t"" *J^ *•» »»1^ " • pUte and tt^potatow Aoidd be druMd for a moment loptliM tiietabls. tor THE HOUSEHOLD, To a ITew Bride and Housekeeper. â- BY lUEOAMT I. WHIII. Tot Uttte gn«» the lonMomeneti Ui»f. oomlrg a W-hen'^y^u- lure left th« "m »1 me to b« wm Bnt i°^^ 'mother felt jart «o, when Irem bet Your f*Lher oama one roinmert i»y to emny home hia bride. Ah, me! how happy had I beeniJ ProvIdeMe had My 'JSJT'old man to see this day. who aUmy feeliDgi Bn^'then, I would not bring him back, not even H I NorThiiieone crook thaf a In my lot, tor what God doea i« right Bnt M I sit alone and think I see Eome thirija I'd chsnfc I mixht have made him happier th n do not think it strange II I Bhoiild speak some warning words to save yon, if I may. From making thoughtlesa, lad miatakcs, to bring clonda o'er your way. So Juat remember, Hannah, dear, thit, though you're pretty bright. It miy be verj' p B9lble you'll not be always right Ferhape when jcu ard fretting o'er some other body's ain. " You'll Sod the fault was all your own U jou would look within. As when we washed the window pines together (ace to face, So that the smallest epot or stain would find no rest. inif plac4, You would insiat, howei^r hard to make you see I tried That every spot was my fault when 'twas really on your aide. And, Hannah, oh! be patient U you find Will some- times alow ' Your wlta fiash out like llghtnlne atreaka, as awUt ti come and go u*- Now, lightning ia a handy thing In stormy nights, 'tis true, But, after a 1, a steady shine ia kind o' uaelnl, too. And if there's any difference comea'twixt your good man r, vi you. Don't St' I 10 ask whose fault it Is the only way dn _, Ia ja"t to tike the thing in hand and try with VQiir miifht. Before it Krows too big to chinge, to fix It up riyht. You know the dough when first tia set, Is molded we will, But when tia baked we cannot change ita shape ffood or til So now, when you ire atuting out in your lUewhome, is just The time to aee what waya you'll set tohaUe,! into crust. ' But, dear, you'll not su'ceed alone, no m tter how you try You'll have to go down on your knees and ask help rem on hii^h. Vie poap and rub and boil and rinse, but after all, you know. It takes heaven's Piin to mkke the clothes as white as new'fall'n snow. For Young Housewives. Clean caster bottles with shot. To reinove ink stains soak in sour milk over night. To lirighten and clean old alpaca, wash In coMee. Mix stove polish with vinegar and a tea- 8p»..t,ful of sugar. When co'jking beans add one-half tea- 8p'-(in of aaleratus. To lirighten carpets sprinkle with salt be- fore sweeping. 'J'o poli-'h a stove rub with a newspaper inateadffa brush. To remove tea stains from cups and sau- cers scour with i-'shes. Frjf burns apply flour wet with cold water, as it ijuickly gives relief. VViien sponge-cake becomes dr^ it ia nice to cut ia thin slices and toast. T'j remove mildew soak inbnttermilk and E|prtiid on grass in the sun. If uutniegs are good, when pricked with a pill /il M ill instantly ooze out. If tlie oven is too hot when baking place a siiiil! dish of cold water in'it. To prevent mustard plasters from blister- ing n:i.x with the white of an egg. To prevent fiat-irons from s orohing wipe them on a cloth wet with kerosene To clean furniture that is not varnished mb with a cloth wet » ith kerosene. To brighten or clein pilver or nickel plat- ed ware rub with a woolen cloth and flour. When there is a crack In the stove it can be mended by mi.xing ashes and salt with water. When clothes are scorched remove the stain by placing the garment where the sun can shine on it. Starched shirts will iron easier if yon let them dry after starching so yon will have to sprinkle them before ironing. The wings of turkeys, ^-:^pse and chickens are good to wash and clean v â- â- â- lows, as they leave no dust nor li.'^et, as cloin. To brighten the icside of a coifte or tea- pot fill with water, add a small piece of soap and let it b il about fcrty-five minntes. To remove grease from wall paper lay several folds of blotting paper on the spot and hold a hot iron near it until the grease is absorbed. blbt« Mndii2 thaai to 000KI5G SEOIPES. Coffee Cake: â€" Two cnps brown sngar, one cup of bntter, five eggs, one-half cnp molasses, one nutmeg grated, two teaspoon- ful cinnamon, one teaspoonfuls cloves, one- half^cup made coffee, three heaping cups flour, one cup currants, one teaspoonful aa' eratua dissolved in warm water, one quart- er pound of citron, one t aspoonful lemon extract. Creambutter and sugar together, and be sure to Hour the frr.'t before stirring it In bake in a moderately f ist oven, CoroANiT Droi's: â€" Beat to a froth the whites of two