INTEREBTING IT£MS. At a. wedding in Bridgeport, Coon., recently the groom, a young man, who appeared F1tID.A.Y, OCT. 2, 188ij, nervous from the star~. broke into hysterica.I sobs before the ceremony was over. A glass bedstead has been made at a Bir. mingham, Eng., factory for a Calcutta. millionaire. It is of solid glass, the legs, rails, &c., being richly cut. The King of Burma.h Wife, Ohildren and l'riends. alsC> has one BY WILLLl.M JJ.ODl:ItT Sl' ENCER. The Swiss a.rmy no·v numbers 477 comWhen tbe black-lettered list to tbe gcds w~s pre· missioned officers, and its effective strength sented · (The list of wht fat e for which mortal intends), is 200, 754 men. The highest rank r ecognized At the long string of ilia a kind goddess relented, in the Swiss iumy during peace is that of And slipped in three bleaeloga-wife, children ancl Colonel, · friends. · A writer In the B1illet·in Generale de TlieraIn vain surely Pluto maintained he was cheated, peutique says that refrigerntion of the ·lobe For justice divine could not compass its ends. The scheme of mon'e ponu.noe he swore was defeated, of the ear will stop hiccough, whatever its For earth becomee he1:wen with wife, children cirnse may be. Very slight refrigeration, and friends. such as a. drop of cold water, is said to be If the stock of our biles is in stranger hands vested, sufficient. Tho fund, ill secured, oh in bankruptcy ends, A native of Madagascar wh@studied medBut the heart iaeues bills wbioh arc never protested. icine in Edinburgh and r eturned home, now When drawn on the firm of wife, children and has seventy young men studying uuder him, friends. and a large class of women whom he is trainThe daysprlng of youth, still unclouded by sorrow, in for nurses. He his in great favor with Alone on itself for enjoyment depends; his Queen, and is about to marry the Prime But drear is the twili~ht of age if it borrow No warmth from tbe smile of wife, children a'd Minister 's daughter, riends. The new idea. in nostrums is not to pretend t hat a particulu.r medicine; " ill cure all OROIOE REOIP:ES. maladies, b11t will positively and a,u d comGRAHAM GEMS,-One pint and a half of pletely cure the one disease for which it. is Graham, 3 tea.spoonfuls of b 11.king powder, 1 designed. The cle11r-sighted student of huta.~lespoonful of butter, one egg,~ oup suga.r, man n ature who discovered this slant is said a. teaspoonful of salt ; stir t ogether with to be on the roa.d t o a for tune. sweet milk or milk and water, or use water When Bismarck made t he acquaintance alone, to a batter not much stiffer than pan- of his present doctor he waa sick and peevcake batter. Bake in a hot oven. Ij:ave ishly declined to answer questions. "As your gem pans well greased, you like," said the doctor, ·'then send for a APPLE JELLY.- Cut ·apples in small pieces veterinary surgeon, as such practicioners withp_ v..t paring, and,stew till soft , using more t rea.t their patients without asking them any wa.t1i?, than for apple aauce. Strain through questiom1," '.l.'he Cha.ucellor was captured, hair seive, then t hrough a. jelly bag twice, A lately published rerort on the British To a. pint of juice put three-fourths of a army glvee the number of recruits inspectpound of sugar-a pound to a pint makes it ed for 1883 a.t 59,436, of whom 23,595 were t oo sweet-and boil until the right thickne~s rejected as unfit for service. There seems to is obtained. The addition of lemons me.kes be no further reason for the popular belif>f it much nicer. tha~ Ireland fights England's ba.ttles, for the ClIEESEC.AKES-Line ta.rtlet pans with puff- recruits born in England numbered 77:3 per pa.ste ; let the edges have three thickn?sscs of l ,000. Scotland gave but 91, and Irela.ud paste. ] 'ill them with the following mixture : 125 per 1,000. The number of short men Toa. poundof loafsugar, add the juice of three offered was unusually largt>, so much oo as to lemons, two tablespoonfuls of brandy and a give rise to 11. question whether E nglishmen quarter of a pound of