HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-07-22, Page 741a;•••
. • a.
::;;•;71 .
....• • T.,94411ttirGovira.pFooleti.
. •
The Perniciouspractice or poison* Eating
It is not generally? known tit!" what
alarming extent poison eating :la practised
- • '
in this eeuntrY ke well as in BUMP,
according to the Boston Iferdid. . some
, cf, the districts of -lower &Istria, and in
Styria, especially in the monntaingusparts,
there prevails the habit of eating arsenic.
,.,The peasantry are particularly given to, it;
•• They obtain it uoder the name of hedri,
.frem travelling bookstore and gatherers. of
herbs, Who, on their part, procure, it from.
the glassblowers or from the low doctors or
ononntebaolse. The arsepio eater has a•
two -fold aim'in the dangerous sajoYment,
one of which is the desire to Obtain' a fresh,
healthy appearance sod acquire a -certain
degree of einbenpoiot, and to this account
' lads. and lassies; the • European countries
_ -CiriPlOY-theagent that -they ',May beiothe
,more attractive.to. each other, and their
; endeavors are attended with astonishing
;dolts, for the poison eaters are, generally .
- speaking, .. distinguished , by a freed':
'compleition„ and have the, appearance of
exuberant health. Not long _since 'a farm
drvant.whO was thin and .pale, but well
and healthy-, wished to make ;herself more
attrattiVe to her lovers,. and, in order to
obtain a more pleasing exterior, swallowed
desired result: was obtained. In a. few
Months she was quite. according to her
lover's taste.
She iocreopedthedoseof-arsehic and fell -a -
victim to her vanity. She was poisoned
and died a distressing death. The number
• • of deaths in consequence of the immoderate
enjoyment of arsenic is not inconsiderable,
.eapeciallY among the. young. -Whether it
arises from fear of the .18,w,, which forbids
,the unauthorized possession of, 'arsenic, or
*Wither it he that an inner voice proclaims
to hiin his sin,. the arsenic, eater. 'always
' tau:meals, inuch as 'possible, the use Of it.
r, The European peasant s Say they eat it to
crake -themselves better winded "—that
•'is, to Wake the reepiration easier when
•• ascending the mountains. Whenever they
• belie for to go, and to mount so considerable
.. ei▪ ght, they take a minute Morsel Of &filen
...on it , it „ to • gradually .disiol
in. the . mouth. They •say the effe
is and they [lace
• with --ease' heights:* Utherwi
• they 'Wald climb only. with •distress t
chest. The dose with ;which the pois
•, eaters begin, consists 'Of. rather hula th
half egrain, and then the 4nantity
T.aeithe rgfc , ,
roccutly,iearlied of 4 anianctafbyearsoldio
777,-Iiit present told. at every dose a pied abo
. the Weight Of 'four 'grains. For' fOrti Years
and What it AIWA
lir#IME, NO WOMAN INNIMES?
Wiy 914.0011, Irleterta ito• -Obtain a
. Drier teem the Pope. •
Queen Victoria ht.,a to • obtain a special
brief from the. Pope before the could apply
for entrance to the Grande Chartreuse nen-
eatery. The only women not provided
with a brief from His Holineee permitted
to doss the threshold of the monastery are
Princesses of tnareigning. -house of Prance;
.10,ot BCO strict are the fathers, even in this
exception, that when the Count of PASS,
the present legitimate heir and pretender
16 the Bourbon crown of France, went up
there 80818 time 8g0 with the Counted of
Paris, the latter .wad refused admission.
The Abbot. was profuse, in his expressions
of regret, 'adding, with the true instinct
of the courtier, " that he hoped the day
was not far distant when she would be able
to thlini admittance as a right. It isneed-
less to add that the. Pope very seldom ac-
cords brief to a Womon, and then ibis
only to a crowned or ' royal, persthiage.
However, once 'Weide, the monks are con*
Aeons enough,. and Queen' Victoria was
shown all over the monastery ar.d treated
to a collation, ' None of the wPIPOn of her
suites were allowed to enter.
• A French .actress during the EiTtnike
cmcie, for. a wager, eniaceeded in gaming
admittalico•td-themourzaff:Bhildieginsid
herself as a Man and, together with two
Male companions, not only, went all aver_
the -monastery -but spent the night there.
