'^^pSf^^W-: \W- .1 it- â- ^1 iT ,1*1; I' 5* li., id i'.. iiiLi It is oii4«ntoo4 thM Um Jfuitote Ijuia. iMote wUl^ ttattita to ttiil Miffbh lHhSr Oa Bktftfdti^ ikfteAldol^ Cftplki^ Abbto predcotod the Kiofiton Sal^MMii Jinay witlioolota. .r'y.::\«' N Hon. JohQ,iGoitfgui u mod to ba pra- aented wi th m. **-*'T |lMi|iitl ttf |n fl" DAtore bjr^lie eMt %aTnW 3o.taiw«, who Are of the wuna otaed a^ ni^nftUty aa himaelf. Averdiotof " tare " atiMoat •lide at Oita foot thereof lioh caoaad the desth of the yoong uiao Ponlin, wa*fli|p« C^Sator- The aanior and jaaid^^j^nsatTfttiTe Aaaoeiationa of WimupaA tiNnCMttnga on Satuday night and ta a u Ni H l^ lin a n d to form one aaaooiation, whieh uaU oboea a candidate. ^|e Oil John Marwood, an old man who haa had charge of th^Xiondon aitiallj^sx hospital for aome yeara,^,Hit «ha «aa diwha rigid re* oantly for dronkenne^, waa foond dead in his bed at the boapitat oh Saranlaj morn- iog. Old age and aisaipaticm are the oaaaeB a«i a i g n ed. â- ' » ,^ The Bteamship Wilmington, whieh aailed from Baa Fhuieiaeo for Yicteria, B. O., eleven daya agio with pawaaogara and freight, haa not beab heard fiom. She ooghi to have mada.the voyage in foor daya. The steamer Empire, whto^ aifiviB^4j^am #«d Pranoiaco la«t night, aatw aothMjeot llir,«»d it is feared she has gone to the bottom. On Tharaday evening the trunk of Mr Carl BtroiMui^l|DilMF w the Anglo-Ameri- oan Hotel, Sellevlile, was brokea into and articles to tbe vaiae of 965 were stolen. The thief aold a far cap, whiofa ha atole, to a merobtiot in town and showed tbe other articles, (rCety offering them for sale. He went on S»tarday morning to Oobourg and tne laots were made known to the police, who telephooed thither and found that he had been tr rested there whilst attempting a joo of sneak-tbieviug in an hotel. An important meeting of Anarchists is to tithe place in Paris to-day. v It is rumored Bossia will somi make anottier tfiort to annex the Oorea. It IS expected that the Gango Conference will clcse lis session next SMorday. Dr. Yon Bolow is making a professional tour through Russia. Tokohama advices Btate that the gun- powder works near Canton explodea on iao. 22ad and killed 250 employees. y' A private telegram from Liabon asserts posiiively that Portugal occupied the Lower Congo on February Isi, and uiat tbe natives made no protest. It is reported that Portugal desisted from hoisting her flag at tUa month of the Congo river owing to the emphatic protest of the commander of a Briticb gunboat. The Social Damoorate have introduced a Bill into the Oarman Baiobstag, regulating the hours of labor, and probibitmg the employment of children under 14 yeara of age. The French operationa in Formoaa con- tinue in the direction of the Keeluug mines. The European killed on the Chinese side during the recent fighting is believed to have been an EngUabman. Aatatement waa read in tbe varioua OathoUc churches in Manchester yester- day denouncing dynamiters as violaters of the laws of God and tbe Church, and aa neither true patriots nor true Catholics. The Queen is in great apitita aa she ia immersed in preparing the programme for her youngest daugbtar'a wedding, and she .enjoys a wedding more than anything else in the world. The Princess Beauice is to get the largest part of her mamma's private property. A scare waa caused last evening uBer- wiok-on-Tweed by the discovery in a tavern of a package containing 75 pounds of dynamite, addrebsed to an unknown per- son and marked " To ba called for." The package haa not yet been claimed. The palioe are searching for tbe consignee. The latest proposal for the assistance of the poor is tne establishment of a huge monU de piete in tbe several quarters of liondon aud to check the extortion of pawn- brokers, who become enotmously rich with suspicious rapidity. The prohte of the shareholders are limited to 6 