Tan Annie on Puntâ€"Bonn plente are e ttoheinieeted by thee hie, e green fly. 1: ioh mnet he removed order thet the piente eheli oontinne to thrive. Toheeeo emote ie the beet remedy. which mey be ep- piied by surrounding the pient by e beg. or by piecing it under en inverted box, end hen burning e little ooene tobeeoo within quuu 0! mixed mod md bun twice 3 any, ï¬lth was out My or other ladder, Ind give three quml of dty man! u momâ€"From Amm‘can Agriculturiu for March 1. _- -vâ€"v-u-uno e " 8‘0. I would never teke him out eleighing, becenee Inch e ehower oi rperke were knocked iron: hie ehoee thet the more end ice were melted -â€"-tnrned to mudâ€"before the Ilelgh runnere reeehed it." Bruurna Huâ€"annro Munâ€""R. 8," Clevelend. Ohio. Alter coneldenble experl. menting. the writer concludee thnt eteeming any but coerce ladder [or cettie doee not my tor the trouble. Men, ierrnere of our ecqneintenoe come to the some dcclnion, end gore np etenming. In ieeding meet. we ï¬nd thet it ie beneï¬clel end economical to grind the groin u finely ae precticobie. and to feed the men! with moi-toned cut hey. It ie‘ digeeted more thoroughly, end none in then‘; found to pue ofl‘ with the dung. But we hue lonnd thet a dry feed of three querte of men] at noon increuee the milk. Our proc- tice with mllch cowe in winter. in to feed three WI Have you coen him? Ho ctandl in the room with his back to the stove. and tell- how he could run a now-paper; how he could be no independent on o hog on ice, und coll expo-c corruption in high plum; how he would writ. good, common sense. and none of you: frivolous. try-to-bsi-iunny stuff. Then he criticises other pcoplc'c methods of con- ductiug now-papers. Ind just wichcl come one would give him a chance to chow his journalistic cbility. The way to can one oi thou chopl in to got him to 2.3m to write I lenciblc nrticic over] do, to: I wash. Before the wash in out he in cure to be pumped dry, dad will gap worn for an id“ than a chicken 0ch did with the pip. .V _-,__ â€"â€"- luv-nus Hulie A 110': eig'htr y eight inches square and eleven inches deep, contains a peck. A box ‘ gwenty-elght inches by ï¬fteen end one-ï¬n Inches square and sigh: inches deep. will ‘ contsin e bushel. There have been settled In 1878 20.000,- 000 cores of new lend by not lees then 100,000 temilles. These persons ere seid to be mostly Americans. They etc smell lei-mere from the Eutern or older Weston) Bates. or mechenice, tredespeople end their clerks who heve found iheir business deck or Tunero'gt’sble in_ th_e Inge cities. I The homes in Norway do not drink their paillnl of wear at one drought. but, when n bucket of voter is placed beside their, .110!!- once 0! hey. they tote nelp of one And 3 mouthful of the other. sometime. merely moietening their months. A broken-winded hone is seldom eeen ln Nanny. v 'â€"D" VI'OUUD D. J. Briggs, of Turner. Meine. preetieee the eheu'ing of hi: sheep to only an April. I! there are my vermin on the sheep he gate rid eithem by only eheering. He hen taken 03 360 pounds 0! wool in April. keeping it till Auunet, when its weight hed inoreeeed. Alter sheeting he tekee good one of the eheep for eight or ten days. and bio flock enflere no injnxy item the ooid. Beechwood is one of the best materials for making butter boxes for grocer’s use. They are made by the million, and sold at lrom twenty to seventy cents per hundred ac- cording to size. The temperature of a collar may be end- denly raised by burning a sancerlul of alcohol. A kettle 0! live wood coals will soon warm it up to the desired point. but considerable carbonic acid gas will be generated. ' A poor farmer and a poor man in one is indicated by the dilapidated and iorlorn ‘ condition of the farm buildings. A thrifty farmer. on the other hand. will keep all his buildings in good repair and looking neat. A in“. ..:..La I... A: a . n-" â€"v. wu-vuv Inn-luau Skin cleanliness ha a great efleot on the nulmilation o‘tood. It has been proved that pigs that are washed put on a ï¬fth more flesh thnn pigg that are unwashed. A Connection“ farmer's experimenting h'u tnught him that English ‘urnipl are worth twentyï¬vo can“ u bushol to feed miloh cows, and should be fed in“ before muting. “Lin A‘gn-l3_‘_- c ‘ “' if?) "1"" Ii" 3753'5 ' 15' ‘33.?" u e e core. on; r or w gory Agd Itch in remembrenoe they be! ' The big hurt oi the notion in uddened, And. readinc the death roll. it throbe Till the brain. horror- Iutted. ie meddened And we woke the w do world with out who. Wee " Burke's Drift " a crime or e blunder? 