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Flesherton Advance, 9 Sep 1886, p. 3

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TNAT BOGUS REVOLUTION. Tba Leader* of tbe Hlslna 1'lu.oed Under Arrest. ALEX IN DEB BEBINO HIB FATHER. Emperor William Angry and King Milan Dis- gusted with the Czar. A last Thursday nigbt'a Lcndon oable eaya: Bir J. Ferguwon, Under Foreign Secretary, mated iu tbe Booee ot Oommone tins afirrunon that tbe loyal troopa had entered Be fit on Toe adsy with tbe oonasni ot tba Powcrt. The exact wbereaboata ot Prince Alexander, tbe Under Beoretary aid, wamo known to tbe Brilieb Govern- mant, bat telegrams bad bean forwarded to him inviting him to return and retume bin role in Bulgaria. Prince Bismarck i< iid to be surprised at the anti-Ruaeitniam diapUyed by tbe Aaetrtan and Haoga:tan press. Prices Alexander bat arrived at Darm- etadl. Tho Ru-i in Charge d'Afuirtt bad an In- terview witb Ibe Foreign beorelary to-day. He proteited against the inanlting langaage ot tbe Eogliab press, and reaffirmed tbat tbe Oau bad LO knowledge of tbe Bulgarian oontpiriey. When Pdnee Alexander received tbe news ot tbe success of bis f rieoda in Bul- garia be was deeply moved. Hs tele- graphed to bis father that be would visit D*rmtadt anyhow before returning to BnlKria. The Roaeiana M Keni treated Prinoe Alexander and bis brother with indignity. They refoeed to allow even a aervant to accompany Prinoe Alexander, saying " year brother will wait on > u.' Tba JIW mns/ f'on bas a despatch from Btamboul eajing : The greaHsl excitement prevails here owing to tbe belief tbat Bos- da intenda to oooupy Bulgaria Tbe mili- tary department is in a state of feverish sxeitemeut. Tba SianJirJ. Berlin csrreepondenl eays : " Emperor William, oa hearing ot the seizure and kidnapping ot Prinoe Alexander, wrote a ebarp letter to the Czar txpreising amazement and iudigna- tion." When tbe King of Bervia beard of the events al Sofia be said, " It ia tbe greatest piece of infa>sny ever perpetrated in Europe. If I knew where Price) Alexander waa I would sacrifice ail I posaaaa to afford him aeaietsnoe." Tba report of the arrival of Prinoe Alexander at Darmstadt ia now feme J. Tba Poweis have r* ojgnfaed the Govern- ment termed by M. Kwavelcff, witb bimaa Premier , M. Btorkff as Foreign Minister . M. Panotf as Minister ol War ; and M. Question* aa Minister of Finance. Tbe pro- visional Government has aasnred the Porte that the movement in favor o( Prince Alex- ander ia not inimical to Turkey, snd has aaked tbe Forte to re open the railway between Constantinople and Pbilippopolis. Tba t'remdtublalt officially denies tbat Austria waa privy to Ibe Zinooff con- spiracy. The ncwepiper Qraihdini* says Prince Dolgorooki will goto Bulgaria to icqalre on the spot into tbe recent mate tberc. Tbe same paper eaya il it intended shortly to despatch numeroaa Rneaian cffitera to Bulgaria, including Qen. Stoljpio, wbo ie ta be appointed to tbe ebief command of tbe Bulgarian army. Ilie characteristic r f Ruanun diplomacy that when M. de Nelidcfl, tbe Raaiin AmbassaJor al Constantino pis, returned to bia post a abort time skgo, after apending a fortnight with tbe Cmr, be gave tbe Sultan the moat strongly worded assurances tbat bia Imperial matter bad not the slightest Intention cf interfering in any way in Bul- garia, and that all reports to the contrary were untrustworthy. " The troops masted in Bessarabia," be said, " are merely col- looted there for tbe annual mat utuvrss. The Oaar ia determined to let thing* abaaa their own coarse ia Bulgaria." GLADSTONE'S PAMPHLET. An Exhaustive Review ot the Irish <|neslin. HOMli BULE A CERTAINTY. UIHONT0N BTAdB HOBBBBV. Marina . mplcli < I TSv.knl Illuli w, mm- PsuMawn* Peeked -nd !.! BUM. A Cilgary detpttob ol yesteiday givea full particulars ot Ibe stage robbery : At a quarter to 1 the Kimouton alsge waa stopped by two mashed men on tbe road eighteen miles from Calgary. There were ID tbe stags Fete Campbell, driver ; J. Borne, traveller lor Mr. Aabdown, ot Win- nipeg ; the Maaeey Oimpany'a traveller ; and a Freacbman, name unknown. Tbe masked men wore stripes from tbe Ucion Jack over their faota and oarried carbine* and two forty-five calibre revolvers. Tbsy were on foot, and jumped oat of tbe locg grata tea feel in Iron! cf Iba horses, which they stopped, a>nd ordered tbe party to descend. Tbey then marched their prisonera into a coulee, where they went througb their pockets. Mr. llama loet 170. but another who had 170 on him waa overlooked. M aaeay't traveller loat t30, tbe Frenchman tl>5 aad the itigo driver 200. The robbers then Iu road thsir attention to Ibe stage and wens through the luggage and opened the mail begs, bat the mail bag containing rsgietered lettera waa overlooked. The stage horses wsre taken out and driven away and the highwaymen disap- peared. Tbsy wsre evidently new al the basinets and nervoue. Tbey took none of tba passengers' watebis. List night 25 Mounted Police went oat to search for them, bat np till cow no trace baa been dlaeovsred. KILLBDA POI.IUBH1AN. A lirnou. n man'* u<ll n,, c. Bcsejtc f e a : r.rdT. A Montgomery, Ala, dsapateh aaya Harrla Onnler, a wall known eitlzer, entered police headquarters at 1 o'clock this morning with a double barrelled shot gun to kill Osptain Martin, the night chief. He nred and killed Officer Montgomery. Martin was nol in ths room. A dsaperate struggle followed between Gaoler and two officers, who disaimed aod plaoed him in a cell. Oontsr was on a epree, and had aarliir In the night been arrested by Martin. A friend want on bis bond and got blm out. He then weal home and returned in hia night clothes with the above result. Guuler Is now in the county jail. Tke Kem.orr ml m S*a..ln Jew. A IVittaborg deepateh ol August llth aaya : To-day a Rusiian Jsw entered the Register's Offlas to take out a marriage license. He Mated that ten years ago he waa married in Rasaia, A few daya alter tbe ceremony waa performed be waa drafted into the OBIT'S army. Be soon daeerted. and finally reached thta ciiy, when he became a peddler. In the mean- time his wife, who remained in Raseiaand waa ignorant ot her husband's wbsreaboota, had been granted a divorce by the rabbi in whoae temple ahs worshipped. Aweekago abe arrived la tbie oily and found her hue- band. There waa a joyfol reunion, and they al once decided (n again marry. Tbe register U In a qoandary. It tbsre waa a divorce it Is neeeaaary to