eggs, and add gradually one small cup sugar, one cup coconnut grated and one spoouf al flour. Butter tin sheets with washed butter, and then cover with letter-paper. Drop on this the mixture in teaspoonfuls about two inches apart. Bike five minutes in a quick oven, Jklly Cake â€" Three eggs, one cup sugar, butter the size of an egg, one cnp flour, one teaspoonful cream tartar sifted in the flonr, one-half teaspoonful of milk. Bake in jelly cake tins and spread when cold with fruit jelly. Baked Ccstauds :â€" One quart of milk, four eggs, five tablespoonfuls sugar beaten with the eggs, nutmeg and two tablespoon- fnls Havering extract. Scald the milk, pour npon the other ingredients, stir together well, fl»vor and pour Into stone china cups. Set these in a pan of hot water, grate nut- meg upon each and bake until firm. Eat cold from the cnps. Eggs a la Tbipe â€" Hard boil a dozen egg's, and cut them in slices peel some small pickling onions and fry them gently in butter over a slow tire duet them with flour, moisten them with equal quantities of stock and cream, add a little salt and pep- per, and stew them till qalte tender then add the eggs and give them a warm np serve as hot aa poaaible. Apple Meblngue â€" Prepare aix Utv* tart apples for sauce. While hot put in a piece of bntter the size of an egg. When cold, and a cnp of fine cracker crumbs, the yolks of three eggs well beaten, a cnp of milk or cream, a little salt, nutmeg and sn- gar to taste. Bake in a large plate, with an onder omst of rich paste and a rim of puff paste. When done, take the whites of the eggs, half a teacup of whits sugar, and a few drops of essence of lemon beat to a stiff froth, pour over and put back Into the oven to brown lightly. Whbat MiTFFiNS â€" For a dozen mnffias .there will be required a cnptnl and a half of entire wheat aonr. a cnj^nl of milk, one- thiid of a cupful of cream, one-third of a cupful of water, an egg, a teaspooafnl of oream of tartar, half a teaapoonfnl of salt and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Mix the dry ingredients and beat them qi|{ckly and yigormaly. Ponr the batter into .battered muffin pans and bake for twenty-five min- nte« in a rather qoiok oven. The batter will be thin and will give a moist muffin bnt that ia aa it alioald be. Fbikd FoTA-roES â€" Peel them and boQ In â- sited water do not let tbem boil imtil theyareaoft. Beat (me ^g, and have ready â- ome fine cracker onimba roll the potrto in tiie egg, and then in thecraoker and fry in batter until a light brown, taming tre- qnently that tiie color may be anif aim or thn potatoes may be dzqpped into hot laid. Beaaty in Witm. Baan^ in a wife may or may not be a da^ â- irrible ^t, bat it ia oertidnly not a joy for- ever. The proverb that bsaaty is only lUn deep may be trite, bat I have no doolit that it is particularly applicable to mairied -^romen b cause (have patience, mesdamea !) after six months or twelve months of married bliss the yonng wife may look as handsome as her better favored sister. A beautiful woman creates a great impresnon in the beginnfaig but it requites good resources to maintain this first impression, and if she has not the mental traits so essential to com- mand esteem, in time her beauty becomes commonplace. The ordinary looking wife, on the other hand, if she possess tiiese amia- ble traits, seems to grow liandsome witii time. The beauitful wife is often too con scions of the charms of her persons, and if forgetful of them is flattered by constant ad mirers into remembering them. The man generally makes up his mind very soon as to what he admires in the phy sique of woman, bat finds it more difficidt to c me to a conclusion as to what is « tial to his happiness in mental qoali ies. As a rule the wife should have mind encogh to comprehend that of her husband, to share his plans and to sympathize with him in his occupation. Fatuilarity with the husband's business enables the wife to regulate the ex penees of the household to his income, where' by many unpleasant dissensions are avoided. To know when the purse Is full and when it is empty is a kind of knowledge that contri. butes largely t:) the pleasure of married life, An apprt ximation of the intellect of the man and the woman to the same level ap- pears to be the most condncTve to domestic harmony, as too great a difference in quality of mind often engen ers a feeling akin to contempt in the superior person, which it is difficult to conceaL Good as the theory of the eztrtmes is In its physiological applica- tion it may not be applied to ii hat relates to the mind. If there be not a psychological affinity between husband ard wife, married life remians a barren