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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-04-04, Page 8WOMAN .P‘Ist MIPATKZE WITH - WOMAN ) ' )IA E. PIN KHAM'S MaZTABLE 00100-1111D. f▪ unre- for all FEMALE INF.Altt WS, Including Leucorrhcea; Ir- *dar and Poinful Menstruation,. Elliannilatibli and Ulceration of the Womb. Flooding, PRO. ' -- LAPSITS tTERI: -gssoit to the tasteefficacious and MIktIi Itisagreat heinin tregniuscy:, and. re- duringlahor and angular pepiod& iliCIA14 rr AND Fmscurast1 ism= ALVIVELIMS.sS Of• thejreteratiie t sex', it issecondtono relnedYthat eT_et tore the putdie; and tor all "eases of the t it iethe Orwies Iteysedriatka Weil& ' trINEY COMPLADiTS of Miler Seis Wind, Great Rellefin Its Use. • r..rocKwar's :Moo]) rtitiFIER dica* every eige of Hunters from the t -the same tune will give tone ancltreagth- to ma.< -.14matiyeilossin resultsastheConappund. , theCompoundan4 Mood Purifier are'prer , -23S' and -235 Westorn Avenue, Lynn, Mass, ' eithe4 W. $1.4 bottles for C..% The Compound rmailuz theforra a pfili: or of lotengesime`;: of price ea per bex'for eithrr„ 3frs; riukbaza• pswere all lettere of inquiry. Eucios.o 3 cent Stud for pamphlet, vrentiTj t4ts Paper,. DrA PiNurativa Tay E4Pu.r.s cute 'Constipa-. !ousnessau4 Torpidity•uf theldver. Wri cent, $olIby all llragaists."-WitT, r • 6. 1,1. 1:4i 14. S4. (Continued.) CTra VII and mysterious curative power la kid littiodb, is so varied in its operation disease or 111 health Call possibly exist. • t its power,and yet it is - • aess for the most trail woman, weakest or smallest child to use, " • "Patients "Almost dead or nearly dying" Feat a, ahd iven up by physicians of, • and other kidney diseases, liver coat- , severe congps called: consumption, have tred., en gone Dearly -crazy! , • agony of neuralgiknervousuessiwaltefut a various diseases peculiar to women. 5s drawn oat of- stiapo fr6in exeruciating. 4 Itheumatisna. nmatmly and chronic, or suffering from - - telast . blood poisoning, dyspepsia, $. iizdt- and ill fact almost all digeages frail re IR 4eir to been eared by iErapSitterk proof of whir& found in every neighborhood in the world. , MO; RLCkARDSON_ ; s 1 tvIrP ROVE:0 trritR CO.LG R L NEW DISCOVERY, rror severa1 year/ we iiava tiirkilahed the amen of Ai -petit& with an. excellent arti- tcolorforbutten sonzeritorimathat it met greet Success everywhere reeeiving, the - est and. only prizes- at both, International ▪ Fairst, • rEut by tatient andscientific chemical ie.- chwe have1mproved1 several- Points, and 'oeerthtineweeleraath.e best -fa the work!: WUL Not Colarthe Butt inc. It . t WIIINot Turn Rancid. the Strothgent, BrIghtest and Cheapest Color Undo, t•-lind, while pret)ared is moon:mound- hat itL Inrossible for it to beearnerancid, r BEWARE of ail Imitations, and or all ed colors, for they ere liable to become and.epell the butter. rIrya•t4 cannot get the- "improved" write us Inow where and howto get it without eztra 6ase. ule-IlAnDSON age., riorunoono% IR THE PERMANENT CU E CONSTI PATI 0 NJ `et otherdiseaseis se provalentinthis coin. ea Constipation,,- and no r enaed3r has ever tapedthe celebrated Sidney -Wort as a Virhateverthe eauSe, however obstinate ead.s., this romed3rwr211 tiiereozne it.. PILES . - MEM distressing= cam - very apt -to be aplicatedwitheonstipathan. VV. art mgther.s. the weakened parts end crcd es amcds Of Piles evenwhe.n. pkgakdams 'you, have either of these troubles USE NNW DOWNS* EIS - --DO di NS 'SUVA= =Wax a.s stood the testfor FIFTY-THR4s ARS, nd has.,..proved itself -the best edy known for the., cuia of onst.tinptiony Coughs, IdsyWhooping Cough d all Lung DiSeaSeSia ‘Y. or old. • SOLD EVERYWHERE. Price 25i. Stti V..0013er Bettie. 00WIsiat EUXiR CM learn eteara engineeting liD- and earn 5100 per =on* llit nanie and lee- in stamps to F. N.Eppil „ BrIdgeport„ Ct. - • .„ - THE F4THERLAND. - I......,...:-.....-.;. ,. _ = • Celebration . if Emperor- Williamli -87tli Birthday., o . DEVOTION OF HIS GERMAN- IUNEOTS. I- 'inte-rfitstiiiir Sketch of a Bulgy and . E"venttal laths. - • •Heil, diliM Siggerkranz. :• lierreeher deg Naierlands, 11e1,1, /Joao* dir t- '''- - -I. Fnehr in des nitorieseilane - ie hohe Wonde ganz- -Ldebl es. a minim,. : ---- - The ruler oI te *flyentered upon his 88th- year on WettittlWiett,-.