Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 29 Jan 1886, p. 2

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/ wamm ff THE CANADIAH STATES~tAN IS PUBT.ISHED -BY- EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, WARREN LELAND, whom e'i'eryhody knows as the snccessfut manager of the TH:EJ FARM, Animal Ailments. WinteT is a.n exaotIDg season upon live atoo r , not ne oeesa.rily by any mea.ns, but be· cauao of the negleot of their owners. C ,ld wea.kenn the vitallt.y of an e.nlma.l very muoh, a.nd lays a. foundation for disease. WhE>n spring comes the effects of poor feeding are aeen in the gaunt frames, too weak t o rise up; the hide·bonnd skin; the cough, a.nd the deadly black leg, We might mcu· tion the prevalent "horn ail" a.nd "tail Ill," both serious dil.!ordern, but very wrongly named, a11 they a.re mi;<t· ely the effe~ts of gener a.I debility, resulting from poor feeding a.nd want of ca.re, Horn ail, so-ca.Hod, oonsists of a feverish condition of the systen1 &nd a low vital11;y, a.ocomp!l.nied by irregular circulation, w!Jioh produces altemate heat and ohill of lihe ex· tremities. The digestive organs a.re out of order, a.nd the brain, the centre of the ncr· voue 8ystem. suffers greatly. The head ia In n condition of oongeation a.tone time, and in a stato <Jf aDromfa at another. The homo a.re part of tile skull, and the hollow coroB a.re lined with a sellsatlve vascular mem brane, conuocted with the frontal sinuses. When the brain ls congested, the whole head is hot, the eyilla waep, the nose is dry, and of course the horns appear hot to the touch, being so closely connected with t i. e skull But the dioeaEe ls not In the horns, or in tho head, it la in the stomach, aa any person can nalize whose stc m1oh is out of order, and who haa !\ "sick headache" from a bilious condition of the system. The remedy fo, then, not to pour turpentine into the ears, or upon the head, and set It on fire, or bore through the horns into the very send· tive cores, but to relieve the atomaoh a.nd liver, by a. libera.l dose of physio, a. quart of raw linseed oil, or twenty-four ounces of Epsom salts, ·and follow it with some comfortiDg messes of warm bran ma.sh. "Tail ill" iii another reflex result of o. poor condition of the animal, in which thfo e:xtremit7 suffers. '.I'he above remarks ap· ply to th!s oa.se too, a.nd an excellent remedy is prevention by good ca.re and generouB feeding. · .Black L9g-By and by, when winter la nearly over a.nd the young os.ttle begin to feed on the dead grass of the first b11.ro spota, or the first green herhage in wet, warm ple.ces, some will be found Umping e.bout, lame in the shoulder or the hip today, a.nd to ·morrow dead in the field or yard. If one passes the hand over the akin of the sick a.nlm1>l, the fame q Ull.rter will be found puffed up and a craolding, rustling sound will be heard. After death these spots will be black 11.nd bloody, WI if the flesh had been liruiJ!ed to a jelly. The liver is soft and rotten, and the spleen is bla ..k and like clotted Mood. This is anthrax fever , the )loody murrain, or blu.ck quarter, whfoh is the most dee.dly diseaue of c?.ttle. Them is no time for any remedy; preven· tion l.e the only ea.feguiu·d, aud just now is the time for this. Feod t ho young animals well. Do not turn them into the fielda to pick up rubbish. Glvo them ir. regular do~e of a. t11,Meapoon of a mixture of one pint of m ola~ues, four ou1..ocea of sulphur, and two ounces of crea.m of tartar every morning, as soon as the weather begins to get warm, a.nd give them as much salt u.a t hey will ti.ke voluut&rily from t hfo time fo1·ward, M. A.JAMES, AT THE OFEICB Largest Hotel Enterprises of Arnericn, says that while a paeeenger from ' New York on board a ship going around Capo !lorn, in the etirly days or emigration to CalJornia, ho leamed that one of tho officers o! the vessel had· cured himself, during the voyage, of an obstinate disease by tb.e use of PutomceBlock,KlngSt.,nowmanvllle,ont TER:I\d'.S: lli0'1)eraunum,or $1.00lfpaldln advance Pa;vment strictly ln advance required from 1Jsor1bers outside or the county. Orders to continue the pa.per mu~t be accompanied by he amount due, or the paper will not be stopped. 11ubeoribers are responsibleuntllfullpaymentis made. R.U. 'J!lS OF A.DVEUTISl NGs 1 ~~ ~ Whole Column one1ear ...... · ...... $60 00 ~ '5 ~ " " Hal year .... _. ···h · 36 00 · ~~ " " Onequa.rter ···.····. 2000 1 ~..,, Ba.It Column one year .... ..... ...... 36 001 -" Hal! year .............. 20 00 - . Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Sinae tlton l\Ir. LELA.ND has recommended AYER'S SARSAI>Ail[LLA. in many similar cases, and he has never yet heard of its fail· ure to effect a radical cure. Some years ago one of l\lr. J,ELANJ>'S fa11n laborers bruised hiS leg. Owing to the bad Btate of his blood, an ugly scrofulous swelling or lnmp appeared on the injnrcd limb. Horrible itching of tbe skin, with burning and darting palus through the lump, made life almost Intolerable, The leg became enoranol'tsly enlarged, and running ulcers formed, dlscltarglng great quantities of extremely otfensive matter, No treatmeut was of any avail until the man, by Mr. LELA.ND'S direct ion, was supplied wJ.th Av.1m's SAUSAPA· lULLA, which allayed the pain and irritation, healed the sores, i·emoved tllo swelling, and complotely restored the limb to use. Mr, LilLA?!D h!ls personally used tum of Sunday, Nothing could induce the rlog to go out with him, though on otner days when he took his stick and hat he showed great a.nxiety to go with him, Prof, l!'Jower attached grea.t importance to kindne~s in the'teaching of animals. Mies Ka.th· erine Wray ga.ve an intere2ting account of how, in thr.ie weeks, by means of a. bone attached to the door bel!, she had taught the dog to ring the bell. Mr. C. C. Wa.lleer mentioned tha.t he knew a. family which had tau~ht its dog to howl a.t the late oppasl· tion u.nd show great interest at the· mention of the la.te government. Mrs. Stokes thought that some minds Qeem~d to have a greater powu of communication with a.nima.b than othera, and she ment.loned ll.n English · pro· Cessor who seemed to havo the power of oa.11· iog birds from the sky. 1 THE RESTLESS INDIANS. A. BnU.lcfol'<l M·rcb1111t's C111into1l of the Sitnaliun in the Nortll· West Territol'lts. ·-----·------- " " One quarter .... · ······ 12 501Quarter Colmr.n one year . .... ...... 20 OO j" " Halt year ......... .. 12 50 .. One quarter ........ 8 00 1 !Nx lines and under. first insertion .· eo 501 Each subsequent inaer.tion ..,.... 0 25: l'rom six to ten lines, first msertLOn, 0 Each subsequent insertion...... 0 35.-10 l)ver ten lines,first insertion ,per line 0 10 _ Each subsequent insertion, " 0 03 _ The number of lines to be recltoned by1-· he space ocoui;>led,,measured by a see.le ot solid Nonvare1l. 75/ _ DR, 'l'A.illBLYN, P HYSICIAN, SUUGEON and AOCOUCBEUR. Offlce:-Silver Street, Bowmanville. 7 J>r, A.. BEI'.1.'JI, !"I RADUATE OF THE 'l'ORONTO UNIVER U Sl'l'Y, Physician, Surgeon, &o. Office King Ayers Sarsaparilla for Rheumatism, with entire succeSI!; and, after careful observation, declares that, Ju Lis belief, there is 110 medicine in the wo1·ld equal to it for the cure of Liver Disorde1"11,· Gout, tho effects ot high living, Sa.It :Rheum, So:res, Eruptions, and all tho various forrns of blood diseases. We have Mr. LELAND'S permission to invite all \vho may desire further evidence ln rogard to the extraordinary cumtive powers of AYER'S SARSAPARILLA to see him personally either at his mammoth Ocean Hotel, Long B>·ancb, or at the popular Leland Hotel, Broadway, 27th and 28th Street!, New York. JI-Ir. LELAND'S extensive knowledge of the good dono by this unequalled eradicator of blood poisons enables him to give inquirers lDUch valuable information. PREPARED BY treet, MORRIS' BLOCK. Bowmanvllle, "· W. ltlciJ.a.ughlln, 111. B., l!r IOlilNTI.A.TE OF '!'HE ROYAL COLLEGE . ':JLI of Physicians and member or the Royal · tlollege of Surgeons, Edinburgh. 0.tlloe: ll.'IORRIS' BLOCK King-st,,Bowman· '"\Tj! · ..,le;;,.;·:..__ _ _ - - -- - - - -- - - DR. J.C. Ul'.ftllllELL, MEM. B ER OF COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS '·'· and Surgeons, Onte.l'io, Coroner, etc. ·0.tllce and Residence. Enniskillen. 7!l. I ',.·B ARR IS TE R, SOLICITOR, NOT.A.RY PUBLIC, &c. Offlce-Bounsall's Bloc,k '<King Street, Bowman ville. Money to lend, John Keith Galbr aith, D BLOCK, up stairs, King Street, Bowman l" tlle. Solicitor for the Ontario Bauk, PrtvMe 1110neTS loaned at the lowest rates, .ROBERT AR!UOl!':R, D. n111tKE snu·soN, 1fll ARRISTEl't, SOLICITOR, &o., MOP'R.IS Dr. J.C. Ayer& Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Drugglots; $1, eix bottles tor 115. U EGIS'fRAR, WEST DURHAM ISSUER .IL\. or Marriage Licenaes, Barrister and A.ttorttr e.t Law and Solicitor in Chancery.Money caned on Real Estate. Otnoe on King s treet, Bowmanville. Pianos Tuned and Repaired. 1 ARTIES WISHING 'l' HEIR PIANOS '.l'uned or repaired can have thorn attended 0 by lea.ving word at the DOMINION ORGAN ..t. T. 1·nn..LWS C"..o'B Oll'WIOE, Bowman ville · .A. first-alas man Ir ICENSED AUC'l'IONEER tor the County >iow being In their m.plo :. llU of Durham, Sales promptly attended, Address- Hampton P, 0, 59, - -- -- - - -- - - - - - -- P 11 OHN H UGHES.