From the Cradle, They tell me 1 was born a long Three months ago, But whether they are right or wrong I hardly know. I sleep, 1 smile, | cannot orawl, Bat 1 can ory At present 1 am rather small A babe am |, The changing Lights of sun and shade Are baby toys; The flowers and birds are not afraid Of baby-boys, Some day ['ll wish shat 1 could be A bird and fy; Al present 1 can’t wish—you see A babe um 1 Frederick Locker. Through Lite. Batering lite, we come fearfully Into the new and unknown, Trembling and terrified, fearfully Lifting lite's burden alone; Braving its dangers more cheerfully When we the stronger have grown. Sill, like old earth so recaivingly Taking the bad and the good Taking, nor choosing, believingly Ever the best as we could; Sadly repenting, then grievingly Striving to do as we should. Long may we wonder suspectingly, Ingrates whom passions enslave, Seorntully, proudly, rejectingly Serving the mercy God gave; Nor look to Him who proteotingly His arm forth stretohes to save. Thoughtiessly, carelessly, musingly, Playing at lite's checkered game; Ever the tally-sheet losingly Seoreth a list to our name; Bravely our conscience accusingly Stirreth our senses with shame. Looking to conscience inguirvingly, Thoughtiessness seemeth a sin; Working and striving untiringly, So must the battie begin; Faith, hope and love will inspiringly Peach us how life we may win. May we our duty do darefully, Strengthening, careworn, oppressed ; Treading our way ever carefully Thrown: h snares to home of the blest; Hopetully, cheaiully, prayerfully, Finding tn heaven a rest! Striving with sin, sin easlavingly Holding us ever so last; Looking tor mercy most oravingly Through the dark clouds sweeping past; Tanderly, lovingly, savingly, Jevus redeeoth, at last. — Boston Transcript. **WATCH THE BOX!" » The 6:20 evening express, No. 39, was over an hour ate that night. Cause enough, heaven knows. For twelve hours the storm had raged, and now in- stead of showing any signs of breaking, thie rain came down in torrents from the inky sky, and the thunder rolled ominously overhead. A bad storm to drive an engine through, as anybody would have known, and the wonder is that No. 39 was not three hours late in- tead of one. Luke Granger, the trus- tiest, nerviest engineer on the road, rounded Lhe curve just below Red Ravine station at twenty-six minutes past seven, I breathed a sigh of relie! when I saw the headlight cut a hole in the darkness. Thestation bridge might bave given away in 8 storm like that, and I was beginning to get nervous ovex this thought. Somehow evervthing made me nerv- ous that night. It was just the kind of weather when things look all out of fOar, shyway. Then, I suppose, the knowledge of that money package being due and fui ing to come on the 11:30, as it shoul | have done, had its effect on*me. I didn't relish the idea of keeping $13,000 in cash until the next day. Eldridge & Ricketson had been down themselves to rueet the morning train, and if the package had come [ could have turned 1% over to them at onc, and that would have been the end of the matter. But is didn't come. That's a way thing: Lave in this world, when you most want ‘em. There wasn't a soul at the station that night except myself, and there were only two passengers who got off the wrain. I speak of "em that way not meaning to be disrespectful, or make light of solemn things; only it's habit, I suppose; for most people would say there was only one passenger that got off at Red Ravine, seeing that the second of "ein was carried out of the ex press cay in a wooden box. Usually when abody was coming on [ got word beforehand, but this one took me quite by surprise, and added not a little to the nervousness already felt. “Who is it?” I asked, as the box was earried into the station. The passenger who had got off the train, and who was a stranger to me, answered my inquiry. “The body is that of my sister-in- Inw.” said he. “She was the niece of Thomas Eldridge—doubtiess you know him. Her death was very sudden. She is to be buried in Mr. Eldrigde's lot here.” “Then I suppose the body is to be left in my charge uatil to-morrow?” said I. ** Yes,” answered the stranger. ** Do you suppose that I ean get to Mr. El- diidge’s myself to-night #7 “Wel,” 1 replied, “it's a good four miles. and in such a storm as this—" “I'll wait until to-morrow,” inter- rupted the stranger. “There is some sort of a hotel here, isn't there?” “Yes, u good one. You'll have to £204 it, though; but it's only a matter of quarter of a mile, and you ean’t miss your way, for the road up the hill leads to the house.” Here I made my way out to the plat- form again and made my way on the express car where the money package, which nil along I had secretly hoped wouldn't come, was delivered to me by the messenger. As he gave it to me he suid: * You'll want to keep a sharp eye on that, Billy. There's enough in it to make one of your Red Raviners put a buliet through your head, and never give you the chance to ohject.” “I'l look cut for the Red Raviners, and the package, 100.” said I, confi- dently enough. But if the truth had been told, I didn’t like the ruggestion which the messenger had made, The train moved off quickly, and I | swung my lantern, as was my habit, by | way of bidding good-night to Luke | granger. Then I went into the station ! house with the little package clutched | tightly under my rubber coat, expecting | to find the man there who had come on | with the body. But he had gone, being | wixious, no doubt, to get to the hotel | as quickly as possible. i ; —————————— 1 VOLUME XIII. Hditor and Prop: 4 10 Le 11's HALL, CENTR K CO., PA. i aa a i JUNE 24, 1880, NUMBER 24. | { compartments, the larger one being for freight and baggage, and the smaller ‘one for passengers. My own little { room was only a piece partitioned ofl from the freight quarter, and ten feet square, and connected by a door with a box of an office in the passenger's room, which served both for selling tickets | and holding the telegraph kev. In this | latter apartment, also, was placed the old-fashioned iron rafe, in wiich | locked up my valuable express packages when any happened to come to Red Ravine ‘he village, | ought to ex | plain, had grown up entirely through the influence of the great iron works ol ! Eldridge & Ricketson. There were rich | beds of ore a few miles to the north, and these, as well as the foundry, which employed 400 or 500 hands, were con trolled by the firm I have mentioned, There had been some troubie at the | works recentiy—a strike or something | growing out of delay in paying the men their wages. This is how it happened hat the $13,000 ‘money package came into my keeping for a night. ; when 1 had made all snug and got off my wet clothing, 1 sat down comfortably with il. I'he storm outside 1 more fierce. were Cosy that night, thin of gear, as 1 have said My pipe didn't soothe me a8 was i try as I might, I couldn't get in- terested in the newspaper; an uncom- fortable feeling of dread--a feeling that @ reading. hut within, things But iN, as be ny is morning. So my work for the night wus done, and I had only to lock up the newspaper in the little room which served as my sleeping quarters. found myself installed at Red Ravine a- telegraph operator in the railway sta- tion. Being content with the humdrum sort of life, and faithful to my duties, I and come by degrees to attend to all the work which the place required. That i£. 