Na. Ind wiuhont nib his oonooiéligouio‘til}! notpomu him â€open“ on I mun. A mun om loyed It the union of Macon, has as been binon by gum! dog. w um 90 Puyonrtwhp unlined totooeivu The experts who hnvo been diuooting I ptim mun hue canoludod “an and diflorod .5 io the oomplsil'afog; the puiont. It is true. my son, a man may smile and smile and be ï¬Vllliiu. But it is equally true that a man may never smile and also be a villain of the inkiest hue. I know it is quite the thing with a certain class of peo- ple to decry the smiling man who is so monotonously pleasant that he is some- times offensively unpleasant. I know that some people bid you beware of the man who is always smiling. But you should also beware of the man who always greets you with a glare. If I am to be beguiled by a villain I think I rather prefer the smiling villain. He will swindle me courteously. anyhow. I do not admire saturnine coun- ‘ tenances even on good men. I do not enjoy any real pleasure in contemplating the bird of prey visages; the hungry glare of the village horse trader. for instance. never im- proves my appetite. I do not think there is cod reason for fearing the man that smiles inall sorts of human weather. I do not al- ways believe in his smile. There are times when he bores me beyond measure. Sometimes his set, unvarying smile wearies me as does the unwinking sun in the dead. cloudless calm of successive August days. and I want to quarrel with him and try to make him cloud up and thunderalittle. or at least strike out a show of heat lightning. I don't believe his smile is eternally a reflex of his feel- ings. He must feel blue and dismal, and troubled and chafed. and penitent and doubtful, and anxious and longing and sorrowful at times like the rest of us. But if he chooses to veil all his troubles behind a smile that is so set it betrays the mask and weariss us. wh that is his way of trying to keep his litt e light shining in this troubled world, my son. It doesn't prove that he is a villain. All men who smile and smile are not villains. nor are all men who look solemn good men. W en you hear a man saying, " Look out for he man who always smiles." that is the man. my son. who will rshypothsoate your col- laterals. â€" Bob Burdens in the Brooklyn Bugle. Gladstone‘e physician believes an autumn ssion would be the Premier's death. A careful census shows that there are 30,000 ghosts in London, and a directory of their location is being prepared. inn. nyin “no he bud not ushod hi- â€my†_t_t onoqgh 99 [nuke oer- Pass. so much talked of last year, starts from this place. runs northwest for nearly ahnndred miles, then turns suddenly to southwest along Blackbery Creek. which empties into the Columbia a little below the Kicking Horse River. The House Pass was ï¬nally abandoned in favor of the Kick- ing Horse Pass. on account of its much greater! ength (being 200 miles. against 60 of the Kicking Horse). also because It would require a number of very sharp curves. and fourteen miles of 2 40 gradient. The ï¬rst crossing of the Columbia is 2.3001eet above sea-level. After crossing the line it will run down the west side of the river about forty miles. then turn and run south- westerly tor sixty-ï¬ve 'miles down Moberly Creek. where it crosses the Columbia the second time. at an elevation of 1.493 feet. Between these two crossings is the Selkirk range. on which the summit of the track will be 4,300 feet from the sea. By crossing the Selkirk Range 140 miles are saved, as it is over two hundred miles around by the Colum- bia River. The Eagle Pass will then take the line through the Gold Range. again raising its elevation. this time to 1.800 fest. Then it will cross the lower part 01 Valley Lake and run down along the shores of Thomson River to Kamloops 124° w. longitude and 51° n. latitude. At Kamloops. this branch of the O. P. R. will join the Western branch (being built by 0nderdonk). making the line complete lrom the Paciï¬c to Winnipeg. or may be to Montreal by that time. The distance from here to Kamloops is 270 miles by the route to be taken by the C. P. R. The elevations given. of course. referto the height of the track above the sea. The mountains on each side of the track rise from 4.000 to 6.000 feet above