perfectly fresh butter, were decreasing in stature, Grate the rind of a. lemon over it as small as The irrigation works of Co"llorado a.re on i;>ossible, Beat six eggs, and add them to it. Stir over the fire until it begins to thicken a great scale. The "Gr1md Rivoi: Ditcb," like honey, then let it partly cool. Fill the western Colorado, at the beginning, is thirty-five feet wide a.t tho bottom, fifty feet patty-pans and bake in a moderate oven. wide at the top, five feet deep for the first COLD MARMALADEPuDDING,-Five oggs, a ten miles, then diminishidg until the la.st pint of boiling milk poured upon them af~er two and a half miles are sixteen feet wide they have been well beaten ; cuga.r to taste.. at ths bottom, with three feet depth of wa.The rind of one lemon, two ounces of stoned ter. The grade Is a. little over twenty-two and halved large raisins, spread over a thick- inches to the mile, which gives a. strong ly-buttered mold and four t a.blespoonfuls of curtent. One compa..ny engaged in the irriKeiller's marmalade. Cut six penny sponge gating business has constructed over lOOmilel! cakes in slices, spread the marmalade upon of canals in the Rio Grande valley a.t a. cost them, lay them in the mold, pour the ous- of $750,000. tard upon them hot. Tie down carefully and Recent statistics show that in 1884 the boil gently one hour, Turn out only just number of boiler explosions in the United before it is reauired. . States waq 152. being less than in t he preTEA CAKEs.-Rub one heaped teaspoonful vions year. The.re were 254 persons killed of baking powder into a pound of flour, Add and 261 injured in tbem, however, and the two ounces of butter alao rubbed in, a quar- number is much larger than it should be. ter of a pound of sugar and two ounces of Fifty· six of the explosions took place in sawcurrants. Mix it with two eggs well beaten mills, where the ~o -c;ol!ed engineer finds a and stirred into half a pint of buttermilk or too faoile fuel in shavings. Men chosen for new milk. Roll out and make of the quan- such positions should have gumption to pertity'\i.:.: tea. cakes. Bake in a moderate oven, ceive that suoh firing generates ateam too and when half done wash over with the yolk rapidly for sitfoty. These people can reduce of an egg beaten up with a teashoonfol of the general death rnte if t hey wish, rmd can milk, '..l.'hese t ea cakes are very nice cut in. especially reduce the present high percents!ices and buttered cpld fer tea . age of mortality among sawmill e1Jgineers STORMS AT SEA. =================-· HOUSEHOLD. Florida is the land of fruit aa well as flow· Decorative Notes, ers. A paper of that S t;i,te says : " ComGreat attention is now paid to the decora- II!-enci:og with Jan:ia.ry, w~ have strawbertion of doors. ~ ome have large figures I r1es then anil. until late m J ·tn.e. J a~a.n painted on the panels; others are upholster- plums from F .,bruarY.:· Mulberrie~ are npe ed with cretonne, and some are papered, I~ Ap;H and last nntJl A ug~1st. l'meapples For a dining room furniahed inmll.hogany, ripen m June and last neariy a11. tl'e year. the wall paper should be red if harmony is We hav~ guavas from Ji;ly until, late t he wanted, or green if a contrast is de~ired. next_ spnng. Of the various be::nes-?ewIn painting cornices dark _ colors should be berries, bl11.ckber:les, and hucklebernesa.voided, rea used very eparmgly, blue plen- ahn~st any quantity. Peaches fto~ May. I tifolly, and yellow and gold-the former until July. Melons fron June untII l~te In especially-in moderation. the fa.ll, Orange~-the best of the. kmdA pretty way of arranging the ceiling in from Oct?ber until ~he next June, with lema sittingroom is to cover it with a sma.ll ons and lnnee, IJers1mmons, pomegranates, patterned quiet-looking chintz, over which gnpe fruit, grapes, and shaddocks. place thre~ inch-wide flat-hea.dedpine moldIndications point to a bitter party fight at ings, painted cream buff-color, and crossing each other in such a way as to divide the the British general