Tn Arum-4' Remember. now.†eeld e' Indlene bride e‘ the alter. “we hue eepereml end been remenled {our “men. end ebout once more will convince me that we on never llve heppily together." The late Mr. MoNnb, cantor of the Edin- bnmh Botanic Gordon. was once token to no Dubnfo'o pointing at Adom ond En and no naked for hil opinion. " I think no moot things oi tho oint," aid the (rut gordonor. " Why. mun, vo‘s tomptin' Adam '1' o pip- pin of I "not, that non. known until obont twenty you. 330,!" The death in nnnouncod nt Both of A grand. daughter 0! the poet Burns. The deoouod lody. Mm. Everett. won the widow of on uni-taut surgeon. {on-med, in tho Ionics oi the East Indin Company. Mr. Theodore Tuton attended n theatrical porlonmnoo in Indlnnnpolla, Ind., the other night nnd now Boo-Io Turner onoot her part in “ A Oolobntod Ono." Mcny hormlcu Gel-mm Bociclicu. who do c you deal of talking cud lounging and who hove been bani-bed {tom Betlin by Bismarck, bong chant London cud lntcmizc vim French Socioliuc. ' Mr. George Augustus 8.!- has just suslnsd his ï¬ftieth birthday. Th0 proprietors of the Daily Telegraph have presumed him with an sxquuito service 0! pins 01 gross ulna. m conuequenu oi the depression in twin Ind : dofloien‘ hurvest, the Dismal: o! Buh bu conceded to hil unnntl a uduotlon of 15 per cent. on their rents. George Eliot will edit the works 0! her lute hnebend, Geotge Henry Levee. n dinner-plan ol ordinary the, boring o Imoli quantity 0! wotor (ole in better) ruch- ing nor quite to the rim, on which the hull- Billion will rent, so no to be be on nearly to pouiblo in contoct with the fluid without octuuily touching it. A moistened cloth to o cover. if the underground lordor or cello: be too dry. will complete the monument; ond than it your Bliiion do not ripou prooporouliy. doweloping tho much-prised blue mould wilh an oven dillrlbution lhroughoul in 010:. unbalance. ic in not worth much. The method of producing this kind of cheese in peculier. The cream 0! the even- ing'e milk is added to the new milk of next morning. end ee there in elweye more trouble in expelling the whey from the curd when it conteinl butter. diflicultiel frequently nriee in the manufacture ol 8tilton cheese. which in very lubjeet to fermentation and hunting. Largo deelere know well the necueity of keeping their merchendiee moist. end eech he: hie own way at doing it; but the private purehuer or happy recipient ol 5 likely-looking Stilton since not know how to do thin. He or ehe will not go wrong who cute it boldly in hell. u the Romhn king is cold to hove out the lepetone. lining to divided this cheese, 1 the two helvel may be judiciouely pleeed with their lreehlly-cut eurleoee downwerd. eeeh in] - j£‘_-_ u ha been turned by gonentions of dthy. women in tint quarter of England; but the nuns of Stilton. though bolonging to adiï¬er- uniconntytelipglm u still. _ , , V 7. v V, v-vâ€"-- van-u yuan-5U a “ Mrs. Peulet. oi Wyrnondham, in the Melton quarter of Leioeeterehire, wae the ï¬rst maker of Stilton oheeee. She was related to the tamoue Cooper Thornhill, who formerly kept the Bell, at Stilton, in Huntingdonehire." Mn. Peulet, it seems, etooked her kinemen’e house with this eheeee. which, being of aingnlarly ï¬ne quality. became noted among all good judguâ€"lor there was a palate ae well no a style in than doye -â€"who travelled the great North road. The art 9! making it ‘ a.-- 1...“. n ..... 2 L Only slow housekeepers know how to treat a. Stilton when may go: one. The hictoty of this king of British oheou is remukablo. In a topognphy of the midlnnd oountiel. published in 1790, occur- thia plunge : “ K'rl panic. Al mâ€"_A_JL__. __ n , u. . Richard Hothem. the lather. is the men who. in 1861 or 1862. picked up a fortune on the railroad nesr his home. He wee walking slang the roed and sew s folded newspeper, and on picking it up found inclosed 850,000 in bank notes. He took the pscksge to en sttor. my end sought legal advice. Advertisements was inserted in the newspapers throughout the country in the hope 0! discovering the loser of the money. and for over s year dill. gent sesrch use msde far and wide, but no one ever sppesred to claim it, sud Mr. Hothem eventullly uppropristed it to his own uses. A short time previous to the ï¬nding of the money I large express robbery had been per. .petrsted nesr Herper‘s Ferry. end it wee the‘ genersl belief that. being closely pressed by‘ pnrsuers. the thieves had thrown the money from a car window. intending to return for it on the ï¬rst opportunity ol eluding the detec~ tires. - v'â€", â€"â€"v un-wv' and, to her carpi-ice. the “rouge mm staid log on the flaps. 