proenrs a eopy ot the decree baton a license of mtrriage can f ba granted. Thta It is imrojsible to pro cure, and tbe regiaHr has reserved decision. bin only JL.ee I del Owl ( I hi.. ' Humor mingles witb patbM and trsgedy (says Ibe Ckriitian Leader) sven in the story of that appalling volcanic eruption in New /elacd. Me. Morgan, a surveyor, relate* that when the showsr of ashes came on at Galatea, one native (ell upon bis knees and exclaimed," O, Lord I if Yoo will only let at get cat of this I will give yon a pound and Morgan shall keep it." afatkeral luve struck into Georgetown, ! E.I, tor the Bret lime In a great many The Ex-Premier Tract* the Progrett of tha inah Cause. A Londcn oable taya : Mr. aiaistone's brochure on the Irish question was pub- lished to-day. II contains fifty-eight peges, and is timilar in tbe excellence ot ile style to Mr, Oladitone'a pstnphlat on tbe Bul- garian atrooities. The brochure it under two beads. The first is " The History of an Idea," in which Mr. Gladstone summarises the following condition* under which alone, in his view, Hemo Bole became possible : (1) Tbe abandonment of the hope that Par- liament could serve u a poatible IsgUIative instrument for Ireland ; (2) the unequivo- cal and oonstitanonal demand of the Irish members ; (3) the possibility ot dealicg with Scotland in a timilar way in circum- stances of eqoal and equally clear desire. Mr. Gladstone then paaws on to defend himself from tbe charge of having sprang tbe Home Bole meaaun upon hia friend*. Beplying to the obargea of Lord Hartington and Mr. Chamberlain tbat be had oooeeived tbe idea precipitately, and to the charge of Mr. Bright that he bad concealed it unduly, be denies that il ia ths duty of a Minister to make known even to bit colleagues every idea lormiog in bis mind, which would tend to conlubo and retard instead ot aid businsss. He continue* What ia true It, tbat I had not publicly and in principle condemned it ; but I had neither adopted nor rejected it, and for the vary simple reason that it waa not ripe either for adop- tion or for rejection." Mr. aiadelooe then goea on to point oat that daring all ths earlier years ol bis public lit* the alleraa- livee ware, repeal on tbe one band and en the other the relief of Ireland from ber grlevaneea. " II was not possible," he aays, " at tbat time to prognosticate bow in a abort time Parliament would stumble and almoat writhe under its oonitaotly accumulating burdeaa or to premise tbat it would eventually provs incapable ot meeting the wante af Ireland. Evidently there wae a psriod when Irish patriotism, aa represented by O Council, looked favorably upon tola alternative policy and had no fiitd oonelntiia at lolhe absolute necessity lor home government, and aeemed to allow that measorea founded on justice to Ireland might possibly soffioe to meet the neeeeaily of tbe ease." Il was as early aa 1871, Mr. Gladstone Bays, tbat bs took tbe first step toward plating tbe eontreveray en its true basis. He opposed Mr. Bolt's scheme because the alternative described la ibe last paragraph had not been eibausted, bat sven at Ibat time he did not close tbe door agaiust a recognition of Ibe qnealion ia a different atate ot things, for instead of denouncing the idea ot Horns Bole at one in ite eisenoe destructive ot the noity of the Empire, in tbe following words bs accepted the assurance g.vsn to Iba con- trary : " Let me do the promotara of tbii movement tbe fullest justice, always speak- ing under tha conviction, Ibey moat empha- tically declare, nd a* I fully believe tbem, tbal tbe union of Ibeec kingdoms under Hsr Mtjealy ia to be enaintained, bat thai Parliament ia to be broken np." Similarly in 1874 Mr. Gladatone accepted without qualifloatloo the principle tha) Home Bole bad no nseetaary connection witb separa- tion. Coming to I h electoral campaign cf 188S Mr. Gladstone says bia great objscl waa to do nothing to binder the prosecu- tion cl tha question by the Tories, bat to me bit beet iffirte to impress ths pabllo mind with tbe importance and urgency of the question. In tha second portion of the pamphlet Mr. Gladstone begins draw- ing certain leasone from tbe elections as tbey sffeol tbe Liberal party. He esti- mates the loaa to the Liberal party from tba Unionist sobiam at two seven tbt of Ibe whole, but this fraction is distributed, be poials oat, very unequally among tbe classes. It baa commanded nve-eixths, bs aaya, ol the Liberal peers, hot nol more than one-twentieth ot tb* Liberal working- men. Mr. Gladstone points oul that evsa now tbe Tories have failed to secure an absolute majority, and draws tbe final eonelnsion tbat at ths first moment Liberalism is agsia uniied il mnit again become predominant. Mr. Gladatone sees) further ground for hope In ths abate- ment tbat baa already taken place in tha Tory opposition. " We hear no mere pot- valiant language," he aays, " no mors of Ibe Hottentots and no more of the famous twenty yean, daring which Parliament wae lo grant special powsra for home gov- ernment to Ireland, and at tha end ot which time, in a larger or less degree, Ibe coercive lawa might be repealed, and mea- sorcs of local self government bs entsr- tainsd." Mr. Gladstone then goes on to point oat thai tbe Unioniela areeJready pledged to an immediate and large conces- sion, many ot them on snob a scale tbal tbey declare themselvea favorable to tbe principle ol Home Bole, and only opposed lo " the awkward and perverse manner in which il waa handled by the late Adminia- ration. ' " Look at the qoeatioo," Mr. Gladstone eontinnss, "which way we will, tbe aaoaa ot Irilh self-government livea and moves and oan hardly tail to receive more lite, mon propulsion from the bande of thoee who have been ile saoosstfol op- ponents in one of Its particular forma. Il will ariae aa a wounded warrior aometimsa arises on tbe field ol battle and ataba to the heart some soldier of the victorious army wbo baa been exalting over him." Mr. Gladstons then looks at the election from a geographical point ot view. He points out thai sven in tbe cue of England what we have la not rosily a rafasal, but is only a slower acknowledgment. The cfftel ot all this on Ireland be describes aa follows : " All the currsnta ot tbe political atmos- phere aa between tba two ialaidt bsve bean eleanaed and sweetened, for Ireland 10 w know! what she never bat known before, that even ander her defeat a dsep liflol Otvteinn runs all through