But in all those walks and talks and road. inge,thouqh he singled out Laura as his companion, and turned to her for the appreciation he iallcd always to obtain from others. she never dreamed ct any peculiar and personal interest on his part .more than that community of spiritual iu- terests which was once the lair Platonic day- dream oi many a girlish soul. Girls in these days know better. or know more. She had never had her pulso quiokoned or her visions perturbed by this man. Theoretically she admired hlm; his mind seemed to her very deep. Bis selfleh'rsticanco and moody temper were a great deal deeper than ‘auy mind he had. and his pompous soil-conceit was but a cover (or the most cross and dog- matic ignorance of anything more proiound than hie law books. Even his professed religion was a form that did not modulate or sweeten his daily iiie; he kept the command- ments beeauee it was respectable and proper to do so, not because he loved to obev his Father and Lord. Honesty, cleanliness. economy. a certain hard and uselui intellect and tolerable sell control were his virtues ; but toa person with any sense oi humor he was absurd too olten, and vhil rampant conceit made him . w- -â€"'. "" "'-I- I “m..‘:.. voluu o! m':' “an: â€3"?- â€â€œwԠa†"" non: Icon an Want reduction hon P'"°"v “‘4 5' â€3 '° 3"â€. “ )m m. nor 3 poem um an. not “mod "in" m““‘"“ to “3' 90â€.“ 1 0.. soul. md blind mm to m- but in} I): “13:22:?‘who in childhood’l em “11’ “am“ am mm.†' Dld'n'l an to me we plioo or new both y swam" "um "mm mm ' h“ 80 (“£131qu Ihnt name I to t um loss ‘3 mu" “d "nun“ '“uh Which nuu m o! cum osn in]! com onutoâ€" trlondlhi 0! I on culmin- I A mother’s on and salmon fund lptuno p y M ‘ And dunnot one: 0! marks. 11 fly but townndth “homo: could I ohoou Auoblo‘lâ€, mm wom’o? Anbonou man. which '. mud I‘m" "“1138 Cow-“90M“: work, than at. For Truth and taking out. , 7 7 Right?" A ohunploo undlemuyedmho ne’er st wrong 0: mam unjust both winked became, tonoolh, The doon ut enmroned to pieces hlgu. One who dlednlned to cringe to my men Althouga thereby be mlnha hove gonen can And won position. one, and ell the good Thu boner mind. would prize as hr above A oomclenoe clan ud void 0! all oï¬enoe. ,ï¬--- - v.1 â€"-¢ uvvluw EDI“ DU. Then they would panes under lomo great tuc, Ind when their companion: had gnthuod about them, thll youth would draw from hll cop-clam pocket 3 small Volume of poetry and tottuu Tennyson or declolm Browning with Iuoh trick. of olooution as college had taught him, and such lack of perception u woo lnbotn with him. “06"". uv n; huv lvu emu! U Laura was very angry. but everybody else laughed. Bhe alone; she thought, understood this loity Ipirit, and enjoyed being a dieoiple oi hie tine theories. It was a pleasure to her to pound along aiter him by the dnaty road- eidee, and come up in time to hear him lay, with a geetnre of command and digito mon- atratum. "That eioudl" or. perhaps. "That eon l†whereupon Laura tell to and admired at it. as old writers lay. in the infentile inno~ come of her heart thinking the thing was to be admired beoange Mr. MeOraw eaid eo. _ v .. . x 7 "- '1" to divert the way. M119! Ind miiel had Lame btockton ioiiowod hie lttidel over hill and dale, distancing her ieu enthnliutio comrades. the panting with iatigne. he cool and gennt. the sandy hair that thatched his angular head flying in the breeze, his high cheek home and prominent nose turned of e crude pink in the keen air of the Donnie hills, and his greet ted hands "ringing beside him iike 3 pair oi nw pendninma. E'ou In tho vile" th brood churlty Bould olou discern o good-the up"): divino Though hunt. waning but the quickeuiuz tooth 0! noble tufluonoo. oumulo pure, To ton fl tum never-(111131131110. The lowest cum-t mu brother man ; No Lulu thou, to take t 0 other side. A kindly, ho] lug bond ‘3 over "ruched To all in nu , sud from thflhud won more Thou ("out bounmully. ouo unoheoxod, Unwind left thy ovoropou door. No to" of wortuluou dld'st thou requireâ€"â€" Thu mlunblo oxouco tor heutlosuueau ; _ The not“! to be pluod.lu thine one mm wrotph‘ who know ma he himself had Bally Siocklon; LnEEK'riiâ€"tag'aianr. cin- fnlly given to parodies. tuveatied the “ Bsttlo o! Ivry " to: Laura‘s bencï¬t, and undo the refnin: Prm where yo see my light locks wave, and "In...