..~« RUSSIAN RAILWAYS. Sam v", Wham†Tundolm-WMOO’ICIMW Indium. William H. I‘lell, a young Putsianof tine literary acxluiremenu, who I! now making a me: of the United states. and who is par- ticularlyintereiitcd in railway and mining unatten, wu ruxntly interviewed by a writer on the Boston h'umflly [hr-1M, from which internew, published in the last num- her of that paper. the following information :n rtftflrlufl: In railway matters is taken : There I! a netWork of railwayii spread over the Itcuian Empire, («impaled of about sixty different railways, with an aggregate length of track of about 10,000 English miles. It is you will think, a small system for so large an umpire, but it is a growing one, and \i‘tll l£0:!h:lllletlall'l filled upas the ymrs roll on. ’rlit'v: railways do a business which gum them a gram income of 2(0,0)0,0UO paper roubles a year, the cost of operation for the ymr lying about ll'lJJJlJOJJOO roubles, thus making the net profits about fifty per rent. of the eanxingq. Perhaps it might be Mr“ for me here to give you a companson of Iliiuian IIii'ZL‘lllfL'i and money with your nystcum. A Russian foot is equal to an r; llflll foot; an urchin is tWenty-eight fit-hm, and three urchins or seven. feet are equal to one sashen; .300 where: are equal to oliv went, and seven werstu equal to an English mile. ()ur Russian money is deciâ€" null. like yours. The lowest denomination i1a cope-:k, which is the unit, like your “rift. Um: hundred co :kn make a rou'blc. .\ rouhle is worth 73.4 cean American money. Our papernioney ranges as follows: Um: rouble, three, five, ten, twenty-five and IOU roubles. The gold coinage is of two dc- noininati-ms, Ill., tcn roubles, which coin is known in an imperial, and five roubles, known as a half-imperial. The subsidiary coinage In of copper and silver, the copper being of one, two, three and live denominations ; the ten, fifteen and twenty copeck coins are simply copper coated with silver. Now, in Russia a paper rouble ought to be equal to a gold or silver rouble, for if. is a promise to pay in either of the-.c coinages at the Imperial hank. But, as a matter of fact, both gold and silver are today in Russia, as they were for some years after the rebellion in your country, at a premium. This premium, however, is not so speculative a one as it was with you. it being somewhat stationary at about the fol- lowing rate, viz.: Ten roubles gold are worth sixteen roubles paper, and one roublc silver one rouble sixty co ‘cks in paper, so that the premium on gob and silver is about the same. The ï¬rst railroad built in Russia was the Zarskoje Sselo, and runs from St. Peters- hurg to the town of that name. This name signifies in Russian the village of the Czar, the place being the principal summer resort of the l‘hnpcrors, and most of the ukases or laws hear the signature: “Date-i? in the palace of Clarskojc Sselo,"as it was here that the Emperor received his Ministers and signed State papers. This railway, which is about fifteen miles in length, was (:OIII- pletcd in lb'ï¬lï¬, and, when the first train wzm run over it, the peasants~~who were ignorant and superstitiouseven in the neighborhood of the (fapitalruheadcvl by their priests, bear- ing vessels of holy water and church ban- ncm, assembled along the line to exorcise the monster which they believed was pro- pulled by the power of the evil spirit. I need not tell you howlittle avail these super- stitions efforts wore in stopping the engine. The railway was built after the style of Eng- lisli railways, and. during the reign of Nicholas 1.. was merged into the proprietor- ship of ii limited company. The town of Zarskoic Hsclois reached from St. Peters- burg by the railway in thirty minutes. It is :i funhionable summer resort for the people of St. l'etersburg. as is also the town of l‘arlvosk, near to and beyond it. The depot ls built in the style of I'luropcau railway stations. and is quite a handsome structure, having waiting rooms for finst, second and third class passengers. The engines used in lllsalll are of Herman make, and there are two gluich - the narrow and wide, so-called, the former being used on the Volgoda and llll' Novorogod inilways, and the wide gouge prevailing on all the other railways in Finland and Russia. I cannot give you the exact width of our guages. They are differ- i-nf. from the ( il‘l'lllllll, our broad guuge being wider. This is so that in case ofa war with Iii-rnniny the Germans cannot use our rail- roads to transport their armies on them. The cars on Russian railways are con- sfructrd after a pattern furnished the rail- ways by the government. They are differ- ent from English curs, though they havu compartments, in having a plia‘allgc way in the middle running the entire length of the car, the doors leading into the car being at the side, and one near each end on opposite sides of the. var. 'l‘hcy are now having cars with doors in the end intrmluccd. The dif. fcri-nt classes of cars are finished differently, the liratw-lzus being ï¬ui-ly upholstered, the second hz-ving ii poorer quality of cloth, and the third having no upholstering at all. They lll‘f‘ heated in winter by two wood stoves, one at each end of the car, but are very cold. The compartments will seat from four to six persons, but in the ï¬rst-class cars :i FIL‘SCHQH‘ can hire ii whole compartment, the seals of which are capable of bein ' ar- ranged rm as to make. a comfortable Abed. The engines are mostly ï¬red with wood. Only the \vnrkmcu aml peasants travel in thi- third-class cars. The cost of travulling in Russia for 100 miles is six paper roubles in the first-class, four in the second and two in the third. In Finland the rates are near- ly the same, but are on a specie basis. Since ISIEO the government has exacted a tax of twenty-five per cent. on passenger fares, which is added to the regular rates. Children undch years go free. and from ."i to I'Jat half fare, llut thew vary on different lines. One. grout troubli- in travel to and from l-‘inlaud is the difference between the Finnish and Russian currencies. A ticket from St. l'ctcmburg to llclsingfors, pur- chased at the depot of the railway in St. l’cfi-rsburg, Costs twelve roubles: but if the ticket Ii purchased in llclsiugfum for the re- turn to St. l‘ctemhurg it will Cost forty- i-ight Finnish marks, which in Russian paper money is equal to nineteen roubles twenty \‘Illh‘v‘ks, or a difference of seven roubles twrnty cupecksi in a ride of 200 miles, over tlw same ruad but in a different direction. It \muld he like charging $12! fnun Boston to Montreal. and $li|.'