3nd noon on she Apps-rod ho adnnoed toward her. " 830p !" Ibo shouted. “ stop. or I'll shoot you !" Ho sdunood another step, 3nd 1: the same inltnnt the girl raised the gun and ï¬red. 3nd ho unk down on the porch gtoaning. “ Oh. my dear sister I" “ Oh. my door brother. I hove killed you !" the poor girl torohmed. no she throw down the gun 3nd untied him into the homo when he noon died. Ono o! tho ooddoot oi trogodioo woo thot on Frldoy ovoning. ot tho homo of Mr. Itiohord Hothom, noor Hilloido. Wootmorolond Coun- ty. Po. Mr. H. ond hio wiio wont owoy on o vioit on Fridoy. looving ot homo their oon Joooph. ogod twonty-two. thoir donghtor Kory. ogod ninotoon, ond two othor dough- toro. nino ond oiovon yooro oi ogo roopootivoly. In tho ovoning Jooeph ottondod o opolling " boo.†ooutionins hio oiotor Mory. no ho wont owoy. to howoro oi trompo. At ohont nino o'clock ho otartod {or home. ond oo ho op prooohod tho honoo the borking of tho dogo Alarmed hio oiatoro. so Joooph was not ex- pootod book It oo oorly on hour. It io pro- bohie tho young mon intended to toot hio oiotor Mory'o couroge. for he pniiod bio hot down over his loco and otherwise dioaniood himoolf. When he woo within o {ow rod: of tho honoo Nor-y oppeorod in tho doorway ond boiled him. “ lo that you, Joo? " Bat ho did not onowor ond continued to odunoe. The girl. now worked up to a high pitch a! excite. mont, ogoin hoilediho advancing ï¬guro with. "Who are you 7 " Still no onowor. ond Mory ohontod again, “ In thot yon, Jon? " and ron into the house ond ormod herooli with a shotgun. Returning to the door, oho diooov- ___j A o - Ion-m Guru-nod In - Penn-null. Far-cf. Good and Ill Dorm-o 'lluc Khan on null-h Cheese. KILL-D II “I. Ill‘l‘... (Prom thoJunouow- Tribune.) lnglluh liens. A men It Lexington, Ve . who wanted to no how noon e letter would go eronnd the world. eddreeeed one to his wife in one of an Amerioen eonenl in Jepen, with the reqaeet to return it ll not delivered. He lent the letter «at. end not lt beck by we, 0! Ben Freneleeo tn jut one hundred do, e. Mr. Gerlyle as he grow older doeln‘t grow more greeious..certeinly. The London St. Andrew's Society sent him the other dey en extremely grateful and pleasant letter of congratulation upon hie arrival et hie eighty- third your. The crusty Scotchmen enewered through his niece in a lesbian which, coneid‘ ering the kind expreeelons conveyed to him. eeeme elmoet onrt.- " Sir," up the young ledy, " Mr. Oerlyl no elk you to convey to the London 8 drew'e Boclety hie oor~ diel theuke tor you kindnm in remember- ing him in lo fluttering e my on! hie birthday. With hie thonke ior your polite lettter. I re. remain. elr. youre ieithiully,_Mery Cerlyle Atken." The tee of Durham. which Dr. Bering hae juet resigned. in not only one of the richaet lin the Anglican epiecopate, but it poeeeeeee 1 very intereeting hletorical aaaocietlone. The ‘euoceeeor of Bt. Cuthbert in eomething more than one at the higheat and beat paid minia- tere ol the Englieh Church. He aita on the throne of the old PrinceoBiahope of Durham. who once exereieed regel away over the terri- tory 01 their dioceee. Till the reign of Henry VIII. write In Durham ten in the Biehop’e name. and oflendere were tried for breaking " the Birhop'a peece"â€"not the King's. Ae late even u the reign of William III. what in now celled “ the County Peletine of Dur- ham" wee etyled “ the Biehoprie oi Durham.