it: 5% d3)“ m 0 Marsh. in Knghnsl. the scene of his dath. basins: been carefully restllfiï¬l at tin: or.» [venue of llml llan‘nlal". lard flute. who has a colony oi brave-s tar. Bethany, in Smtlanil, is gum; :o resent several to the Zrmlozical liar-lens. ‘ (h? liftï¬l [hm lm$lifg slicil gut. A? the ljrusvenor tiallcry opening in Inpv . don the testbeth mastered in strong force in very “great-yell ry . i A workman wan ruining a iii-h: which he had just innâ€"1 in a factory floor :it New llriiain. Conn.,wheii his eye Wu destroyed lwa red hot iron thvzu‘. through from the otiicr side. l’rul. Huxley says tnat those who have tlken an active part in science should be killed atsixty. as not being flexible enough to yield to the advance of new ideas, lie is himself hl'flll)’ tiftymcven. During the past year 2,039 vessels were wrecked and property estimated at $1.400,- 000.0i’)0ileat:oye- . Add to this the prop- perty lost in fires and .m- what an appalling unount of capital is utterly lust. has been slightly indis- Tlil l’o , who I†He is en 'aged posed, is now ( nite Well. writing along incyclical, to be Iub isbed about Euler, closin; the Jubilee ear and setting forth to the Ipiscopacy the present situation of the l‘apacy. 'I'iii: venom oz serpents is said not to dif- fer chemically from human saliva, lIiowisvcr powuful are its effects. Ammonia, long thought to be its antidote, does not render it innocuous; 'l‘he iison when mixed With ammonia killn precisely as though it was pure. Henry Mch of St. l/Dllli piticiiI Mrs. Dinkclinaiin on account of her martial lll~ felicity, and paid all the cost of a divorce. Then he married her. But within a year he was cured of his love for her, and em- ployed the some lawyer who had pro- curcd the illvul'ue to aniiiil his own niar- ringc. ‘ 11' is tbiity years since the cable between Dov-crawl Calais was completed. The ï¬rst "ch e was handed to Prince President Louisti‘lapoleon on Dec. 31, 1351. Prior to the massage an electric shock fired a gun to salute the Duke of Wellington, then at Do- ver for the last timer» Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. Tm: Zoological Society in New South Wales, who have successfully introduced trout and porch into that part of Australia, have renewed their efforts to introduce sal- mon, and have applied for and received from thc United States Fish Commission two boxes containing 40,000 ova. ’l‘hcsc, after great care and trouble being taken with them, have been safely deposited Ill hatching boxes at llowenfcls. I'ris asserted that thc nutritiousiicss of apples has never been properly appreciated and that they are far more nourishing than potatoes. Cornish workmen 88 that they can work better on baked app es than on potatoes. Thcrcis a dish in CornwaIl called squabpic, made of nipttou thh slices of potato, apple, and onion, and, strange as it ma seem to many, it is excellent.I Corn- wall is the country for moat pies, as the miners carry their dinners with them in that form. 'l‘llf’. practiwiu Pennsylvania coal mines is to leave pillars of coal in position to sup- wrt the roof until the rest of the level has been taken out. Then the pillars are some- times removed, but it is a dangerous opern~ tion, even when strong and numerous tim- bers are inserted. ft is iii'tliis part of the work that. most of the casualitics of the mine occur. “llobbing the pillars." is the term used in describing the careless removal of coal from these supports, and the miners continue the practici- because it is an easy way to get the coal. 'l'iir. island of IInrcin of the British Chali- iicl group, after being vacated by the Trap- pists some months ago, has again been pur- chased by another of the monastic orders hailing from St. Pierre dc Chartreuse. Dur- ing last le‘lllg llnrcin was purchased by the 'l‘rn ipiiits. A father superior, accompanied by five brotlicni of the order, took up their quarters on the island for a few weeks ; but fliey ultiiimtcly lcft rather suddenly, Inot having found the climate and surroundings so suitable for a. permanent settlement as they had expected. . Three lovely sistcmnbiujc. Fanny, and Maryâ€"«lived in Louisville, Ky. Lime and Funny admired the same young mnn. A discussion about him one day endcd in such atcrrif‘ic combat that Mary had to interfere in behalf of Fanny, who received such n beating that she had to be put to bed. Mary went to town and got it warrant for the ar- rest of Liuio, who, when she was brought to jail, swore out a warrant agniiist I.\Iary ; so Mary and Lizzie are m Jail. and Fanny is in bed from bar llljlll'ch! while the young man, the cause of all of it, is nodoubt running around the strccts. nosinny With an other young woman. Tm: lion tnmcrnttziclicd to nmcnagcric at Edinburgh, after thi- lions had been fed, was leaving t'licircagc, when he slipped and fell. This accident mired an irresistible temptation to one of t in lions, who, although it bad ain‘mlyilincd. made a rush at him and soiled him by the fleshy part of the arm above tlicclbop; Being rccullod, however, to a sense of propriety by a sharp blow. the lion loosed his hold. leaving only the marks of its teeth on the arms of its victim. The lion tamer, having dressed the wound him- self, sulnwipiontly Ironppean-d in tho Iinenag- trio and put the amino 3 through their usual wrfurmaniw. Dr, lloggs was murdered by or through the connivancc of a number olI poniouii at lruutou, Ohio, and the hanging of one of them by lynclicrsafew days ago seems to have been an attempt to learn their names. .lolin Wagoncr was in jail for the crime. 'l‘wclve iiiuked men took himout, drew him up with a rope over the limb of a tree, and then let him down to confess. llutlio would not betrayhis accomplices The operation was re itcdsevertl times, but not ii wonl could & tortured from him, and lie was fin. ally choked to death. The" Daniel Fuck, 3 suipm'tud man. was taken in hand. A single lift of the rope made him tell the whole story of the crime, and his life was slaved. w... *Wov-fl-v-v ~ ~ maintains. attire," and attracted " ‘ v far more attention than the pl-:tllre<. I 2 P Kate. rm tlw t‘uiu imam... Yes, that‘s her picture! She wooâ€"4a; forty. I I Winning! i es. in a girl of l.