the track. gndiniaot ihe line through this Pass in now ing actively carried on. and the rails will probably be laid over the ï¬ret crossing of the Columbia giver are this year: oloeee. The House been able to do" with any other tribe. Buty miles west of Calgary is " the gorge." or entrance to the Rocky Mountains; this place is 4,300 feet above the sea. Padmore. which is the end 0! a division and is located in the Parkâ€"a charming epotuis sixteen miles from the “ Gorge." Lugan (this place), at the summitct the Rockies. and boundary of British Columbia. is 120 miles west of Calgary. and has an elevation of 5,300 feet. The C. P. R. track stopped here last fall. alter having been laid 320 miles in seven months (from Swift Current to the summit) and is now ï¬ve miles farther. Here the Bow River. which the track has lollowed from Calgary. has its source. and flows eastward. Near here also the Kicking Horse rises and flows southwest into the Columbia River sixty miles from here. The Kicking Horse Pass extends from the “ Summit " to the Columbia flats. The Writing lrcm Laggan. summit of the Rockies. recently. a correspondent says: 115 ° W. longitude and 52° N. latitude was reached by the Canada Paciï¬c Railway about the 15th of August last year. It is situated between the Bow and Elbow Rivers, is 3,100 feet above the sea and 840 miles west of Winnipeg. Thirty-ï¬ve miles further west is Morleyville. a village picturesquely situated. and containing 200 souls. halt whites and hell Indians. This little village is situated on the Stony Indian Reserve. The Stony Indians are so industrious that the Government has stoppedsupporting them, whiehit has not The Great Pass Through the Mountain Ranges. CLIMATIC PEOULIARITIES OF THE COUNTRY. The Villa]. Who Does Not Smile. 3. AT Till ROCKIES. The ornnge tree nt Vermllee,hnown n the Grant Conetnble. in non] 500nm old. It wee plnnted in 1422 by lennor of Ouliele. wife of Ohulee 111.. King of Nnvure. An Altoonn nilroed mnn hen invented 5 device for muting on doors " epuk proof.’ will be in greet request unong parent. Penneylunin 31m. A block frog known u the Michigan frog, end we hing two ponnde. wee lonnd recently n the oentxe of e luge cake of lee at Louisville, Ky. At his jubilee Mr. Spurgeon nid very nuvely that he did not depend upon edveniaement or engoley method for hie ohuiuble incomeâ€"e In 5:10.000 e youâ€"- but simply on payer. "‘Yod may give me u two-cont stamp. it you place." " Undoubtedly. air. undoubtedly." re- sponded the druggist, rubbing his lands, expeohnuy; "and now. win: on we do for 35m. air ?" “Suchaline of policy. I take it,“ said the seedy-looking men. genes at the proprietor with an air of great conï¬dence. “ conte us the essential elements of commercial success. A conscientious con- sideration for the wants of one'e custom- ers. while at the same time s roper observance of what is due one's eel , will win in the long run. I am a professional men myself. but I take considerable pride in stating that I am. nevertheless, a practical man and possessed of practical ideae.†“ Yes. sir. certainly air. We have built up a very large trade by faithful attention to business. and by honest efforts to plea: 0 our numerous customers.†“ I was recommended here by a friend." said a seedy-looking men as, as he entered a drug store. “ who told me the: you did a very large business, and that, eny pnr- cheese I might want to make oould be efl‘eoted on reasonable terms." One of the saddest things I know of is that epitaph which the Virginia father, gathering up the remnant left him after the ravages of war. and settling himself as best he could into the new situation. placed upon a stone he raised as a memorial of his old home. On one face of it he inscribed these words: “ To the sdcredmemory of my eldest boy. who fell ï¬ghting for the stars and stripes.