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The Brussels Post, 1891-11-13, Page 7
Nov, 13, Ism THE BRUSSELS POST, 7 11o•oecan handiwork, not to v1811 1lw1l0 LATEFOREIGN NEWS, h1('ZI104H ill cOnlpinly with Rattle eer0itnta ori —� inte0proter0, but to tnko with them one of the .Raropeul mnrehants of the town, who London han a lady auctioneer, can proven t their being Imposed upon, The grip 18 prevalent at Axvall, Sweden, .110opper Iltino 111 Japan, which 101H first the belief that the tunonut 011 ex0r0180 which rto a+ 1( S' ' i'410. Xh 111 1 A 11310 fuel is being LuiU, 1(l t'npuuhuget, o•nrltrd 1:103 .3 J cols loahonld ha beneficial is only Louudnd by the which iX 10 cost about $17:1,13110, opened. '1'lu{ 110elli of Japan 18 111 ep0Isil'lo 00 rylaelt;v of the per+on to (,elm, \netilor The o costs nru bnildin' a chtua Jl in for the Xtatenien1 of the feet., Pim 1i1n' f0 it 1,0 taken with a view to atr)ogthen the ii ", a 'cu 0r the Inaalhot':i of their faith in the 1lnsashl province, turd it is lou a 104.11111,50100, e1' to invigorate the nervuns sy's• C 1 1(l li f i(1 nblJapaosu w(11I1H that 1.113 W148 1410 1eun, exoroir.o X11311(1,1 always b0 gradual 11110(0, 80X4 ,,upper 1(1:11 0000 worked in Japan, ft, A big aawllll ❑ ,l'111g n lel' i w14H al)em{I III L 1 t 1 l!:1(' t) �ellll. 111 1tH 1'ilel'l'1o40 alta 1110 n111i,li1po lm lam 1'i F11bu 11 ae11n1 )i l ludWit 111a01l1101' y tho actual Mato of the vital powers lampi, { i I Y years ilgn, and Lhu ov0nl w+18 uulrkn'by of the individual. \\ o uta not 10 dou8ld HEALTH. Exoraiee for Girlo, There is no greeter fallacy current than Ali iI i t 1'1'111 L 1'Pl 1110 1' I If t fl 1,183 • Maar in the Gni, ed 1,tate0. °ba.nging 1110 lntile 0f 1" 003 to \\'ado or that betannn 1(-e were „nee capable A torpedo has lean tried ntThome hihci{d (Japanese c1p',erl, That there should be of walking s1( many mile: wil.6ou1 fatigue, taut can ea through a 0(311 wltllm11 ax plod. lag. 1t 10 the invention of an Italian firm. 111 Sweden ryo flour coats exactly twleo as 1131)011 as it did three years ago, and 12,479 more peepers ware supported by the p1biia there in 1440 than in 1007, 'Pito directors of one of the principal rail- way companies 10 (trent 131'itnin Itru consid- ering the prop :al for the entire removal of the class system. The British poacher is crow being followed by the olontric,seuroln Light, Alight several ntilee away 10001Liy delootod and identified a maple of them. At Sandli118, Liverpool, on Tucadny, a n•0111an, aft,• quarrolling with her husband, rushed to talo canal and threw herself and two young children into the water. They were got out, but the younger child was dead. The woman Is Inou0tody. Despolohos from Mexico reports terrible outbreak in 1110 Tulanagu district, arising out of the colonisation of Indian lands by German settlers. The Indians gothered at night, attacked the German settlement, and butchered 200 men, women, and children in cold blood. Troops have been sent to punish the =Mercies. Tim Norwegian mod fisheries will be con- siderably injured by the working of our re- ciprocity treaties with San Domingo 011(1 the Spanish West, Indies. Nearly twenty-five pee cont, of 11e export of rock -dried cod- fish from Norway heretofore hits gone to those countries. A 10 -year-old Norwegian girl emoted a great deal of astonishment and admiration in the city of (Gothenburg, Swede, by driv- ing six horses, siaglo handed, all about the city. Her name i0 Sve•dlup, and she is the daughter of the equerry to the King of Sweden and Norway. Women's wuistbalt(ls 300 more richly or. namented titan u0ua1 in Paris. One of blue silk had birds with outatretohed wings worked with diamonds. Others had from six to twelve rows of pearls, with diamonds at regular intervals, and divided by four or five buoklea,made of colored stones closely set. The Kimberly Kettlles are said to smoke cigars with the lighted mulls in their mouths. They light a cigar in the ordinary monner, tuck the tongue in tho cheek, and trotting the lighted end in 110 mouth gradually non• some the whole. They say that their method. is warm and comforting, mid greatly prefor0ble to the way of the foreigner. Tho republic of Costa Rica, ono of the most progressive of the southern countries, is soon to have a complete eyatem of tele- phonic communication. The Goyernment made a contract a short time ago for the es- tablishment of telephone service between all the towns of the republic and for its main- tenance for a period of ten years. A man named John Pitt oscaped from the jail at Lenoir, N. C. last woek. Twenty - h • t0csurrender four hours later ho 1'o 1(u l sod ed himeolf. He lost his way in the woods and got very badly scared, and concluded that lie 1000111 bo very mti011 sa100 and more n as 1 of his leo in 'ail SO ns 300 1C comfortable g J e line for captivity. mode a b o bearings he bo E detailed reverd of these remote happmlillge or p0r1'urming eme t;yumaslic feat, w1( aro IS not remarkable 111 a country winch 11014818 to try ani gaup op thio power indefhdtely, the possession of a written history extend- whou bio body hoe boom,. less robust. ing book twenty-five centuries, Seven 01' All that Dao he safely borne is vomiter and eight of the aneluut workings aro said still easy exercise of the body, eontinited over a 10 0018) ,11181 as they wore eleven 06lluri"s long period, so as give tune to the vital ago, and trial diggings are now being made lunation without 1irolllahlg the exhaustion with a view W reopening 113 1111110. 