â€" n... I... _â€" tr-â€" -7 ,,_- ,- ~-- ..., "but Ivy-u nuvv. uuu â€hear my lund gnfluw, And 136 mu: oxmummo today the red hands o! '4â€...â€" -w-" ._..v â€"- wrecked, †7 His own end worse. it might be. other lives; And bowed beneeth the burden or Too Lute. A men thou srt of simple. childlike faith. Enduring petience, end undying hope, In one grand word. thou ert a. Christlike man. I think with end regret of all the years Passed for from thee tor Providence decreed That my life pnth. when th protecting love I needed mos should for lverge from thine: And I hevem led thee sore s. thousand times. But ever bv my side thv spirit seemed To stsnd end counsel me to choose the good ; And sweeter praise on me was ne'erbestowed Then this, “ Thon'rt very like thy fathemhild." Had I not locked so oft thy sympathy, Thy tender guidsnee. ever wise reprooi, My muse hsd taken lottier flights and thou nsd'st seen th youth again renewed in me But having to oreso so much my strains, E'en when I sin; of thee, are Inlterin ; And yet is deep. untethomsble 1100 of loud eflection surges in my soul, 1n vein I strive to give it overflow In voiceless music. and within my heurt It must remain u sweet, imprisoned song. Liars at by the window of her room. ruding a note, nothing but porpioxity and disimbnnoo in ha: hit face. She was 3 noble, intelligent, well-educated girl, but utterly unsophisticated. or. al but lohool-mtol culled her with girlish dang. “falcon." ll'L 4A, 'Ihere we: no reason for thia in her locial eunoundingl. She had been born and brought up in a city. been lent to more than one beerding-eehool, and seen much good society in her iather'e home; but her nature wee radically unworidly, and could receive nothing oi a counteractive kind irom thingl about her. She was as romantic, a: sentimental, aa ideal. enthusiastic. innocent and gushing at twenty an a girl of ten; believed what people eaid to her, had implicit faith in the newepnpere, deepieed moneyâ€"it ie to be acknowledged she never knew the want oi itâ€"and had entire trnet in honor, honesty and kindlinere of all about her. Within a year of the time we are introduced to her ehe had formed on acqeintance and what aha celled a‘iriendahip with 9 young â€"_.. x- -\.___24 ,,-,__-_-r vu-Iu- Jul-l†mm in Dannia. who was a law student 303 rubs: m unusual apeoimon of the class. Mr. McCrayâ€"tor hu_wu o! Scotch demonsâ€"was poor. pious uud prim to a degree. Laura thought him on near a. stint as could b3, uud oouuldorod their intimacy I privilege to her. He was one of those people who talk a sort of reï¬ned And pootic cant that sounds well. but. like the fruition fig-tree, food: no living soul. His modest recreation after hard study oonoiltod chiefly in long wulka, uud he do- lighted in getting up p_o_rtioa oi _hll own pg L‘ A:_-_A .L- .7, Slam the Door Alter You. MABY J. MAcCOLL. Unlucklly.tho girl who received this curiously methodio 3nd stifled no“ u the door curried it to Sally. who reoogn ized the tall and than lnr scrip tyoho had '0 often aid was I parlcct phomgrnph of the man. She ran up etelre with It to Laure. end Ine- llelonely stood up while ehe read it; for Laure was too elmple to nnderetend expediente, end dered not quite eek Belly to leeve her. Poor glrll ehe could be ellent. but her hoe epoke for her. Even to her nneuepeotlng eoul this letter we: ungrnolonl u well ee nngraoelnl; between the written linee run that ennotetlon thet lettere I0 often betrey; the eel! love.the innate tyrenny,the obtueeneu.the etiflneee ol the men‘s netnre underlined his words. Bully unleelingly wretched her face no ehe But when winter covered ell geological formetions. end welks were brought to e sudden end. this strenuous youth devised e new diselpetion. Collecting e regged evening school in the lower pert of Dennis, he best up recruits emong his own sort to become teechers. end Laure took up the project with eerneet enthusieem. 