On passing through the great . gate
in the morning • the actress 'fore off
her wig and milstache and dis-
appeared • from the horrified view
of the monk! with•shrieke of laughter. The
Abbot ordered the whole establishment. to
be purified -_that is, fumigated. 'The their
the advise sat upon, the couch she need
and everything, she could possibly. have
touched were burned to ashes, and for
months every plate where her footsteps
could have fallen was drenched with holy
water. Renthrse eventually came to the
actress for after her •impions escapade
she "suffered from bad luck almost as
severely as theJathdatv of Rheims It cost
je her several thousand' francs and man
ve
weary penances before she obtained Sleek -
et tion froth theAo•chhishop. of Paris, and in
nd a special °Asti° from the Ahhot.,._whete.
feeling she outraged. ClitReh
Be
he having • forgiven her; however., her stage
on good • fortune returned; so there , is. some
an moral to the episode. ' '• ' '
•`. ;•„4„401: teollitykEviitkUicitailitaki
tit' writes: The .prettiest trick / Over saw was
• • he has practised • the habit, -• Which
. • 'heilted from his father, and he, in all pro;
• lrability, will ;bequeath the• same to: his•,
• • children: It is doted that neither in these;
riot in otherptisthreitteriyie there the lead
s' trace of an • amnia tacliexy s,discernible,
and that pul symptoms Of ,ii chronic
poishoing, never. :Show themselves in
• individualei" Who ..adapt •• the dose, to • their
•
constitution* 14birthougb that dose :Weida'
. be Considerable, but .when from inability to
• obtain the Acid or other ,cause the perilous
:.,indulgence is stopped, . there appear PYInth..
terns of illness which have th' closed re,
nemblenbe to thoseproduced' by 'arsenic
, ,poisoning. ' •Those symPtofiii COnsist.prin-,
• tpally in a• feeling of. general s. s discomfort,
: attended by 'a:perfect Indifference to all
.7' surrounding *thong and things, greet. p•er,.
•;. . • tonal 'aoXietiod anvaried, distressing Ben-
. nations arising.' froni the digeatiVe.organs
laeli of •appetite, ' Constant , feeling rthai
•,'
the , is - overloaded ' in , the
s.litirribug from/ the pylorus to.
." the throat, pains in the, stomach and par
• : tkolaily great difficulty in breathing. ' Por
•• all these symptoms there ielot one remedy
-71t ursenii.
•. acting intiong the inhabitants ofrlthver Autos
trio has not. grown totos, pension, as is the
ease With the opium eaters in the Bast, the
• obeWerti of the betel Maio India eridpoly-
' • .Cesio„itod of the 'cocoa leaves.-aniong the
ondives Of Peri'. .-1,1,7hOnonce commenced,.
however, it becomes a necessity. : In some
▪ districts Sublimate:sof quicksilver is' used in
. the. ecipne way. An •mithenticbied• citae:is
• :mentioned by .Dr.' VonTsdliiidi of it, great
• .opium -eater .at Billed who ;daily Cando:Med
• the 'enormous quantity of 40 grains of abr-
.. waive • sublimate;and the practice in•
•
Bolivia, Where the Poison is • •cipenly sold in.
-.the Market to -the Indians, icietillgreoter„
, In.Vienna: the use of arsenic is Of. every -
occurrence , hOrie• dealegi
and,....espeeially with '• 'the. ,•. tocteh•iuM
.• of. ihe •-nobility, They • either . shake
...it in o pulverized state • •1 among
the corn or they tie u .bit:the::oi2O of a nee
:in apied.of linen and thOn fasten it to the
HOUrb•whed the hors' is hereeoeed, and. the
aolitta of the 'animal soon .dissolves it,
The sleek, "round, 'shining • appearance of
th • carriage . horde, . andeiindially the
• Ch admired.•foarning at the . mouth',is
the wit* Of this .arsenic feeding. Itis a
,:•common practice with farm' servants in*
.nthuntainone parte to strew pinch of
•
arsenic on the slant feed Of heybefore going
op tt' 8t881) road. This ie. done ;for :Yenta
. without the least 'unfavorable, .result, but
theOld, the •horse fall into the hande. of
-Another owner • who: withholds th t arsenic
. he lode ' flesh' immediately, is no longer
• lively, and even with the -hest feedings there
no. 'possibility' at restoring him .,to his
s former sleek appearance.• "koisons'tliat are
iwallOwed for the .Bake of the, egreeable
Sensations they occasion . owe this °freaks ,
'their • action • anon, the riervefia- system,
and 'the • practice intuit 'be kept tp by.
constantly increasing. dose untilthe scon',;
• etitotiori is irreniediahly "injtired. • In the -
tie of arderiic., so long as the excitement in
u all . is ' apporently 'well, • but
.the point feat length reached when to tiirn
---backorter-OOteed! . alike death. • The
• 4moment . the dose, is :diminished or with::
; drawn entirely, then the . victim 'perishes
• bedithse he lute . shrunk frohi
Arseniois said by Dr. Peitition, to be.
