furniture, piunos, etc. ' solve {our ounces orange shellac in one ~ ’ 't of 95 per cent. alcohol 3 to this add one quart of linseed oil, and one pint turpentine ; when mixed add four ounces of uulphuri: ether, 3111 four ounces uqnu anunonin ; mix thoroughly llllll and well before using. Apply with a. cloth \h or s onge and rub the surface to which it is â€3* app ied until the polish appears. A few oyster shells, mixed with the coal used I :r a inrn-ue or large stove, will ef- fectually prevent the accumulation of clink- Foru polish to clean: 9:) and brighten old He entered the service some 15 years after Mr. Midshipman Easy and Peter Simple, yet his experiences were very simi- lar to theirs. He should have had the countenance of an aristocratic cousin who gave him a hit to their ship on the box of a travellin chariot. But, once aboard, he was hust ed down the gangway tea dark and noisome den, where half a dozen “mates" were washing down monldy bis- cuits with rum and water. There was no room even iorthe small snpernnmary in â€the beastly hole,†so he had tea, with bread and butter, on a chest outside. He met his captain on the deck next morning, who ordered his boat’s crew to he put in irons, as a preliminary to being flogged all round, because the delay of one of the hands had kept him waiting for a couple of minutes. The boy‘s strong sympathy with the sull‘erers took a personal turn very speedily. â€I helieve‘ I cried, or got into somehody‘s way, or did something to vex the tyrant." At any rate. he was summarily ordered to the masthead. There was a heavyfxea running; the ship washceliug over.’ He wangea-slek and m mortal terror when he had f elimh for the ï¬rst time. He never rear-lied the dizzy mastheadâ€"x friendly sailor was flogged for viving him a liftâ€"he managed to get a litt 0 above the maiutop, where terror seemed to give him ireseneeofmind to hold on; and when at not he received iermission to come down he fainted and zol‘gnt his miseries till he woke up in his hammock. He gives sundry examples of the eapricea and tyranny of captains who \H‘l‘t‘. hacked by powerful eon- anxious: and it is characteristic of his in- dependence that when the. ship was paid oil' he « -elined the ull'er of a return-seat. in his ma. ter's travelling earria 'e. †I re- plied thatl Would rather eraw home on my hands and knees, and an ended our acquaintance.â€Â» London Times. era. lluvsuuow His-rs. It may not be generally known that cold food is more easily kept on a sensitive staunch tlmu huc ; so in cases where it. is rejected in the ordinary warm or hot form, it :1qu better he tried an ueirly frozen as can be taken. In many fevers this would be u (ltOidOd advantage. The prejudice against cold food is, perhaps, natural, but we carry it. too far. Milk may be administered in a. frozen state, one“ with positim advantage. It. may not be generally known that if the saucepan in which milk is to be boiled be ï¬rstlnoistonctl with water, it will prevent tlig milk from burning. The humm system consists of ï¬fteen ele- ments, all of which are found in common wheat. But the liourof conunerce is depriw ed in a large degree of twalve of these ele~ ments. An improvement in making flour is evidently needed. Muss. Clean with n qua t of water mix~ ed with a. tablespoon of ammonia. Herbs. Gather when beginning to blos som, and keep in paper sacks. Ink Stands. \Vct with spirits of turpen- tine; after three hours, rub well. Rice: Select large, with a clear, fresh look ; old rice may have insects. Usca cement made of ashes, salt and water for cracks m stoves. Always hang a broom up when not in use. Put, an ordinary, snmll-aizcd screw- eye in the end of the handle it no better way sugggsts itself. Nutmegs. Prick with apin, and if good, oil will run out. A few drops of ammonia in hard water will not only soften it but will remove dirt better than soap. It is always a good article to use when bathing the )ersou, and the water in which it is dilute makes an echl- lent stimulant to house and other plants. Flour. Keep cool, dry, and scarcely cov. cred. Orange and lemon peel, dry, pound mul keep in cracked bottles' Pal-snipe. Keep in g round until spring. Quicksilver and white of an egg destroys beï¬lmgs. W _ Cranberries. Keep under water in the cellar ; change water monthly. Dish of hot water set in oven prevents ctkes. etc., from scorching. Jars. To prevent, coax hua‘mud to sub scribe for this paper. Keep an account of all