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The Exeter Advocate, 1888-12-6, Page 7THE DAIRYING INTEREST IN CAN ADA. B a W. Ly.Kcis, rrid4 letter Is epyrighted ead republithed in tht4 piper by pension ot the authoal This letter is the nest of a mane whieh the writer is abouu ta add rese to the dairymen of Canada, aa one oetceme of at tOtir months' study of the dairy question abroad, by a Cauedian, from a Cenedion standpoint and with Canadian betsereata BMW. That the lettere wine, Be BEAD PT AM. CANADIAN DAIRYMEN the writer bas a right to ask and a reason to eXpeet. The right to as comes of what the lettere have cut the writer ; the reai on to expece contee of the feet that the worle doge him been, aono hi the erest ot these addressed. That the opportunity of reading will come to all who wish we have an assurance in the attitude of the Ceeadien :peed on the etutdeete The im- telligent nitereat taken by the newspaper eaters of °Amain, for several yeara past, ie the question of TREISIPROVESIWP OP OVA D4P31t Iv/PCSTRY leaves little to be desired. The experieece of the writer hes been birch that he feel warreated in tbe belief that if the moat is would hove mail° Pasailile. I ProPee `litving Ot etsalg, 0,,en humble egoeie this mainly only the conclintiens of mature study, - direction, it will not be the fenit of hie fel- along facte enough to ioatiln ouch cool cluSione, writing toy lectors eow 'with all my materiel in laand. I ane abbe to ail' ubtter, and eupplying the hungry visitors with milk, cream and buttermilk, Along with cakes, fruin weds, Sid- 0110 of the "Country Week" girls ex. The exhibition at Copenhagen was one claimed oa seeing a. watermelon greWlng, held only once io aye yeam, and it; work- " I Always teposed watermelons grew beg deka and exhibition of dairy prod:wits in the water." woe one of the great lessons of my trip. It is stated 640 whiskey ls now being rua coesinaza warm made of old rage. We have alwaye known Peratlen ef Trthiti Chorchi TOY furnish a WIT AND W RDOIst. " Tours For Intaith," - foliaine the contrary, it la their pradicel interest which eecaree their public:Imam here. They are nriuted oards and circulated broaa- east in lower New York city by the cam liae I PERSONALS. a are not poetical, On that old rags were made by whiskey mad eemPiete 4- 13 0 of hent4h rules : wereEngland Irelandand Waleep DonInark 6 - f • - ° Sweden, Germany, Rolland, Belga= and, turn alimi is only far play. _ 24.4 soon aa you're up, Shake blanketa and r. Pinney on= began ha praying atter sleet; Freon). I made it a future to interview " leadlog dealers in neweepool, London, Gles. the °heir had performed au anthern, by WI- Bcehtttlearrextbe, iWihteh4ontutys,tiaoesre mthtainves,ltnos:istthiuw;et gow, Dublin, Cork, and, Bristol. I visited ing-t' "14'1' thell ancitntandesb what 619 choir has said, *tough We do not understand feet; , KO ---1 0 Dew ahem end demr-e- olothee will both "Why 414 you leave your last faor make yoa ill; batter and merest -me faotoriee, preyete dark& butter markets, and °engine with all the leading agrecaltertetei deAlere, And experts I could meet. One way Whloh 1 hope to melte the most of my enguirlos, and the auggeatieue whioh are the' oPtoome of my atndiea is by giving to the agrietticuriste of Caudal through aN ATTRACIATIvE A.:ND IIELPTIMA Bras, the series of letters of which I old in On linemen* duet is the fiat one, and.oi which On the departure of Rishep Selwyn for this letter is practically enlY an 1-4tTnaan' hte diode° in New Zealand, Sydney Smith tion, may here °out° the tiii"Ier that took leave of him as follewe "Good -by, though I spent four long menthe in (-Arun my dear Selwyn; I hope you will not dis- inyeatigetion, my lettere willnot 44 v?1,- agree with the man who eata You." uraluotut 84 the abundance of material " Ab, them poem beautiful 1" Yea, Agetbee it is the crowning effort of my life," " And Litteel—lety Lionel 1 it will bang you fame, eternal fame, will it " Yee, Agattaa-eand perhepa $2 'A A little girl *ea gluing On Om filer when NW 1 he cried, ent at it, al Rememter the young cannot live without Tao seisireee panne -mum yeer,ow move dear, and it WOWS trouble yOU " said - 1 ipt "Sure I were tibeherged for dein well, it slowly, en4 alwaya °hem your feed mom" "Ditioluniged for dehig well e Whe, well ; Where wee your "1 weer m the Wenn Freshen the air in the house where you, dwell ; tail, mum, ' Garniental must never he made to be tight; 1 4o ‘wle"hhereroin"w0o:14d4try"ttielrattlefofrawutniele Iftonea will beheelthy if airy And light ; 0104(EO—ear, Gunter : a Perhems I will If yeti wish te be well, as you do, rve no next tails" "Bee they'll be tem deer theni doubt, Won't they 9 Better not wait " jest open the nindotve before you go out ; Keep your rooms alwaya eidy and cleene low countremete on the press It ta due to wolf ani my eubjeet to say at the outset that