^p I ♦ }i ^H.- 'f KniMiif. At ker window tha ia nttiag. Little buy bright ooqaatte, SIm ii aittiiig, kuttiog, knitting. Ever at rabtl« net. Wenrins in t Uaghter, bliufaet, -Ad delioioTU nods and amilet, Tonea aa aoft aa notea of tkraabea, And a thouiaod nameleaa wilea. Take exit, my bewitching neigbboar. Take care that yon do not get. At the end of all yonr laboar, Tangled in your aabtle net. SelfiahaesB Witen icicles hang from the tree. And winter wiads drearily moan, When rivers and rivnlets freeze. There's green in some far away zone. Bat what is the knowledge of this. The ioy of a far away zone Oh, smaU seems another soal'a blisa. When deep sorrow reigns in onr own ' Tk B^l ColiB MM m4 HIS VICTORIA CROSS. Bi/ the Author qf "A Sirasoi W'EblilNf- F.vE," " (;i.4liK Sta-nhopkN Dia- monds," #f. (,HAPTEK 1. oatkakMd,! BaaoMiatoUa " After all Oen ia {fal « • doc" Mid Lock MaLMd. «Mi â- mile. "Brttkaak0wlittethay toMT!" I Coknal Mal^iwd vaa ahron pnapl ia I what«T«r b« did it aarar took hai laag to arriTe at a d ae i ati u aod tkat doaa ha wovid •et npon it Ha bad indaad aaiM Bi«iMa(i aa to what bia h on sak taper woaU aajr jks â- ome aa to what his tallow-oflfan 'a^^t thiak bat neither eanaed him maoh WSMp- neaa he lived so mach out of sooietjr that it mattered very little to him what aBniatj â- aid or thought. He was not yooag, aad the girls would be in the scbool-rooa ba- iides an elderly chaperon would make all things right. "It's anfortanate,' thongbt the Ooloael, aa he rang the bell for Mrs. Grant the boose- keeper, " their coming jast now. I aboold I like to run over and bring the laaaiea my- self bnt it's impossible. These maooeaTrea are coming off and I can't get awav." I Mrs. Grant received the news he imparted I to her with much greater favuar thao he had expected. She listened to what ba said, and, when he bad finished, her honsat face beamed with the admiration she felt for his kindness. " If ye are not a real MeLeod, air," aha • said, with the familiarity of an old servant, "I don't know what a gentleman if. To think of ye putting up with a pair o' wild ' Irish bairns Ah, Colonel, yell have the blessing, so ye will Aweel, sir, and haw soon will the young loddies be coming, and i where will I put them " j "Oh, I leave th»t to yon, Mrs. Grant I " ' answered McLeod, smiling. "Only of oonrsa the best and brightest room, and I abonld TIB ADTAMTAeB OT ZBACHIXe TBOI lO tor maaott KaxT Minumâ€" uoa ak» poo«, "I'oor for them- this 19 bnt a dull house for such young things, and bow can I make it otherwise " t.'^lonel McLeod rested his heal on his liaod and sighed. There was apparently no reason for de- pression, for all Colonel McLeod's lurrouod- iDgs betokflbed ease and wealth. The room io which he xat was Urge and handsomely furnished. The walls w;re covered from fl(X*r to ceiling with oaken book-shelvea. Un oue bide of the room stood a grand piano rich Turkey carpets covered the tlooi a tigerskio was before the fire-place, whereon was stretched a magnificeBt collie dog of purest breed aod in the reading- chair, near which was a stand of beautiful tropical tlawers, sat the owner of this great lonely house and the broad lands that sur- One baan ntatty ooaataatfy of the sity of kasonig acooM t «. aad that, to good bonsakaapM; a woaua â- ha a ld w at leaat a mdiiaaatarT kaowladfa of tha ral aa of moacy. Bat, earioaaly aaoag^, no oaa arer â- anaati tnm whcaoa worn sa aw to get their kaovladge. ra dim a n taty ot othar- wise. Ia fonaar daysâ€" aad tha traditaoa •till liannâ€" it vaa baUerad that ooai p l at a kaawla4ga of eaokary and hoaaakaapiag woold eoaaa by aatare as aeoa as die ring was £ttad oa tha bride's fiager, kt bar maiden life have been aa free fion any do- moatic care as it is paanUe to iaagine and many a miaerable bonr that deloaian ooat the new-made wife. Bat still we firmly believe that oor dangfaters, broaght ap in «irIbood as igaoraat aa anything caaoemiag money as any liliaa of tha field, wilt deval- ope, at any rate, a aofioient kaowladga of its value and managaaient tha day they on- dertake the charge of a hooaafaold. Sobm may do ao, bnt very certainly moat do not, and, in oooaequence, go tbiongh an immenac amooat of worry and troable before they acquire experience. Now, experience most I ~^° be Dooght. It can neither b« borrowed nor given. So, In common fsimcss, we sbonld try to let onr dear ones bny theirs aa ebeap- ly aa may ba, and nnt, to save onrsalvea tfoabls aad anxiety, expose them to the danger of pnrobaaing it at the last moment at a price that may cost them mncb actoal it wen. It ia far ewlK tajpy*** fn vWi oaa diaeaaan it* iM M no wv* «â- «{tkaMnorlaai*af««iedUi«fcfhU tS vitkaMraor _^ eiMoaatha eoMlnt can aad vatehfalaeas that win kaaptlMgiri tram miaahM. oi,l aay nta. tMih tha pil ta aaa tta oaa»- ^har laQy, Sdhalf kar, ky a» )a 1878, whas an Jaaeat aidaif Ika 2Sr.rJSa'S7k""i»'5,ZSa7 s^S^-?^- riav to taka of what aay ba aaUad tha •â- *â- â- â- •â€"-•*«*• â€" Mtaial aanlaaaaaaa af yaath bat thara ia aa oU sayiag, "Aa tha aniia^ia haa« tha tna grawa," aad if a giri who a earakaa of dabt IS not Uaght right aa a girl, what can â- habawhaaahagrowaap? IfihaisaUow- ad to think that if aha esa not "oatbir ooat to her clotb," aa the proverb raoo, the (aalt lias with tba doth, not the cattar-oaa yon wmader if, as a woawa, abe is aztrara- gant aad oarelsaa in Btoaey mattera, fal^ oonriaead that this cardaaaaaaa ia at worat aa aaiiabla weakaara, for which aha ia ia Bowiaa to blame, tha real cnlprit beiag fafa, which has denied ber a MiffioMnt fo it Mi for her wanU, or ber hasbaod, who fails to sapply her with ths ncoeaaary liberality. witha aatobr Mr. W. T.BIaafacd. wamndaaabalaw. BatitwiOdai iatseaat tha laadaea af tha /Mtes #W DonUa-Huded Copy. A BUDXTKK ATTUtm TO rvaiTiaB cart at D0T7BLX HI8 imUAL KATE OT OfWXD, (Fron the Ksna s City Joomsl-) There is a reporter at the Timu think they woald like to be together prob- children, it wi;i be a sad change i '"y they have always occupied the aaraa ,,_ -a terrible break-up For I fear room but I can leave all arrangements to •ufi'erinj, and even in some casea their ao- ycn, I know. Will you send Hector to ma meatic happiness, io twenty minutes, pleaae?" „ ,.. .,,„,„...,._ When Mrs. Grant had depsrted, chsrijed " *-^ allowa.nci. to tell the wonderful news downstairs, which A. aoob as they are able to understand a ahe did with many enconiums oa the i little what money ia, children abonld have Colonel's generoaity, Loris McLeod sat I an allowance, however tiny, for tbsir pock- down and wrdte a lector to Mr. Sullivan "It is my wish aod intontioo," he said, " to receive the Misses Vemer into my chsrge, and I pledge myself to act as their guardian and to undertake all responsibilities consequent on that assumption until they shall become of age. After that they moat choose for themselves. I regret that it is sbiolutely impossible for me to leave my duties at this moment, or I should have had Kreat pleasure in 'making myeslf known to you and my future charges. If ^ou will round it, who would have given up every I kindly let me know however when it wUlbe blameless convenient for the young ladies to cross, I oue of his possesaionx t" stand blameless before the world. Colonel l.on8 Mcl^eol was a remarkably handsome man he looked scarcely more thao aix or seven and thirty, bnt a reference to the A'Mii LMt would have shown him to will send over a suitable esoort, who will thus relieve you of all trouble. I beg to enclose a cheque for immediate neceaaitiea my servant will see to everything else when she comes. I cannot conclude without be some years oMcr. The toll slight form, ' tb»oking you for the interest you have taken â- in my old friend's daughters. I should have been pained had you Iwen less frank about their affiirf." with the upright military carriage, tempered with easy grace, had atill all ibe aopplenesa of youth the dark gray cyea, large and well set under ttio broad forehead, had lost none uf their fire and, although a changeless melancholy clouted lii« countenance, not one j it of the i-rdour and military enthusi- j^m "f Lib ca-'li:r dsys was abated. What- "1 like his letter," was Mr, Sullivan's comment to his wife over the breakfast-ta- ble â€" " a trifle reserved, but good. Let me see wasn't there something about Colonel ever lie mi^ht auller he remained always a â- McLeod rather â€" b'm â€" ngly during the Mu loldier. tiny " The litter which had prompted the I'olo- " I don't remember, my dear. 1 dare say ncl's half regretful words had fallen to the i but it won't hurt the girU. Dear me, what H'jor, anil he remuined tor several momenta a change for them, after this life, to