ii .: I I 1^ mi •mi ^: i^^ i!- i^-\ m m Hi m T£LJ£ HOUbSHOIiP. Oolonng Baaketi. Ta give a bUok Ml«r to tiM wOlMr awd for bMketa and •ther wotmi wn tfia f«l- lawlng prsoett baa bean noanunandcd L«t tba material ramsfn from twalTe to tmaXf- faar ba^ in lukewarm water, aad Mmb dip ft a *i ffi lent length of time in a dye eom- peted bt five paita af grannd fnatio, threa of •olphato of capper, five of ralphata of iron, and fear ef oream of tartar. Iho dye ahanld be kept at a boillag heat tor half an hour, to extract thaoalcr from the fnatifl and dii- â- olve the other iogredienti, after whioh It may b« allowed tooeel. A email quantity of togweod added will sometimea Improra tko oolor. The lame preoaa may be mod ferooloilogTarlooafabrlot of whioh ram- BMT hati are made, snoh aa atraw, palm-leaf, graw, eto. Household Hints. Where a filter ii unattainable, a very little alam will purify foal watc r. An enooo •f alcm will puify a whole hegihcad of foal water. Chloride of lime ia an infallible preven- tive for rat«, ai they fl^e from ita odor aa from a peatilenoe. it ehonld be thrown down their helea, and ipxead aboat where- over they are likely ta oeme, and ahoald be renewed once a fortnight. To extirgaiih keroNne flamei, if no cloth la at band, throw flenr on the flamea. Floar rapidly abiorbi die fluid and deadens the flame. Tin canned goeda, when opened, ihenld be Immediately transferred to glass or earthenware xeoeptftcles. lUoont inreati- gatiens show that oases of poisoning from oatiiig 'oanned goods have arisen frem the soid of the osnned feed attacking the solder of the tins, and semetimea from deoempoil tien accelerated by an electrical action be- tween the ssider and the iron ef the tin. Nftver leave oanaod fruits, meats, or fish in opened tin cans. At this season ef the year napkiaa, table- oloths and often handkerchiefs and child- ren's olethiog are liable to be stained with fruit. It is a good plan to keep a bottle of Javelle water handy and wot the stained artlolet with tbia before thty are pat into tiio wash. I! this is done the stains will be oempletely removed. If yen cannot get the Javelle water, the next best thing ia a solution of chlotide of lime put into one quart of water ahake it thoroughly, and allowing it to settle, pour off the clear flald and bottle for use. This is uied the same as Javelle water, except that the articles to whioh this aolatien has been applied mast be theronghly rinaed in dear water before being pat into suds, Ohoica Eeoipes. Tomato Chowdeb â€"One-half a buahel of oreen tematoea, one dczsn onlona (sr leave th«m out if preferred ), one dezsn green pep pers, ail chopped fine. Sprinkle one pint efsalt ever this and let tand all night, drain efif the brine, oav^r with good visegar, and oook ene hoar, then drain and pack In a jar. Take two pounds brown angar, two tablespeonfuia of cianamsn, ene of allspice, one ef doves, ono of pepper, half cup of ground mnstard, one pint grated horfo radish. Vinegar to mix. Boil this and pour over the oontenta of the jar. Cbxah Fib â€"Line a pan with paste and pour in the following mixture and bake Oae cup of sugar, three tblespoonfuls of flenr, one cap of oream. §tlt well before putting into the paste. Spick Cakb. â€" Two.cais of floar, one cup ef milk, ene and oco-half cups of brown â- agar, one-half cup ef batter, tvo teaipeon- fuls of baking powder, ene tsaapoenfal of doves, cinnamon, and allspice, and the yolks of two eggs. If not stltf enough, add a little more fiaor. Light Cakb. â€" Take the white of two ^gs, one and ene-llf caps ef white sugar, ene oup of milk, ene-half cap ef batter, two oups of flour, and two tea»poonfnls of bak- ing power. After flavor wtth lemon or add currants (about a cup), or ne raisins, can- died peel, or a few cat away seeds. Fob Cvbiko Hahj â€" The following mix- tnie has been used by our family (ihe coun- trified ones) for about three generations. The bams are sure to keep ana are noted for their exollct "flavor. For 100 pounds ef meat take four pounds of fine salt, four ennoesef sai^eter, and one pound of brown sugar. Rab the ham with the mfxturo every other day, until all is absorbed. No more salt is rcqalred. Fbied £ rPLEs â€" Wlpa a few nice, smooth- skinred app!?s, have ready a tptder with a little butter and lard in it, let it get hot, and slice the applea into it, sprinkle a little sugar ever them, and fry slow to a nice brown, tklcg great care cot to let burn, t Splendid Cottage Puddiso.â€" Ono cup ef white Engar, one egg, batter tho size of an egg, ono cap of milk, ^two cop3 lot sifted flour, and :wo tableGpoenfnis of baking powder. Sjuse â€" Ore table spoonful of fljor, oce fourth cap cf Epgar, make into a smooth paste wi'di milk, and pour en hot water till thick enough, and let it come to a bail, stirring constantly. Flavor to taste. Yasilla la tho nioet. The Health Seekers. Tfro physicians happened to meet on the atrests of Toronto. " How do you do busy?" 'I should say so. I am on the go all day and all night. I am almost worn out." HlL;*' The same with me. I'll be busy for tifaw next two months attending to people who have returned frem their health-gettfaig trips." ^**So will I. When people are ent ef town at the health resorts we have a quiet time, but as soon as they set back they are sore to send for us. I've got more aenwal debility en hand than I have any 1 ier." A Cordial LiTitation. Scene, front deer. Time, 12 o'clock Son- day night. She Say, George, when are yen eeming â- Mint He: Oh, I'D be here Monday night. She Say, Oseige, oaa't yoa oeme be- feieMeiidayt "Tha UtteiBOSt Fart». There k little ef the eartti'a svrfsee thaft expleMia, advaatarera, er taad*8 ha^oMt Tidted, and, fer that very reaacau »• daobt, peenle are muoh btereiced in findiag ont s^t may be known about the few reaaln- bg nncxploired perttene. To say netUng aboat the Polar regions, about whieh there is, we may suppose, little that fa interestteg exoept that they are inaccessible i ner alwnt Thibet, whoee people will lot permit for- eigners to visit them j there are still a few eenntries alnmt whioh we are jost beg inn i ng to know through the visitt of observant gfli ^fn tift" explorers, whose stories f re cer- tainly very intorasting. There is New Guinea, for Instonoe, a great island nertfc-eastof Australia, which, tbe^h many sliipi have passed Iiy its shores, haa long been marked " unexplored" on the maps. It is BOW not only pretty well ex- plored, but ia being coleniaad by Eoropeana. Dr. MIklnohe Maolay. a Rusdan man of sot- enoe, will soon leave Russia with a party ef two hundred and fifty emigranta to stort a settlement at Astrolabe B«y. Hew strange that Rassia, with her Im- mense domain in Asia, should set about es- toblishing a oolony in Polynesia I When Dr. Maolay dedded to explore north-east New Guinea, seven jearo ago, he had him- self put on shore in the dark at Astrolabe Bay, and was left alone. There the natives found him in the morning, slttbg on his poitmuitoau en the beach. They did not Imew that there were any white men in the world, and they thought he had descended frem the sky. He en- couraged them in tiiat belief bnt they set aboat making experiments to find out whether ho wasof divine origin, whioh near- ly killed him. They shot arrows at him if he was a god, they said, these oonid not hurt him. Two of the arrows wounded him severely. Toey tied him to a tree and proBied their spoais againat his teeth till they made htm open his mouth. They starved him, bslievicg a god needed no food. They finally decided that he came frem the meen, and treated him well, because whether be was a god or not, ho did them mnchiorvioe with his medicine. Dr. Maolay remained there two years. Other