per caitt. The Conference of the Society of French Cooks sugg«ste the remark that Paris cook- ing has greatly deteriorated owing to the haste of French restauranteurs to get rich, â- ana the consequent substitution u their kitchens of the oven tor tbe i ^it, try iog pan and gridiron, and of coal for uul instead of wood. Tne Prince of Walea haa shown bis characteristically keen sense of the neces- sity for evsn royalty to cultivate the democracy in this age by ordering bis aon'a first appearance at a boy's refuge in the most squallidpart of London. The young ' Prince was aa shy and nervous as any (^ nis juvenile audience. Her Majeaty ia expected to leave Osborne in tbe eonrse of a week or ten days, when she will return to Windaor, where she will remain about a'toctnigpit, after which it is expected she will visit the continent, and be m Oannta on tha 98ih Macdi, ttie anni- -varaagy ottha death ol tha Doka d Albany. Sic Edward Malat, XaB., tha British .AmbaaaadoratBerttaaod dahgata to the 3(mgo Oonleranee, ia e xp ec t ed to arrive in London next week. He will ba married at tha and of the month to La^ Eia Bnaaall, daaghtar of «m Doka of Bedford. Tha hrida-aieat is 81 yaan of age and Sic Sdwmi IS apptoawhing 48. Tha ptegraaa oC tha Balfniion Army anthvaiaam waa malted thia waak bar tha of n InnNu » Ihm oâ€" ndfataity lalMtteiQeaitarn itette iatidtt al •M at tha *a^ lal It '^ri^itf«%Mlfar t» asaoiMt tbahMllfttMy braaaha might do thamaelvea. TM n ii Ilia 1ft tatfliaf bdMal ntf Iha rilhrMk. ill thd t ia inity *i-y 'tba BatMnV haa been placed widitr Qbtfli^an proteottoDk BatfiamyiiiMafcatlMtarittory extending twenty anlaa inland, whiflk had to Herr Lnderits. ThaAhwofnatribtrtDativeB^ th* Odd Coast at Dahomey, J(c#«tly made an on the EngBdi ptetf and aatuamenir ttah. Therttaak waa repniacd by poUca after a aharp fijht. Tnfaa vUto I ware kiUed. Ci«t. OampMl was dangerously wounded. Three bundnd natives were killed on, bbth aidea. Mr. Tkomaa Power COonnoir^ M.F. for Oalway, addxtiBad nlaiga inaalttg^l Iriih Nationaliato j aa t arday at Dalkay, near Uublm. He gave a aignificaot cue to tha feelinga ol tha Pamellitea regardiag tha Khartoum by aiding that Oenaral hadaaUttfa ngbt to be in Khar- Bad Bpaaaar haa to be in DobUn. Admiral Coorbat talegrapha from Kel- nDg,aa foUMra " Filtaan hondrad Ob^eaa attaaked cfHr new poaition on Satiirdav, nigut. They were repolaed and lali 9Q0 dead upon tha field, indnding anHiturdpttui officer and aeveral mandarins. Our loaa waa one JtOIed and one wonnded. The eneray'a loaa since Jan. 2th haa bean 700 killed and wounded." It is stated in Coutt circles that a mar- riage has been arranged between Prince Edward, eldest eon of the Princb of Wake, who came ol age on the 8th ulk, and Princess Clementine, the youngest daugh- ter of King Leopold. Tbe princess is a charming little girl, of amiable disposition, whose education has been attended to with ^re«^t care. As she will not be 15 till the SOtb of Jane next, (be marriage will not take place for some time. The movement for paying- members of Parliament has been transferred from Ireland to England, and is making fair progress among English artisans. A wi iter in one of the magasines proposes that tbe Btata should occupy a now vacant plot of ground near the House of Parliament, and erect thereon a series of free fl its for necesti- touH iegialators. Several journals ridicule the whole business, aud PuncA summarises it by a paraphrase of the epigram of tbe tbird Napoleon into " L'Empire o' est le pay." Tbe Jews in Tangiers have forwarded to the Anglo Jewish Association a mass of liVideace concerning tbe recent outrages against tbe Jews by tbe Moors. Demnut, tbe Governor, it ia siid, ordered a venera ble rabbi, 91 years of age, to receive 980 lashes for some trivial offence. Tbe raobi is now dying from the effects of tbu torture. Women, young and old, were