Lung, tat and Nervous Affections, and a good gen- era physical debility JOHN F.' TALMAGE, M. D. E ALEBILIT Brooklyn, N. B., Oct. 10t1, 1888. . „tgard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly eifperior to [d Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use. D. A. GORTON, M. D. Sil GD1SE lisr,_ 187 West 8403 St., ,4 New York,.A.ug. 6, gss. have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound ,mere mac of Mal -nutrition and the result was than hoped for—it was marvelous, and coa- was. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D. (lid by OruggEsts, Price $1.00T ,AX -SEED EMULSION deh aa Liberty St., New Xerke INTERESTING Trzms, Those who employ the•plumber mot eon ploy the piper. He who feels for the poorshould.rnakethe poor feel the felt. .At this season of the year the liberty a the eiderpress must be preserve& An anti-xnmeopolist is one who would like to put Intuself in a millionaire's place. It is an off uight in Boston when tbere is net a symphony coucert and a prize-fight. A eyelente is like three school girls walk- ing abreast—it don't tura out for anything. Men with red noses are the lighthouses to warn mariners "half seas over." Curiosity hemlines a vice when it is only an iteluog to lora what Is arms respecting others. A revival of speculation in cotton is prom- ised by experts who pull wool over your eyes. A book that has the greatest circulation and is the 1110SD pop ilar is the subscription book. To bring up a el111d in the wan he should go, take care he doesn't see where you go, dear parent. There is nothinglike printer's ink, if you wielt something that will stick closer than a mother-W.40,W. When a man gets ahead of you in life it is 00 easy matter to run him down if you don't catch up with him. If petroleum is to he "the fuel of the futnrc," what are we to clo with the good book thatseys brintstone ? A person with a cork leg, corkscrew eyes, blue bottle uose, and jug -handled ore, muse befall of spirits. We could all be greet men if we could be ensured by the greet things we iatend to to.rnorcow, There is p. SWISS proverb which says that "it takee a good enemy shoveltuls of earth to cover he truth." The dentist who ATinOintleeS that he will spere no pains to pull teeth well is the mare to keep away from. When the curtain of a theatre takes a drop, the majority- of the males in the midis once go out to follow suit. How true it is that altlietione travel in pejo. They have the hog cholera and a new weather prophet in Illinoie. You can't blow up a student waiter. He will stop and argue the point with you, while the soup is getting cold. We still cling to the simple faille that the acme of human wink= is to know when to lay down a poker hand. , A UM auil improved poet hole has been patented. It must be, of a kind that Cali be taken up and cut into lengths. Mormonisin will never be eradicated ttntel a man Is compelled to home as many ' mothers-inlaw as neves with him. Persons who desire to find the President the morning after a State dinner are always told to look in the Blue Room, There appears to be no affinity between tho prestidigitator and the theatrical mane - ger, 'yet they both make poses. The man whothinks he could make a bet ter world than the Almighty he. d better be gin by trying to improve himself. Judging by the large numberof aeronauts that aro dropping out of balloons and damag- ing themselves, the balloonist does not have suck a "high" old time as one would think. Goodness comes from within—from thoughts, feelings, and desires, resulting in life and mations. Greatness is the conse- quence of bold aotions, great energy, ambi- tion, enterprise, and perseverance. Economy is the parent of integrity, of liberty, and of ease, and the sisterof temper. ono, of cheerfulness, and of health. 'ro- footless is a cruel and crafty demon that generally involve her followers in depend - (Mee end debts. He who divides his life between a hard grinding labor and a listless apathy, who is vital only in one part of his nature and tor- pid in all. others, or wbo is iutelligently advancing in one direction and weakly vacil- lating in all the rest, will never be truly great or even a thorougbly valuable man. Brothers and sisters who have spent their youth In enmity are not likely to 'become • friends in maturity. It may indeed be laid down as a general peinciple that, otberthings being equal, the relations that are firmly establishedin the early years of home life will continue long after its control has ceas- ed to exist. Now and then one meets with an except- ional case in which energy seems to have been entirelyomitted iin the moral "make- up" of the individual ; but human beings totally devoid of this element of worldly success are about as rare as brawnless living skeletons. Given a single spark of energy, it may be unquestionably increased and utilised by