-and there Was general rejolointailtr.feetistity among • the I ' -children of the' Fatherland: at. home and abroad. ' .. • - - - - A Berlin Cablegram says: The Emperor's 87th birthday was generallyleelebrated. At 6 i'clock in the morning a !choral was ..."- played on the -tower of the palace. The schoois 'were closed and divine services were . held in all the churches. - The,' Emperor. received -congratulations frore_-_10 o'clock the morning -first tie .. , of the family, then the pr nciely. guests u . . .te members --•who arrived, the officers of the Court,: the Piplomatio Corps, tne Generals, Minis- • -tarsi. monikers of the • Bundesrath . and the President of the Reichatig.1 The -Min- istera w aded by Prince BismarOk an : ;the ge 140 a :by Prince Frederic Charles. '.The Einp ror received.alI standing on . his feet. Occasionally he; ehoWed himself freni, .,the historic °Omer window to the7peoplel assembled below when he - was heartily' cheered.- A banquet- - wee' :- also given at the Bathhouse by the laity nimbi- - tratee. At night a general illumination -and festivals took place all over !the. city. • Among the mass' of eengratulations- re-- ceiVed the one • cif Emperor Alexander Of Builds is especially hearty. .. • - l' . -: . . Bismarck gave .. a dinner to 1 the Diplo- matic Corps here at night, in honor of the Emperor's birthday.- Lord Ampthill, : the British Ambassador, prpposed the -health °I • the Emperor. - ...Bismarck. proposed ( the - toast to the, . represented sovereigns and • nations. - : . .. - _ The day was observed throughout Ger.. many with paradee,.banquets and festival performances. in the theatres, Schools -and barracks. ' At a banquet at . Stuttgart the - kited to the Emperor was proposed. by - --Queen Olga. At Darmstadt the troops were reviewed by the ;Grand Duke Ludwig. At Strassburg the feund.ationstmie of the tin- .. perial. Palace • " - N EVENTFUL LTFE. - The life_of the aged • Emperor embodies nmeh - of recent European • history. He , was born _In 1797, on March .22nd, the second sen of Meg Friedrich William III, of Prussia, and of the Primes Louise of blecklenbtirg-Strelitie *Educated as soldier, he took' part iii the bloody- mon paigh ot 1813 and 1814 against Napoleon, Bonaparte: Ice bat had his life attempted on sbveral occasions, and he has -also 401 snob vicissitudes in his career as appeared likely at- the time of their- oecurrence to -- preclude the possibility Of his ever occupy.= ing his . present high- position. He was 9. made Governor of the Prussiareproeince of Pomerania in 1840. During the revolution of 3.1348 he was a refugee in England. Circumstances favoring his return to his own country, he became Conimender-in- Chief of the Prussian army; and saw active service in that capacity. in 4849: Ten years afterward saw him Regent, in oteise, queneo of the mind of his brother (the King) giving way... Poesessed . of an amperiou8 '4 -urn of mind, be 130012 quarrelled with the Chamber Of Deputies, and in 1062 he saved the Country from .ciiiirweir and laid the foundations oz that power which has since • made himthe greatest Sovereign of the con- Elient of -.Europe by allying himself with Count Bismarek. tic lidter In reply: sent.tfy the inaguittli Years Day Ahe oougratulations 'V of Berlin on New "fg pray God -that it .',,Abi geodness it has, still been. Vouchsafed iff:il me to inaugurate.. theProud mcniumentkii the hanks of the Blaine, which is destirif4d not only as a per- petual commemoratif4 of: the hapyily re- gained unity of Gerd:einy, but alsoAri all earnest sign of the f,..01, gorated and true might of the united Ggraan empire. The grand festival in 'ionic of -Martin Ltither% birth, in -which, .afte lour centuries, - the li. whole of evangelical J` ,T,' hrist endom ' united withine, will not le; ever remain -for -ine an elevating reminia :One. •It . affords -me i the greatest gratifies ;_ini that the new year has Come finder °iron Otenoeswhieh verify the hope of quiet, unoturbed times. I.am convinced that under Ofiblessed proteeticin of peace; of the mii„.41tenance of whieh I have obtained fresh', .ii,uarantees through persimet-intercourse (rilth friendly princes, the nation will in th i tuture find a pros - perdue development!! - 04.60NliZA.TIORis COMPANIES. ' • ' : • . - Quantity et Adano .;:.