a mili- in deep and apjiarently ead thought. The tary household " liuea (4 the tirm but singularly sweet mouth I When told of their future, Alice, the had settled even to steronees, and-the frown younger girl, burst into tears and bemoaned had deepened on his forehead, over whioh her sad ?ate, saying that ahe was positive he kept passing his hand. I'resently he the should hste Colonel McLeod, for he was stooped, and picked up the letter again. sure to be a atiff martinet. Bnt Cecil Ver- " Poor V'erner " he muttered, and his lip ner stood gravely by her sister, with her i|Uiverod little. ".So he is gone. They arm round her, her large blue eyes dreamy ail go so, before the ono who would lay down with thought, and strove to comfort Alice, life without u pa:i){. How strange it seems I i " Don't cr}, Alice," she said, " I dare say He who ooulil lie so ill spared i.s taken we shall be much happier than we think And I Of what use is this life to me 7 And yet iierhaps I am wrong to say that moral- uti t«41 us that no man or woman who lives iM abfiolutely u^ele«s. And I suppose old Cutin here wouldn't like another master " â€" and there was a tinge of bitterness io his tone. " Well, Al'uurt Verner was one of I the few who believed in mo entirely, and he j II gone" â€" he paused, and a half smile ditted i «'Vor the grave features â€" "and leaves his poor lanHits to nie Well, he might have 4.-h«8cr a Initter guardian for them ' ilo again read the letter io his hanJ. " They t;ll mr 1 am dying," it ran "and I am leaving my two pour children alone in a world cruel enouj;h to well-niifh penniless • •rphaiiH. I know not wliere to turn. I am III ilea|iair. In my strait the only one I liuve a faint idea who wuulil help me is jouraelf. You and 1 Were brother officers long a,;" We fought aide by aide lo the .Ml liny, ami I think we loved each other yn .1. Will you try daya, Lon.i, and he darlioga? They have each a little sum uomiog to themâ€" just enough to keep them but tliey have no friends or relatives. And the eliler ;;irl u but seventeen and a dear wild Irish nt\ at thatâ€" a child " Thu letter hure suddenly broke off, as though the hand of the writer had failed him. (^'olooel MoLcod laid down the letter and took up an enclosure, penned in a busi- ness hand. we now. strict Leod like. • I'erhaps Colonel McLeod isn't very papa wasn't, you know. L-iris Mc- I like his name â€" I wonder what he is CUArrut IL It was with no little anxiety that Colonel McLeod awaited the arrival of the two new inmates of Ridinghnrst he had sent o3 Janet Grant, a niece of the housekeeper, with instructions to spare no expense with regard to anything required by the sisters Janet was to use her own discretion as to what thoce requirements were. He knew he conid trust Janet, for ahe had lived for a long time as travelling maid in a nobleman'a family, and, having just returned home, he had engaged her 1 1 wait en his wards. L'nfortnnately the day that they would arrive from Ireland was the last day of the maoueuvres, which were to oooclode with an to remember the old inspection by the Commander-in-Chief and guardian to my two the Colonel expected to be kept lata. It would seem inhospitable indeed for tbeaa homeksss girls to find nobody to receive them when them when they arrived. How- ever, there was no help for it so Colonel McLeol rode away early in the morning, j having given a last injunction to Mrs. Grant I to bo sure to apolngiao to the Missea Verner for his apparent neglect. "Heaven bleas the Colonel!" said the ' good dame while standing oa the ball stops to see him ride cfT. " He's just every bit aa tender-hearted as a girl, and aa particular about politeness to these wild Irish lasses as if they was the Queen on her throne. Bless my soul, Grant " â€" turning to her husband the butlerâ€"" he looks that handsome in his onitorm, you'd take him for thirty, that you would " ".Sir," It aaid, "on looking over the pa- i uers left by my late client Albert VerLcr, Esq., late of th« â€" th Lancers, residing at Kock .inris, Ballyshowao, Connaught, I i found the enclosed letter addressed to you. I wai rciineated by Miss Wrner to examine 1 all papers lett by her father and, finding I that lu thia letter Mr. Vemer requeste you I to undertake the guardianship of his child- I ren, I think it my duty on their behalf to I statu that these young ladies are left wholly unprotected, nor are they litted by age, tx- perience, or etiucation to obtain tbeir own living. They will each of them poasess the j sum- of live hundred pounds, which, how- ever well invested, would not produci suBi- I cient for their entire maintenance. I trust f mentslator he sprang to the ground, you will pardon me for having brought these cousi^^^s charger to Hector s care, tacts under your notice but my late client i was much esteemed by invself and my part- 1 and I thou)^ht it my duty to do what 1 ' As the Colonel had expected, tbe autnaui day bad already closed in before he rode up the avenue of maguihcent trees which led to the house bia eyes scanned the windows, for he half expected to see lights in ths drawing-room, and his heart beat a little faster ss he urged on his horse. A few mo- ner, could for his chiMren " I am, sir, your obedient servant, "FaTRKK Sl-LLIVAN." "Fhe name of the tirm of solicitors â€" one kuown to the Colonel â€" was stamped on the pa|«r. " I'oor lai-sicsâ€" poor little la.ssi«s " said .(.oris Mol.L-od to himaelf. Thao ho rose and began to pbcc up aod down, pulling his moustache thou-htfully. " I siip|iose they are living on nothing now. I'oor Verner He must hive got through a lot of money bnt Irishmen never have any head for business. I dare aay what the children have won't ktep a girl in glovea â€" if they wear glovca down there, by the way. But, of course, there's only one thing to be done. Dear old Albert I I can- not repay his faith in me by leaving his bairns to misery. It's very difficult to know how t i act, though. Can 1 have them here. 1 wnderT That was my first thought. School " I He shook bis head. He had a horror of boarding-schoola. And for home-bronght- up girls too it would be cruel. For all things weaker than himself Colonel McLeod .lad a tenderness that almost amounted to weakness. "At any rate they must be got into har- ness a little at first. Whr.t is the age of the elder girl! Seventeen. And a child at that and I am forty, and " He canght his breath quickly, as though some aharp pain bad seized him. "Well, no one thinks of iry marrying. 1 am eober enongh to take care of two child- ren, I fancy. -Til have an elderly lady to play propriety. It will break into my life awiuUy, though." He hall sighed, aqd ran his long slender fingers- through bis hair. Ho had grown used to a solitary life, and had become per- haps morbidly attached to it^ He shrsnk from the idea of having the house invsded by a couple of wild girls, who would burst into the library when he was reading, never ba punctual â€"and Loris McLeod hsd a sol- diar's dislike to unpunotuality â€" who would intrude into his moat sacred hannte, and who in short must nece.ssarily break up a retirement that he had clung to from mere habit for naturally the Golonel loved charge and society. Then again he objected to tie oonstant society of sny manor wo- man. He thought that no one could poaai- bly have any affection for him, and that he ooald not make the girls happy. Vet, if Loris McLeod had gauged himaelf truly, there were few men more fitted to win love than he. Children and women adored him, and men were drawn to him, althougb reluctantly, even while the black elood that bung over his name half repelled tbam. "Aod yet," he marmnredâ€" and be looked round the room wistfully â€" " yonns faces, yonng bright voices â€" I think I ooold bear tham, arao here. Ah, Heaven, they misht bare baao mine even new But these ch£d- raa will not ba happy here," he said gloomi- ly aad be stood looking down at the coUic, whuae hooeat brown eyes gaaed book at him affeotior ^taly. " Yoa aad I, Colin, are made for each othar Yoa doa" mind what yoar â- aster's mood ia, ao long aa yoo bavea aaraaa-ah, old fallow r â- a beat dowa and pattad tha aaimalfoad' Mrs. Oi^t met him in the hall. Subdued excitement was visible in her face. "They've come, sir; they've come, 'she said, taking the Colonel's helmet from his hand aa he paased with a half smile at h eagerness. "And ob, sir. Miss Vemer is such a bonny young leddie I Janet says she's the sweetest lassie she ever waited on. Yoa won't wait. Colonel, now to take oO that dress, will you " â€" persuasively for the good woman was anxious that the young " leddies " should see her master in his