mmmm mm 1« t qppinppiipii fif m '•? 1^31' t w Timot. Let it diy and dm pat m the pa- per. It wiU look decidedly better, and wm pay tar the teouUe it takca. When a atocking gets oat at the heel, Ae careleas girl throwa it aside and Inxya new â€" ,^t the mother who pennito it is HOUSEHOLD. See Hera, Oirk- Girls, don't marry a man for monOT, poai- tion, or anything bat lore. Don't do it, if yoa want to Jlre to a good old age and befllame tiian she. In'tiie sAie way happy. Yo* may thiak that awney cam " .^j .^ ,^ ^__ bring yoa aS y^ deaba^ bat it cant. That is where yoa are mistaken. It can bay a good many tbingi, bat it can never par- chase contealpsnt for year heart at happi- ness for yoorseoL It may bring tempdraiy smiles to yonr face, bat it will leave great shadows in yoor heart. Don't think that I woold advise yoa to marry a worthless fel- low, just becanae yoa imagine you love him. A refined, good, inteUigent woman shoald never marry a valgar, ill-bred man. No, no, never anite yoorself to any one who is not a man in the traest meaning of the word. Neither could I advise a woman to marry a man who had no visible means of snppbrtisg her, but for hea^wn's sake don't marry a millionaire or a king, if you don't love him. It will not da People have tried it time and again, only to find it a miserable failure. It may do for awhile. You may revel in gilded halls, and be lost in the giddy rounds ol pleasure, but a time wiU come wheb those things will be a hollow mockery to you. There will be an " aching void " the world can never filL Sometimes mothers are to l^me for the unhappiness of their daughters. They teach them that re- spect for their husband and lots of "boodle" are infinitely to be preferred to tbat fool- i8hnesi called love. That would do very well if life had no waves of trouble, but it takes something more than simple respect to'make two hearts cling together in the hour of adversity. A woman that turns her back upon wealth, and takes the man of her choice may miss some of the luxuries of life, but she will be happy. Don't marry a dude. Better get you a monkey. It is cheaper and a great deal nicer. Don't fool with that class of animals. They generally wear a $10 hat on a ten cent brain, and the woman who takes one of these chaps will set left about as bad as the southern con- federacy did at Appomattox. garment which haT«|);Mn of «nr m thMT ^^Z°™l •re toncdaaiibM aocm ia thigr Med fipiffe- rlâ€"^j^ ing oaffl thay accomalata "mot and the shamefaced poa into the rag bag or giras them to A0 fint b^Egar who comes aloog. TUs is waatafol, extravagant, anwomanly and immoraL Every lady or girl ongnt to neatly mend her own fine underwear, and keep it for herielf till worn oat and if she woold help the poor let her give than strong, new and coarser clothing which will be osefnl to them in their position and work. There is something about a neatly mended glove, for example, or other feminine belonging, which s^es it a charm it never had in the beginning probably because it has acqair- ed something of the personality of the dainty and careful wearer. Bread Makiag Hints. Potato Yeast. â€" Boil one handful of hops in one pint of water. Grate four large po- tatoes into an earthern bowl and stir in one heaping tafolespoonful of flour immediately add two quarts of boiling water. Now strain the hop tea into the whole and when luke- warm, add one-third cup of salt, two-thirds cup of sugar and a yeast cake or sufficient lively yeast to work it. Have everything ready when you begin to work else the grated potato will turn dark by contact with the air. Gbandmothees Yeast. â€" Boil six or eight potatoes and one cup of hops in four quarts of water. Take out the potatoes add mash them, return to the liquid and strain all through a sieve. Add one-half cup of salt and one cup of sugar and boil in a heaping tablespoonful of Sour, When luke- warm, add one cup of good yeast to work it. After yeast has been put into bottles do not be in too great haste to cork it up lest you lose all. Milk Yeast Bread. â€" Three cups of boil- ing water, three cups of new milk, three teaspoonfuls of salt, add to these flour' enough to make a thick batter. Let