-ranted and Blenev - • - An Ottawa telegr allotted to the cOloni the itinounti teceiv calendar year of188 Compani. Fertile Belt CcimpanYG.,..... 61,422 IS 24,853 says : The acres ion .-companies and therefor during the ere as fellows : Acres. Payments Temperance C61omapn _ Company - • -213,000 Primitive Methodist eigcni- Batton 68;513 Qu'Appelle Land OompNy..-, - 61,221 Fanners' Northwest Lk-gd & s • . Colonization ComparkV, • 58,005 tion Company -fb; :115,151 Dominion Lands ColOra- -Dundee • Land Invesip ent Company' 10,244 Montreal • & :Western - And - .Conipany . . . . . • 30,375 TotiChwood Qu'A • - . 'sgpziton ok_azimiair,; g -:, 'Under .Bistherck's. 1."rinie Ministership? Prussia rapidly rose to great lime .. by .trampling in 1§1100811131011: upon Denmark, - Austria and France.. On the 18th of January, .1871,.: King ...Wilhelm reaehed the pinnacle Of his greatness, - when, in the Hell • of Mirrors in Versailles, he allowed himself -to: be proclaimed •Emperor : of United Ger- - many. In 1878 his 'life- -was attempted by Hodel, ,the Socialist; lose :thana' month - afterward he was again theftat in .the - Unter den -Linden, and on. this 00Oill3i011 he W&8 ..,Wounde-di the culprit . - being. D. - ' Noebting, who aftertvard committed suicide.•' -- Emperor William married fifty-five 31 ago Augusta,„daughter of theflate. Gran - Duke Ii41,-Frioderith of SaxceWeimar, to, whom- heiliddreffeed the .telegrams whith ._ suceeesively Announced the '., battles mil triumphs of the war with _Fre**, : - • -P) . • "POUR laxos. 4 • € Frinile -Friederioh Wilhelini.:.the ' eldest - ison and heir apparent to. the kltipdom and. .. empire, waif born Oetoher 18th, 1831. Re' is a field marshel-in the German ariny-; an, - took a leading . part . in the iciimpaign in: mace.- .-- His wife -is the eldest • daughter of Queen -Victoria, ..the. Priii4ess Royal- f - Great Britain, to whomhe was - maxi d • „ , January 25tb, 1858. They Have : ei.; chi - -- dren. The eldest, FriederieliNitilhellp. Win January 27th, 1859,, was rnarried February 27th,. - 1881, -to Princess I iViotoria of Schleswig-liplidein. Augustepburg, . - aticl Sheir son is the - fourth in the series. of "four king as the patriarchal Emperor expressed iti7oh-• -Sunday,:.,.. jtMe 4th, 1882, When a phetegraph of a unique character _ WAS taken at the . Marble r Palai3e_ . in gotedarn,. Germany. The prenCipal ROO. • in it were the EmperorWillieten, theCrotvn.. Prince, Prince William and the infant - Trines,whom the - imperialgreet-grand- • . father bore in his ireii,-thrispresenting the . first: four generations of the new ImPerlia.. -house of Geri:nap-I Ina single -THE 13.0171NTN MON E-mperorViiilhelni is the seventh mortar& of the Prussian 'house of Hohenzollern; His kingdom oOmpriseif an area of 137;066 English Square miles and about 28,000,000 .- inhabitants.: As EmperorofGermaity as well as King of Prussia, lie is the potentate Over an area of 212;091Engliiheqttere mileass414` *a population of over 45,000,000 'subjeets, in- cluding the tiiiwillinitipeo.ple Of Alsapi!Lifr, - . -raine, about a million and a holfin number, who, in 1811, were ii Compelled from their • allegiance- to Frei& to that of the newly - founded. German Empire, by the „stern . hand of inilitiiii face. On the litli of last. January he sent the•follo-win characterise . . .. . •- - . & Colonization Con, W.-Vah, ey, and -John' soh-- r Yorh Ferment' Ocilmit coinpany • QU'Appelle & Long Land Company - H. W. Q. Meyer 0. FI FurgusLn and o Henry, D. Sniith Prince Albert Colon Company Ecinionten & Saskate Land Company P Purcell Saskatchewan Lent Homestead Cetnpan Scottish . Ontario & y... 63,081 - • 10,240 61,220 e 36,990 , 10,940 30,720 . _ -.10,240 . on ' 421240 .7an 57,383 50,322 • 000,554 toba Land` COmpanyi„ 28,712 S h 411 River Colon3 tion COmpany • . 30,624 A. Scott and T. Hay 25,600. F ertile Belt Agrienil•nril Ccim an 46:080* 32,640 • 20,480- , e• woo P. V. alin VICI. Sharpies Qu'Appeile Valley _ Oquipany TotEil acres disposed o sa*ount- reeelyed DB1 '44 Tom 51AID1 AND iftis seisToortis • . A Near Story -et ilhe rrafpliet tilse-, Baudan-.1rkie Belief in His DIPIsse Moslem. • - • - At the Orefield -mciment the Mahdi and Gordon • Pasha are the eentre of publie tenet air-. Over .the :Gabriel Charnies, in the erournal ll,es.Detbts; devotes articles-tellie h_eroes-of-fiebotir. :He tells ,the 'following story of :-the Mali& in- th of the Christians of the Soudan are brought before theiproPhet "..he-tergesi them. to: &bend* their faith And ref3ognme_ in him the Mesidah Of the. Soriptiiregs.