A Perk hyeioien got into e greet eorepe lately by‘ coloring thet 5 young ledy of Seven. dd belonging to e femlly of nepeotabillt . drank. Another doctor wee [romp y summoned end sold the . some thing. The pereote werein don t v. .nd inondulit . They aid thet r nought" eotn ly diellhedmine. “ Wetoh u to: oeretnlfy." eeld dootot No.2; end e r. lew' deye zeta: momma oenght the viotlm J of the mxeterione melody et tha eeu do u Colope bottle. story. whioh wee vex- generelly behaved, elm the Duke of Pot end hed been oom- euea to pert with hie weieteoeg e! the toekbridge noon to pey hie loeeee; but why he did pert with it nobody known. The lete Prince" of Orenge wee in meny reopeoee moat nntortnnetely eieneted. Hie fewer. en unineelleotnel men. wee meter] to e y intelleotnel women. They die- oove thee they hed nothing in common. (Translated from the Germen of Belle. / Buoneu Swift.) The you in It“! end deep: Its “Ital border: lone From an the seam keep 0! e 1-: lead unknown. The nighungele'e led ley Ne'er to its depth: may sound, And tdendlhlp'e roses 3: O‘eme in money moun . 0nd lived span. A novel mode of peying e visit occurred the other day ct Alhury (the Duke of Nor- thnmberlead'e piece). when Mr. Beden- Powell, of the Scott Gouda, mompenled by e brother omccr. descended in his balloon in the perk. heving come from Alder-hot just in time for lunch. An'eleborete Ice: wee leyed or porpe. treted in Dublin last '1‘ uredey, e very neetly engreved cord being sent round to society people. requeeting the plenum of their company to meet Lord and Ledy Spencer at the Provost's house to hear some music. The revenue did not beneï¬t the hon. for postage etempe were cere- MPy ant-EM. _ "rho suntan-lad o! («no lie- botwun Wdhsll. cud tho us." , Scandinavian Poet. A! St. Peter's, Eeton Square, on Sundey week, the morning eem'ce wee rendered lively bye lady who. while the oflloieiing clergymen wee reeding in e slow voice. jumped 11 from he: eeee. end. weving her pence] at in en excited menner. ex- claimed 1: an halt-ted voice. " 00 e little (capes; con reed ea well ee tint." Chou (worm fruit hnin Cullen alien. «ruin (laden now prick . o Itin- of ordi- nuy omgen. 3nd than sublet» mum» to I 1):“: of bolorod liquid. beï¬kmkdh hon nm “(365“, o! theirAhyorjle fruit buying {Allen short. Would'lt thou walk In the and“ of tune. go‘udd'n thou um 01 gag mgu um grow 0 when I w. . In ï¬eld.- azure gmmoflmo ? By tho toot of mo «mu m Alone cunt anon tomb thou flown“. And an in the W hovers 051m home of the bird and me so. No “may. no com on Ind ; one mud that; nod o spore. WHO]: iiiï¬is’ihon flï¬diï¬o ore. ' Alone thro h the int the roar Whore the mo od woken hood. But ho who would cling to saw. 0: hold b . knowod toga. And In in his secret opo. Nor quest on his way of 3 am, my be sued by s mute:- hand And 1m to the thorg my bolt} ; .1113" no In!) mun? EU III. In" Nor war-1118M n lubor sud love. Nor you-n (or the applet. nor ctrove With I 3 main; the lover mus! ml. 869! ï¬lm FR"! 01. obltvflon F1â€- \Vhiï¬â€"iié'fibe3ï¬iém 6'33" 3 frown. And are vanished the sod-Ilka oyol. She's bmly twent . And her eyes Are very eolt An very blue; Her llpe mm mede for sweet repiieaâ€" Perhaps they're mule for time. too; Ber lime teeth m white as pen), __Her ngaqupigee witho gt]. ï¬S‘nii'y‘n'o'oYï¬oT ’bioi'él gem? Be my wander in eod on um drum. But who: the dsy I are fulï¬lled, And the mason ingot us lad Ellen ho whg olugg :9 gm koojl Wife}; biifllié h6di'uii} Irina. And whither the gods have willed. She really in u' churning girl: And I adored her-lent July. We danced end mm end bowled and walked ; She let me squeeze her nugget ti I; Enmnced I listened when 9 ed, And treeh eeemed wisdom from her lips. I sent her roeee till my purse Wee dreined. I