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The Exeter Times, 1891-10-1, Page 2NER1.lUS DISEASE! WRECKED BY TYPHOONS. Sicard freof e rest belonging to her were never ' ARUNAWAY LOt)OMOTI ...... ..... rRBsen-Cr Tratitt �i■ arrow Escapes From Death in The (toast Waters of China. Sloven rpm the Shore and Into n TreetOP —Saved by a lien -Coop—# German Who Alone et' n Shure Company Sur- 'dyed—Stoles Told by Yasseegcrs on. e Stesie er Cwgltt in a Typhoon. We were running down the coast of China from Shanghai to 1` 'Hong Kong. It was in the month of August and the southwest mom - men was blowing strong egainst usso that our headway was slow. e had been on deck conning with a gloss the coast of the Flowery Kingdom, the junks and other erafe that studded the waters. Something in the appearance ef one of the junks at- tracted my attention and I strolled in the direction of the chart -room to ask the cap. tan about it. He came out of the chart -room as I near- ed the dear, hurried along without noticing my presence and went straight to the bridge, whenee be shouted an order through the speaking -tube that led to the engineer's room. Then he called for the first and second ofii.er�. "" What's the matter ?" 1 as;:ed of tits c superintending ► : the third officer, who o w ., a r relasbing of one ef the boats on theatarboard side of the ship. " Matter enough. You'll find out for yourself ill au hour or twe. We'll have a ty pheon en us before long unless the signs tare wrong." The course of the steauter was altered sio i as to bring the wind on the port beam and thus carry the vessel away from the centre of the storm. Steadily the wind increased :fan the clouds became more dense. Every• thieg about the shipwas made as fast as pesstbiebutin spite of ell the lasheagsseveral articleswere torn awayand carried off into the seething waters. I had expected to see waves run '• mountain high," but they did nothing of the hind ; the force of the wind was so great that the waves could not form other than in that brokeu shape which we Golden Thoughts for Every Day.. Monday. There was a wilt. time on the tract; of the New London Conn eifanis not God. butbath God's end to serve; other hint (Conn) Northern Railroad the 4. master to obey, a course to take, night, for, at 711 a :look a locomotive somewhat to east oi`l:, Someavhatto.become? backed out of the yard house and set out on GraFrom tk vain to reaml, fromnus a to #ail to new ex cuxsion on its owe hook. Up the North - From From what once seemed good, to what now ern track it sped .as if an imp presided at proves best. —Robtrt . r on' z u. Tuesday—Mutual thoughtfulness will al- ways go far toward making home happy. The duties we owe to one auother should never be forgotten. There are a thousand little things we have to do for cavil other which should never once be neglected, .And to add tosuchneglect the apology ""Ob : I forgot all about it,"is only making the matter much worse. There can be no exense forthe neglect of home duties, however smell those duties are, In the well•conducted family, the word " duty" passes into the London h t Waterford d higher word of " pleasure,:: and whae we station, who telegraphed : 'Engine just Went 01r' at EMI Speed and Crasher luta:. the throttle, anel a tnotnemt later the rail- road telegraph flashed all along the lice the message ; "Look out for a runway engine. Clear the track. It is going north," A passenger train bad just left the way station of Montville, half way between New London and Norwich, eight miles away, and was eoming south on time. Everybody in the raiload office waited helplessly for the catastrophe. Sweeping along northward at thirty miles en hour, the runaway engine had gone out of sight, The next news re- ceived from it was in a. message to New from the operator a ater or ought to do for one anotherbeeomes no more passedthrough this place going at full speed; a'" duty" but a'" joy," not something that passenger train from the north almost due," e Theruuawa et tk f b BUTT'S LONDDN AJ.E ANS AWARDED (I�LP �iEft1L AT INTEItiATiOAL EX4IF.[HOL JAMAICA, 1891. Only Goltz Medal we liar* to do but something that we de Yin,e passen""or mitts alit light in. doing, aha would not have others do a quarter of a mile north of Waterford and eetee-- - for the worts.