it rise in a warm place, but be careful and not let it bake. When it foams well, mix hard with flour and mould into three loaves. Let it rise again and bake, Stubbridge Brown Bread. â€" Three cups of rye meal, two cups of Indian meal, one- half cup of flour, one-half cup rf molasses, one teaspoonful of soda. Mix with hot wa- ter, leaviag it stifi' enough to cross on top with a knife and keep in place. Bake in a two quart tin pan two hours. Excellent Baked Brown Bread. â€" Three cups of Indian meal, three cups cf rye 'meal, one-half cup of sour milk, one-half cup of molasses, three and a half cups of warm w ater, one teaspoonful of soda. Bake, covered clobely, one hour and a half in a mod- erate oven. In making brown bread sift the salt and soda into the meal. The secret of making good steamed brown bread is to keep the water boiling evenly all the time. Never add cold water to the water in which the bread is being steamed as it will surely make the bread falL Economical Hints* Clover blossoms or field flowers and wheat are very pretty designs for ornamenting. The paints for clover blossoms are white, carmine or geranium lake, king's yellow, Vermillion for leaves, two shadei^ of green, emerald and chrome. Where strict economy rules, very pretty eH«cts can be gained by covering furniture with some of the cretonnes. At twenty-five cents a yard one can buy cretonnes inartistic designs and colorings that cleverly simulate expensive tapestry fabrics. Useful napkin rings are made by crochet- ing them out of old-gold macrame cord, and are made glossy and stiflf by an application of varnish. Work ^baskets, waste-paper baskets and whisk-bfoom holders are all durable and pretty made in this way, and r brightened by bows of ribbon. Black silk can be made to look almost as good as new by sponging on the right side with weak tea or cofi^ee and pressing on the right side with a thick flannel between the silk' and the iron. When the silk is very much wrinkled, sponge on the wrong side with weak gum-arabic water, and when nearly dry, iron between two woolen cloths. Rusty black lace can be wonderfully fresh ened up b'y rinsing it in, cold water to which have been added borax and alchohol in the proportion of one tablespoonfnl each of borax and alchohol to one cupful of soft water. After the lace is partly dry dip it in water in which on old kid glove has been boiled, squeeze gently, pull out the edges, pin on sheets of blotting-paperj and dry onder heavy books. Keep a fruit jar that has a cover, full of dissolved gum tragacanth. Have a brash with a ring in the cut ofiT handle, so that it may be hung up when not in oae. If scr^w of paper get loose on the walls, a moment's work will put them on again as good as new. When the boose is papered always save tiie â- craps or get an extra rolL It is bat the work of a moment to pat on a fn«ment cf paper that has been t(»nodff, and it improvea tiie appearance of the hooae wtcmderfially. If tile plastering ia broken, cm i^aoe dog oot by stMne carelen ex pr e ssn iMi or mover of faraitore, before the paper ii jpt on wet • spooofol of ^kater of Â¥ufa iSd fill the fe^i:-^ A DESPEKATE EHCOUHTEfi. A Fatal Flsbt Between Twe( I«rce AUlga* tors at (^atesvllle. Pa. A fierce and bloody fight between alli- gators was the rare sport witnessed at Coatesviile a few days ago by one of the at- tendants in Dr. Huston's garden in that boroughi £ach of the combatants measur- ed over five feet in length, and had been living for «ight years peaceably together in a great tank which Dr. Huston had con- structed for them near his house. They were natives of Florida, and were brought from that country when small by Dr. Huston. For some weeks, however, the two great reptiles have been showing signs of discon- tent with each other, but no one anticipated the terrible and fatal termination of this curious quarrel. One day the attention of the gardener, who was at work near the tank, was attracted by a commotion in the water, and looking up he saw that the two alligators were engaged in a desperate struggle. The man rushed to the spot, but was powerless to stop the fight, which was raging so fiercely that the water was lashed