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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1875-4-29, Page 1Q +, M.l., C.iti�f VOX at Ueoul 1inlvo raft ¥b Ixpelo414,0{9oaz &a• soLi4, he r8tQa .dpfi aiQg.m. 131i0 :41Nt IIfiV1NCa, acceuelo.ure. ()Mee r $a } ona door uortl1 o , etnt et , Eixater; 11t+ ii lit, J 'Wn Z3_R w-- porta C llege.101/3bur Col.. eone Wtst, I1WU G M •, iyy:rtz}1ty aedem9�uiTex Qat- gti '3t{t of (iSk tt. R»EN, Heineeolaatbine «,ron,g4, 'etal: _ OO t awdott O iueable ti'voika. Al tot 1 tai iaitxoliic dlsauiaeo, zaded,Advice free, y1 i 11. C. 'tatatty Cv1119i{ty mem. WA:WA Surgeow of Granton t t,dxeVs atoxe, wind i"- aayit a 1wr a xtoo'& ox para drubseo ;1uee, iud tyo a arts. " ' w u, Jane 18, 1S74: ARDING 6r, HA.RDING, Barris tors, ttorneys, Solicitors, CoInnaissioners (tsrm701,--Rozcoes LOCE, Water Street, St. 1i'eSSRS JONES St IVIcDOUGALL Ilarristers, Attorneys -at -law, Eiolieltors in 1.11iencery, Conveyancers; Commissioners in Q.B, tad Notaries Public, St, Marv's, • 110DLARMID, B.A.., .WILSON, ISSUER' OF ,at the Past Office 'store, Zurich, Ont; • 46-tf. promptly attended to. SALES PROMPTLY /471 -ENDED TO CIIA110111$ MODERATE, cg - VOL, 5, NO, 35, HQLB N O 87. W $PRITG GOODS AT The C. VAND Z ` & CC 'MANSION HOUSE, E: XETER ONt., W. HAWKSHAW, Proprietor. Thi new and commodious holelis now completed, and fitted np throughout with, first -furniture. The ' best of Liquors and the cheicest of Cigars at the Bar. The house is capable of accommodation 35 guests. Excellent ii,41.des and an attentive hos- has lately changed hands, (from W. E. Will us to W. Dewey), and. is fitted with now fur iture throughout. Free 'bus to and from'the station °Rice fOr the no w line of 'busses to London. The bar is replete with the choicest I.quors and frag- rant Ilavd.nati. Four cominercial sample room. Good stabling iind attentive hostIers. 32-ty OT.ISF AND -LOT FOR SALE .— A goOd one -storey' frame house, containing 5 recoils; also .a.,ere of land, adjoining the Market equare,'.Exe tor. On the lot is an excellent well of water. ' For particulars apply to IsAAC B AW - (MIA PER'DAY.--Agents Wanted Ali *los classes of working people of ei- t her sex, young or old, make more money at work for us in -their spare moments, or all the time, than at anything else. Particnlars free. Post cavd to States. costs out one cents. Addres G. • Night of meet- ing -First P'riday in ev- ery month, corner Gid - ley and Main sts. Visi- ting Brethren dordially invited to attend. OATEN WILLIS JOHN -whITE. Li very and,Sale Stables (In cOnnection with the Central Hotel). Tr BHP constantly on hand tho Largalt and JUL Pest A.ssortatent of PURE DRUGS, Patent Medicines ! HORSE & CATTLE .Toot,h, Nail, Hair, and Cloth' S School Books, Toy Books, ,I31ankoBoolcs, Magazines, Pencil Slates, Lead- Pen - 0 Co.'s Celebrated Perfected Spectacles el, Prescriptions and llecipes quickly and accu- rately dispensed. Remember the Place—Di- reotly opposite the " Centred Hotel," Main-st., Exeter, January 7, 1874. 71 -yl. S AND COMFORT ABLE vehicles always °ohmic'. Favorable arrangements made with commercial travelers. , All orders kit it Bissett's Tinshop will be promptly' attended. to. t Exeter, Sepl. 4.1873. 2-1y. Avnd Stock -Breeders. ef the The Dominion Laboratory Go to the Dominic n Laborfvfory if you want PURE -DRUGS! Stuffs If you want Condition Powders, or Horse Medicines, Patent MedicIies, Perfumery, Toilet Articles, Has reraored office to ono door north of W Fanson's harness shop, cUat'directly', Opposite Da- vis' 131ackstnith shop. Veterinary' Medicines al. ways on hand; Calls proraPtlY attended to. Horses exalt -lined as to their soundness EORGE CHILD'S' arm, Plower Garden Seeds GIVEN AWAY ' SPECIAL The London Seed S ore City Hall, Itichnainid-st, PAINTS- OR OILS t the! DOMINION LABORATORY A Fresh stipply "Of SOZODONT, The New Thilliantine Hair Cream. One of the I' preparatidus for promoting the gz or, of the hair, and giving it ' A Fine, Glossy Appearance All at the