W1 Era “7158;: es.Neu toyou. Oftlseo on u my drums, and your brow is I! 11 as Mr, And your cheeks have the some fond low. And your e as an um as bright, and ave all the oving u ht 0! the door, de used days long ago. I may 119133199 you more till I meet you on .. .__, v "the shore of that region unknown but in name. But whno xnunory shall last, in the future as the Note- From Our Brethren on [he Prairie. Beef is 10 to 12 cents a pound. The epizootio has made its appearance Amongst the horses of this settlement. The Zero coal mine is elqsed to; the sea-son. Abont :10 tons were taken out. A new mill has been started by Manning. McDonald, MoLaren 00., at Vermillion Lake, where they have out 250,000 feet of lumber already this season for their con~ tract on section B, of the Canadian Paciï¬c railway. Bev. Dr. Black, of Kildonan, has at last yielded to the advice of his friends in the matter of taking a tour for the beneï¬t of his health. A number of friends from Winnipeg, together with others in Kildonan, in View of his early departure met at the latter place on Monday evening and pre- sented the venerable divine with an address and purse containing 8573. The Battleford Herald says: Battle River bridge is progressing. There is a great deal of sickness around Lac la Biehe. It is a mild type of in- fluenza. 1 ‘ A,,__!--.. :- It is estimated that over 700 tons of coal will have been taken out in this vicinity this winter. uuvuuu» Seed grain will command fancy prices in the spring if all who are talking of it go into farming. The mail station at Duck Lake was burned on the let, together with a quantity of oats stored there. Buffalo. it is said, have crossed the line in la. enumbers, in the neighborhood of the der Bluffs. Col. Herohmer and party made the intent time on record during the winterâ€"- from Battleford to the Portage (600 miles) in 12 dsys, including stoppages. Hay in very scarce at 85 a. single load. Eggs at 50 cents a dozen and butter at 50 cents a. pound are also scarce. Farmers are preparing for spring work in this neighbor ood, there being but little snow this spring, which is disappearing fast. it is conï¬dently expected thst seeding will Min only. Powder is being used in the working of the Mammoth oosl seam at the Big Island. It is proposed to strip the. opal .in such. a Constable Warden pnd Interpreter Ler- onde. of the N. W. M:“ P., have travelled over 2,500 miles since the 12th of December hatâ€"3nd still the ple down east my thot no one can trove in this country dur- ing the winter months. we that the steamer will be able to take on er load direct from the seam. , The Edmonton Bulletin of a. recent date uys the Edmonton mill is now running ï¬fteen hours a day. One of the working oxen belonging to the Ponndmeker’e band was slaughtered but week by the Hall-Blackfoot Chief, who threatened to kill others as he felt inclined to: free beef. The matter has been referred to the commissioner for inetruotione. En- couraged by what they deem leu- to punish, other Indians have killed some of their The forty cents per day policemen at Cygreee are conning 0. steel: deal of trouble on enxiet to their oï¬icere by their die- content. be old policemen haveto be continue" on watch. otherwise deeertlona would be requent from the force. A bad lute of effeire certainly, especially at the present juncture. Whilst pspers in almost every portion of the Dominion have been recording severe snowstorms, high winds and intense cold, the'NorthwestTen-itonee hove been lsvored with on exceptiondly mild, clear and still winter. Not a blizzard worthy of record. end berely enough snow in msnv sections for comfortable sleighing. The streets and roads in and shout Battleford are nearly bmâ€"to-dsy they are very soft sud slopy. â€"Mr.Suukey has a new hymn. “ I’ll sin something shut in not in the hymn- boo .†_nid Mnuï¬mydy, a! he ptyeq €1.13; .me 'u' gleimlve air'o'n the «2.6 at a recent meehng in Chicago. " It ieoalled ' My Ain Conntry.