.‘0 fmm Montreal to llos- Ion. 4.. Q.-â€" Sad Sights In Oran. Litnlzu ram-wk 'l‘h.~ Sinnidi journals are full of and Ill" tails of the dcxpiuling of their colony in the prm inc- of (Iran by thc Ami-:4 and the loss ul lllt‘ and property thvrvbv iwcmiuncd. The colonists are flying in all directions. and alrvady uh‘l‘ three thoude have left the country in the men-ofva Numanria, Vul- ranu. and other navel-i, many of them suffer iii-,1 fmm M‘\i'f‘l' \Inllllil‘, and all destitute. Iii-ports say that the conduct of some of the French soldiers “st Ind. and the terrible heat impaled the movements of others. fin-at indignation I‘\i5l:4 among the Slunianls m the country. and disputm between them and the l’h-nch III the streets and can are mns‘tant and very bitter. It is stated the authorities refuse to issue arms to the Colou- hts, and that the CHllllllIIn hai c retinal fmm the "pen muntrv to the fortified towns. The A 301.!) um SUIT. no: Intact. Inn the 'M W. A remarkable action for libel, which I been before Mr. J nation Field and a spec jury in the Londcm Court of Queen‘s Bench, am: yesterday waouncluaion,thicb was the only one possible on the evidence, that con- cluaiu‘n beinval her in favor of the de- . fendant. The action was brought by the i plaintiff, who styled herself Mabel \Vilber- force, against Capt. Francis Lamb Philp, for I a series of alleged slander: and libels 1111- 5 uting to the faintifl' in substance that she liad attempr to ' n the defendant's father. According to the hintifl'a evidence, she was a daughter of a L nitcd States aur- geon of San Francisco, and was now between 30 and 40 years of age. Her father and mother are now both dead. She was put‘to school at Paris during the siege, after which she Went to reside with her father at Indian- apolis. United States. There she became President of a Red Cross Soeiety for soccer- ing the sick and wounded in the Russo- Turkish war. She was dispatched to Bul- gnrin, was present at the siege of Plevna, crossed the Balkans, and lost by death her aunt and cousin, who accompanied her. He- tuniiug in bad health to London, she set about the formation ofa society for “protect- ing poor children in Bulgaria, ’ for which she said she received £71, and contributed £500 of her own. Going to Paris, she became acquainted with Dr. I’hilp, a gentleman TS years of a e, who had lost all the members of his fami y exceptthe (lefcndannhis son. Dr. I’hilp became attached to the plaintiff, and in 1378 adopted her as his daughter, and for a time she was affectionately treated by the defendant and his wife. The plaintiff travel- led with Dr. Philp on the Continent, going, ainouvrother places, toAixda-Cha lle,where the p ' intiff received an offer 0 marriage from and became engaged to Mr. Dubois,the American Consul, but she broke off the en- gagement out of re ard for the old man. After a time Miss \ 'ilberforce and Dr. Phin returned to England and took up residence at Brighton. There the latter became very ill, having frequent spasms and attacks of vomiting. The defendantbecame suspicious and accused the defendant of giving his father some poisonous substance. He also set thc.Charity Organization on her track, and they stated that she was “pigeon-holed†in their archives as a “swindler. ’ He also (still according to plaintiff’s narrative) set detectives on her truck. She, however, con- vinced Dr. Phin of her innocence, but ulti- mately the son again prevailed, and she had been turned out of the house, although she locked herself in her bedroom for three days. To show her disinterested motives, although she understood that Dr. Phin (who has since died) had put her in his will for his dead daughter Uertrude's portion, she had assign- ed it to the defendant 5 children. This is briefly the leading incidents of her career as told by the plaintiff,but in her evidence there were many discrepancies, which completely upset all confidence in her statements. For instance, she stated that after 1871 her father went to the “Mexican war," and on the following day she desired to correct this by stating that he wentto the “civil war." She also mademany extraordinary statements regardin r the “Trustee†for herself and “her brother,’ Basil “’ilberforce. This Trustee resides at Indianapolis, and remitted her the proceeds of £8,000 invested property. For the defendant it was denied that he had made the speciï¬c charges alleged, but he contended that the laintifl‘ was an ad- venturess and a swind er. Not one of her statements was supported by independent testimony. She could not produce a docu- ment in support of her allegations save some ass orts with erased dates or otherwise de- accx . Every person whom she alleged she met abroad was dead, and the Charity Or- ganiration Society had discovered that she had lived at hotels without paying her bills,taken an office in London and paid no rent, duped several eminent people, re resented that she had been received by the (Sheen