I r AGRICULTURAL .. re. r. To make the gSMlest profit in dairying be cow should be fed and nianagnd in such i way as to make her consume as moch as wssibls of good milk producing food*. To lo this .he should have tbe greeted possible ariety of foods. Her appeliu her likes aid dislike* should be catered tu a* much f can be coinnt. nvlv. In summer her pasture should contain a |reat variety of granaea. And when my lows are put in the stable to milk twke a day they have some good clover hay, and they never fail to eat some, m matter how good the grass in the pasture i*. They also ire fed in summer, except some of them thai (re dry a short tune at that season, all the grain corn and oatmeal or bran- -they will eat, which, of course, is not uearly as much a* they eat in winter. In winter they have as great a variety of fodder as possible each day clover and meadow hay, corn fodder and straw, with a grain ration, in two feeds of from twi Ive to nlleeu pound*. I observe thegrerteslregu larity p<i*sible in feeding, having 'he tame kind of food given at exactly the same time each day, so that they never worried or dis appointed by haviLg one kind of tood thrn-i before them when they are expecting an- other kind. ace milk as economically a* pos To product ible I try to ible I try to provide the necessary elements in that food which will coat thelenet, having due regard all the while for the likes of tbe cow herself, for I believe her pleasure should be consulted aa much as the housewife con- sults the pleasure of lir family when pro- Ti.iin,- food for them. If IN'JI are cheaper than corn meal and bran, I feed oats mainly for a grain ration ; I .'it if two tons of oats will buy three tons of I. ran. then I make the exchange. Chemical analysis seemi to indicate that good clean wheat bran is fully a* good as oals for milk production, but my observation seems to prove that oats are, at least a little better. Corn is usually a very cheap grain food, hut it is carbonaceous and should not be used for more than about one-third of the grain ration. Corn ensilage made from well cured corn is the cheapest food I c*n provide for my cows, but it is not ot itaelf a perfect ration but needs to be balanced up with bran or oats or clover hay. I have been trying to tell you how I feed *n; dairy cows, but lam sensible that I have failed to give more than a slight Kotu-ral idea of it, for each cow has her own individual capacity which differs from every other cow which must be studied by close observation ami acquaintance, before the feeder is able to dn the best that can I done. I never could tell anyliody just how to feed my cows. I never dare give instructions to have as much grain fed aa I feed, for no oix- who is not intensely interested in it and in lull sympathy, I might term it, with vlie cows, will be alile to fred just right. Some cows might be fe 1 a little too much grain and it not be observed until she refuses to eat, when it will probably be two late her digestive organs permaiit utly injured. When I wish to instruct anybody how to feed my cows I have to go, taking him with me and show him, ana show him more than once, too. Kvcry milker has the same cows to milk each time. He commences in the same rate, never hurries and never !>;, but as near as possible every time alike. If they are going to talk at all I'.-j ""t talk all me. time. Sometimes we have bad a boy and a xirl out there milking. Now t h.-n if they are going to do any sparking, they have got U) keep it up, but as a rnle that do-s not work very well. The beat milker I ever had w.n a very musical fellow. He lined losing, hut he had a dihVi-rnt tunr for ascli row. Now if he had changed hi time and sung Old Hundred to the Yankee Hoodie row j.ni sen the motion of his band would have U IMI slower, the milking would have hreu diflrient, the raw would not have been pleased at all, would not have given so tun. h milk, and it would not have been as good. Ih. Apple U I. I u . I - UK i...i tin- fruliofr of ,iU \ u .1,11 Th* ii. u- of .Spain or Ihr Hum- nf Jr. nun ; The rtoaida Oranffe may ^m* in theBoub, The Peach of New JCTM-) may melt in >on niniitli . The Iirad4>ia*ta>l Qnlrv-r lm H heavenly in. II. An. I I I. iv . < '.i ',f. Tula Apricot* wall : Hanaiuo of Namaa anel Malajni '.lap.