Lowest Rate. e. carefully di spent o Exeter, April G, 1875. ()MINION GUN' STIOP AND Flit FACTORY. PLIBIID CAUTION. al ...ilougn they rutty be obtained in' theB.N. An can vro ri noes. ach pot and box bears the Ga. • Rims become necessbay to make this announ- ✓ -tont, because the New YorItChemical Company pLiy nobody) finding lett that their name thdir Medicines frora them, so that they have made arrangements. to sorely eltehiSively fnM of Messrs. Fienry Co„ of New-York;With their so-called "Holloway's Pills and Ointment." It is presumed that from the large connexion Mes- elsewhere, the lath11.0 is verY likelytci be imposed upon by unscrupulous venders and others. unless they exercise greot caution to prevent their being misled, by. finding ' medicines bearing a 'fitainp Nyitla the name of ". Holloway es co. New York," printed thereon. Many respectable 'ilrens in the British Provinces who obtain my medicines direct from here, hive very . properly suggested that I should, for the benefit of 'themselves and the public, insert their names in the patiVis, that it may be known that medicinc3 can be had genu- ine from,them. alio following is a listof the firms alluded to ; and , Particularly .1 °commend those who desire to get ray medicine's to applY,tcr some of the houses named;.—Messrs. Avery, Brown & Co., Halifax, N. SI -Messrs': Forey th & Co., N. S. Hamilton; Mr. Rose, Toronto ;.Mr. A Chip - W Thompson, Harbor Grace,' 11;F ; Mr J SI Afontreal. The medioines are sold at the lowest Wires" of Pills or pat of4Ointiniftet, 'for' tvliiely re- mittances must be Sent 4n advance. Chemists an0 other vendors of Ho lloway'e gen- ' utile Pills ond Ointraent may have . their ',names ineeti,ed'in" the local papers if they' will plonk) te EXETER T SAFE'UKSAFE 9 04', THE MAN FROM CALIFORNIA Nving to the depression in trade, both in Can tda and the United States, the. manufacturer tnd wholesale men have been forced to dispos ' or their Stocks for CASZ '' without reference te I von the Cost i'rioe of -,the f Wm:, McIntosh So' CO laving clbared theft iVinter Stook, thicafgh E' heir vary successful sale, were in .the inlat fl mak* position to talce advantage of title state if the zuerleets ',Their Spring Stock Ailis been f zotigliV4ucli b. aidier than usual; and _wider all . dietadvantrigeb illich Cash told matiired ex, 't perience-Otha'7'eoinin and, the full 1 their Customers., , 1 at Prices never before heard of. W. 1VIcINTOST1.84 CO. Harness Shop : Manufacturer of Light and Heavy Harness, 'wool i inform the inhabitants of 'Osborne and Blau har '", that he has ou hand and is prepared to naanufao ' LIGHT AND HEAVY HARNESS . and those in want of anything in 'his line will study their own interests by giving him a call be- j fore manta sing elsewhere. Repairing, promptly . THOROUGHLY RELIABLE .ORGAN .., Fon PARLOR, SCHOOL OR CHURCH APPLY TO .A.%ent for the empeeem BEST ORGANS ON THE CONTINENT. Senior's Photograph .Gallery, GROCERIES A. Stock of laroCeries and Oanict':o.aery ALL , LATEST :NOVELS. BY HENRY MOItl'OBD. CH.A.P1PER III, (Continued). MEETING THE. OLD pov.e. "What 1,)ar can there be but one. ave been:fighting in,the dark all is time. Ihave'not award from you eavoli are not—''` -his Voice greet: tant.pause before he conlci Utter the rid the pbor ,voide failed her, ", My fait was the res to toe bear; open, and,' tered at a g t John er. Oh, hoot than t coiili, Gwller!' 43eeme° .utakoe oa, ,of a con 1ue" easily as a sitting -room. to Parenthetioallye-=this a fferei.ro of Q t , 'ordinary ; '-ean ' er„- 0 11i' ='' .