80 docile was she in ‘ edopting ell his suggestions, so devoted to the work he hed ineugureted, thet he considered himself beiore long to heve {armed her mind and moulded her cherecter. end looked upon his creetion, in e certain proper wey. much es Pygmelion looked et hie peer- leee stetute. yet. no doubt, with e profounder sense oi his own power end glory in the ieshioning of such en lmege. Seeing in Leure e reflection of his own goodness end greatness. e deeper emotion stirred within him then she hed ever before ewekened. fleli love wee his strongest treit end he leern- ed to loveher from this motive. His eyes shone while he telked with her es pleesently es green eyes een shine, end e milder pink then the spring breezes bestowedâ€"though etill visibly vividâ€"summed his countenenee with en erid glow whenever she ceme into the school- room. He wee so certein thet he wee in love with her thet he resolved not to welt till the yeer expired which he hed set ior thelimit 0! his deley, end before spring hed ieirly begun he egein, though in e rether less formel end e shede wermer menner, requested Miss Leure to eccept his heart end hend. adding : "I meke this ofler in the conï¬dence that such e union will conduce to our mntuel spiritnel good end render more useful to both of us the discipline of this life‘ end the meens of properetlon tor the life to? come.†â€"0." M h. b, â€dill.“ Eng!“ ‘0 Whig-f ' .-"-' " “ll-l- III, mum Inner Plotoniun to take mum oi hi. "on, 3.11,, don't think oi thsti" aid :31, “ab“"m;°:“.t:r “as-- H- mm» ’ “n m ‘ " W" “n “M am. It would do no gooamm, Stoohton would insure him ‘ high ponition But. Lynn. do. do reject him one. to; .11 gm. $0323 o?:,.g‘::ï¬;:n:3u rats: time. Shut tho door on him. or. u momm- ond distinct on»: oi mmiuao in the note modtonyâ€"md W“ “‘W you than did luv. the doou ajIrâ€"‘ you‘ll hove to do it which no iound Lsura reading Ind mdi- m N19 8 0'â€. _ wot-agar}: Lou‘n‘. " Wlll you hue my gold bnoolol?" lho naked. mockingly. when her ulnar lsld the not. down. " 0h. Lllltl, you'll ballot. mo She wee peined. grieved end dieeppointed; ehe liked Mr. McCrew much, no long ee he wee only e lriend. but not one tender eenti ment pleeded (or himee elover. The truth wee. though ehe could not iormulete it. thet thie men we: not e gentlemen in en, eeneo o! the word. Good breeding in e eete ehield egeinet en unï¬t merriege, for e well-bred women in repelled by her inetlnete iro'ue low end vuiger men. And et heert thie precise Mr. McUrew wee both vuiger end low. Leure wee perplexed, end tried to receli to her-ell eny undue encouragement ehe might heve given him; but her conscience ecquitted her. end the excueed him en being beeet by come peeeing iency, end enewered hie note in the kindeet enu moet delicete manner, expreeeing regret thet ehe muet seem to hurt hie ioeiinge. end hoping they would etiii continue to be friends. “But, Sully, what have I done? Idon’t use my reason why one cannot dislike to gnu!!- man, and yet like to be friends with “Parhnps you don't. but In doel. In six months see it ho don't offer again. I’ll give you my gold braoelet if he doesn‘t. Ho don't tool ujootod; not at all, I assure you. Imus, it you had been a little yellow goaling on ï¬ho edge of Cross Pond, you couldn't be more silly thou you are." Partly became ehe wee ahy. partly became ehe wee an American girl, she did not go to her mother with thie note. or. indeed.conï¬da itto anybody; yet Miee Bally’e eharp eyee read the eecret with the acnteneae oi fliteen â€"when ï¬fteen ie acute; Laura at twenty was no match for her. Mr. MoOrew emlled a grimly pleasant smile when he received Laura'e anawer. Worldly wisdom wee not wanting in him ; he regarded her regret and hope ae tantamount to an acceptance. and in a week or two reappeared at Mr. Stockton'e houee ae pious. poetic and prim ae ever, and wae received by Laura exactly on the old looting. She wee pleased to think he chart-had no ill-feeling at her rejection; he wae ae much pleued to be virtually accepted by her emiling welcome ; and Sally, who hated him. wae iurioua to ace that he had returned to hie iormer looting without even a dint or etain on hie mail oi conceit. -_â€"- .._v_ _‘ ..