uni- form. " Why, Mrs. Grant," said McLeod, lauifb* ing, and unbuckling bis sword, " you ore as I excited as though the children wore yonr own. I won't wait how long have they I been here 7 " "Oh, they came about five, Colonel, and I sent them in some tea I The youngest, Misa Alice, is young locking but I thought you'd have them dine with you." " Of course," replied the Colonel and he turned away towards the drawing-room door, his spurred heels ri aging on the tesselated pavement. As Colonel McLeod entered the room, a tall lithe girlish figure rose from the depths of an arm-chair drawn near the fir* â€" for ths evenings were chilly â€" a pair of large wistful blue eyes were turned anxionaly towards the door, and two delioato hands were clasped close together. So mu }h Loris McLeod took in at the first glanoe, aa he went across the great room and, as hii eyes rested upon that winning gracious beauty, it seemed to appeal to him with a strange force old memories came rushing back at the sight of Albert Vemer's child standing thus in that house he forgot the words of welcome be had framed, forgot all but that a fair girlish face looked up to him with an earnest half- questioning gaxe. " My child I " was aU be said, aa he took both her hands in his in a close warm clasp. It was all he could say for a few moments. The tears rushed to the poor Irish girl's eyes she was impulsive and warm-hearted, and this welcome touched her to the quick. She bad felt lonely and strange in thia new unfamiliar bouse but one look at Colonel McLeod's noble faoe had sent a thrill through ber whole frame, and aba felt as though she had known him for years. " So yon ore Albert Verner'a daughter," said the Colonel, looking down smilingly at the lovely face and almost involuntarily ha bent down and kissed her forehead with a tender reverence. A bright flush roaa to tha girl's brow. She never quite forgot the joy that the geatla pressure of bis lips bad given to bar yoaag heart. "But there is another, is there not?" asked McLeod, looking round. " You are not alone 7" ' ' No. Alice â€" oh. Alios I " [TO B COimHUKD.] In tome of the islaada ol tba South PaaiAa where the olom attains a great siae, diviag for clams is one cf tha oocnpa ti oaa of tha aa- tives. The diver tbroata a aharp iraa red into the mouth of tha elaai, whioh e l oaaa ita shell with such tenacity that it eaa ba pall* ed out of its bad. Oonaaioiially dirara who have carelaaaly allevad thiwlf to ba caught ia tha nip of too pawacfal a alaai hara oaly laTad thair Uwm by mUt' ' thair fl ii ga a aad UaTJagthaaa at tha ofthaaST et-money. By means of this they will grad- ually learn the value and use of money. They will learn that if all is spent to-day, there will be none to-morrowâ€" a lesson, by tbT way, thst many of their elders would do well to learn ' â€" and also the true mean- ing af obarity. Giving a chikl money to give to the poor may be a pleasure to them, and a pretty way cf helping those in want but I doubt that teaching a child the min- ing even of the form of charity that consists in giving. Simply giving our money or our time, when we have plenty of both, is hsrd- ly real charity, which surely does not mean giving what costs as nothing. But, ii the money or the time has oost us some self-de- nial in the way of paraooal exertion or economy, then truly the gift bleasea both giver and receiver. By the way, this may explain what one hears of so often from people, namely, "the ingratitnde of the lower orders." The rich give of their super- fluity, and exact in return gratitude. If gratitude were as easy as giving what it oeats us nothing to spare, the exchange woold be fair enough but, unluckily, grst- itade is at least as difficult a virtue as telf- denial. Both virtues come natorally to some people, no doubt, but those people, I fear we must coofecs, are not the rule, out the exception that proves it. BITINO E.XrE]UE:;CE. But to return to our children and their pooket money. As soon as they are old enough for responsibility, 'the allowaace should be increased to cover some naceasar- iea, as well as their memut plaitiri Girls at twelve or fourteen should be given so much a quarter for pooket money and for gloves, ties and the repairs ef their boote and shoes. Some people give the allowance for the h^U4iure itself but this is hardly a safe plan. Growing children should never wear either tight or short boots and shoes bnt girls don't understand what suffering the transgression of this rule will entail in after years, and naturally think that if they choose to economixe on their boots at some personal inconvenience it is quite fair- This allowance should always be punctually paid and the reoepient be made fully to under- stand what she is to provide with it, and the tidiness aod thorough repair of such sr- tioles should be always insisted on. As they set older, girls should always, if possible, have an allowance for their dress and little personal expenses. This is not the cheap- est way of clothing them, for the mother's experience always enables her to lay out the money more profitably than the girl* are able to do, at any rate at first. But to dress the girls economically and pretty is not a mother's only object. She hsa to teach them the value of, and responsibility entail- ed by, money, and lets them bny, at a low rate, and at her oost, the experience they would otherwise purobsse^ar more deariy at their own or rather husband's expense. If properly managed, a girl's allowance will be a capital means of teaching these lessons. KEItnSr. ACCOCNTH. A girl should be given a fair stock of clothes and an aooount book, in which she should be taught to enter every thing she spends and receives. This book should be balanced every quarter when the next al- lowance is given, and strict accuracy in- sisted on. Debt should never be allowed. She should be taught that if a thing can not be afforded, it most be done without till such time as the means of paying for it are in band. Still, in spite of all precau- tions, some girls will get into trouble. If they do, don't soold tnem, so aa to make them bide it next time, whioh woold en- tail worse consequences than even the debt but point eut her fault, pay the debt at once if possible, and hold the girl responsi- ble for it, until by degrees and salf-denisl she has paid it bock to yon. Djn't take a girl's allowance away because she is trouble- some to manage, bnt watch her, and oblige her to be careful, enoonraging her if one really tries ber best, bnt making ber feel the inconveniance and troable caused by extravagances and carelessness. While avoiding frightening a girl from confessing her difficulties by over-severity, don't give way to the opposite extreme, and teach her to think lightly of debt. If she gets to feel that when she exceeds her allowance she has only " to go to papa "or " tell mamma," and coax the required deficit from them, or at wont, subout to a soolding, and so get it, all the good of on allowance is done away. She gets not to mind debt, for will not her father give ber a check if she asks for it prettily at the right moment 7 Or will not mother, after halt an hour's lecture, pay it out of ber own pocket, while the culpntgets of scatbalesa. WBUIE THE MONKV GOES. Strictly kept acoounte should be insisted on. Girls can not too early learn method, and this is ooe very good way of teaching it, beside teaching uem the value of money. Ooe often bears people say, "Oh, what is the good of tboae strict accounts 7 I had so much ia my purse yesterday and now there ia only so much, and all the aooounte in the world won't bring it back." Granted but, if properly kept, they will abow how the money went, and that is sometimes a diffi- culty when one depends on ones receipte for the 'arse, and one's memory for the small items ofene's ezponditara. I heard once of s Isdy who was oonsidarably annoyed by finding herself short of some money. Reckon it how she would she could not oocount for the loss. The house was searched, servants ?