waste. Cleverness or mediocrity once established as a mutual foundation, varieties may be found to con sort advantage ously together, such as taci- turnity with garrulity, vivacity with inertia, cte., but mutual comprehension and appre- eiation are indispensable. PEOULTAE THDTGS. Dr. J. B. Lawes thinks that plants "pro- bably derive the whole of their organic sub- stance from the air â€" 90 per cent, to 95 per cent rf dry matter." M. i!3nri Vivarey states in Cosmos that he linos in silicions bronze an electric con doctability equal to that of copper and a mechanical resistence greater than that of iron. He recommends its use in telegraphy. M. Witz, who has for a considerable time been making observations on atmospheric ozme, says that the proportion of oz'ne in th« air of Paris last year was In the inverse ra;io of the mortality from chdera. The notion that dogs are more liable to go mad in hot weather than at other times is fallacious, says a recent authority. Genuine rabies is exceedingly rare, but vetoiinary statistics show that it prevails at all seasons. It Is very doubtful whether the weather has anything to do with the disease, Kxperlments reported by M. Guigoet to the French Academy of Sciences confirm the views of M. Freimy that the behavior cf chlorophyll or the coloring matter of leaves, is usually like that of an acid. Mr. Cuignet has obtained chlorophyllate of sods, and from it by double decomposition, salte of lime, baryta and lead. A process has recently been patented for manufacturing a gum from the Eucalyptus rjlobuln-i, which has the eflect of thoroughly removing the scales which form on steam en- gine boilers, and preventing rust and grit- ting. The use of this preparation, it is ex- pFcted, will extend the period of usefulness of the boilers 100 per cent, to 150 (er cent, besides insuring a considerable saving of fuel, as scale is a non conductor of heat. Many of the inhabitants of the Congo basin cherish the singular belief that the white people live at the bottom of the sea In proof of this theory they adduce the fact that when a foreign vessel appears off the coast the top of her masts first appear, then her sails and finally her hull. When she sails away the same phenomenon occurs, only in the re- verse ir.anner. Plainly, therefore, European ships ome up from the bottom of the sea, and ii that be the case it follows that their crews and passengers must do the same. A German technical journal tells how wol- ens may be prevented from shrinking and their color ftom changing. The fabrics, it says, are first soaked for sever-:kl hours in a waim, moderately concentrated solution of soda, to which about a half tumber of am- monia water has been added, more or less, according to the quantity of material treat- ed. At this stage the fabrics are washed out, after the addition of some warm water, then rinsed in fresh water. The same result may be reached by adding a tumbler of am- monia to a small tub of water, soaking the stuffs for a half hour In this, finally rinsing them in pure water. On July 10 at about noon, a wqnderfu mirage was seen on Lake Wetter, in Swed- en, by a number of people between the vil- lages of Fogelsta and Vadstena. A small island in the lake appeared as if covered with the mist gorgeous flora and tall, gigantic trees, forming great groves, between which bnilings having the appearance of the most splendid palaces were seen. The Sando, another little island, seemed to rise out cf the sea, many times its actual height, its sandy shores I oking like lofty, caste lated walls. It had the exact appearance of a mediaeval fortress enclosed by ftur walls. Two other little islands, Aholmen and Rison appeared also as lofty towers above the wa- ter. The mirage lasted for nearly a half hour, when it disappeared somewaht rapid- 'y. A Story. The inhabitante of Seymour and vicinity are said to be much exercised in mind ever the existence in that town of a veritable haunted house, and those who have occasion to piss the place after night-fall do so with quickened pulses and a fear that they may see something that would cause fright at least. It is believed that in the little brown house where John Sullivan and his wife were found dead last wintar, after having been undiscovered fur at least 36 hours, there is some strange afid terrible seorettaai that instead of ite baiiig, as some snpposad, a case of donble sotcid^, perhaps both Sulli- van and hia wife were nnidered in cold blood. For some time past timid people have hinted that all is not right in the lone- ly llttleplace. Two or three families have occupied the place since the tragedy, and they at once move out and away, and are reticent as to the