ninnu, tho brewer, 1»on an the moat hut «summon: o! the London «non l hr. Bank, fuhion und wulth won . The («tun of the evening vs. the dooontion. Even the cornice of one I in hung with girl-ad: o! lummor Ho “number 0! 10,000. The home 0mm: Place 3nd mu built by the lot Wuulmhr’lgr hu_cldu¢ Ion. Eu] m-.. L-L _-_4 ,___ -vâ€"v 'vll-l [him out on tho Mann. Ho vainly oh an an n the home and sought some Ir place of ulnlhmont. [0 noon "mud up at the police union I. he mud 80 lane his nun. rest-tend the that. u Loni- Angtutul Algernon Limbo“, In“ the Chief, am: taking nook annually muted him at Peter ohâ€"Bnglhhâ€"ngo 33â€"- lntomperno â€"- mm.-â€"s¢. Gatherine: Journal. v-â€"v-- â€"v-' not. but mud hitsâ€"tho mention-3; I lmuuborg. who ï¬gured than (or union ma nun (Mud into the hand. » A...) IA‘“ h, Ioldln mi‘oFuR'y'? ...-.... w "w w hr the follow would hue proceeded hi: how" in not known, for name one unkind him, nnd typing _h1l goat ooflu |.- A-‘ -â€" A‘A drink _- __-- _- â€"-. vwl, quUI Kl. henâ€"rm) with the propxmor o! the mud Ind damned. the landlord tomat- [to uk [or pnymont until the follow had ‘ but next undo his appearance :3 the my Home. when night hnd noun. 91mg. I flat-x91 gtrglght," he said. ll llpc. leisurely wiped hi: monih vmh n M pocket hundkerohiol, sud gm: 3 low m oomgl'unonury observations about the It and nuns a: the but, pxopuod to do- It. " Hold on, you hnvon‘t pfld (or that mount." «it! the bar-tender. " B in Ill right. my dour air. I nm on a “in; tour [or the medial fratomisy at this n. u to who hoop-‘3’!» bu) lager 3nd gives W ~----v-.. .w... "v, u: an: 10" elem. fie Prince“ in the woman may forget 6 must be owned we have a. reason good 0 own gentle, perfect womanhoodâ€" 111:3“: ways, thy speech and looks be- ï¬tting ell heute In thy lair preeenee thine- , Jutw at we all were taught to hope for in The [med daughter 01 011! glorlone Queen. :llae-Oelleln'e eon l 'twere etnnge indeed I! we 2‘ peeling ought leee loyal gave to thee- i'l'hen £1113. htlght promise well should make us 'nepma to give thee a " (Jaed male/a who 1" Lo mey this land, felt-spreading lax away Deï¬ne to bout of thy flee-regal sway. ' $30 much lnhetlte thou at patriot ï¬re make on doubt thy purpoee to aspire wellere to advance. our love to winâ€"- Hometter who the ty “out" or “ 111;" ale-â€leer! ua ltoheep in View to be noble la to nobly aoâ€" het tnthlnl llvee are more than rank or eta- ~ tlon t teoneneu alone exalta e. nation. Thu-ï¬g:- alone. e people truly free :1. In “tale Denada of cure" may be: Ill any we lined be to virtues Spartan Neath the congenial shadow or the Tartan! much by way of prologue: Ere away 0 how ourselves, this lnrther we would lay- alter etertlnz in e key so arouse. ezzlxlay not just at once "bring down the one. " "nu-u u no I nooner or a small 31:53 2" line! th- bur-tender. "A “mount. it you please." xepllod the My mum. The laser wu duly discussed. The Ham- ‘ionlnn uld it was 'tho moat dolighlful‘ gu- ho land on: tuned, and he was familiar I]: the lager o! In __gho gun-dim and m--- Lâ€"â€"â€"A â€" 3-32.“?! , o o y m { Eu mower , well ms; a 8hr! lilo u : To magnify = than-store '1‘ amino" 10 mm: be a nun. om Th! 211111111111 lining {Iii-1': A lady-looking customer. who uld he an. from Hamilton. nnd was on a tour of "tuition for an employment bureau, ven- Ind Into I nloon and called {or adrink of I“ " .11.!) it be I akoonor or a small 31353 2" by! tho bar-tender. 11.. .u- -- vuuv "yang aown Gilli; ’o tum to ma be owned that, ne'ertheless, 'Olte. upon 0 wk 0.9, "a. great success." ‘ ..._,. vuwv unu y: ouuw 5110' w lweéuy’biend- the Thistle with the Rose. 111 no however partial to Argyll. Id“ 3 Ion pleued some My 01 Erln'l Isle. Daughter of our 1006 Queen! beloved by all-- go. only to: her lake: Heaven. prodigal. mound u n unset! such graces rare A: well me, a men's homage everywhere 3 â€my? â€a“ â€i’ â€a???