HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1893-9-28, Page 77.111111111111wr'w'T
AMER SCOTCH, ,STATUTES.
IserWS Mint Wenld BejOiee the leart of
a Praibitioulet
,
AND BURIAL LAWS.
wig AW books are pro-
'14te verbeelly very dey
- awe •
wee: reeding, aud not
4 Many people would
inolude A volume of
Acts of Perliement
tinder the head a
light and entertain-
ing literature. Yet
these ;same eiry-ae.
duct bemire ATi3 fee.
quently the moues
ref demising vivid flathoti of light on the
eo= end inhere ef our anceetine, and per.
'Nape of explaining cerbtain rasiielpeculiaritiea
nesuifeet even in the peesent deg.
This old Mature boolis of Spattered are full
of enniints onaciatentee qvaintly expremed.
meceesity fOT beteg in readinese to meet
the "mild eressekeoi Erighted," to use the
Y7 words ol 114130o ACtial. expiaitia how
for a long time ties //leering of feethall and
golf 'band other unpirefine.ble vertu " was
werebiblied And " neterly cried down," these
ampelar paintimee havieg to be set aside ter
meethatioue psattlea rit the arehery butte, In
'Allier, if pmasible, than the Scottieh army
might:he fortought be aa great profioiency es
lw Eeglish ernae La Mao use ef the bow.
,Ainother crerioure outcome of Oak anthEng-
firth feelieg wee 5 tit ateirei of Jamie VI., in
lereireeleg Scetsmen to marry eny
reigleth woraim dwelling in the opposite
mend:lea without the King's: express licenee,
under pein of death and conflocation of
geode.
al the time of ,3attaes I., the Poet King,
lirprony appeem heve been a OPEEMOD,
ease, for wo fend an Art of his reign pro.
filistrieg leper folk" comaimg into bewria,
except) the s times a. week, on Monday,
Wedneedisy and Friday, and then only from
.10 tbe morning till it ha the afternoon;
zed if ram of eheao diva heppetted to be a
Yalairket day they sled to postpone their visit
OW remit ,tays
When in Meese old eleye it was thought
eleekalle to encourage terry partioular Mous-
easter or trade the patereel interference of
lealiaineue woe largely employed. The
imbeeen fitheriete for instance, were MI much,
riot snore, culeivosted tloon au now, and
these are maisay curler:is provielons in regard
to thee intimery, elm of the moot curious
:being that the mieletream of the river
eyaU te) be kept free oo that eswine three
yawns old and well fed PAiglat turn gimeall
round within it. That now exploded doc-
k:tine of politieel econemy which taught the
priessioltion of the esiportation of moneys"
My the importing of gee& was responalble
Mr 'Mao enembeeent that no cereals we to be
'denied in gbf ytting but plain linen or "cloth
tf hardwelsmatio said spun within the kimg-
Certidoettes had to be granted by
the reletives of the deceased that this. regu-
lation had been ebterved, under heavy
wenalliee gradnated according to the rank of
the demand. Apperentle the pleen linen
mirenufateterer ranee hove ileuriehed in con-
nequencei, for Borne years later Parliament
leet Milping band to the woollen trade by
snalsieg it inipmative to bury the dead in
peeler woollen Staff.
Bib ekes headahle dere to benefit treat:,
1,. would appear to have been carried rather
,Verieen, fer the encouragement of Mum,
itravalMre were by Acb of Parliainent or-
daisted to lodge there only (the charges
Meting regalated by the local magistrates),
wed riot with their Tea:eves or friezes ;
meil people in tow= •whe were not inn -
were atetualiy forbidden under
stiteninee to entertain trevellore, an onset -
erasers very much centrary to the recognized
limp/table nature ef the Scot.
Scotsmen, however, can be both hospita-
Me end GOGEORliad, mud the hitter
eMeleae used to be firmly and peril:Me
impzossed epon them by their
aid l'arlearnetit. We fin& or is/stance,
rieementee regulating very stringently the ex-
ef thedomeetic eartimenbil connected
wills,baptisteserameriagemendbuentle. At mare
engem store were may to be present, in
sediiiielian to the oontratting perbiers them -
/delete and thoir near:oat eelistivea, not snore
Mae loam friends en eech side. with their
esedhaer„v der/et/title eervesater. No orao at the
'wedding could have MOEB then two
cheiegea of raiment)." At lieptiems only
Yeser outelders were allowed to be preeent.
lffhe member iwbfunerale wa,s a/needing to
ifees rank el the deceased person. Time, at
VAS flInenll of r, nobleman 100 were allowed;
Miati of a bonen 60, and seen. hleurning
Anzio mime also strictly forbidden. The
fifewereal Reforra &Reclaims might do woree
them slake a hint from our am -restore.