into foam and the greenhouse was splashed in every direction. The largest of the combatants was seek- ing to get the body of the smaller alligator in his wide-open jaws, but the latter was always too quick to be caught, and moved round and round, striking the big reptile with his tail, and sometimes getting the enemy's legs in his jaws and biting them. The tank was soon reddened with the blood which flowed from the wounds inflict- ed in- this curious contest. The gardener attempted to separate the maddened contes- tants by beating them with a long pole, but they paid no attention to this attempt at diversion and went on with their fight only more desperately. They rolled over each other, sometimes in che water and at times on the bank -in the mud, but always lashing* with their tails. The smaller and more agile of the two continued to bite the legs and body of the big alligator, and the latter moved about slowly, seeking to make a successful grab at his opponent's body. Their sleepy eyes had become bright and snappy, and it was evident that the fight was to be to the death. At last in an effort to snap at the swinging tail of the larger, the small alligator fell over on his side, and before he could get out of the way the big jaws of his enemy closed upon him with a snap. Then occurred the most curious part of the battle. Raising himrelf slightly upon his fore feet the big alligator lifted the smaller one from the surface of the water and shook him ab a dog would shake a rat â€" shook him until it seemed that his tail would be hurled off, and until, in fact, his back was broken and- he laydead and limp in those great jaws. Then the big animal dropped the body and moved off to sun him- self. BiBflOf HAinveTors mntDEB. r«raK«r«-i The Choreh MiaioDaiy SodMj oeiTBd from the Ber. A. ro- Shaw. tv|itfiamnary at Frere Town, East AicJM^the I^UowiognaRmtiTe taken down bj Waifrani '^â- ' â€" mg African Christian namMl (miirto- Borton. who was witii Bi^h^ Ha*- when he was kHied, tmiirap eacaped, has only lately arrived at FiMeTowa â€" The Bishop was kept a pfeMOMT foreeren day*. We were all quite free walk abootr We had our gons, and all| the loads were leff-in oar house nothing was taken away, only there was a soldier thwe always to see tiiatwedidnot take an;^tiung away. On the seven^ day t£e meaaeagers rSorned from Mwanga, and there was fsooh firing of gons. we asked what tiieneWa was, and we were told that Mwanga had refnaed to give 08 permission to go on to Uganda, that we were to go back the way we oame, and fillet on the mocraw _we shoald start. We all slept well that nij^t. About 7 a. m. on October 29tii, some aiddiers came and began to bind OS. Some of as straggled a good deal, and then those who did hadtheir hands tied behind and were put in wooden slave collars, bat those who submitted were only tied with their hands in front. Some Wag- anda, whom we had not previoosly seen (they came back with the messengers) came %nd talked to us. They asked, "Who gave yoo permission to come this way Yon have come without leave, and most return at once." About 2 p. m. the Saltan came to see us he had the Bishop's umbrella in his hand, and when it rained he pat it ap. He divided us among his soldiers, potting one of OS to two soldiers, and then we were taken away, each one to the soldier's house who had charge of as. At 3 p. m. we were broueht oat and pot together in a line and marched off, taking a road leadinsr in the way by which we had come. Before leaving the houses our guards had taken away our clothes and gave us pieces of bark-cloth to wrap round our loins. We were marched a long way â€" it took us more than two h6urs to reach the spot where we halted. Shortly before reaching that place we saw in front of us the Bishop and his boy Ikuta, who carried his chair they were surrounded by a great many soldierji. Ponto, the Bishop's couk, was with as, with his hands tied be hind him. We came to a place where there were many trees on one side and a valley on the other. Here the Bishop was with the soldiers. We stopped within a few yards of where he stood, and could see him quite plainly. He tried to sit down, bat the soldiers would not