‘ " It ran as follows: I em for In from my home 312' I'm weary often- while- For the longed for home bringing, and my Father‘s welcome amuse, And I‘ll ne‘er be m' content until my cot: do see The gowden gems of heaven and my eln countrle. The earth ls flocked wl' flowers. Money tinted. bri no end guy. T139 blrdleg [able [ï¬nely I meEC-B' you um all the name. \V m us until“ lie :6 mo. When 1 bet: the angel"! aging In my Mn counuio The Duke d'Anmdo in . an thin, and ootemn mused tum, the month has, the; “8:7 Inc. of wï¬ioh join 51:51:: reddish-adored 3 high and mo done bohylnu proiudon. Nowhundlmd. I Love [on Still III the m OUR FAB NORTHWEST. For my Father made them sac. But those nights And then gonads G. w. Jonxsou. the 00-h. m "we“ Anus-Icy and lumenâ€"allowable lxluelco or the Banter. A telegram from St. Petersburiuye : It would be difï¬cult to anger.“ t e grevity of the situetion in Rue-in et the present moment. Never before we: the need of n steady hand at the helm so dee ly end universally felt. It required noth I! less than the tragedy of the 13th 0! Mm to open men's eye: to the (not thug the reform open men's e es to the not was we rerunu which the evolutionists endeavored to wig from the Government by deeds of bl shed cannot be long delayed. In the matter of intel nce the women of Russia are much an or to the men. If they ventured to formulate their desires they could repeat the demand contained in the last proclamation of the famous Executive Committee. It is surprising to see how much there is in common between Russian intelligence and the revolutionary part . The distinction between them lies not ‘ the end but in the means. The very‘ absence of that freedom which some demand and all desire leaves the Russian reformer no choice but silence or sedition. No man who has travelled through Russia lately has failed to mark the diflerence between the serf of the past and the peasant now. Servile politeness has given place to inde- pendenoe, rude and sometimes brutal. The youth has a dangerous knowledge of his rights and wrongs. which makes him a Willing listener to the insidious councils of the revolutionary pro agandists. From the White Sea to the B aok Sea. from the Danube to the Amoo, the peasants are awakening from the death-like slumber of centuries. The spring time of national life is dawning, but the future depends mainly on the decisions that must shortly betaken. Meantime the Emperor lives in retirement at Gatachina. and he sees no one except Prince Varouttoï¬ Doahgkoï¬. Ifeople are aï¬eking in ofï¬cial circles of this novel a. ioetion, and shake their heads when they speak of the future. It may be. how- ever, that are long we shall have a. mani. feato of some sort, and an indication of the policy to he pursued. At present there is none, and Ruesie is without e_Goyerument; "'K'vi'Jn'ni'Hééï¬iicFEalyI the banks and newspaper ofï¬ces in that city have been threatened with destruction by the Revo- lutionists. Sign. of Spring. The ï¬rst sign of spring is the feeling that your hat is shsbb . The second is tint your overcoat is get- ting heavy. If your overcoat is a. particularly nice one, this sign will not be up arent. he suburban begins to talk eloquently of garden seeds and fertilizers. - I u “I ,_n3‘ ï¬e gSGBâ€"home loadeév‘iaaï¬h with seeds- men’s catalogues and hoes and rakes and aggjgultmp! pfogqation. H, A“ 4:..-LAA v‘vuâ€"Iu-vâ€" ...___._.._-~__, "b.1113 neig hbore’ hene are emancipated from their ghibernation. and he thirsta for theihloodpfA his heighbore. - e . 1,, "â€"Iâ€"f§<;\;Ti§e_'§x_1ï¬iï¬eeountry yoii begin to talk of improvements. of a. cupola here, an L there and piazza or bay window some- where else. ' If in the city, you commence your annual talk of shaking off your feet the dust of the citg and moying into thepounfgy. I .,#__‘- v~w w..- .â€".-.