Newspaper Page Text
•
gUPKRSTinOsa ABOUT SxBB.
jr^gnk a fire barns upon lightning the hearth
0 # German* say that newer
fttftes. Cambridgeshire there is carious
la a
bc jj e f to the., effect that a fire started
^ lightning stroke can only be
hr * bed with milk.
queue Devonshire if fire burns bine
ja a
and dead it is thought to be a forerun
s er of death or disaster in that house.
In Wales and in Cornwall miners
their hats upon the birth of a
m ale child; if a girl be born his neigh¬
bors barn it for him.
The Sicilians say that fire will not
born a man born on St. Paul’s Day
(January 25), bnt that if a woman be
burned on that day the sore will never
heal, and will eventually cause her
death, according to the St. Louis Re¬
public. ____
Weak as a Cat
jg a bad simile, for the cat is a very muscular
animal for its size, But to be as weak as a
convalescent after a wasted and protracted
disease is to be week indeed. Nothing in the
wav of a tonic promotes convalescence, Hostetter’s
hastens a gain in It strength, like appetite, he
Stomach Bitters. increases Nervous ps
digestion and induces sleep. inva¬
lids derive from it unspeakable constipation. benefit. It
cures malaria, rheumatism,
^sfisss rairaKSEEssr"
A Child Enjoys
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing
effects of Syrup of Figs, when fn need of a lax¬
ative, and if the father or mother be costive or
bilious, the most gratifying results follow its
use, so that it is the best family remedy known
and every family should have a bottle.
Every good farmer Is a member of the great
industrial army on which the world depends.
Dr. Kilmer’s 8 w amp- Ro troubles. oT cures
all Kidney and Bladder free.
Pamphlet and Binghamton, Consultation N. X.
Laboratory
Clear away the stones of jealousy and env£
“It is an unweeded garden tnat grows to seed.
Deafness Cannot be Oared
way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of tbe mucous this tube lining gets of the in¬
Eustachian Tube. When
flamed you have a rambling sound or imper¬
fect hearing, and when it is entirely the inflam¬ closed
Deafness is the result, and unless tube
mation can be taken out and this re¬
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing hut an in
fi&raed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred catarrh) Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars, fre ^, p & Toledo, 0.»
j HEWE:T co. t
|3J“Sold by Druggists, 75c.
A Bright Eye
BBSSSSeEP
We have not been without Pi°o’« Cure for
Consumption for 30 years.—L izzie. Ferrei,,
Camp St., Harrisburg, Pa., May 4 9L
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to tag csmplox
lon and cures constipation, 25 ota., 6° cts., *1.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, redn-es inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son's Eye-water.Drusgists sell at 25o per bott le.
Wounded in the War
“I enlisted with Co. D, Third West Virginia
Infantry Volunteers. August 29, 1862,1 was
wounded in the knee, and Sept. 18th my
limb was amputated. For thirty years I
v. have suffered from the
remaining part of the
limb, wblehhas never
healed, bnt continued
rM to discharge. My
Y'l health was greatly
I »i shattered, yet I kept
ev f ^ moving about until
.v ' December, 1891, when
i’ I was struck down by
, V the grip, and again, a
j8B PIS year later suffered a
relapse. I bad a
smothered feeling so
Hr. r. M. Huffman, that I could scarcely
breathe at all. I then pro< urei six bottles
of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and I leal better than
I have for ten year*. We have used eighteen
bottles In oar family and have fount It a per
Hood’s 5 ^ Cures
maneut cure for Scrofula. I ewe my Ufe and
health to Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” V. X.
Eornui, Marquess, West Virginia.
Hood’s Pills are the beet family oathartlo
Try
Them All,
Every
Tom,
Dick
and Harry's
Buckwheat.
THEN
TRY
a
vaern —M» LIVER FILLS
I
I
••' ST. HELENA!
A...
> .
THE JAGGED BOCK THAT WA8
NAPOLEON’S LIVING TOMB.