101110h inevitably follows upon any excessive One of the lln aeo castes hes resolved demand upon your power. that hereafter its woolen shall wear a flower There has been 111 some 11101011000 lose 111 the nose instead of the ancient and cue- headaches, in oth000 marked improvement where various disturbances to health had existed. I look for benefit to alt who prac- ticeTmenbcr0 of the caste Wive further re- regularly and faithfully. Gymnasbiol The 811,00010n more 0010 01 ,melee than walk, itched that if any woman in intra wears a ing or towing, t,mary nose ring. The reason for tine In- novation is that the wearing of nose rings tae led to "ranch unfavorable comments nose ring she will be liable to a lino fn ad- dition to the forfeiture of her ntllor orna- ments, A11 11110 may seen) amusing to the Western mind, lint the matter doubtless has its tragical aspects to many In limns who know that the no(o ring is a survival of Ito moat memorable period of their history, and that, esoording to tradition, the p11)011oo was derived from an injunction placed upon the people by ono of the HLu- doo deities. Groat Britain does not pay her volunteer troops for the time they pass 1(l camp luring the summer, but there is a growing ,00hing irnnilitary circles that she ought to. Limit. Col. Sir Robert Menzies, Bort., sold at a volunteers' bazaar in Scotland two or three weeks ago that as the 3ove•nmenb now deems it necessary for the o(lioloney of the volunteer forues that they s1onld go to camp b4 brigades, which int olved a week in camp for each soldier, it should play the men for the time thus taken. He said the Govern• meat could not expect a laboring man to given 1111 y -second part of his ane uatearnings to the country in addition to his time and services at the regular (frill, and that when 11e wnutry takes the citizen soldier from his vocation it should not allow hint to sutra• loss by his patriotism. Tho Cairo Goographiota 800101yhas Issued a pamphlet, prepared by L oitfy limy, of Cairo, with map in Frouchand AraLic, ad. vomiting a railway between !smallish and Gaza. The pamphlet contains an interesting summary of various concessions in Syria. It is worthy of note that these enterprises aro entirely in the hands of Orientals. 1: oussof Effendi Navon, of Jerusalem, under- takes three lines radiating from that maty to Jaffa, Gaza, and Nablous(Sanaria); total, 150 miles- Youssef Effendi Plias, late chief engineer to the government of the Lebanon, proposes not only to unite Damascus with Acre 011(1 Haifa, and ilnpeove the harbors of the Mediterranean termini, lint to put steamers on the sea of Tiberias ; total, 900 miles, Youssef Effendi 1'foutran, charged with the harbor works at Beyrout, has ob- tained the right to construct a stearal Mom - 1v11y into the Hauran-50 miles- Hassan Effendi Baiohom, also ofBeyront, contracts for the section between Damascus and its port -60 nldl08, Tne syndicate for the Damascus -Aleppo system of over 400 miles is in the bands of Messrs. Solo , Balli & (Jo. well known Levantine names. Loutfy Bey proposes to devote himself to completing tho Syr0-Lgyptian liner of 150 milds. This brings Jerusalem o • I unciae within seven hours of 1110 8 Sues Canal. Morocco is still fooling the evils of a war that occurred thirty -ono years ago. At Tangier, the chief port, the Government levies duties of 10 per cent, uron all im- ported goods, and half of this total revel 1(e is appropriated by Spain, to apply toward the war indemnity, which is still partly paid. The war between Spain and Morooco occurred in 1860, and Spain intends that Morocco shall bear the entire cost of it. A meeting of the Dee Fishery Board was held at Chester on Saturday. Major Lead- better, chief constable, Denbighshire, 11011. secretary, repel ted that the season had been themost0uccosefal of past years. In the upp• er waters the coracle not sten had oaught 898 salmon. 