Iba Kog- lleh nation in ner*favor ; that there is not tbrongboat tbe land a parish or villsge where there are not hearts besting in anison with ber heart, where there are not minds earnestly bant OD tbe acknowledg- ment and permanent establishment of her claims to national ezietenee." " Under those happier circumstances what ! there, 1 ' Mr. Gladstoni goee on to aak, "in separation that would tend lo make II advantageous to Ireland T Aa an island witk many hun- dreds of miles ot coast, with a weak marine and a people far more military than nautical ia its habile, ot email popolallnn and limited in bar preMnt ntounea, why sboald the expose herself to tb* rinks of invasion, and to the certainty of an ei or- moaa cost ia Ibe enatioa and maintensnoe of a navy for defenoa ralbsr than remain under tbe abield ol the greateat maritime power in tbe world, bound by every oontid- eratioa ot honor and interest to gntrd ber ? Why should she ba aupposed detirons to forego Ibe advantage of ebf olule commun- ity of trade witb the greatest ol all Km merolal countries, to become an alisn to the market which consume", say, nine- tenths ol her produce, Instead of using the broad and universal palba now opsn to her, to carve out lor heraell a new and narrow way aa a third-rats State 7 Mr. Oladelone next deale wilb tbe purchase aad Bale of lewd in Ireland, and at Ibe outset acknow- ledgaa that tbe moatl powerful ageot In bringing about the defeat of the Oovern . a _ .!- _ T - _ J Dill l-i teoru those fOt Whoea beuettl II in a gnat purl designed, having deiullylotwlb. He thinks il his duly ex- plioitljlo acknowledge that ths lenteno* whlobbta gone forth lor the leverages of the two measures U If reiisiicle, and tbt IWIL ubip which hM b-i m (or tbt time din natrons to Ihe4hopes uf Ireland exists ne looger." At the asms time be bopee tbe partnership between the enemies of Home Ku!e tod the enemies of the Land BUI, v, i - h brought about the remit, may now be dissolved. Mr. Gladstone believta a me*> are of telf -government cot leu txtea lire tbu the proposal ot 1886 wiU be ultimately carried. " Nor IB il for me," be cays, " to o:njeotare wbetber iu this, M in 10 many other oasee, \LO enemies ot Ibo measure are ibe persons designed iiually to guide ite triumphal prooeetion to the Capital." la oonolaeioD, Mr. Gladstone says : " If I am col egrrgiously wrong in all that baa beeii uid, Ireland bae now lyicg btfore her a broad and evtu way iu wblob 10 walk to Ibe consummation ot ber wiahea ; te'or* btr eyes are opened thai came path ol ooDBtilatlonal and peaceful action, ot steady, free, and fall diroassion wbieb hat led England and SoollaLd to tbe achieve- meat of all their pacific triumphs." A I HA. Til' lit 110. l.llllr SJU14 ! the ton of ui> Own. Two old tramps, ragged and toot-aore, walked slowly down tbe Fort Weyae Rail- road track yeetarday afternoon. Children wbo uw them eomiog climbed quickly over i hi fence and watched them paaf with half frightened aye*. Oantul housewives aoled their preaenee with frowning eyae, and H clot* lookout to tea tbal they carried nothing away wltb them that they did not bring. Even tbe little doga eyed tbam aikanesaa they growled viciously or saucily marled and showed their teeih. Down by Jaok'e Ban there wae a little while Laired baby running along the track, He wai too young to fear any one, even a Irsiup, and too kappy picking up little pebble* and laying them on tba rail to heed any danger. And right there, bat a few rode awty, waa coming alrain. Tbe tram pe aw it rcda away. Oaa of tbam aleo aaw the babe. Dropping hia dirty bundle, be prang for ward. It wae a race for life. Tbe tramp reached tba obild not a minute abend if tbe engine. Catching tbe little one, be pitched it off tbe track, when it lolled down tbe btnk, frightened and doity , bat unhurt Tbe Iramp wae dead. Hardly a bone in bii body wae left unbroken. Hia bdy mangled and torn, waa brought back to Allegheny and taken to Bpnaer \ Wileon'e undertaking rooma. Tbe other tramp came bick too. Tbii u tbe story ba told : Tbe dead man, wboe name was August Gotleib, and himHelf, were Philadelphia dyere. B jth men had reoeolly loet their wive* and were entirely aloia. Tbey decided to go to Giaeinnsti and work at their trade. They ttaitcd with 30 oenta, walking tbe entire way to Pittsburg', completing tbe journey in twenty five daye. When they arrived bare Ibey bad 5 osntt. After walk- ing around town a few boon they etarted for Cincinnati over the Fort Wayne track, acd their journey ended at described. Hemry Bebring, ibe dead man'a com- panion, wae taken to a reetanrant for cupper, bat could net eat, hie faelinge over- coming him at tba iragie daalb ot bit former companion. He wae provided with quartsre ai Iba Allegheny lookup- An inquest on Ibe body will be held to-day. A GOLDEN-HAIRED IYPST. The Rtmuktble Romance Young; C rl. "Yes, there is a difference between a gem and a diamond," said a Hiate street jiwellsr ; " a gem ia a perfect diamond, or a perftol precious atone of any kind. Wben a diamond meronanl epeaka ot a gtm be means lomething in which there is no fault or flaw, no imperfection ot color, shape or cut. The difference between a gem and a diamond may be aa wide as that between a ' plug ' hone ani a thoroughbred raeer. One alone may be worth 130 and another ot exactly the same sin may be worth 1100, or even more. Not one parson in a thousand can tell a gem from a fairly good stone. The wsigbl, alao, is small Index to the aisi cl a diamond aa il appears in a aatting. A oarat ilooe may appear as small aa this o or il may be nearly twice in oiroura Isrec oi, like this O. A gem must be oat S3 cnmetly i tut a bair'a breadth ie far too wide) to measure the plane of tbe different faeae by. Every facet most be of precisely tbe same sice as every other facet ol like posilioa. Its angle, loo, mutl be geometrically correct. Tba glory ol a diamond ia ite refractive power. Without lixhl the diamond is aa unelese u a pratty picture, though il is a very common belief among people who have never handled diamonds that the stones have light in themselves, snakiog them bril- liant sven in complete darknees. Another common error is tbal the diamond cannot be broken or injured, and I have known of flae etooea being rained by foolish persons wbo bll tbem with hammers in an effort to illustrate tbe bardneia ef their game. The diamond ie very brittle and Ie easily injured by a slight blow 01 fall. Diamonds