'W^^T-^^ v;-#^:'l" lef?*^ COMPotrvB »M I an interna)?* I Iowa. =ayg. 1 lia\eeverukeii Te been received froB. t? and are uneqcalled nience. The leidiiE SK FOR THEM and rpHK OrMtafcDk. X ooverr oi tht nresentatrefor R«« LATI90 TBI BOmU, »! CuKois an BiMa, LrTsandKiMnOn ri^uin. A PHtMl Ulood Purifier. A Urn In llamilton who imn been benefited by Hi Bse: Mrs. M. Keeau, 19S BoberISi, aan( it Erysipelai ol Iwt gears' atandinsr; Bobk Cornel], 84 Sooth 81, laughter cored el tp- leptlo Uta •tin 4x rean' rafferiivi 'â- â- ' lie Blrrell, 65 Wilaat it, cured or Wtak 'ood,eeOatboartaL. UlionsDeea, need ooir (eal. 6 Aonit* • OS Proetniioa, tn r. SoldatSOcfelL k OO.. PropiMaai MONTBKAL. " â- " I '-,,.«." :-'-^K^:':^J'^K:-^^ y S^W A" --ybi^^^^^BPiPli^PP 'Wf- --*: i ' â- - V â- . ' i/..-^^.. /.Â¥:\'if pffi'SjATHEE. BfCl .gABI^TTB M YOUKO. jHAPlEB j^XVI.â€" (Continued.) »' -,„t says that you set every. |jli-.^°?^voado but look at, Mr. 80 we are prepared to " f^^good geniaa to help ua out afraid that the tangle vas t^linnwi'nding. and, of course, the LitfP*' j3 yet known, were ducnsaed. â- "' in truth, nothing for which ^! be bUmed. He had diligently '" aU office- work, which was mere '" „A conscious of hia own inexperi- i«' .!„.tin3 to the senior partners, at the end of ,od trusting rLionly become anxious at ine ena t r^ when he perceived Goodenough •"nf a settlement of accounts, and 'm«. He had not understood t the previous business to be aware !ilriorationof the manner of dealing thongh he did chink it scarcely il'eipecfed. If he had erred, it was rt tTmuch as a wheel in the ma, L,rr keeping his thoughts and heart m [^' happy l'"le home, and not thro^- .Se/u-totbe spirit of the business f. MV3 01 mose concerned in it, so that tfj been ia no degree a controlling He h^d allowed hia quality of gen- ' jg ^ef p him an outsider, instead of it to Mise the general level of the so that the whole had gone Ixauds ol the unscrupulous eroked auOa. "I should 1» Mhuied to be oahnpy aboat thii^ whaa our flood nMneb »ved. ud wbn «»(« is » Masda^ on the poor, • she added in a lower voloe. tenderly kissing her hnsbud'a weary brow. CAAPTER XXVn. THB BOr OF EGKEHONT. ictions, in the oisaough. liaiapie listened EttOD and knitted quietly tiie affairs were explained on eithei Mark had had one serious talk with jje Greeuleaf, and both had had a scene with Goodenough. Then Mr. had telegraphed hia arrival, and lileaf had met him in London, with bred of long and implicit trust, that sawcity and perhaps his wealth would ihe old house through the crisis. Mr. Dutton, though reserving his jjaent till the books should have been ' gbly examined and the liabilities aletely understood, was evidently in- ' to believe that things had gone too and that the names of Greenleaf and lont could only be preserved dishonour by going into liquidation, jolring partnership, and thus getting li: of Goodenough. jlirk listened resignedly, Annaple with intelligence that made Mr. Button think ie more clearheaded of the two, though she could not refrain for her little ;i " I'm sure I should not mind how i he became if we could only run off of Goodenough," she said. You know what it means " said her and. â- 'uiiyes, I know what it means. It is I nne word for being sold up. Well, â- i, never mind, we are young and strong, sit will not be a bit the worse for the Elyboy in the end to begin at the bottom irery thing." I'lhopeâ€" may I askâ€" is everything em- B£sd in the poor old firm?" said Mr. pon with some hesitation, iUthat is mine," said Mark, with his t.w on the table and his chin on his hand. "But I've got a hundred a year, charged Itpoorold Ronnisglen's estate," said An- ip!e. " All the others gave theirs up when ^y married, and I wanted to do so, but dear mother would not let me she said yj better try how 1 got on first. Think chat, Mark, a hundred a year I Why, Gnnneror Thorpe would think them- [ttes rolling m riches if they only heard it they had a hundred a year " "Yon won't tind it go far " "Yes, I shall, for I shall maii.e you live i porridge, with now and then a sheep's for a treat Besides, there will be lediing to do. It will be working up ia, yon know. Rat seriously, Mr. Dut- «! I have some things here of my dear sstiier's that really belonp to Bonnisglen, I was only keeping till he comes home. pould not they be got out of the way " My dear, we are not come to that yet [•;«pe it may be averted ' cried Mark. Mr. Button agreed with the young "^^ chat it would be much better