†Archblahope are not entitled to encircle their mitrea with a ducal coronet. but the Biehop of Durham ie. in compliment to the old pale tine righte oi hie predeceeeore. The greets-t snow storm experienced in King'l County for mlny years put swept over that district on Dec. 12. In many plecee the drift: were several feet high. and in the revlnwhoy appeared like miniature mountains. ' One 0! the projects in nonnao‘t'ion with the tentimonial to “10 Duke 0! Oonnnught on his matings ii the erection for him. st 3 coat of £20,000, 0! n hunting-lodge nan: the Snowfall incessantly in Dublin on Dec. 11. The ground was covered to the depth of nnuly n 100‘ vmh snow. and tnflio wu auspendad ontirely in the streets during the morning. A mu: named Williun Irvine. who had reached ‘ho advanced use 0! 111 yous, bu jmt died at Kilmmonnn, Donegll. Oelery.â€"â€"This delicious vegetable is not genenlly eppreeieted as a cooking vegetable. Wash the stems cleen in selt end weter. end drop them into boiling water; alter balling twenty minutes, teke up end drein; plsee some toasted breed in the bottom of a dish, 1-, the celery upon it, and season with butter, pepper ‘end salt. . 'l he Garden. The Toledo Blade “yeâ€"We were shown the other morning the ï¬nest specimen of the Spilzonbnrg apple we have ever seen. I: weighed 20 cannot. and in u hendeome o epeoimen olfnu'tuoould be lmogined. It was sent by mail from Wells Wells, Wuh- ington Territory, by Mr. W. H. Reed. It won in a ï¬ne atom of preservation, con- Iidering the: it bed come 4,000 mile: by mail. They grow exoellenf epplee out in thus country. mm: still that comes in contact with the sides of the veaael, and consequently leaves the cream tree to rise to the sur- lace by virtue of ite own speciï¬c gravity. ALL 8031‘! 0! IXPBOYIHII'I’I. It would be impossible to describe all the patent pane. coolers and various eyeteme devised for the production oi a better and more uniform article of butter. A multi- tude of theories have been advanced in re- gard to the treatment of milk for butter. and naturally there la a deep rivalry among? the exhibitors ol nppliencea auppoecd to be useful in this particular direction. Mention must be nude, however. of a system on ‘exhinition by which the milk is wholly ‘eurrounded and covered by water. This makes the surface of the milk of the same temperature as that at the bottom or aidea oi the vessel, and wholly excluded from the outside atmosphere. By this eystem cream can be raised within twelve heart, or between milkinge, although it must he admitted that there are very many dairymen who do not be- lieve in such haaty work. The top of the milk in a large open vessel, being exposed to the air. is rapidly cooled by evaporation. and consequently. becoming more dense, falls to the bottom by its own grevity to take the place 0! the warmer and lighter milk at the bottom of the vessel. The cause 0! the cream rising so quickly in the vessel of email diameter he attributes to the small eurhce exposed to the atmosphere and the ettrection of cohesion, which holds the milk still that come: in contact with the sides of the vessel, and consequently leaves the cream tree to rise to the sur- lsce by virtue of its own speciï¬c uravitv- It in much oeoler to nice man than it io to nice money Iomotlmee. Nowadeye there are patonted wayo tor rolling cream. nnd many 0! thooe implement; are on exhi- bition. Ono exhibitor It the recent (air in New York. quoationod on thin eubjoct, gave the tollowlng information. In experimenting upon diflerent quelitiea oi milk. come euro ego. he discovered that cream could e eepareted irom the milk much more quickly under come peculiar circumetanceo than to none! under ordinary conditions. He iouud that by piecing the warm milk in a narrower veeoel than halt an inch in diameter and twelve inehoe deep, and anbjoeting it to n temperature 0! 