will bora, too, under a heat eaficient to mell bar -Iron. Tbey are netning bat pare car- bon, and they may be reduced lo graphite, and anally to oarbonio acid gas. The pareit etonea are highly transparent and colorless, bat more generally there is some tint, like white or gray. Brown, blue, green, yellow and red are very rare, while black is met with once in a lifetime. In all my experience I have aaen but two black diamond'. John Rise, of the Trsmont House, owns one of share. Tba olher is in Nsw York." Cincinnati Sim. Of Beautiful m Trtt* el roujjbi i. ike Cmmr ! NM4v crlleitier Beared ud t. <lu. ai< J ttj 1 fcrm. I Illl. It... W I.h. A small boy waa out ia the street with bi* older brother, wailing for tbe circus prooouion to pasa. Tbey held each other's bands, and were all excitement to see tbe coming street parade. Oihen were oa Ibe street. Tbe crowd waa so dense that the owners ot teams found it nsxl to impos- sible lo drive their horses through tbe a al idly packed mass of humanity. To clear tha street, a big, burly policeman ie atarted down tbe thoroughfare, using hie dab witb iff eat, especially amotg the little children. He came ap to tho two brothers and forced them back on tbe sidewalk, a position which chanced to be ander grade, and, therefore, moat undesirable forviewirg tbe pasting show. " Iwiab I was 1) J for a mlnil," lisped the little fellow wbo had been turned back. Tbe orewd surging around him prevented him from seeing anything in tbe etreel. Hoab, Bobby," exclaimed 1 is brolbsr, " that ia wicked." "I don't tare," continued Ibe little tallow. " Why do you make toeh a wish ','" aeked a by-slander who wilneised the proceedings and beard tbe conversation. TaoM," aaid Bobby, " I toold get up in da sky an' see de procession, an' no police- man tould mate ms elan' beck." -Si. Paul ment waa ths avsnion to tbe Land Bill. IDS UMMM twioibip ol ths two bills pat Tbe following is given as a aheap mode ol rendering fabrtea uninflammable : Four pe>rts ot borax and three parts sulphate of magnesia are shaken ap loRetherljnut before being required. Tbe mixture ie then die- solvsd ia from twenty to thirty parts ot warm water. Into the resulting solution tbe ariialee to be protected from nre are immsraed, and when thsy are tboronghlv soaked, they are wrung oat and dried, pre- ferably in the open air. A bacriiter on fire aod a sanitarian blown ap by the explosion of a bottle of lemon aiherbet are eights not often wit- nested. Nevertheless, aooordlog to tbe Si. Jainti OoMttt, such a fire actually OOOTKtd la a London OOWt BCt long ilcot. Jaat aa hundreds of ekantloletrs began tboir matutinal c^aoerl ia Kiliibetb, N J , on Tuesday iaat, an aristocratic band of English gypsies drove tbrongb the city on their way to the prairie lands. Tbey bad four of tbe bandaomeat and ueweal cara- vanearies ever aeen with a tribe of nomads, and the borsss were models of strenglb and beauty. Any of tbe teams would compare favorably with tbe ooelly pairs driven by men of wealth. Kaeb animal waa covered withanettiag ot colored thread, and on these dainty guards against moiqnito aiingi tbe women ot the tribe had worked por- traits and forest and field iceoes. Hii oanvae-oovered waggons followed tbe cara- vansaries, and each vebicls was drawn by two boraea. About thirty valuable bines were led in a pro3eesion four abreast by two stalwart young man whe wore black velveteen jaeketa, brown corduroy trousers, wide-brimmed gray soft hats and scarlet wool shirta, with loose flowing scarfs of dark- blue bilk. No ball was mads in this oily by these bou-tou wanderere, but when they arrived at Lyons' farm, west ot Waver I y Park, tbey went into camp. They obtained from Olara Thornton, " The Hermiuees ol Ibo Farma," permission to use a small grove through which a sparkling brock rippled. Here they ereoled scow-white shslter and wall tenta, lighted tirea ander big iron pots suspended from a pole stretched on forked sticks, and then awoke the families sleep- ing in tbe eiravansariea. In a lew minutes several women of middle age, three vener- able and swarthy dames, acd a score of yoong women and girls in their " teens " popped out cf the caravansaries. BOILS bad on Icose wrappers, all were in their bare fsel, and none had their hair done up. Each one ran to tbe brook and performed their ablnlione, alter wbieb they arraigned their black tresaes in pretty atyles without tbe aid of a mirrcr. On going to tbe tent where the men of tbe tribe bad carried oeeeaaary articles tbe females pot on shoes and atoekicge. Coffee, bread and cold ham were eerved for breakfast, which was prepared by tbe women who travelled in the canvas-topped waggons. Arthur Ma) ti 5! d ia the leader of the band. His clothes were oi brown corduroy, with gill buttons, and on the little noger ot hia left hand waa a garnet ring. A small diamond glittered on hie pale-bine icarf. He reoeived Ibe reporter courteously in a elripcd while and brown tent, in wbiob a handsome woman about 40 years old waa dressing three prelly ehildren in bright- colored olotbea. Bbe waa ot medium plumpness, bad an Egyptian face, splendid bUck syee acd a wealth of black hair. Her dress waa neat and clean, ber langaage oorreoi and ber manners those ct a lady. Hsr husband was a magnificent specimen of physical beauty. He bad Roman features, a dark olive complexion, and hie height waa nearly six feet. Ha was aa alert and graceful in his movement* u a youth of JO, but h i said be wae 50 year* old in April last. He focdled tbe tvo little girU alter tbsy were dres-oJ, and when a prelly black-eyed boy ol 10 yearn dathed into tbe tenl be was kisted by father and mother, and a lovely young woman wbo bad just completed ber toilet. Ma) field introduced tbe young woman to a visitor present as " Maple, oar pel." She ooartosied witb ease aid murmured Ibal aha would be pleased lo give any informa- tion denired. Tbat aha waa not a daughter of Mayfleld and hia wifs waa evident, Ijr she waa a perfect blende witb lacguisbicg bias syee, while tbey were swarthy as Indians and had tbs bliokeal of black eyes. Mis* Maple noticed tbe puzzled Icok in Ibe visitor's eyes, divined tbs causa and quickly remarked tbat ens waa an adopted daugh- ter of tbe May fields and the bend. May- field then, with her permUaion, riUted the bistory of ber lite aod her connection witb hia band of wanderers. 