let him. They began to. pull his clothes off him. They took away all his clothes and left him naked, with only his boots on. This they did, for they want- ed his clothes. Then most of the soldiers left the Bishop and came and stood near us. Suddenly a gun was fired off as a signal then two soldiers, who were standing on either side of the Bishop, stabbed him in his sides with their spears, and he fell down on his back. Mr. Shaw adds: â€" ^This narrative was taken down by me from the inan himself. He knows a very little English, but spoke Kiswahili. He ia one of our Frere Town boys, having years ago been released from a slave dhow, trained in our schools, and when of a suitable age, sent out to earn his living. When we were commencing our work at Taita, there was a need of promising lads to go up to assist Mr. Wray with his work. Christopher was one of these. When Bishop Hannington was making up his caravan to go to Uganda, Christopher volunteered to go. Another fragmentary account, mentioned by Mr. Mackay, confirms the above, but adds that the Bishop was on bis knees in I^ayer when he was speared. THE CS7 OF THE YULTUSE. GATHERII ElDBii W â- ew tke Umwm Blr«s ri«^ rea«he»fertheir.e„^^ The eld^ dadk coa«tltnk«.T*' and may .«• «id to be tteSSs,' J-lander^ tf^ntniymS^i Si^unu,.**,. the CoZp?^ neolHpar^ to take a boat at rS?" K pay a visit to time isl»U ritr5»'iCi tOjandAkrey^ rfere t^ScK make their nests every ye»r sWr,J«»». ningofJone. WhenXft5S*£«kil THE WOMAN'S WORLD. The Worldngwoman warns workingmen to " shun saloons tmd be temperate," Good advice, Mrs, Helen T.Clarke has taken a position on Oood Cheer, where she will find ample scope for her pen. Miss Clara Foltz, the lady lawyer of the Pacific Coast, isaboutto take up journalism. She will start her own paper. The wife of a blacksmith at Beaver Falls, works with him at the forge, and is consid- ered as good a smith as her husband. Two young gentlewomen are studying electrical engineering, which profession has not yet been overcrowded. Great fortunes have been made in its pursuit. Miss Hannah Ellis Leavittof Skowhegan won the honors in the recent contest for the best English essay by the junior class of Maine State College, Orono, a class consist- ing of twenty-three gentlemen and onelatdy. The vigorous boat crews at Wellesley College illustrate the enthusiasm which rowing inspires, and show the effective work that can be performed by young wo- men in earnest at the oar. The canoeing which is now thcfashion, induces instruction in the aj:t of sculling, and nothing is more graceful tcan a young girl sending a light canoe through the wator'with quick, esSr- getic strokes. Du Maurier pictures Pun«A rs bowing obsequiously before a lady in colleg^e go4rn and mortar-board cap, who is passing alone into the "first-class" compartment of a railway train, duly marked ** For Ladies Only " â€" ^no male competitor having bei^ able to pass the examinations in Greek and Latin at Cambridge. " Honor to Agneta Frances Ramsay " is underneath the pic- ture. •rtheBeaertUmd. It ia JMOB by^the son. Hwe, 30 milea north of the Whito cMlf, and only a few milee from wJieikIt baidi aipat the eastern â- ide af Hamavli Peak Is a "ifring and two w atee moA tvei. ^Dhe wrm |a thiji â- onroe of a tmy meek- whku tiinaaa itai way OTW vlaia and prairie vstU it amptiea into the nver. I!or* Salfy an even h^a-. ored iaflee totiie northeasty and tito'codflf try between is civen over to the coyote, the rattiesnake and the savage. Camp Robin- son is an even hundred miles to the north- west, on the very head watera of the White, and the coontry bAweennught v^ Be' wjutraH Dowiras aocpbsed. It is high noon by the silver watoh which the scoot polls from his pocket as his mole comes to a sodden halt at the spring and plunges his nbee into the dear, cold water until he most shot his eyes. Trom Fort Solly to Camp Robinson with military orders. Jost half the ride has been com- pleted. Two hundred miles throogh lands accorsed with venomous serpents, sneaking coyotes, savage wolves, Indian devilsâ€" with memories of a score of massacres â€" with re- membrances of tomahawk and scalping knife, and exultant warriors. They bade this man good-bye as he rode from the fort and they parted with him as if he were go- ing to his death. It bad been a rough ride, with scarcely an hour's halt for rest, and the mule drank as if long deprived of water. Little by littie he raised his head from the spring, and at last he lifted his nose clear of the water with an "0-0-0 off!" of satisfaction. The man's tongue burned for water, but he did not hurry his movements. He began at the peak on his right and carefully looked over the ground in a quarter-circle to the north. Then he turned in his saddle and naade the survey a half -circle. Then he ..