†0n the opposite side he wrote, " To the sacred memory of my youngest boy, who fell ï¬ghting for the lost cause." And between them on the third face, “ God only knows which was right I " I pity that man's sorrow and dark per- plexity. But there is a double question there as to the “ right." of which he dared not judge. The motive in the young men’s minds was one thing. and the justice of the cause was another. God alone knows the heart, and he alone can judge men's mouves. It is one of the strange facts of life that the best of feelings are sometimes enlisted in the worst of causes, and the worst of feelings in the best of causes. You cannot always judge the moral value of an act merely {ram its surface, nor can you judge it merely from its motive. But men are responsible for their motives which‘ they have allowed to control them. and for their use of the light they might have had it they would open their eyes to it.â€"Gcn. J. L. Chamberlain at Mouton. James Watt's workshop is preserved at Heuthï¬eld Hull just as he left it. his lathe and bench standing at the window. his tools scattered about, and his old leather apron hanging across the vice. Lieut. W. H. Smith, R.N.R.. commander of the Allan steamship Circaseian. has been transferred to the command of the steamship Ssrdinian, rendered vacant by the death of Captain Datton. It is said Mrs. A. C. Martin. of George- town, wife of the foreman of Barber's paper mills. has fallen heir t0817.500, by the death other father recently in Maine. John Wright, baker at- Rookwood. Asylum. Kingston. is the proud owner of a goose that has hatched out two broods of nineteen goelinge within a little over three months this season. The Kingston Presbytery has expressed its disapproval of Rev. Mr. Galla g’hsre conduct: ll] marrying a deceased wife‘s sister. as being contrary to the law 0! the Church. Prof. Clarke. of MoMaatar Hall, who is visiting at Waverly, Pa" slipped on a stair- way last week and tell. breaking two bones ot_lqia right arm. The wealth of the United States is 850. 000, 000. 000. or 8900 to each mhabitant; them of Great Britain is 840. 000. 000 000. or 81 000 to each inhabitant. The 'Engliah‘ deerhound,‘ téï¬Ã©SfJg' the course of me Irish wolfhound and the early English turnapit, is beoommg extinct from Want 0! use. Scrawbertiea retailed 10! 250. per quart at St. John. N. B., last week. Mr. Spurgeon, says 8 London journnl, has uotl‘lingnuo gpgplgin pf exqeptjlge 39m. _ P. Murray 'oaught a ï¬sh 'meuurinug' flirt}; three Inches in length. The aohu struck aoalm s§o_rt!y atygguaqd .1! e genneesy says the ï¬sh tbwed iii!) to ahoté.’T There was s are“ sou-nit of potatoes st Winnipeg on Saturday, an the low that were oflered found ready sale at $2 per bushel. All the grocer-res were clawed out stanearly hour. New potatoes brought 83.50 per bushel, but the supply wss very small. The Rat Portage Progress is responsible for she following: “Coming through the Devil's Gap on. Tho‘rQay ovenipg. Mr. T. n.- The Columbia River is a large. sluggish stream. navigable for fair-sized boats to the Kootenay Like. The water is too high now for ï¬shing, which is said to be good during «he summer months. A child at Stand Off. non Fort Mac. Leod, wu poisoned recently. In some way or another it got a bottle of etrychnine and swallowed the contents. Odgery went: e pnblxo heepitel. B‘rewberrlee ue 81.50 per peil et Nelson. Gooeeberriee ue "potted plentiful in the Intel dieuiou. Eggs heve advanced in price to thirty oenee per dozen. Butter hm been down to 15 cents and eggs 10 cents a Shell RIVOI‘. MANITOBA AND nou'ruwssr A Cannon- Purchaser. Don‘t Judge Ila-lily. MmJon W. Bye-m. lho projector of the In. Cotton Conunnid. prodioh um baton 1894 lbs Blah. whore oonon in grown will produce more munhomrod oolton than New England product. now.» Lord B. Churchill twice dined end once enppcd with the Prince of Welee when they met in Perie. Their querrcl ie over. Since his return Welee hoe been in con- etent communication with Lord Randolph. with whom hie releticne ere now of o more friendly neture then ever. Mr. Andrews, who lives chant c 11310 from town. woe coming clung on the nilroud crack, the bird made 3 furious “tuck upon him. Mr. Andrews was for c ‘imc uncor- hio whether he or the cane would be the victor. but It Int succeeded in knocking it over the had with 3 stick. cunning i0.