~ p...) ~, “ ... {funicularly grateful. ( a 1', . haveahigh opinion of me. CHAPTER VII. [do Restaud’s stay in her house. “Craig,†said Doctor John, sitting down caution you also to be very careful of the last ‘8 “‘Eï¬fg‘: mohgtffien d on a nail-keg, “ why did you come here 3†marriage certiï¬cate and all other ’papers ‘ y y “Because yonsent for a lawyerandfor Miss you may have Chhcerh‘gg Y our niece. Patten. I connected the mystery with the , _“You can trusE me, 311d MISS Patten, young lady I had assisted to run away, lghlmll" “I t°°k em awayfrom that far-m whose fate has been a good deal of trouble ; 0‘ theirs when I W3? a'Vl‘iltmg there, 8-110} to me ever since. I wanted to help her, if; mean that Minnys baby Shh-11 have hls h 9 need be. Is she very ill?†rights, for he's part Patten. anyway, and er memory - 6: Getting better fast. It was mad folly ; would ’a’ been my brother Sam 3. grandson. to start on a journey sick as she was. I ,‘ Sorry I be he ain’t alive to see him. Minny don’t blame you, Craig, for that long ride ' says she saw 3 BOStlhg paper that offered a and the risk you ran : she is very winning, 1 reward f0†he? whereabouts 01‘ any Inform- this troublesome little lady, and brave too. latâ€? concerning her, 8""lhg her name 1' lght It is a wonder whats. woman can endure, a 7 °ht "1 the paper, and that was woat made slight, frail creature whose hand you could i her leave M t3: Bllhh 5» _Wh° was. 9' kmd} crush in your ï¬ngers.†good woman, if’she is in a foolish busi- “But she had,†said Oliver, uneasily, ness 3 hht I don t kh°W why dogs and cats “plenty of money had she not?" shouldn t he took care of, and folks in “g, 1' . d h Bosting is always running to some new freak. She was travelung m the ay-coac ’ Minny evidently tliouirht Mrs. Blinn would and has,.I . thlhk’ about ï¬ve dollars in a. tell on her and get th‘; reward ; but Mrs. snabby lltzia‘e purse. Miss Patten was right Blinn said shed in. done by Minny as her when she said we should not see Mrs. owu child.†Minny until the money you gave her was “Was that what made her come \Vest?†All gone. Where has she been all these asked Doctor John. long mouths? Byb‘her hhdlhg ’the dog, “The poor little soul thought it her duty M‘SS Patten PhOhh .y knows now. to go to her husband, brute as he is,†said .“Yh’h’ hhd "3 ‘i’ts 8'3 I thoughtyâ€"sompe- Miss Patten, brokenly. ' th’hg entirely original. Near Boston Mrs. ’ that I said she was frivolous and hadn’t no de Restaud get acquainted With an elderly stability ! female who .ran some sort or retreat for wouldn’t dare go to that wolf’s den on the 989d pets, invalid dogs and cats: The Troublesome and to be in that man’s power. “183' "â€3 5° novel Mrs. M‘hhy. dhc‘ded to I always thought he wa’n’t right in his 8th? over and see the place. Flhd‘hg. Mrs. mind. Minny cal’iated on account of the thh agreeable, hhd Skye contented m the baby he’d be more kind, and for the baby’s acciety or his kind at the retreat, she re- sake she ouoht to make up with him.†mained. She met a sailor from Newcastle 5 in the street one day, and he told her Miss Doctor John walked up and down the room Patten had not been home for 8' long time. that had grown so still one could hear the So she decided not to write any one, but to ticking of the clock. remain hidden. One day a few weeks ago she came home from the V‘hhge thh upset, ; “ don’t git no credit for bein’ brave and to the Antwer hhh acted oddly: she hhd “the“ seen some goin’ through things ’count of what they call it a. fly one or. read something in a. newspaper, for - ks is their (1003),. My wife thinks it’s dirigeablc †' the Village storekeeper saw ner poring hern to live here ’count of me, when she it. over one, looking much upset. TWO days left a good home back East. That little sembles the fam later, leavmg a note containing board for , _ . woman in there is larnin’ the woman natur’ a miniature whaleback upside down. her dog, she disappeared. This Mrs. Blinn, of endurin’ for a man; but where my wife fl who seems to be a good sort of a person, . , ’ud live and make comfort outer it, she’d worried a great deal, looking for her every- jest lie down an’ die a-frettin’.