THE SUPPLY AT SL AGATHA'S. BY ELf'Mimi TTItWABT Pliri.P*, IH At the crossing of th* old avenn* with th* | th* face of daily duly than h* paid to tha stream of present Uaffic.in a city which, I, r''t '*hion in sable trimmings in ths obvious reasons will not be identified by thj writer of these pages, there stood and still stands ths Church of Saint Agatha's. Th* uhurch i* net without a history, chirfty such as fashion and sect combine to record. It is an eminent church, with a stately date upon its foundation-done, and a pew-list unsur|>aased for certain qualities among the worshiper* of th* Eastern States. Saint Agatha's ha* long been distinguished for ihiee things, it* money, its music, and it* soundness. When th* lax-list of the town is printed in the daily paper* once a year, the wardens and the leading parishioners of Sainl Agatha's stand far upward in the score, and their name* are traced by slow, giimy fingers <>( mechanics and strikers and socialists laboriously reading on Saturday oights. front pews at Saint Agatha's. There was no fur trimming on his overcoat, which was seven years old and pitiably thin. But he had been invited to supply at Saint Agatha's next Sunday, and to that unexampled honor and opportunity he gve the pathetic atten- tion half personal pleasure, half religious fervor of an ererlooked and devout man. In the course of a forty-years' ministry he had not been asked to preach in a city Cit. The event was tremendous to him. had been agitated by the invitation, which ran in some surh way as this : ... In closing, permit me to say, sir, that it would be agreeable lo us to welcome among us the grandson uf our first pastor, that young rector who died in the bud of his youth and Christian originality. The fact of your ancestry will give to your presence a peculiar interest for our people at large. But I beg to be allowed to add on behalf of the committee, that certain qualities in yourself and in your own work have led us to believe that you may exert positive influence upon us of which we The choir ( Saint Agatha*, as all the stand in need. From your remote and rural world knows, is superior Her soprano ] parish your life has not passed unobserved. JOB* (a famous prima donna) would fill the , S'our labor* a* a pastor, and your methods house. Women throng iht aisles to hear ! of preaching, hav* b-en an object of stuc'y the tenor, and musical critics, hat in hand, i to somt of u. We have come to rate yon, and pad on hat, drop in to report the ! sir, as one of the men of <-od There are anthem and morning pr th* oflertcry for th* Monday In ecclesiastical position, it is needles* to add. Saint Agatha's has always been above reproach. When did Saint Agatha's que*- tion a canon ' When did she contend with 1 a custom ' When did she criticize a creed ? ' H hy should she contest a tradition ? She accept*, she conform.-, she prosper*. not many. In mreung with our people, the writer personally hope* that you may he able to teach us something of the secret of your own happy and successful experience ! as a minister of Christ our Lord . . . i I i I PERSONAlpOINTEnS. In one particular .Saint Agatha's has been nf ,,.,, ,.,. w .,,. ,, ,,,,,., ..., Ml. Vt kl.lrr, PMll'4 Oil lirnr. elr rlr. B.M. !> thrust int.. an attitude of originality foreign to her taste. Her leading men feel nalle 1 I upon occasionally lo explain how the e'er- ' nal feminine came a little jontrarr to the fashion of our land to be recogm/ed in the name of the church. Saint Agatha's first ' first prize of I OO.'lO) francs in the pastor, on* should know, was a very younglet M unicipal lottery. man of enthusiastic and unconventional Joob fireen. a four-year old child, temperament. He did not live long enough out of the n|th , t o ' f to outgrow this-for a clergyman-un or- Slmd ,,, Un<Jfd lunate trend of nature, having died, lull of - - - The rich continue to grow richer Here is the Karon de Rolhschud winning the Marseii- dream* and visions, in the teeth of a lower- ing conflict with bis watdens ; but he lived long enough to carry the day and the name for a portion of his people who desired to call their church in honor of a weei, though rich, old lady who had put her private for- tune into their beautiful house of worship, and her warm heart into their future