to send pse things away before their going could ' 'K suspicion. There was only a tiny f'T saucepan, valued as a gift of " Queen" T ssentina to an ancestress, also a silver tca- ^; mdsome old point, and some not very val- â- ;-• jewellery, all well able to go into a "MX, which Mr. Dutton tmdertooktode- «t with Lord Ronnisglen s bankers. He « struck with the scrupulous veracity •^ which Annaple decided between what DMome her own property and the heir- as, thongh what she claimed might pro- f;y be sacrificed to the creditors. conld hardly endure to see what «e the crisis sc terribly real. " That I a have brought you to this I" lie said 'Wife, when their visitor had at length "en them pood -night. |, u we beein at that work," said Annaple, "Was I who brought yon? I have often â- ^^n since it was rather selfish not to ° 'i'lMented to your helping poor Ursula •ner heavy handful of a father! It lUti T°*- gâ„¢^*i°g and grabbing, and la. ti'ought more of our neighbour â- ^"â- "selves we might have been luxur- lj^?'^he Home Farm, or even if your lit hi J I'-^-rrelled with you, he would We devoured your substance. I have 1 80 often, ever since I began to see ^Mining." â- to J ^*^ cliild, you don't mean that yon I ,,,!*«»» this coming " I--5 M P""*«'Jc soul Why, Mark, yon liQi- l°^d as inferred it over and over Ifc^ »k ^*^* lite scratching that Bade- Itto '?*J»e'er I met him in the street. I I«s,iâ„¢'i5'ge myself by calling him so for PY*»*ct privacy." |laih,?i,°*^f guessed it all the time, while ught how "Xot unconscious yon were. *1 J. "^^y stupid, considering all yon 4»i»l vif ^g and moaning and bei *^cu'"^*u^® time? For my part, "'io(id..y,""'^8 even BOW at petting rid 4ei«.:. ,^de3, what would have been being For "my part, I aeno k -*^ ** petting rid \r.r8? and his jaunty, gracious air I iTl^*«t won't beso {»d after all, I^Tm "*» be «so bad ' while yon are "Tw.^""yNan." Ki^'.u^" While wo have ewdi [H Tk ^%-boy nothing mattew N tWi«S â- P'««»ty of work in as botii. i^j;^a)odmanwiUfinditforus; cw^H ii^^ *«Uget a yellow van sad katt i*i«ttw f^*^«°»«'u»daie ctMBtey i*^ K»!*\^°^lbel Imagiika Janata **^ that's right," as ha mimioiy " And the boy that walked beside me. He oould not nndersUod Why, ctoser in. mine, ah, ck«er, I p rese'd his warm soft hand."â€" Loksfilolw The agony of a firm like Greenleaf, Good- enough and Co. oould not be a rapid thing, and Mr. Dutton lived between London and Micklethwayte for several weeks, having much to endure on all aides. The senior partners thought it an almost malicious and decidedly ungrateful thing in him not to throw in his means, or at any rate, offer his guarantee to tide them over their diffi- culties. Goodenough's tergiversations and concealments needod a practised hand and acute head to unravel uem, and often de- ceived Mr. Greenleaf himself; and when, for a time, he was convinced that the whole state was so rotten that a crash was in- evitable, his wife's lamentations and com* plaints of Mr. Dutton would undo the whole, and it was as if he were doing them an injury that the pair accepted the com- fortable prospect he was able to offer them in Australia. He would have made the like proposal to the £gremonts,but found that Mark held himself bound by hLspromise tohis father not to emi- grate,and thoughtof bome kind of office- work. Before trying to procure this for him, how- ever, Mr. Dutton intended to see his uncle, and try whether the agency, once rejected, could still be obtained for him. Learning from Miaa Nugent that the Egremonts were in town, he went up thither with the pur- pose of asking for an interview. There was a new church in the immediate neighborhood of his house in a state of growth and development congeni.il to the St. Ambrose trained mind, and here Mr. Dutton, after old Micklethwayte custom, was attending the early matins, when, in the alternate verses of the psalm, he heard a fresh young voice that seemed to renew those days gone by, and looking across the central aisle his eyes met a pair of dark ones which gave a sudden glitter of gladness at ' the encounter. That was all he saw or cared 1 to see. He did not take in the finished from completeness of the very plain dark dress and hat, nor the womanly air of the little figure ,until they clasped hands in, the porch, and in the old tones Nnttie exclaimed "I've been hoping you would come to Lon- don. How is Monsieur " " In high health, thank you, the darling of the steamer both going and coming. I hope your charges