|aeatioiiad and a thoroughly uncomfortable eeling produced in the nouaebold, as every one fait tha awney must have goae some- where. The lady waa very partionlar, and, thoagh not keeping regalar acconnta, prid ed herself on her oconraoy aad memory, and keeping all bar reoaipts and hoasekeaping books m splendid order. At last her nus- band insisted on her putting down every jmall sum she could remember, in spite of her protestatiOBS that she had doae this her- self and little by little, with a good deal of troable, she accounted for sotna of the missing change. Eventually the whole sum waa acoountad for by one of bar chil- dren at school writios to thank ber for some â- mall preaaat 'he bad sant and totally for- gottan. Now, if a peraon who is partioalar as to moaay matteaa oaa produea aaoh ooo- foiioa, imaipna tha reanlta d ramlaMiifaa Until strict aooaont ia kept, no giri realuas how tixpcncaa aad ahilKmi run np aad, bad aa tba eifaet of thia oiMaeeaeM will ba as a girl, jodga what it will ba wfaae she is a woman wit£ a hoaaa h old aad ita iaaawMT- able small wants. A OOSTKAar. Amoag tha poor, giria laara raiy aariv tha valaa of moaay, aa wivaa have naaallT a very fair idea of .aiakiag tha BNii of what ia â- " ol thaak (Wkaa ooatraatiag tha eoaateta of thair boasihiMa with Oa wtigm waaUy aaiaad by thair haahaada «aa Haat i iaia bar that it ia aaly a aart of thair pay whiah tha woaaa gat, aaa ia for tea a sa a y aaaaa ealy a vacy bmU fart.) Bat gi^ af tha â- â- all aad widilh alaa^^a lacaly laara aaj tgj al â€" ly by aataal ay iriia ii IMr in valaaavaaiB If thayetiata ii l l »iy •atbf offioe who writes with 'equal rapidity with either He is an ambidixter, aad a bold, bad one at that. When there ia a ruah of work at the office and tba devil is shouting "coppee" like a fiend incarnate, this report- er site down at his desk in full oompuijf front, and, with a pencil in each bond, slings off local happenings by tba yard. Hs writes on two sheets at once, aad doesn't let bis right hand know what bis left band ia driving at, but it's driving all the same. Yesterday be got a little off his mental bise, snd attempted to write up a dog fight and a wedding in high life at the same time. He got things mixed. His bands ran clear away with the gray matter in his skull, and things became terribly confused. This is the way his items telescoped each other " At Grace Church last night the nuptials of Mr. Thomas Johnson and Miss Julia Lawrence were celebrated ia most magnifi- cent style. A coitly floral horse shoe being directly over the slur, and when the yellow cur saw the fiames of anger darting from the eyes of the brindle fysto he opened with the imprtssive strains of the weddios inarch. As the handsome couple walked down the aiale the excited crowd began to get frantic, and there were yells of " Sick 'em, Bull," "At him now, Towser," aa the spectators became interested in the fight. 'The bnde waa elegantly attired in pure whito of the most costly fabrics, and she wore the tradi- tional white veil and wreath of orange blossoms had him by his neck and his tongue began to loll out and bis eyes to torn somer- sanlto aa if in the castomsry blsck dress suit, white gloves, ears cropped close to his head. "He was a disreputable Iwkiogdog in the beginning, and ought to have been whipped for being so homely. He is of good family and is engaged in one of the moat extensive msnnfaoturing enterprises in the West. But the yellow csr seemed to be getting tke advantage, as he hsd now suc- ceeded in gettioe a death grip on the throat of the big brincue, and when be tenderley kissed the bride according to the ancient custom his back was covered with mud and his off hind leg was terribly chewed up. "Among the costly presente received by the happy pair were a fine grand piano from the father of the bride hair had been scalded from his back and one eye s^med to hHve been struck with aa anger. After a shcrt bridal tour the happy pair will settle down to one of the hardest fought battles the re- porter has yet witnessed, snd it wss difficult to tell which dog had been punished worst. The fight ended at exactly 4A8, after having been bitterly contested for an hour and a ha'f were driven to the residence of the bride's parents, and he was taken to his owner's home in a wheelbarrow. He will probably never recover, and if he does will be totally blind. Besidei beine permanently lame in the left hind leg, the beautiful bride received the congratulations of a host of friends. The groom ia one of our most promising young men, and his owner dreads the possibility of losing him, as he fears he can never replace him. The father of the bride is one of our wealthiest merchants,and the yellow fysto limped off with a knowing look in his eye and a saucy curl in his tail, as muoh as to say 'Who else wante to try me r " The ambidexter was summarily " fired." How onr Forests are Used Up. (From the Rocbstter Democrat Our foresU are rapidly going, while at adequate proviaien is beine made to restore then. Tha SUta of New York has a great park full of timber in the northern wilder- ness, but annual firas are making havoc io that region. The great woods ard probably losing mora than thay gain from annual growth. Wood is becoming more scarce and inaccessible every year. In many States the foresto on level ground have mostly dis- appeared, and only remain upon high hills or monntoins, which are not eaaily accessible. The Monitory Tmet tells bow the forests disappear To make shoe pegs enongh for American use consumes annually 100,000 cords of timber, and to make onr lucifer matches, 300,000 cubic feet of the best pine are re- quired every year. Last and boot trees take 500,000 cords of birch, beech, and maple, and the handles of tools "UXI.OOO more. The baking of our bricks consume 2,000,000 cords of wood, or what would cover with foreat about 50,000 acres of land. Telegraph poles already up represent 800,000 trees, and their annual repair consumes about 300,000 more. The ties of our railroads consume annually thirty years' growth of 75,000 acres and to fence all our railroads would east $45,(X)0 000, with a yearly expenditure of 115,000,000 for repairs. In the Northwest there has been a very rapid destruction of the forests, and much soLcitude is felt »a to the future source of timber supply. Straw lumber has been manufactured to Bome extent in Kansas, and is said to answer the purpoae very well. Straw lumber may be the lumber of the future. The refuse straw from the great groin-producing States of the West will be utilized. Instead of raising trees, the land con be devoted to grain, which may be sold, and the straw used for lumber. Coal for fuel and straw for inside finishing may relieve the pressure on the forests and give them a chanoe to grow. #WMi*rta hAra aoiM datHfc roiatiTa ta a aahjaot whioh hai a â- racial iaIerMt for facaatan. Thaaa detail hare baaa extiaetad ofcia^y from a late report by Mr. Onaiatoa, the rtaidaat cMiaaar of tha Bombay Port Tfaat. ^behatteaialthadaAktffr. below thw B. M. staae al tta •aakagr Toaa Ball, the aorfaoeMag about tl ft Maw tbat ataik aad naariy Z ft below neaa water lavaL Hie exoavatioa haa opaocd oat Are dia- tiact atiata, tha lawaat of wUeh ia a reek with aa extreoMly oaavaa aarfaoe. The rook (probably %*i^ thoagh thia is not stated la tha report^ waa ia plaoea covered by taooram, aad tha by biaek loaak Tba thick loam waa orsriaid bya atratamof atiff Una olay from 6 to 20 ft thiok. Tha sor- face of thia blaa olay waa aaarly level, aad the reaudna of braaebe^ twiga, and reeds are diatinotly tr ac eable in it The upper- moat stratom waa aoft blank clay or silt The treea were growiag 4b aa oaerea ear- face on tha rook, aad aoma oa the moorum and bbck loam overlying the rock. Tha soil was generally very soaaty, often not more than four to six iaohsa tUck, aad ths rcote were spread out at almost right angles to the trunk. In aoma of tha da^orca of the rock there was a black muddy loam poaaibly the remains of decayed roots. Altogether ,SS2 trees were found. Thev varied con- siderably in length and thickness, bnt ap- peared to be of contemporaneoos growth â€" 2*23 were standing upright, and 159 bad fallen. The largest tree wss 4 ft. 8 in. (ac- cording to the latest report 36 in. only) in girth and 46 feet in length this was found Ai its side. Severs! others of equal girth were standing upright, but the upright trees were all broken off near the surface of the blue clay. The trees were standing at dif- ferent levels, the highest being at low water level of spring tid^ while the lowest was 16 ft. below low water level. Some of the forest in the Sundarbans is not much bight r than the low water level of extreme spring tides. Bat this forest evidently hod a char- acter different from the Mangrove aod Snndri Forest on the deep mnd of the Sun- darbans. These trees had grown on rock, or on the ccanty soil overlaying that rock, and the forest probably stood above high watA level. The difference at Bombay between low and high water at extreme spring tide is 16.60 feet, so that the aubai- dence, as indicated by the position of the trees, must have been more than 32 feet. The stamps whioh protruded through the blue clsy into the silt were completely riddled to a short distance into the blue clay, by the perforations