â- .« f m- â- ! I J I. ' ,in ' :tSii Hi' THE FARM. Oara of the Teui' I« li MfeMdaUng hoir lifttta ou* mbm turn teuns gat Thay ccm* from^wing or hamwiag, all dnrtj' ivMty, »iid with â- Un wom off in olMpa. it m«7 bo, by hard hanuM that dooo not fib Into tho itablao they go; aad tiio oniryoomb aB4 bruh â- caro^ Mvtft tooohoo tham aad ai for waabingofftiio driod owoat, and mbbbg titom down, that is navor dona. Th«7 go into tho field ia the BUHniiBg perhapi they have been watered and parhaps net and tiiey are oompellad to wait nhttl noontime, when. If allowed to diink, they will take more than la good for them. It la only homaae to manage aomaway that, on tiu hatteat daya, the woik-team may have more foeqoent opportoni^ to drink than enoa at morning, noon ana night. In reepect to feed, lot it be out bay mixed with meaL It ia moat eoonomical heraea will do beat on it and work the hardest. It ia an anor te feed a horse all the hay he wUl eat. Make np the deficiency in grain and, if oats are fed, twelve qaarts par day Is as mnch as a horse can digest well and, nnless they are digested, of coarse they do no good. Above all feed regularly, and do not ovtr- feed. On the other huid, do net expect a horse to do heavy'work on light rations. The Apple's Enemy. libitt it need hardly be said, is the codling moth or apple worm. The only nice thing about it is its entomological name, Oarpo- capsa psmonella. This moth m«kes its ap- pearance in latter May or early Jane, and it is well to be prepaTod to meet It when it somas. Tnpa have been invented for this insect, and various means suggested et stay- ing the advances and preventing its ravages. Professor Oeok asserts, that Paris Green and London Purple If mixed with water and sponged on the trees " it is sure to kill this arch enemy of our most valued fruit." He has found that a pound of the poison mbced with 100 gallons of water, and kept wall mixed, Is stiU cfiFaotive to kill the larvae as they attempt to enter the apple. One or two applications of the poison te tiie trees, made soon after blossoms fall, will thin almost to extinotion net only the codling larvse but all other insects 'present, as the canker-warm, leaf-raller, and various oater- C liars. The probabilltiea are that iii those oalities where apples were so abundant last season, there wUl be few enough at beat this year, and we can't afford to give many to the worms. Potato Flaatiiu;' It is oustemary in most fanning sections to plant potatoes in tbe early spring, and once for all. By this we mean that there is only one season of planting and only one crop to harvest. But in view of drought and bugs, a late planting, say along in June, might make a decided and desirable change, rtda planting leaves the tuber formation for early tall, about the time fall rains should prevail. Moreover, during harvest time, when grain must be garnered, is just the time when the potato crop needs attention and if it does not have It, weeds will soon pre empt the territory to the disadvantage of the potato crop. But late planted pota- toes will not need so maoh attention daring the busy harvest seaaon. The late crop can be dug and marketed when labor is cheaper, and the market is.usually better. In order to insure a good erop at any time, the ground must be kept mellow and soft, and a slight scratching ever with a cultivator, as opper- tiAdty permits, will have good results. Feed for fiuttei. It is not necessary to feed oily food for a large production of butter. On the contrary nitrogenous food mixed with selected food rich fai starch and peouliarly well flavored fatty matter is preferable. It is a fact that oils taken into the digestive apparatus are largely absorbed direony by tbe blood and are carried, without chuge. Into the milk, tiins giving te the butter a flavor like that of the food. Bat when peas, bran, malt, sprouts, and other food rich in nitrogenous elements, and fat which have an agreeable flavor, are used with commeal or other starchy food, the whole la