imam^f THE HOME. FRKSERVTNG AND CANNING. Kvery housewife who takes pride in aeltiiDg a nii« table the year r<,iiuiil will lay im a supply at fruita now while they are plentiful. A few days of steady wxjrk will accomplish this, and although it may be somewjiat wearisome it is pleasant work nevertheless. To facili- tate matters generally have everything iin readinessâ€" the fruit, sugar, cans, jars, etc. The best ca.nning peaches are free- st-»aie8. S(>.le<;t those not over-ripe, for thein tbi-y will not loee their shape after being canned a while. A little wire ba-'ket or dipper is very handy at this time. It can l>e filled with the peaches and Immersed in boiling water for a miiniute or two. when the skins are eas- ily removed. Use a silver knife for peel- ing them. Halve, the peaches and re- move the stone. Crack part of the Btons's. take out the kernels, bruise them and put them into the syrup to fllavor it. Make the syrup of granu- lated sugar and twice as much water as sugar. Alloiw it to come to a Iwil; skim aft the impurities that arike and place in it enough peaches to fill one can or jar. When they are cooked re- move carefully to the jar and fUl to the top with syrup. Then proceed to cook a.nothicr canfal, sealing each care- fully while hot. Peach jelly is made by paring, ston- tng an<l slicing the peaches into a jar and adding a third of the kernels torushed. Put the jar into a pan of boiling water and stir occasionally un- til th* fruit is -well broke.n and heated. Strain and add the juice iof a lemon to each piojt of fruit juice. Measure again and measiure out a pound of sugar to each pint of fruit juic«. After the juice has boiled twenty minutes add the »ugar heate<l. Let it come to a boil and take inatantly from the fire. Pour in glasses. When cold cover with circles of whlt« paper dipped in wax or brandy, ijcrew on the covers and tieaJl. TV) make peach marmalade, or peach Uitter as it is BometimeB caJled peel and remove the seed from the peaches. Weigh them, adoxl make a thitk syrup of two-thirds aa mucn sugar as fruit. After the syrup U cooked ajid skim- med, pour it over the fruit a*,d let it wok until tne fruit begins to 8ellJ«_U before stirrin« Vh^n^Siw^-'^ 1, ^ until thick iSeal-^Jf^^^ constantly nw>ul«l. ^f^*W-C8refully or it may ^'iiS**f" peaches are favorites with >•â- lo make them take one peck of Sf/'.'r^*"'; k'"" . P""^ ♦"" '*"«^r. one quart of brandy. l>ut the peaches to l«i!m,g water; let them remain three or tour minutes; then take them out ana throw mto cold water. AVinje the peuches wUh a .oarse, towel; rubtbem vessel of cold water. Make a symip of the sugar according to recipe given, toi preserved peaches; pu/t the peaches into It andi boil until a straw .an be rum through. Take them out. add the. wranjly to the Kyrup. ami boij for halt an hour. Hemove from the fire, put the peochea into glass jars and pour the syru|i hot over them. Hhey wiU be ready tor uko Iji Uiree moutlia. iPrahably the favorite of all pre- serves is the pear. Ihere is such a de.lcttte refreshimg flavor atiout it that no farm should be wiihuut a pear t re* ot some good canming variety. Pears like peaches, should, be selected under rather than over-ripe. Pare Ihera, fciive and remove the cores, imtting th.-m into cold water to keep from di.'^.x, toring.i Make a syrup of one pouoia of sugar to four pounds of fruit uemg alxMit twice ;is mucji water as sugar. If the pears are melluw place them dircttly into the syrup^ but if hard steam them a little first. Cook umtil tender in the syrup. Lift them BirefuUy into tin- jars and cover with the syrup, geal carefully. J'liuins make a delicious preserve, which is relishwl in the winter. Select perfect fruit and wipe it. Make a syrup 01 three pwumd.s of granulated sugar to every five pounds of plunia, allowing a cupful of water for each pound of sug- ar. "When this lx>ils up, skiui and put the fruit unlo it. When the plums are tender reinova to the jors and pour the syrup