of the Teredo na- valis or another similarly destructive ani- mal. Lower down the holes became fewer, and many of the trees, when cat through into the blocks, showed a single hole wind- ing towsrds the roots, and getting large as it approached the foot of the tree. Of the trees found lying down, some must have drifted, as they were without branohes or roote. The large fallen down tree, mea- tioned above, had left a complete cast of iti branches in the blue clay, though the woody matter was gone. Apparently all the trees were of the same kind except two, which it is said looked like teak trees. The wood of the others is de- scribed as fine-grained and dark, like rose- wood. No remains of any kind were found which might have indicated human habitation nor were any shells or other organic objecto dizcovered in the blue clay or the ground underntath it except one oyster-shell which was embedded in some gravel in a crevice of the underlying rock. But it is mentioned that traces of twigs and seeds are noticed, the latter having left impressions of their shapes in the blue clay, a fine film at the outside skin in some casea adhering to the clay. None of the caate were more thao half sn inch wide, but they were found close together, aod in a vertical position. Below the places where these cssts of seeds were traced, it is mentioned that the losm stratum was perforated with holes like rat holes, and that these were filled with very fine clay, nearly as fluid as cream. Some of the holes commenced from the sur- face of the loam, penetrating it for the leogth of a foot others ran in a horizontal direction. The area excavated is about tbiriy acres thus there were, on an average, seven trees per acre sUnding. But in addition to these some of the fallen trees hod probably grown on the spot. The trees were not howcver.equally distributed, but were found grouped in large clusters on a portion onlr of the area. " Liaving to the geologist the further dis- cussion of this moat remarkablj discovery. It will be well here to offer a few remarks which may be of interest to our readers- So much seems clear, that after the land on which the trees grew had subsided below Iwf"' 'JT^^ °' "^y gradually and slowly settled down upon the treei, and toat at a later period a second despoait o~Toft^![tToii3" •""'=•' """ «"â- "'«"« The trees were probably kUled by con- tmued immersion in water. Soon after they .^ i"" kdled, and before the deposit of stiff clay had settled around themTthey were broken, and blown down by winds and waves. From what U sUted in the reporte which have furnished the date for these notes. It would seem that the wood is in no way petrified, but has preserved ito charac- ter in a remarkable manner. It would be well to examine the structure of the wood found, and to compsre it with that of Indian woods of the present day, in order to iden- tify them, and determine whether they belong to families which are extinct, or are still found in India. !a tka •y _«»ba af part ia thia aofkiad,-^ shaathK tkeir aataial eaaariaaoia. Whatiateba af taamla i dâ€" illai aad af ama^ whatwomainmy laara irfth juy rh ty, aad what ri^y ought to be kept be- yoad thair reaob, what UB o a ps tl eae thay â- ay fallow ia ardar to aaia a Mibdttanoa, aad what are aarfaetla oa femiaiaa, aad arideatly iateaded by ProTidaaae exelaaiTa- iy for mea, are aU graoioarfy. aaMlad^ar tth more or leas ef iimaiwiiiaa^ aad mammmjmt Tnm- mSTmI* MuUfa *• raeaall7,p«»- Silied ia tka Petthabita C iail lt a HM « l i w« sjsSiSJJffSziaRii-as ley, â- â- wivas save w 1 of .makiag the bni* wiqr»yteofthaan gae ao ofiaa beaaiM Pine Culture on Waste Lands. ScieiitiSi: American. Hitherto the %bnndsnce of natural timber in this country has made it easy to dispense with timber culture, snd for the most part oor land owners have taken little interest in such slow growing crops^v/fhis state of things, however, is rspidly'qiassiag away. The demand for special woods for manufac- turing purposes is steadily and rapidly in- creasing, while the natural supply is dimin- ishing and must ultimately become quite inadequate. Meanwhile there are miliions of acres of acres of laud suitable for timber culture and for nothing else, except poor pasturage, that our land owaen are allowing to !ia waste and idle for lack of a little fore- thooght, and too frequently our would-be thrifty farmers will risk their surplus means in wild-cat speculations, promising but never yielding large and speedy returns, when the ssme money spent in planting timber woold soon convert their -worthless swamps and stony plsces into valuable pro- pa rtiea. A oorrespondent tells of a piece of land that was planted with walnut twenty-three yean ago. This land was flooded every spring and summer, and was unfit for any ordinary oaltivation. The trees are now fiom sixteen to twenty inches through, and h.ve been sold for f27,000. No particulars are given as to the oost of planting the grove or the amount of attention it kasnad during the years of growth. There can be little doubt however, that tba investment was small in comparison with the retam, and the land would have otherwiae ramained en- tirely unproductive; to the ca-traiy, the tiaiber crop was ao muoh clear gain. It U clear that oar national reaooroea !might be â- aonaooaly iaeieaaed by a aimilar atilisatioa by timber ooltnre of lands whioh are aew oaasad aad unproductive and the planten will find their grovaa a aarcr iavestaeat for the aeoority of thair family poasaaeions thao aay aaviaga bonk dapoait An Emp«ror in a Hospital. I.«tt«r 1.1 the London O!obe.) The Emperor, who makes it a point to leave no branch of art, science, or industry long without the encouragement of his pre- sence, has this week being going the rounda of the Pesth hoapitsls in company of the physicians and surgeons attached thereto. The visits lasted in some cases three or four hours. His majesty insisted upon being in- firmed of every derail connected with the estoblishment. Instmmente were passed in review, and the more modem improvements of surgical Mpantus carefully studied and described. Xfothinc was left unseen, snd his majesty lingered long iu the wards talk- ing kndly to the iistiento. Indeed, one highly hys'erical femUe went off into fiU of excited delight and had to be restrained till she could msster her feelings. So great on interest, indeed, did Franz Joseph dispUy that the delighted head surgeon ventared to aak the king whether he would not like to witoess an operjtioo or two. "We haves moat interesting case of carira of the W necessitating amputation, your majesty" said .«scUpiu8, smding and nbbing his hands. " The operarion is down for to-mor- row, but we shall be charmed to poform it at once, if your majesty would like to see it " Then csme interesting detaUs of Esmaroh. bandages, and choin-sawa. Frani Joaeph! however, greaUy refused thu seductive offer! bnt desired to see the poor feUow who would on the morrow occupy the operation Ublea. I'lTVv ' J-*^" " of 28, a telegraph clerk, ths chief support of bis moth« ,Sd sister. The saffererlie^an to cry at the kind and enco«rMing word* the king spoke as he sat St h.s beasile. Come whU iay, how- ever, he need now be under no apprdienaon '»â- - future of those dear U him, f sbo, if thay dea't htOtn aay other aaaaage ia the Bihia, hare ciaat littk ia that Whiofaaya, " I anflia aot a wo man totaaefa nor to aanrp aathority over the laaii, bat to beiaaUaaoa." Thaeo-adaoatioaof thaaaxaa talua ap the attaatioa a a good maay, aad â- tiUaaolhar batohtiyta aettia wha ft a r or aot woaMB ahoald hara aay highar adaoa- tioa at all. aad if ao, what thatabaald be, aad how it oaght ta ba ooodaetad. Aad still, amid it all, man's Toseaa are ohiafly hsard and the whole bearing of tbeaa ia that of pitying, patroaiaiag protootiva ooada loaaaion aa if thay ware diao ae ei a g tha beat way of msnaging aad improriag a piaoe of pcoperty that belonged axolaaraly to them- aalTea, aad with wbiob, aa a matter of nght thay ooald do very much as thay pla s aa d Debating duba disouss the whole qaeetion at their open meetings, and young men aad lads are the exclasive orators, while the fair MX are there as admiring apeotatora aad listonen to bave their whola pii siaai f freely oooaidered to be told that thay cannot reaaoa, that iatolleetoallT they are easentially inferirr to their lorda and mas- ter* that they can only be cdooated to a certain extent, aad that it ia aaither possible nor desirable to give them theaaine lutellectual training which thsir brotberi, sos, and hiubanda moat neoaa sar Jy haro, if they are to aooompliah anything either for themselves, or for tfae raee. Now all thia ia