0ebbegee.â€"In plenting lete eebbegee on poteto ground there to no need to plough the whole eree bolore plenting. Plough open funowo. three feet from centre to centre, end meek out by oroel funowo two feet opert. Deep e forhful of menure et eeeh eroeeing, olooe the furrowe over the menure. and eet the plentl In the lines of the excel furrows. After the plentlng ll ï¬niohed the ground me, be worked out with e light plough or eenltlvetor. Fodder Otopo.â€"-Hungerlen Gnu. common Millet." the Golden Millet, mey be town thin month for gteen fodder '0: hey. A buthol of need per note any be town. though tether thick needing. the fodder will be ell the ï¬ner end better for it. Millet thet wee eown In Me! ehould be out before the oeed le ripe or the fodder geto herd, union the eeed ll wented. Millet eeed mekee en exeellont eddltlon to ground feed when mixed with corn V Buikwhul any be made proflnblo upon a plan at rough or newly cloned ground. No om: crop in no mum in moljowiqg 293:3]: g‘-l’_ I-_I â€L- --_l I_ _ A olodd land. The and in northern locum?" Iho b0 sown baton July 12; othotwm only an mm nay ouch tho crop. Gnu ad clout mu Minimum be sown unecon- my wjth buokwhut this month. ' Pontoonâ€"Am: «xi ï¬tiroél no (1;! {or light, they up) If. 19_ owgd_by ‘ _ Fodder-Corn may yet be eown. A rye or wheet etubhle m be ploughed end pleated ln drllle with three buehele of corn per eere. The lerge Western or Southern corn, or Ever- green Sweet Uorn, me: he need. home extre good ammonleted euperphoephete. with pot- eeh added. or epeelel oorn ladder fertilizer. ehonld be eown broedoeet end hen-owed ln betore pleating. Dropping the Iertlllzer In the drill doee not enewer well for eorn when other manure 1e not need hroedeeet. Booiwâ€"Bow Bnhbngu only this month, and White Tmlpl lam. Buporphonphlto o! limo, or ï¬ne bone dust. ll spool-ll: adapted to: than crops. A Itubblo mu be prepared for them by giving out good ploughing and burrowing: I cross burrowing s wuk inter will kill may mull woods. One 01 the hnnd pylon drills will now thou Imsll goods. Ootn Ihonld not be noglooted In the hurry of burn“. Frequent :oultintion human growth ï¬nd the mutating o! the crop. To no the difference, luvs a row or two unenl- flutod. Much hnnd work Met in the «non nuy be avoided by 3 mm woxk with the onl_tlv_n_tor._nnd by taping the wood- down. Gmn Food (or Hananâ€"Give 3 than of tho anon fodder when honol do not tun at pasture. 1m posture st night. I generous tad should be given before they no mmod out. A Ionpo: to: the horns my be made 0! u pint of old myths. with the edge dulled on tho atone ; with thin the "out or moisture, mg: wuhjpgt nguy b: «lily rglpovod. tho lobor o! oloontng them in looionod. Whoa horroo oro woohod. noo o Iolt sponge Ind voter in which some ouhollo coop hu boon dhoolvod. This ooolo tho ohin, oooloto poroplrotlon. romovoo the otrong pun- gont omoll, greatly tom-hon tho onimolo, ond drlvoo owoy flloo. Whoro there I: a river noor by, I both in the owning will be ocroooblo ond oofo, it tho horooo oro kept In tho wotor only two or three mlnutoo. ond dri-von homo_ot onoo ond rubber; dry. _ Boy «pl will servo 3 good purpose upon nun shook! and In much more noun than lhOIVOI. pk. the ï¬eld. after the groin has been drawn; £110}:ng will bl yell ropoltl. Protect the Bonnâ€"A ootton sheet will be loud 3 grant protection to tho hono- worklng in the honest ï¬eld. It â€room them going}. hut. hpm {1103 3nd from (last. tad Outting Wheet end Byeâ€"It there wee eny doubt ebout the but time tor cutting grain, the generel experience leet peer went In tode eettllng the queetlon. All over the country e hot epell eeme on just ee the out- tlrg beoenle general end the grein ehrenk bedly. Hod the herveet been It few deye eerller. the totel gain would heve been enormoue. In the writer’e ï¬eld. etopping the cutting lor the 4th of July helldey leet eeeeon, oeueed e ion of 0100 in the quellty ol the greln end in ehrlnkege of weight end bulk. Ae soon en the grein ie solid. but will etlll erueh dry between .the ï¬nger nelle. it rue: beeut end hot weather will not injure it in the ehook ee it will when etending. Deed ripe greln in not only leee veluehle, but the etrew is worth lees then it eut three or tour How lo Our. Ripe Hny.