over them. Nice jam may )« made of plums by boiling them in ii little water until very tender, and then pressing them through a colander or coarse Hieve„ adding a little water to gel all th«* pulp through. fl:)il the sugar (thw qUiimtity depends upon the acridity of thi" plxuna) in> a little water, skim and add the plums. Boil until thick. Quinces make a fine preserve, of which many people are fond. Take qiial weights of quinces and sugar. Pare, "quarter and remove tht^ cores. lit into a kettle with just enough KKter to lOver and simmer until al- st tender. Remove from the water Bd add the sugar. When that Lb dis- Fwilived put the quinces lack again to pimmer until tender. > aince marmalad*' is made in the tol- Jowing way : WaaJi and wipe the fruit. p^re, quarter and core. Boil the skins atid cores until soft, Ihrn drain off the water, into which put th« quinces. Allow them to lx)il until soft eaough to rub through a sieve. Add • pound of BU^ar to each pound of pulp and also a sliced lemon.. Cook half an liour, stirring constantly to prevent •oorcbing. Seal carefully. HITCKLEBEBJllES. Hucklebeorry Pudding.â€" Butler a pud- ding diab and line it with broad, cut iin alices half an Inch thick, and butter- ed; remove the crust, and cut the slices to fit tlie dish. Fill the liue.l dish with huckloberries, sprinkle over them augar and the gi-ated rind and juice of a leniota. Place some slices of but- tered bread over tihe whole. 6et the dibh in a paa of wateu- in a hot oven; MJveiT thie pudding witli a plate, and Uike one and oneJhalf hours. When th© pudding is done put roughly over t)he top a meringue made oif the whites oif tivt> eggs beaten to a stiff froth, and two tableapo»nfuJ« of powdered »u«ar added to tiiem. Return to the ovem long enough to lurown lightly and serve hot. A saute may be served with this pudding or not, as one prefers. Huckleljerry Slhortcake.â€" Cream one- q^iiirter of a cupful of butter with one eupoful of sugar, add a pinch of salt, one Qujxful of sweet milk, a pint of flour and a heaping taUespooufol of baking pow- der. Stir in one pint of berries, and, it the batter is not thick like a pancake liatter after the berries are put In, add a Ititlemore flour. Bake the cake in abis.- ouit tin. It should to served hot, cut into squares, and eaten with butter. Providence Pudding.â€" Pick over your hucklelierries and wash them, drain them a few moments, and then sprinkle tliem with 8i(te<l floulr: use just what clings to the berries. Puit the floured lierries in a buAtered mould, cover close- ly, an<l boil two houirs. Serve with a tuird sauce. A LITTLE LAM:P LORE. Three point* to be remembered in dealing with laanpe are: Buy good ones in the first place; keep them clean, use good oil, £ach laimp ought to be, examined every day, for even Lf the oil is not exhausted, it will probably require re- plenishing, and the glass will have to be cleaned. One cloth should be kept specially for this purpose, and another for wiping the la«np for if an oil cloth be used for glass it will make it look smeary and dirty. A long-handled brush for denning the inside of the glass, and a paij of lamp scissors will be required. It is. however, a mistake to cut the wicks too often, and when cut only the top of the frayed part should be removed with the scissors. and the wick then rubbed until level with the burner. When filling the reservoir be careful not to flU It auite to the top. When this is done, the lamp oftfn splutters an<l gives a very irregular light. No greater mistake can be made than to use cheap lamps or cheap Oiil. The lat- ter is very diiagerous and it is sure to be highly Inflanimable. Moreover, it does not give a goo<l liglvt, and fre- quently ha« an unpleasant odour, and cheap lamps are cooslanlly getting out of order. SAVED HIS BOY. PLAIN STATEMENT FROM ROBT. McLEOD, OF GALT. ME â- b l.lllle »»m Was ParalyEed an Ome SU« â- â- d Darior'a Trralmrnl Did Hlai Na •Soml-Dr. Wlllliiins' PiDk rilln War* ttlvcB aad