-Liuensed Auct!oneer, e.J Valuato1· and and Arbitrator. Fire and Life rnsurance, Notes Accoun ts Collected. Money to Lend on rea2onabl e terms, Address Cartwright, Ont. ~72 GOOD WIFE GUARANTEED TO every man who buys hie Liccnee from fiHlNRY SYLVESTER-; EuniBklllen' Cheap Life Insurance. A W. ~£Didence. w. DIC.KEY. SURGEON, graduate of the VETERINARY Ontario Veterinary College. Office and Nll<wTONVILLE, Ont. Special attention paid to Surgery. 32·1Y* hm 12 a. m. to 4 p. m., at Coultcr·s Hotel. Will visit Orono every 1'uesday. Office hours ONEY ! MONEY !- The subscriber receives money on deposit for theOntario Loan and Savings Company, and pays interest at the rate or 4 and 5 per cent. No notice of withdraw11.l required. Also loans money on w.ortii;ages e.t lowest rates. No commission charged. W. F . .ALLEN, Bowmanvillo. 8-ly. M I neure in · th e C on f ed erat" A BSO· !On L'f le ciation. It is cheaper than the Canadian Mutual Aid, A. 0. U. W. or any pa.gs a~ound your hat _institution, as the followmg examples will prove: Thoe. McClung ha b_e_en i.nsured since 1872 for$2, 000and the last five years it onl coat him $2.55 per annum on each $1, 000 to inaure. John McClung insured at the same time for the same amount and it only cost him $1.74 per annum on each $1,000 to insure, lie being a little younger. W e certify the above to be correct. Thoe. McClung, John McClung. T H OS. BINGHAM, Agent . Timely Sue;gest1ona. §o Bo! Gentle1nen o.f'.Fas'B11. ion, not so Cast. A.ad all Iha.veto say_ ave written those few lines Iam not gone away. · So all my kind o Id 1 riend a me.y come, And a.11 they oung ones, too, And get their garments nicely ma.de In fashions tho.tare new: li7here old and young, d eartriends, may meet " A welcome vreetinll. bv R. PEATE atbat you can ilnd me s till at home, DENTISTRY WITH T l.Ui1Tllo WITHOU T TEETH. 1. M. BRIMACOMBE, PJU.CTICA.L DENTIST, 'lVER TWEN'JIY YEARS E XPEIUENOE, ~N'ltr4lnsOxtdcG111 A.dmtntstercd tor Palnles 9FFICE Operations. l!ICJCJLlTJ.\'G'S BLOCK. c. A Down merino croes, all things considered, is t he ideal la.mb for winter feeding. The mel'ino mother gives short legs, 11!.rge body, fine wool a.ud a la.Tge q uantity, and a. bardy constitution. The D.:>wn sire gives quick growth, a. large proportion of the lean meat, length of wool, and a. black face and legs. Of the Downs as sires, we prefer the Shropshirea and HampahlreJJ as of very -------~ nea.rhr equ~ l value ; next the Southdowns, Oxfords, etc, The l'eascn of out preferenca le in the fact that the 'Shropshire he.s the H a11 received her new stock of smallest hea.d, which be imparts, and he also gives the blackest face 1md legs to the half-bred hmb, thus reducing the loss of and invites the Ladies of Bow- ewea in la.robing and giving the greatest to the offspring. . manville and vicinity to call value Warning is given by the People a.nd Pa· triot Bgainst overfeeding horses which is and see her Pattern deolarod to be oven more common than in the ease of hogs : Witll food before It ll.!l t ho time it will keep picking it over aud and assortment ot grow poor, with its b~x always partly filled. It la an ex cellent plan to find how much horses really r equire, nnd then feed t hem just so much &nd no more. Do not be a.la.rmed if ev11rythlng is ea.ten olean in S'l:ORE :-S-0eond Door Wesi o f' Willlam1 the morning. That is 1ihe way it should Butciller StalJ be, yet a.lwa.ys t aking ciue to give enough, A phyelcian tells the Philadt:lpbla ·R eporter how he lightens tho wa.y of dark nights by a. common tubula.r lantern with reflector and a spring for a.ttachment : In HAS REMOV.l!:D RER pla.ce of putting it on the dash, I slip the spring over the middle of the breast.collar, directly in front ef the horse. Every part of the road In front of me la plainly seen, I so I can drive w ith as much confidence &s to buildings formerly occupied by in broa.d dioylight, The conditions necessary for succe88 are : A level· hea.ded CODD & CO., horse, with fair breadth of chest, and a. shoulder-strap a.ttached to the check-hook, to prevent the lantern sagging down between the horse's legs when for any reWlon the traces slack. It would be well to ha.ve a. ~hort strap sewed to the inside of the She bas now in stock everything breast collar to slip the spring through, so as to prevent any Ia·taal motion. usually found in a well equipped Pea. mea.l is a. favorite dairy food in Can· ah. It is ola.imed tha.t the la.rgeat qamtity HA.RNESS SHOP. of butter ca.n be ma.de by using