HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-9-20, Page 6T114 EXETBR TINES
A Little Daughter
Of a Church Of England nainieter
cureof a distreseing rash, by
Ayer'S SaMaparilla. M. RIC11ARD
BeRICS, the Well -tenet= Dragglet, 207
MoGillst I‘lonteeal, P Q. Says:
1 have sold Ayers EarailyMedieines
for 4.0 yearssand haveheard nothing but
good, said of them. I know' of Many
Wonderf ul Cures
performed by Aye's Sarsaparilla,' me
in particular being that of a •little
daughter et a Church of England miuis-
ter. The child was literally covered
front head to f oot with a red and ex-
ceedingly troublesonae rash, from which
she had suffered for two or three years,
in spite Of the best medical treatment
available. Her father was in groat
distress about the case, and, at my
recommendation, at last begau to ad-
minister Ayees Sarsaparilla, two lot:.
ties of which, effected a complete cure,
nmeh to her relief arid her father's
delight, 1 ara sure, were he here tor,
he would testify in the strongest terms
. as to the merits of
Aye's Sarsaparilla
Prepared byDr.I.O.Ayer
Cures othors,vviii Otaie yoa
THEE.XETER TIMES.
espubliseedeverwehnrsaay n.13erm,
Ti MES STEAM PR [Wins HOUSE
blain-street,nearly opposite Piton's ,Ieweiery
letole,Eseter,Ont„by.John Whites Scas,Pr-i•
onetors.
nitsrs or Anvitartsma •
Ffrstinsertiou,portine....... ...... . .... 10 ciente
'Tech subtoqueatinsertion ,per ....... ...Scents.
To insure insertion, &c1ver1isc,,en,s sboati
pt sentin notiater than IVedriesday morning
Ouni011- PET.NTEsit+ DEP ItTATENT i 0 IS
ofthe largest and. bast equippea ta the County
Ivor iteutrustel co ad wthes.Livt.i
nor promputteation.
• Deestons ltegarditig News-
papers,
niAyperson who takes a pmerragularlyir
thepost-oftice, whether direeted in his name or
•another's, or whether he has sanserinad-cyzol
isresponsible tor payment. •
2 If a person orders' 11--pubcr- discontinued
tenmst pay till arrears or the publisher may
outinut," tosend it until the payment is wide.
- ".na then collect the whole amount, whether
• e paper is takenfrom the odic° or nob.
In snits for sabscriptions, tho suit may b3
nstitutod in the place 'mere Me paper is pub
ished, although tha subscriber may melds
hundreds of 11211CS Wa%
The coarts have decided that refusing b
aknewspapers orperiolicate fro it the
file. or removing mai le.tviar tha a Liao Itt i
Aeprima„ facie evident: t oS in vane fzaa
IZOR the removal
a, worms of all kind
from children or adult
nee On. SPAITHrf
QEMSAN WOW'
prompt, reliable, safe and Lp?easZEang4t,CrEeqt itiAnhgranY..
after medicine. Never fa ling. Leave no bad afte•
effects' Poles. 25 corrts; pot> Box
imorra.••••••••••••-awareson.m......11.
TEE
OF AwvExETER
— - TIMES
This wonderful discovery isthe bestknownremedgcs.
Biliousness and all Stomach and Liver, Troubles, sud
as Constipation, Iladache, Dyspepsza, Indigestion
Impure Blood, etc.. These Lozenges are pleasanz
and harmless, and though powerful to promote t,
healthy action of the bowels, donor weaken likepiilr,
If your tergene is coated you need them.
.T Aiiteinuet esTieltme.
,.LOSIO/i.l:MLIN6-MANiiiiiiiit •
leneral andHerpes Debility, • •
Weakness of Body and Mind, Fffects eij
Freon; or Excesses in Old or Yettng. Rebus:,
leobte Mahood fixity Rettored. How to
Enlarge and Stiengthen Wade, Undevelepeci-
Otgaes and Parts of 13cely. Absolutely tine
failleg Home Tteetteent—Beriefits in a dew
Me rt testifyfrem 50 States and roreign Court -
teles, Write them. Descriptive Beole, ex-
olenation and preofs retailed (steletl) free.