elections in November, ceiling into panels of about three feet square. Beth parties are prepared for the conflict, Light oak or cherry, either of Its natural but which side will win cnmot be foretold. color or stained, will be the most popular There are evidences that Bismarck is using woods for the interior of a summer cottage. his influence on behalf of the Conservatives, Crossed battledores, fastened by a large Lord Salisbury and the Tory press are greatbow, a.nd serving as a. support for a ba.sket ly elated a.t Russia's concession respecting ornamented with another bow, make a. Zulfikar, but it ia believed that t he action is illusory and in the interest of Conserva.pretty and useful wall ornament. Crimson and yellow form a pretty combin· tlve prinicples, It was until recently thought that Raesia would disturb the present atlon for a portiere, For bedrooms there are white muslin or Ministry by re-opening the Afghan quea· tion and set up a new score on the eve of a cheesecloth curtains with a lace edging on the front, or a. plain hem with bands of plain general election. But this danger has been, lifted from Lord Salisbury's pa.th by the Geriiateen. man Chancellor, on the plea that too much Bm~tJ chains are used for Ioopivg up portieres;·'-or-mantle lambrequins, or are fes- Ro.dicalism- in W cstern Europe may prove harmful to the two Northern Empires. But tooned a.croes then:i, the limit of Russia's strength will place Zul· fikar within arm's length, In fact the frontier question will not be closed until after :Eduoating Boys. the elections. If that event results in a Let us make business men as well as law· Liberal viotory there is a. probability that yers a.nd physicians out of our boys. There is a large and extensive field for work in Russian moderation will come to an end, a.s every direction, There are abuses to be ~uesfan statesmen labor under the mistaken corrected, defects to be remedied, that call notion th~t the Libera.ls will not fight for Herat. It is even asserted by some that if for the man of talent. By establishing and the Liberals are returned the Russians will extending industries and manufactures the at once advance' on that city, snccessful merchant can accomplish more good for the world than either the attorney, A M sterious Providence. physician or minister. He furnishes employment to hundred! of hands, thereby Mrs. Spurgeon, the wile of the fa.moue giving thousands the sustena.nce of life. preacher, is the subject of a.n astonishing His life is elevs.tlng in the highest degree. story in the Presbyterian Monthly Visitor of The petty annoyances and vexa.tions of London. "During an illness of Mrs. Spur· trade are trifling in compa.rison with the geon," says that pa.per, "she told him (Mr benefits that must be conferred upon the Spurgeon) that she had been wishing for a. community by the business men. And it is piping bull-finch and an onyx ring. Of for suoh considerations as these that the course Mr. Spurgeon expressed hia willingmercantile community should exact and ob- ness to get both, but she made him promise ti.in from all men the highest respect, and not to do so. He had to make a sick call on its prominent members receive that lofty his way to the sta.tion a.swell as call at the position to which they are justly entitled, Tabernacle. Shortly after renching the sick person's house the mother of the patient, to ···~it~ his a.ma.zement, asked Mr. Spurgeon if Mrs, The recent speech of Vice-President Hen· S. would like a piping·bull-fiuch, that t hey dricks, in which he expressed himself a.a be- had one, but that its music was trying on ing in entire accord with P arnell in his rev- the invalid, and t hey would gladly pa~t with olutionary and seditious agitation, was, to it to one who would give it the requisite say the leMt, very illogical. Mr. Hendricks care. He then made his call at the '.l'aber· is reported to have sa.id that the American nacle, and, after reading a volnminou~ corprinciple that men had a right to govern respondence, came at last