loun't (aflovihthdm in h in th- nanludom uni-amt“ pun-III: Ind bra-tic um which imam I! git m» in mindnd III-ï¬nd And»- wand dun-in. a» any ban-I (on) Ind “Mutual, by vb“ woo- do. flu which in mind “d bro-thud Ind n. ore-mod during an night mun pun ad hodthhl! “For the put. ï¬lm put.“ up tha writs: "land to, â€I have doph Inmar md Whamâ€"except on I few occasions vhcn if. m impounble u: do Ioâ€"wibh n lout on: mgmfldï¬ mom Vida o n ovary ni h, Av. um ox- oopï¬em Indus. Inn on din exocpï¬onsl‘ ni he: I Il'lyl nwoka v“): n hand-ch- on ¢ «ling ohuï¬â€™oatinn. [conclude thou- fore “an an mud: mm» in indulgod in nbont. nu: mugs inhuman at night air md diam-rib ' tohn'k shat-gin u upnn my other given "abject A (rear Idm‘n- lion of night d: £0 badly ventihtod bed- room would dam may of the illusion- unt exjn in regard to it: unencum- Reform in the “mil-Eon of our home, our churches Ind on: public buildinglja needed I: grout], u "Son: in my other direction, Ind this reform should in in .our hon-ea Ind Ihunld work on‘ into In our churches uni public huildingl. I! win: Ind mothers And home rather: gen- enlly can be induced to In light wd nix into their pix-Ion ugfl bedryolnl. Quit â€'_'l ‘â€" _‘ 77,, . inw their parlor: end bedroom their huabnndl md Ion: will noon h-nilh Ion] uir from ourchurchea Ind public buildin Women ere [urger r nuibln (or poor y until-med buildings of [description]. A grut my people frequently eons-reg.“ in hells, churches. out... where the “may phere. miles: the window: mkupc wide open. in ebout- II mulodoroul II dint of A chuuel-lrouee.yel may do not oontider mail In elmolphero mien] [or hmnm heingn we breathe. It in the ï¬ne. duty of every wife end moiher to In tint. her home in thoroughly vomit-led day end night. It in n feat beyond dilpula the: the pulon o! n hue proportion of nonu- no Hula-Bend Itu. um bruthing in peinful. Nine tent - of the bedroomrretmu me person. ‘ ulity of people who occupy the uplru'nenm from time wcime, it cling: to the beddin , curteinn Ind cerpeu, end he: been close y limb in luv. fresh Iir end Inn-hints lhould ï¬nd ndmibtencu end with their purifying presence curry dun-gs to the iurnitnro. Disinfeeung 1n Cases of Cancer. In discussing uvernl inaunoeo in which moor eeenied to have become located in oer-nil: dwelling: Ind ruppennd tron: Lime ‘ :0 Lime. Andrew Wileon nylzâ€"“Te know of no deï¬nite or cert-in microbe or pun- Iite u mined with enncer, eo thus, Rt present. if mience in working very bud. it in working in the dnrk regnrding the exact end speciï¬c an. o! the nilmont. In this reopen. cancer in difl'erent. from consump- Hon. There we hnve I. well known gem; in life hisncry hos been undied, we know how its dried Iporea possesses inï¬nite cnpnbilitiea of living on and of causing infection. Had we an wconnt'in n ruionnl fashion for the conveymca of eonenmption from those who nre lick to those who on well. If there is 1 speciï¬c germ connected With cnncer. “recent. researches tend to suggest, why in not be thnt, like the germ oi Lat-nun (or lockjnw). :bi: cnncer microbe ‘1‘“?! in the soil. and in n dnmp soil prefer- :hiv, md the in certain conditions of soil in life: hincry nu been haw its dricd upon: mpobilitiu of living I infection, sad we can u fashion for the convey-I from those who are lick well. If there is I spe: with meet, urecem. I suggest, any it. not be ' of 101mm (or lockjnw). hveu in the soil. and in ably, md tho: in certni or lil' it remains in a d! re-infecr. succunive om suppose uybody "gun can from person to per .old of its history poiul man nus: from which m 3 home :prinz. Mo other pain: not ‘0 be m The cancerous uoublea vuious person: who“ tailed dnd noznecusui m the some my. In the liver. in moat-er in on. I reglrd thin In“: this robubly I comma this iuuo, whflq the with il, or i: mnvbeuua ungugnu. graz- Iy Ipplied i: will Inn-11y relieve nll unplan- ta: Iymp'oml nuance, Ind pouilmd in. it. rarely ful- lo cure me most obltinuecuel. The ohjcclion'h it. in tin: i: is too limplo lot the medical profusion to Approve. Worry and Indigestxon. Worry in I banefnl cum Ind nonto- of untold evil; h mm! the {m with [inn And futon And bu I mule dawning of fee: upon flint. hypermlmve org-n, m stomach. The physiologic“ "pl-union of this in the clan guinea of we grub cym- puhedc ncruc. whichm worn than the ulegnph Im- cu'ryin Indium ï¬lm-worry Ind mxiety which epru: a»; train . dun simulmuouly n Ilmbprllylll ma nun. ol the staunch. gun-rid juicnl will an law. Indâ€"Flue ! than in indignant. Sulphur In Throat Troubles. There he: been of hte some dimension on the me of lulph-r in than: troubles, espec- inily these of diphtheretic all-rector. This in by no menu- I new remedy, heving been used u n Lhroet disease. penance: in cert-in homholds for It least I gnu-tar of I- cen- tury. Ae noon-l inflnmmltory tymptona nude their eppeennoe the throat vu wrouzhly dusted with mlphnr, thin trut- pent being reputed every hour if the cue we- levere. Asonly goor’ . ‘d come from "allowing the powder. . an and with theutmmt freedom. Sometime: tee epoch- Inl doses were taken with the molt utm- fsctory main. One of the very heat pro- pentiom for throat efl’ecï¬ou in equal perk of mlphuroun acid end glycerin. this any be diluted in the proportion of one nful of the mixture to he" s glue of the Inter. The throat mny be brushed with it, or it mnvbeuud ungIrgle. Free- ly Ippiied it will mun-11y relieve ell