and Princess Beatrice, and so forth. Every one of the documents, too, from which she had quoted as from her father and mother and other rela tives she refused to produce, statin ' always that she had destroyed them “on t 10 previ‘ ous evening." There was, indeed, nothing to substantiate her statements. Her story about l‘lcvna was a. fiction. Her so-cnlled “brother†was, in fact, her own son, York Trcnifide, and it could be irovcd that she had been delivered of a chi d at Dover, al- though she denied that. She had also lived with a man named Trenifidc in Manchester, and her antecedents in other places had been traced, and witnesses were ready to prove her doinvs, although on these witnesses be- ing askci to stand up in Court she. had utter- ly denied ever having seen them. She also repudiated her own handwriting. On Friday the plaintiff did not put in an appearance at court, and it was stated that she was suffer- ing from nervous hysteria, the case being. therefore, adjourned till yesterday, when her solicitor withdrew the suit. The jury at once returned a verdict for the defendant. Miss Wilberforce, who was in court, said she had been unfairly treated. Justice Field commanded her to be silent or leave the court. All the documents in the case were impounded by the court. As the court at Bow-street was rising yes- terday Miss \Vilberforce appeared and asked protection from the magistrate, saying that she was the \"ctim of a conspiracy. She was much agitated. The magistrate tried to calm her, but could give no assistance. Bargains. This is par excellence the season of bar- gains ; the time when remnants and surplus stock must imperativer be cleared away to make room for the new things which are to come in with the fall. If: is wiser to sell them at cost than to keep them over for another year, since the interest of the money must be counted to proï¬t the loss, and so “reductions†are daily advertised, and trade keeps active in consequence. So it is, that she who has “bided her time" may pick and choose. A good deal of wear is yet to be had from a lawn or bunting bought now, and the dress will still be good to begin next year with. As to remnants, they are for sale cvcr where at Wonderfully low prices, and the ashions of the day make remnants of certain kinds always available. One can scarcely err in buyin ' nfcw yards of an ' stain lard material or co or, for use either wit an old dress, or to be combined with some- thing clsc, purchased later on. Jackets different from the skirt are certain to be worn during the fall and winter, and material for such with enough to match for skirt trimmin ', can not come amiss. \Vherc there are chill run in the family, remnants are dmihlv useful. and dollars may be saved by careful investment in them. Sober, dark colors for school dresses. ray plaids for trim- ming ; a yard or two of t nose last will serve to renovate a half-worn or lengthen an out- grown dress, and the smaller the remnant the lower the price. Odds and ends of rib- boil for the hair. pieces of vinghain for aprons, and, most desirable of a l, remnants of muslin: and other white goods tl‘ï¬t are soiled fmm handling. making lunch difference in the price, but which, when laundricd, are as goo- ascver. It is an excellent plan to buy a number of these last, since white nainsook, Victoria, lawn. and check muslin are always useful and desirable to be kept on captives Ialivil 'Iiy le-Amcnia are said to I hand lo: a mus, tics, and for numbcrleas be \cry numerous, and that he has with him 11M!†horsemen well supplied with pmvi. lions and modern arms. \\ star in haunting wave in Oran on amount of the great inch of ifxluliiuiitmand the crops everywhere pne- mnt the went up minute. The raid of the , other use: 0 all sorts. As epidemic disease of a peculiarly deadly nature, which carries off cattleand horse: by the thousand, and claims aLio its human victims yearly amng the population of the c,’ mmmmï¬pï¬ nu-Wuamaornm.ndmo m at the can: m of . AW. __ 1 Garden ‘ my: the London ll'orl:l,l may be ’vided into two classesâ€"those l which are cepu'onal. features in the season. their 'u and their leasure- l / aplende Boy-in (hula. From the ladies and maid: of honor with which the crown prince-s has surrounded herself, one would suppose, says a corres- , and those which are ex- pendent, the golden age of intellect and lit- ‘ I , nature was about to dawn. There is a cabin inunbernf ' k and bust- I Noetiz, the mistress of court ceremonies. is ages who annually. never to fling open l one of the mast intellectual and highly culti- ' grounds for‘ rated ladies of the Bohemian nobility. their riends in the brfgbtcstdayx of wm- Countess Marie “'aldatein and Countess mer so at long intervals, or with a view of signal Ill . Again, there are other: who onlydo Franziska l’alï¬y. the maids of honor. are so - \ery highly accomplished and talented that their position in a manner which is lu~ they have never found any “afï¬nity,†intel. fe focarry with it {certain sense of lectunl orvothcrwise! One is an authonss. dramatic su “ At Home" at Hertfonl house, square. London does not rise. One of. the great enter- That is the fuhion at court now since the fainmenta of t month was Lad ' “'allace's Crown Prince‘Itudolf has written up anchester days of his hunting life on the Danube, , and a more his little sister, Archduchm Valerie, has fifteen splendid residence, and the fact that it is comprised: drama. The other maid of bon- at onl ' thrown open tp pie fashionable public or is an artist, and both belong to the most long intervals enhances the attractions ancient and historical nobilit ' of the land. of the fativals of which it is the seeing, One descendedzfrom the Lady Wallace‘s at home was a combinatiouj Friedland \\'allensfein,the gal