are well?" "My father is tolerable, just as usual, and my little Alwyn is getting more delic- ious eyery day. He will be so delighted to see Monsieur. I have told him so many stories about him " " Do you think I may call on Mr. Egre- mont " " Oh do I He is ready to be called on between two and three, and we always have Wynnie downstairs then, so that you will see]him too. And you have beenat Mickleth- wayte. I am afraid you found a great change in Aunt Ursel." "Yes; but she is very peaceful and happy." " And 1 have to leave her altogether to dear excellent Miss Nugent, it seems very, very wrone, but I cannot help it And how about Mark and Annaple " ' " I think she is the bravest woman I ever met. " Then things are really going badly with the dear old firm " "lam hoping to talk to Mr. Egremont about it." "Ah!" Nuttie paused. Towards Mr. Dutton she always had a stronger impulse of confidence than towards any one else she had ever met but she felt that he might think it un- becoming to say that she had perceived a certain dislike on her father's part towards Mark ever since the rejection of the agency and the marriage which perhaps was repard- ed^as a rejection of herself. He had a habit of 'dependence on Mark, which resulted in personal liking, when in actual contact, but in absence the distaste and offence always revived, fostered, no doubt, by Greeorio; and Canon Egremont's death had broken the link which had brought them together. However, for his brother's sake, and for the sake of the name, the head of the family might be willing to do something. It was one of Nnttie's difficulties that she never couU calculate on the way her father would take any matter. Whether for better or for worse, he always seemed to decide in diametrical opposition to her expectation. And, as she was certainly less impetuous and more dutiful, she parted with Mr. Dutton at her own door without any such hint. Thesei three years had been discipline such as the tenderest, wisest hand conld not have given her, though it had been insensi- ble. She had been obliged to attend to her father and watch over her little brother, and though neither task had seemed con- eenial to her disposition, the honest endea- vor to do them rightly had produced the affection bom of solicitude towards her father, and the strong warm tenderness of the true mother-sister towards little Alwyr. Ursula Egremont was one of those natures to which responsibility is the bsst training. If she had had any one to guard or restrain her, she might have gone to the utmost limits before she yielded to the curb. As it was, she had to take care of herself, to bear and forbear with her fattier, to walk warUy with her household, and t» be very guarded with the society into which she wiSirown from time to time. Itwasno sudden change, but one brought about by experience. An outbreak of impatience or temper towards her father was sure to be foUowed by his galling sneer, or ^7 ?• mortification to her desires any act of mu- management towards the servants brought its otAi punishment and if she was tempt- «M to Hias sad Wm akoe, and repeatanoe noMT or later earns to aid her, while ra- mOmmaU apraiig np around herâ€" litUe nail ajhisTematB, pleauat ttat her fsOer wm or satisfied, and above all, the charms of little Alwyn. Theipecial«rievaiioe,6r%(Mrio*siBfliienoe, had «aroely dwelt on her at first «s it had done on her mother. The man had been Tin Cm flitlM Teeth. tprowing very cautions for some time, knowing that his continuance in his situation was in the utmost jeopardy, and Mr. Egremont lud, in the freshness of his grief for his wife, abstained from relapsing into the habits from which she had weaned him. When, however, the Canon was dead, and his son at a distance, Greeorio began to feel more secure, and in the restless sorrow of his mas- ter over the blow that had taken away an only brother, he administered soothing drugs under another name, so that Ursula, in her inexperience, did not detect what was going on, and still fancied that the habit had been renounced. All she did know was that it was entirely useless for her to attempt to ex- ert any authority over the valet, and th*t the only way to escape insolently polite dis- obedience was to let him alone. Moreover, plans to which her father had agreed, when broached by her, had often been overthrown after his valet had been with him. It was a life full of care and disappointment, yet there was a certain spring of trust that kept Ursula's