His Conqueror, Wellington, Origi¬
nated the Idea of Perpetual Ban¬
ishment—The Life and Death of
tiie Distinguished Captive.
¥ B. MACKNIGHT, for four
years United States Consul
at the island of St. Helena,
historical gives the following new
facts gleaned upon the spot
and describes the scenes of Napoleon’s
exile: ' ti
First, I can give a historical fact,
which I think has not yet been pub¬
lished, that throws some light upon
the selection of this spot by Great
Britain on which to imprison the great
general. After he had surrendered
himself to the courtesy of that Govern¬
ment, there was naturally an excit¬
ing disenssison in regard to the dispo¬
sition to be made of him, Wellington,
who was given the credit of Waterloo,
and whose name was lauded to the
skies by all the Conservatives of
Europe, was naturally consulted.
The Duke had several accounts to set¬
tle with Napoleon. Early in the oen
turv he had been recalled from a most
desirable billet in India to fight with
the Spaniards against Bonaparte in the
Peninsula, and his resentment against
his now prostrate foe was of that bitter
kind which is engendered in some
minds (not the greatest or best) by the
genius and success of a rival or oppo¬
nent.
Returning from India in 1806,
Wellington’s ship touched at St.
Helena, as nearly all ships from thq
East did in those days, and the sol¬
dier was struck with the ntter bar¬
renness and isolation of the place.
When first seen from an approaching
vessel the island looks like a solitary,
jagged rock, intensely forbidden.
Wellington was getting into the ship’s
gig after taking leave of the civil and
military authorities of the island,
when he said to the Governor:
“If I had an enemy whom I wished
to bnry alive I’d send him to this isl¬
and.”
The overthrow of Napoleon gave
him the enemy and the wish, and he
did not forgot the place.
The proceedings of the council
which condemned Napoleon to a living
tomb were secret, but there is no
doubt that Wellington was the origi
, nator of the thought which developed
into that savage banishment.
Sentence was no sooner pro¬
nounced than arrangements were made
for execution. „ The huge three
decker warship Northumberland was
.^elected to convey the august prisoner
to his island jail. His treasures were
taken from him, only a few of his
friends were permitted to follow him
into exile, and in the middle of sum¬
mer the big ship set sail for the
tropics, escorted by two armed cor¬
vettes.
The visitor to St. Helena in these
times reaoh the island in sixteen (
can
days from Southampton, the distance
being 5000 miles, bnt the Northum¬
berland was seventy days en route.
Napoleon reached the island in Oc¬
tober and was not allowed to land un¬
til the third day after his arrival, be¬
cause the orders to prepare for him
had jnst been received, and there was
no place ready. The island was then
one of the most flourishing ports of
oall in the Atlantic Ocean, and was
governed by the East India Oompany.
Many rich and cultivated families con¬
nected with the civil and military de¬
partments dwelt on the island and had
elegant homes in the country.
St Helena is only a rook ten miles
by six in extent, and oontains little
more than 30,000 acres of superficial
area.
The Governor oecupied a spacious
mansion in the oountry, colled Plan¬
tation House. The grounds about
this house are superb fine even old now, English re¬
minding one of a
country home.
After dusk on the evening of the
third day after the Northnmberland’s
arrival Napoleon was taken ashore.
Troops were massed st the lending,
and a carriage was in waiting to take
the prisoner into Jamestown,
Napoleon was lodged the first night
with a private family in a plain, two
story stone house, the walls of which
are still standing, adjoining the dis park.
October is one of the most a gree -
able of the year in Jamestown,
as the air is then intensely dose and
humid.
Napoleon was greatly distressed by
the gloomy aspect and sultriness of
tbe place, and his first night ashore
was one of intense disoomforl Sir
George Ooekburn, the admiral in
whose charge he was placed by tbe
Allies, was disposed to treat him as
wall as circumstances would permit.