—TheemeD. Handfarth, there was a terrific collision. The tenderof Nee3ing latiatiaii. iii lien themists have b and fragments of it were strewn along he reTn this age of the world," observed nit Wednesday, the runaway was completely demolished `. s re ap e risen v us Awarded for Ale to Canadian or United States Exid141ritoust BATT, i a As our Father knows his own. tract; £ar tinnyuty rods. The locomotive itself ;the professor, addressing the elms n ur- n t Face to face with those that love res, was hurled back more than eV) feet. No We shall know as are we known; one was killed, but. Engineer Decker of the Love, bei and the orient meadow., passenger Floats the golden fringe ef dor , 1? `� g train lulls badlyhurt, and the Heart to heart we bide the shallows, passengers were pitched froth their seats and Till the mists have steered away. r terribly frightened. The passenger loeo;iio- WO ,hall know as wo are known. Live was considerably damaged, Bever more to walk alone. 1,.'When theliuftte lave cleared .away. Old l.aptain Flout, for Iv) on I'toftt s A $muting Story from Maine. al history, " the law of the satv.val of the fittest is generally comeeded to be thorough- ly established.' ''rhea tvhy is it," inquired a perplexed Young Woman in the class, the daughter 0f a prosperous boarding-house keeper, 44 that tiie dodo became extinct and the eoekrcach lives on?" Call a 4hieago girl large hearted and Thursday.• -.1t was not the olive valleys Neck, Ne., now a well•knowe simmer re- eeenerous if you clumsy, but never refer to and orange groves which made the Greece sort is named, was a noted gunner in the lice es big soled, of the Greeks, It was not for his apple or. .lays when water fowl were plenty in that e n c ui Bard or potato held that the far ter of : vii .'ty, • "" Early one spring, l;WiO, or New England and New York left his plow ". thereabouts," said au o1s1 settler, " he in the furrow, and marched to Bunker mu, 1 brought Lyme from the West Indies a gee, to Bennington anti to Saratoga, A masa , the like of which had never been seen by country is not a certain area of land, but it ' the natives. it was a muzzle -loader, abort is a principle; andpatriotistn is loyalty to / two-gauge,and weighedsome thirty pounds. call " a eitoppv sea,': Even the choppy sea " that principle. The secret sanctification of . Soon after its arrival there carte a heavy disappeared atter a time, and the waters 1 the soil and symbolof a country is the idea • storm, and the next morning a pond a were blows,: flat, just as you may see them which they represent ; and this, idea the couple of acres in extent hack of the cap• It.xiallec en email lake or pond awept by a gust of . patriot worships through the name and the taim's barn was covered with ducks so wind. The wind was blowing fully eighty syn gee --C: 11; ('girds, thiel: that another one could not possibly mile, an hour, Friday—The world would scent to moa have been squeezed in. IT was ail op• The sly darkened. the air was hot and very dreary place if I didnot believe in the poetuuity to try talo new gait, sad loading; wadinea immanence o tin spite ea the rate at with% the f tl o c lt rimv luta an tie d d 1 it with a f" regulation char "e of ono fouttll et ln- t* r tem* Teethe reaic4lf tar tee aieie dlitictet tette Snag .11'b$ r' a,-t:a+� 1 r.•, mad. -.i wt-4.F,r nt. 1. Asan C,421.#n,i.4‘,.leen. fere .11',..• �• .tar c ibrr*rredrrnseensl1, V. ,ta• i.. n.. ram P,er$;•ee,oeA ens Re, ,- ,d satin v 1iwa ": •.1 ata flu .,Fd ear,.+Wn.ara..:iisle. Even %v. g.Ain, ra ane t410, ranine frim e.A OA *IIt:utadp+ A. 411: srrebrxrlea law n.. a,Nla at[+.:F.4 an wl1.5! in e'f,Ave, top. r anttr+tite t.: :;;.:af.rl,tti;- .i.. tei..,s? ..d,f.•,+atsw•'ng ebr,s. `hili a,:lixrndrtfut. rarticutsrsfrt.. 444.-• Vo..1$0*.lettereroone,mos.is GUMPTION. wind was blowing, and soon the rain fell . terference of the divine will. The belief in a pound of powder alid one half pawl of . sue e.k„ rf uses cf tfae enc eeee ata es Acne in torrent?. Everybody on leek was lashed ,a speeial divine providence brings with it shot, he sallied forth. At the corner of the neemea slice Ur. g1.140. ansae'. as .trot is ttFy f,tu, to something, or clung with all his strength great peace and confidence, and ie exactly barn he cocked the piece and stepped out in Insets stg, tta+t x1";t seat T+sa norrhrt_S fit to prevent being blown overboard, and it suited totheiguoraneoandhelpleseeondition with it hell in readiness, When within wtia,v;,tt atilt: 1F,)ths v ~ rn the distare f_It ecaurred to rue that the paseeng,ers wontd of the human race �. chariot with no about forty yards all the ducks jumped s erer+tui�aitcaanewelrnxstt ssnat o.aadretit LeLe eager below than above. cinst as tato one bird. The contain aimed at tlt+� mid T