†where, and in her search wrote to the post- .. You’ve read her right,†said Miss Pat- master at Newcastle, for shehadhearers. ten, solemnly, “an’ I’m goin’ to take her Minnyspeek of havmg been there. Through home with me : she ain’t goin’ no fu‘rther that letter Miss Patten found Skye, and West, nor to no lone farms in mountain then started for Denver. †valleys, which was nearly the death of her “She may have seen De Restaud. or that store." servant Of his,†mused the doctor. “Well, Oliver glanced at; the clock, then abrupt. now you are here,â€"-though I’d much rather 1y said good-bye. He left no message for a stranger had come,â€"I want you to draw Mrs. de Restaud, nor did Miss Patten ask up a. paper setting forth the facts in this him for one. She was rigid in her ideas of casein proper legal phraseology.†what was proper, and he respected her for “ I fail to comprehend just what you it. mean.†“P’r’aps,†he hesitated, “you’d like to " You see,†explained the doctor, “the see the baby. I could fetch him out with- French people are particular about docu- out waking him.†“181253 : “No,†Oliver smiled: “a city bachelor, as you called me once, Miss Patten, has no interest in infants. Iâ€"I think I should be rather afraid of him.†The wound was not thought bitterly. hard to forget, to do his duty. trusted to his inner. letter in his desk. ed to see entered (To BE CONTINUED.) M p exposition. “ Mrs. Minny’s child ?†repeated Oliver. “ Why, of course. Perhaps I had not mentioned it. A nice boy, â€"healthy, I think, and bound to outlive his cousin across the sea. The little chap born in that poor place. that switchman’s hovel, may be the heir of millions. So there must be no flaw in his title or the record of his birth." “ A child, and she here friendless, almost 1y now, as he was such a. dear man. itself. ’ .†Oliver’s face saddened. “ l’oor “Sheâ€"sheâ€"likes the baby '3†Oliver ask- I an immense fan or propeller and at little thing i†he muttered, “what a hard ed, awkwardly, as be lit a cigar. world it has been for her 2" ' ' g “ I am sorry to say sne does not manifest three 860131-0119 “She is sensible about it, too,†went on ' any rapture at all. I think she was more . The car is diVided into three sections, Doctor John. “She wanted me to write delighted to see her (i l 0g. I always have for a lawyer and have everything straight.†A\’\J/\ 4’ ll Mgr . F2 i r" l The latter had his big pipe, but not his flowered dressing-gown. His embroidered cap was at the retreat for invalid pets. Skye had not chewed it, Mrs. Minny assert- THE FLYING STREET CAB. that she is a little girl playing with her doll. in size 00 the b She is afraid of him if he or “No: she has because he has black eyes and looks likel The much lVomen are not the Frenchman.†. _ Then lt has been a “ Well,†said Oliver smiling sadly, “ the 19113 time since she saw 01‘ heard 0f you. chapter is ended. I have turned a. page in 1 our vanity may be hurt, but 13 1t h°t bet- {my life’s story. She will be safe and shel- ter that she has forgotten 2’†_ _ ' tered now, and I delegate to y “ Undoubtedly,†Oliver said, coldly. He ' ‘ Oliver, oddly. The doctor hesitated. forgotten you, old boy. to Work the motor. (as the doctor calls me) †“Tm: TROUBLESOME LADY. A FLYING STREET CAR- . . , . . Will R l . Oliver drummed idly on tne wmdow- Sill. , e n ‘0periulon at the Antwerp Exposition.- llic Fare to Be $1. A flying street car is the latest novelty which an ingenious Belgian has devised for “ Wimmen,†said the sWitohman, slowly, the convenience and amusement of visitors He does not ing street car, but “ grand ballon other end an apparatus like a barn door in ., which provides a rudder. I for the motor man, another for the pas the idea when Isee her with young Francois I gets, and a third, WhiCh corresponds about “ Did she suavest sendin for me ‘3†asked as g aggage apartment on a. sub- ics, and moans urban car, is for the use of the conductor. ~abused trolley system has been turned to good account in connection with this flying street car, as from the overhead wire the electricity is obtained with which Connecting the car with this overhead wire is a traveling cable, ‘ moral lectures anyway from her, for she says I must educate myself so my son Will . He does 11 bother about me, but divides his attenti principally in blinking at her and the lamp, I must with a leaning towards the light. healed, Oliver planted, and Why of all women must he care for this one and be so haunted by Every look of hers, her words, her gestures, the little yellow gown were as plain to him after a year as if he had seen her but yesterday. He had striven Yet was there harm in writing just a. few lines? The narrow path was terribly lonely in life, â€"not a path that had been his in the past ; and yetâ€"and vet she was a child. That Stern, honest olu v omen believed in him and While he mused, the shock-headed boy knocked and thrust in. his freckled face. “Gent ter see yer,†he said, lioarser than usual, for there had been a base-ball match the day before, and he had been excused from duty because his “mudder was sick.’ “Show him in,“ said Oliver, locking the The last man he expect- thc room, shut the door behind him, tooka chair, then with almost a threatening gesture, moved it any length 0f time, As much grit as I’ve got, I close to the desk. Henri de Restaudl In appearance the flying street car re- ous Pennington air ship or The I i oating apparatus is ahuge cigar-shaped eral professions 12 . . . [ peasants r,especiai- bag, to which is attached the streetcar n In the front or prow of the car is the _ . tion as adViser. In the next elopement Mrs. one end 0f thh connects With the motor, wenttowardsthehousehurriedlv. “Afreight train passes here in a half-hour; I will go on I There ,5 my train ; and so good-by.†that: so get your papers ready and have slides along the wire as the car moves. the people here sign their 'statements. . . ara liernalia for lowerin the machine. to give an ac‘ou t of Mrs de Restaud’s John on his return said they had gone to p p g stat} at her thus: ,, ' Maine and Mrs. Minny had never mention- Mrs. Macon cleared the kitchcn tableled him; but one . . . . came to Oliver. e loo 'e t swzftly, comparing his notes With the doc- ~ H h d a. the scrawl . to alight. , _ . and he knew well Hannah Patten did not ' thee?istahthr'lihihylshfhzndiogfdrhhsifazhidmgllgii attempt on Italian hand. He smiled with Oliver lodked tilt the clock. How hard pleasure: it was good to be remembered that writing had been to him no one ever after the long Silence, and he had braved knew. Frobm the closed door came the many danhgers for that ungrateful young murmur of voices,-â€"one that thrilled every 2:32:21 huzbavhodrss an encounter Wh’h her nerve and set his heart fast beating. A u “ feeble cry now and then sounded strangely, Pfï¬th Mh- 0L“ ER,“ -â€"the little life that had come in this far- 10 think you were so near and I could oil‘ place and that might. mean so much in h°t see you ,! I cried when they told me. the future. Outside, the white headed I a“? “0‘5 30mg to pay Your money back yet children played :n the sunshine. Skye, [ “ht“ I set my own from Mr. de Restaud. liberated from hishideous basket, which lie I We have Pht 0111' case in the hands of an always regarded with terror and plaintive 01d lawyer here who W83 a. college-mate 0f whines, rollicked with them, glad Of his my d?†dead father, and he th‘hks Iought freedom. How in‘inisely painful to record to Be“ a divorce, and has written to Mr. those facts before him, and to think of de Rehtfhd 80‘ ll e_W3-tCh the baby close- her as he had sen her ï¬rst, that childllyr “he“ Hen“ W211 try to steal him. I woman in her clinging yellow gown petal- ' have never _thanked led like a flower with its Wide ruffle, her run away. dow goo glOWlhg hair, in: beautiful pathetic l W yoh often; but A1 . . . _ eyes! She had gore so far from those days speakof you, 39d folks here think it is in bitter experieme and suffering. Was dhehd‘hl to he Oivorced. They sayI am she changed, gram saddened and old, care she that 1118.111de F renchmanâ€"I suppose worn with thought?-a calculatingwoman, - their thlhk he 13 from Canadaâ€"and am go- forced to be to.- the child’s sake? Odd, in [19g "“0 the courts to get a separation from his mental picture of her he could ï¬nd no hlm- For {10 fault of mine I must be dis- place for the child. He could remember her graced. hven Aunt Hannah admits I with the little Skye terrier and that child- never ought to 3° back to him ; it won“ ish manner, but as a woman, a mother, h°t be safe- never. “ I had a nice time at that dogs’ home ; Ill, friendless, homeless, no waif of the it was a funny place, With the nicest 01d streetswas ever mom desolate than she when (1033 and cats. Skye had 3- grand time. she stepped 05 the train at this barren spot ' one dog W33 ï¬fteen. years “Old and had to forced to accept the charity of strangers, be fed on gruel. Still, I think taking care Her dead father would have risen from his l of poor animals is better than theosophy grave could he have known. His every ; and those fads. and Boston does have some thought, his sisiei‘iid, had been for lime : real good freaks. I expect some day they francs, or 31. _“.