EO'erlcd a Tharoack Cbtc. B'rom the Gait ^Reporter. !Mr. HoJ)t. McJveod is a genitlfeman: well known in the town of Gall andl throughout the district, in conversa- tion with a memlier of the ileporter staff recently, he consented to make public the facts- concerning the illness and restoration to health of bis little boy. lie said :â€" 'Yes. I believe that, had it not been, for Dr. WilUams' Pink Pills my littlrt tH>y would not fiave been living to-day. Willie, who is ten years of age, was taken with an illness that developed into paralysis of the left side. ,lle had tb»^ liest medical aid within, my, reach. but nothing seemed to benefit hitn. Ue got so bad that a pin could j-»e run intu hi.s left h.Ln'l( to the bone without his feeling it in the leapt. If he attem4)tei8 to walk hi!" could only get over the ground by dragging his loft foot l)e- hind hiiir, he had no power in it what- ever. One night I w.is feeling pretty blue about him 1 fejt that he was foiog to lie au invalid alt his life, and v'»rw6<l things in their worst light. On this parti, ular night I put on my hat with the intention of going out to take a quiet walk, but just as 1 got to th'.' door I saw lying on a step a pam- phlet. I picked it up listleasly, and 'saw it was an advertising Ijtjok of the Ur. Williajus' .Wetli ine Co. I only rea^l a few w<irds when Ihe conviction seized me that here was si.>mething that might possibly beneiit my boy. I at onie went down to Mr. lerrah's drug store and purchased a Ih>x of the pills. By the ttuie he bal taken two l>o.\es the color ha I come lack into his hand and arm. and by thie time he had taken half a dozen boxes he was cured, and now he is lietter than he ever was Ijefore in his life, and as hearty and strong as any buy in tin- town. Ye.s, sir, I believe Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a wonderful medi ine." for For For For For FROM IHK COOKING CLASSKS. F'or polltlciana â€" Gold cake or silver cake and election cake. For a geologistâ€" iLayer cake, a sculptor.â€" (Marble cake, an advertiser â€" iPutfs. a tailor â€" Measure cake, a farmer â€" Hoe cake. a millinerâ€" Ribbon cake. For the devoutâ€" Angel cake. For the jeweller â€" Gems. For the irritable â€" Short cake ginger bread. F'or a babyâ€" Flannel cake. {"or a lover â€" JLady flngera For the betrothedâ€" Wedding and kisses. F'or "bulls" and "bears" cake and drop cake. For a gossip â€" Spice cake. â€" For an idler â€" »Loaf cake. For a sufferer from " hay-fever"â€" White Mountain cake. F'or pugili|»ts â€" Pound cake and bat- ter cakkes. "For "a doctor of the old school"- - Cup cake. For the man who lives on his father- in-law â€" Sponge cake. For a dude â€" "Jonny" cake. For a belleâ€" Vanity oake. Por a music teacherâ€" One, two, three, four cake. For those who partake too freely of the above mentionedâ€" ^oma oake. and cake Raised PRAOICAyAâ„¢^^ M)OR£ AlBOUT CEMENT FLOORS. ,1 uole what you say in editorial re- marks in a recent issue of the paper aiiout cement flooi-s, and that you rec- ommend using a combination of plank with the cement, 1 had watcjied care- fully the floors in several barna for some years before beginning to put ce- ment in ra|y own stable, says Waldo Brown, in Country Gentleman, and it is now nearly ten years that I have had personal experience with it. 1 am so well pJeased with it that 1 would not have any other kind of a floor in either cow or horse stable. The popular no- tion that it is too hard for the horses' feet is a mistake, as we always keep the stalls ao thoroughly bedded that their feet rarely touch the cement ; while itji durability is one of its great- est advantages and malkes it, in the long run, the cheapest possible floor that can be laid In the stable. There are other advantages connected with it, such as warmth, as there can be no poKsible blowing of cold air under it coming up through cracks, as is the j caie with pilank floors, it is easy to I keep the stables clean, for the cement doe-s