ippr "fppp^ipff^ â- *^^-^^^^f^'i '^T^S^ FQRTHE FABMEB. I I.I ,1 r ' fil nie wtiye And. â- oils, iWjm|^nel«ties in to belSftreely fit for t»ble cnltiTated onder liM been the {Nurticiilarly in uae whtai long iditions. Thi* h Islea, and B- me experi- and f ow poDDda ct a peek of rwt ia menta have bee^ ItfMl^ recently with a â-¼ieir to prodnl^ ii^^aiktu that will floariiA and give a ibealy product in wet landik% A«p%0es the «|tat£ whidi'llif'aiJko^lie^ tjy Chonrs Archipelago, growing themarabes, was planted in sonie low la^da in Ei|g- landandfeitiliMd-Witk thepellesU^ white potato. The^e triak, whidi were oondncted by Mr.' Ijrthur Sutton, have leanlted in the production of a potato special^ addled id «ef ^uIb, and i^H claimed by the experimenter that a good, edible potato can be grown from th^e tabeniinwet,inatBhy landi. It will, of conxae, take many more cxpodmen's to avbetantiate.th^ uplimited. practicability of the new tQb#v»%a^ illiinnitet certain to be bailed with enthusiasm by the great middle aksses of England, to whom thepotafep»%heir daily bread, and who now rtk/ely e'f er see one that is not n^lviz of a wet and diseased character ^ia a healthy and mealy. But feueh a potato would also be a boon to iqany a farmer in this country, where low lands are by no means uncommon. Thei experiments al- luded to have been published by Mr. Sutton, and endorsed by the "liondon Times." The pJBoaa are tliep hmg ap and tmoke^ i£4d ikiOhAf ^^dMng a alight fire itrtlw niidfflrof the ,roam, and keepni0 it 'MkeittflMtf'^iirtinHdfiptf Inul vbh wood-^le- BofelMPtnliy |twn hickory or oak wood, a« it; impartik*- MngM^ mgef- b r e e d coIm; tp the.|feat.-r[Coiaiti9( Owtfemaai. ' ^, ;^^i/ ,u «!„.;• j t^. EnsUsfa Smre |If cse^ ;The llnfiUsh Shire hoiee ia an excellent aniliijil. _,It .is an e^c^mfdft.pf eTdintion throujp^'a, greatjD^j-yeai^ pi vm and breedibg for a special object â€" working. ip a cart. The cart is essentially Boglisii. It is used for eveiy porpoee tiiafct vMitde is needed for on a fiaa, iMannre, ia drawn in great carts ixijivige loadf, stacked up eqaarely'seTeral feet above the n^k., Two, three, or four horses may be used frequently i^ hauling, these loeda on smooth turnpike roeds, snch as a^ never seen in thu country. 'Horses, and vehJcTes,' and reads are each' an essential part of the question of what horse is best fitted for any particular use. J7ow we are bringing over tkeee horsea in large numbers and putting them to an entirely different use on very rough roads and in drawing wagons, iad even in the field the use we are putting them to differs from that of their native country. I merely note the fact before we get wild upon this horse, as we have doue hereto- fore upon other animals.â€" [Rural New Yorker. â€" ' â€" .g^* • • â- • â€" • â€" â€" A Native Bengal Hoosehold. The widow Kunda Nandini passed Uttm MhmwttmUtu IFake Care of Fsurm Implemmts. Some one once drew a graphic pen picture of a mortal foe to the farmerâ€" one who labored for his dei^irtMltion by night as well as by day, on Sundays, holidays, and work days alike. It was a ^mort- gage" that the writfr of the eketcU wisely regarded aaoti* of the moat aibtrre enemies to tiw Itmnr'B purse aiidpep#e ef mind. There is, however, another agent for evil quite as active, to be found on every hurm. It.is knowQ ap xust. Aad.althougb it imnually :^pi^oys in the aggregate a â-¼aat smnwg|,of property,' farmera too' frequently imiglect to take the measures necessary for ptotectfon from the ravages of this insidious foe, Hiudreds of agri- culturalists ai^ buying farm machinery, which, if properly cared for, the "Forest. Forge, ami Farm" su^ests, ought to last at least ten years. Moat c^ it will be worthless in one-fifth of that time for lack of |k little care. A machine that is taken apart and properly cared for when not in use will do good work years and years after its counterpart has been thrown away by the man who bad the habit of leaving it unprotected. Then the delays caused by broken machinery, looBe bolts, and r:tten or twisted frames, discovered just at the time when the loss of time means danger to the crop, more than counterbalance any time, trouble, or expense incurred in properly putting avay the machine. The provident farmer will alwajs clean and house his implements as soon as the harvest is