1â€- HOUSEHOLD. My Robbie. “'hat is my nolibie boy thinking about. “With that faraway look in his eyes? Is my darling one dreaming of days yet come, As hid in the long grass he lies? less a delicate one. The parents who spared neither time nor expense when the child was sick, now think two dollars, or two dollars and a half a week good wages for the care of the child when well. Usually much less is .‘nor training for the care of any child, much to I paid the nurse-girl than the girl for general iousework. “by a. difference, and if a difference which has the better right to the premium, the girl who cooks our food, . . . , .. . - -. i . . . . Doggy“: sec. m the llgm, new). clouds passmg , u .isiies our dishes ant. s“ chs our floors, or by Fair visions obscured from my sight? Does he hem-angel voices soft chanting their praise, As they come on their criands of light? Gaze on, little dreamer, I‘ll break not. the spell That iolds thee so fast in its power, AndI pray that the years as they come in their turn, May bring thec full oft such an hour, In which not a sorrow shall trouble thy heart, Not a worry shall rullle thy brow. Dream on, elï¬ii Robbie, my 0 vn darling boy, May thy future prove bright as ’tis now. God help me to keep my dear boy everHis, May my child be Secure in his love, May the path of his journeyings lead him at last, To the heaven of rest that’s above. Assn-z H. STREATER. Catsups- Catsups are a pleasant addition to meats game and fish, are much more wholesome than pickles and are very easily prepared at home. Every housekeeper, will find itse- during the winter, for catsups, in seasoning ' as well as serving them with suitable dishes. TOMATO C.t'rst'i-.-â€"Put a half bushel of tomatoes over the fire and let them boil gently for one hour, then press through a sieve. Return the juice to the kettle and boil very low. Add a stiong vinegar and boil half an hour: then add aqnartcr of a pound of sugar, half". tczi- cupful of salt, an ounce of black pepper, one ounce of allspice, half an ounce of cloves, it fourth ofa teaspoouf'ul of cayenne pepper, and stir until well mixed. Let boil a few minutes. Bottle and seal while hot. Cret‘nmzi: Currantâ€"Pare large, ripe cu- cuiubcrs and remove the seeds. Grate ï¬ne, and to one dozen cucumbers add ten small onions, two tablespoonfuls grated horse- radish, lialf a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper, a teaspoonful of white sugar, at little salt and black pepper. Covcr witlicold vinegar and seal. ‘ Sticsn Circvnizim C.irst'r.â€"â€"-'l‘akc large, ripe cucumbers, peel and slice thin, sprinkle with salt, and let stand twenty four hours, drain through a sieve. cgar with a tablespoonful each of black pep- pcr white mustard seed and cclerysccd, and pour over the cucumbers. C.tui=.u‘:i~: C.\.'rs'.'i'. w-Chop one gallon of win- ter cabbage, one quartofonionsand six pods quart of I Boil a (1:2. rt of vin- ' the nurse-girl who cares for our children ‘3 During the long winter evenings the cook and liouscmaid are often free to entertain 'or visit their friends, while the nurse-girl patiently, or impatiently asthe caseniay be, cares for the r:stless little ones in ‘tlieiiur- ’ scry. I do not advozate less pay to the cook or housemaid, but better wages and more sym- pathy for the etiicient nurse-girl. The woman who commits her little ones to the care of an inefficient girl has no right to the name of mother, and it should be an impossibility for such girls to find places. A good nurse-girl, like a good minister of the gospel, is worthy of her hire, and no minister who believes that “ 0f such is the kingdom of heaven,†will object to the comparison. The children’s nurse is the mother’s best friend, and should receive her respect and consideration, and on her part she must be worthy of her position. It. is said it. is difï¬- cult to find good nurse-girls. ThisI grant: although I have heard ladies of experience say that good wages has brought to them efficient, faithful girls; but to make this class ‘ of girls sufiicicnt to supply the lleCtl,-<â€"I say need, instead of demandâ€"a change of senti- I ment is necessary among the mothers. i How often we hear it said, “I pay my ‘ cook three and a half or four dollars. a week. I can onlyafl'ord a dollar and a. half or two dollars for my nurse girl. †“Consistency, thou art a jewel.