thoroughly well digested, and pass into the blood and the milk in a changed form, and not directly. The butter is thus of a better quality than when oO meals are fed. The aeleotion of food for dairy cows is a matter for the greatest oare, and also for individual experi- ment. A good m||ture of food for cows used for making butter Is 100 pounds of peas, or Sonthem caw peas, 200 pounds of cam, and ^0 pounds of fine wheat or rye bran, all ground t^pthar. To eight quarts af this meal may be added four quarts of theronghly soiled malt spranta and one of oottoB-aeed meal for a f uU daily allowanoe, divided into three feeds for a luge full milk- ing c ow. The Color of the Eye. Some curious researches have recently been undertaken by Swiss and Swedish phy- sloiana an the color of the eyes, but without any apparent purpose. Fw oesiTanienca all ayea were divided into' blue or brown, the various shades of gray eyea being olaasified aooarding to the premlnenoe of blue or brown in their oolor. Some of the oanclndona from a great many observations are theae That women with brown eyes havelwtter pro- spects of marriage than those with blue tut the average number of ohUdren is greater with parents whose eyea are dlssim- flar. In children both of whoae parents liave blue eyes, 93 per cent inherit blue eyes but in children both of whoee parents have brown eyea, only 80 per oat. have brown eyas. The above results were raaohed In SwItearland. Ia Swadsn the dlsoavariei ware not quite tiia same, ^le woman with brown eyea were more numerous there than the men with brown eyes, but brawn eyes ue apparently inoreaslng there as in S wit- aariand j » â- i Iha Pert Phyrioian at PliHadelphia, Dr. H. Ltffinaa, haa bean investigating ^^oid fever tiiara. Trmn his figoraa it weald seem Oat this diMaaa ia man pcavalant In Phil- adelphia titan in meat laiga dtiea, and that I* laSaadfly an fta Ino r sasa. ThisfaotDr. L «-^" doaa net aaMba «a ttehuylkin waternortaaaww gM, bsit mainly t» ooa« J^SJJL, aaabar af tka daaSlii an af rao^^; uihSi teMtaMH. wkoara matt â- OMapWa THE UME-KILI OLUB. There waaan nnnsaally large attendance aa ttie meeting apeaed, andit was whisper- ed from one te the other tm»kBrether Gard- ner had sametiiing on Ids mind. His ooun- tenanoe had a sarioiia leak as he took his seat, and d«|ng reH-eall he m busy with aletter When tiis aaotetary had finished his oaU the PiaaidvBt aiaaa aad aald • Ify frfeada, haalram a letter fMm AAa- ville, N etiiCaroUny, inolosfai' the pnroeed- in's of a late temperance meetin' held by do oull'd people of dat nayoarhood, an axin' me te publlckly state my do vs on the subjiok of temperance. Not £hitm among you hex eber heard me preach temperance. Some of you who war' ^binkin' too deeply hev bin made to walk ohalk, but I hasn't forced my ephiynns upon you. I see my oull'd friends slyin' ia an' slippin' ont of sa- loms, an' altboa|^ I know 4ey leave money dar, which am sorely needed at home,! haven't a word of advice to give. I often meet a good man drunk, but I doan' chide him. I see young men gwine te destruok- shun by do aid of whisky, but I doan' held 'em back. Why! fiekaseâ€" "1st. Advise unasked am words frown awi^. " 2d. To be known as a philantrophlst am about as bad as to be known as a fool. " All dat I could say or do fur a decade of y'ars wouldn't lessen do number of drunkards by one, De man who makes a practice of gittin' drunk am, in my opinyun, so lew down in his moral natur' dat his fel- low-man had better let him finish de bfzness wideut intempshun. Let me say a few words to de men^ in dis club " Do ye know what a glass of beer a day means 7 Thirty-five cents a week â€" a dol- lar forty a monthâ€" about $17 a y'ar Nobody stops at one glass. Jist make dat $34 a year. What hev ye got to show fur yer money when do y'ar eaadsT How much batter does yer breaf smell! How much stronger am yer muscle T ' Fifty long ya'rs ago. when I was a slave- boy on do plantashun, I saw a specter. It had hands which trembled. It had hollow eyesâ€" a