-â€"Bay shut has bun out late may be improved by curing it in tho cook lute-d of drying it in the sun. Being oompmtlvoly dry when out it in very soon cured; and it pnl up in cook. no Ioon a It ll thoroughly wllhd. it will he“ and than an! Income much Ioluned.nnd will re- nnin ganglia†it syn-dried in the "nth. Into Hcying.â€"Thc (ulna to gather the In, while u in ct it: but, in u too lreqnont and inucuublc ncslect at thin uc-on. It lumen could be convinced 0! how much of the loading uluc c! hcy in lo“ by lowing the grotto bccom ripe, bud, and woody, it Ugh! no longer bgpcnnfltcd. The following we oxtnot from Ihe Ameri- can Agriculturm for July in its " Hints lor flu Watt 0! mo Pro-om Month." to Gnu donâ€"hm you the she blushing tendeily, no be" afraid. Now we've two Nobodies- Davu so in ureâ€" 5 ending the oneymoon, nttlna on em. One you hu pueed away. Huh are thrown down; She e Virago moves. He but I. clown I Strangers, the Nobodie- Pue on the emu; V911! in the nettingeel le'fng quite fu’t. Baum) o! pedigree. Bunk n the put! Nursing with tonduou A few ulkou hairs. Lamina on mutual. Putting on uni Little Miss Humanism Moo“ Mr. N . "An 01 In pottloootl "- " Intent 0! men "- Giza» sud humane. on annual: Euh to tho other on. Putting on slut ngug )lrt _Nob 0d; anoint, uni! mount. Tum. sdnrd long 3; Too “Upton to notice Bhpo '1 ad on or wml. Buds and unlldy like. Pawns on at"! You IL: Nobody. _mv a quite ms. mu. Ulla tantamount. Ilnolu. dong. n-_'_LA_. -_.I -._-___.A Farm and Garden. Géhé iii'théwilii'l 'onus 11:. Nobody Metrics! .the mid :. A.-l-l Mildewâ€"Keep s osrslul mush. sud l! wnltish psiohss sppssr on the underside of tho loai, ths growing shoot. or the fruit olusisr. use sulphur us once. Bellows for she purpose on sold st the seed sud sgrioultursl wsrshousss. am the sulphur bsiors putting it into the bellows. sud in using tho hollows so rnsnsgs it tho! I light cloud of the sulphur will In usilsrsd. ‘0 sum. upon lhs vinss. Young Treee.â€"'i‘he nnreery rowe ehonld be kept cleer oi weede. The hone-hoe will ‘reech most 0! theee. Uee e ehort whifle-tree. wound with cloth or otherwiee protected. Bede oi eeediinge muet be weeded by bond. They ehould be eheded end wetered it the weether ie dry. If eeediing evergreene demp off. eiit dry eend upon the bed. m FRUIT GLBDII. Grepe Whenâ€"In the epring vinee planted ehonld be ellowed to beer but u eingle ehoot. It'ie well to welt until the vinee are older before putting up n treliie; e eteke ï¬ve or eix feet out of the ground will enewer tor the hut two yeere. Keep the ehoot tied up to thie ° it other ehoote etert iron: the root or the old woed, remove them. in the exil oi eech leei, or where the lee! joine the Item, e ehoot mey eppeer, thie ie it lateral, do not remove it entirely, but pinch all off but one leet ; it it mekee another etert, pinch that beck to one leaf, end ec on, ehould it etert‘ egein. Should the vine reach the top oi the ‘ eteke, let it teke cere oi iteeli. It the vine ‘ wee pleuted leet year. and two ehoote ere grown. keep these tied to the eteke end treeted in the eeme way. On eetebiiehed vinee keep the leterele pinched as above, and when the ehoote ere no long ee deelred etop them by pinching. Ineecte that now eppeer ere moetly then that cen‘be bend-picked. 7 Blightâ€"I! this Ippelu there in bu‘ one thing to do, om Away the blighmd twig, branch or whole tree. on the one moy be. Cut down to bright sound wood and ban the removed branches. Slugs oi cherry and 130i: 17:70â€"07 Tun be killed by dusting with lime from a muslin bug _t_i0_d‘to g_pol_o. - Ineeote.