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The Sentinel, 1884-03-21, Page 7'Op CURRENT TOPICS. IN the l'reitschrift jur 4r4q, lyq-vhe OkinK Kuyper reoords• the fait that . he has , ascertained by distillationtha presenoelof .. alcohol in the brain and hver o2 two persons who had fallen into the Water when, drunk and had been . drowned. In one 'brain he found about one-fifth- of -a. cubic inch of alcohol-, and in one liver a little over half a , cubic inch. The results of Ran litiyper't researches are • considered of high ini--- portance. from a mediewlegal Tcpint of view, , as permitting an absolute demonstration of complete elcoholieexcitation in cases where- • true /1188411W is claimed an a cense for crime•. . AN-Dorate„ ar Andorra,, is rtot. only the ,oldest republic, -bat the .olCest ' State, in fr ' the eighth Century, when - the end of B - pe. Its present orgenization dates 3 • . Charlemagne, in hisexpedition against the - -.Moore, conferred theprivilegos of an inde- pendent government on the inhabitants of - the Andorra valley, midway between Fraece - and, Spain, for their fidelity and devotion in conducting hini through the passes .of the Pyrenees. One otits two, chief officers is named by the French Government, another by the Bishop of Urge', in Spain.; and it is • in connection with the BishoEfinominatian that a difficulty has sirjEtia Which threatens to bring about a clisie in the affairs of the . inicroscepia republic. - • . . • - • indebted to Tobias Rasta., a . Owe Of the hack stairs, for the Statues of -Charles II. and James II.: There ant- two of Charles One ' in 'ffeitt- Of Chelsetv:Hospttelby- Gibbons. and One i at Windsor. One of James II. by tabbens,the best- of the royal statues; stands in a quiet spot- at the teak of -Whitehall Chapel. -Wililam IIL next finds an equestrian statue in St.hitisea' square by .Bacon, '• and Queen ATM three, one in front_ of .St. 1Panl's and two in the .squares celled -after :her. George I.. stands on the Campanile O Bloomibury :Church, and there are two of George ILL; e -very effective one by Bacon .in the Courtyard of Somerset. House and an equestrian One by Wyatt in Pall Mell.- George IV.; bylChan- try, finds place :on one of the pedestals in front of the National .Gallery, .William IV: in Cannon street, and Queen Victoria on the Royal Exchange. There aretwo of Prince Albeit, one by Bacon.on the 'Hol. born Viaduct, and one undethecanopy opposite Albert Hell by the Irish ulptor " Foley, which isgreatlyadmired. - . . ATi. teithetie England: is now in great _ , ' REFERRING to Some recent -expert testi- , • . mony as to blood *sins, the Micro -scope says: " Human blood cannot be told . froth dog's blo�d, except under favorable- 'condt7 tis and. not invariably then." Mr. dward,.. of Washington, says : "The - average of ail the measurements of human blood I have Made- is rather larger than the average of all the measurements of -does blood..- But it isnot rareto. find. specimens of dog's blood - in which; the cOr- . puoles range so large that their average - size is larger than that -of many samples of . human blood." When it- is remembered that the Measurements of litibian bleed_ by - so-called high authorities Very from:1-3050 • to1.-4630 of an inch, expert testimony 011 this eubject takes on a serious.. aspeet, and juries should receive it with great cautien. • IN illustration of the quality with which i THE -itillfeefeirel NEW Beim. charuese,ide : Clippings. ' train • !ii Zile in - - ' • ' 41 the illighlands.". - At 1engt-,.e- Brown ran off to a cottage aa 1 • of ho , - .t*itteri_butit ** no longer .returned ,34er some httle while with can full boil- ing when VA 'arrived,- and the tea Was not •'good. ' Tlu-4?' all . had .to be packed, and it - made ns j'•by late. • ' - :. One-ofe, Duke's- 'Keepers had .prepared a -fire endteta.kettle boiling, and here we .took Our t..L Afterwards- I sketobed, but i .. .