tbe worn whiele I did ineiertelre was net the origiotel intention of my visit abroad., There was PO iaek auggettioa of the Peed of some •istich action end he !me peeeible valtie to Cents, ellen agriculture, but it did not teeta, tbe olie hand, a work to devolve upou auy aLo1eledividuel to attempt to eneomplish, while, en the other bend, whatever agency watt the proper oue 414 tot opener isliVe to !t4 respetutibility. The more unmediete eb, ot of the Visit Was in a respeaee to AR in. matlon from the DEM= DAIRY EARNERS' ASSOCIATION to give AU Addreaft At their Annual coefer- epee, The ultimete en main purpote of the vieit waa to make the opportueity An OCCA= alon ter itequirbig informetiee of enough value to judify the neeedery ootieV time and tummy, which outlay quid not be afforded othervente. The mitten lino of work followed out, tbereferei Wag quire different freW What had been iutended, and wee A line of Work that Appeared to OPEN VP OP ITSELF, nAteral Alcmene& prwitically, yeere of wink that preeeded it Immedbitely the feet of the rope visit baving become publicly knewc, from various qnerters there came, spoutaueously, euggeations of the pressing need* which the opportunity intim be expected to aerve. Members of Perlienient and other public men, more or led eatimolutieelly lit fever et improveweitt, Envie I emeriti' eitegestione Ler dtsil on tlek furniture never be seen; 'Much nettled, by the want of pure Now to epee you wuniewe re ever your cere ; 014 raga and 014 reblitall should never be kept ; People welled are tbat tnelr filers are well airevt .Q4O natvements cbiliiren are heriltby up to these conclueiens. strikiug pense numb detailed work winch led the San Shen.) al her face, ‘,00 :wayolyr C en4 right ; ve will he, eente of them, 4 TOPAd4 12oi ulatiuu-ie "I e'en" 4c4 /1"e *4ti" See thee tn:e elotern eleu to the brim; C...,ellOttY::' V%Per464 StAt149, in the Englieh elii4 the little one. aiterken "Anlerig the Far' A eteee fakir SehOMO Advertieetnent Aaaa ore idv-It your drese le all tidy uiere.' "Among theEritisbInirrtoreit'Sliti etetiug that the advex•tiver will mead, to Ally flee your nue to dad oat it there he a team ; ter Paelerea for Expore Trek e 4L11404 ewe tadeaing the sum of el the secret tiAve Done," "A Model Seiatem, of litalk Supply," "Dairy Scheele," "Tao liTerumndy Speen* of Marketing," "New Ideeti iseerned fromPoreigo Pmetice;" 4%1)e:edition Organ- izetion Needed :" "Goveretrovutio Flue the Week "Need of Privete Enterprioe "Euglaud as a future hlerket ;" "Serge. Potable mprovenewen" v. "Whei the Dame perpetual life. The aneker" Whet MOO tir4hz Very Bea aro the fevers that COMO 141 — - Rumour credits Mr, Audrey?' nernegie die Pittsb time 'roe ng, with the intention of erecting a grated nnaservatory of Meant In New Verb, to ant, seer setae, att mutt aa 82,000,000, off whicb, figure doubtless a large discount ought to be mewl. Asloxl why he lesal refueed plate on the judieial beach, 8ir Rtleleerd Bethell„ before he beriataa Lind Weethary, Amid to have rePlied, "Do you euppeaa that 1, who can make f20,904) a year la 1 telking sense at the Ber, wool i teken5 100 a year to Sit up there and hoer my kernel zrienal, bale luau met" Etna jet:Imago, the Andralian setrese, who is expected to throw Mary Andersoe into tbe ehade coming to TenidOn. Tee orities who hwe sue both Mize Aaderson and Miss JenYlige in the charactare ot Gelatee and Juliet, declare neheSitAtin4ly thet the Aloe trainee aurp mod the Anierleall in Went, and eUnale her in beauty. Denman Thompson, of" The Om Remo. dead" fame, wee 'Made pOtienlarly happy by the receipt of a letter from a well-known gentleman, which read in part aii follevni ; **I know personal!" of a young man who was 'inauced stop drinking and join our eleurch after wituesenig the tableau of the 4 Wander. hog Boy in Toe 014 Honeestean."" iheRnentanian pleurae, Moriz Itesentbea, was et great suede zu New York. Re le a yoong man of twenty_ four -or five, and arch to the drudgery of the doettman, intuited with Line Oaring a tont' in diva zet owe half its honour mai wow tot SontheaStern Zarope he had the honor con- equanimity and attention. ferred upon him, of being made Court pianiat REM; AND THEO. Trio nanaber of dreg in the United State* in 1887 was, 16,394, the propertY leoll woo, 6119 209 380, and the ineuratee pail Wale $6S,950,60. The man at the head a the how can emit. - the litippinese of the household, but be nava not make it. That meat res with the woe man,. and is her greatest privilege. There are 1,311 dailleei 11,60fi non-didliagte rouging from trieweekliett emni-mentblitee. and 1.720 monthliese 14 ntoothliee, and guerterliten publiehed zel the United State". Rappieees &panda en the taste, and mit on the thing ; and it is by haviag when lint like that we are made happy, and 7:34* by haviov wboo others otteitider likeeblenseledi Reehefououldi A Brooklyn girl and a