â€"Deettoy any Tent Oeterplllere' neete thet me: have oeeepod corner notice. The Coating Moth in beet eeught by bends o! cloth or o! heevy paper pleoed eronnd the trunks ; thou ehonld be removed once a week end ell woun- lound under them killed. Letthe hoge get the worm; wind-telle. Thinning.â€"â€"Thongh rather late, it will still pay in the spplo and pear orchards. The lint thinning is rarely Infliolont. Better roman the axons even though the fruit in of some size; tint which remain! will be august; better to my totitho labor. Building Ihonid -bo done â€Minoan u the budu are mama, sad the bark of the stock !il’l rogdilyL Gnfln will need nun tion. Pinch all than that 919 growin_g_ too ylgorpualy. Ptunlng can be done in thin month. Look :0 an open hold to the “00,811“ the sun and air may ranch tho interior. ' Pure drinking water is o! the ï¬rst import- ance. More dangerous poisons are taken into the system with the water used; than in any other way. That (rem brooks is dangerous. as wash lrom manured ï¬elds, and soakage from the soil flows into them. Water irom elear wells and springs only should be given to eattle, and it such precaution is needed for them it is equally so {or the owners. Mueh avoidable disease is due to impure water. 0mm AID 303.331. Marketingâ€"The marketing of early fruits will be a large part of the work of the month. See that crates. baskets and other packages are at hand, and are tidy and neatly marked; always assert the trait. making three grades, ï¬rsts and seconds for market. and the third {or the pigs. Peek so tight that it cannot bruise in trenslt. The utmost cleanliness should be preserved ebout the premises in hot weather. All wsetes and garbage should be disposed of on I compost heap: a load 01 good soil and sods iron fence rows will be useful. as the basis {or it. Weeds should be gathered and added to the heap. Liberalsdditious o! plaster will prevent disagreeable odors. Poultry.â€"â€"The flock should now be wooded out; ell unproï¬table fowle, poor luyern. und poor mothers, should he need or marketed. Two weeke’ ï¬nding in e coop will be unï¬â€˜mient to make them ht. A low of the beat old hens any be kept over {or early setting, but many in a fleck are_unprofltuble. Platâ€"Young pigs mny be made ready for mukgt in 100 days. i! desired, by good loading. The now should be well fed will: rich slop to Iowa 1. good flow of milk, and a leading plsoo {or the pig: should be pro- vided, in which they can get Spare milk With a little fun ground barley meal or wheat mlgdlings. Fuoa of all kinds are now very trouble- Home, and should be wakohfully guarded against. It maggota are found upon {he Ihoop, apply tar and grease (rancid butter or lard) to the parts. and clip ofl the wool closely. Catholic cheep dip, and other pre- parations o! catholic acid. may bo used to prevent aggaokn. Dysentery in sheep is to be guarded agelnet. Ailing sheep will retire trom the ï¬eek.end mey not be found until too late. unless the flock in watched and counted fre- quently. As soon as a loosens“ of the bowels is perceived the eheep should be moved to a cool shed. and one ounce of esstor oil be given. A [mm o: oatmeal mush will be beneï¬cial. Sheepâ€"Keep ewee intended to: the butcher by themselves, and feed liberally. A quert of mixed ground lead or bun end oil- oeko meal will neon bring them into merket- able condition. Keep store eheep in a light pnetuxe. and give a hendlul oi feed daily. Provide shade of some kind. some oi the utifloial 100d! pxoï¬inblo i0 109a wiih anon iodder or puinro. Booming «and by green iced. my be lioppod ai once. by giving the our "10 qnuu of dry cotton-Iced maul. 00m -â€"A oool. dark. oleen etable lo: the con in lo: many reasons proï¬table to e not pasture in the middle of the (by. Dow- that have been kept up on moderate teed. will Ihrlnk in their milk, on being turned into n luxurious pasture on 3 hot day. Dty enth or and nuke: a better bedding than Itnw during the hot eeuon. 