„ One ot the Sisters Of the Fienefi'Catholiei rate! sion declared that she Was quite ready to •csomply with hisdesire, but as the Scriptures seid thaf-the Meath should be recognized by his -miracles; .she thOught fit -Would be well if the Mahcli Were to perform a Miracle, in. Which case she, With all her- oonipationsiWould with an easy 00n8eienee, bow down and worship him, . Whammed Ahmed replled-With some enibareasement that she wafiright ; that, however, the time for. Miracles had not 'Come yet,. although it was tear; and that he would take .the nuns them -Selves -under his protection to prepare them for'conversion. s Persons who have seen the Malidi eay that he delightiiiii play- - bag the -part • of the- enlightened deryish, shaking his -head . and - murmuring prayers ile.walking about; with hieyeslifted to heavens: The belief in hie divinemie- n strengthened by the feet that, on rights cheek he has ---a` sear Of some by which,, acdording to Minisulman euperfitition, the Messiah is. to., be ratios- nized..-• It is almost incredible to what an extent thia belief isspread in Ielani.-:_Arabi made believe, and perhaps -believed himself, that he was. the _Messiah, because an old blind sheik had discovered the -letter L printed on his forehead. In the same way thefietidsnefie discovered the legitimacy- of the -sMshdi's divine - rOiseion.. After the defeat of Gen. Hicks, the - HOU erdered a .hole to be dug in the ground about four yards deep; into this he descended and remained in it for above half an hour; On his.aseent he toldhis followers ,thit'God had commanded Lain not to -march toward: Ihattetire before the end:- of two Months': * * * Rd: maintains also that it is the will of -God that he, after going to Khartoum, shoidcl-peoceed toward Berber and .thence to -Cairo ; hiving •converted all the. -Egyptian Mtissulreans, he will -se to: -Mecca and Medina; - in passing he will driveaway .the Sultan - from - donstentino- ple, which he thinks Will not be -difficult, for, aomirdieg to - his. geography, Constaii thiople is quite near to the Suez Nue': In :themeantime, while he is waiting, he petite's his -Mime. to be Invoked in .putelicprayer instead 'Of. the name- of :Mohammed. If aitybodY is, by necessity �r lciOnViCtiOn, readytobevontvrted, he is taken' ,befOre the .Mahdi, who :addreases him ...with the - 'words :4'3E46:slat al bee. rnoukdieh2" (Do you accept the religion -of the Mehdi2) The convert replies " Alrat "- (yei),. kisses. the Mahdi's hand, and the eenversion is. completed. • . 84;000 24,576 24,76e 24,876. 45,250 4,097' • 19;806 - • 24;576 :5;000 . 2.4,576 10,060 . 4,096 12,288. 4,08o : .20,480 • 24;576 • :12,578 , -81,197 11,543 , • 6,144 •10,210 18,432' 13,107 .8,192 6,000 - ,. 1,400,663 $551,536 •Apt_ .t:TNAENO ,gpr =columns -Ir. • if - CHItiei in -the... ay • 'et the British, • • . , - gproopii e Alandan. 4. 7- The seat of Wari cagily . an unknown travellers have freq the Eastern Sondem on the west and Ka Country -has not beg _;Surveyed, either near .-7- 'land. . Consequently -f villages' anir wells, reefi are about to pro- ow,n.. ,Even Sinkat $,Or m an . - map recently .,.,7rth of the spot where itiSlooated on the b-it-StEnglish• maps. The district between thtidiills and the sea -Waist hafereally yet to be -4-- plored:..Tanianie'b -Is. i-. tii, the late headquart '.'t - of - Osman Digna, where he deposited :.58 plunder, stores and munitions, where h -..!..4o-dgedliie women and children and. kept 48 flecks and herds. Taniapieb is neer - -i..:3te loot tine of the ridge running aliril4 north and 'eolith to the , west of; Suakin and itis supposed to be seated bout ihi :,;Pen orfifteen miles- . from that port. Ti. -often mentioned asli- wftiendly *tribes" Warned Osman net north of Tamanielk lose up to the great mountain barrier. . 