11:lr. Sconce said the whole river was ono complete mase of salmon. Ho had himself been through four miles of young salmon coming down the rlvor, Mr. Bellis said that in April thoro wore thousands upon thousands of salmon to be seen. A reoording apparatus, which las been for some timo at work on a number of cabs in London, is calculated to prevent disputes between cabby aid his faro. Itis fixed inside the cabin full view of the p00seuger. The recorder has on its fame 0 disk which is divided into twelve parte, each part repre- senting s mile, and as 111e cab travels the distance covered will be indicated. Besides this there is ah arrangement by means of which the work clone and the money taken aro recorded on a cardboard disk at the back of the machine, But regulated gymnastic exerei00 is only one means of pllyeical culture ; modes of dress, oat-of•door exerciso, bathing and sleeping are equal in impertano0. From neglect of precautions in childhood, which Beam trifling, but aro very importaltt, there aro low, if any, perfect forms. The shoulders are either too round, 00 one ie higher than the other ; the nook is mink too doop into the body or twisted ; the figure is thick, too thin or all of a pie00, as it were, and the limbs are more or less distorted. When the shoulders of a young girl show a tendency to become too round, she must be (na(le to throw ler elbows well in tho roar and her chest forward, and to sleep on her back. An hour's exercise every clay under the eye of a judicious tea011or of calisthenics is an excellent preventive of deformities. The neck should be carried straight, but without stiffness t in such a way, in loot, that tho fleshy part below the jaw may form, Ms it were, a double chin. If she will determine that am moon as possible of t110 tine of oath day In which she is sitting down she will Bit with her heal and neck up, trunk erect and shoulders low, and that whenever she stands or walks oho will at all times be upright, she will shortly find that she is getting to be far straighter than she was, and if she has a larger and finer chest than formerly it will bo nothing strange, for she hos simply been using one of the means to get it. tatioue 0lmuld be applied over the etomu(11' and bowels. If the attack is 11110 to 11141.1 gostillle food, making Cho child sick by giving salt and water, mustard ani totter, 1 'otivtthufeat 3 101 m• Zhu tickling11" the throat will quit:My stop the easel, Cheese as an Artiolo al Diet. In the digestion of food, partioularly of flesh foods and cheese, poisonous ptomaines are formed, but usually one does not furl these in great quantities, from the fact that the liver is able to dispose of the Most of thein. The small 00100111 of cheese ordin- arily taken at a meal will no11 lilcely have any applo noble effect. But suppose a per- son takes a potted of 01111.0, then he will get enough poison for toxic, effects. Two of the worst cases of poisoning I ever knew were from eating cheese. Ono of the pati - outs died. Cheese always contains these ptomaines. The process of ripening is al- ways a process of decay, and wle11 taken into the stomach the liver has extra work to do to dispose of these poisons. The old I Baying, Cheese, thou mighty elf, whioh t1 digests all things but thyself," is not true. Cheese does not help digest other foods. I met a dootor who explained why it was that useful as nn article of diet by Iva.a Y saying t ' j a in that cheese aontnu ns gastric juice Y from the coif's stomach used as n rounet, l asked him to explain why it was that new cheese does not have as much of this pecul- iar strong acid flavor as old uhease, and whetiher the rennet lad the capability with- in itself of multiplying. This burning, fiery -tasting fluid which comes up in the throat said whioh the old doctor thought was gastric juice, is really butyric amid. It results from the decay of fats and oils and belongs to the category of ptomaines. Sometimes cheese contains ptomaines of a kind particularly deadly, and they are al- ways present. Professor Vaughn, of the Michigan University, discovered this poison in cheese 01101 named if tyrotoxicon. He discovered also a very eaey test by which its presence could be dotoctun, and thought in the interest of the State board of health that it would be a good plan to supply all grocers with it. But first, in order to test it still further he collected a hundred specimens of different eheee003 and to his surprise every single one shoved tho premium of tyrotoxi- 0m1, so he did nothing more about submit, ting his tests to the grocers, for if followed out it would (10st0y the whole cheese busi- ness. When Professor Vaughn wants spooi mens of 11yroloxioon, he gets a quantity of o1009e, pours a little milk and water on it, puts it in a bottle, and in duo time he has plenty of the poison. If wo must eat 0110080 it can be rendered much less harmful by being cooked. But one who wants to keep his liver in good oonditlon and have a good healthy circulation, should avoid food whioh in itself is full of germs—Dia, Kun14003. Lord Wolseley on