to a lette1· and a themselves applied exactly to the oil.Se of pa.reel underlying the other let ters. The Ireland as opposed to Englaµd. Thia is just letter was from a lady u nknown t o him, t he view the South took twenty-five year~ who had r eceived benefit from his service· ago, but Mr. Hendricks t hen asserted that it in the Tabernacle, and, as a slight token of was t he duty of the South t o he governed by her e.ppreciation of t hese services, asked his the North. "If, 1' savs a contemporary, acceptance of the inclosed onyx ring, neck"Vfoe-Bresident iffendrioks wlll make thia Iet, a.nd bracelets, for which she had no furtangle a. 'ittle clearer, people r:iay believe i.11 t her use. 'I'h.is intensified hia surprise, and the sincerity of his views about I reland, he hastened home with what ha.d been so The principle which he eulogizes at a. gather- strangely sent, went up into h ie wife's sick ing of Irishmen is the principle which he room, and placed the objects she had longfought agn.inst on the side of the heavy bat- ed for before her." talions, And t here are people who believe ~----that Ireland is n ece2aa.yto the Brit.l.l!h Union The Prince~s Hilda of Na.s~au and the for the same reasons as rendered the South Crown Prince of the Gran d Duchy of Baden ern States necessary to the Amerlican Union was married on Sept. 20th in the face of the - reasons which then had lientlricka on frowns of K,.iser Wilhelm's Court, no mem· ber of which was present a.t the ceremony, their side." ----..... Some Excltm,j; Stol'illS ora :Ute on the !l!eean Wa.ve. rll E ver aince the Westin dies were dfocover·/ THE NEW ed, now nearly four hundred years ago, it has heen noticed that t he violent hurricanes which aillict them udually appear in August, September, or October. A list of three hun· dred and sixty-five of such storms w as m11tde out not long ago, and two hundred and Kl*E_o o' eighty-seven of theJe occurred in the "hurri· ~ ·* ~ ~ 0 ·oy;mn1m~ THIE FAVORITE !iillif.ii~ cane season." So if any cf you young people wish to see double-reefed foresails, September la the time for you to go down lhere. But the experience fo not an attractive one, and it is a desl safer to stay at home m~aa~~~~~~~~liilli~~~~~~~~~ and study Col onel Reid's "Law of Storms," in which you ma.y learn that rain in some f!J of these 11torm3 is salt, like ocean water, and that fish fa.II with it fr<'m the sky; that HIGH ·HIGH ,FINISH all the ships in the harbor of Mauritius, forty~~--,.~~ one in number, were either sunk or driven , fict~~ 9 ~iforzJ: · ~Ul'CLfife ~ on shore in a hurricane in 1818 ; that the ~~ - ·· ~ British warship Racer wa9 blown into the Uulf of Mexico during a hurricane 1837, All the " Raymonii. " Shuttle Ma.chinos where she was nearly capsized, and only n.ro :fitted with the Patent righted after losing her masts, and even then hadtoheaveoverboa_rdsomeofher guns to! SNORI Hair Pins, escape from foundermg, NG. All these hurricanes oJogely r esemble, al· -, ·Nets & Co1nbs. though they exceed in violence, the winter '!!'be CJIGthes·pin 'fbtory Ex!"Iotltd-The 1 I r · STAMPING d one promptly and neaily. stor ms th at you read about in aea news. lue In C:utHe l!!oap. Theytare called cyclones, from the whirling I fa not generally known, but it is assert· of t heir winds, an d t heir rotary motion may ed to be a fact, that the nose has absolutely over 11. 111nycr·s store, · · J~owmnm'iUe, be very fairly likened to that of water eddy- no share in the production of a snore. Ining :Lround in a basin before it runs out by deed, moat people snore with t h.cir mouths the vent at the bottom, but with the differ- open and their noses temporarily inactive. ence that the ab· rires at the centre of the Hence, the proposal to fast en a clothes-pin whirling storm, while the wa.te1· d~ceud a to the nose of a. snorer is not only worthless through the esca.pe pipe. It ia worth while as a remedy, but is a poeitive aid t o snoring. to draw a be.sin, with an outlet, full of water The person whose nose is closed wit h