!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w~~..&'HJQlf.lll'Et.~~~~,~~~~~~~,~~~!~~~~~ - ~l«l~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WATElt FOJ:t. THE SOLDiJERS. A. .l'iJJC Line to lieJ,ahl l'Tmn Snnkim Acroqs 'rhc l)cije1·t, llJSBHfL .DINTS. S:ri>WED CELE&Y.-"\V1u:h1md trim fo1n or tiva Ut"!lris of celny. Out t hem in equal lengt.hli--about four inches long h the heat size. Stew tr.em in m ilk un t il q ai~.e t endfJr, uhey wiH take about im h-0m a.od a h alf to cook. Season with snlb. When tender, la;v them in a vegetable tureen thicken the milk with an ounce of butter, and the Si>lllC quanit;y of flour, and ~erve. R .n.ILWAY PoDDil"G,-One t ablespoonful Hour, on~ tablespoonful pounded nugn.r, one eg:z, one teaopoooful ha.king powder. Mix all theaa ingl'ediento well together, then add a little milk, 11inffichmt to 1na.ke i nto a thick bat.ter. l 1 our in.io a buttered fl~t ttn, imd bake ten mfoutea in a quick oven, WJ:i.en cooked spread over it a lay or of preserve, a.nd roll over three times while hot. P.10E MILK SouP.-To every ! lb. of whole rice allow three qu11rtts of rrulk and 1mgu to tnete, Wa11h tl1e rice well, put it into an enamelled s11>uoepan, and pour the milk over it. Let it come to a boil over & clear fire and tbcu draw the saucepan on to the Bide and allow to ~lmmer for t\vo hours, or rather more. J "nst before rcmovivg it from the fire, ood wffi!lient auge.r to taste. Serve either hot or cold for anppe1·. Thill ls an excallent vegetarh~n dish. To STLE'FEN .AND GLAZE Oou~ar.s, Ere . - M:elt a lump of borax in half & wir.eglaas of hot water, mix it in cold white starch ; have the things dry before starch· ing them, then starch woll onoo only. Place the collars and cuffs singly in & towel with a fold of it betwe~n each row-, roll up each ahirt tightl1, have a box-iron ready, and iron at once very quickly. The heater should be red hot, Bnd if kept moving quickly will not eootch Each article aa finished to be placed close to the fire. The onff;s and collars are beBt on a tray, 1md f.t is placing the l!hirts, etc , close to the fire stitfens them, the bora:x givet1 the glaze. I wa· taught by a London clear-starchar, and have found the plan sueceesful always. MIXED I'ICKLlliil.-To every two qudrts of vinegar ailolV' two ounoos brui:sed ginger, two ounces, two ounces of mustard, of salt, one ounce of muatard seed, half s.n ounce of tmmerio, half an ounco of ground black pepper, a 111!.ltspoonful of cayenne pepper, half an ounce of cloves bru!aed. H ave a large jar with an air-tight lid, put into it ae much vinegar as fa required, put the mastard, turmeric, pepper, and cayenne in a basin, mix them thoroughly with sufficient vinegar to mske into a smooth paste, and add to tle vinegar in the Jar. Keep thill liquor in a warm pllloe, and stir every m.omlng for a month. It wlll now be ready for use. Put vegetables into lt as they come into season, taldng care to pick them on a dry day, and wipe them with a cloth to remove any moisture or bla cks. The following vcge~ables may be used: Canlifiowar, white cabb~e, onions celery, sliced cucumbers, gherkins, French be&m·, nast urtiums, citpakama, young ancl old carrots, beetroot, rad.iahes. '!'he vegetables which requl?e it should be sliced, and the caulifl.owera divided into smaller bnn ch~s. Put these into the pick le raw, and at the end of the season, when as many of the v()got!l.blea have been added as could be procured, store ib away in bot bles, and, t ie over with a bladder. It will be ready t o e&t in !libvut r.ine or t welve months. · A. iHS1.'0ltl(; llltUJD. ~lever Swindler~. A :M»RD LY DARE-DEWIL. 