Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jan 1899, p. 9

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3.:.=7'3`;,-.T:::~" ...'t5"5 -"=="-"` .'n`i n""v'?s'T"3 new (full .3 . __ __ nd 0%. I Y Q..- _.n- u_ I-.nnIAn. bu ~u-i`... QATUBDAI. JANUARY 7. `I099. 3WMR. M. McLEAN KENNEDY, U-v vv -- -----ua A cantankerous old farmer, who hardly CV01 agreed with anything hi: wife said to him, oamo homo OBI wot day And, pho- lng his back to the re, stood up to dry. Altar Inlnn Mn). him: his UH: tnrn W Hill] Inn III; 11 John, you'll better watch you:-lo! C you'll burn your anneln." To whlch John replied: I think I'll need to burn my tmnun an... H . I'II. `* ndeod. John, you'll need to do use- chlng of the kind. They're burntalnndy." -London 'l`lt~B|u. grounu. I some years 550 two Jopanoeo oamete _ the city exploring for silver. The author- ities wanted to test their powers. They I hurled some silver ingots on the parade ground. Then they took the Japnneeo I walk that wny. Is there any silver about | here?" they ssked. "No," said the Jspr ` neat. "this is not the kind of soil in which silver is found. . 'l`'\AI| elm- hnsolntl vngt-I -nn nsnnnnn Iuvor u Iouna." Then the buried meal was produood from under their very fact, Amid the loud hllm-My of all Celestial ololaldom, Ilnoo which time the Chao-tnnguo hnvo had I ` nnndlalnnn nnnfnlnnl fnp fnlulanai-1-.` my nun Dncl I0 5116 um, IIOUU up so ury. After some little time his wlfo turnol Go him and said: 2 H In}.-u IunII'I` D.-0+`: --huh inns:-ml at John Clnlnnmnrl Joke. All around Chao-mung lien Abundance of silver. ooppor, coal and iron, bui the Chi- nese have very primitive ways oi getting the minerals. They admit foreigner: are the beat at that kind of thing, because they have the power of eeeing under- ground. Hnmn van-I um tun Jnnnn mm. b `HE ll()AN I'\l|}NI!-Y TILL L4U- Gt:NrLzMnN,-l<`or a number of years I led a. sedentary life, and was nally compelled to give up my situation on account of ill health. What was the trouble 9 Doctors disagreed as to my malady. I paid out hundreds of dollars in various kinds of medicines, consulted some of the leading doctors in Ontario and Detroit, but did not receive apermanent cure. lt is true these physicians gave me temporary relief, but it was only for a while. I seemed to be growing worse all the time. Some doctors who diagnosed my case said it was dyspepsia of the bowels; others, that my liver was out of order. They prescribed, but no cure. I -mmouallu lncf all faith in nnn-titinnnrc and was .. ..... TORONTO \iI'oLET Perfume co.` IIICJ IIICHLIIIICU. IJLII. Ill} \.uIc. I eventually lost all faith in practitioners, and was about giving up in despair when I fell in with a fellow- traveller in the City of London, who insisted upon me trying Doan's Kidney Pills. I was sceptical,-v- told him that there was no use,-their remedies would be like all other patent medicines, a fake. He said, try them, if they do you no good they will do you no harm. Oh l I said, that is the old story. I might as well burn my money. No, he said, one box will not cost you a cent, here it is. No, I said, I don't want you to pay for me. Never mind, he said, just try this box and if you don't get relief it is a sure thing that it is not kidney trouble that you have. I was so convinced that I was troubled with my kidneys that I grew angry. My friend left me one box. I felt like throwing it away, but on second thought I concluded that that would be ungentlemanly and wrong, so I tried the pills, and to my great surprise I found them doing me good. I bought 3 boxes for $1.25, and then I bought 3 boxes more. I used six boxes and have one left. I am now I cured man, sound and perfectly healthy. I now weigh 185% pounds. Before I used Doan's Kidney Pills I weighed as `low as 128% pounds. What was the trouble? Kidney disease. What was the cause? I cannot tell you. My appetite was gone, lame back, pain: Tm: DOAN Kmnnv PILL Co. I`,, ,1 IUII Willi. IIIC DI0'iuw IIIVI II I ndlgloun contempt for fonIgnor|.