0t wee it e. hellieh empme? We reed the atim tale with doll wonder While the teen courted from met-reddened eyes We thought with e pong or the slaughterâ€"- 01 the wi town who yoet're'on were wivesâ€" ~01 eeoh tetherieee eon end ouch deuahter Bemoaninc most precious of live“ But. though tender thought: filled on with so:- row, We thrust our emotion ewey And 10 fully dleemtot the manorâ€" Let t re be tne triumph today! Toanon ow i God, hasten to-morrowi Thet. with sabre. and rifle. end non. . We mev wi e out this ehepter oi sorrow And Lieu; tor eeoh Zulu-born eon. Strike. Chelmetoxdl The even of a nation Are on you ;-anngo our brave deed i And, Glyul tight with deeth-deeperotion, And. soldiers! forge ewittly uheadi Vg IWe!“ I Np quintet weeAsiv. n: GM; 56236 '11: 25553135}; ï¬rm To the devils by whom we were driven Through the valley 01 do“?! It Botko’a mm: mg Jon. 0: Zulu. who numbered â€.000. The on “omens took plum ton mun beyond Roth’- 1) I, on tho Toms River. A Valium. convoy of “pauc- sud tho colon of the M91: Regiment In tho hhndl at tho canny. 1'1"! hundrod won out! way numb oï¬icorl were killed.â€â€" Jmmr’o Telegram. lyraao the eyes a wqrokod n13 ugl Igor, ‘ h. nun-I -I-.;- L-..- _-__. A - On- Tovu. Jun. fluâ€"â€On cm and instant a. 811th so umu. continua! o! n on at the nu, II on. bakery. VII dotonud vim «mu. loss by an ovorwhohm “113010. of Zulu whq numpugd â€mg. The .nn‘unrâ€"nn. .n-L -|_-A -., v..- v, .v-u wv m IWI’ Tho oruol wire- 11:" brought 0' or they-ea. III‘A Hm -I A_- -- Tull Faun, Iorln'o Bum. â€"Whmhau Review; Tan Woon.er.I.-"Novor mom 3 mm. my door. until you hove had I pack It his wood-pile." sold I shrewd old count: house- wtloto her daughter. With her. t o wldo old lamhonu wood-shod. piled {an o! oloor, bright. wall-unsound Itovo wood. won on In. dlostlon of tho thrtlt ond ton-hundcdnou which tho to much prized. We wonder â€"' â€" '-'â€"- v. 'uv aevuuu or floor, then out the heed OR in: behind the eeu; when thoroughly bled out, put in the gembrel etiok end out oil the lege et the knee joint, then open the belly irom just behind the kidney! to the breed-bone; next remove ell the inteetinel. inelndlng the liver, lights end heert. Ii ell this in well end properly done the inside will preeente clean eppeerenee. free from blood or blood-eteine. Now belenoe evenly on the gembrel, end pleoe e etiok oi Initeble length in the opening to hold it in proper ehepe; then heng in e cool, dry piece until the tie-h ie 'ut,’ eey iron: eight to twelve homeâ€"it mnet hengi until the enimel heet ie all out. The etiek which wee plead eoroee the opening ehonld now be removed. nnleu quite wean weether.‘ Kerk by eewing e ‘Bhipping Teg’ to the beg skin. between the hind loge; it will= then be reedy ior ehipment. Normâ€"A cell of only sixty pounde in weight in lieble to be \ teken by the Boerd oi Heelth u unfit for use." Thin ie importent.â€"-â€"Ene. -- From American Agricuuuriu for March 1. “ Hoe nnssesn Ownerâ€"Enquiries us to whet sre Hog-dressed Calves. end how they are yrepsred, show thst msny of our present reedere did not see the very full detsils we gave some yesrs ego. This method oi sending vesl to msrket with the skin nnremoved, oiten sllows the lsrmer to dispose of his olives more sdvsntsgsously. We osn best suswer enquiries by giving the method recom- mended by Messrs. E.O.Wsrd.279 Wsshing- ton street. one oi the oldest of our commis- sion houses. The, sey: “ Olives from 8 to 6 weeks old end weighing about 1001bs.. or say from 80 to 120 lbs., ere the most desirable size ior shipment to this msrket, and should be dressed in the following msnner : When sll is resdy {or the ï¬ning. take the eel! gently" (It must not be worried or ohesed).snd should not be led for s speoe of at least six hours previous. Tie e rope to the hind legs, end hang it up olesr oi the ground 01' “001'. then cut .118 hilt! n†‘n-I Gunmomes Fennne.