- _- v ‘v-ovâ€" was as much pleased to be virtually accepted by her smiling welcome; and Sally, who hated him. was furious to see that he had returned to his former footing without even a dint or stain on his mail of conceit. She turned upon Laura as soon as he left the door that morning. "Laura Stockton! are you a fool i†“ Why, Bally. what is the matter 7 what have I done now 2" “Done! When you refuse a man, why don't you refuse him. and not have him dangle after you like this 2" " Who told you I re’used him?†said Laure. blushing red as a tire-lily. “ Your face told me, and various other indications. I can see with my eyes. if you Aln'ï¬ 7’ “ You don’t think he has been refused, do you, my dear? He thinks even now that you are trying to draw him on again." “ Belly. you are too bad." " Laura, you are too hopelessly absurd.†But Sally’s case was proved. as she had triumphant evidence within the third month liter this sharp skirmish, ï¬nding Laura one day in tears over a note renewing Mr. Ms- Craw's ofler in set terms, but adding that he should not. after previous experience, have tried his fate again. but the unmistakable encouragement, even invitation. she had given him of late really obliged him to do so. Bally raved and Laura cried, but counsels of sense prevailed at last. No notice whatever was taken 0! this impertinence, and the answer flank In the: limn‘nlk and unwrap-cl can": However. es the summer went on. mstters reverted to the former footing entirely. Geology now occupied the MeCrew mind, sud with begs and hammers he led his neophytes up em! down. and ï¬lled the echoes with sounds of gneiss, syenite. volesnie lormstion. dip of strsts end the like uttersnees and gsvo occasion {or the enemyto mock him in the person of Belly, when, being asked by s vieitor in search of inlormstion whet s oer- tsin blue mountain in the distenoe was, he eurtly snswered “ Trap l " the astonished girl having meeot to ssh its proper name. She turned upon Man u soon I! he left the door tint morning. " Loan Stockton! no you 3 tool 2" “ Why, Bully. what in tho mttar 2 what hove I done now 2" Lsun'oponoé her large eyel. “ Sally, I don't think you ought to talk that way about it; y_oo'_1fo_only_o_ [“1le girl." "A little girl! Then you‘re only nbnby. Min Laura; Ind I believe in my heart you IIIâ€"I grout, big. dour, impracticable baby. Just wait till be 039:: again. and we'll see who is right than.†“ Halli ! " But the leomxor had vanished in math. touch In don. good no“. lo" Luus'l 2 I'd In; to â€panel‘s, at]: A‘ IA!“ - “ My door. it would do no good I! Idld. But. Lulu. do. do njeot him one. tor on this “mo. Shut the door on him. or. u mommo uud to soyâ€"ad you know you u..,- did luv. the doou oiuzâ€"‘ you‘ll hove to do it on: oath. Linn! " Mr. W. 8. Gilbert. the celebrated pie:- night. and Mr. Arthur Sullivan. the well rnown mueicei compoeer. end who together compoeed the " H. M. 8. Piueiore." errived in New York on the eteemehip Bothnie. A gentlemen, clad in e long, heevy trevelling ooet, with brood for trimming end travelling eep. tripped lightly down the gang plenkâ€" thie wee Mr. Arthur Sulliven. who ie oi medium height end thick eet, derk complexion, with bleck moueteehe end heir, closely crop pedwhiehere end large brown eyee. In one thing. et ieeet. he in eherecterietlcelly Eng. iieh â€"he more the eingie eyegleee. Mr. W. 8. Gilbert. who followed in hie immediate weke. in en numietekeble Engliehmeu.teli end oi commending presence, poueeeed of on easy, nflehle end unefiected meuner. Few when so u for In this. but many go for enough to make their homes places o! to:- ture for all who dwell there. And when this in the one it does not betoken great love on the pert of the wife. for one who love; is alto alumniâ€"Mn! Km Dame. " I don" want to hurt hi! helical. though. Bully. I think um wouldbo unkind. It in D an“ oompumons to my mo. 0! oonru." “ Leure! Lenrei you meke ~ me think of whet thet horrid men we met lest you et Newport eeid ehont Nlegere Belleâ€"you're ' eueh e eweet green.’ Will you let me write the note 2 " “ No. indeed! " wee the indignent enlwer. And Belly eould only hope thet her inter- ierenee hed been of use ; but ehe doubted it when in Key ehe eew Mr. MeOrew. eiter e brief eeuon of euiky ebeenee. yield toLeure'e gentle eivility end evident remoree et heving oflended him. He wee not gentlemen enough to perceive thet. being e ledy. ehe wee pained to have wounded hie ieeiinnfe. end wee too eirnple, beeldee. to know thet eny ettempt et reperetion would he treeted ee repentance. He took the role of en injured pereon. led Leure on to endeevore at eppeee- ing end eoneilieting him, end. when friendly reletione were et leet re-eetebliehed. pereieted in eire of do haut on but towerd thet enreged “Well. dear Lama. ID you mean to marry Andrew MoOnw utter :11?" sh. said. vmh great "name". one duy. when Linn come but from a bounlul exonraion under his direction. A woman brought up in society eeldom dieplaye her jealousy lrankly. eeldom feels it without cause. She knows that husband as well as wile must play a part in the olten empty epectacle. that to emile and chat be- come: aeoeial duty under such circumstances; that the man who really admiree her will not admire her loss because he takes a pretty woman down to dinner, and she would be ashamed of him were he to forget the cour- teciee expected by thoeezabout him. But the woman whose early life has been very retired and domeetic. and who has a naturally in]- one spirit. is alarmed by a demeanor which is only the natural result of being in society at all, and often wrecks her happineee by in. dulgiug in emotions which she might earily repress. and reerimiuations which are felt more bitterly that they are totally undeserved. I once knew a womnnâ€"it in an actual 1;: â€"who qumelled whh her husband because he helpe qd n ladyg neat. n their own table, to name dilh bolore 8he asked his wife it she would duo have some 0! it. Sully. "How dare you uy that 2" retorted the angry Lem, roused {or ones. ’ “ How dare you encourage him ?" replied Bully. coolly. “ I don’t. A mm don‘t went to be reused more than twice." "Tolopbeme.†the “In spoken word," in the lat monstromy invonkd by United 8mm newnpnpor "non for I manage lent by klophono. Men are bad enough. I have no doubt. but as a canon! thing any gentlemen cm safely be permitted to make himsell ngreenble in lociety to which his wife has the entree. Yet we allknaw men who duo not do this be- cnuue of the scene at home which would be sure to follow. “ 1 think ' ,you will that the door after you this time.†aid Bally , “ but you'd better look it t_oo. my den." 7 Yei she might have spared Laura. for she had learned thin louon by heat. leen a good reason, who can blsme elev- lng women for being jeslous.’ But assured- ly that women is her own worst enemy who indulges in oaussless jealousy of her husband. It does not so much mstter about a lover, because there is nothing so easy in these deys of lightly-mode " engsgements " as to break them; but for the jealous wife, who has no just reason for her jealousy, and for her husbsnd, there is nothing but long eon- The genuine eoquette is. of ooï¬rreeraelight- ed to be the cause of jeeloney. and the wile who exhibite it renders herself liable to some: vapding. A was taken 0! this impertinenee, sad the answer sent was the simplest and severest negative. tinned misery. Wstoh the women who he! no conï¬dence in her huebsnd when in the society of others. She is only happy when he has {allowed the sbominsble custom of retiring into 3 corner with other msrried men. Let him address I. few words on any subject to either a clever or us pretty woman. and her mouth sets. her tees flushes with anger, end her unmy glances soon end the conversation in which her spouse is taking part. it his vie a-cis is a women of tsct and not unwomenly enough todesire to see soother women snfler. Jealous \Vlvcu. coco-II... ,p wan-u..- .- 70...... m... m eo.......... [luv u in “model-Donald In our â€autumn-What Ibo Bull'- Cur-o Counted 0!. Mr. Eamon. proptlotor o! the buquo Clifton. the pioneer "no! in the Ontulo and Autumn undo. ha been Inwnlowod by I Tomato upon". and but made tho (allow- lng important "lumen". 