The eressele of the inhabitants north of
the Tweed were uewell looked after. In
to Mune of the Poet King a law wee peeped
That every perms found he a tavern after 9
e'cleek at night wile to he caet into primer,
a meg:elation which ib would no doubt re -
Nee the heart of 8ir WiJfrId LAWOOR to Bee
reigairt in fame. Zn James 171.hi reiga the
lutur WWI exterided to 10 o'clock, with
heavy penalties and the alternative of the
abockri for those convicted of drunkenness
" haunting of tavorne." Lester on we
Aka a complete and evidently well-
erozoidered scale off eereeltiee for bleophern-
evemeing and dram/Trounces, nicely
weredeated according to the medal standiug
of the offender. It was, apparently necessary
be Memo days to be pretty hard on Mae par -
• fn these mattere, for the penalty to
therm wits oniefifth of their atipezd.
ItZE01110 Abova sixteen, isenvicted of curie
lag or beating their parents, were to be put
,keedesitla without mercy, an idealist. offend-
treaa WOW that age were bebop-mai/shed "ac-
woorkleg to their deservisag, no that others
evely hese and fear, and not do the like."
31Toneoluirchgcere and diaturbers of public
wombip were liable to be fined' and put in
the Menke. Cards and dice could not be
,pleyed except in private hotline, and then
tonle if Om remoter of the home joined in the
went, all winningabove one hurideed merits
going to the poor. All householders worth
three hundred remise a year in rent, or £500
Mook, were bound to have a Bible and
Peeler, bock in their house,s, tinder a heavy
'penalty.
WinDD
.A. -bent Raising Bread.
in momat by "raining °' bread la
swarth a few womb. The introduction of
the yeesti into the moist dough and the ad-
dition et heat when the pan its placed near
Mho fire "induces'an enormoris growth of the
reit fungl—tho yogurt ,"gerat," in other
-swaths, These Mimi effect a destructive
forinentstion of a portion of tho starchy
antetems of the flour ---ono of the moat vakia-
fe elemen'ts in the flour. The ter-
tertetitatien produces carbonic sold gage and
thinhaving its origin in every little particle
of the abaroh whieh In Moen everywhere 're-
lent In the flour, ptuilits aside the parte:ilea
ittlifeenele to give Itself room. ThiS 16 what
fer call raising the bread.
To Bailee More Cern
tito mew alvveye USD Patimmis Pedaloes
Glarn Extractor, Alweys Bete and pelnleas.
BYWATeS of edebituttio and itoitationeatioe
Itetnanito Vairderie Come Exteracters Ab
'druggists's. '
WARMS OF_BEAUTFASLI
The Latest Fashionable Fad in
Photography.
A Very Wireneby ideu—Al louden WhItil•-•
Beauty's 'Flowing Ilalr—Viele in the
liligehaus—Idsal IAN at Ileum.
NEw Yellin September.
T le an undieputed
1 dart, soya "
that a pretty women
never looks so pretty
AS when oho is aeleep.
The body is at reit,
and the limbs natm
rally fall into °Inertia;
h. the eyedashea oweep
over the face which
s, snooks oweet and calm,
sr, g while the mouth is
f elooed ;softly, and not
es it too often is in
tbe day -thee, with
empha.sie. Beautiful woman, reoognizing
tide tnath about ber appearance when the
is aeleop, is eow Viking advantage Mt it in
a rearveMee way ; and ber latest fad is the
photograph of herself in the arms of Mar.
pheus. So charming is the tint she sug-
gests to disrespectful mum how much more
delightful all would be if she Wne In the
arnia of eornabody lees then a god. It is an
abrelutely modeet pictnre, and yet it ie e
moot feecioetbm ono. Tdeuelly she rests on
a divan, and the clover photogrepher
arrangee the pelows era ler her heed ao their
not a elegies beauty le forgotten by the lane
while the humsn areet will cleverly enough
blot onb the imperfections in the retouching.
A FASCINATING FICTCRE.
M my lady in inclined to be e little fete
tive oho imara ha her latest photograph a
emit of pejmnee, and has nothiag thrown
ever her. Then the looke like a pretty hey,
who, emery el Melte, has lain down to rest.
Thie is e fetching picture, but ie not the
entialeg Ono. That ehowe mademoiselle
arrayed in the tallest of lewn nightdromes,
with ere:wade of lace 'Mose rip to her titian,
frills oi ib fatties; about her viteloes, one
heed resting jaat beside her, and the other
up under her head. In all this glimmer of
white white-, covers her completely :the le
the mint aneolutely fenaledee tiling imagin-
able, and MB can (wally understand that the
WOMOn whit Mei her el:roping photogreph
taken in tide isetilon will look with Room
upon the jolly type that ehooses the mattu-
line paj wows for her night toilet. '
The photographer whe brie made himaelf
fainoua taking these pleturee told nes that
the newt marvelloue thiog about it all was
how few of the women hari pretty feet, And
how very difficult it was to make S0771$of
them ut threw net that they could tet ;neap in
a high -beaks? alipper ; that eithr the little
pink foot itself mum ahow inked, like the
Muth, or elee it meet be entirely bidden;
and he added thee %viten a worearzi had a
pretty foot ebe usually yeaogutzed it quite
as well as he did., and was OWNS as missions
lo display ito charms to the eold, glering
eee of the camera. That is fad raurnhey one
in the photograph line.