found. completely dry; I longed to aln her chums in verseâ€" But all of th we: lest July. Of course. M: lut we 1nd to put; I ssw a. tear-drop on her check; I lett her wnh an whine heart. And dreamed about her tor a. week. By} qut o! qlsht in 0}}: of. mind; J I!!! has come mun st 1181;: Jul has come nun 3t hat: \ in: summa- gowns maroon are guy; It seems an echo of nugget To meet hu- on the b ‘h to-duy. She's ovon fIII'Ot thsn of yote. And at. I could not tell you why. I ï¬nd 0 1-1 In awful boroâ€" 80 long t in since last July. ' B‘uiioiï¬Ã©h‘aw. kinda-£6366“ by. Hugh (unbel- I beam to and London Vanity Fair In: those not“: I m lggppy $0 be ublo to onyx-gait}! thy Layne 9! 99-05)!“ "‘plqodgnngoo ‘{ wll! ' -‘-I would she mar-ma hé. " Stuâ€"memories of happier times, 01 lovin duds and ovou' rhymes. Throng orth in silver mntomlmea. “ Come book. 0 Day " said he. so: the waves 0! oblivion rue. And “he: to d: hlm clown, “In a thojgoq of he 09;; W“ The innocent. sweet Buy in deed. Duh Night huh mm her in her bed. 0!: gloom eye 9! agree t9)!“ u towed! Now, in a wild. and utter-mood. The tawny Night sits ml] to brood Upgn thg _d|_wn_~_tim_q_yvhe_q _ho wooed. The momoxy of list July. ' '7 Pit éu'c’th’o’ligh't'l" siid'b’o.†" A sweeter] ht thnn over nyod From an: honvon or 09901 maid Has vanished in the unknown shade. “ She's Heidi ' Shi'i 21am" hid 116. There btldel boron: oft sigh And wring their hands n ma: The orphan a plaintive ory choa not its dud min! Yet nowhm clue. I trow. Own ï¬nd thy yurn‘d repose; Through its duh portals low The pilgrim homownd goon. The hon-t which, full of one. B pusiou'l atoms is torn. Do turn for we o'en whore No more 'tw lbostâ€"nor mourn! glin‘tlgoy hul nothing'in oouiuiiixi . NIGHT AND DAY. (By the like Sidney hauler.) the nude- ot In.» London May. u The Grave.†Inn July. There hoe dweye been more or leee ro- menee euoeieted with Ahyeeinie. It ie 5 Christina loud in the heert o! the dork oon- tlnent. It edopted the Chrietien inith when the nnoeetore of the preeent notions lived in dene end onvee. end it adhered to it through all the reliaioue ohengee and po- litioel revolution: thet hove einee eonvnleed Europe. In the fourth century oi the Chrietien are one of the euinte. who nt thet epoch were numeroue end omnipreeent. found his wey to the heedwetere o! the eliiuente of the Nile that rise in these ioity mounteine, _e_nd eo impreeeod the A'YIIINIA. A Girls“.- laud ll tho I“?! of LI. HKrEE-WE' hEâ€"euoutim end the truth of his doctrine am they edOpted it. and followed i} weanling _so the spiritual illumination they 190M They never held it purely. hey got it mixed with Judeiem, whoee tenets were dimmineted by occasional immigretione; with Mohem- medeniem. a belief that found its way everywhere e little inter. end these varie- tione were further oomplioeted by peï¬en treditione headed down trom Ethiop An moo-tore. or imbibed from eeeooietion with Atrioen tnhee. â€At .present it is a ningnlu mixtugo of b91101 md gpponï¬gong 0! yoga“ Catho- ,7,A_L __j 1.133;. prwtio‘u otiilil'e Gmk Church und Mohsmmodan unstioinm. Chrm in be- liovod inLhut mgdq aogooly ggpegior gqtho w-‘I- 'Uâ€"v-v- “whiny of the Jews. and, as the people are ignorent cud still but savage. moreuty in n e low ebb end muricge lime ree- pectcd. There in naming tint on: bonnet! e lieenturo. tmoilnl telea end traditions eup lying its place. There Ire some books e country. but few of them of my greet igteroe‘tpr ulna on account of their 9 3- 3- -2A_-A_: __ LL- enti quity. Abyeeinie ie eitnoted on the Blue Nile and the nfllunte ot the mnin etreem of the Nile, comprising the h table lend! where they originate. e country comiete of plateaus, six or eiéht thousand feet above the level of the eee, end enjo whetin Attics 