cultivation. The best way in wbich we can act useful- ly in the immense circle of the world and for the good of hutonity is to fill our place in the circumscribed circle of domestic vir- tues, to form around us, an atmosphere of love and benevolence. We must do the good that lies in our power ; it afterwards belongs to Providence, and not to us to make that good contribute• to the general utility. Friendship is one of the greatest boons that life can have. As Bacon says, "It re- doubleth joys and cutteth grief in halves." But where brotherhood is united with it it attains a still richer result; for then it has a world of memories and early associations in common—the mutual love of the same Megoured parents, the recollections of the same beloved. home and of past scenes vivid- ly impressed on the minds of both, in which no other friend. however dear can possibly share. A thoughtful and considerate .sobriety of mind, so that one always knows what he is about and what he means to do and whitt he means not to do, as contrasted with a head- long, impetuous,and reckless mode denting, is a cardinal quality in living a successful and a virtuous life. Men must think, and do so seasonably, if they would make the journey of life wisely. Every yoneg man needs to learn this lesson. • • He who is open as the day, who has nothing which he cares to conceal, is pretty sure to come by his possessions honourably. Tbey stand for earnesnhonestlabour of head or of hand, such as helps and never hurts mankind. They are the signs of his energy, his industry, his economy, his faithfulness, his ability. They reflect honour upon hint; whereas gains secured without such equiva- lent and at the expense of others can only reflect disgrace. It is wonderful how few real blessings there ere that any person who lives by labour cannot enjoy just as well as the .men who roll in wealth. The millionaire cannot surpass the ordinary worker in his appetite for food; he cannot coaxany sweeter or more restful sleep. The air is just as pure and bracing for the worker ea it is for him. He cannot love his children any better than the poorer man can love his—cannot be any truer to his friends. A Candid Young. Mau. The beautiful and accomplished diseighter of a weelthy graio dealer of Yienna had the misfortune,so to speak, to fall desper- ately in love with a, youro• man yen° was eulPlnYed jel a rallsoail 0034. Rer affection was very much requited as Inc as the young man was concerned, but there was reason to infer that the wealthy maiden's pa would olejec t, " What is the best way to emanate the old reprobate—how eau 1 get on the Wiwi side of biro?" Asked the yonth of the maiden during one of their secret sessions, " My father," said the wealthy maiden, is a great admirer of candoe. If you de- ceive hira in the slightest particular about your fivancial status, or your past life, all ie lost When yott call an him be straight- forward, even to bluntness.' Tile young inam took the hint, A few kisses and his leare, and ue m day he sailed into the cozy studio of his prospective father -in - Good morning, sir," said the latter. "Good morning yourself." " What on I de for you ?" "1 came to ask the hand of your (laugh- ter in marriage, but before you welcome me inte Your family 1 want to give you a few points about my past career." " Well, you are a cool one. Have you any osets?" "Not the slightest." "Yon are probably in debt ?" "Well, 1 should say se. 1 ea,n't rowem. her back to the time when 1 wasn't dunned severe.] times a day," "I «are stq that areas coat you havo on is not your property:" " You've hit, it to a dot, it'sborrowed for this special occasion; ditto the pants; the hat isn't paid for, and the shoemaker is waiting outside to converee with me about the boots I've got on." You are One of those candid gentle" meni" • "You bete I keep candor on hand to give away. My salary is only thirty dollars a month, and 1 think the railroad eompauy is going to lower my wages on the first. I am just about as candid as they make semh, The somewhat astonithed grain dealer acknowledged the corn; he haul unearthed perfectly candid man. He aseertained from hie daughter thatsbe would shove her self off the end of a wharf if she didn't get him, and haying paid the young Inatin debts - be gave his consent to the inarnage. Samuel( for caution—Piftbies. Habits of fish. Pickerel go to bed early and getup early, They get regular hours of aleep, The halo ite of :matey fish, notably of the bass family are nocturnal. Those of the trout family are at least crepuscular, and some authori- ties say that they will continue their search for food Inc into the night and long after the whip'pQor.wifls bavo gano to bed. Th writer ia addicted to night -fishing for black bass, but never by any accident has caught a pickerel after dark, although fishing over the day-liaunta of the long.nosed fresh- water