\\'_clil_\ . We met under the s adow ot a palace. Pretty! More than pretty. and El“ woman. E cs? Yes. as black as CleopulnIs s: H c said the tire would never die: That black eyes mi- ant lasting: lovc. Humph! Poki- the flrc. old man. Manner and form f I she was just splendid»â€" \Villowy and graceful as. a. fawn. It was a dream. Such as agents always bin 0. Yes. we Xllt‘l again in our own land. Was it a quarrel! .\u: I Loving more than c\ or. she ‘x‘llll. [ï¬nder-“great oaks I _ I I That grew umid lhc fragrance of rarc flou- ' ens. I In the twilight we parted for a lllllt‘. As I Went down the dusty road. I She sang. "Good-by. Swoetlicai-t.’ rometer," "low pressure." oftenest make their appearance a little east of the Ptocky the Atlantic, generally due east. Occasion- inovcs north-east More rarely (:3 clones make their appearance in the West Indies, and follow along the course of the Gulf IStrcam, the outer edge sometimes reaching the Atlantic coast, very rarely extending in- land. Out of 100 storm-centers noted during 1879, one moved north, 3 southeast. 2% northeast, and 72 nearly due east. Their velocity varies from '20 to 50‘iniles per hour so that either storm-centers or cold waves travel from the mountains to the sea in from two to five days,_then passing off upon the The song; was balm to me. ocean, frequent; takinga north-easterly di- 1 "mull!" ll 1"†h" l""â€"‘"“ ’4'" mm“! rection after reaching the coast. Sometimes , "’ , a storm may be deflected from its course, or "ï¬ï¬lnnflll‘eï¬ï¬ï¬if' spend its force midway, or increase in sever In the Persian. 'nic means waywni d. ity, as it moves eastward. It is these pOSISl- And in this she Was a true l’cmlim. bilities, together With the varying velomty of the wave, which render us dependent on Do 1 loyc her! What a question! i'fglqilï¬iii' om “"3 N the telegraph for its iecord of daily or even no Wis say tender things of llIOS“. we hair i tradict the best-founded predictions. r.-. <~o-Dâ€"â€"â€"Iâ€"â€" » A Tit!!! Wlth Farinch About the Weather. ‘ . , h ‘ per cent. of the predictions are verified, and l . mun-xi: .11! cu um. , upon perhaps 71 percent. our reliance mayi be almost perfect. At times, either on land i or ecu, a single warning may save property 1 to an amount greater than tlit whole animal c‘xpensc of the bureau, to say nothing of life i and comfort. Our weather then, in general l terms, comes from the west, and when we 3 read in the papers that “an era of low pres- i What can beforctold about the weather ‘.‘ Not guessed at, but predicted on some Ibu- sis of reason, with a fair dcgrcc of certainty, say thrce'or four chances to onc. The desire and the attcmpt arc. very old. The (food llook speaks of those who. two thousand yan ngo, uscd to say at evening ; “ It will be fair weather, for the sky is red" ; or in the morning, “It will be foul weather to-day, for the sky is red iuid lowering." And ever since flici have there been, as now, plenty of weather prophets; on a small scale. both on tho Sui-coast and in the inte- rior, sailors, farmers, and others, much in theopcn air, who have had consnlernblc skill in discussing and interpreting weather indications. \Vitliin the past 33 years, first the Smithsonian Institution. and now the Signal Service Division of the Army, have taken up the business on a larch scale, publishing maps and seirdiflg out “indica- tions†for the whole country two or three times a day. But with longer forecast, many people at- tach great importance to several “signs.†When the squirrels and thcheld-micc layup abundant stores of nuts or grain; when the fur is heavier and the feathers thicker; when the beavers and the musquaslies build high- er dams and thicker huts, it is by many supposed not merely to indicate that if; has been a. favorable season, so that com and nuts are more plenty, and easier to gather; thaIbeasts and birds bctterfcd so as to bc Hair able to make better fur and feathers; the ‘II I I. I II II I I 'III I streams higher and the supply of material; 3 l “9“ “M†t 0 tiff“ 10‘ I‘laFisil \{1 f)“ greater for the damdmildcrs, and the lint- ‘ “ml “loam; new" to “‘“ll)' 331"“- “t‘ 03°“ I . , - - ' to f. .cteu a“ “nusâ€. say how (lid you know, when you coulan’r. 3111:2:301:21iagghtm“ ‘ I talk together 2' I know by her hair. It is my alas i these giant, “itâ€, fun, just -a science of Japanâ€"this study in the doing . . g . . - . . f the hair. The age and sex of ababy MM (2 will case have often staith nmtli ° _ I I in plrcmatlurge mm" “.mmcrI only to e". I may be known by the tuft in the back oftlic counter heavy snow storms, and the ground. ‘I‘C‘Jl‘y 911' :lleIl‘lllfgI HEOIIIItIItlle1311351)} Weill}! ho" come to Uricf from trusting to his ska-1 "mull ‘3 t 11} l0" ‘1 II c a le Ires is dog. " i shaved. A girl of S or t) has her hair made SOI latterly, have arisen Venue“ Ticc and up into :iliow on the buck and pound round . - . " '1c the front is shaved , “km†themselves cons muons ], with red crape, win I 3333130.. oi‘ivim the \vcntlierpwill be id have and bangs dangle at the Eldes- A young . . lady 'conibs the next month or cicn a tuclvcmoutli ahead: sometinies coutcnting themselves ranged “5 a butterfly with general prophecies of hot weather with I sure with heavy rain and severe galcs is de- g velopiiig in the upper Mississippi. or upper 3 Lake Region," the farmer had better not he- ! gin his buying or his harvesting, and thcl tmvellcrliad letter not set out by way of} the lakes or the ocean, until it has passed by. \Vliilc if in the fall or winter, you read that “an zireaof high pressure with violent winds and rapidly falling tcinporaturcis pre~ railing" in the some regions, the farmer had better look to his young stOck, and make all snug about cellar and burn, and the tmv‘ eller will do \i'Ell to take his heaviest over- coat. Bearing in mind these few simple facts, every farmer or faimcr's boy who has access to the daily “indications and reports,†or better still to the daily weather maps, may become. to a great extent, his own weather prophet, for two or three days ahead, and thus neither be taken in by the guesses of l those who make predictions to sell, nor fail of the advantage which may often be gained by a toleratny definite and reliable know- ledge of wliut‘sort of weather is coming. .u- , 1 How Japanese Widows Vicar Their and gay hair-pins of gift. balls. Some very stylish young ladies prefer to have their back hair resemble a half open fan instead of la buttcrlly.’ A married woman must keep the waterfall style, while a widow who is Willing to think of matrimony wears her hair showers in July, and cold boisterous winds with occasional snows in December, which geuornlly rovc true, unless we happen to have u coo July or a mild December; and sometimes at a venture, hazarding speciï¬c guesses of extraordinary variations, seldom 1 coming true, and generally needing to he 1 amended and explained after the fact. Now what are We to believe in? How much credit is to be given to these predictions, by the farmer who desircs to be neither an old i fogy nor a "grccnhoru" who is too easily, honxed ? , he“ “'itli regard to any proguoetications as to I " the weather, one year, oronc month, or one ; week ahead, lie is tu pay no more atteiitIionI than he docs to patent medicine advertisc- . niciits, or agents for patent churns. 'lhosc who have longest and iiiosIt cnrcfplly stuï¬lied I read and recorded the want icr, 'uow est, . - . I I I that beyond two 01- uu-ce days, no medic. { II I may differ frum dc religious folks when - . . . . t1 . 1i .1 tc t1 Isa dat I's vot more respect for do wood- “0'15â€an “mm posses‘ml’ H. s bl H lpcc'crdcnl ms fur dc dove. De dove is reliabilit or that should be taken into ac- 9 , , , I I count in iiinking our plans. There may be “eltlul' “0 ll '300 amm‘d 3“, Coax 30“ ""10 luckygucsscs, us there may lft.‘ woful fail-I I ‘ ' ‘ - I \ o 9 "ms m guessing. he got: obir intcr dei field .iiid pulls p d “1,,qu yms fun liberty to gm,“ what ..young wheat. All dis time do woodpecker the weather will be at any time in the fu- ll†"‘39" *llgb‘l“ ‘1 “'m'm 0MP“ 3 tree- ture. llut when anybody undcrtakcs tni Elmryl’mVl-‘llon"l’llflmre "my ll“ Wise: label his gums†rm. weeks 0,. “mummy,de l but I doan see why a body should suffer so . . ‘ . - t , ‘ “predictions.†and to issue them as guides l ""th "‘ “mm t‘velll- A 005' 000“ lmb 1‘0 ‘ troubli- ncdcr docs a coon but future gives f t farmer. or the traveller, or then-10th ' , v I I 1 £23,310“ he. in the language of shakes. ! fits tIode baby. ‘Allll dis deIpvoacliciI-s tell beam. “writes himself down an ass." \\'thI l “lâ€! ‘3 0“ “mom†01’ ‘19- Imlm‘ml IanCVY . . _ . - ~ , g. ‘ ob Adam. 1’sc glad dat lie was counted out he. undertakes to gct moniy for doing tlll. , 0" do garden OI) EJOIII Everybody what ' . ' 1- l-v *1 with . _ I I I I gammy-ii?“ a “mum†“n a t 'â€" ! walks do 110' wnl atcctliin Chile is a natural “at forum.- or two. or cvcn tbrcc duys‘ "nemy w“ ‘lfll Wm- I I h ad u“. “in,th “my 1m. foremhp n.0,! I had noticed datI. all great men retains iii a '6 ' V l“ n . ' . . artcr lifode carl' impressions of childhood. thirds of the tune with grunt certainty. tlii l , _ I I - - . . - ' , Dis scar bush is w ierc inv foddcr hit me \vid other third With more or less of doubt. And, I {I I t . ‘ not only can this bcdonc by the trained 01» g“ 533*“ “3 s1mu - server at the signal station, but it may be I attempted with 00-1 success by any iiitclli~ l 5"“ Wm“ “ho ‘35 39W“ to ll": flnlll' “‘4ԠI Aliclmcl Lycct waited until he was 37 be- ther Ina . 0I' 0W" i" “"3 lull flail." mlml'l- ' fore seeking a wife, and then found tlic job It wouh be a great gain to the community $1.113 “my and more costly um“ 1", 1,3,1 ex. if Olll‘tlflil)‘ Nile†“’Olll‘l 8i†"5‘ 3-0939 rt" . pccted, though he had the advantage of a ports lll as they “11' Mill: out, "ï¬fth?! of comidcmble bank account. He lives at cutting them down to the mere "Iiiidicn- xicemwn' a “nun-l, of philadelphin. [(0 tion!" for tlwll‘ mm Viv-lull)‘. "0" ll they gavcn fiddler, whose occupation put him in had to lessen the spare givcii to horse raccs, we way of knowing a great many girls, 310 base ball match“. dug llglluv “ll-l P011“? i as a fee for introducing him to an eligible courts. I I party: but the girl with whom the agent Th†“00Ԡum'l." 0‘ llm‘lellmg “hN‘St‘S put him into rclatiousiavorablc to courtship in the weather. “llll the Iidca of the tulc- wascmï¬yflfl “mlulemfomunmgiafacgory, gflpll. l! based “pull tilt? fart till“ 001' “'1‘3‘ ‘\ Mama pnynwnt of to the ï¬ddlm- re. pin laced horizontally across the back of tlic fiend. But when a widow ï¬rmly resolves never to change her name again she cuts off her hair short to her neck and Philosophy in Ebony Remember, youu man, dill; de man what lion’lcs do most boo 's ain’t dc best cddycat- cd. I knowcd a bookbiiider oncc diit couldn‘t -« -c-...â€".._. Ono Way to Get a Wife. Don't furs“ 10 “I "‘l‘fll‘m‘l’mnfi" 53.“ ther changes come. as ll grin-ml rule. from united in an acquaintance with Bliss Xolan. it in 3'03" [mum-b ym†l'mll‘c" m“ “hm-T3 the West and not from thi- cast ; 31"“ "N who jiltcd him after receiving two dresses your schoolmates. 3'0“? lfi‘i-‘lll'ï¬â€˜rl‘ll‘ll‘ay ll great waves of lciruinctiic pressure. which [and a plank ; and guldc‘uu‘utly with Miss and, and do your friends good. I ind inspiration in over ' "timidâ€"morning heartily spoken. that he [11 to make fresher and work ligbtcr. It seems real make the morning good. and to be: prophe- t. - of a good day to come after it. I And if t is be true of the “good-limping" it is also of kind. WWM 'tvetingt: they cheer the discourage-l. mt t timl one. unchan- inake the I licle of life run more smoothly. lie liberal With them, then. and let no muni- ‘ pus. however dark and gloomy itImay ha. tblt you do not lWl at least to bright- ea by your unile- and c «rial Innis. mw>a>u--w. .. - Q - . inns seem in be very in it: Wilma» or adult: re dips: ‘ t in and the alumina main-downer: ironies-cured theorem“:- .., . ‘m- .gflnnlodtkebopuwotmfm a.†penname ‘ hapm h°P° in the. opposite direction, ly to l clit‘t'l'iull‘ ‘ml “lu‘ “ “mil†ll “ill, do lu“ W0 “MW? M1!" and I'm". “ml “"11030 allcl'lm‘ Casey, to whom he gun: a bonnet, shoes, “"3†i tlom pnkiuce our storms. mm c across our i gun-“I and busier). ymme ï¬nding out “mt “’"m'y {mm “9" l“ “Lâ€- “ml alum“ 09"" l she would not marry him. Then Michael 5“ uh“ for 0151‘ discarded the fiddler aipl struck out for WNW" m‘1“01""“"- ““ 1°“ ‘0 94‘“ WM} “ ' himself with Miss Moran, the daughter oi 1‘ “Mn! N ll“ “ml “l “'1- “l‘l‘ "My lull†l his landlady. 11c gave to a Police Justice, lawn)“ 3" I" “’l‘“ 1‘ K‘m’l‘i 0" “Wall the l a few davs ago. the following account of his '“lW'nl- Tm†1“ 3"“ E'lls'l‘m‘l- 5‘ “"“h' l experience with this girl: “ Furst shc axed mt momwnn is om" telegraphed in cm" 3 for a nu; Mum. lli' yo: inoind um: Scz ing from the southwest. from Bew \ ml: or; L i“ in ye many nu. 7‘ - 1",, hug- », mg 9"“ "'0‘" Vll'lflulav “V "1" C‘wlllwimemn i an; shc. ‘ Margaret.’ see I. ‘it‘s no silk funk" $09â€!- ldhress ye‘llliavc from me till yc promise.‘ The prmnre of the atmosphere in the ‘ Very well,‘ so: she. will nI smilc on her.I trmpente zone varies about one pound per ‘ I‘ll be Mn. 1: 'cct on ILhi-istmas Day. square inch, and isiudicated by t c lumpi- 'I’I'heI ila ‘ belonILIimth, Incl 1. ‘it 1 mar- oter, varying from '29 inches (low) to 31 in- ned in c mornin well be. ' I‘hwnt morn- {chï¬l ' )u the extremes. the ordian vs. in‘ ?' sez she. openin' her eyes and starin' in riatiou in: only about half as great. Your one face. ‘ Christian mormn‘,’ m 1. It I the storuiwenfre ti nt or near the place of New Year's I ml.'aex she. a bould as bran. low barometer. where the are is lent. 1 war bilin' mad, but she 'stnd like a cow their from all sides rushing towards thisx iii-the mud, nn' cndIna ther be druv nor with: rotary motion. which in very sevch blameyed. I water . an‘ to put her in- nnruu is named argrlou. Sometimes. lio‘r- til slipirrits I 3‘ her a twenty-sevrndolttr ever. the arm of high and for Mango“ ring. Sui- Year's Day she Illnt ' ' lira-scrol- the country from in. n littlier nayin' she'd not marry me if l , Instinct from west was made of goohl." It was to n-cover the can: u in may of our “ .1 wave..." ex~ ring that Michael resorted to the Police tend Gulf. sued all tum: deceivcn to make them give luau!!! a little in advance of the norm- npnllhispresents. ‘cntn, while the barometer is falling- Wh-a the centre has passed. the hero inst.- begins to demand clearing ._...â€"_â€".â€".. o . .‘......._._..... “twink well preserved." These 5' viii-centres, or “areas of low ba- : Mountains. very often in Dakota. and then i move with greater or less rapidity towardi A writer in London Trill/i maintains that! ally a stormâ€"centre develops in Texas, and I city. he 5031's. “ the electric light companies With all these possibilities of error, 80 to 90 I smell indeed, and there is no method byl l sympathy, but as soon as yer back is turned Istmw, zuid at best littlcbettcr than so much mania from the Lakes totbc Court. and. meeting with success. he Incl “The greatest fall of rain or snow is! FENELON FALLS; ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEB. THE ELECTRIC LIGHT. r Sure to Super-soda Gasâ€"Its Great Innin- inating Power. E electricity is sure to supersede gas. In'tlie i are paid the same prices as the gas compan- ies received, but furnish four times the light. Their generatms are run by heat from gas, but with the gas that produces, when burned as an illuminant, the light of 12 candles they produce an electric light of I 1,600 candle-power by the are system, and could produce sixteen separate 1‘.’ candle lamps by the incandescent system. He sums up the present system in London, of electric lighting thus :â€" I "Streets arc now being lighted with it at one-forth the price of gas ; incandescent lamps can be introduced into over ' room of any house as soon as the iiiainsare id ; there can be a separate meter to each house ; the lamps can be separately lighted, and put. out by turning acock; if one if lit goes out, no other one is affected ; the su «livision is I so compIetc that there is no glare, and yet a l 1 room with incandescent lamps is far more i ' brightly lighted than with an equal number : 1i iirl ' rovtrcss and which sometimes con- . O l p ° ’ But f of gas lamps; and an equal amount of caii- ; dlc-power produced by electricity is cheaper ? than an equal amount produced by gas. In ; addition, the electric light has no odour, it S does not vitintc or heat the air, noi'does'; it, like gas, tarnish paint and dccora- ; lion.†; The writer then considers the prospects ' before gun cmnpziuies, assuming that they. will be driven out of the illuminating busi- i ness into that of supplying gas with which , . to run the electric light and for floating pur- 3 piece of liolluud. poses. .110. takes the cases of the London l Gaslight and Coke Company, which charges ' its. 4d. per 1,000 cubic feet. In order to compete with coal for heating purposes. the Company would have to bring down the price of the gas at lcast 50 per cent, as well i as improve its quality. I-le then endeavors : to prove that if the price were reduced the E Company could 1 0t possibly pay interest f upon its ridiculously inflated capital, which‘ he declares is greater by £5,000,000 than the 1 sum for which its entire plant could be du- l plicated. \Vlietlier the calculations are i right or not, there is no doubt that he is' ' right when he lays down the following prin- , ciples which should guide Legislatures in? dealing with electric light :- i “ If the right to Ilay mains under the . streets be granted to any particular electrical | company, that company would have a prac- tical mono 013*, for it is clear that it would be iinpossilile‘p allow rival companies to. take "up the ~ 'eets‘at their pleasure. INo' company 3110111 ,Itherefore, be given tliescl powers. For years we have regretted that! the supply of gas has been in the hands of 1 private companies. These companies ha.ch Been allowed to charge rates to secure to ' them a. not ten per ccnt. profit on outlay, and they have enjoyed a. niouopoly. The! consequence has been that the outlay liasIbecii reckless, that revenue has been squandered I because there has been no control overit,and that the companies and their officials have ‘ regarded their customers much as a feudal : lord in the middle ages regarded the l wretched serfs attached to the globe. \l'cl must not again fall into the same error.’ Electric lighting must be for householders and by householders. The amount necessary for, plant and working capital must be raised head, and plnmngcd with gold or silver cord t-liclinnds of the representatives of the ratc- _ in Council. payers. †, 1 ..