supplies, with cost and date when purchased. Love lightens labor. Money, Count. carefu‘ly when you re- ceive change. Small families often complain that they cannot have good roast beef because they are obliged to buy such small pieces, and it comes upon the table dry and overdone. To prevent this the smaller the piece to be roasted the higher the temperature to which its surhce should be exposed. It should he crusted, or browned, as quickly as possi- ble, so that the juices within shall be held there under high )ressure, and only be al- lowed to escape y bursts and sputters rather than by steady evaporation. No more fuel need be consumed, since it would take a shorter time to cook. llobm't Pnslm‘s Apprenticeship. Tea. E unl parts of Japan and Green are as goo as English ’xreukfnst. Watch your back yard; keep it clear from dirt and bones. Xuntippe was In. scold. Don’t imitate her. Youth is best preserved by n cheerful temper. Economize time, health and means, and you wil. never beg. Apples. Keep in a dry place, as cool as possible without freezing, Brooms. Hang in the cellar-way to keep soft and pliant. Sugar. For general family use, granulat- cd is the best. Zinc-lined sinks are better than wooden ones. Housx-zx snvan’s ALPHABET. HOUSBHQHJD litany Tragulim at hoh'l.‘ I’Rmuzn, LANDLURD, nwmas wmzmr. wrrnm THE I-Iwmm'rs ur 'rms munm A amen: gr? Landlord.- A Mmmmm'? \‘m. am. w 'l'ragh 'l‘m-m 1mm T0 um 'rms mun m- “an srnmns Hm um wmzm'n Asuxnm was»: IRON 1.1mm. mm 'rmm, mu nru RlflAl SHEENT, 1‘0 CIIISRI: SI ICES l-‘lulM ITS "NYIHIJHNU “080", P0“ “1 P \\'.(ll’l I) DINE ANON. "AND, PRAY, \‘HU, [IO-IT QUICKLY. YON I‘m! you NEED NUT CARRY; FDR THOSE. WIT" l)|-‘XT BOUB MANAGEMENT, “'3 CA‘Q' SWALLIHV WIIUI I". ‘ AWAY ! Mrs. Charles Newton of [“C‘l‘gllzi Falls, Mimi†has just added to the population of that growiu State by giving birth to three healthy dung ItOI‘S. Each little girl weighed ilVo pounds and a. half. Frank Grove, hunting deer on Blue Moun- tain, (2:51., saw one pass over n ridge. Ho hurried up, and looking down the slope and seeing what he thought was It deer. ï¬red. and put a bullet through the leg of u miner who was stooping over, shovelling. For twenty years Josiah Brinenrd of Spring City, I’m, who was a. private in the Eighty-eig 1th Pennsylvania volunteers, has been trying to securen pension. He needed it, for he has been totally blind since the war, and for ï¬fteen years his legs have been paralyzed. Now, throu0h the eil'orts of neighbors, his ension has )eennllowud, and within a few nys the veteran will re- ceive nearly $10,000. George \V. Carley of Detroit has occa- sionally severe pains in his stomach, with curious swellings and bunches. He insists that they are caused by a lizard which he swallowed in some water from the Chat- tahoochee River in Georvin when his regi- ment, the nineteenth Oiio, cross-ed it in 1864. A tremendous appetite and cmstnnt thirst are among the symptoms which Carley thinks are dueto the lizu'd. The doctors think that imagination has more to do with the case than anything else. The coming illusion will he the anti miles of the Vanishlu; Lmlf'. Out «if u suml 0g ,5 which vrows grutlua ly larger and larger before t re ryes of the spectators, will be produced a living girl. Last summer Roswell Brown of Mystic, Conn., put some watermelons in their cellar and one of them was covered up and forgotten. Just before Christmas it was discovered in good condition, anrl the Browne ate it on Christmas Day, and enjoyed it. An Iowa railroad conducter who found a pocketlncok containing 8250 and hunted up the owner, who proved to he an ancient granger and his wife, was met with this re- mark fmm the old lady : “ It waa a go rd thing someone seen you pick it up or we new r would have got it again.†A youu man of 20, one of a. party of hun~ ters in Co orado, left camp to go out to set (L bear trap. He did not return in due time and search was made for him. It was six days before he was found, and then it was seen that in setting the trap both hands had been caught in it, and thus he had been held until he was frozen to death. At a. recent tern. of court at Pulaski, Us... John Striplin , a white mun was tried for shooting u. co ored man. When the jury went out Striplin , who was under bond, became frightenet lest he should be con- victed, and so jumped on his horse and lied. The verdict was “not guilty." The next day the Sheriff recci‘ved a. letter from Strip- ling, saying that if he was acquitted it was all right; if he was convicted it made no difference, for he had the start. Within the last tweutv yours Mr. George Washington (.