â€" Traren (£741.) Herald. One morning Inst week W. '1‘. Wings“ shot a lurga onus on the [the shore. he bullet passed through the wings of the bird and into the breast. The bird wu not [quad ugd be gno i3 its freedom ugtiz . An of freight with ease. Other elevazore of the same character are being put in, and generating centres for the same purpose are talked of in several parse of the city. The expense in lean than â€earn. The city of New York is now lighted by electricity. gets its news by electricity. deals on the market by electricity. receives its quotations by electricity. has its photo- graphs taken by electricity. talks by elec- tricity. is treated for disease by electricity. is elevated by electricity. and short y expects to be carried by the same subtle and powarlul agency. The latest applica- tion of the fluid was in Spruce street. where an elevator is now daily run in a six-story structure, with electricity as the motive power. The fluid is carried over house- tops for a distance of two blocks, and when applied in full force lifts over 2,000 pounds 0 freight with ease. Other elevamn of 3' Various chemicals have been used for the purpose of bleaching bones. such as sul- phurous acid, chloride ct lime. and latterly peroxide of hydrogen ; but according to experiments made at the Bavarian Museum 0! Arts a very simple and effective method has been discovered. which is said to impart to bones thus treated almost the same appearance as ivory. After digesting the bones with ether or benzine. to remove the lat. they are thorou hly dried and immersed in a solution of p osphorous acid in water containing 1 per cent. of phos- phoric anhydride. After a few hours they are removed from the solution, washed in water and dried, when they will appear as indicated above. There is nothing so cheap or convenient for a freezing-mixture ae pulverized ice or salt. In chemical laboratories other materials are used for experimental rel-rig- eration. They are too expensive for gen- eral use. The following are some of these oomhinationeâ€"Sal-ammoniac, ï¬ve parts; nitre. ï¬ve parts; water, ten parts; nitrate of ammonia, one part; water, one part. Sulphate of soda. ï¬ve parts; diluted nul- Ph‘l'i‘? acid, four parts. . M.M. Mignon end Tonerd. of France, state, as the result of a long series of ex- periments, that hams infected by trichinze are rendered innocuous by exposure to a cold of 20° C. for an hour. It is proposed that all importeuons from America or Germany shall be exposed to this temper- ature to protect the consumers lrom trich- inosis. locus of the smoky towns of the Penn- sylvania‘lron region there has been per- fected a process for saving the waste slag from the furnaces. Before cooling, in is run into moulds, which shape it (or paving blocks. here the prayers she has sent up tothe Throne of Grace that her boy would grow up to an honorable manhood, an honor to himself. to her and to the world. Now the day of his majority has come, mother cannot give him up. She still feels her responsibility. yet he has faith to believe that her rayers will be answered. He fee I, in a certain sense, a new dignity. a new free- dom, but will it incite him to cast off all ties which have bound him to that dear old mother, and, although living according to her directions up to this time. start on a fast life and try to " make up for lost time ? " Alas. how many poor, foolish fellows have done this just at that im- portant time in ï¬le whenayonng man should prove to the world that he is oom~ posed of the real etufl that they make men of. The young man who remembers the ‘ prayers of his mother, who feels that he ‘ now has the greater though pleasant responsibility of caring for mother the remainder of her life after he is 21. will in nine cases out of ten attain to an honorable manhoodâ€"a man honored not only by the whole community in which he lives. but by the world. There is no great danger of his going to the bad. He is fortiï¬ed behind the prayers of, and love for. mother, and so long as_he keeps within that fortiï¬cation all the powers of evil cannot prevail against him. to school and remembers how she had helped him through many sknotty rohlem in his studies; she sees him enter a shop and learn a trade. Ind warns him to be- wsre of evil doors and to keep from temp- tation. All these things pass through the mother‘s mind, and how well she remem- liar Feelings Whe- Iloe- la. Benches Illa ‘Jlat Birthday. “ He is twenty-one to~dav." remarked a fond mother recently. as she gazed on the finely formed young