toothless monthâ€" a face so drawn an' pinched dat a blue VLnht seemed to dance aroun' it. I asked the name of de speoter, an' an old man answered ' Bum 1' "I hev seen dat speoter aLneas' ebery day since. It has followed friends te,de altar â€"it has jined de funeral purcesshun when dese friends war' buried. When men fust see it dey cry out in disgust but, littie by little dat grim, relentless speoter gits a foot- hold. It pats you on the back. It walks aim In arm wid you. It becomes a boon companion. De broken voice of a father â€" do. sobs of a mother â€" de tears of brothers an' sisters do not reach de heart of dis speo- ter. It has no heart â€" no soul. " I have heard It laugh as de poo' ole drunkard fell down in de anew to freeze to death. " I hev heard It exult aa de young man was brought home drunk for de fust time I " I hev seen it stan* at de cottage window an' dance in glee as de brutal blows of a drunken father smote a snfferin' mother an' Innocent chill'en. " I hev seen it rldicnlln' de youth bekase be would not be led into temptashun. "I look back for twenty years an' ask what has become of Ben an' Torn an' Sam an' a scoie of others. Dead, alas 1 Ho«r By old age? Not By accident! Ne I By disease No I They locked arms with the specter. Drink, an' drink alone was respon- sible fur fa' ont o' five deaths. " I look aroun' me to-day an' I see de specter seekln' new victims. It has victims in ebery graveyard In de world â€" its dead sleep on de mountains and under de sea; but It am not satisfied. It has made a million widows, but its hand is relentless. It has made five millyun orphans, but de number mus' Increase. " De young man who puts liquor in his mouf am holdin' a keen-eged razor to his freat an' walkin' ober broken ground. He am stealing' away an' sdlln' to de dram- shops his reverence for his father,â€" his love for mother- his brotherly feelln' fur brothers an' sisters. He am exohangin' honesty in- dustry an'de respeck of his fellow-men furâ€" what! "Bum/ A speoter walkin' beside him wid noiseless step. A serpent lyfai' in wait wid deadly fangs. It blights your manhood. It htstens oleaige. It digs graves fur heart- broken women and starvin oUU'en. " As I cum down h«ah to-night I heard wails of sorrow In a house to which de mas- ter will neber return. He traded laia all for Bum an' de grim speoter walked to de riber wid him an coaxed him to jamp from de wharf. You cannot imagine how dark de clouds hang eber deae left behind. De vio- tlma of dat neoter am lyin' about us as If Death had been holdin' a carnival. Walk up and down the streets of any town or dty In de land an' your eye will tall yon whioh household welcomes de speoter an' which drives him away. What de broken gates, shattered pains, ragged ohill'en and bar' floors mean! What do blows, screams, oaths an' arrests mean Wliat in f o' cases out o' five, cooks de murderer's pistol or draws his deadly knife! What separates husbands an' wivesâ€" breaks np homes â€" tiUa our asylums and poo' houses! "It is Bum I Dey Ulk of de deadly weanms of war, bnt Bum kUla its 4iun- dreds whar' war kills its scores. War re- s-eots de alged an' helpless. Bum de- lights in deir slaughter. " I say to yon, young men, look, ant fur de fust temptashun. De speoter stands be- hind you te drop pizen in de glass. Men argy wid yen data glaas of beer kin harm no one. Neltiier kin it benefit anyone. Tau am simply tradin' off yer money fur sun- tUn' of no aooonnt. It am a stsp down hiU. De man who tella yon he kin drink jist so mnoh ebery day an' den let drink alone am baitin' a trap fur hisself to walk into. No vioiaoa lialiit eber yit stood stW on a man. It mus' grow or it mus' be checked.. " Yen axa Iwy 12yaara eld what drink- in' leads ta, an' he wiU tell you te gamb- lln' fightin' idleaeasâ€" de gutter. State Prison, de gaUewa. B, in do face ef dat sartin kaowladga, ha jinas hands wid da â- psoter, who shall argy dat lie Un ba tamed baakt Bbary drankard raalissa whatdvaandwHi be. B he am satisfied iriiy Aonid de warid lie anxas. tiMvno daya to devote to da aalvashnn ef ainii wk» ML iaiiwIvM w«D "naff a Bar to da (otMaaCaoa «ha MaHzsidat aaA â- isadar fanae-ea'aar an da Ughwaj ladastana. I haa aiai|p|j told mm fMlaboBtlt. Latfi^- ^^ "Jr^ o 8GI6HTIFIG AID UBBFUL. A now teat far tea kUttWMant of aafaaa yialdad,4faa qaal^tity l»*4 «»?