`�ax stv e le l.now- ietance r ,' ing his foible a`ncd” aolinowledge it. "ter d Gwiter'sr �fatly- There ryas a pietur of 'him,``dono;, . is eve Wo#se rough crayon by a "Haff' starving' artist,` 00'0 1 he,eaehtimed whom' ho took that ititethod of befrieh ind, and v i many andltt,0a1 orutan' will'retrte 174Se ;entlix¢ia fuer shop 04 4, u Bt oet- Ina, 1$51•;' and ,.for € >Y w?e )ti ter h1s own=verbal ; es . soual: e,stilnate cwua;work „meq sitting 1n a room W,4 nhthee, occupying tone, an over each of two othsrel, a,Tegupon ear `of the foureft,and fifth,' ;while },the siatl was- turned,'`duwn behind'<his oWe .to prof it. The sitter wore long Mexican' spurs,' the rowel of one.of them bitoh_ ing into and tearing the sleeve `of a person';''attempting' oto pass hili in' "''front;' which' his wane thrust'Over his shoulder, was juetpunoh?" ing-out the eye Of ',another unfortunate; .attempting to"passhim bel ind 'Could a man do more, than the" ordering" of ',snob ,a patriot, t`o:slh'o`w `tbat,,if not, over burthoned with shrinking modesty, he was. it least quite ns destitute. of itghy poeritical' affeet'ation` 2) (`And yet another parenthesis. It is already known to the reader -that ' Mr. Fred. Gwiler long` before he went' to California,, had awhat might have been exiled eertaii"love' passages," with one oz t tlhe tree .` Adequate Idea ty of these bpi a Visit, tO tii044 er stablee,' tweet). 2x0 - present ti tiles arQ tinars}ly trio L}'ullttlsi to 'e eogtlt of t obtain an nd capaci- Withent llres at she retia- ofthe ,W," €ill. ori stilts, Q, 1w fi* 11 for of, e�1 all the fierce ' has ,paskon tx- her,her as if•plie.had struck lith` a phy- sical blow. t,fjohn Gwilen--Me father ---ati, old man'and a; hatseful old man, if I ever kneealliin: and this from you!, But What matter, "sinceyou'are- lint te be in?) wife, wholir yeti marry'? 'fin' I OW she could say no more. "I thank you, Lillie', at least for this caedor 1", he-a-esumed, his' hand on 'the knob cf the door, but pausing A Me- .mexit aud turning toward ° 'the .. young :girt as' she' stood half -blinded-. by her tears. " It Wasbeet, after '5a11; that' should know thel:'whole truth, bitter Ae it is. 1 eau fightin the open day -light now—that is, if I have life left to fight " DO not leave me in anger, Larry I --oh-do net !" the half-faMting girl pleaded. holding out' her hand. But the lover who had lost her did 'not take it,,andbe added' but one sentence : "As, you loved me once let ne dne know that I.. am in New Yerk, until you ahiejavre.tomething more from me, dead or Ile was gone, tbe door closing ab- ruptly behind him' -with the impetug he had himself given' it. Through the hall—out at thefront door and down the steps --fleeing from the memory of the words so lately heard in that foom with ell the impetuosity and all the despair of fearful crime fleeing from its punishment. Down the steps and away, 11 t.-1 uelied, striding figure, lost af- ter a moment in the gathering dark- ness ef the street. Lillie Saunderson staggered to the wiudow as she heard the closinn of the outer door. She saw her lost lover dis- appear in the obscurity, and then her overetrained system gave way. "Gone I gone. Not only los'. to me foreyer, but gone away hating me ,and believing me false and fickle. -Oli, Larry ! Larry !—what have I: left to With one convulsive cry, half gasp and ludf an attempt to call for that help which she felt would be needed in a moment, the young girl sunk to the floor. There was a wild bUzzing in the head-, and a paralyzed feeling in body and limb—then insensibility, or death -in -life which brings nuinb pain The watchful ear of Jane Wesley (who had, however let us believe, not been listeuiug lit the door), heard the gasping cry of ber young ,mistress and the fall which foltowed : and the um -- meat after the raised the half -lifeless form from the ,floor. But many min- ntes'Olapsed, and mueli hartshorn and rubbing wereexpended before the young girl fully awoke te the reality of the lite visit and the latter's loss. " Did I do wrong in letting Master Larry in ? I hope I did not, for I am sum I thought that you would want to see him, and him eone away so lout, • and you know that I did it all for the best tx." So the tongue of the good-heart- ed waiting woman questioned, as after consciousness had been reestablished, she assisted the youog girl to her chamber, where a night of nervous prostration and a morning of womanly "Iteadttehe" mere tO follow this severe “Wrong? 