Canada is up to her chin in sonnets. odu. longs and other rythmnio testimonials ema- nating [tom the wanted pone of the en- thnud hm]- o! the Dominion who are 0mm. end of Lon. 3nd Louise. And when Im hand from the poetic “do no still rising.â€" Albany Journal. Au Annmnn Mm Cumâ€"An invention which metitl notice hue juet been introduced into parts of Garmnny. The invention con- elete of e milk-can, Io avenged thnt the milk cm he pound out to the leet drop.hut not 3 drop of water cen he edded to It. In the oxdinery tin lid. which in securely locked with n padlock cite: the can ha been ï¬lled. it placed e breu ulve. which opens outwerdl. When the can in tipped to let the milk out, the vulva openl, end the milk flows out ; but, to add water, the can mnet netnrelly he in en uptight poeltlon. when the valve cloeee hyltc own weight, and prevents any water flowing on eny one here be relied upon to give the underlying in: e unilorm end rich coloring. Long prsctice hes mede e few persone in Engiend experts in this work, end hence they hold e monopoly of the trade. sud guerd their poeseeeion with jeelous wetchiulness. But this in rether en enewer then en expisnetion, for euy old terrier who hes been in the busi- ness iiity yeers will tell you thst lur-eeel shine were iormeriy dressed in this country. end that en estsbiisbment in Alheuy yeere ego used to do work of this kind which would compete ievorshly with eny now done in Eng- lend. At thst time the supply csme almost wholly from the South Shetland Ieieud, neer Cspe Horn. sud. until. by the indiscrimi- nste sieughter. the enimels were extermin. eted, it wee no uncommon thing to hsve vessels errive within e twelemonth, bringing between 200,000 sud 300,000 skins. Theee were, in meny inetenees. sold here end whet ie more. were frequently sent to Eu- rope in e ï¬nished condition. But when the \ South Shetleud supply wss exhsusted. those ‘ skilled in the ert of prepering the rough- ealted shine for the msrket muet heve gone into some other occupation, end the ert or trede then ieded out oi existence. As it is, $600,000 is now enuuelly peid to English workmen thst might be esrued by our own countrymen. end so in so the home con. snmption oi fur ie concerned. with e proï¬t to the dealer in lessened expenses of not lees then 8100.000. Is there not some one now living who used to work et this trede? end ii so. is there not eome wey by which it might be revived 7â€"H. Y. Timer. One of the lost arts in America is the method of dressing tut-seal skins. 01 the supply which annually ï¬nds its way into the world’s market, tour-ï¬fths is obtained in this country, and it any also be added that {or several years past the lnr has been more generally used here than anywhere else ; yet in spite of this. before we can get it in its ï¬nished state upon our heads or hacks, we areobliged to pay the cost of transportation across the Atlantic ocean and return, the proï¬ts 0! European dealers. and the large duty which our Government. exacts from almost all imported articles of luxury. Ii one asks for some reason for this singular deviation in trade, he will be told that no one in this country understands the process by which the long coarse hairs in the ssal-skln_are removed ; nor can The farmer who takes applej set for his apples is obliged to pay the Government tax before he removes it iron: the still. The tax is 90 cents a gallon. Applojsck is not ï¬t for use under a year old. Even then it is so ï¬ery that only the toughest drinkers can to indulge in it. It improves with age. and as it shrinks as it grows old. it becomes more precious to the owner. When apple-jack comes from the still it is white. After it lies for a few years in the farmer's cellar it be- comes something the color of sherry. The Orange County distiller hes not much margin for proï¬t. He must get 81.50 a gallon or he is out of pocket. Consequently he has his little tricks, by which he would lain add to his gain. Dried peaches. browned to a crisp and added to new whiskey from the still. will give it the golden glow of years. Sugar. skilfully burned, will have the same eflect on the newest flow of the still. But old applejsck drinkers say that nothing takes the sting out o! the “apple" but age. At its best. applejsok is worth lrom tour to six dollars a gallon. ‘ There is whiskey of favorite stills. however, ; 0! great age in many a farmer's cellar in this ‘ county which could not be bought tor ten ‘ dollars. 