- - we were frirrounded by a ,perfeot Cloud- of midges w Oh bit medreadftilly. - And th4. - the poor. ;Old woman, Whom we had knot and - seen from the first !here these twel!' ;one .years, lay on her bier in her shro i but with,her 'usual ;cap on ,peacefut 4 little ' altered, her dark skin taking-- fr:jnthe usual terrible -pallor: of death.- had on thefsooks I gave her the day W.ore yeiterday. She was in her 89th year • : ,..' . , -. And v - melancholy,' and . yet sweet, were my , dings when I landed and found on the p 1some 0! df the 'lame white Fib - Nei whi y dearest Albert had•picked, Up and kl made. into a bracelet for Me. I-pioked t.io and carried off .a .hatildftil my- self.: - ' This .1, si the: only tontreteinPs .to our Most au c,_ ssfilli enjoyable day. H0v3- dear- est lithe would have have enjoyed it 1 , - -- .. MecAl 4, ter had broiled,' some: fish .. and •• . . got .tea - ady for .usi e n a very small room upetairs1this little.cottage, where -- there wasa fir. I: had my °toffee. We ladies and Theo a, all squeezed into this - room.. It wee st ary merry tea. - Wem. ing the - day, aa 1' grief over the prospiactive sale and probable eoattering of .the Magnifigient Marlborough colleotion, -of Piottres. whioli have hung, some of- them for nearly two centneies, on the walls of Blenheim Palms. ThoughThe house is only eight .-miles from OxfOrd .the gallery' has Wen famous mainly by teputa- tion; and is familiar to but few. Only one of the -Natures, "The Fortune Tenets,'" by Reynolds, ever has been exhibited in Lon- don. Foremost among- the treasures is the '" 'Madonna - dei Aniiidei,". Painted in 1505 for .the chapel of the Axtsidet family in. the Church of _the . Servet .at Perugia, and 'pronounced the most pre- cious Raphael existieg in any private Then there are four by Rubens— his-own pOrtrait his full-length portiait of Helena Fourme and Daughters Holy Family fr 1? 0 the Lotwith his Wife and the " Return .of the- ta Egypt." Next in Value “81113C41117.FAIBA?9,, Quick, compote. cure, ali annoy• i Bladder and Urinary Diseases. $I. are Vandyke's p ctrait of Charles I., veinal -waef in the collection of that unfortunate ng, another Vandyke, the picture of Lord Staftord and _his Secretary, and half a dozen of the best! examples of Sie;Joshua Reynolds. These are but, specimen bricks n a collection the gems of which the British Government will -try to buy and keep. But it would seem as if here was a °hence for the members of the C. P. R. Syndicate. Gen. Gordon has to deal, it is related . that in 1821 Ismail, soh of 1 Mehemet Ali,- the conqueror of the Soudan; was ordered by hie father to: collect the - tribute due from the tribes of Bedouins of Shendy on the Nile, belt -way between . Berber and Khertoum.. Ismail summoned ' a chieftain. - flown - -as the .Tiger,,- and told him _ to - furnish a large amount of forage and fodder in tten ef a money paYment.. Next morning Ismail slur his troops - found with satisfaction piles of the stuff demanded placed around the camp, • but their satisfac- tion was short lived. •The stuffwassoon set . on fire, and those :not burned were, picked off by men lying iti'-wait behind the burning piles. Mehemet, to avenge' his roasted SOU, razed the town of Shendy,but tile Tiger made tracksin good, timeinto the fastnesses of the intezior. _ DR. OvVARVAIE ROBEBX'S report to the Anthropometric Committee, as to the aver- age bodily growth. of Engliehmen, was lased on the measurements of over 53,000 individuals, and contains some facts of general interest. Thus, it appears that be- tween the ages of -111 and 14 girls are taller, and between 12i and 154areheavier than -boys of the same age'. The public school boy at 14 averages nearly seven inches more in height than the industrial sollool bey at the.s me -age. Prize winners - are found to have a decided advantage in, • height, The (=dims circumstance is stated that gellowa of the Royal.Society are more than two inchetkabove the average height. It is not stated 'whether they held their heads higher before the fellowship was con- ferred or afterward. Oe of the chief ob- jeots of the investigation appears to be to enable parents to note their children any departure from the normal . standard, so that the trouble may be rectified by the early use of hygienic measures, etc. - - - :Kidney, r.uddiste. According te-lbeLondon Truth, eherry 15 going out of favor, and the only wines really largely consumed in England are claret and champagne, • . .