* Gow sns ous e % pation anos be â€-ldl:';-“n;th‘m. He w ven A an age of n-dfri: entered lord withâ€"a ver face. challenged a nian. him, and felt that he had times when he found that do toleraied as it was on the Co he retained his moustache t the authoritiest to have , aniversity life bee : and he _set about dov Ho --'d.hh ta &nmmm di the only thing he d appareritly . Rtange of uh fhet orne ty 11 ho con sollege he rememberod in after life only two Wwho renched distinctionâ€"Fathor Coleridge, 8.J., and | g:- Infrtentiains oo 30â€" In those , ad In‘Tat sars, he ns Anatain l ies heast for !hfllfl‘rol Bnghâ€:d'; am i md‘ -.Vvo;'“‘mtbdox face, He challenged a nian who langhed at called upon to instruct a single student, Ml‘huw m w "in . the study. I in ity lego /was uy&"htdw;yflum suipid to Burtos. | He missed munmm of the Continent, he the theatre to which he had been accustomed, and in genâ€" cral felt Wimeglf out of hiwelement. Almost ‘love fwh ghnd ;h‘}oh he would &:hab_ly h‘. inâ€" N nflg of E'n.glhh Nï¬od. .Arl,&o_hfldi:e l;:n':an l;unoc. and oocuic';nkll sojourns were to‘ him like periods, of exile. 2 and ‘his brother 'lbookd‘,hwbr is lz.&;drfl-n;:: shouty o! contempt e ‘ on whi :m'lé fever nuâ€"l?nr rises," Fa(;nily iscipline was practically unknown. ~ Once when the childre ene o‘? walking with their mother th:zakfllo was first called. to some eâ€"puffs in a baker‘s window, and then were lectured: on the beauty of selfâ€"denial. . Their response was a. rush at the ‘window. |~ They broke the r'l‘ul, snatched the good things, .and t theirâ€" astonished "parent to pay the damages: © ~â€"In ‘places where: there was no English E‘m there was. an evening meeting at home, in which one of the chilâ€" drenâ€"wat‘oxpéoted"to read a setmon " selet : ed for the obcasion. Invatiably the elders, including father, mother, tutor and goverâ€" ness, went to sleep, and the children 1urn- ed by mdulntinght.hoir voices to the pitch used in reading the sermon to converse with each other until it was time to disporse this J.-%mm~mmmmm had‘their love scrapes almost before they were in their teens. . They learned toâ€" ride, toswim, to shoot, to fence, In all thesg: Burton became e’fér!.’,m‘ï¬iaiï¬:?&i; has heard one of the most skiliful swordmen in Earope. Atanage when average boys were under atrict tutelage he was oxpérimer ‘ng with what seems dangerous drugs for youth â€"with strong liquor®, ‘with hgaa:. .even with opuim. ~Only his nataral vigour and the life of exercise which he led could have prevented the baneful effect of these things. | â€" Meanwhile he learned without appreciable mflny langwage . and v&i-fect with Be came in contact. He could as rapidly.exchange insults with the Néapoliâ€" tan lazzaroni as with, the French butcher boys. . With wolv::erfnl activity he sought where except in tliat highwa mr’nppoudx Cop trade. A‘n u‘.y- on the of his tutor to exarcise zï¬". ï¬.&:’yfl“ collision,and wh it was time to zï¬h C , the latter was found him, and felt that he had taflen on evil times when he found that daellimg was not tolerated as it was on the Continemtâ€" But h?‘ his moustache until compelled authori ies ':'hu it r«no(vlnd. “w became unen urâ€" he _set about dovices for being '.....u."‘ i Tiee nhove the orimary, m-.u Art the ‘wmvm'- ous metsons, The straw that the to be woetully deficient in the classics,and, worse tlian all the rest, haiâ€"never even heard of theThirtyâ€"nine Articles. â€"Alâ€" though his quickness and his wonderful memory him to take up for these defects, yet higprivate instructor, doubtâ€" less observing his wilfulness, told him that wwhile he was “’3& of itaking a first at the university, it was not ab all certain thit he would get one. Jn case ot failure, Barton foresaw that all his time would be wastod. ‘ He had no desire for & fellowship; to work for one and then be: Wm ;u & ct which he éould‘ not endurs. zen "t on the ies Ne ie h Anbir ï¬h“‘tï¬â€˜-hl oglus " proâ€" fessor | of that «languageâ€"did= not: feel NIR- and One Night," or the w" time to 'mmmh ‘will ’ . anxious r.u golltiul honours,â€" that his years of literaty in comfort, Compare hus i career ‘full of labours, at times glowing ‘with such splendour as to dazzle the mere admirers of pageantry, with the tragic fate of Palmer, one translator of the Koran, and the dull misery endured by Sale, anothor.translator of the same : work. In addition to success, that could only be *yon by & great mind, Burton thinsted also for the honours which belong, in the nature of things, to amall minds. mâ€" ‘te be in haste. Even if ; of the recall b.l;lg counâ€" termanded, wasâ€"needless ; for wfter &ï¬-&n‘mohld London he avoided the F f , itoo proud to aek ‘for the glontd the blow to his oonnï¬o of a lion in the m‘n of danger and death, he was as as a bhild“in % 'huo‘n his fate deâ€" pended u; will ‘or the aiane of sonetS * H w Ladly Burign ho had to look after his interests in allâ€"#uch oases, and she remarks regretfully that he might have done better in a yprlxly way it «To the public, which listened with‘ rapt attention to the romwnticnarrative of his adventures, the details of his life as m public servant are bf: comparatively small imporâ€" tance. What matters it how he kept the wolf from the door while he translated *‘The he had depended more upon himself mguag as ~Mils @xford Daysâ€"Indian Burton, on being récalloft s mb Damaséus, rushed off c &iï¬ul 25::‘““' vwi;:out Athe points game which he k,hhv.lu his enemiea, without to with his wife, he bo'n{ 1!1.