youth from being dimmed, and enabled her to get a fair share of happi- ness out of it, though she was very sorry not to be more at Bridgeport, where she could have worked with all her heart with May Condamine. Moreover, Lady Kirkaldy's absence from London was a great loss to her, for there was no one who was so kind or so available in taking her into society and Nuttie, though mistress of her father's house, was not yet twenty- two, and strongly felt that she must keep within careful bounds, and notattempt to be her own chaperon. (to be continubd.) observed towards her foyer's gu"*». *»»«" followed ,esti^or senu^ iteonaA, or .tone of conversataon tiiat EKdher. and ""^^ »»« 'S?^ " " Dily. Mr. Btoremont did i»t wirirhM tobe ?Jh^ipwi»k. One day, triien she had bees ^^"irrfcitSSTkiSsrsh* had i» oB. '»*»8» ^-J5ir faAed^itwiaii»ar- 5SJ JtSa^J* *••â- «" » The Commotion in France. Gen. Boulanger, so lately under the waves, now floats buoyantly on the top of the gov- ernmental commotion in France. Circum- stances and not his own effortshave wrought this change in his lot but whether his as- cension is real and not seeming, and whether he is to remain a central figure or soon to be swept aside like driftwood there is no telling. The German alarmist see in him the head of a majority party in favor of war. They look for a dissolution of the present Chamber and an end of the peace policy. But there is no clearly outlined course to be seen in any direction. The motion which overturned the Tirard Ministry was one of urgency for the bill revising the Constitu- tion. It was carried by a majority of but 31, and through a'combination of extremes â€" of Kadicals and Monarchists. These two elements would be at swords' points as soon as the work of revision began. But the measure providing for revision would, it is said, surely be defeated in the Senate. Whichever iray the eye looks a deadlock is in sight, and though Fioquet may form a new Cabinet, dissolution and a new election of Deputies, with all the uncertain- ties of the result, are apparently unavoid- able. A new President is also among the possibilities. The connection between all this and Bou- langer is not visible at the first glance. It rests in the fact that a few days ago he was retired from the army by the Government. Subsequently he became a candidate for the Chamber oi Deputiei before the electors of Nord, and issued what Premier Tirard de- scribed as an audacious proclamation assail- ing the political situation in general and the Ministry in particular. Immediately there- upon the Mfnistry happened to be defeated, and the illogical French popular mind con- strues the defeat as a BouUnger triumph. The most that can be claimed for the dis- mounted " Man on hoiseback," at this time is that the the present commotion may bring to him another opportunity. Cinders in the Eye. In a conversation, some tinie aeo, with a Chicago oculist, a writer in tht Chicago Jour- nal received some useful infer uation, about getting railroad cinders and other motes out of the eye, which, although it is not new, should be known by every one who is in the habit of travelling, that the inner suri ace of the eyelids are ridged in such a way as to promote the moving of small particles to- ward the inner corners of the eyes, where the duct opens which leads into the nose. This is the particular fact on which his advice is based, and which also shows the extreme folly of the method usually adopted to extract cinders from the eye. This me- thod is to double up the forefinger, and gouge into the afflicted eye until it is red as a beet and suffused with tears. Some horri- ble contortions of the countonance are tlirown in, as if to assist. Now, the only effect that such a course can have is to grind the cinder into the cor- rugations of the eyelid, and keep it there for a week until the inflammation subsides. The proper way to do is to cateh up the eye- lid by the skin, and pull it away from the eyeball gently and repeatedly. This not only instantly relieves the pain, but pro- motes the shifting of the cinder in the right direction. In almost every case this will be found a speedy and painless remedy. mm finssia and Bnlgaria. If the coining of spring is all that has been waited for by Russia before developing her Balkan policy its disclosure cannot M far off Periiaps a first step in this develop- ment may be traced to the reported request made of other powers to withdraw their diplomatic representetives