causes, only saying that they do not care to live there. Fiiully it transpired that the first family were annoy- ed by strange noises. The second fsmily heard all sorte of snpematatal soiuds, and so did the thir'1 family, and it would be ex- tremely difficult now for the owner to get a tenant. Very recently a young man waa riding along in company with a yoooc lady, when she suddenly gave a shriek of terror andconvidsively leindliimby thearm Ha liastily asked her what she meant, and aa ao«o as she coold regain iier cmnpasora aha she said she saw the form of a woman on the roof wildly waving its hsnds. Her oompui- ion toied to make her believe that there waa nothing in it, bat die insisted, sod stfll in* sists, that she saw tile Btartfingspsatra. He Bids ap his mind that lia woold -sift the mystery to the bottom; and theaeztaigbt^ in company with three or fom leBalda friends, he visitsd tlie spot Whlb tiiey sswnoidiiDg. tbm saasrt that they heard many noisaa that fa their ofUoa am* ta aa- odbed to tnpswstiral aaalw. THE FARM. Daily aad Fum Topioa Cattle g aeiaDy arc facingfag bettar prioM tUs year than last. Hogs that Iiava plenty ^giaM an maly troabled wiA oholna. The Ixigas bottar boainni ia becoming the boss fraud in thi« country. Clover pasture incr e ases the milk yield of cows and makes yellow batter. Fatten and sell every ilieep diat .will not yield a fleece np to the average weight. Reduce the number of sheep to a pofat where they are secure from the privations of shortened crops and excessively severe weather â€" hot or cold, wet or dry. Horses should liave water often if they are working in the field. They donbtleas suffer much from thirst, for th«y are never watered except at morning, noon and night. Persian insect powder will kill flies and ensure comfort and rest to cattle and horees, if dusted upon the stanchions and stalls and around the windows of the bam or stable, A flock of sheep should double themselves each year, and the early Umbs will sell for quite as much as the sheep cost in the first place, thus leaving the parent stock and wool to the good. Fanners shou'd not be so ready to lay the blame upon the farrier when their horses' feet are in bad condition. Much of the trouble frequently comes from the bad roads and from the farmers' own neglect to ex- amine and clean out the feet of their horses at intervals. The worst kind of a cribber can be dis- snaded from indulgence In his vide by the following means Nail a piece of sheep skin about eight inches In width the entire length of the crib select a skin with loog wool, and sprinkle It freely with cayenne pepper, The cure will be speedy and permanent. Lack of water will make fowls light, how- evtr liberally they may be fed. In an ex- periment whire some fowls were killed twelve hours after feeding, bnt without water, the undigested com was foiud nearly whole In their crops. Where they had ac- cess to water the crops were empty, showing that the digestion had been rapid. When a farmer becomes burdened with a big lot of poor stock, eto.heis then in a fair way to loss money, and to bee me dis- couraged and ready to declare that farming don't pay. Poor stock will burden any farmer, and toe wise man who owns any of this c!as of animals will make every en- deavor to gAt rid of them as sooa as he can stock up judiciously with better ones. There are cows which can never be kept clean, and which seem to delight in fouling their udders and hind quarters, and plaster Ing their sides wi'h filth by dipping their tails in the gutter and lashing their flanks with them. This all comes from education A well trained ccv has no such unclean habite, and, once brought up in a cleanly manner, will preserve the habit, and save a great amount of labor and wcrry thereafter. Nearly half a centary ago, Joshua Van Gott, a great horse authority, used the fol- lowing recipe for curing heaves in horses. It has been regarded as a preciocs secret un- til quite recently Take forty sumach buds, one pound resin, one pint ginger, ha!f pound mustard, one pint nnslacked lime, six ounces cream tarter, four ounces gum guacum, one ponnd epsom salts mix together, divide in- to thirty powders and give one every morn- ing In horse's feed before wateiiog him. In keeping a horse fat there is as much in the driver as in the feed. A horse well curried and rubbed with a woUen rag after- ward is sure to make a sleek-coattd horse, and when well groomed is, we may say, half fed. A cross and nervous driver will fill the horse with fear and dread, and will rapidly ruD his horse down. Use any animal kind- ly. Always be firm and make it mind, but never get excited. A cool-headed driver makes a long-headed