Mil assured him that be wonid soon
be lodged in the country, where his
sorroudings would not be to for bid
ding. The prisoner had thoroughly island,
acquainted himself with the
and was therefore sorely disappointed
that Plantation House was not sug¬
gested by his captors as his prison
home. •
The Admiral took his prisoner next
day for # horseback drive to Long¬
wood Plain, and made a partial of tour the
of the more attractive portion* Jamestown
Wand. At the heed of the
gorge Napoleon saw the pretty little
villa called The Brian, nestled among
flowers and shrubbery, and expressed Loug
a wish to stay there while tbe
wood barn bring eoaafrnet* *
Sir George made the
oents with Mr. Bel
% rx of tbe garrison, who
tew*, and the two
of Napoleon's historic
The spot
te very little
In 1815, except that a lew
dteraticss bsrs bjes asds is
house, and the palms and other trees
are larger. The pavilion Count that Las was Casas oo
cnpied the by letters Napoleon, stands just they
and son as
left it, and the visttor realizes what
close quarters it most have been for
such guests.
A few days after his settlement at
The Briars Napoleon fell in with Hr.
Balcomb’a daughter, Betsy, French a sprightly well
miss of fifteen, who spoke
and treated the fallen monarch with
true girlish complacency. At first she
made fun of him, saying she did not
see how so small a man could have
made so great a name. In an acoount
she wrote of Napoleon’s stay at The
Briars she tells how, one day, she
grabbed a small dress sword that he
wore and drove him into a oorner at
its point. Betsy Baloomb made an
unhappy marriage, and died in Eng¬
land when still quite young. To her
Napoleon owed the only ray of sun¬
shine or diversion which came into
those years of miserable banishment.
In December the order came for the
prisonerjto be transferred to Longwood
and the move was made without th6
least regard to Napoleon’s with comfort. rats
The old barn was overrun
and mice, and workmen were still saw¬
ing and hammering, while no attempt
had been made to remove the litter
that encumbered the place. Odds and
ends pf furniture had been got together,
to make the dismal structure habita¬
ble, after a fashion, and in this re¬
markable dwelling Napoleon lived
from December, 1815, to May, 1821,
and in which he breathed his last on
the fifth day of the month last-named.
It is to-day praotioally as it was
when Napoleon occupied it. Such al¬
terations as have been made were ne¬
cessitated by the faot that after his
demise it reverted to its former use,
and became a storehouse for grain and
vegetables and a shelter for oattle and
hogs. When the property was ceded
to the French Qoverament early in
Qneen Victoria’s reign a custodian was
sent out, proper fenoes were built
around it, and it has sinoe been kept
in good order. The site of the tomb
was inoluded in the cession. In the
Napleonic era, from 1858 to 1870,
mnch attention was given to the prop¬
erty, and high prioed offloers Franoe were
sent to the island from to
watoh over it. But in recent years it
has been in the care of a sergeant on
small pay, whose stewardship is sub¬
ject to report and inspection by offi¬
cers of the French navy who touch at
the island. He really keeps the place
in good order, and he and his family
dwell in the 820,000 house called
Longwood New House, which the
English Government jobbers were
building while Napoleon was dying.
The new house was intended to pro¬
vide the prisoner with quite a eom
fprtablo dwelling, bat he told his cap
tors when they were laying the foun¬
dations that he would never live to oc¬
cupy it. The bouse was begun in
1819, and Was not completed when
Napoleon died.
The island funeral was conducted
with all the pomp that the Governor
and the jnilitaiy could invent, and
great oare was taken to have the
grave deep and strong. The body was
plaoed in a fine casket of wood, which
was hermetically sealed in a leaden
case, and these .were enolosed in a
strong teak box. After the coffin thus
completed was lowered into the grave
several large slabs of limestone were
fitted into sockets which had been
dng in the sides of the excavation and
securely bolted together. Upon these
wei e plaoed other stones, and the top¬
filling was of loose earth.
It took the Prince deJoinville’s men
all night to dig up the ooffin when he
oame to remove it to Franoe in 1840.
Some of the friends who were at Na¬
poleon’s death bed were his present on
the occasion, and also favorite
valet, Marohand, and when the oasket
was opened all were astounded to find
that the features were soaroely altered,
and that the great General, after
twenty years in the tomb, looked as he
had in life.