- uml DOAN S KIDNEY PILLS CURED HIM OF SEVERE KIDNEY DISEASE AFTER Ila Wu Right. .n.-_._..- -1; 1-..... . all over me, loss of memory, and at times as nervous as a man with the D.T's. My urine is now us clear as water. I am an entirely different man. physically, morally and mentally. Mu ...w.r:na in the nnst the most trenchnnt pen morally Ina memauy. My suffering in the past pen couldn't tell. If l had the vocabulary of a Daniel Webster, 1 could not relate the pain and suffering I endured for years. Fellow reader if you are troubled with kidney complaint, be persuaded,-- lry Donn's Kidney Pills--and just as sure as you are a sufferer you will be cured. I rmly believe that the worst case of kidney trouble in the world can be cured by Doen '5 Kidney Pills. I __I.. -_.:..i okno I ma nnncacepd nf H fncultv Olv Uoan's Kidney I lllS. I only wisl. that I was possessed of a faculty of putting things in a more charming way, but the main thing I want to say is that once I was a diseased and broken down man, now I am robust and strong. I believe I owe-in fact I know it-my healthy con- dition at present to the healing power of Doun's Kidney Pille. Doan's Kidney Pills will never die, but will be the means of saving thousands and thous- ands of our fellowmen from an early and prematuie grave if they will only have faith to give them a fair trial. I wish I only had the burning eloquence of a Demosthenes, and then I would fail in doing justice to Donn : Kidney Pills. .- -. -u-Ami irI'!\v|II'.`I'\\I From all over the Dominion testimony keeps constantly coming in, adding proof to proof of the power of Doan's Kidney Pills to cure Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, Weak, Lame and Painful backs`, Gravel, Sediment in the Urine, Weakness of the Kidneys in Children or Old People, and all Kidney and Urinary Diseases and disorders. as D-:nn pnn n I-u-nr nr 0 far SI .2K It dI'U(fiS[3. and Urmary Lnseases Inu ulaulucns. Price 50c. 1 box or 3 for $1.25 at all druggists, or sent by mail. The Doan Kidney Pill Co., Toronto, Ont o'o".`m. ii 1 1. L s Tnuwnv, Om. | Ont. VI awn 1:. Ask for Donn : and refuse all others. , times :.n_ .|.- n T . Mu ring in: nnw nu clear KIDNEY DETROIT AND ONTARIO DOCTORS FAILED. Tilbury, Ont. GIVES A VIVID ACCOUNT OF HOW SPECIAL SALE GLASS LAIPS Froll 200. to 750. With the latest pattern of Burnett and Chimneys. 7Thc Greatest of all Llvct, Stomach and Blood Medicines. A FEW MANHA1 TAN SMOKE- LESS L1MPS LEFT. Re gular price 82 50 and 03. Special at 81.75 and 01-35- MCKELVEY & BIRCH. 69 and 7] Bnock Street, LAMPS To clear out fall stock. II. IICLEAN KENNEDY, Ex-School Teacher. 30 HA fad-2 (`-0- 711-ac univenal late of mankind. It cannot be escaped, but it can A be hunted against. LI V- ....-,,..... , `I 5 For further pamculars en-4 quire of any of the Ofcerl or 1 ,a Member: of the Order, or address q ll) HCCUTC IHUICICHK IKIIUTIIIICC ll) `` rirutect their dependents at Hie lowest possible rate cousintnl i*witli safety. They have succeeded *3 Lin pinyin over $1,500,000 in claims am amusing the magni 5 ccnt aurplua of over $674,000 :32 I pa sufcg uard. I1..- l....ol.-_ .._.a.'....I-.._ -.. A IPIQIFIO vol Ihounutlsm. Gout and Chronic Complnlnu. `L` AKDv&I'I:1'I.arurId:a II " `5 In-."I-I-var. r- noun 1`:-ntnohln. .V-oahpo. &-Johann -In U-bun I-r--mu A.l..PIIl.A..l'11.al A nsn-Iu.s <'<-'37'- '5 us. .- ..ua.....-".`?I.'5.'.`.-'i.`.'..