A. St,ocum, M. C., ISO ARgt.moe a ge carne around the ,.p:iia ave the driver, an "eine with oho engineer, a voyage ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. b it g anti ne captain or amaers ra""int battle dla of the mass alt fired, Here the old order for us to descend and t e cabin doors and no cotrlmander••••-what, ,would a 1 these settler ,topped as if expecting soave eWour- were soon closed upon us and securely lash• events be in eomperision with undirected agement, and ttnafly was asked, "Taw' est Then we watched for a time throu"*h Mohan life upon this whirling globe, in an many did he get?" "" \\'al," he replied, ""Ire the bull's•ey a windows the effect of thio : endless passage through time ? The worlddidn t get any, he undershot, but Ile picked wind upon the waters but the spray is iullof Iguorauce, disease, revolution, wars, up three bushels of ducks legs." and rain nitre so ease that very pestilenceandiunneasurabledisasters. They little eould be seen. After a while we gath- ered about the saloon tabie ; the vessel was crruelgto those who aro too ignorant to rolling and pitching so fearfully that we hall obe • thern. All this does not establish the to cling to the table and chairs in order to doctrine of a divine special providence, but retain our places, We could hear the roar- it makes it devoutly to be wished that aitch ing cif the wind, the swishing of the waters,'*government may be proved to exist.-- the patter of the rain on the deck and every Fl, evil 11 -Circ. Xafeeher. few ward as though in a B obdingnagian blanket the steamer was oned u- Saturday-- in the hands of a thousand grants. How happy is ate born and taught Cards were proposed by one of rite arty 'Chat servetit not another's will l— Wlene armor le his honest thought, but no one else eared to play and evidently And simple truth his utmost skill. that individual was not at all sorry that his Mose pa' sions not his masters are, proposal was rejected. Then we fell to tell. Whose soul is still prepared for death; beg stories of adventure. Naturally, the I unto the weirdly care stades turned in the direction of storms !II public fame or private breath. such as we were now eneannterin Cho envies none that chance doth raise, g• .. Orviee : whenever understood " I was once on r. junk near :Rin o °' > now deepest wounds are given by praise, said one, " when a typhoon came up sudden- Nor rules of .,tate, but rules of good. ly, and we were blown on shore along with —Sir E Il Dolan. dozens of other junks and smaller craft. Hundreds of people were drowned, houses were overturned, fields were devastated, trees were torn up by the roots,aud immense damage was caused for many miles around," " How did you escape with your life, when your junk went ashore?" " I don't know exactly how it happened," was the reply. " Half the crew where drowned : yes, mare than half of them. When she struck 1 jumped overboard and let the wind and waves carry me where they would. By the greatest good fortune I was carried into the limbs or a tree that the wind was bending low, but had not yet up- rooted, and it was the tree that saved me from being dashed to my death." In our party was a German who had taken little part in the conversation thus far in the voyage. Consequently the rest of us were se prised when he was the next to speak. " I've been overboard in a typhoon," said he, "and with no land in sight. It was ten years ago, between Bangkok and Hong Kong. I was on a German schooner that had been trading in the Gulf of Siam and was on her way to Hong liong. We were caught in a typhoon about a Hundred miles off Hong Kong, and were in the worst of it. All of our yard sails were carried away, our masts went by the board and the wind fin- ally turned us on our beam ends. Every- body who wasn't lashed fast was carried in- to the sea and swept away in an instant. I was one of those who went overboard, and with me went a ben -coop, which I managed to seize as it drifted past me. The wind, tarried it so rapidly that it fairly dragged me as a boat is towed at the stern of a steam. boat. " In a minute or so after going over the rail I could see nothing of the schooner ; neither could. I see any of my companions who were with me in the water. The rope the b as by which hen -coop h e p d been a lashed was still fastened to it, and I managed to pass it armme ander my o that itgave s some sup. Bort. • And all the time the wind was blow- ing fearfully. I was blinded by the spray and the torrents of rain, and really I did not expect