horse. Sheep on the farm a:e almost a necessity in these tir es nf udva^o^mcnt In fanning. The highest -uthoritirs r,n agricultural econ- omy claim tba thiiri aitbe a vailety in stock as well as in crnpo m attain the great- est success on the farm, and sheep are ad- mitted to be the best adapted to foul lands. Their size makes them very convenient to furnish meat for the farmer's family. Their products are marketable when there Is little else on the farm to bring in ready cash, They fit well to the large gap between hogs and cittle. POniDMAlSB'B PRIBOl UFB. «alsUtow««toWearnaHair ai The PonltaT Yard. Com is not a good food for the fowls in warm weather as It is too heating in its na- ture. Oate are much better at this time of the year and if the fowls are confined especial attention should be given to furnish- ing them with a variety of food. Sunflower seed is an excellent egg pro- ducing feed and as it is so easy to raise it should be fed liberally to the fowls. The seed should be planteid about com plant- ing time and the crop will furnish a large bulk of excellent food with very little trouble or expense as they can be grown In odd comers where nothing else could be raised. Charcoal is an excellent purifier and the fowls are very fond of it. If fresh If they have free access to it they wHl eat it quite eagerly and seem to le very fond of it. It is especially valuable in summer, as it serves to keep the blood pure and fre^ from disease which is so common daring the hot summer months, A dust bath is as necessary for fowls as a water bath is for man. It cleanses the feathers and rids the 'skin from vermin and impurities of all kinds. A littie sal phnr dust mixed with the ashes would make it even more beneficial in ite resnlte as sulphur in any form is very obnoxiooa to Insecte and vermin of all kinds. If there are any rate about or near your poultry houses they should be destroyed at once, as they are a very trouble-some pest and destroy a great nnaiber of yoaog chickens, frequently kill ng whole broods in a few days or nights. They do most of their work at night and in many cases the Icsi would not be near as great if rat proof coops were used which could be shut up securely at night and thus shnt out enemies of all kuids. The poultry quarters are not complete if they do not contain shads trees or a contrivance of some kind to protect the fowls from the hot sammer sun. If trees cannot 1m had plant some rapid growing foliage plant for the pnrpcse of supplying shade and do notiforget to have fresh water before the fowu every day, aa it is a very important P i^afthsirreiiadtsadatirgtlM hot weather, now, daring the sammer months, tps, that the breeder is moat ashamed fowls that have frost bitten combs, detracts materially from their beanty and looks espedaUybad dating the warm pleasant weather of spring and summer. It isaoonstantlyocorrlng grievance t'ibnejera and owners of the large-combed breeds, for the large tender combs wiU most rarely b« frosted unless pan ionlar pains are taken to save ftem. Even after they are frosted the c: mba can be saved from prasentixg an nnsightiy appearance by a little attention and care on the pirfeof the keeper. The fdlowing treatment haa been leoom- mended and is a good one: In tiie morn- ing rub the afflicted parte whhaprenaiatian oimsisting of two parts of diataied dyostine andonepart of tnrpentiaa. AtaoaBapriy |weeton and naewatv (three parta nlthe iwmer and one of the latter) and fa the evoiuig glycerine and tarpantfae agrin. Tlus is a very tinvb and oiiMp Rkady sad w msny timaa «m the bnrla fr«M baoMB- â- »« *?W*dlrtbe loM elpartef ihiir oomb wUok mikaa tiMB leak an tka wwM aflm tlia warm weaaareeasa aad tt*4aa-i Srispsrt. aoJttraaU baaawa UMfsr • bredter of laMa MadMrfnHMaMt' this Nmady aadpneiiaa it aa tha yona •U^aas ha fa x^rias Oh year aal aai ttSS OBBot brhg Asm â€"â- -•-' â€" A gaaflMMB thna writaa of aad tha other Indian aad haUbroad ptfaoa- I Jacamented fa the Stoav Moaafafa PeaMatiaiy :â€" The wardse lad Oe way to the gardaa, aad here we sasr tlia vaiitabfa Pooadmakar, a trifle thinner It fa tiae than when we saw him first at Battleford, bat stin •• tha noblest Indian of them all. ' and looking qnito young omaidering liis forty- f onr yaaix. He wws tlie ooaviot dreaa, Imt it waa liidden m a great measure by the Idaaket he is aUowed to nae, and the hid aona ahoea. worn by tlie ordinary convict do not diafigare tlie Cree chiet's feet, for he ttill wears moccasini. His long black hair of which he is so proud iias becm spared 1y the authorities, and hangs down in a long plait almost to hia knees, and is coTcred with a twisted handkerohisf from the vol gar gaze on account of