AGRICULTURAL. Karl. l. rrtr A correipondent writing to the American Agriculturist *y* : "Several years ago you wrote Uiat if any enterprising man liv- ing iu the vicinity of a large village, or two w,three smaller ones, would manage to put his early peas, corn, beets, cm umlwrs, etc., into market a week or two ahead of others, he could get two or three price* for the first offering*. That this could be done by electing a warm dry plot, by draining it well, if needed, by putting in seed very eaily, and protecting with straw or other covering when cold nights or frosts threatened after the plants are up. And especially by the, fol- lowing plan : Have prepared a lot of pieces of soil a foot square or so ; if pretty well rotted and free from fresh grass roots, all the better, but not essential ; moisten them with weak liquid manure from the barnyard. Into this, marked off into little squares of the M/I! required by different plants, put peas, corn, etc. , one seed iu a sq uare. Place several rows of these sod* along the south side of a board fence. Keep them sufficient- ly moist to sprout the seeds and start the growth, using larger pieces for potatoes. On cold nights cover with coarse cotton cl ith, which may afterward be bleached and cut up for family use, or have straw at baud to throw over when needed. When the warm, settled weather arrives and the ground is all ready, with plenty of well- . rotted manure worked iu, cut the sods into squares, so that each piece will have a plant in it with two or three weeks of growth already made. Put these pieces in the ground at proper distances ; plants go right on with their growth, aud thus much time may be gained iu the maturity. "I acted upon this advice, extruding the operation largely ; had my sods prepared in autumn, and well frozen in winter, and on a small area got seed enough started thus to plant over two acres. My early garden tulf was the town talk, brought in a heap of money, and in this way I wo* able to pay for that land and get forehanded enough to put up those buildings, and I don't owe a cent. Unlusi 1'nllarr. In answer to an inquiry on tins lubject Currie'i Monthly says that when circum- stance* are favorable, onion culture is profit able. The best soil is drained swamp land, such soil seeming to contain just what the onion craves. Where there is a swamp that can be used for the purpose, cut ditches so that the soil may be just dried enough at the surfaas to work. Moisture i* necessary to produce the finest onion. After ditch- ing, free from all obstacles to free cultiv- ation. Then plow, and as thoroughly pre- pare as possible, and thoroughly cultivate. Upon other kinds of soil pulverize and ma- nure heavily. Manure the swamp land, too, for th t matter. The manure should be well rotted and tine, and thoroughly nixed with the nl. The Acme pulverizing harrow is a capital instrument for pulverizing and mixing the manure. Superphosphates of lime, ashes, salt, night soil mixed with earth, are all good fertilizers for the onion. It is recommended to apply 600 pound* of sufierphosphate, .'10 btuhels of ashes and five bushel* of salt to the acre. Sow from 12 to 2O pounds of seed to the acre. The '.Vethen- rii-1.1 is a good keeper and the Yellow Dan- vers is very prolific. The While Clobe i* the mildest in flavor. There i* a hand 'lull for sowing, and it* use is very convenient. Have the rows a foot apart. Keep the weeds out. Some of the bulbs will produce teed steni. Break these down. A bundle of brush drtwn over them will do this. The maggot is the great enemy of the onion. Prof. Kiley advises as a preventive of this pest, to trim the land early in spring with a mixture of lime and ashes, preferably wood.tshes. This mixture should be lightly spread over thc land after plowing aud har- rowed in. If, after the need is sown, and the plants begin to come up, the worms ap- pear and threaten damage, employ the pois- oned 1*11 system, which, in brief, consists in placing along ,he rows, at a distance of 15 or 'JO feet apart, amall bunches of fresh cut grass or other green plant: cabbage leaves answer a good purpose. These bunches of grass or green plant should pre- viously be sprinkled