man. her son. on his Ltwsnty-first birthday. He was a noble- looking fellow. nearly six feet tall. with clear eyes and healthy-looking countenance. with just the faintest trace of beard upon his chin. Bow proud he stood before his mother in his sell-consciousness that he had arrived at his full majority. when he could now take his place in the world. re- sponsible to no one but himself for his acts. Will he now forget all the careful training and kindly precepts that mother has tried so faithfully to ingraft into his life? Will all her labor be in vain ? These are the ques- tions that come up in the fond mother’s heart on such a day as this. She looks back over the twenty-one years she has1 worked for that boy to the time when he was a babe ; she sees him in childhood and bears his merry laugh and prattleashe played about the door ;_ she sees him going A IIO'I‘IIIB'I PBIDI A!†JDY. All-cued by a Wounded Bird. Scientiï¬c and Uselul. J08. J. CAVE, PROPRIETOR. â€RICE â€" Into nun. Woonnua. on 61w a8nndviue gavmtc A reeident of Snow Hill, Md.. noticing been passing in end out of n smell aperture on the envee of his house, oonoluded thet heee were etoring honey there. He told neerpenter that if he would remove the boxing he might hove all he could ï¬nd. The reeult wee the discovery of 150 pounde (at honey enugly lnid ewey under the gerret oor. - A pyramidal maee et eighty roses and ï¬fty loeebnda, thirty heliotropee and as many violets can be bought in the city of Mexico for 25 cents. - ' Streetcar drivers in New Orleans not only have to keep their care clean, but are expected to furnish the material for keeping the hraeeee clean. _'{‘he _pr_incipal attraction of the wedding The principal attraction of the wedding of Lord Tennyson'e eon was Lord Tenny- eon himself. Not a few of the visitors to the Abbey went their chiefly with the idea of catchin a sight of the Poet Laureate. In King enry VII.’e chapel by far the most striking objects were Mrs. Gladetone‘e extremely handeome blue velvet dress and the poet'a white waistcoat. Mrs. Langtry was really sadly bruised in her tussle with the wonder. Her lip' was slightly out, while her shoulders were bruised, and her hands and arms had black and blue marks on them. She was feeling very sore and stifl’ as her home m- night. An exhibition was given alterwads for Mrs. Langtry. It developed into a wrest- ling match between her and Lulu Hurst. A billiard one and a chair were used. Miss Hurst did all her tricks successfully. and and at the close of the struggle Mrs. Lang- try had her dress slightly torn. When she got out on the sidewalk she exhibited her torn dress to her friends and said : " That is the result of wrestling with the Georgia wonder. She is a mystery to me. I don't think it is muscular force, and if these things are done by electricityIdo not no_ti_ce a_uy shock.†Jln. Laugh-y has a Wrestle “’1": the Magnetic Girl. A New York despatch says: The Georgia wonder. Miss Lulu Hurst, gave a private exhibition this afternoon on the stage of the Madison Square Theatre. Charles Batchelor. who is associated with Edison, the electrician. was the ï¬rst candi- date (or treatment at the hands of the won- der. She tried the umbrella trick on him. He held the stick ï¬rmly for some time, but it ï¬nally flopped over his head and looked as if it had been ruined. It was not. how- ever. He tried the feet over again, but she could wreck the umbrella as she had done on other occasions. When he got through he said: There is some muscular force employed. but the secret of the girl’s power I am not able toexplain. Stephen Murphy. 9, living in Wood- bine Place. Penge. was charged at Lambeth Police Court on Saturday with being con- cerned with George Steeden. aged 9 (now under remand). living in Maple Road. Penge. in assaulting a child named Henry Douglas. about 3 years and a hall old. by putting him into a dust-bin at Laurel Grove. Penge. thereby endangerihg his life. There was a further charge against the prisoners with setting tire to the house. 