â€"Don’t you think it would pey to look ebout end etc it you can't bring weter to your etock-yerd. ineteed of driving your stock to the pond or brook. end breaking e drinking-hole in the ice for them twice e dey ell winter long. We heve known iermere to do this, or oerry e etinted eupply oi weter to their etock ell winter. when en hour's thought, e little “ gumption" end e tew ldollere in money, would heve delivered en edequete eupply where they wented it. through pipee. or the turning of e chennel. Even welle end cleterne ere oiten unprovided eimply because the grendiether. who wee too buey cleering OR the tlmberor picking up the stonee on the unconquered ï¬elds, did without them. The sumptionleee iermer hee e pretty herd time of it. end eo here hie men-eervent end hie meld-eervent. hie ox or hie ee'e, end the etrenger thet le within hie geteeâ€"not tomen- tion hie wile. poor eoul lâ€"Ezchange. Gnu-mm Oust Enun' '1‘uus.â€"-“It might be of interest to some at the reader..." says the Gardmen' Monthly, “tor me to describe a method of working over some Flemish Beauty peer trees, upon which the lruit cracked so badly as torender them worthless. Last summer, in the budding season. I bud- ded all over the trees _iuto all the limbs. which I thought would form a perfect head. ‘ The buds all ‘took.' and the present season have grown remarkably. To be sure, this is new discovery. but many truit growers think that there is no way to work over a large tree ‘exoept by the old-lashioued mode of cleft- greiting. and which oiten produces unseemly gushes upon the tree. and which it often takes a number of years for the tree to over- come. HenoeI speak of this method of bud- ding luto the limb. and it may be 0! service to some, who, like me, are troubled with several worthless varieties of the pear, that are rendered so by cracking. Gum AND 83m â€"Lard and kerosene are good to keep lice from calves; sulphur mixed with salt is good to drive ticks irom sheep. Calvee. like all animals. should be kept growing lrom birth to maturity. Here is one place where the proï¬t comes in. There is always n loss of time and feed and more, too, by allowing young animals to “stand etill " for six months or more of the your. Sheep are well clothed and need shelter from snow and rain. and perhaps from the very strongest winds, but cold agrees with them. Feed them well; give them plenty oi water. in small flocks; keep them dry, and they meyrtey out in the cold and thrive. A close. dark pen is a poor plane for sheep. Frlond. Km yoB’Iéoltâ€"r'ye'. 2 Well, then‘ let him out I . ___ _ ~~â€"' uv Vvlflfllo 1‘0 trot now. The sharp air and the glorious sense of lreedom has charged him like an ‘eleeirio current, and his body is quivering with the eoslsoy of motion. Bee him lay down to it; neck airtight†a goose when in flight; noee out. Hark! See his heels go into the air, the roses]. How could he recover himself in time. Whos. boy! whoa, boy! Come up here. you seempl Here is on epple {or you. Like it, don't you 1 1311’: weni to be shut. up in the eold stall. did you 7 None of shot you rogue! Get away from me. Nowgo it again. Hiâ€"l reuouable prioeIâ€"Scientiflc'Farmer. Courtâ€"Now. lrieud. do let tint colt out at the Iteble. Don't keep him penned up euy longer. Open the door end let him out into the yard. Don't atop there. Heviug begunâ€"~heviug muse in I good directionâ€" keep on, end open the yard gate and let him out into the road or lot. What he went: in ‘roomâ€"roomâ€"pienty 01 room. Look! him go down the road there, tail over his back, held liited. and swinging lrom ride to tide. How he opens out. Trotter? Gueu he in. Couldn't heip lrom being: he won bred right. Good honour, what a gait! A‘ perfect slasher, ieu't he? Look out. you‘ rogue you! You'll go down it you ntrike that strip 0! ice. Now he has stopped. Bee him thrust hie muzzle into the air, in- flate his aides and blow. You are 3 regular buck: yer ygu are! See. he comes. No in.