1e called 3 uln- brionl mete, whoee only drewhock ie dysentery and occasions! fevers doting the stints: 'Tho [niacin fauna; lit-o dezvinhou. Monasticism is common. The Mosnio rites and practices havg boon rgtdned_lrom line rnin non-on. It has at present no pon on the Sea. Muaownh having been taken from it by Egypt. The restoration of a portion ofï¬onoooal in said to be the town-d oï¬â€˜orod fonrmiahnoo satin“ tljo Moody The earliest settlers were Jews. Arabs and Ethiopians. Tribes of these races still exist. The Gallas are a ferocious African people. who occupy the southern portion of the territor . Catholic and Protestant missionaries ave at diï¬erent times visited the country, but tailed to make much impression on the people. Under the reign of Theodore Abyssinis acquired the greatest prominence. The English. desiringto cultivate hiefriend- ship. sent an embassy to him. which he imprisoned because aletter with an oï¬er or marriage. which he had sent to Queen Victoria. had not been treatedwith respect. This rendered a werlul military ex di- tion necessary.w ich took his strong old. The emperor committed suicide. Since his death there has been no central authority. the country being divided into three provincesâ€"Tips, Amhara. Shoe. The population numbers about 3,000,000. spread overcome 200:009 square miles of The inventive business of a Connecticut Yankee hue etc the cereer of one men and given him e ure to meditate on his evil ways. The cash-drawer o! 3 country store in Connecticut hue been reputedly robbed. The store-bee r, determined to etop this interference w th hie petty cub, contrived strep to cetch the robber. He unused in the floor e trap-door which perfectly metched the boards of the floor. intact! metohed the boards 0! the floor. egutime the door wee securely fastened t et night on le'eving the store n ontoh woe no ï¬xed that the moment the unsuspecting burglars Ihgpod on the door to oporoto on the money- rower, the trop- door 0 nod and dropped him into i pit n the or below. The side- 01 the pit were the oeflsr below. The sides of the pit were smooth and higher than 3 men’s heed. but the trep door once dropped the hurglsr could not escape. The trsp closed cuto- msticslly by s spring resdy for s second burglsr. A prsctlccl trisi o! the trep proved successful. for one morning the store-keeper found evidence of en entrence to his store in the night, end on lookim! into the pit discovered the im risoned burgisr. _ _He coolly went phone hAs _hu_si- lice-ole Conduct at III one lady. A donpntch from Mobile. Ale" deted Tneedey. eeye: Neu- Bolling, Al... lest evening. 3 north-bound trein on the Mobile Montgomery Rood ten over on eged women named Spence. killing her inetentiy. Walking elong the roadside with her little territory. The people have a certain amount of ingenuity and make cutlery and agricultural implements. with some textile fabrics of the coarser kinds. They have not a city with a population of 10.000. while the general et no of living is scarcely superior to that o! t e barbarians in the interior of Africa. The region is of little consequence to the world at large and only becomee important now by a mere accident no.5} and in due Baum of time Ind the urglu: muted. o! intermtland politics. Walkin nlon the roadside with her little do to dong ter, thelefler heonme fright- en oi the nï¬proeehinn trein end ren on the trnok. T e old Indy rnehed to the relene. eelud the child end throw it oleer of! the trunk. While in the not the treln ran her down. killing her intently end throwing her body over upon the little girl, seriously injuring the Mm. A recent edition of the New Orleene Picayune wee tinted en peper mede of begun. the re use of anger-me etter the juice in eqneezed out. end