HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-1-11, Page 2ur o
of the Throat anti
Ayer'S e4rry Pectoral,
equal as a congh,cur
otoritis
n 1 was a boy, Iliad brouoitial
trouble of such persistent and stob.
born cbaracter, that the doctor pro
-
resumed it ineueelele with ordieary
rerueslies but reeferemended me to try
Ayers Cl‘erry Peeteral. 1 did turd
lie bottle cured me, For the last fifteen
rs, I have used this preparation with
elleset wheeevee 1 take a bad cold,
kricnv of numbers of' people wlie
reep it in the house ell the thee, not
tionsiderinse it sefe to be without it."—
J, C. Woed-ssoin P.IVI., Forest Hileeeer.lea.
rough
For more than twerity-five years, I
Was a, sufferer from lung trouble, at
-
-Waded with coughing SO evere at times
tocause bemorrhege, the eneroxyeins
requently lastinee,three or four hours.
Was induced t:tree Ayers Cherry Pec.
tore', and aftettaking four bottles, was
•"ehoroeghly cured,"--rreme Hoffman,
Clay Centre, Reins,
G ppe
"Last sprileg was taken clown with
4'a grippe. At times I Was completely
nrostrated, and so, difficult was my
reatleinge that my breast seemed as II
•eonfined ifl no iron cage., I procirrecl
A:fettle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoeal, and
Po sooner had 1 began taking- it thee
relief followed, 1 could not believe that
the effect would be so rapid and the
zero socorneilete,"—,W. I-1. Willie:xis,
*t S. Dak.
• pared be Dr, 3, •C., Ayer te Co: Well, Mass.
Sally all Dregalete, Piece ; see bottles, es.
PrCetelnA to act o SeSre to curb
IIEEXETEIt TIMES.
• eeoublianta every Thuradaymeenne, at,
TtMTEAMPUNThHING HOUSE
fdainestreetateerlyoppos,tte Fttfores eewelory
feore,Bgeter,Ontebeetelan White ‘e Sonterese
erietore.
xutmEn 013, arevniirtszea ,
teretaisertion,peesine,.....-- ,, ,, dente
'each eueee ue tea o • ''
The Old Pioneer.
In sUutiner 1nolo ronn' oat doors
Ankinder help to do the
1 lx.e to be some little ',Nee
Aie chop. ale fetee the eledlifn woee. ;
Ijeultre e men shoulasatill be breve,
Long es' be keeps outside the graVeg
And do his work, hoWever
A u' poke abont till ho siege dime.
Am' deremese (femme tut' COVQP$ n11 —
11' 60 1 pone an puttee romee
This trembled here, thee() shaltio'b00e9
Once eletired these tiers or trees tee stories ;
This han' it preesed me young brele's ban'
An' led hce through, thie milculawn
Th e weir ale be prewled rime mir. deer,
Bet Wo wry.:Y911/1.14 ate Poole
Blit tint doer six simple treat
No lecue ie 'idea shall eettle down,
1,PYWyOill'StluLt hAre 110Z MINOd V1t11allSt
Cae poke ale putter reline
The weeCts fe °leered, the eivaeope is sweet
With WAY tre not% of graea au' wheat,
meloneeome, woods hoe all itenle room
TO let the peer an mesh). bloom.
An' wbere wriz
one the wild wolf's den
Is happy lv.ines SI, nappy mon.
But the or man who led the VIP:If
e et them clerk or forests down.
Now sundowa shedders cloud hte day,
Can only poke au' putter mune
'Twee here eve peesed life's ewes- more.
'Twee here our boyann' girls wuz born.
Sheleareea their babe feet to stray
Through taeleneget torestei tangled way,
The girls, new fear ise she wits then,
The boys growed op to strapphn men,
leergit the pethevey to her grave -
But 1 can keop. the stroug weeds aowe,
,esn' flowers( above her duel-. shall way°
white 1 ean poke and. putter ravine
The great wore 1110Vos SO easte,toeley
It leeves au oe man by the way,
•Fergits the work thet lie hoz clone
his toilbeneeth the so n;
AF all the V0i009 SOOrn to ;
S. tare back, el' man, keep out of the way
hear the voices' cruel roar,
-eget the night is settlere down,
Ain leraps they'll amiss me Von no snore
Tee ermine pokes an putters roma'.
^
Eggs an, Wneter.