“‘0‘ in his makeâ€"up that rnguiteble for public gervice. of @5 a moment‘s notice. . But it ble to know when to move It is well to be ready : to the raps. " No, you‘ll drown me !" Finding that the poor boy of whomhs mutâ€" wasindeed lost nc aver bourd,, passed the ;ï¬rh-‘bmly i6 â€".flm “l:, him as Pegurhoman m (ength, he en himen inetap. Iafl of th buiwaths 54. the ons qritiont mo. _ Then he threw Holbrdoks, in spitei6f himâ€" self, Jh and waf Arig olï¬ wes, hm"\ were safely Sands" records a galiant deed of Heary Marsh, ons of the lifeboat crew at the Dawns, in the eastern part of England. .A furious temptest was blowing, and several vesseis had gone ashore and broken up in a few minutes: ~~Then Marsh ‘determined to r_'ndnnj.g_flu;bu_ch and see if lome_thin& sould be done. * Don‘t you go near them ! said his wife, fearfullyâ€"; but he only replied, the m'_h‘:mtdmy .f::m he .dmi\;,i:g were cager with their ï¬&.-â€"lrâ€"mmm roton clother warm fireside and hisf" short pipe." â€" ‘*He‘s gond * weas\ ; but with ervé S é...«e,?'?..-mhu strugelâ€" ing. (Bt 1y e€Metigted, he Won the hisâ€"waist â€"andâ€"to a ~belaying pin.>â€"Then he in sA A cce s nee , who, ‘wil &Q d g-pr:)& %fwy +the poor‘ boy * ** I‘m Marsh, and I‘ve come to save you!" cried the rescuer. . c# ready ?*. he, shouted . to the back soon. i He found the beach crowded with specâ€" tators, and the sea‘ Bréaking over «‘ French ig which had. a&g u&rq‘ \The rigâ€" ing was thick, \_#snd*lh%cng' froze as it fell. She was rocking wildly with the motion of the tremendous sea. Between her and the beach were ten feet of deep water, which, with each giant recoil, swept round her in fury. & t M s aâ€"il‘;wâ€"r;r&; p; h‘e‘lp to Burton. * Are all ‘the pengle out of that there brig?" called Marab. ® All but two," said the bystanders, I'h‘:d we can‘t get no 'nmer from thom. 4 ’nqns are," ie s ons 2 “Mon ml% go’!omm" Pale © Which my_'mymflq tasave ‘em;" was the‘chotus. 2 5 zÂ¥ l ~d 7 ~‘The noxt . instant? he was. swept off his Mrz on he went, hand over hand, till he was dashed againat the ship‘s side. â€"+«* He‘w killed 1" the bystanders ; but :3’ Ts Mitrbsrad: with" hoib over hand. T e deen (firesp sipeed wpen ts l' r?d Pfli a BA up.ptd n.poAn '.e â€l nI'I PITY CC Revage® alac l l o .. Ainpcali 22 c i red s hig w Ti oo m S e 1 R I * I‘m ’.{ï¬n‘ 1" "maifl Marsb. . ‘"Hére, h,'l.d my jacket. Don‘t you hold m back. 1 ‘uâ€"g.hï¬:ky Let go of me !" and seizing the lineâ€"which led from the rocking m‘t:’no.hm,‘hmh.dmk deep into surf. * with the ies known.ta.the West, .. As nnmyo§ ï¬"m. hflnll initimate with the workmen in the. canals. Puuing‘ on the dress and with it the character of the hilfâ€"Atab, halfâ€"Iranian, such as was to be mst with by the thousands along the mnorthorn shore of | the Porsian Gulf, he Emd_r over{wh.re under the name of irza Abdullah, the Bushiri. â€" He imitated the religious practicesâ€"which came under his observation, ~wasdecorated with . the eral, viewingâ€"it.as inferior, _ Thipseatimen was i L a,? Burton. _ Me ï¬ke&’?} the nativas.! Injeffect he becaing ane of them. He studied the . Jats, and came to the conclusion that they were indentical _ After pumn? Oxford 1;}in%hi n _ the n ‘his o e ce hi ns 8 yâ€"army. ~Then h\nla’c to wo;k ::ior an eccentric Scotchman, Duncan For who hisd Spént .a ygar or so in Pialauky, *and :runhu strength of it was perfect master Otientalflanguages, He hur:wopm'mu; one was for smoking‘ a huge : meerschaum stuffedwith the strongest possible tobacco, and the other. was for chess, . Porhaps his third passion was not quite so harmless ; it was simply for not washing," . Burton‘s atâ€" tainments in Arabic, :&b he speaks slightingly of them, must already have been uldï¬hlâ€b. as they â€"won for. him at. once the old Scotchman‘s rogn:& The foundation was rapidly laid for Burton‘s future studies and on coming off the -flg‘x\ Bomlrg he was realily to surprise the natives with sote of <their own <choice language. Griffin though he was, he hadâ€"thoâ€"startâ€"of all the youngsters whoâ€" had heen {taken into the East lndia Service along with ‘him. . But there was‘something uncanny about him as seen with the eyes of the Englishmen about him. ~From the outset he sought toâ€" leara. what was ~good in native. customs.« The Q;iï¬g{g}l had tricks of swordsmanship and skill on horseback which he gladly acquired. By{studying twelve hours.a day he rapidly: made himself familiar with all the languaâ€" es that could be of use.to him between iomh:y and Tehefan,,/~ Oné of his instrdc tors celebrated him as a man . who could learn a languageâ€"ranning, . _ _ ‘_' 8 8 aue ad . The proper thing for aa. English . officer wu,wpm nlooflmm nfliv_gfli’é in genâ€" ob by Edward IV., waa hardly moderated by . » f . * C Onul-n:' M h-raq‘.' hi ‘L‘ :‘A Roman L in i en ; dark hair, &ll’p. high wni i e on en @ mï¬ Mrll‘.h:chhh d have g f beâ€" v Wiont Ni blon anprcadants is 16 not Soppreâ€"e n r 0 ve biography that he cou have d 1 y . U io ht Paslding Ehi Sril td chde nds do or going where they hardly dared to venâ€" tnrl;; go laemedbfrom*xh own point ;Y‘v‘iow to ish} ing. .. Xeb.t figmen uhe papey tapie in hiaGoum at plomacy. n & C * pile db Taking broath, hetastened a libe Wround : Henry Marsnâ€" . j ‘The atithor of **Heroes "of the=Goodwin No, I shall be lost, lost \" No, you 'o.'t',zll-.l .you aghore on THE AFRRENTIOESHLE IN INDIA oi i c a8 The way from the and xinhw 0t io and hisf"* ah of Royalgbn, dangh stan about tam se chitd recsived only oN idns .;,»‘; (be Tel id ‘ P t TE VARTOUS® NEWSPAPEN®, + bearing with him the * flimay" which talbf of Home Rule, of Sinm, of the Behring sea sase, of crime, of love and treachery. He could not play marbles if he wished _ anless the polic¢ man at the corner shonld by chance fl-’. Ther aflm‘m with _ his cont off, and the cn“ with his sleavas hustics y’; that gives a stisk to the lively the Unlike t:n'end‘occh:uion;l butterflics, the busy 1 night have their hongyâ€" t to p.’r'..;? Mahomet being nï¬% the movdntais, the monntain sotes t him. The resta nrant comes to the dinetr. In other words, a lanch man with all the neo: :y ptFl&lfllllï¬ for lï¬ m-ï¬ visite the night offices with his waiig&n w tea, milk, coffas and solids at nl1 mg ME: the ti operators are away inâ€" dustrionsly. The messengor boy, who does hot dawdle as in the day time, hiss hot _A night waite® puta the fhost nbm‘i.e.