to live an hour where I was. Half the time my head was under water and it was very difficult to get breath. "But I clung with desperation, as a drowning man always clings to any sort of support. The water was warm, so that 1 was in no danger of being chilled and be. numbed, at least not for a while. By and by the wind fell a little, then a little more, and then I tightened the rope under my arms and lifted myself further out of the. water. A terrible thirst came upon me, but I managed to assuage it a little by catching in my mouth some of the raindrops as they fell. Then my strength began to fail ; I felt like fainting, and wellknew that if I became insensible I should certainly drown. " As I was making a great effort to rouse myself I caught sigh: of a steamer coming through the mist alinost directly towards me. The lookout forward saw She hen- coop, then he made out that a man was fast to it and then the steamer slacked her speed so as to bring me close alongside. It was still too rough for lowering a boat a Malay sailor eame down the rope like a cat, passed the bight of it around me and then.. after casting off the hen -coop, he scrambled back again and I was hauled on board. I. fainted. I was on the steamer Danube,and her capthin took good care of me and landed me ego in Hong Kong. The sehoonor and About Selling Wheat, Advices from it. Paul, Minn., state tha the chiefs of the Farmers' Alliance made another sensational move on Monday by is- suing a million circular letters to the wheat - growers of Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota calling a halt in the mad rush of grain to the market which bas been going on for the past fortnight. Wheat has been sold and delivered to the railroads so fast that they could not haul it all, and the ele- vators at Duluth and Minneapolis are re- ceiving from 600 to 2,000 cars a day. This unprecedented movement of grain has had a depressing effect on the market. At a con- sultation in the office of Editor Mullen, of the newspaper, The State, it was the gener- al opinion that unless the farmers discon- tinued their insane rush to realize, wheat would soon be selling at 80 cents. Mon- day's letter to the farmers is intended as an eye-opener to the situation, and the Alliance men expect it to result in farmers storing the grain in anticipation of better prices in the next two or three weeks. The letter claims that it will be worth a million dollars to the farmers to hold their grain a month. The newspapers are charged with being in league with the speculators and the millers to depress prices. It is asserted that Europe is short 67S,000,000 bushels, which is more than four times as much as the American surpins. Theletter concludes : " Wheat will soon be over ,1.50, no matter how much farmers and speculators work together to keep prices down, and we ad- vise those who can comprehend the situation to hold their wheat for "$1.50, and add for every month they keep it, say five cents to the price. Hold your wheat. You cannot get left." The Irish Land Act. Takiiu the Ache Out of all Aching Void rr 1 es," said tite young man as he threw himself at the feet of the pretty school teacher, " I love you and would go to the world's end for you." " You could not go to the world's end for me, George. The wart;., or the earth, as it is called, is round, like a ball, slightly flattened at the poles. One of the first lessons in the elementary geography is de- voted to the shape of the Globe. You must hare studied it when you were a bay." "I know ; but what I meant was that I would do anything to please you. Ali 1 Angelina, if you bet knew theaehunevoid-= 1 " There is no such thing as a void,; George. Nature abhors a vacuum • but that there could be such t thing, how could the void emu speak of be a void if there was au ache in it? ' "I meant to say that my life will be 10110 ly without you ; that you are my daily thought and nightly dream, I would go anywhere to be with you. If you were in darkest Africa or at the North Pole I would fly to you. "Fly 1 It ,viii be another eeutury before man can fly. Even when the laws of gravi- tation are successfully overcome there still remains, says a late scientific authority, the difficulty of maintaining a balance—" " Well, at all events," exclaimed the youth, "I've a pretty fair balance in the bank, and I want you to be my wife. There." "Well, George, since you put it in that light. I—" It is undoubtedly true that in European countries governments attempt measures of paternalism that -would