`u \ u.I.F.'5A1-"1...-s%.I-,7-1...--V-u-4-3-. '1 T ghoul it to be their high duty to} make it easy for all healthy men to secure Iufcicnt insurance to [ . -..o-no oh-;- .l.........l-..n. an H... 1 THE Cmnun ORDER or [lonesmts Sarsaparilla TI105. WHITE. Hlnh Sec`v , B ERNST 0ARTl`JN(l. 8.0; Bram! R. ELLIOTT. H. C. R.. [1 BRlSTOL'$ nuouuuf IVITII. D3lSTOL'3 L..|.IU I I . C. R., Ingeruoll. n II 1110'!-I mum: ME A MAN J AJAX TABLETS IXEWWVKLY CUR` 3. W I II I a. High Sec`y , Brnnllord. nun n . nu-u nun .. A rlvhllaicdn-d an-um u.-aldtkh use lbon. Toto an Kenna unam- mulhudlolu. A D!`II1I.IfRI4 Lnnu G-r panhuhrs. lat?-aqua uopzger 1 The courts generally condemn to low " ging confirmed criminals, fugitives from Siberia and vngnhonds, many of whom have received altogether (mm 500 to 600 blows. An old Siberian trump finished his curriculum vitae with the following words. "l have received all told 1,400 stripes of the birch rod, 600 blows from the kuout and numberlees thruhinga by sticks." As is to be expected, the statis- ties of the Siberian prisons show the in- tility of these punishments asoorreotivo measures. In proportion astho punish- ment.-: increase in number and cruelty no the relapses and bunkslidings into crime increase Nostalgia. or intensied homo- siukness. is curiously strong in the in- Inntea oi the Siberian prisons and will not be repressed by the most cruel system of whipping Himhnrln we have dealt onlv with the Hlli umnunum Hirlll Ul puulruunmnu. This sort of is inilictod upon convicts whenen-.r it is ordained hy the lnw or by the police nnd loonl uuthoritiu. The (ilspemaer of blows is always A fellow tuken from the prisoners themselves, and in his hands the (mo oi` the delinquent may be laid literally to lie. The knouo consists of A thick wooden stick, to which is fen-ntened a strongly pinimd lash, about iii) innhee long nnd 2 inches wide. and this thong ll cut so MN to form three lnshen at its end A oonvii-t who retain: the small- est. degree of hunuu feeling man never be induced to undertuk this office, And thus only the most reprutiute and hardened criminals are chosen for the dread work. To these inhumnn vreuturou the courts of lhiuelu intrurut hunmn life. It in in their power to inillct. only light punishment upon the condemned, to make him a crip- ple for the rust of his days or to send him to his grave on the spot, and yet the om- oials never deem it necessary to put any restraint on these iloggeru. The experi- olme(l oggere are really skilled at their work If they wish to show any mercy to the delinquent. the rain blow: on hie body with the mid le part of the whip, while the cruel tips of it fall beyond the prisoner and on the bench. but if no morcyle to be given. then the knoul in . made to do it: fell purpose. In the hand: of a skilled no yer the motions of the knont are so qui it that they can scarcely be tightly followed by an inexperienced oinmrver In either case the prisoner net- uruily howls, hut the dierenoe in the re suit in very marked The lightened form of punishment can be bought. and woe to him who in not nblzwo propitlnte the (logger i`rm nnnrtn nanny-Allv nnndnmn Ian ou- wnlppmg Hitherto we have dealt only knout. which Is the rnrer form of punish- ment and must be ordered by in court of law The usual corporal punishment by means of rods snd stinks is somewhat dif- ferent. for they form the alpha and omega of the oorrective measures in use in Si- berian prisons This form of punishment is regarded rather as s bagsteile, and yet its effects are much worse than those of the knout. for it is meted out n; all in the same measure It needs not to be ordain` ed by e eourt of law, snd the victim un- dergoes no previous medical examination as to his tness to bear the punishment Every governor of prisons can give 80 end every district governor 100 of these blows st their discretion. It is the naked truth thst en criminals when grievousiy ill do not escape this punishment A to mnie prisoner in the district of Korsakov wus whipped to such an extent that she leli down deed. mt.