‘ terpretation on theorâ€"ler for ‘"a small steak." He is accustomed to cater to lppfl‘ stintulated by aleoholic beverages, and is nerous accorcifigly. It is a true 7 xf that the night restaurant deals for the fnost part with those who are * out for ** wiram or tin:: Niour ?" His dog Jack is grown old in the service, and whe:dhil muhur stops to have a chat he is glad enough to stretch out on the ??Erf?i%i"]c_:lia %Eke a rest. But honest, aithful Jack ever keeps one eye.c an no. one"has.ever had t:‘: ludihzd my ht was not as vigilant as he should be. â€"Aud what.a of xfnfahrl'nllhlonr d8: \‘l?zohmm Burroa e is the goodâ€"angel of yo repoi king for news. And fllw ly interest in their behalf has prevented more than ofte of them frombeing regalarly and propeyly ‘scooped." Long may he hv{_. he hig dt;‘g “_Japk.’; ) ‘, hen there are the water police*t t watch of the S.0. E. life‘gon station. â€â€™ghc little dingey goos ont at midnight fot a twoâ€" hour pattol on the.water front. ‘Vfl?h it the aquati¢ ‘Colling, the Argusâ€"eyed ‘and Briareus handed Nr. Bumdnfo or that deâ€" lightfnlly remfniscent manâ€"o‘â€"war‘s man Mr. Tyler. ‘Tis true ‘that there be not many .{ï¬r thieves nowadays. Pirates are few and far between, and murderers have other means of disposing of their victims than by dumping them in the bay, but the water patrol nevertheless does a very useful Wofk in finding and restoring what might becomié flotsam and jetsam if left alone. 5 Wattee A midnightride in the dingey, with the full moon silvering the Ii-ph:. {m- nfl iten musio,â€"with the dnrivnflinnd the aoidd to the south and the mysterious ningling of cloud and watet. beyond, with the ghostly forms of palace mm“"‘m whiteâ€"winged yachts ng;ng the shores is object lesson in beauty, which would make even the cynic a post. â€" ""ling THE AbLâ€"NIGHT RESTACAANP. ___ The allâ€"night restaurant WWa recogni institution. â€" The bill of fare must b:Kbo"u‘i alor night hnwks are gotacions. The s t who is h&bited as is his diurnal conâ€" frere, is like him in other respests e t that he has that peculiar owlkeyed lnrnm look, which is am attribute .r{n who wark by night. _ o d e e k Aemrnordtermncdes a Guardians ofthe Nightâ€"The Mies â€"How the Morning .News: ) . moambr in Fut idt s lt d x;u the roar of traffic has subsided,: and watchman‘s footfall is heard with : ling distinétness on the uonÂ¥ 4 wlunl:«'l;:dtu;l:u nl; comohhzclly fro R n ces to the gutter; even tlL r-puic:.g‘mlnt man his owed his mercenary chant and has gong home to dream of Tuscan hills and. & valleys; when drowsy ‘stazs blink for v‘e’y sleepiness, aad the late full moon ‘struggles with theâ€"electric light to swathe the night in spirit qlrmtntl of white. Between the hours of 12 p.m. and 5 a.m.,. when Jarvia and Bloor and the host of lesser residential streets have donned their night caps, pyâ€" jugu or oéber slumber. clothes, when‘ l&h and poor are wrapped in the arms . of Morâ€" phousâ€"a gontloman, by the way, â€" whose embraces are strictly impunhlâ€"-ciuwn in that portion of the city most oonfuta& by day. thore is still a silent drmy of workers laboring in the night. * vorlp Aiele THE PEOPLE WHO SHOULDN‘T B OUT,. But first,as to those who have no business to be out at these ndcn‘nng hours, The young man who has heard that spirits ‘wallc abroad An darkness, staggers from _ his: too familiar intercourse with them. ~He:it is who vexes.the drowsy ear ot night by singâ€" ing songs of Bagchanalian import in a voice as husicy‘as the whistle of the Chicora. His inclinationa.run to.cabs furiously driven to various places wheve he. ‘"knows the ropes." The hotel clerk, who goes to bed when.there are no longer thoss around to appreciate the glister of his diationd, ktows him not, but the sieepy â€"porter: who ‘takes his place ‘can tell you how very thirsty, heâ€"was and how.many boitlés of ale he drank at 25 cents per uwigflo; Perhaps it is well that someâ€" one sitould ‘keep tally, for when this amateur Fortunatus, who in the=daytime wiekd$ & yard stick, walkes “E next morning. with a seal brown taste in his mouth he can. re member nothing. .‘This dissipated young mign has unlimifed tastes but a limited salâ€" ary.. He can ** paint the town red" only so RX‘ as his sqanty material lasts, and‘so by % . he has reached his tether, crept into l\muding house by the back window and fallen «into oblivion on the ‘back" stairs) Requicscat in pace. . Those who bewail the nightly vice of grest cities must except (Poâ€" ronto. The picture sketthed above is not a frequent one, an auterbiting © oketoh or ‘roronto. Artor NIGHT IN A GRBAT OHMY, THEY NEVER SLK&P copperhoads and eight black snakes. One ogp&: \% : gakes was two inches thice and five feet. _ ‘The. story they told of their batole with these suakes was enough toâ€"make the hajr stand on cne‘s head. <Phey had been qut‘&n Brush Valley hunting for ground h Weist gropoied descending an air m caused by che mines being wotked Wmnthe surface. / The ‘botâ€" tom of the " eovered . with a thick undergrowth: of . laurel and. everâ€"green. They all clambered down, . Weist leadâ€" ing. They carried doubleâ€"barreiled â€" reâ€" peating . shotguns. â€"Near _ the . bottom was a sharp declivity, and Weist slipped over «a crag and struck _ the _ mossy bottom\Wwith \much ‘ forse. â€" Immediately loud