“ e the ve cure a . MfOtO. here we. In our Joy ejaee. ‘ I Prlnm-ln or..._.._.__ _ , yhno crowds. ohm. their jubihtlonl vent mhou. torch“, rockets honour-rd sent. on Io am. on gent!» plenum: bent. on“ ohumod y En nd'o nightzugnloa, tn'l "not thrush“ on the lulu of w den, 1 in our“ woodnoten wild " and moiklo came kind («bounce nther than applsule; 1 other. we Arc-resolved to do our bestâ€" , ring to you~md youâ€"and youâ€"the not. $7.131 thin bright oudlenoo unnlng Mud doom. no! the wish to plan. our hearts inspire; all may old Enn'l. England's, Scouaud'n Jun a Inn. on ne‘er below, to win your pulse- luvo we not in this bright oompoulo no“ Illa-Mona who can claim to b». ‘ “an or blood. linked to thounmom three? All on. no. .....u"’.'s'.9.‘.f:‘!:..'.h.219_!9{mapovhows 1 inn in honour of h!- W‘ogho luqnu 0! ion» and flax Maya! oh I 9 Price.“ Log», on we occasion a! cunt um w Kings 1:. 00$] \Vflllng to Drink. BY IVA)! I'COLL. A Dublin. Cor-rm: Hon ’0! Faun Wounâ€"A tram oppâ€! In being made tovntdl thin 0 or“: to be erected at Brighton on gum mom! to the Mo Prince" Allâ€, who took a flap imam. In tho Inbjool. Helmet! on Susanneâ€"Writing to en . English correspondent who hed asked his ' opinion es to the use of alcohol end tobecco in ethietic exercises. Henien seysâ€"“ In my opinion the best physics] periormences cen only be secured through ebsoiute ebstinence from their use. This is my rule, end I ï¬nd. eiter three yeers’ constant work et the oer. the: I em better able to contend in e greet recs then when I ï¬rst commenced. In test, I believe thet the use of liquor end tobecco hes e most injurious eï¬ect upon the system of en ethicte. by, irriteting the vitels end consequently weekening the system. Ieet wholesome iocd. teke reguler end moderete exercise, evoid violent exertion. end gens- relly strive to cultivete e cheeriul stete oi mind, in order that sweet sleep msy follow my deily work." One dey it will he an article of leith with thousends of rare] Frenchmen thet the Prince {Imperiei wes sesessineied by bus redicel ‘egente disguised es Zuius. Such e story is ectuelly sheet in Perle to dey end will be cere- lully nursed end elehoreted into e most eflective " cempelgn lie" by the Imperieiist propsgende. Mr. John O‘Brien Seunders, who died re. centiy in London, wes not’only e successful indigoplsnter end merchent in Indie, but built up the success of two newspepers which } he conducted et different times, the Delhi Gazette end the Oslcutte Emiirhmas. ! A eurioue atory reachee a Kurraohee paper through Jaeobabad to the efleot that the GoVernment treaenry at Quetta wee lately deepoiled to the tune of eome 20,000 rupeee by eome men of Jaeob'e Biflee etationed there. The iaote as related to ue are pretty much as iollowe :â€".A private having ocoaeion to go towards the hilie eaw anumber of eepoye eoeiaily engaged in dividing a large number of rupeee. He joined the party, and natur- ally enquired ae to what bank or hoard they ‘ had drawn euoh a large “ haul " from. when ’ he wae bound over to eiienee by “hueh money" of some two or three hundred rupeee. with which he walked ed and laid them and hie report before hie native oflioer, who took charge ‘01 the coin and told the man to mind hie bueineee and eay nothing. Two or three daye after. eeeing that nothing came of hie report, the eepoy thought he had a right to go “enaoke.†and lo aeked ior eome of the coin he had parted with back from the ofï¬cer, and, on hie reiueal. became virtuoueiy in- dignant, and went and reported the whole ' aflair to 001. Mainwaring, the commander of the eorpe. Thie ofï¬cer at once inetituted an enquiry and arrested eeverai native om- core and eepoye. and the greater part 01 the money wee found either on the pereone or among the baggage oi the delinquente. The marvel of the matter ie how the lellowe ‘managed in the tint tnatanee to abetraet eo large a run from the treat . and in the eeoond ae to how they imagine it poeeibie to get oi! with their booty. How they managed the “ loot†hae not yet come to light. and requirea explanation, ae there muet have been either oonnivance or groee oareleeeneee eomewhere. 