^.'5.2; ierior abd ad^MaStod Miopia, tiuma thaaa of good quality. Ifpraerhaa tnan laia vndar earpak all dust^baaaaUy removed wWi it. M«r^ over, greater warmth ia aaewad by oAg oarpat lining, or even aid aawqpapars nndar Oarpeta. Itiaaiddthatinasqidtoaa, fliaa, and other pestawUlnot enter a ream in wUah tiie oastoraa plant is growing. It s eams tiiat the rnnM bey is net alone in his horror of oaatoroU. It waa found hf exact measnrementthat a chimney near Marseilles, Prance, 115 feet high and 4 feat in diameter at the top, reached a maxlmnm oscillation pf twenty Inches daring a high wind. Prof. N. S Slialer Is authority for the statement that 50,000 aqnare miles of ter- ritory east of the Mistlssi]^ new oevared by swamps. might easily be drained and turned into fertUe lands. The practice of scalping is not peculiar to the American aborigines. Seuthul, In his ' Recent Origin of Man," quotes from Her-, odotus to show that the Scythians aaed to scalp their fallen enemies. In the present time the wild tribes af North-aaatem Bsn- gal use the scalping knife. Yoltaire NotUng is more aatimable than a physician who, having studied nature from Ms yontii, knows the prepertiea of the human bcdy, the diseases whioh assail it, the remedies whioh will benefit it, exercises his art with caution, and pays equal atten- tion to the rich and poor. A Paris mOdloal sedety, seeking evidence from many sources concerning the conta- giousness of pulmonary consumption, has forwarded questions on the subject tt every practicing physician in IVaace. Similar hiqalries in Baglaad and in (Germany have not been ptrtlonlarly aucoessfnl, only 1,500 out of 23.000 English practitioners answer- ing, and but 200 Germans out of 16,000. A new and rather ouriona ^pplloation af the steam whistie has be^ made at the Jaeksonville (IlL) Institution for the Deaf and Dumb. A whistle four feet in leniith and twelve ioohss in djameter has been placed en the pinnacle of Ine bailer house and is used as a signal to awaken the in- mates of the institution, eto, who, although they oannot hear, are made sensible of ita varioos signals by the vibration It givea te the buildings. ogel, in his " Diseases ef OhUdren," tells a story Illustrative ef the infiuenoe ef the American mother's milk en the preoodty af the Infant. He once treated an American mother who still nursed her child, who was then two and a half years old; One morning when called to be nursed tills Infant pollto- Ivdedhied, saying: "No, I thank you, dear mamma, the nursing Is tee tedious for me." The mother waa then oenvlnosd that she had bettor wean the prodigy. The simplest and least expensive method for removing saltpetre exudation from brick work when the efflorescence is in position where the sun and wind do not have free ascaas Is to wash it off with dllnted hydro- choohloric or common muriatic add. of com- merce. About half a pound of the add Is used with an ordinary pailful of water, the application bting made with a sponge. Oonsldering the number oimateoric stones whioh reach the earth's surface. It would not be surprising If many livea had been destroyed by them. It is stated that loss of life resulted from a large fall in Africa; that about the year 10:iO many persons and animals were killed that In 1511, about 5 o'clock one evening, a priest was struck and killed and that still btor, in 1650, a monk was killed. But theae, according to Mr. James B. Gregory, seem to be the only in- stancss recorded of death from falling me- teorites. A German entomologist, F. Dahl, clainii that spfdiars have perfect vision only at a very short distance. Their sense of touch is consequentiy remarkably well developed, enabling them to locate duturbanoes In their web. Their smelLIs so good that they oan distmguish odors, and their hetring is ex- cellent. Some of them shew a remarkable Instinct In building their websâ€" even thnr firstâ€" in perfect geometrioal form. A re- fiective power is evinced I^ thdr refusal ef kinds of tough Inseote whioh have eaoe been attacked ansnccessfnlly. Always in Daoicer. A certain Dr. Bull, in New York City, be- came a confirmed inebriate, and was proved to be so irrespcosible that Us family suooseded in having goardiana appointed *?