-. _ WI... ->â€"â€"â€"v~-â€" Straw 1n the Manger. i New York Tribune. i It is not at all difficult to rot; down a straw ‘ pile, and by so doing to germinate and kill by making the stack very flat, so as to catch 5 much water , it rots rapidly, and so soon as : it gets once thoroughly \vctted, by rcpiling~ it soon beats and decays. But the stack or l‘ potash, nitrogen, and phosphoric acid is very l which this pile of straw can in any way be I changed into manure containing, any more of these valuable elements than were in the stack originally. If we tread this pilc down i; will only be a pile of wet straw, and if we rot it ever so thoroughly it will only be a smaller pile of thoroughly rotted swamp muck. It is only by the use of straw as an absorbent, and as a coarse food for fattening animals, and by using with it much rich food, such as corn, bran, oil, or cotton seed meal, otc., that we can change it into a manure that shall really be very valuable to use, and that will largely iii- crcasc the crops whch used. “'0 must not expect that we can raise large crops of grain year after year, and sell the moat valuable part, and by any method turn the straw iii~ to a manure that shall kccp up the fertility of tlic soil, if we manure only with straw We must expect to grow only straw upon tlic land. It is unfortunate for any man to be so situated that he cannot afford to raise stock to eat up and trend down the straw. [ , and to be fed richer foods, so as to make u I l l ! full supply of rich manure. With any sys- i tom of farming we now have, the land must, [sooner or later, become exhausted and cause to yield profitable crops if we fail to return ,to the soil the essential clcmcnts of plant -' food removed in such crops. __-. . «<->â€"â€". râ€"“â€"-â€". Meet me tn the Morntng. . lkfflrll has Pm- He had been absent a year, the youngest pupil at a boys‘ school, and now his mother was expecting him every day, and she went about, proud and happy, telling her friends of the improvement in his studies, and al- ways ended with his bcing such a good bov. Then comes a telegram from Willie himself, the first real nu-sssgohe had ever scabâ€"bow, I funny it seemed, from that babyâ€"and there i . was just this simple form. “ Meet me in the 1 morning." His mother went about all day with it in her hand. reading it over as if it I had been in her child's own handwriting. l I Then she smiled to herself as she carefully in a scrap ~25, 1882. POUR LES DAMS. Tlic Empress August-.1 of Germany has given $000 towards the proposed Garï¬eld memorial hospital. , According to the New York llrmld “only about one girl in twenty makes a good wife." For robes de chambre, the most fasliion~ able models are the Greek or the Recainier matinces in plain colors, adorned with waves pf lace and satin ribbons or narrow bands of iir. “ I am afraid, dear wife, that while Iain “ Oh, the longer I shall like gone absence will conquer love.†never fear, dcar husband; you stay away the better you." ‘ If there is any one form of jewellry more in vogue than another, just now, it is that which is representative of ii. flower, aknot, and above all, flies. bees and in- sects. Mlle. Sarah Bernhardt is said to bc al» most worn out by her Russian four. She has been playing twice 11 day for several weeks. In \\ arsnw she was to have played fifteen times in seven days. Nextscason black will be universally worn g and foulards and trimmed suralis will he the fashionable fabrics. It is pre- dictcd that black grips-grain silk will be re- stored to the favor it lost when lustrous satins became the fashion. Gathered ruf- fles will doubtless be the fashionable trim- ming. A most beautiful tidy can he made by tak- inga square of satin, lined with a. stout The satin may be either iaintcd or ciiibroidi-red. Tllc border should ie of Miracourt face, with the heavier parts embroidered in floss of one color that harmonizcs with the tints in the decora- tion. William Repp, of Menominee, \\'is., a laboring man, came home one night and found his wife hanging in the wood-shod by if. piece of clothes line, dead, and on her dress was pinned a note with the following : "The reason why I dothisis because I am too lazy to do my own work, or even to make any thing for myself to wear. it"lllll, -_.-._...._...._.'.._~. -7 -« Red Tape in India. as Elsewhere. Bombay Gazelle. Even the Bombay Government has occu- sioual moments of relaxation. At the begin- ning of the rains, Mr. A., the head of an im portaut though not permanent establish- ment, purchased for his puttawalla a cheap great-coat and umbrella. He then sent the bill into the Accountant-General. The Ac- countant-General declined to pass it on the ground that puttawnllasattachml to tempo- rary establishments have no right to great- coats and umbrellas. Mr. A. replied that his establishment, though temporary, was certain to last throuin the rains, and that unless the pnttawallo. was protected from cold and wet by the ordinary means he would probably be laid up and become useless, and therefore if: was assuredly in the interest of the Government that he should be provided with the orthodox umbrella and great-coat. Letter followed letter. The Accountant- General, however, was obdurate. Finally Mr. A. requested that tliewliole of the pro- tracted correspondence might be formally laid before Government. The case was of hers high in front and ar- l at 3} per cent. on the security or the rates, Sufï¬cient inmrést, to elicit an important m. on the back of her and the lighting of the mctmpolismustbe in solution from His Excellency the Governor His Excellency held that the Accountant-General had only done his duty in declining to pay for the great-coat and umbrella, but that, as Mr. A. had shown that the work of his dc )artnient would be impeded if the puttaw a were laid'up with cold through the want of a grout-cont and tied 311d thStc‘l all-“"10 a long She“ lmll" most of the weed seeds contained therein; 7 umbrella the bill for 3 rupees and odd might iiowbe passed, but not as a. precedent. and provided always that if the department cea- sed to cxistbcforc the said great-coat and umbrella were worn out that they should be .comlJS it back Without ï¬lly Pm‘t- This 13 pile of straw at best only contains carbon ’ sold by auction, and the ninonntkalizcd re- : the “'33' "‘1" "CW frlell‘l- the “'39le “'0â€: - and silica in quantities, and these arcï¬the ' funded to thc Accountant-General. l most common and least valuable of all the leleniciits of plant food. The quantity of; _..__. ._._-‘....