unpleu- lat uymp'oml nuance, end pet-lined in, it v-niv ful- to cure the moat obltinnecueg. Disinfeetlng in cases or cancer. In discussing several instences in which sneer seemed to have become located in ertsin dwellings and resppenred iron: time 0 time. Andrew Wilson sayszâ€"“Te know if no deï¬nite or certain microbe or para- ite as associated with cancer, so that, it present. if science is working very hard. it il working in the dsrk regarding the exact ind speciï¬c cause of the silmenL In this -espect, csncer is difl'erent from consump- Lion. There we have a well known germ; its life history has been studied, we knew how its dried spores pesseseee inï¬nite :uplbilities of living on and of causing infection. and we csn mountin a rstiennl 'ashion ior the conveyance of consumption from those who ore sick to these who are well. Ii there is s speciï¬c germ connected With csncer. ssrecent researches tend to suggest, why it not he that, like the germ oi tstsnus (or lockjsw). this clncer microbe lives in lime soil. und in n dump soil prefer- sblv, and that in certain conditions of soil or air it remains in a dwelling to infect and re-infect successive occupants! I do not suppose anybody regnrds cancer as infect- ous from person to person. “'hst we nre .uld of its history points rather to a com- mon csuss from which the difl'erent asses in s house spring. Moreover, there is one other point not a be missed in this recital. The cancerous troubles appearing in the various persons whose histories 1 hove de- tsi'ed did notnecassarily nï¬'ect Escli person in the some wsy. In one it sppesrei in the liver. in another in thevstomsch. end so on. I record this Latter fact in indicsting that probably I common cause orginste this discus, while the indivxdnsl peculiar- .Iies determined the exsct mode of its sp- nnce and development. Pending further light on this nstiounlquestionâ€"foi‘ it really 18' national and public matterâ€"there is one thing to be done. If nowadays we disinfect houses end rooms in we of con~ sumption. end pttend to the personal hy- girne o! the consumptive patient, it is clear i'ne least we can do is to practice the some disini'ectien in ones of csiicer. This is one preventative measure well within our grasp, and we should see. as a matter of public hesith, that it is duiy and carefully carried Oni- Sulphur in Throat Troubles. A correspondent treats such fears as groundless and deride them. " I believe," he says, " that Gen will care for all those who eat Ind drink at his table werthily ;" and he contends that there has been no “well-nuthentientsd \cuo of contagion brought shout by the old custom." More- over, if people should avoid the common chalice from fear of disease. why. he ssh, should they not also refrain from the use at tho drinking cups at > public fountains, sud from the kining which expresses the love and sfl'ection that gives beauty to life! But it there‘ be poison in the communion cup willit not he as noxious thlre'os nuy- . where else! The natural lows of the uni- ‘ verse express the will of Gen. Instances whore contagion has beeh reuonsbly at- tributed to the common‘chalice are un- doubteily on record. and they were referred why the Rochester pastors of whom we have spoken . Medical authorities unite in warning people of the danger of using public drinking cups, and familyphysicians genersllyaxe now cautiening parentssgsinst sllowing their children to he kissed other- wise than on the cheek. That disease may becommunicsteil by the kisses of lovers has been proved indisputably and lament- shiy. Devoted mothers have received the poisonous germs of fatal disease by kissing their suffering infants. The communica- hility of consumption by such contact is now recognized as 3 demonstrated fact. and public health boords worn the people of the danger of it. thus spreading abrond the very fesrs that have caused the disuse of the common chalice in these Rochester churches and not a few others that have followed their example. Probably such alarm would be justiï¬ed by most physicians consulted as to the matter. They might sny thst the dsnger is slight, ‘but they would not venture to say that it does not exist. The whole theory oi-the generstion of disease, u estublished by modern science unquestionably sfl'ords res-Ion for it. It cannot be dismissed as a silly fear, but it is sup rted by the highest and most nd? vnnee medical opinion. Hence, the discussion of the necessity. or at least sdvissbility, of doing sway with the com- mon chalice in the communion of both kinds is sure to go on, with consequences thnt may become of greet religious importance. Fesrs thus produced and stimulated cen- not be destroyod by ridicule. The ques: tions raised are serious for nll churches which teach the obligation of communing -__..s___-~__- i“ the Holy Supper with both the hren disinfect. hon-u and rooms in case of con- anmption. Ind grand to the pznonul hy- giene of she consumycive palient, i in clear the last we an do i.- m pncbice the am: disinfection in can of uncer. This in one prevenuhive manure well within our amp, and we should see, u a runner of public hemnh, Lb“ it is duly and cmfully auried mm. aux give nimbl- «nation on ions at «amnion. Shh dam. il who to pun-at canal!