1 preer. Between the press end the ehed ere tenke or vete. Thie ie en epple whiekey die- tillery. They ere ell elike. Their everege cepecity ie 8.000 gellone. The epplee {rem which the liquor is mede are the trait of unv gutted treee. there being meny seedling oreherde yet in the county. Grelted fruit thet drops from the trees. or is detective. is eleo need. In the tell the lermere cert the epplee to the etille. In specie] oeeee e iermer mey heve hie epplee ground end dietilled. eo thet he oen heve hie whiekey unmixed with the yield 0! other 'orcherde. The custom is, however. to dump the epplee ell together ee they come to the still. The termer gete from ï¬fteen to twenty cents a hurhel tor hie fruit. Hie pey is either in eeeh. older or whiekey. ee he chooses. Ii he tekee whiekey. he is ellowed one gallon for every tive or seven buehele oi epplee. The distilling oi epplejeekie eeimple process. The apples are ground by horee- 1 power. The mill being elevated ebove the vets. es the pumeee is preeeed the juice runs by conduits into the vets. Thus no pumping in required. The cider ie lelt in the Vets or cieterne until it Iermente or “ gets ripe," es the term ie. Then the alcohol must be removed et once by distillation. It the process is delayed the cider turns to vineger. The “ still." a large copper kettle, ie elr- tight. The cone-like’ tap terminetee in a coil of pipe. which peseee through a ten]: of cold water. A ï¬re is kept et e low end oven temperature under the kettle. The elcohol in the cider becomes a vapor under the heat. 1n peeeing through the coil it is condeneed by water. and comes out “ epplejeok." The ï¬rst yield of the etille is considerehly shove proof. Other yields are obteined iron the eeme cider by increeeing the beet. The die- tiller is peid 82.50 I dey, A still must be worked up to ite surveyed cepeoity, or the Government inflicts heevy penalties. flow It. led-cu" .1ch pour-go u manna-d What u In Good For When u I. We. (Conupcndonoo of tho Now You Bun) , The tnvollor through Orange county wlll In on Almost our} hill side 3 tnmbla- down Ihed. Further up ,tho bill a old'obmill und Fur Dre-nil“. The best conductors of sound on iron and gloss. Through them sound is transmitted st tbs rate of tbrso miles per second of time. In sir sound ttsvols [hnt‘ onsqusrtor of a mile per second. Loxnox, Dec. lO.â€"The annual meeting of the Royal Geographical Society was held last evening at the Society's rooms, Saville Bow. Burlington Gardens. when the Earl of Dale ierin. the new President. delivered his inau- gural address. His Lordship was supported by Sir Rutherford Alcock. K.0.B., D.O.L., the retiring President; Mr. 0. It. Markham. 0.8., the Secretary; Lord Arthur Russell, M.P.. the Foreign Secretary. and other distin- guished members 0! the Society. As an appropriate compliment to His Lordship's early travel in high latitudes, the evening was devoted to the sub- ject of Arctic exploration. In his inaugural address, the new President gave an eloquent and interesting account oi his recent travels in the Great Northwest. with a glowing description of the prospects at that‘ vast territory in connection with the luture‘ ot the Dominion 0! Canada. Papers were‘ also read on the Swedish Arctic expedition‘ under Proi. Nordenskjold. and the recent Dutch expedition to the polar regions. A Montreal corro- pondeni has heard a violin!