Europeans have followed him, aad declare tho osast to be ene of the most beautiful r^ions in the world. The WoEtem Soudan, In Afrioa, is an- other great and papulcus regfon wliioh U jast opening to the knowledge ef the world. It is for the meat patt a rather level oonn- try, fertile, with soattered hills like our Western battes. The black Malinka and Bambarra racrs, pagans, poEsessed this re- gion until El Had] Omar, whose sons now rnlo ever the greater part of the western Scudan, and who belong to the Foulah race, also black, but Mohammedani, came, wield- inj! tbe sword of Islam. The Fealahs spread destruoticn over the coantry and El H«dj Omar set up a great Massulmon empire. Ho did some good, for he plantid trees over a wide extent of country, so that many towns have woods and thicksta around them where no vegeta- tion existed before. Bat tbe Foulah h^ve fallen into disunion and strife since E( Hat? j Omar died. One branch ef them, tha T^aouiears, have min- gled with the pa^an population to such an extent that the Fienoh, who are trying to get possession of the countiy, hope to make use of them to overcome the fierce and war- like Foulah sultans. The Great Si an States, in the interior ef Farther India, east ef Burmah and west of Anam and sooth of China, have until lately been almost as much an unknown region as Thibet. They have, altogether, an esti- mated population of thirty million, although the independent Shan States have but three mllUen. The rest of the country belongs to the surrounding kingdoms. Tho oily of Zlmme, or Tsoherg mai, the capital of the portion ef the Shan country that belongs to Siam, haa itself a pepnlatien seven hundred theuiand. It is rather diffi cult, however, to make quite sure what tho population of these towns really is, aa a Chinese oeniae effijial ones found out. He was sent to enumerate the people of Wa ming-hsien, somewhere in this region. He deputed the work to two assbtants, who returned such widely dlfierent figures that he discharged them after punfshinf them severely. He then sent two more efficlals, who get together and agreed to return the same numbtr, twenty thousand four hun- dred and ono. The ceneui tffisial shut them up separate- ly, asked each whether the odd one was a male er a female, and, receiving oonfliottng replies, reported both men for pnnishmsnt. He then tried to take tho census himself, bnt the people flsd to the woods, and he hanged himself In despair. Oil his person was found ths following CEN'sca OF THE Cray cf Wu ming hsien. In the Pr evince of Mei yu-fu. Men â€" acne. Woiren â€" none. Children uadrr H. ol both eex3â€" none. G/uid totalâ€" noae. The best tea of China comes from South- em Yrn-ran, which is mostly inhabited by Shan people, and from the Shan Siatss thenlBolves. The English traveller, Mr. Ce!q^honn, says that tho Sbans are peace- able, indattiioas, civilfzed and lettered, and seem to be by nature a race ef ^.eddlers. There is an Eoglish scheme for a railway frem Burmah into the Soan Stotea. The Cleik Goald Go To Bed. A countryman and Ida aan " put up " at a hotel during the Toronto fa r. San ent seeing the town. Old gent comes down frem his room at midnight and says to the nfght clerk â€" ** Haa my aen come In yet ' Nfght Clerkâ€"" Gueea not Haven't aeen him." Old Gentâ€"" Wdl, yen needn't aet up for him any longer." A Brooklyn lady at Greenwood Lake pnt her baby on a bed te aleep, and, fearing that It inlght roll o£E; plaod an ep«n trunk lialf full of dathirg ty the Indalde that the child might faU into it if it foil frem the bed. The child did fall frem tiie bed, and did fall Into the track, bnt when the motiier found it It was dead. It had tangled Ita liead in the clothaq; aadamotti* ered. Hoaible Faj Pewfc lie U oBtgrewth ol modern dvfl fwtiea, Mi jmeia miikr la p eree ne wio poweae la mere com men m «»•'"••" ~rl-3ii-n». Salcolture. H" *?