MEDICAL DC Oliffal0 N Y
• ti
AGRICULTURAL
DeViee For Feeding Sheep.
The old-feshioned sheep pens gave the
lambs free emcees tole feeding reelte, and
generally from thence to the bare floor, in
both of which situationa they maneged to
Soil 0, good deel of feed, and to afford OP
lit•tlethoonvenieneato the owner. MOreover,
ece—astseera---
9Olay4NIE1T ezeouse RAalte F0B. Einar.
the old fashioned racks were very incon-
venient when feeding grain or roota to the
•sheep, as their heads were either in the
dish, or continually in its way, while those
which Bret received their grain or root
ratioe finished it soon after the last one
was given hers, which gave the strong
animals a chance to eat their own and then
to fight for the ration of the weaker. • The
device shown herewith consists of near
little doors, one for each sheep in the pen,
through which only their hereas can
protrude , The doors are all opened and
shut with one movement of the hand, and
and wheel shutcan be fastened with a
single movement. Each feed can be placed
in position before the doors are opened, so
that, all dam begin to eat at the se.me time,
while no heads have been in the way of the
feeder. The doom may be closed "between
meals."
1 Weer than this into their buttermilk, eild
is very doubtful how far such watered
leettermilk on be sole without riek of
preSeOution, uulese it is expressly sold
AS bilttermilic and water. The liettereeilk
should now be drawn Off through a etraira
in cloth and eieve, to prevent any loss of
butter, lent there should always bmendegle
left iu the ettern to float the butter. Tho
butter should then be malted with cold
or iced salt we;ter, the object of putting
ealt he the water being to help to draw
eft to buttermilk thoroeghly ; this pro.
cess shotild be repeated until the water
comes away clear, The last water may be
quite fresh, or With 4 elight pinch of Rah ;
the better should then be lifted on to, the
butter worker direct, or into a wooden
trough, and left for a fewmoments to
dram. If the water has been thoroughly
iced you can take it out with a sieve, and
work it at once. The butter should thee
be worked gently until the moisture is all
1 out and the grains have properly adhered
to each other; it is then ready to be made
into priots or rolls for the market.
Advice From an Expert Batter
-
Maker.
.A correspondent behoves there Is dm
royal road to achieve success and turn out
really good butter. The two principal
points to observe ate thorough cleanliness
and care in every respect. I do not pro-
pose to refer specially to churning es hole
milk, because the butters that now fetch.
• the highest price in the market are made
from cream. Anything I say can, however,
with alight modifittations, apply to churn-
ing milk, and, if you use a separator, I
shell, before I conclude, tell You how to
artificially sour the fresh skim milk, and
produce a better sour milk, either for the
market or eer feeding purposes, than the
lappered, heavily -watered. Sour milk that
is produced from. churniitg milk and which
is full of decaying matter. I consider et
of great importance to get.ehe aream away
from the skin milk •either by the separa-
tor o by.gamer, while it is •perfectly
•Peale, before any lactic ferment has set in,
and while the casein remains in complete
solution, because it is the presence of casein
in the butter which prevents its keeping,
and if the milk from any cause begins to
get tainted or rotten before the butter -fat
particles are removed, from it, they be'come
impregnated with the evil smell and flavor,
• and it is imiossible afterwards to produce
a sweet, 'wholesome, keeping butter. Hav-
• ing now given you some reasons why cream
should be taken away as soon as posalble
from the skim milk, I will -proceed to tell
youshow Iprefer it for churning. Of course,
if you wish to make butter from sweet
cream, the sooner you 'churn it the better,
•but it has been proved the -6 butter made
frorn sweet cream does not keep as long as
1
butter made from properiy-sourect- cream
that it has not as fine a flavor and that you.
do not get as much butter from the cream.