. 'as. harmless as a glass of wine in tho quarii.;
' tity of one-siiteeptit part of • a grain, and
, in thetase, of agues it is AO certain in its
effeetii that'. the French s'directory Once
• iseueditit edictordering the surgeons of the
Italian iitity,„ under pain of military 0.118..t
• to banish • that complaint at two
or three days' notice from among the Vast
• .
numbers Of soldier who 1i4dtal 188g8i8iii8g
taider)it in.theMatelies• of Iideribardy,•'•It
Owns that no poithrtitaken in small and
dilntcd:detiee is inimediately htittiol', and
. the Bathe' thing. may be said Of Other
agents.• ••
one by Hermann while at, lunch ' with a
-brother „conjurer in the hotel at Monte
Video. Five people were seated at the
table •(not•ihis own, be. it observed),. and
there wasapparently an entire absence of
any possible preparation. Taking a, pear
from the dish, he- told us to mark it. One
left four punctures , from his fork in it.
Another dropped a spot of ink on the rind;
r pushed on American three-centpiece into
the soft substance of the fruit until it was
buried; next ,a large slice was cut out and
eateo. Hermann then •took it and tossed
it towards the; lofty. 'ceiling. "Catch it
yourselves," he cried, as -the, pear, was
whirling in mid-air. it' fell into my out-
stretched hand', prong -marked, ink -spotted,
and with the three -cent bit still bedded in
its tissue --but whole 00 • -
. . • ,
ThIslspame,; • ,
Last Week; at about the same hour and
on the saline day, an editor and a horse died.
In the papers of his own • State the editor
was Abounded with nine or ten lines. A
minimum space of a half column Was de-
voted • to the horse. ,The editors toad his
age, the names of hismother; grandfather
and , grandmother kohl '4 hat • they dld ; -
what the, horse himself did; told what . be
was worth; low he dame to be worth sci
moth, keen° man spoke,Of him as "the
deceased;" and all the Writerii-agreed that
in the death of this horse the . eotmtry had
. suffered *great led. That in fame, my boy.
If you are at all., ambitious you will. Bonita
'41 he mighty sorry, that you weren't born
a," hoes " instead of an editor:Still, if you
go with the right kind of people, . You may
yet grow to bean "ass." That won't help
much,,thongh..—Bordette, •the BrooklynEagle. •
Too Dinoh Enthiudain.•
" Teaching,to me," said an enthusiastic
young echoolmit'any hi a holy calling. To
sow in the young Mind the seeds of future
InoWledge_arid.seateh,•them as they grow
and develop is a pleasure greater than I can
tell. I never. weary Of my Work. I think.
only of—" • ' •
"1 .amvery,earrY," interrupted the young
Mao to Whom sshe was talking. "that you
are. so devoted to your profession Miss
Clara. 1 had hoped that some day 1 might
ask you—in tact, I called to -night to—but
I ' hardly dare goon, in the light, of whit
"You May go on, Mr.' Smith," said the
ytung.lady softly. "'I'm a little too entluisi-
astio at times, perhaps." - . •
, A Good jciike- on the Mayor.
On Thursday mast the mayor procured
a supply.' of Crawford's best champagne
and treated the aldermen in his office.
Some ten bottles; which'were untouched,
were locked iothe thpboard, se • that • they'
could- bo.roturned at the, :earliest- tiniveoi.
once. Lad eveniog ionic persons burg-
larized thecupboard, and ,drank all the
cheunpagne and ;pliced the Aropty 'bottles
back in the basket, .consequently the Mayor
will be out $25 at the lettet:-/Citiffitati Whig.
.No Change in ,lifm.
A • Very, good • story is being told. An
DM Manlier Opining out of the s British
House of Commons inahnrry ran into the
•Arnie Of a most malignant Tory. " You're
a' confounded fool," said the Irish member.
You're drunk," said the malignant Tory.,
4'1:-Itifotrl'ib-drank;'? said the Irish Mem-
.
bin. (and, indeed he was), and to -morrow
I'll be sober ;but• tomorrow • he a
ocilifoundedfool still." '.
"Ono canee of baldness,"says a .physi.
Wan, "is great .intelleCtuality," Possibly
baldness is for the purpod„ Of allowing the
hitelleetuality,to shine. •
Tho honorary degree of LL.D. has been.
conferred Upon Rev. George IL Cornish,
pastor. of the ,Methodist,. °berth, Drayton*
Ont.; by Rutherford UCollege, North :Care-
na. • ••
•
ounowis AHEAD.
An Alt9tOtsteerelostst Sees a MiliktY Heat
on its way From Gm Stars. . •
Mr; Wolter H. Smith, of Montreal, 'writes
calling attention to the following extracts
from " Summer. Forecast," published
in the May oumber of his. journal,
Astronomy and Meteorology, issued. list
April.:," The summer., will soon be upon
us, and all are concerned. in asking What
are the probabilities? In two, words, heat
and drought. * * May will
be -fine, more like Juno -than May, and
*though. June will have its sudden tool
storms and changes, July will give. os
some persistent dry weather, Which*. ander
burning skies and with parching chinooke,'
will wither the tender crops, burn the grass,
• bake the soil, dry PP PienY of there-
mennialspringsr''. inwhichisomeof -my
frienos place so much confidence, and torn
the tinder -like forests into an easy prey to
the fires which Will make them but smoke
74-7.71.