t Duke of ather of Theckla. of the alfresco and the indooreutertainments. whose name is indissolubly joined with that The cats wandered through go of pictures and crowded witi lleries full of poor Max Piccoloniini, her lover, who mediieval perished arms. They made the descent of a marble other nob e ping the Swedish spears. The dy descends from the lady of staircase, and found themselves at a refresb- honor who stood beside the Empress Marie ment buffet, one of the most remarkable Theresa in that memorable houm when thel dainties of which were tomato sandwiches imtionshouted: “Moriamorp Thence Yet the nobles shouted, am the imperial in- out intoa quadrangle. decorated font, afterwards Joseph Il., whom the Em- coneocted with consummate skill. they passed with flower-beds, where the murmurs of to Rege nostro!" press held in her arms, wailed aloud his splashing fountains were blended with the baby thanks, but only to the court Indy did notes of Hungarian music. To this same the empress confide the fact: “I pinched order of enterfaimnent belongs the fete given baby to make him squall." some six weeks since by the young Duke of The rooms occupied by Princess Stephanie St. James, who, a year ago, came unexpéct- iu the‘ royal :castle on the Hradschin have odly into his vast property, and whose been fitted up in superb style. town house no one had suspected of being rose and blue satin, gold and creamy white furnished with such a him]. His noble re- draperies have changed the interior of the lative, his predecessor in the title and the gray old kingly pile into a modern fairy eststmi, had lived the life of a recluse, and realm. And the lovely summer castle of probably not a half a dozen persons in Lon~ Ferdinand I., on the opposite bank of the don were aWare that beyond the gloomy Hirsch len, above the river Moldnn, is a portals of the family mansion was there an bower o loveliness, fit resting-place for the inviting expanse of well~cultivated verdure. fair young bride. To this place she and her These are the garden parties which mark ladies often come in the cool of the morning distinct epochs in the lives of those who hours to wander along its broad piazms or give, and those who assist at them. They study the legendary history of Bohemia in have an importance which is peculiarly their the suberh gallery frescocd by Rubens and own, and, within certain limits, they have his upils, no competitors. ere in this castle the imperial Rudolf 11. Garden parties like those at Holland 5 eat the summer months with his favorites, house, at Holly lodge, and at Marlborough heppler and Denmark's proud son, the guy stand in a different category. They are an- nobleman, Tycho Brahe. Here, in the arch- nunl events ; they are expected by the fash- ed ceilings of the entrance hall,is the window onable world ; the perfomi a service which through which the I unction can accomplish. many of their “observations. no other social great astronomers took †Down in the They show the brilliant miscellany of Lon- great city over the Radon rose the towers of don society in its most vast and varied as- the Teyn, or court church, in which T} The most exalted personages in the Brnhe lies buried. On one of the walls of the pacts. 'cho realm assist at them; the huniblest com. gallc 'Rubeus has immortalized the hand- petitors for social distinction are not exclud- some - chelor trio, Rudolph IL, Kepp ed. The sovereign of these realms graced and Tycho Brahe. ler, The latter stands with the gatherin of the heir-apparent and her his right hand upon the emperor’s chair. He daughter-in- aw the other day, and Mrs. is dressed in the brilliant court costume of Pomonby de Tomkyns was pleasantly spicuous also amongst the guests. can that most courtly age. There with his jewelled sword hilt. His left band plays The young ( are a freedom and clasticit in an entertain- nobleman'a oseis so carelessl ruceful an P ment given in the open air. Nobody whether some of the guests are or are not to have been a. distinguished savnnt. asks nonclinlant that one could never believe him The strickly eligible. Already there are several group are Watching the unveiling of a marble ladies who utilize the ardan of the squares statue which chpler, standing behind the in which they live as p ces for entertaining emperor's chair, seems to be explaining. their friends. Such a summer as we are now experiencing inspires a. hope that this example may be more extensively fol- lowed. The A Nugget or Gold. In the early days of the Dunolly gobl- garden-party at Marlborough haugc fields, writes the author of "A Glance at was (1mm as large as the assemblages {,f Australia in 1880," two working ‘miners former years at Chiwick, Her Majesty namedoates and Deeson, after experiencing looked in radiant Health and spirith am] many vicissitudes of fortune, found them- was surrounded by grandchildren indifferent “Ivesâ€! the art/05 0f their 01088. “(1611(1- stages. The Princess of “'ales were way, I: broke. Their credit was exhausted at the the Crown Princess violet stamped vc vet, neighbouring store. and one of them was and Princess Beatrice blue. prevailed, and very short some of Short (ll-oases actually in want of bread. them tion tliey‘began digging for gold in a. very In sheer despcra~ wereâ€"anon: suited :to a. ten-mile stretch unPI‘OImSIng locality. It seemed a very across country than a. summer afternoon in hopelfiss taSk ; but the two men worked on a royal garden, One lady, in a’ï¬ight steadily, standing close to one another. jacket speckled over with flowers, and a Dceson plied his pick in some hard bricklike skirt of white muslin. ï¬fteen inches off the clay around the room Of an Old tree. breaking ground, was neither more nor less than a up freï¬ll earth and tearing away the