with P;iri green or London purple. r>Mls-allc the reallry HOSMC. To fumigate a poultry house with sulphur the first point is to guard against tire ; hence some material must l- used that will not communicates heat to the building. Sulphur burns only for a short time, as it in. -Its and smothers the tire. An excellent mode i* to u*e a piece of sheet-iron. Heat it until red hot and place it on a brick. Then sprinkle sulphur liberally on the heated iron, placing the brick first in the center of the poultry- house. If preferred, the cheap fumigatora sold by seedsmen may lie used. To insure success, every portion of the poullry-ou*e must be tight tnd close, all cracks being tilled. Whin the. match is applied to the sulphur, the attendant must quickly step outside and close the door. The door should not be opened for two hour*. The greater the volume >t .sulphur gas the better. All pansof water must be it-moved hcforu burn- ing the sulphur, as water absorbs the gas. Sulphur gas, or sulphur dioxide, as it is called, i* very heavy and settles to the fl<M>r an soon as it Income* cold, penetrating every ralhok- in the ground and destroying every living creature with which it comes in contact. If the house is close and tight all the lice will be destroyed, as well as the germs of desease ; but a single air hole will render the effort useless. ment by which the bucket is suspended be- neath it* mouth. Lastly, th* sap-buckets are hung. The average size ia twelve quarts, though sixteen quarts i* a bettor size." Then come* the process of boiiing : ** In a brick framework in the bngar ho.ise is set an iron arch with a square iron chimney. In this arch i* set the evaporator, a deep boiling-pan in front and four smaller and shallower pan* farther hack. The bottom of the evaporator is deeply corrugated, nearly doubling the surface, exposed to the heat. Kapid trailing is a great point in sugar- making the shorter the time from nap to syrup the better the quality. The ssp in the holder or store tank flows thrssigh a strainer and rubber hose into a regulator, which is adjusted by automatic gauge to keep the supply in the boiling pan at a cer- Um depth. When the sap in the boiling- pan has reached a certain stage in evapora- tion, it is emptied into the pan next back by means of a siphon, which remove* only the syrup, leaving the scuin behind. The boiling- pan is again tilled with frexh sap and the process repeated. When the liquid is strained into the fourth pan, it has become the syrup of commerce. " At this point the sugar maker removes the pan from the ar h, and rapidly itirs the syrup until sufficiently cool, when it is turned into tubs holding from 1O to 100 pounds each, and there forms the sugar cakes. H Illinil HI;, HI.. To mail plants safely use a wooden box, strong but light ; lay in a piece of oiled | paper large enough to wrap around the plants. Wet the plant* you wished to send before taking up ; then shake off all the earth that does not readily adhere to the roots, and after laying some wet mow on the oiled paper at the bottom of the box, ' place iu the plants laying more mo*s over the roots. Proceed in this way till the box is tilled, being sure to put in sufficient muss to make firm ; then fold over the oiled paper and fasten down the cover. When ! tne wetuher i* very hut, it is a good plan to ; out an opening in one end ol the box, al- most an inch square, to let in the air and prevent healing. When received by mail or otherwise, unpack with care, place the roots in a basin of wai m water, and let them remain an hour or two or till the leaves have revived. Then separate and dip the roots of each plant in tine sand (scouring sand), roll them in it till well covered, ami plant in good compost. Use small pots ; those three inches across the top are sufficiently large for the average plant sent by mail. Place a piece of broken crockery at the bottom, till ODD third full of earth, then press in the roots anil till tightly with the soil. Water but not too much, keep in the shade for a faw days, and in a week they will have taken root in their new quarters and h. -1:1111 growing. Ballrwd KnllUinx la Africa. Two railroad projects of