former riepremo Dr, Chapin 4 Churell la l'IOW York, aloorolii, great trtamph As the Crystal kabob, L*n. don, so the perfermanee of Sir Arthur i;ballt4' van's "Golden Legend.' A Shrewd, old gentleman once said to daughter, "Bo sure, my dear, you never Marry a poor man; bet remember that Sett poorest Men in the world is one *at boa money and within elm" There is not a Single °Mee, profeetion. eecation, Iron the high, flutien of the to Queen Eltzebeth of Raumania the "Carmen Sylea" ef the literar7 lalayor.eleet Greet of New 'Varle,. is geld have made up his mind to sundae hie teat phasare, feet driving, ficereeln eeplog with the reeponaibitity and eligni. ty of the Meyer:#.14. lie bee sold effi his trottera end will take his recreation Slowly url do We journeyingti more emietly -teeoaubea, crowded 1,4 cars, oe plelaien rent the latter years et Ks life the Bev, itewland esed to ceme to Ida chapel la urine. Re got AO anonyramie letter re bilking him for this. beeanse %Tao not the way hie heavenly Muter travelled. He ad the letter from the pulpit, and Bahl t it wae quite true, and that if the writer eld come to the vestry with a eaddle and bridle be would ride him home, 14Vinia 811annen, the young nouthern ac. ea who ettedis eer denet Washington mune to sitar in " Andleyn 8ecret," ceatithe of theEed of Ortureven aud graud niece of the last Merman of The- m:ea. She was born. to New (triunes went to heel at Moutit S;. Blue:diet, lemlaville, and was dully graduated at the Counent et Ile Vititetion, Washington, D. C. When they were expelUng Lena Weetbury from a Conservative 010 because he wee not sound on Peoteetion, he defeadell binmelf with greet spirit befolie the cemmittes, "Speak upl" roared an old fox.hunting uire, from tbe fez ther end of the room* %peek up:" "1 ahould haVe thought," sold Bethell, in his lelmuleet note, "that the hon- ourable gentlemen'a ears were long enough to catch my articulato uttorencea, even at thet diettancia Sir William White, who represents Great Britein at Constantinople, is a man of leo. eine aapeot, tall, atalwert, witia a mediae forehead, a flowing white board, and. a valetas like a rear. "Ali, my dear Sirrr 1" theme words, ringing like an Irish acne* may be heard through the thickest deora or df paces off in a atreet, vebile Sir Williem wltb uberent geatioulations is ramming to feet into a hard hoed, or some indignant remouetrance into a quivering sten, Signor Crisp!, tbe 'tali= Prime Minister is abort, compel:41y whittehaired,' grey -moustached, with a round, welbbal. tinged head, ermlyant mouth, and a pair of keen, quick °yea conveying tlut impression that their owner'has kept them open to no inconsiderable purpose far many a year past. Rat is a watehful, earnest, .energetic face, the prevailing mem expression of whioh is only aoftened for a second or two now and anon when A tension of ita cleareut feeturee ia releaced by a peculiarly pleasant and win- ning smile. The. Crmius of South America is a woman, Dona Isadore Catalpa, et Santiago, Chili, and there Aro few men or women in tbe world riaber than she. There is no end to ber money and no hunt to her extraVagealee woman bath little conscience. Select for a and the people call her the Countess of -wife one whose lips are atraight, nob thin, Monte Cristo. She traces her ancestry for then she is a shrew, but -with just tha fulness necessary for perfect symmetry." the dollar reeeiveti by return reed ar neat card, MiWblob areprintnelthe wean "Don't Mete Winkte-You aurely are not going out to night Mr. Mike—Yee my dear ; elude% yolt kireW. Mr4. Winl&—The eh eotien ie over. Mr. Wietkii—Usea.er—yea, 01108 about tiolnou oto. Wile my dear, thia ono tat but there'll be Another above lit ea oleeo suggeetiou of what le to dtetion in four yearet my, dear, end every ere.nree e.en he m4,4 at 'fhb' stage geed citizen meet begm to titbalt 41)00 CIA0- 44 tee"' otters mon not Pauses enough, didatee, you know, my love. dal be back interest to my toilbag oountrymen, Whe Are early. the Netball() of our eplinalid natiottality, to be acted npen to mane their labor more easy and remunerative, it will not be be. emu I leave epared every prenible effort to make there intereatiug mad veltieble, Daaventa, P. Q The 131111 and Pythell I.awt Saaday work one of the meat re - workable aemies ea reeOrd is reported as having been witnessed in the vieinity_of Table lion:1min. A troop of cattle, ouneti Lugof twelve caws *ad patriarelna old bull, were grazing en ane of the pleteatmlike spur* M to whet migbt er *eget to 6e done, of the mutate, which es surrounded on The following extracts from A letter written three alike by preelpitoue review, and. on Me On the fine of Moy last by Professor E" the fourth Ade, that newest the Mountein, A. Barnard, then director of Agriculture by dense bosh, Sarno netivee higher up the fur the Province el Quebec, will illustrate mountain were ettract,sd by the sudden the bellowing of the cattle, and eaw two °nor. EXPECTATIONS ESTEE:TUNED OF MIC VISIT, MO= pythons coming out ef the bush and Prof. Bernard wrote t—"Delighted to malting for the cattle, which bad 'drove bear et your bang Called to England on thexneelVeS up in a compact group with the of the same kind at the mansion here, find. euolt *complimentary miselou. 