1mm loud I plooo 0! follow mud to cuboid-gnu ond olonr on tho am do, 01 August. Tho ground m thatoughly pro~ pond in July. 5nd woo lo oduuud wlth ohofl mum" hurowodln. '1‘ no bnaholl.42lb|. ol otohud-grou nod. and bolt a (foot 0! clove: veto sown. and covered by rowing o omoolhlng plank dlogonolly oorou tho hon-ow mom. This covered the nod even- ly, sud amoolhod the around. The prosonl your one otop 0! boy, equol to two total per ooze. wu "ton in May. and lho om: grown: wll_l alvo I goooqd 910p “l1! meal); or pelt. I“ during the hot Bouon. Axuflpial Food_ â€"_Bu_mr dulrlmou will ï¬nd mublo bun: with no water in 1:. sad killed hlmull. The gontlomnn who said "Boa-on Ticket†when the ohmohwnrdon approached him my; the p19". A very much Inger quantity of who“ Ohm muslin being onluntod thin nouon by Non Boom Mum. Tho emuâ€"9mm as the open who bowed urgently-{n hi: ha} beforg taking} out. The go'ntlomm who put on him spectacle: to look {or them. Tim mm who made 5 iii!“ Sud left him- ulj yelldnuy‘lognoo. The nun iho_ came to his own door. but ï¬nding he mu not at home Ion word he wogld onllqgain. The men who not on the ‘bonsh he wee lowing on. The gentlemon who went npnteiu to dreu {or dinner but nndreued Ind went to bed. The old lady with a wooden leg who knit- ted herself I poi: of Itoehingl. Looking for Ipeetoelel on you: own none. The non who put the enndle in the bed end_the extingnlehen on his own heed. The gontlefnm who haunted his 'foot to thgpfller-box t_o have his boou blacked. "A gentleman who wnlked down King street in a shower holding up n wplking nick under the Impression that it wu In umbrella, nor (ound out his minute till he was wet through. , A gentleman who called It h1- own home mg naked it he mm In home. A gentlemah ï¬shing to boil In egg plmd his wine: in the nuoepun und teamed the egg in big band. 7 A isntlomm who plmd his clothes in bed and hung himself on tho door-hook. A gontlomnn who forgot to provido himself with a ting for his nodding. Somo 0! lbs lollowlng cm: of absence of mind unfairly 390A :â€" Everything should be kept in good order. Mow the inn when it needs it. Remove ‘lerge weeds that any start up. Ii the weether ‘ is dry water should be used ireely. The edg- inge to beds end welks should he kept neetly out. Bedding plants need much eere now. es they will grow repidly end will often need the knife. Ont ewey flower clusters oi plents cultivated for their ioliege end trim end shepe to suit the design. Tell flowering plents, like dshiies, gledioluses, lilies. ete.. will require stekes. Do not use unsightly devices for holding up plents; streight stems of shrubs ere better then peinted sticks. Climbers should not be ellowed to fell ewey from their supports. Keep the ground eieeu eround perenniels eud seve seed of ell plents as they ripen. OBIIIBOUII AND WIRDOW PMRTI. This is s diflioult time 01 yesr to keep the greenhouse looking ettreetlve. Sheding must he used. Whitewesh is the eheepestâ€"muslin on the outside oi sesh is perheps the best. Frequent sprinkling oi wellu. ete.. is neces- sery to keep the rooms eool. Fumlgets et lrequent intervels. end allow e good eireule- tion oi pure sir. It the wsether is dry. it is s good time to get end store the yeer's supply 0! spheguum moss irom the pest bogs. Bquaahes.â€"Keep clear of buy by hmd- picking. Let the vines Itrike root “the join_ta. Tomatoes. â€"-Keep from the ground by fumes or trolling. Bruh or buy in better thou nothing. “clones-Bonk" late not: that would not ripen. Save only pure seed. Turn ‘0 secure an}: ginning. Cubismâ€"ï¬nned as soon as the tops die dogn. _8_§ogo_in a cog], striping. - Sweet Potatoee.