-. sh- ...m.-nnuu nl Qlhm-Inn nriannn v o Iell nown now. That the governor: of Siberian prisons are not all monsumi, but that there are In exceptional cases kindly hearted man. Is noun |n zhannm of Siniurln. tho former ... .--4;, and I ..n`l.h _Gol" otI0rW'dmdst IJXOGDDIOIJEI 08883 llllllly nusrusu unuu. us soon in shoouo of Sipjagin, director oi the prison at Irkutsk. 80 want no for in bi: dnuntleel reforms on to entirely Abolish punishment by whipping. And what was the result? The prison discipline improved astonishingly, trunn- gn-sninns and crimes almost oeued to be the order of the day. and atunnptn to ca- mpe he-mine a thing of the past.-V|-such. I St Peinrsburg Medical Wookly. 'I'-I IV -IIIU I-vvv. VisH:or-And what In tho 0&1 tlncuon of this manner? Aotor-X l--- Flloutendo Blunt. Huollpurgnaivo nmoduo no fun Iv `Log II no use goublo notion nod mi ol- loccn o Cu-tnr I L-solo Liver Pulln. I! you -n than Iboywillothiulyplouoyon. _ Tho Bridal: China rqu-dron '1" he Arnnnlllannd In um nddnynn ol aha main. ' BTHHI` Look out," or "Pull yourself togeth- or. " forms the gmmrni remark of the knnun wlelxlar, and tho next moment tho blows are rnlnlnu ln fuurful thud: upon (ho hum back of Sltluruv, who utters heart plurvlng nllrlolm (Hm, two. thmo-tho wunlur (`nllu aluml the tale of the Itrlpea, exury om of whlc-h hlx-mos and leaves In mnrk on the culprit Thu ory tlmt at rlt tnlluwud every stroke lms gradually bo- cmne an unhmlmn howl and roar, and renders must. have strong nerves If they vun pluture further all the hldenusnosl of this dluhullcal form of punlnhment. 'l'h|- an!-t nf nnuf|uuf.|nn In lnflivtnd nnnn ------ -V_._. Donnie In K|nI!eu n, zu-`-Kn w-no can tune: Hound. nnl!|~'- ll). IIYIIICII ljllllll P(|IIIllI'(II Will I dtenglhuud by tho sddmoo ol ubo omin- nrn Orlando and St. Gnu-A. "1 uumnnxu lt`lILlll'l!l Ul um ulruunuuuu. "h'i1lurm"' in mtnllud out by the governor In is quinc, rurlt.rnim~d vuima Hhiomv step! nnutmuiily and with an in:-rt-using toner and rattling of his vhullis out of the lino 0! grny, lung (cit cunts. I note hii lip: growing pale and the four in his widely opwned you. as though he were on hunted wild boast. Lie down I" in the command. llnntiiy making tho sign of the cmusnn his breast, Hidurnv ii:-a down at. length on the bench and chruwu em-h urm around it He in than bnnnd by lcnther thongs 00 the bunch, and his band: an tied together bo- nnmlh 1% -II..... .........uv- ..-|r.. hn maul... nbun-and the prison governor "Who will be the new" 1- the gggxpcfon that In ull we clearly L0 be rand pon tho dnmhllku fa-ncurua of mu nrruutnntu. " --_'|.I.......," |.. ....Il...l nut hu rln. 1.vul7Al'f\l'II nmun no `How many?" asks the warder charged with (-mnmng the an-nkuu "h`1xLy. " is the quiet answer of the gov- nrnnr Pnuing along a gloomy passage of the Al:-under priuun. whose walls are cover- ml with black molniineu and reek with the utrong menu oi pine oonee etrewing on the oor. we find at the and of the oon'i- dor Uhnlri and tables for the authorities who witneae the infliction of the punish- ments. Among the oloiall are a lawyer, thu chief of the priuon and the surgeon. and a little way oil is placed the blook" or threatening aapeot, behind which stand: um wieider of the knout. who awaits his victims with a ourioua look Hie garb in apparently intended to make the situation all the more ixnprvmiive He wears a tall white head covering, soft felt shoes, a mood red shirt with its sleeves turned up. nmi he oarrlee the knout in his hand. Along the one wall stand: I row of mu- victa with smoothly ' Ihaved heads, and facing them in a long line of warders arm ml with loadml r-miversin the hand. The Illlllmsn, mi of the g'.