1 hope yea bull 0 fte hende AO 010 Whom drew lam hg an old (Bused ewer, the existence of will take time to look into dairy mitten the animal; gradually backed till they otood vihich Was suspected, but although at:arched there somewhat carefully. Vdhet we laud on a small splice that jutted out over a tree for, cotad not be found. most for the English market, 1 think, le (1) torollollo PreciPleo. ao has holm employed) 1 believe, on sine. tared the room, but eons rushed out with An ()meantime each tte the Dominion Inn At thie stage a sudden rush was made, but ilar datien by the Londou authorities. lie his hair standing on end. He heti seen his migration agent at Liverpool, prometetl for only ono heifer succeeded in escaping. The discovered our wAterenains and brAnches ttuelo's heat ttle, bellowing most piteously, s (2) a Pookage or a other ca e ado of live ateek • 1(1 y preterved—enn be laid 011 the English backed, and ono by one fall over syetem, by which our fresh butter—proper. gre4uallr the pree pleb till finally the bull onto was left. Ilei suddenly charged at the big Water finder, w r Claamberie Journal g a fellowing intereating account 91 (me of these e who beein to have sixth neuee wbroh thasi til ce of weter - luta beeo employed here wend timea thmd water, efter much expeuras bad been mertal remeine of his nude uutil they i warred with ongineere and ottiers, wed should be borne to their last reatiog pleee. Ian always beeta aueeendul, although at Stet Oa aloeday oveniug, as the lady Was tired, most of al doubted bis powera. have her Imobend sent Inc to the drawing -rune train. Welk an numb ea yea cen without feelin fetigee ; Xerxes could walk full teeny letgae ; Your heftiest is your witelfb, wicia you witilorn mut keep ; Zeal will help a gOod cause, and the good yoU gotten A Seneible Dead Nan Who At Bread, au Dmuk Wine. An casierly gentlemen. Tel/1410g in the AC RaCheChotart, Peri& who wae euppoted to be dead, bas euddeuly come to life. bee a nephew, vim), tieing duly iiiformed of Itia demises On Sunday, repaired at once te hie house with big wire to keep wend). over the tested in every ponabie wear, lied he has never tailed. No elle UMW bereeboute doubes pewee& The vicar wee perhaps the meet merodultnew, uutil he had teeted to teke some repose on a sofa, and A itervant Whig eemewirte aud bretium table, he anew bitueelf in an um cheirin.the bed. room, Aucl soon went tioundly eleep. Ou the men thoroughly, what convinced bine Awakeolog at four in tha morning he found moat being thet whea Menem was inked to that the broth bad disappeared and that the dud water in his flower garden, he alit out battle of wiae was belt empty. Berterniug acouretely the ninnies sower front hia bouee clarinet!, be went to his rife in the draw. tor A lug dietrome—not a true of which iogmootn, mowed her, and told her whet was dincarnible above grand, and which no had happened. She rota -rued to the bed - One knew butte's vicar, 11e did other work room with him, hue the pew ilea hardly reached the door when they heard a =lute. They palmed at the threahold, avid, to their eanateritation, a VOICe bade them not to be Afraid, but to come in. The husband en- coestunern table. 'have been studying the imestion for some time, find I have come to python, tranefixing the reptile on his borne, the conelnaion that we can preen our butter tem the aecond melte eolzed the bull iu its foto a lb. rqueree nicely stamped, peck '6)1h anal having its tail around a huge eaoh pound in parchment paper box, say 24 boulder, commenced to crush the bull, whith, lbs. together, or even 12 lb. boxes—putting moaning PitomislY$ etruggled frantiontly to say eight in. nem wee a largo ship.atone The tail of the python lost Ito hold ping cue. The whole moat be ao arranged With a preservative against great °bermes of temperature, as to reach the retailer in the hest shape. lf that can be done, and an tionne buten agent found to take care compressed the amulet miits athazfold The of our shipments, alien other python suctieeded in regaining its for- mer position, and the bull was literally sum neon noent A (MI= DEAL POE. Mat COVETET pended in mid air by theanakes. The whole "1 am prepared to help you, or any one sCen e looked like some ghastly triumphal else, with all n y might, for the realization march. The snakes were evidently gettutg of anch an object. the best of the poor brute, which was bleed- " With our promised new era of fast ing profusely, when, by a sudden effort his ateamers, competing