it with other foods. It ia worse th~,u useless to· try to m.il>ke win··er butter-ma,king pay unleea the oows MRS. HUMPHREY ll.re well sheltered. B atidea good food, they should ha.ve wai:m water to drink for good results. GOODS., M· J. Clinskill, merchant, · of Batt!eforcl, N. W. T., has been impressing upon the authorities the neces~ity uf proper precau· tions being ta.ken to prevent lm Indfon up· rising. Mr. Clinakill stated to a. reporter tha.t ihe India.us are t-xlliblting more cheek than ever just now. "They a.re enraged," he said, "at t he executfou f the eight murderers in November last, and a.re ma.king e.11 sorts of threats. Although not ate.ting what form thia revenge will assume, they entertain a feeling of bitter hostility towards the whites, whom they regard a.s intruders. The Government was badly deceived when it thought that the fa.te o.f the murderers would intimidate the members of the va· rloua tribes, The Stonies ll>re eepeoia.lly lou ~ in their threll.ts, while the Crees, who a.re of a. more ca.llous nature, are greatly embittered against tho setnera for the loss of relatives during the ri&fng. The result of Otter's and Strsmge'o tight s has given t he Indiana a re· markable idea. tha.t the whites cannot fight and they magnify the retreat of t~e tro~ps at Cut knife H ill and Frenchma.n'e Butia into overwhelming victories iu their-favor. Everything ind1ca.teH tha.t the Blackfeet and Bloous, though represented to be quiet, will be the first to ta.ke up a.rm11. A rising will be precip!ta.ted if a blunder ie made by any ignorant under-stra.pper in the employ of the Indian Depa.rtment. The Existence of trouble in the ::louthem pa.rt of the territori0s would be the signal for the Battleford a.nd Fort Pitt Indians to begin. The Urees and Stonies, though nppa.rently working patiently on the'r reeerve1 . do not lndulgein ta.lk for nothing. They would be overjayed to hear of trouble, a.nd could be expeolied to give a good account of themselves in a xush aorosa the pra.irie to j oiu the hostiles in the South. I am confident th11>t they a.re not completely dis&rmed. After the close of the campaign over three hundred a.nd fifty persons, consisting of men, womeu e."d children disappeared from P.oundma.ker's Reae, r ve and were unheard of for several . months. It was a.scertalned Iii.tar th11.t they were enca.mp ed near Sounding Lake, a point about. oue hundred miles Eouthwest of Ba.ttleford. The looa.lity at which the l ndlana settled, a.bounds in sm!>il game, upon which they will subaillt durwg the Wint er. All the In· dlans in that ba.nd arc in p 3aseas!on of their arms, but, unfortuna.toly, no effort h!l.B been ma.de by the authorit ies to bring them ~u. It is reported that they are well provided with sta.ple articles, such WI tea. and auga.r, which wao included in the plunder taken from the Battleford stores, The goodawere cached away a.nd ma.de use of,when the time e,rrived. Ranners from thia branch of t'.'e tribe visit Pouudmaker'a reserve frequently, but th e tidings th.11~oonvey have never been ascertained. Cl\mpad at Sounding La.ke, the Crees a.re brought close to the Blackfeet, whose country ls le~a than fifty miles away. They could muster 700 warriors in the north country. Coufteulen are excha.nged hetween the varioua tribes all the time. While on the Swift Current t ra.il this F ..n, I encoun· tered more Indians tra.velling north and couth tba.u ever before during my reaidenoe in the North-West. A BATTERYMAN FIRED UPON, BONNETS, HATS A p ·ivato despatch from 1\11.ttleford 6ta.tea that Gunner Lafllmme, :one of 1the sentries of "A" Battery, while on night duty at Fort Otter, a fow da.ys ago, W&B fired on from some brueh ne.n by aud the bullet pa.esed tbnugh his sealskin wedge. Palliaa.des aov· ering ~he uentries have sinoe been erected a.nd the guards doubled, a ·41W···Hampton Court a.nd General Wolsey. TRIMMINGS Mns. HUMPHREY HARNESS SHOP first Door hst of RuebottomHouse, Call at the new premises. It has been suggested that it was in a. v.