36 to 40 degreee Fain. he could obtain the cream in two home, which. under ordinary conditiono of letting in broad, open veuelo. would re- quire thirty-oi: honra to obtain. He wu‘ very much puzzled by the remit and began to experlment on n lerger ecale. Alter many inilurel, he ï¬nally out a pail of milk at night under an open window in e tub which wee a low inchel deeper than the milk can. In the morning he (and the cream gathered in concentric ringe on the top of the milk, each ring being clearly deï¬ned and eeparated (mm the others. It occurred to him that the disturbing cause which prevented the cream from rising as quickly in the large veuel no in the omnll one was the circulation of cur- rents within the body of milk in the larger vessel. Acting upon this idea, he made other eflorte to diecover their canoe and ï¬nally traced them to the diï¬erence in tem- perature erected by the unequal radiotion oi heat lrom different psrte ol the milk contein~ ed in a large. open veeeel. low I. an». 0mm. Ireland. ' and I had a 7 talkflend I promised her that I would quit. I believed I could, when I promised. I went to work that day with a strong resolution to attend to my duties bet- ter. but before night I had met one or two friends and I told them of my good luck. They said we must have a spree that night ; wedid. and after we had got pretty full. I loaned one hundred dollars to one of the . boys to play fsro with end I went home. It was not a month till my money was all gone and I was as hard up as ever. I had lived pretty fast and dranke good deal. I took ï¬ve dollars and went to try my luck at faro one night. I won three hundred dollars and be- lieved I was going to be as lucky as before. But the thing changed. I lost my three hundred dollars and my original ï¬ve dollars and was left without ever you sew. From that time I began to have ell kinds at bed luck. but was continu- ally trying to make a raise at gambling. I went to extremes to get moneyâ€"med whet of my earnings I could spareâ€"oiten left my dear wife and little boy without what they really needed. Finally I was driven to such a strait that I pawned my clothes and every- thing else that I could get my hands on. I drank e good deal, and one morning I was told that my services were no longer needed. It came like it clap oi thunder. end I did not know what on earth to do. I went down and got a place in~a secondclass house, where I did not stay long. From worse to worse it went all the time. I had got a terrible mania for gambling. and I neglected everyâ€" thing for it. Nobody knows how I felt and the misery that was at my house. I went to one of the gambling houses in the town and stayed there most ell the time, depending on the chances for a living. It was a terrible suspense. Half the time I was without a cent of money. One day, I remember. I went and pewned my only cost for two dol- lars, and sent half of it to my wife with which to get some dinner. I went all the day with- out my coat, and at night made a little raise and went and took it out. I got to be a kind of hanger-on, and the men who had made hundreds off me had no further use for me. Oh, it was frightiulâ€"worse than deathâ€" e hundreds times worse. Tears are nothingâ€"I had no tears; my wife's tears were also dried up in sorrow. I could have torn myself into a thousand pieces many a 1 time. One bright morning last July I went out on the street and solemnly resolved. by the help of God, I would there and then for- sweer gambling forever. I was without money and without friends. I sent my poor wife to the country. not, however, till she had pewned some of her jewellery that I had given her when we were married, in order to raise 810. I kept $2 and gave her the bel- ence. I did not know where the next wastocome from. Well. I have struggled ; along for over a month and am still alive. I am going to escape after all, and as I am still a young men. I have hopes of making some amends. I tell you there is nothing in gambling. It is the worst fraud in the world. If I can do anything to stop it. I will do it gladly in order to save others. I have not told you half my experience; I have lightly skimmed over it. I could not tell you what I have seen and felt. There are plenty of them here in town who can tell you a worse story than this. One thing mm a cent. I went home as miserable e man as ‘ ,_.