linos, o., with our struggles breed both reptifes to loose their proximity to the seaboard, with cool storage, hold of the tacks and the whole three were and with care in making and shipping, our hurled into the ravine beneath. butter should reach the consumer in Great The cattle were found on the first ledge of Britain in as good condition as the best the priapism, all being dead, bat the bull of Normandy. Of course our butter is long- and the pythons had bounded from 'ledge to er on board ship, but cool storages and the ledge, and were found 400 feet below the right package, excluding air, or neatly so, scene of the fight. The bull was merely a fronithe moment the butter comes in the mangled mass and the snakes were greatly churn 10 118 tirae it is put oaths table, evenmutilated, the larger one having the Norte - in England, makes this possible for na as brie broken in nine places. The python% well as for Normandy makers, if we organize which were of the rock species, male and and go properly to work about it. female, measured respectively 40 feet 3 "Try, by all means, to study this matter inches and 36 feet st inches. out thoroughly. I wieh the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa would help you in Love. this matter. Should you see Mr. Lowe or tho Hon. Mr. Carling about it, I have no Do not listen to hear whom a woman doubt they would give you full aesiatance praises, to know whereher heart is; do not and enable you to obtain from this voyag; for whom she expresses the most earnest enthusiasm. But if there be one she once the public information we so ranch require. "A trip to Copenhagen and a visit to Mrn kneve well, whose name she never speaks, name Nations dairy school would also be if she seems to have an instinct to avoid ostesefulevery occasion of its mention; if, when you m. ea, s "Wishing you every prosperity, and es. spkhe drops into silence and changes the subject, why, look then, for something 1 pecially all advantages for the furtherance of the objects you aim at, in this important illvoyage," etc. Prof. Barnard is well and favorabley known for his great 'interest in this queston, not onlyin Quebec, 00 1515 officialground, but in other provinces which he hafi frequently visited. Newspaper comments might be given here to show similar expectations entertained regarding the intended visit, but apace forbids. Thepublic introduction to British agri- culturists, through an honorary connection with the British Dairy Ferment' association oral MOSTOPPORTIINE FOB MY PUILPoSs and paved the way or me by bringing me letters of introduction, even more of them than I could use, not only in the British Isles but on the continent. The time of my visit itself was opportune, especially in the matter of exhibitions. I hart an opportunity to attend the dairy contest at Ipswich, the Glattgoiv exhibition, the Melt exhibition in London, the Scandinavian exbibition in Copenbagen, the Royal exhibition at Not- tingham, and then Belgian exhibition at Brussel*. There were miecird dairy featflrea in all these exhibitions, except that at Brus- sels.' At the Glasgow exhibition the work- ing dairy was carried on under a 'different system each two weeks. There were employ- The visit of the Emperor William to ed, in succession, English, Irish, Swedish Rome and Naples cost King Humbert and and other dairymaida, to afford a comparison the Italian Goveritment upwards ot £200,- of methods. At the time of my visit the 000. Thi includes. the expelled of the Irish dairymaid (the head dairymaid at the naval and military revieWs. The alterations Glasnevin dairy achool, near Cork) was about in the Quirinal and the decoration and that he is at once crafty and impulsive. He to leave and give piece to a Swedish butter- furnishing of the Emperor's rooms cost means wen, and will sin and repent a good maker. At theiinsh exhibition, I found £48,000. The Queen ofItaly has command- deal before he has got much older." the well-knowii Canon 13agot full of business ed that th nooms ocappied by the German end pith, with Ina company of good looking, Emperor*the Quirinal shall remain in "%jeer compleidoiad Irioh making, exactly th tate in which he left them. Sorrow seems sent or our instruetion. of the rock, but the larger make ethical had slipped off tbe horn, lapping Dm tail around &mailer boulder oppoeite the one the other snake had juat released, !And the bull and hero wherever lie eroded them In the courae of hie journeys, greatly to the sterprise of on engineer from tIheiliniti who conetruated The old men WAS Sitting, enveloped in &Mot, on the side of. the bad. The suppota utmost difficalty in et - our reservoirs, and who followed John "afar ting his pestle a de sea relatives 10 un or - off " for leveret dime. The earne engineer anted that he was not dead after ail. g • afterwauls cornmeal to the writer that he one alive 1" ho