4:ithe Soudan is praciti- '1 wintry. Although Fitly passed through ni Suakini to Berber a on the smith, the the ,coast or further the lexaot position whither the British geed is not deflnitel is placed on one issued thirty miles th si ki Walla of. Handoub, e eneenipment of the cr some time - einee 'meddle with then, is - - Cruelty Lending a willin go driving. Condemning a chopped off by a.w .: Compelling a do while yoUpractice Patting an Engl.', forcing it to eat WQ Mistaking a dud monkey inthe pee Teaching _a :pa Withal° your neigl where he can get • Taking your swe out riding when yo Leave one of them . „ Causing a gentle hiniself in hot weal a pasture With a re Making a sensit ignoring his prese him alter he has teeth. '- Jumping on to a wild Indian 'when - poor little anirnal into fits, _ . Animals. arse to two women to - • to .have its head an. b stay in. the room the flute. . sparrow in a °age and s or starve. . ✓ an organ -grinder's - �e Of the monkey. . • to say unpleasant. r, and then leaving it d of it. , . eart and .her mother have but one horse. home. n cow to over -exert slosArs emer.„801.11N.V • .soyk4 1Pitnetkair Pninte Glatberea : • • , The,. tunnel- ofinneeting the 1,; ashire and Olieshieesides. -thtriver three), is now nearly finished.The rockti'i-!•-491been repfirtad as very favotabte for :exokaation.• • !.Wlifiteyer-groty be true of bar ries in the way of drink, the tainS :Agit -14.914t11, .haPPIPe88,alk stimulus:enough in the unsophis of n.attire-•-411 pure Water. .• - EVery_niokeillor.,Said:hY meta contain enough _arsenic to Jfl There may be something in that: Men. have been known .to die where only nieltebi are put in tu tion .boxes. - • Myr. Buxton, Chairman of -t School Board, 'states :that, " an it may !sera, the mote -vigorous 131011 enfercied • againet abs greater the tendenoyla an irr anee." at. sehool. - Direct .electrio lighting of trains of. the Distnot RailW Kensington and • Putney is very • steieeisful. The -.light inperier. to that . obtained from' but is reported- tones.* only two.' of the latter. - .1 •• - 1. the 4t: . seine .1B1g rsingz. A ten -foot alligator Waseaptgreolreoently near Waxahatchie, Texas!. ° The U. S. GovernMent envelope featbry at Hartford, Conn, uses.a ton of gum a week. - • A party of Baton Rouge, La., birdlitint- ers recently•ki•lled .1,400 robins with -sticks.. A sea dog WM-killed on the beach near .1,ongBraneh, N. j., not lens ago.- It weighed 143 poundi.: . • • While tripping near, Bridgman, Mich., William Williamse - caught an -eagle that measured nine feet.. _ • A cow horn 4 feet 11 inches long .and 18 inches in diameter at the base IS on exhibi- tion at Monticello, Fla. ' • : by passing through- 'firment on. bulldog feel bad by and trying to pass) wled and shown his le and yelling like a mouse appears. The are often frightened on* mt with, Beard. - Munti, the ectior member for Bir mingliam, who waliMpe 0! those who oon- _gratulated Mr. Pe on hie.:elevation • to the! Speaker's ohaig,t' was present • at the baptism of the Ist,t,' When lie,..Wes. named. .Aztlitir Wellesley; dr She -Duke of -Wel- lington, who was . -present :on • the .044i6Bi011 in the cap ity of godfather. This wa-s-in the year 182 when Mr. Mtuitz was €4;• in his 180 -year.. Minitz'S father (also M. P. for /3iriningl#,-.44:7ore a beard when there was not 'anti., ,ler.-A'in the of Commons,: and W14. throughout England as "the 1:04With the beard.' - - 4 :Jacobs Eyler, -O oti0009,4_, agent. -12 yeare, who is ore Ad oyming the greatest part of th lively village in ;which he .4, lived, .00thmitt mode recently be- Pittyse he ;paged tha. he .would heme•to-tay a neighbor 0100 pinagee, .resultinglrom an overflow W•4`..6er from one of the ditches on his far tura- main- k well • is .to man. lergy- ri places -London ous 813 ,empul- fi, the ttend- of the et -ween d to be ,ot only or gas, de that Paper wash -basins, buckets w. similar articles for domestic purposes arOnerally made of strait pulp, and, aftatIthey are rotighly Medd into the desired g' erthey • ure ' in ire the • stibjeeted to : hydraulic strong moulds, wherethey at,: finished forin.- ." THE M&K ettsizte. TIsvp IEabkiIi and -maim He Bens „ Wares.' - ••• • •The Trench -Canadian . habitant is quick to learn: 'some' thing& .:During the paab whiter the rage: among fashionable young men who go tobogganing and anow.sbeeing has been thiold-fashioned Canadian- Oath. Thill is a kind that have great . bread4h, length and lerigthjef fringe. They are, it nOtikovegliowadays,, and can only be had frten oarterii and others who have had them for years-. Quite recently as =101.1 as 118440119 We been paid for thesetri: relics -of Ohl Canada. A day or two ago * (miter's sleigh. did a 'thriving bufirwas by Selling thorn tnr 4 /tr. f..tt ',11*,y• tut thgk.4 oarLue vut t ple udid epeisimeri walked up and down in front of the St. Lawrence Hall so as to attract the eye of the yoting bloodfi. who affect thole • sashes, and who when they purchase one tell their friends that it came from some of the back oountry. 