hilhngl aud rattlings came from the thickest part.of the fern, and Weist disâ€" covered %h, had fallem‘ into a den of smakes. _ ‘The side of the hole was as smooth as glass, and he could not climb out. â€" Sudâ€" ‘denly an<a of snakes glided towards h{m. fl’-‘%rgad 'wt;r barrels at them, blowi ix to pieces. the rest crept on. Twicenf;;.:fxn h fired, and shrieked furphelp. His cries were drowned by his companions overhcadiring with great rapidity at the reptiles, now thoroughly mad with pain and fright. ‘ W eigt was gnally surrounded by a writhing mass of serpents. | He could not shoot, so, grabbing the gun "by the bazrel, he struck out right and left. _ At Jart he l.)egnnwm; faint. When his comrades A Shiamokin, Pa., special says:â€"Shartle Weist, John Orwick and Aavon Numah, thres: well, known |ponin;¥‘ men of this place, ci_t_nn‘il\ town the other night with thirty â€"two‘ d ‘snakes.~â€"â€" There ~wore t wenty â€"one d snakes, the la".f‘g%!b .beink four foep long amd three inches thick, threg " & W," bowed the tramt, ** I bel * r toll e implionty, and, to show 0, and that I do not want ghall greatiy mocept your * _ you patronize for one or beer. Thl; ';‘wtl{mréri. ud * Here" ;* "taike this dime t out of %&! Py N Al some rhamï¬ périon farnd her an occipaâ€" n o f dresemaking establishment 18 her sapsrior intelligence soon her ame‘s most valuable assistant, and the WA# lpnt to Comstantinople with drouges d by the Sultan‘s mother. Nothia@ ut heard of ‘het fot miany youre, nntil afiittle ineritance was left her by a relative, and notices were ypublished «aking for b:‘vw)mf wbout. In answer to aff these notices, & w orderfl equipage, escortâ€" ed by t a.mz, -‘mn the deor of the Hnibasny , the ‘s wile m‘ to deciate herself the once F inff and rencumeed the legacy in Add to these figures the nuinber concealed entirely, 'neeï¬!hfin houses and fecorded as something entirely unsuspicious, and the nurber igring i suburbs which , were not ;eool?d'%pu by the Naples sanitary authorities ° the average of 30 daily is easily ‘reached.. / © _ k : wï¬;n;:;fl;z:ï¬ announced whe will not give a clean bill of health to ships from Naples and Greece has established a quaran tine. h + A his w-m over the crag, and Weist grabbed »it>~Then, . Numah and. Orwick started. m..{lhunnp. At this moment a large rattler Mgod at him. . But he kicked iuï¬ul off with oneâ€"foot, .and â€" with "the flrgiweriï¬dn biack snake imst .the sl e‘(;“ho.mk. a'b:n his feso;xï¬:n}r{ed the 0 and he was sife. e had mï¬fgga gun all this time, and, after reâ€" covering breath, he aided his friends in shooting ifto the mass ‘of snakes directly below. . â€" Wien tbo.i; lclrt.rldge- wore. ox> haus secur g poles ‘and fished out SId Muï¬l lll“:l they could â€"and datried them home.. An ex‘fedition will be tormed t Â¥isit the hole and firish the roâ€" by a relativ «sking for i these notice ed by mor deor of the Piok Colly Collis favour_¢f b It was tha « Morke, in t algwx(VM"--â€" &m-; ie, Bos + w6 dek wen fls spone frve the mmann n d shen feormed mainder. The tramp met the business man on the strees. . $*00If The :r_ ran was for going ahead. & P .m’-"“._rersuf t.go tramp, *but I there is a financial stringenty permeatingâ€"commercial circles." surprised a %’u’ of b?“‘z * , *k rd so," said the tramp, " but I dis ‘4t, for 1 have been told that story ~many "times im my experiâ€" ence." Chaatn ies 1 + «wesp 9 ‘VCB’†1#“ e mow, whather you lieve it ed the husiness 1 mflr éon fo:({nm" g _ ** I bew your pardon," bowed the tra l?l'h’ orite‘ wife of the present Snlt;n o -M a poor girl,living in the coal She was a bessnmnl girl, as ah ¢ a beautiful woman, and snpp:l_u;i_ï¬fï¬ï¬‚uy' of appeal bati s Prasetiat < +0 ols o2 ind Abdrast w Auod Bc td deaths ; July 28, 11 cases. and 7 deaths, Then came , days of rain andâ€"the rate fell."" On July 31 there were 18 cases and 10 deaths 3 n&mx,w cases® and 6 doaths 7 A?t‘.‘ cases and 10 ‘deaths ; August 4, 25 cases am@\15 .doaths.; August 5, 14 death:%w«zh were registered. by authorities‘ / g{stro-‘enterir.is. The ®*World‘8" Wmdoahkww:aholnwly that they wore cholera cases. ... 3. w éricans. < we\ concerning : cholera | is trausmitted.»> The Government had hoped to ‘eonceal °t nt epidemic enticely, This season es is deserted by English and Ameri¢an . visitors, but. awarms with Italian visiters who come to bathe.. Rumor of the truth got among them, and Naples is now. a-mwfg mil who can go. °_ Qn. July 14 mnd 26 thore were 14 cases and, .5 «deathss July : 27, : 15 cases and 7 {;l\ ‘The number ol gats in the hospital : is not published either, . The authorities .-‘.i? not ldlllg“!! » e "of cholers. The United y, from the Govâ€" ernment ab. the small . officials , at NIYIâ€"“" in a.conspiracy to conâ€" ceal the tfluï¬. mt \s It is only bécgme known through an Italian phys t x«:mi.flï¬l- with Amâ€" Te “Wï¬ Â»a She is Shunued by ( ‘ii velters. A.New York special‘ says :â€"A special Sable to the (New York * World,‘ dated Nuaples, Aug. y and mailed to Paris: tells a serious | the . ravages of cholera. in that rnfortunate oi y“.d.goep to show that both the city sns 1 Go ernment officials have taken every means to suppross the ‘trath. The ‘despatch a ‘“f‘ deéatharom :cholera ieve have averaged 30 daily for more than a week past. T6 is impossible to learn the pitmber sick beeause mlh themselves. rim of lake sold in the. In an ol |rubber * Pardon ms a +moment," he said, bow "* Yosy bhersaâ€"i¢." agid the business m an, Fall Into a Don of Sumkes Tinanoial Stringency. PBeauty Not a Curse had uesd the old boot us DESERTED . water suralin E@w*““’ en comes ‘a rer, In the cast is a e P omeie "ait ..