-. in. lustsrtasi richseM as>d lavwhinc shape*. I The) r. lieu u! .fill all. lull hvpnti-C them ulm H.ll '. Aruddynld monareh outrank* thn> M.lill ; A fruit tin' . cr*al. < .K-\ a I ith in tu *Ti* the tilcmed old apple ; K mi "iiy it who eun farm >V/<( unil ,NYonl-iaii. I ini.-t it .1 r, i in- Ihe i . in.- i say a few things as I > how thii these old fash ionud churns and milk houses, Kii.l yon will revolutionise the butter trade at once. 1 au> not in favour of Mi-ikes ; but if I could reach the ears of tbe good women that are such an ornament am I joy to the households of Canada. I would have them strike and (ay : " \\ e won't do anythmlg until you give us new ohurus aud mik- houses." Men would likely stand oat for awhile, but they would have to give in. [From AdilreeM by Prof. Robertson. Ike Fmlnre Wheat Kopplr. The following letter from the County (ientlemau explains itaelf :- I am (ure you, readers must feel grateful to Mr. C. Wood Daviii for the largn amount of interesting reading with which he has amused, if he failed to instru t, them during the past few months. The intelligent readers of the Country Gentlemen, no doubt, early dis- covered that Mr. Davis was an adept at cooking and serving up statistic* so as to make them interesting to those of us who bolieve that it i( about time the American farmer had his inniugi, or at least got belter paid for his labors But it seems to me tint' he overdoes the thing, and that we can scarcely hope to ee during the present generation, the average fanner get the inside track in his race with the (tock gamblers, railway boomers and protected monopuliata in general, for his jint proportion of the national wealth. Mr. Davis' Mathuaian idea* are not new by any n.ean*, for it is evident that they exmtcd long lieforc ths Christian era, if not before the flood, but even hoary nonsense may be made to appear plausibla, and even pleasur- able, to the average reader by a clever writer like Mr. Davis. But they seem to fail miserably in what seem* to be Uie intent of the writer, viz, to " bull '' the price* of grain and farms. " Well-informed cultivate*! of the soi know that scarcely any material ]>ortion of the earth's surface is cultivated so well as to produce the poesible maximum yield of food for man, and that xvithout drawing very largely on the possible abundance which the water* may bring forth, our little planet M mi-iiriinu i M> 1.1 i ti !>>. The Oalar'o Health UIII...MII. - ea Ihe Alerl In Ma HIP oul Ihe Dlnranr. The following are Ihe amended regula- tions n diphtheria adopted by tbe Provin- cial Board of Health of Ontario, and approv- ed by an order in Council dated Dec. -'l.d, I. Wherever diphtheria is present in any municipality in Ontario, the Council of every such municipality (hall at once ap- point one or more sanitary policemen for the purpose of assisting to arrest the spread of the disease, and the Council of any munici- pality in Ontario where the Provincial Board of Health deem* the appoint men'; of one or more sanitary policemen n. ces-uiiy, (hall ln> make such appointment. If the medical health officer of the m- 1 , cipality. or the Provincial Board of Health, I ' require* the appointment of any specified War r... i. an Ihr lake It 1. pleasant to turn from the frantic and senseless utterance! of anme of the New York paper* on the wiae treaty between C.n-at Britain and the United State* that neither country shall place war vessels on Hi. Crest Lake* lo a calm and common sense view of the case from an American standpoint. The Chicago /'</<< in a recent issue, has ths following to say on the subject :" Treaties as a rule have mutualities like any other bargain. The treaty which prevented the United States from placing a fleet of war-vessel* on the ake also prevented Great Britain from do- ing likewise, and for more than seventy yearn the result has been