__ â€"...â€". .7- ..vu 1 single night; um I had boner play when my luck wu goodmto. But I insisted and draw out my 8500 o! winnings. The nexï¬ morning I put I 8100 bill undo: my wife’s pinto It the bmkfut tnblo,‘ but when the look it outgho orig! becaugoï¬ho but! an idea how I ‘into the gambling bueineee. I had conï¬dence in him. and have seen him win agreat deal 0! money. I wenld stay away (rem home till one or two o'clock frequently, and when I would go home I would almost die with remoree. I had some good luck at laro. I remember one time I went into a place on dixth etreet. with only 85 in my pocket. It wee hardly enough to take me through the balance 01 the week, but I put it all up and won. I put up end won ngeln, and again. I got ex- cited and bet up as high as 850 at a time. Sometimes I loat, but luck was with‘ me meet 0! the time, and at three o'clock in the morning I wee 3500 ahead. I resolved to draw it out. They begged me to keep on; aid I would break the bank and get rich in 3' Gambling. an it exiete in St. Louie. hae many phaeee and many bearinge. It in- . volvee the men who keep the honeee. the men who go there to play. and the oflieiaie who protect it and allow it to pro-per. Thoee ; who eufler are the playere and the once dependent on them. The proprietore reap ‘ the tint proï¬t; the efliclaleâ€"well, thie ie . rather a delicate matter. It ie intended that ‘ nothing unreaeoneble. malicioue nor extrava~ gantly eentimental ehall appear in the Poet's articlee on gambling. It ie a grave eub'ect. and deeervea grave and earth treat nt. But it le intended that every hideoue ieature ol gambling ehall be revealed. an that the public may know the enormity oi the evil that ie allowed to exiet without reetreint. .The law hae put gambling under the ban beceuee it ie wrongâ€"became it ie an enemy to the peace and eubetantiality oi eocietyâ€" and because it ie devoid of a eingle redeeming quality. Ae above remarked, the euflerere are thoee who patronize the gmhling houeee.‘ Upon theee the proprietore of those eetablieh- 1 mente teed ae the big ï¬sh leed on the leeeeri onea. They epread the note. and the unwary go in and are ewellowed up. The young and inexperienced are the ones caught after. They are the green nude and the meet ioolieh. The proleeeionul gamblera make but little of one another. end it gambling were conï¬ned to them but little evil would follow. A Poet reporter met with a ‘young man yesterday who in a victim to the ‘gemblere. He told hie etory. . Baid he. “I have been reeding the ertielee in the Port on gambling, and have reaeon to eympathiee with the eï¬erte oi the paper to break it up. I came to St. ouia three yeare ego and took it poeit ion in one of the wholesale dry goode honeee on ï¬lth etreet. I had been in a country etere and become a very good ealeemen. I went into my position here on a eelary oi 820 a week. I had a wife and one little boy. and the future looked very bright to me. The city wae a new thing. and, being naturally ol ‘3 very eociable diepoeition, I made many iriende. Among the number was agentle- man who wae at the heed of an exteneive boot and ehoe home. He wae well known among all the eelesmen in town end oom- manded a large eulury; poor. poor iellowl he ia not here now, went down to nothing and elunk out of town like as dog. He had a family, and one of hie children wae a beauti- ful girl. nearly grown. I had formed a lever- able opinion of him, and looked upon him ae ‘ a model. Through _him I wee led : it. potato _I_ hit go: the store the A Gambler's Story. parlance; I have could not tell felt. Thorn no Three. Englinh touriete. named 8emuel Gould, A. H. Prindle end Williem Gould, errived with e perty et Niegere Felle yeeter- dey morning end ettempted to meke e trip behind the roering cetereot on the Oenede eide. At this eeeeon ol the yeer the experi- mentie ueuelly perilous on eccount ol the ice. and the pereon undertaking it mnet pick his wey with greet ceution end heve plenty oi none. The gentlemen nemed did not heed the pleedinge of the other membere oi the party, but