< .H*. ..... A Flend Incarnate. An extraordinary instance of human in- gratitude and depravity is reported from the little village of Irondalc,a suburb of Chicago. A few days ago Edward Mueller was strick- cndownwith the sinnllpox,aud having no one to administer to his wants was placed in a most pitinblc condition, hilph Johnson and his Wife, a middle-aged lady, assumed the role of the Good Samaritan, and nursed Mueller until he was approaching convale- scence. About ten o’clock last night- Muel- ler, who was lyin ' in bed, arose from his couch, requested olinson to lay down, as he (Mueller) was feeling better, and would like to sit up for a few hours. Johnson complied with his request, and soon fell asleep. As soon as Mueller found out Johnson was sound asleep, ho scorched his bciiefactor‘s pants pockets, midsccurcd his little mite, $17.50. The wrctcli then visited a room in which Mrs. Johnson was sleeping, ambaftcr uttering threats of death if she made an out- cry, violntcd lier person. He tlicnmadc his escape and has since evaded capture. lin- inediatcly after his quitting the place, Mr. Johnson, who had collected licr scattered senses, hurried to her husband's bedside and informed him of what had occurred. The poor man was almost frantic. A few of the neighbors were gathered together and insti- tuted a search for the villinn, who, if cap- tiircd, Would be dealt with summarily, but no clue was obtained. -....._.._..,..- ....... - I Picking out the Weak Points ofa Bone. The weak points of a horse can be better discovered while standing than wliilc niov. iiig. If he is sound he will stand finuly and them. with legs plumb and naturally poised. If one foot is thrown forward with the we pointing to the and and the heel raised. or if the foot iii lifted from the ground and the weight taken from it. disease may be suspected, or at least tenderness, which is a precursor of disease. If the horse stands with his feet spread apart or straddles with the hind legs, there is weakness in the loins and the kidneys are disordered. _ Wle‘l "- pulling beiids the knees. llluiiib or milky, 500k- Wlfllc “Inf-"'00." cast eyes in horses indicate moon blindness "Ruled framing ll to bang 0"" ill†"‘3’" or something else. A lWl tempered hone tel. But all the friends loved Willie: he has the only son of his mother, and she was a widowâ€"and he did not come in the morn- ing! There came instdd the dread news of hasty illness, and his mother hurried to her do:- ’ boy, but it in: too late! The doc- ilci- l doneliis work ~â€"he in: breathing out his little life in the sleep from which he never would fully awaken here. Only once, toward the last, he noclosed his eyes swiftly and saw the dear mother face bending over him and murmured, with dry, hunky lips: “Slant me in the morning. mamma." Dear boy! it is mornin with him alwaysâ€"Abe morning light of aim than Italian aliasâ€"- while we yet grape among the shadows. But by and by , “'e shall home at evening 3 Am! and imominz here. ..- - ..,__ 1‘ . I†. ......__ l. A chin Daemonâ€"A senior. desirous of revisiting his mtive haunts, sent the follow- †in; dispatch to hisfatlier : “ Telegnph inc Riga-{3‘3" all“ “‘3‘ 35“, 13W“ is 8 to come home at once. othennu 1 can't “01' sweet ‘ I?" asked Henry. "Oh. yes, very “we. W eel-il- at “thawed. generally with nonli- Iunet. replied Jane: "that is to say. she is " To which the amn- immediately m: “ Come home at once. otherwise I can't come." keeps his ears thrown back. A kicking horse is apt to have scar-ml legs. A stum- bling horse has blemished knees. When the skin iii rough and hard. and does not mere easily and smoothly to the touch. the home is: heavy ester and his digestion is bad. Never ho a horse whoa: rerpiratory organs are at al impaired. Place you an at the side of the heart, and if a wheeling sound is board. it is an indication of troubli- â€"-let him go. ~ How beautiful is the exhibition of hu- manity in the young. A little boy found a poor half-frozen wasp in the t and placed it upon a chair before the parlor tire to that out. Surely the angels must have 2 looked down approvingly on such an set of lkindneu. mien mm Mary'- ban used that evening he glanced at the chair and seated himself in it. murmurs : “0h, bless heart, how tbouqbtfnlshe is of my amnion!" Two minutes later there was so much noise and racket in the u if it had been tumedintoadenofdemonl. Then-pm thawed out: that ion-by Maryim't married yet. \l'liat's the average fOI‘ husbands} igcst ordcr of heroism. Uni: of those cm~ squarely on his limbs without moving any of I ENGINEER IRVING'S BEROISM. How He Snvr‘d Many Lives at the Per-ll of His Own. “Railway Scrizuiis. City Road. aunt‘s \lllty \ irgwuin | Now and till‘ll, in quiet fines of peace, emergencies spring up \vl demand the ergeucics occurred at Wayncsboro on Wed- nesday of last week. Trains No. ‘22 and H and l‘.’ and 10 on the Chesapeake and Ohio Road, going cast, had orders to meet and pass four sections of extra trains, coming west. at llluc Bridge. The extras were late. and, as a consequence. l l trains were blocked on the main track nbovc \Vnyiics-l boro awaiting their arrival. After three of ‘ the extra trains had passed. the tiist section l of No. It started out and couuucnccd as] cending the hoary gradqto the tunnel. Rain i and sleet were falling, and the engine of No l 14 being unable to draw its cars the engineer 1 of the train immediately following' it. .\1r2£ R. 1’. Irving detached tlic engine. from his‘ own train. and coupling on the rear car of No. 14, aidcd the ascent. A ftcr pushing the fiist train nearly a hqu a mile and giving it a good start, Mr. Irving rcvciscd his engine and started to return to his own train, but are he had reached it he .saw u detachment of the train ho had left coming down the mountainnt a rapid rate, it having become uncoupled from the engine. In an instant the intrepid engineer rcalizacd the peril of the situation. Thirteen heavily loaded cars were coming down a 77-foot grade, and rack rc- volution of the \v ccls was adding velocity to its Speed. With rare presence of mind and an iron ncrvc that few men possess, lr- i ving started his engine to meet flu! dcsccnd- i ing mass and break the force of the collision He ran up to within :l short distance of the cars, and then l‘f)\'01‘8lllg to lighten the. shock clutchcd the lever in his strong grasp and bracing cvcry nerve. in his body awaited the catastrophe. A moment and the crash came. The shock of an avalanche could scarcely have liceirgrcatcr. One of the. cars climbed up on the boiler of the engine and another was wrecked. lint the brave man had accomplished his purpose. The wild train was stopped, and the engineer had saved many irccious lives and thousands of dollars‘ worth of property. ._....-__.-_..