«* "•*J?»«.r.!!Lta now weU a««taliiid to be P«"« •« ?^ nlanta. anch aa the gw«ios,rye, whea^ oat^ f«w5d and RemTn wenoweod. The pel- 2If dUferttit pfanta exottea It in diff«ent MraeiM, but whatever oauao prodncee it KcTwUl produce It again in the asme per- Sn. H»oe It appears eftontemea wKh %ct wgniarlty yelTaf tor ys»r, »t oeaasna TSJbg fr*m Mly to Ojteber. The st SSpto» •" »k»«» ef hchlng of the eyeUda 2d naaal pasaagea. followed by freouent aneerio^ and the discharge ef a serens fluid. Henry Ward Beeober, hlmmU a •nOwor, says " Yon never before even snspcotca what It reaUy waa to aneeao, I' a pane of slau Is gone yon aneeae. If yeu looB into Qie annahine yen aneczs. If you sneoae once yen sneeae twenty tlmea. It ta a riot «1 ineez». Pint, a single ene, like a leader in a fleck ef ahesp, boite ever; and then. in spite of all yon can do, the whole flock dasUog over in twea. In fivea, in bnnohea of twenty." Next, there ta redneaa and w ator- Ing of the eyea, aweUbig sf the muceua mem- brane, of tbe noae and general febrile sym- ptoms. Ssmetimea (he noae ta entuely closed by the awelling. .Cough follows, more er leas frequent and violent, generally with bnt little expectoration. In a certain proportion of oases there are parextama ef asthma, mere or less severe. After a vari- able dniatisn the snecz^pg ceases, the dis- charge becomea thick and less abundant, the swelling subeldea and all the symptoms abate. The only method of preventtng the disease in eusoeptible persona is to avoid ex- posure to the cxcl^ng cause. Certain local- ities have gained wide notoriety frem the immnnity which they afford from this disease Bsthlehem, N H u one of the most famous of these. Others are found among the mountains, at the seaside and on islands. A voyage at sea always gives relief. /ppUsfdr the Sick. Dr. Whitman, cf Beaufort, S. C saya " I find good, ripe, fresh apples one of the very best articles of diet where the patient wants a little something to eat, and only a little. I prevume there b mere at fault in the manner of giving them than in the art- icle itself, where faulty digestion results. If the attendant will pare tho apple, and then scrape it with a epeen er common oase knife, and give the soft pulp of a fresh applo, it will hurt no ene. To the contrary the stomach will frequently retain it, and the patient enjoy it, when nothing die oan be taken. I have used the pulp of ripe apples for a relish in fevers, when nothing else would seem to satisfy the patient's craving, and would not like to have to dis- card it, en the score ef indigestibility. Great chunks ef half ripe spples are good for no one, but the scraped pulp of a g^od apple will harm no one." Good Dkinctants. This is the season (Sf tha year when ditin- f octants are of the greatest aeivice, and shenld be regularly employed In every house where there is an occasion for their uf e, Evorytbing which can prepetly be so disposed of shenld be burned. Potato par- angs, remnants ef food from the table, and all aorta of garbage can be oanally mere easily disposed ef in tbta way than any other. Substances which oannet be gotten rid of In tbta way such aa honae slops, eto., may be disinfcoted by means of copperas, or aalphato e^iren. It ia well tci have a solution of dbinfeotant always on hand. D^olve two pounds ef oopperaa in a gallon ef hot water. Keep In a wooden or earthen vei- sel. A quart of this solution will thorough- ly disinfect several g.illcns of decomposing matter in flaid form. Hints on Feasting. The carving knife b mightkr than the sword. Mastard imprevea a lobster, but rnlna a chicken saUd, A good digestion b mere to be desired than great riches. It is brutal to drench an eystor with vine- gar er pepper tauce. He b a fool who inanlgea to excess either in eating or orinking. Peace at a dinner tabljreabte