9' so .- ll 1t ‘1 3 a 4H-__.4 a“- _ ‘7, .--â€"u- vets-J W uvusflu to provide an icehouse large enough and buy the potent " vegetable extracts" irom " Bignor Rotors," (who alone knew the habitat of the plants from which they were produced in South America). and the thing was done. It would make all the difference between proï¬t dud loss on many a term. We lorbear to strain the application 01 the process to human beings personally. But we iancy that some people, ‘ when the. times are hard and things go wrong generally. would not mind taking a long nap in that way. It would be a good disposition to make of useless persons. They could be kept on ice till they were wantedâ€"e very long time, probably. tor most of them; but the longer the better for their friends and relatives. Such is the amusing hoax which, having been in New York and tailed to attract much sttentlonat the time. now appears in a news- paper at the antipodesâ€"the Courier. oi Bris- bane, Australia. Thence it was copied in the London Tinm without a word of com- mentordissent. Its appearance in the greet English journal has given it such a start as it never had before. It is now going the mighty round of the universal press. Several papers in New York, misled by the London Times, 1 have copied it in whole or in part. apparently ' without suspecting its true character. 5 The process wee very simple. A certain vegetable decoction was injected beneath the ekm oi the animal. Thie euepended the cir- culation of the blood. He could then be laid away in e refrigerator, where the temperature was kept just low enough to arreetdeoompoei- tion. The hypodermic injection of a vegetable antidote brought the creature to life again at pleuure. The edva ages of the prooeee were obvious. Live etoc could he cent from one country to another without any expenee for feeding on the voyage and landed in prime condition alive. But this would he the leaet ol the enormous bemï¬te to the world accruing lrom the invention. Farmere could omy ‘ their cattle all through the winter very economically. They would only be obliged to provide an icebouse large enough and buy the potent " vegetable extraote" l-nm u Dan..-» This particular hoax had the honor oia serious reference in the address of a book- leerned proieesor at a meeting 01 the Ameri- can Association tor the Advancement of Science. He gravely alluded to it as among the meet important discoveries oi the year. Later on New York journalism gave reins to its imagination and produced the story 0! a wonderlul invention in Australia whereby sheep, cattle, hoge end all living things could be deprived of animation and shelved or packed away for an indeï¬nite period and then revived with all their let on them and their faculties unimpaired. [The Anus-nua- Dupe-dad Alumna": Discovery Prone-mood a lull. ( N. Y. Journal of Commerce.) Since the production of the oelebreted “3400:: Hon." eeverel elever thinge have been done in the lame line. One 01 the meet reelletle end etertllng at then run the pre- tended account, in a New York peper, ot the eeeepe of all the wild beset: tron: the Central Park Menagerie. Another neet piece 01 Muneheneenum us the report, nleo pnb- ‘liehed in I New York paper. at the dteeovery o! e greet eenyon in Blberie where the mu- todon and other antediluvien monetere were tound browsing around. having been name. how leftover in thet place by the eeteelyem which destroyed all the rent of their contem- porerlel. A Slim-lu- Robbery. A GREAT "05X. very simple. A certain as injected beneath the This euapended the cir- He could then be laid , whexe the temperature { Henry Bessemer, the English Inventor. has token out 160 