took the gulde’e word ior it thet there was no denger. end lollowed him down the eteep end slippery etepe to the river ‘ benk below the Felle. Along thie henk the path“ nerrow end dengeroue in eummer, but now it is regged end hezerdoue in oonee- quence of the frozen eprey. Huge ioiclee overhang the path, etteched to the make ebove, end it requiree no little skill to dodge them, end et the eemetime ï¬nd e eele loot- i log. Mr. Bemuel Gould ren egeinet one 0! theee immense frozen pendente with euch lorce ee to ceuee him to tell upon the rough peth end to loosen the icicle. which fell with e creeh upon him. An ugly out in the heck ol the heed end e bruieed beck mode it neceuery lor hie compenione to eeeiet him beck to the hotel. There he received proper ettention. end wee eufliciently recovered eiter dinner to take the Oentrel trein with hie irlende lor New York. Soon elter etertlng the injured men loet hie reeeon. It required eeverel men to keep him etill. Arriving in thie city. the nnlortunete young men wee conveyed to the hoepitel, end hie lriende re- meined over until hie recovery. At leet eccounte thie morning he wee conecioue end eloely recovering.â€"-Br.ï¬zlo Commercial Ad- eertim'. Die. 28. _ _. _-â€"â€"v- av: tea-parties. The usual Sunday afternoon walk. with all the guests. and household children, comprises visits to the garden, the dairy, the (arm and the kennels. and always ï¬nishes up with ihe stables. The company consists of very much the same set each year, with occasional additions of foreign- ers. There are also generally one or no very good whisk players. ,__ __ '-â€"--- -- “Va-WU“ Immediately after ten end notice (when there in a party staying in the house) the Prince eite down to his whiet in the email room lending out of the (inning-room, end the Prince" edjourne to the bowling-alley. where two ‘little boys. attired in eppropriete costume. are in attendenee to eend buck the hegy belle_end let up_ the bowls. Th} gardens no :1 con-idon'blo (extent, and the Princon' dniry is a thing of beauty, with a lovelylgom lnxngigualy tarnished {or A__ “,_.Q,, lisrd-room is most popnlsr. The Princess plays veryâ€" well. while those who have no tune this wsy cit in s littlc sntoroom. com- fortably furnished with two long low eettees end rocking-ensue, and from which you commend s good View of the game. Out 0! the drswing room, on the opposite side to the dining-room. is n smsll sitting-room ï¬tted with bookesses. Beyond this is the Prince's own room. quite lull o! besutilnl things. Here he sad the Princess slwsye breaklsst. cnd here on the 9th of November and the let of December are lsid out sll the numerous birthdsy presents. 01 the Prin- cess’ privste epsrtments upstsirs it will mfliec to ssy that a prettier room then H. R. E’s own boudoir, or sittingoroom, was never seen. All the vieitors’ rooms sre per- fect, nor are the servants’ comforts neglected. I..__.I:-A-s_ A l .. _.°â€"-â€". a proceeding to which come aeri- ouely object. They then in their own handwriting have to record the lull details iua book kept specially tor the pur- pose; they write their names, date. weight and costume worn at the time. Thus you read: Heavy walking dreae. tevgown, velvet droneâ€"the heavy onea generally attribute some of the fault to the garmente. It ie an interacting book. containing an it doea auto~ graphs of many long eince peeled away. Thedrawingroomia a particularly pretty room, lull of furniture, and every available eornerle ï¬lled with gigantic flower glaeeea full of Pampaa gun and evergreen. Here the gueata aaaemble before dinner. The dining-room opens out of thia room. The dinner-table decorationa are noted. and are all arranged by the gardener, whore taste is very good. The bowlingalley in close proximity to the ML evening. Some few years beck the gentle- men of the homehold gcve the Prince on hie birthday a handsome weighing machine, which hes ever since been honored with e conspicuous place in the corridor peeling alongside the hell; end reguletly during each party, generally eiter tea. the gneete ere requested to come ‘end be weighed, ______ 11..