ravished, children murdered in tdeir motberb' arms. The agents sent by tbe Saltan to. inquire into tne atrocities accepted bribes, and reported falsely. The Aoglo-Jewisb Asso- ciation is urged to secure tha interoesiion of Granville. ' to whM^m*tM*and oitiudCaeapMidad. Bea6lati(Mp,cil indignation, wpr* e4PR|Jw. •adia^mmittiiawas •WOinuAH^fit^ thaChinaso tbitt they mi^at all laptVf t" Mwr^ISmaviMtod eaoh Chlhiai^iAsa inS ooiAp^lied tham to paak. up^thwr effeets. then marched them to a wacahouaa, wharadlboy imprisoned them awaiting tha ^pwturb bt a iteamer for San Frhnetaeo. » :^^E9r3!i5tn^ It dntaa bom the ttagnot ScS£«i|aBt habita. ba aoon bb-am* •• ia^oritomth tbe TurUsh offiaata. wd riliw.ha borrowed manymilHoibol «it«*yj iuSlMtakug to pay extravagant ![«« «? 'wtit rtt^V ta« iwrtfljil pvrpqBMii â- » y*^ Savottirto Oriant|4 di*p^]r Pff^^.^ At a padosd maaS' meeting, ***^'*^;^Iirtlv oajaoea tHiromihedi/tgd oonhifry, to 1000 yeetetdayvabtandingoommittae war wj^i^ing tnrkbh -^ffldida and to atocking appoiDtefl and' empowered to prevent any Ohinaaa locating there in future. vnm CAflAVPAff |iliiCf'dA« 1 th« lendaUi •nAnaaa^ ttha latMOt Another account of the fatal bayonetting at Woolwich Arsenal says a private soldier on guard duty last night saw a man advancing toward his post, and commanded him to halt and give the counter-sign. Tbe stranger neither halted nor- replied, but attempted to walk past the guard line. The sentinel thereupon plunged bis bayonet into tbe man's body, killing him instantly. The account of the occurrence reached London to-day, and was exaggerated into a sensational report that dynamiters had been at work. An investigation shows the man killed was a soldier and a com- rade of the sentinel whom he tried to annoy by a silly practical joke. Aa organiaation, to be known as tbe National Independent Association, has been formed in London. Its objeota include the upholding of the privileges of the Throne. The Sovereign, however, to live in England, Ireland and Scotland alternately the pro- motion of national or home trading before resorting to tbe formation of foreign alliances free trade in artidee of food only an increase of the Britidi fleet in order to afford better protection to com- merce, and an effort to promote an alliance with the United States, having lot its sole object the repulsion of any attempt by a foreign toe to invade any English-spaaking country. The latter claose has attracted a great d«al of attention, and tbe idea of such an alliance or confederation between tbe Eogliab-speaking people of the world evidently pleases the popular fancy in London. The total cost of the Greely relief ezpe. dition was S759.000. Eatelle Wheeler began a soit for divoirce some time ago against Jas. H. Wheeler, of Bame, NY., charging that he had vioUted the marriage vow. Wbeeler admitted infi- delity, but dedared EsteUe had condoned the offence. The latter haa filed an affi- davit denying the allegation and making addiiianal charges against Wheder. The flnandal statement of the New Orleans Expodtion submitted to Prerident Aitbnr shows a defidency of 1819.000. Congreaa ia asked for further aaaiatanca to carry the expodtion through. Work haa been suspendM on nnfinisned buildings, and It is understood the awards in aome departments remain lupaid owing to financial embarrassment. The demand for space for exhihita continnea. All available room is now oecupled. Frank Abner, 15 yaara dd, haa bean jailed, eharged with mnrdating hia grand- mother, Mra. Boea. near Book Creak, IlL On Monday avaaing ha iraut to tha wooda to pUy with an older bc^. to whom ha expraaaed ^pprahanalon that hia grand- wooldwh^himfor nagleetiag his k. "If ahaaayaMytiuBgtoyovknoek bet on tha head," said hisaempaaion. Mra. Boaa administaaad a xaprimand, bat did not whip tha troaht, wbo wtDt to bad auly and with mottarad thnata. At midnigM npandhanaAaBau iit Ua vaai. Ai a iaiai â- miai nf Tha nvart ol tha Miniatec af Militia Def^oawfalaidontbatablaof tha Com' moui yaBtordaj. 