\ult of this pa.lace the.t the incident ccc:ir· rtd which opened Henry's eyes to the wealth acquired by hie favorite oardinal. As the story goes, the king's fool was p11oying a visit to the oa.rdina.l's tool, and the jo· cose couple went down in to the w!n9 vaults. For fun, one of thnn stuck a. dagger or eome othe1· pointed in11trument into the top of a cauk, and to his surprise, touched something that chinked like meta.I. The meddlesome pair upon this set to work, and pushed off the head of the cask, discovering that it wa.e full of gold pieces. Other ca.aks by their -sounds, gave indications tha t they held wine, and not gold. The King's fool stored up this secret, and <me day, when Henry VIII. was boasting a.bout his wine, the fool said, ea.tlrka1ly, · "You h ave not suoh wine, sire, as my Lord Ci.rdina.l, for he has casks In his cellar worth a thousand b1·oad pieces each," and then he told what he he.d detected. Whether this be true or not, it ls certain th&t W olaey was so far awake to the fact that he was so suspected by the monarch as t o deem it prudent to present him with Hampton Court, HARNDEN, L. D.S. ~ THE GREAT RUSH! TOTRE· Graduate ofthe Royal College or Dental . Surgeons, Ontario. OFFICE OVER DICK80N'S STORE. · lOLD FILLING A SPEOIA.LTY. -ate Work executed in the la.test and mo& i improved style of the Dental Art, BETH EXT~ACTED Wl1'H OUT PAIN · the use of Nitrous Oxide Gas, without Injury to th~ patient. P arttoule.r attention paid to theregnlatlon of CHILDREN ' S TEE'.CH, Eclipso House still continues for those Intelligence of Doa;s. At the meeting of the .British A2eocia.tlon a t Aherileen, sa.ys an article credited to "Exchange," In the Brooklyn E~le, Sir John L11bbook read a. pa.per on the intelligence of the dog. Sir John l'emarked tha.t it 'l'!a.1 surprlsing how little we know about th:a true natureof animals, This, he thought, ruose very much from the faot that hitherto we have tried to t ea.ch anima.h inetea.d of to l earn from them· to m·ke instance the dog underst and·WI, ra.the~ than to u~derstand the dog. He suggested tha.t some sucti system as that adopted with deaf mutas, and especially by Dr. Howe in the case of L'>um Bridgman, might be tried with advantage, For this purpoee ho had select· ed v. black poodle, V :.rn, and then proaented pieces of cv.rdboa.r d t en inches long by three feet w ide, on whioh he printed words nch a.s "food," "watff," "tc11.," and no one who had seen Van look down a row of cards and pick out t he one he w11nted could doubt that he was able to distinguish the differ· ent words, and quite under3ta.nd that a. card WM equivalent t o a request. The cards wue oel' talnly not recognized by 11cent, be· cause he used a. number of ea.ch. H e sug geated that some one with sufficient leisure mi,i;ht ca.ay this much further, and the n.ttempt would be well worth making. Prof, Flower mmtioned the.the had seen within the last few days a_ dog which knew the re- ..-.ALL WORK WARRANTED.~ STANDARD BANK OF CANADA. lll.&.PITA.J., $1,000,000. ...,_ Super Diagonal Overcoats.... $8.00 Worated Pants.. . . . . . . . · . . . 8.00 Mantle Cloths, per yard .. .' . . . 50 All Wool Shirts and Drawers 1.00 Dress Goods in all the newest shades from 10 cents. for' _ REST, $ 220,000 OUR O RDERED CLOTHING IS BOOMING, Tho people know that if they - want a- This Bank le prepared to do Legiti- '2!1ate Banking i n all its branches. Farmers notes disconnted ; Deposit11 a aceived a nd Interest paid on amounts of ~ $5 upwards in Savings B ank Department; DRA..FTS ISBued and Collections made in Enrope, United States and Canada. · 27 FIRST- CLASS CUT suit of clothes they must call upon IVES. A Doctor of Divinity. In Mississippi ao ma.ny da.rkies have claimed exemption from road duty on the pretext of being ministers of the gospel, tbl\t some of the courts have nqulred tb.e.t a.II cla.im1ng 1 xemption en that soore Jha.ll produce certificates of ordina.tlon or a.ppointment. At the la.st term of M adison Conntv Circuit Court, Brother Dick Barnes WWI minus this a.lJ.lmporhnt document and he sought the advice of a young friend who told him "he would fix it all' right for him ; to come ba.ck: in a.bout ten minutes and he would ba.ve a certificate for him." While the prea.cher wa.s gone the young man stepped a.cross t he 11treet to a. drug , etore and got a. "Marsden's pills" diploma. a.nd, pfacing It In a.n envelope, g ave it to Brother Barnes, who wan promp'ly en h&nd when the ten minutes ha.d expired. When court convened, and it wa.e · In order to offer excnsee, etc., Brother Barnes approa~hod ~he clerk's desk, ~~d ~hrew down h1a certificate IU_!d t a.id ; '.J.:ha.r 11 my certify ter preach therr wurd. " The clerk passed the document up to the j\ldge, who smiled and remarked: "Uncle Dick, this iii a doctor's oertifi· cate." "Well, Jedge, hain't I er d octor ov divinity? " ls it th0 Dotbneas ()f t he Do, or the Doneness of the Did ~" proposed a Hub tutor t o a. little Ya.·1 kee kid, The Boatin g u rchin's answer free at oncely took the bun : " ;.The pwope.h tawm to nse would be, the Didness of the Done," ----~-------- W.J, JONES, ;\gent. W. H. IVES. room, and a lig?