patents, almost on many as Edi-on, nnd one of them. hlrmam 0! ranking steal. nuke or one o! the moat bril. um invention: at the century. It oonnrte pig-iron Into Iteol In I in minntee. and he reduced the price of eteel rolls per ton tron: 0200 to '80. Ton timer or much eteel to ring: in the world now u we: and prior to 8 . It ie edmltted. I think. thet Britieh oiï¬eere .ere equel to my emount oi herdehip when in the ï¬eld. The " e l? derilnge †oi the Guerde did not ehlrk t e orrore oi expoeure to the eeverltiee of e Ruelien winter in the Crimee. nor do men who heve been reered in luxury at home object to rough it in Indie or Alrioe. et the cell 0: duty. It mey he thet the eontreet ie rether pleeeing then other» end elx meeleper diem it must eeem quite delightiol to eufler e little deprivetion. To here to diepenee with one’e breehieet end morning luncheon, end then feel uncertein ebout dinner, ie no doubt e heelthy reereetion etter e course of over-feeding ee e milltery etudent. The epotheoery'e epprentiee ie ellowed to ï¬ll himselt with juiubee, end the grocer‘e young men ie perm tted to help ‘ himseli to elmoude end reeine. Why ehonld not the militery oedet oerry out the mexim dum eim’mm vivamue. The Oommiueriet Depertment ie not elweye equel to en emergency, end, therefore, when the eedet joine. end in ordered on entire eerviee. he any and that the reeolleetion oi tormer joye 4 is useful in helping to eoothe him for exieting ‘ discomfort. end thet it eeeiete him in helenoing eeoounte with hie digeetive ieoul. ' “emâ€"Truth. 1 oven-waned Judge. Poor mm! How ’11. suffer: this hot "other. Put him on loo. Put the clergyman on loo. Tholobom is worthy of his hire. All In love: at choc amen-hour worked to- store olotk going {or 5 ton weeh' vmtlon to tho Adkondooh to ï¬nh with the Rev. Mt. Manny, n) "An." Contrary mindod 2 “No! Noll No!!!" I It is the rest oi or. We ere 900.000 etrong. We ere quite legged out. It in hot weether. We went e reet. We went to go to Europe. ‘ to the Adirondeoke. to the White Monnteine. Will eomebody eend nu Will eome oonntry brother iii! our pulpit? Al! in the emrmetlve eey “Aye.†Negetive, "No.†Noinoilno!!! 'l‘he noee heve it. ‘ Itie eJndge. Bel-11,815,000. Poormen.j He’e quite overworked. Bet on hie bench thirty deye leet yeer. Isn't it led? how unmereiinliy the public do work their peid eervente. Get him on? O! oonree. And double hie eel . Put him on ice poor men. Let him eooulyofl. ’ All in the eflirmetlve eey "Aye.†Aye! eye! eye! It ie e eeleemen or women in e New York dry goods etore. They work ï¬fteen honre e dey. Give them e rent 7 ï¬end them to Europe. to the Adirondeeke, to the White Mounteine. No. Oen't think at it. Balineelie hue!- neee. Sympathy depende on the mount of eelery e men ete. Look et thet poor $16,000 overeorked _ ndge. VPoor men! How 'he i A Hot Weather Samson. It's a minister. Poor man. Be it quite preached out. He wants I lost thin hot wonih- a. Let as loud him to Europe, to the Adirondack» to the WhitoMountninc. Good. We will. We will. Close the Church. Stop pre'aohlng. Let him so and cool 03. Pm- -__- 7â€"- -v-u v- “IU‘U - V null! or onplnlol. exceedingly emotive to: this purpose. The oudiomotor promise: to become one of those metal adjunou to practice 01 which we nhnll uy china-My. “ How did we so: on before it was known I†‘ .._ .v.' u.