repeated, adding that the was purled; but he Admitted the mann prepay:ideas for his funeral heti not escaped powers, Mullete need the hazel and thorn life notice. He had been in a lothargy, and 44 twig') only. No member of his family half wakine u he helped himself to the broth, tho 41gAft e' hence everything haa to be done by himself. Re asks no aosiatence sue a "twig," cut close by, and a lad to follow he. hind and put a peg in where he makes a lurk with Ina hut He °barges Me fare and modest foe, and is willing to aabmit to any reationable teat. Ile does not pro. fess to explain his power, knows little or nothing about educe, and is rather illitem ate, Not a few largo breweries and menu. factoriee owe their water supply to him. no does not profeea to find dill water; it mud be running. In tbe ease of the water mains here, the "twig" turned up above theetipe in field, woods and highways, where confirmed the demise of the worthy uncle, no sign of the grounahaving been disturbed who seems to have taken a new lease of life. appeared, the pipes having been long down, and no one knowing anything about itheir whereabouts butthe waterman who depends on the map when he seeks it. I do not attribute the teen's gift to any- thing 'supernatural, but to natural 0111113438 not yet understood. That water can be found by the man in the way described, I have no doubt whatever; and I am equally sure he will confound any skeptic who tries him. latillens says a "twig" from a variety of treed will do, but the hawthorn and hazel are the Moat active; and the way the point whirla .round in a moment above water is inervelcies. The "twig" is Y-ahaped; and the man, holding a leg firmly in each hand and the point downward, steps slowly for- ward, stooping. On one °maiden 11814 one end of the twig," where it projected through , his hand, the vicar holding the other end, both firmly, Mullens simply holding it, but without the power to move —mat as, when getting through deepmeadow it uP or clown, yet it whirled. round as be. grass, a bird Ries ostentatiously up before fore except where we held it and cense- you, you may know her nest is not there queLly eivented the bark to it, by but fax off under distant hills of fern and the force it exercised. buttercup, through which she has crept, with a silent flatter in her spotted breast, to aot Plain Talk abmt an Emperor. her pretty little falsehood before you. The Paris correspoedennof London Truth The Firing of Vulcan. says : — I met this evening a Bavarian Grafin, fresh from Milli* and bound for Madral. "What did you think," I asked her, "of the young German Emperor ?" " Well," she said, he's hard to read. He's changeable as a bit of shot silk. There are times when he looks a mewed of stiff- ness, coldness, and hardness. His mode of saluting se such 'times is Mut and unpleate ant : the eyes dare, and --must I say it ?— glare. They are, .when he is 18 151* stiff, inn perfal mood, the blue -glassy eyes of the laighlander at the tobacconist's door, There are other moods, when he is all 1 un and heartinees. I saw him laugh himself into a violent fit of coughing. Ile romps with children, pokes in %he ribs and tickles princely lads, flirts with the flirty ladies, and is ticklea witiethe merest straw. Blood easily flies td his head and sets his thoughts in a tingle. He hates 'bookish people and artists. They bore hint. What he best liked after dinner was to get away to his own room and smoke with the young Princess of Bavaria and the Duke of Genoa. They laughed and talked far into the night. The Princes smoked pipes and drank beer. The E operor smoked oigarettee and quaffed senior water.- My impression Of himis whioh'haI done him good, Hearing some one upprosohing he had got into bed, as he watt anxious not to cause auy alarm, but Richard WAS himself again. He felt per. featly recovered, and cortAinly on older examioatien the uncle'a aprearance by no means belled his words. The refreshments had onto in most opportunely to restore bim, and as he was much pleated with the affectionate attention whioh his relatives had shown him after his euppond departure from this world, everything was don made happy and comfortable all round, The doctor of the quarter had not yet officially nits on tad story but very little known" said Uncle Phineas as he drew his chair up to the fire among the young folks. "What's that, uncle?" "About Vulcan's being thrown off Me Olympus. Most books have it all wrong— all wrong." "How was it, uncle?" "Why, jimiter was standing On the edge of a cloud one day looking down over the earth, and he remarked : "1 dee that Old Caine 1.uinue Metalline has gotten up a. tether in wheat. As it's a matter pertaining to grain, tthink I'll send Ceres down to see about it." "Yes," said Vulean, "It's in every way a Ceres business." "He was 'fired before twenty-four hour's had elapsed." ' • An Expensive Visitor. Wild