a and remove the stopper gently, and then clothes-pin must epen h is mouth in order to watch the formation of theTapidly whirling breathe, a.nd he thus assumes .the precise a.tThose who stay at h9me, oil up with eddy as the water runs out. Although a titude most favorable to snoring. Neither simple expel'iment , it will give you a fair would it be of the slightest use to sa.y to the idea of the motion of tbe winds in a t ropical snorer, "Don't snore." No person snores cyclone, if you imagine t he ha.sin turned. np- voluntarily. The snorer is ashamed of bis and keep t hings running till the absent ones return. side down, its si:rn vastly increased, and the offense, and when taxed with it generally water changed to air. denies it stoutly. MACHINE OILS. Over the tropical oceans these storms de'.!'here la precisely one cure for snoring, and WOOL OILS. velop a terrific strength.Imagine one of them, it is to Sir Humphrey Davy t hat we owe its with its mass of whirling air two or three discovery. That eminent scientific person HARNESS OILS. miles in diameter, turning faster and faster aecertained that snoring is due to a.n :tbnorAXLE GREASE. on the smaller circuits near the centre, ad- mal vibration of the cord!! of the la.rynx , and vancing &long it s track from place to place, that this vibration only occurs when the sur· and beating the sea. into great waves. Pie- face of the larynx ha.s become dry, A man ture the central parts of the whirl a.ll dark who sleeps with his mouth open, until his with roaring thunder clouds, from whioh tor- larynx has become dry by contact with the renta of ra.ln fall, and, strangest of all, con- atmosphere, is sure to snore. Sir Humphceive a space ton or t wenty miles in diameter rey saw at once that, in order to cure a. snorjust· at the centre in which the air is almost er, his larynx must be kept moistened or requiet, although surrounded with sorea.ming Iaxed. Ile found, by a. series of experiments winds. upon a. person of unusual snoring powers, - - -o- - Even in thia calm centro, which sailors call that a piece of Castile soap inserted In the I beg to announce t hat my s upply of Granit e and · M arble M on uments was never so "eye of the storm," although there is no open mouth of the snorer effected an instant large as at present. danger from the winds, still the waves run cure and warded off any further attack of high and broken, and if a vessel survive snoring for at least twenty-four hours. R e- In Variety of Pattern it is most modern. them, there is yet the after eide of the storm peatedapplications of soap broke up the habIn Finish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. to be endured with violence as great as that it of snoring and thus effected a permanent ln Workmanship, :first-clu.ss. of the front. Only the stoutest ships escape cure. According to Sir Humphre7 Davy, the double dangers of the storm's central Castlle soap, which is composed o olive oil And price as low as at any experienced shop and soda, is decomposed the moment it comes passage. I have r eceived by S. S. " Indiana," a cons ignment of A violent hurricane crossed the West Hi- in contact with the hnman tongue, whichhas dies in August, 1871, giving a. ·triking ii us · a:wonderful affin ity for oxygen, The olive l~l~IT:E tration of the contra.at between the great oil, being thus set free, lubrica tea and reAnother lot has 11-rrived by S. S. "Nebraska," and others a.r e following, whirlwind and ite calm centre, It was laxeF : the larynx , while the sodium is forcib· first observed by t wo sa.iling vessels on the ly expelled in the shr.pe of a strong alkaline i DUY DIRE(J'l' FRO~.I TUE N'lA. :r~rUFA.C'l.'lJRE RS 17th, for ont on the tropical Atfontic in le.t- language by the snorer, who awakens the tit ude :34° W. and longitude 13° N., where moment the Clecomposition of the soap be· in Aberdee n, Scotland, and from long experience (28 years) at t he best advantage, I there were heavy rains and violen~ w inds in gins. It is seldom necessary to administer