‘hilds, A. 51.. of Philadelphia. has presented over two hundred big and valuable Bibles w churches, schools, and Societies. Henry Gunltney dug into nmonxul n‘m' Wnknlln, Fm, recently, and found a. skull that must have belonged to a. giant. The under jaw was particularly large, bein twice the size of an ordinary man's, mu none of the teeth was missing from either jaw, and but one showed any signs of decay. \Vhile Bertha Cook was attending to an old woman who had long been bedridden with paralysis, her clothes caught ï¬re from the stove. The invalid seeing that Bertha was too scared to help herself. jumped out of bed, wrapped the girl in a blanket, sub- dued the ï¬re, and fainted away. Since then the sick woman has been very much better. A Chicago policeman reports that the other night, while he was chasing a burglar the fellow suddenly fell as though he had been shot, and lay unconscious bleeding from a. wound on the head nude by an icicle thathad fallen on him as he run. He was carried to the police station, where his ï¬rst words were : “ \tht do you want to shoot a. follow for '3" He did not know what hit him. Ed Avery ofS nhzwen, Va., shot a deer the other day on was steeping over cutting its throat when another deer, a big buck, rushed at him from behind, striking him with great force, and knocking him heels over head down a hill. The buck followed up the attack, and for half an hour man and deer fouwht with desperation. Avery succeeded in cln'eaking the buck’s leg, and shortly after his brother came up with a gun and killed the plucky animal. During the war William Knnpp deserted from the ï¬rst United States Cavalry and \vnsnevcr captured. In due time he sut- tlcd with his family at Grovetnwn, 1nd,, inu- LATE AMERICAN NEWS. liACII T0 IIIS TRAIDI'}. A Best at small dog whose lines had in deed fallen in pleasant places has just died. He wore delicate napkins at his meals with his name embroidered in the centre. Ile as put to sleep in a erih, with costly furs for his bed and a ceverlct of the ï¬nest and wrapped him‘ about. Over his sleepinu prison was drawn a counterpane of tigurer silk. When he took an airing it was alwa 's from the seat at a carriage. and the one I- man has driven him out alone when by chance no memhers of the family were ready to accompany him. It is said that since his death his former home has been in mourning. Visiting friends of the family have been given to understand that the family would prefer that all calls should be omitted for the present. Any allusion to the (log in the presence of his mistress oe- casions a flood of tears, and the attending physician has rigidly prohibited any men- tion of the name or fate of the. pet. A suit- able memorial will soon be erected to his memory. where it recently occurred to him to see if he couldn’t get some back [my somehow or other. He wrote to Washington, viving the circumstances of his deeertion. mn wntst informed that he could get no back pay until the taint of desertion was lemovud.‘ He accordingly decided to go to (/‘hiengoi and surrender himself, believing that he would be released without much trouble owing to the length of time which hud elapsed since his desertion. He is new in the county jail awaiting the notion of the War Department. . The l-‘lrst Train Goes Through she Severn Tunnel, 2 1-! â€â€œ05 l'ndcr lhe orcun. ; The ï¬rst passenger trains passed through the gigantic tube linking the shores of New a mouthshire and Gloucestershirc the other ' morning. Before those on board quite know where they were a. shrill whistle, a. sudden darkeningâ€"for it was now nearly broad daylightâ€"and “ We are in !†told them they were †in†and rushing down a. clearly per- ceptible decline toward a. point a hundred feet below the bed of the broad estuary. In at trice watches were out and windows down, the first to keep time, the other to ; test the ventilation. The inrush of the icy 5 cold air, as clear and pure as the trip across was being made in the old way â€"over in- stead of under the (Ilnmnelâ€"~showed the lat- ter was all right. The submarine journey; â€"if such it may be culledâ€"proved to be . more like it run through a. pretty deep cut- f ting than through a tunnel four and a. qunr- j ter miles long. Four about three minutes and a. half after entering there was no mis- I