1·c11l'le~s l'1·m!.l<~ lllow the n:ml· or E11gh11ul nas ltoll'·"d by 1.'he St1·anc;c m id tof Lo1·d FURS! ROBES I HATS! 8cra~1"1n-d. The British Governmen t, according to the c11,ble deapatches, has adopted !l. 1 ovel plan for aupptying the forceu in the Soudan with an itbundance of water. This plan is to lay a system of pipes in the ~e· sert and force water through them wuh powerfal pumping engines. "The British Government propos<>e . to rnn a pipe line acroas the desert from Suakim to Berber," said a member of the firm of H1omry R. W orthington of New York, manufacturers of pumping engines, yesterday, , 'and we are under contracb to furnish the pumping engines. We P.hi1)· ped two engines on the Adriatic on hJ,at Baturday, and will shlp two more on the Britannic to-morrow. "I thin.Ir it is clear that the adoption of this measure by the British Government. is of great moment. The journe>y . from Cairo to Ber ber by wa.y of the Nile 111 aboub 1,200 mtles. The i;lownesa and hardships of that route are familiar t o every reader of the despatches. F rom Suakhn to Berber, in a a irect line acroal! the desert, the distance is about 260 miles. The look of water on the rout e makes this stretch of desert very difficult for a large force. Even t he bui1dlng and ma\n. tenance of a rallro11.d would be extremely Water in difficult for the same rea.aon. large quantities would be needed for the son11truction hands, the soldieru to guard them .and the completed route, and for the engines. . "Ih is proposed to change all thill by laying tw-o linei? of four-inch pipe between Suaklm and Berber. At intervals of twenty-five or thirty miles, or even lass, pumping, stations according t? the plan will be established. There will be t wo engir.es at every stat ion,capable of pump ing water at a pressure of 2,000 pounds to the square in ch. There will also be a big tank at every station. Water will be delivered at the (lnd of the route at the rate of about 150 gallons per m.lnute. ',With plenty of water at hand the oon· mce of a double11trucbion and malnten1 track railway between Snaklm and Berber will be an easy matter, and the 1iranaportation of t.roops and stores to Berber, whiJh Lord Wolseley seems to bedesirous of making a now base of operation3, will become as much a. matter of course as the conveyance of the Sevent,h Rtigiment by ;rail from New York to Washington. "It has been settled that the pipe ls to be laid in ziz-zag lines, to allow for expansion and contraction unde1· the l!and. The laying of the pipe if a snfficienti force of men is put to work, ought no pi'oooed at the rate of about twenty miles a day. An American gent.leman, conversant with all the detaila of the oil pipe-line system, now in London, is in consultation with the Briti&h Govornment, and. there seems to be a disposition to expedite the work. "It will, of course, be n eceiseary to have a guard at every pumping station on thel·oute. The~<~ stations will also be stop1:ing places fort.he railro~d trains. If the Mahdi's fo1·ce11 cub t.he pipes the diminished prnss11re at tho n earest pump ing stat ion will speedily demon strate t~e fact, and a force can b e eent out to r epMr the break." Save(l from :tn Ava la nch e. Avalanches have be0n more frequent than is uuua! at thi11 time ot t he yei;.r on the Swistp ide of t he G1001.t St Bern.v,rd Hospica/ Travellers who luJ,ve pas~etl over Mont Jou will reme:mh e·r t.he Hue of long posts tha.t rum~ Cl.own t he middle of the gorge le.aCling t oward M;i.rtfgny, althou<>h every on e may u ot be awarn that t~ey mark the track t ak_en in winter to avoid the avalanches