THIS IS YRENCHY.
Number two has been transplanted hare
from France, in shows a pietty, woman
ina fascinating dressir.g gown, sitting in
front of her dreseirg Miele, which is owe-
ered with all the dainty litter, utterly
unknown to man, with a poweer puff ht
her hand, as if ahe were going to put the
heat toueli en leer face. Of course, the face
itself is nee In the mirror, and the Affzet
vrhini tho zubjent is a geed one, is decilliedly
evggestive of Madam') Pompadour, or cdany
of tbe beentees of the court of Louie or of
Cherelee the Seeoad ; them beauties:, who
permitted Miele admirerto alt around while
they gave the finishing touchee he their
make-up, or let the faekitonable man heir.
dreezer senstige their flowing lecke. Tele
style of pletnre requires much care arid a
wornati with a pretty profile, for rebile the
bill face leeks at you from the mirror, it
le of WilitE9 VW) profile that is qeite to the
fore.
IT'S ENGLISH, YOU KNow!
Fad number three had he origin in Lou-
don, and may be mentioned me simply billy.
After tho Queen had clecovered a loe
of her old dolls, the patriotic English
woman began to look for her; aad not
setiefied with finding them, ehe had her
picture taken with them. Della do not
coma out well in phetegraphs, even their
meet ardent admirers heveete confees tint
they beck expreselom and tinnily thee. pink
and whiteness cannot be reproduced. The
only pretbw picture I have seen in which
the doll craze wise introdcaced, showed a
ocquattieleloeking girl (tending hehled
table onwhich atearranged dolls of different
kinds teed sizeo, and she twinned like a sales-
woman hi a brimr, and a saleswoman who
would bo quite oartain to charge five times
the eroper price for her picture and over so
much mom for the blurry autograph upon it.
Sperdeing of dolls reminds me that no
household la complete without one just
now ; but, of course, lb must be a dell that
had ito birth in ROMO foreign country, and
which came over here either to see the Fair,
or wan personally conducted as a curio to
its present mamma. A largo Japanese doll
of my acquaintance sits under an umbrella
and rejoices in the name of Daniel Derendo,
andke rrgercled with awe by a feenily of
doge They know hablea and are friendly
with them; they have en extensive we-
queintance with rubber dello that oqueek
when they are bitten, but this doll, which
'mike libe le mikado, and which has a button
en its cap showing ib to be of high degree,
is a puzzle to them aswell ao a terror. They
know it landb alive, and yet, Implied at from
a dog standpolut, I thiek they have an idea
that it will be SSIAO day, and so they stand
off at a reepectable Mamma and admire it
in a way that we always adlraire things we
don't understand and area little afraid of.
MY LADY'S HAIR.
Fad number four has nothing to do veith
pbotogeaphers, but it is a fad that) wants to
bo cheriehed. It is the desire on the part
of wornekind to exbibib their treases se
nature made them, and it moans the disap-
poisranoe of the peroxide girl. She was
alwaye vulgar, but it took womankind a
long time to rushee it, She had a way of
chatiging her color whoa she didn't atich to
the &id that was not pretty, and she bad a
fest look that—voll, you know tho look.
Yeti never expected to hear her epeek in a
'leveret, low voice ; the was dashirog, and if
there Or anything thet is abominable in a
waman, it is that. She was not too parbiou-
lar about her Euglieb, and she was greatly
given to attempting to look as if the were
a7Zillgradtarete from the music, hallo.
She wee probably her own worst
enemy, but eh° ifortainly wasn't
nice. Illarlo with tho brown treatise brushed
until they shine ; Aroy with the pure blonde
ores that 114170 MA a tint of brass; Ethel
with the jot black Mow thet 'rhino like
oberre—meoh is inteterstivin and her very
name is e, joie Ow Can desar
oribe her ,
awbaburne Allem " the aweeteet name
that over love` igroiv weary of »; hub the
tiaroxido girl could reily have been Cora,
Blanche, Trixle, o cense Farah
seffenemetellenreentered
diehnlic name, caloulated to /negro any
thing but love. Theo, tom the new colore
—the PAN groom, the deep oriMennlei the
royal purpleo—demend more digniby than
the peroxide girl ever pommeled, sea the
fact thoM Worth himself is elwaye yeerning
to dress dark-haired women, and has ex-
pecte:fed this desire, may be another reason
why peroxide hes gotten into diedetrate.
YOUNG mimes IN THE EITCHEN.
Fad number 'five is a very sensible one.