highly beneficial lo the contracting nations. There has been no war, no aggression, no menace, and number of sanitary policemen, then such number shall be appointed. In case the Council of any municipality neglect* or refuse* to make the required ap- pointments, the Provincial Board of Health may appoint a* many sanitaiy policemen for luch municipality a* il deems necessary. J. Any default ou the part of thcaathori ties of any municipality in taking immediate and effective action in carrying out the regu- lations of the Provincial Board of Health, or any of ihe health Acts of this province or nf any health by-Uw in foice in the municipalily, ihall be at once reported by the medical health officer to the secretary of the Provincial Boad of Health, in . no vast expense whereby Christian nations each other with increasing have increased the bur- taxation upon peaceful and well disposed people, wko, in the sweat of their bruw, toil for their daily bread. If there xva-) any advantage loone of the parties in a treaty which all the long years of its existence ha( been salutary for both that advantage lie* with the United Stales, for, having the command of the outlet of the lakes, tlie ability of Great Brit- ain ta crowd the lower of these with war- vessel* was limited only by it* willingness to incur the expense of their construction. There could be no possible use for the em- ployment of auy of them, yet but for this beneficent trealy they would have vexed i the peaceful waters, and having done nth- I ine would have been retired for new forms ng " that the said board may take .uch mea*ure. ^^S^SZS^Skm^itS^ aa it deems requisite for placing the said . ..retard municipality m a po.iiion" a regard. iu ng tremendou. expend sanitary arrangements, to effectively combat " the f ni " 1 of * m \ n ? ' Ihe said disease. f :. The medical health officer of every mun wai ; ll f Uved ln * l ? l .> . . ... L - - j - * nofltile uccl* tiom Hit- laaei icipality having received information of a < im > I h il suspected ca*eofdiphlhcria(hall immediate ' i ' 1 ..,,.,,,11-.. it.i,, th f..,-t itKr KV ...... unit* . i scoundrel, not a aiaiesm. . pend a menace from the other hip at iu greatest ulilily which has kep'. lake, since the close is a pettifogging ly enquire into the'ljactt, either by consult*- j ^"^^^^^u'^orfor'theabrogation of tion wtth the attending phydci.n or^by hi. I *^\ re ^ y< ^y be done upon notice. own personal observation, or by both. If the characteristic symptoms are suf- fi'-i.-ntly developed at the time of 'nveetig.- l.'.ii. -he medical health olhcer (h-ll keep the true nature of the is discovered. might be induced to feed comfortably al | '|> <: under hi* persxmsl obsjervation until least ten times the number of it* present in- habitant*. Since the time when Joseph made serfs of the Kgyplian* by a clever deal in grain, there have been numerous and marked fluctuation* in price*, but the ten- dency ha* been all along toward a lower standard, aud during the paxt decade, HoJge could secure more bread by a day'i Anolher journal, commending the suggesting to re-enforce armed vessel* on the lake*, says : No such amount of wealth afloat and ashore is left with such a miserable pretense of national protection as that which is found m the lake cities and lake (hipping. H THEY ABANDONED Al A Boat's r< u Arrive in Liverpool and Fro*l UilU-ii. ON BOAED WAS THE DEAD BODY OF AORAZY fASSENUER. Be lln.l Jsjsuped Overheard HUI| Hit fjesi Irlr.l la It.--. II.- Illll. I..IM.I I.. J.I SBil llHleUlBK a Um>> *o.ar of the Hen ire Olpplrd l- III. Tkey Will u.