-. .. -â€" tho cont. Thu. howonrJa o dbumnblo prooou for tho lody cud-nor to puottoo. And an oh. la zonally wllllna to so to some polnl wo «command to her nttontlon n pol: o! bmh than. Bach may be molly mode 120m 0 null round blocking bmhu. no rudlly toonnblo. unused on a opting. With th I lmplomont.tho groan lloo om bo removed {tom the Ipotl they intent quite rudlly. by Ilmply shutting tho brushe- ngslnnt tho ohoot. The bamboo will on- tnnglo orlmpnlo tho nphidu which no he- twoon tholroloood ultimo. We think web on nppnntnn would ï¬nd I «la nt our lead and plont atom. were they tarnished at I gage ggyjurilnï¬d at a 9?" ‘ in“ ........... ar "CI- [IIU'N in.‘ he was going up 5nd down the village the worn {or drink, “aging. dunolna and shout- ing. and thut M last he was taken Into on:- to y tad 'oonvoyod to Wuhflold. He was “heated on the following (I. . bu! 1m tam: Ipprohondod :3 night lnohr ml. The de- Heavy rune have caused the rivere in El- ‘eexto overflow their bunks, end to flood thouunde of acres oi low lying lends. The thew end rein here mode the road- in many pleou quite rotten, end inetenoee ere reported of horse: einhing up to the kneel. and of wegdgonr boring literelly to be dug out of the nu . The State npertmente were cloud on the 8th Feb. in untieipetion of Her Mejeety’e return to Windeor Outle, on or ubont the 20th. The deeeyed elm tree! in the Long Welk. Wind-or. meny of which ore said to be nearly 200 care old, ere being sreduelly removed on repleoed by young trees. The ewene in the Windlor dietriet. otter being‘ twice houeed during the severe trout, hove now been relented on the river. M the Wakeï¬eld Court House on the 10m Feb.. the Rev. Menhew Hepple. out-Me et Emley, wee brought up on n charge of being grunt end duorderly. _It wee proyed shes The Reverend George Butterfleld, 53, e clergymen of the Church of England. wee charged. at the Bow Street Felice Court, on the 10th Februery. with being drunk and incapable. It wee eteted in evidence thet he bed been reduced to the -loweet depthe a! poverty through hie lnveterete drinking hnblte. He wee ï¬ned 55. . -_-.u u. a.- UIWI lane. In thi rolnlt. 7711i; L3;dlhip pronounced owns: Mr. Dale. Ind condemned him in the costs ot_the proooodlngu. Judgment was given on the 8th Feb. by Lord Penance in regard to the charge- bronght ngulnst the Rev. '1‘. Polhun Dale of ritualistic practices at St. Vodut'a. Foster lane. In the mm“. m. Lara-him .. ....... z Under the new Inland Revenue Act, twenty- three reaidente at Slough wete eummoned on the 12th of Feb. before the Magistratee for keeping doze without lieencee. The bench ï¬ned the defendants Go. for each dog. with eoete. The prooeedinge have caused no little ‘eommotion among ownere oi dose in the ‘dietriet. The Prince and Prineeu oi Wales arrived at Portemouth dockyerd on Saturday afternoon, the 8th Feb.. having aeoompiiehed the jour- ney item Victoria. London, by apeeial train per the Mid-Bullet route of the London. Brighton 6: South Gout Beltway. in the un- precedented], ehort period at one hour and ï¬tty- three minutel. The feltinl of St. Valentino was rigidly observed in Brighton on the 14th Feb.. no In: thnn twenty-two not: of Cupid‘s min- Itvol being touched from London. nnd thin - alx lacks 1mm orou poau. «oh not «pub a 01 holding font biz-hell. ‘ l Mr. Williun Brooke. J. P.. a lace! menu- hcturor ol consider-hie populerity. who we: a chore time since memorielieed by the, Con- servelivee to become thci: candidate (or the representetion of Huddersï¬eld, hoe deï¬nitely declined the honor. The East Norfolk Railway Oompeny meets the full dividend accruing for the put hull you upon the nix percent. pretax-once chores. No dividend, however. ie proposed upon the crdinuy than in the compeny. A landowner, Lord Bondes, has. in con- siderstlon of the depressed state of agricul- ture. returned his Norfolk tensnts 15 per cent. of their rents. A number of students belonging to Eton College Rifle Volunteer Corpsmho are under- going instructions in engineering. are now