. via Ana OF KEEPiNG. COOL. - • ' •orsET ON, LA4w911,4040. .
1 ,• .
:,
BitS••0‘44.41vIce Prompted by Old444,014/Pneil, Yerribl.,e •ExPe4e;ice of- a' Ottaidrh Yacht,
. .
s o. common. Sense: ' . ;• : liw •rerty, iletgr10100: irvo*,.• Dort v.o..
. moon ro.to .
The art :i.0f keeping cObl these -clays is 1 .Tbh1:17.61.1. hi*. (b.T. .i..),,O0rreePOndent: of tlin
only .second in wide. Milian interest. to iba' Bitffitki Courier writse; '01 Experione,es. as
art of nioney-Malithg.• Yet the chieffactor horrible as were ever related in fiction
;in both. is a little, old-fashioned,•eommon befell, the grew •of the Vary B. Booker, s. :
sense within' the comprehgnoir,4 of over. emalls sloop yacht Prthis plOce,,Whieb ',Made"
hob. The body ie•AttteT. al:4014a tool of 0.17974149-: to • C4elkda, -awl was 'wrecked e*
.the will; If witk, the first lipproach • of wooy night gaits. ;Own:. She had- on • .
Warm -weather -We surrender -,to, the heat: hoard *Irma: Bother, lapr owner, and two. '
without any effort to oVeratme the changed blonde; Btaiiley,. Gibson, O; Married mon; a •
climatic conditions* we are largely. to blame pattern maker in the, Brooks . shop,, and.
'tor oar sufferings. A little philoisiphy and Homer B. Adams, Ofliiiiihford, the shipping-
experithenting will show the dulleetthat he clerk at Barber, Scully & Op.'s .planing mill,
• ffecomost Who dwells; most—in. thought here. • .. , - ; .
and Speech --upon the weather. . The first "The Mary P••?,. with a Sloop belonging to
•principle of keeping cool ie to keep the Frederic Fromm, which vetoed:On people, ..
'olio' fixed. On anything and everything but sailed hence on Satnrday night, reaching
the height •of the memory. The • greoteet. Port :colherho.hefore tbe:flay. They. started
trothle ip the, eating and drizikhigi 'Here to return on Monday afternoon. . In the eitlii,
, ;people are the slaves, of appetite or ignor-4 and entceediag eonelle they beeettoo.sePat. ' .'
and ashes, , ". 4! * The heat at an* „TheY • kilindly, .contfnue. to, tithe into.
times will be extreme: • There will be not the ?item the most heat-prodeeing foods,
.. . ..
only o waves, butseas, 'dodos of . heat, Hupp. emehted by frequent potations of iced
until humanity will 'anger Severely, , Poe drinks., in iiYriecl, forms,. No Wonder they
in "July and August in, -1••• the • West., and are hot 1; • The /odd is enouph. to keep their
smith promise temperaturee. over 100.?- WOO at a boiling. point, and this is aggra.
in the Abode. Very ' heavy ,storme; ,vateds by the; id, swater and otheitotrotio,
cloud iholeteLand....tornaddeowili•-•-breark 'drinks, whieh retardiikesticin andhinder
ii-t-intervale,- when precipitation willtbe the system from . throwing . off the waste.
anemia., Cool terms will follow, but - e inside of the body....moninistered.tcoat°
them-==wakeLwill-,come-thwdry-i:-liot-winda the , events of • the outside.. Instead of
and sultrY'periede again, parching every, :ppuringgallons-of-drink7cloWn-the-thicat;-
.thing .before them. •••‘t•:-." -1". ' Those h e faucet should he turned on the Wrists
have heard - their -parents talk . Of the and the mouth -. frequently rinsed as ,the
. ,. , .
drought of 1819-, who themselves remember . jockey "sponges" his horse. : .: •
those of 1854,1800,.. 1876 and 1881 will, be. , Bathing should become a religion instead
fore next October • have added 11387 to their of a lost art. • There ebould: be a -paving at
catalogue of dry, 'hot suinmere, " . the bar to spend at the laundry.. Fine*,
The ice -dealer whp has a fell supply; the there.shoeld be some Work to do. Nb' oils.:
dry goode Man with a heavy ,line of sum,: take is more can:mien than to suppose s thet.