very fine, and very considerate on the pirt of these masculine ir^tora and education- iste, but might it not be only reasonable that the " female brethren " ahonld also be beard from, and that men should not talk to these as if they wera household chattels. Were oonveniencaa to be utilisod exclusively aad always for the glory, honour and nom- fort of those for whom, no doobt, they were created. The discussion will do good. It hss doMSO already, and will do still more as it goes on. In the meantime, however, would it not be well if men, and especially young men, were not quite eo cocky, aod not quite so patrouiaing in their way of conducting the discussion Women are fully one half of the race, and with all rev- erence, be it spoken, are not abeolutely the private personal properly of the other half. They fully contribute their share to making the world what it is, and are not to be treat- ed as if they were either snpernumeries or paupers. Ihe H3v. Knox Little, no doubt tells them that the sum and substance of their duty is to obey their husbands when they have such, and, we suppose, their pas- tors and spirittial advisera when they bap- pen to be either spinsters or widows. Bot Mr. Little is not Solomon, and bnt a very small fraction of the sisterhood will be in- clined to toke the law at hi* lips. In the meantime, it is settled beyond all controversy that women, as a whole, are not so stupid nor so useless as some would imagine. And that to a great extent as they are, so is the society in which they live. Stupid, illiter- ate mothers, make stupid il'iterate sons, and sisten whose chief duty it is to worship, coddle and obey- their brothera, generally make the objeote of their idolatory, soft, •elfish, conceited milksops for their pains. That there are ' particular spheres for women's activity and energy is, we think beyond all controversy, but it is equally evident that men bave frequently invaded these and supplanted the rightful ocoupante. We don't believ.: that education, even of the highest kind, if it be really what it is called, wUl unfit women for occupying tbeir particular places in the humsn econ- omy. On the contrary, it will make them more efficient In the meantime let it be kept steadily in view that women are an in- tegral part of the race, and that it is but raosonaole that they should bave some efficient voice iu making all those social ed- ucational and other arrangemente from which their whole futures have to take tbeir oast colour and character. It is a matter for conference and consultotion among all concerned, aot for a man to settle of bis own mere matter of course. We shoald not like to see women believe that it would be in accordance with the fitness of thing* that she should serve before the mast, shoe horses, or tramp to the wars. But there are surely a great many things which she might very properly do which she has not yet been allowed to attempt, and there is nothing absurd in imagining her taking a loving intelligent interest in everything coa- nected with her own and the world's des- tiny, and I be not the less able to cook a dinner, darn a stocking, sweep a room, or nurse a baby as occasion may require. Even ss things are, ' our girls ' are not such use- less, thoughtless trifien as many would seem to imagine, thoagh even if they were, who is to bUme but the men, who may possibly be frightened that if women get too intelli- gent, the nakedness of tbeir own intellect- ual territories would the more strikingly and distresam^ly appear, and their long claimed superiority, would be seen to be an impudent aasumption and an exploded myth. t!mf«HSd^S^!tSfir pfantiiHiiae ia Perth, ahita. MMyef thatraaaaiafvamaOtelOO yean o( mo aad tha aaali^ af the. timber tamagaiasaai. AtMoonnid WoAl there aiaatllla aambar of Sootek flr traaa «dose apaa SWyaara of age. Amaa|*t tbeaa ia a Tary reaiaikaUe tree, aanNprmtaly oalled "ThaKiagot tha F a i a at, " aa aoaoaat of ita axtraordiaary aisa. It eteads ia the oeotar of a aaotioa of tba old wood, whioh waa re- eeatly eat dowa, aad ia " attended " by akaathall a imm^mm af large aiss aad giaat haaatjâ€" wectky ••ktag"â€" to Mtaat Tha"» thaalemaata. •kimg a( ataadeakaatM (t in height has a ^rth of 16 teet at 3 f«et from tha granad, aad IS ft 4 iadwa at 6 ft from tba groaod, aad ooataias aboat 40Q eabio It of timber. There ia ao Sooteb fir of (ii^lar aiae aoatk of Bieeaiar, aad it is doabtf ol if ita ef aal asa ba faaad there. Moorward extaada ta apward af 400 aerea. In tha aaaaa diatriat, aaya tta writ ar, we aotiaad three eaka a( raval firattwobaiag Qmrtm muU^m t othera i*m w a f« Tha la adinl80«, tkakktterayaartal*a( "plsatotioa" tree^ are rary axtriaerdi a a i T for thair ogak no llrat haa a pu« at*m «ilB6 ft, tha baight ie aear W I*., it gbtka f *. 7 in. 5 ft from tke gaeaad, aad haa 7«eabie ft. of timber. The aeooad ia aboat tha aaoia height ia aerea feet in oiroamferaaoe, aad baa 9*[ oobie ft of timber. The psAtacitfa- a haa a etcm of 67 ft, girth*6 ft 9 in., and ha* 114 cabio ft of timber. AU of these tnei are qoite near tha two-saiddlaataae from Peitb. Here too we notioed tba old ConparAuga* Bood, now covered with aev- eral aah treea, bordering on 100 ft. in bei((bt and got a slimpae of a fine line aveaue, fully fiOOyarda lanx. On the Taymoant fctite there are 172. acrea of a va1nab!e crop of trees, 5.' years of age, principally lard and Scotc'i fir. Io the neighborhood of Taymoant H'nse. there are some fits old oaks. Oae of the e oaks ou the riverside on the east march of Innernv- lie measures 20 ft. 10 in. in girth at a ft. above the grcmnd. It haa a splendid r.-tmi* fication of limba, and i* altc«ether a EOble tree. It is believed to be abiaut 500 yran of age. At LyneJooh a large asresge has been planted lince the Barl of Mansfield porobaa- ed the property from the lato Lj.d Lyne- ddh, about 36 years ago. The wooda at Lyuedoch are not only very extensive, bat I hey are of great value. Here i* a sreat ail- v«r fir, acknowledged to be one of the finest in Great Britain. Here, alao, are two mag- nificent DoMglaui fir*, which rank among th* best to be met with in this cjuntry. Ths silver tir is 110 ft high. It is ab^ut 150 years old girlhi 13 fc. 10 in. at 3 ft. from the ground, 13 ft. 3 in. at 5 ft from the ground, has a spread of 43 ft. and conta ns 425 cub- ic It. ot timber. 'Ihe Urgeat Dou/j'tuii fir has lost its leader, but tt e other is perfect in all ite proportions. They were planted in lU, and both r.!sch an altitude of ftS ft. The one measures 9 ft 10 io. at 3 ft from the ground, and 9 ft. 7 in. at 5 ft from the ground, and tUt other measures 9 ft 3 in. at 5 ft, from th« ground. The largest tree has a spi-cit.i ol branch of 70 ft., and the other a spread cf 45 ft. and the cubic f et of timber in the one is 132, and in the other 121 ft On the west side of the estate there i; a large tract ot larch ptantotion about 50 years of age, the seed of 3(X) seres of which 18 said to have been town by the late Lord Lynedoch when on horseback. From some poiate of view this plonUtion is so extensive as to convey tbe impression that the whole property is one vast forest, scarcely anythiug but larch being vi.iblc within a very wide range. The forest is in perfect health, and when it c. mea to I e cut down wUI no dunot yield a moat proiitab'a return. Only a very inadequato idea of the value of the wood on the Lynedoch r iptirty can here le given, and it is probal)le that during the lifetime of tbe lato Lord Lyne- doch it was even more valuable thaii at pre- ssnt, aa a large tract of valuable old timl^er was cut down before Lord Macsflsld pur. chased the property. Indeed, for 10 yc rs previous to Lord Mansfield securinc t.ie property Lord Lyoeiosh and nis representa- tives were making sad havoc amongst tha woods, catting down timber to the value of about £5,000 per annum daring the entire dacade. " Many hearU depleted The fate of those old trees, and oft with pain The traveler at thi* day will atop and gaze On wrong* which nature scarcely seems to heed." In middle-class Spain Iffr senrant " my d.„. ,L?V on a kind offi^J""^/" maoh authority on thTi and certainly little diacbj.^ part oftheeervant; .J*?' hareel^ sinoe she haa littU u' dusts with her little bt^^^ broooi made of strips of ^j *^ " It was ' ours ' Jr*.i ItORNIMQ th* earty mail* toaisas^' 'I'll room. " it araa his asine " Yet she 'â- » ""ra OB,,. has oJ*i with all hei dusting o^ ' never moved Aw thkigi; floor in tbe Anay, b^ ' lo, thane, «n ite aocn»^,^ .^ though ho were likely tj^ ' put ft on, and pass oiu, ^n i ty and a kind good-bve, to^' !L^*T^ ?!?.