great interest are now developing in K.tt Africa. The British Government has been authoriz- ed by Parliament to pay a large part of HIM expense of the preliminary surrey for the railroad from Mombasa to Victoria Nyauza. This insures the completion of the survey, and ample capital to build the railroad is assured. It is admitted that this road will practically end the stare trade in the Vic- toria Nyanza region. Slaves are still caught there in large numbers, and are used as porters to take to the coast the ivory and other merchandise of the Arab traders. The slave tratiic is now carried on chiefly to obtain porters, but when a railroad run* from the lake to the sna the Arabs will use it a quicker, safer, and cheaper meant of transportation. The railrotd will live a profound influence upon the Vicfirm ! Nyan/.a region, and it is certain that the resources of that part of inner Africa, can- not be developi-d nun I it is built. The | other project will be completed first. Tin* . is the road from Port Ik-ira on the Indian ; Ocean, about -J.">0 mile* wert to Mashona- land. The capital for this road has been "iil.M-rihad, Iiolh tin 1 Portuguese Mozam- ! bique and the British South Africa, com- panies are represented in the Board of Con- trol, and the construction of the line is to begin next month. Track laying will be extended far toward Mashonaland by the end of the year. It is a remarkable illus- tration of the rapid progress of events in Africa, th.it projects arc noon to 1m rcah/ed, which will enable the ordinary traveller to reach without discomfort regions that were so long a great mystery, and the story of whose exploration l>aa been followed by the world with no much interest. urn OHHTII VALLEY. K-rmprU ISM Valley's Trrren le Kill Him .rir II.T.i.f IM,.|ip,.lnl. ,1 in l.nr. Among t hi-niim who ba\ a toughtfor fortune in the great desert that stretches away to the north of this ragged mining camp i* M Harmon, the proprietor of a little restaurant near the I>ai{gelt railroad station. He is full of desert stone* perhaps n > man here is more familiar with the tale* of prospector* who have braved Death Valley terrors hoping to strike it liuh. Among the stories he sometimes tells, is that of an uulurtuuate Frenchman uamed Isidore Daunek Daunet wa* born in Basse* PyreneM, France, on April 4, IS."*!. He emigrated to California when 10 years old, finding a home iu San Francisco until 180,'t. Then although but a boy, he began to wander up and down the mining camp region, picking up a knowledge of ores, and eventually becoming, while yet not of age, a typical prospector. When fully grown he was noted as a remarkable specimen of manly strength and vigor, and was, more- oxer, possessed of gttsiit courage aosi energy ol character, sfnsshtien which saved his life in a trip through I>alh Valley when others died, but qualities which failed him, never- theless, at a critical period later on. In the year 1H8O Dauiiet was in the min- ing cam n in Panimiut, on the west side of the I'animmt range and but. a few miles in a direct line from the most depressed portion of Death Valley. Finding no prospect of M I M.|\fc IN I Mil I The Practice avumui-il si resUral* i" Ike Hcmhrra Kan ..r ike r. n i o.ul. In October last the obsolete practice of hook swinging was revived in southern India. It was a feature of a religious festi- val in the large town of Siiolavaudan. The .mi lioritie* did nothing to prevent the cruel exhibition. The local I ovi-rnniunt wa*. in fact, asked to prevent the occurrence, but an evasive, answer was returned. The vic- tim of the spectacle was a willing sai-rili v, no feeling of religious devotion entering into his performance. He received between 4OO and 500 rupees for the exhibition which lasted more than an hour, but the mini is more than he could earn by hard labor in eight or nine years. He w. a,lJiu"u, i>iiYUrgea to travel around the country for three mouths, showing the huoks ropes, Ac., and receiving money from the people, few of whom would refuse to give him something. Tho performance, there- fore, was very lucrative for him, and it gratified the people, hardened and bruta- li/ed aa they are, for Sholavandau is the head