grass caricature. But it is pleasantcr to recall from the surface of the ground. He mined the memory of beauty rather than ugliness, & blow at the clear s ace bethen two and to turn from pntnt and vulgarity to branches of the rootsmm the pick. insteagl Lady Dudley, in a. lovely dress of mauve, 0f Bmklng Into the ground. ralmlmflelh 118 If with white lace, to the Hon. Mrs. Re inald it had struck upon quartz or granite. “Con- Talbot, in a medizeval composition of rown found it," he “Claimed, “I'VE nearly Pmke" satin and white ; and Lady Hermione Dun- my PiCk ! I WlSll I had bl‘Okell it. if It. had combe,thc incarnationofnymphdike beauty, only been over some nugget." A minute in vestal white. There was also a lemon-tint~ afterwards he called out to Oates and told .ed dress, with shaded parasol to match, him to come uudsee what “this†was. It which was refreshing to the locker-on, and W113 8- 111888 05 gOId cropplng several Inches most becoming to the wearer. out of the ground, like a boulder on a hill. The crimson-velvet tents, gorgeous with As each successive portion of the nug et was gold embroidery, which the Prince of disclosed to view, the men were 0-.t in Vales brought from India, added to the amazement at its enormous size. It was over coup (I‘m‘l at the garden-party, and these 11-foot 1" length. and nearly the Slime ill were not the only reminder of the Indian breadth. The weight was so great that it empire; for the gardens of Marlborough was difficult for the two men to ‘move it. house, being surrounded by a. terrace and HOWCVCI'. by dint 0f great exertion. they wall, form a sort of basin, and on Thursday succeeded in carrying it down the hill to the tem eruture was as high as it is in Bum. Dccson’s cottage, where they commenced to bay, ’ he result was that the queen was inspect their wonderful treasure. It was overcome by such an unusual state of the completely covered with black earth, and so thermometer, and, feeling ill, her majesty caused earlier fun it was hoped she would. Her Majesty the Q general disappointment by leaving person might have supposed it to be merely t tarnished in colour that an inexperienced amass of auriferous earth aml stone. But uecn honored Mme, its weight at once dispelled all doubt on Nilsson with the gracious distinction of re- that p0int,forit was more than twice as heavy taming her quite ten minutes in a conversa- 0- plcce of iron of the same me. Great was tion, as I am informed, of the most flatter. the rejoicing amona. Deeson's family. ing and condescending kind. ~~â€"-â€"â€"‘â€<-wâ€"â€"_’“ Women of Tangier. The Moors are handsome men, haughty of feature, and with great dignity of carriage. The Arab women, of whom we met not so many, left their chum to the imagination. Though they were muffled up to the eyelids, showin ' only a strip of buff forehead, they general y tunicd aside their faces as we ap- proached them. Their street costuurc was not elaborateâ€"a voluminous linen mantle, . pparently covering nothing but a wide- 5 eeved chemise rcachin to the instep and caught at the waist. 'l' eir bare feet thrust into half-slippers, and their ï¬nger tips stain- ed with henna. Some had only one eye visi- ble. In the younger women, that one pcn~ sive black eye peering out from the snowy coifwas very piquant. The Hebrew maidens were not so avan'cious of themselves, but let their beauty frankly blossom in doorways and at the upper easements. Many of the girls were as slender and graceful as vines. if their apparel they appeared to affect solid colorsâ€"blues, ochres, carminea, and olive as. They have a beautiful national l rcss, which is worn only in private. The chesses of Tangier are famous for their eyes. teeth, and complexions, and for their ï¬gures in early maidenhood. they are ahapeless old women, "Sans loefb. sans eyes, sans taste. sans -‘£‘\'t‘l‘)' thing.†â€"â€"â€"-â€".~â€"â€"-..â€"-~,â€"-â€"â€" Kissing. Kissing, says an exchange, maybe said to be like swimming. The kisser must abandon himself wholly to the business~closc his eyes, as if. were, and trust to the natural buoyancy of his body to recover himself after the ecstatic plunge. A girl takes to kissing as kittens to sport, with a natural ii titude for the quintessence of its delight. ' L‘nder the tuition of an ' girl the moat hash- ful youth soon learns re operation of the lips. and. once learned, the art is never lost. .\0 rules can be given for the pursing or the placing of the lips. The suggestion that it mig t be practised before the mirror is not worth considering. as there is an intel- lectual process in the artistic development ofakisu which cannot be simulated or in- voked lave under the eye of the owner of the lips that invite and under the tender spell that transforms those same lips info the one objectin all the world the loverycanu to taste. The sign of a right sort of a kiss is unmistak- able. There in a mounting color in the cheek worn in mourning. The waist and-lust- were hematitcbed from top The wife piled up a huge ï¬re, and Decson placed the nugget on top, while the rest of the famil stood around watching the operation of reiliicing the mass to the semblance of gold. All through the Friday night Deeson sat up before the ï¬re, burning the quartz, which adhered to the nugget, and picking off all the dirt and debris. This was so rich that, on being mulled in the puddling- machine, it yielded ten pounds weight of gold. Meanwhile Oates had procured a drny to convey the nugget to town : and on the Saturday mowing the two men set off for Dunolly. They carried their treasure to the London Chartered Bank,where it was weigh- ed and found to turn the scale at two thous- and two hundred and sixty-eight ounces, or nearly two-hundrcdweight ; and the sum of ten thousand pounds was placed to their credit in that institution. â€"â€">...