the event bee oreeted quite e etir eaten; the peper pennfeotnrege. _ The Inge; flattens 9! monuleotnren. The Inger intern at Loniaiene. who have burned t inhitherto worthleu Itnï¬to et rid of it. now seen poeeibllity otm money out of it. nnd tome of the more enthneiutio of them think it willbe neuly no proï¬table no the rorop. n lmpronmont which will am Oh. sppunnoo of the lunar town la in con. mlnlon in Borlln. The Unto: don Lin In in to In prolong“! canard by 3 now “not pining hornet; the Castle «1 the otthodnl. tad ndln ln Alena or oquno. It In to be called dur-Wllholm A Burglar Trap In my opinion evety prob-lone! men ehould keep e oheet o! eupentere' tool- in his hero or shop. end they himeel! et odd home with them in eonetru the vetted ertlolee thet ere elweye need shoot the home. write- Bill Nye in the Denver Opinion. Then in e greet den! of pleuure in feeling our own nude denoe at other tandem-3n moreee _ _ yo! the oerpeg: lib]; “I Lump“ Anus-r can ter. Every now and then your wile will went n bucket put up in none corner or oiher. end with your new bright enw nnd glitteri hummer yonoen put 0 one upon which e e onn lung u out ton harem blenke. lembuqnin. with inflexible water lilies hewed in it. A men will. it he trim. roedily learn to do e greet meny such little thiuï¬a end his wife will hr on him to other iee. end they will e invidioue oonperieooe be- tween their huebonde, who oen't do my thing of thet kind whetever. end you who ere “ no heady." Firstly. you buy e set of emehnr eer- penier toole. You do not need to soy the. you are An amehur. The dealer will ï¬nd ihet mixer: you ask him lor like» ruin- mug no oremengege un , e. He will eell you e eat 0! emeteur’e tools ihet will he mode of old sheet iron with buewood hendlee. end the eewe will double up!!!" . viâ€? 0! mini». I made a very handsome bracket last week, and was naturally ud o! it. In tas it together. it hadn't inadver- tent y nailed it to the barn floor, I guess I 1 could have used it very well, but in tearing it loose item the barn. so that the two could be used separately. I ruined abrachet that was intended to sens as the base. as it were. of a lambrequin which cost 89. aside from the time nded on it. During the month 0 March I built an ice chest for this summer. It was not handsome. but it was roomy and would he very nice (or the season of 1884. I thought. It worked pretty well through March and April; but as the weather begins to warm up. that ice cheet_is about the warmest place around the house. There is actually a glow of heat around that ice chest that I don’t notice elsewhere. I've shown it to several personal triends. They seem to think that it is not built tight enough for an ice chest. My brother looked at it yes- terday, and said that his idea of an ice chest was that it ought to be tight enough at least to hold the larger chunks of ice so that they would not escape through the res of the ice box. He says he never uilt one. but that it stood to reason that a refrigerator like that ought to be con- structed so that it would keep the cows out of it. You don't want a refrigerator that the cattle can get through the cracks of and eat up your strawberries on ice, he Alter you hove neiled' 3 bond on the fence aucoeoeiully, you will very noinnlly deeire to do something hotter. more difï¬- cult. You will prohobly try to erect a peg-lo: goble or "optic gotta. _ A neighbor of minowho onoe built a hen resort at lotha. and now went: a thick thumb until that looks like a. Brozil nut as a momenta of thot pullet corral. says my ice chest in all right enough. only thot it is not suited to this olimnte. He thinks thot along Behring‘a Stroit, during the holidoya. my chest would work lika n chum. And even here. he thought, it I