Mer goods; the seaside: and minter resort 'work is incompatible with keeping cool. On
people; ' in fact, oil; Who want•to lee an the contrary, therna,n Who makes a, !mi.'
abnormal 'summer for 'heats. are likely to • *SS. of keeping COOL •*oinffere 'vastly more
have their lieartft'inade ‘gb,d..• So far Mr.. than he Whose mind and body are model.,
141,iiiith, seem: .. .. , . ' s . .ately Occupied. . If greatierihrienecessarY,
.,.._ .° . , ',: , it ,sliOuld•bejudiciouely•itrrainged. As moth
•
issue with Wwiti:*Elingislaillidn'.rdt:gEo*rgdlainfigd"t'ronie7,,of'"gh. it..n..
Wan boundary line; and appeeis tsri she in
Andra seems determined id.. force • tn.? ..)cool, andtevening.0iEe middaytha ht ciohnter. 784,toOnaevxyt0. r i ii$dh• 1 ttk ihaenr art of
. • ei (,):c l I. !, hauniii t keepingio.
as possible be done in the morning
a pasition to have it all her ,_.0*.,:atty..;.* peaks tii,i.deperid upon :trifles it_intiet.he:
that'eprilei Of tlie'',"; *0447:When . the, war. letliviiih -ealliii. 4 txiilea make al:i Pelle'
begins:. 'Indirect inforinatiOn; by, .way of /fen' 44'd perfection . • , . .. .
is,fio trifle." • • , . ••
India, is th the effect that the ; Russian .T.. : : C•
ured ' bY a stirside: .
railway lines have been rapidly at . well 'ae , • •• .,' ' ,• • • • ..
;etiralthil ,,,,,extioidedi ttencinOvii.griiielf. ..-&-twol-03 . agtelbel41%tt
ohm .„.; , , .. esf,cot the ,thetder IsmitIodontitim4inelet Shin leg&4*.60115.011
. , : ,••0rs
4.nesli4t,oces-e•vornothrodothait 80, was
My; :thilee .. ,tpt.,.... 'the 'intervening 'space 'ofilicted-withnt-inturalletaseofparalYeis.
Were' • or ,: would ., e0en • • be covered. *Ile trie•tVe.very. known kind ofireatnient in
The ',Rtiiiiiiin soldiers , are • in .: oveoee vain and then resigned shimself itilis•fate.
the Aineer.s' That dignitary seems doomed The reomentle.ftwoke in
;the 'clown° °cos, only, .Separated. by the when he went to bed that night he praYed,
in: Vidory in the inevitable battle with tte his clothing
idotiteingd'atdonxtanthed.9410,onosria.ifruoni,
rebel.Ohiliai, and his chances Of winning tns'defeat. . ;Hie Onechitzie,e of,succesw lien fele that he was cured. He sprang • from
ti5of.iht ce°.:nbeetrilktieetrtenmPpaerte.i.Oannfithie9britenPltePrt.eddf iasie‘kremarkable ‘21 euro . Be dWwroughtread:t ' h• abei 1 :3: ma shoutingdf:00:6i te 3Phid:n ,./ft in into 4 I .
waters Of,:; that stream from the tt6OPs. 6f !Ong and earnestly that. he, koot recover.
Areniaterially redhead by thefactthat hut all the time like a Madman. -BefOreending
doeStave secured 'possession of ' the, nosed. his optics he ran about • the , yard:. Several.
to the Otherwiseinectessihle mountain re: times toted his - new-foundetrength. :Mr.
treats ',where the Anteer's „illy, Sheri J'an,. Bedew Bays . he hasn't been • ith. .; well :•fiii
theleader of the. faithful Terakhi ChM* is twenty years 0 he is iiOw•. • ". '•
encamped. • , .. - : , : : . . • 2.: ,
Meanwhile. there is A &Oral .iri:diatiCe:
08 Indians and Afghans are 'alike. detont-
Mohinirnecians, and during the holy Month
of :Raiiiiidan, Which this year Will expire On
the 23rd of Jinni, the good Modulnian ab..
stains, from the , riding. to the Setting of . the
son, from feed' and drink;Itoni-all,fioniishi;-.
went that can restore his strength and from
It11: 'pleat:tiro that 'can • ratify his eenses
, •
ated, Bother sailing further wedWard than
'Fromm. At ll o'clock at night Bucherwas
within sight of the Dunkirk light and the • .
harbor -beacon above- them..., Fromm was
out of sight,. They struck thothird bean'
squall, and at a 'quarter past were lying
AL.a..grest. Was-probably-th .
centre of the storm. Her jib was down (ma
her•mainettil doubly reefed. ' Sidde.nly a -
_heavy-squall:strick-her-sail-flat- from the
direction of the shore, in the pitchy dark-
-neetc-andr- slite-w-Eir -Capsized; .7...She "thni
floated; witli.a little of one side out of , • '
water, until 6 o'clock the neittilay., or nine-
teen hours. • ; . . - . . ... •
"It was blackness itself il a howling wind
was raging and a tremendous. see, • was up.