the number of visit- ers who hanker for a lock of his hair by way of relic. He had been strictiy caution- ed against parting with bis tialr fa this way, as the authoriiiss do not wish to siethe great chief Puandmaker go back to his people baldheaded at the end of his three years. When we first saw him he was walking slowly down the centre walk fa the garden with the prospective governor of Am- siniboia, Alexander Fisher, trottfag Iy his side like an attendant terrier, but on seemg the warden, he approached us and shook hands with a smile. Through his mterpie- tor, Alex. Fisher, of Batocbe, a small sized, sharp-faced little man, with a cnnnfag smile whenever he addressed you, we aaked Poundmaker several questions as to bow he felt, how he was treated, and what he thought of the place. " I was ia this country when I waa a young man, ' said the chief, " at the stor.p fort, on the Red River, over twenty sum- mers ago. This place waa not here then. It is not a very bad place here, and Mr. Bedson is a good man, bnt it is not like being out on the prairies where I have my young men to do what I toll them. But I must not complain for the government is very good to me. The walls of that bnild- fag,"saidhe, pomtingtothem, "are very thick, and the poor Inaian could not get out, but the white ohief opens the door for the Indian to walk out and see the trees and sua." Tha faterpreter said Poundmaker appear- ed well in health, and never cOmpUuned. He Is allowed the use of tobacco, and we ac- cordingly presented him with a cigar. Several of the rebel half-breed prisoners now came up, all being dressed fa convict clothes. With their beards cropped short We questioned them through the interpreter as to how they flt, and they all complain- ed of ennui. Their bones ached with net having sufiioient exercise, and they wonld all be glad when they get some work to ^o. So far, tbey had nothing to complafa of either as regards food or trestment, and all appeared to thfak very highly of Mr. Bed- sun. Neither Monkman nor Leplne put fa an appearance, and those we saw, amongst whom were Parentean and Champagne app.and silent and downcast, and declined to talk, and were evidently glad when we cr ased questionfag tbem. Alex Fisher, n ihe contrary, was brisk and chipper, ann tolked away at a great rate, and when we turned to l»ave, wished us good-bye very ples«itly. The last seen ot Poundmaker, he was seated inside an arbsir in one comer of the garden, p-ffing away at his cigar and looking contentedly down npon the at- tendant Fisher, who seems quite contented without his governorship. Speaking about Poundmaker, Warden Bed on- said it was not the intension to treat the chief harshly, or to put in force all the rules, and regulations of the eniten- tiary in his case. He will be allowed to wear his hair, and be given as much liberty as is consistent with safety, and any em- ployment given him will be in the open air. At present he is studying botany under the tuition of Alex, Fibber, and the general impression is that his term cf im- prisonment Will be cunailed considerably. The half-breed rebel prisoners will be put to work this week, and then thiy wi^l probably not suffer somnch from ennui. London Dock Laborers. In Bunshme or shower, fog or fair wea- ther, thejapproaches to the docks and wharvta of the metro polls are every momfag thronged by crowds ot eager, anxious men, struggliog â€" nay, fa many cases fighting like wild beaata â€" to obtefa work withfa the gates. As the hour draws near for the ruging of the great bell announcfagthe commence- ment of work, a crowd of often a couple of thousand men press around the principal entrance of the London docks, and, as the big gates Bwfag slowly open, the mighty mass of humanity rushes forward like an overwhelmfag flood to the chau-barrier where the Superiotendtnt gives out the me- tol tokens entitling the holder to employ- ment withfa. Of course he shows preference to those previously employed, but there is always the chance of obta'nfag a ticket, and,themen strive to clutoh one of the talismiuis with intenae, passionate eagerness, Thi y push, and jostle and strangle, leaping on each other s shoolders and fighting and wrestling fa the mad rush like famishing animals, rather than human bemgs. The most desperate determfaatinn is writ- ten on every face, and there is small thought in the mfad of any man of that snrgfag crowd, for anyone but himself. For work mesne food â€" ^poor and scanty, no doubt, but still something to keep the terrible wolf from the aoor. Failure means semi-btarvation, or worse. But of the crowds who struggle and fight at thejgates, f requentiy not ncore than one third are selected, and