ended. Whenever the paint on an implement thows signs cf wearing off, it ought to be renewed. And when tools and implements are housed they should be placed just where they dSji readily be found when again sought for; Mode of i'ui'liis Hams. Virginia country cured hams, and notably the Smithfield and East Virginia hanu, are cured in the following way, admitting some slight yariations of course, according to the fancy or taste of thej individual The hogs are left on the Ecaffold till the animal heat is well out of the carcass, end it has become a little stiff from cold, it order that it may cut smoother and better than it does when hmp. Usually the pork is not cub till the next momine after it is killed, but if the weather is very cold, ai;d it is feared that it will will freeze before morning, it is cut and salted the same d«y. On being cat, the meat is immediately salted by hands who stand ready, and packed down in bulk, fieidi side ap^ ' on the floor or a platform made for the pur- pose of holding the meat. On packing it down, each piece is eo laid that all the blood that oczes out of the meat will flow •way from it, and not remain in contact with the tleah to taint it. This is one of the nice points in our method of curing bacon, namely, to have the animal bleed freely when it is killed, and not allow the pork to stand long in the bloody water that always comes away from pork for a short time after it is slaughtered Hence we never use brine, but always salt the meat dry, and break bulk and resalt again in a short time. Care is taker to couch all the joints and bones with plenty of sal^, and to sprinkle more salt on the thick part of the piecas as they are packed down. We use from a bushel to a bushel and a half of " aiit to a thousand pounds of pork, appfying.the moat on meiit of large size. Sometimes, to give a fine red color to the flesh of hams, a little saltpetre is rubbed on the^i,^but very ofteit, nothing but the diy salt is applied tiH I3ie meat ia ready to be smoked. "At the expiration of four to ii;( weeks, depending on |he ilze, and state of the weather, uie huns cb^fw^S^ttedf^d ' mSSS or moist hrbikdaigtJr i "sMakeA iktit the flesh sides, and red or blaek^penw^" A ^ied fireely to gi^ »A « v W gR^i f good ^iSiM^Wi^ihi lit ovmi, am â- orta of pe]^p«r may be taken A fldlott of molamee or ten poanOs some time in Nagendra's house. One afternoon the whole household of ladies were sitting together in the older division of the house, i^l occupied according to their tastes in the simple employment of village wonen. All ages were there, from the youngest girl to the grey haired woman. One was binding another's hair, the other suffering it to be bound one submittinir to have her white hairs extracted, another extracting them by the aid of a grain of rice; one beauty sewing together shreds of cloth into a quilt for her^ boy, another suckling her ;hild one lovely being dressing the plaits of her hair, another beating her child, who now cried aloud, now quietly sobbed, by turns. Here one is sewing carpet-work, another leaning over it in admiring examination. There one of artistic taste, thinking cf some one's marriage, is drawing a design on the wooden seats to be used by the bridal pair. One leainel lady is readin? Dasu Rai's poetry. An old woman is delight- ing the ears of her neighbors with com- plaints of her son a hnmoros young one, in a voice half -bursting wi^h laugh- ter, relates in the ears of her companions whose husbands are absent some jocose story of her husband's, to beguOe the pain of separation. Some are reproaching te Grihini (house-mistress), some the Karta (master), some the neighbors some reciting their own praises. She who may have received a gentle scolding in the morning from Surja Mukhi on account of her stunidity is bringing for- ward many examples of her remarkable acuteness of understanding. She in whose cooking the flavors can never be depended upon is dilating at great length upon her proficiency in the art. She whose husband is proverbial in the vil- lage for hia ignorance is fistounding her companions by her nraiaes of his super- human learning. She whose children are dark and r.epul8ive-lqpking ia pluming herseli^ pnrhaviu^ ariven birth to jewels of beauty. " Surja Mukhi was not cf the company. She. witf a little proud, and