When eggs are 45 emits per dozen, ev-
erybody would like to own a big flock of
" steady layers," and the man who car-
ries theenweneettireeneneeleepegegestry eggs"
eeseerfiiiket week after week,. is riede,te by
hie less lucky (?) neighbors as a ort ox
Nrimard who has peculiar power in forcing
his hens to lay, whether they are ready or
net, But with the snow three feet on the
level it is not every one who can yield the
• neceseary influenee with the hens. Dry
feet, resting on a substance that -is a non-
conductor of heat, such as dry boards,
hay or straw, are instrumental in the en-
eourageinent of cold weather eggs, as is
a well balanced ration. alsoesince no eggs
result if either factor is wanting.. Fresh
air is else another important consideration,
but in the Northe'rn States, where snow
covers the ground for several naonths each
year, it is often a problem how to give the
time prevent contact with the cold
x on ,pei coma,
irds air and exercise, and at the same
To;io,sure insertion( advertisements should •• I
•afeeentin notriater than Wednesday moraine,
Ourleen PRINTING DEP ARTIIENT one
ofthe latgest end best eg envoi:tie the county
• of.Huroingli work entreated 10 118 wiureestve
eiore)rompt attentleen
PaPe
-31.Aspersenwne tar _paprz' •
athuipthatsoy• e„, ilethehlleattirme1c_
1E1205 rseoueortsagieesero
DeteSiODS lieigueedlag
rIy fro u
11211500
eee en' ren
,.„,rsolitinuod
• rears or ,atettsber mity
°send, Strsintil the payineut la arcade,
I-L.00112d1 the 5vho1e anima% whether
e er Is takeitfamm the °Mee 012 1101.
suits for eubeeriptione, the suit niter be
tilted -la the elace whine tee peeler is pub
ed. although- the subscriber • may resid
unclreds of *titles away. _
4 Thecourts have deckled that .refueing to
newspapera orperiedicals from the post.
c. efe relnevine ante leaving theinuncellea
eeprima Alan, evidence of iateatirmal fraud.
ilL4014e. TIMES
IT4,„nzzavn laBAisrs ere e eew eta-
•coyeeetbat mire the worst eases• of
erereeus Debility, Lost Vigor and
g Manhood; restores the
121 51111830 of bot:Lyer%nind caused
1112 over -wore, or theesrrora °rex-
oewa of youth. 'This Bereedyab..
eolittels cures the most obstinate oases when an other
s'ana.V.Olnr3 bare faadeven to relieve; Sold bydrug.
eats at It per raiekasd,_ or streer 45, er sent bY =dim
reoeipt of price by eadressieweem JAMES MEDIOME
• CO., Teronto, Ont. writeser pamphlet, Said in—
Sold at BrOWning'S Drug Store, Exeter,
Young middle-aged GO old wen suffering from tee
etteets el fellies arid excesses, restored to eerfecl
rernhood and vigor,
B. a0B1)1111'3 11,BMSD11 roai itav
iiree%ErAceTEaltld Powerful
anhoot!.
arveus Debility. !fight Losses,
twee, over Work, Indiscretion.
mulanis, Lack of Eneity, Lost
Wakefulness, eteet and 'Va.
emedy accordieg to diree,
tufty tied conseientiouse
PACKAGES $5,00.
it in. U.S. or Canada,
nspection,
G TO
Vf1(
white mantle. An ingenious young man
has devised a plant -bat is both simple and
gatisfactoryv antIetne that otistS so little
that itis adapted to the smallest capitalist.
His hennery is a two-story glass struceure
• with large glass windowa npstaire and
down. To give the birds air witho•at snow,
he bas constructed a balcony on one side of
the building end connected it with upper
windows. It is a wide shelf on heevy
braces, and a slight frame incloses it with
wire net Duringbright, sonny days the
windows are opened, and the eowls go out
to plume andbask. Tim wire net does not
keep the son from the fowls, btteedoes
keep them from the meow. If feloW fella in
the balcony, it is quickly gotten rid of by
upsetting, turning over the loose boards of
•thefloor. A large shed protected from cold
winds, and open to tho South, is also a
good placefor exercise, if the owner will
patiently shovel out the snow after every
storm. Large doors, to be closed duricig
storms and winds, save this trouble, bet
all these things cense some expense.