11 Our band came from Nottingham, England," be aaid, " forty-two years ago. My grandfather, wbo bad charge cf tbe eighteen persona in the original band, selected a pieinrerqoe spit on tbs Esountaina near Woesling, W. V* , for the permanent headquarters of the band. Until ble death, in 1*17, the band travelled only io tbe South, and the women made beape of muasy telling forlunea on plantations for tbe wives and daughters of planters. Father bad 70 man and 93 woman aad ehildren iu> tbe tribe whan be waa ehoten leader. He made a trip through tha Northern and Western Btatea witb 60 people tor two years, aad ha had jost retoned to tbe mountain borne when the war broke oat. Mosely and all but seven of the men wsrs preeeed into tha Oonftderate service. Il waa a bard blow to me, tor the month previous I married Mary Morgan, who is now my wife. I served until tbe close of the war, was wounded twice, aod wbsn peace waa declared I bad difficulty in oolleeliag tbe remnant of the band. All the women bad escaped to Michigan with my father, who bad purchased land there. He died in October, ItHiS, and when I arrived at the camp during ine winter of 1866 there were lae than thirty of the original band there. " Early in the spring of IWi'J.af ter repaint- ing all the waggons, I drsw from tbe bank the money father bad deposited in my name and etarted for cur Virginia home. Oar trip waa very suooeeefnl, bat the freshets delayed us at different points. We took io Chicago, Cincinnati and other Western cities, ivnd during tha first week of April entered New York State. QJO rainy night there came into camp a woman wbo carried in ber arma a tiny babe. Hsr rsflaed face was pale snd thin ai * iu her blue eyea there waa a hunted loot, which went straight to my heart. She was given shelter by my wi!e, who said the next morning tbal she waa a lady who hid been reared in sfiluenee. Ber baada were as soft as satin. She had the most beautiful yellow hair I ever aaw, and beriyea were large and dark blue. My wife pleaded with me to let the atranger remain witb tbe tribe, and when I saw tha baby I consented, for il waa a lovely little girl. We bad no children thin, fur oar little girl bad died five montbi before, and my heart went oat to tbe babe. " Oa our arrival ia Rime my wife and I wenl to a lawyei named Oarrat witb tba mother and her child, and the papers were mads out leaving tbe babe In our care ia ease anything happened to tbe mother. Bbe gave the name ot Alice Farreut, but declined to aay who were ber parentr, where she came from or give the name ol tba father of the babe. At ber rrqoeal we did sol iniist npoa knowing hsr history. We were satisfied thai ebe w.s a gcoi woman, whoae life had bean wrecked by a great misfortune. 11 Oa April 13th we arrived in Hampton Village, Oneida county, and I than uolieed thai Mr*. Farreut acted etrangely. For two daya Ibe rain poured down in torrents, and on ths evening ot the third day we went into camp at Olaik'a Milla, a village on the Ortskany creek. B ty was sick and Mrs. Farrent went to Ibe village for medicine. Aa she erossed tbe bridge the water was sweeping eloee up to tbe elring answered by seresius from both ahorea, and the next instant a maaa ol umbers whirled down the creek, wbiob wae BOW a broad river. "Mrs. Farrant waa rescued with the child warm on ber boaom. Tbal night tbe mother died. She entreated me at tba last minute to be a father to ber child. "After reaching our oamp in Virginia we earned the child Maple tor tbe tree tbal saved ber. Bbe was educated by Bisters of Obarlty in Savannah, where three years ago she graduated. Robert F. Clare, whose brother owna an immenae stock farm in Tex at, met bar when be visited the convent to aee his staler. Ha fall in love, obtained my concent on condition thai be wail three years, and then etarted tor the cowboy land to make hie fortune. He baa suc- ceeded. Oa Ibe second Sunday in Beptem- ber tbey are to ba married in 81. Louis, where be will meet her. Maple's mother was a Methodist. All she let I her child was a tiny gold cross which bears tbe word Willie, set in pearls. Maple wears il always in the hope thai she may eou.e time meet ber father, tor I believe ber mother was married. I am sorry to lose our pel, but I have two daughters almoat as old as she. Tbey are al school. Until our pet was 10 years old I got in trouble often aboat ber. People said we moat have kid napped ber. Twenty seven times I waa arrested in different places on Ibal account, but ibe paper Mrs. Farreut signed in Rome carried me tbioogb. Maple will not follow gypsy life attar ber marriage. Bhe ia not one ot us now, tor bar life has been spent in school. I will follow this wandering lite to tbe end, but my education fitted me for another career." Hew i ii i-i-i M. A m u t. fiu I di ibr BSMl PUB I. ..iu AveBgCd 1.brr tdraxr*. Oaa of the lady attendants in tbe insane department of ibe county jail waa return- ing uualleL Jed from church about ' o'clock. last Sunday night, whan, at the corner ol Dearborn avenue and Ktnsie atreet, she was accosted by a creature In tight pants. " Oan I see yon boms ?" softly bcablbed tbe thinr, lifting bia bat and bowing pro- foundly. Tbe lady, wbo ia lull of reeonroes.qaiskly recovered from the first start at tba unex- pected insult and gavs her consent. Hsr deetiuation lay a block away, and her escort beguiled ibe short journey with many an apt reflection upon tbe weather and sundry weighty topics. Now, ths Dear- born aveoaa aide ol the jail building looks more like a residence than a public inslita- lion, and tbe iron stairs which lead to Ibe entrance might easily be mistaken In the dark lor tbe front stoop of a dwelling. Tbe young man made the miatake, and, although the lady produced a bunch ot uncommonly beavy keys, and the ponder oni bolts flew baek with a rattle and ring, be did not oorrtoi tbe error with bimaeli until be bad followed ber fairly within the building and tbe door swiftly closed behind him. Curled np on a beach lay a muscular young man, wbo is slightly demented, so that when the lady whispered : " Catch him, John,' the lunatic leaped to bis feel witb a fiendish shriek and made a rcah Icr Ibe intruder. Tte dude lifted a howl of terror and started around the ijjadraagn- Ur corridor wbieb skirts tbs oelu. Al tbis jaaetnre two of Ibe male attendants who bad been enjoying the night oa tbs outside ranted in. Before they had time lo olose tbe door tbe terrified young man dashed by them, and, pitching himialt headlong down the atairs, ran into the jail court. Think- ing