â€" At Christmas the hall looks liken Inge bozo-r. being then ï¬lled with the most costly Ind beautiful tables. with a large Christmas tree in the eentro and objeote ell stand the sides of the his]! full of preeentl for the household and vieiton. Their Royal High- neuee arrange there presents all themselren. and no one is permitted to enter till the evening. Some (ow genre back the gentle- - __v-- 0' â€".IU'-u' in a gallery. At the hill; the upper it served n a number of round “lulu. with one long om} dgynrlho aid» of the room. tel-gownl. It to a pretty light to see her surrounded by her three little girls. who look like tiny tuition. and who run Ibout to put “papa’o†letters in the large pillu‘pmt box at one end of tho hull. There are generally {out or ï¬ve large dog to odd to the circle. In this nmo hall the ball: take pluoo. The floor in excellent. cod the_ music is upstaiu The Prince of Welee at lie-e. (Venity Feir. December in The Prince of Welee’ country houre ie e pretty two-mile drive tron Wolverton. in Norfolk, through e quentity oi young plente- tione in which the Prince tekee much intereet. 0n the lelt you peu e pictureeque building celled “ The Folly." lurniehed with greet teete. and where ehooting pertiee lunch once or twice during the eeeron. The entrenee to Bendringhem ie through the lemoue Norwich Getee. end no throughe line evenue cl llmee. The house in e model of comfort. The lerge hell which you enter on arriving ie ï¬tted up as e dining room. with e pienolorte, eeey~eheire. end two large writing-teblee, et one of which the Prince ueuelly writee hie letters on hie return iron: ehooting. Behind the pieno ere e quentity oi toye for the children to emuee tnemeelvee with et the “children's hour " elter tee. Here et ï¬ve o'clock the tee-tehle ie pieced in the centre of the hell. and ie prey sided over by.the Prince" in the loveliest ol 1 w_-- W cm VIII WI,- Thun ondod the not]. The young nun who told 3 live. horo in the any. and to well known bonno tho gamblers. nnd the em- ployou at n prominent dzy-goodl house.â€" St. Louis Post. I nu] My. 3h. pnhndod worn at the polio. ofloinla b flop gmbflng no nothing but 3 than. I know how u in and but «on it. Tho unable“ huoit All their own my.†L..- ___I_j AI Accident at III-gun: nulls. - __ “nun" u. III. A _ .. non (all to In.“ his obllntlou.‘ " No an in my trying to oolloot “In sir." “id 3 collector to hit employ", h: In; tho dishonored document to tho 1‘ " Why 1" “The man who Ihonld p.11 non m," replied the oolloom'. "Thom It Ind collect It. air. A non at an 'm f.“ .0 “00‘ I“. obllanllnlnr†,,v-_, _â€" â€"â€"vu I’VII'IO Th‘eee indioetione seem too my to d eeneible men, yet while the Ohlnemen In only eenlible, but eotnelly ehrewd end in he guides most of his more important All by the elmenec. The poorer eluul we the elmenee perelully, end merry. hazy I do other thinge only when It eddeee, out in to be feared (hot the better “out“ not atett on.e joumey not enter omum on {evoreble deye. though It It to be be] they bathe, eheve end_eleen ohener. -7--. Ill-Ul- oi this, the principal part of the lapel Almanac. On the 17th one maybe treeteg illness and open eaciree of provision. 1 the 22nd it is allowable to pull down old holi and walls. but dralne must not be open“ wells dug until the 27th. Arreate elm ‘be‘made on the 25th; this is the oi ‘iavorable day in the monthâ€"a very eel factory arrangement {or crlminale. W are {our days in thirty on which one cut out clothes, and the same nnm which one may sweep and clean up. advised to shave on the 6th, 23rd and and to bathe seven times in the m Unfortunately the intervals between t bath days are unequal. and the believer ‘ the Almanac must salt from the 6th to II 13th, and irom the 14th to the 23rd. Devil on the let bathing is favorable et en bled nenlent hour, vim, noon; the houront 29th (ï¬ve o'clock) is much better. -' m-VJ' ' The eighth; mey eeormoe, mentor!