011 no, you do not do Wrong, Jane," assured her sorrowful yAng mistress. " I did want to see him, oh, so nmeh. Bat.you will 'never have to let nim in again, Jane I" and at the thougbt the foundation of,tears once more broke u nd he sobbed on tbe supporting shoulder. "Oh, Jane, -Janet hotv shall I live ? Will they nev- " But you are about to be—you have orgotten all their ties that one° bound s—you haire promised to marry some an with a better , ohanteter and more appose, , Olt, ray Cod who could have Wilding here, too, but a moment since, ipon.lier lips." So the 'surprised` and ialf-angry young Man broke out in it orrent of words that the other had no hence to interrupt before he had fin - 11 Larry 1" faltered the poor girl. You have seen more, now, than I had ry right to show ; heard more than I ',ad a right to speak. You know too yell that the past is not forgotten ; that have remembered:you, aye, loved you, through evil as well as through good -eport,' or neither of us, would so have aimed the other to -night. " And yet—" re -began the tortured over, his face turned atvay in a sorrow hat wee half displeasure, while the oung girl stood beside him, her hand esting on his shoulder as if witu some aint hope of yet preserving a bond be - ween them, and the tears flowing un- hecked and pitifully down cheeks from hich they should have been kissed way—"and yet—" " Yet we are separated ! Yes, I own t, though it breaks my heart to say so, arry. I am free no longer. Pity me. nd do not ask me further " she begged n that wailing tene which so bows the eart of the hearer when it comes from he lips of girlhood. "You will seen mew all, Larry ; toogsoon, if you are half as wretched as myself; till then, hi'do pity mid spare me!" "Not a moment!" replied the yoeng an, breaking away from her hand, nd striding across the apartment with mprudent forgetfulness how loudly his teps might sound in the servant's partments below. He was not ouly grieved, but angry now, and Lillie Satindeason saw a kind ofdark, sullen do. terminatiqn on his face, which made her shudder as he looked. "Not a moment! I must linOtv all, now! 1)o you suppose that I can sleep to -night, or that I will attempt it, under this dreadful uncer- tainty ; worse than a fog in the monn tains, with -vild beasts at your heels, and unknown precipices all around you? Do you suppose that I can rest, 'or o rest, with a terrible doom ready to fall at any moment and no knowledge of the direction from which it is coming'? No ! no ! no! I have suffered enough al- ready, and the torture shall end in one way or the other. Tell me all, new, before I cross the doorsteps of this house for the last time, as „I am going to do in a moment, the young girl between her sobs. , "You must I I tell yqu that you must, Lillie Saundersonl" was the reply, lit- tered in a voice almost as husky , with passion as witk grief. , She answered him nothing ; only, through the still room came the sound of her sobs. ,„ er let -him come back ? Shall I never " Hear me 1" Laarence „Deane went e h;in again r, on, with the: same dotertninatiOn, of agony evident in look an venn. I have said that you and speak, and I mean to compel you to do so, No, ao not look at me in that way ; I may be a thief, as you have thOught, but, I am not a ruffian, and I de not mean to take you by the throat and choke the words out of you! But you, believe, as well ,as. myself, that I have put my li- berty in danger by coming to New York,:and that it would be ,imprudent for me to show myself bdfore something had been done to place 111,3 beyond the power of My enemies ?" answering voice. "Very well, then. We are alone, but ean not be se tench longer. ' Your parents will soon return, aecorditig to Jane's story dna -_yOur own. 