that ena of tbe patients wae escaping, ibe men gave abase, and were promptly reinforced Dy depuuae from the jul and watchmen from Ibe criminal conn. Aroutd aad around the email yard tbe unfortunate young man ran like a rat in a barrel until gaining the stairs to the oonrl bnildicg be apiol one ot the deputies and ran out upon Michigan street and vanished in tbe dark- Dees. Tha avenged lady smiled and the captive lunatic, who U fan tat no but harnt leaf, chuckled aof ily as be went btck to hia be_ou. CAt'cofO Journal. ni u ui BCI wiui glut L.U JUBI uwx* r tbe pilot to get bis bead into, i to tbe boat ia through a circular iaf l of the dome. At the stern Jul. . Van*'* Urram. M, .IUd 1. H*l I iruilrd 1> Aiarrlt lut<-BI*r. A tub-marina torpedo boat invented by Prof. J. H. L. Tuck waa yesterday tested and proved a practical anceeae in toe pres- ence of a large parly of gentlemen in- terented. They wenl aboard tbe ateamer Cbanoo Hhol at Eighty-sixth atreet, North Hiver. The sub-maiine vsaesl lay like a gigantic tort's lashed to ths stesuier'e side. Bbe has been ehriateoed the Peacemaker. Bbe was aonstmeled at tbs yard of 0. H. Dclamater Co. and is JO fsel long witb a breadth of beam of il feel and a depth of H feel. Tbe bow and etern taper cff from amidships, and ths forward sno of the ves- sel is iurmoanted by a dome 14 inches high, which ia eel witb glass and joat large enoofcb for Ad m lesion cuttle abaft Ihsre is a prcpellee; aod a rudder of ordi- nary fashir . and two borisanlal rudders witb which . as boat may be deflected op or down. Tbe interior u ball filled with machinery and mechanical devices, includ- ing a powerful little Wealioghonse engine. Compressed air U stored in stx-itoh pipes running around tbe interior, aod arrangements are made by wnieh air may be supplied by chemicals. A gauge registers tba depth of tha veaeel beneath the aorfaee. Light ia furnished by aa iaae>niaaeenl electric lamp. Al ycaterdey's experioMot. Capt. John O. Holland and Engineer John H. Kline slipped down into tbe iron hull and fastened the air-ligbl eeutUa. Tban the captain 'a bead appeared in tbs look out dome and the iron fish started up the river. Bhe bad not gone 100 feel before she dipped ber BOSS into tbe water and gradually slid Cut of sight beneath the rooisd surface. Tbespeetaton acxioualy watched the spot where she disappeared for three minutes, when she rsappeand about a quarter of a mile to leeward and headed towards tbem. The Sylvan Ulen waa coming down tbe river only a tew hundred feel above, and her oaptatn waa mnabiurprised at ths sudden appearance of the iron monster. He tooled hia whistle vigorously and put his wheel bard aport. whereat tbe torpedo boat kicked up its heels aod again disappeared. Tbe Peace- maker reicbed a deplL yesterday of forly feel and attained a fair rate of speed. Tbe torpedo portion of the experiment waa not tried. Il i* designed to use two torpedoes attached together by a eaam and fastened to oorked magnets, wbiob wiil attach Ihemselvss to tbe iron or Meet sheating ot a veeasl to be dee troy sd. They are to be fired by elecirieily after the torpedo boat baa reached a safe distance. Prof. Tuck 11 working on a device by which he claims Ibe occupants of the boat will be enabled to leave II al a depth cf forty feet and return again in safely. Patents on the submarine veeael have been secured in tbs I ailed Stales and throughout Europe. A company baa been formed under tbe lawn of this Slate, with M. Roosevelt Sehnjlsr at President. -Noe York H'orU ran or iittst>. I O. Ill- I IK h. A IKM.I -. \> I M.| M k. I. Ihr Mv. Mr. VrUHe.al I o, OBI . f The Nsw York llenld of yeetarday eon- talcs the following : A happy party of two ladies a-J two clerical looking gentlemen aetoniibod the clerks in the Bureau of Vital Statistics yesterday by asking for a marriage license. Acting Deputy Itegister Weil blaahingly toid tbem tbal it tbat waa their " raoke: " uo license waa needed. " I'm so glad," said one of the gentlemen, " we'll get married right here. My friend here, the Rev. William Frizsle, of Toronto, Canada, will lie the knot." Mr. Frizala stepped into an adjoining room, aod in a minute the Rev. llnury James Hamilton, ol Mnllioa llill, N J., and Miss Catherine Ellen Brown, of Scotland, were made one. Tbe ceremony waa wit- nessed by Mrs. Catherine Hamilton, the mother cf tbe groom, and Health Inspector Lucas, wbo waa " roped in" for tbe occasion. The bride aaid the was 21 years old and wae born in India. Tbe groom ia a native of Philadelphia. Hs ia ten f can older. None ol the party would talk abeol tha courtship, bul il is believed thai the contracting par- ties were cousins and tbal tbe hasty mar- riage was due to a desire of having Mr. Frizz'e, whom they happened to meet ia tbe city, perform the ceremony. Aa there ie no " Bev. Wm. Frizzle in Toronto," it looks very much aa if there was something radically wrong about the cere m on y . A "i"> > tml.i h ll.-i.li.IU.. Oaa night an Amisoh brother waa startled by a noise iu bis chicken house and went cut to investigate. As he approached the benoery a man came tbroogb tbe door and started down tbe lane. Immediately afterward a voioe from tbe root whispered : " I say, Bill, aren't you moat through .'" "Tee," whispered tbe Amiaeb brother, "there's just one tat rooater I want to get." "Here," be added a moment later, reaching out bia band, " put II in the bag." The uneuipeoling chicken -thief leaned over, and waa surprised to feel a brawny hand clutching bis wrist. Gome down," said the farmer, and he tbiet came down. Without a word the farmer marnheil bis prisoner into the house, and patting him into a gairst, locked tbe door. In the morntOK the farmer opened the door and looked in with a smile. Oome down to brsakfaal," he said, witb tbe greateel oonrteay. Tin detected chioksn-tbisf wss a farm- band and a neighbor, and shame worked its own punishment when he aaw the farmer's family around tbe table. " Bit down," tbey said, and tbeu tbsy waited upon him aa though be were a dis- tinguished gueat. But tbe gneet " ate but little tbat morning, and when, after braaktanl. the Amisch brother took him by the band and led him In tbe door and bade him "g>od day," at though nothing wrong bad oeen done or dreamed ot, be went away vowing be had bagged bis last rooster and that the Amiioh were trumps. St. Lou.i Chnmttl). I ! ! KMM far Ikr Mk.lr ! I rn:ui%- Inh.bll.Bi. ( Ikr wMtwii A chsap popular periodiaal publishes tbe following interesting (aragrapb, tbs tdse oci UK to endeavor to show in eome wsy tbe dimeniioae of heaven: Any one may prove the apprti.mato accuracy if the compila- tion tor himself by performing the several operations called for. Toe basis of tbe calculation ie taken from ths sixteenth vena of the twenty-first chapter ct Rtvela- tiona : " And be measured tbe city with a reed, U 000 farlonga. Tbe leojiih and tUe breadth and Ibs height of U are equal." Twelve thousand furlongs .