â€"-D6 not' 18: the vines root. Move them when booing by lifting wiih the hoe handle. Egg Plant-a can he forced by the ace of liquid manure. Keep the trait OR the ground by placing etrew under it. It potato bugs Abound. it is dimoult to save the egg plants without dell; vigilance. Corn.-â€"Plant only sort: {or late use and drying. Save seed from best specimens of the early crop. Cannibalâ€"Dun with “has or lime to kogp ofl amped beeï¬lo. _ (Innateâ€"Thin; hoe until the tops prevent furjher wo_rk Among them. Celery.â€"-Set in rows three ioet apart And nix inches in the rowon we love), in well manured soil. The trench aynam has nearly 3090 out o: praptiog. Cabbageu.â€"-Sat out tor late crop. They need rich soil. and man be kept clean and watched {or worms. Catch the whim butter- flies early in the morning. when they are slowin moving. Beccaâ€"Plant lo: late ; the Refugee 111 beat to: calling and pickllng. Pinch the Limes when they have reached the top 01 the pole. ‘ Beete.- Bow tor succession 0! young root: and to supply beet groom. Bow only early sorta new. Asparagus. â€"Pull such weeds es appear, and it the Asparagus Beetle is discovered, out away the branches on which their eggs are placed. Curranta.â€"â€"The long. weak ahoota that puah lrom the interior are to be broken out. and also all other: not needed. Pick the fruit early. an won as wall colored. {or jelly, but for table use let it be thoroughly ripened. XI'IOHIH AND Hm OED!!- Have no waste ground where weeds may grow. When the early crops are 06, clear and plant again; Bleekbenlee end Beepbenlee.â€"-Treat ell plente thet come up and ere not wanted tor hen yeax’e [tuning ee weede. Those to grow should be stopped by pinehlng et elx lost for blackberries and four feet for reap. hen-lee. When the 1mm- of! o! elther, out out 3he old canoe that heve borne it. Btrewberrlee.â€"-Il crown in elngle rowe. remove the mulch when the plating ll over. lorkln manure. keep the ground eleer of weede. end remove the rnnnere. It the elter- nete eyetem le followed. the epeeee thet heve been ueedee pethe thle eeelon ere to he mennred. torhed up, end reked level to meke e rleh tine hed lnto whloh the runnere from the old plente ere to he directed. It pot leyerlng le preetleed. leyer the «that run- nere. Thle it to heootnmended tor rlvete gerdene; it it elmply to elnh in t e eoll emell pot: ï¬lled with rloh loll. under the runners ee they eppeer ; pleee the runner on the eoll ol the pot end put e elod on the etem to hold lt nntll lt hee tehen root. When the pots ere ï¬lled with roote. turn out the belle ol eerth end eet them in e new bed. Plants on treated wlll go on end grow end beer e good erop ne_xt_veer_. Ohoou n «In dny. Bop“: tho Inlphur um I uh. mom OABDII LID IA“. Absence offlllml. An English lady in the Court 0! Vienna with whom an Imperial Highness deneed three times on the ssme evening. flsttersd by his attention, intu expressed her gratiï¬cation It the compliment. “ I did flbt intend it es eoompliment," wss the snswer. " Then,†said the lsdy, " your Highness must be very fond oi deneing." “ I detest dansing." wes the unsstisisetory response. " What. then, mey I ask. on be your Imperiel Highness motive tor deneing 7" " Msdsme." us the enltsd personegs‘s curt reply. “ my mediosi ettendent edvises me to perspirs." Omdlol hue come Mo {uhlon In New York. ; A " Danubisn Society.