~â€"â€" I N DU STRY AND INVENTION. The net income of the Bell Company in 1885 was $1,890,996. it was $3,411,679. daily. - n ,. “fall it. is 3 dead do ndt know. l will build an old maids’ home. You never household prOViSions 15 51' _ Mlhï¬how fortunate _ wire on that train!†i saw so many old maids as there are there. The .preparation. 1? made h? Blmnly ".16" Oliver said, suddenly. .7 Mrs. Blinn has seven sisters in one of phase Chatilchlly efmiilsn'ying '3 suitable 0}l with Doctor Join started. “tile? Yes, it was, Newton towns,â€"there’s an endless chain {’1 s°_“t‘°h ° 9 us or gentine and fillutln and that I should have fomd ourlittle run- Cf themiâ€"and 110‘? one Of themâ€"the 515' m wmh WM“ to any deï¬ned consistency. away. I own up I lookedlfop her all the ters, not the towssâ€"cver had a beau. One would think an anchor would. be the time I was away.†, “ Please do not dislike me, or at last thing anybody would eXpect to improve The door ppened, and i sPatten came’the mention of my name p Yet a Memcan has designed an l softly in. haughty look, as when I ’anchor which consists ofa. flat rectangular “She is “jeep, Door . r," she said. said things offending your nice sense sheet of plate metal. It gently. “Iguess “1y eyes red. 1 waslof what a woman’s convenation should an upset. and die don’t seem t- hink she éone f be ; and write me one lltil) letter to b any harm if not letting kumy where f say you are still my good friend. she was alt was so deep and scared- ’never ask you to help me again , I do n ’ ,. tiï¬cial cream. it sheet plate fire.†3 'need it; so you will be safe in continuing serves to hold the vessel steady, kee its : , - - - ’ e. Aunt Hannah does not head to the wind and reveal; its drift!!! “When return to Boat 1, ’smd’ Oliver, . our acquaintancu ‘ . p g “hue Mr inn makes : emsnt of Mrs. " know 1 have written it u- I get too many to leeward. l Minny makes you must be the assistant the other being attached to a trolley which anchor attached by a Wi , l f A cable to a. Windlass, which in turn is co time at the swit h‘aglssmzhh I roml bull,“ nected With the electric motor, provides t v a - A. C ‘ and brought pens and ink. Oliver wrote ouse 3‘ e er means for hauling down the flying car wh . su erscri â€on the est in rk V c stl y a station is reached where passengers are for the prisoner . - - a. ' ' ew a e tor’s remembrance and Mrs. Mason’s 8.838!" p p ’ p L The ï¬rst practical demonstration of this aerial means of rapid transit will be made flow during the Antwerp exposition. One model machine is alrea ' pretty well advanced l The youth W95 toward completion, the termini of the route ' were then Plle being the exposition grounds and the bourse these he was c at Antwerp, which are about a mile apart. feet, hands, motion and the success of the experiment may probably revolutionize street car traffic. One great drawback to its popularity,how- ever, is that the trip of a mile will cost 5 The nitrate deposits of Colombia, it is lieved, Will shortly rival those of Chile. Two inventors at Los Angeles, Cal., have invented a machine to utilize tidal power. A cane planter and a pea shelling machine are two of the latest agricultural inventions. Telephone In 1892 The latest addition to the list of pseudo ward Taylor. Sunday from Owen son he has a wife. appears to have wandered the city. He states that he by trade, and 27 years of on using second crop on rainy days or at and he will 3.1 advantage of planting. 4. Growers of second cro early in July in this latitude can crop of full grown month best quality. - Some Odd Facts issued, and it con the operation of the di into force in 1884. December 31, been lodged successful, while 2437 and 2080 had resulted in . cases the ;ten to twenty y 1 one to ï¬ve years one I thirty years, sen- In December, In One afternoon I_ v . . ,, the rear compartment of the car where court. TWO prisoners Oliyer thlhhghh dthe Whole aflair would the conductor has his quarters, is,all the introduced Miss Patten should also get that Mrs.Biiun ' pass .rom 18 min ’ especmlly as Doctor this: him with long, secured. The cries of the victims and