|al 7 jM 000 feet, wbiob, being cubed, ie 496 79J.08U,- 000,000.000,000 cubic feel. Ueeerviog one- half ot this space for tbe throne and court cf heaven, and half Ibe balanoe for street*, wn have a remainder, U4 1 - 1 21 1. 000.000,- 000 000 cubic feet. Divide this by 4 006, the cubic fsel ia a room M fee-l iqaare, and there will be 30.321.81 J 7JO.OOO.OOO rooms. Now, loppose the world always did and always will hold '^90,000.000 inbabi tauta aad thai a generation lasts thirty three and one-third years, oiikinu in all 3070000000000 inhabilanta ivsry cen- tury, and that the world will stand 100 000.000 years, or 1.000 centariee, mak in all 'i 070,000,000 000 inhabitant*. Then suppose tbsre were 100 worlds equal to Ibu ia the number ot ibe inhabitants and Ibe duration of years, making a total of 2,'J7'J.OOO 000,000 000 pertoce, and thin would be more than 100 roomi, tix'.eeo fsat tqaare to caob person. All A letter from Cape Vincent in yester- day's Nsw York 7imaaye: A well-known gentleman from Brooklyn same to this place a few daye ago. He bad heard great tones of the good fiabing to be had here, and be Iboagbl be would try eome ef it. He had no trouble in finding a good boat the boats here are M prelly and staunch ae Ibey make then and a e*pable boeuman is aa easy to gel aa a boat. The Brooklyn man, wbo ls called " the Jodge " by bia ftiends, in token ot the c (final [Oittion once held by him, carted out one fine mcrnitg for a good day'e flahim He did net oars for perch or pickerel or reek base. What be wanted and what be came for were Ibe get,oine black baas, game y aad full of life, that bend a laneewood rod nearly doable, and require delicate playing to get them safely into Ibe boat. The til Lawrence Kivsr al tkia point aad amocg the neigh boring laiaoda baa for year* bad tha reputation of being good black base grcund. And act only baa laia been true of tbe river itself, but ot the bay* and inlets of Lake Oalano. Tbe time baa been when a man would have thooght il a pretty poor day if he came ia with leu than thirty or forly handsome black base ran- ging in weight from three quartan of a pound to three poo u is each. The flab nee to minnows aod fliee ; they aeooped in spoons , they were to be caught either still fishing or trolling, and tha great sport w ae eoueeqaenlly always to be bad. Maehtl- longe, too, were numerous enough to make U worth tbe wails to aarry a trolling Una especially adapted to tbem in every boat. The mainland bers and round the numerous ialanda Wolf, Carleton, Orcuadier. Fox, Powderborn and no end of others all fur- nished larking places tor las game fish. The sport attracted hither people from all parts of tbe country, and Iba reputation ot A Nighl A Dark as tbe night Ikr (.!- pieoes. Stores of the employes of the eo|ton mills warned her to return. Bat she gave no heed, for she said she would die lor Ibe baby's aake. On her return from tha drug atora ehe was told tbat Ibe masonry supports of the bridge were giving way, but aba started aeroca. As she arrived at the middle ot tbe bridge a tree was swept againel ths bridge by tbe rush log watsr. A shriek from Ibe bridge wae The crippling of tha mother-in-law j ike by the President e taking his mother in- aw with him Into Iba North woods has been speedily followed bv the deevtUslH of tha plumber joke through the suicide of a Brooklyn plumber because of hie extreme poverty. Somebody will presently survive tbe kick of a male and tackle a hornet wilhoul getting etong, and com- plete tbe ruin ol tha fanny paragraphsr. Ckieoyo Timti. Mrs. Oilehrist, a resident oi Edin- burgh, now in bar tHith year, distinctly remembers teeing Robert Burns when tha WM bslWMQ w Md 6 V ears old. was, all were busy around Ibs little encampment, if I exeept Ibe doga, wbo seemed to be poeaessed of neb timidity tbal neilber word) nor blows coo.'*' drive tbem out frcm tbe shelter they had taken between the wheels. For some miaotee all bad become quiet, aod I com- menced lo hope that il bad been a false alarm, when a roar so loci and oloee ae to awake ibe echoes of the surrounding kop- pies broke tbe moootonoui etillneee ot the nigbl. 89Cb a roar I have never heard pre- viously or since ; let him thai likes say what be may, it made the earth trembln. To the reader it may appear impossible that any animal oan produce a volome of sound thai almost rivals the thunder in its density ; but let me aaenre him, if he baa heard a mature male lion ia Ibe full vigor ot his life sive utterance to bis wrath, bs will agree wilb me that there are a soblim- Ity and grandeur in the voice, wbisb, it Ibey do not cqaal the depth and power cf thunder, very nearly approaches to it. If qaist bad compara- tively reigned before, now all waa excite- ment. To aod fro tbe bollocks rushed, trying to break their tktimi, tbe horses reared and pulled upon their bailers as if determined to strangle Ibsmaelvse, or upset tbe waggon, while every native wbo waa not armed eeissd a lire-brand and shouted aad called to my animate to endeavor to still their fsara. Bo intense waa the darknese thai nothiog could be seen, yet William fired a ooupls of shots in Ibe direction from which be imagined tbe sound proceeded. The blsc and report of hie beavy elephant gun, one would imagine, would have driven cff anything u the form of a quadruped ; bat not so . the lion roared again at svsn snorter distance than at first, causing the bu 1 ck to become frantic with tsar, and therefore to nee their almost power and elreocth to break locee. I thought I could trait my rfcemu. but alas : I waa in error, for one more violent straggle than had previously been made took place, and they gave way, and Ibe whole team went down to leeward aa if Ibey were stampeding before a forest fire. As Ibe method (tor il certainly Is a preconcerted and arranged plan) adopted by lions when a boot to attack a span of cattle may not be known generally, I will briefly attempt to describe ft. Lions, aa a rule, hunt