could keep the foyer out of Iuy cheat. there would be loan Such crimes as those of Ferdinand Ward. while they spring often from depravity, are ottener the result of mere weakness of character. Thsokersy ln msny of his minor sketches constantly draws the por- treit o! the man sud women whose means ere not eqnsl to the style of living which they desire; and they desire it not for itself. but only because others have it. They usnot strong and steady enough to he conï¬nt with that which they csn com- mand ml slut]. and the means to secure the other must somehow he obtained. Thackeq put the fact in the simplest and most amusing form. The young couple must give e dinner. and instead of a joint of lsmh end the glsss of beer which is the only repast to which they have the moral right to invlte a friendâ€"if. indeed, the beer may he morslly permittedâ€"they must needs prepare a feast which the cannot honorably sflord, end for the so e reason that other people who can afford to give such feasts. - I hove made eeverel other little articles of vertn thin spring. to the oonltrnotion of which I hove contributed 3 good deel of time and two ï¬nger nelle. I have eleo eewetl into my leg two or three tignee. The It is this doing e little more. or e greet deel more, then the door cen honestly eflord. which leeds to the swindles of Wei street. Living in e house too expensive for his meens, meintainiog it eccordingly, dressing es his richer neighbors dress. doing in ell things as they do -â€"it is thie week complience which is hidden in the ï¬ne heusee. end drives to the perk in the line equipeges. which presently ends in Lndlow street jeil end opelese diegreOe. Yet it is the poorest kind of competition. becense the little imitetor might see even with his doll eyes thet there must elweys be e few persons thet cen " do the thing " better then ell the rent, end without feeling it. The hnilirog mey ewell until he bursts. but he oennot rivel the ox. and Ninth streets. enter the third stable door on the left. pm oronnd my Gothic house. tad give the oountersign and “ma kick: on the door in an ordinary voioo. leg. of course. will get well. but the panto- loons will noi. Portion wishing to moot mo in my studio during the morning hour will turn_intco the alloy hetwoon_ Eiglgqh This is the tendency which nil sensible peopleâ€"end s greet msny otherwise sensible people ere swept swsy by itâ€"onght quietly to resist. The power cl individnsi sample is immense but it is often under- estimsted by the intiividnsl. “ My vote is o! no consequence, but. since you wish it. I will vote." ssid s men to his neighbor. cm! the right csmlldete wse elected by s malorit of one. The ismily which in the m st 0 s sstnrnelie of luxury snd extrsvs. 3'0 5 limpln. 117101170633. tom in. wâ€. in (“mini-hing the supply of Fe {and Wad! .36. Wpllnatnsp _gsnloI_.â€"'â€"Â¥dupr'a Easy “ I speak within bounds." u u:- prisoner an! to m Min. 0M“. in Hamrfn ï¬lming for Amt. niéit 6! i iitiï¬ndilivbl luxuiy tad ant-vu- {Anoophpu 00 pk. pup In it. put hold; Int-moo In Living. rec-III! m ee emeneting from the intellectunl meohine. end not epringing. warm and irrepreuihle. from the heart. Telme. in hie treetiee on the ert of noting. eeye: “ The geeture. the ettitude. the look. ehould precede the worde. u the dub of light. ning precedee the thunder." Yet. it you watch any uncultiveted Ipeeker. you will find thet hie ecticn never mdicetee the path he in trevelling. but follcwe it. Oheerve the itinerent preeoher. whoee epopletic eloquence eug- geete thet he in euflering from n determine- tion of worde to the month; you will eee thet the flinging of bin erme to end fro in en eï¬ort to odd force to hie worde. not the outcome of etrong feeling before it hoe broken into