which often at this ee2,son s weep ovo1: and obst ruct t he ordinary 11lgzag road. N eerly every morning a monk, accompanied by t wo or three servants and several mastia'a, goes out to look for footsore and possibly perishing wayfarers. It is literally a man hunt for the mastiffs quest like any other hounds, and can scenu bodien at a coneiderable dept h under the snow. A.bout t en days ago Ca.non LuM er imd two servants who went out on an expedition of this sort., nauowly escaped ex· changing t he role of saviors for _ that .of victims. W hile still close t o tho H ospwe the Canon h& ard. a sound he knew only too Hell-the thuvd·'r of e C'1ming a val.an· che. He bounc1.ed b1 :.ckward at the pas :riJmnastigu e, shouting at th? n~.n:e time to the t wo servant.a to do bLew1·1a. The avalanchA paor.;ed "'"it,hout tou< 1hing him, but when he looked round h es comThe n<iX t pa.uloos hail. dfo~ppeo.red . moment, however, on!:l Qf thfm at:mggled out of a heap of srww. But where was the other? He could neither be seen nor h eazd, and t h<:! eurvlvor11 felt; c ;rtain t hat he wa-11 irrevoc~bly 1011t. After a second and longer look, however the Co.non fancied he cou'.d sJe a black m11.rk on the snow some distance away. They ran t o the epotat onoe a nd , surely enough , the black mark aa the lost inan'a boot . The r·al of him was burkd un<ier th e avc1.hnche. 1l'l\g Mm out by dw An atfompt t'.l c leg faifod··-th"' wei~ht c'.f imow wns t no !!l'eat. Them war:i :nothng for H but t o dig their comp o.nion C'Ut wJth thoir hands It was don e 01tly jnst lu tlme·. Ho w&s quite iur.eJ.Jaiblo at.d recovered vr1th gre.>t d.1fficulty. A faw aecondr; moro and he would have pcrfahi>d. Tbe m1n's nnmo is Collon1bior, lloUd this malica the third time he has ~en over~al!en by an avalanche :md rescu:>d M bv a miracle, frc,re the j 'l.ws of dcath.'-fLowJ:;n Timm;. Reeent tk~p"tches from tho seat o.i 7'ar in ·i·ha bouds.11 have arousod a aus-Jicl.on in the minds of 11orue oynic::1l ob&etvera that General Wolsel&y io be1ngp>J.idby theda:y. Atte.ched to the staff of U· Prussian gen. eral is a young offi'.}er, who fo ordered on special duty to Egypt ; on bidding him good-bye, the general says to the aide : "Bring me back a mummy." The aldede-ca.mp 1eturns in about six mont hs. "Well where's my mummy 1" " I've got it gen~ral. lb is down-stairs." "Well, ie't us go and see it." The sa.rcophagua is opened ; the general and his aide unroll the bandages. When the mummy is at last exposed, t he intdligent Dutchman exclaims : "Why yonr confounded old mummy is dead !" The last great fraud by which tlw Bank "The 1~0ws which mine hy telegraph f .Eughmd has been a su:tf.orer '!l"JJ.ll ! l1at 111 ·hiH motnir.g," Fa.id a gen tleman recem.J;, ~ust·n Bidwell and his a,ccomplicei· 01i "d o tl"a not eurpri~t> I!lf' 1n the .l e~~t.. The ohe 18th of April, 1872, Aurit.iu I{1ilw<i1J ceacue of Sh- CbarleB ·w ih1(1U ie just what -IIIANUF AC'l'URER AND DEALER INcalled upon 11. tailor named Greuu, ir, m4i;ht have ooen 6Xf>f-'C'ied from a B.,rtl"S· ilavilltJ ruw, and under the assumed nmnf io:rd ; they are a fi~lHing r i:.ce. '£.i10Ee of Warren gave him a handa'ime order who t.hink that c.h e l\j age 'blood -will ttJll' Minks S, S Stial, P ersian Lamb, Hussin.n Lamb, Beaver and On May 4th he pai.ci Mr. Green anoi-he1 a a myth c1.1.u not do better thAn 2~udy Otter Muffs, Bowi:i and Cap s. vitilt. He was then p:rofosse<lJy on h is ·he history uf 1b.i.11 fighting famiiy Ml<l see way to Irel~nd, &nd having a.bout him a 'low from ge11era.tiv11 to g eneration moot large sum of money agked Green to takti of the d.es..:enda.nt.e hava been s·m!