â„¢;w,u. lifted himself in the stirrups and surveyed ^ine the moist hole that contains her the ground to the leftâ€" to the rightâ€" ilT The male, squatted near her frontâ€" and his circle was complete. It was " '" '"" ' ' ' plain â€" sterile, parched, broken and ridged â€"lands which produce only for reptiles and wild besMts. A serpent lay basking in the sun a few yards distant, A gaunt, wild- eyed Wolfe peered out from behind a rock scarce pistol shot away and gnashed his teeth in disappointment that it was not other game. The scout smiled with satis- faction. He could detect nothing of neat then she geneiill?"' egM, rarely more. Kâ„¢er»Uy U„ j Daring this time the drake «». of his marital prerogatives thijT'{S| hke tiie good father of a familyZ^^I ceases not for a moment to keen* ^« eye on hU consort and fetches J.«.^ stiantiy if she gives the sliSfS- of wishing to teke a wal tI^HI phenomen m of a male mere c^t^l offspring than the female hw S^ll" en by nomerous observations Bnt^ h» motive in this is simply jealonir next day the owner of t£e ifi 2 carries iway at the same time W^ down and the eggs. The unfortuD»w which sometimea makes a stout rwi chnging to the clothes bf the robbJl their beaks, go off a short distant begm agam but the bondi (farZTc^. oncemore and takes tke preeiona 421 The indefatigable mother goes to work I and this time only a part of the t^ taken for if aU were removed the dmJI tor m desirmg too much would M But this reserve is made solely aa re*il the eggs, for the down is removed^l eveiy weefc, and the poor mother coi,tiS!| to strip herself until she finds herself J bare that^he has no longer wherewitluill An Estate of Oyer a Million Acres- Thursday last, at the Mart, Tokenhouse Yard, Messrs. Wells and Read offered to public auction the freehold domains of an enormous estate sitoated in the Province of Vefsen, in Nbrway, and about 200 miles north of Trondhjem, lying between 65 ® and 66 ® north latitude no portion of it reached beyond the temperate zone. It was describ- ed as occupying a fiftieth part of the whole country, the area being 1,200,000 acres, or 2,000 square miles, and the number of farms was 168, It was also stated to be rich in timber and mineral productions, which were capable of very great development. In one respect, aa the auctioneer said, it was unique, being the largest estate that was ever offered for sale, and presented an exception to the custom of the country, where the farmer is generally the owner of his occupation. With- in its boundaries was situated th^ Lake Rob Vand, one of the largest inland-'-waters of Norway. The sporting rights, over 200 mil^ of river and lake were reserved, affording some of the finest wild shooting and fishing in the North of Europe. The estate was easy of access, so much as as the Highlands formerly were, and the climate in the sum- mer months was exceedingly pleasant. There was no serious offer for it, for the small sum of £6,500 that was named, or about Id. per acre, could scarcely be so considered, and the property was withdrawn. The word polite was formerly applied to glass or i%arble surfaces which we now style polished. Many anglomaniacs r^jet that they did not ma^e Buffalo Bill's acquaintance before he went abroad. CdaseJVa Magazine refers to anew b^ad of gloe for joinuig leather, belts which has re- centiybeen intooducied. Its t^mMnty may be gathered from tiie atatemoife tbit a joint in a four-inch single belt, I'ec^tiy tested, brjD^e in the leather dear id the join witii a Btfoa A 2474^poandB, "which is at tiie rate av8C0 ptMDindi en tiie square tiidi of sec- iaan. of the bdt. -^KSs fenhtia !