suc- cess. It had befallen this dear old lady to bear the name of Agatha, which, for her sake, and, of course, in dus ecclesiastical remembrance of the strictly canonical aamt of similar cognomen, wss accordingly be- llowed upon Ihe church. In the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and another numeral which I am requested fell New York house pedestrian's shoulder. Neither was seriously hurl. Christopher Columbus, the Ksquimn ba l <y born at the Chicago World's Fair, die.l at th* San Franciio Midwinter Fair last week. Th* climate was too enervating for l.im. Thscleik of Queen Vicuna's kitchen, who always carves, receives a salsry of $.1, '<() a year. The chef re eives the same salary, and th* two confectioner*, who at- i tend to the making of pastry, jelly, etc., | receive annual salaries of $1,500 each. I Yr. Munro Ferguson, according to a Scotch newspaper, said that after prodding Mr I'liditone on the subject, thlex-Prem ler said, "My drar sir. I might a* well undertake to replace tho first man in th* garden of Kden as to carry Home Rule for nol to indicate, but I may not deny that it i > ,,t|,, ( | i. a recent one, the popular rector of Saint | ' ThomatCarlyle one* told a young Colle* Agatha's took a winter vacation. He was an imposing and imperious man, full of years and honors, in the full sway of his professional fame, when befell a victim, like any common person, to the grippe. In the attempt to recover dom this vul- I Scotland gar malady, he was forced to observe that his select physician had drugged him, i an exclusive bronchitis, into a minister'* sore throat, such as any oidinary country parson might develop for lack of an over- coat, or a fire in his bsdroom. Without undue delay or reluctance Ihe rector of Saint Agatha's took ship for the south of France ; and in the comfortable way in which such things are don* in such quar- ter*, the church was set trundling upon the wheels of a two months' "supply." This was msnaged so gracefully by the experi- enced vestry of Sainl Agatha's that hardly a visible jar occurred in the prish machin- ery. Many of the people did not know that their rector had gone until a canon from London sonorously filled the pulpit one Sunday morning. A distinguished Middle State clergyman followed the next week ; the West sent her brightest and beet the succeeding Sunday, and so it went. Kminent var etjr easily occupied that sacred desk. The wardens of St. Agatha's have hut to *ay. Come, and he cometh who weighetb the honor of ministering in this aristocratic pulpit. In brief, the most ills iinginh"ii men in the denomination cor- dially " supplied." On the whole, perhaps th* parish enjoyed their rector's vacation as mu ,-h as he did. Now, upon the vestry there chanced at that time to lie one man who was " differ- ent." One does find such people even among the officers of fashionable churches. This man (he was, hy Hie way, a grand- nephew of the old lady who built the church when Saint Agatha's was an unendowed experiment) had occasional view* not wholly in harmony with the policy nf his brother otlicers ; and being himsell a heavy rate payer, was allowed, sometimes, by the graduate in the presence of lieoernl J. Wilton, "better continue at the plough all your days than depend on the writing of history for a living." He abandoned liter- ature, and is now a successful preacher in THE SEPARATOR CREAMERY. I" the creamer/, u in the private dairy, the firi. and inoel important requisite to UCMMJI -leaiilineis. A* it u impossible to 'urn out a goo j finished article without good material to work upon, nu milk should b* accepted but tliat of good finality and free from any objectionable odr or taint. It u import- ant that milk should be j-rated a* IOOD a* ilrawa from the cow, care being taken to ee that the air is pur*. It should aUo be protected from rain ; rainwater in milk makee it im)xiuible to eecure a good quality of butter. Milk from healthy oowi only, fed on wholenome food and having accew to pur* water, should be accepted by the be once over on the power wi rker. Then i pack in Ub. If for prints, about flve or ix time* over will be sufficient working- To prepare ash or spruce tubs for use, they should be pickled in hot brim* for twenty-four hours or stsamed over a steam jet for t rutty mmulei. 