- from n “Inï¬ll-by thy. bu up“ HEALTH . of its history point: runner to a com- (ans: from which the difl'crenb use» hon-e :prinz. Moreover, there is one r point not. a be mined in thin reciml. cancerous Lroublea appearing in the my. mum; whose histories 1 have de. Duo-who! mun! hum: in serenity of “Input Ind . all-control the ambit: u no hour with oqumimihy sud untamed tamper ch. potty trigl- nd in. 0! life, «pool-Hy dam ailing Iron count with welding, iruoihh, inn-inking folk. h in well to “member at. Inch mime: tlnt “Ina unlortumw- are their own wont. cumin. And 3 cultinï¬nn of the an of nor. heurin will he! u: very much. 10 in I vary nulu Art. .11 rough life, and well worth lame trouble to wquire. FTiazh'hoovrc-qr‘. not were hunt-lei little con-n- oupe introduced into two churches et Roch ester, N. Y.. the one Beptist end the other Little Attention from the speciï¬celly end r nape. on no linen: may or the ‘1 nun-n. ‘ 31 The lnnoveï¬on oi lndlvidusl communion p I ll Preebyterien, hes received compentively proleuionelly religious papers of thou end other Frets-tent denominntlous. TheV teem to ovoid the subject, hesltstlng to expreu e‘ny decided opinion es to it. Its discussion hes been conï¬ned chiefly to the medicel pepers end to individusl Church members who write to the jonrnsls celled "color. The individunl wine cops were ‘ substituted for the common ehelioe in the ‘ Rochester churches at the suggestion end on the urgent edvice of the reguler medical society of the town, after reputed vern- ings against its use had 'been uttered by meny other medieel euthorities. The grounds {or the chengeges expleined by the posters of ‘those churches on the ocwion on which it was msde, m of e kind to provoke among Protestant communiuents enxious questioning which cannot be suppressed by merely ignoring the subject. They era the: the use of as common wine cup by meny people in the celebretion of the Euchsrist is both offensive to cleanliness end denger- em to haslth, subjecting them to the chsnces of receiving the germs of disease. Atleest one of these psetors dealered thet slreedy the number of member: of his church psi-taking of the Holy Communion had decreased because of prejudices n sin-t the common ehelice induced by festi ious- ness end feu- of contegion, end thst to save the .qrdinence from felling into more generel disuse it Ives necessary to heed these objections. for they were sustained by scientiï¬c medicel opinion end demon-tre- tion. Since theinnovetion of the indivi- dual cups wes mode. moreover, journels in diflereut parts have been getting mnny letterenpproving of itess requisite ento- c_-_n.- gourd at health. some of them even going ,.L,r .L i:_ __:.c_. .......l.l INDIVIDUAL COMMUNION CUPS. no hit 1.- to declu‘e thut their writers would nbmlutely refuse to partake of the wine of the Euchuiluil the common chalice contin- ued to be used in their church". .t. the Holy 1 and the wine. Born in the Army That Went to Moscow. France hn an interesting old pension“ who has just presented himself at the Mini-try at War to receive his ygnrly penzion for Ibout the ï¬ï¬‚eenlh time. His ammo is Thomas. He in now yver 80 year- old md expect: m dnw his pension for It. In.“ Lwemy your 'more. Thomu was born in the French grnzny during the d‘ , L74 m .u muv u . It wu et the thne when the scattered, Minn-nu oi Nepaleon'l Irmy which bed set. out with web delusive hopes of con- quering Rania were ranking the h' tarh puaego o! the Remind. where no yot them perished, tbet Thnmu was born. Ili- futher In in the lmperin’ Guerd, Ind Lie mother e:compenied her hush-ad an the camp-ism Both {usher sud mother were killed. had the new-born child In. taken cure of by the Rue-inn Government. Be In: laced in m inetitnlion for orphans. When homes engined hie mljority he left Rani- for Frunce, when he entered the em . For nearly hllf e century now he he n e pen-inner. utronl retreat. of Moscow. A Mn. Snddenrichâ€"“I never bond no mch wsy of ulkin' u you've go. into It, boardin’achooL" ,. Dunnerâ€""I've hand to rpuk I: {ha teachers dry? â€at n n,,- 1-... u Mn Suddm Them penny- In our uh" Not In the Swlm‘ :nrichâ€""Well. jm' drop it. trickan birding! don't, move gilt follawed the“ burning A nun-I llwnlpn Puma-(M u m! m or.“ of “null (hunky. A. low dose ego Mr. Adolph Nlolun. the Enpuinmdenn o! Filuheriu 9% BL 10“": Newfoundlnd. eihihimd in pneumonia lugs number o! ï¬shing Com-ins. “plant.- ON." ï¬shermen. and Qho genenl public. ‘ new App-unu- for tuning ï¬sh or my other min-l nub-knee, which 1e Io uimple. inexpen-lva. uni muy worked “no is promin- to ha 9! immenlo beneï¬t to on: ‘ ï¬sher-non And to A“ interest“! in the ï¬sh- erlu, oipecinlly in ooneoï¬on with tho prenmtlon 0! hit, writa- n oorroepondenh. It (requenfly hopponl thob onr ï¬nhormen late a third or n fourth of the whole ï¬lhing omen from the want of bait. Dny Idler day the cry in, “Phony of ï¬sh, but no hem" Our but ï¬ehel nro herringe, «polio, Ind Iquidl. Thole strike in on tho lhoroe . Ind in the boyl inf enormous lhonln Ind I m'th wonderful regal-my. Ewh he: in D “Hominid then dinnppoarl into the un- ‘ known depths of the Boom. giving plnce m L it. succeuor. But. it. very frenuently , happens during the xenon of any onoof ) these species of bait. fleheu, the ohonla nothin- I ly luve portion: of the count out! do not, renppear {or dlyl or weeks. In Inch: - cue tho ï¬shermen who no plying hook and line or buit-u-ing devices are left. idle. The cod may be around in myrinds, but. without. bait Lha poor toilers of the son are left powerless. This want of bnit. often I enuils most. serious losses and shortens the “A _..