taking the feet that n sharp gradient was being descended, then a. momentary rumble ; as the train passed over the curve of the are â€"for the tube (lips in the centreâ€"and then the locomotive, at an ever~decreasiug speed, ‘ climbed the opposite gradient, to emerge ‘ once more into daylight in 8 minutes 49 seconds. _ l VENTILATION or Till-2 TUNXEL. ; As before remarked, the ventilation of the ' tunnel is little short of perfect. During the construction of the work a fan 18 feet in di- ameter, discharging 60,000 cubic feet of air per minute, was used. This has now been replaced by a. fun 40 feet in diameter and 1‘2 feet wide, made on the same principle as. those used at the Mersey and a. portion of j the Metropolitan tunnels. The tunnel is ‘26 5 feet wide and ‘20 feet high from the double l line of rails to the crown of the arch inside the brickwork. The mils are laid on long- ‘ itudinal sleepers. The tunnel has been lin- ed throughout with vitrified bricks set in ; cement, and no less than 75,000,000 bricks : have been used in this work. This vitrified , brick wall has a thickness of 3 feet in the crown of the arch beneath the “ shoots," : but as th..' tunnel rises from this lowest ' point one gradient one in 90 one way and ; one in 100 toward the Gloucestershire side, i this thickness is gradually reduced to ‘2 feet 3 inches. The total length of the Severn Tunnel is i 4 miles 6‘24ya1ds. 'lhe St. (-0thar:l T1111 110113 9.5 miles, \Iont Ccnis 'l‘unnel' 1. .‘_.- miles, l Arlbe1g Tunnel (Austria) 611 miles , then: is a tunnel in Massachusetts 4:‘ miles , the Standege Tunnel, on the London and N01 th- : \1 estern, is 3 miles long, and the Box 'l‘uu- ; 1181 rather less. But the s eeial feature of l the Severn Tunnel lies 111 t 10 {act that ‘21 3 miles of it have been constructed from 45 ‘ feet to 100 feet below the bed of a rapidly , flowing tidal estuary, offering engineering difï¬culties which make it the most rema1k able tunnel 111 the wo1ld. : A marriage will take lace between Mlle. MncMnhon, the only (augllter of the ex- Presizlent Marshal, Duke of Magenta, and the Count (le l’iennes, whose father was in the (ax-imperial household. The young lml y husbcen bred in rural life, inn large and happy family circle. RAILRGADISG UNDER TIIE _ SEA. 0TH ER G REAT 'I‘UNNELS. l The early Friends refused to bow or to 4 take off their hats to anyone, justifying this 2 by the plea that it would be an acknow- ? ledgment of superiority, whereas God had 5 made all men equal. In this there was con- siderable reason. As a matter of fact, the ' sect by no means neglected to give honor . where honor was due, only they showed it 5 by tangible actions rather than lip service. > Thus, when Fox called on Cromwell, he g scrupulously kept his hat on his head, though both by word and act he showed the Protector that he respected his ofï¬ce. In stead of being offended Cromwell remarked: . “ Now I know there is a people risen that l ; cannot l'uy either with gifts, honors, olliees, ' or place. but all other sects and people I ean.’,’,. Nor was Lharles 11., with all his faults, oll'euzled when Edward llorrough, ' with scant courtesy, went to him to com- . plain of the persecution the Quakers were ; undergoing in New England. The i] (- Em; )ressl] ngunich: is succeeded hcr intention of building at Farnhnmugh a superb munumcnt to some us a memorial of her husband and son. A magniï¬cent church nov crowns the heights of Furnborongh. The l‘uly who writes under the name 0f Juhu Strange Winter, authur of Howie's Baby, is a Mrs. Stanuanl. She is said to be a direct descendant of the celebrated Hau- nnh Prichanl. whose monument is in West- minster Abbey, close to that of Shakespeare. California‘has the {oungest telegraph o X38501} it is holievu , In this country. ï¬n: is Miss Nellie Weleh, eleven years of be age. and she has full charge of the otlice at Point Arena. ! ! Flsu As Fool). Fi<h has always. within historical times, en an important article of diet. In some mrts of the world it is the staple article of ood. The huge uhellheaps in Europe and Princess 'l'lmwm ““3Ҡ0f the Pri“0‘3,‘Ainerieaâ€"tho remains of tribal feasts in Ref-1°"t " lhrnri‘t. has lllll'llf'llul ll \olunnn- ‘ periods long anterior to written recordsâ€" nus “'Urk ‘\l""“'_hl‘53“'- and "8 PWPlt‘g and 1 show how greatly shell-ï¬sh entered into the the antholess is about to write a annular diet of aboriginal races. work concerning England. Fish is cheap. It furnishes