engsged in constructing esrthworke on some lend in the vicinity of the school. At the end 0! {arty-two deye the want in one epot ley ten feet deep. I was going in. com- pany with my father over the fetal spot. The eheep dog etopped end barked. He held his ear to the enowâ€"thie wee hie habit. for he never barked except where there wee e living eheep entombed. We dug up the snow and found the bleekleoed hognet alive. etter being iorty-two deye etending on 3 here reek; 'we also found at the eeme time ï¬ve or eix more that etood on soil where there wee etrey heather. They ate the heather ee fer as they could reach. end part of the soil, but they had ell been deed meny days. The one thet etood forty-two deye on the bare rock wee elive end in e heelthy condition. She lived meny yeere after end reered 1: number 01 lembe." ' __,°_-.._â€" .1-er “U5. 1 0|“! 1‘ 11181118116 sheep. dog. as the breed of these animals was then different from sheep dogs in the south of Scotland. He had then some black-faced hoggets seven months 01 (abou‘t any). they were all cover- ...I - .........L-_ _- stove lrom hand to mouth. at their lather did. The girls will certainly leave the old place it possible, or at least never marry a larmer without looking at his woodshed. Don’t wait too long. nor iorprrleet conditions of ground and weather, toget out your year's supply of wood. Pile up. to season, about twenty cords more than you “ calculate" you will need and save the chunks in a conveni- ent plane (or the regulator or the ï¬re-place. Think what a help in enduring the bad weather next autumn. in doing the house- work and eomiortabiy enjoying religion, such a wood pile will be. A Touon Baumâ€"The Darling Downs Gazette. of Toowomba,New South Wales, has aletter irom one of its subscribers relating how. many years ago. in the Grampian hills, Scotland. his lather lost a number of sheep ins heavy snow ator . The writer says: “All. or the greater number ol_the black-laced sheep were spread over the mountains, eon. eequently there Were thousands of sheep covered with snow and smothered; in some instances they were covered twenty or twenty ï¬ve feet deep. Those that were covered while standing. in many instances were dug up alter being three weeks hurled. very little the worse; but those that were ‘ lying when covered were smothered todeath. j My father had a beautiful specimen of the 1 Highland sheep dog. I oall it Highland j sheep. dog. as the breed of these animals was then diï¬erent from sheep dogs in the south _ oi _8_eotiand. He Inâ€! at.-- â€"-_A ~ ,A landowner, Lord Sandal. -_ v- wu- IIIHIUKI m“ than and to I». who“ wintor onpply 0! wood I: o “ In " o! groan that)“ doposltod not: tho wood (100:, to hunt on wanted. which in madly about noun than 3 day. We Inppou u 3 mon in how tint way. or ohmlounou or liquor hove brought him to it. then In no an In talking about economy or oomlort. ox ovon oppouonoo. Ho will_ 39 on to tho ole _... 11------ 2-â€" ENGLISH COLUNiN. -_~._ -- ._â€" uvr-v-Ilvfl Ill track. which Ihoroholdon in mm I must expect to putlolpnto In. On the who 0. how- ever. he thought thuoholdon 1n the dlfloront lino- mlght be well “timed with the return: puhllnhod during tho hat but your. Ton per cent. was not to much u “I“: own lino 81: W11“!!! Lumen. prodding on the 17th ult. n a muting ol the Muypm Gull-lo Bunny Company. and moving 1 dividend of ten pot «mayday-2 to {he dppmlion in A--J- _Llâ€"L Alexender Moflst. meneger of e hrench of Messrs. Wette. Whldbourne. end Oo.'s Bonk, surrendered to his. belt at Newton Abbott. Devonshire. on the 11th Februery. charged with embezzling his employers’ money. Unlimited {conï¬dence hed been pieced in the prisoner. whose ceeh belence hsd not been exemined lor severe! yeers previous to lest week. when delslcetions cl £254 were dis- covered. He hes e wile end eight children. end there wes e peinlul scene in court. The prisoner. who wee strongly recommended to mercy. wes sent to prison {or six months. Five hundred sgricnltursl lsborere from Kent. who errived et Plymouth. in the only pert of Februsry end hsd been detelned there over