1 was ticket agent, baggage-master wd keeper of the station, besides acling #,r the express company and continuing my charge of the telegraph key. These erwbined labors made it pretty close work for me, but they all yielded avery cymfortable income; und as I was t ‘oubled with no unsatisfied ambitions, 1 countéd'myseif well fixed. As I have intimated, I slept in the station, partly to keep guard on the company’s property and partly from choice; being a bach- ¢lor and without kin, I had nothing to attract me elsewhere. My duties had grown a part of second nature, and 1 nad lived in the little town so long that the younger generation had come to speak of me as “Old Billy.” That was, I suppose, because my hair was get'ing gray and my joints a little stiff. The Red Revine station was a wooden buildirg, about forty feet long and wwenty wide. It was di into two i { i i t to happen— possessed my mind t all comes from that pesky money package,” 1 muttered to myself. “Why 11:30 iobh of keeping it here ahou tha tie h and saved me the overnight!” Just at this moment came a terrific vivid enough to make the jamp dim. had locked up the package in the and put the key—there was no combina- tion lock—in my pocket. But { not i safe | had the largest faith in the security of the old safe. It had occurred to me often that a person could open it, even if he wasn't askiilful eracksman. It was my custom to leave my door open between my littie room and the ticket oflice, so that if Red Ravine was called on the telegraph key I could hear it. The in- strument had been clicking away at a great rate for the past hour; but as it was none of my business I had paid no attention to what was going over the wires I judged now from the nearness of the lightning and the jerking sounds of the instrument that the storm was plaving the mischief with the messages passed into the ticket office where a jight was left burning, and stooa for some time thinking whether the money } be less exposed in package would safe thar it would be under the mattress the the Iatter would be the hardest for sny possible thief to reach. So I took out the heavy brown envelope and stowed it away under the mattress. Once more I sat down to my newpaper and pipe, but with no better success than before. The storm seemed now to have centered right over the little sta- tion. Peal after peal of thunder rent the air, and the lightning played about the sky like phosphorus on un inky back- ground. If you have ever chanced to be in a telegraph office during a thunder storm, you may have seen the el ity dash down the wires in a way to make timid people nervous. Even veteran operators, like myself, wouldn't want to undertake to receive that sort of message. I was tempted to close the key, but the meaningless ticking nad = sort of fascination for me in the mood 1. | then was. : To occupy myself about something 1 relighted] my lantern, went into thi freight room, examined again the bolts of the doors and the fastenings of the windows, and returned to the room more Justas | was entering my own nest, the light of the lantern fell squarely on the wooden box. Oddly enough. until that moment I had forgotten all aboutthe dead young woman. Thinking so steadily of the $13,000 had, I suppose, driven the box out of my mind. Butl can’t say it was any comfort to have it brought back now; for a corpse is never the most cheerful of company, and, feeling as | did then, I would a great deal rather have had no company at all. It must have been the imp of the per- verse, I suppose, that impelled me, after the box had been brought back to my mind, to leave the door open so that 1 could sit and stare at it with morbid | curiosity. As I have already said, my sieeping-apartment was partitioned off from the freight room, and was con- | nected with the latter by a door. The | body had been placed in such a position that when this door was open the head | of the box was in sight. Two or three | times I got up to shut the door, but | some strange fxtality drove me hack to my chair, and caused me to keep in view the box with its sad freight. All this time the storm raged, the thunder dis- | charged its mighty batteries, the light- ning flashed, and the mad ravings of the t¢legraph continued. I caught my hand iremoling as I tried to refill my pipe Nervousness, no doubt; but possibly an observer might have thought old Billy was frightened. ! I had just risen to wind the littleclock | 18 eeeiric- hitherto meaningless ticking of the in- | strument sharply and distinctly came to which in spoken words meant, ** Watch the box.” I started as it a charge of electricit had shot through my trame. [I could fairly feel my face grow white. stood | motionless, clutching the back of my | chair, and with my eyes riveted in a | vacant stare at the table in the telegraph | office. I knew this was no work of an | excited imagination. The words, tomy | pra “tical ear, were as plain as if shouted | m clarion tones. There had come no | call for Red Ravine, and the message | ended without signature or mark, but abruptly, as it had begun. More than that, it was not the wr ting of an operas | tor on any section of the line. I would | have sworn to that with as much posi- | voice with which you are familiar. In | the dot and dash alphabet we learn to distinguish who is handling the keys almost with as much accuracy as others And in all my experience | had never heard the sounder click off & message like that. While I stood dazed and almost par- | zed (for you must remember thatold Billy's nerves were strung to a terrible phe 1 that night) the rapid and uuintel- igible click-click was resumed as if a demon had again got hold of the key. It was ully five minutes before I mustered courage enough to pass into the tickel office and sit down by the table myself. Not once had I turned back to look at the box. Almost at the instant of my sitting down at the table the clicking stopped short, as it had done before, and then these words were repeated : “Watch the box.” 1 sprang up from the table, and, with the now strengthened conviction that it was no delusion, no fancy, but that the sound had come plainly over the wires, I felt my courage returning, and re- solved to heed the mysterious warning. The rolling of the thunder and the mad roar of the storm no longer depressed me. I stepped boldly back into my own room, and rested my eyes unflinch- ingly on the mysterious box. What was the mysterious freight? Why had the phantom of the storm sent those startling words over the wires? What unknown hand had reached out from the very lightning itself to warn me ot some impending danger? These ques- tions rushed through my mind as I felt the dread fear disappearing and found myself of a sudden growing strangely trembled inserted the key, and wound it composediy, Would it be the last time that 1 should perform that simple task? No matter. Happier than most men, because content with my humble lot should never be sald that old Billy inched in the face of duty, For that night it was my duaty—my one snored, all-linportant duty- guard the treasure left to my keeping And guard it 1 would while life remained When 1 had finished winding the 1 took down from the shelf an oid rusty pistol w hileh had lain for vears undisturbed. It was not {, nor had i either powder or bullet anvywliere in the station, Bat the weapon was an uzly looking one, and carried a sort of silent force in case of Wo aggressive argument. After examining the rusty lock, , put the pistol on the table, lighted my p and-—-closed the door that opened the freight-room Now that thoroughly myselt again, | found easy enough to