to most people Maulzune Anderson. of Stockholm. has been granted by the King the freedom of the railways of that country, in rcvoguitiun of her import mt. mimimmry lahurs in the cause of telnpemuce and social purity. Mrs. Malcolm who died recently in her eighty-seventh year, was one of the lust links with the old society of the reigns of George IV. and William IV., in which she was a. popular and prominent personage. She was a favorite daughter of Archbishop Vernon Harcourt, a. very clever woman and a great favorite with Sydney Smith, and be came one of his principal correspondents. Many of his letters to “ Dear Georgiana†are published in his correspondence, und there is ample proof in them of the high re- gurd which he entertained for her. The last letter he ever wrote was addressed to 101‘. Mrs. Jared Crandall, one of the three women who have charge of Government light-houses. is stationed at “'utch Hill, R. I. Her husband formerly kept the light- house. Her husband is connected with the tower. She cleans the immense lenses of the light during the day ; at sundown she lights the lamp ; at sunrise she mounts the spiral steps and puts it out. . She receives $600 a year salary. and lives rent free. Mme. Boncicant, of the Bon Marche, l’anis, has given hex employcs. outlig ht, a pension fund of over $100,000, 000. gThis fund 18 mailuhle to all \\ ho lune been in hex sen ice tn enty years. provided the men me at least ï¬fty and the n omen forty- five years old, and not among the shareholdeis of the establishment. Mme. Boncicaut has in addition paid the fee which the state charges on legacies, amounting to nearly $140,000. The great glaciel of Alaska is moxing at rate of one fourth of n. mile per nnnum to- ward the sea. The front presents at wall of ice ï¬ve hundred feet thick. Almost evely quarter of an hour hundreds of tons of ice, in large blocks, fall into the sea, which they agitate in a. violent manner. Prof. Thurston says when a drop of oil is placed upon the surface of water it ï¬rst rapidly spreads in all directions, forming a ï¬lm of exceeding tenuuity, and atlccting the waves as ifa sheet or carpet of thin. flexible, elastic and yet tenacious substance. like rub- ber, had been spread over the waves. MEN AND WOMEN. Fox and Cromwell. but" He says, “ For this hint I am indebted i to the intelligence of a patient. I had, as iree . usual, forbidden ï¬sh. and explained my lent reasons. I was told that ï¬sh steamed, as [i1], lwas done in that house, was tender, and ght- i never di~agreed with the patient, but was the ipartaken of with relish and beneï¬t. I got s of i astcann-r for myself, have since iccoiniueiid- she ‘ ed this plan of cookery to my patientS, and. the i have had satisfactory results. Dieting is. ives ‘ the half, and sometimes the best half, of iiiediea‘. treatment ; and perhaps, a little to- :he, iniychagrin, I timl that this system of pre-t- t, a l Bill‘lllgdirli has been specially recommended: .‘liis y various schools of cookery, ’ ll in; LET IN Till-2 Goon Doc'rons. nen . _ , ï¬vei The time is now here when people Will lers 5 try to economize fuel at the expense of their has 4 bodies. The cracks in the dome and winâ€" :ate 3 dows will be carefully stopped up. and every irly : whiff of the free air of Heaven will come in ' under protest. \Ve pay some attention to her the purity of the food we eat, althoughwe take I t 3 it but three times a day, but wrgivebnt little 5 0 , attention to the. quality of the air we are 1 c ‘ constantly taking into our system every I e 3 minute of the day and night. _ It is a. un- l5) ' . doubted fact that more disease is engendered mg 3 by breathing polluted air than b ' eating b § niiwholesome food. Eithenthroug i ignoro a ts : ance or false notions, sleeping apartments na’.’ : are so arranged as to shut out air and sun. } nl ' light, and the consequence is, the occupants in: s take into their lungs vitiated air which ini- [‘he . poverishcsthe blood and debilitates the sys- l to tem. Erury bed~ con. 8 iould have the purify- ing influences of the sun and air, am when ' a sleeping room has a bad odor in the morn- , ing, it is a certain indication that some- ? thing is \\ rong. Knock out a pane of glass to . if necessary, and punch a hole through the his ‘2 roof to Cttlbllsll a Circulation. 