The tuitional:de girl lo,malting a greet efforb
to show her abilities in the housekeeping
line. She inviies her mon iutimete friends
to a little supper where oho cretin en the
chafing dieli, drones the salad, makes the
coffee her own sweet self, and has only her
maid to attend the table. Tide le very
diplomatic. 1VIademoise1le Wisdom knowe
that she look* charmingly lemitirie au aloe
caters, in her pretty way, to the appetite of
her gusete, and she wenial net deeerve her
mime if the hid pegs before the had be-
come miebrees of the chafirg disis, diepeneer
of the wiled, and queen ot the coffee. She
does no regard, thank heaven 1 these inti-
mate frieede ao dogs on whom she le to try
sweeten cooking, but 'when she controls
Iwo or three postleob diebea the then sonde
out her Levitates:3a and makes every bache-
lor thbak how perfecely delightful it would
be to have to wouniuly h creature at the
head of hie table and metering to ids deuires.
Ab these suppers she wears) an apron, nos
a silk one, not a lace ono, but a muslin one
with a bib, aed with ruffles and Menge, and
ea the bachelor eats the lebetor a la New -
beteg, the he pubs hie teeth in the tiny birds
with overcoats of bane. as he notes how
the oil and vinegar are blended on bhe green
Rated, au he realizes that
THE COFFEE is AS BLACK AS HADES
and as strong as love, then his eyes stray
to that apron and he within that he were
the striugs ilbout her waist, teed be Medea
the little gold pins that hold up the bib,
and, ,infatuated creature .1. he believee he
would like to be small enough to be put in
one pooket. And then he goes to his hotel
,or hie bachelor aparteviont and kick's thinga
around and cursee everything, and before he
oloaeu hie eyes, says to himself %belie forty
times : "Ali the fiae furniture In the world
don't raake o ham o unless there is a woman
in it." And Madernohelle Modem has
achieved her desire and made nem, whom
woman, with a espied W, calls the tyrane,
realize of how little importance he is before
the Biome/ feminme. My 'Mende, tbisieafed
to be encoureged. I like it inunteseely, in
fact, I think it is uo good Mat it is a Mauna
to call it a fad, for anything that tende to the
making home pleasanter, and whioh in-
creasea the desire for matrinaony, is to be
commended.
IDEAL LIFE AT HOME.
Matrimony, to my way of thinking, is
the Bolling of Di great many riddles. A
loving marriage and a home will blob out
more anarchists than the police. A home
of one's own end a baby in it, and the proper
management of Wet baby so that its father
believes it epends moat of ita days thinking
of him and his great ability, will keep more
men out of naischief then MI the sermons
that stare ever writbee. I once heard. of a
woman who mid she didn't like babies—I
never believed she was a wernan ; and
from that time on I dietrireten her. On
may not be overfeed of children
12 and 14 yews old, but for a
woman not to like a baby, a dear, little,
helplese buedle of smoothers 'drab mike
entirely on your goodness and your
generosity, why, a WOrnan who doean'o
like a baby, would not Hite a dog, and a
woman who doesn't like a deg, wouldn't
like a men; and she would be wrong all
around. That is a happy woman who bas
a little baby in her arms, an agreeable dog
;she adores the baby, and who is waiting
for tho raauter of the three of them to came
to dinner. One says the " al:teeter," and
then one /smiles; becense in any properly
conduoted eatablishment the artaistee is that
mysterious bundle of reste their and lace and
lawn, which is felel with each care, and
before which both DIM and dog bow down
in admiration. I wieh W01/1011 understood
better the great) power that metherhood ie.
I wish tbey brew better hew to uee that
power, not only to maw their cliildren
love them, but to keep the love of their
husbands.
WOMAN Afd A HOME DIPLOMAT.
I wish iaatead of telling ehbruen how to
read some ebsteuee wr, '
iter how to appro.
ciate art with a capital A, bow to grow cul-
tured with a capital 0, a.nd how to grow
less womanly with a capital W, some very
win teacher world tell them hew to male
life happy by love with e capital L; how to
make a home by coneideration with a capi-
tal 0 ; how to milk° ts man happy by ten -
denims with is capital T, and hove to use
every weapon to make life aweet with all
the eapiteli in the alphabet. Every woman
Is a diplomat, aud a woman who realizether
power as =strews of the berme, and caters
to mere man through cooking with a coi-
tal 0, through that tie of effection, the baby
all in capitals, and through her own wifely
devotion and wisdom and cern, which there
are na letters big enough te describe, is the
vsieman who is going to rule the world. To
steal from the suffrage people she is the
coming woman, but the will net come no.
companied by a brass band, and with
shouting and screaming, bat hor kfluence,
like that of all diplomate, will be fin and
intense, and she will succeed. Don't you
stand ready to greet her ? I am sten yeti
do. Every man doer.
The Extravagant Sultan.
The Sultan of Turkey la raid to be the
most: extravagant housekeeper in the world.
Accoedieg to a recent estimate his domeetio
budget runs thus : Repairs, new furniture,
mats beds, Moe 15,000,000 trance ; toilet
requisites, including rouge and enarnele for
the ladies of the harem, and jewelry,
50,000,000 francs; extra extravagancoa,
65,000,000 francs; clothes arid furniture for
the when personal ly,10, 000,000 franca; dou-
antra and wagea,20,000,000 francs; gold and
oilver plate 12,500,000 franca ; maintenance
of five carriages end homes, 2,500,000
francs—a total of 175,000,000 francs, or
more than $38,000,000.
tAstAninmeametatozezavawm=,ausaravamdazcirinswaramixo,
SOMETHING U1VT7S6A4,
as a medicine fr
Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery.