1?bi report of IbeDepaty |finiater'dw#b that the total lonnds of aaMDunittaw paikoa mad «aady-for iaaoa alt ^«overamentaaK«cidga faolory at Qua. beois 1.616,670: Th«-Oondemned amma hitioh from the Imperial stores was eoairerted iuto blank ammuitftiont, 800,000 roonda. The hnmber of pensiona paid to vetanm* ol tbb war of |8i2-l5 ^»aa for 1881, 46i. The detail at expeoditare in-^be Ddpartmoot fw 1884 jpwt 1969 498 ontel an avuhkbl^tl.051.68^^ Tbe expenditure for miUtia fusions was 927,268, and thenum- bar of pensioners on the liat wa» 664, there being 695 of theee veterans of 1312-15, 15 new miUtia peuuooers, 5 Lower Canada militia pensioners and 56 Upper Canada miliii* pendoners. Major-General Mid- dleton in his report upon the state of the miUtia recommends that the strength of the force be redoped, so as to enable every battery of artillery, regiment of cavalry and battalion of infantry, botb rurd antf city, to be cdled out for drill every year, and that the period of drill be extended from twelve to sixteen days to rural it not for oity corps also. Tbe present Kilmarnock cap, he tbinks, shoaid be aboliabed, and a helmet substituted, because almost the whole of the militia drill is carried on during hot weather, and the cap is utterly unstiited for heat. The question of improved arms and accoutrements should, Qenerd Middleton snggeste, be reconsidered, and he says that, from what be has seen of the Dominion Mihtia, he has formed a high 1 pinion of the force. Two additional infantry schools are sdd to be urgently required, one at Winnipeg, and one at Lon- don, Oat.^ A CanMUy*tCbiMNaiiilnsin.lapaii. O d-fasbioned people in many districts in Japan, to wboae f amilieB death has made freqaent visits, still resort, in their anxiety to prolong the lives of their children to the custom of bestowing upon their offspring names ordinarily given to infanta of the opposite sex. Probably the superstition ia more widely prevdent than foreigners would suppose, but it is only when some incident or story m connection with its observance is rej^orted in tbe vernacular papers that the mnjarity become aware of the existence of tbe old custom. A Kokio paper tells a story in point Somn time ago a man named Eano, living at Kameioho, Nibonbashi, Tokio, received tbe intimation from the authorities that bis ddest son Bannosukeâ€" a name dwaya applied to malesâ€" having attuned military age, steps should at once be taken with a view to the young man undergoing medicd examination prior teactud enlistment. Kano loet no time in going to tbe ward office and explain- ing that Bunnosuke was his daughter though registered as a mde since 1872. in whiQb year the census system waa dtered. The authorities, however, in whose mind frequent and more or lesa ingenious schemes to evade ooneciiption had given rise to a condition of pure skepticism on this pomi, did not scruple to order an exam- ination to be conducted at Kane's house. The result, of course, proved tbe statement made by the father, who, on being ques- tioned, sdd that, having loet two daughtera bath about one year old, he had been driven to this expedient to keep the third alive. It may bepKBamed that ita succesB, as evinced in his daugntsr's attainment of " military age," will tend, at any rate among his neighbors, to the re\ivd of a custom, which, whatever ita inconveniences, is net without soggeative interest. Greater men than Kano have Idd schemes, far deeper than bis simple artifice, to circnmvent the grim visitor, and for tbe most part tbey h:k?e failed.