not ab.sorb any liquid, and when freshly cleaned and bedded the stables are entirely free from t>dor. Other ad- vantages are the furnishing of no place for rata to breed and harbor, as is the case with all plank floors, and the per- fe<;t saving of all the liquid, which is by far the most valuable portion of the manure. [ note ailso (hat you recom- mend a slope of 1 1-2 inches in the floor of the stable. I can see no possible ad- vantage in this, but more than one disadvantage; I should lay all floors perfectly level in every direction. The disadvantages are, first, a little more danger of horses slipping on the floor, second, a slope causes the urine to run back so that in paasing through the stable behind the horses the boots are saturated with it, and if it reaches, as it often will, the wujls of the stable, it will cause the boards to rot, and the urine will be lost. The proper way is to bed the stuills so thoroughly that all the liquid will be absorbed by the bed- ding, as in this way there will be no loss, and it will help to decompose the manure and add to its strength. As there is some little danger of slipping as horses get up in the staills, even on w level floor, we guard against this by m.ikiug small grooves in the freshly laid cement by laying a broom handle down and ta|jping it until it beds one- half its di&meier, and these grooves are made about four inches apart, for the space of two or three feet at the rear of the stalls. If one can obtain grav- el, sand and broken stone, convenient- ly a stable floor of the best Portland cement can be laid al less expense than a good two-inch plank floor, can be put in. and the fanner and his help can do the work at a Mlack season of the year when other work is not push- ing. Some writers recommend u.sing the ciuiap gradea of cement, but aside from the fact that It i.s doubtful wheth- er the fk>or^ would stand the wear if uii'.de from tbio kind of material, there is lit lie economy in it. as the best Port- land cement will admit of using so much larger proportion of sand and f [ravel with it as to make the cost l)ut itile more than if the cheap cement is used. 1 have used on my farm more than foriy barrels of this cenient in the last ten years, and have used night barrels of gravel to one of cement for tlie concrete founchition. and two bar- rels of sand to one of cement for the topping, and all my floors, both out-of- doors and insiiie of buildings have giv- en r-erfec-t satisfaction, .\uother advan- tage in using the Portland cement is thai the htable may be u.seil for horses in ten ilays from the time the cement is laid down ; while Ihose who recommend the cheap grades of cement .•fay thai three months must elapse be- fore il i« safe lo put the horses on the floor. I e^^>t•cially like cement in the cow stable, as 1 never enter one with plank floors in which 1 do nol find a rank odor ; but when we clean our -sta- bles out and apply a freHh, fine bed- ding, fur we always use some kind of chair or Kawdust tor lidding in the cow stable, Ihere is no odor, but the air is always pure and fresh, if the stable is properly ventilated. I am particularly pleased with cejuenl for hog houses and fet;ding flcKjrs for hogs, as they are easily kept clean and give no harbor tor rats. A neighbor of mine, some years ago, had an old plank fecHling floor for bogs, about 12 by 20 feet, and the rat-s bred inder it in such num- jjbers that they were destroying his poultry and over-running all "the out- buildings on the farm. U« determined on a rat hunt, and in order to get them all, he si!t wide boards on edge at a little distance a»ay around the floor, before beginning to tear it up, got some neighljors' boys and dogs to help in the fight, and the resuilt was that 37.5 rats were killed. I have always found that rats abounded on Ihe farm that fur- nished safe breeding places for them, aud are rarely found where there are no safe places for them to harbor. GBlOW YOUR OWN CLOVER SEED. iMauy