^"'n*"*^F*'P«^- Infteoauraa of time Ball applied to the oonrta to give him back his estato, aa ha oUlmed he had everoeme Us thirst for aloehaL Mnoh In- twasting teatimony waa preduoad as to whether the attraction for strong drink could ever be entirdy gotten rid of. It was oenoaded that there were such persons as reformed drunkards men wha had lived saber Uvea after having bean appaientiy con- firmed aeta j but several phyaidanagave it as their ophdonthat after a dtnakard had an attaok of ddrinm tremens the mpetito never "^iS '^â- PJK?*** ^•og^ it might not maUfeat Itaefilf the patisSt waa «Sround. T .."^«'^â„¢8 afeon m stanoaa. The late John B. Gottgh who had net tonohed a drop of Uqtrar for over tidrty years, said he dared not eat a piem ef minoe pie away from heme, for the brandy or wine It might oontafa would awaken the dormant demon. thetUnt for atrong drbk, which had made his Ufeas • yenng man so nnhappy. One ef the strong- eat arguments for preUbMon Is thit tiiaabsMoe of a temptation to drink b es- sential for the proteotten of the vaat army of S^"^^ JiL " ""** *•»• "Pdl wfioh SSSL Sl^K^P^ J!? d-'^t'Sr You5 paepto dieuld be careful hew ttiay form ttS habit, far enoe acquired one'a futataS JM'"^*^*'â„¢" towrirttiiampettS ^^.J^"^*^ " allnranmnteTS gUdod saloon are far mere eftsottvTMad SSSS.*^ •«•""**' farlSiffJ No Bnaslan lady huaheadls Meant batin AaaMa .â- -it .:(â- tcavd w'tbenther • ^ooree haa taosatiT h^ -- *~ "â- • " â€" Hm ff Yoa'd batlar #va np tta iaiM l*v *» jlag, tidd a Mad of ToBeretaeft. The yanag effioar poozad oat aaother glaas ef "BSSTfima tiiagaaa." ka orlad, "at thavCTymemaat tiiatmylaok la return- ing I ohall not leavo tba table until day- ** I pladri myaalf to do tha saaM," rapUad AnganiiM'£ The game oofitinued withrenewad anima- tion. Sooh atrugglaa have a terrible ra- lemblaaoa to daals to the death. Etoh ad- varaary watohaa thaother, saeklog to divine In hie eyas the aeorataf Us next play. Bach tries t9 Ude his own thoughtâ€" he yields, ad- vanoer, retraate ag«ia; ayai fluna, hands tremble. A aingla mistake weald be irrep- arable. Every ^y ia oaloaUted, all cense- 8 nonces are reckoned, and oards are rapidly ang down in order todtaoaooart tha advar- aary. Finally one ef tiie two becomes oon- fused he teela his look departing from him; he sts^gers he snoonmbs. It's all over with Iiim the game la lost Thus In that memorable night saooumbed Toheretzoffl Long Iefore the dawn began to glimmer,-andthe nighta in St. Petersburg are long, he had leet all th»t he peasai sedâ€" Us house upon the grand Moskala, Vbi fine estates in the oenta«l provinces, and even his beautiful chateau in the Ukraine, where he used to raise the fineist horses in the empire and lived like a king when he went Uther with Us young wm to yisit bis serfs and re- ceive the revenue of his lands. But what gambler ever believes he has lost, so long as there yet remains to Um anything to lose Toharatzoff ooald not stuLo the diamonds ql the princess, and he had already pledged alibis own â€" even the diamonds of Us ^coratlons and a fine jewel he wore upon his finger â€" a rioh gift from tba Ozar. He rose up all dazed, took a glaai, filled and emptied It several times in snooeiHrion â€" walked tiurloe arennd the room, and returned to take his plaoe before Augustiioff, who sat there quietiy shnffling tbe oards as if waiting for another adversary to oentinue the game. Bat when he saw Toheretzaff again In front of Um, Augastinoff