†It is a question, which is of the more consequence, ' our dinners or our children ‘: Is it any wonder that poor, untrained lyoung girls, often needing a mother's ctre l themselves, fail to care properly for the chil- . dren under their charge? We found hospit- als to train nurses for our sick. I question ON THE SAULT STE. mm [ Jolly Old Garrett and the Tradition of the ï¬shing season will find scattered about in boats and hotels at little dodger containing these words: 1 l l N0 Fish, No Pay, No Pay, No Fish. GAILROX. Inquiry will elicit the information that the dodger is the unique advertisement of a. jolly old ï¬sherman and guide named Giirron. Translated, it means that he will take any one so inclined out ï¬shing in the rapids, and if his patron does not catch any fish under his management and instruction, he will take no pay for his services. If his patron catches fish, if only one, he can’t. have it unless he pays Garron’s price, which is $3, whetherthe visitor is out ten minutes or all day. Harron's services are always in demand. He has one helper in his canoe. They hand- le the light boat. with long poles, as in no other way can a boat be held or propelled. against the rushing waters of the rapids. The dexterity with which the men handle the boats by poliug is wonderful. They can take their canoes anywhere, sending them with remarkable speed up the swift current, holding them in one spot as still and steady as if they were anchored on an unru‘llcd lake, or letting them go with the turbulent I water, either slowly or rapidly according to 3 the will of the polcnian. ,Garron, who is nearly 70, is a jovial, red-faced little man, full of quaint quips and cranks. He is al- ways ready to bet anything from a cigar to a. $10 bill with any fisherman he takes into his boat on the result of any cast of a fly. “The cigars you git a trout. there l†he will shout as he and his man hold the boat j as dead still as a stone against the tearing current, and he points to a spot where he wants the fisherman to cast. If the fisher- man thinks some other spot a more favor- able one for a cast. and prefers to cast. there, Garron will cxclaim : “All right. Ten dollars to ï¬ve you don‘t get one l†7 Perhaps it is not so very queer that- the )Iagic Indian Eye. . The visitor at Sault Ste Marie during the i - , . . . , . . . . . . . I II “ 0 “ "111d “UL (10 bet ‘61 ‘0 fmmd homes i jolly old fisherman wms his bets nine times and schools to train girls to care for our chil- j out of Len, (.rcn, that there may be less need of hospit- als and nurses for the sick. The trout that are caught. in the Sault Ste. Marie are the wild native brook trout. that spawn in many streams which It “was “0 m'gumeln ‘30 Prove that the ' enter the “$00†on both sides, and nowhere 1 early training of the child, determines to a in the country are “out, of this kind largcrl iliu't醓fem the Chin's future; Ofneccssuy’ or fgamicr quality. In an hour’s ï¬shingl u 1;. "t u _ ., U , C . .. t . .D ,.. .. . ievcn With the most watchful and carcfullwm, Gunon this season, broasï¬ng mosey "t 1910 “‘13 ‘l" I“ 012 “03 5‘1"â€: [ mothers, a young child is much of his time I l with his nurse, and learns of her. The society lady is satisfied only with an artist for a dressmakcr. She must also haven. 1 professional cook; her house flll‘llISilCd and ‘ decorated by artists ; her children must be 2 pictures in their ait dresses. 5hearts of the children? far in the background that; she has no un- ,dcrsianding 01' sympathy with children? 