Peoteeting Tile Outlete-
lInlesa epeeial pains are taken to protect
the outlet of a tile drain there is danger of
its being badly damaged. If it is in the
pastures, stock eramping about it are liable
to crowd, the tile out of place or break them.
Where land wathes very welly, heavy rains
will frequently displace them It is else
sometimes desirable to so close the opening
in the drain that mriskrate„ rabbits, etc.,
cAn 11912 -0111812 it duringrf 'dry time and
build an obstruction oeveral such devices
are illustrated 11 b. D ir particularly
suited to a tile neich hag its opening in 1.
Imre rational system now' prevails, The
progrezeive farmer Wonldaes4e 0131080hie
berm and cattle to ittelement, weathee As
lus SV111% TAO MOO eraelre for winds end
mews to enter the mere eerie ha recinired to
keep the anima heat up. This 18 31111311 and
easy to nederetend. And ete board's tie*
rum* ehcaper proteetien than corn,tt
9,nite clew thet a warm ety leeere e0ohethe
seal then. 1. gash), one,
eon good thing isboet the present de-
Preasiou in wheat prices is that elvine
breedere ere learning 1111,4 this cereal is one
of the best mid deepest foods for all dosses
of hogs. It Will no e be wise to do without
corn entirely, bat feed, growing pigs three.
fourths wheet, and onefourtli 00111, and, ite
they grow older, alter proportiona, until
fattening ewiee have onefourtli wheat and
threefourths corn, the whole allowed to
soak afeveral beers before feeding, eapeelei-
ly if' the grain is fed unground.
I think even fattening hogs, that are he.
lug finiebed off ae rapidly ae possible, will
attain the desired, sto.tenmeh more cheaply
and rapidly, if ellowed a few roots oceasion-
ally, and the core is lightened •mechauically
by additions of bran, middlings or whole
wheat, Corn alone is far too heavy 0111heating for even swine. As hogs are heavy
feeders upon every kind of eatable flub
stance, they require swiss to eentein mate-
rial such, as *weed eshes, (Mamie' and sea,
in order to encourage and promote diges.
Lion. These are hest placed in separate
troughs, where stook can take what they
need and no more.
Danish Butter Makers.
The Danish butter makers, sera an Eng--
lish paper, are gradually driving all their
competitors fin the Eeglish markets,
The rapid development of the lautter trade
in Denmark is due, in a great Measure, to
the face that tke farmers have adopted the
co-operative system of produetion. I3y
workbag colledevely they are able to turn
oue butter ale:better qaality, and at less
cost, than woeld be possible if worked
separately. .
The full responsibility for the working of
the dairy rests on the exeentive eommittee
which consists of a ohairnaan, e, treasurer,
11 seoretagy, an auditor, and an indefinite
number of directors. They are elected at
'1j,,annna1 meeting of the society, the mem-
Lt
bersAf which have as many votes as they
heve awe. The executive must visit the
deity 00elesetlyl. keep the manager up to
•and quantity of
i made accord -
hod. They
wn the
co
his work, tes111• t
the butter, an
ing to the meet
mast aleo beo;
working expenses 0
the best and cheapest,
to find out new markets
They reoeive 110 salaries, butt
•their expenses when engaged on •
of the society. The manager is theixere pe
sentative, and is responsible to them for al1!
that takes place at the dairy.
Upon th; manager's fitness for his woider,
depends the success of the dairy. •
position is a most difficult one. Not tinier
must he superintend the making of the
butter, but he must keep a -close watch on
the proceedings •of the members of the
society. lie rnusb • inspece their farms
examine their cows to see that they ere
in a healthy condition, and insist uponetr
cow -houses and the vessels in which th
milk is transported being kept perfect'
clean. All who join the society agreeet
dgeeeeeve certain rules with regard tQl
•
for inetence, teeny° to each cow at least 1
Ib. of rape cake per day during the winter;
also never to use cabbages or turnip taps
as fodder, arid to were notice se the dairy,
when they are using • potatoes, vetches,
beans, ete. It is the duty of the manager
be see that thee-en-ules are rigidly Observed.