sharks. Bass and other .N1 sleep all \Miter auci catch forty winks now and then daring the day or night in other eettsons, but the pickerel is on business during the day -time throughout the whole year. Bo bites at the bait even more eagerly m winter than in summer, perhaps because other fish are sleeping then, and consequently the regular supply of food is scarce. What of the merits and demerits of the pickerel. The rural auglers hold hint in high esteem. Ile is a tool fish, ought on any lure, and stupid enough to wait until a wire noose is passed over Ids head and tig litened about hie gills. Under favorable conditions he grows to large proportions, and snakes a. respect- able showing on the table. On the other band it may be said that the pickerel is but, poor eating at the best, being soft and full of small sharp bones, which are annoying. Then, itgain, he must be arraigned as n ter- rible destroyer of other and more valuable &b. A pair of holthy pickerel will tlepopus late a, trout pond in a single season, and nothing but the most hardy fisb, with the sharpest spines can flourish where the pick- erel has gained entrance. A pickerel with his stomach distended with hell will attempt to swallow another almost as large as him- self, and will go around. for days with the tail of the other fieh protruding from his jaws.—[Breeder & Sportman. Church and State. Tradition tells of a fiery .Anglo Inclian colonel who, getting into a hot dispute with a portly elergymen, remarked pointedly, "It is a. pity that black ants should not be useful in proportion to their size ;" where- upon the parson at once retorted, "It is a greater pity that red ants, which are so in- significant, should yet be so offensive. Another collision of this kind between Church and State,tn which the Church again had tho best of it, is said to have occurred at a public dinner, where a would-be witty officer asked a well known Colonial bishop who sat next to him whether he could tell the difference between a bishop and a don- key,- and then proceeded to explain that the one wears the cross on his head and the other wears it on his back. "Very good Major B.," said the bishop. " Put now can you telt the difference between an Army officer and a donkey ?" "No, my lord, I cannot," replied the major. " iv or cam 1," rejoined the bishop quietly. Even this how- ever was surpassed by another passage of repartee between the gown and the sword which is still preserved among the society legends of Calcutta. A certain famous gen- eral, the hero of two Eastern wars, found his health beginning to give way beneath the strain of long and arduous service, and was ordered home by his doctors. On the day of his embarkation for England he was accompanied by a vast crowd of friends to whom he began to distribute various small tokens of his regard. " Well, general," ask- ed the Bishop of Calcutta, who was one of the party, "hare you no memento to leave to an old friend like me ?" "Oh, I have not forgotten you, my lord'!" cried the general. "On the contrary, I have bequeathed to you my entire stock et impudence." "Ten thousand thanks, my dear general 1" replied the undaunted bishop. "lou have given me by far the largest and most valuable part of your property," And then tile bishop's wife turned to her husband, and said sweetly, " I am glad to see that you' have come into your legivey se soon. 1" _ Lir CROFTER OF THE PERIOD. —London tourist in the Hebrides, interviewing cro- fter. London tourist: I suppose the poor people in this locality live chiefly on oatmeal cakes and porridge? ' Crofter,: " Ooh, no, sir we neffer do eat oatmeal cakes, or par. ritai eytho 1" London touriet "01), hi - decd Then on what do you lire? "' Cro- fter ; " Weel, you'll see, shist noo WO lcev maistly on spundge beekits. We evince tried London buns, but tbey did leave snob a ferry pad tot m the Cockney aksent in oor 'Meths • ior a turtuth that we ehist had to gie them up." THE. SITUATION 1N OIIINA, crnts, ors ArrtLis,au tShtalittgolt.aattit. itentaielneSto by . HOXG Kt/NG, • Nov.—. Little change has occurred 'in the situation in China. Two ethisers of the northern squadron arrived et nhangbai, and others will follow.. The pro- vincial officials now seem more anxious to maintain order, ann are displeyieg zeal in bunting down members of secret. aoeieties. Considerable uneasiness, however still pre- vails a all river ports, and itis impossible to withdrew gunboets. There are also i)ed.i- catioes of troublespreading in the northern provinces, and the loyalty of Weeroy'e troops is questioned. At Tien Tsin A meet- ing of foreign residents has beeu called to organizer& volunWercorps. The feeling at Foo Chow is much quieter, but the destination of the anti -foreign tracts still gees on. Chang Chi Tung, however, has issued a proclamation threatening to instantly behead any one poeting slander - pus