101' some mother-heart- in the person of a I i tossing rapids in his cocklc'slicll of a. bark canoe, one New York angler killed twenty trout that weighed forty-live pounds. The , handling of a lighting rout; of two pounds! and more, on a, seven-ounce rod, in such1 water as the Sault Ste. Marie Rapids, is an , I _ n _ _ “mil? ‘II‘tISt ‘ experience that no trout ï¬sherman ever had i is carving iucliaceable lines in‘thc minds and i elsewhere, for nowhcm else are theâ€; “out ‘ _ I? 1'3 the, Work 0f j waters so ï¬erce, so angry, so persist nt in. some lovaolc girl whose childhood is not so aiding {I hooked trout, in its emu-t5 to get! is certainly. If you asked him .10 1,0 your free. There are few lake tourists who have not read of the Indian fishermen of the Sault - ' I u r . I I v- - v n. s r . I I r o s n u n of gicenpcppci togethet. Iloil halt a gal- ' uoman u ho u iscly cares for both pliy sxcal ' Sta Mama and mu,- ,,3:,»0undmg feats m reg- Ion of vinegar and one ounce of mustard, ginger and allspicc, one tablespoonful each of cloves, cinnamon, mace and grated horse- - and spiritual needs? ting Whitefish iii the seething rapids. The i - w l - . . . i V. . , t . . . . . “5 “Ln “~le 3 me"? ‘ 13““ 0; “one , guide books describe this great. attraction of - ‘7 a and drawer of water, radish, with one poundof ln'owusngur. Four 1 model of beauty from the rough stone, the: over the cabbage. Mrsuuoou C.t'r:=t‘r.â€"â€"Takc freshly gath- crcd mushrooms, wipe, but do not: rush them. Put a layer of mushroons in the bottom of an earthen dish, sprinkle with, salt, then put another layer of mushrooms and salt, alternately. Cover with a damp, the 0119 to curve a' the “Sooas follows: “Two Indians go with a canoe into the, ‘ -.' . -, ,.- . -_ 's . v . . . imnm m “Ute a ll‘J‘v‘†“m1 5‘3“ 1“ L0 “‘9, ‘upids. (Inc occupies the bowaiid one the l iziusic of running brooks 9. id dashing water _ stern. The latter [Imiiuu, presumably _: not I ‘. . . s ', .. . , . ,.: .i t - , 3 141157 “91"†15110141",- h ‘tafléllt Ell,“ 1†_ HM“ stern} uses a paddle to keep the boat. s head ; our Cllllttl‘Cll to be beautiful \\'li}:lOlll2 and up Stream. The former has a, pole Wm, within. which to steady the boat, standing upright. Blessed be that child whose nurse is but 2 in his place. They mkcwm, the“, a dip net 1 another mother. Prep-“Cd 193' “willful “mess four feet in diameter, attached to a pole or folded cloth, and stand in it warm pleceforim1d 001‘501‘3'1110115 “mums 101‘ 1'10" FCSPUH‘ ‘ handle liftccn feet long. This is placed thirty-six hours : thou througha coarse bag. To every quart of Juice add one ounce of pcppcr-corns: put in ginger root, two dozen whole cloves and a blade of mace. Let. simmer gentlv fifteen, . .‘ .:.: , ‘I . . i .‘.., . , . . . nasli and straiuis‘d’le POSmml- All“ “hill 0f “DEW “I10 ready to the hand of the Indian in the bow. i I‘m-'59 “(it only Supplement the “ml-hell’s E The fishingr is done at the foot of the rapids, WOI‘k, but I'L‘"€l1l5~8 U": Children “1‘0 motile!" l where tllOWViLlCl‘ boils and tumbles futiouslv. I a kettle and boil half an hour, then add an. 195$ 01' have incoml’etcm 01‘ careless ; \\'ith his pole the Indian in the bow holds. ounce of whole allspicc, half an ounce of ~ “101110â€, “'0 the 0111)‘ “lowers the Children ? the canoe or lets it float steadily sidcwisc, 5 know? ' \Vbcre is the man or woman of means, now up a littEc, perhaps, and then but always under perfect. control. down , The Iii- iuinutcs longer, then take from the-ï¬re and i “1‘0 “'m e’l‘lf’w “home "1' who"! Whom girls , diaii gazes constanth info the water, which let stand in a cool place. “'hcn cold, strain ' “lily be “Tuned ‘0 become COIIII’L‘tfiI'l “‘II‘SCS . is often ten feet deep where they are fishing through a flannel bug, put in glass bottles, {01' {be children. of our homes ‘."‘ crlly, the l and the depths of which no white man was mothers \\’lll‘l'l':'(: up and call him, or her, over yet able 1,, school his eye to pcnctmie, blessed, and the children shout, Hosanna ! 5 Suddenly 1,0 which. the met by the handle and seal. “'oitcrzsricitsiiiiu: C.i'r:~:t.'i’.