in family parties. A very old male, cot onfrtqaently incapacitated from taking an active part in panning game, ie gscerally tc be found at tbe head ot tbla cotmt, and on him devolves no unimportant part of tbe pro- grammd adopted by tbem when a trader's or iraveller'e cattls are resolved upon as the violins ot their ferocity and power. the waters for a thing waa spread rapidly. Tbe judge wae lured here by stone* of great c itches of black bass, and be de- termined to do a little fancy fiabing. Tbe jjdga didn I catch bat two bass To* waa told by an old fiiheraan tbal it was on account of tbe shad, and be expreeaed ear- prise that shad shooli sal baas. " Wbo said tbe shad ale the baas .' It's the baas that eat tbe shad. "Wall, suppose tbey do. How doee that spoil the fl thing ? ' " Tbis way. Bappoec you've had a good dinner and eome one cffere you another. Dye think yon would eat u. eseiatally if il wasn't as good as tba first I Why, look here," continued the flsketiain as be took op one c! the black base out of the and cut open its body. Two little about five or six inches in length dropped oat of the base, followed by the partly digested remains ot otaera. Il wae svtdeel thai this particular fitk had hai enough for dinner. Us was chock full. Ths second base, on b;icg opened, showed a limilar condition of Ibicgs. The fisherman, aeeing the laiareel the judge took in the matter, went on to ex- plain : " You aee that blanked tool Setb Green thought eome years ego Ibal what this liver needed waa shad. And be put in no enJ of em Nibody up this way tbal I know of ever saw a big abad taken col cf the river, but there are millioae of the little ones. Tbey travel in tremendous sboale, and yen can sea 'em jul eovsnng Ibe lop of Ibe water for acres tome times. Ths black base don't want any better eating. They jual fill ibsmaeivea with the yooug abad and tbsn clear cff. Tbey doa't want aay more, and thsy won't take minnows when they can gel all the young sbad they want. There are enough aod more than enough shad to feed all the black base and all Ibe maskallonge in Ibeea pane. Often just toward dusk you ean see tbe sbad jamfiog up la buncoes oat cf tbe wave*, and tbe ba<s are going for them aad filling up oa tbem. Tbees little sbad die in ihoosanls, aod thsy have been thrown up on the eboree in tueh quantity that the stench from Ibe rotucg fish wee too mcc j f .r tbe seoatest itomach to bear. What yon want is something to kill the ebad. K'll them and )ou'tl have all tbs good black bass fishing you want. ' Thia explanation looked plausible. Tba juJge made icquiriee of boatmen, cf fliher- meo, prolseaioual aod amateur, ot ins- keepers and others. All agreed tbat tbe blask bate flthicx, too greatest charm In Ibis neighborhood, has beeo greatly de- cl nmg of recent years, aad is now worie than ever. A ma wbo alter fishing ikil- tolly all day long britfa in a half dcain blaok baas u regarded ae bating a pretty g ol cites Men do come ia after a day of u without a slcgls OBS. Il Ie true that they may fill np a flab box with rock beat. perch cr (ickcrsl. but ttese fail to satisfy a love for sport. Scab fltb ae lb.es>*, aa Ibey cecur nereatoal, give a pull or two oa tb* line, and bead the rod for a seeoLd or two, bjl Ibey give up easily, an J II ia only a question of pallinj ap so nuab deed weight. ' )je might as well reel tbeoi op wiib a wiodtaia, or beep pulling op aoebcre or codfish all day ae to haul la rock bate. Acd Ibe perch acd pickerel are luile better. Il is a rare thing to strike a masksJlonge. In tea daye there I have not yel seen one. ' 13 o I eome one may saejaeet, "Why not catch tbe joang f bad aod use them (or call? There is only one objection acd tbat u fatal. The yoang abad won't live. Tbey persist in dying laiekly. L > -..utter what care is taken to cbaage Ibe water ID which tbey are kept. Acd you might joat aa well try aad catch blank beea witb pork and beans tor bait aa to aattb them with*. dsad sbad. n 4rckkl.k*r !. tor Hlrrf. Archbishop Uuiberl nol only admired the preaching oi Father Uyaeinthe. bat liked aad respected him, and wished him well. I should nol forget a very beautiful outlet of what waa paternal and beeevolens in tbe archbishop. Il wae hit love for small bird*. lie bad tamed by bu sympathizing kind- naea myriads cf tbeeo feathered ereaturea when be was al Tear*. They used, when he appeared on tbe balcony ovsrlcokioe: hie garden, to answer in flicks to bia call and fly round him and alight on hia shoulders and arma and try in bird's way to e areas him. When be gavo up his .. rooms to Cremieux it wae agreed Ibal be waa to have tha use of Ibe saloon for.an hour svry morning to feed bia birds and bold convene witb tnem. Ba could nol for Ibe world have imprisoned oae of tbem iu a cage. 81. Francis of Aaeisi, be said, preached to birds and was underetood by them. Mgr. Uoibart would have been glad to have the peculiar elcqoeooe ot tbe selnl, to nee in converting the sparrow from bu greedy, impudent aad bullying waya. II la a pity that be never eoaaigved to paper bia own ornithological obwrvatioaa. Bui being a mystic, and believing tbal every object ia creation ie a hierogly pb eipreaatag an idea of Ood or a divine leeeoo, be bad carious notions about the analogies between birds and heavenly truth*.- Car. Ntw Ytrk Lion Country," fy Parktr Krom " ia Ite Qtilmart. in IsfUwttrr. " Would yon," writes acme on* to tha London Timtt, " insert tbe yearly appeal tor consideration of Ibe poor oats left starv- ing when their owners an off for theii leasure ? Starving animals Me vary not* (M hydrophobia.'' A M I -I i >! I I'mbrellas will last far longer if, when wcl, they an placed handle downwards to dry. Tbe moisiure (alia from the edgee of the trams aod ibe fabric drtea uniformly U stood handle upwards, waieh ia commonly i, tbe top ot the umbrella holds tbe owinc to the lining underneath ibe ring, and, tberefort, take* a loag time to dry, thus injuring the eilk or other fabno with wbieb it ie covered. Tbis ia tha prime cause ot the top ol the umbrella wearing oat sooner than ia tbe other part. I mbrlla cases, too, are responsible tor Ibe rapid wear ot tbe atlk. Tbe oooetant friction oauaee tbe tiny boles that appeac so provokingly early. When not in uae leave tha umbrella loose . when wet, never leave it open to dry, aa Ibe tense condition thus [reduced makes tbe silk slid, aod thiD II will toon crack. <

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