__.....â€"~¢r- ope-u.- Iealon’e catch. It. is evident. thee i! the ï¬shermen had any mum of preserving belt in a fresh condition they could take it. in any quality when it. is plentiful and atom in up for the um: 01 femine, lo thetrthey need nex or be without belt. Mr. Nellseu’s apparatus is designed to meet this difï¬culty, though it may elee be used for many other purposes. It! can Itructlen is so simple that any ï¬eherman, after seeing it, caulyusily make a lreezer for himself, and the coat is almost nil. All thnt is wanted in n etout barrel, some conrse ealt and ice chopped up into emal pieces. This in all that is needed for the new freezer, which is at once cheep and expeditious in its 0 ration. of course. ice an eelt mixed have long been in use to produce an intense degree oi cold, and thus freeze varioue articles. The ‘ apparatus {or making ice cream is n {amil- ‘ iar illustration of this Hitherto, however, this method has aimed at freezing articles indirectly. Either the ice and salt have. been eucloeed in metal receivere. in isolated rooms, and the cold produced by their in- termlxture penetrates into the atmosphere of the refrigerating rooms, and .0 lower: the temperature us to freeze my articles luch ea ï¬sh or meat placed within them to undergo the procesa, or the eriiclee to be frozen have been inelased in metal Vessels of various couetruction. and then buried in the snlt end lee. Mb them methods ere , 7A4 ms nu»... By Mr. Neileen'a method half a barrel of herringa are frozen as hard as 1: piece of wood in from ten to ï¬fteen minutes. A de~ acripliou of the apparatus will enable any one to make it for himself. _ Acommon barrel,anch at a pork barrel,ia taken, and inaide it are placed four woodcu flange: or lathe. and faatened to the eidea. the ahar edge outward. They are placed diagonal y, to an to make two irregular triangles. The object of adjusting them in thieroblique position in to mix and rotate the article: to be frozen with the ice and salt when the barrel is put in motion. The barrel is then loaded half full with alternate layers of ice and salt. the purpor- tion being three parts of ice '(or anew, which in equally good) and one part of . aalt. Whether the ice or salt is put in ï¬rst make: no diflerenee. In the pre- ' sent experiment three ehovolfula oi . ice were ï¬rst put in and then one of salt. and so on alteraate‘v ‘ till the barrel was half ï¬lled. Then the barrel was ï¬lled up with ire-h herringa and headed. The head of the barrel is not. pointed around the edges in the ordinary way and the “ chimes" are cut down perpendicular to the cross, in order to make it easier to put on the aquare-edgo head‘in and take it out. The barrel,thuahoardod had headedup. ‘ was placed on its side on the floor and rolled ‘ one and a half turna on its bilge forward, then back one and a half turns. This rolling was continued for ï¬fteen minutes at a moderately quick rate of speed, which muatbo learned by experience. If too alow longer time {or freezing in required. At the end of ï¬fteen minutes the head of the barrel was removed. The whole content: ~ of the barrel were intermingled. and the whole herring found to be frozen almost as hard on a rock, They were then placed ‘ in sawdust and examined at the and of a fortnight and found to be as hard as ever, without the least sign of aollening. Four more baï¬ela were treated in the name way. So intense was the cold that one 0! the men ot the tips of his ï¬ngers froethitten in han- dling the herringu. Where sawdust cannot be obtained dry mould or moan will do Y almost so well. The ice and Ialt can be a need over again many tithes, as long an it I will lalt. ‘~ ‘mhmmmmmâ€"~â€"-flr\n': EXTRAORDINARY FREEZING an: on": u..- «<â€" slow in operfllon. V'rh. lute-e Ind most. improved Ameriz‘u anlb and ice freezer ru- qnirea from fouytaen to seventeen hours to freezes hen-mg hard. In neither system in there Any motion or rotation of the freez- ing man. _ .. u- -. I VALAJ‘.»It-L‘- -l Those who witnessed the experiment ex- pressed warmly their delight snd ulonish- ment. There was but one opinion as to the great beneï¬t this barrel freezer will confer on our ï¬shermen. Capt. Blsndford, one of the most intelligent nnd experienced of our ï¬shermen, declnrsd thntii he had had snbh s freezer with him Inst yesr on Labrador it would hsvs been worth $1,600. Invnrinbly he lost each Monday procuring hnit, on he ‘nsrl no way of keeping it fresh from the Ssturdny. and sometimel one or two dev- more from want of bait. Cspt. Whitel'y, mother Labrador mm. was equally emphn- tie in its praise. Tna ï¬shermen were not less enthusiutic. Mr. Neilaeu is to exhibit the invention in Hurbnr Grsco end other outpnrts. Large numbers of these freezers will spec-My be in me. Mr. Neileen sated thst he is not the inventor, but I friend snd countryman of his in Norwsy, nemed Mr. Wallems, who he! sent hlm s model Ind permitted him to use it In this county. The ï¬sheries Depurtmont will no doubt send an henornrinm to the inventor In In mknowledgment of his kindness. It is only to see that the beneï¬ts of snch en ingenious but slmple spparltus will not be conï¬ned to freezing butt Fish of sll kindsâ€"cod. ulmon, trout, lobster-ash be frozen snd kept fresh. Genie. poultry, beef. muttonï¬onlsuzx eon be treated by this metlmd. Hot-“holder! will it one no in mwifold nun. Once it. in mud: known the ï¬lhormon of all oountrlol will boluro to me in. In Newfoundland it will be worth may thounndl 0! gallon mnnnlly to the ï¬nhermon. The pool-out ï¬nhermun cnn hove his own freezer, or 5 number of them con combine, ad, with nliu lo incur, lny up on nbnndnnh sup ly oi alt. A null lca haul: in nob loge would give ogple luppliu of i (or working tho tumor. The runlt of 0 experiment. goal to show lhnt tho hen' gu-h‘ozen in thin way will lie-maven in l‘ nil qn-ncitlel. for n month. J“. .