intend that t he p ublic needing work in my line shall be liberally dealt with. cppoaite d irections, from ·which it is seen the Castile soap more than three or four I engage no Agent a. I keep for sale thu.t the storm centre lay then between the t :imes, a.nd the most obstinate m~ae of anorthem~ two points of observation. ing known to medical men wae cured with Thence it advanced westward, and at nine a-ix doaes. It m ight be remal'ked tha.t a.1o'clock on t he morning of the 2l$t, the cen- wost any variety of so,.p-can be mi~d with tre,l ci:.lm arrived at St. Kilt's a little islnnd benefit a.a a remedy for snoring. c..stile soap for enclosing Lots, at Lowest Prices. in the Lesser Antilles; this makes its rate is, nevertheless, much more rapid in its acof travel thus for 11obout eighteen miios an t ion th!!n any other variety,with theeolitary ALL W 0 R. K GUARA N TEED. hour. The royal British mail steam~hip exceptfon of soft soap. M ei·sey, commanded by Co,ptain Dix, was ·-----anchorad in the harbor of St. Thomas at this A Smart Scheme. timo ; its log gives a valuab le record of t he N. B.- I h a ve n o connection or interest in the Composition, P ottery, or Zinc passing storm, and introduces to us a new Two da.rkiea had to carry a large desk to Monuments, so called; I have enquired concerning their merits and cannot r ecomfactor of great importance, namely, the de- tbe house of Dr. Blister, who had bought it me nd them t o t hfl public at a ny price. crease of the downward pressure of the air a.t a furniture store, When they arrived B owmanville, June 18, 1885. 25-3m. at the storm centre as shown by the barom· with the desk he was in and directed them eter. where to put it. The darkies expected to It ha,s long been known that a "falling get a. quarter each at lea.st for .t11eir ex tra barometer," or low atmospheric measure, trouble, but alas I the doctor did not give foretells the comiag of bad weather, We can them anything a.tall. He forgot all a.bout ti.rot illustrate the fact, and then consider I.ts their sufferings in carrying the heavy desk cause, Captain Dix noticed that the bar- up two flight of stairs. ometer stood lower than usual on the mornThey consulted t ogether for a moment in ing of the 21st , and that the wind was blow- the ha.II, and then t hey began to fight and ing in puffs of increasing violence, so he pound each other, calling ea.ch other all gave orders to get up steam, and prepare manner of vile names. N o such uproar had for bad weather. Atten o'clock, .the barom- ·been heard since the adjournment of the You can do so by calling at the eter rea,d 29.88 inches, and began falling; Legislature. ' at noon, it was 29.82, and the squalls were Dr. B lister hearing the noise, came out growing heavier. At one o'clock, 29. 77, 11nd wanted to know what was the cause of with very heavy s~ualls from the N. N. K ! the disturbance, the stronger part of the hurrica.ne was at "Dia heah nigga kap for hisself de money this hour just coming over St. Thoma.a. wha.tyou guv him for us bofe, for totin' de An officer was then stationed by the bar- desk up de stars," B'<id Sam, ometer with orders to watch it closely. At '.'You is a liar . De docter didn't gib me where there will be found a complet e assortmen t of every kind of two in the afternoon, it was 29.50, with very de money. You got de money and kep' it ," footwear from the smallest to the largest. heavy gusts still from the N . N. E ., shinglee retort ed Jim. and roofs were seen blowing about in the " You are both wrong, boys, " said Dr. If we cannot fit you with a r eady-made pair, we can make you any town on shore, and flying around in the air; Blister. "I didn't give either of you anykind t hat may be needed, in the latest style. about this time the English barque D 1tke of thing, but I'll make it all r ight. Don't fight Wellington, which had been anchored outside any more," and t aking out his pocket book the harbor, parted cables, and went ashore he gave them a. quarter ea.ch, a t otal wreck, but the crew were sav6d, Those who assert the colored man has no At half-past three,.the barometer was 29 __ executive ability should ponder over this 38 with terrific gusts backing to .the north, tern._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ and doing great da.ma.ge on the land. The · -·· .. neatly done so that the patch can scarcely be discovered. barometer continued b fall rapidly, and at Lighting His Own Funeral Pyre, five o'clock had reached 28. 