“- vvuavfl .he just been invented by I’roi. Hughes. the rel discoverer oi the microphone. The audio- 01 meter is used as the precise measure of the ib- sense at hearing. It is formed 0! a small battery oi one or two Lecianche cells. a new microphonic key. two ï¬xed primary coils, agraduatedinsuiatedbar, to which at each. end one oi the ï¬xed cells is attached. a secondary induction coil. which moves along the graduated bar. and a telephone. the terminals oi which are connected with the terminals of the induction coil. The princi- ple oi the audiometer is based on the physi- cal hot that when the battery ismaction. and a current is passing through the two primary cells. the secondary coil on the bar becomes charged. by induction. whenever it is brought near to either 0! the primary coils ; but when itis brought to the precise centre between 'the primary coils there is a ‘ neutral point or electrical balance. where l the electric phenomena from induction cease to be maniiested. By placing . a micwphonic key between the bat- 1 tery and one of the primary coils. and by attaching the terminals 0! the induc- 3 tion coil to the telephone, Prof. Hughes was . able to make the telephone produce sounds whenever he brought the induction coil near to one of the primary coils and moved the microphonic key so as to make it play on a ï¬ne needle suspended in the circuit. When the induction coil is close to one o! the pri- mary coils the noise is very loud. but as the coil is moved toward the centre at the bar the noise diminishes. until it ceases at the centre altogether. The scale on the bar is graduated , into 200 degrees, representing units at sound from 200 to 0 or zero. At 200 all who can hear at all can hear the vibration oi the drum in the telephone. At 0 no one can hear, while between the two points there are 200 graduations 01 sound. from the highest down to zero. In using the instrument the telephone is put to the ear of the listener while the operator moves the microphonic key. and at the same time shiits the induction coil on the graduated bar. so as to measure the hearing power at the person under examination. Dr. Richardson presented a preliminary report to the Royal Society on his ï¬rst experi- ments with the audiomster. and showed that already. by its means. some useful and practical. as well as curious, facts had been obtained. Among many oi these was one relating to an enquiry as to the best material ior making artiï¬cial tympanums. and the best form of artiï¬cial tympanums for cases of defective hearing irom perforation or destruction 0! the natural drum. He had ‘1‘! found gold. made into the form oi little cups 31‘ 1A. Instrument for Elm-ring the lem of Bonds... (Fxom tho London nwoot.) M the in: making of the Boyd Booioty. Dr. Riohurdnon demon-triad the motion 01 snow imminent which ho bu nmod the audlmour. 9r nudlgmeug, gag which bun €n-b L--._ Till AUDIOMITBB York Graphic. __u-.. u-..u5 Iu' wwll ' Pmt'odï¬hu. who notation-l1 no fond of Jun. will be mutated in tending the account 0! the Mo Baron uolhuhfld'a hand. This tun-um nu] nan-nin- ,jï¬ -__._.-, an" a nu â€lulu! In! advertiser tor during to nuke the pedom- nnoo of Sunday flat: I matter of exchange for such worldly putimo: on Bundnyl, pro« fencing to win nonl- (or 0mm.,thn he mny Ihgol pnrtfldgol gating in. "ck I" --A“- , _ â€" uuâ€"v‘n. uuv “Inï¬ll. tor oi the perish churchnrdon, compioins that the floor of Oireucester reluled to edminister the sscrement to his wile st the . only celebration on Ascension Dsy. and says thst ii he no resident in the perish he should certainly contest the mutter; end contends thst the rubric clearly shows thet the ricer (Dr. Miller should hove previously ' signiï¬ed his determ etion to flu. Wilkins. The Bishop oi Gloucester end Bristol being sppesled to, writee to the ricer: After boring cereiully considered the report you ‘ hero mode to me, it is my judgment thst es the low 0! the Church end the low oi the loud ere both explicit. you could not have noted otherwise, though I know yell thst it hos given you greet pain to have been obliged so to set. ‘ A "Beater." writing to the editor oi the London Standard. observes: "Enclosed I send on edvortisemont which,in looking ior s curete, I here just observed in the Ecclesias- tical auntie. It runs thus: ' Wented, by s Benedoed Clorgymen, Shooting. in August or September, in return ior taking Sunday duty.-â€"Address Vicsr, cure oi. etc., Bediord ‘ street. Btrsnd, London, W.O.’ ‘ Surely the , insertion oi such on odvertisement is e gross g 1scandal to. end libel upon. the Church oi Englnnd. thet e beneflced clergyman should seek to barter the functions oi his scored ‘ oflice in exchenge ior permission to shoot gsmel i. would not restrict e herd-worked clericel brother irom the heelthiul exorcise oi ï¬eld oport, if so inclined. during e period oi root end chongo; but I_ do? blsme the .A-A-‘l-A- 1-- fl-A Mr. T. Wilkins, of Cheltonhnm, who hu mmiod his deceased with 31339:. the dn_ngh- hr nl n.. “.4“. -L__-n____,, The Rev. Dr. Pusey. of Oxford, be: written e letter to Dr. Newmen congretuleting him upon his being made Prince Cardinal in the Bomieh Church. Ac Dr. Newmen end Dr. Pusey were the prime movers in the treeterien crueede to Bomenizethe Church of England. it wee elweye en occasion ior ‘regrct that Dr. Pusey. who wee the tether oi the movement, did not go with Dr. Newmen‘ into the communion to which hie crowed principlee neceeurily led Dr. Newmen. The excitement 0! than timer, oulmineting with trect No. 90. her long since died out end the eigniticent tome oi Pueeyiem end the Nemenie ere now quite obeolete. The Arehbiehop oi Omterhury. in presid- ing letely et the ennuel meeting 0! the Notion- nal Society. held in London. amid he believed that ii the feeling of the country oo‘uld be as- ‘oetteined. it would befound that a more then overwhelming mejorlty oi the inhabitants would hein 1.70: o! the religious esetem of edueetion meinteiuod end fostered by thet Society. Beeolutionl were passed. and od- dreuel delivered urging that some mttie- tion ehould he pieced on School Bond ex- penditure. The worehip of St. Joseph is gaining ground in Frenoe. elthough the Congregetion o! Bite: be: condemned on ridiculous en Ave ‘Joeeph conteined in n pamphlet approved by the Oudinel-Archblehop ot Toulouee. and honored with the benediction of the [ole Pope. Not only thin, but it in rcletod in Ill eerioueneee, how e child who tor deye hed‘ been uneble to open his eyes wee cured by reciting thie Ave which the Oongrcgetion o! Bitoe now declnree to be ridiculonl. I The monitlon ordered to be leeued by Lord Penzenoe against the rector of St; John'e. Mlle: Plotting. hed not been served on Sun- dey. The renleee were attended by a good any etrengere, but pefleet order prevailed. At the celebration of the Holy Communion in the only morning the usual rituelletio preo- tioee were indulged In, and the illegal vent- menu were worn. The eroee remelne over the teble; in feet, no elteretion wee nude in the «nice. ‘ Dr. John Cumming hes resigned the pee- torsl cherge ol Urown-Oourt Scotch Church, London. He hes occupied the pulpit oi that church for some iorty-eeven yeers, and although he has mede prominent some views with which many do not sympetlze. he has done good service. It seems that his con- gregetion hes been but small lor some years pest, and now the church ie likely to pass sway. His people are about to join with another congregation. A great crowd listened to Joseph Cook at Salt Like. The subject of the lecture was 1" Oertuinties in' Religion with e Prelude on Mormonism.†It was to be delivered in the Presbyterien Church. but when thst building wee tilled, end some hundreds were still intending outside. the lecture was sdjourned to the Methodist Church, 3 larger building. Many Mormons were present. end heard some very sensible and plsin talk. which made them very nasty. _-_-_-‘ - At e Hebrew Convention shortly to be held in New York will come up a proposition to oheuge the Bebbeth serviees in the syuegogues {tom Seturdey to Sunday. This important change is being put in practice by a few of the radically reform congregations, but it meets with strenuous opposition Iron: the orthodox nbbis, journeie and people. Women on gradually muting their way into the pulpltl o! more than one denomina- tionln the United