<, a ud chiuge of i.t during 1is absence. Green tightin.g w1rn l:\t t.lut. H is not long ago chan Jackets, and Gents' Coon Coats a specialty. he&h.ated to take the te11pon11ibili.ty, but when one o f t.heee flgh 1,h1g Bereiofordis remarked that the branch &nk of Eng· th1ashed ~Ill editor iu hi·i e11uctum because land wue in Burlington gaxdene, clore by, he had pr inted !'.!owething which dbpleas· MITTS and G LOVES in Ueave.a-, Persian and Russian and offered to introduoo Warren there ed him. '].'his oame Lord Chax 1~,s B er esThb wa..~ done, and Wanen opentd an foro, whose exploit the telegraph r aLamb, Kid, Wool and Hair Seal. :1cooum; by & depueit of £1,200. H e grwe oount.s, wears upon his left b reast i wo his name as Frederick Alberb W ;nren, medoJa which he probably values uwr t> HOBES.- Huffal o, Coo n and Black, ·white and Gray J ap. ;i,nd .hia addreM 11,s Golden Crues hotel. .J11m the Vfotoria. <r.oss, a.1Jd the .Brit's ff,~ paid in and drew out moneys to a con- government gives him t~peo1&1 peimiJ:1si.>n eid1irl!l.ble amvnnt, and ~hoTtly rei.:an to to wear them," o(for bills for diacount. They bore the ··How were they won~" beat of namee and were drnoounted with"Wllile a midsh.ipma.n, on two occaslona White, Hegatta, F re11 ch, Cambric and Wool Shirts, Brac;ies. out hesitat ion. On the 17th of June, tie sp:raog overboard and sz.ved Hfe. On Tieis, Silk Handkerchiefs, Collars, Cuffs, also over 25 1873, a bill of Rothchilc\'11 for £1,,600 Vl' M cne occasion his own life was yery nearly choice lines of :F'an cy , J>Jain and Ribbed Underoff~red and wae disoounted iu due oourse. aacrificed, he, as well aa the seaman he H11ovi:og thus g11.ine<l, by tr ..risactiona in aaved, being imienaible when :rescued. clothing and Cardigan Jacket~. genuine bills, the confid:e nce of the bank For £a.ch oftheso actis the Royal Humane authoritiea:i, the enppolled Warren com- Society of Great Brlt11.in vottid him a menced opcrat\oIJ.B of another kind. Bille medal and the Ilritbh g~·varnment h.aa came in thick and fast for di!count, still l>-'·rmitted him ~o wear them." heaiini;c the same finit-clans n\\me11" Will he get the Victoria cro!dl for this Highest Cash price paid for Raw Furs. Rothllchild, Blyden11tein, Suee, and Sil- a.ct of bravery 1" beth. ek. ; bt1.t the1 were now cleverly. "No; this is only given for acts of executed forgeries. The bank continued sierson:a.l bravery. ln ttJ.is caae he '!as to dlecount witboutsuepicion . . Naturally, !!imply in collinuwd, and will n ot roce1ve however, It pa.id in it.!! own note!!, of which any Bpecial decoration." . vho numbera were recorded, and whi.l·h, "What bill! hill history b een bUhe.rto 1" - - OF -when it WM discovered that the bills wet'tl "He waa a. member of parliaIDt011t for forged, would be difficult to realil!e. Waterfo1·d, and wii.s elected aga!nat the Bidwell, in order to dispose c·f t~e11e ~ud oppoeit.ion of two hom.e-ralers; that Wai! to dl.roinish the che.nces of idtmt1.fioahon, whi1e Disraeli wll.e premier.·. Thea. at the opened an account in aoother name last election, which I think was in 1880, (Horton) at the Cont inental bank. Rere he stood ngain , n.r,d wais beaten by M1'. he pald in the notea received at tha Bank Willi~ St.uart, tlm home-ruler. .As to of England, taking French and German hiB naval record, 1 C'an eay that he wa11 money in exchange, .Hill3--under the the comman der CJf the Thu r.deNir when name of Noyes-acting as hia clerk. she blew up, but fortuna.tely at that time Sometimes, by way of varie·y. Rills w·&a enjoymg a leave of absence, or .he changed Jlotes Into gold at the Bank of would doubtle~ have gone to glory with Englimd itself, alleging th11.t the c,-oin wa11 the rest. After that he commanded the '\Vo will begin a. Great Clear.ng Sale of our immense 1toc!t. for export, but the gold be obtained w~ queen's yacht Oaborne for a time, bub brought back again- by Macdonnell 111nd speedily followed the family instinct, and, of Dry Goods and Clothing. We quote no price· but 't'fe exchanged for fresh notee, which, thus fiud.ing that there was fighting ponsible cbtained, would have no obvious oonnec- in Egypt, at once got himself appqinted ar~ ~ertain our customers will be surprised at the swupiOf t!on vrith the originll.l frl\Ud. George there. The praaent I.,ord Ohe.rles BeresBid"ll'ell nnderbook what may be called ford is the second orother of the imioont lreductions in every department. the manufacturing department-namely, marquis of ·waterford, and la well known the preparation. of the plates and ~he in the clubs in Dublin, and liondon as a printing of the btll forms for the fo:rgenes. noted athlete, being one of the fineab By thus dividing their labora, and work- boxllrs that ever put on the gl oves." ing each in a distinct department of the "Bow did hi11 brother, Lord William In Tailoring Department fraud, the gang hoped to evade discover1 Beresford obtain the Victoria c.ro11a ~" until they had made what they regardl'd "That w~s in Znluland, !l.11 a vo!u1.1tear. \Ve mean to prcrte as a sufficient h!tul, when thev would H e was with the army in Afgha'bi&tll.n ; Very tempting bargairni will" be offered. doubtless have retired to foreign cli~es when peace wa.a made, peace, of· cour se, beyond. dispute that we cannot be undersold: to enjoy the fruits of thoir labora. ~ow <ltd not suib him, and h~ got leave and much furbher they would have goue it is went down to Zululand iu a volunteer. iropo~aible t-0 say, for thev had already He was with t he moun:ed l!1fau try in an ofl:'sred forged bills to the amount of over engagement whei.1 t hey were be:~ten, and £102,217, when a happy ove"ight led to had to retreat. On tha retreat he oama Bowman ville, Ocl ob er 16th, 1884. ~ ,....--------·--....... ____ it-.~----_,,,~ their detection. 'l'wo billa for £1,000 actoss the sergean t grievously wounded .,...........__ ! __ ·~ ---~~~::::_:..-·~~-~-... each, professedly aco<Jpt.ed by Mr. Bly and he alighted, got him on his own H E AL'I, 1.::£: denate!n, and payable three months after hor110, and m1.maged to ride off e~[ely "sl.ght," were not ' ·slghted"-tha.t is, the with him. It wa~ in the heat of a bit ter date of acceptimce was not inserted. A fire from the enemy, and was an act of "1erk of the bank was rient to Measrs. exceptional brave1y, the sergeant's l~fe Blydensteln's t-0 geb the omie11ion rectified, having evidently beon saved. For this, '"rd wae met by the startling iniorn:.ation Beresford rOCt;iived the Victoria cross, tliat the bills were forgeries. With s0me the highest honor England can pay, bnt, fotle tronbh , the whole of the gang were as I have so.id, I t hink Sir C.harle1:1 v;i,lue11 arrested, and, a.fter"' t rial lasting eight his modest medals of tho Ilumaoe iwoiety Purify t he Blood, correct eJl Disorders of the days, were convicted and senteuced to qnite as much as ho would the croes." L I VER, ~'FOJ11'iA.t;I1-1, lih'l.D~J<Jlr~ A.ND GOWEL~. (Jook l ng a Plump mn d ]:1 H 1tt1 Girl penal servitude. - lVew York Commercial The1·e am In t hi11 country llt the pr esent time two of this noted family, L-Jrd They invigorate and rest ore to health Debilitat ed Constitutions, and E arle, wrote a very readable, In- A dve~·tiser. _ _ _ _ _,..