Doga of Assam, Wherever dogs run wild as in Australia andin India they show teeny of the char- acteristics of wolves. They have a similar habit of hunting in peeks. The people of Assam 'telt wonderful storieit of the cunning and sagacity of these wild hounds when in pursuifr of game. They say that when a paok goes out to hunt, an old dog goes in front and searches for fresh scent of a deer. Having found this he starts off alone, and when he has ascertained the whereabouta of the quarry, returns to the pack, which he then disposes in a circle of a mile in diameter round it; eaolt member of the pack has apart allotted to him. These precautions having been taken, the old general starts alone once more in search of the victim, and on finding gives chase. The startled deer of course fliee from his en- emy, who follows, givingtongue as a signal* the rest of the pack. The deer, far out- stripping the dog, rushes on, but is sudden- ly met in front by one of the outlying dogs, who gives chase. The deer, of course, turn- ing to the right or left, again rushes off only to he met and turned by another dog. Thus, turned at every point, the poor animal becomes more and more exhausted, while the pack gradually close in upon it, leaving no avenue of escape, and dozsna of sharp fangs soon feast on the victim which has in this way been run to death. Two of the three Americans who have gained ninth notoriety in Europe by the drange influence which they were said to have gained over King Charles of Wurtem- berg 'have been deposed, but the third, Baron lleon jacked' (once plain Richard M. Jack. on, of Steubenville Ohio), still enjoys royal favor. Jackson is the son of a poor farmer n Steubenville,eand went to Stuttgart to ' tudy,music. Not being very. suocessful as musician, he Obtained the United States lee•Conaulship, While in this position he ade the sequaintanoe of King Chluies, ho took a fancy to him, and made him " reader to the King "—a ptsition equiva- lent to otinfidential companion. Jackson very .decent sort of a man, scents to land not an adventurer, and he has risen to be a hie present position of confidant and privy councillor through aocial and business qualities which have made him valuable to the King. He is said to have wore the love of a titled lady, and this, with his in- fluence over the King; has aroused' bitter court jealousies in Wurtemberg and Ger- many. An old ledger haa recently been bros‘hit liBlitto gn 14 et r 94h Debf gtviagehs'ix4rgent1844th ovInt beh4IgirlAt the tenet the ineide board the la Per laseribed the worile; "God bile Wk. and kelp MS and le hewn 44 Q 411 toothpicks, come largely fro whiA pOSealaal the largeet factory re world, Tbia feetory, which is looanal near was origleady started to snake quill pgeurtme. e;bat when thee° went out of use, tho proprietor tweed it into a toothpielt mill, the preseat animal output ot which m 20,969,000 The awed= method a AtoRtug A rasa. way terse ie as follows : They piamt A cord. with a rueuieg knot around the hereon neck, near the neck strap. To this elip noose nt. tacit a pair of reins, ;which may be WOWS. Over the daehhaard ready to be "seized at Cale% When the leers°etarts take up the xtra reins, and tighten the cord expand the hones threet. The most Anion* lame thee choked etepe fustoutly, anti will net kiele or tat, welbmincled pastor ada at the COW* *1 14* charity stir:non, "The widow" d orphan* need not caller/bate:3 The next Sebhatle he 'applied from the pulpit 118 following memerandurst to hia °engrave - tion ;•^A' The Mat time 1 preach schart Sermon I will say nothing about widows An and orphans, for the hot Sunday my remarks 150415 deadly effect; nearly the whole eon- irregation were suddenly deprived of lune bands anti fathom." As a party en " eXtra" maid of Erin wait engaged by thehoeters to ambit the "regular' In passingiround the tea and cake. The "ex- tra hand, to whom this sort of thing was quite nem, hustled to and fro with flier* en- ergy than grew. Whoa about to retire, elasi suddenly stopped,and pointing to a portion of the company, innocently inquired. of the " regniar " housemaid, loud enengb for the whole company to bear," Rev ye fed them rathura over There I" in Great Britain and Ireland there are he round munbera 660 Manhole, cantata.* wreathing like 39,000 bed*, or ono to 1000 of the population; 18 England, an, hos- pitals, with 27,280 bailie or ono to 970; in. Wales. 