placards, and there seem e to be a genu- ine effort to suppress this form of hostile feeling. If the Government's efforttoqueli this disturbance. proves inadequate, the only effeetivecouree polieing the openports by foreign sailors or soldiers, The province az Fokien is in a. troubled etate, several villages having rebelled because of the- mooed salt, tax. At Cent= the anti -foreign pla- cards again eppear. It is reported from the north that the for elan powers have threatened China than they will occupy Shanghai and Woo Sung uuless bit protection be given to foretgners. Shengheibetng the marinate) capital of China it is thought that, short of oeupyipg Pekin, this couree will have the greatest effect on the imperial authorities. Butes coutinuance of this trouble is due more to helplessness than the unwillingness of the Government, the ittep proposed by the fereign powers would not help matters molt. Hui= Ltterati has issued A manifesto ordering then:arch andexpul don of all native Chietiane, the confiscation of theirproperty, and the destruction of the chuckles. Chris- tian native officials are menaced with dire - favor at Pekin, Native papers say the British Consul at Hankow called on his Exuellency Chang Chi Tung and returned 4,000 tools which were paid to the women who suffered bad treats ment atthe hands of the Wusuelt mob. The Consul told the Viceroy that the missionaries requested thal the ringleaders in the Wusuch riot a be not branded, as dieflg•arement would destroy a poesibility of their ever reforming. The Vieeroy said that such good action WaS that of virtuous mem tenet granted the re- quest with pleasure. Outstaying Their Welcome, Writing of country -house visitors, Mr. James Payn says— 'Some men can get rid of their guests with comparative facility; but they must, have high rank and no man- ners. I know a noble and hospitable lord who 'weeds' bis visitors every morning by the summery moss of asking the butler at breakfast for iIrculdnue, and reading out the list of those persons he has got weary of. 'Your train, Mr. Guy, goes at 11.30, aud the carriage will be at the door et eleven o'clock lamp,' But this is n berote remedy etich as only a peer of the realtn can use. t. don't defend it—though I must eonfess I admire his lordship's way—but it must he allowed that same persons who find life at a great country -house agreeable to them' do not scruple to overstay their welcome. Just as one who is going away may say to himself, Amorg so many guests I shall notbemisto ed,' they say to themselves, when they home made up their mind. to stop, Among so many guests I shall not be noticed but in this they take too humblea view of theirown individuality. A gentleman of this kind once stayed the entire autumn at a certain nobleman's country -seat. A fellow -pose, astonished at flailing him there, and so long. observed, did not know you knew Lord IL, I didn't knowhim, nor leis wife either, was the shameless reply; but I knew they -were not on speaking terms and that each would be sure the other had invited me— and it is really a capital house to stay at.' The relations of host and guest, it must be said, are often much more sympathetic than the outside has an idea of. P. e cannot con- ceive what A. can possibly see in B. to give hint so extended mwelcome ; but friendship, with some people, takes quite naturally the et:anent forms. A emil-known Irish baro- net, when walking on his estate, came upon a certain Mr. D., who, I believe, was tres- passing on ib; nevertheless he • took to' him, andasked him up to the house' to luncheon, where he remained thirty years. Both the host and D. were very silentpersons, so that the charms of conversation could not have drawn them together. They never inter- changed a remark in public save after din- ner, when as surely as the decanters began to circulate, Mr. D., who always sat at the foot of the table, would ask of Ids host the name of his wine -merchant, and on being told, would rejoin,. 'Then he does not treat you well, sir.'" • The Crazy Old Mau. "On Sunday evening, being alone in my lodgings," Mr. J. Jefferson the Americen actor tells us in bis kutobiography, "1 got out for my own admiration my new wig and beard the pride of my heart—which I was to use in the last act of Bip von Wi2zkle. 1 could not resist trying them on for the twentieth time, I think e so I got in front of the glass and adjested them to my sat- isfaction. I soon became enthused, and began acting and posing in front of the mirror. In about twenty minutes there came a knock at the door. Who's there?' said I. It's me, if you please,' said the gentle but agitated voiee of the chamber- maid. May I come in?" Certainly not,' I replied; for I had no desire to be seen in my present make-up. Is there anything wrong in the room, sir?' •eaid she. ' Noth- ing at all. Go away 1' I replied. .Well, sir,' she contined, 