shut 11 to CIOUK load eg pe, nto Was it box, 1t was not until the clock struck again that is eleven—that I made up my mind to go to i. All the time the storm held on, although the thunder had begun to rumble more distantly, | rew off my coat and slippers, put oul e liglit in the ticket office, and turned hat in my sleeping-room down to a low flame. Then 1 drew the money pack age from under the mattress and pinned it securely to my woolen shirt under my vest. ‘This done, and the table so placed that I could reach bo i nmp a pistol, {opened the door into the frei rooms some three or four inches and then threw myself upon the bed. Just as my head touched the pillow in strument, which had grown quiet now | olicked off for the third time, loudiy, distinotly, slowly. its words of warning “ Watch the box!” his time the warning was not heeded I had not gone to bed to sleep. but for hed t 4 th } th t tl ththe 5 the it ¢ Standing as r, and thervelore ciose to the to tl I. box itself, the bed afforded the very hest point from which to keep an eye on ight. Had my fat! telegraphic clicking been less, or my own sense of great responsibility de- serted me for a single moment, I should | given up the job of watching hi, and in that case it is not likely narrative would ever have written. But I believed in the repeated message, and did not let drowsiness overcome patience, Twelve, one, two-—-how very slowly the hours sev med to drag themselves. The low ie COG suspleious ire been thried & € Oil What a relief it was to hear strike! At t, the storm had broken. af Lhey came out, through the window in the freight room, which was on a line vision with the box. How strangely still it seemed after the mighty roar ot the | storm and t harp clap of thunder! Not a elink from the instrument now, | Not a sound save the sturdy ticking of | the clock Stili 1 iay listening, watch- | ing, wi facuities all alert and my ey always on the oblong box. A minutes, The went dry the « ¥ 1 KOOL OCR ast, somewhere inigh TH I could see the st: it me rs L of he 8 il ia on littie past two-—perhaps ten silence almost painful in its profoundness. Nothing but the tick- tick of the clock, which, to my eager ar, had taken on this sound, which it kept repeating over and over “Watch —the—box! Watch— £!” What was that? 5: Figs Laat bo ¢ & strument. No, it was the grating of iron. Faint, very faint, yet stil andibie to my ear! Breathing regular.y and deeply, as one breathes in ieep, I lay nnd listened. terval of silence, and tnen wue grating sound came again, this time a trifle iouder than before. The light of the stars shining through the window made the objects in the freight-room just visi- | ble. Almost simultaneously with the second grating noise 1 saw the cover of | thie wooden box rising slowly from the | conid feel my heart thumping away like | a siedge-hammer, but 1 continued to breathe heavily and te watch keenly pressed upward until it reached an angle irom my view tae window beyond. A moment iater the figure of a man cane out of the shadows, while the box cover was .el as noiselessly as it had been raised, This then was the burden of the box | This was the meaning of the mys. terious warning which the sounderbad spoken. With eat-like tread the figure moved toward the door of my room. Stiil 1 iny as in deep sicep. » On the threshold the figure paused, and in a moment | later a single ray of light like a silver | thread pierced the darkness and fell upon the bed. Luckily it did not strike | myface, and in an instant I closed my eyes. As | had anticipated, the ray of ight was directed toward my pillow, | and by the gense of feeling I knew it rested on my face. Satisfied that I was in deep slumber, the figure, still with | cat-like tread, glided turough the bed- | {ato ticket office. My | eves were wide open again by this time. | The light from the dark lantern had in- | creased, but its ravs were now turned | toward the safe. Obviously the robber | believed the treasure he sought was there. 1 waited until he kneit down to examine the lock, and then, with steps the i So intent was he in examining safe that iL. was not until I was within reach of him that he heard me. He sprang to his feet, bringing the glass of the lantern full into my face, and reaching for his revolver, which he Lad laid upon the top of the safe. Bat he was too late. With the rusty old pistol, held by its long barrel, deait him a crushing blow on the head just as his fingers grasped his own weapon. He fell heavily without uttering a groan. the match and lighted the lamp in the office, As its rays fell upon the upturned face of the rotber I saw that blood was flow- ing from the wound I had inflicted, and I saw, too, that Lis ince was delicate in its outlines and intelligent in expression. I had time to notice no more, for 1 feit, now that the danger was past, the need of aid. So, after binding the uncon- scious man's feet and arms and bathing boots and overcoat and started in hot haste for the hotel, Half-way on the road 1 met a covered carriage drawn by one horse. I took it to he the turn.ont of Matthews, the hotel proprietor, and wondering what he could be out for at that hour, shouted his name. I got no response. Then 1 eried out at the top of my voice: “I've killed a burglar down at the station!” Whoever was in the carrige must have heard me, but the horse only quickened his sharp trot, and disap- peared in the darkness. They give me a good deal more credit, the people >f Ned Ravine, for thatnight's adventure, than { dese;ve. And I do not blame them for laughing at how things carie out. For when a party of us got back to the station my uncon- scious burglar had disappeared, and the tracks next morning showed that the covered carriage wi Bo I had met on the road had drawn up »t the plat- form. Who was in it? Well, I A swear, but [ have a notion tha’ it con- tained vhe gentleman who had come on with the body, At all events, neither he nor the body was ever seen in the town again. I had the satisfaction of delivering the money package safely to Eluridge & Rickeston, but the check they gave me was not really merited. For what would have happened had it not been for the mysterious message i SOLDIERS’ DREAMY, be Susceptible of Proof, A week Rrevious to the batt of Fair Oaks, a New York volunteer of the in the morning looking very glum and downhearted, and when rallied about his fancied homesickness he said: “1 have only a week to live! business for me and lots of others, A week from to-day a battle will fought and thousands will be slain regiment wil and I shall be killed while charging across a field.” The men laughed at his moody spirit, but he turned upon them and said * Your regiment will also be in the fight, and when the roll is called after the battle you will have nothing to be merry were here Inst night will be among the trees I saw them dead as plainly as I now you. Une will be shot in the breast, and the other in the groin, and dead men will be thick wn My over killed se The battle took place just a week after The dreamer was killed in every wan in the Third before the fight was an hour old, and within minutes after the two sergeants and six of their comrades were dead in tl woods, hit exactly where the dreamer they would Ix More nity men will bear witness to the truth of talement Just hefore the battle of Cedar Creek ho was off dnty tem. porari:y and trying to put in ] sleep, dreamed that he went on a so A mile to the right of our camp be came t said tian a ll $ he sought when he heard voi Lint the piace was ie