`uVu. which Itampn all present, is hrokun from time to time by the ruttling of the handcuffs and the lug ft-itcrs and by a furtive cough or the rnntllng of the papers upon the table of the priuon -~\vh.. will I... Hm next?" in the uuuuion ' The Mory or the Me: Eon!) II-Ital a -, _ . , 1-\,|_A p- ___A__ n__, FLOGGING I`N SIBERIA FEARFUL TORTURE TO WHICH CON- VICTS ARE LIABLE. u -- nu.` _, . ' ----- --. __- -The Worn! Cflylllll Cholol .... .___ TIC Whole Ilow. .,_L - ._ AL- _ "'A.'..:'." A CHAIN AND CHARM . For sein 24 pa: a of Violet Per- tume at 1 each. 0 money If ecquircd. Send us your name and we will put you in the way of earning a Watch or I Pat: of Skates. Sell the ` 1,, Perfume among your friends, remit an the money and we will send you either premium by man: mid. I I Gm-diner s Baal mam Insurance Houses, Lots and Farm: Fm 3 sale and To-Let. w k a Fire Insurance in 5 Companies at lowest rates. yff-v=Jv'.J.8 W as `I gnu- -bglnfln-an IIIII `-U IVUII IIIIIVIL 0' on ' ll cantor : Manual. " Invention mad ' In Puuon l`n~nu." All fno. Inriol I in-t Iqn Idlaltvn `I-gig In-Inky U-aha i";F. HARRISON (:0. FVea22eZ9 Food SCVt`fC5l illlu lllU3I. lnanguaui. una- czises, afyer everything else failed. Thefa nothing like it fur driving all poisons and impurities, which are the cause ofdise:1se,frmn the syslcni, and building up the hczilth onlhe foundation of pure. rich blood. Mrs. A. Hilton, of Sunny Hrste, Pictuu Cu, N.S, is one of those who have been permanently cured by R.B.l%. Recently she wrote the folhming }lCL'0llIl[ of her case: .. .a .. ..... The record of permanent cures B. B. B. is rolling up is one of the marvels of moc'ern medicine. Case after case is being presented where Burdock Blood Bitters cured, and cured permanently, some of the severest and most malignant dis- .. A. ..l'u...- 0....-.-okinn nlu fnilnli when you ask for CARL- |NG'5 ale or porter see that you go CARLI 6'5. and no other. Your dealer can supply you with our goods If you Insist upon it. Why ~hou|dn't you have the best. if I costs no more thamother goods? An excellent Food, admirably adapted to the wants of Infants and Young Persons, and being rich in Phosphates and Potash is Is` IL- .4....-L....L ..lII!1... I- -..._..l ;;r'"m'.' .';L"t2{ L}::?i'y ii. liippuy- mg the bone-forming and other .n Pspensable elements of food. rw Too Weak To Work, Ieasam Iiji __::?..__ For nun no Woman; Cl: In (:2 -ooklv- no r 45, Per Cent and upwards. FURNI I UHELH Tcpb. 6: EMULSION TIC D. C L. EMULSION '-e:.~.,~:.-21:.-:.;:-.':.:~..-.:.-2.-.:' -cu: n -u-ucu uu -yyIl\-I-vu. .......-r_ . MEFIORIAL COMPANY, LONDON. OI! TIoD.CL; EMULSION locmlbdbychludlqplyldnnol 1IoD.CL.BMULlION ina. villi II|l.n.|'voI1uuII|:`_..|'::`IOClI0. locnrocl "3 . U NC. uh.-nu co. LI-ml. I-U-' The manufactures of Car|lng's brewery are sold all over Canada. INFANTS IND |NVll.ID& Woman ; day ul evening. $6 In Sn week] ; no cnnvnuiug or ex pericncx needed); plain Ins rucliona and work mailed on application. Anldreu: unnun LI 1`t\llIAIIII I nmnnn n.. Furniture and Unde~ taking. 15! Wellington Stgoel Iwo yoorsa olrs. A.Wal- ton, Sunny no, 01.3., was so wool: sho oouIdn't do her housework. I. B. I. rostorod hor health and strongth,and she : been perfectly well since. u om! .\I H. I | :v'i`ii?"s:ii`v'iix`i`n`>i'i."Ls (2% WUUIU you IIUVIBU ll!!! 00 U0! Jay Green (pmmptly)-Soll mm as quickly as you can. ]8I' like IdId.