There ii now only a cement slab,
without inscription, surrounded by an
iron railing, to mark the empty sepal
cure. The weeping willow that for¬
merly grew beside the grave has died
ont entirely and disappeared, bat the
spot t is more beautiful, if possible,
than ever it was.
Curious Effects ef Odor*.
The aroma of red cedar is said to be
fatal to house moths; the aroma of
black walnut leaves is fatal to fleas.
It is a matter of common* observation
that persons engaged in the odoriferous business
of making shingles out malarial of districts,
cypress timber, in
are rarely, if ever, effected by malar¬
ial disease*, and that perpopa do engaged
in diaMlHng turpentine d i not suf¬
fer from either malarial seas e s or
consumption. It is said that whan
cholera epidemic in Memphis
Term., persons working in livery 11
stables were entirely exempt from
It Is affirmed that sinoe the destruc¬
tion of tbe dove frees on the i sla n d of
Ter nets the eolony has (offered from
epidemics unknown before, sad in
tunes when cholera those has employed prevailed ia in
London and Parte
the perfumery factories bars *aca p * d
its ravages,—Mew York World.
Dr.
of
Africa,
the
tiara
cal Africa
to
they with only in a
to he No of Idega pariM^te
The seed is stronger than the sofl.
False create false securities.
Uneasy lies the head that wears a
falsehood.
The mundane world is conducted on
the defensive plan.
Life is a combination of which the
secret is not given.
Beware of a man when he begins to
disparage himself.
Only - the morbid mind is on the
lookout for Blights.
In the whirligig of time someone
mast take the dust.
Oar pre-existent habits are our
present tendencies.
Silent people are misunderstood,
and they deserve it.
He who gathers no wisdom from ex¬
perience has no^futnre.
Never let thy right hand know what
thy left hand doeth badly.
Fidelity is the conservative pre¬
server of type, custom and race.
Wise men eat their words; fools
ohew them and hnrl them out again.
When a thing is hard to endure,
something harder may oome to make
it easier.
If Nature were to disclose her se
orets man would have the audacity to
patent her inventions.
Praise not a servant too greatly, lest
he be puffed up and masterful; nor
too little, lest he be discouraged.
Homely truths .are like home reme
dies—apt at times, but applied upon
every oocasion whether they fit the
case or not.
What we call luck in our neighbor’s
case and special Providence in our
own is probably bnt a fortunate acci¬
dent in either.
No man is lovable nnless he has
some womanly qualities, and no
woman is respeotable nnless she has
some manly ones.
Fly-Catching Mice.
For something new in the way of a
fly-trap look in the window of the
drag store at the corner of Tremont
and Eliot streets, Boston. There, at
almost any hour of the day and night,
from one to four rodent quadrupeds
can be seen prancing over bottles of
tooth powder and syrup of squill and
tincture ol turpentine, and Bweet spir¬
its of rhubarb'and the other useful ar¬
ticles usually displayed in such places
in a wild attempt to capture the mnsoa
domestica (house fly). fly-fishing.
The mice are simply out window
A card has been plaoed in the
in self-defence, which reads “Fly
Trap, Not For Sale.” This was done
after the doorstep had been worn half
way through by a line of people com¬
ing in to inform the clerks that the
window was full of mioe. - The mice
have been in the window for three
years, says one of the clerks who has
seen that length of servioe for the
druggist, and he doesn’t know how
much longer. In the winter they live
by gnawing off the labels in the store
that are glued on with starchy paste.
The mioe by this time have become
quite tame, but they never leave the
window except when the store is
closed. They have proved themselves
to be real conveniences. When the
store gets unpleasantly fall of flies the
clerks drive them into the window,
and then the mioe have lnnoheon.
People .gather at these times jast as
they do at the oirons when the animal*
are fed. The best fan oomes when the
mioe make after a horse-fly; there is
a great race, and onoe oanght the mioe
tear thd fly’s wings off and bolt every¬
thing else. In this way a great pile of
wing* have accumulated.