- ike < .1.1.1111 Wbe Left I h. ... I.i\ KKI-OOI,, Jan. A boat's crew composed of six men, belonging to the Krituh uteiun- ship Kleanor, arrived here this morning in a half frozen condition. The sailors tell a tale of much suffering, from which exper- ience several of them will be permanently injured. It appears that one of the paxl- eogecs of the Kleanor, who had been acting ' labor than could have been dune by him or his anei slots siuce Adam w are not so sure that w*s this In.y, ami downward tendency ha* boen permanently checked. "So friend Itavu may l.inili bin fear* about the early sxlvent of a ilrprrjuird aid of iifni. /, allltough a little of the so- called " lowering " might rennll advantage I ntil the time arrives when, in the opinion Canada ha* done better than the United of the medical health officer, all cause for States in this matter ; besides which British nspicion of danger is past, the suspected K , ln hoaU can reach the great lakes by way case shall be isolated and otherwise dealt ( the \Velland canal in the event of war, manner a* prencribed for wn il e a United State* navy would have to ^ created for the lake*, and this could not On the occurrence of the first or any be accomplished until much damage had ot diphtheria in a municipality !' been inflictt-d liy tne enemy. It i* true that , DC tr^ty now in force prohibits either Britain or the United States from , n ore thau one war vessel attoat on lhe lmBM- |}, t revenue cutters are not war . ve s*elji, though they should be well with in the sam diphtheria. 4. ca*c medical health officer shall at once remove the person attacked to the isolation hospi- Ul, tent, or other place provided uuder sec. Vi. tap, aw, R. S. ()., I8K7, or cause uch penon to lie otherwise efficiently i*o- lated in the house where the diease exist*, ' krtn ed i' ne i on g line' of coast to be and shall lake proper measures for placard ; p lote cted from the plot* of suing ously to ihe health anil hapiimess of not a ing homes, or, if necesaary, the destruction ^.\ en required few American citi/ens. Hit is it just to | of all clotliuii; whi.-ii may have been expos- call the standard of living which raised a ed to the contagion, and for the disiufec lion and purification of every conveyance, rail car, steamboat, sailing vessel, carriage or other vehicle which may have been ex Lincoln, a Uarfield or a Krinkliii, lower than that which produi e so many dys- \* |iln- dronrx in f.'i a day hotels? And it would certainly i.e a raising of the standard ' posed to the contagion. (Vide sec. HI, v~>, of living if the consumption of intoxicating Hii and H7, etc., t-p. -Jo."i, It. S. I). 1SS7 ) lii|iiors and tobacco were aUndoned forever I 6 Whenever, in tbe opinion of the medi- , by every one elauuiiig to be u free American eal health olfi, er. it i* alieolutely necessary | g. citizen, and the billiun and a half of dollar* ] f or the aalety of the public that a case of j two or a w hole fleet. The last official use revenue-cutters, in a strange manner on board that veawl suddenly jumped overboard on Sunday, while the steamers wa* going at full speed. The Kleanor at that time was off (ireeuore Light, County Loath, Ireland, but far oat at sea. In addition, it wa* night time and' a nasty sea was running. The weather was ' bitterly cold. In spite of these facts the ctptain of the steamship (topped and then reversed hi* engines and ordered a boat to be launched, lie called for a volunteer crew and burned blue light* while the boat was being swung overboard and lower- ed. A crew of six volunteered, and, with the steamer mill burning colored lights, UM rescuers disappeared in the darkness, palling in the direction in which the drowning man wa* supposed to be. Under the influence of wind, -e.t and a strong current the boat was soon so fur away from the steamer that h-r lights could not be seen. The gallant seamen, however, continued their search for the passenger who had jumped overboard. THE 1-ASSBNtiIR WAS 1'KVI'. \\ i. -n the first alarm of "Man overboard '.' had IKII u:-.