-..u L- I“... l..- in:;2'e';u:n21§13,1fï¬gy Vcoul'dr be kept. for two, pelhï¬pl chm months. eel-e Ito-nu: lterlea Recalled In I Brill-l Wu Ollee Runner. The recent attempt made by the null oflieiall to huh up what would hnve nrul-hed m3 tel-ill for I. Ioandnl e! nnnnnll dlmenelnnr bu apparenth been Iueceulnl. Thin war that in more than one veuel oi wnr lemalea, dreued ln mule attire. hnd been acting al oiï¬oerl' private Iervnnte. Rumor even went so [Ar an to any tint name of these girl: were highly counseled. The ‘ Lil'air revivee the recollection of mnny can: of women in breechâ€. lays London Truth. It is raid that 150 women dilguined as men were dircm ered in the United State- army of the Potomno in 1866. The list of ntunge lmpolturel would oi iuelf ï¬ll pane, the narrative of their conception and fulï¬ll at w ld occupy several volumes. Sull‘fh have been quite purpolelen ; lom been during and well nfl'eeted. but the rewdeut and most daringoj all have been criminal in delign end too often encceaefuL Tie into 001. Burn-by told of the diloov- cry of n womln who larvod u I wldier'in he tanks in the my of Don Carlo: in 1874. She wore the uniform and lived and taught juntu the acher soldiers, but I priest in whole rich aha hsd lived identiï¬ed her. Don CPS-ion removed her to the nurses’ qunrunl, but she be ged to be lent buck m the rnnka. Ho lnug ed. “Not in the regi- ment. of men. but. when I form a [amnion of women you shall be colonel." ln Aultralin not so many years I a there was a. woman who tnveled under 9. a uliu of Edwud de [My Evans. For you: she wu I miner IL Bendigo. She in lufled m hnvo been marriad u 3 man ihres times. He: true nu was discovered upon bar reception into Kaw ldhntic uylum. She eventually xecovoredher reuon And returned to the outer wqud. The career of Mary Ann Talbot contains ‘ a still further flavor of romance. She was ‘ the reputed daughter of the earl of Talbot. and at 14 years she fell into the hands of a certain Gay: Bowen of the Royal navy. The captain. being ordered to San ‘ Domingo. took er with‘him, disguised as ‘ a page boy. When Capt. Bowen was kiléed in action Mary Annchanged her flag an entered‘the'French navy. She then entered the American mes-sharia marine. She quietly â€"-oi course, still il male 9'4- guiseâ€"became a favorite with a certain of the Vessel. and he took her home with him. His niece fell-in love with the retty sailor boy, as she considered him, an pra- poae’l marriage herself. The proposal Mary Ann deemed it prudent to accept. and it was arranged that. the marriage should he celebrated on the kail'oe’a return from hia next voyage. It is hardly neces- sary to any that. this gay deceiver hed no intention whatever of going back. Land- ing in Enzlrmd, Mary Ann was arrested as a deserter from lhe British navy and, to escape further service, she confessed her sex. The story of her adventures immedi- ately spread abroad and created a. consider- able sensation at the time. The then Duke of York procured {or her a pension. and sh r ceivcd numeraus and handsome uts from him and from others. It is strikingly noticeable that many of these amazon: were fatally attractive to their own sex. As we have seen, Mary Ann Talbot unwittingly captivated the heart of the American captain's niece. while “Edward de Laey Evanse," who married three wives, must also have been a very pretty fellow. n u Twelver‘l'houmnd slx nlndred Do green Fahrenheit. How hot is the sun 2 That is a question hat ultronomen and physicists hnve been trying for your: to solve. and they are not yet Eatisfled thst they know the true ana- wer. In fact, it may be said, they are ‘ certain they do not know it, although they are able to report progress. from time to time. in the direction of the truth. The moat recent trustworthy invutlg-A tion is that of M. De Chntelier. who ï¬xes the efl‘ective temperature of the sun It twelve thousand six hundred degree: Fuh- ranheit. It may, he thinks, be either hotter or colder than that ï¬gure indicatel. to the extent 0! eighteen hundred degree: either WA . I . . ..., :. "Una-.. nf\l n. WOMEN DISGUISED AS MEN Wl - gnvioua to this investigation of M. De Chntelier‘n the temperature oflhe sun had been ï¬xed at eighteen thousand degrees Fahrenheit. by Rosetti, And that remit. was looked upon by runny leading eronomen as probably the nearest to the Iclunl fur, oi my third: hsd ya. been obtained. It will be noticed iha: xhe latter utimua taken 03' several thousand dagroea. but. this in nlriflo compared with [he falling off {mm the gatimnwa of the temper-lure o! the um mods by some of the urlierinveslignton. The celebrated Souchi on one lime mniu- uinod oh“ the solar bemperaturo was nor, lent than ei htoon million degrees Fuhren- heir, huohvï¬limselhilerward found reuonu {or droppin down to two hundrad and ï¬lmy ‘ nhouannn egreu. Such estimates of the lun'n lompornlnre no one hundred (hound degreel, Ind ï¬lmy lhomnnd degree! were ‘ invonbly regarded n few years ngn. If M. DoCh-wher'a result il approximate- ly correct». then we can, perhaps. begin m a! lame ching like n comprehension of the haunt the Iolnr iurnlce. Imce it npproochea cum nrilcn with lemporuurea lhu we con pro uco artiï¬cially. The highelt utiï¬cin W“ n..