fanners from force of habit do not grow their clover seed, but buy it frjun yelar to year. Such a course for the average farmer I think is not wit-e. Clover is practically the great restorer, says National Sto«kman. We may talk a great deal about manures and rotation, but after all these sink into insignifii'ance when comparison is made with this great renovating crni>. Will not th* experience of hundreds of farmers corroborate this? No mat- ter how cheap clover seed may be pur- chased in the local market it has alway.s been a considerable item of ex[)ense to the farmer. A bushel of clover seed this spring wras equivalent in value to twenly-tive bueheils of com, or thirty- five bushols of oals delivered. To pro- duce a bushel of clover seed ordinarily is not nearly so expensive as the cost of growing the quantity of these grains raenlioued. It may !« that dover seed wUl Ijj! cheaper this yeay. However this may be I do n(n^ Lhlnk the seed in this jtart »jC th« ooLatry ever sells under its (;o8t of production. But tb-ere are stronKer rea.sons why farmers should raise their own seed for jjers'Jiial use than for Ihe money ii will bring ihem la the njiai-ket. They are sure to have an articje at cost oif pro- duction which they know is reliable, I'liey are sure of what they are sowing. There will to no need of sowing seed five or six years old. nor will they .sow the M.^immoth or some other variety for the medium or vice versa. The farmer who grows his own .seed will more like- ly have enough for all purpo)*«s than the one who buys. This spring we sow- ed afield Mtiroh 17. t»n account of un- favorable weaiher it proved a poor "catch." Miost likely had we Lnjught the usual amount of seed we would have lieen i-onlent with the stand. But hav- ing iilenty of our own see<l we sowed the field again almut a month later. The second sowing, judging from the prospevt. will pay us well. Farmers caunoi afford lo have a ixior "catch " of i^lover. If it is not advisable to have a crop of se*d every year then plan to have it onoe in two years. POULTRY HOUlSE WHITEWASH. A capital whitewash is made by mix- ing ixjinmon wnter lime cement \vith sweet, skimmed milk to the proper con- sistency. The following is the govern- ment whitewash, and a fine whitewash it is : Put two pailfuls of boiling water in a barrel ; add one-half of a bushel of w ell burned, fresh quicklime : imt in quickly one peck of common salt, dissolved in hot water, and cover the barrel tightly to keep in the steam while the lime is slaking ; when the vio- lent ebullition is over stir till well mix- ed together, and, if necessary, add more boiling water, ao as to have the mass like thick cream, strain Ihrougu a sieve or coarse cloth. Make a thin starch of three pounds of rice flour and one pound of strong glue, having firsi soak- ed the glue in cold water, and to the latter mixture aild two pounds of whit- ing. Adi) this to the lime wnsh, and also sufficient hot water lo dilute to the proper cuneisteucy ; keep hot w bile applying. It will require about six quarts of the mixture to 100 square feet of surface, and it will last remark- ably well. It goes without saying, that it may to made any color desir- ed. PLANET MARKS ON THE BODY. Atnertlon Tlial Kvrrv PrrHau Hao Our at "I assure you I have no moles," say some people but this is impossible; ev- ery human creature when it is torn toars on some part of its body the mark of the sign or planet which gov- erned at the hour of its conception and nativity, and moies are contingent on these, impresiied by the influence of the celestial signs, and answering thereto, not only in their formation and position, but varying a-cording to the dominion of the several planets. Moles are of three colors, red, honey coior, and black, flat or raised like a wart, those <jn the right aide of the fa-e or person toing usually symboli- cal of good, while those on the left mostly deni'te ills and misfortunes. After a long and exbuuslive study