- • A good Baptist -clergyman of Bergen, N. Y., a strong temperaire man; suffered with kidney trouble, neuralgia and' dizziness almost totilinti- dein, over two years after he was told :that Hop - Bitters would cure him, ‘because he *a.,3fraja of and prejudiced _against "Bitters." ;I Elb1Ce-1118, cure he says none need fear but. trust in Hop' Bitters. . Fitetu Old Figures. At . present about 19,000 persons are exiled to. Siberia -annually, and ' about .60 per .oent. are nol#es. In France there are 2,150 Iady artists, of whom 602 are 'oil painters, 107 sciulptors, 193 Miniature painters- and 154 "inters •on porcelain.. -- Russia produces. annua4 about $4-,000,- 000 worth of honey, or -over 18 opo tons, besides 5,000 lbe,,of Wax, worth$2000,000. _ . r. It is nearly all .consumed - the empire, however: - ;. There_ are said to have been 500,000 Christians in the world :at the -end. of the first century, 10,000,006 in thelinie of --Con-- stantine; 30,000,006 in - the eighth century, 100,000.000 at the time 0! the Reforniation and 450,000,000 in 1883: . • . The imports of wool in the:United Stater; have increased singe 1876 about 75 per ent., and last; year .was 70.575,478. lbs. The :home clip has increased ab ut 35per -ant:, amounting now to 290„000 'annually. In New. York city, according to -Some -figures recently published, there are more than 800 . rag dealers, and the pickers, who are -mostly Italians, gather -6750;000 worth - yearly in the .streets and roads/while the. money realized for cotton raga ((Rine in the -United States- is put at 622,006,000 per annum. - Mrs. ties twe .pooket, go light • Pranc4 Veile, a New York y Of 15, wants ,000 damages for having his eyes picked - - by Pliiletus Dorlan's able cook when e was bin two years old' fill' - Ternctipe Campuellot one armedoperator of Hart!i d, climbed it pole in three Minutes the oth day and clearedthe wires of an , entang ent. • heldon, of Buffalo, bought a New - dog for his boy to play with. The lined after leaving borne, and a few 4 drowned himself. - n -of Washington heti 11189alle mo- y.en he believes he is going to btirst, klamily have to pour cold water 011 -Ail the- strange delusion passee . . 4 • • NO Norwegian girl le allowed to hate a beau -Until she can -bake bread knit stockings, and it would do your heart go�d to taste the bread and wear 'the iStoCkingi. that 15 -year old Norwegian girls can make.' . • • 46.1$01Yelli 'ON: covliiitii.4.- •KnOcks a Clough. or •Oold endwise.' 114 children • o Troches, 15c. Liqiiid590, At druggists • Aft the Oelebratien Of the twentieth ianni- versary Of a Methodist -ohurch.in New Yofk, lest :week—e. church.named after certain Bishop Janes—the 'cradle which the bishop; was ;coked to Sleep 76 years ago occupied a corner of 'the church. *Among the: most -efficacious remedial' agents are, the medical preparationi from the laboratory of Mis. Lydia H.-Pinkhapi,- Lynn., Masa - - • . - • ' . questleaha I Ask the most 'e'anent ph3;sician _ - Of any sehootivtut is the best ding in tr. world for quiet4r4 and allaying all irritation, the nerves and'euring all forms of nervous eons . PIaints glidninAtSialfehildlikerrefreehing sleep awe, , - • t/r31,1411-01-1- Yottnnlis,titatt!islY me !grind! lops I" • - • • I 4 PTESL- Ask any or 44- 0; the *oat eminent physician "Whit 18 tiliti,b00 and only remedy that 'can be relied on to se au diseases of the kidnele and urinary otggis ; . such as Bright's disease, diabetes,rete74ion'or inability to retain urine, and all the ‘110e:ses and allinerita peculiar 10 Women "-- • "And their *ilV tell you • •eXplicitly and ent phatically Buenc,' " . • ,. • Ask the saraciphysicians "What is tl$i *est reliable- and surest curs • for all liver diOka,.ries or dyspepsia, constipation indigestion; bilidtisness, malarial ..fevaA' ague. etc., and they Fs -411;e11 you: Mandrake! pr Dandelion!" . - Hence, whes'AbiZeremedies are combined with. °theta equallyVariable And compo kd into mop Bitters, 'inielipa ( odeluded next week.) The earliest Colonial coinage was in Massachusetts; in pursuance of an order of the general ciourt, passed May 27th, 1652, whicsh established a mint house" at Bos- an1those dreadful reporter, includ. .ton. The coins ordered were of the value lwho behaved so ill on Satur- of 12d. 61. and sa. were coming blink. 1 66 BOUGH( 0111•CORNSr$ -Odd Illappentegs. - Ask for Wells' “:Bortgli on Oaths." 1.5c.. • Quick, - isiomplete, permanent- etre.- ' Cloirs„ -warts, ornpson-offered a New York Jut- . un ons. 4. . y -four eggs she had brought bi her consideration of his promiee to -APexis paper says that the English gam - her boy for stealing. ' biers at Monaco are the most determined and lose the most. It is said that each -day when the play begins the bank his in hand 10200,000 ; as play becomes brisker. this is sometimes famed to $600,000 more. - 5. found' animal days la IA di manta and hi him away. . job 6 6 • Clever Asiinsigs. - The most faithful DWI Messenger of Sullivan County is it• dog belonging to the station agent at Winterton. When near thelinie for the arrival fthe train the dog takes its place onthe depot platform, and • upon receiving the bag carries it to the post .office. - AN attempt at cremation : at Cardiff, 'IVales, came before -the Glarnorganshire Assizes, _where Dr, Price, -described_ as a Welsh Druid, was charged with unlawfully attempting to burn the body of his infant child alter -neglecting to. give notkie to the coroner of its-- death. presiding Judtice Stephen charged the. _Grand jury that a person who burns instead, of buries a dead- - body does not oomtnit a criminal act Unless he does it in KWh a manner as toamount a public nuisance. "The Justice, after the fullest examination of the authorities, come to the conclusion that cremation couldnot be considered even an:dean:leaner, and he-deoided that to burn a dead. body •decintly and inoffensively.ie lawful. - He mid that every practice which startles or _ jars upon the religions -sentiments of the majority of the populationt is. not . for that reason a Misdemeanor at common law. 'This deciision will tend to call attention to - - the subject of .crematiou and make it as ranch- of. a- sensation in Ord E 'viand _ as it seems to be just now in -New England. - • I 1 1 • I MM3.4 • - Pitcte. Flum,- who has returned With his -party:It-era Palestine, - brings with -him materials for the construction of a geologi, -- cal map -of the Holy- Le.and- -Very ranch in advance d anything which eauld hitherto bUttenipted. The Professor is of opinion . tat at the time ef the Exodus there was a contintioni connection a the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. As regards 'the...Dead Sea, he hail discovered that it:fornierly istood at an elevation of 1,400 feet above its -present level—that is to say, 160 feet abeVe the level of the Mediterranean'. The Wa- tery ef this gradual lowering of.th,e wa,tere -will form, a 'medal feature -in Prof. Mai forthcoming report. He has alio found ,evidence of a &Am peancient • lakes in the ginaitio distrait, and -of another chain in • the cetitre of .the Wady Arahah, not fax from Oe watershed ;The terreoes .of the jorda-''. beive. beer e.k%mioed, the most bei.l'.11,00 feet - above °the , becalm§ Aiousinesswasbadesid to his partner, "ComV:en, let's go out and hang ourselves." His pialnerrefused, but: when he left him alone t+ a time Trapp cat his throat with i an up r.t-laterer's knife. - - . . . One leundred citizens of Anoka Minn., charte,c d a train last Sunday and went to . _ , ' rapp, a New York upholsterer, rai-• A pint of the finest ink for families 'or Schools can be made from a *ten cent package of Diainond Dye. Try them. - . • • Cl td. to be shaved, the Anoka authori- ties h •barbs chino 4 body 11'ng forbidden Sunday opening of hops. They returned in time -for n the evening and attended in a h clean faces. :On whioh oellsi 11' sweet -Ther, bly.dv Cook thee to as cella ef • s door- , horse in Sayreville, Pa., has to haul sixty-five loads of clay and one - ;load ,' of coal dust every - day. He receives- no orders, yet :never fails to go the right. number of times to the clay :pit4 and then to the:coal heazon thepier. lire has his own idea of how Ditch -each load oughkto' be, and rears and Moke.if .too muohip put on his cart. For fifteen years a horse bekinging to Col. Mott, of Westbury, has been driven at- e certain hour to town for the fainily mail. Recently the animal was deeltired . entitled to a rest, but at the usual time he broke from the stableiand was soon at - the -post office. - Theanimalhas --eVei since appeared daily at the regular hour- at: the post dam—New_ York Sun, • GVOd Deal ilia Plante: • A Frightful Fungus, M - the most remarkable fungi of ere ie any record grew in the wine Sir Joseph Banks. He received a ins as- a gift, and, finding it too adit locked up in & cellar to ripen. remained for three years, proba- mg the time he was with "fCaptain 12 his voyage around the *odd. At of that periodhedirected his butler 'te,telin the state of the wine, but the of3r could not be opened OH account e powerful obstacle within. The csut down,. when the caller was - "-What dOes the word pedigree' mean, John?" "It means descent.' Write a sentence- on. the board -containing that word." John went up and chalked off the following "We pedigreed down the hill." Harper's Bazaar. ***" Great hate is not always good speed." Yet you must not dillY-dally , in caring for your health. Liver, kidneys and bowels inust be kept healthy by the use of that prince of medicines, Kidney Wort, which comes in liquid form or dry —both thoroughly efficacious. Have it always ready. - • • • .16. IL2* t44. • founao'be completely filled with a fungus so defpe and firm as to require an axe for eig its re. It was then discovered that the /t)igus had consumed every drop of winegrind raised the empty cask tolthe oeilir It reported that Plunger Wilton will sail fr; the other side about the last of the toile it month. . The annual rainfall in the jStates, ac- cording to the Weather Signal, is lowest in New Mexico (13 inches) and California (18 inches), and 'highest 'in Oregon (49) and Alabama -(56). The annual rainfall in the Britiah. Islands among the mountains is 41 inches; on the plains 25 :!inches; 45 inches of rain falls on the -west side of England, 27 on the east side. Ix ew of the fact that General Stone, Of , United, States- arniy, spent Many year n Egypt, and is conversant with the dist ;Os referred. to, the following state - men from his pen regarding the country ' the conflict betw.een British forces -Fab tribes is now in progress will not e hout, interest. General Stone says that'll o-ker is the little, - where village resit41 the Chief of the district of To kart whiih," district is a marshy tract of about twer3:4 or thirty. pagan Miles, capable of gooqthultivation 111 ordinary seasons. This dist distr4iIt has for a longtime served se- pas- tur' $.9 and a watering• Place for the flocks 1 and ketds of .the Bedje Arabs, and since 187 Oas been somewhat improved for agrtpltural purposes by families of Egyp- tieagpeasants who have there established theloelves 'under encouragement from the liliqjveli Government for the cultivation of caliton, vegetables and grain. A small int0Mittent river, 'called the Barka .-or Baia, which rises in the mountains of notfhern . Abyssinia, and 110Wie,' ‘,.first wee '' rly, then northerly and noetheast- .. . .. . . : Walter WilsOn; of Montreal, rail away while his bridewaited for :him to clothe to their wedding; . His brother, G. -Reed Wilson, notified; her that Walter. had fied. Imagine ?the surprise of the!. people ' of, Buffalo bn reading thiii„ for Welter Wilson; is an 'alderman there, - and his .! brother G. Reed Wilson is a.conepictionii Mertiliift•of that city. ,Sizehcoincidences aryneyzyare.