investigation he ree Confederate scouts then shell Pr, fo ust anout Of WAS es and dis- sovered t already oo. cupied After a ascertained tial t } : place, he therefore move The sentinel! awoke him with a vivid remembrance of details that asked permission to go over and confer with one of th the log barn was described to this man he located it at once, having Pa Ese dita dozen times Ti dreamer de was, the highway exactly as | and turn, and the scout put every hi ch faith in the remainder of the dream one ' i and i lie € S00LLs stribed y LOOK tour soldiers, dreamer, and } Three Confederate scouts werd ike ir ¥ areain £¢1 PIROS asleep in the straw, and were Ti o hundreds lias t % wand g lire s sv I (x Al Sheridan's In uded The Brandy Station ORVALrY to at reunions the eavalry fig} a trooper who s¢ipt as i coiumn in hi igh ! Knee dreamer iat he took opportunity toad captain and relate his dream. “Go to Texas with your croaking! was all the thanks he received, but had his revenge. In the very first charge xt dav, the captain was unhorsed by wr breaking of the and was pitched head over heels into a patch of As | i hie) and i O18 Horse and night before ¥ along in certain oaptaan hors VO ed i that a rom his ¥ eft nextday, and while rising | wouid be wounded the $ £3 11k in th $s SFL he tl girth, a she men, ang one mashed the g to a bloody pulp. He ident Ohio, and his leg indisputable evidence L dreams somelimas come LO pass While MeCle Linn was hese ging Yor k- town the fun was not all Confederates had plenty of shot and shell, and they sent them out with intent to kill. One morning a Michigan who was in the trenches walked Ars IEgied out Lwo «4 of iron of is On one side. he ut were eating breakfast and warned them that they were in great peril. On the night previous he had dreamed that he bind looked at his watch and marked that it was a quarter of seven, whens shell hit the ground behind hm and It besought the officers to leav at once Hisearnest manner Induced to comply, and they had only reached cover when a Confederate shell which a horse could have been rolled with room to spare Three days before affair the dreamed the al cavalry that a a white nose. Within five minutes both horse and ri'er would be killed by a This dream was related to more than a score of comrades fully two days Early in the action in the forehead by a bullet and dropped a biocod-stained "saddle, galloped up to the sergeant and halted. He remem- the animal, and soon after picked up a biack horse. The white-nosed anaimal was mounted by a second corporal in another regiment, and horse and rider were torn to fragments by a shell in full sight of four companies of the Sixth. These things may seem very loolish now but there was atime when dream saved General Kil- patrick’s life; when a dream changed Custer’s plans for three days; when a dream prevented General Tolbert's camp from a surprise and capture; when a dream gave General Sheridan more accurate knowledge of Early'slorces than all the scouts, — Detroit Free Press. Mustard, The seeds of two species of mustard (Binapis) are commonly used for culin- ary and medicinal purposes, and are known as black mustard sceds. The flour of mustard, so extensively used as a condiment, is prepared from a mix. ture of the two kinds, usually in the proportion of two parts black and three parts white, The seeds are pounded and the husks then removed from the flour by sifting. It is remarkable that the pungent principle for which mustard is valued does not exist in the seeds, but it is produced when the constituents of the seeds are brought together under the influence of water. Internally, flour of mustard is used as a stimulant, diureti» and emetic; ex- ternally as an irritant and rebefacient. White mustard seeds are often taken in an entire state as stimulants in dyspepsia. Mustard should be mixed with water that has been boiled and allowed to coul. Hot water destroys its essential qualities, and raw cold water might cause it to lerment. Put themustardina cup with asmall pinch of salt, and mix with it very gradually sufficient water to make drop trom it the spoon without becoming watery. The Germans have a way of preparmg mustard in which much of its pungency is modified by spices. The 1ollowing is an approved method of preparing it: Take of the white and biack mustard seed, ground fine, each ,one pound, and {halt a pound of sugar. Pour upon this mixture a suf- ficient quantity of boiling vinegar to make it of the consistency of soft dough. It should then be stirred constantly with a paddle for about half an hour, in whieh time the mustard will swell and become much thicker. After it has cooked—say about an hour -add one ounce of powdered cinnamon and half an ounce of powdered cloves, and mix thorougtly. It may then be set away in tightly covered bottles and jars, and if the vinegar is good it will keep any jength of time and improve with a ze. It may be thinned with vinegar as it is wanted for use. Mustard prepared in this way is fur superior to that mixed in the usual manner. calm. : The clock struck ten. I turned to the which no man sentP— Washington Post RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES. There are eighty-three Episcopal Sunday-schools on Long Island, In Georgia there are 2.663 Baptist churches, 1.653 ministers, and 219,736 members of the Baptist chureh. There are, it is said, eight translations of the Bible in the languages of the | South Sea islands and New Zealand Last year twelve persons inthe United | States and Europe gave an aggregate fol $3,000,000 to the cause of foreign i ‘ { Wil Bids, | South the American Missionary associ i ation has expended $3,000,000 during | the last nineteen years, ng only twenty years, but hardly =a town of any importance is now without | Protestant church, [t is now about 140 years since the verts from heathenism now number { about a million and a half, The mission work of the Lutheran | ehurch of Denmark in Greenland, and { which is supported by the government, % in a Hourishing condition. The mis sion has ten missionaries, and 7.547 communi nts. The United Brethren in Christ, who have missions in Sherbro, Africa, and in Germany, report receipts of $564,350 | the past year, most of which was ex. | pended extension The United Presbyterian church, { which was formed in 1858 by the union lias grown, in Lhe twenty years of its existence, from a body having 408 min- isters and 55,547 communicants, to one with 674 ministers and 80,602 communi | Gants, Dr. Rufus Clark, at the Sunday- school centennial, observed by the For ign Sunday-school association in New York, said the Sunday-school had be. come the greatest theological seminary in Christendom, and the time had come to make it one of the greatest missions ary forces in the world. The Methodist Episcopal church has in New Orleans seventeen churches, with a membership of 3,500, and church property amounting to $131,050. The New Orleans university is now well es tablished, and promises to be an increas. r for good, uh iooated in the heart of the | $20,000 I'he Pan Presbyterian council is of city worth - phia on Thursday, September 23, and evening of October 3. Principal ininy, Professor Calderwood, and Dr. Andrew Thompson, of the United Pres byterian church of Scotiand, are an- nounced for papers, Ie Rott? “ Medimval Theologioal The Rev dis and ** Light from Without." I}, D. Bannerman, of Deikeith, will sion to Sealing Ordinances.” Mr. Daw. son, of Montreal, will read apaper on a t not yet made public, . Hoss for Five Minutes, Soon after the dinner hour yesterday a specimen tramp appeared at the door of & house on John R street, and be. began: “Sir, I am a tramp.” “ Yes, I see you are.” But Iam not here to money or clothing. 