-.'ii on board the Kleanor a life buoy had Kvn thrown overboard from the steamer, and after an hoar of fruitless search the men in the Kleanor '* boat found this buoy, anil clutching it fiercely in his death ai;ony was tho unfcrtunate passenger. He died before he could be pulled into the boat. The six rescuer* then turned their attention to their own safely and anxiously scanned the horizon in search of the iteanisr's light or of lireenore's beacon. Neither, to their dismay could be seen. By thin time the men had become benumbed with cold. Tin' men shouted and shouted for hours without avail, and at last they rocogmzed the fact that the Kleanor had abandoned them. Their chances of ever reaching shore were very dim. The boat was half full of water, and it roqui-ed the combined strength of the six men forming her crew to keep her bow into the sea. To iiuikc matters worse, a drenching downfall of rain swept over them. Some of the men were so x- hansted that they could *crcely grup Iheil oars. Some claimed that their kid luck was) service and the possibility of disturbances justifies a thor- oughly armed equipment of them. It is marvelous that we have been able to set on amicably the*e more than seventy years only caused by the dead body in Ihe boat, and it to discover of a sudden at the saggeition was proposed to heave it overboard. More of sUrimats. prompted by demagogues, and | humane counsel prevailed, aud the six men, jobbers, and junketers, that we arenoloug I with their dead freight, continued the battle ! W c get another war vessel or ply nurnes and siu-h medical aid and other necceenarie* as in his judgment are reijiiired. and charge the cost ot sa-ne aa provided in sec. 84 of the I'ublic Health Act. (Vide j sec. H4, 97, cap. 'JO.'., R. S t;., ISS7.1 9. In the case of the d-iath of any penon annually wasted in that direction turned into a more profitable channel. " But there is one thing about Mr. Divis writing" which we Canucks dislike, thai is, hi* habitual ignoring nr Iwlilthng the wheat- producing possibilities of I be Dominion, al- though it liu* light alongside his own coun- try, from the Atlantic lo the Pacific ocean*. Mr. Davit mieht get his idea about the (ut ure wheat supply of tin* continent nxp.tii.l- ed and conected by taking a journey next August to the Peace River country which . suffering from lies about l.OUO miles directly north of the niedicu! health State of California wheru the lirsl prize wheat at the Philadelphia centennial wan charge of the body, and the medi.-al healtl grown, and whence will probably come ihe otlicer shall lake such tep in the prepar prize wheal at Chicago in IMi.'l. In making alion of the body as he may deem necesaaiy UIIH journey he will see a country containing over IO,(lOO,000 acres of good wheat land - equal to any in the known world and quite capable of producing l.llOO.OOII.IlOn bushels .f v. heat annually. A'ter hi( return from such a (urvey of Canadian territory, if not blind*.! by prejudice, he will not f.-.-l like diphtheria be isolated in a hccpital or bos j niade of the revenue cutter Johnson, as far pital tent, he shall be empowered to sup- 1 M Tk< 7W* has observed, was to carry the plv, atthe expense of the municipality, a u on Jeremiah R"k and hi* family on a vehicle for th purpose of carrying said pla^gur, j ull i. Kven in the event of war on to the ho*pital. He shall alto sup- | f; real Britain could not crowd vessels into against cold and wave. RKS.TK AT LAST. It was not until 10 next morning that the Eleanor's sailors, so weak and exhausted that they hardly had the strength of rluld- ,. ren, ran their boat ashore at Ortenore where the upper lake* through the Welland canal they were cared for by the coast gusrdsmtm. unless the soldiers of the United States or | Th rescued mon were badly frost bitten. n onp. the , i,,. l a i e , , worse than humbug. It In* the it once be i backing of jobbery, of plunder, of ollicialisr notitied by either the physicvi or party in anxiou , to aggrandize itself." diphtheria or orlicer should In cane the diwate be contagious, lie (hall cause the body to be enveloped m a sheet thoroughly saturated with a solution of mercuric chloride the proportion of one in ,VN) part* (two drains to the gal lout. An outer sheet shall also he applied to prevent Ulll* -*-" HH *wn>v" V" . *!. its volunteers have no knowledge of the ue ' A. raon as possible they were forwarded to ot dynamite that would empty that canal Liverpool, where that steamer wan bound before Jack Tar could cry Jack Kobinaon. | for. The Klearnor had. m the mean