Any farmer who infringes upon them ia
warned in the first instance ; and if he
repeat hie offence, he is fined. • Under cer-
tain eireennetances he may even be erielled
from the society. The manager • is pro,
feelewenneeen4gar,ennoinee-p-
100...pai4d.s of bateee-essienat e satiefactor
rate •
-
The dairy officials collet the milk frolo
the various farnis,Weigh it—the Danes hats°
no faith in measuringe—tese ib, and hand et
over to butter makers, who have been
specially trained. for their work, The glees
is fitted up with centrifugal separatore ee'd
Blithe beet butter -making applienceennamy
ef which are too oostly to be bought by any
one small producer. Thus the werk is
carried on there ander much mare favorable
conditions than in any ordinary farmhouse
dairy, with the restuit that the biltter made
iieuniforznly of a better quality. It is pro-
duced, too, at a less cost e for, in a co-
operative dairy, ovring to the extensive
scale of the operations, many economies are
made which would be impossible in a small
0110.
The farmers age paid monthly, 111 122 rate
fixed by the executive oommittee, for the
milk they send to the dairy. They are re-
quired to buy back from the dairy, Also at
a fixed rate, a, oertain quantity of separat-
ed milk, or churn -milk cheese. Every Feb-
ruery the a.cootints of the dairy are care-
fully 'balanced, and a statement ,gnelee, re-
ceipts and expenditure is drawnexp by the
executive and; presented. ab tegenerel meet.
Viehat money remains al tereelefrayirig
current expenses goes to vying off tee
debt for the initiat cosb of the building,
eta. As fawn as the dairy hae cleared
self, an inverieery of the soeiety's assets
made, and their value is divided
aliens, which ere allotted to the mein
in Proporbion to the geentity of milk the
have supplied since the opening of th
dairy. n'rexte that time the annual profit
of the society are devoted to paying inta,t-
est at five per cent. 'on the shares; and it
any belance renutine when this ie (lone, it
is divided among the members, eath of
whom receives a bonus prpportionate to the
qatintitsr of his milk during , the • previOulf-
year. The members are reepoesible each
in pronortioh to the number of his cows,
for alijl0880s the sooiety, may eustain, ,
EON ROBE •
Ara
Trail NOW III1nUIILI: Ole COOP t
road..
The Congo &agreed haa just opened fOr
businese ao fer as it heti been eompleted. It
has [sleeved at the digniez of a, time table,
aud schedules of passenger eat freight
traille, What the road lake fa length_ it
mekee up in. charges. It oasts •anybody
who has a aoeiel position to maintain .$10 to
travel twenty-five miles. This to the first
class rate, end the drop from first to second
Glees is preelpitoesi end eleyenial. The only
accommodatione for seeentlechiss paseeueers
are seth as they ean find jo the freight
ear% but they 01111. o.tTord to stand up if
need be, for they are recieired to disburse
only $1 for transportation that eoSts the
unfortunate few ten times as much.
Modern, improvements in train eneuage-
ineut are a featere of ehe new African rail-
road, The fact that only onda train a day
sterts frein etieleof the termini redueee to
a, minientim the danger of a rear -end
; but as the Congo Railroad digere
from our trank lines in hewing only a single
track, it is met expedient for treinslo
tempt to peso one anotherbetween atatioes.
Tbe four stopping plane along the line
heve therefore been cotineeted by tele-
phone ; and concluders are under orders
matte leave one station until assured by
telephone thetthey will leave a full monop-
oly of the 'track to the atation ahead.
When the line is completed to StenleyPool,
there will be a fine opportenity for tourists
of the adventuresome sort to catch e glimpse
of the lower Gorge Valley and return to the
sea, breezes bi a few days. It is to be ex-
peoted that the progrees of eivilization will
have a teadenay to reduces the price of fiest-
olaas tiokete. The company, however, has
a nionoply of railroad building for meny
years to come, and will be likely to charge
all the traffics con bear, without auy fear
thet oompetitive routes or ticket soalpers
• will demoralize rates. Of worse, the needs
of commerce and the pressure that the Con-
go Free State may exert, will soon have a
tendency so place all. (lenges on a reason, -
able haste.