'Yon' worild netlike to have thein ,meee. nie here, and have' us Meet' es we mnst, Tell me all this reysterY—atleast give nie the name Of the man to wham you know with whom Tam dealing, or I de :not stir from the spot mitil they wine ! Mere --I will assault your father at the, WOrk, ill find my3elf the Tombs within the tieit honr 1," "Can yOU Mean to de this, Larry, you.who used to be so gentle ?" said the young girl trembling. . i,Ilear me, when swear before God that I will, and that:nothing on, earth shall 'Move Me trona nay determination!" 'was the reply, ' ," To SAVO yon anitrriVSelf, then, front long as 'tvb / will betray eeeret the knowledge of which may work its both quite as Much miseay I" eanne the force ms to it—de yeti Maine MO when it ie too late 1 ani 'pledged to Mar- yet ;onjoStyeaviet, aitiong 400 "riSsuten and., the Wealthiee'claas of POMO-ma. ' Near the Chime Of Of 1E0)1 he sold. `10.13 gambling hpuse, and, in. company with John C. Heenan,- opened a house in ,',.NeW York. partnere lost $250,000 in kss than Six months, and then closed their houso. He sub, other • 'Magnificent eitablishment; *hien uona(iiti, Saratoga, rivaling that of 'John ba• ck to New' York. ' Then he begaii to for several yeare'playea with, reckless, nese, atlernately, winning and losing largo suma. While 'be was carrying ph his -gaMbling there he "was taken detrn Misi Pen Worrell, and that the ac- 'With "consuitiption, hf Which ,be died lionse. 5.,vae noted for hie ;extrava- gance in dress, In boyhood he spent ail his winnings in "costly clething, Mid in later•years he was known as the best dressed man in town.' He once Sent to Paris and imported for his own use shirt bosoms that cost $250 a dozen, gold. lie eeidona wore a pair of boots more on& (Which puts bin noteh a head of Fox. as a martyr), and 'kept three changes of snits' a day. He bought $1,500 worth of gloves at a time and, threw away four. or laVe palyS dAy. He died poor and was buried at the little graveyard around the corner: e peen, quaintance between them had not ceas- ed, so far as it could be kept alive by oceasional correepondence, and the inntual intention to marry each other at some time in the very indefieite fu- ture. .Now any other 'person than him- self, so situated, would unquestionably haye followed the example of Laurence Deane, and sought an immediate meet- ing with the woman to whom he was eo warmly attached, and from Whonk, he had been ,se long separated; Not so Mr. Frederick Gwiler, who always,had what he designated as "his own way of doing things ;" and. yet his waiting of that immeiate interview *was by no means the result of any lack of feeling —oely of oddith ; upon to Make an explanation, he would have been very likelY to Convulse the inquirer by. informing him:that "he was waitingun- til he got out of his timidity !") , Mr. Gwiler;to, the eye of the indiffer- ent observer, wouM have seemed to be in an eicellent humor. With himself and the world, ifany assurance could be drawn from the sparkle of his brown eye; and the areal shapes into 'which the tension of the muscles of the mouth con- tinually twisted beard and mustache. Ile lay lazily back in one!chair, his foot upon another (very much as reliresent• in the the picture before mentioned), and alternately solaced himself with a slip from the glass beside 'him, and a long sybartish draw and puff upon the capital Havana which crowned his em- ployment. He was holding a eonver• sation too, with nimself, and so was certain of an appreciative interlocutor :; and if his words' did not sound 'Upon the outer air, that came at last near enough to that publicly to bear erystal- "Well, this is really refreshing !" 'he mused, as a hang spiral wreath of smoke shot -up from his lips toward the cell- ingL-7" very refreshing, if Larry Deane &we not keep me waiting for kiln all night. And what if he, does ?