‘%‘m\u’nxo:.ll day. i6t, fownd by Arthur 1, who were still poor. 6f love at first sight ad the beausifal mod in on , ear." he car is a orning. dawn ps froum the purple taull Baitidings look « fare tem cOnts Ahror p Aibicy | t The temperature of dairy rooms can be lowered by sprinkling the floor and walls with water, . The evaporation of the water takes up heat, leaving the room cooler. It it is necessary to mix two portions of cream which are ripening, mix them thorâ€" oughly by an occasional stirring. â€" If this is not done it will likely be lumpy. Breed has less to do withâ€"the quality of butter than the dairy ‘equipmentt and the buttermaker. A skilled man can make firstâ€"class butter from anv breed. Have a separate room for dairy work on vegetables, etc, is a poor place to keep milk, butter or cheese. _ All xliry produccl: take up foreign odors readily. * Partics who Eut up ice last Winter are having no trouble in controlling the temâ€" perature of their milk, cream and butter now. It saves much time and one is usuâ€" ally able to produce.a more uniform proâ€" duct. f It is said that a dairyman who was milkâ€" ing a large herd of average cows took five of the best and five of the poorest ones, and keeping an accurate account of the cost of feed and caré, found that while the five good ones were paying a fine profit the other five were actually‘costing him $7 per head annually over and above the vaine of the milk they yielded. . Individual test is the only meansof agcertaining the profit and loss in the dairy,= ~ mont Station is devoted entirely to colic in horses and mules, the subject being treated very fully." Veterinsrians usually recognize but two furms of colic, upnumdtilc (cramp) and ibnlont (wied), Inflammation of tfc bowels is closely allied to spasmodic colic in -ymrtnm- as is soute indigestion to flataâ€" lent colic. These four disenses are the most common ones affectifg the digestive system of horses and mules. ‘ Forâ€"the prevention of any discase an intimate knowledge of its causes is eneutl:l. INimfnn out o(lnva;y. #wenty cases of colic may p y charged to some irregularity in ,ood and water, ~Sudden changes of temperature, unduly severs exertiony worms, etc., and feeding on grass when not mu:tamacf to it, are lr«ï¬nm canses of colic. An animal from which Nard or fast work is expected shonld never be ailowed to eat green grass, at least very little of it. . Do not wean calves too early. â€" Milk is a very digestible food and should be gradâ€" vally replaced by grain when the cilvosare weaned & Give the milk pails, cans and other dairy utensils frequent sun and air baths after carefully washing and scalding. Make aâ€"firstâ€"class and uniform product if you wish to work up a "trade orshold present customers. A neat psckage with your néme or some brand stenciled on it will enable your customers to find it. It becomes your trade mark. The real.‘seoret (if :there: is any) of this man‘s success,is staying at home and attendâ€" ing strictly to business,. . Whén the time comes to plow,.sow or"reap, he is ready ; does nos have to **briggle" around a day or two getting.tools repaired and bunting help. While this farmer. das done an immense ainsunt of hard labor. on theâ€" farm iti@s â€"not all work and no play. with him. _ He Wigks first ; does not stop his work in a busy ti to attend a public sale or spend ail afternoon. loafing around‘the town. _ He.takes.time to use his lawn mower at the mï¬:r.time. and to keep things neat and t/id‘;ln ut the barn wnd farm. ; No brier paiches or weedy fence corners are to be seen, ncither can you see any farm implements standing where they were . usedâ€"last. . They are invatiably found undershelter when aot in actual use. ‘There is no man:of my scquaintance who enjoys being at a neighborhood gathering, picaic, fair, or teking a trip through the west, any bettsr than this. ou¢, and he inâ€" dulges in these pleasires quite often, but does not neglect his business to do so. I don‘t suppose this friend will thank me for writing this article. "It was not written to praise or benefis him particularly, but for the benefit of a class of _farmers who think there is nothing in farming, and have become discouraged, ‘and are not trying to do anything. Even those that have inheritâ€" ed homes aré letting them slip right out of their hands."‘If this ‘friend f visited can make aâ€" farm pay for itself, : thousands of others can do tfle satne if they will only iry. He had no better chance than others, but madeâ€"the most. out of what he didâ€"have, â€"[E. A. Trout, in Ohio Farmer. â€" Do not hurry the cows to and from the pasturo. .‘ Few substances will incorporate. foreign ;nd deleterious odors more readily than utter. 6 Spasmodie Colic is a contraction or cramp of a portion‘of the intestinal walls, due to some irritant. ~ Indiscretions in watering or sudden changes in lmg::ulnre may also caus> the trouble. The #ymptom is the manifestation of pain. It passes of and the animal appears well again, ut after an interval the pain returns with increased severity. As the attack advances the inâ€" tervals are shorter, The pulss scems vory high during the pain but is normal at its cessation. _ This disease may be distinguishâ€" ed from fiatulent colic by the absonce of large quantities of gas in the intestines. The be animal fsmot bloated. It is most likely to confounded with inflammation of the bowels bfl:&thtnlhpï¬-nlï¬ severe, esâ€" in the oartior -tm andâ€" is conâ€" stant. The pulse beats y, increasing in frequency while I-’rudk colic, as has humhdi .the ho remains nearly normal, except "’ spasma. . Then, too, in inflammation »nh-&.unhufl is loss sud ln-dï¬-;'uul:, ‘vhlaa* tm his manifastations of â€" foilowing prescriptions will be found of :Can mono givea reason for this variaâ€" tion ? the stock bn-il:ï¬o life out of the soil in this lot?