The road is completed to Nkenge, twen-
ty-five nuleiefroni its starting point at Mee
te.di. It is now fiiirly oil the plateau be-
hind the hills thatoverlook the foaming cat
-
r thus far has
tee rock,skirt-
eigzagging up
here, a, number of
the trouble -
difficulties of
en conquered,
de to Stanley
r and near will
erects of the 'riven
been hewn op b of the t
log, first tbe Oongo a
the Mpost River 411
coatly bridges ef0r0
some strearoTea
as- ee ea,
ware rouse e
Ad rapid progres
oo/, where steeen
ring freight to tb
Facts are stu,bb
road must e.stoni
who affirmed a
men could accent
climate of the
Ettme,n &maim Of VD Yeate.•
• The church of Se. John, la ClerkenWell,
Londoe,weabeilt between 7 00a,nr,1800 years
ago by the le:eights Hospitallers, and is
accordingly ono of the most Catenating
eceleeimetical structures in London. As be-
fits a church of mediceval thnes, it of course
has a snipe, and there ie hardly a. place 80
eeeny of a visit in all the metropolis.
trt 200 yeare ago the crypt was on A
%lithe grollibi011tSide, but reoecrn
lid other melees have 1101127
of eubterranean exieterafe.
I of human rernisine, nearly
ed four or five deep„ hexing
• verious raceme in the welle.
re taken out and stowed
121120 8012318 of elle el Ides and
ey have bean decompose
bee. This festering
eluded seine
who were
o of the
rely, the
ed haat
now
NOTE
e and this rail-
ermy of 'writers
ago that white
ng m the trying
7.
lamp.
e s
Is,I rieultui
re eatmetes
end in the United
;),03eici
0fe000,0b0u0s0e100s
3
1I12, 2bt3 1 yield 9,000,000
Ifer e further ke duce Yn 8 the teelleee efeadrimn gel;
low pricee—tlies lowest in modern years—
widen—di-raw ef idea in the grain magkets.
There Tres cane for the depresssed feeling
the telegraph tItilo us prevailed in Londoes
this Christmas . eason.
The report that the British have annexed
the Gilbert, IeTante is very much on a par
with the news thattle, 'Dutch havetakenHol-
lend. The -Gilbert Isia • s have for some time
beenunder the practical ' retection of Great
Britain.'and the British gag was eceseee
on one of the islands 0101 than a year ago.
eteegheeekleseArealeteeletk_arnmepsts heve
. ee
ably have liceeeigenbjoat I
and. settlement, since England aenntllynerd
posseesion of one of thern. It may be that
the formal occupation of all the islands has
oely now been aeseually carried out. • The
veep liea in one of the routes between
Australia and Cauada, and hoe probably
become more valuable to Great Brieein fence
the direee cable -and steamship lines between
the two great colonies became something
more then a dream. It is not improbable
than the story of the annexation ie made
the moat of et this time in. San Francisco
for the purpose of arouiting the jealousy of
the people, of the United eltatee and spur-
ring thera into anneeen the Sandwich
Islands. " g
Peixoto has bad no end of trouble with
the Yankee sailors oit the Nictneroy.
They smuggled spirits on board, in eocoe-
nuts, loaves of bread and bladders, and
the remelt was a drunken row which almost
amounted to a mutiny. It was quelled by
the leaders being pee in irons. When they
got to Pernambuco a great many of there
said they did not intend to do any fightieg,
and were put ashore. If this sortdof 'thing
glee o0 leeixoto will be glad to end his
trotibles by a theely resignation. It would
be heartily welcomed by all parties in
Brazil, for everybody is lured of this uncle-
cisive warfere, which leaves the belligen.
oats seathless, and makes it dangerous for
e •dal citizens. Aleamet any form of es -
4013e4 goveentneat, mouarchle or repub-
etelan would bo better. than the preeent
'f°61;51;:loi
i:tiY.satitifac—tory—feature of the St
Lawrence cattleeeade the past season wee
the , smallness of the losses on the voyage.
01 83,322 animals shipped, all but 316 were
leaded. The 3.085 1712.0 bur elightly in exoess
of one.third of one •per Cent. In 1802,
which also hada good record, the loss was
ofneest 1,,waret.ds of one ,per ceet, Many
v0Yeeeee.wereeeriade with litege coneignments
without a single animal 'being siterificed
Geed11 for enthe s is due, first, to efficiency
fh8
everteeent regulations and, otel:
IoYatt0the manrne ,itiwttrmal
haichotinietyre'evemih
ree,ne-
1:0re{3kedoif)ytitliciseei7enPeb,Iblell'se often required a
strietnees thee looked het eigenee, and
which 120111012121200120111012121200'caused foe .71:4-ee0-le,tt,
but the benefit to the trade aux e,„
say nothing of the maiming to ele,
that was avoided, ie seen la a 103it,14na1a,
that it proves that eattle eam be as WI"
ca'trLoi:da bleyti615:no"reb,ybw—il 001h0 Canedl'e,Yne'
hav not forgotten, has, since his deseent,
been telling fibs experieeoes oa the 11 Roof
of the World." eils lotrney, 00 foot and
oa horeeleack, through Kashmir, Tibet,
Chinese 'Tertary end Rueeien Central Asie,
though prompted in the first innate° by
love of travel, a desire for novelty and the
search for new opportunities for spat,
rether then by any thought of the roadie
and glory of the explorer's toil„ has been by
no ineane frainees from the geoes,raphicel
team/point.• He dtd nets strike de cone,
pletely ont, of the beaten peth as to be
able • to claim the title of diteoverer.