I am not a chemist, but only a practice
dairytneid, so I cannot give you the soma-
tifie reason for these facts. I am not eure
that, any learned gentleman has yet been
able to give a thoroughly aatisfaotory reas-
on. I can only state this from my experie
ence, and say that I believe all other but-
ter -makers agree in this. To peoduce the
Bnest flavor of butter the souring of the
mum requires care and attention; it should
have a sharp ftesh sour, and this can only
be got by employing. artificial means, be-
cause if you simply leave the cream alone
until it has got' naturally soureit has a dun,
rotten flavor, instead of the fresh, sharp
taste -which isnecessary for the first quality
of butter. Sour the cream by addible about
3 per cent. et buttermilk of the previous
*churning, and raising the cream to a tem-
perature of 63 degrees,it should be ready
to churn in from eighten to twenty-four
home, and I judce when ites properly ripe
by smelling and 'tasting it ; this is the only
part of butter -making where two of our
senses maybe relied on.
But, of course, every person has not got
a nice fresh soured buttermilk to use ;
sometimes you want to churn when you
have no buttermilk; sometimes, perhaps,
from thunder in the air or other cause, the
buttermilk is not up to the mark and has
beconie tainted; in either case you must
make a fresh start; this is done by making
your own sour. Yon take some fresh sweet
milk, heat it up to 72 degrees, and then
when it has become nicely sou ed strain it
off through muslin, and use it itstead of
buttermilk. I may here say that when
you use buttermilk for souring the cream,
it should be strained in a' similar way.
This is to keep the curd as far as pessible
001 0± the eourrancleimply make use of the
latic ferment. I may also say, as Ppromis-
ed you before, that the process I have just
described is just exactly that to be observ.
ed in souring your 'fresh skim milk, and
when it is properly soured you can not
distinguish it from the best buttermilk.
It makee a most cleliciou drink. In fact,
if you have used a proper churn, and taken
the whole of the butter fat out of the cream,
the ehemical analysis is exactly the Banta
Overworking spoils the grain, and makes
the butter greasy.
TO preserve the butter in grain while
washing, the temperature meet be reduced
below fifty.five degrees : those who have
it supply of ice should drop one or to
amall pieces fnto the churn after they have
redueed the epeeti and are giving thmfeett
final turns. The ordinary practice is to
pour in cold or Med water to hardmi the
grain in the proportion of about orie of water
to eight of the buttermilk, and the thorn
ahOlild 001 have two or three torts given
to it ;bab many people, 5 -specially that
raw churn milk, put a great deal more
• MURDER IN TILBURY.
A Desperate Racomiter "bleb Results 111
the Deatlt oe John ltatteltere.
A despetch from Tilbury Centre, Ont.,
Says :—An affray occurred here on. Tues.
day evening about 1.1 o'clock which result-,
ed Wally to one of the participants, one
John Radcliffe, commonly celled Jack the
Rattler, of Romney township. John War -
nick, a promine:,1 farmer of Tilbury North
township, who resides about three miles
from this town, met Radcliffe and some
friends on Queen streeteand an eltercation
mauled which resulted in the stabbing of
Radcliffe in the heart. Another peaty
by the name of William Haight was also
stabbed in the neek. The unfortunate man
Radcliffe died froembie wounds a short time
after the affray, although he was- able to
start and walk for medical • Assistance,
Haight was not seriously injured. It is
ama there were two or three parties in the
fight cornbthe& against Wernicke and the,
stabbing was committed- by him in self-
defence. Nara& was arrested by the
town constable about midnight in the Com-
mercial hotel, eyhere he bad retired to
rest, and a knife, with which the deed is
supposed to have been committed, was
found In hie posseseion.
The evidence of Drs. FergusoniSharp,
and Bray was taken upon the postmortem
examination. There were five (SIAS on the
body, , death resulting immediataly from
the one in the neck, which severed the
jugular vein. After some deliberatiosi the
jury rendered a verdict that John War -
nick, the prisoner, •caused • the •wean&
'which were the direet cause of the death
of the deceased, John Radcliffe.
DUNCAN M'ORAE KILLED HIS MAN.