~If this is the reason why ‘does not the whoat grow where. the stable floor was ? ° If it is becauge there is an excessivé amount of fertility in the soil; why is it that there‘ isa very luxariant growth of wheat in the fence row, where, necessarily a large amount of manure would colloct ? â€"s d ordinary help, _ He nowShus ope bundrei Past nlpadltent A P Tinehnbrofutmante, {nlot wnd eontatine h Wihela ol actt This whoatl m;. ‘yikld 0f 85 d¢ 80 bushe!s per acre. ‘The seed used was roâ€" eleaned, and the ground/put in the!best _ Another intereati t of this wheat feld was a #pot vh-l:o‘avl;‘n h?‘ formerly stood. . Where the floor aud bay had been the wheat was very vigorous, and a dark E:::u color. Where the stable: floor had , and also where the manure‘ froum the stable had: been throw in â€"heaps,‘there was not a spear of wheat growing, not even a weed. . There had been a (u! lot connected with this barn; in this the droppings, straw and stalks, were allowed to accumulate during the winter and spring months: After the feediog season was over the manure would be &rown up in long heaps whore it remained until hï¬, when it was hauled on the wheat ground, . On this spot there were a few wnsl‘iï¬hin; a aickly ofâ€" fort toward getdni a start, xlt no wheat. Around this lot where the fehoe lad stood recoived from a fourth to a half more t rulbh shape and sown early (the frat fow ays of September). < He thinks one bushel of seed per aore is about right, and the way this crop stands on the ground it seems to hg‘:‘l’l that is required to produce s maximum yield. e Trak the wheat was all right, and soyeral inches higher than the wheat next to it, Bo 4h help. _ He now thus ‘ohe help ie howlant whe Uolic in Horeas Dairy Notes e Mississippi Exper ang Nave aoem ..ij <Abe larmer ':,:1?“":; | not be idle a" I sust is | fmg so AIn.â€" Th e profie such that ther * P winter idlenes the summer‘s i ! Every stepir * result of exper lE cter advantage than other stock, but that it is better for them than clear. Timothy hay ; and toâ€"day, I(_I had. cattle and sheep to ‘feed lng had only fodder and Timothy, I would give the fodder to the sheep and the Timothy to ‘the cattle, t.’housh. of course, an oocasional alternation would be advisable for both. Clear Timothy im <sometimes tuo constipating for sheep, also, for cattle; but the latter cuwitl,:-_ stand its effects with less injury than the former, especially where there are preguant ‘ewes. I regard clear Timothy as the poorâ€" est sheep â€"feed in the whole category, straw excepted, of course/â€"and the benefits of.a fodder ration are so marked: as a.cool» ing and laxative feed, that it is well worth while.to let the flock go a little hungry for a few.days until they learn to relish it. â€" In a short time even yearlings and lambs will come to like bii&hc green fodder, and will browse it perfectly clean ; eleaner than any pther @tock possibly can, . Now, for the flockmasters in the old hayâ€"growing States of New England, where corn is . ill adapted .and little grown, the above may seem gool- ishness. . But whatover the farmers of the East may.think, for those on the prairies aud rich bottoms of the West, where corn geems more appropriate than any other coreal crop, the matter of feeding its folinge is a practical one, and the saving of it may mean the difference between raising corn at a profit and raising it at an absolute loss. iThe great point is to stack the fodder in the Fall and keepritbright, says a writer in Sheep Breeder, â€" To do this, is must be tut, shocked,..busked and bound in convenient bundles with tatred twineâ€"this being the bess matcrial for bands to .prevent rats from cutting them, _ About . the last of November or first of December, unless ‘the Fall chasâ€"been unusually wet, foddér can be ricked ‘without danger of moulding, _ A lowâ€"wheeled wagon on a still lower truck, like v.‘h?n in cities, can be used to advantage in hau in‘fl; It is best to make the ricks long for windbreaksâ€"100 feet if ‘desired. ‘Throw down poles to keep the fodder 0T the ground, then begin and lay a sourse of bun(ï¬eu clear around, tips inward, and the hundles lapping about a third of their length. Then lay a shingle course straight through the middle to keop it full;, this will give a downward pitch to the outâ€" side> courses, gheddinq the rain. _ When built up high enough, n{ bundles lengthâ€" ways nrong the migdla, sharpened up to reâ€" %eive the rooif‘.vwil}o latter Wi{lfl:ul'l;;l_t of undies set staep; like â€"the opâ€" posite sides of ;ho:'-lor r66f. " If ‘the bu{?; are well thrust down intoâ€"the rick and the tops laced together, it willâ€"take a hard wind to blow them off and they will"protect the sick. Farm labor seems to be growing general ly more scarce, and wages higher. ~This will give the working farmer an opportunity to pay himself better. > h "Good land and good stock are pretty nearly thrown away on a man who has not a natural liking for kgriculture:â€" Soe that our boy has some aptitude in that direction Lfore yo‘h insist upon tying him d a#nt~ve fl{; farm. sat Hints and Suggestions. Do not neglect to weed turnips. If they have been planted in drill rows theâ€"weedâ€" ing can be accomplished with a cultivator. ‘‘The farmer wh~ .s a good manager will not be idle e‘ winter because there is nothâ€" ing to An.â€" Thesystem of work should be such that there is something to do. This winter idleness often destroys the profits of the summer‘s industry. > Every stepin advance, inagriculturo, is the result oi experience. An agricultural paper makes the experience of one farmer known to all others, and so is a mutual Iulrot. If you do not want to keep up with YO“ brother farmers, thenâ€"don‘t take an agriculâ€" tural journal. go. ® . Sheds, tanks, vaults and compost heapsâ€" or any one of them, will enable us to conâ€" serve the full_yalue of the manure. Yet most farmers prefer to waste it in an open bathyied,â€" . 