°" '»" 1 swonl at hiB hed-hend thlJ drsMiag-table boms Lis ',»^.i there are his boots, Li* '" not «Ahi!"shew^j«,^ d»7 oones round, " ,^i, S boeno que ha sido a mi " /« J* j Uttto follow; how Rood l„;**f And then, in a flood of gJJ** in that lonely room, t.he^i^ praya to La Virgen de \^ j^ pushes away her simple m^^" egg, the puchero, the cup of hi 1 "Ahi! itm ao lonely witj,^*^- she says, and Ht night, he, 1,^; ing with Its loa.1 of troubles,; hen^lf to sleep, her cn,cifirl her breast, her ,,il|„w wet .Tl Sunshine, thank ({(«|_ j^ g '«4^ row, often bursU u,h,u h^* landscape ere the dou.J.^ ha^l away, but the clouds return ,u" back at the recunt;uc-e of evL/^'" his, the lost ond's, saint at ti^} of hU little thingj. tl,. ,« ig n!!^1 English sorrow, h steady cIobj ' son, and then sunliglu, bri steady if somewhat mcllo.jj tumnal in its glow. for tha aabocrip- «]^i^ with tha lalea. " do • • • '• -aa ,^v '«*,' •"::."' JJ,, ttr.t ^«*'l' ancnt ioasrtioB^ finer. «"» ••**' .looeot iBsertioa. y. ejSat«2JlJSr' 0^ to b« reokoned by n«ar.d by a scale of Its without brd till for- iy. All transitory Tba la the ofii^e of pub- Bok ' aa tbe Thotsiay hetr publication. BUTLEDGIi, Proprietor. vo of lied •BOW 27 M IC UO 8 W 400 50 15 75 e.'i s 2 Mi 77 W.J a A BUtlNEtS MRECTORY. Spr*alc Cauicr, U, gurgeone, Aoctfoclieurs Jbc. |._- Medical H»U residence at loose.' IMH. PUKDY, gCBGEON, ACCOUCH- liaknui P. If. Hiwd. The Burial Place of Consort The Pedestrian and the Bloodhounds Hearing Lord W. biost that his blood- hounds would track any living thing, by soant alone, CoL A. wsge'red a hundred guin- eas thay would not trsck a man, and ssked Moontjoy to wio the wsger fer him, assuring th* startled pedestrian there was ao danger of Ihe dogs catching him at they ware slow runaen, and he would take care sufficient start wsa allowed him the object bein^ •imply to tost their power ef scent, llie trial duly eame off over three miles of greuad ' round Hampstead Heath. Aftor tke dogs I had sniffed at Monctjoy's legs, he made h.* way leiaurely for half th* course, when th* flag wa* dropped sad the hounds set loose. Th»y tracked their quarry »p:*ndidly, bnt where 600 yards behind whea Mooatier reached tbe inn at the end of the coarse, snd shut the door upon them, outside which they howled their dissatisfaction until remov- ed by their keeper. D.sbelievsrs ia the blooJhoand's scent were still unconvinced, averring thst they had sighted th* man for â- part of the journey at least; and to aettle the p:int beyond dispute, another match was made, to be nm at night, the distaace this time being but a mile and a half, Uasuspi- cious of foul plsy, Mountjoy went gsyly oa his wsy, bnt had not aooompliahed more Jay Ooald ia geipg a^arcatly to de the b iag aat thiag yet ia tha way' of maaapoly What ia thia world oomtag to A f*w aafstaliata are aoiag to baatride this earth lika that aid a£ur at Bhodea which every. baly ha* heard of. What with ooaaoUdated about the before leaving, Fraai Joaeph gave him bi* the word* " Y, hind, with the word* sister shall aot want' our mother and S^neral Proceamon a MUe Out on Latta At Boffklo, the other day, a funeral pn ej«on of six or eight carriage^ ea a van !*»™y «l»y. rtartoS for a^Sj ^Li^ w saaeine road that raaa aloac tha Uk what thay sum»«d waa tha propaT â- « than two-thirds of the distance" allowed hi by the conditions, when his koir stood on aad^ as the cry of the dogs, hot apon his trail reached hUears. They bad been pur- posely slipped before tha proper time, with- oat any warning. " For oae second," said he, '1 stood stook still, as if I bad beea frozen, and then dashed away and ran, aa I had never done )efor^ and have never done since. I was in perfect training and oondi- Uon, but theco'd sweat broke out from every pore, and poured down my body, while mv leg* teemed like lead, and I trembled afl over. StiU I kept desperatoy on, whi'e aeaier came the deep hoene bay of the boands a* the soeot grew wsimer, and they kn«jw they were running ap to their piey. I tboo^t I was lost Those few M^nds ware like week*, and I wondered whether tteywonldgnp me first by the lag or flv â- traight at my throat LackUy, Idid iwi I aettled down and raced away at a naee which I kiiew would last the dituice j'but '2!!^J'" t'" death-kaell and,^ sheer d*n»ration, I pot on all the nxad I fn^ii. K"^} ""'I" "«hts of tKne N'otwitbstoading this wholesale destruo- tion, the estimsted value of tbe wood by the expdser was ss high st £52,000. The Earl of Mansfield has been at enormous ex- pense in re-foresting the plantations which were so ruthlessly despoiled. An almost incalculable quantity of young trees, chiefly Scotch fir, have been trained and Ranted, snd now many thriving young plantationa occupy the ground rendeKd vacant by the the deapoiler. In tbe neighboarbood of Logie manaioa house there is a large extent of hoe old tim- ber, consisting of beech, plain oak and larch. There is also a splecdid avenue of Walnut trees, and several gigantic ailver firs. Some of the p'ane treei are rrmirka- bly Urge. One of them contained 300 cubic feet of timber when Lord Manafield acquire- ed the property. The tree ia atill very healthy, and now ocntains about S.'SO cubic feet of good timber. Along the bank* of the Almond are some very fine Weymonth pines. At the old maiu approach to Logie noure there is a magnificent avenue of lime and beech trees. In every respect it is per- haps the finest in Perthshire. It is fully a quarter of a mile in length, â€" ia very wida^ the trees are ^ed, and of large dimenaiona, while the foliage naohe* almoat to tbe ground. It pretents altogether a grand sight, aod one npjn which the noble pro- prietor may look with no small pride. .* Ithough the plantations on the property ui e Earl cf Manstield extond to about 0,000 acres. Almost tbe whole of this vast forest occupies grouud tbat would otherwise be unprofitable, and an eyesore in the land- scape. Some idea cf tbe extent of planting inreont vear* may be gathered from tbe fact that for many years aftor Mr. M'Cor- quodale bsoame f jsester he planted from 300,000 to 900 000 trees every year. PiOMediag along the walk at the top of the cUff sk-rting the beaks of the Almond, near the historical wood of Melhvea, we suddenly meet with a menstor beech, rank- me ainsaiist the largest in the oonntry. It The beautiful burial |,iv^ Prince Consort has bten erecWi. Queen's sole expense, ami «« £200,000. It lies in the milRtf^, shrubs in the gardens of Fi 0^0,^^ miiny of ^Iie trees have an ir.. ' telling when Uiej were }iinii' ious members of the royal fati,;^ mausoleum is a work of the m magnificeace. The richest Vi mosaics, by D. Salviani, are eiE in ceilings and wallj. paintings adorn each transej.t^ t» j jecta being the Nativity, Cnic and Kesurrection of our l^r.^ ble panelling, bas-reliefs in .. marble, and others in t-ira-cwi around, and various text.s i £j^, and in German meet th^ ' whole floor Ls of the mo.-t i*a-,-j laid polish marble, and Iu v !, stands the sarcophagus C'Hjtai-j,- mortal remains of onr Vi vusb:' consort, Albert, " tlie flood. four kneeling angels, wiiL hands and opened wicij at fcin tier, executed by Mdr.chet:i. v,-^; recumbent statue of thu Prince, ar- .â- ^t works of this sculptor. Tatw. WMkea. I at Law, OwenSotind. I bnilding, over Rohiu' J'o ^tS^eet. Fr*st Sc Frvst, 3TEB8. AND ATTOK.NEYS-AT rgoiieitors in Chaacerv, Convey V 0*eu Sound, Ua%°e resumed at Oflee opea every Thurwliiy. »• ,. • ..J. W.f sosT. LL. B. own Attorney. 1 â- ea SssM*B4 ^TEBand ATTORN'EY-AT I'-*^^. er in ChasKwrv, Owen Snund. 1880. 1 .V Jmbcs «T-AT-LAW, SOLKTTtJR IN Nolorv Public, Ac. aad at lowest rates on personal itate. iMods booj^Ut and Hold, [seller introiliuol_frfe f rommiN CUNDALrK. 31«t, 18S0. 1 ft $»tt^ llgmttf. Whs. Browa, [OF HABRJAGE LICENSES. Ac, tioUer in B. B. Ac. leittg in all its branches promptly Fto and carefully executed. KKoiwy tt Lend oa Real Estate s«- Sept. 17, 1880. »-y 1 less marble figure of the Piin peifect likeness. He is dad Hr. L. Saaitk. ^OHERAL AGr:NT AND DEAHEB IN jT Harsey Stock, Williamsford Station. •|opet7, 18?0, -- 1 military uniforoi, with tLe mantit Alex««*er Br»w«, the Orderof the Gaiti-r/.mn,/ ;jini."MIU»«""fc« License*, Fire and lies but upon one-)i.Wf of iLeva^ei IJ**!""""' '^«*"' '-^omm'""'"" ,.«,l..„„. »~ ""OJi.11. ui iueM«c. Convevsucer and Licensed copliagQB, and is a retuvniiw ot vWL,^^^^^^^j^Q,^i,y onj^y. Farmers, of the royal widow, who, iu ei-ei^iiSI^, and Land Sales, Punctually at this memorial, looked on li iu« jdaAt»and charges mode very modi^rute. when, her own life ended and bet A*«»«^flfc. P^- ^^ • ^^: " accomplished, she should be laij to r: 4to»rKC C«rket, Jr^ by the side of him she ever mouii.