th composure of the spectators wer gusting. I said as much to my I generally regarded as an am His reply was. I never seen this before,†doubt he had. The ex dreadful sceneâ€"excuse th â€"was that, by the law of be executed until he has c These two individuals be. beyond doubt of heinous refused to confess. The 3. them was execution or d and apparently they pre The ceremony I witnessed ed de die in diem until tion gave ‘Way. How the end came, of course, I never knew. ABufl'alo, N. Y., was a serious and at A Kentucky Plan and the Followed. The farmers near Louisv That for several years past, been in the growing two crops of potatoes on the same The early Spring and hot Summer cause the ï¬rst crop to ripen early in July. plowed and immediately re- op is killed by tubers are half land. The land is 0 whole or cut to any only precaution ncce be kept, after being Will deteriorate. the second or frost in October when the to two-thirds grown and still puite , ture. These second crop tubers a for eating, but, it is claimed, are far better for next Spring planting than the ï¬rst crop, and for the following reasons :â€" 1. They keep in a cool cellar without sprouting or shrivelling or losing one par- ticle of their vigor. It seems that having been checked before maturity, they lie dormant, ready to send up a shoot when again in warm ground as vi were growing when stoppe The consequenc growth goes into the tu SEED POTATOES- E DIVORCES IN FRANCE. Couples. The official report of the French try of Justice for 1890 has only just been tains particulars as to vcrce act, which came From that date till 1890, 38,377 petitions had ese 33,870 had been had been rejected fa compromise. the increase in the r divorce the suits ecreased, having fallen Concurrently with number of petitions fo for separation d from 2470 in 1884 to number of divo every 1000 mar twenty-four and ï¬ve in 1890, w three cases out of 100 the lodged by the wife and in cases out per cent. penal , and of th riages was ry and in 2041 in 1890. rces and separations to respectively hile in sixty petition was eighty-seven- of 100 for a separation. than half of the petitions were lodged b m Chinese Punishme nts- 1801, I was â€"one an old man, A walk, the other a yo re but abject and forl n- l presiding mandarin appeared, sat down he sipped his tea, en out along oratio “This very SLASHED BY A NEGR 0. An Owen Sound Man In it Serious Condi- tion at Bufl’alo. He is known how he happened to Taylor admitted the crime and was locked ment about 200’000 acres up. special says :â€"-There probably fatal cutting affray at N o. 50 Vine alley, between 1 and 2 o’clock this morning, the Victim, Thomas a negro named 3d- White came to Buffalo on ad, Canada, where poorly dressed, and aimlessly about is a stoneniason age. It is not “M The silence often of pure when speaking fails. innocence per. Reason it is i lle, Ky. , have: habit of re inferior gorously as they d by the frost. -. They never send up but one This is true whether they are planted number of eyes down e is that all the here that come on from ï¬ve to eight) and arketable size. If the , and the season ï¬ne, they will all be extremely large. 3. They can be cut six weeks, or in fact before planting. ssary is that they shall cut, in barrels open at the top only. If there a. ' side and bottom the pieces thus exposed The gardener or farmer seed can do his cutting other convenient times, ways be ready to take full aspell of good weather for ps by planting get a ï¬ne potatoes, which sell better in market than those from the North; or, by waiting until the latter pa. rt of the , they get seed potatoes of the very W- M inis- More for divorce y the working classes, while tradespeople were ‘20 per cent., the lib- l per cent., farmers and 9 per cent. and domestic servants In thirty-eight of every 100 petitioningparty had be from ï¬ve to ten years, in twenty-eight from cars, in twenty-two from , in seven from tw in three less t in two more than thirty years. In seventy-six of every 100 cases the petition was based on the ty or desertion, in the ground of adults the plea that the res demned to Times . en married ground of cruel- the twenty-one upon three upon pendent had been con- serVitude. -â€"[London in Canton. isited the principal law in chains were too inï¬rm to uth, tolerably vigorous, orn in demeanor; The and while an ofï¬cial pattered n.presumably an indictment s proceeded, as I understood to plead “not guilty.