¢â€"-_ _ - Colors. Word comes from Paris that red is this winter to rule supreme as piping and linings for suits and wraps, as bows, and in masses for bonnets. \Vorth has a velvet mania, and is making summer mantles of that ma- terial, warm as the weather in France is represented to be just now. So we may ex- At thirty_ï¬â€˜.e psi: 1 velvet 80850!) this winter, with this utiful fabric as the favorite trimming for silks and woollcns, satins. brands, and cloths. Plush will be less woni,â€"â€"â€"expcricuce has proved itus perishable as beautiful,~hut will doubtless hold its own. White will continue the festival color, but silks and soft woolens will, as last year, take the place of muslinsâ€"even young girls are forbidden mull and tarletanc for full dress in winter. They say, however, that the exquisite open- work cnibmiilcriui which have been wvom this summer on so-called washdrcsscs are to be used on Chinese and India silks and on India cashiucrca. Nothing in the way of dress can exceed the beauty of the white draws worn this summer by wealthy women, dresses one mass of dainty needle- work, covered with lace or with no less costl' cut work, Irish point, English em- broidery in wheels ande 'elets, or French woven-work, half lace. hal embroidery. One of the most wonderful pieces of needlework of the season was a hematitched white mull, advantage In corn-slimll with m. Suhacriln: fur made to order for.the daughter of a deceased millionaire in deep mourning for her father. The motive of the dress was taken from the mull tits, hermititchcd in blocks, In much an “pinpfl'll. .If. at il.L’i a. in.. and role a urine every other week during the mum, pre- to bottmn in Amman-Incas. The lady was the Princes Soulouque. j daughter of the Emperor mulouque who was . driven from his throne years ago and died in exile in Jamaica. Her face was a dad jet black. but the features Were softly maul-ital, and, with a fine set of laughing :eeth, nude .. \ her appearance preposscsuiug. bin. Lountess jaunt), . She wore a white turban hat with an immense cardinal ml feather floating away behind like a ship‘s peunon. Her ridi dnss was of sky blue, very long. and t ‘ ing in the, dust. Around her waist wasahmad gold; unkind in her bosom she wore a sapphire 3 brooch almost as e as a saucer. She \szs . mounted on a Venezuelan horse about sixteen ‘ hands high. which was made a pment to her 9 BIRTHDAY & SUNDAY SGHUflL CARDS Coughs. Colds. Group. Whooping father by the President of Venezuela. The ‘ back. He wuss clear cream color all over v i Hangings of = .you will only throw aside prejudice and. l the body. with l tail and most admira le sba snow-white main and l . The lady's! riding whip had a gold handT: studded with ‘ precious stones, and the bridle chain was of , solid silver. She won.- leather yellow gloves 1 with gauntlet: extending in far as thcelhow. l Her voice had a tendency to falsctto and its tones were peculiarly entertaining to hear. I The Princess, but no longer a l'rinccssliyj the laws of the land, was cducutediii Europe . and spoke four languages. l An Astonishing hot. A large proportiou of the American penpr are to-day dyin ' from the effects of llys mp. | sin or disorderci liver. The result of t new 'i diseases upon the masses of intelligent and valuable people is most alarming making life actually a burden instead of a pleasant exist- | ence of enjoyment and usefulness as it ought to be. There is no good reason for this, if i » »-- 1 i f skepticism, take the advice of Ilrngglsts l and your friends, aml try one bottle of ! Green's August Flo“ er. Yuurspecdy relief is certain. Millions of bottles of this medi- cine huve been given away to try its virtues, with sutisfactor ' results in every case. You can buy a sump 0 bottle for 10 cents to try. Three doses will relieve the worst case. Pus- itivelvso‘d by all Drugeists on the Western continent. ~< -â€"â€"o.>â€"-- .â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€" HALL s \‘i-zmranr. Siciuxx llxm RI:- SEWER is a scientific combination of some of the most powerful restorative agents in the vegetable kingdom. It restores gray hair to : its ori inul colour. It makes the scalp white and c can. It cures dandruffund humans, and falling out of hair. It furnishes the nu- | tritive principle by which the hair is nour- ished and su ported. It makes the hair moist, soft am glossy, and is unsurpassed as a hair dressing. It is the most economical preparation ever offered to the public, as its effects remain a long time, making only an ' occasional application necessary. Itis recom- mended und used by eminent medical men, and officially endorsed by the State Assayer of Massachusetts. The popularity of Hall’s Hair Renewor has increased with the test of many years both in this country and in the l forei n lands, fund it is now known audused in all the civilized countries of the world. For sale by all dealers. â€"â€"â€"â€"w4-.v>ovâ€"_â€"â€"__ I Ask your dealer for “.Castorinc" Machine 011 and see that the barrel Is brundcd “ Custorme," as none other ls genuine Burdock Blood Bitters Cures all diseases of the blood, liver and kid- neys, female complaints, nervous and gener- al debility, and builds up the entire system when broken down by disease. Use “Castorine†Machine Oil for all kinds of ' machinery. It is also excellent for harness and leather. making it waterand weatherproof. For sale by all dealers. Are you getting up a Lacrosse Club? Get Cooper's striped under-vest; Blue Navy, and Red Stripes, 60cts and Uï¬cts each. Cooper’s, 109 Yonge St, Toronto. LIFE uxs rmv Ciixuus for the Dyspepfic, which is not to be wondered at when we take into account the amount of bodily and men- tal suffering that this distressing malady generates. feriug from this disease. What's In a. Name '! FURNITURE OSHA‘VA CARINET (u. 9': You“- Sim. - Tnnmlu, Ont. Lyon & Alexander, I28 BAY ST.,‘ TORONTO. Importers and Manufacturers of every ill-strip lion ul PHDTUGRAPHIG GIBBS, FRAMES. MOULDIN GE . (ironies. Illmr‘. l‘erf‘umlnl Goods. Jr, .