A Toueb Front Pene.tang shot Dead by
the Toronto., esteeCtiiiendentlIsSelteDe-
Fe'dieed'
•
'Particulars have 'been xeceived of the
shooting affair at French River, in which
William Pereault, a Frenchmart from Penaan,g, lost his ble. .A few months ago some
of the Pereault brothers, who live at French
River, were arrested by Conatable Duncan
McCrae, formerly of Toronto, and fined.
On account of this they have borne the
constable a grudge. •
On Friday evening That the fourPere
e.ult brothers with others went into French
River and picked a quarrel with McCree-
who ordered them away. They proceeded
to Charlebois Hotel, where there was trou-
ble, and the constable was sent for.
TUX STrOOTING WAS JuSTIFIED.
McCrae arrested one of the gang and
had him by the throat when all the others
attacked him and William Pereaulegrasped
him by the throat. McCrae, with the in -
;melon of frightening them, 'drew his re-
volver. William Pereault was haremering
him on the head and aimed a blow at the
revolver when McCrae's weapon was dis-
charged, the bullet striking ,Perea,ult over
the left eye, and killing hicti instantly.
The other •brothers ran away. It is the
general opinion of those presesit that even
if the constable .had shot intentionally it
was perfectly- justifiable.
Shaving in a Lions' Den.
An additional attraction has been added
to one of the piany menageries which stand
in the Parisian suburbs. A teiv days ago a
barber entered into an agreement with the
proprietor that he would enter the den of
lions with the trainer, mid . while there
have, brush, comb, and arrahge his heir
in the latest style. This feat he success
-
folly accomplished, although the 'lions at
times became very unruly. Another oer-
ber. has performed the same feat in the
Leurent :Menagerie at natty. He carried
out his contract without flinching, although
the animals were in a very excited condition,
and ELITIODg theIll was a dangerous Tion call-
ed D' Artaguan, alter °be ot the heroes of
the elder' Dames. D'Artagnan frequently
evinced a desire to have a munch at the
barber, but the eyes of the soaped and
lathered tamer kept him in, check.
How to get a "Sunlight" Fieture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
'Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott Ste, Toronto,
and you will receive by poste. pretty pictures
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing.'This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it vvill only cost Icapbetage to send in
the wrappers, if yon leave the ends <men.
Write your address carefully,
•
henBay cat; afelc, tee traveher Casf,orb..
nhen she was a Child, sbe cried for Cestaria.
lahett sho became- Miss, she clung to Castoria.
!Jaen she bad Children, she gave Mein Ce,etorie
Cold Comfort
. ,
Mt, Slimpurse (feeling his way)—"Your
disarming dkughter tells me that she is an
exeel len t. cook and housekeeper."
ad Latly (caltrile)-e"Year I have had
her carefully tatight, for I have always held
that.„.no lady who (1018 not Ufideretand
hOtteekeepingcn properly direet 'a retinue
of
Children Cry -for Pitcherle Citetoriai
BRITIR AND FOREICIN.1
Aceording to the examination just mado
by order of the Greek Patriarch, the
Ilyzeutioe edifieee of Coestantinople heve
oot suiTered severely by the earthquake,
!time. Luca, the whim of the music
pub)isher, who has just died in Milan, car-
ried on the besiness herself after her bus.,
bead's death, and was among the -first to
introdece Richard Wagner'e operas to the
Dueing the vieit of the British Amnia.,
tion to • Oxford a statue mf • the great
Physician Serdenhain, who was an Oxford
man, was presented to the University
Museum by the warden and two former
fellows of All Souls'.
Sir Edwin Landseezei house in Se John's
Wood road is about to be torn down to
make way for a new railroad. It was
built from the artist's own designs, and
the walls of the studio and the door panels
are covered.with peel:Oh:tee by his hand.
Plans for a great Roman Catholic cathe-
drat for London are now ready. • The site
was chosen by Cardinal Manning, being
whereethe old Tothill prison stood,between
Victoria street and Vauxhall Bridge road.
The cost of land and building will be about
4180,000.
