Gueh however much one may. using seeming hyperbole and superlative adjec- tives. yet i; is impossible to express With- out their use that which will renvey even aiaint idea of the general and particular beauties ot the scenery of Japan. To appreciate how beautiful it is it is neces- sary to see for one's self and enjoy the luxury of experienung the delights that ravish the senses almost in satiety. I have met these who have seen all the quarters of the globe, having visited all the State" 'l‘ Bumps and been over India and at...) Gl'ua from Hong Kong to the great wall. who declare, without reserve. that Japan excels. as a whole and in detail, any uountry they have seen in all their "travels. The your.“ 'Juoou of upain roads Ameri- can children‘s stories to the little princes. We hear a good dul about the "rage of _a eculntinn." but. the rage generally comes a to“ the speculation. A veteran physician speaking on this subject recently said: “Judging of the thoughts of men by their words just pre. views to death. I should say it often hap- pens that a dying person gives no indioa. tion of thought upon a subject that has been the favorite topic of a lifetime. I have known active business men. with im~ pertant aï¬'airs unattended to. who died with words upon their lips that indicated absorption in some incident of the moment. generally relating to personal comfort. It was that sort of a death that Washington Irving died, saying: ‘ Well I must arrange my sillows for another weary night; if this con! only end.’ Long suflering under the aï¬liotions of a [gainful disease will serve to divert t e mind of the strongest. Even the philosopher. Ben Franklin. was forced to say. with his last breath, ' A dying man can do nothing easy. It is a very common :hing for a dying prrson to express s mpathy with attend ants who have been atigned in attending them. Among the last words of Sir Walter Scott were '?oor "min, I know you were up all mght."'â€"New York Sun. “ Just as much so as adrearu. They are controlled by the ordinary thoughts and feelings, the every-day life and education and imagination of the subject in precisely the some way as a dream is so controlled. Generally a draw is a reproduction of a waking thought. The curious jumble of subjects in i. dream is the result of absence 0! volition. 7- here is a suspension of the functions of the median tract of the brain. The same thing oecus in the mesmeric trance. The suspension may be temporary. and then the person may not only return to consciousness, but remember some of the curious things seen in the Vision. Some- thing 01 :ie same nature occurs in taking opium. In the earlier stages of opium- eating the subject "ppears to have two mental operations fling on at once: one is fantastic and odd. the other normal and regular. In such a case one is able to keep up a running comment on the visions pass- ; ing before his eyes." \ ‘7 And do you regard such exhibitions as pure_ly physical?" “ Certainly. They are quite common, and not at all conï¬ned to religious persona. Experienced physicians testify that most persons die in a. stun of tunce. Although they are appatcunly conscious, they pass away in a state of dreaming. Often they mom to be listening :0 I .uaioal sounds. Sometimes they seem to be 118kaan to by angoia." "It is, in fact, about as dimcult to tell when a man dies as to determine when he goes to sleep. Deal a is gradual, not a and- der process. I am speaking now of death by disease, not of violei ieath. Possibly in the representation of Violent death the actors may come somewhere near the truth, but generally their pictures of death by disease are, to one who knows the truth, simply ridiculous. Dissolution is as painless and unconscious as birth. The approach to it may be pro- tracted and painful. There may be long and agonizing scenes resulting from disordered imagination. Death destroys one organ after another, not all at once. The last organs to yield are the lungs, which show their oppression in the breathing, and produce what is termed the‘ death rattle. As soon as the lungs cease; to act, the blaclr venous blond is no longer, changed to red arterial blood, but is pro- pelled unpuriï¬ed from the heart, and thus poisons the body like a narcotic. The energies of the brain are gradually lulled as in the approach of sleep. and uncon- scious cerebral action produces the murmur of the names of friends, 0. recollections of past life or rei‘rence to whatever has passed through the mind. But that there is pain in natural death I have long since ceased to believe.†“ Have you eVL: observed the visions and ecstatic delights than are often spoken of by rgligiousA "titers ?" “ The ideal death.