digestien, angry words ntir up bUe. The tinkle of the dinner bell ba pleaaant- er sound than tho blare' of the trumpet Prabo your housekeeper fer her successful dishes, and regard leniently her failares, Ndver accept the invitation of a man to tko ' pot lack " with him. He degrades the namo of dinner, and also, insults you. Nature b a great physician. Don't be afraid to trust her she looks carefully after the interests of her patients' stomachs. L^t an invalid have whatever he calls for to eat ii; Is not ho who craves it, bat Na- ture, and she will not permit him to eat to cxosts. A fewspeenfula cf soup, poiaasaiog body taken on an eirpty stomach, gives it tone and prepares it to receive aooeptably more aubataattal fare. In the progress ef oIvIHzaHon the frylDg. pan diiappeared with the advent of the gridiron whioh in turn haa been auper- oeded by the wire-boiler. A drop or two of lemen-juloe and a dash ef cayenne on an oyster may lie tolerated bnt it b best eaten directly from the aheli fiavored with ita own juice. A dyspeptic haa no right to dine among civilized bemga. Ho ahonld take a sea voyage, or go into the wilderness and Uve for a wUlo, like John the Baptist, en leonate and wild honey. The Arab bt the desert dividins hb laat handful of dried dates, and hbfewremata- lEg drepa of water with a wandering brother repreaenta the higheat typis of has^tallty, â€" â- Pair widow, examiidng aome black dresa material-^' But deea it fade I" Mr auf enstoin-" VeU, yea'm. ta toU ye. d« tSji it fatea a kedle. batlt ahe^t geea ht»^ iofly violet af tor ax mentha « K-SlLt ljta,ojdaw.ml,yo«r moonOag .mTSI LAW PQigiOI IBWB. Lodkaow Msthodisto bava had a green oemeoelaL The M*yor of Eart Selkirk, Maa haa re- algnod. and it4a atated tha eowoil wUl fol- low hb exaasple. Fifty thoosaad quarto of blue berriea Were ahlpped to tbe Stotoa during the month ef Angut frem only three atattena on the New Brnnawick Railway. Beya In a bam at St. Thomas, dbturbed aneatofhemeto They at once attacked a cat that was on the barn floor, and stong her to death before ahe cenld get away. There war oangbt at Port Stanley a few daya-ago a stargeon weighing 100 ponnda. boMeved to be by aU edda the largeat fish nver caught on the north share of Lake Erie. Tho P^rt Hope Chief of Police shot aeven- teen untagged dogs fn one day recently. The Times intimates tbat every dog which fails tononre atagtabooni to receive a ball. The eleotora of the municipality of St. Jeaeph, in Eattorn Algema. have voted down a by-Iaw^f er grantlnga boaue of $1,000 to establbh a grist mill at Riohard'a Land- ing- A Eiogston alderman opposes the pay- ment of city meney fer Mayer's picturea. He allegea that if the city oannot spare money fer street lighting and other useful purposes it oannet afford to buy paintings, especially aa the CHy Hall haa too many al- ready. Charles Eirat, accused of the murder of a msn named Glllb at Eamloopa, B. C has been discharged and an Indian girl oommit- tod for trial fer tbe crime. The gbl atatea she waa afraid she would b9 put in prison 'for life, and therefore aoooaed Efrat of com- mitting the murder. The body found near Copatown reoectly haa been identified as that i f Arthur Todd, who lived in tho vicinity of Toronto. The general belief b that he waa murdered, and the moat thorough inquiry will be made with the object ef clearing up the myatory anrrcunding the oirocmatanoea ef hb death. Rr3C«ntly a New burg woman Invitod a Salvation Army Captain to her house for dinner, but her htulMnd refused ||to tpt rmit him to enter the hnnse, and thereupon the wife promptly returned to her father's reef, and refuses to go back to her husbacd until he agrees to give her full authority to Invite whom she likea to their home. Two fierce Nswfenndland doga invaded an endesuro at Halifax where 39 sheep had been shut up preparatory to being