01 «poem inure» to Ontuio mmnhomron: “ What." naked the reporter, " wu your xenon (or selecting Adelaide u your objective point. Indeed o! Bjdney or Mel- bonnie?" "Bmuu South Austron- In «nation, on ogrionltnul colony. But I oholl have more to any on thot point Inter on. 01) start. ing on ho: outward trip the (Milton took on board at New York twenty-two ou-loodl of a general ougo. consisting. on to: u I on remember, of ironwork, ornamental use. And fountains: Ito‘vol. curing». tmnbor. prams. “ flow Lona lluvc l to Live 9" It is not every one who asks himself this question, because, strangely enough. it is the belief of most persons that their lives will be exceptionally lengthy. However. life nasur auce companies are aware of the eredulous weaknesses of those whose lives they assure. and have therefore compiled numerous tables of expectancy of life for their own guidance, which are carelully referred to before a policy is granted. The following is one of these well authenticated tables in use among London assurance companies. showing the avenge length of life at various ages. In the ï¬rs column we have the present ages of persons of average health, and in the second column we are enabled to peep. as it were, behind the scenes of an assurance ofï¬ce, and gather from their table the number of years they will give us to live. This table ha! been the result of careful cal- culation and seldom proves misleading. 01 course sudden and premature deaths, as well as lives unusually extended, occasionally occur. but this is a table of the average expectancy of life of an ordinary man or woman: iermlng implemente generally end cured meets; the goode coming trout Toronto. Hemllton. London. Guelph. 8t. Themes. Weterloo. New Hernburg. Finegei end other pleeee weet of this. Prleee out there ere generelly the eeme ee here. Heme. beeon end pork. however. it properly peeked tor the merhetâ€"whieh our people are not in the hebit of tehing eufï¬eient trouble eboutâ€"would reellze e hendeoxne proï¬t. Butter end eheeee. too. it peeked as they Ihould be for each e long voyege. would also be eold et e proï¬t. I had on board the Clifton on ite outward trip. ee ehip‘e etorel. e lot 0! heme and enumber oi 20-lb. tube of butter iron: Weterloo. which. when we errived et Ade- leide. elter e voyege oi 101 deye. wee ee freeh end ee eweet as on the day it wee put up. The trouble in. our pecker: will not teke enough trouble about putting up provieione. Heme for the South Auetrellen merket ehould be put up in boxes end eprlnkled with eelt. While I wee in the colony I land they had any amount of Olneinneti cured heme which ware labelled ' Yorkehlre.’ They hed been sent to Englend. re-lebelled end then exported to Australia ee English cured. When I told the people how they had been teken in they were slow to believe it. eo strong wee their leith in their ‘ Yerk- ehire ’ heme. Provieione oi thie deeeription tor exportetion (rem Oeuede ehould be of medium size. end perhepe e little under. us there in no market whatever tor the lerge end coereergredee." The people ï¬ght rather shy of what they call Y ankee notions. When the Clifton arrived at Adelaide a paragraph appeared in the papers, couched in rather depreciatory terms, announcing the arrival of a vessel with a email cargo of Yankee notionv. but I went up to the newspaper oflicea and explain- ed matterl, and after that the prose made an very welcome and gave as several enlogiatie notices. The fact is the people are no attached to England and everything English that Americanâ€"that in United Statesâ€"goods have no chance. " She will enive early in December with a lull cargo of wool and wince. The letter are item the vineyards of the moat prowl. ncnt people in the colony, end like ell the wince oi the colonyâ€"ere very ï¬ne. full- bodied and mellow. both red and white. and ranging from eight to eleven your: old, in none is consumed before it he: arrived ct thorough muturity. 