1 have bite, I had money 1 should get drunk and be sent up.” “ Well, what do you want?" “There are four tramps down the and 1 know they'll call here. It is now five years since ! began traveling | around. I suppose | have been called a loafer and a thief and a dead best ten | thousand times, and 1 have been shot | at. clubbed, broomsticked and scalded | times without record. Now I want a change.” “ How?" i “Well, all I nsk is that you will let { me represent your house when those | tramps come np.” | This was agreed to. He sat down on | the steps, removed his hat, lighted the | stub of a cigar and was reading a circu. | lar when the four fellows slouched up and entered the yard, | “What in Arkansas do you fellows | want in my yard?" exclaimed the tramp food, mi had a ask for jast * aged { BL'eeL, | ag he rose up. | * Suthin' to | reply. | Something to eat! eat,” was the humble Why, you mis. { erable, thick-ribbed cadavers, go and | earn it, then! Do you suppose 1 have nothing to do but keep a free hotel for loafers?” “Can't get work,” mumbled the big gest of the lot. “Oh! vou can't? Been looking all around; 1 suppose? Everybody got ali the help they want, eh? Want to be cashiers and confidential advisers, don’t you?" : * Nobody gives us a’ show,” growled the third man. “That's it! That's your cue! No- body will take vou in with your ould rags and dirt and sore heels and weep over you, and ask you to please be good, and put you in the parlor bedroom and fred you on chicken broth! How awful it is that you can't be put on ice and laid away where you won't melt!” “Will vou give us something?” im- pudently demnnded the tourth. “Will I? You are just right I will? I'll give you five seconds to get outside the gate, and I'll tell you in addition that if ever I see you in this neighbor- hood again 1'll tie you into hard knots and hire a dog to bite you to death? Git up and git? Move on-hurry-out with you!” They shuffled out as fast as they could and when they turned the corner the tramp put on his hat, put out his inch of cigar for another smoke, and said to the gentleman: “Yeu have dene me a great favor and Iam gratsful; I alrendy feel better for the change, and I solemnly believe that if I could only have got an excuse to throw ‘em over the fence, I should have been ready to reform and start out as a jecturer. Good-bye, 1 shall never forget your kindness." —Detrou Free Fess. Cn 33 Richard the Third’s Bed. In the corporation records of Leicester there is still preserved a story curiously illustrative of the darkness and precau- tion of Richard's character. Among his camp baggage it was his custom to carry a cumbersome wooden bedstead, which he averred was the only couch he could sleep in, but in which he contrived to have a secret receptaclo for treasure, so that it was concesled under a weight of timber. After Bos- worth field the troops of Henry pillaged Leicester, but the royal bed was neg. lected by every plunderer ag useless lum- ber. Theowner of the house atterward liscovering the hoard became suddenly ich without any visible cause, He bought land, and at length he became nayor of Leicester. Many years afterward, his widow, woo had been left in great affluence, was assassinated by her servant, who had been privy to the affair; and at the trial of this culprit and her accomplices the whole transaction came to light. Concerning this bed, a public print of 1830 states that about a century since the relic was purchased by a furniture broker in Leicester, who slept in it for many years, and showed it to the curi- ous; it continves in n8 good condition apparently as when used by King Rich- ard, being formed of oak and having a high polish. The daughter of the broker having married one Bahington, of Rothley, near Leicester, the bedstead was removed to Babington's house, where it is gtill preserved. The Paris Abattelr. {The slaughter houses of Paris are lo. | cated at La Villette, on the outkirts of {the city, and form, together with a olioe station, telegraph office, barracks for a small foree of troops stationed there, and other buildings,n town of ver respectable size, The buildings, which are of stone, were constructed in | the most thorough manner by the eity under government authority The | premises are inclosed by a high stone | wall, and the grounds are divided into | regular rectangles by four avenues, in- tersected by four streets, Through each building runs a series | of cours, covered with a glass ceiling, and in these cours the slaughtering is { done, the animals being dressed on wooden frames placed at regalar inter- vals on each side of the cour. A pe- { eulinr feature of the business is that of blowing up the carcass as soon as the | head and An are cut off, which the | Commercial Bulletin describes as fol | lows: The body being placed on the dressing frame, an incision is made in the breast near the neck. and the nes. £2] of a bellows nserted. A man then works the bellows for about fifteen | minutes, until the whole carcass is | swollen out like a small balloon. The | reasons given for this are that it makes the meat look better, more plump than it otherwise would, and that it enables {the one who skins the carcass Lo get the hide off quicker and easier, with- out injuring it. All bullocks, calves, sheep, eto, slaughtered in these estab. lishments are blown up in this manner, Pig butchery in Paris is conducted on anovelplan. The pigs are taken into a large round house, having a cupola in {the roof to let off the smoke, the floor being divided into triangular dens. A dozen or so of pigs are driven into each den ab atime, and a bute hier passes along | and strikes each one on the head with a mallet. After being bled, the deflunet porkers | are carried to the side of the room and wrranged methodically in a row. They are then covered with straw, which is scton fire and the short bristles quickly burned off. After athorough scorching the pigs are carried into the dressing room, hung up on hooks, and seraped ! by means of a sort of drawing knife, handled by a skillful operator, who per- pig a minute. Then the bodies ate washed and the entrails taken out and cleaned. Every part of the animal is utilizedin and that which the AWay as some use in the Frenchman's | Paris, throws | subservi economy. the manufacture of the large black sau- { anges which meet with sudh extensive in Paris. “The long bristles are { pu ed maker. sie About Matches, Old Mr, Jones is dead, many of Lis name, but we bear Lis | memory in specially grateful remem. | brance as he passes away at the age of tighty and is laid at rest in Chillicothe, { Ohio. Itisto Mr. Jones that we are ! chiefly indebted for friction matches. | As with the steam engine, the telegraph and the elecirie light, there were others | who about the same time were «xperi- menting with combustibles with a view | to inventing something to supersede the { ancient tinder box and flints. To Wii liam Jones is accorded the chief honor, About half a century ago he pasted with starch on the ends ol small and rudely-fashioned bits of stick a com. | pound of chlorate of potash and sul i phate of antimony. At first his matches were made like a comb, a number of | them being on the same picce of wood, they could be broken off as { wanted. They bore the name of Lucifer | =not, as it commonly supposed, in aliu- | gion to the Prince