epeech. The true oretor’e movemente muet eppeer IO spontaneous that they pose unnoticed. end yet. insen- eibly. they will effect hie audience. The most powerful epeehere ere elweye more or lose ectore. who identify themeelvee with the ceuee they edvocete. Gold rhetoriciene who hove not thin cepeoity mey bring con- viction toour rec-on when we reed their epeechee in the pepere the morning utter they ere delivered. but. looking the pee- eionete pereueeiveneee of men whose voice end freme vibrate with the emotion their worde evoke. they will never touch the heerte or rcuee the enthulieem of en endi- enoe. Gutleuletlon :- lounge to on: notion ; end yet the men who would be en onto: mulleun whet to do. uwell u whet to “Old doing. with hle tune end heude. The world in but on echo. the emhuudor of thought. All energetic motion, all deep eentlment. mun he herelded by expreeelen. or by outwud and vleible ' n o! eome eort ; othetwiee the woxde _wll fell _9oldly! [Ii-ï¬lo I'lullfl. Why a cum an: [Juana-d Gum-- In public speaking, as in reading, it in o! primuy impel-knee tint ï¬ho voice be not Broiled toomgh manor too low. but in» the ynote I); struck in the_ middle of _th_o to: sister. Many persons become exhausted in reading. or in addressing an audience. iromigsorancs of the art of res tiou. and from the erroneous notion at it is necessary to employ some non-natural tone. Neitheris it essential to shout in order that the speaker's words may be carried to the furthest extremity of a large ball. There can he no greater mistakes than these. As in singing, so in oratory. the most natural emission of the voice. if combined with a distinct articulation. will “ tell †more at a great distance than all the bellowing in the world. Actors are especially liable to forget that violence is not power. and that loudness is rather in- dicative of hysterical and feminine impo- tence than of manly force. I sat beside a great actress at the theatre lately, when a scene which should have torn out our very heart-strings was being enacted. “ Why do they talk so loud ?" she whispered to me. " They would produce twice the effect it they did not scream at each other.†~Ninetcenth Century. Throwing the shoe otter the wedded peir wee. eleo. no doubt intended en en engury 0! long life to the bride. In Yorhehire the ceremony of shoe-throwing is termed " treehing." end the older the ehoe the greeter the luck; end in ports of Kent the mode at procedure is eomewhet peculier. Alter the departure of the bride end bride- groom the emgle Indies ere drawn u in one row. and the bechelore in one or. When thue errenged. on old ehoe is thrown en en fer a poeeible. which the teir eex run for; the winner being coneidered_ to have the .beet‘ chepce As in the cese of the stochug. greet im- portence is etteehed by meny superstitious ns es to‘ which shoe they gut on ï¬rst, ellusion to which Bu er in his " Budlbres " seys: Au stu h ' ov Pug]: bli's 1'32: 3e 10221115? ht. Hed like to heve been elein the dey. By soldiers mutin'ing for pey. An old writer speeking of Jewish cus- toms tells us thet “ some of them observe. in dressing themselves in the morning. to gut on the ri t stocking end right shoe rst without ty ng it. Then eiterwerd to put on the left shoe. end so return to the ht ; thet so they mey begin end end th the right one. which they eocount to be the most tortunete." A Suflolh dog- gerel respecting the “ weer of shoes †leeches us the following: 'l‘ip et the toe: live to see woe; Wee: et the side: live to be e bride ; Weer at the bell: live to spend ell ; Weer et the heel: live to seve e deei. Among some of the meny cherms in which the shoe hes been found efllcecious. mey be mentioned one noticed in the North of Engiend. where e esentry. to cure