- 1.-.... .n‘im-H'd bv Profes- pruu “W ll ‘lu ten-I enlure h nor mm; It. shunt Fthrenheit. > _ \le-cn gaiimu‘éd by Profu- fonr thousand degrees , A_L__‘A u.“ o)..-'. , But. it mult be re‘ are certain arbitrary any or may not be c‘ in the trout. _caralul ml: by or um, u... m. V.‘ ,,,,,, ‘ . this most. uralul mvemgnuons'ot thi- blue“ and that. am any nte, the um i. udnubudly much holler underneath bhnn h 5% Lu glowing Ind vilible lnrlua. THE HEAT OF THE SUN. c be remembered that. they}, lrbitrury nuumptionl, which not be correct, involwrl» oyep Mary (I the niece. who Ell-Ill! Pronto: Horrible III-nun. Bonn “Which Eclipse new 0! on Tim“. Wpllo the hoErm-l o! the mining din-tor in Walu are "ill upon u- . Runny “my 0! I dull-r event. comu lrom China: It. vu- knawn {tom the record: elm. in 1494 ‘ - urriblc maidens Ind hpponod in the Anhnr‘l district. A low dnyl 330 s mining puny reopaned an old lhI“ There they found the bodies a! 170 mu: jun u any were struck down 400 you-a ago. The ï¬nance of light 3nd air Ind kept the bodiel in {rank preservation. Chinnin I long way ofl mad the story will need corro- barlbion, ,b t more incident; of the name kind hnve lnppengd than in genenlly lupâ€" pond. In the Iprlug e1 1790 the ruined eenle- “17 of the Bull ol Kyleyth we: openedhy lame vendele, end the bodie- el Lndy Kyleyth end her child were found u perfect I: on the dey they were entombed in 1717. “On June 12." nyl the minilter of the puleb, “I luv the body of her ludylhip. II was quite entire, every leetnre And every limb was lull n; in life, the ehroud cleer endrlreeh, end the color of the rib- bons bright. The child ley et her knee, the feature: competed u if he and been uleep, md the Imile cl innocence let on his llpl. The body named to hnve been ‘ preurved in name liquid of the nppenrmce 1 of brnudy :though perfectly trmperent it hed lent ell pungent qualities, in lute be- in% quite vipid. ‘ uriouely enough, the bodice when ex- oued to the nir did not crumble into dust». or eevernl weeks they underwentuo vilible eheuge, though Inllied by the drop- of grease from the cendleu held over them, nor or mouth. efter, though ‘preued with the ï¬nger, did they yield 00 the touch. but eeemed to retain the elasticityflof life. At the monuiery oi the 'Cxpnchinmin Pelermo. there in e vault in which ere niche! in which the bodice Ire placed upright, Ind clothed in e come drell. with the heed'md Irma Ind feet here. They Ire prepared for the eitnetinn by brolling lhem npon l gridiron ever e slow ï¬re till I“ the int. sud mainture are conenm- ed. The akin, which looks like gale-colored lather, remain: enlire, end the cherectet of the features is pruerved. Among the moat romnrknble historical rueuncee of the {reservation ol the dud ie that of Ede , whnae tomb wu opened in 1870, and his body, After a lnplo of 463 years, was un- degeyed: . . .. . .. n ,, _|_- a The body of Cannw, the Dune. who ruled in England in 1017. was found "vary Ira-h†in 1766 by the workmen repairing Winchuter uthednl. No device of “I, howuvar, lppem equal In the simple proces- of burinl in peat. moss. In 1569 three Roman noldien. in the dreu of their country. were dug out o! I man of grant. axleut, called Kuzey Mon. < \Vhen (and liner a lapse of 1,500 years, “they were quiw (ream and plump." A man. .rornlntic incidenv in chin connection happened some 5715" ggojn Sweden In digging at man. the bodies of several parlonu w Ind been millinzlor 50 your: were discovered. The dead bod suffered no change, but there were [cw living persons who could recognize them. Among them was woman of 70 who had been engaged to be married :0 one of the long lost. individuals. The contrast between the living and the dend. u the old womnn bent. over her voung lover, is described or having been inexpresaibly touching. The llenlu: or (he Tramp: 1. Very Gaul Column-In: lh‘ Cllmuk. A recently issued gavammoutal report gives some interesting “Mimics concerning the health of British trdopa i1. India. A royal commission appointed in 1583 report- ed that the death-raw of white bumps in that. country had for some you: averaged sixty-nine in the thousand. that this tcr-‘ rihle expenditure of human life wns un- neceuuy, and that. the denim-rate might, BACK FROM THE CENTURIES. by certain practicable reiorma. be reduced to twenty, and ultimatelyâ€"when the gen. eul unitary condition of the country was improvedâ€"to ten per thousand. The for- mer at these etandarde wae reached in the decade 1870-9, and. near approachce to the latter have been made in subsequent years, notebly in 1883, when the death ram Wu .1 10.8. The meat recent experience, how- ever. in of a less encounginn char-char. In 1892, lor instance. the report for which has just been issued. the death rate Wu 1? in the thoueand. u against 14.17 in the de- cade. 1‘12-91 ; the ratio of “Admission: to hoepital†wee 15.17 per thousand, as com- pared with 14.48 in the nrne decade : and the ratio of "conatently aick" was Si per thou-and. as compared with 74 per thou- und in the earlier period. The ratio of inveliding tlone ehowa a alight improve- ment. having fallen from 26 per thousand in 1882-91 to 24 per thousand in 1892. Eliminating the Incidental character of aingle yenre by a comparison of longer periode, it eppeera thet the death rate of - â€m. An _ A .1: n1.