4 Limetree avenue. an unoccupied dwelling house. and doing damage to the extent of between £2 and £3. According to the evidence. it appeared that the prisoners got hold of the child Douglas (a very intelligent little fellow). took him to the garden of an unoccupied house. and there put him in a dust-bin which was some four or live feet deep. They closed the lid upon the child. threw bricks upon him. and secured the lid of the dust-bin so as to prevent his getting out. That was about 5 o'clock in the even- ing. and it was not until 1 o'clock on the following day that the poor child was found. and this in consequence of a third boy having heard what the prisoners had done. and giving information to the friends. Steeden. In imparting the secret to the third boy. said it was their intention to keep the child in the dust-bin until he was dead. and then they would get a reward for the recovery of the body. It was shown‘ that the child had been Im risoned in the: duet-bin for upwards of 20 ours. and had been without food or drink for quite 24 hours. Detective Blackwell made in~j quiries. and traced the prisoners. who did not deny the charge. It was afterwards ascertained that they had gone together to an unoccupied house. No. 4 LImetree avenue. and having efl‘ected an entrance. collected a heap of paper and rubbish on the floor of the kitchen and poured on some parafï¬n on]. and then set a light to it. Fortunately. shortly afterwards the fire was discovered by a lady living next door. and assistance being called the tire was sub- dued. Some £2 or £3 damage was done by the ï¬re. Both prisoners. when questioned by the magistrate. put the blame upon each other. Mr. Chance said he could scarcely believe children like the prisoners acting in so shocking a manner. It wasreally extra- ordinary that the little child Douglass had escaped death. or certainly some injury. He was only too glad to ï¬nd the child was so well after his imprisonment in the dust- bin for nearly 20 hours. He remanded the case in order that further inquiries might be made by the police ; in the meantime the prisoners were sent to the workhouee. WORM POWDERS. Amman-Mom mantra“ mm". II 5 out. Inn. And omen.) damâ€!- of worn: In Children or Adults. Two ll." Bury - Child II . Dun III. I“ “may" let u Bow-M I"- III. Dead Body. Jl‘llllll! Ifllfll'fl EXIIIOIDIIIII. LULU AND THE LILY. (London Chronicle.) THa MAIL has become no W null-n for In. A‘- venue-ell. And Mmmohhcmthn “Mum cmmflm co.- bluod. II In: mono rudcnoflbo m ADVERTISEMENTS of "Firm fov Sale" and "Pill! WIMed.""SIoch"ov " Seed lot Sule'ov "Wanted" hound II THE WEEKLY “All..ï¬wmummde I at two? mu per wovd lot [or minnow. m In HE IL! KM 00 m and - Mum pa "denim um a “mu roi KEVâ€"XII: "mu Num- lnlhc Manufactured only at 1‘11 fa. rsr liomOWAY‘a I'Istahliwa ,v 18 New Oxford St. flat»: ‘i". 3'! ’ ’1?.)Lcndox:. and sohlat 1%. 131.1%. '1" »“‘. " Y A. ' . and 3.14. each liux and PM. ma“ wu “may nzviroura, 90cents. andélao cam». v1.4 1.“: lmgur size» in proportion. Ix" (‘.\lTTXOZ\‘.»~I lune 110.59, -n' ix.- who Unit“: Stutc<,1mr urv z..\‘ I\En:‘:iv:i2|c~.§h f. than. Pl râ€" clmspn shruhi t).u"rfvro Funk to the I Hm] on (.1! Pots and Boxes. If Hm uuldrusu is not 583 Oxford Street. London, they are spurious. Climax Cngn‘Igg’lmCompany, will be found invaluable in every household I. the cure 01‘ Upon Sou-s, Hard Tumours. Cohh. Sore 'l‘ln'oats. Bronchitis, and all dinordm of thy Throat and Chust. as aim (mat. Rheum». ism. S-rof\1hl.au-l every kiu‘l mi 81...: Diu‘usc. And every species of disease Arising from Impure Blood, c. C. ruruao av Tut Health Happiness for all. WILL CURE OR RELIEVE Biliousness, Headache, Dys- pepsia, Indigestion. Dizziness, Jaundice, Dropsa. Fluttering of the eart. Increase tlm socretory powers of tho Livernlbrm lllv nurvuus Syrtonl‘ and throw into the circula- iiou the purvst Elgmwts to: sustaining and re- pairiug the frame. Thousands of persons have testiï¬ed that '0 their use alone they have lmnn restored to bus) and stromitl‘l, after every other means hadproved 'll‘uIInnul; p n *muuccoséfu]: pgnguusmn wcusms, caucus cured for itself nujipporishablo fauna t'uruu h “L! the v. or! l for the a . viatioq and e! '0 o! _1_u st tunes to \\ hich humanity is heir. - unify. "’0th their W'Nght in Gold‘ mus xxcommmnw mamas»: nus DAILV_AN9WE;KLV MAIL â€l‘omliate nndimprovo the quality of $116 . They assist the digestive organs. cleanse AND OINTMENT. SI‘OMAOE and. BOWELS, um... Till MAIL 7mm,“ YO? WAN"?