--wha cares ?pogo .:ionpo, old fellotv, you come if you Can; but if not can do, how can? Eh, John. I have 'the privilege , once More., of enjoying,a drink' without spill- ing more than hatf my liquor down my neck and waist -coat" andhere he took' a, quiet sip by way of punctuation—"fte a libation to some water -god or other. Mucha ruala, that losing half one's (poi at sea; Wouldn't mind so hutch if it was water, for there is plenty Of vaa, ter alLaroand. Humph, welle-ethe fact is .that ,I have ,been tossed" ,ahout off Acapulcoynand the pahamas and Hatt teras, until;I . am, very nearly in poor Warnba!s' uondition, with my ',brains • turned upside dpwn, and some necessity to stand on‘iny diead,or being hung by , the heels,,,,by way of getting thena,back into ProPer Anott‘er 'sip from the tumbler 'made a pause in his complacent eonversation with himself ; and when' he resumed • " I said that this was pleasant, . dna yet it isn't anything of the kind, It is book• ," glancing at the cheap novelette on the table, "Flothebody, dreatned that peck of paving stones withliiiii-inertar sauce., Lmean `to get into 'State pri- apPropriate surroundings. Wonder whether that Young Wretch has, been caught end shut up in the station - house bf tithe, L'or ,wliethei he had merela let Lillie "Sttunderson take away his breath by smothering tiin,„ with think 'of ft pared ot 'fellows plinehing ing theni about by the hour and paying tWontY-five cents a ,gatrie for the privi- leged doing that amount of hard 'work' —ill just to oblige the man who lieope hut, under the restrictions of our leave the table., Heiglint” the sigh twinkle° lie cOuld marry but one. lie bestowed very near to 'being a yawn. "Now, his heart and hand to Miss :Ruttier. hang me if I deal. have some ,compan3 The other tw n Miss MeEwert and Miss good, badfor indiffetent I Isay. waiter t" Lyene, did not pine away, but nursed givingVoice.'to the letter WOras and AO, their wrath and dieappointed hopes en- dompanying thetn. With a feW decided til an oppottmity for revenge presented knoolts dills empty glioe en the' table. itself. On the °voting ot tno 20th nit., The door was oponed in It mOnlent, OonWay was passing the night at and tile head of the Ganytnede wbo ear. his fattier-iii..law's. Ate doors were ried liquors between the bar -and the burst open by the friends' of the jilted billiard and sitting rooms, showed it- young ladiee, tvho to the number of six personality by which, . even: when all looking and yery mannerly Ehglish boy titecauto h Oat ett or in mitetokeesly tern' silpplies We. :Fin Piro /MN PRIX - TIN glitch oclaCii- y Apply at 'tit t; 4etOg (told fro; cod. itonoeta'i emit' Carson's Paint It is Cheep and: Vire-proof, enterinl grain of the 'Weed 1 it stops ail SYnall lealat „of both On and weather. Oile coat im ser, Agent, Exeter, ry.--Vood taken IA etchange ter trie Paint 11A111/1 SALB.---11.1311 SUB - .1..2 sallow' offers fox, 606 tivs te.W. of lot, rs,. *oh. 60,Usbetne, b0 acres of exeolo &trolling }tonsil, barn and et obis Olk p.fcrnifieti; TII F. CALIFORNIAN IN EIS GLORY. On the sarne evening whieh witnessed the same 'visit of Laurenee Deane to the house of Richard liatinderson, a very different spene was presented in a little side•room iidjoining the ' bar of one of the numberless "Shades'? at which pot - Ales, eatables, lodgings, bagatelle and blocka wok' of Broadway. Feed ,Gwi- ler had accompanied' his friend to far on the way to his visit of discovery,. and promised to await him there 'on return. In erder,t6beggile the tedium of waiting,liSthetud ne present fancy for 'bagatelle or. billiards no had invest- ed fifty diatits in a paper,bountt novel stalul'on hie way utia and he had also ordered inte: the' little room, which ehatieed at the 'first thne to be leserted lishment,' a few of those things which he called "absolute ..,neeessaries,"' but which many °there' might have desig- • At a email round table in' the `Midst of ,the room,, before him, half -a dozen er • in anticipation of their coming alito,? do tfc, and a deeantor of liquor with, couple of tertnhlers; besides,the remains of what bad evidently' been a julep in advance of the season—aat our friend of the and he showed, there elseWhere Ahab reetiliar quality of Again thiek sobe choked the -utter- name', and silo paused. S'idefthlea s, tension very unugual with hinit a Mouthful of air. Physiologists