not be thought of in Canada. The Irish land act, which places $165,000,000 at the disposal of Irish tenants for the purchase of land, is a case in point. The land is appraised at a moder- ate valuation, and then money is furnished the tenant to pay for it. The loan is to be repaid by the payment for forty-nine years of about eighty per cent, of the present rent. Farming has been so poor that for a number of years this rent" has not been paid, and the prospect of getting a moderate valuation for their land disposes the government to sell, The government takes bonds secured on the land at 2•h per cent. interest. It is calculated that the grant of money will be exhausted in about three years. It will not provide for the purchase of all the land, so there is natural strife on the part of those who wish either to boy or sell to cotiol de a bargain while money from the goverment is available. This measure puts the Irish people in a more hopeful condition than they have been for years. Doubtless the - excessive emigration which has steadily reduced the population of Ireland will be checked, and it will enter on a new era of prosperity. As the proportion of Irish land holders increase the objections to home rule for Ireland will fade away, and political troubles will disappear, as so often happens -with a return of better times. Six hundred babies have been named Chauneeyeihepew. Taking no Risks. Old Seedy--" Oh, sir, will you not help a very needy person? I have no work and thirteen children," Old Thrifty—" If I helped all such people as you Page into bankruptcy." " Seedy—"But remember, sir, that he who gireth to the poor lendeth to the Lord." Thrifty—" Very well; let me see the colateral." A good story is told of the Iove which Prime Minister Delyannis of Greece has for his dogs. He was crossing the Pirseus on an English steamer some years ago when his pet dogfell overboard. He begged the cap- tain to stop the steamer and save the animal, but the Englishman replied thathis orders were strict, and that he could not delay the ship even if a man instead of a dog were drowning. Delyannis at once jumped over- board and swam towards his pet, when the ship was stopped and both were saved. Says the Detroit Tree Press : " The old isaltogether too slow o d and poky. o The British postal officials made nospecialef- fort in any direction to back up the efforts of s the Empress of Japan, the Canadian Pacific Railroad, the New York Central Railroad, the New York postoffice and the City of New York, which vessel equalled the east- ward record across the Atlantic in the at- tempt to deliver the Japanese mails in London in unprecedentedly good time. The delivery was so muddled that the bril- liancy of the feat of carrying the mails from Yokohama to Queenstown in twenty days was destroyed. The " tight little island" was the last place ou the grand circuit where somnolence ought to have prevented dispatch. The officials in the old country could get a few valuable pointers by writ- ing over to Canada and ascertaining how the Canadian Pacific shot the mails across the Dominion." A menagerie belonging to Mr. Bostock, which is touring in the West and South of England, was on Saturday the scene of an exciting fight between a tiger and a lioness, which resulted in the death of the latter animal The exhibition was at Cerue, in Dorsetshire, and by some means a tiger oh. tamed access to a lioness. with. the t est"it that a desperate fight ensued. Theon m"iis •fought with great aerceness, and loth 55.15- tained fearful injuries betcre tl:sv (weld lie separated. It was thee found that the jaw of the lioness was broken, reed her other injuries were so severe that the pr•,prietor ordered her to be shot. The tiger ;"as also badly mauled; Mr. 'Rostock has been very unfortunate in this district, having only just lost two lions by suffocation at Yeovil. LOO ., NADA. t 0 ex.et e4 i ,7" ! E t%oasguaranteed. es r ineJi aense Remanent L ltsrsdvattigeao nex. E with 3saraett aceclaltIe a OU'Trrr Fuze.. WC Qua abcertisee Write Indole t 1B8 lli • ee en. o i nt • , . tv - o is 1; e LATEST FROM EUROPE THE WAIF SURES The Chinese Question.. There was no repetition of the scares which marked the opening of lasts eek. It is • generally admitted that they were not even well invented, Iliongh the touch in the story of the British occupation of $igri desrribin g the surrounding of the island by torpedoes is aslwittel to be graphic. The serious part of site business comes in when we consider 1 the marked effect thew flighty stories had ou the markets and on public opinion gener- ally ? It shows an what thio we the German Emperor and Lord Salisbury state when they sin ; their duet—peace, peace. The incident haareviccd tlieol"land £avor:te idea about the neteindispensability to thegla; cl of the Suez. (;anal. This in even o. more de cidedform dates back to the time of Lord •-+ ..f+tt00.Mttytae6k. ufn:.i'.bg.lrb•tt, Palmer:ton, who couthatted the projected I:tY'tla-a„hH.