• Aecordbag to weather observations re-
cently published, b'erlin hart an average of
147 dark days in the year to 111 on which
'the sun shines, The brightest days are ie
May and September, the gloomiest in
November, while in July they are most
changeable.
• The Czarevitch will reteive a service of
Sevres china as a wedding gifb from French
admirers, who have jut appointed a com-
mittee to take the matter in charge. The
plates are to bear the arms oi the provinces
and towns of France, combined with the
Russian eagle
At Moscow a nes' conservatory of music
is now being ,erected by order of the Czar.
The building will cost 8400,000, and will
accommodate about a thousand pupils. Sta.
tues of N. Rubinstein, a former director,
and of Tacheikowsky, who long taught
there, will be placed iu the square around
the new building.
Cain, the sculptor, just before he died ex-
pressed the wish to give to the city of
Paris hie last study in bronze, an eagle and
a vulture fighting over the body of a beer,
which was exhibited at the Salon of 1801,
and at the World's Fair at Chicago. -It
will be set up in the square Montholon,
where the artist used to play wheme, child.
Franz -Schmitz, tbe architect in charge of
the Cologne cathedral at the time of its
completion, died recently at Badeu Baden.
Thetw o towers at the west end of the church
are his work. He was employed in the
" restoration" of medireval buildings all
over Germany, and in 18e7 received the
highest prize for architeotural works at the
Paris Exposition.
"Opposite the St. Duero station in Paris
recently a young mau, in stopping the run-
away horses ,drawing ,an omnibus. was
knocked down and seriously injured. ' He
claimed compensation of the omnibus com-
pany, but was informed that his Set was a
purely voluntary one, and that he would
not have been hurt lied he minded his own
business. The courts took a different view
of the matter. however and have condemn-
ed the company to pay damages. ,
During the recent naval manoeuvres two
10-inchguns were fired simultaneously on
one of the vessels with startling effect. The
glass that protects the helmsman and the
windows of the chert -house, of which the
glass is one-third of an inch thick, were
smashed to atoms. An inkstand,. bottles
and tumblers jumped six inches into the
air and spilled their contents, but came
down whole, and men near the turret
were lifted off theirefeet by the concussion.
Negotiations are said to be in progress
for a combined advance of the Britishoand
Italian forces upon the upper Nile. The
plan is for the Italians to advance from
Kemal& to Khartoum, supported by the
Abyssinian army, while the English, and
Egyptian troops mareh upon Berber from
Suakin), drive out the reinnane of Osmen
Digna's dervishes at Berber, and then,
folio sving the course of the Nile, join the
Italians at Khartoum. Both powers fear
that they may be forestalled if the advance
otrKhartount is delayed much longer.
The war in Corea has brought- out pro-.
minentey the control which England has
over the submarine cable system of the
world. English companies own lines having
a length of more than 150,000 miles, whieh
cost over 430,000,009 and produce a reven-
ue of more than 44,000,000. The Govern-
ment hu done everything in its power to
facilitate the leyingmf these cables by sub-
ventions and patronage, and the prelimine
erg surveys have huh nearly all made by
the naval authorities. In return the com.
panics are obliged tio give priority to the
despatches of the imperial and colonial
Governments over all others, to employ 110
foreigners and allow no wire to be ender the
control of foreign Governments.; and, in
case of war, to replace their servants by
Government °Meads when required.
The report of the British Custotns Cont.
missioners just published g ives the gresi
receipts of revenue for the year ending
-March 31,1894, as £19,964,319 an: increase
of £78,890 over last year, but over 00,000
less than was expected. The revenue from
coffee, which had been steadily decreasing,
was in routtd numbers 4170,000, 4.5 per
cent, lose titan last year,
that from rum,
£1,940,000, 6,7 per cent. len than in 1893
a lees to the Government of 4140,000, and
cocoa and tobacco also decreased slightly.
Brandy brought in £1,305,000, an increase
of some 430,000, and tea 43,500;000, an
inmate of £90,000, or 2.75 per cent.