States. One no longer [eels utoniahed when among the ordinary religion- new: one read: such on item no this : “ The Rev. Ellen G. Gnltln hu become the poster of 3 church in Westerly." yet. Father Hyacinthe administers communion to his Perla congregation in both kinde. It having been asserted in England that his marriage interfered with his work, the Pere, in his reply. says the truth is that it helps him. and that the great majority of Catholics approve oi a married clergy. Dr. Robert Motiat has been speaking on the Zulu war. and. as every Christian man is bound to do. he condemned it or brutal and unjust. He also expressed the opinion that Gatewayo. it he is disposed to do so. can hold out againat the British torcee for a long time val, umun nmy, 63 860 belong to the Church olEnalund. 80.872 m Itomm onhouol. 7.125 Prubytozim, 3,985 no Prom-unt- at 031m donomlnulonl. Rov. 000. F. Honiok, of Turkey. reports tho: the oilouhuon o! Biblu and religious monturoln that country now numbou about 140,000 volumes n you. The only mluion. ho nu. which om roach Turkey in a women'a lulu on. 0!. grand to“! 0! 94.841 Britbh "my. 62 860 belong I o! Englud. 80.872 m Rom 7.}25 {’rubyhzim, 3,985 no) b In. Baron uolhaé'hfld'a luau-m tad mammal. THE CHURCH. man In the Ltouc..oolonox a. 32-11. Prince Arthur ruin. his oommund of the In Butalion of Rifle Bflgulo n Aldenhot ol‘hor‘nm month or in lopunlm. . â€" can" were sold by motion in'Londotrigé the ulo unrated gll the moat distinguished disciple: of 711m Walton in England. Aveleren eportemen well-known in the We», Florlde end Oenede, Sir 83. George Gore. Bert, of Irelend.hu peeled ewey, leaving behind him the moet wonderlnl collection of fleblng rode, tackle end sporting gear generally believed ever to here been poem-ed end need by one man. Theee were cold by emotion in Landau ma u. m- _, '- _.. __â€"_wâ€" w-ycuuulluu Ul eu instrument nemed the eutophone. for which letters petent have been issued in the United Ststes end Europe to Professor Merritt Gslly. of New York City. It is oleimed by its inventor to be entirely origi- nel, both in its conception end {undementel in principle. end it is believed to be the ï¬rst successinl invesiou oi the domsin 01 music by sntometic mechenism. The eutophcne is opereted by e thin sheet oi psper only three end seven-eighths inches in width.punotured with smell holes. The instrument is provided with eny number 0! stops, end, it e read or pipe instrument, with eny number of sets of reeds or pipes. The invention is eppllcsble toinstruments oi eny quelity,irom the cheepest pieno or cebinet argon to e ‘ grsnd church orgen. The music sheet is prepared to represent not only the notes, but else the entire expression required to render the music in the most perieet end ertistic manner. Nsnsow Ewanâ€"On Bsturdsy evening, when the six o'clock trein going west left the G.W.B. etetrcn. s men. considersbly under the influence of liquor end with e couple at percels under his erms. run down Richmond street end mede en ettempt to get on one o! the iorwerd couches. He msneged to seize hold of e portion oi the pletiorm. but the motion of the train cerried him 03 his {set end he wes thrown underneeth. Still he clung tothe pletlorm end the parcel, with his ieet bumping egeinst the treek. end sp. perentlyreselvedto unto the trip in thet ‘perilons position. The speed of the trein wss repidlyincreesing, end those who sew the men underneeth the pietiorm closed their eyes to shut out the result which seemed ineviteble. He wss observed, however. by persons on the train end heuled on board just in the nick 0! time. as his strength could not have held out much lemonâ€"Free Bren. -â€"â€" wow-Av“ IU‘ ., 1 "In! or to keep it backward. On thic principle. and in a spirit of cordiel reepect and goodwill to ell concerned. I have noted end I menu to ect. Al I perceive thet mluppreheneion end jealousy ere opt to eriee lrom eeperete correcpondenee curled on inwhet ere. on 3 subject like this. oppoeina quarters. I here thought it beet to embody in my reply to you ell thet I have to ‘eey in the preeent etete ol thinge on the queetion of Establishment or no Eeteblieh- meet in Scotlendâ€"e queetlon which. I lee! eetleflcd. will receive cerelnl end diepeeelonete conelderetion, end with reepeet to which I cannot proleu that. in the preeent condition of impedel eflelre. it oeeuplee the hut, or neerly the lint, piece in my ninthâ€"I rennin. my door lit. leithlully youre. “ W. E. Guneron.