__________ _ . Delaval, who is earning hfo laurels as a are invaluabl<i in &11 Complaints incidental to F emales of all .Ages. For t elligent, and bot little k nown aooount The 11.itciry of a. Burglary. cowboy in Texas, and Mr. J. G. BeresChildren and. the aged they 11;rro pr icoleaG. of t he Manri11 very early in the present 'I'here is l'< lonely, remote '>'illage in ford, who Is well known in thia city aa a century, !!peaks of the g11ntle manuer:ij 0 ,"l"byahiie, remote from railways, which member of the Union, th e Jocky, a.nd thQ TH E OIN TMENT and kindly ways of a New Zeei.hmd ohief, I used to know very well. There is a fine New York Yaohtclubs. Is an infallible remedy for Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Old Wound:s, Sores whom he a.ftenvard dieoov-ered to be an pa.lnted-glllbB window in the venerable Thls gentleman has been In this counand Ulcers. It is famous for Gout and R heumatism. For disordere of the inveterate Mnnlbal. H e relates that he ohurch, whlch has underneath it the try c..fI and on ~ince 1870. For a time - Chest it h as no equal.visited the p\aee where W I/.!! cooking the words, "Ont of the mouths of babes and he &ctcd as the agent of his comin, Lord bcdy of a young slave girl th&t his friend sucklings. " This window with the ln- Charles Beresford, in the management of For §ore Th1·oa~.g , -~r@nc!1itis 1 Uo u ~lls, Co.Ids, h&d killed for the purp0f3e. The head acrlption is connected with a daring bur- his estates in Ireland, and when he last Glandular Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has no rival; and ·for w aii severed from the body; the four glary. I know well t h e house where it rnn for parliament this Mr. Beresford contmcted and stiff joint s it act s like a. charm. qum1;ern, with t he- principal bon01l r e- happened- an old manufal houee, for the \' as his election agent and man~ged hia moved, wer9 compresfled and pe.okt"l<l. into old rector waa a Squarson, living in the canva11s. H e is vrell known in N ew a sm11ll oven in the ground, and covered ancestral hall, and leaving the rectory to York societ.y , and is a favorite in r.11 of M anufactured only at THOMAS HOLLOW.A.Y's Est~blishment, with earth. It wad a oaae of unjuatifiable others. Th.e old rector had married a theclubs.-[New York World. 78, NEW OXFORD STREET, (la te 533, OXFORD S'EREET), LONDONi0 ca.n nibalism. No revenge was gratified young wlie--an arra.ng11ment, by the.way, And are sold at ls. 1]-d. , 2s. 9d., 43. G d. , lls., 22s., and 33s. each Bo;i;: or Pot, u.d by the deed, and no excuse could be which in t his rase worked exceea.111gly The Baymla Desert. may b e had frlilfi1 all Medicine Y enders throughou t th.a World. made th~t the body wn.s eaten to p erfeot well nod by-and-by ca·ne tho inevitable · ! ~ G kd 1 h · rl h E t th t h ·" · '" A correspondent writ ng iroro a n .1!3rl?nrchas ~ril s b oulcl look nt the Label on the ~'oti a n d Boxes. Ir the 11ddre&!i t e1.r t u mp · &r_e says a e baby 'l'he old rooter, at his time of thus a'e~crlbes the BayuJa desert : The learned that t he flaah takee many hours 1 f · 1 · t ·- d th · 0 f th b b b n o& :;:;3 , Oxford iltreet, l'.01ulon, t hey are s p 1uJous. th t it t h "f t i e, oou a no s.,..n e no!Be e a y, sout h west of Afohamstan and the ea.stern · d t o cook ' an . a is vEnry oug i n o d t kl. lf £f! to a ·eparate room -"' h il, t t f thorou hl cooked but that it puils in an . 