did net (it much with' these people; if she came, amongst theihtherpresi^ce was a restraint upon the enjoyment of the rest. All feared her. somewhat, and were reserved towards her. Kunda Nandini associated with them she w»8 amcnofst them now, teachjng a littln boy his letters at bis mother's request. Dur- ing the les^n the pupils eyes Were fixed upon»the sweeitmeat in another child's hand, con9equndy his tiJrogrSeKwaa'npt great. At this n)oonent -tbcgh^; app^afed amongst them a BoisTiavi (female mendi- cent), exclaiming, "Jai Badhika 1" rtrr Pat ^nd'tli,erVP^y" Belvedere irerrgHwA Alike. » A young Irishnian' visited Rome, and there met a friend and fellow-country- man who was pursuing .the .avoeationof butcher. The butehera^t^d %s his (Quide, and thifcis « part, of P^'a-jidfey t^ aipbii- se^itl^, as hellld^'^etheart'^en m returh: ' ^: "The most woiiderful thing I saw in Rime was a shtone man." "A shtone man " ejaculated Mary. "Yes," repUed Pat, "and they called him the Polly Belvedere. As we were looking at the shtone man, says the butcher to me, says he: 'Pat* you ^d the Polly Belvedere ire very much aloike.' And be that we measnredl I was broader than him in the fut, but he was higher tiban me ik the- inshten T waslaqser tbjui him around tte ankle, but he had ipa in the. catt r)f the leg. My knee wras latger liien. his, but ,^ was bet- ter tha^ me in .the thisW My belly' was xtwiee its lai^e voimd u his, but hishrist; Was'twice as hngearbuniplasiiune. Then, again; ny neck was mndi l4rger than liis. but his head weatEiiicb laiger thanr- miil^ but, M^e btttdme aald,oaitlie.geiieml »?^ y?:jf)»e3J9rt«»)»PTMkt^«iJiMiie ctmf mtttvc eeqoaiiit dmT e. (tar j who J^w^W, ii«» â- p^im uadi^OQT^te^Bnf end deaOTv^Qj tantftr edf^^) of th^ gratfoil e^tn^ii^t wkkfh hm^^iiii abedt %$tldn t^iAsb i«i^- leotieb befemaen tlieam^ee end iibkt*ptifr lisk ip f ndi|»ii^moali iosifoctlve Itt^hJ' idaiys, ithey â- Hr,)of .dieiii^yoaEh, 90. and 46 jentji •(K»i wiofiflili Ibm were ^wmH among '.we' Mowany's cheers me^ jrhe fi!6in ttfeir abuse ot power wiere duliki^ and iusay feta'ed' ^e iftl^beiral feeb'ngor natives ta|nH»l tjbe JBqglis^ civiliaaiwas one of ^respect and vtaa of affe^ tiom The Indian ^arecter ia aff^tiona|ie, ent^nai' asttc, a^d iiidiiied'to hero wpruiip and the EagKsh' In euty djays, from t'he^ir sopeiior khowfedge end itfen^th of chair-' aeter, lexereiied^ no little 'fasoinetion on the native miad. Nearly, all of the' older men talk with reverence tod esteem of certain teachers who inptrf cted them in youth, and; «fce^baui e«rly patrons- to whom t^ey'owied' their sucoess ine^ter life eud thejr vrfttingly sckUOwledge the influence eteroised over themselves atkd their ^generatum by 'inch individual :e±- atbple. The.ED^liafai offi9i^l of that day, they affirtxi, had more power than now, but he exerciied it with a ^eftter sense of responsibility, and Boof J^oBor in its dh- cluurge. He took pains to know this peo- ple and, in faok, be knew them trey. Except in the very, hii^est. ranks. of tiw service he was readily accessible. He lived tu a great extent ampii^ the" people, and a66ordtiag to the' customs of the peo- ple. He did not disdaiii'tt^ make ffienda with those of tbe^'bettei^ Jftlavs, and oc- casioually he married amotig- them, or at least ccmtraotedsen^irafatriatmnialreliations with the women of the land. This may have had ill consequences in other ways, but it broke down the hedpe of caste pre- judice be^een East tod West, and gave the official a personal interest in the peo- ple, which no mere sense of. duty, however elisvated, could supply. The Englishman of that day looVea upon India not unfre- quently as his second home, and taking the evil with the good, treated it as such. England could only be reached by the Cape route. 