-_ -_-- Your aunt, or some other elderly female member of your household. has her say again of blood a-ehen 'ng and the conse- 3uent necessity for ï¬lling the stomach with eoootions of herbs and roots. The dark shadow of the coming house- olesning broods like a bird of evxl omen over your once happy home. The wife of your bosom talks of new ts end new furniture. ‘ he plumber no more robe you of our substance. the carpenter and the enter and the plasterer and the peper- anger tahing what _is left. The ash heap in his yard rises grimly, like a remembrance of evil doings: As you ride homeward in the cars you hear stgneq o_f early peas. _ The English spurrov} has not his alarm clock an hour ctr-liar, and now arouses you tro_n_1 your slurrgjgers at 4 run; ‘3 , s L‘,4 The; pussy v7illow {darts 7 itself, and the willow pollards show forth a jaundiced The mud sticketh to your shoes, and the passing vehicle supplies your raiment with the same article. Anon the duet arises and ï¬lls your eye and your mouth. , The wind blows where it lieteth. Your landlord has discovered that things. we going to boom, and booms up your rent stasishmv- . tint. The H htning-rod men and the peripa- tactic van or of step-ladders knock at your oor. The shadow of the strawberry Shortcake looms up no bigger than a man’s hand. Oysters grow into desuetude. Your liver begins to ueert itself. Your house-hunter ie abroad. Types have an ex ressiveness of their own and can be m e to speak lsiniy enough without putting them into onmsi words it they are only set up in the right shape. The following will make this plain to every reader, nothing but the ordinary symbols in common use being emplo ed to tell the story of the three worthies. t will be seen thst it is wholl unnecessary to say that the old it] in t e middle is in e condition of perp exity, doubt and general anxiety. which is perfectly natural. consido ering how herd it must be to make herself acceptable stone and the some time to the very glum men on the ri htsnd the exceed. in y jolly fellow on her eft: The Germen gossips have selected the Princes hie A ate, of Ardeok. {or the future ride 0 Prince Hen . the Emperor‘s grandson and future miral. The Princess is the granddaughter ofa shoemaker‘e wife. The incoming trnnectlnntic etecmern are beginningto report ice ï¬elds in considerable number. The Bremen ememer Hamburg on the 14th inst. saw on iceberg ei ht‘v feet lijgh_cnd__cleo‘ large ï¬elds of dr t. fee of! 3119:: pmnmngz: 1i“ :‘MDIiM- When Skull Wm Three Meet Again 9 RUSSIA’S DANGER. N“! You. April26.-â€"8mith's box luctory et Green Point was destroyed by ï¬le this elternocn. It had I Inge number of employees. Several lives ere reported test. Thus for one body hee been removed from the ruins. thet of Geo Bloomï¬eld. reel- dence unknown. It is lieved thst seversl others perished. Owing to the inflemmsble nntnre o! the meteriel the fiemes spread with greet repidity. There were 5 greet many workmen employed in the factory. and meny becoming penlc stricken ‘um i from the windows or crowded are at or in their eegerness to get out. The result was thet severel were injured and two euc- ‘cessivo slums were followed by cells for ‘embulences. Adjoinin the factory was s \sewdust storehouse. e ut which slsrge ‘ crowd bed gathered. es the wells protected them from the heat while watching the ï¬re. No one thought they were in e. dangerous position. but there wee e sudden explosion. which threw the wells over on the crowd, and the domes swept over them for a. dozen feet. There was 3 regular shower of blazing sawdust for some distance, which set ï¬re to the clothin 0! women and children. who fled ehrie us from the place. The ï¬remen, police end others rushed to old the nniortnnste onee who had been injured or buried beneath the fallen walls. most of whom were boys. Their nemes are as follows: W. Freeman. fatally burned; Frank McMullen, fatally burned; Geo. McDowell. badly burned; John O’Connell, bedly_bu_rned. Axnumber _2LL .. Lou or me by It" at (Ino- l'olm. N.‘ auuu U wuuuu, Wu] nun-luv" .- ...... 0! men were knocked down and either injured or burned, but with the aid of friends made their we home. Bloomï¬eld was the only one kille outright. The 101- lowing were injured: George Clepr. Pet. Kenner, F. MoMulkel. G. In area I, Geo. McGarve , Wm. Sweeney. Jo n Rennert. all burn b y; John O’Connor, removed to the ho ital; A. Treekey, fatally burned; Jo n Vanderwater and John Clark. burned severely ; Wm. Crawford, ï¬remen. severely injured; Jae. Hewitt. 