\'cu‘ Illushufcd Catalogue Luna! Isl .Iluy. horse was as remarkable as the woman on his 2 ~ -- Building (I; Loan Association. MONEY T0 LOAN AT RATES. ï¬Tonn‘ ur annnrnl to «ill lmrrmu-r» D. GALBRAII'H, - Manager. is 'ronom'o s'r.. TORONTO. lull‘rosl allowed on degmsils. TiHE STARR KIDNEY PAD! ul‘l' :,\~i. i w I: g .: Midlt. .l unn- riilllng I'm-mu~ urnl (‘Iire for [themes of the Illdm-ys. “ladder and l'rluiiry Organs, or ullendunf rouuilulnli. \I'rllc for pamphlet on KIDNEY IIISHISI‘S uml I'rlnlml Uni of 'l‘rsllum- Illnls, lrcr. :II Kiln: Sf. “mt. TOIIIIX'HI. IBLACKIRD M NAVY TOBACCO. For sale by dealers cvcrvwhcrc WI [ULICSALE only b_\‘ the Manufacturers. This Brand In guaranteed to be the very best CHEWING TOBACCO In Cann- dn. bolng manufactured of the ï¬nest sun- cured Vlrglnln loaf. To avoid Imposition soc that each Plug boars the tin stmnn, and every Caddy tho Caution notlco of THE ADAMS TOBAGGO 80. MONTREAL. M Provincial Exhibitiuâ€"n Aâ€"â€"-l)lv‘ THEâ€"â€" Agricultural &Arts Association 0|“ (INTA RIO. TO BE HELD AT LONDON, ~FROMâ€" let to the 30th Sept, 1881. $18,000 OFFERED IN PREMIUMS. Entries must be made \vifli lhc Seen-fury uI 'l‘oronfo, on or before the (lItIOS, viz. : Ilorscs, ('nlllr. Sheep. Swine, I'milfry, Agri- cultural implcmenls, on or before Sulnrdaiy, August 2011:. . (Bruin. l-‘ield Roofs. uml other Ii‘iirm I'rodui-fs. Muchincry,uud Manufactures generally, on or before. Saturday, August 271h. _ > ’ Horticultural I'roi lll'lrl. Luilics‘ “ork. Fine. The Peruvian Syruphi protoxide Arfs. etc., on or before Saturday, Seplembcr , ‘ of iron) has cured thousands who were suf- 3rd- I’rizc Lists uml lllnnk Forms for making the, entries upon, I'll“ be obtained of the Sci-rcfnrii-s of all Agricultural iind llorficulfnrnl Such-firs and Mechanics’ lnslilufcs throughout the I‘m- The virtue of most of the patent medicines vim... with which the market is flooded, lies in the name, but the virtues of Burdouk Blood Bitâ€" ters lie in the jiicl that they cleanse the blood of impurities, and cure dyspepsia, bil- iousness and indigestion. Price $1.00, trial bottle 10 cents. Toronto Oil Company are sole nuinumeiurers of “Cusforluc†.\ uchlnu Oil. luf'ringemenls will be prosecuted TEMPORARY RELIEF, in Cilscsol piles, may, perhaps, be found in some merely outward application; but a permanent cure Ulll' only be secured by an outward a )plicatii‘ui assist ed by an internal remedy. '1 his is found in the great Medical Pile Remedy. llugh Mil- ler 6: 00., Toronto. Cholera Infantum. That terrible scourge among children may be speedily cured by Dr. Fowler's Extract of \Vild Strawberry. All forms of boWel com- plaint, nausea and vomiting, from an ordin- ary diarrluru to the most severe attack of Canadian cholera, can be subdued by its prompt use. It is the best remedy known or children or adults suffering from summer complaints. Toronto Oil Company are sole ninnufufurers of "Castor-Inc" Machine I)“. Infringements will be prosecuted. E (‘orner Kingï¬t York - Stu†Toronto. I‘uh . lurk ll. Irish. proprietor. ‘Mnrku iminufuclured by M. II‘ YOUNG 5: (TI)., 13 Wellington SI. B. olYLIDINGS, Frames. Mirrors. Glass, l’ic~ lures. kc. &c. _ u. .i. ngjrnuws .v IIIIQ..ToroIiIn. __ 7..)0 PER DAY. LIVING WA'I‘EIt S'I‘AII 2D"; Auger, bores 5 to 2!: inch. Ilund or horse 1power. Send for catalogue. 6:5 Mary-8L. fl“lflll.9’_'_-.9,“E ,, -. _ . “ OLDEN STRITP "I.\'l2(.'AR“&’. “ ROYAL V. 0. ('ider Vinegar" are both guaran- teed fo make excellent pickles. Munufnciured only by B. B. ('IIAIIL'I‘ON, Ilnnilllon. 9J1L_ ANJTIDIBA l..|.\'l) 0PFII‘E-â€"AllClllllALl) \OUNU, Toronto, selects Government will"! 3'“! Ie'LdachmrIEEigie.-~ llurrlsleriind Ai- ch- “a lorney. IS King Street West. Toronto. ace "Olelfll f‘uniidii. SH East, Toronto. Agents \viinli-d. ofl'llEI'AliElHJ-ZA - 'rllrllfliiirable, Light ElMllI?,lllldISh(‘ll). First prize of l'rovim-iii Exhibition. London. ’I‘eslinioniula on npplh-u. lion. Satisfaction mmnleed. ' Address. J. I )AN_& SUN, Ifruyfon. ()nt ROLLESTON HOUSE. Bourdlng and Day School for Young LIIdll’I. ILASSES WILL Ill-J ItEh‘l'Ml-ZI) SEPT. 6th. This school (now ï¬fteen years estab- IlllNIH' WADE. Seen-fury. Toronto. .I. It. .ll’l.l~l.s‘“‘0lt’l‘ll. I’reslilcnl. Si-“linrgh. Cures Dyspepsia, Nervous Affec- tions, General Debility, Fever and Ague, Paralysis, Chronic Diarrhaaa, Boils, Dropsy, Humors, Female Com- plaints, Liver Complaint, Remittent Fever, and all diseases originating in a. bad State of the Blood, or accompanied by Debility or a low State of the System. PERUVIAN SYRUP Supplies the. blood with ils \‘Ilul I'rlm'lnle, or Lll‘e Element, uuix. llllllHllIK Hfrcnsyw Vigor, and New Life info ull pnrls of the M's fem. GURNEY'S NEW HARRIS Wood Furnaces! I'ORTA “LB 01! STATIONA I! l'. fished; still offers fliesaine superior adv-“1.13m... l-‘or \I’nrmlng l'lllll‘rllfll. school "nun-i and of obfalnln ntlioroiithlucution.combinln ii refined an hop 3' home. A full mat! of I no best liiasters our resident governouvn. For particulars apply to Ills. NEVILLE. I“ John turn-l. Toronto. Dwellings. Five Sizes of Coal Burners. S M M E R ' N G “Fund for Dru-rlpllieI’nuuiblrl. The London Institute for the hire of Ini- pedlmrnl In speech lla‘l reopened for flu.- fall and winter. For circulars and testimonial» from hundreds we have cured, address STADIIIEIING lhsflTl’Tli. undon. om. ï¬â€˜ANI’T'O‘BA ‘! Thosc'tgningm Manitoba will ï¬nd a to their the L'olonitl Nara, a per glvlngjusf the Infor- mation you require: 0c. in end of year. Pun- pbleu, with main, sent free. llolbrook's lull l‘nrty,with sleep: earn attached. will leai con coded two do a before by lheIr {act (relight train. 