-Ex- change Soot` In tho oqulvolont of tho Anglo- Saxon word "Ioeat." meaning mutton Thornton soot tree" originally meant tree from the payment of taxes," and now It has become I general up:-onion for h-Odom from Anything [ Are you 'ronbIad with d shun. empti- ` no -3 ll ~'u 0II(`.y, uehingu. lnlnoao. canon! d|-H'tO~? TAIQ K D C -H10 Kvng of D, apgpolu Cums II in gnu-snoood no cure won or money funded. Bold by K C. Ilurrhnll, lldo the ynn True. In 5 small village in the south of Eng- lnnd in A church which. owing to the ab- i Dance of gas, is lit. up by candle; For the oonvonienoe of the minister I oandlo it placed each side of the reading desk in the pulpit. in front of which the choir Illil. The parson in this particular church had I hahi of swinging his arm: a'b,ut when- ever he wan Ipoaking to give emphasis to his words. n..- c.....I-... ..|..M oh- I-oL.... ...-- ...A. Hail to Have 3 Punport. In the Caucasus some years ago 0 Ser- mnn lady was dangerously ill who the local police master called as the hm .4 and naked for her passport. The husband, an easy going man. said he had not got one, or. rather. thao it was 90 years old. and therefore useless. and. n his wife wu dangerously ill and the doctor doubted her living through the day. t.ho demand was ill timed. lllllknol" 1|Cl|'n.1'\1\l` Oh- nnllng ungnoan WK III IAIIHU`-I. "What!" exclaimed the pollen mum: "Dying without a passport! She can't din without a passport I" A ntl aha rlhl n `C. __ A I-nnnnnl Gog Advice. Ir. Buyer--Mr. Green. than team: to ` be something Ierloul the matter with the ; horse I bought of you yesterday He N cough: and wheezes distresningly. and I ` ` think perhaps be In wind broken What l would you advise me to do! ` Jaw HI-nan lnv~nInnt.Iv)-RAll him an `Du DI` II I-ccholl. "Moreover. there in no nonsense about eight hours A day with him With brief Interval: for food. he workl from 6 to I. or more. or in winter from daylight to ` dark. lndeed horsemen and oattiemen work longer. Moreover, when oulyee or foals are expected, they have often to sit i up all night, perhaps for the best part of A week. and this without extra charge. , I lkewise holidays are for them practical- ly nonexistent, and if the weather should be Inch that it is impossible for farm work to continue they go home and are docked of their wages. " I GUI VVIIU Wlu pay uuu In IullIlll'B II Wvul. I IIIH WUFUI. One Sunday night the latter was nod- ing out the hymn, Sometimes a light enrprieeo The Christian while In sings. when with n powerful Iwoop oi his am: he knocked down one of the candles into the open mouth of one of nho member: of the choir beneath. The sputtering the! ` ensued was something wrrie There wen i at loan one Christian surprised that night. 3 -London Globe. They Cleanse and Purify the Blood. 1 I i xuya. ' But. their rapid and iutn..lgen|oombina- tion for defense, meuaoo and lookout duty ha: ooncribuzed quito an much bomheir ` Iurvival as their speed and activity In tropical America even tho monkey: an hard put to it. no escape the attaokso! auoh active and formidable too: an the harpy angle and the ooeiota. But: to oannoabo 1n-uvmi that oven the moss dobaoed or physically weakest. of mankind has even- boun the natural prey" of him natural cnnmy" which, according to Sir Samuel Baker, in the nightmare of nearly every Species of nonoarnivoroun animal. - I`hn nnnnm which nmko axnantlanl no man I magazine says` To such people I would say let them tryeny one of them. even the easiest, such as `eing I ditch, and I think that they will change their vows In truth. there is no single operation on the land that dool not require 5 very considerable umount of skill to perform is properly, and this