of Darkness, who is | sometimes erroneously called by this | name, but by pleasant reference to the { morning star, or ** light bearer.” Half | a dozen years after Mr. Jones intro- | duced matches phosphorous wis added ito the composition and soon became i one of the leading combustibles used. { This useful agent had been kpown for | 150 years, but it was expensive to pro- | duce and risky to handle. Modern im- | provements have reduced its cost and | vastly increased its production. An { immense quantity eof phosphorus is | every year used in match making, be ing over ninety per cent. of all that is produced. A pound of the sriicle will make a million matches. Some matches are made without phosphorus, chiorate of potash being substituted for it. 8» necessary do these useful aids to civil ization seem to our very existence that it is hard to contemplate a state of society which prevailed only hslt = century ago in which the best people had to knock flint stones together when they wanted a light. Mr. Jones must have had great difficulty at first in per. suading people that his matches were better than flints. Old gentlemen and others who were set in their way were opposed to the innovation, and, espe. cinlly when they heard mention of the name of Lucifer in connection with it, suspected some influence of the evil one. Even if good old Mr. Jones should not have a monument erected to him his memory will be honored in the fact that the fruit of his happy thought has brought comfort to all manner of peo- ple, and that Lis invention, apparently so small and so humble, has taken a conspicuous place in the world's march of progress, i i 50 that co ———————— Runaway Horses. The horse that has once acquired the habit of running away, says “The Book of the Horse,” will bolt on the first opportunity. If you suspect his in- tention the best plan is to cheek it the moment he begins to move, taking hold of one rein with both hands, and giving it one or two such violent jerks that the rogue must pause or turn round. Then stop him, and, if you doubt your being able to hold him, get off. Perhaps a too vigorous plug” may make him cross his legs and fall—-not a pleasant contin. gency, but anything is better than being run away with in a streer. In open country you may compel the ranaway to gallop with a loose rein until he is tired, or to move in a constantly narrowing cirele until he is glad to ha't. A ten-ancre field is big enough for this expedient, But the great point is to stop a runaway before he gets into his stride; after he is once away few bits will stop a real runaway-—a steady pull is a waste of exertion on the rider's part. Some horses many be stopped by sawing the mouth with the snaflle, but nothing will check an old hand. An- other expedient is to hold the reins very lightly, and on the first favorable opporiunity, as a rising hill, for instance, to try a succession of jerks. But the cunning, practiced ranaway is not to be so much feared as the mad, frightened horse, The mad horse will dash against a brick wall, or jump at spiked rai ings of impossible height. 1 once saw a run. away horse, after getting rid of his rider, charge and break open his locked stable or. ee ————————————— Sure to Win. The gentleman is sure to win in this lite of ours. If you speak the right word at the right time; if you are careful to leave people with a good impr: ssion; if you do not trespass on the rights of others; if you always think of br, vid ns well as yourself; if Jou do not put youre self unduly forward; if you donot for- get the courtesies which belong to your position, you are quite sure to accom- plish much in life which others with equal abilities will fail to do. This is where the race is not to the swift nor the battle to the strong. It is where you make peopie feel that you are un- selfish and honorable and truthful and sincere. This is whatsociety is looking for in men, and it is astonishing how much men areable to win of self-respect ana success and usefulness who possess these qualities of good breeding. The Manitoulin Erwpositor, a Hritisk Ameiiean paper, says: News has just been received of the death of Arthur Cole Hill, who died at Serpent river The deceased came from England, was | about thirty-five years of age and pos- | sessed of a good college education. He { entered the service of the Hudson Bay | company for three years, and upon the {expiration of his time signed for two | years more. After putting in about one | year of the latter term he made the ac- | quaintance of a squaw and wanted to get { married, but as he could not do so until lic leit the company, he wrote to head. | quarters for his discharge and his salary fup to that time, Mr. Mackenzie, who | was in charge of the post at the time, | also wrote explaining matters, which re- { sulted in the discharge not being granted, { Hill was then sent up Lake Superior to { another post, where it was thought he { would give up the idea of marrying a { Squaw, but he did not stop there long—he | deserted and got married, Accordingto some rules of the company, a man who | does not serve his time out loses all back me aey, and such was the case with Hill. | Hivwever, he heard from Lis brother, Henry Hill, who, we are informed, holds | some office in the Bank of England, that there was $500 to his credit there, and he intended to sue the Hudson Bay com- pany for back pay, whieh is about $600, Alter he got married he made bis home among the Indians at Serpent river, fol- lowing their life, fishing, hunting, ete, | and received a small amount for looking after Murray's mill at that place. Last November he took sick, and as there was no medical attendance at hand he lingered on till his death. Frank Miller, who has been trading on the North Shore all win. ter, went to see Hill at the sugar bush about fifteen miles from Serpent river; upon asking him what was the matter, he replied that he had been sick, but felt better then, Miller stopped in the wig- wam that night, and next morning Hill took worse and told him he was dying. He told Miller that if anything happened and if bis money could be obtained his wile was to have it. He was silent for a while, Suddenly a gun was fired, fol- lowed by two more reports, then turning on his side he said : * Frank, do you know what that means? On being told that he did not, he said: ** I'hat means there's a death in the camp. but I ain't a gone leoon yet." After lying quiet a few mo- | ments he asked Miller to teach his little | boy to pray, and that was his last request ; ihediedat2 r. Mm. It was a bard scene, Miller being the only white msn with Lim; the deceased's wife and child, ber mother and four Indians, comprised the funeral, The body was rolled in a | blanket and drawn out of camp on a dog- i sleigh, followed by the little procession | in single file, snd placing a few arrows in the grave they buried him. Deceased : was well liked both by the Indians and | white men, and his sad death is deeply { fit by all who knew him. Culinary Uses for Leaves. An English writer, calling attention o a much neglected source of culinary flavors, says: With the exception of sweet and bitter herbs, grown chiefly for the purpose, and parsiey, which is neither bitter nor sweet, but the most popular of all flavoring piants, com- paratively few other leaves are used. Perhaps 1 ought also to except the sweet | bay, which is popular in rice and other puddings, and certainly imparts one of the most pleasant and exquisite flavors; but, on the other hand, what a waste there is of the