-:t diet, which for a few da.ye should consist <Jf w~ll-made <l'a.tmeal ?rue!, 1md boiling " new " milk, with e.n Reli~on and Health. mfuslon of Vichy, two tablespoonfuls to Man ha.a a. religious, ao muah as he h·s eight Gf . m ilk, or a large OJ!pful. Avoid a.n intellectual, naturP. He may fail duly cold dr!nka till the pain jg gone and the to develop either, or he may thoroughly natural temperature restored, pervert both. Tha.t man is healthiest who best looks after hie body, mind a.nd heart. True religion-not a mere profession-ls INTERESTING HEMS. a. great help to health, however bad may At lea.st four lncorpora.ted towns in Col· have been one's physical heredity or his early surround,nga. ori>do aro at an altitude over 9,000 feet a.hove It teaches him to keep hia 11ppetitee- the sea, grea.t sources of disease when allowed the 1::he steady shrinkage of glaciers in the ma.ra~ry-in due subjec,ion. No truly S w1ss Alps has c'l.uaod severe losses to many rellg1 oue me.u can Jive to eat, err,ibrute himthe pee.Hntry by the dr:ying up of pa.sturea oelf with a.lcohol, or to be a. debauchee, ~f tormerly morn.tend by glacio.I rills Snch a ma.n will get more rea.l phy!lical pleasure out of life than those in whom the The S ·lvation Army h116 retreated in dislower nature has the mastery. Religion orderly rout from Westfield., Mase, after a condemns a.nd tends to rei;irees all jealousy, brief campagin, leaving all its drums, tameuvy, hatred ll>nd the mahgn passions eaoh borines, uma,and accoutrements in the hands of which when yielded to make ~evere of the enen: y-the Sheciifs offioera-who re· draughts on the health. ta.In them to satisfy unpa.id bills. It enjoins loYe to God a.nd man as a M!liasa.ohusetts ngistered over 6,000 infunda.menta.l duty, and foeters it as the cen· tral principle of the life. Such love not sane persovs in her asylums 11ond hospit&la only a.rrests all malign tendencies but during 1885 - an Increase of 200 over the dlftuses throngh the system a ea.Im, ~ooth previous year. The annual oost to the St:i.te ing, gladoome inflnence, signaUy conducive of this form of relief exceede $450,000 ot in· terest on the value of buildings, &o, to highe·t health. N othing can be superior in this respect to a.ctlve benefia. nee, REfcent explorers In Alaska. ca.me upon a. It keeps ambition and the deaire of nn.tlve village containing eleven ma.Jes, five waalth within proper bounds. It leads the of whom were deaf mutes. while one of !the man with capacity for the high places of yvoml\n w~s wholly del\f, This sbte of things power to accept them, that he ma.y serve is accounted for by steady iutermarria.ge, as the people aa a serva.nt of God. If he has ~o other India.us lived within several da.ya' great business oa.pa.oity, instea.d of shrivell- iourney, ing into a. mher over hoe.rcled thoua11nda or Leprosy is deolal'0d by the L<J.nsing (Iowa) millions, ht> conduots himself as being God 's stewa.rrl ; and keeping the outlfow of wealth M irror to exist to a considenble extent proportioned to its inflow, be is uplifted, among the colony of Sca.ndina.vians from enlarged, and made every way a. happier p.or thern Nor way, now settled near the village of Spring Grove, in 1:1.ouston Co., Minn. ma.n, and thus a. truly healthy one. Doctors who have ex11.mined the snhjects, It ever makes life wort h living. The who 1i.r0 In three or four diffl'rent families religiol'le an never la.ck a for an a.Im in (but a.re related), a.re said to have pronounclife-and othing is more depreo~ing phyoi· ed the ma.la.dy undo11btedly leprosy, cally than a life without ~n a.Im. He In the Union .Medicale a doctor tells of a. knows that he is made for God and the eternal future, with the image of God with- duel a.t which he assisted, and In which one in him, to be here mor8 and more developed of the men died of a pleurisy- empyema following upon the wound. He thoaght that a.s the basis of unending growth. Religion prevents unwholesome a.nd this could have been prevented by due anoft~°: dea.dly depression in adversity. The tiseptic prec&utiona. " The blades should rehg19us man knowa tha.t discipline is es· ha.ve been clean, medically. The foils should sential to moral advancement, and that he be pa.used through a :ll.ame of ce.rbollo acid. is under the wise training of a loving Father. ~e should like to have the pletols nnd balls He iii sustained and cheered by the d1ainfected." This Eounds a. little odd, oowonderful assurance that a.II things sh&!l sidering how c:a.aily they could bo dispensed with, work together for his good. It leads him to look on des.th a.s the The authorities of the Crichton Royal Insdoor to his