00 u mse Oil · u r art of Beloch111tan, t e w ,..es par o . l~k y b't f tt" . if ell of hie own. One night, m the very depth Armenia and that part of Arabia that piocea l ea l o o mg raper w of the ni,,ht t he infant made a most ' Ad b· d th 0 ' · . done He continuea tha' the vlctUn. waa h- h k hes near en, are, a as ey appear .d . · ~ l l f 8! howling, precoc10us noise w ic awo e when ono is travelling in bheru, perfect a . Ell1 ll(d·me, oo , gir (,~l the youog mother. She attended t o her parTM3ises compar ed with thfa Be.ynda. 6 been.bar., o;:e a, 'I~soo. l'f"<t'J.Uf;t·~ Y 0 child, & nd then 'Jfent t o the window. nnd deBert as it a-ppears during the pre~enb see 11. 011t, r.,,e pan. o quo e 11.s own d bl- d t 0 "t11· 0 l 0 k t tb · . · 10 word~ - "Whi2o llatenin>' t) this frightful "ti!W ~,Pt1 m · · : ah ~ -:;·:, . e aea~on. Evllryt bing but a little m1 mo~a, 0 10 0 ' det,nil - ,rn f .h e1ck a]{;;_ t t o fainting. , night , t>e piio~le. ~ay. .? · ~, ~ and close to the we_lht a. !ew tufts of v;iry 08 Welch .A t-l:-;:;-the cl1iaf -.,rho had killed Llrnre was an~troo1ou;s-lool,rngmansta1.1d and wooden gra!s, i~ vnbnared and dried. The mounti.+lna &.>em but heaps ?f brown t lie !.rl) and egaiu ntroller.J. toward the Ing on t he wmd.ow-a.ll. spotgwhere th'l duigu~blng feast was C"OokShe caugh~ her babe in her arms and, or black rubblt0, ::.nd ~hou~h faeh> J?len~ in N ot a native W&l! now n ear it . I.\ with a shnuk , ruahed. off to her hua- ful water 111 llcaroo. Th1:Jre are no 111ubun· ho~· st.e<·m kept ocC11.sionally buratim~ f;om band's r oom. P resent!y there was a crash cal r;;maina. 'r b.cro do?s not appelll". to the smotherad mlllfla, and the H me dog of glass, and t he burglar, followEd by have even boen anv :roo1deu~ popu}a.t1on t lMl.b we he.<l BfJen take t,he b.ead of the gi·"l two c t.her m en, had dM!hed mt-0 ho~ de- save a few hundred wandi:mng ~ali·bred no w ere 1t, from ben<.>at,h. the hush.ea and s~rted bE~d·room. If I remem~er an gbt, A.raba, who have now ret1.red_with ~heir " sn~iak ei to t he vill<tp;o ; t o io.d-i to the she hMl ~ocked the bed-room door on the flocks to t he pools "'hich ex!r;t m the m acgioomine,.61 of t.ho whole, a b-rge hawk other inde ; . but thie, t oo, was broken ceaelble gorges of the hill rnngea, and who ms~ i1 e,.v1Jy from the very apot whre t h1 ·ough by the Invaders~ . She a·.vok e her he~e wait events. We have had a meitt tho poor victtm h11.d boo-a cut in pi·Joos. hu_ sbtt.nd: ·who, on ~eanng the s~nt.; of re.t1on for tw-o days, b ut the cattle we:e My fri<md and I eB.t gamng in this m.ol11.n- t,hm.g~, h g t1.ted a .~no.lti th e l>edsido driv11n up from Kort!, and nob so much oholy p l a<:e ; it wtk~ a lowoling, gusry rmd lll:oduc<Xl a pis!;ol. 'I he . three m_~n a.a a go°"t h:.lve vre aeon, though ~ome We have the E XCLUSIVE sale of t hese Watches, which cannot ba cla.y, 1md th" mQan !ng of tha wind t hrough men appeared M th~ b~-x~orn d"or. The sport.aru.1.Jn b.ave b een good enough uh?t.s b eaten for time. thfl b-::rnhea Ml l t mvep b r onnd the hiil on old rootor prc·mmtea hiis pwtol, and ea.id 10 gon g~2'-~lle 1rnd antelop~1. wl uch, with w.hfoh we WfJ rn eeeJOod in uniuon with onr if they should a<lva.uced another st q l ~ " . Mmd gniuae, nu~ke e, very acceptab~e ave ti rel1son to be thankful for past fa,·ors d uring forty yeai;s We foclioga." Earls goes on t o re.late h ow should fire. o ~te of th~ ~men ad.l'&llCt'~: : chtUJ.ge f Nm mtlOII ¥:irr.. T he ~un 1:1 in busiu~ss hero. ha and th.rtl9 othe:r compatriot;a whom he ~he rectur fired hls pmol a!ld the n""· usually ho~ from 8 , till ~· but at most. :mmmone<l from ihil hooch for tlle pur- fell. l 'he whole house wi.:1' now. alarm.,~, times the kindly_ nor,,h_ wind tompel:'a the Now our i.tock Ui one of the largest in the Dominio11 o.nd '"'will poioe, with the Englishm· .n's mma.r ill'pGr~ and