“ whose “objooiim of artistic in- stinct Inflated from the pr ominanco of his aubjooilvily." Fiddlomukou should be more cumin] nbout catching the right kind of can. Cincinnati Commercial. Yet the regulation did not prescribe any ‘epeeiel lowness 0! eat, and each mattere oi itaste eud propriety might aaiely be lelt to the ladiee themelvee. They will not thank the joumaliets for meddling with them' on that ecore. Discuseing the matter purely from an nsthetical point of View. we must coniese to a penchant tor the square out in front. Al to high-necked dresses. they are usefulâ€"under eome circumstances; but the ladiee of Canada are neither valetudinarien nor flat cheeted. and the back. which is the meet vulnerable pert, being protected. they may aaiely indulge in that most bewltehing style at drese. Colonel Lyttleton, himseil, in the celebrated order under review, wee not prooi against the square-cut. We would humbly euggeet that the conditions be re. vet-ed, and that only euch ladies us can bring a doctor'e permieeion be permitted to attend in low-necked dresees.â€"â€" Montreal Gazette. . LORD DUI’FEIIIN MADE PRESI- DENT 0" 'Illl! ROYAl; “BO- GBAI’IIIOAI: SODIBTY. ' We trust much to the known strong com- } mon sense 0! our new GovernorGener-el end his good wile to repress. instead of to en- eourege, the craze for show and courtly hum- bug which seems to here seized and converted into e set of flunkeys e certein class of our fellow citizens. There ere. to be sure, e few in every community who will pley the fool, elthough the extrevsgence required to do it should involve the beggery of their limited incomes in meiuteining the neeessery “ style." Let it be the duty oi ell who value the reel weltere oi the people to discourage the ineuguretion of e ridiculous mockery in this country 0! hebite which ere foolish end im- possible, {or the reason that they will elweys lack the treditionel precedent end environ- ment which ere the excuses for their exist- ence in the lend lrom which it is proposed to trensplent themâ€"Kingston Whig. noted unbecomingly bud they mnkod theix din-pprobation oi the oï¬ennivo order by :6- mninbg sway altogether.â€"-St. Catharine: Joumal. The next mietake was at Montreal, in the ieauanee of a mandate which excluded lrom the reception ladies who did not no ï¬t to appear in a costume repulsive to common eenee, inappropriate to the climate. and aub- veraive of modeaty, that noble charm of womanhood. Many oi the ladiea of Men- treal very properly relueed to appear in the dtcollete etyle prescribed, for we notice by the papera that there were very few ladiea preeentedâ€" fewer ladies than gentlemen by quite a number. - Nor would the ladies have Neturelly. they will ï¬nd eociel life in the country considerably diflerent lrom what they have been maetomed to ; end they Ire too wise to expect the style of St. James Palace et Bideeu Hell. The mu- 0! our poo. ple ere eimple in their hebite, u becomes their country. There in 5 null section of society It Ottnwe noted for it: snobbery, but the vice-regal iemily will not be likely to teke thin clue on e epecimen or the Oenedien people. They donblcu expect to ï¬nd a plein, nnvarniehed people, and are not likely to want us to nppeer other than we armâ€"London Advertiser. Wit -- â€"° â€"vv«-- lesrur. end bright enough to illumiue the grotesque emulation which takes pleoe within the circle of its rsdienee. It is likely thet the great American snob will now end then ï¬nd his wsy thither. end that he will deport himsell siter his kind, bewildering the hy- perhoreens with his smszing plenitude of ear and the rendiness end originality of his ceremoniel resources; but the mein supply 01 flunkeyism bids hit to he of homo growth and the outside world will observe its meni- {estetions with much interest.