“ said a physician. IL Ohï¬lfle of one oi the New York citv hospb “'3. †was that of my uncle. He war ii. hale. hearty men of So, a bachelor. wealthy and surrouni‘ ad with over) comfort In a beautiful home not In from No» York. He arose one morning ‘tppsrsutly in per- fect health. His buoyancy of sprite was noticed. lie was singing some of the q . not old Scotch songs of his boyhood. He expected a visit from me and arose from the table alter a hasty and partial weal. saying he would drive down to the depot and bring me to the house. The oil gentle- man had not driven more than a few rods h am his own house when he was met by a neighbor who noticed scan" hing strange in his appearance. nis horses stopped. The neighbor dismounted and went to the side of his carriage and spoke to him. The old gentleman did not answer. He sa' upright in his seat. lding the reins in his hand. lie was dead. He had passed away With. out a shook of any kind. There was no apparent cause I'r his death. which was probably occasioned by heart disease." THE PAINLBSEYEBB OF DEATH. Said Dr. L. L. Seaman: “ My observa- tion convinces me that the dramatists and actors have far J». astimated the pains of death, and especially the possibilities of great mental efl’ort just previous to the moment of dissolution. Tfll’. PREMIX“ 0F DEATH. DEATH ED VISIONS 2081.101. Beantlml annn. LAST THOUGHTS. AN IDEAL DELHI. a littie time to give you some advice that will do you good.†The young follow went out and did not come backâ€"Chicano Journal. --.’\t a meotln in Syracuse the 0th evening one of t 0 speakers; said: “8 m writhing like a whirlpool, and we mus meet in with the pint of the sword." An old merchant. who has been in busi- ness here since Adam was a little boy, called a new clerk to his desk one morning this week to have a talk with him. The clerk is very smart, and the proprietor said to him: “ Young man, you are too smart. You have got so that you smell of gin. You wear neckties that would scare shores, and you seem to be a year ahead of the styles. Sir, the pants this year seemed to me to be tight enough, but those new pants you have got are so tight that I don’t see how you get all of yourself into them without using a shoehorn or stretching them with a glove stretcher. You wear a number six hat with a washer inside of it, and number twelve shoes, and your coat tails are so short I should think you would take your death of cold. And look at that diamond pin. or is it alum ? You have your ï¬nger- nails dressed by a professional corn doctor. and your hair is parted in the middle and lastered down with bandoline. You {m 39aweek, and pay 86 {or board. 84 01 whiskey and 35 for cigars. Now. where do you get your clothes 7 You think I am a tool to live here forty years and not get on to a racket of a soft-headed kid like you ? Now, you go and sweep out the store and come in here about the time you usually go out for a drink. and I will have 11 “Min Hmn 9n niun unn an“... -A..:-- I remember him at theoUnion Club and Delmcnico‘s, but that he did know how to live is evident from the way he lives now. Gen. Grant dines well now, but I remem- ber him at the Grand Union when he was ï¬rst made President, and he did not know much about dining then. After his trip around the world he showed great improve- ment. President Hayes never drank any wine at. his dinners. and therefore did not know how to'dine. I was ten years with Delmonico; I was with the Union Club; I was at the Grand Union in Saratoga ; in fact. for twenty-six years I have prepared dishes for all classes of noted people, and President Hayes was the only one I me! who did not drink wine with his dinner. Dom Pedro, the Emperor of Brazil, is a good plain diner, and lives in the French way as to hours of meals, but wants Brazilian seasoning. Alphonse Rothschild, of the English house, was a beautiful diner. Gov. Stanford is a good plain eater. The Princess Louise and the Marquis of Lorne eat English dishes, and the Princess adores anchovy paste. Really good livers care for three ,wines at dinner: sauterne. red wine and champagne. Good livers for a red wine favor Burgundy. but it is sometimes changed for a lighter Bordeaux. Gen. Barnes and Mr. J. G. Bennett care only for champagne. Mr. Jay Gould is a good, regular diner, whom a chef can serve with- out an order all the year round if he knows him, but Mr. Vanderbilt is eccentric. and insists on ordering his own dinners. 02 course there is only one good American liver, Mr. Sam Ward. New York is the ï¬nest marketplace in the world, and where 26 years ago butahalf-dozen New York families employed professional men cooks, now. I suppose, there are 150 chefs so employed. Next to New York I place San Francisco. for there are a great many there who know how to live and have the money to do so."