time. Suggestion that war vessel* are needed on reached Hilyhead aud reported the low of i i.i .v- t ne six men and the passenger referred to. Tbegteateet indignatun is expressed against the captain of the steamship for having so haHtily concluded thai the six seamen were lost. Ho (ays that he cruised about for two hours in the vicinity of the spot where he expected the boat should be, aud not finding her he concluded that she had been swamp- ed and that all on board of her had been drowned. The iujured seamen propose to bring suit* for damages against the Kleauor's captaiu Tke i M- .. i < I'll' I r.i.i. . At a recent meeting of the Iteminion Live S'-ock Auoviatitm held at the Albion hotel, ex Aid. Krankland, Toronto, presiding, the IH mci|val topic discussed wa the advisabil- ly of pay ing IhelawcosU.C.I.IIODin connection repeating the statement made by him in the Country (ienlleman for June 2.Y " It i* Iwrely pouible that in twenty year* the Kni.i|-an prinlin-t (of bread making grains) may inrreaax .'HI.IMIO.IIU) bimhvls, that of Nortli-AinnJIea.'Ul.O'HI.OIIU, that of South Amerii-a 4" w lli,0<Ni, that of Australasia .10, Ae. It is true that l.nt a small fraction of this . evaporation. As stran as poasiblo the body with Hie famous suit brought against An- and against the owners of that veest-1, and it shall be placed ma coffin, and surrounded drew \V. Aikens, of Cooksville, and his i* said that the Hoard of trade will order an by a quantity of chloride of lime, and the partner C. Flanagan, members of the asoocia- inquiry into the whole affair, with the view ..iflui Khali lie immediately thereafter per- tion, by the Allan line, to recover damages of auspending or taking away the captain's manently closed. It shall lie the further fur alleged breach of contract. The uircum certificate should it be proved that he did du'y of the mi-dial health officer to see. iuncei of tlte case are as follows : Messrx. not exhaust every mean* of finding tbe OMS- that the funeral be strictly private, ami Aikens & Flanagan contracted with the ring Imat before be decided to pi oceed on his that, the body Iw buried in some cvmetary Allan Hue for two ships in which to carry a voyage to Liverpoor. The rescued mariners r'Hiimonly uicd for the burial of person*, large number of cattle to Kngland from say that it is impossible for tho Kleanor to dying within thtsaid municipality, and that Montreal. Through the alleged negligence liavecruined two hour* about the spot where mil i dairying presently ean lie earrisd on Vitb advantage un the farm* : b*Taiire in ciwn<-<tion with that scheme nf helping i. .un. i- teut.it. hiittTin winter l.v fur ni-litiij; i ream lo LT.-iiln ll, 1 Would like tu we tin- f.irmers hAl>ed in noine practical way to make morn ana hner Inn t< i at their own pU.en. Votwithstunding the impor- tti-it f tin -i. imerjr imlustry and the ad vaulage* that flow from its development, I think one li.ilf nf the Imttrr will be made in hoiiie dairies for some I line to como in my life time any way. From isolation settle inrnt, from varniu* causes, alxmt one-half of all tin l.utt.-r pi...lm-i in i '.iim.U will be made in private dairies. Now I think that tbs farmers' wives are eager to learn when thepgeta fair chance, but Ihe trouble ha* been that the men have had all thegood thing* Thry had i/*-h\r the honi-t, and the reaping, and mowing machine, und the ''riving sliexls, and everything else they wanted, while their wive* had In get .iluni; with one pan try for kieuing the milk, the hull.r, tin i old vsg< laid.-, the picsand every tlnng else. 