17 be:gamin with 020 beds, or one to 2310; in Boonton', 40 heepitels, with 4320 bedsfir one to 926; in Ireland, 86 hospitals, tvitIdeign bola, or one to 802, Dublin him one bed to every 140 pereone, Elinburgh ono to every 312, Belfast one to every 38G, London one to every 420. A celebrated Peraian sage Rave this ativiee concerning the titmice of a wife :—" Choose no woman whose lips droop at the cornete,. or your life will be a perpetual mourning; nor yet should they curve too muck upward, for taat denotes frivolity. Beware of the under lip that rolleth outward, for that beck to the days of the conquest. She haa millions of acres of lawn, minions of raoney, flocks and herds that are numbered by the hundreds of thousands, coal, copper, mid *silver mines: a res of real-estate m the alt - les of Santiago and 'Valparaiso, a fleet of iron steamships, smelting works, a railroad and. various other trifles m the way of pro. duotive property, which yield her an income of wenl millions& year that she tries very hard to spend, and under the eircutastences succeeds as well as could be expected. From her coal mines alone Senora Cousin° has an income of eighty thousand dollars a month, lied there 18 00 reason why this should not be perpetual, as they are the only source in Smith America from which fuel can be ob- tained, and those who do not buy of her have to import their coal from GreatBritain. She has a fleet of eight iron steamships, of capacities varying from two thousand tons. In addition to her landed property and her mine she owns much city real estate'from which her rentals amount to several hun- dred thousand dollars a .year. She is also the principal stockholder in the largest 'batik in Santiago. Not long ago she presented the people oE that city with a park of one hundred acres and a race course adjoining it A 'Hollow in the Heart Inmyhhteaeilaado rttherelisgrefhasaihollow, w.a shattered joy is laid. made, in And beneath, stony silence Many Love in all her strength,and sorrow Keepeth watch beside the gate, Lighting up the empty chamber, Vast and bare and desolate._ For the gate is always open, And the passage always free From the surging world around me. To this ohamber's seoreoy. And my heart can never, never Be as it has been before,' It must keep thedeep-hewn hollow Till this niortal life is o'er. Lord, I come to thee to fill it, Not with earthy vanities, But with Thine own prcimieed blessing, With the peace that never dies.; Like the .dew from heaven descending, Like die gentle, healing rain, This than still its fevered throbbing, Soothe and Mirth its weary pain. Make it, Lord, a sacred chamber, ' Where my willing soul may learn Henvenly lessons„ rare and precious incIt elsewhere mild 'scarce discern. are Sheltered from the daily tumult, ETSheltered from the world'broad glare, Let me see the things eternal With, unalouded..vision there. gARAB G. STOCK. Because three Edinburgh Freemasons none spired to let two ladies see how the goat performed at a funeral lodge meeting, the Grand Lodge of Scotland, has expelled one of the miserable brethren and censured the other two severely. All the ladies in Ellin - burgle have called on the two ladies who saw the mysteries of the lodge while tyle& in the third degree. But the two ha.ve maintained itaciturniby, which can be sues counted for only on the theory that they were either blinded by the awful glareunder the gridiron or rendered dumb by astonish- ment at the wonders they saw. This ought • to be a warning to all ladies to flee frouithe tempter who would inveigle them to gaze upon Masonic ceremenies. Trusts were recently declared to be ille- gal combinations by a California court ander the following circumstances. A number of lumber manufacturers agreed that the pro- duct of all their mills should be sold to the oorporation which they unitedly constitut- ed, that sales of all lumber raanufacturen by the mills in the Trust ahould be through its agencies, and that any millowner 18 118 combine should pay a fine into its treasury if he were found to have sold on his own account contrary to agreement. One mile - owner broke the bond. He was sued for the fine and for breaoh of contract by the Trust. The court dismissed the suit with costa against the plaintiffs on the ground that "When agreements are resorted to for the purpose of taking trade out of the realm of competition and thereby enhancing or de- pressing the prices of dommodities, the courta cannot be successfully invoked,' and the ex- ecution of the agreements will be left to - the volition of the parties thereto." Committing to Memory. They who, though not enduring the calam ity of Milton, have known what it is, when far from books, in solitudeam in travelling, or in the intervele of worldly care, to' feed on poetical recolleotione, to murmur over the beautiful lines whose cadence has long delighted their ear, to recall the sentimenta. and images which retain by association the charms that early years once gave them -- they will feel the inestimable value of com- mitting to memory, in the prime of its power, what it will easily receive and indehihIy maintain—Menu Hallam.. An Amite pastor created a itemisation the other day during a sermon by giving out a hymn to be sung by the choir to a lively tune, with the remark, "Perhaps it may genre to wake the congregation up,' and' it