agree that the smallest allowance of air per individual should be BOO cubic feet, and that even in that case the air should be changed frequent ly ; how many buildings fulfil this re- quirement of health ? The writer of Perils of the School -room,' a ,paper which created a marked -sensation when read before the American Health ,As7 sociation; at its last meeting, quotes from the report of a late ins pectiou of the public schools of one of our It.rgest cities to show that certain children are daily confined in an atmosrhere but little if •any better than , the Black Hole of Calcutta. In one room in a new and favorite school " there were 126 children; the windows all closed, the ventilating shaft closedrandthe hot air registers open. fi,ch of these chill dren, had fifty cubic feet of a space." -L In a room in another favorite school there was found to be only forty cubic feec spfiee to each child.- Rooms in other school buildings contained, re= spectively thirty-two, thirty, twenty7 nine, twenty-seven and twenty-four feet ! These boildinga are no worse than the scheol-builditigs of 'other , cit7 ies, and the worst of tliena matched bj, many Sunday -school rooths.4 ' As to Churches, 'we iniagine everyone can re7 memher certain. sanctuaries in Which no piflpit eloquence can keep the'. Bur dience awake. And who does net 're- member certain residences where the firSt mouthful of air 'has a stifling,ef- feet ; Where the ghost of many departed dinners float in unwelcome fragrance through parlor and hall where the residente, who are smart'eneugh When Met in the -street or in husiness, lapse intohopeless'aitupidity soon after they 'sit doWn in their -own reaulence .? The breathing of bad itir is the Meat. inexcusable Of. himan extravagances The peorer the par, the lower the am - food to maintain animal warmth. ; The poOrer the' air, the less able is the; ilys: tor it alter, that these b yentillited ; in fact the yet r verse as ly thecase. The stf,118 are roomy and supplied with plenty of fresh air, while their floors are carefully cleaned 'three or I.:tor times a day., The cattle appear to be in first-rate ebullition, loOking healtily, clean and fat. In fact one of the first things that the visitor will re- mark on going through the stables is the remarkably „clean and healthy ap- pearance 'Of 'every animal he 'sees. The stalls are arranged in most•respects just as,thestalls in large cattle ,stabIes are, exceptperhaps the peculiar arran- gement by which they get their three meals of slep from the -distillery. This slop iwpumped through a long line ef ducts or wooden pipes leading front the distillery to,the bYree, Where it is, enil.)- tied into big tubs.or vats, whence it is distrilmted in other ducts to oie differ- ent stablea; In front 'of each 'row ' of cattle ia an Open trough,' and 'at each end of thiatrough atelbie' fitting slide. At feeding time the slide' communicat- ing with the slot) (bust iS opened and the, Warm feed let in, when the Cattle generally atack it with a will.' 'As 'sooii as the slep gets cold theY will iiat tench it eveuif they are hungry, but ft is:not always let in warrn; enough, so that they have plenty of time to satisfy themselves before it gets cold: When. feeding time is over t e sue e other end of the trough is' opened and the cold slop runs out to a pen of pigs just outside the cattle byre, while „the troughs in front of the 0 tttle are. rinsed out with Clean water ,which; ie , let through the slap ducts. After t e pigs have 'eaten all the cold sl,pp they want, from the cattle trOughs, and carried in open troughs some four, himdred yards across the marshAnd deposited in an arm of the hay'.' The sblid manure is carried sway by farmers and gardeners, while a portion of the liquid is drained off iuto the marsh in...shallow ditches ; but the soft porous groand about the stable "diatibtless absorbs a",good deal Of it, while the close proximity of- the Don makes it -reaSonable to suppose that the pellucid and romantic stream does not reach the bay withent being Over 2,500 he41 of 'cattle at the byres and with le* exception's, all are in splendid condition. Messrs. Loo- mis, Brttton, Falkland and Shields are the, principal proprietors. tem to expel its waste matter, aud, by consequence of such inability, the less able to work' advantageously. The poorer thew, the slower is, the min to comprehend,the lessons, of book and pulpit, and neither teacher moripreach.