taken tolthe slaughter house en the folio wing day, and in the morning fifteen of them were foand dead er dying, frightfully mangled, while all the others were more or less injured. Mr. Thos. Brown, ef Sberbroek, N. S., an old man ever 70 years ef sge, baa sheared daring the presest year 660 sheep. Several of the farmers for whem he ehearerl this year he worked for in same capacity 30, 40, and even ,50 years ago. Ho commecood sheering 56 years ago, and sinoe then he hs aheared ne fewer than 30,710 sheep. A P3ntpnel correspondent states that dur- log the exoavation of a cellar at that place one of the workmen found what at first ap- peared to be a lump of lead, but upon Inves- tigation proved to be an almost pure geld nugget weighing 8^ ounces. Smaller quan- tities have a.noe neen found In the same section, and also small quantities of plati- num. A young man ef Naokawick, N. B quar relied witn a young lady to whom he waa engaged beoanse ahe allowed another suitor to pay her some attention, and entered init agi^st her father to recover $2S. The bill of particulars Inclnded jewellery, seme wear- ing apparel, and $15 in meney. Before the case was tried, however, tbe young couple met again, the flime o! love was rekindled, and they were married before aoy other ebstade cenld Intervene. It b stated at Edmentoo, N. W. T., that two well armsd. suspicious oharaaters have been seen near Eleanor, and an Indian who entered a white man's camp near there while the oacnpanta were alet^g declares that there were tour men with their revol- vera belted on and gnna by their sides, and that their horses were picketed dose by. It is suspected that the object ef the men is to intercept parties goinf; out from the scrip bsue at Lao la Bloho to Calgary by the Vic- toria and Battle River reuto. At Zarich a fe^ nighta age, a gentleman who happened to be ent late, while proceed- ing homeward, fancied he saw a couple of parsons at the window of a dwelling on his route. He at once j amped to the oendusien that they were burglars, and dropping on his hands and knees he proceeded cautiously toward the house, and was intonsely db- gufted to find that hb supposed burglars were simply a yesng man helping his lady love into the houte by way ef a window at 12:30 am. Mr, Aroh, Molntyre, Lt'enae Inspeoter for East Elgin, has instrnoted his solicitor to enter an action againot Riv. J. R. Gundy, of Aylmer, for $2 000 damagea for libel. The alleged libel ia oontaiued in the following atatoment which Mr. Ghindy ta re- ported to have made at the late meeting of the Djminion Alliance :â€" " In the County of Elgin the Aot waa in force. Tney aisked the removal of the inspeotnr there who was not in sympathy with the Act. Ho w.-iB frequcmay aeon reeling about the Ettest." A St. Themaa Tetorlnary surgeon pulled a dog'a teeth reoentiy. The canine was braced up on Ita Itind legs on a chair, and opened Ita month qaito naturally. The sur- geon took advantage of the opening and with a pair of horae foroepa took a firm hold of an eye tooth. The dog yelded and wrap- ped hb lega and tail around the aurgeon'a Mrma in a deaperato gr^ bat the foroepi kept hold, and after a iiard fatrngrie the teeth waa twn from Ita fattonlnga. The dos feU bade in a dead faint, bat was aeen re- vived and aet at liberty. The atory ta toldi ttat while M Ue Rhea, the actrtKi. waa at St. John. N. B a few weeka ago, a reporter oaUed open her just M she had completed a broafaat of boUed ohidcea and while tiia akeleton of fhi oUokea atiU repoaed on the pUto at her olbew. Tho reporter, wishing to air hb Ffonob, aaid Ughtly bnt with not qulto the Ptfisiaa accent, •• Boa jour, mademebelle." Ahe Mtareaa atarod at htm for a moment, uiakiag that ha was apoakiag Biiglb)i, and fhaft ha aaid, « Bom ySw 1" Thw the re- ««ntlfSt.tL*«?53 »»y«dghtaaa'"*^l »â- cemetery. Th. """^IiilW profes.te'ij^ttg oeptthat the»7*'^««irjT ohargevUlt.JJV^wk.'te ly.audlhattheJ^fhC'i J*F0fit,destJS?