74, when the John Rosenmeyer, a well-to-do farmer in hurricane suddenly cea.s'e d, leaving a. perfect Weisburg, had been drinking deeply of late stillness, "so that a ca.ndle might have burnt and was in a state bordering on delirium also the in the open air I" · tremens. Returr:iing to his home, he began At 5. 25 the barometer reached its lowest a. violent attack upon the members of his point, 28.62; at 5.35, just as the captain saw family, and drove ea.ch in terror rom the the ripple of the southerly gale on the after house. Still imagining himself pursued by side of the storm-centrn coming along over devils and hissing serpents, he piled the No trouble to show goods. Please give us a call. the water, his officer called out, "The bar- bedding and furniture in heaps upon the ometer is rising, sir !" and as soon as the floor and set them on fire. Then, armed wind struck the vessel, it began to l'ise fast, with a gun, he placed a chair upon a t !l.ble reaching 28.71 a.t 5 40, 28 93 at six, and 29.60 in the centre of the room, and, amid the at seven o'clock. The gale that followed roar and crackle of the bla~ing combustibles, the calm wa.s reversed from the direction of sat upon his elevated seat, with his weapon the first half of the storm, and came from the in his hands, shouting defiance to the imasouth, still very heavy, but steadier than be- glna.ry swarm of snakes and devils that fore on account of blowing now mostly over were, in the light of his mtJ.ddened bra.in, the sea, and hence without the gusts and seeking to devour him. The fierce flames sprea.d, and the entire squa.lls of the front of the storm that had come down on the vessel from the high land building was soon wrapped in the consumof the island. ing elemen t s, yet in the midst of it all could By eight in the evening the hurricane be seen t he maniac. Like a monarch on his Purify the Blood, correct all Disorders of the moderated to a fresh ga.le, an d at midnight throne, he sat laughing and ex ult ing a.t the had decreased to a strong breeze as the storm ruin and havoc around him, and shouting at LIVER, §T®.lVIA.UmI, li:IDN:EYS A\..ND BOWJEJ... § , moved away, ll'a.ving the staunch Mersey the top of his voice defi!l.nce to fire, devil, and unhar med, death. Not nntil the flames had entirely They invigorate and r estore t o health Debilitated Constitutions, and a.re invaluable in all Complaint s incidental to F emalea of all Agaa. For F r om this description it may be inferred surrounded him and he had t.oppled from his that the storm crossed St. Thomas to the lofty seat were the alarmed spectators able Ch ildren and t he aged they are priceless. nor th of west ; as eight hourn were required to reach him 1md drag him from certain desto pass over t h e one hun dred and forty miles t rnction. ·while thus engaged in t heir hufrom St. Kitt's to Si;, T homas, the velocity ma.ne work he threatened with loaded gun Is an infallible remedy for Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Old Wounds, Sores of the storm as a whole must have b een still to shoot them, and U lcers. It is famous for Gout end Rheumatism, For disorder!! of the abou t eighteen miles an honr; 1,1 nd as the Au examination of his burns Ehowed that - Chest it has no eq u atcalm lasted t hirt y-five minutes, the diameter he could not live many hours. The house of tho eye of the storm must have been dose with all its contents was dest royed. .For Sore Throa ts, Broncb.iti§, (;®ughs, Co!ds, to ten miles, Its further progress carried it --~-northwestward, a nd then toward the north