â€"â€"Ncw York Mail and Express. Having a Little 'l‘nlk With aNew Clerk. Talleyrand, prince of diplomats, once confessed that the only man whom he suspected could read his secret thoughts was his cook. Certain it is that many statesmen while under the mellowing in- fluences of a good dinner and ï¬ne wines lose for the moment somewhat of the habitual reserve which distinguishes them. Jules Harder, the chef, for many years a resident of this city. and now at the Palace Hotel, San Francisco, tells in an interest- ing way some of the peculiar traits of a few of our prominent people. In conversation he said : “ I consider President Arthur the best liver of any President we ever had. He eatu well and eats with judgment. He was not considered such a good liver when Flt-mod In Which Pupil-n Are 'l‘uuum uh Nututory Arr. (lntervrew with a Professor of the Art) “ Our process of teaching is a very simple and easy one. When the pupil prenms herself and has donned her bathing suit. which consists of a sack. skirt and broad trousers. she is taken to the preparatory room and is taught the proper lllOllUlanf her arms and legs on a carpet. These umN- tered. she is taken to the bathing pool. where a strap. so padded as not to hurt her, is passed around her body. and is placed in the water with her face down and kept afloat by a rope passed through a pulley. Here she goes through the motions of swim- ming. which. like her music lesson at home, are indicated by the voice of the female teacher. who counts one. two, three in a monotone that gives the time to the mo- tions of the limbs. The next stage is swimming with a float or lifepreserver around the body. In this the action of the limbs is perfectly tree, and the pupil. accompanied by the teacher, often succeeds in making a round of the bath in the second or third lesson. All her motions are closely watched, and her attention is sharply called to the false stroke or laggard movement. The motions once pedeetly learned. the pupil soon gathers confidence in her ability to swim. and it is only in a few cases that we are not able to dispense with the float at the ï¬lth lesson and send the young lady out to swim without any other side than those given her by nature. Girls are taught the same stroke as boys, but I think there is an essential difference between them in the matter of using the propelling power of the lower limbs. The boy is more vigorous and more propulsive in his legs than his arms, while with the girls the reverse is the case. Many of our lady swimmers dispense with the skirt, which somewhat retards their motions, and wear simply the sack and the trousers. I think that is the most reason- able swimming eostume, for the skirt is apt to hold the water and lessen the speed of the swimmer by giving‘her a heavier load :0 carry.†TEACHING NIVIIVILVIING. Cook’s Recollecllonu. “ Mary, in your master at home '2" “ No. 3i r, he‘s out. ‘ " I don’t believe it." "Well. then, he‘ll come down and tell you himself. Perhaps you‘ll believe him.’ Testing the naked {mathâ€"Giving the bare facts. It is wrong to laugh at the crooked legs of the young man in tight trouaers, but it in perfectly proper to laugh at the tight trouser- upon the man with crooked lcgc. Mr. J. Brinsley-Richards says that Mr. Gladstone's fluency in argumentation, though a natural gift. was purposely fos- tered by his father ; indeed. all the family were accustomed toargue about everything that turned up at table elsewhere. On one occasion William ladstone and his sister Mary disputed as to where a certain picture was to be hung. "An old Scotch servant came in with aladder and stood irresolute while the argument progressed ; but as Miss Mary would not yield. William gallantly ceased from s eech. though un- convinced of course. he servant then hung up the picture where the youn lady ordered; but when he had done t is he crossed the room and hammered a nail into the opposite wall. He was asked why he did this: ‘Aweel, Miss. that‘ll do to hang the picture on when ye’ll have come roond to Master Willie's opcenion.’ †-_~ nun-v box, supposing at the time it was a cent, and did not discover the mistake until the next morning at Montpelier. Vt., where he took breakfast. Meeting William P. Hill about a fortnight ago in Montpelier, he told him how he had paid twenty-ï¬ve fares instead of three. Mr. Hill remarked that Ben. Mose Humphrey. Superientendent of the Concord Horse Railroad. was a †square dealer,†and would, no doubt, re- turn the gold, which must have been found in the box. A letter was written to Supt. Humphrey stating the facts, and on Satur- day. 23rd ult., a letter was received from him inclosing the gold piece, which had been gone for six months. and stating the day on which it was found, and saying he was glad the true owner had made his claim so cleanâ€"Concord (N. II.) Monitor. On Dec. 16th, last your, C. U. Lathrop, Esq., of Williametown. Vt., wee in this city on business. and visited the state prison in the afternoon with two other gentlemen. 