*|S2 the funeral, but ;2"^««2 Mrs. Barns, ,fpT^l5l Bixnights. D«Srit"Wj!l rennding oonntnr k?' *•»» iSa parties bat wlthsntfo?. "^XH WJ andallh.p9ofhttt^'"«»»jiil dened. bS :«'« hi^jj last the came h««.^%» aij byh.rhu.b«dl!;Ll!*rj outof bedforsou^^f^UkS oold.hethonghiS:Cjj she had been%rhr,rK 1 in search of her U u "^^wJ mystery. Some veSTi^^ «3 forashartthseff l*r nppn Tib BIOHAPElOii. The wealthier nun In «„»„. nowonhlswaytott, i.râ„¢J Nyargwe, the great tadhg^lJI black wlbM on the npp.rb,?"' of African books ef ti-a7elh«.T: dealofTlppnTtb,and„'C5^-, greatly increased hU poWS fij are likely to her mnoh ef him. T?ppaTIbi.,nly45y,»r„. as coal, and of mreld blood, 4"1 that he comes of an almixtie,u,l tribes of east Aftlos anlhnirl little Arab blood in hii velni "ul in central Africa for twenty five nil fa to day the gieateat tliwaadlimU in the world. He hu enUtrippdil oompetitftrs threngh ihesr fotad J and atrength of cbarscter. Aiku the tima when Cmfr»n!ntr»diifleJi our notice he rhited Nytngwe «d bullying Arab traden there tht I did not leave certab latin lUn A alsno it would bethe.Tenefaithsm, f lost no time in pledging etenij m\ Tippa Tib and all hii irieidi, Cameron lay i Tippn Tib vu the dandy he saw among the trsduioi L that, althoogh of negteld blwd, he i a therongh Arab icmKanetitsdilea] his white yIsUoti speak ef th« ili|Bi bb Arab attire andef hltcmrtljaiil beating. StftalEysayithttathiifintd lag with Tippa lib be regtided !!lgii| moat remarkable man he htd net i the Arba, Wa Swthill, ud bil! i Afrioa. Lient, Van Q«ie ef tei atata, who met Tippn Ttbh Jmufh says he was sorprited by the iitnl i\ infotmation en Ecrtpiaa ieplca Hit familiar with evento eooanlog ii En and waa particulaily Uteieitedii thifl liah, Gormani, and Belgiau "Ikir tlona he asked me," sayi VaaGiU," ed that ho h neither an Ignorut as ono of ordinary mind," Henidhefc ed aome day to go t« Euope, Tlilttti| of the Belgians and alie spend v»x in Cenatantineple. In Tippu lib's home, eonthef JJ" Cameron aavs that large gwgi •! i walkiBg ab«ut in caains met Ui M every turn. They were leading ei^r r were well ted, and be sswns •rt«l" there. All had been ""•'"»' fj^Hl tho crying wrongs taat Me iâ„¢ i"!; the aimplo aavagea ef Africa, vaji surprbed in their peaceful h«MilJ sudden onslaught of DpP" y" soldier slaves, who had barned tt*« killed their friends, and J^^f J^ into captivity. TipP°T»'l'S representative of these o6nw";J' iLflwttng mare icffanng npea tW* ir.atc.re. than any other hum«Jfl professional slare traders afiWJ of Tppa Tib'a •'»'««'« "li^ ocean.^' Tney are sold amenjth.^ tribes on the way to th'e..J2«, vans, however, ri°Wy Utww» areof^ndispatcnedtoheo'"^^^- ItwasTfppa who bjlPfJ*^ down the C^ngo from Ny«l^^; where both Livtogf^jgttei dtfaated In their tff*rt^»o*«^2le,',l farther. For "'"//•'f '^bt^ party was augmented by •«' "",,^ Jf Tippa W. men. 2^ 1^ beautiaa from the gre» «" companled him on t^'l'^Yn '^b^fste c-^ C.4o, where he un^^5^»'^^„iftj. ef the river '^^ '^^ ^.V I about 353 miles bel«i»Nyf^b^ his elavo pen near St^«? jjfl,* twentyfivahundreawejb ^^a/J foundtwoyearsaoj^e;^j^^6.j International a»oej»J.w'i,g f^ 8iJ For many mile" taj'" '«,»«« was chased by large 9^} ;iS party siiff^red ^ej"' « ^^^Jt arrofra of the mo't^f, Xne" ???J ho met on the CoB«V„th,C. „.„^ raassn^^^^j^yhsj^ about eighty nuI"?J'J«^ Dt. 1*J^ to attack «««•/' jSst.«l«fSAJ* explorer, wreta «*° fjiiaaijl^,^ last that betjo« *j;;;roap*bi«'ir3 river the natives werj^t*^^ among them,^ « •**'L!r*««^ other -«7,;J;\;.W3' bf««tb.^"' ef »1" Lonz adds 1 Tippu Tib region than tha* " ' ^^ Invited mU8.en« J' %teo*»- h^ nromised tntin v ^^^^.^^ HeadofthebJi^JJi^.WX^^J into-^ayanim_g'^..jl*fl^.,V_- en Rita: T«« th« "'"^t*^' Sveo'tgstVSdlW*"' the Hottse-' ""