$,1.�..9"cCri. f,rat+tllrat.r. • canal nn the .,rn:,n.l that moth n. near ns+, t.. ,wan IRO utt u:al.e MI ee b,tt+l UP CPI CM b r. ugni, I& IAA' ta.atn tr"a;ito 510$.44r, 0*/lt"'ofd. sad maze ;:*..ap, cu, nem exam 1ly rp.s. total pad tt armee, yet. w ,ti mime, in 2,,,..e, pit. , werk r Illi i,�nn rrat 1 c, ii fit tit as long as she Cape route was Lht' only 11ioI:- ,,,,I hurl rr. ri'r ,,;rt ata• h min ins way. It is now pointed out that the there a.,yer ng. 1,AMIAF•t•laDnt fean•+lc, s•Attl"l a"4A.SKt+ 31 :1 in Metros at Core" possibility appearance of the a ear'ance in the Medi-, atlazeA A le., tuxitiau, JIAINE, terranean of a Russian tleet;ehanges the' whole aspect of things, by no means to the disadvantage of this country. With a 1 British fleet masters in the Red Sea, Eng. i land could, itt case of war, effectually dant up the Suez Canal, and if Russia. wanted to Sow Lost, liow Restored get to India by sea, she meet needs double t Just published a um, eumu of Dr. curter* the Cape. This is the view of the situation t India would lessen tife naval superiority ca• joyed by the swift•sailing fleet of England Irrl1'a Cttlebraietl iEsitar on he radical cure of Srzauatowtnaa or incapacity induced by excess or earlyindtecrettou. The celebrated author. in this &dmitable cssky, cleanydemonstnitesfrom a thirty years' sacceesful practice, that the alarmia consequences of self. abuse maybe radietHy cared; poieting out a mode of cure at oneo aim*, certain and effectual, al, by means of ahicb every iuffeter, no matter what bbs condition nisy be, may cure himself cheaply,pri rattily and radically. 421exhieiectureahould be in the bands of every youtb and every manin thalami. Sent under seal, in A plain envelope, to any ad dress, post-paid,on receipt of four cents, or tw postage tamps, 8ampiesof iteiichaefree. Addres THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 nn Street New f ork Poet Office Box 450 8 SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. A11 druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos- itive guarantee, atest that no other cure can suc- cessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing_ a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price to cts., go cts. and $i.00. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price es cts. fe g n 0 „torsDo V Y llBY USING B I I Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills THEY are the Remedy that the bounteous !rand of nature has provided for a1/ digs ; • arising from IMPURE BLOOD. ♦cos♦ • ors s Pills are a Sara Curt for *.:11. 5. o8SisrEtlei ttle,;.t..Ae : , , SIA. tee., *Ice. FOR SALE sr ALL DEALERS W. Na COMSTCCK, •ROCATILLE, 057'. MORR/STOWN, N.Y., Suddenly presented. It is not likelyta be lost sight of long after the late scare is for. a gotten. The few newspaper sten in London trim have any means et knowing things which pass behianl the scenes at the Foreign Office fi say that the "permanent officers" of that department, who exercise great influence over the actual Minister, aro of the opinion that the anti.foreign agitation in China has been considerably exaggerated by interested senders of cablegrams to the London press, and that the Chinese Government is doing its best hi the verydifficultcircumstances. Lord Salisbury, is known, is not disposed to take any step which .night have to he supported by nets leading to war, from which Russia would be the chief gainer. A big Russo -Chinese war is only a question of time, null France is watching for a chance to make some important frontier rectifica- tions at the expense of China without pay- ing too great a price for them in blood and money. This is clearly marked out as Europe's bad•tempered Autumn. There is no one who deliberately wants war now any more than ht year ago, and in truth it is only too easy to find reasons why all should now specially desire to conserve the peace, but moods are independent of reasons, and most of all moods that of sulky truculency. With this popular irascibility in the air, there is more than ordinary necessity for prudence and broad wisdom among