â€"N. Y. Tribune. It is not such an exceedingly ï¬erce light which beets upon 5 small throne like the‘ at Ottawa, but it may be ho$ enough to melt the wine lrom meny en ‘ugirlng eoeiel __ __ ___1 L-.LI,. , This in caning the lowmecked dreu buel- nou too tor. There ore very few Oeoudlen lodiee who would humillete themselvee by undlns o doctor‘l certiï¬cote to the A.D.C. in weiting no u to permit 0! their being prelent ct o vice-rend reception. If low necked dreuee are to be the rule ot receptions, then those who do not ï¬nd it convenient, for verioue chance. to weer them. on romein at home; but the doctor'e certiflcete buoineu will not work in Oenodo. We feel pereueded that good sound common name tor which the Prince" Louise ie celehreted will induce her to Ice thet thot Court ruler he relexed in Oonodo.â€"King:ton New. Tho qrdor I“ I most unulou on. und flohly dmrvu the up it hu resolved. The Mail III tho that to all nttontion to this unmitigated piece at Inobbory. sad we no pluud to notice tlnt it wu gonoully lup- portod In dhoountonmclng Inch Innovation: by the pun thxoughout the province.-â€" Braufford Courier. [unnatural Adan-u. The low in the canton of Zurich, Switzer- land, which until letely conï¬scated the property 0! girls tor the beneï¬t of their brothers. has been amended. A newspaper there says that the male peasants consider themselves mined because their sisters are now to share in the iamiiy property. Scranrmc Slumâ€"Mr. Edison is not able to prevent the noise on the elevated railway. He has got a contrivance to stop the noise end he has discovered where the noise comes {torn and knows where it goes to. but don’t appear to be ableto ï¬nd any piece in between to put the machine.â€"â€"Danbury News. . The idea oi teaching every girl to thump a piano. end every boy to he a book-keeper. will make potatoes worth 84 per bushel in 20 years from now.â€"-Oanton Repository. Europe has about 14,000 newspaper! and periodic-ls, of which only about one in tour- teen are Roman Catholic in tendency. Great Britain end Frence have the ume number of Romenilt journele,; forty-two. hut in Britain it in (arty-two out oi 2,500, end in Frence forty-two out of 2.000. 0! North America's 8,500 joumele only 132 ere Romen Catholic, while in South America only eleven out oi the 1.000 newepepeu repruent the dominant re- ligion. An interesting experiment hee been made determine whether the heed water: of the Denube found their wey through enbterreneâ€" en pueegee into the Aseh. Borne fluoreeeein wee plecad in the water. of the Danube. and in three deye the splendid green color and golden reflections were quite distinct in the water: 0! the Lech. Ten kilos of floor- eeeeln had colored at lent 200,000,000 litres of water. We have seen it stsnd somewhere thstNepo- Icon 1. was the devise: of that eyeteln ofbook. keeping known se “double entry." The double entty eystem ie of much greeter sntiquity then Napoleon. It wee in use emong the Itelisn merehents in the 15th century; the eulieet known trestise on the subject being :ygLucs di Porgo. publisher} at Venice in 4 5. " Old Hundred," a tune which will endure ss long u there no Christina hurts to ss- cribe praise to Him “ from whom all blessings flow," is. ssys sn Ameriosu :oontemporery, compiledilrom iourjold Georgian chenu, pro- bebly hyFreno, who furnished the music for the Geneva Psslms. published in 1564. It unknown originally “the " One Hunredth Psalm " in the: collection. Hence in pres ent title. Whose in the heat translation 0! Dante's "Inferno" 7 Home years ago Prof. Lowell told his olau in Italian that Dr. John Car- lylo'a translation of Danto'a " Inferno†van in his judgment the heat. It is a proao literal translation. the text of each vane being given. with explanatory notoa. Ol metrical trana- [bationa Mr. Longfellow: is probably the cat. Indy Anne Blunt Byron’l gtanddaughter, in about to pnblinh " Winter Bonidonco Among the Bedouin Aruba. " Lndy Anne nnd her hnnbond, formerly in the British di plo nntio Ionics. hnvo been odmitted by the Anbu to tho mont kindly intimacy ,livody with them intheir tonu. oto. ,ley'Anyne has I touch of eooontxioity nbont her. Loon Lewis. the tumour novelist, in about to begin the publiontion of a new literary pa- per 01 . chnuctor aimlar to the New York Ledger. 