from Bulgaria because the principalily has lefoaed to reply to Turkey's noto declaring that Prince Ferdinand's assumption of power is ill^iaL Bat Russia has several times befon made requeste on this subject which the other powers fomid thonselvee nnaUe to grant. In one recent instance she wished Englaiid to jtAa in dedlarii^ tliat Prince Ferdinaad most " go," bat Englaad vwy jndfcaonaly dedined to do so ontil ' tiie powers should first agree who was to come m Ferdinand's place. Hl^ality ii bad enoa|^ bat, anaxchy maybe muae: Bulgaria, on liar part, hasiiowfonad qneitiaas.to ad^eav of tiwm b«ng why Tittksy is pottniK ti in tiie town of Moitralia Bsaha. ' latter iadinettyoo thetanbr «C BonmeUa, and Aa wwaoe ef traops Hum aaana to poirt to in the Balkan proUanwitti the qring. Ht dear motlMn aad naidiaaa, yoa not fotget that eaaiptols the baattdadier, aada BfBtB^gUot aakeap yoor owa teeth ikttttaded to. 3ee tiwt yonr oommsiids to tlM qoiek, ohaarvaat littb oaMS do not oome firom months wboae irregnlar, imperfect teeth render year artioolaoonan inratinot jomUa of wwdstkiat ate bome on a breath laden with the fool odors of decayed teeth and snraaratiBg gams, or else tiiey will lose thor ennct. Yon dwnld take as sood care of yonr own teetii as yonr ehildr«a\ so that the depocit of tartar around them will be reduced to a minimnm. This deposit od- lecte more or less around the teeth Of every one, and varies in quantity, character and color in different individuals; it is nearly white, of a soft, scummy consistency, yellow, greenish, brown and black, when it is almost as firm as the tooth itself. Its hurtiul effect,of course,depends much on its quantity and kind, sometimes being of so pernicions a character as to cause the gums to become in- flamed, swollen and spongy. While the gums are in this condition they are highly sensitive and the nse of the tooth-brush be- ing so painftd the month is neglected. The brushing should be persisted in as long as it is not absolutely unbearable, even at the expense of a littte pain and' bleeding gums, for by the neglect the tartar accumulates rapidly, and forcing between the necks of the teeth and gums causes them to suppurate and slough off, while the pressure on the sook- ete results in their gradual absorption, when, if allowed to continue, they entirely disappear and the teeth drop out for want of support. If the tartar accumulates too rapidly or be- comes too denee to be easily removed with the brush and a good dentifrice, then it is well you should consult some good dentist, who will remove the offending matter, after which a constant use of the brush and denti- frice will prevent ite return, or at least re- tard its growth. Diseased teeth and gums are often the unsuspected cause of throat or lung troubles, by reason of the breath tainted by the filth over which it passes carrying the injurious producte down into the bronchial tobes and lungs. The saliva and other fluids, vitiated from the same cause, produce more or less irritation in the stomach, thereby producing indigestion and loss ot appetite. The blood becoming thus impaired from want of proper nourishment deranges the nervous system and leads to affections of the eyes, pains in the ears, head- aches, neuralgia and a general disturbance of the health. Brush your teeth, and teach your child- ren to brush their teeth after every meal with tepid water, and always just before re- tiring at night with a good dentifrice. If you could brush your teeth but once a day, you should do it the last thing before going to bed, for the constant movement oT the tongue and saliva against the teeth during day keep them partially cleansed, but at night the muscles and tongue are at rest, and the small particles of food that are floating about in the mouth or lodged be- tween the teeth uhite with the stagnant sa- liva, producing an acid that attacks the tooth either at the neck or in one of the ir- regular convolutions of the crown. While too vigorous brushing is to be deprecated, yet it is better to err in overdoing than not brushing thoroughly enough. Every acces- sible surface of the teeth should be thorough- ly brushed to remove any food that may be lodged there. Do not rest content to brush only the fronts of the teeth, but also the inner surface and crowns the upper teeth should be brushed downwards and the lower teeth upwards in order that the bristles may pass between the teeth and force out any particles of food there it also presses the