â€"â€"One quart of vinegar, half an ounce of cayenne pepper, four heads of garlic, bruised, half a dozen anchovies, mashed, ten whole cloves, and one blade of mace. (‘ovcr and stand aside for eighteen hours. Strain through asicvc, add one gill of walnut catsup and a tablcspoonful of made mustard :put in a stone jug and let stand for two weeks. Bottle and seal. This catsup is an excellent substitute for Worces- tershire sauce. G uizizx Tt'rT-lA'l‘O C.\Tst'r.â€"â€"Cliop one gallon of green tomatoes, a half gallon of cabbage and a pint of onions with six pods of red pepper: sprinkle with salt. and let stand over night : drain, and add two tablespoon- fuls each of mustard, ginger and black pep- per, with one tablespoonful each of cinna- mon, cloves. allspicc, horseradish and mace, and a pound of brown sugar ; pour over the catsup: put in a preserve kettle and boil four hours, when it becomes thick and smooth. (hut-i: C.\T$l'l‘.â€"T:tli0 nine pounds of grapes, remove from the stems, \vcigh and put in a preserve kcttlc ; set on the fire and scald: rub through a collandcr, add five pounds of sugar, thrcc tablespooufuls of citi- iiainou, one each of ground UIOYcS and all- Bpicc. lloil fifteen minutes, then add the vinegar cold. Bottle at once. Moriiizii's ’l‘onirn ('.\'l'$l‘l’.-â€"l.-Ill(“llttlf bushel ofpcrfcctly ripe tomatoes. “'ash and break in pieces. Place them over tiic fire and let them conic to a boil. When cool rub them through a sieve. Add one-half cup of salt, one teacupful each of allspicc and cloves, one quart of strong vinegar. Cook one hour or until quite thick, stirring all the time. Bottle and seal while but. Donovan. Our Nurse-Girls. I sometimes wonder why the sick are at such a )rcmiuni. To be sure we have the. Master at words, “'l'Ea-y that are whole have no need of a physician, but they that are sick :" but why need a phvsici-m? “"6 spend cur iuouéy fright royally for trained muses for our sick. “We take no note of time but from its loss t" and we count that lost spent away from the bub side of our dear ones. Day and night are one. The life and strength of the mother is freely given, oven until she goes with her child into the “dark valley." I‘hc father inimrtuncs the doctor to spare no ex. pc'nsc of time and labor for his child. The trained nurse is quccn of the i-ilcli room :hcr lightest wish gratiï¬ed ; herinstructions car- ried out to the lettc'. All this is well. no more than is our duty and pleasure : but the child recovers and in a few short weeks is remand to the care of 3 young girl who has had neither experience Amer; I‘IAMIL'UN Ricu. Seasonahle Recipes. Coux C.ttit:s.â€"Ileat two eggs, _ pint of buttermilk, sift in a teacup of incal , and half a tcacup of flour villi a teaspomiful I of soda and half a teaspoonful of salt. Mix \y‘cll and bake on a hot, well-greased grid- ( .c. ing~iron, put over hot. coals and broil done. melted butter and serve very hot. Fitiizo Em: I’i..\.\‘T.â€"l’arboil, slice thin, dip in grated cracker, then in beaten egg, thcnin the cracker again, and fry in liot. butter. I’ixi:.trri.r. CAKi:.-â€"Crcaiii one cup of but- ter and two of sugar together, sift in four cups of llour and two teaspoonfnls of baking- ï¬shing. vou will leave the Sault Ste. Marie I stx eggs and half a teacup of cold water, flavor with lemon. Ilakc in jelly~pans. Grate one pineapple, sprinkle with sugar, and spread between two layers. sides. Ssrri‘izn Ton.iroi:s.â€"Tuke one dozen large I tomatoes, cut otfthc ends, takeout the seeds iand pinp, sprinkle with salt and pepper. _Cliop a pound of cold meat line, mix with I tomato juice. add a slice of cold, boiled ham ; fry onc minced onion in vuttcr, add a tea- cup of bread crumbs, two eggs, at l ttlc salt and pepper. Mix all thoroughly, fill the tomatoes and bake. L'oux Promxo.