oremp. ere in the heblt o leying their shoes ecrws to evert it. Mrs. Lethem. in her “ West Sussex Bu retitiol I," pub- lished in the Folk-Lore covd. tells us of en old women who wee et e com lete loss to understend why her " rheume es wesso uncommon bed. for she bed put her shoes in the form of some every nl‘ t by the side other heed. ever since she elt the ï¬rst twinge." In the seme count . e cure for egue consists in weering e is of teney in the sheerâ€"Domestic Folk-Lore, by Rev. T. -_vu , , at muriige. She then throws the shoe n the genuemen. when the that who gets it is believed to hevo the nmerohmoe o! mstrimony. A somewhst similsr custom prevsils in Gsrmsny. where the bride’s shoeis thrown among the guests st the wedding. the person who succeeds in osteh- ing it being supposed to hsve every pros- pect of s speedy marrisge. Msny snguries are still gsthered from the shoe. Thus young girls on going to bed st night pleas their shoes st right sngles to one snother. in the form of the letter '1‘. repeating this rhyme : “ I tho I you alum-ed good tithing .- one on o our-minn- of your summer resort." " 80 I did." ruffled the lmdlord. “ Why. thus 'I my mm nvo mile: of hon.†" I never said than was but mu of tho young lulle- in my home no hon-cum"â€" Brooktyn Eagte. Tho olden .po panama: â€in Berlin, which“: 1888 ml; 13!: ohm“ m. 4000!: mniumry of It. existence. bu 3m boon cold for nu mm of $800. 000. Boring this night m in. lovoto m. 1p too myahoosm etoxmot s '1‘. The Ely-cede- “ Shoes. Good "all". “We oen wender ehout the city end an to the theetre in the evening. The next morning the conductor oi the suty gute u in eerrl ee. end we will open the ey in viewing e Britith Mueeum. the Netionel Gellery. the Remington. the 'perke. the Albert Memorlel. Weetmineter Abbey. House of Perliement. the verioue monu- ments. ell oi the edmieeion teee being peid by the conductor. The next. July 23rd. we will drive to Kew or the Zoo. to B aete. the tower. the lew eourte. ohnrehee. end over the hridgee ; end we etill have enother dey to epere for e eerriege ride. which will be vided without extra. cost. or we oengo at on foot end vieit some pleeee o! emueement in the evening. " 0n Fridey morning. July 85th. we go down by expreee trein to New Eleven. are. the ehennel to Dieppe end preee on to Peri the eeme elternoon. We heve tour deye to see the eighte o! Perilâ€"the Louvre. the Luxembourg. the Morgue. the eewere. the eeteeomhe. the Ohempe Elyseee. the Bob de Bonlogne. the Arc de Triomphe. the Pere Monoeeu. the Hotel dee Invelid. end Nepaleon’e tomb. the peleoe et let- eeillee end 8t. Cloudâ€"ell in meg under the guidenee of e conductor w deye ell teee end ellthe hotel hille hereend elsewhere in Liverpool was enough in the dey to see the dock. . che Exehenge end the omen sigh“. Tin following morning we shell take the â€green tuin to London by w :1 giowegwgbyand in ï¬ve noun be in on: o . . m III.†In I flout tor 9‘)... “ 1th 30“!th ho chaps: Io gob Empo than to any st homo.†aid 5 m. in yutgrginy. “_8_oo whu‘un bo_dqno M 1900. I Inn with I puty on July I“ in tho City of Rome mm s oompauiw at my on alumina. We no to be u a. un- §il gum-y. _J ..y_fl)th. vhgnyo 311:}!th "0n Tueedey. July 29th. we ehell ah the night txein to Dieppe. end we no in London only the next day. We heve n day to ï¬nish up min; whet mere in wot“: seeing in Longion. end. eta: rening st nightnn tekee morning expres- trein '0 Gleegowl engheve e {hie through Englend mdï¬mflmg b; dtylighï¬t _ “ We 1-th Glaxo w n 8 o'clock 3. night. and then m the morning we hove u ebony. to see 80. M '3 (human! end the Necropolis. In 0 Moon we go on hoerd the Oiroeeaien. We gel 3 gumpeeol ehe Giant’s Oeuewey. it it is oleer. end it we nil down the Clyde we see Dumheflon Gentle. Arm Iele end the bold hlnï¬e um make the epproeeh to Gleeaow no pie- masque. We touch Moville. and thus get a. glippge of _Irele_nd. . .A.. u . .