th.e_ :men made : of!', t a.kmg tlle1r h~t, and 11omet1.mes it even, ~lows vnt.h tinent intsrferenoa and intolerimoo of wounded comrade w.th them. They vloknce enough uO t01lr dow:n 1hl~ brauchCls cintoms diiforln:; from his ovin, det<e>r- were traood by the blood maiks on the of the r.cJ.cia tr_<'es, from w h1ch camels_ a.i::u mi,.e3 to fme.trat. 0 A.toi's inteutio(l. ano1v. · The wouuJed m,t~ recoi;errd flocks have su1ppetl 2111 t.h.e ](laves w1thm regardi11g no man, eith<>r Jew or Gentile. Thoy to; e.ber villlited the hill v.hern the i;.nd, with the otlwr~, r"cci.t.d ~. b1.g N<.Ch. Throu,..!:wut Nubia the insects fit:Hh wi:.u cooking, imd, de£trnying the &entence. '.LHl J.1lcst k ub)c·<in:~e.' l:>ut hero_tho ant11 r;? ill .ii END§, .fl·: M. E .&. IN E !§ §. ov-~n budud the remii.ins in the &11rtb. - ___,_..,.. ........,___ 1....v<' o 10 ::.lone: Iha bl11 ut1fal bror,z~ TIJ.r<y found the heart put 011 one elde for Dillo1·, archbi1ihop of N11.rhon110, '4"ae in and g ,J.1. horne~s, 1ne too bu.ay tb.lnking tho a~)ec!al delectation of their conatl.!.n t t..is day a migh1;9 hunter before the Lo1·d, !i.1)out g··tdng a armk _ of :wrnter to oouoern 1 ~ frien.l and oomptt.nlon, Atoi. Eule wa.a and Louifl XV., onoo upon a t ime, iliewsdrn"'. about 11angmg. B ut to the afteiward.s go'>d·humotcdly told by the deemed it hiB duty to call thci prelc.be':i at- terroru of r.he nighb on the ground are · · t . t chief t ha.b theh: lnt'ilrferenoe had beeu of tention to t he unseemly spectacle 'vhfoh added the fears of the black scorpion, M . ' " no avml, as t hey had. fouuil t he grave he presented. "I ~~m . more a~rpri~,~d, well as of his iw.n<ll-c:>'.ored and larger where the fiesh had been butietl and my lord archblr.shop, ~aid t he kn~g, tor brother. t.JtngethtH', this fa a country t o - - - -·---------JiA - - opened ib soon after he .and his friends the reason that, wht!c f OU enJ0 Y the kee-p away trow, ~no. we hero may well had left, and finished cooking in and ate pleasures of th~ cha.:ie 1mru;;derat~:}', yc;m hope t o get ou t of it soon, for i~ is ,even it all forbid your pnest.s to hunt. I wtll now a very Geh enna, and wha.b it will be Cures Dizzmess, Loss of Appel ite, lndigest wn, Bilioumie.BB, · explain that, your majesty,'· said the in thro\J monthi!t' time the imagination D yspepsia, Jawuliee, Ajfectiuns of t he L iver and Kid'M'f!B, S ARDnrn To.Asr.- Drain all the oil witty a~hbishop. " H unting, for my shrinks from contemplating. Pimples, B lotches, Boi"ls, lhmwrs, Salt 1Uu:um, Scrofu}.411, fr< )m the fiah, free them of bonee and priests, ls a fault ; for me it Iii the f~ult - - - · -~-· - - - nrnise them to a pMte. Dust a little of my anceabors, from whom I inhertted While; the coolt weighed his ihoughtri E ryci,pelas, and all diseases arising from Impura Blood, F ·<>p per through and a little lemon juice, the tenden"f." the captain weighed his anchor, and the D eranged Stomach, or irregular action of the Bowel$. , µ oading over slices of oriap toasted The greatest homage we can pay to cheese skipped around in a whey of its bread. truth i.13 to use it.- Emeraon. e wn. Ladies Capes, Fur Lined Circulars and Astm G EN'rS' FUR NI S HINGS. P. S.- All kinds of Furs altered and repairett GREAT C LEARING SALE mn rLnTDjDifl' By. r~nn~ A·J.'. lo U111 l1lJ. lJUUll L~ ON SA1'URDAY, 18TII INST., Winter Clothing Vl/'ill be offered extra cheap.. the ELLISON & CO., FOR ALLT ~1ho 0 , bl h . . Pth!:hk kttfg r I ·~-~ ROCKFOR·D AND AURORA ?:r -w-A rre :a: Es_ Sall Cheaper than the Cheapest, w l"" mn.J s 0 A..t.:.~. RO'N ~ ..- BUCKL ~ -\. . . E~ R . edding Rings in grea var1e y. 'I! .· , '