centre of the Kullcr, or robber, caste, who are guilty of robberies and tram wreckings, Inside* bloody deeds. Thousands of pnople Hocked to seethe re- vival of the old fanatical religious custom. The hooks wero thrust through the flesh of the man a hack and he was suspended about twelve feet in the air. He bore his suffer- ings with the utmost, fortitude, and his face It Makes Pure Blood AJid by o doing HooU's SarsaparUta scrofuU, salt rheum. and all other blow I dis- uses, aids proper digestion, cures dyspepsia. gle* strength to every organ ol tut body. and prevents attacks ol UuU tired feeling or more si-nous Election. The fact that It lias ..ii.-il thousand* of others Is MilBcienl reason lor belief Umt It will cure you. N. B. !!< sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold l>r all <triiKtiti. fljilxforfS. Prepared only IT i '. I. Hi mi) * CO.. Apotliectriai, Luwell, Mi IOC Lo3es One Doha- striking a lead there that would make him "howed scarcely any evidence of the pain he rich, he joined a party of other ad venturous ">" have endured. A medical man who spirit, bound on a prospecting trip into the , Present, and examined the swinging dVs.ru of Arizona! Ae party numbered , man, sent, at .th. reque*tof tlu.Gov.rnm, nt. -r tr-jfisfCLSft: ! IX &%< %. SSR3Sf9 Ji and getting pack animals together they started away, although it was in midsum- mer, by an unfamiliar trail that the next day led them into Death Valley. As they went down the canon they knew very well that | lay before ; prime of life and health, and scouted enced wa* considerably within the limit* of endurance. It was announced in February last that arrangemunts haJ been made for another it was Death Valley that hookswingin^, to take plaoeat Tirasuvenan. them, but they were in the ! The Madras (.overnment propose* to make a thorough inquiry into the whole matter. i the idea that they could not pan* icroa* it* narrow breadth. Nevertheless, aa it* arid atmosphere sapped the mois- ture irom their bodies they strove in vain to supply the lack by drinking from their Of course the Indian Government find* it wise policy to interfere as little as possible with the religion of tho natives, and if, after thorough inquiry, it be ascertained that it is a religious practice, and does not entail ew M e Klrcp. According to the best writers on the subject, it has Iwen ascertained that, in be- ginning to sleep t he sencei do not unitedly fall iuUi a stale of slumber, bnt drop off one after the other. The sight ceases, in conse- quence of the protection of the eyelid*, to receive impression* lint, while all the otiier sense* preserve their sensibility entire. The sense of Uiste is the next which loses it* susceptibility to impression*, and then he hearing is nxt onitss tho sense of touch. Furthermore, the senses are thought to sleep with different degrees of provi nrl- canteens. Almost before tliey realized their serious bodily suffering it may not be pro condition their water wan gone, they bad no hihited. knowledge of the location of the spring* there, and, half wild through their suffer iug* ihey cut the throat* of their pack am ev, ad m.ilt Liiil drank the blood as tiger* might have done. The sense of touch sleep* the most light- ly and la the most easily awakened: the next is the night, and the taste and the smelling awake last. Another remarks de circumstance deserves nolne certain mus- cle* and parts of the body begin to sleep be- fore others. Sleep commence* at the extremities, be- ginning with the feet audlcgs, and creeping toward the ceiilre of the nervous action. The necessity for keeping thc fuet warm and The native, gave a* the reHon lor the ! perfectly still a* a preliminary of sleep is exhibition last fall that they wished to pro- | W9 " pitiate the UoddeBS of Rain, so thut they ' ss secure abundant showers. Kor two weeks, however, before the performance Thui D.i.uict :uid another, the strongest! heavy and continuous rain had fallen. The real reason foi the exhibition was that the people are great lover* of fcativals and care iitlli- what the spectacle is, if they only have a gala time. The entertainment was pro- x iued chiefly as an amusement forthose who