â€" Japan Ifail. Mgraed In the trade tbe )9m Witoia sla ves,^ a c' deorets andt*- wUlintciikrs Sribihg aroma. «^ IMttivo, fdlahB» To pay the interest, tha I i^i^ wtta v^atamatieaUy A WcMch JTakc One evening, in tbe principd gold-mining camp in the Transvad, nine or ten years ago,A man, partidly intoxicated and sup- posed to bo actuated by jedousy, attempted suidde. He first took morphia; but this not proving strong enough, he tried to hang himself. He waa prevented and banded over to the aheriff, to be kept in safe ena. tody for tha night, and to be tried before the acting ^old commiaatoner (a shrewdnnd solemn Scot) the next mwniog. Aatiiera was no law to have prevented him from eommitting aniaida if ha thongbt fit. but it bdng dedrable to punish bim in auna way, it waa deadad to bring a chaiga of drank- enneae and diaorderly oondttet againat Um. To tiiia tha ptisonar pleaded goUty. where, upon tha aoting gold oommimionar, withoiU a ghoat cf a amiia. delivered tha f oUewinc axtraorJKoarv jodgmant: "Mr. -^-, I ahdlflooyotwa panda fra yoor dnukm- bot m gl«B ya to am yoav dr idaratand that I ken wn wad what yo attempted to daa. and. had y« naooadad in y«of attempt, yonr pB BJahm e nt woald havo bean vnm maah mora aavcto than it ia!**â€" Leaden -Thewofd kniakarbodnr, w^a^ Va^. "â- ^ »â€" â€" -â€" ^lo vaia, k^bbadTtb^ «« dbliaator "iW^^J^, •* threatimai a^ary yoM?* « ^kf"!^* »% nntortOBato nativeahad anythingtofeua- II •» ona raised objscttooa to thia wholeada promptly aeiaad and treated to a aoii^ floggiaTwlib the baatinado. By and by, dtekbadifa eool4 borrow no money, ^W»d iha fdlaba weierandared ao poor that tbay eoald po longer pay takaa. Than the British apd Franeh GovammantB--4hc Comter^ativaa being in powar ia' Britain-- deposed lamaU and made hia aon, tha present jHomind ruler, Khedive. Tbe mdn ob jt ct in view waa to aacnre payment of interest on tha bonded debt, tha major pirtiOBotthabonda,beinghd4 by British Ind French oapitaliata. Thja waa accomplished byestabhshing the oblebrated ioiul or dud oonteol o! Egyptian finanees. Sir Biveia Wilson, the Biitiah representa- uve. dismissed dl the native Eieptian officials and put in their places English offidals at much hi^er satariea. Before long, Arabi Pasha waa uicoesBfol in forming a " natiood party," intended aa a protest sgainst the new rule, and^ as be was an officer in tbe army and had no difficulty in obtdnisg followers there, a military rising took place in Cairo on Feb. 1, 1881. With the subsequent evento in the Egyptian war our read era are familiar. France refused to ud Great Britain in putting down the revolt. Britdn, afrdd of the Suez Cand, andertook the tatk, defeated a band of Arabs, and garrisoned the prindpd towns, but only until such time as a strong Government oould be set up in the unfortaoate land. That time cannot have arrived yet, for the British troops are still in Egypt. It was not till July, 1881, that the Fdse Prophet raised bis standard of revolt in the Soudanâ€" a territory extending 1.650 miles from north to south and 1,200 miles from east to west. This district had been gradndly annex;ed by Egypt since 1821, but its hundred and more tribes had never been entirely subjugated by tbe invaders. The great trade of the Arabs has dways been slave-stealing and selling. They tolerated Egyptian rule so long aa it did not interfere with their peneAant for taarry- iDg at will their negro neighbors in the southern latitudes bat when Sir Samuel Baker, acting on behalf of the Egyptian Government, led an expedition mtothe district from which the slave supplies were obtdned, and the conquest of the equator-, id provinces was accomplished, the f ael- iog of resentment waa engendered. In 1874, Col. Gordonâ€" now the famous Gan- eral Gordon â€" appeared on the scene, was appointed Governor-Generd of the vast dependency, Darlnr being added to the conquered territory ia the following year. Until 1880. Gordon bdd this position, and it must be add with eredit to himself. He dmed to put down the infamons slave trade, and in this object he had the sympa- thy