And, because of
that, there's some-
thing unusual in
the way of selling
it. Where every
other medicine of
its kind only prom-
ises, this is guaran-
teed. If it ever
fails to benefit or cure, you have your money
bacti"O
Itho only guaranteed remedy for every
disease caused by a disordered liver or bxe.
pure blood. Dyspepsia, Biliousness, ths
most stubborn Skin, Scalp and Scrofultors
affections, oven Consumption ( or Lungs
scrofula l ie its earlieststages, all aro curd
bYItititirlirties and enriches the blood, remise
(-•
every organ into bealthful action, and re-
stores strength and Vigor. In building up
both flesh mad strength of pale, puny, Scrof-
ulous children, or t� Invigorate an& brae.
up the system after "Grippe," pneumonia,
fevers, and other prostrating acute disarmer,
nothing can equal the ''D very." tiv
YOtl °WY for tJiqoOd YOU get,
CLIMBING THE ISCIIINGi-LiOliN,
01.1•11•011111,,,,,,,
Exciting Experiences of Two Eng-
lishmen in Switzerland,'
,
A TOURIST PANIC STRICKEN.
---..„
Over Molts and &IOW Iiilasser—Whe Braver"'
of Min Guildis—Pioies 'on , Tratvel in
switzerianu—rio Extortion There.
N thbaking over the
rnual holiday the
mind oaturally recure
to Switzerland first of
e all, who an Bagfish
eon espondent. pro.,
i viclecl the body can be
itt:lsil.the pocket can provide
t
f.froerealtutear=11
M the necessary In011110.
sl 'serge parties may
, orgenlze restecial terms,
(mei and Imo time coat*
flde km money ; but three
df:* weeks is ao eherb a
esit.4.40: time AS the Swiss
holiday maker should
have, if the fatigue and coat of the jeurney
is to be fairly recompensed. Any-
thing lese la a tour de force and
a makeshift. You see lekt3e and
peaks and Mimi:Ong woods and dirty
white &anima and flowery Natures, but you
are not likely to come home rested. !She
journey from ',melon to Lucerne, by the
Candi-Bale route,
mote nix gnineas return,
emend class, andtakes twenty -to hours
each way. You aro then at the end of
your jot:teeny, properly so called, and you
may °hone to May in one placefor a week
or more at a cheap inanely° rate of
FIVE 70 EIGHT FRANCS A DAY,
or you may, in mere costly manner, move
about and pay about throe frauca extra per
day in hotel bills. Iereoornmend the former
plan for everything except merely covering
ground. There is hardly any extortion in
Switzerland. Nor need you know French
and German ; it is part of the education of
every Swim whiter and waitress to come to
England or America to learn the outlandish
tongue of their nationel ire stomers.
Nur is there any hardship or diffioulty in
transit. Railiveye, gooe made and bridle
paths go everywhere, and late yeara have
eeen a vigorous now crop of funicular rail-
ways, which carry the visitor by a chain up
a steep incline, to be received at a height
of five thousand feet above the sea by a
revert course table (Acre, and a bedroorn.
with an electric bell. Ladies can alvvaya
ebMin mules en .sedesei chairs. The back of
a Swiss has been developed by gtheretione
of mountain Ilfe kato an orgatt meltable of
wondreue deeds in the portmanteau line.
SIMPLE RAIMENT BEST.
Persons who cannot bear hot euti an their
!made should have shady headgear and
pewee's 11 of the righb sax, and the simpler
the raiment, both of men and women, the
better. Strong bootee fleunels and tweeds
for men, with a Meek coat optional for
dinner ; for ladiee a light walking dress,
thicker travelling one and an evening gown
are all that is needed in that line. TAke
yonr own soap.
Pethape by deecribing a day which wes
typical of many another day, I shall give
the reader a better idea of what climb-
ing is like then by 32100 general abate-
ments, bub
CLIMBING A SNOW PEAK
such as is desoritted below is only one of the
many ways of taking is Swiss holiday.
Climbere, even compare hively insignificant
ones, are in a relemity, and are found
moistly near three oentrea—Grindelwald, in
the Berrien Oberland; Zermatt, under the
Matterhorn, and Cheimouni, under Mount
Blanc. You mAy be as lezy as a stout
German paterfamilias, if yeti like, and
indeed in July yon will encounter such in
plenty. You may Mlle repose, modified by
hotel luxury, while listening idly to the
lapptag wave of the lovely Like of Lucerne,
or you may, in the breathe air at the higher
summer hotels, take gentle and invigorating
exercize—say on the Rigi or the Eguischorn,
or its neighbors the Rieder Alp or Bal Alp,
or at Saaa-Far, Arolla, or the Riffel Alp at
Zermatt); or at Perm, or in the Maderaner
Tied, or at the Engablen Alp, or at many
another favorite spot.