†with the object oi guarding end developing the communicetions on the Danube end ite tributaries, wee iormed et Vienne on the 9th 0! J one. The com. mittee consists oi eminent commercisl men irom both hsives oi the monuehy. represen- tstivos oi the principei towns on the Danube end engineers. Professor Sues, e well-known ecientiiio suthority end e member oi the Anetrien Perliement, in at the heed oi the underteking. In his speech st the opening oi the Society he pointed out how little he been hitherto done to iscilitete the navigation oi the Dennbe end its tributeries, which iorm e wster channel 01626 Germsn miles. (or com- meroisl purposes, end thet the removei by the Berlin Tresty oi the restrictions hitherto imposed have now made it possible to open the Dsnube to the trade of the world. A Cnown'e Kennethâ€"A clown wee buried et Finchley, Engiend. on Sunday. the 25th Mey. eccording to ie directions. Fir-t in the lunerei pr on rode the ring~ieedeq. leeding tour dame: de la cirque in ooetume. Theee lediee were iollowed by the bounding brothcre, the eword ewellowere. the eeltim~ benguee. the here-beck ridere end other meie periormere. Then ceme e (1qu cerrying e bleck neg, end etter him the Barbery epe Jecko on e Shetlend pony. Jecko wee in e cult of eeble end hie eteed wee eieo decked in the trappings end the enite oi woe. The cofï¬n wee borne on an open bier. end on the plete where the royel coronet ehouid be were the motley germente oi the clown. Two clown colieeguee ioliowed the heeree, but it they ï¬lled the peeitlon oi chiei mournere their gerb wee eerteinly not in keeping with their piece. for they were chelked, ochred end dreeeed ee it ior e periormence. Thie etrenge cevelcede wee wound up by pert ot the circue bend in one oi the geudy proieeeionel cerriegee. They pleyed ench eire ee “ Go where glory weite thee," “Down emong the deed men," “ In none teir, euitry ciime,†end other morceauz eelected by ‘their deceased comrede. At the cemetery the ieet remeine of Billy Weiton were leid in the greve. end when the deiey quilt wee enugly epreed over him, eeoh oi hie brother ciowne turned e eomereenlt cver hie reeting-plece. end with thet the remerkebie interment concluded. 1 When turning over the columns of an old newspaper we met with the following. Pro- bably some fair lady in this city will be able to explain it the grammatical rules in ques- tion have been correctly stated: " The grammar of the kiss has not been written. True. a young lady being once asked it the kiss, being a substantive. was proper or common, archly rc- plied that it was both proper and common. but a most enlarged view may be taken 01 the subject. We ï¬nd there are only three regularly deï¬ned kisses, properly so-callcd, and these may be denominatedâ€"First, the kiss negative ; second. the kiss positive. and third. the kiss superlative. The ï¬rst, or negative, consists in kissing a lady's hand. The second is positive. and consists in kiss- ing her cheek, and the third. or superlative. consists in kissing her lips. There are, besides. two ‘ auxiliary,’ viz., the kiss ' passive,’ such as is inflicted by old maiden aunts. nurses and grandmothers, and the kiss ' active ' in ‘ use principally on the Gretna Green road.g The ï¬rst. the kiss passive. is generally‘ declined by the kisses, whilst the latter. the ‘ eotive,’ governs both ‘ kisser ’ and ‘ kissee,’ or as it is more analytically written, ‘ kiss he ’ and ‘ kiss her ’ in number as well as gender." “ Trueâ€"true. Peel: ’01:: right of! in {mm (our to eight weeks, leaving the complexion an (air as u bube’e. and without injury to the moat delicate eyebrows.†" You 590â€"†“ Mr. Green. I see it ell. I shall never target your kindneu. In lose than u week my heckled wife will be in Berrieu County. and you and I will stay out till two o‘clock in the morning, and then go to my house end sleep in the beat bed with our boots on! Mr. Green. Lor’ bleu youâ€"Ilnkel Any time you want u favor you any rout me up ut midnight and oommund!â€â€"Dctrait Free Preu. j “ Oen'e you nuke her believe her nerve: :ereurelexing 7 The genenlly works pretty {we ." w “ Oen't do it. She eleepe like a brick. end her nerves were never stronger.