- i AM^AN AMD GEXBBAL AGENT group after group entei-ed tlie fi.ri,^ WKPsonnd Honev to Loan at low and passed to the left of the k-'**' "t*"' Principal payable at the Consort's tomb, they stopped to JHl*f"° °^y""'f '"â„¢ Lalf year- ,, ' " '"~fl'" w •»- aryaarly, or principal and inter«?st trpav- anotber exquisite memorial pltct.. |^ igtalm*uta. this sacred spot within the latr-:lS^number of desirable Improved Fann It is Boehm's statue of H. 1!. H j- f **^ .. i? cess Alice, Duchess of Hese, kl »-' ' M, C Sta«, represented lying aslee]. wii'i Lei c-'VOMlNION AND PROVINCIAL L.\ND in her arms â€" that child wlium sLe:./Jt'^*y°-"i DraugbtBinan and Valuator so devotedly nursed to it.^ hist h Mother and child are lik.- life, .r inscription well says of the mutli... " she counted her life ihar iiuiv. self." Many fi-esli wrtMihs lnJbsl laid upon both tlusp v-mU k t:^ Queen and Eoyal Fauiilv Uf.ire t public were admitted. â€" Tii.- y iwa BUlounl TheBe:t| ;o.o(i3l 9.OOI tt Ktlmall •rblrb roa^ f*a4 InIA I cnaac-* \\'i| sla w ra. «lel7 nfrrr prevcaii l.| 1 1 aria I It arl« ll Drcoll It PariHif Ii Qutrii ItPraa It Naarii ll otrrtal liapen HealthT It D' u'-rall Mood. V.I., Tliere ar»| and it ran I llii- a;«1 laJ tft*tjit to d\ raiaor FBICE OFI Read th| of Per»cr use of th^ roR your vs haA bene and Liv4 cine 1 e\ •Dear doctors' eigbt ve that r After u4 for a br| led to liove ;: llf.' An Audience of Qaeen lliisbeti eyor, and Markdalc. Having purchased Land Surveyor Charles Rankin's iSock of original Field Noti-, rUiie. Instructions, tc., of all bin Sui vcys within Ihe lost fifty-five .vears, I am to make Surveys in strict accord- lerewitb. Profiles and Estimates ing Hills, Plans and Specitication ing Bridges, furnished on spplica- loney to Loan at 8 per cent iiitrcst. by lettor, or left with O. J. BLYTH. ~«, will be promptlv attended to. 1*0^ Iv lL.Ut wan uf which my rooa lucurabl 1877, II lilooJ mi/uct d I a shoit fair day! entuxlvl Amongst the archived MvVeMiiu- try of Foreign Affairs iu Vntis is carious document, and nccouot t Hurault de Maisse of a mission tni which he went as Ambassador to English Court in 1597. His tirK terview with Elisabeth took \lm the 8th of December in that ye*:.is is described with graphic minutsftiiii' One of the court carriages csee »» iM T ipperatlons required npon'the the Ambassador of Henry IV, igt^haj^i; satistaotory maoeer, am .-s .ui.nj^av uic largeas in tne oonntry IS believed to be about 500 years old, i_„ msy havo been a Urge tree when the batU* of Methven Wood was fought. One almost mstincMvely UfU his hat oa coming aoroes rooh a venerable monarch of the forest Who can recount what has transpired with- in Its protracted life-time T How nuny generations of mankind bave lived aad died since It fint sprung up ia tbat qniat spot by the *ide of tbe claaaio atream oa wboeehank* Ossian sleeps? How many storm* ba* it weathered? Ha* it auy butory beyond its geaeral aasoeiation with the bloody atrus- gles which took place around it? If *o ?t must remain a aealed book forever. 'The tree strikes one all tbe aiore foroibly that it confroota bim aoezpeotodly. Tbe walk on the summit of the cliff u not fringed with tree, remarkable f»r .h-i, *S»icpp^lS FSadiag they id not reaob tbeir dJattaii; ,,. thiy bigb t,.. Ha w«at tMv* be aa awfal "** ^7. when the JieopU aT l!?* V?* " »at this sort of jmq- thy .topprf after • whaTI; i^SST s«f f e«/to their horwTtWt tJSf*^ oae mile from had eat eatlTSJ-LJ?* ofLakeie. The^lL^U^^:^ J««j«d in th«r b«riUer^t^i?S3: IS ^*^ twabfiagaod ataaat B-fcD »«th eoid. they eroatbaek touTj^. i aoanful enaad to Z^Si^y, and, IB •d I but at tiiat very matant the bratca brake rat ti«w had aghtod m* at last There waTa garden in oat of tbe boaae7«dll a^nptoitlaaw tbat the gato wairi^t How f did it I aev« know bat bl™™^ I daaied it, darted ttaaagh tfcTST wSS *•â€"*- Gas a ^kiac, after Aaaeoa-^mMt MmmI* ^^ â- ^T^lf' i p!aa* of fear. sad. imA^ SS "V^T'J P^aa.offe*r.a.d,s.i!i«. ^r* hta DiABWniiaa alC nat^tkekMef Iftslka remarkable for tbeir â€" „^â„¢p„. wood aodyonngtreee generally predonwkat- og on botb aide*. We tbefifor. waU •Ugbteat izpeetatioB of aeeimr aaytbiaa notowortby for some little timeTbat aabarl turn to the nght. aad a few *top* oawaHi bnag na uutaaUy to a •UodatiU, ia mat* odauratioa of the gigantic vecetobU wonder befoia aa. The tree ba. every appearaaee of being over 100 ft in beiht svS!T«wio» by Ur B«ay iaw»«iae Ueeaia tba aeigflSiaiJ hood. AtlfttiamthegRiaaditnlLaaia. 21 ft. 10 in., tad at 6 ft. froa* tbe graaad it J!H?/r "..? i^ It ha* a splendid bole Of 20 ft., aod divide* lato five gieat limba. each of whioh would be a large trae by it^ saK, A* yet it shows no *ign* of deeropi. ^», bateeeaaatobsaedowtid with peraeta- •);««" Um whale trae beiag Ulm^Mt ttajia^tdiaplayed iaaS hi* epiMaiU tha beaeh to ^a balaof soft Ooaaby the of *a river h a baaaUtal plane, 11 ft ia bole ia far "• 1^.'*J' " »â- ««»». sJSTft. I i ******** " " *• h»aohea apraad 1 A Torao oity fellow boufbt' '-^- Ha had a tea evshaMl kuM sffpia tne*. a^ a iMr afa ha tappid avaiy eMof thaaa lac conducted him to the Thames, »-^ a boat was awaiting him, wLkL-^^ diately put off, and dejiositeds*^ Whitehaa He was then cuncM^" the Lord Chamberlain thiougli » ^â- ' corridor â€" the obscurity of whicim** a great impression on his minJ-t' ' private apartment in which vu ' Queen. Her Majesty was sitting « 'I low chair at the top ii thf room, si*" and retired, at a dis-sia.w f.va 'i* crowd of lords and Indies in tbe er part of the chamber. When b* made his reverenco she advAnciii t' or six paces to meet him, and tocitrfi his hands, after he, on liis I"'*-' humbly kissed the lo«er part oi'-f] dress. She then excused henel"" not having received him hdoK, i" ' leging an inflammation on the n|!^ side of her face. " She also w^e her excuses," adds the .\mb*«s*' " for being found in her night^ and began to reproach her utteod**, saying, ' -What will these gentJr^ think to see me dressed in thi« I am truly grieved that they ' see me in this stote.' " The go« question was a close-fitting ^^ white carnation, with a jirofusi" silver gauze. "It had ojieD si** lined with red Uffetta, and «»« with other little sleeves 'f "«"' _^* down aa far M the ground, and *^ ahe kept tying and untying fron " to time. She had on her bead *f land of mbiea and pearls, a"** JJ^ n?»th a great thick wig, of a '«*' •olor, with an infinity of gold »*' JJi ver carl-papers, and a few pearls «" hung down over her forehead." â- I m^m I m â€" Waste of Timxkr. â€" A cot wrftiag from oeatrol Mincuri. ssyi "' famiag oommnaity of that secimo: wasto of timber U eppollicg. Tbey P aad bora np magniflceot foresu ol hiekoiy, ash and linden, to nuke roos aew wheat aad earn fields, while tb« onaa are not half eultivstod. Tbej l gaat yooaff wahint and cherry into M oeaaea laO*. to fenoe lands wo li^ tlO sad 190 per sere, and then ^y thsf aast pay three prices for fyiit aee freaa fsetorie* a thoasand •way. Thay even pat walnut \ofi ftmrnfu^at sbUm^- pig- tioogbi, ootd sat was h aa ts y, witkoat a thought tW thatteharlMaiae willi 7*IM S^amm* t. Wkitc, 4o-lk. Ghaaerou, Owen Soaud, ' BE AT THE BEVERE HOUSE, kdale, on the last Wednesday lu when he will he preparc-d to per- mouth and upon teftta. l.y i«4»u. [AlVgtlOlV HOX78SE '"i"***^" "^beive hotel and thor- rmomiabed and refitted it, tha tray- â- Mic will find every aocommodatiou. the best ef liquors and cigars kept. tabUng. Careful hoetler. JOHX.VAK HORN. Propriolor. Ln.isac*. ' l.y ERE ^OTEL, :«I.4RKDAIE. *ROULE, Proprietor. ' popular Hotel has bad a Urge ad- on added to it, thoroughly rctitteil, r second to uonc in the cuuuty. bliag and ottonlive ontler Firht-' OBunodation for summrrcial tiavsl- Praia Vl.OO prr day. 17 ly LL liOXKL, MEAFORD, Ont. [MoOIBB, PaorsuToes. UcaH Erysif your Iiidl me. Mt K| Iilu.d h}-^ rrOrivcil I aietiil il^ j 11S| Ml. i\ l)L«H valuable *.'rKUJ| I'l »n I Paiof :ii I relieve Syrup xvhl alWH fTlf j JUStl Jc JoiJatio^ for tbe travelling 'Is well stocked with tbe â- t(4 Liquors and the bvbt Cigars. bun to and from all train*. 1 IMO. l-y j au(i I w j w«'nt to I I which didl vonr Iiid only a aba ' ed, and I can Ml tetnedy. DYSPEl'l DtAK Sli years wiiLl Kidutry C^ I many rcn came vtryi 1 seut to j bottle of y| uut besit a.m com(i man. 1.; with b*\ei your valufl CUEtS EflCIAL HOTEL Ont. I and commodious Saniplo ItoomK Booms, d*. Tbe Bar sod larder with tbe best tbe market af I Stabling and attontive Hastier 's. TflOS. ATKINSON" Proprietor. I880. « iORGE WILSON, atzt daor to Expositor t delivered at aay bouae IU town. Plak Dy»-p'p.-- Indtun Bl4 ever bel|i from tbi8 i trial. " Sole op and Lj Toronto. Ilealine SJ is weU ku Blood Puril nahii MarkdsU wiUappol them t*«f|