â- iiot gfvmi. The Width of a Tornado's Path. Fortunately the paths of tornadoes are ordinarily very narrow-â€" the widest have a diameter of less than two miles ;*the narrow- est of only forty feet. In most cases a tor- nado is seriously destructive over a width not exceeding five hundred feet. The length of the tornado's path across the country does not commonly exceed thirty miles, and it generally traverses the distance in about an hour. When the npward corkscrew lotion of the outer part of the spiral and the swift- er uproah of the air through the central shaft have drained away the most of the warm air which gave birth to the motion, the tornado dies away. The equilibrium of the air-masses is for a time restored, the heavier air has fallen down upon the sur- face, and the w'arm air, spreading laterally as it attains the level to which it tends, comes into a state of quiet. Assoming the width of the destruction brooght aboot by the storm at tax. hundred feet, and tiie lengtii of its journey at thirty miles, we find that the area of its devastotion amoonte to about two thousand acres, or to a sqnare area about two imles ou a side. Over this area the destruction ia ordinu^y more complete than that which occurs in the moat severe earthqoakea. ' Ittakea flie tusks of 75,000 elebhanta -yesrtosop^tlie world's ^ano key* lard balla and knife handles. A brilliant black varnish for Irain atoyet ' andfirepbees is made by stirriiur ivoiy Uadcintomdinaryriidlaovaniilu THE FOE HE MOST DREADED. He leaps to the ground, strips off the saddle, and while the mule picks at the sWeet grass around the spring the scout breaks' his fast from the bread and meat in his haversack " Hi ek i Hi ek Hi-ek " It is the call of a vulture, sailing in circles over the spring. Did you ever see a vul- ture of the plain A heavy -bodied bird of somber color, with fierce beak, and talons like the claws of a tiger. The living are nothing to him death is his feast. " Hi-ek Hi-ek Hi-ek 1" When you hear that cry look out. Death is close at hand. At a second call the mule raised his head in a startled way and cast a swift glance on every side. The scout was slower in his movements. He loosened his revolvers be- fore he moved, and as he rose up he had his rifle in his hands. " Hi-ek I Hi-ek Hi-ek " What is it The man turns slowly on his heel to scan the country, and brave and fearless as he is his heart increases its beats and his eyes betray anxiety. The vulture is never mistaken. The death-call is never uttered without reason. There are three minutes of such suspense as try men's nervesâ€" of such silence that the flap flap of the vulture's great wings can be heard as he siils his circle. " Hi-ek Hi 1" " Ah A score of savages suddenly ap- pear on the crest of the ridge half a mile to the we^, each one painted and bedecked â€" each oiro mounted and thirstlng for blood. They have been in ambush for hours, and now their waiting has been rewarded. They wheel to the right and to the left until they are in line. Not a war whoop has been ut- te^dâ€" not a shout has broken the silence. The scout faces them. Oneâ€" five â€" ten^ fifteen â€" twenty-two I An even hundred miles to Fort Sully 1 An even hundred miles to Camp Robinson 1 One to twenty-two 1 "Hi-ek! Hi-ek! Hi-ek!" screams the buzzard in exultation. The bronze which the summer sun of the West has burned upon the scout's cheek pales a little as the line advances to encircle him, and his fingers tighten on his rifle un- til the clutch would make human flesh cry out in agony, but there is never a quiver of the lip â€" never a tremble of the limb. Now the flight 6pens. There is shout and shot'and swift curding. The hoarse cries of the vulture mingle with the fierce screams of the warriors and echo back the defiant shouts of the scout. • • • • Now the circle contracts. Two warriars have been struck from then: flying ponies and two ponies have been hard hit. They must close with him or numbers will not count against his steady eye and iron nerve. • • • • • " Hi-ek Hi-ek I Hi-ek 1» The scout is down, and the mule, wound- to the death, has broken through