Lord Roberts luta been,making another
interesting little Speech on the condition
of the army in India. When he first Went
there the soldiere had no refuge, when oft
duty, Save the canteen, and the canteens
were crowded. Then regimental institutes
were established, and became Stleeessful
rivais. of the drinkiog bars. The men
developed a taste for the perusal of light
literature, and Lord Roberts declarediet
when he left India the reading.roente Were
orovsded and the canteees er11pty Some-
thelg Of the same orb is going on in Eng.
asit't in it
Vf."0"."0..."4"/ '4•44\04k0..
I•t is just be.ft
Cause, -there is
no lard 41, itittz_t
TTOLENE-
the new shortenin3,
4o Of on der fit:5 P0P-0
41 lir WM housekeepers. -
OTT01- ENE is puftE7
rocAT E
for..154TisFyiNg- none
,of ffie unple as a,rit odor
klecessarii/ connected
Bold In 3 and 6 pound pails by all grocers.
s Made only by s
The N. K. Fairhank
Company,
wenivigton plat
eteCientRAL.
61111611MIIIIM ,14:111011:11=2111=141•16111
land. The free libraries of the cities are
largely attended, and licensed victuallers
are complaining of the slackness of
teade.
• The marriage of the Czarewitch and
Princess Alix of Hesse has been postponed
until the middle of January, when it will
take place at St. Petersburg, according to
present arrangements. The report that
Princess Alix had objected to enter the
Greek Church is a pure invention, rend one
of the mosb absurd character, as she was
aware long before the Ozarewitch proposed
to her thet his wife must become a member
of that communion. Princess Alix is to be
baptized and formally admitted into the
,(reek- Church when she goes to Russia
shortly on a visit to her sister, the Grand
Daehess Serge. A German Princess; when
she becomes a member of the Greek Church
on marriage, has to array herself in a
night-gown, and, haters the assembled
Grand Dukes and court officials in Bassia,,
to get into a bath, immersion being part of
the ceremony. --Truth.
CLEARING FOR ACTION.
Sceic on Boal•il a Nran.0 •War--Discitaftte
Inns nest Perfect, Development.
To watch a ship's crew in the most ex
citing moment of clearing for aotion is to
realize ehe value of dicipline la its most
perfect development—tho result of the
constant practice that gives faultless pre-
cieion.
Whenever bugles sound the call and the
boatswain's mates pipe shrill echoes,' the
men, wherever they may be, whether on
watch or asleep in haunnocks, assemble at
their allotted posts with marvellous cele
riey. There is a momentary trampling of
feet between decks, a rattle of arms, and
then silence so profound that ILL)/ word of
command can be distinctly heard fore and
tau along the deck even of 'such a 'ship as
the Repulse.
At the words "Clear for action," there
is a commotion which a landstetan might
mistake for a panic as men rush from point
to point. A blue jacket never walks when
an order is given, but does everything at
the double. Every one knows his station
and goes to it by the quickest and shortest
way: With a rapidity that seeing wonder-
ful, companion ladders, with their ponder-
ous gangways, are unshipped and stowed
away ; railings around the lotv decks fore
and aft are lowered ; theventilating cowls
and eltintney stacks disappear, to lie replac
ed by avers fluth with the deck; ehutches
are battened dowu, water -tight doors closed,
and tackle rigged for hoisting ammunition
tom the magazine. Between decks every-
where something of the same kind is being
done as quickly and as quietly, and then the
men stand to their guns. When the bugles
sound Mr firing to commence, the great
barbette turntableserevolve slowly, turned
by uneeen power, and the qpick-firing guns
in maindeck batteries .are worked with
surprising celerity by detachments of Royal
Marine Artillery,
A Good *Law.