†What followed was The old man was held nâ€"wliile two stolid Chinamen flogged pliant canes above divested of his chains, which d up in front of him. up â€"not held the knees. e complete e alike dis- guide,whom iable being. interesting. though I have no planation of the ere could be none China,no man can onfessed his guilt. d been convicted crimes, but they lteruative before eath by torture, ferred the latter. was to be repeat- either life or resolu A" ROUND.ABOUT vanes Coming From Ham-312;: to New York the Barque Broomlmll is Blown Into the Arctic. Racked and torn by the gales of the {3: North and after drifting for weeks in the darkness which hangs over the shores of the lands of the midnight sun the barque Broomhall got into New York on Saturday. She had been at sea for 108 days, and for nearly two months no trace of her had been seen. She has just ended what is probably the longest passage between Hamburg and New York known in the history of shipping. Her agents began to get anxious about her, as she was anywhere from ï¬fty to sixty /' day overdue. I She came in with no topgallant bulwa-‘Ks and rails to speak of and with «one man missing from her crew. She had plenty of stores on board, but her crew were on short rations of water, and only by the strictest economy did Captain Taylor save his men from the sufferings of thirst. The Broomhall was a trim and ship- shape vessel when she weighed anchor at Cuxhaven and left the Elbe for the open sea. imma- sprout. OUT IN THE FURY OF THE GALE. The cracking of the capstan bars and the clicking of the pawls had hardly stopped before there was heard the roar of the tem- pest. The waves rolling under the Broom- liall’s counter were lashed into an angry sea. before she was three days out. There came a gale from the south-southeast on November 11 which sent her staggering northward under lower topsails. The gale become a storm and the storm 8. hurricane. There was no escape for the Broomhall. She was brought to the wind on the port tack to avoid the blows of the waves upon her quarter. Then the gale veered to the north, northeast and struck the barque a blow aft which caused her frame to shake and tremble. It tore away the lower topsails and rip- ped the upper topsails from their gaskets. It rolled the barque over on her starboard side to the hatches. The cargo of salt shifted and gave the Broomhall a starboard list. Tons of water The About the Separation of flooded the Oil room and pantry. Waves swept the vessel’s docks clean of ladders, winches and capstan bars. Then came a lull in the storm. The crew made two new lower topsails, and bent them to the yards. The gale blew them into ribbons. Then began the laborious work of sailmaking anew. The crew were busy making sails and the continuous gales were as diligent in dispos- ing of them. The Broomhall lost nearly two entire sets of canvas before her voyage was over. Every man who was not abso- lutely needed for the handling of the ship was put to sailmaking. The Broomhall drifted to the northeast, making leeway under the united influence of West and northwest gales. The days grew shorter. The barque drifted into the region of Arctic night. The sun showed its face for a short while at noon and then hid in darkness. The barque went on impelled by the gale which shi‘ieked through her rigging and flooded her decks with stinging spray. The green brine swept her decks fore and aft. A mountainous mass of water broke in a roaring flood over her bows. It wrench- ed iron rails and stancnicns, carried away the top rail of the port bulwarks, tore the enty to thin covering of teak wood from the deck ban a year and house, burst open the cabin doors and flooded forecastle and cabin. LIKE A BROADSIDE 0F ARTILLERY It raked the vessel fore and aft like a broadside of artillery. It swept over the decks like a resistless tide and then poured over the stern. Imits embrace it carried Charles Marx, a young German seaman. The man was standing near one of the forward winches. He was hurled against the deck and, bleeding and unconscious, was washed overboard. In a squall on January 15 the foresail and foretopsail, both of which had just been made, were Split from foot to head, and the maintopmast staysail and mizzen staysail were blown away. For the crew things were