- “ On Tuesday, August 1251:. just A month she: lenving. I will be as my business in New York. The only expense outside at the 8200 to be incurred will be such uremi- tiee us I choose to give end my washing. 1 can have 113 pounds of beggege so sud from London, and 56 pounds between Lon- don end Pail. by the enormous smouht ct fluid intro- duced into the body. end by the easily- sssimilsted nutritive constituents of the beer itself. Furthermore. such hsbits sre otten sssocisted with grest bodily sctivity. sud st lesst relstively luxurious msnner at life. The sversge weight of the norms! hesrt in men in relstively ter in Munich than elsewhere. elect. thout doubt. de- pendent u n the excessive consumption cl beer in st city. The chsrscteristic chsnges iu the form of hypetrophy undc ccnsiderstiou consist in the psrticipetion of both sides of the hesrt and in en enormous incrcsse in the volume 0! the primitive musculsr elements. with enlsrgement cl the nuclei. Whether or not setuel numeri- csliucresse in the mueculsr ï¬bers tshss piece on not be known. Msny individusls sddicted to such excemu sttsitï¬usu sdvenged sge.‘ Isotwith- stun csrdlsc ypstrophy y rec. son of constitutional peculisrl en sctivs open sir life. or n en moderetion. huts greeter number perish sftcr brie! illness with symptoms of csrdisc tsllurs. At the post-mor- tem exsmlnstlcn ure discovered modersts dropsy. pulmonsry oedems. brown indurstion o! the lungs. bronchitis. congestion of the lungs. liver. spleen. kidneys. sud other orgsne. Petty degeners- tion of the musculsr wellot the hesrtis sheent inmost of these csses. sud dentls must. in the sbsenoe of sdequete customi- csl lesions. he looked upon ss due to psrslysls of the osrdlsc nerves sud lie. The . condition of such sub cote not rsrely mounts to s true plethors of the most ty icsl hind. such ss seen ‘smong the rivers _c( each on seen emong the driven at beer-veggone end workere in hrewenee in Meountry. The exoeeeeeinheer common in eome forte of Germany ere me in the new war d. but thet euoh exoeeeee ere ettended by e direct and grove denser. hitherto little enepeeted. should he gener- elly whatnotâ€"Philadelphia Medical News. The h‘bitunl consumption of beer in n- 98“?! am?!“ 5°12“. ‘9 â€EMF“! â€I ,AL- L--_A “ It I toke o month's venetian in the country it will ooet me ueuly 3200. out! if I ohooee to buy myself on outï¬t in London end bring it home I can eove hell of thnt eum by the diï¬erenoe in the ooet of thi on the two side. of the Atlmtio. The thing shout euoh o trip thot ie dieegreeohle ie the phyeioel end nervous etnin. I wouldn't advise o eiokly men or dyspeptic tuteke it."â€" . Y. Post. tho direct action 0! “echo! ugon the héui. by the enormonl mount fluid intro- “ Ah. my doth Mlee Annie. how do you like the out of my holeh ? †dnwlod o lend- gpiered Iyoung blood to e bdghl Welnnt ll 1; git . “ Well, Mr. Willeee. reelly. now. line. you eek me, I'll loll you. thet. while Idon'e olwe I like each ehort bolt. in your on. I do ll o it. for it lo no nloely out to molar." " I (1011’. qulle comprehend. Klee hole. Much whee ? " ' " Your brolne. ol manorâ€"Heroin: Traveller. . A Iago ty of tho momhou’ oi tho Bri- tioh Aoooo otion. with thoir wim. d . ton om! othor iodioo. loft London Livor i yootordo . on thol: woy to Goa o,to ottond t o onhuol muting of tho ouooiotion. whioh ii to ho hold at Manual. The oio‘orono of tho oxonroion io Ooptoin Bodford Trovoi on Plan. B. It, to when oflorto tho ooioo on of Honuool oo tho mootinc plooo io principoliy duo. Boon-Drilling and “can lute-lo. flare-stained, n It Were. A â€I... 'I'CIP.