arose in turn, " It Is not yet day," said Toheretzsffâ€" " why do you get up T" " Yon cannot play any more you have lost everything 1" "Howdeyeu knowr " Have you seme hidden treasiure 7" " Yes, I have Udden treasurea." And oentinnlng in a whisper, a strangled whisper that barely eaoapad from his livid lips, he said: •• Fou love my wife." " Who told you so " " Nobody I know It I I have not now even the maana of noarlsUng her. I will, play yen for heir. I will stue her agidnst allthat you won from me this evening." A flash aa of lighteing flamed and passed In the eyes of Angustineff, and for the first time his handsome and passionless gambler's face evinced the emotion of his seiS. "I accept." he said. But his voice new trembled like that of his adversary. Emotion choked the words at his threat, and came forth only with difficulty. He continued. ' Still, I accept only under two condi- tions. The first is this My stake is insuffi- cient. I add to It 500.000 rubles, because I cannot add any more. Seoondly, you must have the dirorce obtained, taking upon yourself all respendbility for it. Therep- ntatienef theprlnoessia withaat spot; aha must net be tonohed by so much as the breath of an evil whisper." " I accept the conditions." replied Toh- eretzaff. "The first is fiattorlng to my wife the second Is flattering to myself. It shall not exceed my generosity." At the moment of taking up the oards Angustineff was seized with a singular nervousness. He aa a ma d afraid to bi^a contest of which the wenum he loved was the stake. Waa he afraid of losing! Or did he fear a disdainful njeotion by the prinoess ef the torma to whioh aha had nn- oonsdously beOn made a partâ€" a oentompt- nous refusal tiiat would annihilato the fmita ef viotory In hisvery grasp! All theee feelings blended In the tumult of Us mind and robbed him of mnoh of that won- derful ooolnesa he had always ahown in or- dinary playing. The game oommano3d. It. then aaaumad ttie aspect of a mortal dnel, Indeed. A deep alienee reigned In the halL Each held Us breath, andnatUng ooald ba heard axoept tiia dry Bound of tha cards falling upon ana aaethnr, like thoaaldiers mortady wounded. From tima to time a voloe apake, annennoing a point madeâ€" than tha gliding of the cenntara marking It. At aaoh play tha two advarsariea panaad, like wreatlars avaroema with f atlgoa and tramlding at the thought ef defeat. The ohanoea aaemed equal, the skill Ovenly proport i onate. A bald hut inoautloas play was finally made by Tcheratzeff. It might in other caaaa have breaght vlatoryâ€" It only led to defeat 1 Then, for the first time, tiie man whom the fever had peaaaased for tan lang yaara raddanly assumed an attitude foU^ noble dteaity. Ha bowed to Aoguatinaff; aalntad Um aa abioan aaloto aaoh otiier under armo. and said: "IshaU-keapmyward." Itnavar aomaoh as oocurredto him to quaatlMi tta validity of his angagamaat. But from tiiapallar of hia faaaTtiie mist ia hia ayea, tha Bnaa ef pain abavt Ua month ud forehead. It waa easy to see hew tanrl- "• *•»• â- f"»««wint aad liow vMaat tha ageay within. J?*!"^!'" '"Wiled. Tedi- eretioffobtamedthe diveroe, taUns noon Umaalf aU the reapansibOity ef ttait iad unniingaUtiiafaaltB. Csrtaialy the moat Mrioaa fault waa tiiat af having atakad hb wHeupon a «me of oarda. In Buasia tin P«ttoa of a OvMcoad haiboad la â-¼eiy aari- *^' ^}* ** "»«y **»• *• » hoavy ?^^«y^!«»^yrito ald-a^-oanip waa netl^- P»Mad, bat he waa pssiiililaJ aa a vary gyy^«pJ»« tta lowaa atwariati^ 0*;y» Hftdit MM bat afar wtaiaad. „,i*l»«»«* what waa tha lUa attiia iraoMaMd what fna ohaioa dU aha aukkat ^_y*°.^»fcfftolttMaitetoMthavaan. TUrteeayeus aplayed hthei, 5J3;«-J-ulton;«.., 5jJ: The Virgil i„^ fa said to be the «!??*' ««R '«aei oonduoted'byT,Jfij^»P^htt? bOtfrie Bragg. ** •t^" The Freooh i)aHo«.i Ploy.girU.at,2KMtfh.^ •ewers, bookbiid«rt?^«»^, tog from fifty oenta* *^^ After tt»iriyy7S,'l*«l5ft women are «,,eduS?" ^MIss Mary AuderS i ' *»™^ to the oityTl Jlh.'^afc she spent her earW vsJ.