'villages or that it is fe family heirloom. The 'season is too far advanced for the oIdmati,to sell many now. :-Montreal Witness. A new religious soot in Boola holds that disease s is ceased by thel:gmence of God 'from the - body,' and tbAill esn be euredbythe passage -Of the Diti fluence from the Well to the sick as t j'it- with Omit spines in Contact., It is sai pumber among its votaries people of in Tale and prOmm .ence. .. - • • ' • A. cinerary nen has been di vered on the farm of Cuttyhill, Longsre,An Aber- ileerishire, Scotland. ,The shap VIt the um is globular, 'fifteen inbhes in di re. - per and eleven inches in depth. It was Vormed of a brownish • sort of.olay. ,The Which rng tonched. -- ed the receptacle crumbled inf54ust on The coral industry on the Al . coast being • ' 4 is now regulated by a decree of ct1.1 French Government.- In future the ing for tore" mustno longer be coiiduotg ith the , se of apparatus made of .iro f.fr other Ilnetalcas it is supposed that im lments of this nature lend to destroy. th Irtiefe.aud - prevail Weir reproduction; . Phylloxera on the roots of 'blies for- _ warded to England for exanzqrt tion by expert, through Kew officials., VAIN Gov- ernment of Victoria;have beeekkiimitd in considerable numbers, although", t'iltis vines themselves were effeetu.ally dee. Jed.It appears that the earth .protecte pests which had found their Way und ctuad. , . An owl measuring four feet and two inchestrom tip to. tipwas recently captured in Franklin county, Georgia.. ' Robins are feta in flooks of 10,000 in the neighborhood of Powhattan, Va. A 1 maii.reoently killed 480 of the birds. A lady 60 years old, residing in Roches- ter, N.Y., skated- from - that city to Brook - pert, twenty miles, in anhour and twenty- five minutes.- " - . • .. - Charles White, of - Thorndike, Me.,has three yoke* of oxen whose united weight ie 12,210 pounds. • One yoke measures eight feet four inches, and weighs 4,865 pounds: New Orleans recently had a baby show, with ninety-nine infants on exhibition. Thelirst prize Was Won by a seven months old .baby that weighed thirty -ono pounds. , The United. States Treasury half the bigf int spittoon -.on record. It is a great oblong wooden box as big as a bed, filled with sawdust. It lied in the basement at the foot of the four flights - of stairs which lead to the various stories, and accommo- date the Goyernment employees and otheri. - J. B. Kerne, of Stokes county, N.C., went there from Pittsburg, Pa.; four years age. In that time siii.ohildren have been added to hie family. He has been married to the Mlle wife eighteen years, and has twenty- three children living. Seventeen of them are boys and six girls. His wife • is 46 and he 48. - • 4. A man was suffering from the lungs, with cough, difficulty - Ing and fever. The odor of the most offensive. The patient we a mixture containing carbolic a no improlement followed, c • ane of breath - Mk was it upon but as ure of eucalyptus was substituted fort *pad. In two days after the use of the laek,preiforip- tion the Odor of the breath was 100 disgust- ing, and in less than two Weskit' tbe ram was discharged =red: The belief -44* work was attributed to the action of t1.4.1tucalyp- tus by Dr. Bellamy. . _ ri The height and velocity:- of OftdL.f., a may be determined by MOMS of plOigraphy. Two cameras are placed 600 fee' art and provided with instantaneous 'v utters, whicsh ate released by electri -same moment. The angle of in .k the camera,s and the position of Discovery et a litetriged A London despatOh amyl; Goo. Simp- 'son, of McGillivray, recently made a re - ,markable dispovery. When digging on his farm , he struck on a large stone, and after clearing the - dirt away discovered e petri- *fel -man. The being must have belonged to a race long since extinct, as it measured 21, feet 4i inches in height, and was almost perfect ,in form. Parts of the bay are white and the rest has turned a darkfgrey- ish color. -Mr. Simpson brought the figure to ..garlthill and plecedt4t in the greasily store_ Ot, his son, whereiarge numbers of people nail iiterY day to Bee it. . It is one of the greatest' curiosities ever seen in.this country.: Mr. Simpson is m3gotiating with sale of hit Curious discovery. the ,manliger et . 