3Vaveling was tedious and expensive, the mails few U)d far between, tod many a retired officer had at the end of his service become so wedded to the land of his adoption that he ended Ida days in'it, in preference to embarking on a new expatriation. It is easy to under- stand from this that the Anglo Indian official of the compay' days loved India in a way no Queen's official dreams of doing now. ALie l^lr, loving it, he served it better than now. and was better loved in return. â€" [The Fortnightly Re- view. Nature's Zoo- The country of the Upper Nile was, par excellence, the wonderland of the Roman World, as it is still the grandest out-door museum of natural curiosities. Zoologically there is no more densely populated country. All the wild beasts and birds, made homeless by the devasta- tion of Northern Africa, seem to have taken refuge in the Nubian highlands. In the terrace-Itod of the Nubian and Abyssinian Alps there roam herds of ele- phants, wild goats, wild sheep, and four teea or fifteen different species of ante- lopes. Further below the hippopotamus and white rhinocerous haunt the river swamps. Prof. Blanford enumerates 290 species of water birds. With these harm- less settlors lees desirable guests have crowded in, the spotted hyena, the jackal, the black and yellow lion, four species of smaller cats, wild dogs, and, above all, the oynocephalus, the wily and mischiev- ouB-. baboon.. Three varieties of tlMse Darwinian pets inhabit the rocks of Southern Nubia the Jittle babu'n, the cynocephalua proper, and the celada,. or msntle batJddh*, ia fierce and pdwefful fel- low, who.'e shaggy mane protects his body like a cloak, and enables him to brave the climate of the upper Highlands. Profs. -Euppel and. Hotton agree on the fact that a trdt^p cf these brutes, in ravag- ing a cornfield, will not only hold their grouui agaifst. «11 comers, but on the slightest prdVocation take the offensive in a way not likely to be forgotten by the unarmed natWe. Dogs have no chance idiatever hiMinst a full-grown baboon The old maul ^o not wsit to be attacked, bnt charge t|^qtt once with an energy and skill of fo-opention that- would do credit to a;tropp of ;^wdl-dx|lled soldiers 1^ hyrax, a'queer paohyderm., allied' tp thA^iirope4|i-^bad|;9r,^ cpinhabitik the rock a irioli it tib(nriiat(ui|g mifimot' aiid the tiouit '^d^les swerm-wtth wild hogs that multi- ply undisturbed, for. Jih^ Abyssinian na- tives share the pork prejudice of their MohaaomaoUn neigiiboH. aUy rept kwJ ited 1^ the hereditary melkampoini^iBSQdi an aid inner UmiiSi mtHHmtiT-^M she netivee jregud itâ€" (M^mpj^anVinaehdftlMnyikn medi- cuMtiM adoteed reet of moie'eivilised eoontHes^ and aave endless mischief and iiiiffiridgto her lex. What skill they Ukr^ is, of course, almost purely tradi- ttonal. None of the seienee of the world or Britith usage baa yet altered in the aiightest degree either the customs of the native or- his horror at the idea of male physicians for women â€" especially in car- ton ailmentsâ€" and their wonder at our obtruseness and disregard of propriety on so del.cato a point. To supply a vacancy so long unfilled, lady doctors have now appeared on the scene, who. it is hoped by reaching the zenanas, may reach the re^l source through which a higher en- lightenment in India is possible. An immense field is open to them along. with every encouragement, tod were hue some of the many young ladies at home who are «traiaing health for a future pittance iia one or other of the spheres of teaching to turn their attention in this direction, they would find an opening of wider and greater utility before them, and a pros pent of large and rapid emolument. â€" •^[Chamberii' Journal. wUdk FeUewe« the i^^ IthOuSt Ithe !«r •» tr The Beadly Climate of Panama. Just befoie Mr. Dingier left Panaira for frarce, say, 16,0C0 men were at work. The wet season is now in, and to- day not more than 7,000 of all ranks are employed. Quite recently, owin? to the very rickly season, 440 of the 7,000 were in the hospital, apart from nearly 160 under treatment at home. This tells its own story ajbeut this deadly, climate. The laborers .are nearly all Jamaicans. At Oeorgoma, a caiud camp, between Satur- day last and Mcmday nodh three canal chiefs had died. We hear of the deathij ot chiefs â€" as for the men, they die on the line and are buried, and no attention is paid to the matter. Two American car- penters are in an. unnamed grave near Emperador. The death-rate a few months age, from a careful estimate, was 109, and a decimal, nearly 100 per 1,000 for all ranks. Yellow fever kills the whites, malaria the natives and negroes. Many an able-bodied, well-built negro is cut off in from twenty -frur to thirty-six hours after his seizure. Many are placed in the ambulance cars of the canal company and die en route. None but those living here andifamiliar