His route had already been travereed by
ween onAerens 8.12111 01110 Engliestes travel-
lin tensity et one Outten 51120W
ventpartson.
lthough the worde 1111111011 A114 1111i011,
5125 isnown by mune to almost Wireq One,
yet the significanee of the nurebere go ex.
pressed is by far not foktlistitiot mad :email.
tar to many as the ineetringe of the smeller
/imam's, leer exemple, if the breadth, ef a,
etreet is represented by a millien units, 8.
billion of sueli milts would give a &dance
equal to then, from Hainbere to eau. n'efen
MOO. 11 this ja not remembered we are apt
to get very erroneous impressions, espeolel-
ly of estratioinieelpheoomente As our eerth
metieuree in its greatest eircineference only
about 25,000 milesewhile the plauets are dice
tent from the earth and from each other
apeces vevyleg from 27,000,000 to 4,600, 000,,s
000mi38s, eccordingly moat of the distanoes
which confront 110 on the earth are to be
regarded as vanishingly small when corn -
pared with the distances which coefrontue
in the planetary system. On the other hand,
the nearest fixed stars have distances from
the earth, arid, fionsequently, frere any point
in our planetary eye se ne as great es frem 27,-
000,000,000 to 4,000,000,000,000 miles ; for
example, Sirens is 832000,000,000 mile• s
distrust. Consequently, ea in the eoZh.
sideration of the distances of fixed stare we
• have to deal with billions, while in the case
of pleuetary distances Wo only deal with
millions of miles; also, all the distances of
the planets from one another must be re-
garded as vanishingly smell when oompared
with the clistencee which oonfrone ns hi
the realm of the fixed stars, In other
words, viewed from Sh•iets, not only the
earth or the sun, but our whole planetary
systieneitself would appear as an indefinitely
faint point of light, exactly as Sirius
appears to as as a luinmous point.
The reader will readily appreciate that
the number billion is generally • conceived
too ernell, when we tell him that the Ger-
man Emperor, William 1.'on his 891211
birthday, had lived in the actual number of
23808,510,400 seconds, hut that a billion
seconds have not eiansed, since the origin of
the baunan speeies, reckening the age of
hunntuity at 30,000 years, It will also
seem hardly credible tbat a billion new
Amerlean 25e. pieces, placed • on top of
another, would reach an attitude of over
1,000,000 miles, that is to say, would forro
glirtariOal pile over four times as high ae
the moon is from the earth.
The fact that the results of modern exaeat
science first required of language the forma-
tion of names for large nuinben, might lead
us to believe that the people of early times
never made use of very large numerical state-
ments. •But this is not the case. More than
2000 years ago there lived a people, who,
from pure motives of amixsement, exercised
their facilities in tine domain. In India,
where our presentenumerail system was in-
vented, names existed, even in Buddha's
rime, off umnbera up to 100,000(000,000,,
and Buddba himself, it is said, prosecuted
"the formation of numeral names up to the
number which we now denote by 1, and
fifty-four appended ciphers, and mighb call
nonillions. This strange passion ot the
Ilindoos found fresh material for exereise
when in the fourth century of our era the
principal of our present nueneral system was
Invented by Hindoo Brahmin priests, and
the easy methods of computation based on
this syetem diffusell over all Indie. It was
now possible to multiply "with. facility
numbers of twenty planes with one another
and to be sure of the correctness 'of the
results. Nay, in the seventh century in
India, arithmeeical tournaments were held,
at which, as new in our ehess tournaments,
the great masters of arithmetical computa-
tion gathered together, a,ndhe was crowned
as -victor who outstripped all competitors.