the circle with a mad rush. It were better if the bullet which tore up the scalp and ren- dered the brave man unconscious for a period had penetrated to the brain. When he opens his eyes again he is disarmed and a prisoner. He lo«)ks from face to face. Not one gleam of mercy â€" not one line of pity. to her asistance, and he, too' strips'L- self of his plumage, a quaUty of downll the Icelanders distinguish easily front of the female, because it is white and t from the creature's sides, Emperor William's Gift. In the Porzellan Sammlung, a great all net of China, in the Royal PalaceofDi«d«l a collection consisting of no fewer tlum|%)l 000 pieces of pottery, there are three plijl yellow plates, two of them entire, thettudl broken. These are considered to be, J specimens of the ceramic art, even mtm curious and more precious than any otbl article in the porcelain galleries, not iDcloil ing even the two earthenware lifeml leopards, the colossal bust of Augustus m king, the majolica ware painted from tltl designs of Raf aelle, and the set of pordiij given to the Elector Augustus E kl Frederic I, of Prussia, in exchange for J company of very tall grenadiers. Ikl three yellow plates are of direct Chbal manufacture, and are esteemed the greitHi rarity in the collection, for the reason tbil this class of ware is made tor the u8eoft{ii| Emperor of China alone, audits exportttjul is prohibited under pain of death, fioil these plates fired with the Imperial cdorlyil low) found their way to Dresden is unoertiii, I .but for considerably more than a centojl rthey have served aa models used at tltl royal porcelain manufactory, for the]wl duction of a special porcelain only madefgl presentation to royal personages. " D»| den yellow" is thus as historical ahnei "rose du Barry" or or "bleu du RoL" En peror William ordered a service cf ^1 famous yellow ware to be made as a cot I gratulatary offering to her. Majesty tin I Queen of England on the occasion of tit| royal jubilee. Eating A Saw Cat- A New York policeman arrested, at ill early hour the other morning, CharlesEif der, colored, 42 years old, residence iii-| known. He was walking through E«l Eighteenth street, holding a dead cat wil both hands to his mouth, which he »ii| ravenously, " In my dreams I heard the voices 1 dead wife and parents. They never alloWl me to sleep, and always said to me, 'T«l must either eat a human being or a c»tl| you want us to have peace in heaTO-l Night after night I heard the same con maud, and I determined to obey it »\ last night I walked the street, but was «f| able to find a man, woman or child iWl would allow me to eat thent. I thenchawj alive cat around, but I could not cateh tl By luck I found the dead cat, and! i)»9| the wishes of my 'Wife and parents." I This was -in substance what RiderBfl the officer. The latter tore the ai from Rider's grasp. Both its hind legs^l been eaten and several portions of t"'"^| Rider became frantic on being pr*^"*}! from eating the remainder of the cat, *• I it required two officers to take him *« I station house. His face and clothing ^1 covered with blood, and he presented »^| rible sight. They made him wash his^l and hands and then brought him P^^F Justice Gosman, who committed him for mination as to his mertal condition. In after days some oter scoot, riding with life in hand aa did iis one, may stop at the sprmg. He will see the ashes of a fireâ€" a few bonesâ€" bits of clothing scattered about a pile of empty cariridge shells. "Hi-ek Hi ek Hi-ek !» He will turn from them to the death-vul- tures sailing above his head, and as he glances back to the teli-tale relics thebotom of the parched earth will be a sign on which he Will read: J • • •â- ••••...•.....,, j i, CAPTURED BY DEMOiNS • The leading flower of fashion in at present is the daffodil. A lady is a human being of feminine «^ I der who is not afraid to be called a »«» f The Baroness Burdette-Coutts has j-^ with Mrs. Mackay for a grand chant»D» liance. jjgi Gentlemen gypsies, or those who t»__j^| vans throughout Great Britain, are f more plentifuL A cynical man buried his wife a fe*JJ back in grand style. His most innj, -° â€"Jed 8"" f SEPT. 16, 1868. AXS. 