0n returning from the prison in a. horse- car he put 9 82.50 gold piece in the fare- _._._ -7-.. -u unv- Thus ended the most eloquent plea ever made by any prisoner at this court. The effect on the Judge and audience was marked. The prisoner was impassioned in his utterance, and was more than ever pathetic and touchingâ€"Fort Smith Special. __.__...--... u uJauE Lulu.“ an be hung from the cross, a companion in death with Christ, and that same star of hope scatters its rays in my heart. Yet I ï¬nd it hard to banish the dread events from me. Yet why so? I have always been honest, and stand guiltless to-day of the crimes for which I am about to be sentenced. I stand here and boldly say. and with a clear conscience, that I did not kill those two. men.. If I speak falsely, miserable or happy souls, who- ever you are. make your appearance upon the threshhold of this room and cry out. ' Thou liestl ’ And to you (addressing the Judge) whose duty it is to be tender as well as just, I ask all clemency you can give. And now,fareWell earth, made wet with tears and blood, farewell ; and to my enemies, farewell. Time’s brief work in the face or eternity, a ray of celestial joy falls upon me and takes away every fear, aud‘I now know how easy it is to die." a... 3 Death is the destiny of all men; and being a debt of nature which must be paid, I do not fear to meeait in its natural form. But I shudderâ€"I fearâ€"the best of us do so, to die a disgraceful and ignominious death. I do not make this talk as an effort to save my life. It is an effort to seek justice, and to save the reputation of my hmily, whose .honor is dearer to me than my life. For what is life ‘2 It is but a vapor; it appears but a little while and then it vanishetn away. Itis but a spark struck out of noth- ingness and expires in darkness Nay, it is but a flash out of darkness, soon again to return. As the old Saxon imagination pictured it, it is, ‘like the swift flight of a bird from the night without, through a lighted chamber ï¬lled with guests, heated with the breath of passion, back into the cold night again.’ The strange uncertainty of life is but a mcck theme of pathos. No description can touch all the sorrowful ten- derness which death in me excites. now be- come so tragic and so bitter. Oh l igno- miny l thou art bitterer to me than the gall which Socrates drank. It is non death I fearâ€"it is the form of deathâ€"its igno- miny and the shame of the gallows. Under my present circumstances I can- not but till my mind with the gloomy images of death, and torment the present by apprehensions of the future. But religion does not countenance any such morbid anxiety. She comes bringing in her hands the flowers of hope, and, like the angel which she is, whispers of the cruciï¬ed Christ, ‘ He is risen.’ The star of hope that ï¬rst beamed on men like me shone from the murderer's dying faith. as L- ‘____A . .I “ May it please the court : I know not which weighs the heaviest upon rueâ€"~Won- der or grief. Both weigh heavily upon me. I must ï¬rst call to mind the occasion which I am called upon to make my appear ance before the court today. This to me is most solemn and serious. It is as the Ysadness of death itseli~death which in a brief while will come to me with sickle and terror. Alas! alas! for such unlucky stars that beamed at my birth. But I am not possessed of that obstinate stubbornness characteristic of one who is about to have sentence of death passed upon him, or. more generally speaking. a hardened ‘ criminal. Being truly sensible of the singular andsericus position in which I am placed, Icannot help but shudder,and must say that these are the saddest moments of my l_iie. 7 As was expected by many, Finok. when aéked by thejudge If be had an ythiug w my why aeuteuuu of death nhould not be passed upon him. arose, caim and collected and mid in a distluob and rather musicul voice: 'A Pmoner’l I'lru. Death aenzence was passed on Saturday luau upon three meu~Murtin Joseph. a negro, who killed two men ; Tu-al-iu-to, an Indian. and William H. 1' iuck. They wow eeutenoed to bang on the 29th of June. Finok is a quadmou. with decided Italian features, and am‘an' of unusual Intelligence. A Scotch Anecdote ol Glad-tone. A Gold Piece in the Fare Box. Conversationâ€""You any that Susan won't pay you that note? In he embar- rassed?