Oar party were staying one Jnly at Gina
melwald, near Murren, whiale Is perhapa
the most famous of then high places, on
account of the wonderfal row of mouratein
wall and Matron which it fronto. There
is a frottioular or cheain railway up to Murren
new.
PREPARING FOR A CLIMB.
Two of us had an idea of climbing the
Taohingelhorn, about 12,000 feet, and the
mint te the right of the row of Oberland
giants seen from Murren. The usual course
Is to go to the chalet at the Obere Stein-
berg, the lest house up the valley, and
spend the night there, in order to save a
couple of inure' climb; but the evening
breught, with it torrents of rain, and we de-
cided to stay whore we were, go to bed at
9, and if it °leased up by midnight to get
up and make the whole emelt within the
twenty-four bourn
Mieniglab brought ehining Maus and a
marvelleuely wakeful and attentive porter,
by whom knocked up, V70 breahfasted.
Taking breakfesS ou thee cement:1s has
an odd sensation; the oeffee seems to go
down yeur throat Hire a stranger, as if
none had ever been there before; there in a
FEELING OF EMPTINESS,
wideavrakeness end unrestedneas. Once mit
however, in the keen air, we were fresh and
otrorag. We :started by one and followed
the lantern thrisugh the dark woods till
de,wn. One does not talk much en then me
mime, the whole bushman la at that step
toe sombre tend serious, and the exercise of
the climb keeps the lungs sufficiently at
work.
We paned the sleeping chreleb at the
Obere Steinberg at three, and in another
hour reached the morainea at the foot of the
Inthingel Glacier, which we had to an -
cent. It is a chaotic, weird region. When
I had been there ebout the aame hour bi the
morning the year before fog held all the
upper levels of the mountain, and under-
neath it, between wane of bare rock, torn
and worn, rising up into the invielble, wo
walked about what looked like the tossed
waste elements of the world, "without
form and void," blind torrents, thapeleas
heapa, ice throwing or water freezing, detri-
tun and barrennese. It was too dark to see
the
LITTLE ROOK FLOWERS
WhiCh ore the advance guard of organic
life, and the marmots were waiting for the
day to begin their whistle ; there seemed
'nothing but our own incongruous selves
te show that the ,breath of life had ever
been breathed on the formless chaos. A
glacial moreine is indeed the wreckage of
an older creation, Out of which n new One
will be born—even the new and beautiful
order of things we bad left behind t1.8 in the
valley—the pinee and flowers, the pastoral
and ehalets„ the &eke and their herdsmen.
-
The flays of creation are ever result at the
foot ef n glacier, and the vitalintne NMI
kiefukt he kei ye r Ent ho gr eel avbi De retu rtly aWadorkoilbu?e; ulthsorue
when through centuries they lay Own an
,00111muvolarl. bed or cover a rook with a garment
A GRAND SIGHT.
This year, however, the night war elean
and we could see above US the 'firmer/eine
with Ito pale, glowing dare. Up into it
rose 'the great 'snow peke in their cold, WI-
paadva mightiness. Soon the' Morning
touched their tops, and we knew ant we
wero dwellers still in the, ^bright .Warro
world. The dawn brought little fleecy
deride and made them glow right through
with its golden light A MOS of brigbt
0)0Ud tre618003 gathered round and ebretekted
away from the bead of the Maiden, the
queen ot the 13ermese naerintahle.
Aortas the Techingel Gle.oier, with easy
enow bridges ovsr the ;:inOnnis of ico, we
reached the Poterserab ridge, whereto we
could see the counikau pealm of the °mann
Valais.
There ist an elootriorie, a roajoetie unee•rtia-
!Moen Menet A landscape unadorned by fl
tree or green paeture, separate absolutely
Iran the homes and lives ot mere made up
wholly of stead/tea of snow and of dark
rook where the mountain sides are too ebeep
for the :move to Whig. Our peak rows out of
ttkih: rPitide
tlieroatrdeett ridge; but we had to cross
COAST ALONG THE GLACIER
to the loft, till we restated a place where
the rocks above vesre not inacoessible.
When just under the highest point we came
to the foot of a ootiloir sieetnhing righb up
io the atimmite A oontofrle a deep gull
filled with unow, up whith you progrees in
Wgzeg fashion by cutting diaipa with an ice
axe. Phis is done when the rooks at the
sine ere irepaseable. A cool:* has several
&mons of ite own. The moat obvious is
fr m showoffs of falling atones. Tee 'rest is
always &teething bite of reek from near the
tep. Dewn cornea one, detaching others on
its way, each becoming a new engine of
destruction. We saw the whole perform-
ance when we were at the foot of our couloir,
tut the sane of it was not ogre, but a
neighboring gorge. A little noise near the
tep of the mountain grew nearer and nearer
and gathered volume eel it came, and pre -
untie/ there shot by' a, few flying steam,
the Advance sons Of the main shower,
which leapt up a sort of rattle of mountain
artillery ler two or three minutes. The
stones lying plentifully at the foot, of our
coulter were not very nice to look at after
thie, but we kepis on the whiter snow, out
of the regelar track, and the couloir was
so broad that there was very little danger.