â€" than-anti ..__.4â€"-an§- an Wu», H. -yr... the decade 1881-90 9.: 14.24 per thousand. ‘ “comp-red with 19.34 penhonsand in the deed: 1870-79 : thnt me rnuo of admin- Iions to hospitals showed a tnctionnl im- provement, 14.71 per thousand for the In!» tor period. In ngninsv. 14.75 in the earlier : And chat the ruin 0f “consmuy sick"rose from 60 in the thonund In 73. In making the compnrilon it him 19 be remembered than in the decnde 1381190 large mnlnriou regions, Burmnh and BeloochiHnn, were added h) the British Empire, and khnb re- cent. ohnngea in the terms of cal-vice have breughc the soldier into the country at a younger age, and remove h m hymn it. just. II he in becomlng acelimnuud. A mm who on celebnm the 126th “H nivcrsnry of hil birth in rare. Ilmoa: done in fact. for so great. In ago is hardly known in modem luthcntic binary. Such a min however, in M. Saw-in who. born in 1768; was a «pain in tin Gnud Anny, Ind wu hken prisoner in 18l2 in the coursed I battle during the Buuim campuigu, nnd owed his life to the general“ intercession of \ Gen. Pmom , _ _ n . a,_A:A _.:u Gen. Platoff. In spite at hie age Cnpt. Swain still buiel him-eltwilh vurieul muture of busi- nen end pleueure. Bil memory in good And e few year- ego he peinurl never-l picture: Inrl compose some bite of veae pf greet merit, He rieee early, wulh. reicelvee com- pany during the day, and every Sandy in regular in hi- etteudunoa It. church. BRITLSH TROOPS IN INDIA A Frenchman 126 Years Old. The Hilton!- of the Unlud sum hm 8533211: debu wanting to 311.000, 1 . The longs“, bras: Ind nrongut bonn 1:0 who hum album is the femur, or thigh no. . Nearly a mfllian mud n lull dolhn ro- muchjmnd in m. New York uvingl A Nuw York dog when eyesight i- ll- !echdilddlymwuring- psi: of spec- mlel. - Some Chine-e and my Alden: us the out: I pocket to entry ooin- md other Inn" nuclei. I Thu tongue rowan (tam no injury much more qui ly tlun my other put of the bum lyuem. . Anni“. In: men pllcel of public wer- Ihip in praponion to populntion chm my ozhar country. , The {out trï¬al germ-London bridge «ch yen redness to powder twenty-ï¬ve cubic ylrda of gnnile. ' - Thu quiet. and ï¬mid bus, when she cries in kn, an be hard I umber 08' than either dog ‘or en. Wine mnde 1mm cry mmtly made He Almyt remove- to before he begin: n necret one. 131p“ in and in Gummy in the unnu- fnclnn o! pines, being employed (or d] of (.513 part: which no madly and. of woo . Tbs introduction of mhoglny into Eng- lmd and the commerce 0! the world was causedby the repairing with u [wk of thlt wood of one of Sir deer deigh’l venell in 15%. The hum-n Iyntem an endure hub of 212 degrees. the Militia point of wnur. beam the lkin in I conductor md becmu the penpintiun 0001- the body. Men hue with-hood without injury I hen. at 300 de- gree- izn- sovenl minutes. A ne 0 hld n utreak of luck while 6-h- lng in e Flint. river, near Albnny. Hi- lina became tangled in something which Brewed Do be ; lndy’l gold necklnce, which Id evidently lnin II the bottom of the ‘river for mmy yen". Tho killing of elephant.- ia going on st. such a run in South Africa that. there is Emmet“. of tha Imiiml becoming extinct he future South African msy bnve to go volume Inge civilized city in order tn see the alephun. ' A policemu: in Jersey City,ï¬nding a. thiel was getting Away from him, jumped aboard a trolley cu, impressing it. into the city'- Iervico, gn'e chue with it, and pmemly overhuuled And captured his man. An ancient bell dug out of the ruins of u: Indinn church It. Albuquerque wt: pro- nounced b local expem to contain gold worth $1 .000. Afber the Denver mint. worked on it to: {guy-eight hours an: d' worked on it. to: lorry-eight. hours me ma- coveren ware mded A near. bun brick worth 51.25. The skull of a mnmmolh hnn n being of prehistoric times Wu discovered in lanth- arn Cnlitomu lame time ago, Ind recently it. In: discovund Hill I. unity in one of in tooth WI- ï¬lled with gold in tho Insanel- employed by modern dentist; What Hr. Cccll 'mmau n non-.- ha South Africaâ€"ll: In [Humor and any Bee-In: Cecil Rhodes, who. bud he lived I hun- dred years ago and talked u be In: done to the Imperial Government, would hue had to Lake 3 tune of prison life, in slowly developing his own scheme of land tenure in South Alrim, where, originally 1: Eli- buster and lmdgrubber,heisfouading “new nnlnnill amnire. There are grave doubts buster and Ian coloninl empin whether name his head to de< or a detached tribute to ply: to C in Africa and America.