'there's a policeman at the door, and he says as 'ow there's a crazy old man in your room a flinging of his 'ands and mgoin' on hawful, and there's a crowd of people across the street a blockin' up the way 4' I turned towards the window, and, to my horror, I found that I had forgotten to put down the blind,, and, as ie seemed to me, the entire popalation of London was taking in my first night. I had been un- consciously acting, with the lights full up, to an astonished audience who had not paid for their admission. As I tore off my wig and beard, a shout went up." . How do you like your wew place doctor?" " It's very nice indeed. There's been more sickness in Badville in the past week than there was in Hollowtown in a year. "They We making car -wheels of paper now," remarked Mrs. T., as she looked up from the newspaper. " Yes," replied her husband, " and locomotives too." " ‘5.7ou don't say so ?" "Certainly Have you never hoard of stationary engines ?" Antis --Good-bye, Freddie, I'm sorry I can't take you in the carriage with me. Freddie—Why, auntie aro you going in a carriage 1 T heard papa seyethis morning thin; he'd be glad when you took pair fined walk1—[Boston Budget. A. Oyelinz Incident, In the e,arly days of 'cycling abicycle was a never ending -source of curiosity to the eountry people, and would attract as much attennou in front of the village tavern as a noted trotter or an elephant, and the wheel - men were not to be intoned if they took considerable pride in showing off the possi- bilities of their new vehicle, and aetimes made statements coecerning its capabilities that were not withia elle bounds of truth. The bicyclists were semetimes inclined to be " fresh," and did not always come out aheed whoeunnttrryyni,au, ugto have sport at the expense of o.c Otte warm afternoon three young men were resting by the roadside in the shade, when a parte of half a. dozen wheeimen rode up and dismounted to rest °while. The wheelmen quickly engaged itt conversation with the ountry boys, and of course blue'. ing was the topic of conversation, The wheeiroen were inclined to banter and brag. "Say, how long &tont take to learn to ride one of the blame thine?" asked one of the country boys. ou "iTlit'rjeyr t takes about bouetoh al them p year; sometimesrelid, it take "It does, hey? Well, you give that to somebody that's greener thau we are. bet that anybody cam ride one of them things in ten minutes." "Well, bet they can't ; and now you seem so smart, ru bet you live dollars that you eau try ten minutes, and thanyou won't be able to stay on the newhine at the end, of that time," "11 you'll make it ten go you. I wouldn't foal on the thing for any less," drawled thecouotryman. "I'll make it ten, then, and after trying ten minutes, if you can ride the bierle the ten clollers is yours, and he cau take any wheel in the lot ; ean't he, bays?" "Yes, let him take his pick of the wheels to try," was the response. The money was produced, by both panties, and the ectuntryinten picked out a Star maeldue from the lot. It was a fifty-four inch old style Star, known to wheelmen of years age es 0 "Grasshopper." It was fearful meee of machinery, and whoa, he selected it the wheelmen smiled, for of all maclibses thee was the meet difilenit for a novice to ride, and the man who bet felt thhisatrhoeckheultt, the countryman's ten dollars in It took the combined streureth at the erowil to elevate the countrymen to the bicycle saddle and keep him and the wheel from falling. Ho lurched aud rolled in a manner that threatened to nott only break his meek, but wreck the wobble. Shortly ho improved so that it required only one man to hold the machine, to steady en Ile grasped the eaddle-spring back of the saddle and trotted Af ter the wheel, theolus ally the 'countryman increased hie speed until the assistant was on a brisk rum Un- consciously he kept following until just the ti ps of bit fingers rested on the saddl map ring ; then all at once the countryman gave a wee bus shove on the pedals and shot down the road alone, while the wheelmen looked on in gaping astonishment. The countryman rode a short distance, turned in a space no longer than the large wheel of the bicycle, swung out of the saddle and returned to the starting point riding on the frame et the machine with one foot on the pedal. He banded the wheel over to its owner, gather- ed in the stakes ad calmly asked "Who's the next gentleman that wiltgive ten dollars to see a country bay ride a bi- (mole 1" The disgust nal wrath of that party of wheelmen was something painful, mud it did not make the chap that het feel any hettera few weeks afterward to recognize in the riding -master of a bicycle school the country- man who took Isis ten dollars. E. R. 0. A TOWN OF CRIPPLES, A Community er Maimed. Halt and Mind —They Throng the Streets and are Apo parent ly nappy. One of the strangest