0n the arrival of the curse our connoisseurs will have an oppor- tunity oi pronouncing upon their merits. A greet and proï¬tcble tunic ceneleo be done in the hide. ol the netive wild enimele, 0! which 1 hive some live specimens on board the (Milton. including some kengerooe. emul. Oepe wild geese, cocketooe, pen-ate and c wild dog celled ediugo. They will all be brought to Toronto. but I lest the climate will prove too severe for them. Ac coon en the Oliltou can load up ugcin she will return to Adeleide wi‘h a cargo of wooden housesâ€"mode in Toronto. Ind {or which I am just giving the contractâ€"lumber, carticgea. mm from Mel- bonme,-nnd o goncnl cargo of goods, all of which no glrcody placed." Are the Ameriénhu doling much trade with Aqgfralia 2 gngripd thq ropogter. Age. Oat tendon will author from the nbovo tnbnltted atntemem the number of your: to which their liven, according to the kw ol avenged, may rouonnbly be expected to ex. tond.â€"-Harper‘n Bazar. g It In awed um lines 1870 the city and county omens of 8:. [main hue default“! to the uncut 018463.000. of which only M07,- 000 bu lmn recovered. " Andâ€"how,†enquired the reporter. " did the people reoaive you and your cargo 7" H 'l‘hn nunln nan-9A"- n--- ____ -I_x A- " The people generally were very glad to weleome a visit made to them from Canada in this way, andil all tho goods sent out there were adapted for the market a ready aale could be made in every inetanoe. I found many of the principel people animated by a large hearted spirit of enterprise, while there were others on the other hand engaged in trade whose object it was to form ringe and toexcludo goods from any quarter unless theypured through their hands, leaving I largeioommieslon behind." 5 What return onrgo does the Oliflon bring? " V-u. coco-00.00000...- coo-cocoon. I'D-D...‘0'OIQOIUUOOIoac09'OOUIIIII oocnvooc-ulooI-o Jaconltl‘lo 0-00.00... on. ounnunnn In nu- â€noon-oat out-on 00.... noon-- "cu-toga colt. cocoon-on"... u an. More Years Lï¬o 41 81 Ir. Oehiii. oi at. George. haa written e letter concerning the Beaver sold hum.“ eontelnlnc valuable intonation. Amen“ other mattere it is claimed that the Neel and alone. which hae heretoiore beenthrown eway ac valueleee. in now found to yield eumcient quentitiee oi the preoioue metei to cover all the expenditure attached to the mince. leaving the nuggete {or proï¬t. The dame which are being erected in Boone to divert the atreema irom their coureee. are worka employing large numbere of men ell almost certein to increeae eiiectueliy the eueoeu oi thoae who have enuegcd them- aelvee in thic undertaking. There In no doubt thet all the compeniee which have operated during the peat eummcr have ee- enred gratiiyina returne irom their lebce. end withthe new energy that to to bed". lured into the undertaking next summer. we may c‘xpect to hear at an immenee increeee in the proeperity and populetion oi one at :the ï¬neet regiona 01 Lower Oenede. Al ‘elready atated one company elone ex. peote next year toempioyinite mine eon 3,000 men. The Grand Fella oi the Chen- dlere are to be dammed et e eoet 0! come 825.000. and it in cold that the contrect he thia work has been already given out. Th bed of the atreem is Very rich. end there 3 eleo e tradition that at the Fellr. during the American inveaion of Canada, a commiaeerlel cheat wee loat, containing hell e minim doiiara in gold. That the country will he very materially enriched by the cm loymene oi so large e number of minere en by the . . home market which will thua be provided for a large amount 0! agriculture! ell other produce, there can be no question 0! doubt. Lennon, 0nterio.â€"Lut evening en oiled, mnn nomad Angus Our, who in well known in the city, wee found ineeneibie under euepieioue oireumetenoee. He we: to the jnii. Dr. Hobbs was lent to: and quickly arrived. In making an exeminntlon oi the men he gave it on his opinion M morphie hnd been token by or “mini“.