†“Woll.ha won't pay the note; says he can't, but he didn't seem to be a bit embarrassed! Never saw such cheek." There is a report that Mrs. Alexander Carlyle. the favorite niece of the author. is going to write something about her uncle. hielady is the wife of the head of a board- ing school near Wimbledon. and has two sons. one named after her uncle. and the other after her uncle‘s favorite hero. Oliver Cromwell. ~~A Berlin piano ï¬rm he bought most of the onken piles late! taken out of the Rhine at Mayence, and lieved to be part of a bridge mentioned by Omar. An eucalyptus tree has been discovered in Victoria, Australia, that far surpasses any of the great trees of California. It is claimed that it is 430 feet tall, and measures sixty feet around the trunk at a considerable distance above the roots. Hon. John B. Garnier. of Lawrenceburg, Ind., has quitea curiosity in his garden. It is a pet turtle, of the hard shell kind. Its peculiarity consists in its ability to catch rats. Ever since the late flood those rodent pests. being driven from Oldtown by the water, have been almost an intmerable nuisance to the inhabitants of Newtown. which is fortunately located on high ground. Mr. Garnier and family have frequently noticed the pet turtle feasting on the carcass of dead rats, and had won- dered at this strange sight; but recent] . as the gentleman was showingsome lrien s through his beautiful garden of flowers. their attention was attracted to the rust- ling of plants near by, accompanied by a scratching and whining noise. On investi- gating thc cause of this disturbance. what was their surpriseto ï¬nd the turtle en- gaged in a ï¬erce battle with alarge rat. The turtle had the rat by the side. and was dexterously using its claws on the strug- gling animal. The rat was resisting its enemy, furiously biting and scratching the hard shell of its assailant, but Without making an impression. It was squealing most piteously, and while the visitors were looking on in astonishment the turtle coolly completed its work of death, and the rat rolled over a corpse Union Paciï¬c preferredâ€"A happy mar- riage. "Henoeforth we meet as strangers!" exclaimed Brown in a ï¬t of anger. "Thank you. Brown, my dear fellow!†gushed Fogg] sï¬usively; “ you 'elweye did treat strangers better than your friends and acquaintances, and you make me exceeding happy that I em henceforth to share In your distinguished oonsidere~ tion." In England we flatter ourselves that we know how to “ sweeten the soil.†In the north of France they do it literallyâ€"with treaclel This statement is certainly startling, and, fearing to jeopardize even for a moment our reputation for sober sincerity, we hasten to shed a little light on this singular employment of sweetness. In the region just specified many of the farmers are also manufacturers. They not only cultivate the beet, but extract from it a sort of sugar, which, if we err not. is the pet abomination of every properly digniï¬ed British housewife. The reï¬nement of this sugar leaves a residue of treacle. of molasses, of what the French term A vinasses.†Having arrived at the ‘stuff last named, the force of reï¬ne- ment can no further go ; vinasses areâ€"or, rather, were formerlyâ€"regarded as a waste product. Not knowing how otherwise to get rid of this liquid, the reï¬ning farmers distributed it over their land by means of irrigation. Sweet are the uses of adversity, however, and out of this dire necessity arose an unexpected virtue. According to the chemists, this liquid contains all the: fertilizing agents which are absorbed from the soil by the parent beet. It therefore follows that if the vinasses he returned in sufï¬cient quantity no other manure need be used. Moreover, land thus dressed will for a time yield splendid crops of cereals. including wheatâ€"a fact that oddly sug- gests the existence of a subtle aflinity between the elementary constituents of bread and treacle. Under this treatment, howover, cereal crops gradually deteriorate both in quality and quantity, unless the cultivator resort to the liberal use of phosphate of lime in addition to his vinasaes.-â€"Londou Live Stock Journal. Seven Men on in Fine Engine nre ('buu-ct by - Locomotive. Seven ï¬remen belonging to the Brooklyn Fire Department had an almost miracu- lous escape from death recently. An alarm of tire called out the engine. and its driver sent his horses on the Jump through Van- derbilt avenue and across the Long Island Railroad tracks (in Atlantic avenue. A train trom Brighton Beach Was coming down the track. The gateman watched the ï¬re engine crossing the tracks and realized that there was danger ahead for its tender. which is just behind with its horse on the gallop, unless the railroad train was brought toastop. He waved his lantern signalling danger, but the rail- road engineer paid no attention to it, and his train came thundering along on the down grade with its speed unchecked. Seven ï¬remen were on the tender. and Frank Creighton, its driver. was urging his horse along at the top of its speed. The horse's hoofs had struck the railroad tracks before Creighton fully realized what the warning about of the gateman meant. He then saw that the railroad train was close upon him. In an instant he had- whirled his horse's head around. turning the tender so sharply about that some of the ï¬remen were nearly thrown 03. Rising in his seat he plied the flash to the startled beast, and away it went down the track. The tender‘e wheels jumped from sleeper to sleeper, and swayed