†V _ ___ -_- "xiv-mu ywpw to con- eider, ehould not be reieed by the petty un- til the Scottish people ehould have pro- nounced upon it in e mannerwhich ie intelli- gible end dietinet. But I do not ï¬nd the phruee “main ieeue†end "eide ieeue†to be euflieiently tree Iron: ambiguity to lead me to ehoore them lor the conveyance of my own sentiments. while I think a dietinet end in- telligible expreeeion muet be all for which each gentlemen he I have described would wish to stipulate. In my preeent sentiments on the eubject there is nothing to conceal. They heve been matured, I think. he let u the present e 0! the dieeuseion edmite, end they have been expressed an fer as they have been matured. I refer to our diecueeione in Perliement, end I adhere. eleo, to the decleretion of Lord Hatington. Those who hue done meet to advance the egitetlon of the queetion were. in my judgment. the enthore of the Petronege Act 0! 1874. It in no pert. however. 01 my , , no V. -_ _. .â€" vusuvs’ Iytl’llllu of -religlon. But the funeral service used over the remains oi the lamented baronleet natur- is day was plentiinlly sprinkled with prayer! u. for the soul 0! the departed. Prayers even ut were cilered that his sins might be lcrgiven. n and the closing requiercat in pace on leaving ' the grave was pronounced in lull and sheeting terms. This corroborates the argument that praying lor the departed was auniversai custom in our Lord's day. and it the practice were open to the extreme objections which Protestants allege. it seems impossible that our Lord would not have denounced it. But it the soul of a departed Jew may he rightly prayed tor. a fortiori mendatlons in the case ol the baptised. The Proteetant in his dreary and distant notions about the invisible state will haveto lock tor sympathy among the atheists. No aneientreilgion will serve him. not even Mohammedanismâ€" Church Review. . The loliowlng letter. written by Mr. Glad- stone to the Rev. Principal Rainy, is lurnish- ed tor publication : “ My dear Binâ€"I have received the letter in which you express an apprehension lest the leaders 0! the Liberal I party should give a virtual pledge that they . will not touch the question of disestabllsh- ment during next Parliament. I do not tell within the description of a leader oi the party. but. for one, I have never at any time nearly at the same time there should have reached me an opposite intimation from decided opponents of diseetablishment in Scotland. Their tear is that the organization 0! the Liberal party may be employed to procure or favor the return to Parliament oi persona iriendiy to that measure, and their desire is that the question should not he raised by the party until the Scottish people shall have had it presented to them as a substantive or main issue, and not merely as a side issue. or one mixed up with other issues of a more pressing character. I agree ‘in the opinion that the organization of the party at large should not be employed for or against persons oi any of its particular leo- tions, but should be used impartially as he. certainly desire that community in uld to hue manly stripped null 01 lupuumlon. u wen u ol .11 tom. 01 Idolatry. Modem Jud-hm in an ample of m (manly mumâ€"mu In, in the Proton- tmt Home of tho word. .1: 9:1“:eg Iplgltlnl -â€"rallnlnn n.“ Al.-l.._-__