1: is to be issued at his home. Penn Ynn, Ind he has oatublirhod {or the purpose a modal printing oanblhhmout. Philosophy iteelf has no objection to en ocessionel flourish o! trumpets. The eneient angel tought in the schools. end modern phi- lomethe lecture et public institutions, but who shall any that they are not es much in. cited by the vanity of showing their acquire- mente, so by the desire of instructing their lellow citizens ? Even Seneca declared, thet it knowledge wee bestowed on him on con- dition thet he ehould not input it, he would decline the gift. All singularities may be traced home to a certain degree 0! vanity. of which prevail- ing weakness, the old leather breechee of Frederick the Greet. the coarse cont and brass buttons of Charles XII., the lmell cooked hat and may capote of Napoleon. the blnnkot and tub o! Dlogenee, and even the plane beaver and modest dnb of the Quaker, may be included u samples. ',_V _ vice." Bthrowing hie puree among themho got out of lhoir hmde with loud huzzu and exolnmotionl. The Eel-l of Poterborongh, who hld much sense, mdoh wit, and much whim, leaped out of his chariot one doy on mine 3 donning-mater. with pouLoolored silk stockinge, lightly stepping over the brood atonel. Ind picking his way in ox~ tramely dirty wealher, and "manor him (who soon took to his heels) will: his sword drawn. in order to drive him into‘ line mud, into Wuioh he. of course, followed} The cclehrntcd Lord Petexhorongh. though light. end “in and proud. hnd no wonkneee a! this kind. Once. the populace teklng him lot theane of Marlborough, located on drug- ging him through the Itreetl in triumph. " Gentlemen." laid he. “Icen secure you by two reasons that I am not the Duke of Merlborough. In the ï¬rst piece, I have only ï¬ve guinea in my pocket : and. in the ucond place. they are heartily at your ear- iin- U! “A tk-nmSâ€"u- L2- 5..-..- _____Ln___. L _ Lord Nelson we: (and of exhibiï¬ng his sun. Ind delighted in having his horse- hkon out, Ind his outings drawn by the mob. 011106 him ’00-‘13:qu «Gnu a... A V23! Bmcx Fumâ€"Tï¬o borrowing ï¬end. who is alwnyl 3 mm short of change, in an enemy to whom no qultter should be showmâ€"Ncw Orleans Picayune. Wm. Hz, 0! Wm. H- Bucaun fâ€"-Dr. Mn, Wulkor‘o reason any be restored. Edi- son in aid to be it work on an invention to keep psntaloonl from baggingâ€"Scientiï¬c American. u: "w" The use for exhibition! has now nprold oven to Control Ask. The 1mg: news from Tuhkond sum thot on agricultural ond industrial exhibition in about to be mode for int Bomuoond, ond the Government bu promised gold and lilvor medal. to the exhibitors. I! well an honour, «tuna. What will be thought of the United State! shipping plum padding to England, potatooa to Ireland, oatmeal to Scotland, toy: to Nuremhurg and lager beer to Germany 7 Yet such are the facts. and they are not more In- tonlahing than the thrice-told tale of the regular and proï¬table sale of American ootton goods in Manchu-tor. and American cutlery and hardwaroln Blrmlngham.â€"â€"London Court Journal. . ' " In the last mm: In in South All-ion. one lug. tribe wu h t bwk {tom ï¬ghting “an“ England by 0 hflnonu of the Got- an mluionadu. A Famine-r Broncmc.--The well.known fragrant garden favorite. the eweet-ecented or lemon verbena (Lippia citriodora). seeme to have other qnahtiee to recommend it than than of fragrance. for which it ie nenally cultivated. The author 0! a recent work. entitled "Among the Spanish People," do- ecribee it as being eyetematically gathered in Spain, where it ie regarded an a ï¬ne etomaohic and cordial. It ie either need in the form of acold decoction, eweetened or ï¬ve or eix leavee are put into a teacnp. and hot tea poured upon them. The author eaye that the flavor of the tea thus prepared “ie aim- ply delicione, and no one who hee drunk hie Pekoe with it will ever again drink it without a eprig of lemon verbena.