Moltke. Those who know poor, weak, jealous humanity most will best realise the dangers inharen tin this Prussian system of command. But, above all things, 1hoy,w1ll not fail to admire the 'unselfish 1oy0lty with which Moltke served his King and the disinterest- ed patriotism with which he mead his country. It would bo difficult to find in history a more renarlcablo example of those noble qualities—qualities which go far to redeem humanity from ooltempt—than Moltke displayed when, in deference to the military Constitution of Prussia, he cheer- fully anoepled the second position in that great and splendid army whirl won for x111 Germans the unification of their fatherland. Abroad ho was known as the greatest strategist, the ablest soldier of his epoch. At home, revered wherever the German tongue is spoken, 1e is still known as the groat chief of the Stolt' of the Prussian mon- arch. Had ho served any other nation, his epitaph would have described him as the conqueror of Denmark, of Austria, and of France. 33utin his own 00nubry ho will be simply remembered forever, nein Ito was (mutant to bo so remembered, with deep feelings of pride and affection, as the loyal patriot, the great soldier, and the faithful servant of his King. What flame could the good man wish for more Poste diamonds are not so match talked shout hero and now as they were in Europe a hundred yours ago ; but they exist, and they aro not the mysterious things that most persons think them, They are nothing more than an excellent quality of glass ground with many feeds, uneh es the real diamond is ground, though of eonreo with loss care and labor. Paste diamonds aro often baolcod with silver foil to enhance their brilliancy, and it is this that gives then their peoulinr lightness of ooitr. They aro need not only for personal ornament, but to decorate artiolee of household use. ThoDeprortmentof Agrionitu re ofVioloria, Australia, sent eiroulors to tltehend teachers of all the State schools outside of the metro- politan aro0 a short time ago miring for their views as to the amicability of giving metru0- don ht agriculture to tho ohill.ron attending those schools. Of 1,248 teachers, 84 per cent, aro favorable to the introduction of agricultural 108001ns in the rural schools, and 34 pot' cont. of them &treacly have sono acquaintance with the theories of agricul- ture. In fifty-two oases school children already care for gardens 0)' trees 111 the school 000erv00, and the majority of the 001101al•5 attending 360 other schools have garden plots or assist their parents et lone 111 gardening. In 101 schools the pupils 110x0 regularly made oolleOtion0 of wild flowers, weeds, grasses, cos 11113e ta a1( d butterflies, es and these collections have been used in object lesson9, De, Lonz, tho explorer, has a warning for tourists ot Tangier who are eager to boy Maroo00n wares to parry home as moven• toos. Two largo bazaars aro 411011 with goods and ]rapt by Jaws for the tourists trade. 1)r, Lens says that most of those articles are ,ado in Parris, where the 1)1181. 11088 Of manufacturing Orieuta1 antiquities and art goods is carried on to a largo extent, 'Cha prion asked for those 8puriou0 Mot:ocean wares is very high, Tourists aro advised, if they desire to buy genuine specimens of Injurious Gush. " I suppose 1 was very abrupt, and per. haps, disagreeable," said a mother of two or three pretty children, " but I assure you I could not help it, There is nothing that oc- curs to me when I ant out with tho children which annoys me more than to have strong. ors literally pounce upon the babies and cover their faces with kisses. Of course I would not have oonnnon sense if I didn't know that they me extra pretty children, 111ave heard it ever since they were born, and certainly I ought to have learned it by this time, slf I didn't know it any other way I should very soon do so from tho marked attentinu they always receive in public, but I will not alloy this promiscuous kissing, The woman who annoyed me was 0 middle. aged parson with the most atrocious sot of teeth, or rather the rennins of them, that I over saw, Her brootl was almost intoleree hie even at the dist:tom I stood from her, and I noticed that tato baby turned his faoo away in disgust. 0f course, I hated to tell her that, I novo( permitted 011rangers to kiss the children. All the same, I did and cut not sorry. " It is for this reason, largely, that I g0 om1 myself when the children are token for their airing. I find that muse girls will not guard them against this clangor, and I can't permit them to run the risk of getting all the infections and diseases that 1 itlnow must cone from such a condition of the mouth. People really seem to have not the ail il eal idea e th at they aro gnilty o f a rude - nese in offering to rice other Pco no's chit - then : 1111 1 consider It 911611, notwith- standing the foot that 1 know I am expected to talus it as a compliment, "I assure you, however, that I would rather 0no1 c0mplitnents were omitted attn. gotta. I will not engage a nurse gill with The Sabbath Chimes T would not rest till .1 nm wenn;:, 111011)11,111)11 „maw, 1111111,0)101 ,Ink. 1401 11 1111' week Lint God 1031413 hear 1310 1144 f , [June. 411helm l 131)r11 work es/leered 18 bereavement, A l',00 to 001110 min "1'••111 1(1' shrill: 1811111 110110 !riump1 of anldevemeet to good for all. 