“ enter oflica, umme oeremonhl clothe“ ï¬ve I. m. may sit towel-d the eontheut: d levoreble {or oonjngel union, Vinita. fl dings. taking on e new Ierunt, mule. '1 n journey, erecting upright: end putting eroeebeame, building, removing lo}! I burying. ' ' The writer give: u few more item 1 oommente ee tollowe: ‘ And lo it goes on {or non]: every day“ the yen. Enough bee been tx-eneletelg ehow the excessive _ohi_ldiehneu end ebentl -l 4L1- A. A I The elxth day in tunable {or and! ooni use) union, visiting. taking on s new vent. starting on n journey. removingmn ingaepeiring, building, blanking youth three in themomlng may drew up eonttn open shop, blflal', lend preuntl. uni. -1 the soil and bury. The seventh dey ; any level mull, must not ital-t on a journey, 0 ML- A!,- .I Thoridnrtâ€"l‘nfldsrgs min. or III vlsitl and out out clothes ; n noun 1- mdming mam-u! up oontnou. batter: make prawn Mn, not go on njonmoy br0_3k gljound. ' The second any in hvonblo for I md huhing. Ii In nnhvonblo for l on a j onmey, "moving or pmmlngm taro. The third day; than no no indium The flflh day ; may visit, bntho. uh oleï¬n up. Munoz plant nnd low. The ï¬rst day is {notable for norm» for entering school ; It noon it it allow to bstho. It is unhvonblo to: “allay journey or onnnging residence. . tiona to: :ho um dun of tho entrant follows: new njCllnnlsn- Bani-Ic- III-A. The December number of The Anni Journal of Science and Art oonhins sn III on the Chinese Oflioisl Almsnoo. of INC is ssid thst “ it is issued snnnslly in camber, end it osretully prepered ’ Bosrd of Astronomy. en importsnt imperislly sppointed, presided over I prince of the royal blood. end equal ‘ dignity to any other government body ol- empire. The elmsnso is bestowed ss up. set of grsoe by the Emperor on the Cored Looohoosne, Annnmites. snd other mm Ststes. As this pubuostion is so spsoted by the Chinese, it any felrly In 0' sidered as the representsttve at mm stste o! astronomical science to them." A lsrge put of the- sstrolo'l portion of the slmsnso is intended fl; "nvnnï¬nnl anti- :. AL- A , ,_'-â€"°'w . "V.“ "I... v J Jone. oeme weet thin week to em wedding of his only eieter in Chinese. the trein he gave the story ewe, to 0-D: gentlemen. who meeting e reporter 6! News on his errivel et Detroit, introd him to Mr. Jones. from whom he extrl the etory direct. Mr. Jonel in e dim looking gentlemen end when dreued il oflioiel uniform. new for the ooouion. u very readily be teken for e person 0! . In"..- â€"v'lâ€" “-5-.“- I 'l ,, â€"~â€" II This developmenr uti-hctorily I the lune of Voracity bemoan ":0 nor den: 0' the New York World Ind tho The World correspondent did oorrc port the interview. and the anoil rrnthfnl in denying «pry word 01 it. 'f‘____ A, When the (moor who hm! put up (1:01 judged um the Duke might Ian I. completed his wiring he [and mom cutting short the interview and bodily" tho correapondentâ€"lucooulnlly zoning 0! him betox-o His Boyd Hignou up†VIMâ€":â€" .Lâ€"J , I V__._-_- law-y‘a- un- ‘ J the cabin nnd obsequionsly onqnlna’u addressed His Royal Highness Prince All The wsgglsh oflioer winked at Jon.- lormslly presented the oouoopondont. J’ol tsken aback nt ï¬rst, nuintninod n all reserve, but ï¬nally. turning to tho 11 mutated {:0on every question proponn without osring much what the import of ingots might be. (From the Detroit Evening Newt) The Duke 0! Edinburgh peeled “In Detroit this morning vie the Greet We! end Miehisen Oentnl 3.11:0th ll. indivtduel whom the New York World respondent interviewed et Home: on the ‘rival o! the Black Prince. 8.!- red null Jonesâ€"Robert J. Jonee. He in all by friends to numb]. the Duke not e um... home is Helflex, though it has been in lew you" since he lelt Englnd. holds e Ouetom Houu eppe ment nt mum. end on the mm] the Duke'l Ihip, the Block Prince. weer hum of deepetohoe to ï¬ll Royal High The Duke took the deepetohol end "Nut his Itetoroom to exemino them. bidding! messenger weit till he Ihonld hue prep. hil replies. Jonel wu “ending, 0|. head. conversing with en oflioer ol vouel who hepponed to he lonethlug e wag. when on irnproeoible New York paper eomlpondynt pres-ed hie we: As 01inch“. ALMANAQ .00 I}. P'INUIu Pulse.“ oi?