†And he further etatee that it thie he need, one need “ never enfler lrom flatulence. never be made nervone or old-maidieh. never have cholera, diar- rhoca, or lose oi appetite.â€"Scicntiï¬c Ameri- can. â€" Mr. Byles - “ You ms, stand down. air."â€" London Paper. How ken ya expakt to ï¬nd two people in this world who are ulike when ya kaut even ï¬nd one who iz dike huï¬â€˜ the time. It iz ammo safe to follow the religious bo- lonl that our mother tought Ilaâ€"Than never wuz 3 mother yet who taught her child to be In inï¬del. The world all pm. the philosophers. but to“ their penny'a into the inl 0v the mon- keys. we are never {ally prepared, and that iz twins. Cam-bun iz I good thing for o man to have but when he has got so much ov it. that he in shade to tntoh u out iron lion, for lau- it Kill bite, ignoranae iz what's the matter ov Im. Than iz only one thing that knn be sad iii favor of mo bootsâ€"they make a man forget all his other Iona". The best thing i kno ov iz a that rue wile. and the next best thing is I second rate one. The things thet 1 Rent prove l beleevo the moat; i beleeve thet one apple iz eour. and mother one eweet. but i will giv enny highly eddiketod men e Ipen ov metehed mulee who will tell me whet make them IO. Muried litoiz I little guns. in which the wont-n. it uh. iz culled, iz nllmou auto to have a "nu 1'th. I never question 3 makes" any more than I do the right at a bull dog to lie in biz own gateway. No, I don't. low. ltiz owls. mm who prom- bi his own experienceâ€"but it 12 I good deal wizer one who let. the rattle-nail: bite ch. other phal- IAâ€" Yang mun. not down, nnd hop still. you will huv plenty ov chino“ yet to mute n phool ov ynrull baton ya die. I but ï¬nally cum to the koukluuun am it I but pron . thing withom betting 5 donut on itJho thing In: act 3 drodphull wuk spot Inmwhm. Tho roputuhnn am l mu: an; iron: hlz moo-ton omn wmu a match dating to ï¬t him In their old clown would. It in may 6L..- thus. I! you madam. to hm n nun to be bonus. yu will b" to also hit "8“ our, nilgrnlng. 3nd Inch him dudphnll oluu ho. a on. Truth is M to be nuns" um: flohhnn -it in. to mo" pholh. Thnraiz2 {higgs in the world for which Tricking. Lev-rum! Counsel. (From Bmlnu' â€mum to: 1879.) Josh lull-'0' Prov"... la long and enhance. will prob-bl] load 0! complain to follow the “.mp1. of tho Eq ublo. The nmount of {alumina curried ha one] Dwight (About $250,000) was don ‘ uncommonly lugs, bnl i! too largo lot] dance. the oompmlu might sully hue In it umller by declining such risks to may not_lonl_ of my Ippllomt. , The New York Time: ny- thot 10 to“ shoot the length 0! I “30!. It doesn't I: I0 long. There II “on!" mind whi does no: look very long, In“ flu wt: 1 unfold lmll hu Imprint! any a [a PM rom- to the mulo.â€"-Rochemr Em; m.“ o! inaunnoe in that oompuny hold I) 001 Dwight. T_ho {spot} 0! Dr. D_eln_fl|l_, u In the one of the Me Colonel D Binglnmton, the upon 0! DnDohflo invoatigutod the oinumutonm on o! the Eqnihblo Lilo lulu-moo would seem to settle tho hot. “at 001 Dwighg dï¬od from mm“! cull“. Tho I! table, being dhotod the Oi conree, no eingle came in euflelen‘t explain this phenomenon. but among th which combine to produce it. none la n conducive then the general leek of po‘ to render the tecultiee obedient to the! When thia power ie ieeble the moat brill] perte, the meet fertile imaglnntlon. the II keen perceptions, the greeteet fluency oil guage. will not eeve their polaeaaou fl linking. In childhood. where we do not 01 3 greet etrength of will or power of cl . tion. we are atrongly attracted by th: ! ‘ of what we loudly cell genius. and IL; ward with happy aaeurance to the t they will develop into manly end I} â€" euperiority. But when life’e exigenci and the demand in mode for accura ledge, sound judgment, and eteady theae hopee ere often eedly diaappoin luatre which illuminated childhood and the power which ahould lup hood doea not take ita place. The question is often pertinentiy no “What becomes of sit the promising 1 dren?" but it is seldom thst o sstisise answer is forthcoming. It does on stnngo that so many boys In'd girl: ‘ astonish us by their bright saying.