DANGER OF SNOW ASG4E/iTS.
The other great danger of these snow
aocents is that you may uncenecionely be
walking en th thin layer of snow but loosely
attached to a more hard frczen substance
below. In this case you and your feotheld
shnply elide away suddenly and quietly
with etmeequenoes which cannot be pre.
dicted,as an Iriehmari might say, till atter
the event. Of course, in practice, you rely
en the knowledge and experience of your
guides—they win timidly tell the state of
the snow. Indeed, one's task is very much
to do what one is told—the excitement, the
game indeed, is more theirs than oneti
own. They have to thread their way
among the crevices of a glacier. The
leading guide prode the snow bridge with
the pointed handle of hio ice axe. HI9 In -
dim% tells him whether it will bear hie
weight or not He [steps cautiously over,
bidding ea hold the rope tighteand after
that we quickly follow. If he goes in wo
pull him out again by the
ROPE ROUND 01JR, WAISTS.
Incidents of that) sort are frequenbly occur-
ring, but the repe makes the party qoite
safe. When we remember that in additive
to all this responsibility a guide has meaner
a Ohara of provisions to carry from which we
are free, one dose not grudge him his bigh
pay. There are positions where a party
may be seriously imperilled if oue member
of it give way or lose contend of himself. In
these came the guides are a tower id
etrergeh te us ; but what are we to them ?
We felt that them two peasants Med wed
canoe the three guineas which ihey re.
ceived between there fcr that dav'e work.
The oteepesb part of the Micah- new com-
menced; we were about twelve hundred
feet from the top, with a hot nun on our
backs. First a mit of bergschrund or charm
had to lee crossed, quite narrow, but
natureity much higher on the side other
than ourseuad up the icy aide opposite steps
had to be cut. We didn't much like theee
ateps—a fall from them lsoked so bad.
After thet there were no more crevastes,
though
THE WORK WAS TOILSOME,
particularly for the guide who cut the steps.
We zigzagged up a slope of snow steeper
then any roof T remember to have seen.
After a time we took to the rocks and liked
it better. They wore quite practicable,
though steep and shaly. Then to the snow
elope nein. We were near the top,
when a mill ef distress rose from
my compani n behind. He could
nob go any farther ho Raid. He was
losing his preeenco of mind. "Had we
net better turn back ? ' He WA'.I evidently
frightened, and the eitnetienwas dergertus.
To turn and des lend with our leading guide
at tee hack, with one man demorelized and
helpless awl the ether three disappointed
and anxious, model have greatly added to
the &eget on thee ioy steep, where so much
depends in cookese and confidence. Fur-
ther, there was no real clanger more that;
there had been for an hone past. It was
CLEARLY A MENTAL COLLAPSE.
So, on the spur of the moment, I ttied
oterinnes and authority as a last resort and
drove my friend an. It sumeeded for a
time. He kept up bravely, but at the next
bit of rook work the wbole 00000 wan re-
peated, ana I was obliged toleave politenese
for lees urgent moments, and to exert all my
will to help bin STA WS method in safety,
boat half.past 11, the Dewey cop which
rounds the top ot the mouotein mid haega
over like a white cornice of cliff on the
side toward Mumma We bad been ten and
a half hours in the ascent). The view was
no better than from Paterograt. The valley
we had come by was filled with clouds, far
below us and we only etayed long enough
to eat and rest.
Rost and food vitae enough to set my
companien up again, and he descended with
perfect comfort end eafety.
The coutoir required aa much eaution bn
descent) as in going up and the crevasses as
careful crooning. But at length we reached
the end of our glazier walking, freed eureelvee
from the ropes which had been ton hours
round our waists and took the last meal
Sabre making the final taut for home. We
are en emergenoiee not far trona savages
yet, and the gusto with which fingers and a
pocket knife (the more ileportant tool first)
can finish the cameos of a thicken and leave
it to the eagles on a moraine heap by a
glacier's edge IS an instruotive cams of rever-
sion to type.
We were web through before we came to
Ginitnelwald by snow, hail and rain, but wo
reached our friends after seventeen and a
half hours' labor in a wonderfully comforts.
hie elate. Such is the bracing effeet of
mountain air at those elevation.
CARTEKS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
LIRE
Sick Headache and rel eve all the troubles ineS.
dent to a bilious state of the system, sueit as
Dizziness, Nansea. Drowstness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, &a. While theirmost
remarkable success has been shown in curing
1 K
Headache, yet Clarerna's Lrrrez Lwra Fuss
are eqpiely valuable in Minetipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of die stomach,
stimulate the 'liver aud regulate the boweba.