with such painful sights Can form any idea of this country. To return to the appearance oi canal works. Lack of spirit and lack of energy were every- where observable. Heavy rains inter- fered greatly with the work. Earthworks are swept away by the tropical downpour. A few hours rain caused a small stream to rise in suoh a manner- that a railway bridge was swept away, stopping oanal work there. One may safely say that during the loitg rainy season, from May to the middle of December, fully half the time originally c^dculated on by De Les- seps is lost, owi^g to the rains, small floods, and the stubborn fact that, while the company claimed to have 16,000 men in its employ a^ the close of the diy sea- son, only 7,000 are working. Some con- tractors are losing money, and a great dei^ of it. One firm of Americans threw up its dredging contract rather than lose men and money. IB V? ol FA WT^' â- 'â- ' .Tci 1*1 MiiQJ ttS â- »: ItSi^ 19pf#T Natlre Treatiueiiit of Bisease â- liiaUi. Regarding the native treatment of diseases, one of the most, curious thines I ever Witnessed was ' a half -dad native shootiDg throi^h^he'atreehrof a eounsry town *.^ Deee ,«ai^' ^se w«nt back hia â- igbt^T* »np?». flnJy I " Mrit he were hawking niii|^ or aweetiae«j^ «n4, to my astoidihinait, p jM^tient spop present- ed himself io be operated on. fo^ cataract There and 'then, «tianifiig in the bazaar, the itkleMnt' bciilis(! tb^' out his pen- knife rand ipesftinned^ the o^oratieis: in a fewminqteih bnaiduap tbe: xsait'e ^es, ind Reding ktUfk^V^kefBin t)be «»k^ » fort^hf "*^" • -- The stKby^flili^i __ v«n«MM^ P%^^ak W $B^ #spgv 3ifc a^ JiewllMbM^ Ui«ddh«dillr The Sappbire. The ancients, curioiisly enough, called this stone male and female, accordirg to its color â€" the deep-colored or indigo sapphire being the male, and the pale blue, approa(diing white, the female. To the sapphire also have been ascribed many magiciil qualitiesâ€" among others that it was a sure preveiitivo of evil' thoughts, that it was a remedy against f ver, and that if confined in a vessel with a reptile it would cause the death cf the latter. The gem was also sacred to Apollo, being worn by till Who inquired of the orac^.e at his shrine. The sapphire is to all intents and pur- poses the same stotae as the ruby, differ- ing in name only on account of ithe C(Jor, which last varies from white to the deep- est blue and black but there are several varieties; the name sapphire being usually restricted to tha blue varieties, while the bright red are called Oriental ruby, the amethystine Oriental amethyst, and the dull, mwsive kinds, carundum or emery. The sapphiira is iiextr in hardness to the diamond. A most curious property of this stone is its difference in color in dtffcsrent lights. Thus, a sapphire which is blue by day- light, by gadight appears to possess a variety o other tinta but a really good stone should appear blue in both lights. Tastes differ as to the shade or tint which is the most beantifu], but ccnnoisseurs are generally i^rsed thatastoxte whidi approaches ia hue tp blue velvet of the shade ctlled hleit de.roi is ths most vahi-. able, It is worthy of remark that the name "d'apphire" M One of the very tew that appear ih mdst lasgusgea with but very slight ^umge in sfpelUnff^thus We have the Hebrew .eapphu; the Gireek zaffiros, the Latin sapphirua, Chaldaic jrhljMt»iMT W^^mt w,% stoTcf eurtain ^i^ and the kt „ "RHforfstfod clearing, farm and valley, was only bro- ken by the rceasinnsl snort of a heavy sleep*. vipleS' «nd miles of the dreaw solitoo^ Missouri night scenery were left in the distance the train went wbizzin» by small, unimportant stations, and now halted at Some vayside tank and took in solid and liquid refreshments for the bloodless horse. But why should it now slew up in the dreariest of all the many dâ„¢ary» ;nnfsr\«dffing places along the road What ill-looking stranger was that who had just entered the car and passed down the aisle between the slum- berers with a jtq Tliug face stamped witk a sinister brand Crack " Surely a pistol shot I ♦ ' I knewl 've been looking for this sort of thins for the last six months "â- fhouted a Kansas City drummer, diving for the aisle and getting there with both feet, "tsurt^nddrl" "Crscfcl" '• V'engemcois mine, saith the Lordâ€" b ^sid«iit,hat X