of both the Kbecive and the British Government, for on the British had hitherto devolved the task of dming a blow at the trade when carried on by means of dhowB on the Red Sea. In 1880 Gordon Pasha was with- drawn, owing to the era of economy which had been inaugurated at Cairo, and tbe spirit of revolt agdnat Egyptian interfer- ence btcame intense. At last, as we have "Seen, Ahmed Mohammed, the Mahdi, appeared during the holy month of Bam- aaan,and presented himself as sent by Heaven to secure not only the politicd but also the spiritud sdvation of tbe natives. He gathered around him dl the discon- tented dementa of those vast regions, who acclaimed in bim a lined descendant of the Prophet- a prophet himself destined to regenerate dl lalam, and restore to the true believers tbe spoils of which Christendom and ita alliee were seeking to deprive them. At first, the Mahdi waa defeated by the Egyptian troops in Sanaar, but before many months hsd elapsed (in the spring of 1882) his followers had annihilated tbe army of Toussef Pasha, 8,000 strong, only 27 escaping to tell the tde. Victory after victory followed, and the cause of the Mdidi was triumphant. The aimy of Hteka Pasha was out to pieces, ElObdd garrison surrendered, and it was seen that the revolt against the Egvptlans waa far inore formidable than at fir«t sospeetod. In Dsaember, 1888, Sir Evelyn Baring proposed that a British officer should be sent to the Soudan to anperintond the withdrawd of tha EiopUanaf and the Government of Egypt joined in ibe rt qneat. Gordon vraa appomted Govemor-Gsnerd of the Soudan and be waa direeted by the Kbadiva to withdraw all the wvil and military aathoritiaa mid aa many of the inhabitantaaa wished to rainrn to Egypt. At thii time there ware ia the Sotadan 40,000 Egyptiana and aa Great Britdn had nndartakan, ftrat to oonteol thaftaaaaid aSairaoS Egypt and Babaa« qoantly w raatora order within her bordara, the OovammaDt doomed it a daty to seoare tha aafaty of the as people. Gonard Gordon, aoaompaniad qbIt by hfk at rodo oa a aamd aecoaa tha dosort to Aba Ha m na d. from wUah plaaa he oommoai- aatadtotha Oovarainent hia intention 4 mifagtha tlffwtoCaa iavaaioaol Torkiah tsaopaftoibdaaatho Soodanaaa to aabmit t3 his plaaa .teUa arrival ai.Khanaom. QotdoB fooad thU tknat of no tUsot. Biiaazl miatvi wta a vnjaial ta at tha pnoisbment 'Ida to tbe •nt at*. r icon- of tboae perial 'oaâ€" all noone bat every. amm urttinself m«y tak« a man into hia aervice SJSSKaT^Nooie will interfere with Max, eompfiMton for yoo. jfS^fi^^**" Oarddi also removed ti^aaatehet place and hofnt d all the reoorda of anpdd taxes and the whipa »^1p|#^««,l)ef mdn- ttinhd E^) piian snptamaoy. Hi« plan waa nowto rdaettta ttta bain ct the petty Sol^uia who held aathority prior to the dbB4tiaB|, leaving them to agree aa to tbe form of a central Gevornment. To the Mahdi he mmmm^^ ^**!.»"' MlVthe bribe wasrislana oy the Prophet. Whethorbaoaaao oC b« (Kovioas prestige, or in oooBcqaenoe of hia po^aeadng a large f^ f^ of money for distribution among those #hocame over to him, the people of Ktactoam teaeiwd ^rdan withmani. fa»tation»;a||i|||«l;iilir4 oOM^ont- the on**»*« i roJWm mU."' W S v ' '^^ FaliaPr^lPjiMw^|nB mir IbroeB were added to daily, ^^rddn n^evar Imdmuoh fdthiuthe Egyptian soldiery, and their tondnotwhilabiakibi qirtta tn^ the city •Wtr it WM. parttMly .iovfsl^ by tbe foroea of mttrntHimaiM h d w a dh otaoghly oanvioped him dt their oowardiee. If his force pf 7,t00 mdii had bae« .