200000 00 i 2 .c % Corn Fodder For Sheenâ€" ; Beginning on aâ€"river furm not adapted to the cultivation of oats, and ‘with a hr!ge range of rough back land, more suitable for sheep than for cattle, I found myself conâ€" fronted with the problem, how to make the sheop consumeâ€"the fogder.â€"â€"Toâ€"myâ€"surprise the first Winter‘s experience satisfied me, ng only that sheep will consume fodder to Every product sold from the farm carries away tomd amourt of fertility. : If no sysâ€" tematic effort is made to restore this, you are simply selling the farm by bits instead of doing it at a lump. PC i 1 N dn ndbhnm- withouts -E...- are similar to those named in gen eral but feeding grain ltely before a.durw exervion, and quantiâ€" of green dood, areâ€"liable â€"to onuse the, trouble. It is lessâ€"sudden in its developâ€" ment. 'l‘lug»h-h ?qynuulnd the mn gradually increases in frequency. The belly becomes enlarged with gas in the intestines, and gives a drum like sound when struck with the hand, â€" The treatmont is ‘entirely different. Opium in any. form m ust be avoided. : The objects m&h‘v "wre . the relief â€" of. pain, o‘mckinf formation of gas and its removal from. the in testines. .. For. the . first . two purféa‘il‘ ‘use the following : Chloral hydrate, 1 oz ; hyposulphite ofsoda, 2 0z ; atropia sulphate, l({r; water, 8 on Give in 1 dose,. If relief is not obtained from this dose and the Kain is still severe, it may be répeated in alf to one hour,, If bloasing. only coftinâ€" ues, the hyposulphite of soda alone may be given, _ For: the removak of ï¬â€œ which colleots in the intestines several methods are practiced. â€" Injections into the rectum are valuable and may be repeRtbd every half hour until two or tgm ‘nave been.. given, An inj ection of fcur or five ounces of pure %lyoarlnoi:nho of ‘benefit in som e cases, ut there js no. method so effectual and satiafactory as puncturiug the intestines with a small insemiment known as the trocar and canula which is made specially for this purpose. < The average stock raiser can use it with comparative safety. â€" The time at which mamure is applied to the land is of much less importance than rm the land gets it all. Deiny in applying t usually means waste. mss It is a {ood advantage to keep ahead ot our work, efpecially when harvesting late {s“ crops. To be caught by a storm at this season usually means some Joss. * Farmors whose tables are wall supplied with truitâ€"and vegetablétâ€"have few dootor‘s bills to pay. Thisconsideration alone should induce you to have a gatden and orchard, if hothing el#e will do. _ hyA _ Unless the corn otib is rat proof, it will hardly pay to hold your graiv. for higher â€" When you figurs on holding corn and wheat for a better market, uk:gmh shrink â€" age and insurance into consideration, ... The best time to start in the cnltivation of a new crop is when the price for it is low. Then.you won‘t be disappoints1 in the market, and will have a good chance of getting in for a rise. s t 3 _Make im tem of fwemi with dnm»m 3:-'150 nd:s if there is a boom in wome wln line Those who come in after the in start« ced asually sufer. â€"Iimping from oné crop to suother in atâ€" tempting to follow the markes and grow the one that pays best, asnaliy resalts in keeping you just a yoat behind. .. tained, ‘ If colic has been produced by porâ€" say hind. ED 2 pingitive "ime se of any kind, give a purgativeâ€"one ounce 0 Socotrine: aloss md,h warm, . not boiling, water ; or one to three pints of raw unrla‘on.,,lljuflou into the rectum are beneficial if properly used. ~* /.. __"_ A new industry in Canadian lumber is being develt;{):d in the city of Ottawa by Mesars. McRae & Co., who have secured the control of a German patent for the treatment of beech afid> birch woods, The great objection hitherto held against these woods is the fact that they are very difficult to season, and even when theyâ€"have beon seasoned fully 40 per cent. is defective. By the new process the sap is sweated out of the boards by being rlmd. in a n state, in steam chambers for twelve 5‘:;:, after which it is put into the drying chamber for two or three days, according to thickness, and then by a chemical application the wood is stiined throughout a rich wainut color, ~‘The process has â€"begn â€"tried on a large scalé in Germany for the past eightcen months, and has proved such a success that experts acknqwledgo that moodâ€"so treated is superior to walnut, and the owner® there write that they are quite unable to supply the demand. No country in the worldpï¬ns‘ such forests Of b}&ch -3 birch as Ganada, and the discovery\of this process will no doubt greatly enhance their value. . A trial kiln has been built is Ottawa, and the first cel, turned on‘ last week, is so satisâ€" r::tory that works for the treatment of tiwenty five car loads monthly will be erectâ€" ed thére immediately, and arrangements ma/dle for the erection of two other plants, one in western Canada and the other in the Province of Quebec. It is probable that the bulk of the first scason‘s out put_ will be shipped to England: where the wood it well known and can be readily sold on t. profitable basis. * ® There are dmt two things required in tenching the litile calf how to drink, the first is a littlo dommon sense, the second is ~ lots of patieace. . The common sense comes in when ‘ya- consider that its nature is look up for its food supply,and if you h the top of its head or nose, you must éxpect its tendency will be to follow ng);hn dirâ€" ection,to find what it is after. t think . a calf a day or two old could have a greai amount of experience, so don‘t expéct it t« show very much rehsoning power. . Yot must do that for them. _ When your m ence begins to waver just ask yoursell much more you knew when you were at the calf‘s age, aud it may hélp you to credit the calf with just a little sense, and you will br able to overlook a good deal that Â¥ou might otherwise attribute to pure cussoiness. _ The congh or puff of aâ€"railway ergine it lue to the abrupt emission of waste steam up the stack. . When moving slowly the :::gh‘ can, of coutse, be heard: other quite distinctly, but when is put on the puifs come out one ‘after an* other mych more rapidly, and when cighteor coughs a second are produced they cannot be separatoly distingnished by the ewr. A locomotive running at thaâ€"rate of nearly seventy miles an hour gives ont twenty nll of steam every sscondâ€"that is, ter sach of its two oylinders. j Ansomaron,â€"Porn; is 16 ;000 foet abovt the sea; and the ~highestâ€"inhabitedâ€"spot in this world Since the coal minersâ€"of Great Britain: have refused to accept a reductioninâ€"wages. of 25 per cent., reports say thatin England they are on the threshold of a‘ colossal trade battle which will involve a strike of nearly‘ 500,000 men, and enforce Tdleness on probâ€" ably as many more.> This, if cohsummated, wilfbeimmeuunbly the biggest of thefifteen great colliery strikes of the past twentyâ€"five ‘years. ‘The miners maintain that the ownâ€" ers are to blame for the low prices and overâ€" production, since Lhaj‘ have no foreign comâ€" petition to meet, and that it is unfair to make the workmen bear the brunt. of the owners‘ mismanagement. . The fpricse of coal is still falling, and iron works forge coal is now down to from 7s. to 8s., and miBl coal to 8 to 9 shillings. During the sammer, say from June “1 September, once orâ€" twice eacs month, sprinklé sulphar on the +eattles‘ backs, Whether it prevents the depositing of the egg that develops into ï¬mh. «: whether it destroys it after lwing deposited, I do not know ; but this I do know, that with 20 head now in my stable, there are but twe that have any grubs, and these two art heifors tha t ran ‘with the sheep last season %nd ‘did not,get the suiphur treatment ry.it. Canada‘s trade with has not g-:, quite satis e \hol:m yoar. > n wdian ox Amonnted to only £1,708,199, & lheth.f- of £385,245, or 29.50 zu cent. for the six months. On the other hand, the imports from Britain to Canada increased from £2,163,101 last year to £2,404,003, equal to 11.16 per. dent., this mostly in mauufactured goods, The disappointment of cattle shippers con tinues unmud. Each lnomfh'l;“'nk shows dlashfished returns. For the weeks ending July 15, the exports were 2.209 as oouasnred with 4,584 the week previous, and 8,760 for the corresponding week of last year,, It is reported that there 1s pruuul‘la mo space now under contract, and that all the contract cattle have been shipped. . j Trade in wholesalecircles has been quiet all the week. Country dealers are buying very cautiously, and will likely continue to do so until the crop prospects are even more assured. ‘Reports from most points are very favorable. In view ofâ€"the reported shortage of forage in Europe it is worthy‘ot spzcial note that the croEa are good in al« most all sections. / There has beon a general improvement inggrop conditions durï¬; the week. In -mm:ru of the west the rains came teo late to ensure a« heavy growth. Collections ard generally . s e:{lng ~fairg Canadian stocks are not so Kopnll.d as & week ago, and prices are steadierâ€"both at Montreal and Toronto. Money is still inâ€" clined to be stringent, but may te easier shortly. _ Mercantile discounts are. unâ€" changed at 6 to 7 per cent. Bank clearings in Toromto which are a fair index.of the volumeâ€" of business were 4 per cent. less than last week, and 17 per cent. less than a year ago. ® Canada exports to the United States ducts valued at from $35,000,000 to.w.ï¬ 000 in the face of the McKinley tariff. is taken as conclusive:evidence of vhe suâ€" periority of imany of our productions, ‘The number of failures reported to R. G. Dan & Co. last week in the Dominion of Canada~ was 34, as compared with 26 the week before. They are all more or less uniniâ€" portant, though two out of Ontario, which cf the provinces had the largest number, viz., 21, were rated above 33.530, one was rated above $500, one more had the lowest credit rating with lowest capital rating, andâ€" the remaining 17. had neither gapital nor credit rating. _ There were â€" only 7 failures in the Province of Quebec, and tho{ were comparatively unin&&wrunt, thou, two were rated above $3,000. Four of tf:o seven had no rating, and only one more was above $500. ‘ $ a is most unex Thik uomen t malg lower prices on raws their quotations, .‘This is no doubt partly â€" due t: manipulation, The utilization of energy for electrical purposes from windmills ’{lu heen proven gorm‘ble, if not commercially feasible. '!’ auron this matter is interesting, and dicative of. much yet to be attempted. â€" Ex+ poriments made in Great Britain show that a machine constructed for this purpose deâ€" veloped results that Mprfl%flm tory, the power obtained being sutl t for the elsctric li,ht.(:ï¬ of. a Lul-ifl-&. twentyâ€"seven 16â€"candleâ€" ‘lamps and thres arc lights. Expefiments made by Engineer Raou in the north lighthouse at Havre, France by a 40â€"foot Halliday mill wereâ€"found to give a power of 17.8 measured on the wind shaft, with a wind velocity of twentyâ€"three feet per second. ing, and is quoted in New "ha wa ns adalhran Teaching Oalvas to Vrink Rapid Oouzhinz 16 fo