of the science a savant says heiscon- vinied that not only the chaiater, ta.stes and disposition of an individual but the future itself tu a great ex- tent may lie determined by the lo>al posiliuu. relation, and gene;al appear- an.'c ol these natural maras. If tbt' sun, at a nativity, to in Aries and a».endant, the mark of that sign will to found on the head. pro. ably on the left ear. When Venus is lady, a flat violet mark will to fount on the thighs. When torn under Gemini the mark is on the arms. If torn under the first part of the sign of Cancer, the mark is atove the breast, and has no feeling if pierced by a net'dle, ThoM! who are torn under Capricorn have the sign on the knees. When Leo is ascendant the marks are on the left breast. If Mercury 1« lord, the murks are on the left side, or upon the legs. I'be nativity toing under Virgo, there are black or reddish spots on the stomach, Th«' last of the signs, Pisces, governs the feet, and thoBC Uiru under this do- minion are of plea.siug countenance, brave and inge|ii|>us. A man having a mole on the right side of t lie forehea<l will to e.xceedingly lucky. To a woman it denotes gills from the dead. One on the loft side of the forehead foretells to a man limg imprisonment; to a woman, that she will have two h.usbanil."*, and probably live out of her own country. If it to in the middle of the tore- head, it denotes, in a man a cruel ininil, and it shows a woman to to fool- ish, simple and idle. A mole on the hinder part of the neck predicts a happy life, but threa- tens untimely death by drowning. A mole on toth sides of the iieik. opposite to each other foretells dangers and perils with ill forlun». A man having a mole on the left side of the upiier lip rarely marries and in a womon it denotes trouble and suffering. If on the umler lip. it shows her to to improvident, and a man hail to,st towaie of her, A mole in the hollow of the chin de- notes a woman to to contentious and (luarrelsome. On the edge of the chin it shows good fortune, happy marriage and a long life, of whatever color it may to, excepting black. To possess a mole upon the throat is very unlucky, indicating that the in- dividual w ill die by the hand of justice, or should it api)eaf as a wart he perish- es by water. On the right side of the upper lip, a finger's oreath above the mouth, a mole signifies to either sex great good fortune, A woman having it will to comely, gra.eful, healthy in Iwdy and careful for the things of this world; she will marry well and live happily, her best time for n.arriage toing between 19 and 24, and she will make a true wife and an e.xceptioually happy okotlwi. IF YOO SEE IT IN THE MOOH ^o Muiicr WUnl II I», Voa Will Have Same ' - Hon «t. Luck. "IX you see iha nerw moon over your right shdutder it's gixid luck all the luontli"â€" over the left shouilder being Ijad Iluck, of course. "IC you meet the ne'w moon face to face wiiih money in your pocket, you wiU have that kind of money in youu- po<;ket for a mon'h" â€"and so on, this last toing taken from an old black-letter treatise on "things worth knowing. ' Eivery where In the world the idea prevails among those who luck scientific training that any- thing falling to the lot of man when th« moon is wixlng will likewise in- crease, similarly decreasing while the moocn wTines. 'I lie H'indu troubled with warta looks at thei new moon, picks up a pinch of duMt from toiieath his left foot, ruibs tie wart with itâ€" and when the moon goes, so dues the wart. If you; falJ ill you. can to cured by herbs gathered in the fuil of the moon. The Moslems in the Kingdom of Oudh core insomnia, i>iUpitaiion of the heart, nervous prostraiion, and similar evils by sitaiiouilng the sufferer with a basin of water in am hands in the light of the fuiU moon ia such u way that its refulgent iniuge siiiues directly from tlie litiuid into hisi eyes, 'i'heu, WI'fHOUr MOVING Hlri GAZB, he is required to bw-lIIow the water at a draught. In northtrn