3. broken leg; 3. workman missing. Most of the 'injured live in Green Point. Lose, 875,000. Fineen Hundred People Homeless. A deepatch from Panama says that Buenaventurs. one of the most important commercial towns of the Paciï¬c coast in this republic, was almost entirely destroyed by ï¬re on the 12th inst. The houses were mostly built of wood. with thatched roots. The ï¬re commenced in the kitchen of a private house. which burned so rapidly that the owner perished. A strong wind was blowing, and the entire section of the town nearest the shore was soon a sea of flame. Merchants were unable to save their books, papers or anything of value. Three persons lost their lives. The losses amount to 81,000,000,‘ and there are no insurances. Fifwen hundred ple are homeless and very destitute. '1‘ a custom house and postofliee were destroyed. Many of these merchants have correspon- dents in New York who may sufl'er losses. The step-mother's lot is hard. From the ï¬rst she is a tel-ï¬t for ill-nature. Her msrrisge is gene y en unsentirnentel cue. She needs a home,cnd her husbsnd requires a. mother for his children. It is a business transaction on both sides.‘ But it little sciatiment exist, the 0:11 ofhguty is our; an men us not 'erw subsequent meets with «1:3; starts with a. desire to (1% her duty. But her husband’s children repel her by their unkindness and unjust suspicion. Every fault that she commits is seized on to prove that she is true to the character of her close; end the children triumph in the vindiostion of a gensrsl truth. She cannot always reckon on the support of her husband, for he loves his children and hates femily _ ; disputes. children and hates family . disputes. He is apt to side with the children as against a legal wrongdoer. The wife, although she math-we married prosaieally, does not like to set at naught in her own house, and she determines to get the better of her husband. Every source of domestic anarchy thus becomes increased. until the entire house is plunged into all the miseries of a sort of civil war. And the poor step-mother hears the entire blame. Girls, old and young, should think carefully before consenting to occupy such a trying position. Better face the terrors of old~maidenhood than undertake duties which it is impossible to fulï¬l to the satis- faction of all concerned. ' FATAL CONFLAGBA'I‘ION. Tunas is nothing more important than the ventilation and flushing of the city sewers â€"nt stated intervals 11 aoontinned flgph and ventilation are imprsctioeble. The result in beneï¬cial influence over the nblic heelth cannot be over-estimated. T e the case of Leeds, England. for exam la. The death rate for the four weeks on ‘ng Nov. 27th. 1880. after the sewers were ell ventil- ated, was 10.0 per 1,000. while for the corresponding four weeks in 1879. before the sewers were all ventilated. the death rate was 25.6 per 1.000. In this connection it is interesting to note thst New Orleans has ï¬nally ado ted the Waring system? of sewerage. a ter nearly a year of a consideration. Memphis has already; adopted and established it. This s tem‘ consists of small mains. kept full 0 run- ning water.sothat there is no room for sewer gas to collect and back up into the houses. The laterals are also smaller than common in cities, and are flushed con- etantly. At present all the sewerage of the Crescent city is on the surface. In all parts of the city. and in eve wide street. these surface sewers empty nto mid-road canals. in which the water stands until the sun dries it up. It is stagnant. covered with green scum, and is pestilential. In the gutters the water is kept running all day. It is let in from the river. which is above the city. and pumped over into Lake Ponchartrain. This keeps the main streets clean. but the back streets and the canals are exceedingly unhealthy. The Earl of Ila-ebony, Lord Rector of the ï¬nivemltyd of Edinburgh, bu signlï¬od his tentizm duffel-lug n prim of 90 guinens Annually during hi2:p tenure of omcc for the best my on an historicll nubject.’1‘ho following in onnouncod to be the tub] 00‘ for tho precont you: "The Ecclesiastical 8y atom of Scotland Imme diuoly bofote the Rolormntion. " On the third onnlvemry of his oorono- tionP Loo XIII. dispensed non-l 08, 000 in chug y $1,000,000 FIRE. The Step-Mother MIDNIGHT BATTLE WITH A BURGLAR A Toniflc Struggle. Ending tn the Intrudor's Death. Ile ls Ibo! 