skill, acquired by years of practice, the agricul- tural laborefpute as the Iervioo of any one who will pay him 18 shillings is weak. " Mnrnnvnr, them is no nnmmmus About IJU lllu uueumut M) urn] nuu Uqulp uuuicu. But man has had an even more potent ally than his own ingenuity which from remote antiquity has invested him in the mind of the animal world with something of the supernatural. He is over aooom- i panied by the one element which the ani- mal mind cannot create, cannot under- ` stand, stands in constant awe of and ` dreads hy night, when its courage in area} ` eat and that of man least steady. Fire, N that pillar of cloud and name which pre- ` codes not the aggregate human host, but the smallest fragme , of the invading army. the constant um` `readed harbinger l of human pruH(mc~, springing up, as the ` beasts must think. automatically from the 4 earth wherever man rests his body, unrd~ | ing him in sleeping and waking, always annouinte(i with his abode, has for ages tor- riod the boanta.-London Spectator. The Engllnh F urn: Laborer. Most people unaoqmlnted with the rou- tine of a farm have a notion than a farm laborer`: duties are of the simplest descrip- tion. A writer on tho Iubjeot In Long- man'I Magazine says: 'l`n nnnh nnnnln I wnuld IAV Inn thnm WJUU Ul UUHUIIIWIIVUKVJUI Illlll. l`he onueol which make exception: 90 this rule are temporary and narrowly local. Even the Groenlauder and the Eskimo no the masters of the polar bear, and prob- \l)i_v always have been. though lime bot- tar armed than primitive man, and tho pymnlea oi the Central African forests an mighty hunterl. It may even be that: tho neighborhood oi ame animal! {ided the early development of man, for thc loan developed races are larguiy found in such planes an Tierra del Fuego, where in the ahwnce of savage beasts lavage man had no inducement to arm and equip himself. nm nunn kn. hurl nu nvnn Innrn nnfnnl ` nlu] Illaall III VIII. KY3 UVUT IIHUU. Priullti man,litaerolly speaking, "lived by his wits," for be oould have owod hil survival to little else. He wan not. for I!- nmple, nearly I0 well equipped u the muuke~_\-a for phyuiual defense or ight, thougl their Iurvivnl in not Altogether easy to uxpluin on purely physical grounds. Their power of using their Arms and hand: u A means of Iwluging rapidly from branch to branch given them an ad- vantage over all tho trooolimbing oatc. Their habit of throwing missile: in Alan very diaoonoertlng to other anlmnlmthough this art is only pr tlood by ourtnin mon- keys. Hut. mhnlr mum and lnt....man|nnmhinn- V if. an teem: probable, the Animal hero! , men wan acquired and lunot nnunlto their mlndu, it in not very clear how the sery early tribe: of men. when the inr- ger carnivorous Animals were hr more numeroul than now. amped destruction nnd survived long enough toimpreuon Ibo ullmnl world the sense 0! but by which man now dominate: in Rqnrdcll merely an a conflict. between one clue of Animals and another, the ruult uhouid nuzhuve been doubtful. Mun ought to have disappeared from the face of the earth, or, in any one. to have nurentued to remote stronghold: in region: not me- quenbed by the beats Thus he did not do so, but turned the tables on the bettc equipped oennlve creature, in fair pn- ` numpuvo evidenoo hint original lllll never who on I level with she animal: in ` awlllgenoo, but we: equipped with the predominant brain power which has put him ahead in the moo ever since. n-|...na.K-...-n In`.-.lIu.....-hi-us "Hugo! Why the lavage Ioaau Did la! La- alhuato Hanan Lilo. VIDIIUIIU I PWIBWIFUI And Ibo dldn't.-AI-gonaul. PRIMOTIVE MAN AND FIRE. All Dnyglstg `and General Dealers.

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