exceedingly uncomfortable on that barque. The forepeak was flooded part of the time level with the deck. Owing to a leak in one of the tank pipes the drinking water became brackish and the tea and coffee made from it were al- most nauseating. The water supply was almost exhausted when the barque had been at sea for seventy days, and it was carefully portioned out each d The barque had gales from ev Captain Taylor is now counting the cost of this long voyage. indebted to him for the following :- Four lower topsails, two upper topsails one foretopmast staysai , one main topmast staysail, three mizzen ~staysails, one main staysail, one jib, one star board. cathead broken 06‘ short, iron rails twisted and broken, teak ï¬ttings torn from . one forward winch, 86 feet ofsta~ gallant bulwarks with rails, 120 topgallant bulwarks and one smashed beyond repair. He has charged up to proï¬t and loss a never had harder workin keeping a vessel in my life, but we got here without carrying away a stick. “It seemed to ro’e,Ԥi'diigh, lhat we left ’ canvas all the Wet} ’ from Iceland to Sandy Hook. I don’t want anybody to mention me for a week." M A Salvation Army Colony. It is reported from Mexico that a o move- ment is under way to establish a lar e col- any of the Salvation Army in that cotgintry. of ca italist Booth and his Echeme: has purchased from the Mexican Govern- in the State of 0, on the Paciï¬c oon be perfected mostly English, to be excellently Chiapas in Southern Mexic coast, and that plans will 3 for settling 5,000 families, on the land, which is said adapted for agriculture. "K‘: Eaa THE Willi] Time is No Objea I! Is a Case or an. the let! Ian. 5} lie Simon‘s I 8 “00‘ [jnd‘ Icthods. . «g . . , .. a /.’ . . g habits of wild animj , a good nur 'l‘ne . ter,†howw 1. . ' q.» ' _' ,eiialifying a-t -;.. ' \ ’ ’ - v J A ~ 7. of5 me. but In: hunter it‘ll kill {CH L same lengtz. of tinn- , ~_ gun is of inferior at. r g“ is limited to batch: e . . ’with food it every.in has no powder to {hr by? and as a result he is a , 1.35.52; In the old days when a: 5' spears, bows and arm shooting was marvelo niy of ammuui to practising upon eve of target. with a bow and arrow most miraculous were have never seen an in rifle with anything 2’. at any distance more it an oftener than he gels :4 3 iii'xin r .u i In “ The Camp-Fir». Prof. Dyche gives a (its Chippewa Indians all oods hunt the n conceded to be the in animal of all that are 1.: North American routine tells how the Indian 3.; then, instead of :oJowzn he went ozi' a hundred \1. followed in a parallel 12m the leeward. At stated distances be; through the uiidcriirusii His movements were : fooled Dyclie, who thong: feeding near where the 7 stalk. The fact was ii: much caution in approacnf would had he kilo wn 7.: (r . i) .2 luurf lxnn ï¬nally Ciawlc‘. Up on the moosl at 24) yards. Aii hVez‘Ich xv 4' ,‘ Would go ineliize with nervoiisn toattempt such tactics. but Wit! it made no (inference in him l continued on the trail if . of getting the moose in the (rink; less for him to go back home ci ed, for the tepee was also emorv nothing to do but no on unii something to take bark with :.2 known Indians to Sit for have da eating by the side of a trail i expected a deer to pass by. The was ï¬nally rewarded by g -_‘ animal. ’s 'mi‘aiir rum: i\‘i‘.i \i‘)' As the wolf, the mountain ii'm iesh-cating beasts of prey are la Infancy how to approich uni can food, so it is with the liidiin. ‘- soon as he can run about he bezii lise the ways of the hunter. it "2 dogs and horses about the canmtn °0bject of the lesson, but he is creep and crawl up to the 11mm: were a. veritable hunt ism he «a dulged in. As he grows old-gr possessed of a bow and arrows. ter are blunt, it is tr e, for the much danger of some men ‘ ‘ being made the recipient of a \i' he kills small birds, rabbits anri s animals as he can slip upon and All this while he is learning ihe 3:1? flame that one day he Will follow » e learns the different sounds of ‘ or plain. Inc earth. He ï¬nds where the deer zc morningand the route taken by in its regular round. ll -' that, to me, Indian’s existenceg' he fact tlia ,_ them ever adxvanceo%r%i.n.;li 1 ‘ trap. The nearest approach to} er device for capturing . purp t Ince Steel . co“ '7. “(i sin We of the white a, hike learned of the‘ Ppers, the I . _ 7 use, but befor tgpe such things Were unheard of.