places in the United States is the little city of Hazardsville, Connecticut, for in this small place nearly every person oue meets is a cripple. Men without arms and legs, or with badly scarred faces, meet you at every turn, until the visitor begins to feel that he is visiting the grounds of some great hospital after n great battle. But the secret of this strange con- dition of the population is that neer Raz- ardsville are the greatest powder mills in the world, and all the cripples havebeen maim- ed by explosions. During the day the able- bodied citizens are at work in thernills, and so only the cripples are to be seen in the streets. Strange to say these poor creat- ures seem very cheerful and happy, and often one comes upon a group of 10 or 20 laughing and talking as light-hearted and contented as if they possessed all their limbs. One peculiarity will, however, strike the new comer at onde, and that is the exereme care with which they move about, as if the force of habit acquired in the powder mills still cling to them even after they had been forced to leave their work. Outrage by Soldiers. A Vienna correspondent telegrapbs:—On Sunday a most revolting case was closed. A young servant girl who had been dancing at an ino on the outskirts of Vienna was out- raged by eight or nine soldiers in a. neigh- bouring wood. Steps were afterwards taken to findthe miscreants and punish them. The soldier who hati been her partner in the dance was tried before a military Court, and having gone away before the others seized the girl, he escaped with eighteen months' hard labour. Of the others, two were sentenced to twelve years', three others to ten years', and one to eight years' hard labour. Two were acquitted. Science is a big thing. It makes 'sugar from coal tar. It can do everything except make maple sugar from Vermont. We do not live on facts alone, much less on facts of a single kind. Religion and poe- try, love, hope and *imagination are as essential to our wellbeing as science. Human life is knowledge, is faith is conduct, is ' beauty, is manners • it unfolds itself in many directions and shootsits roo ts into infinitude ; and for the general purposes of education, science is learned to the best advantage when it is embodied in literature, and its methods and results, rather than the details of its work, are presented to us. Judge (te prisoner after conviction)—Any- thing to say, Sneakey ?" "Yes •my lord, I 'ave to say as I am the wictim of my physician's advice. He says, says he, you wants change,' and I took it." It is easy for a girl to fall in love with a man, but when she has to support Min by taking in washing—ah, there's the rub. What you do, do thoroughly; the loss of a mere collar -button makes one's whole ap- pearance ridiculous. BEA MAN: riaoceori the oils of the fatal set:. penis was not more helpless than is the man whopines under the ef- fects of is ease, excesses„ overwork, worry, etc. *Rouse yourself. Take heart of hope again and. 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Sold everywhere, or aent bT7 mail. 0 CAME NEDICISZ CO., Hew Itri....(B Lma1l2ill. ii1ke. Small Fa, The Indications Were Very Mashed, It was at a phrenological, entertainment, and the professor had been illustratingbis lecture by inviting gentlemen of various avocations to come on the platform and demonstrate that different habits of life were characterised by corresponning variations in the formation of the cranium. He pre- sently came to deal with the criminal form of skull, and, desiring a subject, addressed. his audience : "11 there is any gentleman. present who has been the inmate of a prison. I should be glad if ho stepped forvrard," To this invitation a tall, thick -set man, in the body of the hall, responded, and, rising from his seat, walked down to the front. You have been itt prison, my friend ?"' asked the professor. " Yes, sir," replied the tall one. "And how many years of your life have you spent there ?" "About five.and-twenty." " Dear me 1" said the professor. "r Will you sit dewy, please ?" The subject sat nown en the chair in the centre facing the anclience, and the professor. commenced to feel Limn. " I'his specimen," he commenced, " is an excellent one, the indications of a criminal character ere very marked ; the organs of self-esteem rind benevolence are -missing, while that of destractiveness is abnormally large. Ishould have been able to tell ire-. mediately, without the testimony of the man himself, that the owner of this 'skull bad lived an extremely erratic and -criminal life. For what crime, my friend, wero you imprisoned ?" "I've never commiteed any crime," gruffly replied theombj eat. "But you told us you had been the in- mate of a prison' foe twenty-five years." "So 1 have, but I've never committed criMe.", " Why were you them, then ?" " I am a prisoa warder 1" Collapse of entertainment.