gums against the necks of the teeth. Always use a soft wood- en toothpick after meals, never a pin or any metal one. Never use any advertised or recommend- ed powdera that you do not know their en- tire constituents. Avoid all powders that contain soap, charcoal, cuttle- fish bone; or any oily or insoluble eubstance for constant use. Do not use any wash that is recom- mended for whitening the teeth it either does not accomplish the result, or does it at the expense of the enamel of the teeth. Any dentifrice that has precipitoted chalk for its base is good, provided it contoins no acid. When you or your children take any (f the solutions of iron, or other strong medicines, whether through a quill, as they should be, or in any other manner, see that the teeth are brushed immediately after- wards. â€" Dr. Conrad in Home Knowledge. A IHtering Gktem. Xayoanaadotiiorp^panl have Itarins eister adan I siv* reotiiMis for hoildiag fitnns eisterns. df. For beasfit of jrour readers I glv« yoa mif expnioDoe. a 1867, jost ootride of the watnr Uadti asar tha maanfaotoring, ooal smoke dislrfat ia St LooK I bailt one, aad another in 1876 ia this oooaty (Calhoou, HL) on a farm, both in the same manner. The St. Louis dstem, after being in nse twMi^ years, filtoing smoky and coal dust water, withont any cnaage or repairs, aad is still a pNufeot filtor, 'tis needless to say that tiie cistern ona farm in this ooantyia also afford- ing sweet water, clear as oi^taL The main dsterns in both oases wera twelve feet deep and eight feet in diuneter, capacity about 200 barrels each. Two feet from we outside circumference I dug a small receiver six feet deep and four feet in diameter, bored a hole from the edge of the bottom of the receiver into the side of the cistern and cemented them both. I thm built a solid brick wall, arohed outward, of hard (not glazed) brick, from the bottom to the top of the receiver, one course of the brick laid on the flat, in hydraulic cement, using care that no cement covered the edges of the brick. The water from the conduc- tors was turned into the receiver or filter on the side opposite the onttet into the cistern, and had to pass through the brick in the waP before entering the cisterns. A "man hole" was left so tlut the dust, leaves, ete., could be swept up and taken out of the fil- ter. It was a surprise to me when I «aw that with 3,000 feet of roof, all the water that run into the filter in the heaviest rains passed through the wall, after there was a head of three feet, without any increase of depth â€" i. e. it was filtered as fast as it ran in when there was a three-foot pressure Care should be token that the bottom of the filter is to raised and sloped toward the bottom layer of brick in the wall that all the water may run out leaving its bottom dry, otherwise unless frequently cleaned, the deposit in warm weather may become fetid. I had at St. Louis a sand and charcoal filter made in the bottom of my receiver, which soon became foul so that I threw it away, and substituted the brick walL The adyan- tages of this mode of filtering over any other I have seen are The water being filtered before entering, the cistem is always sweet. It can be cleaned at any time when ^the water in the cistem is below the bottom of the receiver. All the extra cost is the brick wall and the two feet of sewer pipe for the receiver is just so much more storage capacity. It will last a life-time. When the brick become dry the pores are reopened and they are a?ain ready to do their work, and the cistern is always clean. We never have to pump out the water to clean the cistern. Use hard salmon brick for the walL The Source of Napoleon's Qenins. Napoleon, as all the world knows, ate very plain food and very little of it, though always with hunger and rapidity. A little claret was all he drank a single glass of Me^deira would flush his who^e countenance. He was neither an eater or a judge of eating, wrote Careme, but he was grateful (was he?) to M. de Talleyrond for the style in which he lived. He differed widely from that poor Stanislas of Poland who fondly studied onioa soup in the inn kitehen|at Chalons. Napol- eon had a strange theory about his bile. There is no personal defect that a man can- not get himself to be vain of for one reason or another. " Don't you know," said he to the Comto de Segur, " that every man that's worth anything is bilious 'Tis the hidden fire. By the help of its excitement I see clear" in difficult