.An act passed by the Dominion Govern-
ment during the last session makes eeveral
imiortant changes in the law regulating the
trial of youthful offenders. Among other
things the new law direets 11 jndgos and
magistrates to try children under 16 years
of age without 'publicity, eand apart from
the trials of other . accused persons. Such
children must also be onfinedin separate
apartments and Secluded entirely from
the society ,of adults. When the of
Lender is under 14 poems of age, the new law
requires that the executive offieer of the
Chialten't Aid Society shall be notified, m
order that he may investigate the cause of
the offense and likewise the home treatment
of the child. The magistrate may dispense
with a kernel triaeand hand the youngster
over to the guardianship of the Society to
bo reered under ite care The probable
benefits of such an alliance between the law
teed Christian philantbropy are ipparent to
the most careless obeerver, the combination
being all the more feasible because there
are no new officere, to be provided, encl no
neW Mad) in ery necesSary in the carrying out
of the new law,
"
The numerous Out stories whioh have
been given curreney in New York letely
led a small by in that city to ittmersonate
one Be frightened many pimple foe about
it week before he was captured.
41•1•010.0.410.11000111.1101111.1.
7
1
THE FIRST PHONOGRAPH.
mts doe to au. Acezdent or whio• gime*
Too, Ad vitUt
A number of years ago, at the blow when
Edisoir was experimenting en diaphgrame
for the telephone, he had coustructed a
number of email she4pekin drumheads to
compare with theist-0mA. ones. To some 0
these sheep skin diaphgramshebad attached
e smell needle, whioh was intended to pro-
ject teward the magnet and assist in con-
veying the vibration caused by the humen
voice. The sheepskin diapligrams did not
fulfill Edison's expectations, and were
thrown aside as useless.
Toying idly with these discarded dia-
phragms, hie assistants discovered that by
holding them in front of their mouths and
emitting a gutteral sound between the lipa
• a peculiar noistkpproaohing music could
.be produced. In miming one of the no
engaged in playing on a diaphgram one d/y,
Edison playfully attempted to stop the
noise by touohing the projecting metal pin
with his finger.
"Do that again," said Edison, and it was
repeated, and again the pin impinged upon
his finger, to his evident delight. Ile re
peated the experiineets with other assist
ants, getting them to talk against the dia.
phragm.
Finally he retired to his -den and com-
menced drawing diagrams for new madam
ery, which his assistants speeday made,
and a few cloys later the first' phonograph
was pet together. -
A MISSIONARY MURDERED.
Rev. Ilr. Wylie o: the Scott isle' Presbyterian,
Mission In Mita murdered to. iltroad
Daylight.
The murder of the Rev. James 'Wylie,
of the Scottish Presbyterian Mission, was
et a brutal character, and utterly unpro-
voked. The murder was committed in the
main Street tof Liao -Yang ha broad daylight.
Mr Wylie was Walking., towards his house
when he saw a detachment of Chinese
soldiers approaching. Seeing the men
were in an excited condition, lee stood
aside to let them pegs. On catching sight
of the missionary some otthe soldiers be-
gan to jeer at him, while others abused
him in :dltey language. Mr Wylie tried
to move away, whereupon one of the soldi-
ers struck him, and this was taken as a
Memel b; the others, who threw themselves
furiously upon the defenceless man. As
he lay Upon the ground Mr Wylie was
stabeed and hacked at with knives, beaten
in a frightful -Manner with musket auks
and clubs, and kicked unmercifully about
head and body. The officers Inchargeof
the soldiers did not attempt to restrain
them, but simply marched them off when
the missionary's -life bad been apparently
battered out of him. Mr Wylie, however'
though mortally injured, was not dead.
He was carriedeto his house, where he
received tender -end careful treatment.
From the first little hope could be enter-
tained of his recovery, and he died within
a few hours of the attack. News of the
murder was at 0006 Milt' to the Provincial
Government and to Tientsin. Orders were
forthwith -despatched for the art est of the
men concerned in the crime:. Tee Civil
Magistrate called upon the officers to sur-
render the murderers for trial, but this
demand was treated with contempt. Up
-to the present the officers refuse to obey
the Magistrate's orders. The murder has.
caused , greet excitement at Liao -Ta g
among the British residents, who have sent
a petition to the lvlinister at Pekin, asking
him to cause justice' to be done, and beg-
ging that a British- matoon war may be sent
tO the port.
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41.1•10.0aalliMar.e011,14411.
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,