the remafader, bear- ins their sad fate with as much philosophi- oal fortitude aa they can musterâ€" perhaps it is stony despair, rather â€" turn disconsolate- ly -away, some to seek work at other places whiohopen later, and others to wait for "calls" which may occur at any time dur- fag the day. Thus a visitor, strolling through the fine docks, and admiring the shippfag and im- mense quantities of merchandise piled on every hand. Is suddenly arrested by the strange sight of a sea of white, anxiooa faeea, pressfag wistfully against the bars on a side entrance. Yes, men are still waiting there for eny call for laborers that may coma daring the day. And presentiy, aa yon wait, the Saperfatendent appears, and cries " One man wanted 1°' lohtintiy all the watohers sprfag np like oased animals when food ia bronght them, ydling,shoatfag, and eztendfag their handa. They leap on eaoh other's backs, and clam- ber np to tlm topmoat rail aad alltiib fev- erish ex-jittfaent is to olitafa one littie me- tal ticketâ€" pwliapa for one lurar'a work- entitling the owner to fivepenoe, or aizpenoe at most I One out of the Urge nomlier reosivts tiie ticket apparentiy l^ chance, ratlier tbma by any otiter manner of selection, aad than the noise snbaides, and the men wUt on, patient, dqe«d, hungry-' yedaabefoia. At aantiiertime the call will come for two men, and the aams aoene will oooor a^ain. and so on tliroaghoat the day. Bat of tlia great nombera wlio erowd the gatea fa their diaaperateatraggle to olitafa om^oy- ment, only a Ttrr few, oompacattvely, sm •var be en g agsd, One fa every tinea or foor aj^eaia to lie the average noadier wlio obtafawork. EztnMOdiiiaiy Ouaaf^fdnphobia, Aaianlar caaaof aa a da aM faadoaha*. Ia* Brighton. Aw.. wUdiwUiaaaM «o Oa frot that ho waa aot of tta Haywardli Haatb Co^ LaaZaTL;. faai,aad Usewaaelkaabifa»aa A^Zl. ^^HS^ rfTSSsaTlWada? aftsr, rtS»mi«U^^aato aU •««««* S3: The owner, befas of «P^. ,„, STy dogs were dsatroyelaarabld thatw«« St w toSoted. kent the "l?-»?«**'S*i* S?e hope that he ^^*^!!S^'^^^' EtiophoWfaits worst form. Nooto~ Satira of tiie dog's conation »» ^ogiven by ite maater tiuS tiiat » waa W"**** "J the blood of tiie unfortnante Jiaajmho. fa a fit of insanityi had oonunitted snidde. ".I Don't Want Belief, Bnt Cure," is tiie exclamation of tiionsaads anff«™« from catarrh. To aU anch we say Catarrh c« be cur^d by Dr. r age's (^t«^h Remedy. It has been done fa thonaanda of eases wny not fa yours? Your danger is mdjOay. Enclose i stamp to Wor d's J)"^*".^ Mediral Association, Bnffikfa, N. Y., for pamphlet on tliis disesse. Every succor fa the Isad ought t j be put through a "ooorse of sprouts, t An Important Arrest. The arreat of a saspidoos charaoter upon W general appearance, movements or com- panionship, without waiting until he has robbed a traveler, fired a house, or nmrder d a fePow-man, is an important function ci shrewd detective. Even more important is the arrest of a diseaae which, if not check ed.wiU blight and destroy a human llfe^ The frequent cough, less of appetite, generel languor or debUity, pallid skm. and bodily aches and pafas, announce the approach of pulmonary consumption, which is prom^ly arrested and permanentiy cuired by Br. Pierce a "Golden Medical IMsoovery." Sold bydruggista. The brewer who maketh good beer fa the day and putteth a good head on it is better than he who drinketh the beer at night and waketh op fa the mornfag with a good head on himself. Weak lungs, spitifag of blood, consump. tion, and kfadre i affections, cured without physician. Address for tteatlse, with two stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Asso- ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. A man of mark â€" a marquis. A Toice From London Repeata the of t repeated atory that Put- nam's Pafaless Com Extractor is the best, least harmful, most oertafa and prompt of all preparations ever offered for the remov- al of corns. Kennedy Callard London, Ont, writes, " Nothfag ever fatrodic^d has given the satisfaction that Pute^mi s Pafa- les Corn Extractor has. " We recommend it." Beware of cheap or poisonous substi- tutes. Sold' by druggists and dealers fa medlcfae everywhere. Poison Co., pro- prietors, Kirgston. .Always safe, harmless and sure. A Baltimore man called a letter carrier a liar and was promptiy knocked down. He is now punishing the Government by gofag to the post oflace for his own mail. Like Lightning. The rapid action of the " great pafa cure," Poison's Neiviline, fa relieving the m st fa- tense pain, is a matter of wonder' to all who have used it. There is nothfag snrprisfag fa ita resnlte, for it is made of the strongest, purest and most efficient remedies