India the jieopie lay out food in the fiiill moon that comeii in the month corresponding to oiur Sep- teimtor aud October, bai'X of each, and givm it to vhi-dr friends as a meana of insuxing iongevity. That same night the gnji ovus water in the mooulighi, saying they are getting rid of liie coud weuiher. Il was long ago iioied that llits York- shire maids "do worship the new moon upon their tore kneen, knee.ing upon an earth-fast stone, " and Lady Wiido Siiys thai the Irish damsels drop on thjiir knees when iliey llrsl catch sight of the new mooii and say : "Oh. moon, Ijeave us as well us you found us !" In India the naiivei, lake seveu threads from tluB en<l of iheir turtuns and giive them- to t4ie uibw moon, with a prayer. The Bpota on the moon a re caused by many pereoiis or Ihlngn. bomeiimes it is a man wi»Ji a fugot on his I ack, sent thither (or picking up slicks on th« Selibath. Cbuui'er calU him a thief and puts a ihorninish on his shouliler, Dante says u is no less a criminal than Cain. f<hak«*peare provides a dog to keep him comiiiny. H'indus keep, not a man, Imt a hare in ihe moon, and the well-known conneotlon in the minds of the man of the moon and insanity may atrcount (or uhe Mlatemenl regard- ing the Manh hare, aud pobt«^b.y 'he thomlninh muy to the distinctive cov- orimg i»l tie hatterâ€" at aniy rate, thia ita as gwMl guessing as a iBt ol : be sun myth (leopte have dime; wb;le B-aniig- Gotiid identifieti ihe moon children. Bill aud H.vii\ of the. Nonhern mythology, with d:ick anti GiDl o* the uujTiery rhyme. ' , ,. ,,u » Ihe Greeniand KMciono believes that Uuj .sun and moon were originally BJlOlHlia AND tJlSTKR. Shu-, tomg teased by him past ordinary endiimiice, seizeil some laini.'Ulack and ni.t>to,l il on him fa«e. 'ITien she ran, her brother after. Finalily bhe went so fiiHt she, nuBe ulpl iWlo tJie air and lie- caaiic the mito. whiJe her sooiy-foced broihcr lujrned into tho moon In t^a- nioo when a gn-nt famine oppressed the people the moon rose one night, big and round, VikH a bread fruit. A ptdient mother. ujiaHle to quiet the pan<n* of her Jit i lei >me. looked uip and said: "Why don't you come down and tet my Ixi.by have, a bite of you I" This ui'ule the miK'ii so angry that she sim- pCy picked up l»t4» mother ;ind child, un<l they have toen Ihere over since. .•VII sailors are certain that sleeping in tropicaj moon rays will either make them cn»=8-eyed or IrM.nd. On the Am- erican vessel Kl Capitan. a year or two ai«.> a mimtor of the crew, disregarding the advice of their fe»Mow« during a Kjell of h<rt Weill her. sleiit on the de«-k III) tho moonHghl, and (soon ,ift*r went c<:iip;etely blinil at night, llumgh lliiey could see ii.s weill iin ihe daytime aH ever. The skiipiier of the ship re- ported the occuirrence, and with it miade ». wtalement to the effe<-t that r,'(o to Uifit time hie h.id tocn a diei- toliever in the i«>-i-iilled moon hliik, TIlJ."* is a. disease Ulnknirtvn to the iiiedi- cjiJ i^rtrfetiKitm. FOUR AVEDUING RINGS. Foul wedding ring.s were uspd on the maoriage of Mary Queren of iScota with her cx>UBiini, UeiiiTy Stewart, Lord Darn ley, son of thie Earl of Ijennox by hiis marriage witJi a grand-daughter of Heinry VII, oi Einglaud, w!hi«ih wa« celebrated at Holy rood on Uni 2;ith wf July, ll'iliS. An instance of several wed- ding rings toing used at a marriage is related by Buscard. At th« mar- riage of a ilauhter of Pope Innocent Vlll. to Lewis of Aragon. Maniuis of Geracio. Jajiiiary 3, 14li2, the tiair ai>- proached the Pope, and, toth toing â- m their knees, thi^ husband put the ring on the proper finger of thl; left hand of the spouse, then severiU rings on the other fingers of both bunds. Ii'ointalnebleou's forest is on fire, over 900 hectares having already biirnedl down. The whole garrison of the town has turned xiut to fight the fira^ but it seemSi unable to check it. SrOR TWENTY-SEVEN YBARa r^ UMi ^:-^ "^>j BAKMO POWDER jHEC00K'SBESTPRIEN5 UkROf tr SAkS IN CANABA