'J.J-0" 3,.'fV».i- TOBTtTBXDTOrMte^g^ldflE^aa; ' ' â- •••*••••••*• â-º ••-•»•••. ..J^'Jw. friend ^ed why he had expen; lavish sum on her funeral. WipwS^ ^^ amber drop from his leftoptic the w sighed " She jvould have done as m" more for me with pleasure, dear "°^\^^. " Sopbronia," said the young ^^ I ingly, "I wish it were over. » thu^ of asking your papa for this la^^ it gives me a violent palp»ta"**.id isk haart, as it were." "IfJT '^1,(1^ mamma, CUrence," replied Sophr^ morely, "would it give you the aBS" to speak?" .ilofffl Tomniyâ€" "Does your mother w^^^j^j toMsBthe horse girl?" JohnnJ-^ gaess she don't carec Does yows • â€"" I don't think she does. l^^J^ her, but you'd a' died to hear her Wj^^^ the W to w when she saw him a day an' she lela him do lots tn»« "wooldn'tlet me." h^;MJ^ittoejaidto.be ,^,j, remedy for neurali '^^" I of dress from thick 1 M mad* in the momin) Jforoes ate in faU play n^lnofr-always necessary lb I i^!!tel when uiey ache. 11 1*^ of slteht Bore throa I ?Ii^5T)oraxbe placed on [Sffaltowed to dissolve and n Il-r Satit U better to leave tb ISf taogry tiian to '^S^jJ^^ I |«l£«tft« e»*^ heartily. » flbThabit of continual spitti Jditiie chewing of tobacco a (Cm deMlity,-not only of I Keep yoor sleeping rooms w. in Sd weatiier. Many a 1 I" leMant taste in the mouth I S^ng iBXfvre atmosphere. Men in bnsineBS have a very keedng thdr hats on indooi S2rW ascribed the d ma^ of tbe middle-aged Ami nan- None of the minor " iUs" U i Lome than an ingrowing nail. I hot tallow over the nail, the hi shout it is shronken and relief I When any part orthe skin 1 I MB, apply ice, snow or cold wa I dnity of a fire and warm roo ivoided. If the p^^t blisters I yon would a bum. I A drop of cold water, place* I of the ear, will put a stop-to hi this does not produce the dc press firmly on the arteries c I where the pulse is felt. I A No person should bathe wh \(t btigoed by either mental 1 labor, or immediately after a bathing purposes, in summer ihoold be about 70 " in winter In case of being bitten by a s Buck the wonnd (spitting it with warm w^ter to make it 1 Tie a handkerchief around the tbs weond. Give spirits am I drink. Bain-Watex. Many persons employ rai I drinking purposes, with the id( I doing they are availing themsel the purest sources of water. 1 from the Royal Commission, oj tio Water-Supply of Great Bri fident to lessen confidence in tern water for domestic purp I raiders very evident the neceas ug cistern water before using it "The atmosphere Is the reel aggregate quantities of impui partly from the respirations [partly from the combustion qnaatitieB of foel, and partly mental dost, the fine particles diy weather, become suspend' to the extent, over the area of of hnntlredB of tons, and remi weeks ontil washed out by rain is in reality water which more or less dirty atmosphere, with mineral and exoemeni zymotic germs, and the produ and vegetable decay and put half pint of rain-water conden 3,373 cobic feet of air, and tho a tunbler of water, imparities ody gain access to the lungs ' oays, may be swallowed at c »ofc of dwellings this rain-wai Mter all, the only source of ply, meets with soot and dust fields, manure and all sorts â- which is carried down into »d rivers. These soorces are liable to be further con "«ngB or infilterations from VMtt, by deadfish, anima **gMi»g weeds, and also on pywe land drainage, sewage, w»M, which flow into otir riv Gaiuses of Sadden D J^ number of sodden de P«5«inoreaMnglyso, thorn ^tauon may he -false, si P2» "ad the tel^^ph have •""JjlodoftiiewhSleWd. "â- « aoorce of sadden deatl 52J»»»y evente pass under 1 "Jjw whidi might have bee: g**Wagainat. Canadians £ffi*?*^« gteatrisks J""*^, their dothing, M^" wilway tracS, "^oardew weare! N JfJU, and it woold nS] J22S*_*» *he ehdoe of 1 jgWfcUoa. T^oftiiei iZrT^ttng from the filM*^fire to ca 2^alighte Fnamaav iMiSLS?'" fflB aeem ~^ netUng to do. tttike phyncal -~a weakness has "Jrt. pcrliapa, L_, «* hi tongh,] snddenly tl â- jjj***ed heart fa '^-^n»an -â- • OBiineai, 6r| \n tiw midst ol Ihere mayf ' artery, i an Bxi fra heart i^JjHal' walls ^â- *ay at one I force to â- i^Iar, «ftiier ••©verJ â- ':ii«*^ ;i^1V4l MijifeiMtt