e fortnight. bound {or South Anstreiis. . were to heve ssiled in the ship Steed Beer- ‘lem. hutLloyd'e Committee celled the etten- ticn ol the Boerd oi Trsde to the {set thet in the vessel's stern the scuttlee for light end ventlletidn were only three inches above the weter. end the bresklng of the glue by ice. wreckege, or the wevee might ceuse penis end disester. especially es they were in the qusrters ol the unmerried lemsles. The vessel.therelore,wes detelned by the Boerd ol Trede, end will he docked for eltere~ I trons. The emigrants meenwhile were not per- mitted to leeye the depot. csusiug much dis- estislsctlon. ,_ --_â€"' â€"-- WIN-l plwluuun'g l"- muking .150 um tying-r grew than upon- unoonfly. The :- onuo Ind inoroued four- lold in four your-mud the exports had doubled in the nine time. ,,______.. .â€" uâ€"u 4-ku “I“. LINKI- ing, on the 11th 11“., on the condition. pro- gyeu and resources of the colony. and upoko o! the {utility of the soil, and of m adapt- nbility for cone. 8nd cotton plmgathnl, n- m-u‘dnn -i-- ‘L-A ,, Her Mejelty'e eteghounde met on 11th Feb. et Selthlll.;neer Slough. Thlele the tint time they hove appeared in the open {or neerly three month: owing to the long trout end the outbreak of tablet in the peek. The et- tendence both of peopleln eerrle‘m end of followere of the hounds we: not l0 lerge or usual, the epeclel treln from town only bringing dovm about tort, horeel. Sir Arthur uardon. Governor. of Fiji, de- livered en eddree‘eln the_'_l'own Hell, Beed-‘ h“. A- LL- 11.1. ,7 At the meeting of the Bouthport Town Council on the 11th 11"., it was resolved to cell 6,500 square yarda of land, at 78 6d per yard, on the shore to the Cotton Dietrlota Famine Fund Commlttee, who oontemplete eddlng a new wing to the Convalescent Hoa- pital at a coat of £40,000 out of their aurplua tunde. The Council also reaolved to offer prison 0! thirty. twenty and ten gulneaa for the best deelgna tor the new promenade extension, which will coat £50,000. Mr. Brogden, M.P., addressed I crowded meetingoi his constituents in the Wednes- bnry Town Hall on the 11th Feb. He ssid the commercial gloom and depression hsd been intensiï¬ed by the polities! excitement of the pest few months. He dwelt upon the nnoonstitntionslism of Lord Baseonsfleld. Let it not be seid, he observed. thst the liberties of this country hove been overthrown ‘ At the meeting a! the Roynl Geographical Society,†the 10th ult.. the choir was taken, {or the second time during the canton, by the Earl of Duflerin. K. P., Preeident. At the conclusion of the meeting the Earl of Duf- {erin, who was loudly cheered. acid that cir- cumetencee over which he had no control compelled him to reeign the poet of Precl- dent of the Society. He regretted that his expected enjoyment of home quiet should have been no quickly termincted. A report by Mr. Douglas respecting the progress of the new Eddyetone Lighthouse. at which he has charge, states that slnce the works were commenced leet July. the weather bed permitted only 135 hours to be worked on the rock, although every opportunity hed been tsken edvnntege of. Should the work continue during the present year us during the pest six months, the base of the tower would be above high-water titles by Jennery next. and the meta diï¬icultles would be over. At any rate, they would be able occasiouslly‘ to get beck to the steamer tron: the rock with 1 dry jackets. ‘ A woman named Ann Oorby was, on 11th Feb.. committed for trial at the forthcoming assizes icr cruelty to her illegitimate daughter. aged sixteen years, a girl of weak intellect, by exposing her. to the cold during the recent revere frost, and compelling her to put her feet into cold water. Eryeipelas had followed irom frostbite, and part of the girl’s teet had lallen 03, and rendered amputation necee- Iary. An indication of the present position of the hematite iron trade was tarnished on 'Ghange \ at Barrow on the 10th of February. in the ‘ ‘ann'ouncement that the Oarnlorth Iron a; 1 Steel Company had determined to close their works. embracing six blast lurnacea and large steel-producing