†’6 acute perception. and even by their profit ty of thought, should grow up into ' ordinsry men and women. distinguished nothing in psrtionlor. snd oertsinly fulï¬l none of the promises which their only ya so gientiinlly oflorded. For the third time within thirty yom1 tower of the parish church of Wool Mu]. North Cornwall, England, III Suturduy night, November 9th, Itmol lightning, nnd doltroyod. A mullvo It: wont atone wu thrown twenty yard! 1 the tower, and .u the come: “one: \ dislodged. Tho Scotch Banks hsvs s csrtsin sntht issue of nosesâ€"tint of the City of GI! having been shout £73,000. I! nor. 1 no issued thus are prescribed by lsw. (or every ons- pound note so issued than be s sovereign in gold put into the sons tbs bunk. rom- Prime Ministon hue within tho I hundred yen: relused the Garterâ€"Vim“: Sidmonth nnd Melbourne. Mr. Pm um! i Robert Pool. Pitt, however, â€(:0de it his bro‘hemho «mud and last Lord omn- who bld no personal claim whatever to 1 distinction. ‘ A strike is imminent in tho pottoty of North Staflordahiro. The majo: employers refuse to enter into the Michaelmas contnota with the man 1 the latter ugreo to I reduction raging ï¬ve to ten per cent. on the tom 0 year’a contract. The subscriptions already received promised for the extension of the build of University College. London. smoum upwards of £14,000. Within the last you Queen anointi- 1 given 825,000 to the temperance emu. 3‘ member. of the rep] household m it abetainen. ‘ The number of veaaélri‘; present 1 conscructxon in the Clyde ahip-bnilding is 78, compared with 118 in August. 18 The Pxince of W-Ien' Indian tog-o exhibited igEdinbprgh. The Rev. Mr. Perkhuret. of the Preeh: in Church. makes this intereeting and! 1, signiï¬cant statement: " In my tr: round the world I new not one new hee‘ temple ; ell the pagan worship I ~eew we old dilapidated temples. Not very long there were 100,000 idol god- in Beretm but letely a young men from Bereto visiting the Britieh Museum, new emon wondere there the ï¬rst Beretongo id eye: ever beheld. He wee born in iterate and bed lived there nineteen yeere wit! ever seeing an idol, so clean e eweep hes] Gospel made. v â€" v ' * ’ U " " â€"‘_ 'I ‘ †Brother. will you Ind us in pnyor." brother hounded In“ a moment. And unuwer: “ I was obou‘ to ofleu few rel: but perhlpl I cm throw them into the ot_n prgyer." Tho Rev. Dr. Blank won a good Jul cored by a zealoun brother who olwoyl‘ proviaed o remark below the doctor bq On one ooonion, n he rose to spook, putor gently intonup‘od .hlm by I"! H lehn- mill -n-‘ I..-) ..- -.. __A,,, Mr. Samuel Goldmtn. a New York I“ who. with the English. spook! {no}, ’ Hebrew, Gonmn md Poll-h longingâ€. come on o convert into the Episcopal 01m and is to be u miuiomry omong tho Jam thnt city. by whom he hu boon hold in high." «teem. “ A wunby Outholio nobleman †1!. n to buy. 3t tho out of £100,000 tho um Bodlord Puk. nou- Ohiulok. {or tho pm 0! providing I romeo tor member: 0! religious orderl expound lrom their m tori†during the present Gama: porn “on. Bonon Inc can nuglouc ldcc. Ln mcncc non-dcnomlmfloncl church In M bum. It ll to In opcn to Ill and Inc I cccuticnicm. Tho on» will be 0200.1 which cmonnt h to bc ulud by .500 4 ccripflonc, _ 'rho Froo Church 0! Boom hon-1 0! 8135.000 ‘0‘ an in m to hold. 1m thougho moot o! it I ho o in Indlo. A Pouoo lody joinod tho Hothodm on in Bonboy. Juno 16th, tho am in“ whoro o lody 01 um huh hu publicly IINI od Obflouonlty. Prom III-g Children. Great Brit-III. md v 130110! a. sour. Lady nppoin 100d 1 “9P0 1