75M mm 0 choice land for uln on easy fernm. E. & G. CURNEY & 00. I HAMILTON. ONT nmlcruu-ul ioncd (1313‘. LAD] send an “Ab ferotadollnrand 1 MI ml you the units- sorts. 1. every :IISIISII tor- ?lu S‘plnge zLituu mi -r,, in y: in lhIInl. smi‘nium‘ull the bum mum-n mites fmm flu-best Amer fun and Ion-Ti publications known. I dress .\ I‘RAXK \I'IL‘ON. ma 1“ Adelaide Sf. “'esl Tunuilu. nu i: ‘m- ruin» urr 25 ,BICKLE’S A G SYRUP w-wnu:â€"â€"â€"â€" Cough. 620. If vuu need anything for such complaiqu you can hardly find its musl. Ask for if. JNO. W. BICKLE, - Proprietor ir‘uriucrly llh'RIJ: a Spa-J HAMILTON ONTARIO Cures Cholera, cholerq Morbus, py- sentery, clumps, Colic, Sgt! 810A- ness and Sum mer Comp/amt; also Cholera lnfantum, and all 00m- plaints peculiar to children teeth- ing, and will be found equally beneï¬cial for adults or children. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. T. MILBURN & 60., Proprietors, Toronto. BUY TE}: WILSON SGALES ’I‘Ill} FINEST SCALIN IS 'l'lll: MARKET. 'l‘hc \\'ilsnn IIxiy Scale I purchased from you gives cullrc snlisIm-fiun both in scusillvcncss and accuracy. The l‘iilcnl lleuiu is u moch for simplicity in culi-ulnlinu. and In lwuufy. In [In- lshiind design. and as n whole. fhe scale In n credit to the manufacturer. Whihing you every success. I‘. h‘Nl'RR, Jordon l'. (l. \\'rilc for prices. l'lvcry Scale \vnrrnnlcd. 0. WILSON &SON. I 45’ESPLANADE STREET EAST. TORONTOZV ,. WATERDUS ENI an 00.. BRANTFORD. ONT. c.“i‘)‘}\u ID& sow Dry Goods EIDDOPIIIID ! GREAT Aï¬Ã©AcTious For all buyers who wish fo save llmn and money by llillkIlIK their purchases from om- ol flu- largest and ebullient slot-kn of Iiry Condo in Ihe lmnilnfuli. NBW [lands in Every Department. [lur Dress Goods Department, Our Mourning Goods Department, Our Staple Goods Department. [lur Hosiery Department. Uur Glove Department and Our Fancy Gouda Department. are full to overllimlnu. (JL'Il LAIHIQS' IYNIIIZIN'IJJ‘I‘IIINH crew-In iii iilyle,innlermland Imeelrwurk. lnumrfedizur meniu hear no comparison in value. 194, 198, 198,200,202,204 Yonge St, Tenant-.130. 37 .‘IAIK Sine†\I'rm, “Ammo-1, 23rd May, l-ijl. Mun-us. LAinmw, in". k Co. .Inhs u infelhgih c enough, mnai‘dcriu the f capital. bu made If: appurancc in more l and a loner glitter in the e as that tells the agitation which has lmwmuml ami- the gun time illâ€"Stink? of the province-a of St. story with youth or maid. ere is a theory ‘ 1:: ‘3: Law" ’“duԠ3" ‘TPE'H’Eg-Ioo“ ‘ (inalzmfl' “The “Hanan†Vflmnflun “w! - u ' t v . ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ . ' . . ' ' I ‘ . ' ., . Muï¬ulmm lehu “ 0‘ 50m,“ Am“ in at“ mm uh 0‘ soma‘ m" u “‘me 1h“ we momth Pk†. lwlmg M m ‘ lune blocking done twenty-eight inches Sum-moor to It. W. Prime 8: ('o.. M Kim rim-cf ’ m “My “gum†l “"‘I “w"“l"‘l l" L the French invasion of T unit. and if. would 3 with alarming rapidity. llama. which. the perfect kin. but this must he a matter deep Two who, which were much. me am. 1.0mm“ igilrhf‘lrthiUln smoke iluild timeâ€. it i: an ' V r ' ? M ammonium Mill r, and it has only be In Cohluft‘nlly with all the traditions ‘ after land. are the most valued property of of option. as Byronâ€"who m so fond of? . . c __ _ . I . of Oriental undue that such a raid, if it the plasma. are dying by the team, and kinuthnt helongul to have all the kimble I Wait: “11" 3:: ‘0! hmuxzzl 3‘" 7°“ W x†w “we†H'†“W†Perl“?! Mlixltuï¬ihn. did uni-cm, should have been scum inf bv Z many case-n of illness have occurred among 2 lips in the world made into one mouth that he ' ounce I! no mo can testify to its marvellou- wcno healin ' and recommend it to your M, ricndn. We re er to Dr. Fowler's Extract 1"†a†mufï¬n of “'ild Strawberry. the grand specific for-ll The remedy that has stood the text of time agdala ii in London. summer complainu, diarrhea, cholera mor- ‘ in Dr. I-‘owlcr‘n Extract of Wild Strawberry. , cram cholic, nit-knell: of, Alum! infallible to cure dysentery, who)â€: he the stomach and bow!- complainfa of infants ; morbuii, and all "winner of fluxes, eliollc be oradulu. lot in merit. be known to all.crnuiim,cliolerainlumuxii, and every form of who have not.an it. summer coinplainfe. lcompleu-d a drama which occupied fifteen 'lM' LIN-“1. Md!†LJLLXHJI. ï¬ning †‘ , expert needlcwomen for a week. Indeed, the would probably cirvunntamw of umptional cruelty mil the Almaty. Whatever "mic may be madpglov for “It! uulbhmk of uvagcry, it is obvious l to the want of efï¬cient doctors and veteri- ilut ii '1“ have in be puntdml no:me and i nary alan and partly to the anion.- decuively. Nu ratio-u «copying the puni- i tendencies of the is. who. tmtin all tiuu that France din in the Onental menu-y I to Providence. re ale 'aution and It in ' can allow in subjects to be unnamed and 'v the ad boring village-a the skin: of the outraged with unfunny. brutal t t have died of the disease. pulationdif theinfeefcd villages. Thelmight kin itâ€"oi‘nd no moustache. Julius authorities are helplcu, owing partly Ca: . too, who drop l into c tonic a man show m the handful kiuing c the luppincu of the i urea: of ' beauty of old. were none the leu‘effcctivtl with sp- um knew no beard. ' A General Maud. A Mn. J. (l. lloluxrtaon will": “I an- suffering from gclicrnldcbility. want of h[.' ntilm, COIISllllfllhll, etc†so that life wa- ii mnlun: after using “unlock lllood Bitten I felt bettrr than for year: I ' . . cam“ t r‘ . your Bitters too much. I I, “w Loki: Sum of 3! gallanh, whose? His tenure of ofï¬ce n Governor offlibnltar bun, dyaen will expire in October. when, being will According to the present regal. l compelled to retire from the army. .. I :1. .iom,