GJ..itndula~ Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has no rival ; and~{for Tailor-made jackets and frocks are conpast F lorida., and a.long our shores far northcontracted and stiff j oints it acta like a char m, sidered indispenae.ble at the 2easide. east on the Atlantic. To explain the mechanism of such a storm There is a curious uniformity in the numManufactured only a t T ROMAS HOLLOW.A.Y's Establishment, would require n long chapter of r ather difli· ber of p ersons killed annually in I ndia by cult d escription, b ut a few worda ml.lty be wild animals and snakes . The l ndianMed78, NEW OXFORD STREET, (late 533, OXFORD STREET), LONDON given as to thtl cause of the barometer'a fal- ·iciil Gazette gives the number of those killed ling as the storm approaches, and rising in Bengal alone by auimala, for five years, And are sold at ls. l f d., 2a. 9d,, 4a. 6d. , lls. , 22a., and 33s. each Box or Pot, and . may be had from a.II Medicine Vendors throughout tb.e World. again as it recedes. Referring once more at Irom l,2G4 to 1,302 in each year. · The t o the experiment with the basin, it will be snakes de.Gtroyed from 9,153 to 10,064 an«Purchasers sh ould look at til e I.abel on tile Pots and noxes. I f the address .· seen that tho surface of the water einks at nur.Uy, I H n 11t ti33, Oxt'·1r d flt.rcct, JL1111.1 lvn, the7 l\J:lf) ~1nu:!@n1J, tlw centre as the eddy is formed ; the d epl·'<ision deepens as the eddy etrengthens, anll finally even an empty funnel- sh~ ped Formerly B:nown ae tho" Soper Mills. 't cur" may by formed as the faste5t rotation is !-(!!.hied so effective is centrifugal foroe in HIS MILL HAS BEEN THOR· holding the water out from t he ctintre. UGHLY r enovated and put in order ,under The whirling air of a tropical hurricane is ->ur own special supervision, for the purpose o! similiarly affected by its r apid i;otll.tion ; the d ating and manufacturing Oat Meal and Pot low barometric pressure at the centre results Flarley, and we are now pr epared t o receive G rders from a ll our old customer s a.nd others chiefly from tqe a ction of centrifugal force, 1or work, and we gurantee to give them wh o which draws the air out on all sides, and so lntrust us wit h th_ e same entire satisfaction diminishes t he weight of the at mosphere at Oats and other grains to.ken iu exchange tor Flour Oat Meal, &c. H. & J, TOWNS, Bow the centre, As the low-pressure storm·cen227, tre moves over an observer, his barometer manville. must first fall and then rise again, as in the example recorded above. E ver ainoe it was discovered by Dove and Redfield, Reid and Piddington, t hat storms were in rea.Hty great whirlwinds, and that they always turned from right to left in I beg to announce that I have a very fino this hemisphere, aud from left to right on choice of ~ the other side of the equator, and tha.t their B A trncks were defined, it has been pe.rt of a N G S · sailor's eduJation to learn how t o avoid the S WIT C I-:I ES, violent storm-centre; and simple rules a.re and WA v Es. now devised by which a well-informed sea cnptain can sh!l.pe his course so as to escape I do all my own llAIR WO!tK ttn(l ·will all serious danger from an approaching storm. _ wui:raut It. ----------I-I:air Bleach, Caledonian Mills. ~~~ T ~RAYMOND [.l[il~[.l!i&f.l!iiliillJ!iiltiii!l:i!iilliiflil!iil FOR PAlVIILY USE. To the ·Ladies ~·-SEWIN G-MACHINHrnfe, A~M F Automatic Bobbin Winder MRS. A. DAVIS, RAN to the Front and Defend your Country. A Fl LE McCOLL'S LARD I NE, McColl Bros. & Co., Toronto. Granite and Marble Works, BOWMANVILLE. SOC>TC:Ja: C:S..lR.. . Marble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix l!ead Stones, Posts, and M etallic Bars C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor. Boots and Sl1oes. Keep your feet dry and warm, arlor hoe tor'· e" ' Good fits warranted every time or no sale. 0 E ·JM: E N"9 T I :t'f G Trunks and Satchels will be kept in stock; Best quality of Dressing and Blacking STAND :-Neads' Block. "W. JENNINGS. HEALTH FOR ALLI THE THE O INTMENT