- In. Erie: Levi € Daniel* - Zinn Atesieppeareicl from aniong his friends andmeleitiv_es,'; His brother 'seine time at eiWartrisa* the cyi name - of Levi Demi Zinn on "a hotel register. r He hunt" up the man who bore that name, and found him -tci be a stranger. a presebr:of,ittace irife,-)ead • -1..• ' Cus.y yiag. 4. • Epgialisovereilpi litiwwftatue . to him in London, elletifletNerinallihtliiiSirk of Hul-----7f . next -.1mItators_.va. • . . r • KHA1111111 E :LE COMPOUND.- - - s a Positive Cure 4:7 For kn. th•s* Complaiits and Wialueuiee coo ana-opar beet female foralatlan. .1 Mealcine oman. Invented &Wellies. ared by a Woman. The lanelitegt Ital4-Discayery time the Dawn of 4.1'• - • 12rIt revives, the drooping spirits, invigorates and harmonizes tktz.panio finictiOns, gives elasticity awdflrmnesto . t10,10, reStoree the niturvi1 lustre to the ' eye, aufip1aueir.,400-•pa1e cheek of woman the fresh , roses of life's OcOg and early summertime. OFPhysicipsMse- It and Prescribe 11 Freely.' • .it,removel; .0-1r4ess, flatulency, destroys all craving for stinuilh4,:i 644 relieves weakness of the soh - That feelin4 jothearing down, causing pain, weight and 13ackachS; laAlways permanently cured by its use. FOr the eurV...att 'Pinery Complaints of either aect. - Good pointi are worth remembering, for the reason that they assist us in avoiding many discomforts and protect no against the cupidity of overreaohing people. When you learn from friends that Pinnies COW EXTRACTOR is safe, _prompt and effectual, don't allow druggists to palm off a worth- less and perhaps poisonous substitute. His object is quite patent. He wishes to make a few cents' difference difference between a good article and a cheap imitation- or sub- stitute. Putnam's Corn Extractor. Sold everywhere. Bowan of dangerous imita- tions. !Pelson & Co., proprietorei Kinest012. • 4 ^1 * 7. 1. z - • THE Meticsii papers boss the political ; No. conVentitons • are held and the journals begin a discussion of can- didates about a year previous to the -Peed- :dentist ekoticin. Next. they; -" postnlate,", or nominate -certain candidates. ' At the head of the paper will iP We postitt, late" so and Sod:laming the journal's choice. ;Then,. on election day;the voters assemble at pollingiplaries, and ea& deposits a written ballot for electors, who are to een- stitute the Eleotoral Boma. •of the_ State. The law stipulates that the ballot must be written, and a table, with poet :and. Writ- ing utensilikis provided beside the ballot box, and the Ihallot must be written and- immediateli deposited underthe spe_etion- a the SupfirVisori- Sometimes thevoters of the different parties will Mee*. a few, hours previous and agree upon; sonie'oatidij date, but. usually each :voter:age mildew ohoice-Of candidates without ianYiresinirel; from party Machinery - 1.s xy,;,6 xi4e - ; tlikeluul is unsursassed, • I. IA '0*•%__ • • BLOOl) will eradicayi Wary vestige of Butiors from thy - Blood, and gt...ih>'. ,tiftne and strenth to the system, of manwomau . Both the .6 at Mind VII'r, 110. Insist on ving it. r And and Blood Purifier are prepared k;10ern, Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Prima Vottlesfor V. Sent bymall in the form ' of pills, or ojlk4enges, ou receipt of trrICO, ill per box !or either. My4Pielcham freely answers all letters ce- hcriry. 114,11b,ie fictetanip. Sendfor pamphlet. No family be without LYDIA. B. PINK/1MM Was P. ii-,p4i,-aznez cure constipation, biliousneos, 'and torpiditl ohe Uver. $5 cents per box. • tilTz..4(1W Ikilggisis,10) • Faahleer's44aleat Folly.. • 1 - • . Electrical jewellery is worn in Paris..the •• ornament consists of glass, _cut and to imitate rubies.,diamonds and other stones and fitted in an envelope surrounding a email incandescent lamp of low resistance. The light shines through the PieCeS of glass only and gives them all the „appearance Of the stones they are intended to. imitate. The lamp is fed frein.ii, smallbettery,whioli is carried about person.