violently against the rails. The seven clung for their lives. For one long block this unequal race between locomotive and horeelasted. Carleton avenue was reached, and Creighton jerked his rein again as suddenly as before. The animal. snorting and rocking with sweat, turned sharply off the track, and safely dragged the tender upon the paved highway just as the loco- motive barely grazed by. People who watched the incident expected to see horse and men thrown into the air, and mangled under the locomotive wheelsâ€"New York Times. [Violas-cs an n Manure. A Novel Rat-Catcher. HmnAonnâ€"Pmlculariy is removed and par. mummy outed with 7mm“. Try a lo cont ample. It rogulatu tho Htomach and Lint. TIIE DEBT BLOOD PUlllll'lflllo There is only one way) by which any disease can beoured. and that is y removing the causeâ€" whatever it may be. The at medical author- ities of the day declare tha nearly every disease is caused by deran ed kidneys or! ver. To restore thee hereiore is he only way la'which health. can be secured. Here is where Imer’e Bale (lure has achieved itc great to ntation. It acts directly noon the kidneys and ver and b plac- them n a healthy condition drives lseaae and gain from the e stem. For ellKldney, Liver and rlnary tron ee. for the distress ng die- ordera oi women, for Malaria and physical troubles generally this great remedy has no- equal. Beware of impoetore, imitations and concoctions said to be just as good. _ For I_)_iabetee ask for Warner's Sale Blu- n. n. WARNER as 00., Tom-00.01â€. Roche-far. N. Y.: London! mu. Mice. viii; FOR THE KIDIHS, [IVER All] "BINARY MEANS- T In only u {not all people should know-â€" E vorybod high, embody low~ ll. who. ealrlng their Teeth to look white, rush with "Tswana? " each morning.†_l_‘_‘ very satisfactorily. â€"A woman wntes to the Boston Globe that, ï¬nding she could earn more in busi- ness than her husband, they reversed the usual order of things. She now goes to business, and hi does all the home work and does it excellently. The plan works A very polite and impreshible gentlemen, meeting a. boy in the street, said, " My dear boy. may I inquire wher9 Robinson's ahop- is ?" "Certainly. sir." said the boy, very respectfully. After waitiuga few minutes, the gentleman said. “ Well, my boy, where is it ?" “I have not the leash idea." said the urchin. can safe, and died with 6.000000 florins and a title. He aubieoted his safe’a publicly to the action of ï¬re as an advertisement, and obtained forty decorations from the rulers to whom he sent magniï¬cent speci- mens of them. Baron Wertheim, the great Austrian manufacturer of iron safes, was of un- certain origin, and began as an apprentice; he learned in yourh theeeoret of the Ameri- ,, -_ â€"~ - v-- â€"vâ€"-o-~u "v..- "0-15". "x"- ting of blood, and the early stages of consump- tion, Dr. Pierco's “ Golden Madical Discovery ' has astonished the medical faculty. While it cures the severest. coughs it strengthens the system and puriï¬es the blood. By druggists. The inexperienced person who conceives a steel ship or a steel yacht to be a shiny monster, with the bright polished surface otakuife-blade or -a pair of scissors, is usually wrong. Shipbmlders’ steel is, for the most part, a duil gray, lust-slush sub- stance, easily confounded with common iron. But the fast English cutter-yacht Vanduara has been sand-papered and. emeried until her sides shine like silver. She has also been provided wnh electric batteries, which diffuse a constant current all over her. so as to prevent the adhesion and growth of harnaclen and marine- grasses. London World says : “ The biography of George Eliot, which has been inner- ru ted in its preparation by MLGrOaB’ long in isposition. wul, now that he hen recov- ered. make rapid progress. I hear that Mr. Cross in working from the minute and uninterrupted diary which his wife kept trom her earlier years until her,den.nh." For sil’e’b'y‘ all dealers. ' A crank went into the Sunday School at Unity Church. Des Moinee. Iowa, on Sunday morning, with his arm ornamented with a live garter snake twined about it, and seated himself in the Bible clean. The people were much put out at the Introduc- tion of the pumitive toe of mankind. A Liverpool thief washed to get into a pewnhroker'e oflioe. and thought he could elip down the chimney it naked. 80 he took his clothes off and made the trial. only get stuck feet in the flue. He terneined there all night. and was glad when ï¬nally taken into custody by the police. because they had to rescue him. Mr. Gledutone'e published " works " end their translations and criticisms number 291 titles and ï¬ll thirteen pagan o! the Great British Museum catalogue. A German paper in transluting Yuma Doodle My: : “ The word doodle 813nm†u. lazy soouudrol. a bummer." In the cure of severe cougpsï¬,‘ yank gangs, spit nâ€"nlklnnz -.-.I AI__ _~_Au, Miscellaneou- lu-I.