1 in-lined tut* nhoiild bs thoroughly soalded and cooled before using. Remove any resin or specks on the tin. Put the butler in the tub in small quantities, pounding it thoroughly around the edges with a suitable pounder, keeping the surface of the butter level. The tub* should b* filled to within one-half an inch from the top, leav- ing the surface slightly crowning. Cover with parchment paper or butter cloth, or, what is better, with both. This should be covered with a salt pane, made by pulling sail ID cold water. The tubs should be tmltermaker. The pasture*, yardi and filu<1 untl1 th " lt '"' w ' l o the top of lauea should at all times be kept fret from the tub - '*" the tub with Parchment paper before putting in the butler will be found lo give (uod results. The temperature of the storage room should not be higher than 5> , and ai much lower as it can be kept uniform. [From the Agricultural College Bulletin. carrion and all decaying matter. The milking should always be done with dry hands ami in a cleanly manner, the udder being well brushed or wiped with a damp cloth. All vessels. pails, etc , should he of tin and should be thoroughly soalded each day. Wooden p.ils should never be used. The buttsr maker should at once reject any milk that is found to contain any bad odor, or any that Is delivered in cans not properly cleaned and scalded. It u well to accomp- any the rejected milk with a notice a* to its defect, and also, if possible, with the remedy. After strictly enforcing the foregoing, the Imtter-maker should keep the factor) in the be*: possible condition, a* an tiample to those of his patrons who may visit him. In order to keep the separator in good running condition, all oil must be kept wip- 'id oil, and the bearings kept free from any water, dirt or ^rit. Keep all parti with which the milk comes in con tact thoroughly clear and sc Ided every day. The temperature of the milk to b* separ- ated should be from SO to 8.~> ' , not allow- ing it|i<i go higher, as the .-oil in time and ioe in cooling is increased, and the quality of Ihe product is likely to be injured. The cream ihould Ixt C'Kiled as soon t* possible sfter separation to about 4~> s to ONLY A COUGH, mm? n PUTT Ttf i W ' Iflfi UlllIllMAJl (oosri.i OBD) Sherinr.am in this kerf II Hniieii ! the Masssrr* e>f TBesuaad*. \Vh.n one remembers the important role played by Marshal Su Arnaud in placing Napoleon III. upon th* throne of France and his glorious death in the face of the enemy during the Crimean War, it is aad to think of the degradation to waich lias sunk his son, Oomts Julien de St. Arnaud, who has just been committed for trial at Newgate, in London, on a charge of having obtained a sum of fi,1 by means of a forged check. Marshal St. Arns'id was one of the moat unscrupulous promoter* of the coup d'etat. But what he lacked in principle he made up in courage, gallantry ana brilliancy. He always uae-d lo attribute the bloodshed which inaugurated Napoleon HI.'* reign to a terrible cough with which h* wan I afflicted at the time of the coup d'etat. Mrs. Sherinr.am in this ship?" *ha cried, with starting eyes, and ths wildest, whitest countenance you can imagine. " Yes," I answered. "Then it's h* who murdered Soeringham. She is capable of it. She'* a tigress!" sbe cried, in a Toiee pitched to the note of a scream, "That's what 1 har* come 'o talk to you about, and I am glad you have found your voioe." "Where , she'" nheasked, and a strong shudder ran through her 'She is in the cabin '.*elow--dying; _ she may be dead even now as w* convene " She uttered something in Spanish passion- ately and clae-ped her hands. "Now hear m," said I, "since you have vour ears, and have found your tongue You are suspected of having murdered the m\o you eloped with." "It is false: ' she shrieked. "I loved him Oh! 1 loved him!" 8h caught her breath and wept bitterly. "In my own heart," *aid I, touched hjr her dreadiui misery, "I believe you guilt- less. I am sure you are so, now that w* ! have discovered that Mrs. Sheringham is on hoard. \Y|K you answer me a question' " Y<-s,' h* sobbed. ' You know that .Sheringham was (tab- bed to the heart with a dagger ?" - Ye*." "It bear* this inscription: 'Charles Win- throp Shermgham to Leonora Dunbar.' Was that dagger in your possession in this ship V " No. Mr Sheringbam gave it me There was no inch inscription as you name upon it. I left it behind me when I came away. I swear before my dod I speak ths truth : ' Her voice was broken with sob* ; she poke with deepest agitation. Her manner convinced me it was as she represented. 