eternal home, &nd thus he titution for the Insane la.tely c&me to escapes tha.t life-long chill, through fea.r of the astonishfo g conclUBion that it would be it, from which so many suffer, a good plan to give a. few of their choicest luna.tfos the diversion of shooting parties, "Sweet peace she glv0B wh0rever she arrlves · A new comer, who j oined one of them, stray· She builds our virtue as sb.e forms our lives ; ' Lays tbe rough paths of peevish nature even. ed away from the pu.rty, and was 11.fterwa.rd An.d opens to each breast the light of heavta." found ! hot through the head, The death ie thought to h ave been ca.used by accident but it led, people to ask which were the ·~ore No One Rule for All. inaane the patients or the authorities of the No t w? pa~sons are alike physically. asylum, People differ 1n t emperament, heredity The P alace Laeken, ne111· Brussels, is In susceptib1lity to disea.oe, and in recuperativ~ telephonic communication with the OJ?Ora. · powor. Th~re is B.lao an acquired dlapoai- House in BmRaele, and it appears that the tion to particular d1aea.see from ocoupllotiona queen of the B9Jgians was lately listening to a.n~ .ha.bits of life ; an d t emporary suscep· ~ rehea.na.l of the new opera. by Llto!ff when tib1hties from anxiety, grief, watching, and she audC!e'lly dropped the " r eceiver" 11.n d overwork, mental or physical, Boo hy · retired. The leader of the orchestra., in his gienic ho.bits als'l make a vast diJI.irence anxiety to bring the chm·us up to the peras d<J bad hygienic 2urroundi.!Jgs. ' feotlon he considered neceasu.ry, used rather There are, moreover, undefinable changes strong 11m11ue.g e. The Queen made a formal in the phyaicll.l system from childhood to oompla.int, and there has been much trouble old 11,g e, that rendet· tho lia.bilitlea of the a.t the Opera House. later.period quite diffe'l'ent from thoee of a Five Mile Bea.ob Island near c~ Ma previous one. R emoval to a. different_ oU- ha.a a.n uai ue a.nd bea.utlful feat~t in ft~ mate also ~reatly. changes the ensceptib1lity. holly grovie which stretch for four miles S o much UL - this atter fact true tha.t I h ! j d va.ocinatiou good a.t home b . -,. ong t e 5 a.n , Many of t hem are very less abroi.i' ' may e power aged trees. '.rheir trunks are more then a. H ·' d' . d foot in dia.met rr i.t.balf their height. The is n::~~ : !:«:i;c1;: j0[ for ·hne Pj.J:son light gray bark, with tints of pale gmn a.nd 0 appears the ;alue of a. " e~. dcl:~e patches of brown, bring t ogether the hoari· one who knows the fomil hiat!r y of hi~ n~ss of age and t.he tendernes8 of )'Outh. pa.tient &nd the latter's i 1 rd" id . '.Ihe moss ha.~gs from the branches as if the ality P ye oa. n iv u forest were :southern, while the evergreen W~ eee, aleo, th&t the same h lenic le&ves and the bright red berries .keep up methods are not eq11all d t d ytg the l!JU11ion of summer in the dreaner .days 0 a.11· of float · Y a a.p e 011e can slrnp with his window open not ' only wltbout harm, but with positive beneBy means of a simple chemical precess a. fit, The depressed condition tha.t oharao- bea.utiful coloring of yellow is now given to terizee sleep, the more nox!rns night air marble, without any injurious effect upon and the liability to marked changes in th~ the poliEih or hardness of the stone. Neutra.l outside t·mpernture, would render the he.bit chloride of iron la for tnis purpose dissolved perilous to ma.ny others. in nln~ty per cent. of a lcohol, and after So one muat not blindly take a. daily oold gently hes.ting the marble to be colored, the bath Jx.oause othero have tried it, and solution in quu tion is applied by means of strongly recommended It. It might be a. brush, & sprinkler, or by p ouring, the deat.h to one, though life to another. Orie strength of the 1olution being, of course, needs to have regard to the condition of the proportioned to the depth of the color dealr· h eart, and the re11dJne811 to · r eact from' a ed, and ca.rs hdng requisite also in regard chlll to a. glow. To l!ome a semi·weeklv to the degree of temperat ure. On the marble warm bath ls muoh better. becoming completely dry It is moistened It is somewh"t the sa.mo In the matter of with water m· uposed to moist air, when exeroitle, which may help ot ma.y ha.~m. the decomposit on of the eait of iron takes One, if at all delicate, ahould oa.refully find pla.ce in the upper strata., and the process of out what i J best, both in kind and degree, oolor.a.tlon is complete, a.11 tha.t rema.in11 to be It is equally so in the matter ot food. done being to . polieh the eutface, if necesWhile the vigorous, wlio 111.rgely live out sary, or it may be simply rubbed off with a. doors, may eat a.lmost anything within the wet cloth. For light tint., very dlluted limit.a of their appetite.