'Whatever n» re run conditions Around our path., in life prevail, If we are faithful to 0111' ❑1111,11008 WO 0anu01 011(1. The 8001 that never slights a duty, 11owever irkaame, strange, or lard. Will Hou it Inst Lha undinmed beauty Of 1110 reward. Olt. glorious tought, to fool In heaven That. ,tone 1)y our neglect wuc+harmed ; That every task whiten Uod had given Was well performed. Oh, lot us then, with firm decision, Do every task, boar every load ; And leave at hist, with duosubmission, Our work with Oed. Golden Thoughts for Every Day. Monday—Hear the invitation of the gos- pel 1 There may be some one in this 1101100 to whet I shall never speak again, and therefore lot it be in the words of the gospel, and not i0 my own, with which I close: "]:•Io, every o170 that thirsteth 1 Come ye to the waters. And let him that bath no money mime, buy wine and mills without money, and without price," " L'onte unto me, all ye who are weary end heavy laden, ad'1.1 will give you rest." Ohthat my Lord Jesus would now snake klime0lf so attractive to your souls that you can not resist Him ; and that if you have never 1lrayecl before or have not prayed e(n00 those days when you knelt clown at your mother's knoe, then that tonight you might pray, saying " Just as 110111, ‘01.1110111 0110 111011, But that Thy blond was shed for 1110, And that Thou bld'abno come to Thee, O Lamb of G,od,1 oomo l" —(Dr. Talmage. dy— I'Tttosrlondslallp doth bind, with pleasant tics, The heart of man to matt, and age But strongthene 111-11 never dins T11 tlni,hed is fife's final page. Love is the snored link which binds IIoarts,foinod by friendship firmer still : Who once has felt it in it finds Joys which This soul with pleasure 1111. Truth only cancomplete the chain. Its links enduring strength can give 1 With this unbroken 'twill remain While e'er the human soul shall livo. —Anonymous, Wednesday—The olderl grow—and i now stand upon the brink of eternity—the morn conies back to me that sentence 1n the cate- chism which I learned when a child, and the fuller and d00pee its meaning becomes, " What is the chief and of elan? To glorify God and enjoy Hiln forever. "—Thomas Car- lyle. Thursday—How beautiful 111 is to sue a plant growing right under the cheek of a precipice or snow -bed, or by the edges of winter through the year 1 Men say how beautiful the thought was that God should create life in vegetables mid Bowers right alongside the 810w, as it were, to cheer the bosom of winter; whereas it turned out that everything that could not live there died ; and, by and by, there were some plants so tough that they could live there, and they aid , mottle oa adaptation was the remainder er after a long series of perishing.. Men soy what a remarkableinstance of divine design that the cactus can live on arid deserts, e where water scarcely f(ells more than once or twice a year ;and what especial creation and adaptation it was on the part of God that he should make such plants as that I But the evolutionist says that all the pinnas were killed in Ble0e981011 until it came about, in the endless variation of tho vege- table kingdom,11101111p10011 developed whose structure was covered as 011 were, with an iodic -rubber skill, and whose leaves were eubs1antially little )isterlts which drank up all the water they wanted to use through the summer, and so continued to live in sp-te of their dray surroundings, When others mould not live because they could not adopt them- selves,—Henry Ward Beecher. Friday— I brueb al—God—the right shall bo the right. And onto" then rho wrong, while Ile endnres— I trust in my 03011 soul, that can perceive Tho outward and the Inward, nature's good, And God's— [Robert Browning. Saturday—" Some say that God will have all men to bo saved, and therefore you will be saved. That is too strong a statement of it. For God has left us f roe to choose whether we will bo saved or whether av0l0111 not, There is ono little place where yon say, I will or I won't." God will never take many that freedom of action. God eau love you; God can pity you ; God eon become incarnate and die for you, but He cm not will for yon. That you meet do yourself. Men may rob God, but God never will rob a man. God is able to save unto the uttermost and that uttermost reaches to the outer lino of