-, ._. -..... U. .. , “Yes. Sir, I‘d Shoot film!" Six or eight congenial spirits sat arounn a stove in a Grand River grocery the other night, and after several other subjects had been exhausted some one introduch that of panics in churches, tlicntrcs, midlinlls. This gave Mr. Hopewell acliancc to remark : “Gentlemen, I just long to be thcrc.†“ Where 1'" “\Vhy, in one of those panics. Yes. sir, I’d give a. new twenty-dolliirbill to be in the theatre one night when there was an (locus- ion for a panic.†“\Vliy'f’ “ \Vhy, because one cool, lcvcl~hcadcd man could stop the thing as easily us you could end up that barrel of floor.†“ Well, I dunno about that," observed one of the sitters. " There is something awful in the cry of fire. and hear it where and when you may. it stai‘tlcs and frightens. \Vliat would you do in 0. theatre in case there was a cry of fire and a rush ‘:†“ I’d stand upon my seat, pull a revolver from my ockct, and shout out that I'd shoot the first man who attempted to crowd or rush. Ono cool Infill would check the panic in ten seconds." While the subject was llclll" continued; thc grocer went to the roar amid the store, poured it little powder on a board, and lave three or four men the wink. Directly f. ich was a bright flash, yells of “ Firc " and “ l’owdcr,’ .llllll every man sprung up and rushed. Hopewell didn’t spring up and talk of shooting. On the contrary, he fell over a, lot of baskets piled between him and the door, got up to plow his way ovcr a rack of brooms, and when in: reached the sidewalk lie was on all fours, white as a ghost, and so frightened that he never look- cd back until he reached the opposite :siili- of the street. - , â€". -â€"«OC<-O~>ooaâ€"â€"vâ€" N 3 Atrocfons Poisoning. I Several cases of atrocious poisoning in l‘In- I land of late hich attracted much nttciition. A London physician has written a lettcr to one of the papers. in which he says: " 1hr. ing in conversation with an eminent London physician and with and eminent provincial physician, I chanced to relate an attempt at domestic poisoning wliicli'lind come under my notice in course of my practice. The provincial physician related a similar one, the London physician another one. He then added : ‘ Here are we tlircc, each with such ii case, and probably more than one in our experience. ‘Istiinntiiig that then: are 18,000 medical practitioners in Great Britain, I believe that 12,000 of them could tell tales of the same kind. flow many instances are there which escape dctcctiou 2‘" ’ It is not admitted by most coinnicntatoi's on this curious intimation that there is any such prevalence of poisoning as these figures would sot-iii to indicate. Nevertheless net-sins ol‘attciiiptcd poisoning are not infrequent. There set-ms to he, no safeguard against them. For in England, at all events. the regulations ngaiustI the iiupi-opcr szili- of poisons are very strict. ‘D-v‘-’ I- Pay Your Debts. l If you would have the vvurld fi’ivizdly with you, than avoid creditois. The debt- or‘s cliaiiuis cold and heavy, and its links \I I-I‘Iâ€"~I...i ~‘I~" II [ ummomxxwu. Jew: in London-An Etta-normal? Vil- taln-bonx Rom 'i'iiniii. are .vzghty-niiic Jews in the Lou. .iuu Stock }:\l‘ii;fll:“t‘. ‘Si:.\ivii:i.\.\i- is proud of flurry Coop“. a miner. I"‘l'.t1l:".‘ he is 7 in". Sinflics Ill lft‘lglll. ' ‘l‘iivï¬lsssiirld Directory of Ills‘ lamb-ii ' .\Ictmp«‘\litan Charities shows their inmmc to amount to over $25,000,000. Four Bibli- societics liaic a total income of $00,000; I fiftysix home. missions, $2,350,“: twenty. 1 three foreign missions. “000.000: lwentw 2 three charities fur the blind, $203.01)): 10:; » [missions and institutions for the aged. Sic 00.000 cic. Srinvixi: rm: SlliS.\!.llll.\'.~~Ailllnllfll‘ of glaring cases \ t overwork of railway signal- _ mcii on various mics. during the prevaleiiw of rcccnt fogs, was l‘t‘ \ortcd lately at the head 0111th of tlic Ania gaiiiated Souloty of Anion t the reports was one stating that the “ as men" at (.‘licstcr General station laid been‘ unduly “ fog signaling" “ forabout twentv ‘ hours and over at. a stmtcli without food." - 'l‘pi: Amcricnn Palace Hotel to be erected on fun \‘i‘ctcrin cmbankmciit of the Thames in London, bctwccn the river fuid the lane of \\ liiteliall. is to be him! stories big i, it“ coiiimodatc 1,300 guests, be man lby Lu- lniid, of the llclcven llousc. Al ny, the waiters and bar-kiwch American. the ca i. tal $2,000,000. or £400,000. furnished iv Englishmen with whom the idea, suggested by their liking hotels in America, originated. It will not be. rim for American travellers exclusively. but it is expected that English- men will patmiiizc it. I .-\.\ l‘lxtraordiuary Confessionâ€"‘Jlrooks, a farmer iicnr Luck, in Staffordsliirc. made a most cxtmurdinnr ~ confession just before he died, l‘ct‘t‘lllly. '1 “‘0 ycai‘s ago two neiglv boring fannci‘s, mun of substance and reâ€" spcctability, named Johnson and Glows, were sentenced to ten 'cais‘ penal scrvihidi~ for what was described as a “barbarous and brutal" assault upon Brooks. This man, lioivcvcr, noiv confesscs that his neighbors wi-rc guiltlcss, and that he inflicted the wounds on himself in the hope of cxtorting money from them or their friends. The facts are to be laid lgorc thc lloiiic Secre- tary at once. SELLixi: out a Quaker. ~»1ii Fillinouth some three months ago,<tlic goods and chat- lcln of :i Quaker were sold by auction to nicct his proportion of the rcctor‘s rules. and :is llll‘ sum rciilized was iiisiillicioiit un- otlicr sale was announced to follow in n duv or two. At tlic sumo time, in tho miirt iii TuliUllllOllsc‘ylll‘il, London, was going on another sale cqunlly scandalous to religion. It was tilt? powcr of appointment to tho sacred oflicc with all the tcm oral benefits annexed to it, and the sale too t \lnco along with other f rcohold and lonscllulil property. 'l‘hcrc \viismudc ii protest iiyiiiiist this Silli- by ii cliurclnniin, wliodcuounccil if as ii Roan- diil. Although one was also made at the sale of the Quakcr‘s goods, it was not llllllll‘ by a chiirclimuu, but. by a Quaker. 'l‘iii: \\'iinb1cdou nicotiug rcgulntions.