400, in -Toronto, tor *Si A Itome despatch says the 'Congregation of Cardinals disclosed yesterday the ex- pediency of the Pope's leaving Rome, and also oonsidereci theAuettion 'whether the next oopolave shall be held in Italy, The Makfino dcallion Without :the eon - at the Mien of file _cloud as photographed are thus- obtOed -and simple trigonometrical operetioVive the. heightand distance from those ' -A __recent writer on the eialOons of infants says- curiosity shows %self. . the. *gest in when, to its se the e most age the cloffely, playing lief that, notwithstanding the fact of t 4teothless upper jaw, deer do actually oonigime- their shed horns. picked up reoehipj at the deer forest it Dtuirobin, Scotlqtr a horn which appeared to show that it been in great part eaten aWay., and .thai tt seems, was the belief also . of the men ips of the Zoological Somety of London, ,had recently 0exhibited the men. The marks on the horn wOuld. be made bythebroad incel lower jaw; - and .here sole.ntiflo 2: seem to confirm popular opinior gleiects of -oar eivilizatij9g. • ,, airtime Fair, - A flower has been. • discovered :in Seuth, America which is only visibla when the wind is blowing, The shrub belongs to the °actin family; and grows about three feet in 'height, With a crook on toP; giving it the . appearance of a Meek hickory came. When - thewind blows a.' number of beautiful. flowers develop from. little' lumps on the stalk. • ' * A curious experiment has been tried by. M. Margelidet, I1' FrellOil, naturalist. Five years ego he placeda toad in A hole made in some granite, and Covered It witfi imper- meable oenient, and . recently, in the pre. Wince of several .spectators at the Paris Masud of Necurai History, he released it The animal, though in a tozpid- stile, was alive and healthy: A soi'entillo experimenter once - arow out from the body of a single spide thres .-- -thousand four hundred' and eighty yes "threader spider -silk -a -length of a little. short_ of three miles, - Silk may - be wOven, of spider's thread, and it is more glossy and. brilliant than that pf, the silk -Worm, being of a golden color. An enthusiastic ento- mologist secured enough of it for the weav- ing of a suit of clothes for Louis XIV. Dr. George Schweinfurth. the German, explorer of Central Africa, who now resides in Egypt, has sent le Sir - Joseph Hooker, direotor of the Kew Gardens, a long ecootint, Of the plants contained in genie wreaths found in :the coffin ' of an Egyp- tian <Princess (mummy). They cora- - prised leave; Of the willow, 'leaves of the date palm, . corn -poppy . flowers and oorn flower. • Of the poppies,: Dr. Sehlveinfurth, says that the inner portion. are in a won- derful state of is Not a stamen,. not an anther la wanting; 'nay, one might. almost say that not even a pollen . grain is missing. - Rarely are such perfect. aid well- preserved specimens of this fragile, flower met with in herbaria. . The oolor, too, of the petals is maintained in 4- high degree, as in thedried specimens Of the present day. It is a dark brown- red, that leaves a deep stain on the paper where the flowers have been soaked. • The Princess at whose, funeral these flowers -were used lived about o eleven centuries bef e the Christian era. Pine °ones,' which must have been employed as funeral offerings a thousand years earlier, :have been found - in : a. vault at. Thebes.. minutes child begins to take other things besides its food, , though it still oarriee everyt mouth, it does so merely tongue is the * finest at well ,exeroised organ of touch. At thf child handles thinge, looks at t pulls them to pieces, and so instructs himself. Sir j.areyer inetlines to the. 4,4 hom he 0- such as re of the eervation . It is often the case that the criticisms madeon our oivilkz from those who have be tip . Under . a different .0 Statement made by the Japar 'seder to .England his reoent iished, which. is; a good.illuste force of this. asiertion.. When he theught of European society, "One • 'great - drawback to it j.N-l_he entire absence of the sense of brother t 1.04 which the. strain and oompetiticin ofilicAprn,busi! ness. had produced. In japan tkireembers of a family are all bound togifeArby the closeat.,, social. ties... When I- silu Tokio, there is . no man of my iiatitinilage, no matter how poor, how meaner -Ow desti- tute he may be, that would /20.5stre the 1 utmost confidence- in doming ti ..ip for as- sistance. -Nor Oceild I refusef' to him. Wilms, in the Japanese capitii„ntch aPpid- lation'of 1,500;900, there are onlytto or,900 persons: who : depend . upon tqf,1 ptate'for their support-14bl* is; eleho:oemAlpond to yOur paupere.”