1 said. " Come with me and see the wo- man, and tell me if she U Mrs. Sharing- ham." Sh shrank, and cried out that she would not go. Sue was perfectly sans ; all her William VVahl, a New York brewer, had bis luxuriant whiskers pulled out lately in a row with his cousin, Herman Wahl, and as the wind can no longer blow through them, he wants it to raise on them. He has sued for J.'i.iXX) damages, and put hi i whiskers, wrapped in brown paper, in evidence. Kismarck ha* lost none of his old-time gallantry. It was arranged by th- deputa- tion of ladies who personally visited him to present the 403 bottles of finest Rhenish wine contributed from Kaden, Hesse, and the Palatinate that each should kiss his hand upon Iwing pretrnled, hut the old soldier kissed them instead, and not upon their hands either. It is reported that Mr. (jladstone has completed the translation of Horace, upon which he has been engaged for some time. His work is said to be in th* hands of Mr. .loli n Morley. who lias been granted the pri- vilege of perumng it before it goes to the printer. The ex Premier intends to devote his energy to the translation of another clas- sical author, but he has not yet made a selec- tion. Though sbe is pt seventy, Rosa Ron- heiir spends a long and busy day at her easel. Photography is her only recreation, 'in, Her atelier is crowded with artistic trea- sures as to be, in an admirers phrase, "a private Louvre. ' It contains many com- plete and incomplete works of her hruih, some of which are said to be as great as the productions of her earlier years. ripen ticicntly, add sufficient starter to givs the cream a sharp, acid taste and glassy appear anc* ou the turtace. About two per cent, of (tarter will usually be sufficient. To prepare the starter, take fresh skim milk tha' i* known ti be free from any odor >r taint and warm it to 'JO 5 , keeping it at that temperature for twenty-four hours, when it will be ready for use. It should be kept excluded from the air a* much as possible, more epecielly if the air be a', all impure. L'te a small amount about one per cent. of the starter al- ready made to stimulate the development of next day's starter. This may b* omitted on Saf.-.rday, a* th* length of time over >unday will give sufficient development of lactic acid, and the starter will b* entirely fresh each eek. We favor cooling the cream to a low temperature immediately after separation, and ripening it in a few hours, using star IIT whsn the season and condition of th* milk requires it, for the fallowing reasons : 1. The solids in cream other than fat are subject to rapid decomposition. 2' Tbis dec imposition is not favorable when he ceased, the Marshal just manage*! to gatp the words ".Ma sacree toux" (my cursed cough). The officer sent to take the Marshal's orders, having wailed until the latter recovered his breath, repeated the Question, and again Su Arnaud began roughing violently, terminating, as on the I previous occasion, with the exclamation, ' "Ma sacree toux !" The officer was no fool. He could take a hint as well a* any one else, and, saluting, h* left th* commander's presence. On re- turning to the Brigadiers and Colonels who had sent him for instructions, he was asked what reply the Marshal had made, to which ne responded that the lieneral s only word* had been "Massacre* toux" (massacre everybody). The command was obeyed to the letter, and many thousand persons were shot down and bayoneted in the street* of Paris. to the keeping quality of whatever it ef- fect*. .'<. Butter always contains a proportion of solid matter that is pot fat, and the lea* this has advanced towards decomposition the better the flavor of the butter, and the longer will this flavor be retained. 