The waves would strike •thein from'. their •
hold on the boat and they wthild,," get back
: with. the greeted difficulty, -even with the
help of life lines which Bother rigged.. The •
labor'. of %holding on, the . knooke of ' the ••••.;
waves and the . chill . exhausted thane ` and. •
they:grew Weaker. .Bucher, tide,drongest ...„,„
of the three the otlY.oneaceostomed tto.
the water, was the icily sivvivor. • • • , • •••• '
' "Adams was -the -first,Victini. T6Ward • :'
dotinhe began Act strangely and became .
restless. Hes talked disconnectedly and'.
soon showedthat he had gone crazy. • • •anst, .
befiire_daybreak...he.3hrevi:--hinisellawaY .
froth the boat and resisted three efforts to
'bring him , back. • • A life -preserver „about- .
his neck kept his heiditp, but he got tides. .
.the breaking waves, and rolled and
tahOut4ond.,,stheitthollStlio*:ainkie4 • ',-.-40f
eerlomOt 14,*tvliewaatat'Eltdietaixesvol. :"•'' --..,,,, -.
di,fette,•8fot etlietkozttp;initheiimit2,0 hie
conipanione •• -. The cOrpaii,TbitoyedT:iiii. by • . •
the float,' kept: along Close by the boat; -
which • drifted ont..., Gibson Complained of • • •
it, and • finally. fainted 'soon after...sunrise.
Bucher 'held 'hinds. up: and the three, One...
dead, one insensible- and . one: 060scions; • • :
flOated•Onit--Sucher-Wair.•pielred+bli7-at • 6. •
o'clock in the evening off. Ms 'water -lagged ..r. 7
and sinking only leviniffee Off Port ..... •
Colborne, whither she had Come again. The ..'. • : -
Bobbie; ;:s Mr. ' McCaig,. owner, of Silver • ,
Creek,. picked' ,thein ,rip, L' the : carpsefirst;7,- - ' •
then Hitcher and his insensible comrade: .
The Robbie net , sail .D.:ir Silver Creek and
reathed there at 5:30.ecleek_41iisMOrning • ' .
GiliOn.-rocoVered-condithisnesent .4' seek ''
. Up letbeleet .week Mtei..B.y...11Owe; of
fAtffeiid . from . nervous , prospation, was • • .
Huntington, Ind., had for than three.
years been a bedridden ,.. iavalid...., !.idie exposure,
'e'B, bhuethewrinier. e• VcoetYpr.'...i,1,1,..frohi his,lohg.., ,
Blood brought both bodies pp from Silver
•
,hack again and died at '9, o'clock. . Coroner ,
. , ..
partially paralyzed and was PV,011'0.0 sick •
'toieed herself. ',Her. physicians ' told. her . :I: Best Lit"' ',Girt 1.1 London. ,
that deaths: was 'rapidly approaching: .0n Speaking of email 'girl chosen •' to. red.',
the afternoon , of -. Saturday, Jone:•18th,.e, ceive a memorial jubilee ',eon!' from the
'few. friends tame Over ' froth, the •.preyer. Queen, the London N ea gays; whimiiicallY: • •• '
Meeting at theelinrch. and Prayed for "The double -first is Mi8.8 Fi88888-1)8.114*
bigot week, however, or gratify
every: ' -After they had gone Mrs,.Rowe -aged., 12; •.of St..; Mary's, •• Westminster,: •
lowing the decisive struggle Must Come; '• , felt better; and in the evening she got out national sohooln,,Whodstipreine distinction ..
':.
Should Ameer'S , forces be rooted and , of.. bed Of her own .. accord and . walked is that, Since. the year 1880, she Iiiii;:neVit ...,
he IiiinSelf forced to abdicate or : be, slitii1; grothatheretintumedisted: In the Morn- missed a 'single attendance. ' Others, per. ..
Sngland May ,feel' .jostified in taking poi, Jug she feltlike o new woman, ....a went .haps,lave Soinethnes, been late, , or . have ,
- session' ottlie country : Of . her , falleit ally:: to ehurob to..:. give thanks for her remarke.. new and then kept at .home .to .mind. •
This will enable her to seciirethe advantage ble recovery. • She • grew.. stronger: . and. .thebabY: . On such an occasion as this it ., •
Of pc:4400n in , aise. of . ivarwithltussia, heartier; every day, and seenisifibe•entirely. would be Unkind tOtsaggi3st:that they have;•
Otheitvidthe .Russian forces would have Well. ' .' :. .. ' ,.° ..'• - . • ' -' s .' • . • perhaps,- occasionally .. 'played 'truant.
great ,adirafitage •:Ct. the ...Oudot .for with .. Mrs. Walter Meade, the _Wife. of, an Frances has done none. of these things; but , • '' •
-
their superior . means ...fOr transporting ; Adrian (ffiCh.),' dr.asynien„ had been . &Pi- 'With unfailing regnlarityhaspreiented her., ...
troops they could occupy ' all the etrong,' , fined to. her bed. for ; several. years with self day by day.; for seven . years, " at - St, , ..
holds of 'what' they •propoyi., to make thoir.f: Chronic diseases. .4., short. time ego', an in.' Mary's, Westminster, ..tt- receive nourish;
frontier Were the British .army,' conld ' W1141'41)80404 "began to imp her remaining, ment at -the fount of learning. in a thotin-
' ..