'l‘wles'. nu Dena-d- Illa-sell bv IIIrll-u (inns ol needs and In. Weights as Ills Captor. A despstoh lrom Buiielo dated Tnesdsy. ssys Dennis Murphy was found in the grocer store of George Irish| on the corner of Oh 0 end Illinois streets. this mcrning st 8 o'clock. by the pro rietor. and during the light which ensued nrphy wss shot twice. from the efleots 0! which he hes sinoe died. At the time indicated. John Webb end Henry Dunn. tWo lyonng men employed by Irish, and ‘ who slept in the house over the store. 4 ihesrd s noise below. which msde them sns- } peat thst burglsrs were st work. They st once awakened Irish, snd. before he got his yolothes on. Jennie Gormly. s servsnt girl. also went to Irish's room and told him that there was some one in the store. Mr. Irish srmed himself with a. club and at his wiie’s suggestion slso took his revolver with him, sn , soeompsnied by the two young men nsmed. demanded by an outside staircase to the street. The store stsnds one corner end as the three men appeared from the oovered stsirwsy they hesrd footsteps hastily msde. as it the burglar-'9 psls had scented their denser end were moving oi! under cover of the dsrk. Irish pieced one man ewh st the two side doors of the store and himself ste pod to the front door, which he osntions y opened, and NOISILEBBLY STEPPBD INTO Till STORE. The place has two counters on the right hand side, as the front door is entered. With a passageway between them. The intruder was behind the further ecunter. and in the dim li ht which came from a lamp in the rear 0 the store, which was turned down. stood motionless. Irish saw him and said : “ I've at you; throw up your hands. or I will b ow your head off." The burglar said nothing. but approached Irish, who fell back a few steps. Irish said : “ If you move another step you are a dead man." At that moment the burglar hurled apound can" of peaches at Irish. which failed its [mark but went crashing through the front ‘ window. The fusilade of canned fruit was :kept up and the burglar kept working to- wards the frontof the store, when Irish took ‘careful aim and ï¬red. With a yell, which sounded like a man’s name, the marauder hurled aheavy scale weight at Irish, and followed it up with a heavy set of counter scales which stood in front of him, all of which missed their mark and went tear- ing through the window. The fellow then closed with the proprietor. A terriï¬c fight ensued. during which Irish broke his club in three pieces on the burglar’s head. while the latter seemed anxious to effect an escape by the front door. When the struggle was at its height Irish sprang away from hisautagonist again and ï¬red, and the thief fell headlong to the floor, where he writhed in agony, and during which he yelled the same name he had called when he was ï¬rst hit. The police were notiï¬ed, and Dr. Waldruï¬ sent for. An examination of the man’s wounds showed a bullet hole inthe forehead over the right eye, and another in the right breast. over the ni ple. Blood flowed cc iously. Thei woun in the head was not gangerous, as the bullet had glanced from the skull. The other bullet had penetrated the right lung. At this juncture a man named Patrick Donaghue rushed to the police station and asked for the services of a priest. He was locked up on general principles. Priests were ï¬nally got, but the dying man refused to tell who were his associates. Subsc- qusntly he was removed to the hospital. where at 7 o’clock to-night he expired in the most horrible agony. He was conscious to the last, but refused to make any state- ment implicating any one. The dead man was an engineer in Kalbfleische’s chemical works, and is not a professional burglar: He spent last night in the slums of Canal street, and at the time of his attempt was probably considerably under the influence of bad