~â€"Hmtc the corn from a dozen cars : scaSon with salt. pepper and a little sugar : and the yolks of four eggs, two ounces of butter and a quart of new milk. llakc in a slow oven. When done, beat the whites of four eggs, pcnr OVcl‘ the top and brown. lpowdcr, stir in the well-beaten whites of I Ice top and A New Refuge for Paris. By the death of Mr. I’ruvotâ€"â€"a landcd proprietor, who lived in the lloulcvatd dc L’onrccllcs and left behind him a fortune of £80,111! â€"â€"thc city of Paris has received a legacy of nearly £40,111). The tcstator left instxu‘ctions that the chief portion of this amount is to be used for the. construction and inanitcuance of a “Night Slzeltcrfor the Homeless and llcstitutc l‘ou' in the Seven- tcc :th Ar. l')lltll:>‘clllf'lll," which includes the districts of the 'l'crncs. the l‘lainc-Mouccau, tizc lLttignollt’s. and the Epinettcs. He has also left a considerable sum for benevolent purposes among the young to the town of Soicsnics, where he had a residence. Take up, sprinkle with pepper, pour over mix with a' I with one hand, still manipulating the boat. with the other, and plunges the not into the water, perhaps ten feet away from the boat, ’ thrusting it to the bottom. Then he gives it a peculiar twist, draws it- up, and turns out into thc but“. often as many as half a dozen Whitefish weighing from three to ï¬ve pounds. ' '5‘ use Indian fishermen are ' uncrring in c: ing their nets, and it is not;I an uncommon thing for them to captureI 300 whitclisli in a dav. How they are able I ," , F , ‘ -. : ‘ _: . . . ‘ I ' ‘ broth-1i I'l.-\..i.~_â€"5lu.c ham thin, pout 0\ 01 ' to see the liin on the bottom of the rapids IS a bailing water, drain. Wipe dry, luv on a brotl- . mvstcrv no one has vet been able to fathom.†Tliusvthc guide book. And if you go with a pair of these Indian fishermen and watch them fish, you must acknowledge to your-j self all the apparent nccromancy of their piscatorial art. You can see nothing but the boiling waters, but suddenly your Indian 1 starts, plunges his not into the troublcdf depths, and lifts it from them fullof glistcirl ing fish. If you don’t think to marvel to‘: jollv old (ittl‘l‘ml over this amazing Indian} l . . . . I deeply impressed with its wonde‘ and its mystery. But mention it to Garrett and he will smile and wink his shrewd little eyes. He will say nothing unless you press him for a reason for the smile and twinkling: eyes. Then he will tell you that the mys- | tery of the Indian eye that seems to look down through ten feet or more of foaming, rushing water and sec whitcfish that would be invisible in five inches of the same water to the white man's eye is a fraud of the most stupendous dimensions. The Whitefish are natural denizens of the still, silent depths of the great lakes. To get from Ilnrnn to Superior tlic=c fish must ï¬ght their way up the fierce Sault Ste. Marie Ilapids. In doing this they tra- vel by easy stages. They can brave the rapids out a short. distance at a time, ' when, almost exhausted, they drop into the shelter of the friendly rock 3 that fill the bottom of the rapids. lluddlcd sometimes by the score behind these rocks the white- lisll, if the water is not too deep. can be picked out by the hand of the fisherman, they are so nearly exhausted. The Indians as well as the white fishermen, knowthis, and kuowin ' the location of every rock in the rapids,Iiavc only to plunge their nets down and dip uptlic. fish. The cunning of the Indian led him long ago to give visiting sportsmen the impression that. he could pen- etrate the depths of the rapids with his gaze and discover the white ï¬sh on the bottom. The wonder at it spread. It is now one of the foinlcst and best paying traditions of the Sault Ste. Marie, but there is nothing in it. The only wondc: about the Indian Whitefish fisherman isfthigtlcxtetit .with which behind- lcs his boa: in the rapi His magic eye is a liunibng. . _ _.._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" FALL FUN A rattling gameâ€"«lie 3. An echo is a kind of holler mockery, A pretty time of nightâ€"moonlight. Monev has some human characteristics. It talks and it gets tight. She started the fire in kerosene, Blew up and hasn‘t Since benzmcl There is a double signiï¬cance in say- ing of a dead shoemaker that he has gone to his last home. If the conceit was taken out of some people there wouldn’t. be enough of ‘em left to hang clothes on. “I loved you once,†he said, in a reproachful tone. “Well,†she responded, “ I don't want the earth. Once is enough.