England, however, witlithes aid of 'Ain, .thatite the utmost she cetild-live Only two, watthea. ' :Will it. be .6 life of isolation?
1
•have penetrated' the.. intervening . thogn. strength, and her case was abandoned es nous, flew, ,,Theitfterolife-of-Eraneesill
tains,- .° • .., • , . :. • • • ••".,. •'-',.,. •• ' ,hopeless. 4t: last . the physician, told her 1.3o interesting, and her Career ought to be:
trittendGermaoy, may be . able to coerce , 4".y...•:•Mre. Meade. prayed earoestly. that 'Con any child, after thets..Meznarial mug; '
.Rutisis, • cannot but be objed 'of:Austria's,'
Russia into keepingthe peace. Unearopu. nighttcthe restored to: health, and . awoke itivite her to join in a game' of hop -scotch •••
loudly ambitious of and ,,Constaiitly -in,...irefreabeda. :, New. life ...seemed :id, 'course or. skiPping.rope ? %She Will s be tett.,.' high-, •
triguing forptewer in theBalkin provinces; ftlirptigh ber..treins,imd• she .grew stronger strung,' and will probably inspect ;herself .,
every lthor,; The o.bsceso dried up and die; Of depravity of taste in the 'rare . moments ..;'i• ,.
Most jealous care, and Germany may,: de appeared, the other ailments 'departed and in which ehe ventures .to.. turn , fthiti, -Tin,
'in stich a .triple :alliance 'se 'fne4- ad*tvit.... Mrs. Meade ;is' nevi well. Besides that, her hock's catechisms to s the ' :history . Of the :.
ages in case a, conflict between • that goo 1'husband, a long scoffer at religion, is news giant -killer," .'. • . . , - ;.' : ... . , ; •, • . ,,.,. ,.
'eminent. and France s that she may be in. devout church -goer. - • . • .. , : , ' ...„„ ' • 2. - • '''' : ' •• • . , . ;
&iced to join it,' :: The 'Austrian .ond, Ger, . Medical chiles in Erie 'are nitipkanciazed • • ._. • -•!;#.1-: Feraisla• Ideeni Christlists. .. .: • -
I
Maii-anthaeiaddie were 'closeted with,: Lord at the inii•eteulthill recoVery; from paralysis . .After thntetai programme Of questions,'. •
Salisbury art Theidayofteriloon;for exactly . of Isaac Bally,. a .Lancitster 'Soldier, who they suggest:. , , .„ . • ' • ,:... • , . • •
,
'what purpdoe is not known; but ' Ms; gen. has been, patient at . the Erie • Soldiers' •."Being an Englishman, you are, .: of .
erally. sup.peded that Wine ' kith', plan of Home for:a long time past.,•, He hia. scif course, a Christian," by.which they mean ;
bringing Aussie, ,to fermi as we have iridi. fend ahhost *entire paralysis- from agun. that I•eni not ii.Muesulnian. . ..
Cited Viae the subject of disonsefoo, ' ' • !diet • wetind, and ;during his day at the. - ;" Certitinly,',' • I• reply; whereupon .they• .
•• Home ° had been ns helpless as a °bird.. 4 lug ins:into one „Ot. their wino -shops • 'and '
. , 4. 'bog ti, oe, 1.,.,,,i4,04 , ' , , few mornings egg he astonished hie attend- tender me a glass, of roki (a corruption 'Or '
' .. l'he, fidelitY of a• dog Whig Mader - • :
ants by dressinghitfiselkineidklqmd'Widk':'r'tcrraOk;" ' re,W, fierY, a kits Of the id d
4
. • , • Was ing,ftbOilt.the premises as 11 nothing ailed
liven •illtistrated kat evening at Seventeenth ini, . He nOw seems to be • -entirely well:,
street and 0 Portland avenue. Christopher Mr. Baily is not a praying man. ..