whiskey. His step-brother is the captain of a lake vessel. He claims Murphy was drunk. and not in the store for burglaricus purposes. The fact that Murphy was in his stocking feet and bareheaded proves. however, that he was in the store for no good. He had forced one of the back doors, and it is supposed that his accomplices were on guard outside. Murphy was 26 ears old and lived in the house on Abbot road in which _John Kahrins was murdered by Martin Flanigan last October. The police have arrested two men as accomplices, one of them being Chas. Ro‘ehe, who has served ï¬ve years in Auburn. a The city has suffered for several weeks from a gang of burglars, and it is hosed that the vengeance oereo. Irish will ten to frighten them to other ï¬elds. FBOM nomn. 3nd Condition of Poor Ger-an laun- B‘t; :ADO, April 28.-â€"Leet night about sixty poor, weer German immi nnte.with ebOut twenty o ildren. arrive in Buffalo over the Erie. Some of them wanted to go to Bey City. Mich. end the root to opoint beyond Chicago. They were hungry and nnilees. the said. end could not proceed rther. Di eion Su rintendent Taylor directed that they be urniehed with coffee and food at the expense of the cpmpeny. Accordingly they were â€signed to a plum or hivouee on the pletlorm just outeide the waitlug~room. where they orrnn ed their luggage as beet they could as s and covering. end otter hnving ntiefled their hunger they knelt down. every one of them. And offered up their evenin pm er before lying down. _At noon to fly t ey w‘erg tile}: ;;i',â€"nn"aev_¢;r:l I)? E. {vaiï¬en had huddled together and were indulging In 0111;- nnnrinmn armf pourings of grief. The Emperor William hue mode the Emperor of Russia honornry colonel of the Kaiser Alexander Regiment, which was created in honor of his late father. Prince Suworoff has received the highest Prussian order-4h“ of the Block Eagle with the diemond our. The Uikedo of Jana, on hear“ of the murder of the lete . lent by utopia to the Emperor Alexander III; on expree: ion 0! oonaolonoo, and ordered a men! moaning to be observed wrought!“ up“. Whoa A til m wide {or Msy. Like unou I all the ruin-drop: gumm- Fruh violou open everK day: To :0qu new bird one hour we listen. Thyohllclnnylm the qtroyulou sing. A The children with iho uremia! sing. When A til prl M lut har weeping: Ana ovaty upp‘y’ “rowing thing Laugh- iikon nbo just roused irom sleeping. Yoi Anni wuerl. you ha you, For mud lay her i iuiy flowers: And May. In 3014 of Innbouna clear. "iiï¬'ï¬kii 16m; iliiiéis? mowers: All flowers 0! spring are not hie 's own; The excess unnot omn kill or: The wow-drop. ere she comes, has flown; The eeriieet violets elweys miss her. Nor does Hey oisim the whole oi e ring ; blue leaves to April blossoms tom or, The! closely in the warm turf ollng. 0r swing irom tree-boughs. high and slender.~ And Hey-flowers bloom before May comes To cheer. 0. 1mm. April's suluess' The pewlhbud glows, the wild bee bums, And wild-flowurs wave in graceful gleduees. They are two shim-s. side by side Blmring the changes of the weather, Playing at pretty seek~end-hltle-â€" 80 in! sport, so close together! A MI and MI one moment. meetâ€" iut inewel sighs their greetings smother; And brutal um. and birds re )eei. How May and April love oec other. A New Device for Producing Light and Ilene irons Atmospheric Air. A despatoh lrom Cleveland. 0., says letters patent have been taken out by a patent solicitor in this city for a new device for producing cheap li ht and fuel. The claim made for it is the ld one of utilizing the oxvgeu in the atmosphere as a heating and lighting medium. by a method so simple and ice: nsive that nothing short of experiment demonstrao tion has induced men toentertain its possi- bility. The device consists of an ordinary air-tight cylinder. into which is introduced a paste compound of certain proportions of gasoline and powdered charcoal. on top of which is acked tightly some fibrous material. li ecotton. Through a pipe in one ‘ end of this cylinder is forced atmospheric air, subjected to a greater or less degree of compression according as heat