plant. Four of these tur- naces have teen etanding idle for sometime, and it is now found expedient, in the face 01 unremnnerative prices. email demand. and large atoclrs. to atop the works altogether. At Millcm. another furnace was blown out, making live out 01 six idle. ‘ [ Mr. John Bright. M.P.. tersely but Indig- nsntly denies en seensetlon msde by e newspsper et Leemlngton that he end Mr. Mundane. who elwsye put themselves forward a the lrlends of the working clearesmre "ailing themselves of the lower wages on the Continent to oerry on thelr businessee which they once conducted in England. and then import their mennlsotnree into this oonntry duty tree. the reenlt being that Englishmen are deprived of employment. MnBrlght states thst. so hr as he is concerned, there it not the slightest founde- tlon tor the stetement. 4 , __ï¬ -_ _.....-uvu wens luv uanOI- sit]. not for the teeeptlon o! uudergudustee. but to uslst the education at usident members of the university who ere osudldstes tor holy orders in the principles of the Belomed Protestant Church. With rsgud to led] studeute It mey be ststed thst Glxton College is being euluged. that Newnhm and also Nonloh House as quite lull. A new hell close to Newuhom Hell. sad about the some size. is to be built. lendent «id be me innoeent. end bed eimpiy been doing hie duty u e onrete oi the puieh. but he Inbmitted to the poweu that be. He wee remended. proteetins et the ewe time thet'he I“ innocent At Cambridge it ie intended to euet e theologioei hell in fliiietioq with the univer~ III-e n... 0.... AL- _. , j The Ohmtian at Work “a “ Simplify ‘ihoee Sande, eehooi preyere i 0 how! one Sunday school euperiniendeni ptey. ' 0 God, ï¬ll at with that divine eeeenoe which pu- meetel Thy divinity. end mete a! divine in on: mime the we me, exempiiig in out iivee e meeeure oi Thine own in nitude i' And ihie in the preeenoe of two hundred and iweniy young ohiidmi" __..- -IF- a. .vveu w III" Are th? (11:31): with cherry pee'te 7 Gindiy A newer. ie't '0 or Feir Oenedi For thy ehoulder Tell me quickly. What ie really re Bueeie hoe ette photogrephy. one on m tion scout; not? aid. no inrke, I leave white mull: tell to me. 11 in thee 1' ined e foremost poeition in It is lergely edopted by any government eetehiiehmente tor the reproduc- tion oi ma treiture, pl end of Stete peper . The pot- however. ie moet remerkebiy cult!» voted. Meny eeueee heve contributed to this perfection. but ertieticel culture at t oi the beet h etteined e high de pointer: before they n0" moet prominent ie the he photographere.meny photographers he'll. gree of proï¬ciency II embreced the newert. lur- mnn or linemen-Life ie in]! “v reeeone tor thenkluineu. ll we look goodneee and mercy have been over as in the put. It iorwerd ‘the way end glory it ‘there the divine epirit worke. It without. greceie omieedtcr 't the endfun within. there both neture end reveletion ehed light on our preeent peth. All the decline cl“ divine Providence ere deeigned (or our and ii rightly the world w reign forever. improved. will prepere he in here thenkiuineu end joy thnll , w--- -- 'w-W. can. can III'I'I. exposed for neural day: to the sir. Tho pun- once of tho white 0! 0“! then determines “I. appear-nae 0! an omernld green. I: lh‘blulh. whloh roles mock. Bong t as: three tnd nix per box, And thou up! I â€on; to tub. Asa. AL... -1â€" A Committee oi'the Osledonien B _ . Oompeny.Inverness. heve iseued e duller to the ehereholders ceiling on them to guer- ~ entee individneily to the other Booteh bell. the cum 0! £150 egeinst eny poseible loath scotch ben‘ks meyincnr by the Oeiedonien Bsnk being kept out o! liquidetion. end the Ueledonien Bent getting two yeers ‘ pey up its liebilitiee to the Scotch belie. The circnler etetes thet the City oi Glam. Benk liquidators do not now ineiet upon Oh liquidetion oi the Oeledonien; but still - require thet the amount of its peidmp cepltel -£150,000â€"â€"be set eside to meet my poeeibler cleim which they mey make on the tour- eheres held by the Oeiodonien Bent. The‘ cleims oi the other Scotch beaks ooneist o! the amounts