†‘ “ And ehe doeen’t went lo eee her molher 2" “ Her mother in deed." “ Dlgeeiion good i†" Splendid. She eete everything, from n redieh to limburger oheeee. end I een't talk ehenge of diet to her."' Green tell to musing, end by and by con- tinned: . " Mr. Brown, you hove been a good triend to me." “ Well, I hope l0." “ for. you have stood by me like a brother. and now I'll do you a fever. My wile let: for her mother's yeeterdey. to be gone ten weeks. I tried every dodge I oonld think 0!. but she was bound to stay home. At last I hit it. She has freckles." "Ah! Egedl So has mine." " Nothing but the country air in J one will mu lreeklee.†0' Frocklcn." “ Your wife 30an to the oounlry 7" Mixed Green u he met Brown on Woodward svcnuo yang-any. “ lsuou not. I offered her 850 to get randy, but the deolml right up and down sun the war“ so." . “ Have you worked the Ill-hoalth dodge 7" “Well, I ttied to; but she hu mined mirtoon poundl line. In» Janna], and nova: lookod better thnn now.†An Indian Dcvoun Ill- WUo and I‘ou cum-o Wanna. Mnnlkobn â€"An Indian hu boon urn-ad 1» Hon Suhtohonn. non: Edmon‘on. for murdering nnd nuns his wife and {our children. The Mounted Police found we bonol nnd ukulln. which had bun boiled nnd the flesh nun on. Ind mo skull- Imnhod and we bxunl oxtuutod. A CANNIBAL. A non who mndon business of writing obltusries, opitnphs. eto.. used to solicit patronage is: and nest. Hosting of tho dosth of a man in n distant part of the country, and business being a little dull, he mode a journey than. Finding the widow of tho deceased person he stated his occupation, and and it she wouldn't like 1 (av lines about hot hnsbsnd. " hinos about him i" she sold woinlly; " ho bod all the lines he wsnted.‘ I! he had one lino loss he would have boon nllvo to-day.†"Whnt allod him, mndsm 2" "guns nuns.†_ J It ll snnoniiood the new Viceroy 0! Egypt. Towflk Pubs, bu relinquished half his on" lip. mad “I“ he ll nppoinflng “comm The lateet'educatlonel returne in Bueeie ehow that among the recruite for the Imperiel army only ten per cent. could read, and only tour per cent. could write. The rest were perleetly ignorant. The peasantry ere ettll more ignorantâ€"only about ï¬ve per cent. being able either to read or write. The peasant women are eo deplorably ignorant that not above oneohelt of one per cent. of them can read the Scripturee in the moat imperfect taehton. They live in extreme poverty. and in epite of all representetlone to the contrary. are kept down simply by the overoawln force of the army. Among theee peaeente t e leeven of Nihiliem ie spreading, and however much thle may be deplored. it can be little wondered at. If we mey believe Sir Willism Thomson the iemone compleint which wss once ex- pressed es to the waste 0! good water-power st the Fells oi Nisgsre is destined tobe et lest satisï¬ed. Sir Willism. in his evidence before the Select Committee on Electric Lighting. proposed to light North Americe. or e good pert oi it, by meens of electricity genereted by dynemoâ€"msgnetio enp gines in the neighborhood of the Fells. These engines would not only light the homes of New York end Philedelphie. but else turn their sewing mschines end boil their kettles. This prospect wss st first e little too much (or the committee. end Dr. Pieyisir seems to have timidly suggested that the Fells oi N isgere were e little out o! the record. He evidently forgot thst Greet Britsin. by meens of Ceneds, hes e certein proprietorship in those tells. end thst wemnst not allow our iriends oi the Btstes to monopolize the good gifts of science end Providence. Possibly the Atlentie csbles might be utilized so es to mske Nlegers light London. end in thst csee emisble noblemen oi the future willheve other eesocistions besides Britsnnle’s trident on the ezure see to couple in verse with the great cetersct. There is en opening, too. for his enterpris g Highness the Knedlve to utilize shout he only thing in Egypt which he hes not yet utilizedâ€"the tells oi the Nile. It would not be surprising if some enterprising projector hed slresdy telegraphed ior e concession of the second ostsrect eiter hosting Sir Williem's evidence. He is evidently an enthueisstic pertizen oi the new method oi illuminstion, end no one on deny that his opinion is e weighty one.