—Front a Fashion Journal. - - • - • AtBethany, Pe recently, 'thin Avery, . of 1-11 • while shovelling snow out - Of his yard 'discovered buried inthe.snoW a hen"which he had' missed for ten days: She. had paoked the snow down -and Made a room. the size of a bushel basket. ' Beyond the loss of flesh -incident to the long fast the hen was- unharmed.. . - - • , wat--5, here loses itself in the soil/lout so times flows powerfully enough in wet' se ns to force some ' water . into the Red Sea at •Trinkitet; The • ignite* generally comes in . the hs of;Tune and July, and,, -When suffi- meL has come down. to impregnate the sekhe running stream appears. In ordi- seasons the ,whole district is marshy • g three or four months,' and when r rains- come this marshy condi; s continued until early- ;wing. • principal settlement in the dia- 1 after To-ker is called El Teeb, du wi ti Tb tri 'ix • hi On the direct road . between To*-' and . Trinkitat.-• The distance froi Trinkitat landing to Ted, is aboutfour- te kilometers, say ' nine miler. Froin to TO-kar the distance is from Six te',-...?ven miles. Caravans ofgamels occupy a t aix hours on the -road from Trintitet o-kar. The distanoe by -Camel- road, frG To -tar tO:liassala is about 200 miles. he south it • Toast,- at a distance (4 10- miles, is the northern limit- of- the cottAtry„ occupied by. the powerful tribe of 1:10dulns dalled,the Benizaieer, through. wi OCOOtintry-the route taiilWosala, Piste& enitAmer-iiiVveriktutheroits,-anct are Geo- W. Lee -and Henry .Peterson havo: been matched to row three miles with '11; turn for $400 a side on the Oakland course at San Francisco, Cal., on March 16th. Peterson is said tole a 'much better soldier than either Stegenson or Coisford, both of whom Lee has defeated. 1.4 • - fin4-4904-. «iPPY are warlike VeslitIR , - • . f.7 - Rld.HA PROVED 1 E:R C.0 LGR W DISCOVERY. orPorge3Oral years we have furnished the 0.4 Ainerien vim' an excellent arti- ficial cola fcrisittet; sb rocritorbus that it met with gc41 f;Aceess everywhere receiving the highest 1„:"Paly prizes et. both International Dairy vie€45; riarnetk,44 Pe:tient and scientific elemidal re- searchwtlilit'Ve improved in several points, and now off‘i•:ig=„flnew color as the best fa the:Dora. It Color the Buttermilk. It • Vigt.E0 Turn Rand& It the , Eti4rigest, Brightest and , i-.-„•!..i.caneapest color Mace, - gar , while prepared in oil, is so compound- & that le t.,:i:in-ossible for it to become rancid. vratplARE of ail imits.tions, and of all other ont,,,,igkirs for- they are liable to become ' oath° butter. ot get the "improVed" Write us re and how to get it without extra . (46) illAltDS0',C is CO„ Enrlingisn, Vt. • • rancid !mu to knoV, ex13411se0{ '.11'; SURE CURE. or a (leases of the Kidneys and uniLIVER— xt h-,:,.gpoctifLo action on this most important 0rge300131ing it to throw' off -torpidity aid inacti„0-411mulating the healthy seeretioirof the *L.-40nd 1* keeping the. bowels in free eendi*,4,"eillacting ita regular 4iseharge. If you arasuffering from IWggeg.41- 116A1 inallaria, have the chilli', are dyspeptic. oleonstipated, Sidhe3- 111Torts,:=,4= surely relieve and qtrieleli cure. Di ,,f-gpring to cleave° the System, every onea74,7..Figol take a thorough course o; it. BY OROCCISTS. Price $1. E COOKS BEST SOLD BY ALL GROCERS 111 Sasd yOurna1nefl& 1 iiibgleeetiBriftseporti ph; • `‘Nonimplirimr!mmul -iiiginee • 1p09tiorr. InlizEppyi)b. /have -• stlositive remedy for the above diem/set by Its use thoplilfW of 'cases of the worst kind and of long standin ',?0,)? been cured. Indeed, so strong is m.S.itia in iti e , that I will send TWO BOTTLES FEK. to - tether oz.44.ta YALU/1.13LE TREATISE on this dt 431 Ex rPO ess and F. . address. F,Locuni, Pearl fit.,W see, OS .- Vork. - 9.99 DO fi) NiV° STABLE RIM= ' H:sood the test for FieTv-THatert YB-ts, and has proved itself the best ren!cly known for . the cure of suniption, Coughs, .cc9,WhciopIng Cough a 411 Lung Diseases -On or old Soi.D* EVERYWHERE. 5r1 **IMO pet Bottle. R •