3 on cannot ow- ; afl‘ord to breathe bad .ttll‘ any more than iad ‘ you can afford to eat tainted food. It may :on- be cheaper, Just as decayed vegetables may the 1 be cheaper, butat won‘t pay when you take nor f into consideration the bi!ls of the doctor, 1 it . druggxst and undertaker. Don‘t. hermetical- ice. ly seal your rooms so that no breath 01 air he 3 nor ray oi sunshine can penetrate it, and ad, E don’t go to the other extreme by turning the ' your house into a saw-mill, but have it In E warm, comfortable and wholesome. .edl: 3 Tue DIET or Srnoxc Mex. it ‘ . . cos I The Roman soldiers, who built such won- le 1’ ; derful roads and carried a weight of armor his I and iuggage that would crush the average ,,h I farm hand, lived on coarse brown bread and En: sour wine. They were temperate. in diet, rere i and regular and constant in exercise. The * Spanish peasant works every day and dances i half the night, yet cats only his black l bread, onion and watermelon. The Smyr- g at I on porter eats only a little fruit and some l to- ' olives, yet he walks oil' with his load of 800 l 0f 5 pounds. The coalie, fed on rice, is more 'ery ' active and can endure more than the negro ice, i fed on fit meat. The heavy work of the ,hey i world is not done by men who eat the great ' est quantity. Moderation in diet seems to H is be the prerequisite of endurance. But, in the matter of diet, we need always to plan for weak stoumchs. There is a dlf~ ifcrcuce of digestibility in ï¬sh. Some con- . tuiu a large proportion of oil, and are there- { fore of more. value to such us cun digest tlmn. ‘ Others are uunlmmtiwly fuc lrom oil. ! Thai 0 is much dxfl'crouoe also in the muscular libro of ï¬sh, \\ hich in wine is short and itondcr. Salt ï¬sh is more dillicuit of diges- tion than fresh. {The Love and Respect of Chil- dren. If mothers could only realize what a criti- 3 cal period their children are passing throu h ’ from the third to the sixth year, they won (1 i exercise more than ordinary care during Ithat time. Not only physically, but men- ; tally and morally they are undergoing a 4 change for better or worse, according to the ,care and attention they receive from their imothers and fathers. A father is no more exempt' from certain duties toward his off- ' spring than a mother. He should always hear in mind that his assistance in the con- ‘ trol of the children is of more value to his ' tired wife than the presentation to her of a . costly gift. It is at this time that children ' begin to notice papa.‘s and mamma’s hearing ' towards one another ; let this always be one 9 of perfect courtesy and respect. Nothing ‘so quickly destroys reapect for parents as Teonstant bickering in the presence of their Ichildren. The ï¬rst thing a child should he ; taught is respect for his parents and elders ; g all‘ectiou comes naturally with most children, and is the most valuable aid in gaining eon- f trol of their actions; next to that is respect, without it very little can be accomplished for the child‘s welfare. Parents should ; hear this in mind that children lose respect I very soon upon hearing them disagree ; thing ,hittcr. cutting words to each other. 'l‘his : is inflicting the first actual pain these luhy ghearts have been called upon to lwur. In the presence of this the ehild experiences . conflicting emotions, which ends in )ity for t . ‘ one parent and eontcmpt for the ot. lei. _ i) Fish is chcn . lt furnishes to most people an agreeable 0 many with meat. Snltcd and dried, it is in season at any time of the your. and can b: exported to regions where fresh ï¬sh is unknown, or rare. It is held by'somo authorities that ï¬sh contain elements of s cclnl value as food for thg brain, nerves and _ nee. The manner uf couking ï¬sh nmkos a dif~ forcncc in digcsubility. Fish tried in but- ter is cmier of digt-stiuu than ï¬sh fried in onlinar fat; huihd it is still easier, and steamet it is easier still. It is a common belief that ï¬sh is a very good dish for the sick, when convulcscing. But a writer in the Laurel has found eases frequently occurring in his practice in which n. dish of it had been followed by dangerous, and own fatal, relapses, and he had become accustomed to restrain i's use. He ufter~ words, however, concluded that the sole dillieulty was in the cooking. parent, pause, consider before you lose this Inlll on the little being who has heretofore considered you perfect. Let there hemmn- ilnity of pur mse in not, word and deed he- fore those litt e creatures. who are so suace - tihle to every new im ression if you Woulll preserve their love em respect. llllAl/l‘ll.