‘ is not an unleu mm accunud only by the spirit of agg give adventure. He in as dilleuaute as Bnlfour. He is well versed in Clulica, hnd an hononnble university carear. visiui to Ali-ion were diamond-hunting. he is u truly the dilmond king 0! region as Col. North in the nitrate kin Peru. Mr. Rhodes, however, in more h diamond hunter: He is, .n ambi _.J _. new bateemm. having enquired weal-J: enough to entiaiy upiretion in then deuil. ‘ Soon utter enwring the Cape Perliement he became rirtnnliyiu dicumr. end {our year: ago wu made Prime Minister. In this caplcity he has devised some novel method: of L.ovemmenL Chief of these is his lend Icheme. He proposes w root his people is the soil in en unprecedented mmner. Any head of a family mey l. we I eight urea It. a little less then $4 per you ' rem. to theGovernmenc. There is e Inbor tax of $2.50 I year, or its equinlent in new-l labor, nmely, three months'eer. vice outuide his own district. Suflnge in to be exercised by every male native who ‘ pays the labor tax. The proceeds of rho lnbor tax are to be npplied on schools. Failure tn pey this tax will subject the delinquent: Do imprisunment, one of Mr. Rhodee' dream: methods of making every- body ehere an: or eufl’er [or failing to do so. landholders are not m be elir , eell liquor except under locel OPLIOII, my violetion of thin luv u: enuil uneellnion of title.'Rebellion or rte-ling in also to work forleilure. Government is to be adminiemred by locel council: of six mem- bers. one-hell eppointed by the Crown. and one-hell elective. An experiment of this mixed nuure oi peternelilm and State Socielilm my well be wretched with inter- est. by etudenu of modern economics. 1 Monarch FACTS 1N FEW WORDS Mn. MeGAuberâ€""Heroil I notice ny- ing chub if the bill in not ptid, the gu will be shut nfl'." Mr. McGAuberâ€"“ Let 'em shut. it. 06‘. Who mm!" " Bu: what will we do 1" . " Put. in thou-in lights.†"But in time the bills for them will ermgmy come in." _ “Oh, we}; pe‘rhnpg mwathlng elm will be invvve'nted éy‘xm "So you won introduced m Mn. Tnugey In: gvanjng 2“ "Wk-t. dud I‘IO all thou!" “Ahut the. Bonn.“ No Use Borrowing Trouble. NEW EMPIRE. ï¬le claiming Rhodes, unlik d America} is n‘ All he Remembered pouwes in tha discov- by a French chum-t. the nyu from the pow work, As his prom il ’nt no m II II. WW†1| 0|. «1W Tad- h training a clan oviduct a! lbw Innuendo my", tum flu m 0! fl:- Influx†W to flu Inn-n: may lamina. The W loo!- hghfllobulluollvuldilm olhophil- non. The W outlook i: not: do- main of billion- In model-Italy unann- Igiug. The gcuoul Iolvmey 01mm! mun ll unload by lpedfl upon: whidl hue than I mum dean-c not only in the number of insult-n0. ï¬nal. Inn in m “Abilities of failing ends. 11:: unjority of Romania mind dim-Jun I comp-tr tinly do“ oborpn'nu of main Iwch throughou: the country. While-om deplore cine rutricï¬oun of with duplzud but hunky Iboch Are the main! outcome if. in genenlly Minimal to be I good thing {or the nobility 0! future bnxinou. ind. furthermore, “In if the some caution: policy of buying Ind been Adopted by trud- en zenenlly two or blue: you! Ago. than would hon been inï¬nitely fewer Mum and commercnl din-Mn. While there i- no came for upecinl dependency in the limcion yct we would Advise 3 continued exercile of the It in genenlly known than mm He too may under- in m And thu- bulineu magnufly Influ- from excel-in confe- tilian.while expense: In cum more in- roporniouve tn the ntio of ï¬n ruined. een competition of thin ‘ d, however, In: tho mdunuge of Ihnrpening lhe win or {multic- of [tn-ino- men and! (kn-dinn- nnvq gnined prnm'menee Ind diltipcn'on “_____..-I THE BUSINESS UUTLUDK. in the-vino“ hotly contented comm'erdnl nrenn known toe civilintion. Luck of upinl frequently prevent. xheir [matching on: on etnpendonn enterprise: Inch :- we micnflly bar of in lend: where there is fully In much left to good luck a: good guidulo; While the nltimnlc yield 01 the crop- will not be u Inge u m- predicted in the curly pen of the season, either in Onmio, Quebec or the Maritime provinces. yet a n the whole the ï¬rmer: will hive m “other good hmelt ; but "cording to present indie-tinn- the prim for gnin ere not“ All likely to Idmec, I0 ï¬n! (knadinn {mum Are obliged 9° "ï¬lm“ their gain at current prices, Which 91'0““ embie retailers in collect. more «9-11! end urlier then In". year. 9nd W “an", menu in remitrnnce- ll _l°°k°d ‘05 . A alight. drums in mm hue-3n groans. “wig“, Inger! end vet.- :I expectedtn ' give u: impgen- w humane, and there In insulation: tint. the downwnrd unden- cy at "Inn- in eff-culture! prndncfl, when ‘ nloneexcepmd. been unwed. Ill“ Dang I- largely 3 Inner of “In“. In bu been very eloquently u call u very winely ’nuned um. “lmonlity m- p-cu uha Inn of the lava-ll realm- which it unita into s “ugh empire Ind gnu-mee- much the unimpaired maintenance of it.- [0611 Minoan." Thil i1 rightly equiv-Jen: on saying the: right-doing i.- lnrgely a nutter of limit. It recognizel III the powers, I“ [he funnies. .11 the need md III the ï¬cient this yen. Only two â€yon-ten in athe whole kingdom mention I crop shove [he nvenge, and those two In in Scotland. Win. rent-d to pens. m limo-I. equnllv remuksble result. in recorded. but of u ‘oppoaim chnncler, pears being time“ everywhere nhnndun. Plum: m genealâ€" ly deï¬cient. Cherriu, on me other bud, no nwuklblv Ibunduat, the“ being forty-ï¬ve "tux-age" reports from Secular], md no fewer dun 1‘16 from Englmd. to. Nut.- “ not much grown in the northern counties. bu!» in nhe lonlh they at nther Ibo" nvenge : wdnnu. however. “Hen-3 from the Iron; atnwberriu hive bun uni vex-sully lures. Ind bud in qnnlny ; an.- mu. rupben-iu. md somebeniu (in good. Chromc' ï¬rs. Shupeyoâ€""I Mnn’t huh-i . hni I noticed um. Doctor 3‘ [as looked Yer) gloomy when he lei: _ e Moneyhggt miduloe u link while Ago." lulu. Hemlock“ Ah. gun the mold alum-n in getting wen Mahould never ï¬nance upon all British Fruit Crop The ubulu' report in The hromcle shown tint lpplel m Mn Nexdoorâ€"“ 5.53. my morning KANY SIDED NATURE POI-10‘! 0' CAD?!†A Health Indicator. How in old Mr. Honey C nrdenm