†It is a sign that her husband is making money when a woman begins to get the look on her face of looking at you without seeing you. The unsuccessful actress who married an architect had the satisfaction of knowin r that she at least had a husband who coult draw houses. “What is the foremost ambition of a boy?†“To b a man.†“ And what is the leading ambition of a man?†“ To be one of the boys.’ †Mable (rclenting a. little, but still a trifle angry)â€"“ Anything 1 have of yours I will return at once.†Charlie (giving her a kiss) â€"â€"“Well, there's your opportunity.†The bootblack now appears less blue, Nor mourns a lucklcss fate; He‘s happy forthe russet shoe Is getting out of date. Susieâ€"“ Papa, isn’t it. murder to kill a hog?†’apa (who is a lawyer)â€"“Not exactly. ,Murder is assaulting with intent to kill, the other is killingr with intent. to salt.†’ Landlordâ€"â€"“ I want to tell yonbeforc you move in that I like to have the rent- paid promptly on the first. day of each month.†’ITenantâ€"J‘VI‘liat’s my style. Either punc- tually or not-at all.†\Vintcr is cold and bleak and dreary, Spring is Winter in thin disguise Summer is hot and makes us weary : 011 Autumn surely there are no flies. “ Do you know what llismarck’s scheme of the progress of creation is?†asked the I. ajor. “No. \Vlltlll- is it?†asked the. Judge. next Germans.†Friendâ€"“You have only been married two weeks and you are lighting already, so I hear, )lrs. Youngâ€"“ Yes, life’s too short- to waste any time. I ought to have tackled him two weeks ago.†“ And may I go to your father, darling, and ask him the same question?" “Oh, dear, no. He would refuse.†“Refuse?†rife, what else could he say but. no '1†Undeniable Evidenceâ€"â€" The weather Seems pleased to give proof of its power “'hen most unprepared we may roam : The man’s always caught in the heaviest v shower \Vho leaves his umbrella at home. There lived in the city of “'oi‘ccstcr A man who could crow like a roocestcr. lut as he grow old He often caught cold, And then couldnit crow as he nrccstcr. Amyâ€"“ Fred, I hear that- your engage- ment with Alias illlcsscr is broken ‘:†Fredâ€" “Yes, it is.†Amyâ€"“It. must have been built- on the sand to fall so soon.†Frcdâ€"“ I thought it, was founded on rocks, but I dis- covered slie hadn't any." The urchin‘s tears now freely flow And he who lately was in clover Shows its a face o’ersprcad .vith woe, For this the reason, don’t you know? Why the long scliool~vacatioii's over. IUiinpSOiiâ€"“More humble mcn reach high stations in New York than any other city in the world.†Traveling llritishcrâ€" “Indeed ‘1 You surprise me : and piay how do you account. for it '1†I’lipsonâ€"“Thcy have to take the elevated trains.†\Vife (to husband who had been absent duriiig the night)â€"â€"“I am ever so glad you left. your pistol with me, darling. A burg- lar was here last nightand lsurpriscd him.†I‘IllSImlHlâ€"“YOII brave little woman ! Did you shoot. him 1†“No, I threw it at him.†0â€"...â€" How Russia Deals with statics. Russia has two ways of dealing with her Asiatic subjects. \thn the population is considerable, united, subordinates licr appetite to licrassiniilating powers, leaves them pretty much to them- homogeneous, she, M. ___ _.._..._ ._. ..- _......_._â€"â€"â€" .-.