the world and to the very remotest soul on the globe. As far as you can 0onied be- neath to d1 p111s of sin incl loss drops tite plummet of the cross. God has done His part, and whether we are saved or not de- pends upon whether we accept His gift or reject it. lie not only desires mon to be staved, but Ho has provided for their salvo. tion. —'[Dr. Gordon. Convulsions in Children. Fits occur at all ages. During childhood they are called convulsion& and may oomo on within a few hours of birth. When a holey hos a 00inv3lalon he should be at 01100 undressed and put 11tt0 a batt of warm ora- tor. Tho water must fool comfortably warm to the Ilan(; in this the 0(11101 should be kept until the seizure is over. I£ wind es- capes from the bowels, 00 injeotiou of waren water will cause an action of the bowels and 0fteu immediate relief. Fits maiming in babies aro nearly always clue to wrong food or overfeeding, Tho nervous sys. Lem of babies is more developed than other organs, oonsoquently any food that disagrees may cause 0 convulsion. To ovoid those alarming cheeks mothers must not overfeed their offspring nor give them wrong foods. A boby fod by ho bottle or on the bosom does not need feeding more than once every four hours during the clay, and on00 or twice in the night. Babies must not bo given env foods but the bosom tuilk, or the milk of the cow, goat, or ass, until it has out at least two tooth, and. oven then not before It is nine months old, To give brood and milk, or oatmeal, or biscuits, or arrowroot, Or any b (10110 to Ppatent food, rendes' a ba is 110 Y ab 1' those attllaks, When babies snB'er Flom an hind of illn00s this often begins with convulsion, Illsiol, as i1( measles, 0011rf0t00, illfl0m- moti0tt of the lungs, R.1(. \Mott children from Ono to ton years old suffer from 00110001. 910118, It is 1,0110lly because food or otter irritant is distnrbingtho 9/01110011 c1' bowels. poor tooth or o6'euslvo br01.111, or ono A Add wlloso nervous system is highly who has any disease of tho .lungs, throat or do'oloped play hove a lit if ho has salon head, I don't think it's safe to do so, and some food whi0il has disagreed with flim. therefore I make 1110 most rigid itumirio0 in •111 a ease of thbs kind the clothes about the this rospcot 1 mud good 1100111 aid a oleo, neck lnmstha uufastmincl, n cork or alit of mouth aro among the imperative demands' wood placed between talo tootle to prevent when I engage such servants, the tongue from being bitten, and hot loner. DEATHS OF CELEBRITIES- -1891. January 2nd ---Historian Kinglnke, Lou- don. au troy 5111—ltnnla Abbott, Salt 1.alce, dauu1a+ In -uro lfu1tssma1, Paris. la. Jlt(uary 171,11--(/eurgc 1311100311, 1FILsh- ' fngtoi0 Ilaaru•y 2rltlt--thug Kulaka11:1, Solt leruncisco. .1 unitary Dial—The Afgilun Antro', Af- ghoul/gam .1,1au1try 20--1\'illin:n Windom, New York, I •l estuary 303.11--('h1u"les 13rladlaug h, 1.011• don, January :3 let .-Meisso0100, Paris. February—Admiral Porter, \%103hfng ton. February—General W. T. Sherman, New York. lrebruary—Px-S0nal0r 13. K. 1\'ileon, Snowy 0111, Mil, 11x•01134 --Lennard Jerome, London. :March 17111—Prince Napoleon, Rome, \laroh 201h—Lawrence Barrett, New York, March 23,4—Rev. Howard Crosby, New York, April—P. T. Barnum, Bridgeport. April—General Von Moltke, Berlin. April—Grand Duke Nicholas, Sb. Peters- burg. May 0111—Mme. Blavatsky, London, May 213th—Rev. Dr. Van Dyke, Brook- lyn. June—Sensing J. Lossing, Now York. June—Sir John Macdonald K. C. 13., Premier of Canada, July nth—Hannibal Hamlin, thine, August. 12th—James Ruseel Lowell, Massachusetts. August 12th—George Jones, Founder of the New York Timer. September 13t1-1larquis do Chambrun, New York. September 10th—L'abnaoeda, Santiago. October 6111 --Bing Karl, Wurt lmhorg, October Gbh—William Henry iniith, London. October 7th—Chas. Stewart Parnell, Brighton. Outo11er 71h—Sir John P. Hennessey, Queenstown. The Modesty of Paul. " Not 00 though 1 had already attained, either were already perfect; but I follow after if that I may apprehend that for whie1 oleo I ate apprehended of Christ Jesus. " {, " Nevertheless, whereunto we have already attained. let us walk by the some rule ; let us mind the same thing. -.Philippians, iii., 19.10. It may appear to some, talose study of the inter life of the Apostle has not been very prolonged or very deep, that to speak of the quality of modesty as 011101ing large- ly into oharuoter is a little strange, and yet the fact of it remains, and is worth consid- ering. Maly great men have the most opposite, 01' seemingly opposite, qualities manifest and ofl ristrnnglydeveloped. The perfect self-possess:on and undaunted man- ner of Paul In the days of persecution, his independence of spirit under all circum- stances, his steady poise in the very amidst of circumstances that would have wholly