A. NEBO'S DEAT.K,
Brave Captain. Wiplanas. Bled 9.2s
tOrielo
spronsenengege.ene
41
sesellePanY'e seedee, 'Mout being stirred
by aelmiration. Le, tht .history of most nee,
tions we may find male instances er
soma bravery, hat for deb.8 0
age, a toble virtue whicb fe
turn to the amen's. of Britain a
spring, Americe, for among th
the national quality of courage, a
guished from that mere bell -doe bra
which is unreaeoning, Ends it$ highee
exemplifleation.
• The noble youth who, after the beetle El
Teb hi Egypt when the Surgeons were eine
putatiug
78 $ITATITRND L1,I1115,
seized a last opportunity to write to his
mother to coinfore the girl whore he loved
at home ; tha sailor °tithe Australian coaet
who had gone overboard dinging ' t
broken moat, and seeing that the
timber poundieg the stales of th
threatened to milk ber, called 11
8hip-11413es to cut the wreck away
regited to his safety; ehe old miner
Welshmine who insisted upon sten
young limn ep on the heist first and
ing theneselves to perish by suffoea
touching trane-Atlantie illustrations
exalted quality,to Whiciewe refer, wise
Brown, who gave up his life for the
and Idea. Cutting who, with his own
destroyedthe ironelad Albeznerle on
Virginia °Oast, are prominent among m
which we could quote from American
eras. The Latin in times of great (lenge
turns hisweapon npon himself and dies e.
sitieide - the more courageous Anglo-Saxon
faces death with composure, retreats from
it if he ean end dies like it man and. with-
out complint when he cannot • '
Captain Williams was in command of a
scouting partyagainet the Telatabelee, far
from his main force. While bee:pier
kraals they were beset by a lave
1,11.3)T7 017 123128 exzere.
AL
Prevention of DiSeVekA3fl0n QhIctreh.
The envious feeste 4oeat3ycliaeovered
bearing on the relationehip between certeie
diseesee and the microseepie plaute humeri
beeterla have beeu in meny instanees of
signal help iu the prevention of thoes dis
001008.
• VMS it is know a ths,b the onset et 4
leteterial Illeeese is net passively telertaed
by the hutnau system. The }einem body
eontains Within-itifelf a power of reeistance
capable of doing battle etweeeef idly with
disease germs, and when t1t hodile cooe
dition Is 110123nllIy aetive, tke ehances are
all in favour of the humeri organism.
In ehildhood, however, when the pro -
()dues of neteieion and development are in
O etete of superetetivity, the system ia es,
pecially seeeitive to infection, and a de-
roamer-1unit of all the orgens 31 especielly
eikely to occur, .
• One of the meet import:int things te be
borne in mind by those wile have ohildreo
is the necessity ot maletabling a healthful
eondition of the nutrition. This oonetitatee
natare's own income of preventing disease.
It includes attention to the quality and
quantity of food, proper attention to light
and air, and the avoidance of all unsani-
tary infinenees of every character. Habits
of outdo& exeroise should be formed at a12
early age.
• Isolation from the commuuitylliarge of
Person suffering front cliftease is caw,- et tee
methods most universally empleliedi ae 11 1e
also one, efe ehe eeriest useful. • In private
households this is usually done by setting
apere the siok in that part of the dwelling
which admits of the least ocgrimunication
wIth the other parte, while every 100013 1012
the conveyance of the infeebioue ineteriels
from the sieloroom is carefully guarded
ageiest.
Disinfection, if properly earried Out, is au
extremely useful amens of preventing the
spread of ooripageoee clieeasee. Fumigation
by salphier is entirely ineffielent, Tee walla
ceilings, floors, furniture of the rooms treat-
ed must be subjected to the aetual contact,
of the carbolic solution, or to whittevee
suitable disinfecting agent may ,lendems
ployed.
Health a Enty.
Perhaps nothing will so mud, hesten the
tine when body a.nci. mind will both be
adequately, cared for, as a diffusion of the
belief that the preservation of lieeltle is a,
duty. Few geem conscious thrst there is
sueh a thing as physical morality.
lelen's habitual words end acts imply
that they are at liberty to treee their
bodies aa they please. Disorder, entailed
by disobedience no nature's dietetes, they
regard as grievances, not as the effects of a,
conduct more or lese flagitious. Though
the evil consequences inflicted on their
descendants, and, on future generations,
are 'often at great as thoae caesed by crime,
yet they do not think themselves in any
degtee criminal.