wished something exciting and spectacular. I Many of the people are very religious, and and most resolute men in the party, started 1 off for help, and after shocking hardships reached an Indian camp where water was abundant. The Indians at once returned to help ihime left behind, but found only two of them living ; the other three had perished for want ot water. Not long after this adventure tho story of w '" worship almost anything if tlii-ir the borax find of old Aaron Winter* in t he | emotions be excited, .iiid to that class also upperendof Death Valley was told through- * exhibition appualed strongly, out the region, and Daunet heard it. He had had a nurd experience in Death Valley, butsssocialing with himself .1. M. Mcdonald, M. Harmon, and C. C. Blanch he went down near tho lowest part of the valley and secured '^liOiicre* of good borax laud. There wasan abundance of im-squitu wood for fuel and water was got by digging. They car- ried a boiling pan and crysulizing tank* uitablo for preparing borax for mar- ket, and l>y the end of I IS-.' had turned out _'!>ii,iX)il pounds for which they nvem-il uui .cuts a pound and upwards, Thair first shipment was thirty seven tons. n - i i .11 ,t~ ir.'. thc . i .txrrr " Una. Many races of men livs entirely on ani- mal food, and these are the most hardy, and, from all I have been able to gather on the "August Flower" For Dyspepsia. A. Ik-llanger, Propr. , Stove Foun- dry, Montagny. Quebec, writes: "I have used August Mower for Dys- pepsia. It jjave me great relief. I recoraintnu' ;t to all Dyspeptics aa a very good rctuedy." Ed. Bergcrou. General Dealer, subject, the most free from iFiseases of all | Lauzoil, LeVlS, Quebec, writes : "I kinds. >ir Francis Head say* of tiio 1'am- have used August Flower with the pas Indians: "Tht-y are all hoiseintn, or, rather, pass their lives on horseback. In. spite of the climate, which is burning hot in [ niimmer and freezing in winter, these bravo of crude material, and for that they got mun, who have neyor yet been subdued, are , eight cents. Nevertheless, the enterpn.se ' being so far away on the desert from Dag- gelt, the nearest point of shipment, they could not succeed in competition with more tne V lm e no llxod * of , 1 \\ here the pasture is good, there 'ire they ; to be found until it is consumed by their best possible results for Dyspepsia." C. A. Harrington, Engineer aud General Smith, Sydiiey, Australia, entirely naked and have not even a covering Writes: ' ' August Flower has effected for their head. They live together in trilws a complete cure in my case. It act- each of which is governed by a cacniue, but -,1 i:i. p _ ,,,; ra ,.l,, ' they have no fixed place -' - Wholesale i o,. >i i'. n, Like every other industry in which pro- ducers are engaged, that of maple ingar- making is conducted in these il.iys on a wholesale and unpoetic basis. Time was .when the Canadian farmer and his guns 'tapped the trunks with rude Iwrers and caught the sap in buckets suspeu Vd from a yoke. The fluid was then taken to a great iron kettle hung from crosi sticks and ooil- ed to the necessary thickness. Nowadays Jt is no uncommon thing for a thoiis.iinl irees to be tapped at once. Three men do this initial work, which is thus described : "The first man, armed with a bit-brace, foes ahead, and with a three-eight hs inch bit snakes an incision about an inch deep in the fibre of the wood on the lee side of I he tree. A second man inserts a round double tin spile or spout from two aud a half to three inches long iu thn aperture. The spile not eoaiiucu tbvsap. but has an arruuge- III- Ir .!.!. . II II -I MBI. Two i-iii|H-rin-s are professing their desire to pulverize each other. Two men, by chance, children of potentates, are piling up wealth and fashioning swords that their laves ma) fight to determine the cliampion- shipof tin- p. ilveri/ing fraternity Famine rule* in Russia, and sycophants in other countries crowd each othc r in the effort to replenish coffers whose contents are to be used for human slaughter. Starvation threatens hordes of dolts in (Germany, who will soon be shouting pt-an* to a tryant en gaged in pulverizing another and crueler