or light is desired. and the resulting product is led from the other end into a receiver, and thence into a main just as coal gas now is. and is burned in a similar manner. The degree of heat from this gas varies with the compressionâ€"the . greater the compression the more intense the heat, and underasuï¬icient and easily attained compression a heat is produced so intense as to astonish all who have witnessed it. and to promise wonderful results for the invention. The inventor is Mr. Edward B. Reynolds, a young En lishman recently arrived in this country. e has explained his device and demonstrated its utility to practical moneyed men here, and has enlisted their hearty co-operation in push-v ing it. One of these is Mr. W. H. Doan. a wealthy oil reï¬ner. and this gentle- man will be prominent in the stock. company now being formed. He offered -,.n- A-.. A‘ 9..) Mr. Reynolds $200,000 for a one-third interest in the invention. but it was declined. Private tests were made in New York city. where a chemical analysis showed that 80 per cent. of the product was oxyhydrogen gas. The inventor claims, howaver, that he can and does produce 90- r cent. A large tinsmith establishment ere has fully tested the gases s hasten. and is now using it altogether. The foreman. in experimenting with the gas,. discovered that he could melt a quarter- inch bar of iron in thirty seconds. A cylinder charged with 9. int of gasoline supplied four brilliant lig ts nightly for four weeks. One probable method of’ utilizing thegas as an illuminator is by producing the calcium light. The inven- tion is exciting much attention among those interested in electric light and gas- stocks, and in fact from everybody. They' areanxiously inquiring whether the coming light has come. " I can’t pick up a paper." said Brother Gardner at the o ning of the last meeting of the Lime Ki n Club, “widont bein’ startled by do announcement dat we eat too much. sleep too little, sit up too late, go to bed too airly, dress too warm or too coldâ€"walk too much or too little. He eroakere am constantly at work to put do root of no on de ragged aige of anxiety. One day we hear that eonsumpehun has become our naebunal complaint. Nex' day it am predicted dat de fewel supply of de world am runnin’ short. Dar’a euthin’ beln' hunted up an‘ shot off atna ebery day in de y'ar. an' it has got to dat page dat de man who lie: down at night dreads dat he may neber see de moon again. " I has bin ï¬nkin' all done tinge abet.“ I has bin .wor- tied an' harassed an' hall scarf. to death» ober de drift. porriod. de predicted climatic changes. de astronomical changes an’ de sudden diskiveries dat human life am shortenin‘ u like an ole clothes line on a. niny day. hes got. to dust pitch deb I‘m goin’ to not down in my cabin wid a pan of apples on_de fight han’aand exam of ,I I_ Ann-m an' hiloeophy nn’ prediokahune an’ pro- phec on. let ’01]: do it. but my advice to de oull’d race am toworry ober nufï¬n‘ higher‘n de roof of 3 house or deeper down don de bottom of a cellar. When your do ’9 work um dun, not down in do big cheer, ight yer pipe, on’ let de ohil’on en’ do dog loose for e good time." of apples on do right han’ and a an of popcorn on do left, an' let do worl tum ottom up 511' be hmgedto her. It white olkn â€at 1.9 go 0}: wogy‘in: ober science MIrden [In Two Children and Cuts [in On Throat. Ginsu lamp, Neb., April 29.â€"-Christion Roch, railroad em loyee, on returning from work at St. Paul t is morning went home Ind found his door locked. He looked in the window and new one 01 his children in bed and his wife] in with blood around he: on the floor. 0 then summoned the sheriff end together they went in and found his two children and his wife with their throats cut and a. razor on the table. The children were aged 6 months and 4 yam old respectively. It is thought that the mother murdered the children and then committed nuicido. Blind pgrionl no admitted free to musi- oul podorthmm at the Boston Th «m. g The um» Months. (buoy Imam. In It. Nichol" tox flu.) ’l‘llllI COMING LIGHT. A Tunable Philosopher. A MOTIIBR'B DEED.