flavoring properties of peach, almond and lsurel leaves, so richly charged with the essence of bitter almonds, so much used in many kitchens, Of course such leaves must be used with caution. An infusion of these could readily be made, green or dry, and a tea or tablespoonful of the flavor- ing liquor used. One of the most use- ful and harmless of all leaves for flavor- ing is that of the common syringa. When cucumbers are scarce, these are a perfect substitute in salads, or any- thing in which that flavor is desired, The taste is not only like that of cucum- bers, but identioal—a curious instance of the correlation of Aavors in widely different families. Again, the young leaves of cucumbers have a striking likeness in the way of flavor to that of the fruit. The same may be affirmed of carrot tops. while in most gardens there isa prodigous waste of celery flavor inthe sacrifice of the external leaves and their partially blanched footstalks. Scores of celery are cut up into soup, when the outsides would flavor it equally well or better. The young leaves of gooseberries added to bottled fruit give a fresher flavor and a greener color to pies ard tarts. The leaves of the flowering currant give a sort of in- termediate flavor between black cur rants and red. Orange, citron and lemon leaves im- part a flavoring equal to that of the fruit and rind combined and somewhat different from both. A few leaves added to pies, or boiled in the milk used to bake with rice, or formed into crusts or paste, imparts an admirable and almost inimitable bouquet. In short, leaves are not half so much used for seasoning purposes as they might be. Printed Paper. In buying groceries, butter, cheese, eto., are frequently wrapped in printed yaper, or even in old manuscripts. Per- Po we might also say that provisions tor picnics and other hathpers are stowed away in similar coverings, and it will, therefore, not be amiss if we call atten. tion to the fact that danger has been discovered to, burk in these fwmiliat wrappings. In the case of printe Wharr Pp characters have often been transferred to the cheese or butter, nd either they are cut away by thé obser- vant cook or they are unnoticed, and in due course become assimilated in the process of satisfying hunger. It is more than likely that deleterious matter is contained in the ink, and the digestion suffers. But written paper is even more likely to be hurtful, inasmuch as in writing the paper has been in close con- tact with the hand, which not improb- ably may be giving off a perspiration, that may enter the pores of the paper and may there ferment, not with advan- tage to health in the event of any portion ef the manuscript being allowed to ac- company the food down unsuspecting hironts, Only clean, unused paper hould be allowed as wrappers for food st —————— London's Expenses, The principal officers of the corpora- tion of London are paid as follows: ‘he recorder (as judgeat central crimi- ! hot court oh 8 Jig mayor'scourt). $15,000 Registoar of mayor's court, who is also assistant judge... .ooieinn . 13,170 [he COMMON BOPEEANE. «av ves vee 12,76) Judge of the ity of London court, who is algo commissioner. i.e ves «19,625 Comptroller and prothonotary. ...... City solicitor . Chief commissioner of police Remembrancer Architect and surveyor Town clerk Head master of city of London school. Registrar of coal duties and inspcotor of froit MOAR «vv virs ir rarstrnsans J lioitor to missioners of sowers.. 5.000 The lord mayor is voted an annual sum of $50,000, free of income tax, to maintain his position; and in addition to this he has his robes voted to him, and has the Mansion house, free of rent, to live in. Tr e sass ——I—————— The New Testament has been made a duily reading book in the schools of Greece. The demand for it has become greater than he missionary depositories are able to supply, and un enterprising publisher has begun to publish it as a speculation. FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD, ——— Mized Feed Best for Animais, Noanimalsdo well torany great length of time on any one article of food, The ratuial condition of all our domestic animals i+ to roam at Iarge and make their own select’ons from the abundant varieties which nature has vided, We frequently speak and te of the excellent feeding qualities of one or an~ other variety of fodder. but in the ex erience of feeding it will be found that n the first change from one kind to an- other we have an increase in milk, al though the change may not always be in favor of the most nutrition. A new variety tempts the appetite, and the ex. tra quantity which the animal consumes will more than compensate for its less nutritious character. It is generally said for a horse that is working in heavy teams corn is preferable to oats, but for the driving or riding horse oats are better than corn. With this statement we disagree and prefer a mixture. Oats roduce more muscle, corn more fat. A PE fed on oats is quicker in its motions and more restive, but fod on corn is steadier and more enduring, hence the benefit of a mixed feed. Nowhere is the advantage of » mixed | foed more apparent than in milch cows, | for, milk being a product that requires | a fair proportion of all the elements re- | quired for the production of an animal | itis evident that «ll the elements will | be necessary for making milk. Bat | sometimes we make a special effort to | produce an extra amount of butter, then | we must feed an extra amount of food | which eontains an excess of oil or fat. | We find if we are feeding the best of | hay, if we add a little meal we do not unerease the quantity of mills so much as the quantity of butter. The German | ehemists have for some time been teach- Call all the boys; “we must go ated, To speed the plow and cast theseed; God bless the seed, and make it to yield hen & man attains the age Af hie may be termed XC dingly old. Does pot a farmer heoome a eas when he ests his owa kine?~7¥ Sad > “ What,” asks the N. 4 Haven " fer, “is worse than freckles?” might try a boil. ; were erected in not far from J : It is estimated that the total proc tion of coffee throughout the world The Federal # ot Sas oer $30,000 since the war fn ing government buildings ail over the Lady Harcourt, dnaghier of Motley , is the first American Indy who has the wife of a “None knew him but to named him but to praise, What's the use of about spelling reform | ipg us that to obtain the best resu’ts carbo-Lyvdrates (fat and heat producers) and albuminoids (flesh producers) so | | evenly balanced that one shall consume | | the other inthe anirial economy, though | | this cannot punts be le on account of the dierent conditi~ns of the animals. One that is being fattened | will consume a larger portion of carbo. | ‘hydrates than of albuminoids, snd the | | Iatter will be found making richer the | manure pile, although rey h furnished | largely in excess of fat producing ma- j terial. In growing animals flesh and | | bor e producers should be in the ascend- | {ency. and in milch cows, as already : | stated, the elements should be well ba's | {dnoed. The evidence that no one i duction of nature is all that is required in the animal economy is farnished is | {the facts that no one production e adapted to all the requirements of the animals or all that is required from the aviwal, No person has any higher apprecia tion of rye a»d corn fodder ex- perienced feeder. Yet we do not think that these fed alone are equai to a mix- ture, Rye is valuable because it comes when it | desirable for