- ed to the uniottuneto mun. When notched. e bank-book for 8100 wee found upon him. but the money in pieoed in the bunk beyond hie oontrol,ho receiving only the interelt on. it, end the money in pnyable on hie deeth. Dr. 0. Enter. a German savsnt. oi Gteils- weld. has devised n simple arrengement which demonstrates the circulation of the blood in the human body in making it visible. tht is known as Purkinje's expert. ment previously ambled an observer to wit- ness the circulation in his own retinal blood vessels; but now, (or the ï¬rst tims,ean the now of the vital fluid in one person be watched another. and that. we are assured, with flcient accuracy to’detcct any thing abnormal. and to obtsin invaluable assistance in the diagnosis of disease. Dr. Eater‘s method is as follows: The patient’s heed being ï¬xed In a frame, on which is a contrivanse ior sup- porting a microscope and a lamp. his lam lip is drawn out and ï¬xed on the stage of the microscope by means of clips, the inner eurieee being uppermost. and he'll; 0 strong light thrown upon it by 3 condenser. When these preparation. At the ï¬rst meeting last night oi theme: f hundred and seventh you of work at the j Medical Society of London, the oldest oi the learned societies of medicine in Englsnd. alter a short introductory sddreee by Dr. Cockle. M. L. F. B. 0. R. Dr. Bichsrdsel brought before the meeting a new instrumnt he hes designed. which bids fair to ï¬nd I large ï¬eld of use in dlegnosing discs-e ot the irculetory system. It consistl at an ingenious combination ed the sigmogrsph. by which the heating 0! the pulse is graphically delineated on paper. the microphone. which sound. and the telephone, which so marvel. lonely enhances the power oi hearing; end its sheet is to render the betting oi the pulse distinctly audible. The clock port of tin sigmogrsph is replaced by e microphonie slide, the working power is a smell blchromlb battery, it singphone. then a rest for the wrist. and ï¬nally s Bell telephone. The principle in that when the pulse is working the needle a series of motions are nude along the microphonio slide instead 0! elonc paper. and the sounds thus pro- duced are communicated irons lb microphone to the telephone. By modliying the battery power. the intensity of the sound! can be increeesd so es to be heard thirty ysrdl lrom the instrument, or so diminished es to be quite audible to e. patient. and to requhn that the physician shall apply the telephone ' to his ear to be able to distinguish them. In its present stage 01 development, Dr. Blchsrd- son ssid the ephygmophons was not so ep- plieable to the cardiac as to the wrist pulse. ‘ but he had almost arrived at an instrument which be anticipated would indicate Miner“ of chest movement in particular psrte ol the chest. An experiment with the instruo ment wee then made. and the sound oi the pulse heating at the wrist oi one of the an. tlemen present made audible with diflsrent degrees of intensity. Dr. Richardson then gave an account of his own experience with the instrument in specially indicating pelpl- tetion. aortic deï¬ciency. increased end deï¬cient arterial relaxstion. pertisl intermit- tenee. and currents. and his ressons in believing that its use would throw lnereesed light on these derengements oi the eireuiaé tiomâ€"London Standard. Circulation o! "no Blood fllnde V1.58. are completed all the observer. ha! to do is to bring the microscope to bear on tho surface of the lip. using a low power object!" and focusing a small superï¬cial vessel. At once ha sees the andless procasslon ol the blood corpuscles through the mluuto capil- laries, tho colorless ones appearing Ilka vim. specks dotting the red stream. Dr. Em user to that from taking carelul not ‘ o! vul- ations in tha blood flow and changes In tho corpueclos, he has derived great advantagfl in the treatment of medlcal caus.â€"Galw ni‘s Magazine. Professor Kilnkoririen, of the Oburntory o! Gottingon. in said to have invented 0 I01.- gnpbio device by vhich eight diflount nu- ugon may be “M by one wire n tho um time. our! printed sepsntoly nnd simulta- eonuiy by means 0! an nppnnma It tho receiving end. General Fitz Hugh Lao. quoting the Dub 0! Wellington’s diocnm that 3 mm of n. ï¬ned Ohriotlun nenalbilltlu in totally all. for the proleuion o! n soldier. an the I". at Lee and Blononll Jackson "(ah tho Idol. BII'STEBIO U6 AFFAIR; The Sphymophone.