they here paid in honoring the notes end deposit receipts oi the Oeledonien ‘ since its doors were closed. Ameet ed. Oeledoninn shereholders was to be he in < Invernees on the 14th hit. to consider“. proposeis to be mede to keep the beak out e! -' liqnidetion'. M. Zach. oi Perle, seys thet from the grehe ‘ oi rew coflee there me, he extreeted e beee. ' tiiul green coloring metter, adopted to ell the purposes of each end confection". end m_ * will prove of greet nine. ineemueh es the number oi green colors snlteble {or such men end which ere not poisonous. is very limited. ‘ Thecolorlng metter is ohteined in the iollow- ‘ lng wey : The comic greins are cruehed ell '_ the oil is extracted by meens oi ether; they ere †then dried end egiteted with the white oi no as to form a sort of piteteg end the letterll awn-end In- _._._.I 1 , An important discussion took plsss on tho 12th uit., at the Cheshire Ohsmber of Ag. culture, on the subject introdnoed it!“ fa: Batemsn. oi the present position Ind prospects of fuming. Mr. Bstemln M1 to Ameries es the greet competitor of tho English farmer. To meet it. English 03:: oulturists must aim st it higher stste oi : vetion, end. consequently, lager production. ’ from land. He relied more on “beâ€! Om i [month end perleet oonfldenos between M1 lord end tenant, then on lower rents. Fen-E more should gain 3 better sequslntsnoo With the chemise! properties of the soil they; cultivate. the msnnres they use, and class of food which the crops they grow I.- quire. Mr. Batemnn slso argued sgeinst the.» excessive preservation of guns. end or r rabbits, sud sgsinst the sbolitron oi holdings. es detrimentsl to the interests of: agriculture. Mr. J ustios Mailer. presiding in the 011 usl Court It Bristol on tho l-ith Fol». ‘ summing up in s one when Mr. Cotton} was {or ths prisoner. interposed o I"!!! The loomed judge ordered him to‘sitd4 lmmedistsly or he would ï¬ns him. He in! expressed his sstonishment that thatch! be lound ons bsrristsr on the Western 013 who could be guilty oi bullying s judge 1 jury. With much wsrmth of tooling he! the jury they were not to be tenth“! by vshsmsuos 0! an sdvoosts. ,. __. . --- u no gravsvu|We On the 14th nit. there was It great my log of agricultural laborere at the an“ Oendlemae Fair to: Doreet. They were him at lle. per week and upwards, beeldea p1 quieitee. The intereete o! the Lehman Union were advocated at an open alrmeetin at which George Mitchell. known at “ 01 iron: the Plough.†wee preeent, but the pi ceedinge tended to ehow that nnlonlun {I I from populer in Doreet. The nationalist tion of land and the exteneion of the cow lranohiee were recommended. The em were paraded by a prooeeelon and a band] music. v ,‘v ‘â€"-.¢" The weeven‘ etrike eommeneed et All)! Under-Tyne ln reel eerneet on the 101; l Orowde of operetlvee were welklng Ibont latreele. end one~hnll of the mllle were It ‘ped. Atlas“ 2000 people in Aehton eh were out ngelnet the reduction, pledged reeiet it. Only at one mill hid the“ engaged in the spinning depertment b1 effected. At this pleoe-â€"Buret Milk-4 engines had been stopped. end the whole the operetivel hnd been looked out. 0t] employer: hed not touched to teke t extreme etep. but they intended doln lo the etrike of the weevere wee prolong . fl _v-vâ€"â€"w I" come men curving. end othere etrifll Indeed the Mariyport Relive: might belool nponeeenoueinthedeeert in theeci geared times. the totei decreeee in reven‘ lug only £7,855. The ennnel meeting of the Northern Olin! ‘Deienoe Aeeocietion wee held in leached on the 10th nit.. under the preeidency o! I Hugh Biricy. M. 1'. A reeolntion wee III- exprecelng regret et whet in deecribcd ll .5 reokiere and per-intent dhregerd oi eeenre shown by the iecturere oi the UM Society. end strongly condemning t new of the looel committee 0! the Society .1 mittlng end auctioning the miecondlet ite agente. elpeoieily in resold to the orb": oi the quotetione from the public cum and pubiicetione with the ohvioue puma mieieeding end deceiving the public. eometlmee sue. hue It wee not to be d when they new bake and nominate