:Hart, wall known in P6,liati•Oirclea?..lieoamf' I ' :Mrs. Ruby Mantel, of Keeler, Mich., had
intoxicated, and lis small yellow ' cur, been lying ill in bed, for eighteen months
Dandy took in the necessities of the • case until the other ' day,. when she suddenly
at once: Dandy; left his master's side and rose and• dressed herself 'without ,assist
.hunteddown-apolicendan.. The dog finallY • , ante.: She now feels •perfectly well,: • wheras
found Officer - George Cornell ' and - led ;the previously she had not been able to ,drage,
way to }Tart' who was 134.k in tiKgtOter' heitelf 'around the house, •',- Mrs. Mantel'
Hitt was arrested sod taken to 'Seventeenth =
esp., that she 'prayed for recovery from the
street Police station.. DandY. 'would not time she was token , in, and ,that her
rest content until, admitted, to Hart's dell.. prnyeke :pet before bet.' reetoratioo. to
The dog Slept On.' the rough bench beside. health were'no More earnest than they had
-his mister, and ,hecarne furious. with rage :hien: ' .- • . • '
when any One approached . or attempteddto . ,.A Chicago woman . ;kite has , had some
Prilstrill:rk-ejoi*ittlftiohi,. - ' . . : ' :. made an aetonishing-entelast• Week in the
Hart's ''Peaee,--4,OuisviZte ' success ih.theChristian science faith cure
• • • ' - ' " , ' case of,14:r. POtter, 0 an Iowa man, who
one,Thing otore,xold to tosAstrairews. . iiijored his spine ten molithe ago, arid'
The burning of the Paterion_Aroil works . caine to. look on his condition an :hopeless:
id attrihuted to the- Eoglish sparrow. The ' Nine licitters treated hiin for • ink mOnths
'sparrows havesbeen noticed Carrying straw an(, -then gave him np•to die. The Chicago
and other •inganiiriable stii.ff and Wieling wonran cured. him in twe weeks Withotit
their teats among, the . goers, and it is 'administering a drop of medicine, &int he
' heioeo that the spoke lodging in these he neW no welltthat he can walk a Mile at it;
flute derided the Ilre.••=-Philadellilsict Record, brisk itqf without the iilighteot Incon.:
: . , :'' ., • ,,,..........°: • . , :. venienee. • , • , , , . . . , , ,.,,,
its-'clielihteenhheiarliteter.*ii,1 8°b"?' .ee,10.ra.te,: i.). i.' rrolm'es ' says that when be was in
.• , , . . , England he insisted upon tilettellrillg A01110
. Iiiine,leaves are doming to Pinup a fibre "large One, s to - eeinii.0:0 Ahem • With
wfuth is need as a eubstitute for yute, flax, )3ostori , Sims': . About sixteen lett
ete" in earf'eV thanufttetur°' and din PP' Around the think is the ineacitiroinent*
duction of it is •hbedning a cOnsiderable In' Boston .common .elm, and from gO S
rhistrY. ' ' . • • ' feet is the ordinary . Maximiiiiii •of ,the
v. Abbe josepli 'Auguste Siiiger, of largest trees. . lie found , an elm in the.
Seminary of St. Sulpice, tiOntrealldied , grouridn': Of Magdolert College . which
night
' ineaShred 25 feet and 6'i:itches. ,-..s,.-z,,,
known among the En lie soldiers in India
brthe suggestive 'pseudonym .of flied,
bayonets "). Smelling the, raki, 1•
make a wry face and shove it away ; . they
look surprised and •order . the waiter to
bring,cognac ; to save the waiter trouble I .
make another wry. face, indicative of dis-
approval, and suggest that he bring vish-
Re
—It is better to ki4d Witil the lark thAn —Memphis Aodatipbd: Woterthelone are ithe
, with the bent pin. • " • ' dear, butdoctors aro-dearer:: , „ last
,
" Vishner-su 1" two or three of them •
sink out in a chorus of blank amazement.
•"'Ingilis ?. Christi -an ? vishnemu 1" they
exolcum, as though such a prepoderonsi •
and unaccountablething as al Christian
partaking of a non -intoxicating beverage •
like Viiihner-su is altogether beyond their
corconehensioh.—olround the, World; On a ,
.•
• •
.
. it Wasn't'
- ' HO satOhthe curb stone in Irentefthe •1 •
City Hallo in the full glare of the noonday •
sun, with the, therirititheter seething sta • •
Mark 400 degrees. A pedestrian who .eerl
ried an umbrella in one hand and a :lariat
kprehief in the other, ththight to joke himi
'little, and called:not
IS this hot enough for you r
" Ng, aitY was th
prompt reply.
" Good Infidel why not
Becitinie I've gbt the Co,fiady ager,..and
this 19 just the tittle' for toy 'alit, Soy, is
there any hot ter:plate than this in Detroit ?"
4 -Detroit 11/•ee 'Press.. . 1 • ,
" Do you rectify mistakes:here r' asked.
a gentleman; as he stepped into a ,• drug
store: " Yee, sir, WO do, if• the patient .
still alive,''.'replied the urbane:clerk. '
•
7
•:,