despot. Meantime Christendom looks on with silent admiration and raises uo lun.l to stay th* crime. From the pulverizing of these two emperors, will rise other heroes to whom monuments will b* raised. It they be skilled in the arts of war, other art* will be levied upon, to perpetuate in bronze the memory of their deed*. In both countries what is termed law, Will strangle the fattier who commits murder that his family may have bread. In lx>th countries he will In- esteem- ed the best exemplar of civilization at whose belt hangs the greater number of bloody victims of legalized warfare. If in Russia two beings seek that. lia|i[>inc.ts designed by nature for every creature, aud seek it n it in accordance with tho will of a self -appointed head of a church, the bullet sped by a legal i/.cd ruffian shall send one to the grave and the other shall be driven to Siberia, where death would be a boon. There is pressing iiii-d of anew definition for the word pat- riotism. If lovo of country is to be held a virtue it must be shown in other ways, than ad hug to the sum of the world's mirery. If nations are to be allowed, nnrebiiked of their ncighboiv to plot war as a means of further enslavement of the masses, then will liberty require of her followers better work than sympathizing with crime and charity to warring kings. f.-tvnr iMy located concerns. i>n Oct. 1. I v.i-_*. when at the height of what seemed a very piosperous career, Daunet wan married to I'lotilde (iarraul, a French Canadian. Clotilde had made one matrimonial adventure already, although I i.iiinet did not know it, bnt she hail been divorced. Everything went on pretty well with thu couple mini Iwt, when business troubles accumulated, .tnd then there wore qnarrrels in the Uauuet family. In May these 1 1 unities culminated in the wifu leav- ing Dauuet and applying tor a divorce. The service of the papers on L>au- net was made on hi* arrival in San Fran cisco from Ins works m Death V.illey. lie had hoped 10 i-fli-rt a n-ronriliation with Ins wife, and lh shock to his nerves when th* papi-rs were served proved too much for him tilling to hi* lodging* at .Vir> Post street on the morning of may '2M, he wrote a rambling letter " to the public," tied up his head with a white handerchief, sat down l.-t< in^ the mirror, anil tired a ball through Ins brain. tlir* 01 i ill OOMTft. Tk<-> Mi-rr O<-ra*io>all) Large a* *ome efuurown, hul I am magi-* b \ f . Lsige ships were not uiikiK-wn to the an- cients, and -.'in.- of the molt roomy attained dimensions ei|Ual to ships of modern times. Nevertheless, they were unmanageable monstrosities, almost at the mercy ot wind it horses, and they instantly mow to a more verdant spot. They have ueilher broad, fruit, nor vegetables, but they subsist en- tirely on the ririh of their marex. " Describing the effect on himself of tins diet, Sir I)" rancis says: "After 1 had IH-I-II riding three or four months, and had lived on beef ami water, I found myself in a i-n dition which I can only describe by mying that I felt as if no exertion would kill inr, although I constantly arrived so completely exhausted that 1 could uolspuak; ye 1 a few hours sleep upon mv sudiili- mi the ground always so completely restored me that for a week 1 could daily bo upon my horse before sunrise, could ride two or three hours after sunset, and have really tired ten or twelve homes a day. This will explain the im- mense distances which people in South America are raid to ride, winch ' 1:11 i-onli ilenl could only be done on beef and water." TheCuachos. of tho Argentine Republic live entirely on roast beef ami Geo. Gates. Corinth, Miss., writes: " I consider your August Flower the best remedy in the world for Dys- pepsia. I was almost dead with that disease, but used several bottles of August Flower, and now con- sider myself a well man. I sincerely recommend this medicine to suffer- ing humanity the world over." i) C. G. GUEEN, Sole Manufacturer, a WouUburj, New Jersey, U. S. A. ever tasting farinaceous or other VI-LJI ' il>i- fond, itnd their sole beverage is tnatu or 1'araouay tea taken without sugar." Thc bankruptcy of Portugal is almost an ollicial fact. Foreign exports maintain that the treasury is empty. When the merits of a good thing are con sidered, ii only natures proof like the fol- lowing to convince and settle any doubt. Horrlhlr Untrue. j a wli. s. According to advice* received at .San Francisco from Honolulu, a family of 12 persons havu Ui-n brought prisoners to that, place from the Island of Lanai charged with murder. The story i* told that Piinlolo, a female member of the family, through her remarkable curing power, had secured the re- scarcely piitation of being kaliuma, or one possa and wave, and utterly unfit to cope with the ConsUuitine, Mich.. V. V .