__~_â€"__â€"~.... -_W.m' u‘. i i selves, and even guarantees them certain, privileges. The; are then in the position of the captive reserved for slaughter in ancient Mexico who used to be well fed, sumptuous-I ' dressed, married to four young girls, and generally made much of till the feast of TCZ‘:ll.Ill)OCil came round, when his heart was torn out. by the priests, his head stuck on a spike, and his body eaten as sacred food. This is the method applied to. the llaltic provinces, Little lussia. Poland, and Finland. The feast of 'l'czcatlipoca basal ready arrived for the first three peoples; it. will soon come round to the fourth. Whenthc populations are weak, disunit- cd, scattered. they are at once assimilated, and should this prove inmossiblc, life is made so uncomfortable for them that they llce from before the Russian advance as North American Indians vanish before the white man. Ask the brave Circassitui whether Russian rule is acceptable to him and his race, and he will tell you what few Englishmen seem to be aware of, that his icoplc have disappeared from before the Ilussiaus asa flock of sheep from below a pack of hungi y wolves. Thousands of Circassians emigrated from Batouin when that district was coded to Russia ; tens of thousands have been sttad- ily emigrating ever since, and now a me- morial column might be apprcpriatcly erected in the centre of that picturesque country once inhabited by the vanished (fir- mssian race. i or is this all. Half the Mohammedan population of the Govern- ineut of Kara have joined the exodus. ()nc shipowncr alone in Xovorossisk «and this statement is borne out by the official re- ports of several foreign (,‘onsuls to their tSovcrumcnts*sliipped 62,000 Mohamme- dan inhabitants of the Rub-an dirtric’. and Daglicstsn fiurn Novorossisk to Turkey in the course of last year alone 3 These things require no commentaiy: they afford no scope for the display of niagiianiinity. IN AWFUL SUSPBISB. Conductor Wood‘s Lire Saved in a Way 11m! Seems .tlnios! Miraculous. One hundred feet in the air, with the falls roaring bone; tli him and a heavy train rum- blincr above him, was the position in which “Edison \Voods, a conductor on the d†.\.l. and I. lailroad. found himself last Friday at. midnight. Yet, by a miracle, his life was saved. hlr. \Voods had chargeof the bridge freight train, which hauls the loaded cars from Runs city to the .l clfersouville yards on the way to their northern destination. (bi Friday night. his train consisted of about thirty vars drawn by a Mogul engine. There were two brakeuien beside himstlf, and at midnight. the start was made. Woods was at the front end of the car next to the engine, and was climbing down theladder to step on tho tender. Ilcfove he gained a foothold, how- ever, the laddci, which was an old one. gave way bcncith the wci 1ht. upon it. Like a flash he disappeared tween the cars. and fell through the narrow cross-tics of the bridge. lc‘ortunately he succeeded in grasp- ing with both hands a projecting iron bar, to which he hung while the train passed over him. Mr. \Voods is not a strong man anal before ialf of the train was over his strength was nearly exhausted. He called loudly for assistance, but the roar of the falls and the rumbling of the tr. in drowned his cries, and it is doubtful if a man passing on the. footway could have heard him. Several times he was on the point, of recasing his hold. and had he done so his body would have been dashed to pieces on the rocks be low. llut the thought of his wife and child- ren at home, he says, imbued him with ad- ditional strength at the critical moment, and he managed to hold on. When the last car had passed his arms were stiffened and almost numb. Besides, he was so weak that lie could not draw him- self up between the tics, and it seemed as if he had only escaped death under the whccls to meet an equally horrible fall upon the rocks. Just as he had resigned himself to his fate and his still'encd fingers were slipping from the iron bar to which he. held, there \ 'as a football on the pine boards above him. Sev- eral glimmering lights appeared, and a ino- mcnt later he was lifted to the top by strong bands. The other trainnien it appears, had missed him soon after the accident and five minutes later thty had stopped the train and began searching along the train for him. He had probably hung there ten minutes be.