known in medlcfae. Nerviline cures tuothache in- stantly cramps in five minut s neuralgia after two applications rheumatism is at once relieved by its use ;~and the same may be said of all kinds of pain. Sample bottles, costfag only 10 cte at any drug store. The large bottle only 25 cent' Poison's Nervi- Ifae sold by druggiste and country dealers. Crocodile farmfag ia rapidly becomfag a leadmg fadnstry fa certim localities. The lar4:est animals are killed and skinned, their fidsfa bemg used to feed their descendants. One dealer last year supplied a tanner with 5,000 skins. It is beyond all doubt that "Myrtle Navy 'I is the favorite tobacco with the smokers of Canada. They obtain moie en- joyment from it than from any other tobac- co made and those of them who have used it long enough to tost ita merito never aban- don it for any other brand. The reason for this preference is that the "Myrtle Navy is made of the very finest leaf which k grosm and that in every process of Its man- ufacture the most vigilant care is exercised to preserve the genufae aroma of the leaf. If yonwishtopaperaTrhitowashed wall, brush it over with a strong alum water. tr Alma Ladies' College, St. Thomas Out., haa full staff and complete coarse fa Llteratore, Musio, Ffae Arts, and Commer clal Scienoe. Be-opens Septonber 10, 1885. For 50 pp. announcement, addiess Princi- pal Aostfa, B. D. The laborer who la worthy of his hire is also worthy of his lore. PreTentlon Better Than Cure. Many of the diseases so prevalent fa these days are caused by nsfag soap oontefaing impure and infectious matter. Avoid all risk by nsfag PEBRcnoN Laundry Soap, which is absolutely pure. Ask yoor grocer for Fekfection. Mannfactured only by the Toronto Soap Co. A.P.246 siSss- ••fe?" •ffi'iliStani aSteta asssslsd ookifa "•â€" Lf^fcSrSl nsSrSvsiT sas *ooM UmL cJSXraiiddssortl«»soloorBiipl AgsBls wsa«ei_Wrf»e lor tams.^ man Iiins Boyal £311 Stsameaiis .M ufe^r^l Rend 6c. â- .â- !s°E.'2^' »*Eiitioo ,!?»liU OLnTHBTsPEOicAL MiciiisiBT iiiii;*'a(fl Terante. Ont. ' " ••st^S FASHB VOB BAUâ€" an Unda.- JOB J. DU.BT, Onehili. 'Bend fee lis ASK TOCB OBOOKB FOK IMPEBIAL FBBNCH SHOE B LAOKIKO PUBBBBXDA'EBSHIBmn sa!e; t«ason,l*o rwrUns baltws anaonebaU. Wills tor d«aeii Hon, ptioe and pedlsne lo G. V. BaKuuTntalcH. VALUABLE FARM FOB SALEâ€" 100 acre*. 8 miles east of the oltv of St. Tbooibs. For par- Ite nlors address 1. J LEWlR, New Sarum, Ont It to conceded bran that the Doumoii 1^ Busnnss Colliob, Kingston, to deserved- Pn ly tlw most â- â€" â- â€" ' â€" â- â- T .» Oanada. popular boslnesa tiaininc sohool in C\NIARIO VETEEINART COLLEGB, Tempe^ ance Sb, Toronto. Patrrn«, Gov. Qrn. ot Canada, USUI -Oov. ot Ontario. Ih* most suocess:nl Veteii naiy Instltntlon in Americt â€" Over Ave hundred graduates in surcNefal pnotloa. AU (xpeiieDoed teachers Betsion begins Oct 21. FeesFiiti Dollar^ P.iodpaI, PBOF. SHIIH, V. 8. A BUCOKSB AaAIIi8T~AUi PEKEJUlSo J\ « Deisms- â- » Waist has pvoredUtelt a nsasss. Drauno have used 11 tasording to dirtcUons. if their ere* *er* eonkia, sa «UI bs s en lir the nncwsignsd S'SSSi*",.?'"""!* «I«»"bll»*.oeenllstMled^. O FoitiD it his dtad me, oeeoHst wonld not tir ma Alezu d« Wand, 6 ican b ind. C hii. Ambitt « r an. Be Snloai: 33 jan blind aad now I see, John IieORli. Asi mar dnugtola for It. WholeiaM-^r Iran Baana^t.., 884 a jMi' Bt.. Mmtre.! PRGHTBRS WHO RSQUIBB New OF Second-hand ii^sses, oa ormnt lucBnnaT oa lunauL or lar nso, will (St the lowest prices sod bast terms fioa J. H. TITIAN, w*»Ad«isMsa t.asMowmo. iV^BLL BOKiNG BUT THB STAB. phis a»a dortag mmmer £*E2",SS- aadOlawe. 5Su,w««kl»: Plassowand BosKmiSoesw' •"â„¢ "~~^ inalilIadel{dl*,lartn]ghUr. ' .^.^ t^tttmmMw dwiMd I JL. 0VUUU-SWUCH â- »» "r^^â€"â€" â€" a^ (E 00, Hallta »• fc ^lS^ AUGURS wmkesell tsMjw^n CcMsBJa Wmkesel toSlMh hd»: haw « an Osa^ijlf tis.id mmuj a^ JAMfiS PARE bON Pork Fwilcen» Vofonta .1*. Bmsii. B«sd Msa k-ii. o a Bms.. â- I. m3 ^l^S?a â- shWasPsliyaslSIa â- ul^at SeiyXadc kua ruiAiiAiiv.iuiWijI^ '« Spool Cotton i _^ JOhB*! sTEi'wS^teomson ftCo.. Bt 'J^K^ Zilan «: Co., CShicagoi Untjk ' JjP T«A il. BeirUm. Toronto lAUaw, Baa ft; OJ Onta io Agricultural College Wt t il KE-OP8 K as FIB -T OOTOBBB. KxA msaTioiis FM Adiiibsioh oa ftro Oc«»»a. Couias ot tastruetlon SPECIALLY .DAPTED to i wanUoftaimars-Mins. For diooUr giving Informa. S!S is to leimsot admlsrion. oast, oonise of study, j s«|dyto rwfi I isin [the (C3a iiy the la si let I J kng CONIJOrS .U»RIAGET01'3,„,v Market Order ore f.ou, your J^'** J Take no other kind. ' **' 'â- â- *acit Plnseft^, MYRTLE Hii ,Uec ast luwii reat" !estG to your iopere ,tb Jirat itheo to a idayl thiz ;M. E she V â€" » "â- ""â- «Bia»oBsdd^ookjff-li