The recreation of these mioe con¬
sist* in running up and down the cur¬
tain cord at a lightning pace, cansing
the residents of the neighboring sa¬
loons to rub their eye*, and finally to
avoid that ride of the street alto¬
gether. —Christian Work.
Altec Bain* In Arizona.
D. J. Court, a mining prospector,
he* returned to Prescott, Arizona,
says the Lot Angeles Journal, from a
three months’ sojourn in one of tbe
most rsmots and little-known parts of
the Territory, and says that that sec¬
tion oontains more Azteo ruins than
any other portion of America, evi¬
dences of human habitation being
found from tbe highest peaks to the
loweet valleys. In one place be fonnd
a road or street three mile* in length,
derfeotly smooth and straight and
sixty feet in width. On either side of
the street the entire distance are ruins.
The road wae evidently built prior to
some mighty earthquake; ae it ends
abruptly at the brink of a mighty
'**»*<—" He dog up and fonnd lying
about a great number of skeletons
which were in a fair state of preser¬
vation, the heads all bring alike—
very large over the fjoe and receding,
and almost flat toward the back of the
head; jaws well developed, but front and
upper ea4 lower teeth small
sharp. The ruin* »how the people to
have workers in stone, some
fragments of work in turquoise being
found. Every available foot of land
had . cultivated. Tbe re¬
gion, although little has been known
•host it* is a vary accessible one, and
will no doubt beoome an interesting
resort for traveler*.
OMsat Parody ia the World.
Officials have already examined 8000
efthNmaasof papyrus ma nu s cr ipt re
eantly addad to tha Boy al M at
Berlin. They are in the Greek Iso
image and ia the main belong to the
first ea ntn ry of the Christian One
of of n
parody of the “Hied,” the
Nothin g tike
tbfMpajj^n.—
SSSSS MSSS
of Venice is notorious,
ys that a fourth of it* in¬
habitant* are paupers. in‘gold Yet today
48,000,000 francs Be in the
coffers of one of its banks alone. v
The Campania and daily Lnoania when driven consume to
600 tons pf coal
their utmost speed. This is equiv¬
alent to a consumption of a little over
900 pounds of coal per minute, or
twenty-five tons an hoar.
Three raspberry canes in the gar¬
dens of the London Horticultural so¬
ciety were grown from seeds fonnd in
the stomach of a man whose skeleton
was dng np from one of the old burial
mounds of North Britain.
According to the statistical abstract
of the United States, the total oost of
liquors consumed in this country an¬
nually is over $16 per capita, twioe as
mnch aB the total amount of the feder¬
al revenue.
Electric welding has been used to
remedy blowholes in defective castings
by first drilling out the defects and
then heating the casting and introduc¬
ing scraps of steel, which are melted
by electricity, making a perfect joint
without a seam or flaw of any kind.
Flammarion, the Frenoh astronomer,
recently remarks that our planet, if it
were as near to the snn as it is to the
moon, would melt like wax under the
heat from the solar surface, which is
composed of “a stratum of luminous
dust that floats upon an ocean of very
dense gas.”
A Charming Romanes*
He could not explain her indiffer¬
ence. Sometimes he thought she was
trying to conceal the love she had tor
him, and sometimes he thought she
hadn’t any.
“Yon are heartless,” he said to her
one evening in the twilight shadows.
“Yes,” she admitted trembling,
“some one has taken it away from
me.”
Upon this he rushed away and pur¬
chased a large and elegant engagement
ring .—Detroit Free Press
Eclectic, Ala.
I know Tetterine to be a radical cure
lor Tetter, Balt Bheum, Eczema and
all kindred diseases of the Skin and
Scalp. I never prescribe anything else
in all Skin troubles.
M. S. Fikldzb, M. D.
Sent by mail for 50o by J, T. Shop
trine, Savannah, Go.
The chimney of a lamp is less liable
to break if never touched with water.
A few drops of alcohol or even paraffin
oil will remove the dim, smoky effect
and make the ohimney bright when it
is polished with soft flannel or chamois
skin.