unnerved nine men out of every ton, seems rather to stand in the way of any great claim for honor on the ground of modesty. ha Mia letter canr cad this c r And et whog to his old Philippial friends and not feel Paul was 0 man, modest to the very heart and soul of him 1 Touch his right to preach, as some did with no other invalidate 1170 force olive than to to and 1 e was n in arms. "Am of 1' miuistr i his y, I not an apostle Do I not bear the marks of au apostle? Have 1 not seen the Lord?" Or seek to render void by somsanbble Judea- izing form of doctrine, and you hear the blast of a far -sounding bugle: " Oh foolish Galatians, wino bath bewitched you?" But when he looped at himself in the light of the cross, and the pure blazing light of that revelation of divine love to Him, as to one horn out of due time, his whole soul was bowed in lowliness and humility. When it was n matter of boasting of lineage, or forms, or ceremonies, no was the peer of any of these boasters. "Hebrew of the Hebrews as teething the late, perfect I" But when it o01uo to Christ and his relation to his Divine Master, 1i0sonl was bowed lower than his knees, bowed to his very feet ! All thing0 loss for Christ 1 To win Christ the grand and only worthy end of life. To know Hfm, the sum of all knowledge 1 To be in Him the sum of all safety, to stare even the deepest of his sufferings, the highest point of sacred honor 1 This man, before the im• potions demands of men, could be and was unbending as an oak ; but beforo Goalie was bending lowly, as the willow bows its green branches fn the shadows of the rippling brook. Bo you sore of this, that the man who bows to every man who d email ds 11,11 not the man most likely to bow in lowliness before God. But the man ot dauntless mood, who stands his ground and holds his own among Ms follows, 1s just the elan to bow lowly in the presence of the God who knows all hearts and just the ratan to receive more and more of the divine favor. , LAR3E LAND -OWNERS. Tike nuke or Sutherland Owns Yearly a 'Whole (14400141.7. There is only one landed proprietor in England possessed of more than 100;000 acres 10 ono country, there being three in Ireland and no less than fourteen in Scot- land. Li England the Dolce of Northum- berland is proprietor of 181,616 acres fn Norlhnntberland. In Ireland Mr. Richard Burridge ispropriotOr of 160,152 acres in Galway, the Marquis Conynghatn 120,840 Dares in Donegal, and tho Marquis of Sliego of 1212,002 in Mayo. 10 Scotland the :Duke of Argyle is proprietor of 168,315 acres in Argyle, the heel of 13roarlalbine 264Mra 1 acres in Orth and 204,102 in Argyle; Evan Baillie of Dockf0ur, 111,148 eons in Inverness ; the Delco of 13uccl011ah, 253,179 aures ht Dumfries and 104,461 in Roxburgh ; Mn', Donald Cameron, of Looltiol, 100,574 mores b1 Inverness ; the Parl of Dalhousie, 13(3,002 acres in Forfar; the Duke of Fife, 1811,820 acres fn Aberdeen; the Duke of TIaniltoid12 210 a6r0 in 30t ;Sir o 13ao auras in Inver. Verson C,resit P nese y1( lamas Matheson,103,372aMa, 40(1,070 soros in Moss tie Duke of 'Richmond 150,052 mores in Banff; tile Charles 11088, 110,445 norms in Ross 1 the Earl of 000(10111, 160,3:14 acres i1( Inverness ; and last lint, not toast, the Diiko of 'Sutherland, with no 1104 than 1,17(1,484 norma in ;Sutherland, so 11101 1118 graeo is pus• sossod of very 0100rly tato whole cotlntry, the total urea of wbiclt bl 1,207,0 15 norms, A. remarkable salt, lake las 1 00 discover. ed in the ITvwaiian Islands. King of to Fa e t 4. Care "41 ,-mol 3Llrar..tcfoas."' a 1Yi m I was 11 yearn of age 1 Lad a 84.1,01'8 nitw'k of them - :than, and afire I recovered lead to go on err ,ihes. A yr Z.1' 1oU•aaelu0p1a, . In the for111 ('1 white swei ees, appeared 011 01110103 1(101'.111 my body, and for 11 yea's I troy an Invalid, being confined to illy bed e years, In that 11/110 ten or eleven sores ap- eearod and broke, meshes lou great pain and . suffering, I feared I never eh(ei(Let well. "Ealy la 10se I Went to ('hicago 13,01111 a sister, but was confined to my bed most of the tlm0 I was there. I1( July I rend li book,' A nay with a Clrcua,' In which were statements or cures by hood's Snr0npnrllla. I was so int• pressed with the success of tills medicine that 1 decided to try It. To my great gratification the sures soon decreased, and I began to feel 1,0110r 100(1 111 a short tllno I was up and out of doors. I continued l0 take flood's Sm•- snparIlla fur about a year, when, having used six bottles, I had become so fully released noes the d100050 that I Went to work for the Flint & Walling Mfg. Co., and since then ItAv13 1000 L08041. 