4. This decomposition in cream is very rapid at a high temperature, whileata low temperature it U retarded. fill HXIXO. PHYSICAL EXERCISE II Via. I.Mi.Mere,! .1 I'rell, l.n.i.l Thlu* War Hat k In I'll . Time. All authorities that have treated on lon- gevity place exercise, moderate and regular- | ly taken, as one of the main factors of a long life. That there are many exceptions doe* not alter the fact that physical excense i* as useful in keeping one healthy as it i* to prolonglife. Good walker* are seldom sick, and th* same may be said of persons who daily take a certain prescribed amount of exercise. Kxercise is both a preventive and a remedial measure. In my own prac- tice, I have seen a case of persistent trans i piraliod that followed the least bodily courtesy of the majority, when bin notion was not really in bad form, you know to have hi* way. Ho did not get it so often but that he wan glad to make the most of it when he did ; and when his turn came lo control the supply for that Sunday with which this narrative ha* to do, he asked the privilege of being intrusted with the details of the business. This request, a* from a useful man of certain eccentricities, was in- dulgently granted ; and thus there occurred the events which it has been given me to relate. It was just before L*m, ami the winter had been a cold injure the grain 01 the butter, and cause*, in too many instances, white streaks an i poor flavor. When neces ary to use color, add mill , ient lo make the butter a* nearly a* possible The church in which theCoburg wedding ' the color of that made in June. Always add ceremony was performed was consecrated I the color before starling the churn. About in 173s. Brtore the time of Martin Luther, I one-half ouuce. per thousand pounds of milk it was used as the chapel of a convent con- j in winter will usually be found sufficient, ductnd by barefooted friars, and the organ, stone pulpit, an 1 baptismal font now in the palace church are relics of the day* of the friars. The convent was converted into See that the chum i* well cleaned Inside [ effort, and which annoyed and debilitated the person at night this being a condition left after a severe illness disappear a* if by magic after a day or two of exercise on a bicycle. Pliny relates that a Greek physi- cian who took up his residence in Rome was wont publicly to declare that he was will- ing to be considered a charlatan if at any time he should ever fall ill, or if h* failed to die of any other disease but old age. Celsus, in speaking of the same physician, observe* that his faith, in the benefit to be derived trom exercise, was *o great that h* had in a great measure abandoned the ad- ministration of internal remetiie, depending mostly on hygienic measure*, and e>erci*e*. As an evidence of the correctness of his viows, Pliny telii us that this physician iived to be a centenarian, and then only died from an accident. with % bruth, at tentonoa week in cold anil twice a week in hot weather, and scalded each day before and after using. Cool it before pitting in the cream, which should always be strained into the churn. Thick cream churn master thanthatwhich is thinner ; but to gel the best results it should contain from -"> to 30 per cent, butter- fat. If for any reason it should be thicker than this, it should be diluted with pure water or skim milk of th* proper temperature. Churn at ae low a temperature as is possible to get butter in from thirty-five to seveuty minutes. To warm or cool cream, do so by putting warip or cold water or ice around the vat 01 vessel containing it, and stir it I'imitly. Never put hot water, steam or directly into the cream, as this tends to CRIME IN ONTARIO. palace in l.'ilV. The parents Victoria were married in tin* ISIS. Mr. Law*on Tail exonerates Ihe a of 1,'ueen church the human race from the imputation of being the oiily onatures that naturally take to drink. Wasps, he says, have the lame proclivity. Mr. I'ait has wittrhed the wasp* eagerly attacking over-ripe fruits, when the sugar lias in some degree been converted into alcohol. Around such fruits especially gradually increasing to that amount in fall, and lessening towards spring. As soon as the cream breaks, or at the first signs of butter, add enough cold water to lower the contents of the churn 'i a or in i 3 , and continue to churn until the butter granules are the size of wheat grain*. Allow the churn to rest in n position to draw off the buttermilk for four or five minutes, that Ihe particles may all rise to the top. Then draw oil' the buttermilk, straining it to prevent any lost of butter. Add at least a* much water as there vas buttermilk at i r..in ike Aal Beperl ml Ihe iMprrler. Ths aim lal report of the inspector of prisons, of cormnon ;ail- and reformatories was presenter! by Mr. (-ibeon to th* legis- lative Assembly latt week. The table of crimes shows a decrease this year on that of previous years. Kight thousand six hundred and nineteen crimi- nals were arrested in Is'.i.t. Nine thousand and eleven wers sent down in is',''', and I0,4i'l in ISO). (II these S.OI9 only 5,408 were found guilty and sentenced, as compared with ."