«- A thousand volunteers accustomed to take part in riflc competition in different parts of the country have forwarded a memorial to the Council of the National Rifle Associa- tion to rescind the alterations rcccntly nr~ rivcd at making alterations in tho position in which competitors may shoot at till; Wimbledon meeting, alleging that by the regulations cnnbliug men to fire in any posi~ tion in which they can show the greatest skill with the rifle tlic 'rcatcst proficiency li'Il developed, and that t ic proposed regulii- lions would. by their restrictive character. lower the average shooting power of tlic force. The voluntccrs'petitions comes from almost every county in England, Scotland, and \\'iilcs, and the signatures include them of 80 ofï¬cers and over >100 non-conimissioncd officers, many Queen's prizcnicn. nud olhci distinguished shooters. LATE scorcn NEWS? A Vigorous Proachor~A Great Reduc- tion In Rantsâ€"Big hard of Cows. chcrnl Fri-c and U. 1'. l’rcsbytcrics havi: been discussing the question of Discstab- lisliiiicnt lately, the vote being, as undo, all but unanimously in favor of the move- ment. The large licrd of cows belonging to the Public Dairy Supply Company at lulderalic set-ms threatened with annihilation. No few- cr than 413 out of nbout 500 have died within a week. The lielsu l’ulicc CullllllfHallnlCl'Pl, who rc- ccntly unsuun‘tsfully nttcmptcd, by action in tho Slicrifl’f‘ourt. to remove an itinerant auctioneer from his stands in the town. find that it has coat them just short of £200. 1\Iice thing law is, and quite on door as it is pure, and something more so S The l't'f.‘f‘llt galcs have made rarc havoc in the south of Scotland. On Lord llrcndiil- . . . muc’s l’crtlisliirc estates some 12,000 trees 1 have been blown down in a circuit of a few milcs, and on the fluimo Castle property in Ih-rwicksliirc it in estimated that 50,000111t‘l'u inllcii. home of the oldest and finest trawl at Claims Castle, \vcrc.iiprootei1, and timber to the value of nearly £100,000, was flout- ing about in the Firth Clyde. Land rcIut reduction goes forward so much and so iioisclcssly in Scotland that it would almost appear nail the lairds hoped thus to avert the threatened legislation at tho com» iiigIscssiIon of Parliament. In East Lothiun, which is ' (ICSCI‘IIJL 1 as the homo of high iiiriniiig.Iuiiic farms recently were rc~lct at iiIrcduction in total from £10,535 to £7,631. '1 ho rout of 0111! fell from £1,000 to £1,000 ; of another from 11520 to £200, and that of a third from £1,500 to £050. An epidemic fins broki-n ouf amongst horses similar to that which recently pro- vnilcd in London and other large towns in England. Horst-s in Glasgow began to In affected with Mic complaint about a wool: previously, and in the course of a day or two :It number of animals had to be withdrawn from work Milli-ring from the disease. 'l'hv- illlfffflfit‘. has been designated a "dumb cold," the syiiiptonm bctokening an affection of tlir lungs. ft in said that the outbreak hat. mun-d uni-Mines» among tlicowncrs of laryr studs. and that vctcrinary surgeons afi- largely employed dealing with the epidemic. Sm cral homes have already died. A cori'cspondcnt of the llm‘l†ï¬lmy-up}. rust on the heart and make it cold and flIcwl'ilmna singular alwidcnt which befall a weary. Credit is a hungry wolf and limits Scotch ch-rgynmn while pram-bin I in a Non- or home to office. sure to bninp against anothcr mow able than the one you got iii of. not glide it ovcr friends or foes. down its victims like. a bind is liuntml in cunformint cfmpcl at Shepherd's lush on n the forest; there is no noon )0 from its englo ri-ccut Sundzi '. lie is said to have had †a eye, no matter how skillful y you may run Vigorous My I'." and now and again the the ganntlct from your office to your home. " portly preacher," would lean his whole You may, in order to weight on the " reading-stand," “gazinu in~ steer clear of its votarics. turn down mmc leutly into the face:- of his auditors to Jim... unfrcqiicntcd street, dash around ionic rm" cu flu: impression of his counsels." ncr or into an alley, but you are jllnl. ha 1w was once thus gazing. the wrrmpondrui. forinid- says. “the audience were startled I: seeing lfcbt is the wading-stand topple over the p tfomi, Whilv and hide it either from but. although the fall'wna onch about Seven Lilac oil in water it iim in feet. the iniimter quickly regained his foot viewi- always. and theremrc always siicer- fog. and at once returned to his placcat tlir crs ready to mock it; 'tin an Ufullwlllcd restored rWllllgqul." lmforcresmninglih Word hanging by a thich Pay as you go. awkward! ' lute-nuptial discourse, hchrn, Do without, is a cross that few know how the preacher remarked that "than who to bear: learn to bear it and has man among lmncd upon the Master would belittle: ï¬lth men. Nobody} slave. liau- does not m- taincd than he had been while leaning upon in among unpaid notcii. noi- happiness in tlic nailing-stand of His servant." the apparel owniul by your mac-ring trades. mm. .x..,--.._.__.......,. . m-.. », muons Disappearance. 3 Nine months ago Mn. llugbm, an old ' lad ‘, suddenl ' disappeared from her home E in cnncl,’ am since then not a franc of her i whereabouts or anything t» show that she-is 'alive "has been discovered by her family. She was aged, feeble. and of weak intellud. and the supposition is that she wanderedin to the heart of some swampâ€"~whila trying to make her ‘1! y to Crccmorc,whem a dau h- terof herslivcsmand shed. The son uni made every cï¬'ort to 'ad the wanderer, but without avail, and has given her up u gotta forever. it is regarded as re strange that in the heart of shrill out“ diIstrichtge dinp’ We! inane ‘agiiiou e plmnndmthlng transpire to throw light upon the mystery, a cup of sorrow within itself. Pay-day will followed liondloyg by the enema“; prmh, "68"" Iconic and will always come to soon, you can or himwlf. Many iushcd to lift! mil-twice; 1 --“---â€"v~w-~ mu“ 4.. aâ€"-~â€"â€"â€" A liimbcnnan broke his leg in the Wlsoow ' sin woods, and desired to go to hit lane at 30ml. Canada. when: he could receive good Umlllwnl. Hui. ml was a thou-soil miles away. and he had only a few dolluu. In " this dilemma, be resolved to travel chuply u freight. 11c mule a has six foot loo , two feet wide. and sixteen inches of i. marked it “This aide u with gmtcue." and had himself mailed, in and shipped. some wide cracks ve him air. and he took along a supply ef cod and water. 110 gal along very well. though not without «flown» forts. until he arrived in Mantra], where the box was set up on an], and the inmate lef t standing on his band. 110 was forced to make anon . He had been three days on the 'oarney. which the railroad officials enable him temple“ in a regular pou- L’Dflfl'. o4.