- cr can make good the deficiency. The poorer the air, 'the slower and More imperfect is the physieal growth of children while in crowded and badly ventilate'd recitation-roome and Sun- day -school room's they are in danger of contracting contagious and infections diseases than they would be in a walk through the naoet unhealthy heighber- hoOda of our dirtiest °Wee. The Poor- er the air, f.0 1186 tobacco and other stimulants and narcotics. l'he poce.nr the air, the lower itievitably be- come moral tone and moral force for the'interdependenee of Mind tied 'body ii fixed heyond &repute. County, X. 13., has another sensation: It appears that one William Conway, living on the Buctoucho Road, near Kingston loved a trio of youeg Itis to be regarded as'a: settled' faet that diseases' of a'contagious..nature are - canted and spread by influences largely within 'the sphere of oer pont:jot. , This feet hap ...recently been strongly arged English physician, in' a leetnie deliver- ed by in London. 'EVery infectious lever, 'he es eerts, lute its idio- eyncrasy. Thus enteric.fever and chol- fever hibernates.in.-draware., after long months, %conies forth With cast -aside: garment„,to 'be 'thrown with it 'areund tile threat or head of Senie new victim; and so start thence „iiiinn from hand to hand and ' MOuth'' to habits prevail.' Se well" known are theseidiesyncresies; and the irteans :Of control, 'that' the'eXisteriCe or'spread 'of "sinah diseases iii'direetlY'atteibiltable 'to alone, lie seemed to fill a tooth mid in spite of bis oceupation ; but the la - need. co °span ions. This was not all the effeet 6f'sizo, though he was uhdeniably inetilded on ptittetn,; the big heart andreeklees,rol• tiattIO showed' through 'ovary ,glance and every arttion, arid gava 'tint the general. irilPreSSiOri of that delicious itliptidence and approbation winloh 0001 pidity with which hij WAS db)Ige,t1 to have swept his long light hair chroni, paaratee Of the tail of a human eomet . -a failey which the wild, eyes by no lamella' dissipated. if there had heal' any,look of mischief Pied Gwileriii A son of the Fadderland went, into Barney .Gallian's,saloon the' other • day and called Tor e; drink.: Barney observ, "'Ton have had enough." Enough of whtiat; I guesS?" asked the, Teuton. 'Iling niaohilie,,Yott ?" You arew and you are running it -int° the am a her, said he, slamming his hand down upon the bar, " There' is tio bet there," said Barney, laughing. " GAO now," " I bade you not." " Well, will bet y,ort fifty dollars vs one that yott number gathered around to see the run. " Glood enough, bade you," said be, to make a dollar. Now who will you leaf it mid ?" "I'll leave to yourself. Ate you drunk 2" " Yes bjr jiugees, I"atia." said lie rnornfulty, take der- dol- lar." A friend of his happened to be in the crovvd,, and upbraidettlihn for de• der dentin " Well; supposing it Wag, why did you -Want to he ibol enough to bet tor, then. ?" couldn't lielp ia —ads odds was so greed," lie replied, dereanded the life Of Conway, Dutink' the contest the latter's Wife Weta, Severe severely 8°4(1(4 by kettle of liet Water, *hitch she took from hor Intsband!a, hands pro Ably witk th6 intention of The, latter were '',driven to A good joke is told of ecrtaio Dalian professor:. ---a stickler for ventilation.— abet' pleat, he asked the latter to raise the'ttindow at night:As the air was .se 01000. 44 I can't raise it," said tbeguest, after working:at the windoW for' a while. -a *Lilo tho profastor oot up dna broke, tho'PlortliPg )he 920f WO. 014 brolto into ti'bookoaso,