\. i-yi, ir,, isx; : Seeing much, suffering much aud study- ing 'iim-h, are the threo pillars of learning. There i no vice that doth so o'er a man With shame as to be discovered in a lie, fury of iv hurricane. Doubtless we are indebted to travelers' tales for the the detailed descriptions that survive the lapse of ages. Constantius con- veyed fit m Heliopolis to Rome an obelisk weigninff 1,500 tons, and, in addition to this long coveted monolith, the ship cariied about 1,2110 tons of pulie stowed about the smaller end of the obelisk, inorder to bring the ship on an even keel. In '.lis U. C. Archimedes devised a mar- velous ship for Hiero of Syracuse. Her threo lofty masts were brought from Britain, whereas our ship's masts arc of iron, or ob- tained f r< m New /calami or from Vancouver island. Luxuriously fitted sleeping apartments abounded, and one of her banqueting hall* was pav>*d with agate and costly Sicilian atone. Other floors wero cunningly in !aid with scene* from the Iliad. Stables for many horses, pond* stocked with live fish, gardens watered by artilii ml rivulet*, and hot baths wcrejprovidcd for use or amusement. Ptolemy I'hilopater |M>sacssed a nuptial yacht, tho Thalnmegon, 312 feet long and l.'ifui-i de^p. A graceful gallery, supported by curious- ly carved columns, ran around the vessel, and within were the temples ot Vensux and Bacchus. Her mnsU were 100 feet h.gh, her sails) and cordage of royal purplo hue Was troubled .'H) years with pains in the back from strain ; in Iwd for wneksatatimr: no relief from other remedies. About s yeais ago 1 bought St. Jacobs Oil and made about H application)) ; have been well and strong ever since. Have done all km. Is of work and can lift as much as ever. No re- turn of pain in years. " D. M. KF.AHK K of supernatural powers. A -inn;, it is al- leged, under the guidsnre of the spirit dinvling her, she dubbed to death her sister for questioning her powers, uud next . lnli!>eil to death her nephew, aged six. Mor brother, a man of .T>, was thi-n sei/cd and hold by tho members of the family, while I'lliilolu bin ni-d his face nml body with a flaming torch. The miscreants also seized mother man, whom the woman heat to dr.i'li. Aia r3iilt of tln!*o crime*, the natives havn deserted the place. Burled tlltr. Anollii-r supposed cue of woman ulive is reported ii'viht; a from Kichepen, noar Audi, in Krance. The local gravei'iggor fancied I h.i 1 hi- heard a movement in a >iliii npnii which be was about to throw the first spadeful of earth. Tins impression was alter- I ward* confirmed. The man ran for help aud Daughter " MSI, Mr. Blank proponed to ' restorative*, and the collin was opened. It | me last night. "Mother " Did you accept was then discovered that the lip* of the 1 hint, daughter?" " Yes, mamma. ' "Him supposed corpse were moving, but she ex- j he any money, daughter? " "Only * I, Si H) pi red a few moments afterward* It was a year, ma." " Well, handle him carefully I added that in her endeavours to escape, ilie for a month or so. Possibly you can pick ! unfortunate woman ha 1 scratched her chast up something belter during thc balance of ' and Ilinwt. Tho Prefect of the Department the Winter season. " t has ordered .in inquiry to be instituted. Dare to Iw true, nothing can need a Ho ; a fault which noeds it mod grows two there- by. THIRTY YEARS. Johnston, N. B., March n, 1889. "I was troubled for thirty years with pains in my side, which increased and became very bad. I used ST. JACOBS OIL and it completely cured. I jfive it all praise." MRS. \VM. RYDER. 'ALL RIGHT! ST. JACOBS OIL DID r." '