-.'. i "i in I V'J. One hundred and nine were sent to Kingston ;<enit*ntiar;' 6.*< to the reformatory far boys, 669 to th* Central pnvtible one. ('ne Friday evening ' rotten plums and grapes, the waxps may he ' Kvnlve the churn as in early March there came up, or came | seen fighting sad Hiruqeling for precedence, ' almut two minutes, ilisn draw uif the water, down, s drifting; snow storm. U was bad I i'l afterward* when they are absolutely straining as in the cane of the buttermilk. a temperature of 50 or 50 in winter, j prion. UI7 to the reformatory for females and :. , as nearly as possible, in summer. I *>nd 4 -' l '- >s to common jail*. pel haps dead at this moment, and by put- ting on an air of command I succeeded st last in inducing, or rather obliging, her to accompany me. She veiled herself before quilling the cabin. The saloon was empty. We passed swiftly into the steerage, and she followed me into the cabin where the I woman was. | Th* poor craatur* was still unconscious ; ths stewardess stood beside the bunk look- ing at its dying white occupant. I said to Miss Dunbar. " Is it Mrs. Sheringham '' She was cowering at th* door, but when she perceived that the woman lay without motion, with her eve* half closed, insens- ible, and perhaps dead, as she might sup- pose, she drew near the bunk, peered breathlessly, and then looking wind to me, said : " She is Mrs. Sheringham. Let me go!" i opened the door, and she Bed, with a it rang* noise of sobbing. I stayed for nearly three hours in Mrs. Sheringham * berth. There was nothing to be don* for her. She passed away in her unconsciousness, and afterwards when I looked more closely into th* uatur* of her injuries I wondered that she could have lived five minutes after the terrible fall that had beaten sensibility out of her over the windlass end. I went to the captain to report her death, and in a long talk I guve him my views of the tragic business. I said there could be no question that Mrs. Sheringham had fol- lowed the guilty couple to sea with a determination to so murder her husband a* to fix the crime of hi* death upon hi* paramour. How was this to be done ? Her discovery at her home of the dagger her husband had given to Leonora Dnnbur would perhaps give her the idea she needed If Mits Dunbar spoke th* truth, then indeed I could not account for the inscnp. tion on the dagger ; but there could be no question whatever that Mrs. Sherin^ham had been her husband's murderess. This was my theory, and it was after- wards verified up to the hilt. On the arriv- al of the Chiliman at Melbourne, M iss Dun- bar was sent home to take her trial for th murder of Mr. Sheringham: but her inno- cence was eetablished by, rirsl, the circum- stance of a woman having been found aboard dressed as a man ; next, by the statement of witnesses that a woman whose appearance exactly corresponded with that of "John Burgess" had been the rounds of ths shipping-otrices to inspect the liati of paiutnger* by vessels bound to Australia : thirdly, hy letters written to Leonora Dun- bar by Sheringham found among Mrs. Sheringiiam's effects, in one of which th* man told the girl that he proposed to carry her to Australia. Finally, and this was the most conclusive item in the whole catalogue oi evidence, an engraver swors that a wom- an answering to Mrs. Sheringhaiu'a descrip- tion called upon him with the dagger (produced in court), and requested him without delay to inscribe upon the thin plate, " Charles Winthrop Sheringham to Leonora Dunbar." And yet, but for the death of Mrs. Sher- inghain and my discovery of her sex, it was far more likely than not that hit wife would have achieved her aim by killing her hus- band