^mpooa4 of European soldicxo, it^ wonlfl doobtlesa have cut ita way through the daaart. Gordon could have ridden back to t)b coast as he eame, if lie had ohosen, baite-preterred to stay by the Egyptiana,^ adf it was to reecua bim and jitom that Gen. Wolselay'a expedition waa deapatcbed. Sfcar DrlvlBg. There are men Who gat position by auda- dty, and not hs merit. Snob men are Bometimea. foand in the^ workshop in tbe position of foremen or bossea, and they make trouble for men and expens'e'f or pro- prietors. Sach a foreBiaoia|peaKB, dwayp, as though in a «reat hurry; gives short replies to questions, aa thoogh time and words were exoeedijnely vdUaue with him rushes about the fshop as though pursued by a constable with an uncollected debt against bim and turns from a -possible customer at an important point in conver- sation to attend to a trifle that would more sppropriately belong to a subcHrdinato. Among the workmen suoh foremen are troublous they make quiet workers nerv- ous, unfinished workmen apprehensive, and old stagers' angry. They upset tbe plans of careful, systematio workmen, and iodace the" green hand" to imagine that pretenee of doing is as good as done. Such a foreman does otber mlBcbiof he is not content with infecting otherR with his superficial activity be iDJoren the self respect of the workman and impdrs his usefulness. With the useleRs drive that comes with the foreman when he goes the rounds of the shop comes the expeotation of relaxation wj^sn he goes, and this letting down of workmanlike energy is a natural rebound from tbn pressure cf a strain that is repuldve. Tbiti foreman never commends he oriticistw and questions. " What I these studs not yet turned What's the trouble " "Be Bare and get this fit right don't you know how to do this job?" Such greetings do not put much force into a workman's mns- clee, nor icorease his desire to excel. These men are notth winds or western gdes with a notification to all to lie low. They impose for a while evftn on the workmen, but the workmen find them out Booner than do tbe shop proprietom. there Wm N«Ktlck«B l^tac She was orasy about palmistry. She bad bought hdf a dozen booke and studied the lines and the mounts and tbe idands and the eroBses and tbe atara, and she had read her Henry's fortune time and agdn. So ha undertook to read her hand one night, with her help. " This is my heart line, dear," she sdd. as she traced with her fioger across tha palm. ** Yes your heart line." " You see how well defined and bow strong it is " " Yes, beloved, but it is not qoite straight, and this hook says that ibose little lines running oot of it are evideuafa of previous sffectioos." " Ob, but thiB great big break ia you." " Tbo3, there's my head line." "YeB, darling. If your heart were at; levd as your headâ€" I mean in palmiatryâ€" I would not be bo jedoas." Biit you musta't read it like that. What are you looking for " He was anxioasly Boanning the book and the hand. "Dearest, I love yon. You hava magnificent life. line and a splendid beats line aud a level head line, bat " "WeU?" " I am poor, and if you could only show me the kitobao Iwa the future would be one unbroken dream of happiness." â€" San Franeiteo ChronieU. Ctaa-Flpca Blatfc 4rmB i*aper- A novel use of paper haa been found m the manufacture o( gas-pipea. It is eon- Btrdoted aa fdlows An endless Btrip of hemp paper, one Width of whieh equd^ tba length of the tube, ia paaaed throogh a bath of mdted asphalt, and then rolled tightly and amootiily on a core to give the required diameter. When the nomber of layers rolled ia anffidant to afford the desired thiekneea. tile taba ia atrongly oompreseed, the outside sprtoklad wUh fine aand. and the whole eooled in water. When cold, tbe eoreia drawn ont and the indde served withawvtor-pRMaagaompooition. In addi- tion to bdng abaotatoly iSght and smootb. and moeh aha^per than iron, these pipes are of groat atranctt^ hir when the aidea hava Beareafythrae-fltihBoiaiioah thick, tbey wiUataodapraaawraaf^nnra than fifteen atmaaphaiaa. If boriaa ondngfoand they wiU not bobcakea by eatllaBMBt, aor when vidntlyahakao or jamd. .The material hakif « badiMdiiotoc mit^ «ba pipaa do â- at taadfly fiiiai. --^_, cMi IJwiir tb«a I. I â- \ liiMiiaiiliiiis