Even if they only cured
Ache they would be almost Peloolese to those
who suffer from this distres.sten complaint:
but fortunately their good.oess doss not end
here, and those who once try thereat will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without therm
But after all sick head
CH=
Is the bane of so many lives thathere is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S reuem LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two erns make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable awl do
not gripe or purgo, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents;
filie for 81. Sold everywhere, or Seat by mail.
CARTES IIEDISIITE it., Vow Tork.
DU Small Dom anal! !rice,
A BEAVTIFUL BALL.BOOM.
Novel Ideas Embodied In the Bargings
and Colorings.
In a liandeeme private mansion the ball-
room ham been decorated in is novel mariner.
It is in is ene-story addition to the Mom,
without side windows. The walla are hung
whh a brecsde silk fabric, extending from
the op of a paoeled wainecon &lined in
white and gold, to the bottom of the deep
cove aernice, of papier maohe in an Mahe -
tete &sign, representing fauns and eye -lobs
in et woodland festival, and finis d in
ivory white, touched sparirgly with geed.
Mere and there, breaking through tee, lines
of the cornice, are large peanshaped helbe
of leadeei gizmo, very delicate in catering,
and so arranged? in a metal framework, as
to open, dimming a nom for the el, °trio
lampe, which light the room by righte
By day, skylights, which are just above,
permit a Eshened light to settee sbcugh
the seine glen bulbs. The ceiling is mewed
with fiyirg cupids and fleecy oloncle upon a
Ay or team ; and the fleet of oak, e exed
end polished to a surface so stneoth tine, the
dencers seem te glide over it with an
chef., teerivalecl even by the winged het of
re e ni. #Aenger of the gods.—Panitieg and
Decorating.
Live Mastodons.
The Aleeha Indians peeitively omen that
wlhie tbe Met five years they lave fro.
gently seen animals which, Mersa the de-
scriptien given, must be maatodoes. _Last
seeing, a bile out hunting, one of these In-
dians came ae00118 a series of large tracks,
each the size of the bottom of a salt barrel,
sunk d. ep in the MOH. He followed the
curious trail for some mike, finally coming
out ir rut) view of his game. As e Mass
these Indisess are the bravest of hunter, but
She prnportioes of this new speclen of earne
fili ti the Minter with terror, and be leek
no swift and immediate flight.
He desotibed the creature as belug au
!ergo se a post trader's store, with great
sleteleg yonowielewhite tusks and a month
large enough to swallow a man et a se y
guile Be further says that the seems, wee
undoubtedly of the same species as t rose
whose bones and tusks lie all rver teen seo-
tit n of the country. This fecb thai otter
Mutters have told of seeing t re se mom rem
breweirg an the herba up a. .mg the t ver
glees a certain probability to the I ry.
On Forty -Mile Creek bones of MO., euas
er.. quits plentiful. One ivory tmk tone
wet Joxg projects from else of tie teed
dense on Meat creek, and single tee,1) 1 eve
bt futind that were SO large the, hit
would be a good load for one isian to es- sy,
Down With High Prices Far
Electric Belts.
$1.55, $2.65, $3.70 ; former prices $5, $7,
$10. Qualty remains the same -16 dif-
ferent styles; dry battery and acid belts
--mild or strong current. Less than half
the price of any other company and m ore
home testimonials than all the rest to-
gether. Full list free. Mention this
paper. W. T. BAER & CO. Windsor, Ont,
Sweetheart Abbey.
There ie in Galloway, Scotland, at' an-
cient ruin known as Sweetheart Atney.
Within hes ivy-covered, ratortn-ba ered
wells nee buried 1 be affectionate. 43 (I op -
d Dery °role, with the beert of ber Mes-
hes& John Belk& embalmed uper her
breast. Lovely in their liven in (tee h
they ere not divided. The omen le es
nemenry be still, and moat ever , 4
romanee in its symbols of death and
tellieg every day, as it has for 600
the tbrillirg story of a vernal:Lei tender love •
and devotion.
The price of mourning is likelyto advance
when the Emperor of Moromo shuffles off
this mortal coil. He hes 6,000 wives, and
suitalle rcourning attire will he in demand
for the bereaved widows,
rommesenamensesenmemanneoweatomentennemess
i.."An.ekni.nriew,""kecarwuen..""ro.".r.rviA,
is thelatest triumph in She, rnaac ortho cure
of all the syraistome intimating Kneen/ AND
revert Complaint. If you are troubledwith
Costiveness, Dizziness, Sour Stomach,
Headache ind gestion, Poen Anestenen,
TIRED FEEL /NG, 1 nEUMATIOPArtes, Elleepleffs
Nights, Melancholy Feeling, BACK ACRE,
Membray'sJl1s nay and Liver <nitre
wiligiveimniediaterdliefsndLrrnOrl€nre,
Sold at all Drug Storoe.
Illeenbray Medicine Company
Of reterborengh, (Lintiteel),
PETERBORO,LIGH, . ,
*/*.,41,4".h.l.•"11^A./1"""wr