the statesmen and rulers who are responsible for the conduct of international affairs. Indeed their burden has never been so heavy before. Fully Equal to the Task, The young man felt that he was in love and, like a wise young man, had decided to consult his father in the matter. " She's beautiful, of course," said the old gentleman after hearing the confession. " Oh, father, she's— "Never mind that," interrupted the old gentleman. " I know it all. Good family ?" "One of the best in the city," exclaimed the young man. c" Why, her father, when he was alive, was—" " Father dead ?" interrupted the old gentle- man again. " Yes. She's an orphan." " Um—well, that's no fault of hers. Have you stped to think how you will take care of her ?" " Oh, but she's rich, father 1" exclaimed the young man joyfully. " She's worth $300,000 in her own right." The old gentleman shook his head doubt- fully, •& Never marry a girl for money, my boy," he said. ' Never marry a girl for money. .You'll regret it if you do." "" But, father—" ° " Never marry a girl for stoney," repeated the old gen tleman meditatively. " It makes more trouble in this world than any other one thing. But," he added, suddenly straighteningup, "if you can love a girl who has money for heaven's sake do it.' " 1 can, father I I oan 1" exclaimed the young man. My blessing, my boy. I sin proud of you.,, Not Her Fault. Mary," said her mother, "You'll have ., intake that Mr. Golosh leave earlier." • • f t isn't my fault, mamma." Not your fault? Dicln'tI hear you last t i;h t at the front door say, ' Stop, Edward, ' h ,if a dozen times i If he wanted to go why cl•d•you want to stop him?"— Senator Lacoste haabeen appointed tinier Justice of Quebec. . 'tet cream Tartar KING POWDER PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. Ccrtairs ria AMufn, Amiecnie. Lime, Plit pbetee, crany Ireurieet. E. W. GILLETT. Toronto, ant. CARS SSS nil LE IVER Pi LLS. Fick eleadaeheand relieve all the troubles Mee dent to a bilious state o1 the *settle such asi Dizziness, `Ausea. Arowsins ts. Decrees after e ating. Pain in the Side, &e. While their most remarkable success has been shown hs curing SICK Headache. yet Cxnren's Llsrr.c Levert Preto v v i C n vin are ei;uall, valuable n o s.l eu and preventing this annoying comp Me wbile they also correct all disorders oldie Monett, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. • ca If they only cared EAD A ;he they would be almost pricelces to those mite suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their goodness does brut end erre, and those who once try them will find -Isere little pills valuable in to ninny ways that they will not be willing to do without them. Iiut after all sick bead Irtit! ' 1 is the bane of so many lives that here is where we make our great 'boast. Our pills euro It while others do note eanrsa's Ltrrt n Liven Etas arevery small and very easy to take. One or two pills snake a dose. They are strictly vegetable and d� not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please ail who use them. In vials at lei cents; Bye for 51. Sold everywhere, or sentby mad. CABTEN (MEDICINE CO., Beau York, IrAall !�1 mall D c1 hial� X 081: FLAX -SEED EMULSION COMPOUND BRONCHITIS 186 Lexington .Ave. New York City, Sept. Ave., New I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several cases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages o Phthisis, and have been welt pleased with the results JAMES K. CROOK, M.Dd C NSUMPTION Brooklyn, N.Y., Feb. 14th 1 I have used you_ Emulsion in a case of 14th, (consumption) with beneficial results, wit. could not use Cod Liver Oil in anyform. J. H: ROGE PROSTRI Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 20tb, I can strongly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung Bronchial and Nervous Affections, and a good gee oral tonic in physical debility. JOHN F. TALMAGE, M.'D. GENERAL DEB1LIT Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 10th, 1889, I regard Plait Seed Emulsion as greatly superiort the Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use. D, A, GORTON, M. A SIMS 187 Wear84th Se. New York, Aug.. 6, j88$ I have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compote n a severe e of`iia a and the result 1 se e e Grao Mal -nuts do moie than hoped for—it warenarvelons, and ce tinuous. I recommend it cheer lay to the professi and humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D RHEU MAT'S Sok by Oruggists, Prise $ I.0 FLAX -SEED EMULSION tw 3l Liberty St., New York*