'I l.i-u the . n-aiii tiMik in the mixed II i- ..m If the farmer would give tb wife a small iinik boune, I will warrant that it would be kept far nmre tidy than his driving shed | and nlu- wmild '.ike such a pride in it tliat it would make a mm look aft< i Ins part nf the busineiu better I io round and see tin v." men strugaliag withan old fashioned churn, working twjce as long in ehurning the Imt ter (H then is any need fur, and until it is not (o nil e as as it would lie if churned more rapidly all because the man had to liny a new top baggy and MM ii n .Iris ing shed, Ac., never thinking that Ins wife shon'd have In i x'rength spared and the neeiU if her deparunont provided for. flel'rid cf en. n inniis bread producing territory ha* yet " '"fected apartment*, clothing and other O f ihe steamship company the cattle were her commander should have Known they lieen brought under cultivation, but we hav* j " c ' >' "peedily sud thoroughly disin- : allowed lo stand in the sim for three days were to be fouud without aclually finding tbu land, and we i>h -II soon have the peop'e fected, and that no such apartment* he en- { M a one of them died. The cattle men ihen them. lered or occupied by members of Ihe family ; refused to ship, and the company sued them, peop'e to ruliixate it, when our government gets i nl HUM li.in. si li.ml -. wild Will not iicni'it hard working farmeis In Ix- l>-g,iliy plunder ed tor the lienelit "f a few tnonopolists and protected nianufa<-tnrrr \Vh.-u that time rumen. Uncle Sam will pay n- l,.i. k four fold fur the hundreds of thousands of cuterpn* mi: I 'anailiHimn ho have gone from "ourside" to help develop "the land of the free and the home ol the brave." In tin- meantime I hope tl-at Mr. Davis will nut slacken In- hand in making war on grain gamblers, and the many other vampires who rob tbe honest farmer of the lei(itiiiiate products of his farm ami brow. Montreal, Dec. the sweat of his DAVID CI-RRIF." Nex I to Canada and the United Slate*, the .ouiitry to H huh there is the largest immi- gration of Kiirnpeana ill tlie-r times is Brazil. N.'tttithstandintr all tbo dictsWbuoM of the year in Kra/.il nliipltKuls nf steerage passen ger* have been put ashore every week at Ba Ilia, Km, and other ports on the eastern sea- hoard. \\'e judge by the monthly returns thus far rc.-i-ived Utut the year's iniiiiigra I mil will i un uplii -JliO.tKMI-mmtly fnnii I Inly, I'ortngal, and Spain. The republican 4>ov- eriiinent hold* nut even greater inducements I., immigrants than worn held out by the I >u\ i-t iiinent nf l>i>m I'eilro. It [lays n pro portion of tlu-n pa*mi){<: nionvy -. it gives tin-in land on easy teims ; if pmniisrs to provide tlit-iii nli employment, ,ni.l it re- lieves them frnin military service for a term uf yearn. OM-I Stl.tl K luliaiiH have i..k>-n advantaije nf tin-He offers till* year, and the I, .1,1-1 nun-Hi , amid all the troubles and changes of the times, has striven to kerp tin- }iroinisen made tu them. It 11 a ciiriini ail that whili- them were many Hi inun immiuraiiK to Ilia/il during tin- reign i.f lloni T'edro, (Jennaii immigration ha* almniit rni u i U iitippi'd since the setting up of the unsettled repeblio. or other peron-i until they shall have been SO dl-iilili - l.-.l. Men Verk rn 1.1 1, MrkU. The New \ ork (H*tritr nays that any one the trial taking place in Kngland. The lv. minion Live Slock Association had been givnn (uch poor service thai il agreed lo U Ire* <! a < el Fire. \Vheuoxidoof iron is placed in contact with timber excluded from the .tlmo.-j make a test case of the matter and shoulder all ,| aided by a slightly increased tempera the law costs, if Aikens & Flanagan would ture, the oxide will part with pay the damages claimed by the company in n ,l is converted into very its oxygen, finely divided who is at all familiar with the public school the event of their losing the case. This was puctidss of metallic iron having such an buildings in that city, cannot be surptiml by agreed to, and the suit was decided against affinity fur oxygen that when afterward ; lie statement*! and illustration* now being the association much to its surprise. An VX p<"i,a to the action of the atmosphere front pubhdieil, showing the v.iy in whi<-h tlie asiiHiint of |l"> has heen levied on the -n y cauu> oxygen is o rapidly ahuorbed t-hiidreu of New York HII- 'lexie^.