- The fatal Mee131,f, odern civilitetionAs She 'entire -41 1) uteide Osiaciiiiibillty.. The 'rule Of oci an esientlally- aelfish one, aueoess.-the . reward which' it. ordinarily be secured onlyby ' (gains which Ohm; may make - . . telling n COMO brought m. Ambas- • ?pen pub- -3.pn of the ted what replied : 'The irritatibie of thetteiniall . Ben Batter's Nerve. Speaking of duels reminds me that ,Ben, Butler is descended in part from the old Gilley 'stook, and was hence related to the Jonathan Gilley who fell in the noted Graves-Cilley duel. Butler would have made a duelist himself had he been born in a State and at a time when the code of honor held goad. ' But bean -eating Massa- ohusetts never fights -duels, and Butler's nerve has had to be expended in other ways. A notable instance of this obourred in 1856, when Ben .Butler was a young practitioner - at Lowell.- The Buchanan campaign was in full progress, and great meeting was being held in. the ' largest hall of the city. Rufus Choate, the great lawyer, was addressing the meeting and his °la -- queues had thrown them • into the wildest - enthusiasm,. when a jar was felt and orash was heard. - The cry -want forth, "The floor is sinking." Every one turned pale and the andienee rose for a, stampede, when Ben Butler came to the. front of the platform beside Mr. C1100e,. and calling the audienoe to halt, said there was no danger; that the architect of. tbe. building was present and that he would go, with him and examine the binding and report to allay their fears. This quieted the audience: Butler said the arehitect made an'immediate examination of the halt and found the danger very great.. Butler at Onoe returned and nmilingly assured tho- audience there was no present danger, but as the hall was overcrowded he advised them to quietly adjourn to the Public' Square and there Mr.- Choate Would finial' his speech. Thkorowd went quietly out and the oatastrophe was averted..., As Butler stepped on the platform he, had wbiapered to Mr. Choate with a balflaugh„ in order to defieive,the audience. This, is what be said, " Mr. Choate, I must clear this house -or we.shall all be in hell in /Ivo minutes."-" Cam" in Cleveland Leader. Mawr FasIdene Change. • A lady of prominence' in society can - almost start' as.1 a fashimiany freak that, may occur to her. -If it • PI in dress it Will be surely -copied. Women, • as a rule, are like so Many sheep and must be led. Mre. Ogden Gftlet was the Ira lady to wear a Jewelled pin at the hack of her bodies, Where the lacing meess -at.the tore The pin was -handsome and oontidned 80MO very precious atonal.; it was first seen in its .new .p?sitioar at One of the D-elmonico balls this winter.. At the next bell two on threw ladies apiiparea with handsome pini attached to thispart- of the dress, and it was only a few:weeltslater that, the. number tition blot ladies Who were valuable pm" on film lektonal peaullar spot had considerably illereallea. rs-can And ad it: is with almost everything that ring. the appettains to dreesi.;,..t.24h Y. Mail and Ex- - prase . • . t oxides iiii'dactversttoodintlimferdeeint !Iv/a-lett sextookingswanknoce. lirml That IVitiventy-four inches; "every 'in* strosiecifonktmake seyenty. four men. This must be the _same identical oUstelner -•4frirritlffil-a4lhost in himself:1...f The Judge. :131Fro,190.0.. thit Powers,- spinet -the 'Wilted Stater Mae? at Der- -A runior cirisulitted in, tlavana in lin seems to -have died out 11-11fp Aargau% 'a , inflicnicir:ofthe tors He also dines hontfr Of SO. eV Itaturdiy that an -order had been .ficifived ilias been, in fromthe- Government at Madrid declaring I patted t� -da tubelike, state of siege; The Autlioritiefl Of.the at Ravens pronounce it ,absurd. • iBbsinsrek en Atha rhino <, `