- forc they discovch him and had they not; done so just at the moment they did he would Probably have never been found. The brac- ing air s<20ii restored him, and be was able to walk back to the ‘aboosc. It will be Sth‘l‘uI days, however, before he is entirely himself again. ##â€" Some Things at. the Beginning. A young honscktcpcr will never do any better than to l-cg'n her oversight and raid at the vcrv foundation of her house auc li(:::ic--v.'itii her cellar, the kitchen, undthn pantry. In fact, she may even begin outtidc tl‘ 'tchcnproper,withâ€"tiicfastidiousread- 'th: Its-the swill pail, and at a glance sec for herself if there is anything there that should have bccn saved fol-making over into brcal-zfast or side dishes, or that could better have been put with the soap grease; she can go further still, and sec that the soap grtasc is saved, and that it is her own pet'- quisitc, and not, the maid‘s. She will go into her cellar. and if things are kept; there in quantity, the will make sure they are kept in the right way ; that there is, for instance, a weight. on the top of the pork barrel, if she has pork, that will in: its contents stay under the brine : she wi.l see if the apples are decaying there, and if so, have them picked over, and the bad ones cast. out : Elli? will see if the pzirsiiil-s are under sand, if the onions are in the dry- cst. corner, if the squash are where it is dry and jus'. removed from freezing, and if any of the vegetables are sprouting, in which case they must be put in a dark er spot and used as soon as possible ; she must see that there is some light and a sufficient circulation of air, and that the swinging shelf is well out of the ray of the rat. 1nd free from dust and mould. In her pantry she must look to the Indian incal, among other things, and have it stirred now and then to let in the air and keep it from heating, and have a large cool stone in it for the same purpose :she Will have herlai'd and her suct kept in the vessels instead of in stone or earthen jars ; she wil look at her brcad boxes and judge if they are aired and sivcct, or capable of giving it musty flavor to the bread, and if the frag- mentsand crusts are saved for the various lit-cs to which they can be put : and she will see that all the articles in the place are kept. in tight buckets and boxes, and not in the papers in which they crime from the grmrct‘y. In the kitchen, crluips she will be so fortunate as to lie able to begin with the beginning, and have her range or cooking stove gradually beau-d. instead of being warped or cracked by a sudden extreme of temperature; and she will have had all her wirtlwn vessels put into cold water and brought to a boil. with a handful of bran thrown in to toughen the glaring, and prevent it. from in. jury by ncldr. Nu.- will have the lamp cloths {if the does not in-c gas) washed and diicd, and not thrown down together in that. oily condition in which they spontanimunly generate lire. Sh:- will see that her new knives are not plungni into hot water lliub will loose“ and ‘IIMWIUF the handles, and will instruct her maid that when discolored lJllh‘k rubbing with sindp'iper will do a great deal toward restoring the original aplwaiancc of these knife IlelHilt-e: and rhc will hurt.- tl.( He that arc to be IiZl'. away wrapped in paper, and not in woolen. She will. :1;- that the Wooden Ware is ('ll'flll and Maldvd often, that then: in a bountiful Hipply of holders, roller». and dish'tou'cls: that there sh ill be three brooms, the taupe: broom never to be net-don the ban.- floor. the kill-hen broom never to be uwd on the steppe and outdoor \Htlkb‘. nor the yard broom to be brought into the house: that the clothes-line is taken down when the wash is brought in, and the clotlu.-;4-pins gathered and counted at the same time. Squire Fetterl-n'dlncle Jasper. we me just comidriing the question as in whether chickt...~i elm-p or" at night. “'laat‘r you 0 iiiiimi '3 Do they ever get in the mom of hirirplmux ‘: ' Uncle Jasper- ~“\\'tll,.‘~‘qxiar ! I'll that gf‘ninltll.flik nigger an‘ in: known whar dt-y done rocs', dey suttingly do git. dat‘ fo‘ a fac‘," ., .fltwm. .r