-d by u.. KaliH>n(. Anyone who ha* ever t:i<-l ;<i battle with the Nalonn power f' i the >-,kn of a ohureh or a school or a neighborhood know* the hopeler*ne> of obtainini! any justice or tympathy from the city nlh'ciali. The mayor himself had been tin- proprietor of several saloons, and his personal and official associates for many years have been im n in whom tho atmosphere of a saloon is far more congenial than that of any ediica tional institution. " 1* it surprising '" asks the Obtrnvr "that men appointed tore)iultti business nliouhl scorn such con siderationsa* theimral welfare of thousands of children when the prosperity of tbe in in seller and the comfort of the ward politician are at (take T Within three block*, on thrue aide* of (Irammai School No. '_".), an eighty five saliKins, and sojtie of thcs<i are ol the lowest and most dangerous character. Otliei schools have a greater number within the ams distance. There is no part of this me- Iropoli* where these gatux of hi-',, do not '. p. n al the very door of our Echoolhou(e. i Mir adjoining towim are no Iwtter. Yonkers ban built a noble grammar nchnol building In Ii looks down on cue bundled saloons Vlibln a few itep* of it* doom. Those sa- loon* have more to do with education than all the public and private schools in this re- gion." l|t IS S Of the 1.1,000 000 inhabitants of Mexico, said 10,000 own all the Und ontmde the on me any cause, members to meet the bill, and for two hours lnftt t,he* e particles become' suddenly red this assessment w;ia dlscusced yesterday bot, an ,j if , n suthcimit quantity will pro- w.th ...... h feeling. Kveryone present except duce a temperature far beyond the iguitiou A. C. Suell the rich t;ue!ph breeder, thought point of dry timber. Wherever iron pipe, the tax all right. It jiisl look Mr. Frank- ar o employed for the circulation of any heat- land about 10 minute-, in his iirayer meeting e d medium, whelher hot water, hot air, or style .tliycnnvince Mr. Suell that it wa* a steam, and the pipe* aie allowed to become privilugtTto lie allowed lo contribute to this ru ty, in clows contact with timber, it M law lull. No one could withstand ihe ol ,iy necessary to suppose that finder theso .|I--CI,MIH aixnin.nts of tho president, al circumstances the particles of metallic iron w Inch the an.H.-inl.lv laughed maul comunied become expoied to the action of the almos- ly. Mr. Snell paid his*l">in amid a stoim p ),ere -and this may occur fiom ihe mere of applauae, and thus a threatened break expansion or contraction of the pipes in in ihe associationVa* healed. A large num order to account formally of the fires which her of member* who have not had the case periodically take place at the coinmemmicnt explained lo them have failed lo remit, but ,,, the winter. trouble in nol cxpecled. * A deputation, con*i*lini of Messrs Dunn, tiil.-hrmt, Snell and Crawford wan appointed to go to Montreal to endeavor to gel a I i-.-nt A Central American newnpaper tells of a to go to Montreal to endeavor to gel a 1 cent ST i. Y u r r . a inile rate ou the railways, as wL formerly n "J" ll n '" S . n ' aul ' Hra ' 1 . 1 ' wh . w . con - . ' siderably over 100 year* old and who is the case. These officers were elected : President, C K. Krankland : vice presidents, J. C. Cimghlin, T. O. Hobson : secretary, H. Cil- must, Montreal ; IreaMirer, A. J. Thomp- son ; Kxecnlive Committee, J. Ki-athci stone, .lame* Aikeim, William Hearn, \V. C.r.iw iii^ L;I ..\i n young again. He has reccnlly new set of teeth, and his hair, which had turned gray, is now almost black again. He is in active business as a horse trader ami occasionally he rides over ten league* in a day. He has been married three times, is now a widower and is quite \V Craig, I 1 . Conghlin, \V. J. M-('lelland, wca i t hy. The paper casually remark* that A. Kawlings, John Dunn, K. O Leary and lhe ol< { man , n |>. rc d greatly at one time K. Suell. > wlt h a tumor, "but this wa( cured by being After the meeting Mr. Andrew W. Aikens gorod by an ox.' of Cook*ville, related an inci lent in whiah a Toronto man named Kraticis iWsteld* teat The Indian National Congress has for hit all, 138,000, through the aljajed jioor roally approvexl uf tb great work done by steamship service. U> Satvalion Arxjr in luuia, >