It is true that in the case of drunkenness
the yiciousness of a bodily transgression is
reeognized ; but none appear .to infer that
if thiebodily transgression is vicious, so
too is every bodily transgression. The fact
is, that all breacees- of the lawe of health
are physical sins. •• • -
When this ia generally seen, then, and
perhaps not till then, will the physical
trainiag of the young receive all the atten-
tion it deserves.-11derbert Spencer.
The Wearing -Out Process.
1184 a person any more right to indulge
in intemperance in working than to drink
or eat to excess? This is a fair, honest
question. Each is injurioue: each, in its
injury effects not only the individual, but
the entire family'. The person who drinks
to excess is a recognized nuisanee to ..the
community, an evil to his family and a bane
to himself. The penaley is loss of ineotal
pa trese--,--s---1-e-- neee
In over eatin
dition that
thoi
Whet fills the housewife with delight,
And eaalies lier biscuit misp reid
Her breed So tempt the appetite e
2(2311
3121111) toneh ?
CO'ITOLEN
• what 3 11101125133 Cake so nice, •
Better than lin, 1? 1*"3112 PrI"'
Anci __Salting in it triee ?.
COTTOIL,En
'Mut
Crag e
As n'
hat fries 0
5, 312 eggs, or
'el
t. saees the time
ee
Ana is ipatience of oet. eve( '
And 1 os them malt.
Who is it earns the gratitude
Of every lovir of pure ro
' By making COlerfn
N.
EVERY MA
his physie8) powers flag
Pinus. They will reato
physical aue mental.
REV 12A4
pressions anti irregularitie
entail sickness when neglec
system, yNeutlif baPhathiTs
msulfaItkPo0tbliaE
cin regular.
For Sale byall druggists, o
receipt of price (300. 31012 box),
.• WIZ DR. WILMA
LOST F
• The (artier sva,g to run tor ie. The Cap.
tauvetses,igd with the rest, but his horse
became til%nanageable and separated him
from the Arra. Alone he ram into another
party of the enemy. Tanning, he rode,
With the fleet warriors in hot pursuit,
until his horse fele exhausted., On foot
and grasping his arms he ran hitt) an open
spade and signalled with hire heads ee, ini
par -suers to come oil. They , did eel -heals
with a rush, Ue killed the hist two who.
shots from his repeating rifle. all its chain-
bere contained prebehle, and teing nnenb,lo
to reloted, he began using hie revolver, TS13
encounter was brought to e olose
eeing shot through 1110 head,
newel j1 tVe111/8 1133 l'EnislaD)
in there', e Way as the PrincO
0,5 a soldier'efe, On. It was su
will bring dor 680p Ea'
Mut father. Oen.
only see the dead
have the oo/1301aiiOn 5)3111212) *
proaels ean tamaieb 389 1121001
eotirageous desalt aehleved. .
ltrietstet sold : ",GreaCee love halt
then this, that beegive up' his life
frionde." Atni i1t1u1yoell for the
of a man's life wed he render that
feee/Y one unooMplainingty, oaf
.
Or bnro cif,eeee one wile
Mc.
• COCKNEYISMS'.
---
new the 118eate.4 lany,thlt 54 Slaughterez
by Certain 01'U6112 littbjeds.
It le a canoe of belief vsith reney par:sone
11)1.1 1110 cockney leasese one the letter "h"
where you and I put 31 in, and thee he p rll
it, in where We leuve it otit. It 21. trus ant
,now and agein the espirete is scattered in,
discriminetely and bewilderingly, but ,pef e
rule, soya ttus S le Jemate Ga-351te ..(Loacif,'
112 10 lazily ignored. The cochie
ney veri
clove the fine/. "g" end he le given. to
one word into auother,wherem he al
limowitgly apes the example of his l•
the example of the heedlese "mar
in lazy slipshod English could bee
to give hitn points. Note hew
close era th irenderinge of "Di
A oillthe'"f0itlei?aieneite°1)°'afdlii°
i:
mt •" - tint/ Femme, : "D' jar) a
;" erev mach, fun 1"
‘3.3 • t,;,l1,0e1 itnaot-iraik,oilnb ofr
• „. , will
cry