500000011 0110 on account of sickness. I believe thle disease is expelled from 1113r system, I al ways feel well, am In goodspirits and have a g0o11 appetite. T nm now B years of ago and can walk as well as any ono, except that ono l(nb is a little s11orter than the other. owing to the loss or bore, and 11(0 sores formerly on my right leg. To my friends my recovery seems almost miraculous, uud I think hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Ming of medicines." WILLIAM A. 3,111011, o N. Railroad St., Kendallville, Ind. Sarsapadil Schley:di druggists. 811 Oxfords. Erep.0,10e11 by O.I. (0(11113 X, CO,,Aram ecar(es, Lolven,Mae8. 100 Doses One dollar Ile was a " Geatlom tn." Theo were tet of us who rode from the depot to a 10101 in Charleston in the sa' o 'bus, and a, wo entered the otli:a u short, thickset, dlLet-mined •lookiug loam collared a young anon wearing ey0 oaasses, and said: , I'll thank you to return my wallet." "C',aluiniv, sir, 001taiily. Let usconduot ourselvee as becomes gentlemen." " You picked my pocket on the way 1(p, and I want my wallet back, or 1.11 mash you 1" sh ,utod the short man. " Exact Ig. No need of raising your voice to a disa1rlcable pit eh. Never forget that you arca (1 •,1.10111011, cie (11011er wines the emumatouccs." ' When, is lily wallet I' "Hort, sir, and 1 have groat pleasure in returning it. I 0,111 sures, that wo have had any misunderstanding;." Anolli^e1' 011110 sen for, an-110:tile writing hisappear.tnce the young 001:x1 said to the crowd: " 1 never had any tumble 14,011 a gentle- man, neves'. I am obliged to all et you for the conr;esice 0011)1111 you have ex1011(1ed. Let us islet as gentlemen should," Tho 011ieer soon 1lrriv8d and walked hint esseses-T••-aewwers:seercm. - - -..ass Member of the Legislature. In addition to the testimony of the Gov erne of the State of Maryland U. S, A., a mother of the Maryland Legislature, Hon. Wm, C. Harden, teati005 as follows : " 746 Dolphin St„ Balto., Md., U. S. A,,. Jan. 18, ' 90. Gontleinen 1 I 11101 with a severe accident by falli0g down the back stairs o my residenoe, in the darkness, and waf bruised badly in my hip and side, and suffer eta sevoroly, One and a half bottles of St Jacobs Oil completely ourod me. \Vet. C. 11Au11817."Member of State Legislature, 1;nglieh se She are Spoke. In a hotel not 100 miles from the top of the Rigi, t11ofo11oving t0uno11nc0m8111 gives groat satisfaction : ' Misters the venerable voyagers are advertised that when the shin him rise a Horn will be blowed." That an• 1(o neen0ntsufficiently prepares tine visitor for the following entry fn the wino list ; "In this hotel the winos leave tho traveler noth- ing to hope for," 66 erman Syrp !! We have selected two or Croup. three lines from letters freshly received from pa- rents who have given German Syrup to their children in the emergencies of Croup. You will credit these, because they come from good, sub- stantial people, happy in finding what so many families lack—a med- icine containing no evil drug, which mother can 1administer with con- fidence to the little ones in their most critical hours, safe and sure that it will carry them through. Wlrsrrs, of Urs, JAo.W. KUM, Alma, Neb. I give it Daughters' College, to my children when Harrodsburg, Sy. I troubled with Croup have depended upon and never saw any it in attacks of Croup preparation act like with mylittle daugh- it. It is simply mi- ter, and find it an mi- raculous. valuable remedy. Bully one-half of our customers are mothers who use Boschee's Ger- man Syrup among their children. A medicine to be successfulwith the little folks must be a treatment for the sudden and terrible foes of child- hoodewhooping cough, croup, diph- theria and the dangerous infiamma • tions of delicate throats and lungs. away to tllestation, but that evening 311,:11 nine o'clock, as I was walking on Moe Ging street, the prisoner halted me and said "I desire to 111(0(110 you for your consult1,- titianin that affair. You treater me n. a goltlemon, sir, and 101)1111 not forget it." " Bat I thought you ---you--" " 01, yes, I was locked up tight oneugh, but the officers at the station were no gen- tlemen, sir, no gentlemen, luta they treated me ht suoli a manner that I felt compelled to bid them good -night. I will now say au rowdy," T went up to the police station to ingnir0 about it, but the sergeant in charge re- plied : What 1 That genteel fellow with eye- glasses? Oh, ha's in there," "1311t you didn 11 101110." Ho entered the corridor and 10ok0(1 into the cell. It was empty. The "gentleman" had sawed 0110 of tho window bat's elf and golo out, by the way of the alley.---JNew Clipper. 1«11y7..4tIfttih ;Yt 411 0. f kr$41'-i411;;Y iii`: ® WITZTOTJT Aitt EQUAL. a �+ �O�, O CURES A � REI 1 TRADE0/11 �1� ■ MARK ��•taR �. � C lA � . M ,1 LIliS11111AC SCl1ATiCA, AHE M 10GREAT 1�fqdp i Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Swellings. THE CHARLES A. V©OEL.0i22 COMPANY, Roitimorc, 716dr Canadian Depot; 'TORONTO, ONT. w�L.°f k L71P(aJRIIIRE Zfna!III N025+9