anil getting her rival hanged for the murder. - {Harper's \\ eekly. i possible, i fast a* enough in town, but in the suburbs it was worse, and in the country it was little less than dsngerous to passengers through the wide, wind-swept street*, the choking lanes and Litter moors. An old clergyman, the pattor of a scat- tered parish, sat in hi* studvon that Friday niftht, snd thanked Cod that tl.e weekly evening service was over, and his day's work done. He would have regrcttnd being called out again thtt night, for he had got quite wet in walking to chinch anil back, and the cold from which he hid leen u' feting for a week past might not Ixi bene tilted thereby. This fact in itself w.i a matter of no concern under ontin.iry c m I; tn* to the old clergyman, who, being a lonely man in a forlorn country boarding- house, u h nobody to take care of him, was accustomed to live under the h.tdw of a nnnon cold, "and who paid no inor at- ts*iiiioi> lo his ow.i physical ln< m-fortu in drunk wit h the rpirit, they crawl away in I Then add the second water about the a torpid condition, and hidu themselves in ' same quantity as for the first water the grass orgie. till they havo s'ept off What They Mftan. t the i All to :>s - in winter and 52 e to 58 in I summer, and repeat as before, If for any Sweet liirl "What do the papers mean when they talk about a wamanly worn- Father --" They uieM. one how 10 make pumpkin pie*." I reason ths second water doe* noi com* off clear, or nearly so, repeat the washing un- til it does. Allow the contents of the churn to drain well ; then take the uutter out carefully, . for I The crime most prevalent was that of liunkenneas.about 3fi per cent. l tee com- mittals being from that cause. The next in order of frequency are crimes of vag- rancy, larceny, and common assault. Four thoussnd four hundred and seventy-seven of these prisoners were men and !.'>! fe- males ; -,7ti.1 temperate and .~>,s;>4 intem- perate | 6,!>I5 could read ; 1,704 were illit- erate. The city of London wa* not so fortunate as the rest of the Province, and the record who knows ' " >in 8 * woo ^ on spade, care being taken to i keep it in a granular form. Weigh, and plaun the butter on the worker, adding All Encouraging Slgrn. Farmer Meadow- "Hi. w it your son doing in th- Fanner Harrow " He hasn't said much almut his bu*in<->, hut he writes me thai h*'s got lots of dienils them." Farmer Meadow " That's encouraging. That shows that he ain't hue! to lorrow mousy yet." salt Kiimcicnt to suit tho tail* of the cu toiiKT. From three-fonrth* to one ounce of sail to one poun.i of butter will uiua'ly bo found ulli -lent . Wrk carefully and evenly, avoiding any ruli'ini^ or fri-Mion, until the salt Is evenly iliitril ute I and excessive moisture i* ex- pelled. From sevnu to eight times over will usually !> "itli, n-nt. Turning inwards an I outward*, then doubling, is meant to of crime increased from 497 in ISW lo 537 in IS'l.'l. Forty-six of the 537 wsre females ; Mi were illiterate ; '259 were temperate ; '.'7s intemperate ; .'Is were committed for drunkenneaa, which is 08 more than lilt year. There was an increase CLUBS AND KNIVES iiu reel l*j Hen... f>arll Bew D.iring a debt! 3 between the scholar* of a country school house a few miles north of Winchester, Ohio, the other night, a fight occurred between Nathan Mansfield acd Edward Carroll, aged 15 and H. which resulted in the former being, it ii thought, fatally injured hy being stabbed in the back, while Mansfield was struck on th head with a lame club Th entire school was in a general fight, evendown to (i- year- old children. Miss Kva Kra'zer, the teacher, will, a piece of stovemood, struck a young fellow named Henry Steinmau, a bully who had a , insulted her. Four of tho young men who in th* expense of I live away from th* schoolhouse had to be One hundred ami thirty- carried to their homes on account of the affray. Citi/.ens in that vicinity are greatly excitad over the matter, ana the School Directors swore out a warrant tor the arrect of the entire crowd who visited th* OebaU and created the disturbance, th* jails in lS!i:i. seven thousand four hundred and eighty live dollar* wa* expended, which i* about $1,700 more than last year. London jail COM f'i.iis'i, which is an increass also of |MN>