haven't sot a pistol," ecoed » mtfll^d voice from the sepulcher of an uppen berth. "Crack!" A ra,tberblu^)^iws female fisrure. robisd in white and ruffled nightcap, bounded intp the aisle and.ru'^hed at t^e Kansas City druminer with, open mouth and vk discrepancy of teeth. As she fled ahe tripped, recovered herself, and plumped eiu»re]y into this drummer's amw. "Oh. save me from the Jim boys. Landtnrd. save me I " shrieked the woman fmm Parsons, ** save me for my darter's sake " "Crack " •" Throw ijp 3rour hands " said r,he drpmaaer, trying to pquirm away. The woman from Pbrsons complied rapidly, and he slipped otit on the rear platforiii. The tsain was justj starting away from a ghrs*;^ tank Iqpmingup against the rofy. hued'horizon of approaching day. The covdootor entered the car from the other e*a "(Srackl' He dodged into the smoker's apartment and peered out along the aisle where the ftid lady w«s "sashay- ing " and balancing before the curtained sections in a stately, single-handed min- uet. Capped and undressed heads were thrust without the curtains, and white, anxious faces looked up and domi '«be aisle. "Any train robbers at your end?" shouted the drummer above the din of the howling Parson's woman. "Not any down my way," answered the conductor, steeping out in f ronb of the old lady's berth. •"Thunder aad Mars What's this? A soda fountain t "Crack!" " Why, for the land's sake "broke in the Parsons woman, " ef that ain't my yeast, six bottles of i^, all for Jane, and busted, busted, busted. I was afeered all along that the rattle ot the keers would get the stuff a workin'" Formosa. This island should prove a valuable colony to any Power th^t gets it. It is a large and very fertile islancl,and possesses some good coal mines at Keelung. The Spaniards and Dutch were the first to get a footing on the island, the Duteh driv- ing out the Spaniards, and being them- selves at length driven out by a great Chinese p.rate chief, after ^hich the Chinese came into possesic«i of several im- portant ports. The natives of the island are savdges, who regard the Chinese with a most deadly hatred ' they have foufitht bravely against the- inva^Jers, who f ear them a good deal, 'but tfcey'are being gradually pushed further into the interior. At present the interior is still in the hands of the natives, and the Chinese hold the ports, and a. good stretch of couutry inland, which they are steadily increasing "by an insidious encrcaciing process. One drawback to the olaca is that it possesses n6 realHy good harbors, every port having a, bar at the entrance to the harbor, which impedes navigation. Dredging would, hpwever. no doubt do away wi*h tils drawback to a consider- able extent. I i the hands of a European Power the resources cf the iiknd would certainly be vastly more developed than they are In Chinese hands, and if France does take the Island for a permanent pos- session, it is believed that the result will be a general increase of trade. Tbe Life oCa Brain CelL ThewonderfuLsctivity of the human brain is in large part due to the fact that it 18 made np of a yast, ^umbe^ of cells, each of which lives ite own individual life, andin so doings eoatributes to the lief a?.d activity pf the whole. A German pbysiplogiat, who has given careful study to the subject, computes thah " the cere- bwLl mass is composed of at least 300.000, 000 riervB cells, each an indepen-'ent and the body,,orgaa!ism,' and microscopic brain, bntjhe »\%;«concMrnsit» vital relations, but sapirinon. a^d, J|0 on m*u»«o ancients applied the term ilidisMiminitely «*lipr^inated to a higher nurDose m I to^ Stones of a bl^coion ' xelattgn ^p the functicn1,f tL SgSreach «nâ„¢Sr w^^*^^**2*Â¥*** »^ »«*.« *»i» hymg a sejiarate life iridividiiaUy, though country ;^t ^tt 'Bufcope the '4iff««eB»' :soe»Uysnbje3t to ahigherlaw of function. eves liSlS'Wn^ft?^- JH* ^^V^ ^m^m^ JtT? »W'20«,000 ever^r hour, â„¢2^^?^5£ire ^\?r^-J^ i 'â- ««*!^?f T^ «to ,^q^t nSinber of their pro i^JS^HS'S?*'^*^ '•^'Bk* needs good care aAlAe .»d^ best of f^S mmP^^n»f»-x?. L'Q-io ah"ai "Wh ' ' -- WSSi rhare ^E^ be a^orde4 by good food, 'iaiw^omMii'iAiBntB, and .to %â- -^^k^^^^?^^^ ftfti^^ying, pat .u xU fwws Mtas ft« .aUliT^i^ii] ?**°^y » »l4i«lise*^«*»ii*-there is » Xt .a ,«'«a iiiw rjc aj£t ive^^"*® family of obildr«n. igLgfi^iuMjtjamigi^^