~, others must learn solutions are applied, the limitB of their own digestive powers, Richard Wagner gene~ally receiv ed hie and act · accordingly. It Is certain that v isitors in medlreval costumes, such as he these limits vary gcea.tly, always wore when composing. Alexa.ndre Dilma.a, ca.lling on him one dt1oy, was highly amused a.t the mat querade. " You &re a.ll ]acteria. dressed up to play Gassler," said Dumas, The proportion of bacteria in a oublo with his good·n.atured la.ugh, whioh rather metor of 11.tmospheric a.i,r is, aoccording to hmt the feelings of the a.uthor of "Ta.o.M. de Parville, 0.6 in sea. a.ir, one in the nhe.ueer," who never theless returned M. air of high mountains, sixty in the principal Dumas's visit when next he was at Paris. ca.bin of a ehlp at sea, two hundred on the After some oonaiderable delay M. Dnmas top of the Pantheon, three hundred and sixty appeared at last, dressed magnificently in a in the Rue de Rivl'li, six thoue1UJ.d in the dresdng gown with a. large flower pattern, Pa.rie eewer11, thirty -six thous!llld in old a helmet with flying plumes, a. life belt Pa.ris houses, forty thoueand in the n ew round his wa.bt, and enormous riding boots, Lospital of the Hotel Dteu, e.nd the s6venty· " Pa.rdon me," sa.1d he majestically "for ap· nine thousand in the old hospital of the pea.ring In my working ooatnme, I ca.n do . P itie. In Ryder Street, St, Ja.mes's, a nothing without being dressed in this ma.ncubic meter of a.!r contains only two bun· ner. H (l,lf of my idel4s live in this helmet dred and forty ba.cteria, whereas in the a.nd the other half are lodged in my boots, Rue de Rivoli the ea.me qu11.ntity of a.lr which are indispensable to me when I write oonta.lns three hundred and sixty. M. de my love soenea." Paxville says the superiority of London air, In an a.rtiole on "The Use of Oil a.t Sea," as compared with the l\lr of Pa.ris, la shown by Lieut John P. Holditoh, R. N.R ., the not only by its containing fewer ba.oteria., author sa.ys, " The reaults I have obtained but a.lso by the rate of mortality being are these : Fish or co!za. oil only is of any smaller. i'he greater 11urity or leaser im· go~d, it does not matt.er how it is as long as purity of t he air of L'>ndon is a.coounted it 1s not thick. Paraffin is too thin ; pa.int for by London being nearer than Paris to oil too thick. Running before a ga.le natura.l· the sea, by its covering a great er ext.ant of ly expends much more oil tha.n' laying to, ' ground In proportion to the population, and you have so mnoh more water to oil. Careful· by Its houses being lower. ly expended, one qua.rt in three hours for ' running, one pint in four h<Jurs for laying t o, will be suffioi~nt. The means I used wa.s Pneumonia· Pneumonia Is lnflil.mma.tion of the lungs. a ca.nv11.s bag (No, 6), with large holes ata.bbed with a needle. I ha.ve heard of a. bundle When the ln'ihmm<i.tion in on the lining of of oakum being saturated with oil, and then the ob.est, it is plenli& y. The two mav be put in a coarse gunny bag, which I think comb:ned. Pneumonia is a dangerous would a dmit of a thicker oil being u sed fo r disease, and requires prompt actlon. It is time. The place for towing is ur~doubtedly preceded bv a. chill, from which it somenot a.ft. Whether in h eat1.r>eti.ohing times is d ifficult to restore the na.tura.1 h'ea.t. forward o!l could be used successfully I ca.nnot say, This chill ie followed by a. high fever, In but I doubt it, When runnillg dea.d before which the heart boa.ta rapidly, If these the wind, tow from ea.ch cnthea.d, a.nd th e symptoms i>ppear, eend for a homeopathic ship is ~s safe as anything oan be at sea," ~ , · physician ; the dioea.se is treated m·o re succesufully by homeopathy than in M y other way. Untll he arrive·, keep in bed vVh1t did you d'> the first tilfle you got between flannel shet ta, apply hot rubber into fl. battle ?" said' a young lady to a.n old wa.~er-bags to the feet, a:nd hot fla.xseod soldier. "Of ooursa you didn't run? " "Uh, poultlcea over the lungs where the pa.In ia no, I didn't r un, mills; not at all. Bnt if I most severa. TI,, pla.013 these with others ha.d been going for a doctor, and you had every two h our3, A skillful nurse is a seen me, you would h"ve thought aomebody . nece~slty ; a.lso a. warm, yet well ventilated was awful eiok," HEALTH. "' 02 0 £:r:iJ. 1

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