junctures. It wins me my battles 1" Careme himself ate sparingly and drank nothing â€" a sort of Moses of the Pro- mised Land by choice. Stag Honnds for Wolves. The Montana Live Stock Journal relates a new plan for getting away with the wolves that commit such havoc with sheep and calves in that Territory, by the introduction of stog hounds from Colorado. It says that dogs get away with more wolves than could the same number of men with Winchesters. Various range associations are now said to have these hounds. It is related that six of them were token out on the range by a party of men and in lose than two hours they had twelve wolves at b:!iy. The fight that eventually occurred is described by eye-witnesses as follows The dogs appear to work on an understond- ing, and tbeir movemente indicato as much intelligence as human beings would exhibit. Hunting in couples, they invariably bring down their game. One of them will seize a wolf by the neck and throw him twenty feet in the air before he knoMrs what ails him, and when he comes down the other grabs him and polls him limb from limb. In the big fight spoken of this plan was followed by the dogs, who went at it like veterans, and they bad finished nine of the wolves when the others turned tail and got away. Every day now when the ranchen want a liMle fan tiiey take the dogs out, and it is not long befoxe a wolf is scared np. The hounds are fed on oom bread and butter- milk, aad tiie only taste of flesh they get is when tiiey nip a wolf. Trne to his Motto. Patient â€" 'Then you think if s all up witii me, doctw?" Poetorâ€" « rm afraid so." P. â€" ' Well, we mnit all die once, and I may aa mil go now as afterward. Yoa'ro snro rm maiaK V D.â€" "Y5» Pâ€" **Ths»M) OM hare yoarfaOl." S.â€"" Ify ULI Mydeariii^aiaiaTafy zea riioald give yoor tiMog^itito P. 1; '*-"**£S:siri"«' Hot if We Enow Ourselves. New York Forum Canada belongs, geo- graphically, to the United States, and will in time gravitate to the Union. We do not need her we do not want her and there are many, very many, reasons against the admission into th? American Union of foreign Stotes on an equality with the States that have grown upon and been educated under our system. But territorial contigu- ity and identity of commercial intereste will in time lead to political identity. We do not need to buy the Maritime Provinces, as Mr. Atkison suggests, to settle the fisheries dispute. The great magnet of the United Stotes will eventually not only attract them, but all tJie rest of the British America, and put an end to disputes through a fusion of interests. Vaccination Vivace. Dr. Sanborn, one ot the New York quar- antine officials, with an assistant vaccinated the passengen of the Britannia the other day at the rate of 550 an hour. When a reporter showed surprise at this rapid per- formance tiie doctor remarked " My assis- tant, Mr. Hurd, is an exi»ert vaccinator. He goes tiirongh them like lightning, and to my knowledge he has vaccinated 1,200 in one hour." The World says that "the simple immigrants must have been prepared to see wonderful things in America, but probably nothing quite so wonderful as this. And this vaccinator is not even an M.D. He is a vaccinator pure and simple, und on his lightning efforts the health of the people of this city depends." The Press in Japan. We feel sorry for tiie Emperor of Japan. Not long ago he decided to give the news- papers in his insular empiro a littie leeway. The first tiling the newspapers did when the mailed hand was taken from their throate was to attack and ridicule tiie Government. And now the Emperor has put his big rough hand on them again. The cause of free press and universal enlighteament has thus received a severe check. Perhaps one of these days tiie devdofMng people of Japan wiU care more for free newspapers than for aa Emperor.â€" fN. Y. Worli " I think the most miserable men or wo- men in the world are those who get in the habit of whining," said a philaaophioal tlemaa. " They not only make ndaasable, bat every one with whom they onna in contact- If s a habit^ aad a very badoae. 3^worstofitii[thattliewliiaen do aot nalirn tiiat tiia^ are a noiaaaoa or tiURtiiqr Iw^ fallBB mto snch Wf- I lUak tikan are moco wliWng mmimw^g tiw kttar iazaa Kwaftaunn hMâ€"* wwi mi m .jui ii ii n i B iiMii lm lliiit npnntnahr mai mAmw* BnkvMB ij woiiian fwa i 1 'fcllii'S rMV i" ...u-.;!t ..J. 1. '•,.â- n .;?â- -J '«â- ' â- â- *â- i;^i 3 -f .M .f.ry-- ' ate idUi irffltifrrftilifi iliM