â€" LogdonjEng.) It'ews. bond. In one vessel. each men 01 the crew was presented with e bound copy of the paper printed during the voyage. Qnoite mode from rope ere eometimee need by than who are fond of the geme, end kite-flying in indulged in by otheu, when the kite very olten gate lost. wind through the rigging and the gentle rip- ple of the weves es the vessel quietly plough: its way onward. It has been no uncommon thing in passenger-ships to have eweehly peper. all sorts of possible end impoeeihle nonsense ï¬nding its wey into its columns. One might reed that a irightfni murder 1nd been committed at some early hour in the morning on bond. which reeolved itself into the feet of e sheep or e pig heving hed its three: out. When e eerinl teleis ettempted it sometimes proves espeeielly interesting, u embracing the lifehistoxy of some one on flow u. Diedâ€"Brunei- r-ueuc opt-Io- ore the lubject. The cable hee given no the iaete connected with the deeth oi the Prince. but come very intereeting detelle ere contained in the deepatchee irorn South Airice. The Prince. who wee elweye deeirone to be actively employed. wee anxioue to join Lieutenant Carey. oi the 98th. who we- "er'i-‘n with air men of Bettington'e Bone on e reconnoitrlng expedition. The eteii objected to hie going, but he leughingly overruled their wiehee end eterted. Lieutenant Garey, the ieeder oi the reconnoltring party, gave the iollowlng eccount oi the expedition: “We leit Kopple Allien at hell. peat eeven. rode to Itelezl and waited for the Beentoe. The Prince being in etlent et their non~errival, we rode on wit out then to a hill eeven mile- end a hall thle elde oi lehlewenl Hill; reconnoltred with teleecopee ior one hour but eaw no one; deecended to e deeerted kreel in the valley below, oil-eeddled end reeted one hour. I reminded the Prince oi the time. He eeld. ‘ Wait ten minutee.’ At length, at we were ebout to reeeddle our horeee. I eew the bleck iecee oi Zulue peering out between the melee etelke ell round. The Prince. looking eeide. eaid, ° I eee them too.†We leaped upon our horeee end rode oi! amid a eudden volley oi mueketry item the Zulu-.who. ee eoon ee they new ue mounting. ruehed iorth on all eidee irorn the meine. All rode off. On creating the donge, 200 yerde ewey. we noticed the Prince'e horee ioilowing riderleee. I expect the Prince had been killed in the tree]. Two oi the eecort were killed." From all accounte it eppeere that ‘ Lieutenant Oerey end the troopere who eeved themeelvee ran away at the tint eight of the Zulu, and left the young Prince. who had come difï¬culty in mounting irom the teering oi the ecddle flaps. to hie iete. Later ee~ connte ray that Lieutenant Carey galloped ï¬ve milee without etopping after the com. -â€"-â€"â€"â€"~â€"-â€".- 01: an Atlantic Stenmehip. Shut out from the ordinary eeree which vex the landeman, it doee not require much to provoke excitement and fun at can. A paeeing chip. the glimpee oi dietent land, or anything in the alighteet degree out at the uenel course. will be provocative oi converee~ tion. When a dirty night ie coming on. eeilore will be bothered with qucetlone u to whether it will be very bad weather, it it will laet long, and each like. Snndey et een ie generally observed. Hid awey, however. in come quiet corner may. perhaps, he noon 3 equed playing nt cards, while within a dozen yard: oi them another group will be ringing hymne, with a crowd around them. a few oi whom are joining. Service on that day ie held once at leaet on deck, end in very in- preeeive in ï¬ne weather. Nothing is heard to breelr the eilence_bu_t the _eo_it gnehroi the 'l‘llll LATE PRINCE IBIPIBIAL. A Use for Niagara Falls.