There are between 800 and 400
women apotbeoaries in the United
States, and, be it said to their credit,
they are rarely charged with making
mistakes, and never with permitting
winking at their soda fountains.
The Greatest Hedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Biscovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS.
dot this Letter day before yesterday.
Penn Yan, N. Y., Nov. 38,1894.
Your Discovery hat done to much for
me lam only too glad to tell everybody
about my case.
When I began taking it, one year ago
last July, I had DYSPEPSIA in Us
worst form. I wu constipated, to much
W as to always PAIN use injections, and I had
M constant in my STOMACH
i nd LEFT SIDE. My knees were stiff,
end I could not sit down on a stool or
jet down to fix, anything on the floor.
But now lean sit, or get down on my
knees, or do anything <n my garden. I
tfel like discouraged, a new pert on. I You have must lost know
>■ was as two
•Mere and an older brother with
STOMACH TROUBLE. But I truly
believe if they had known of your
remedies they would be well, as I am.
Tou can fix up my letter to suit yourself,
only do publish it, that women may
know what the Discovery has done for
me. Yours truly,
Mrs. MABY O. AYBES.
Send a pastel card for Dr. Kamdy's Beak.
To Orange-Growers. m —
The largest ’crop and best grade of fruit can only be
by using fertilizers containing
Not Less than 12% Actual Pota
'
This is equally true of pine-apples and other tropical fruits.
Our book* on Pofcuh are teat free. They via cost you nothing to read,
you dollar*. GERMAN KALI WOS»»«
Weak Mothers iii H!
and all women who are nursing babies, derive almoot
ceivable benefits from tbe nourishing pr oper tie s of
.4
Scott’s Emulsion
This ia the moat nourishing food known to sail n
riches the mother's milk
makes bebiss fat and give* more -
children than all the rant of the food they eol
Scott's Emission f*8W|
twenty yean \rt for Eh]
A-4P
Sessifer f ni/ilti em p- r.j — WPPP
Iown#, N. T. AN
■f v t
-
■
Concentrated thought, cent
When a five horse-power**
to do ten horse-power work someth!
going to break. Very often th*~
worked man "bolt**®* eomiag fro tn the fields
office will food in a few
nte* which foods will take hours about to digest useful in
too, many keg are of nails aa would be fo
stomach as a
fire under a boiler. The ill-used atom*
refuses to do its work without the prop
stimulus which it gets from the blood as
nerves. The nerves are weak and “reas
to break,” because they do not get 1
nourishment ill-used they require brain is from morbidly the blot wi
finally the
awake when the overworked man i
tempts to find rest In bed.
The application of common sense in
treatment of the stomach and the
system brings to the busy man the foil en
joyment of life and healthy digestion
he takes Dr, Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets to
relieve a bilious stomach or after a too
hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and
vitalize the blood. pills made The “Pellets” of highly are tiny
sugar-coated trated.vegetable ingredients which concern- relieve
the stomach of all offending need matters be easily taken
and thoroughly. They the only biliousness,
for a short time to cure
constipation liver; then and the slotlifulnesa, “Medical or Discovery” torpor» Of
the
should the be taken blood in and teaspoonful enrich it doses It has to m
crease n
peculiar effect upon the lining membranes and
of the stomach and bowels, all toning time. up
strengthening feels them the for effect of the
whole system pure
blood coursing vitalized through and the strengthened, body ana the
nerves are not
deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called
celery compounds and nerve mixtures do
—but refreshed and fed on the food they
need for health. If you suffer from indi¬
gestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and any
of the ills which come from impure blood
and disordered’ stomach, you can Medical turd
yourself with Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Discovery which can be obtained at any
drug store in the country.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURK. HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
— On this Coattasnt, ksvs rstsive*
HIGHE8T AWARDS
ftomthsgMst
i 11- In EmpeaXico.
pus Th.ir u«. zsmm
SOLO *Y QROCKRS EVZRVWNZML
WALTER BAKER > OOTdORCHERTER, M
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