the cows to have a change but there is a wonderful dif- ference between an addition of a few quarts of brewers’ grains and squat of bran, mixed, and a pint of meal in the productionof milk. Weare to feed ryealone because nother forage doit, , Onls i i crop is available, or we would not If we conid have amixtureof bar! and clover with rye, we should have a superior fodder. Pasture grass, or rather grasses, excel, ton for ton. either rye, barley, outs, clover, corn fodder, or any like crops, because pastures yield a com- bination of grasses all varying in their composition and in their 1ime of matur- ing: but the difference is this that we can obtain a ton of any of the fodder crops from less than one-tenth of the ground required for the pasture Still, is 1s undesirable tv feed ary one forage crop when we could feed three or fourimixed, or alternately. A mixture of grasses make a more profitable hay than any one kind. Clover and peas are good feed to alternate with corn fod- der. Clover, which is rich in albu- minoids, will produce a large quantity ofmilk. Sweet-corn fodder is rich in sugar, starch and fat, and will add to the milk, the butter and sugar elements, and so on. But we have said enough to illustrate our position as to mixed feed being best for animals. — American valor. Best Fertilizer for Fruit Trees. A correspondent of the New England Homestead says: The best fertilizer to use in setting fruit Jrees of all aiade a partially or thoroughly decomposed chip dirt. We made use of the material for the first time some twenty years ago in planting an apple orchard, and it was a wonder to those not in the secret what caused the trees to make such a fine growth the first season, and afterward, too, for that matter. This experiment was so satisfactory that when we set our new orchard we made a liberal use of this material with the same satisfao- tory result. These trials have proved to our satisfaction that chip dirt is the very best material to mix in the soil as you plant the tree that can possibly be used, for the reason that it holds mois- ture, and is full ot theeclements of plant food; therefore it a most lux- uriant, natural and healthy growth. Re- peated trials have satisfied me that a tree is not only more sure to live, but will make double the year (es iy if a dry season) if some two bushels of chip dirt are properly used in its setting than it would with- outit. A Single trial will convince the most skeption! that the best possible use that ean be made of this valuable ma- terial is to apply it to the soil in plant- ing trees in order to push forward the tree during the first precarious stages of its growth. : tiousehold ilints, Use white oileloth, bound with red for wall protectors back of the kitchen table, and under the hooks where pans, ete., are hung. Potato water, in which potatoes have been scraped, the water being allowed to settle, and afterward strained, is good for sponging dirt out of silk. W hen you clean your lamp chimneys, hold them over the nose of the teakettle when it is boiling furiously. One or two repetitions of this process will make them beautifully clear. Sweep carpets gently. Even a carpet Thould be ed with a eration. A severe digging witha broom wears the warp and scrapes out the lint of the rags quite needlessly. Theery of Life. The late Professor Faraday adopted the theory that the natarsl of max is one hundred years. The duration of life he believed to be measured by the time of growth. In tte camel this takes eight, in the horse five, in the lion four, in the dog two, in the rabbit one yem. The natural termination is five removes from these several points, Man, being twenty years in growing, lives five times twenty years—that is, one hundred; the camel is eight years in growing, and lives forty years; and so with other animals, The man who does not die of sickness lives everywhere from eighty to ome hundred years. The professor divided into equal halves, growth and decline, and these into infancy, youth, virility, and age. Infancy extends to the twen- tieth year, youth to the fiftieth, because it is in this period the tissucs become firm, virility from fifty to seventy-five, during which the organism remains complete, and at seventy-five old commences, to last as the diminution of reserve forces is hastened or retarded. In the Congregational house at Bos- ton there are 20,000 volumes and 100, 000 matusaripte pertaining to the his- tory and theology of Cong onalism. It perhaps is not , pig lv known that this building stands on the spot where the first stone house in Boston was built 217 years 0. word, anybody ean spell reform. don't the gpm the ravines, and sat down in one of the gorgeous gorges ged himsell, mountains to say that OuS 88 & TAVED among A newspaper out West thus heads its geport of a fire: “Feast of the Fire ¥ -— The Fork-Tonguel no Licks with its Lurid Bresth a Lumber i of Boston tobe * in the du Rhone where all the inhabitants—some 15,000-—stammer. He ascribes this to long continued lm smog the communities and to a degeneracy of the race. M. Alexandre Dumas has received in suthor's fecs during the past six years, while MM. Erckmang- ris their play, “L'Amis Fritz" § : In Behring isiand the Swedish Arctie explorers claim to have discovered the future “airy farm of the remote East, anglers who have used this season. It would int certain ¢'ass of young men more to know what kind of shoes is go! to be the forest. thing for the Pa oung es ve been : i numerous floating barsgrarhs don revaricat p e,— Norristown A curious monopoly pre : Japan. It seems thst in the midst of 8 er Son fagrabion a Japanese Ay ean on ¥inaute ithumity : for his roperty rom; a suffid Hop ibe: to the ramen. this is done, the latter are perfectly as to the destruction of other property in oarr The Tokio § sa of a million inhabitants there steam-enpgine and hardly sa i le,of B ~ d of Pari “otksot 'Aiple, of Burie an 2, ahout 90,000,000, while tho-e of Rota Germany and other ¢ untries produce about 10,000,000. So that we estimate proximately at 80,000,000 the number of pins manu every day, giving 20,200,000,000 of pins in a year in Europe e. An Egyptian Fair. the A letter from Cairo, Egypt. has L following account of an ptian fair: The sound of wild musie instru- ments made deep in the heart of the * dark continent” mingles with shouts and songs ina aundred dislects. The setting sun throws a ros; glamour over gong sounds from a minaret, and watchman's ery, “Allah "—the last rolonged indefinitely — floats the air. In an instant every sound is hushed, the angry dispute and the frantic song stop short;'the thou- sands turn with one sceord to the east to touch the ercund with their for . The sight is unmistakably impressive. We pick our way through the plain to the town, one’s attention being divided between the tethering poss, and the heels of the unbroken mules. In ten minutes the are reached; here the day's business is giving, piace ts ure. Carpets, j* we ! : APS, Sessels of ne a silver, slip~ , turbans and weapons Loess k AWRY. Galiored lamps x Seine in the cafes, and dancing women prepare for action. dancer, like a good skater, requires but a small space in. which to perform, and the artof the Egyptian fantasia consists in the move- ments of the muscles of the back ard loins, highly developed from in‘anc Song mpanies the dance, the ments expressed being, however, advanced. But it is late, the air is stifling, and the hasheesk smokeis are getting mad with their narcotic. Buey all. the syllable thro onl t 4 glare at the yw |