*" hi? soeoial vote of coii«i!T»*«« Wi. Kentucky 8tate"ai«*.SS audience. P«aa», oontrd of herTwi J^«»«L.^ hitherto been entirsl^V???*" 'rtST? h«band. ThuCe'tt^W^ being taken in No?AvtSL"»Ss condition of woman. '"*^t!! ^Miss Augusta HolmMhu. tiie opera she 1. oompS^ «*'!!«. Anantiqae legend^f?j;i;5hk, chosen oy the lady. ,?.?"** her own libretto. Mto Hm^ *^ autumn in 'L-mA^ZJ^ "pS IrbhM.8.S.bths%;5ftiai Mme, Rlbard, ofP«i, T I Tonquin, being kppsSS' fS? M to the family%f*^^M Url^i " governor general of thst p!?. Mae.R,bMdfaal.ofafr"rte?i^ g«izatlon of an ophthSS^l»l tabhshmentatTonqiUii. Sh?ll'*H by professiot "• The Lancet sayi that s «,.«_ named Heathom, who b wi?^ Maid of Kent." ha. '""»'" lOSa year, havine bs^ «j„,^ stone in April, '"'o' '" ** lOVB U nj jart ctn been liaptlt, 1783, TheTan«ili.i possesses all her facaltles, asdhZl have indorsed a oheok vithtit fifmon'S.'" "" "' Tho U. S. Ladies' Health Prota*. sedation haefaducedtheownenofZ houMS^to make the Imprweiwrt. mended by the ladies. Than vJti patting In asphalt fleots, Iutoic slaughtered meat kept away b^n thi of the ridewalk, keeping fits imuSim teuoks, and keeping the heiwi ihtsl that the children in the ntighbahMis not see the cattle slaughtered. We have before now had ooouintii the excellence of the work aeooDpik Paris by the ladies f omdng fte i of the LIberees de St. Lizm, tlui female prben. It ii well kntvn hi depths of misery the womsnpTiNBeDii Lazare were reduced before Mile. diG pre began her beneficent wwk, Un t. of assutiog the diichaq^ ptimnk now been carried on skoe 1870 vitliari uonsly increasing snooett. Dulsg ths year three departments of work ian k organized the first is that ef tht iiij|| ronoHos whe receive the women « I release from prison at 28 Place Du distributing clothing or ratiou «f I them, and endeavor to procure ei for them. The seoend branch ii the I court Asylum, where the chQdm oi I prboners are taken care of dnriog tUtli of punishment. The third branohiilUt the lady visiters, who last yetr i permbsion to enter the prises udihitl women there. They oan tiini JanlM wishes, ascertainwhat werkthayinei o^ and obtdn employment leidf farf at their discharge. New Gold Fields. Since the exhaustion el the piKi I ef Califomb and AastraUa ttew"' a large fallfag off fa the w»«* • gold. At one tim? seme {200,000,01111 " theprodaotofthemfaiei m«»J*' year the prodnotlen of the «»»' was not much over 170.000,000. D particalarly uufortonateinTlefM"" that gold is now the sole im»w% T and ita soatdty means low« mj^ prices, thus throwhig aoloudonwo- intoresta of the world. It*""" beUove, however, that fa'jwj""' wUl be new snppUes ef gold fw"' parte ef the earth, f •*»«?' .? n to be a most important g»"°f,S deporit extends from Cape W- • northern shore ef the Stt«K«' along tiie Atiantfo shore •wnetwr The gold country Is •«"(, "STTli the depodta are known to M* tiiese ef California or Aobih suppUes of gold also we •?*«fffl A:?loa. TttereUagoldfevwb** mere u • g"" *: " i,^ ijir vaaL On tiie oleifag "^^illi 560 ounces of geld 7«'?J?*^i»lW Farther nortii nob depf*f '«2 fti'*! metiJs have been f»«il »» » ^^d bed. TUs region fa bot Bw white men, bnt if it ^•J^*l£?«.'i tens of tiionsands ef ^J^S'!^! be in Oontrd Africa ^^^ another region '"ob " JTO|i*yf vaat quantities of gol4 »SJ Jft be axUrively worked. «»»»;|;^ti gionwitti underlying reosjw ^^ Sxtean to twen;^ '-L'frilP'i, b anrifarous. Then th^ 17,i^ danoalnManthuria. JfJ^,^^" China near tbe B-^i^*^? Madagaroar 'eperlaooB* oi^gj^, findsT^ In Burmah, fS^JST *?.! bean amiexed by Gw'^jfSciJil bdleved te be valuable ^^M tiie United SkatM ^u JJ^^Mjl In productog %f^'^S^^S\ In Patagonia. So"»«'"4l^liiB'C*%l will 1«^ » «»V!SSirSfc«^uV| to tiiooo dfat" "» Cid » •*5n*| quantity rf gold ^^i»^A atimnlato tiie ""»•?? iafintSf I •nly would bMi»-«,"'iJt. ^^^ aatian would gain bf«' eat anrifarous '"•P**,,,^--- â€" â- i**-^ ^i\ Mr* ^^l^^^^^ mambar af She btiia wife •[ Dr. -.wTc-i *^^:;rSJ£Sf ^^5 qnalifiad f ar tha ..:^:?riiit'j';;i._i-i .ji ^^mX J;-i$vv.M: