arth, ANE We ay, regret it, i THE CENTRAL PARK TRAGEDY. | uddenly stopped eat- | } hing,”’ he his morsels of | Lie cup of chocolate sel Le- 1g up the newspa- nt before YO} TL HCI he had | been running over with a carless eye, 1e read r th cond time the pas- sage tl 'k him so forcibly. | of a long article of details re- Park, a last fort- titude Central viel: for the 1 the metropolis up- whose author had as vain. The article reward of SoUU t or cause tl ar al» ne committed the | » will remnind our | is described old, of own hair, pale al a point, an overce silk hat, having about ilk handkerchief striped i. ordinary,’ repeated I. is ’ ption descr 1 14 Id mine pre- 5 years old, of medium brown a hair, of dark cloth and a in the habit of wrap- neck a silk handkerchief 1é siripes. in y nEUIAIL like ’ at le overcoat from its was De. cessively cold, he | about his neck | striped with red seemed to him | that passers-by stared at him oddly. | This surprised him disagreeably, but a 1 the mercury be- ), ROes hin a bandsome, | red summer overcoat ought o feel astonished when people turn to look at hi But Lamont gave not s thought to the eccentricity of his outfit; that wretched description that he had read in the newspaper filled Ins brain like a demoniacal pos- session, Without having considered the step, he entered a barber shop. “Want a 8 juestioned the ton “A replied Lamont rather | timidly: *‘shave off my beard, Leave mly the side whiskers,’ He seated himself in the chair, and during the whole operation he thought the eved him very curiously. *‘11e takes me for the murderer, evi- dently,’’ thought Oscar. When put hand into his pocket to pay for his shave he pulled yut three or four five-dollar gold pieces, which in his confusion, he awk- wardly dropped to the fioor, “1 am betraying myself horribly,” he thought, **I shall certainly confirm this man’s suspicions by throwing gold about in this way. "’ After a great deal of fumbling In all of his pockets, he finally found a little small change, paid his bill and left the shop. At a distance of a few steps he #lanced behind him; the barber, stand- treed the witl gentlemen Ys low fort light-co not t 2eT in. an stant’ ave, or your hair cut?” sorial artist, shave,” barter Darvel he his ing in his doorway, was watching Oscar a8 he walked away and ‘vas shaking his head gravely. Instinctively Lamont quickened his pace, and turned up the first cross street he came to. “If I should he to himself, this wretched walk which certainly nothi about It, in this is anothe: certainly advertise- back * said “1 should put an eud to £0 home,’ has all fearfal ng with these star cold, Yes, thing-—my have read pleasant i fools and but then there landlady must that confounded She will notice that a ng I have my have changed my have beard shaved, an will 6 her own sus- will have me arrested. Five hundred dollars picions, perhaps a tidy sum.” He decided that he would not intil nigl ] He was tfal iti 111. walking along, banging the dreadful to head and ti he would nnking of be obliged He turned around in alarm, fail to recognize “It is my good Osca breathed freely fr o had addressed **I could not Lamont was an old him in thi "Are you again; it lend wh well? anvbody, I hops MM ing friend, “1? What mu stammered l.an “Why, ] Te 1 Li, yes, FOISKers taste, 100, tha suminet overcoat degrees below?" unhappy man Having he took hi Lamont Was cry! TUln-away street a rey § CAarnriag old lady was utt sinking nly a h Mercy, w WAS Ise, an hat a fright!’ had taken ban restaurant venting ‘ Plame his painful 3 the stove warmed Vas, i meal he passed the time th tl in chattir with the proprietor, who happy to devote himeeif | i Hi ii unlooked- when v entertain: of t ast. AbD was quite dark, he went home, “Well, sir, bave you heard ews?’ were the words with which his | andlady accosted him in the hall, “No. What news?” he rejoined, at the same time turning up his coat col- lar to hide his face as much as possible, “The Central Park murderer was ar- rested this morning, It seems that he is not more than twenty years old; he is a tall fellow with red halr.” ss I I olank { ut © 0'CloeK, it 1 1 i A New Explosive, Chemists are ad vancing so rapidly in the perfection of explosives that we may soon be prepared to hear of the de- struction of a fleet by a bomb or of an army by a grenade, The last frightful invention is a composition known as melinite, sald to be ten times as power- ful as nitro-glycerine, or any other compound heretofore put together, General Boulanger, the French War Minister, bas spent $3,000 irancs in erecting three forts near Bourges, of block asphalt and flint, which he pro- poses to blow to pieces with melinite shells just to see how the stuff will suit his requirements, He has ordered 200,000 shells loaded with this new ex- plosive, which was invented by two French officers, Friendship 1s the most sacred of all moral bonds, All between the cradle and the coffin is uncertain. I know of nobody that has a wish to dle this year. NEW CANNIBAL TRIBES, Discover the 8 of € Groat Along River. apt. Van Gele Mobangi Last fall the ( Van Stanley’s officers, in the steamer Henry State sent Capt. favorite Ongo (ele, one of make further explorations river, the great aflluent of the Congo, whose 1portance Mr. Granfell was the first to discover. Van Gele did not ascend the river quite upon Mobang! northern as far as Grenfell, being prevented by rapids, through which Grenfell his urrent been able to water He, while Grenfell's push when the c Was however, took time to explore, journey was than a hurried reconnaissance, very interesting He found, for tributaries, Van Gele made some discoveries, instance, tle up which eamer for at It 18 estimated 3 } t pushed his st of 207 y three years that itself added only about miles, onl since Staniey the 350 miles navigable Now the # Mobangi or the Kassal deserves dis- waters problem is whether tion as the Congo's greatest tribu- ng, animation. : 300 canoes swiftly pl The canoes sn and AVin water, 1 WOlne en were leg nr 1 ¥ 3 ids and begin the day. Other firme Capt. : iowhere in a has he seen fish 8 of equal The g the position of the nets many acres. All these tril tall and powerful, and in form they are splendid speciinens of physical beauly, falls, £8 Are - Patmos. The great remedy for the evil eye on : istic. This must be burned In an person or the object which has suffered. and then, by throwing three carnation leaves into the fire, it can be seen whether the charm has been effectual or not. If the leaves crackle it is a sign of healing, and some one must spit thrice on the person or the thing, say- ing, as he does so, *“Uncharmed!” But If the leaves refuse to crackle it is best to go to the monastery at once and secure a monk to come and read a prayer to avert the danger. The inhabitants of Patmos half worship the monks of their monastery, and believe them entirely devoid of the failings which'other flesh is heir to. monk passes by or enters a house it is customary for the people to touch the ground with their fingers, and then to kiss the hand which the holy man proffers, A Patmiote mother’s highest ambition is to see her son introduced as a “reader” into the monastic church, with the prospect of being eventually admitted as a monk when the days of his probation are over. All the monks are now of Patmiote origin, This was not the case in former days, when many came from afar. But of late years | many things have been altered. The old-fashioned common life has been room, with its frescoed walls, is rapidly | falling into decay. Visitors have stolen { most of the old tiles which once adornod the common table, the | throne is now tottering on Superior’s three legs, and the fine baronial kitchen, which ad- | joins the common room, is now used as a depository for that hateful lime with | which they love to besmear hing which is architecturally beautiful. everyt i i i a — Eastern Slavery. It the SL as Cond utterly rary, h 8 a mistake to regard { tion of a slave in the On the { much better off than ti Average The worst { endure is the severance from Cl wretched, t Coll e ti Li= to é@ al has san in Europe, he and the journey to his place of destina- The { and slave in tion. relations between master yuntries have le analogy,with thoseformerly exi itl- ng Braziland North America. Mohammedans the slave 18 cor the eastern c« sidered a almost . During in this ¢ | member of the family, and with exception well treated of many | a residence try. 1 Case Of VEArs Hil- have become aware of only one cruelty on the part of a master, It concerned a negro of about 30 years Arab of the and the! re . " of age, who belonged to an be of Beni Harb, some offense committed ng twenty tr si tened around several md 3 4 ’y pe Lo . struck off. on was loud eXCepLiona s a slave wishe n compel the women ores to make t had to at ' . ad heir purchases, £ th ¥ «63 ¥ Y 1] a stop the merchant's doors, i i i | } the street the things that they wanted, | This law, which was incapable of ing enforced, could not be lon | tained. be- o £ main- -- lainfall Society of Edinburgh, J. Murray read a paper on “The Total Rainfall on Land of the Globe and its Relation to the Discharge of Rivers.”’ Investigations, { according to this, show that the total | amount of rain falling upon the land- surface of the globe is 20.350 cubic miles annualy, Of this amount 2243 cubic miles of rain fell on the inland drainage areas of the globe, which had an area of 11,380,350 square miles, and, as no water was discharged from them into the ocean, it followed that all the water which fell as rain must be again returned to the atmosphere by evapora- tion. Should the water accumulate In these areas into lakes, and these lakes show a slight annual increase in size, then the rainfall must be regarded as greater than the evaporation; but when, as in the case of the Great Salt Lake or North America, the size of the lake slowly diminished, the evaporation over the basin must be greater than the rainfall. The total weight of substances carried to the ocean Ly rivers cach year is calculated by Mr, Murray at over 5,000,000 tons, ecm ——— It is a base thing to tread upon a man that 1s down. CASTING THE GREAT BELL. Devotion. ed Ghosts,’ book, entitled *‘‘Some Chinese of the cit “illu bell in the Tachung sz’ kin. Yong-lLo, of Ming dynasty, official, Koan-Y u,that he should y of Pe- the trious of have a | made of such a size that the se might be heard for And he further ordained that should be and deepened bell sweetened with silver, the face and the great lij bles 1 that writ will graven B61 the sacred books, an the cer sound through suspended in itre of t to ways of The worthy mandarin 4 colored the cily immediate!) sembled all the master Imo } 1 renowned bellsmiths he empire, f nateriais | the fully 1c triad mMoids i AIBA i i 1 + id BK measured ill prepared the ruments, labored like ; bu Heaven be 5 4 TY ty alii y, was beautif form found when Nes were 8, » any Lrace he body of Ko-Ngai. And bell ils t of t they so deeper and mellower and mightier 5 than the tones of any other bell—reach- ing even beyond the distance of 100 li, like a pealing of summer thunder; and yet also like some vast volce ullering a name, a woman's name-—the name of And between each mighty stroke is heard a long, low moan, a sound of sobbing and complaining, as though a weeping woman shonld mur- mur “Hiai!” When the people hear that golden moan they keep silence;* but when the sharp, sweet shudderin comes in the air and the sobbing of “}{iai1l"’ then, indeed, do the Chinese | | | i i FOOD FOR THOUGHT. Jlessings are often nof valued til they are gone, Children are certain ca LH ae hint res, bus Gratitude preserves and procures new. Anger friend old begins with of “Iisten! that her shoe! her shoe!” Pekin, whisper to their little ones: is Ko-Nga! crying for sm The Use of Oil at Sea. The use of oll, to lessen the effect of dangerous seas, still continues to give very favorable results, and the accum- ulated evidence 18 of the most satisfac. tory nature. In one case the “slick” made by the oil extended thirty feet to windward, and the Hydrographic office concludes that the oil is of use when the vessel is reaching ahead at the speed of eight or nine knots, with a beam wind and sea. i He that falls to-day may be up again to-morrow. He is unworthy to live who lives only for himself. A good cause mak anda a strong arm, Alms are tl gate of bh the Ul wept Your capa thin n Iimits is in yn to the strength of your } Lull bor wi proporiid iA pose, When mistake, don’t Take the reasol into your own mind, and then look forward. Mistakes are sons of wisdom. The pa t The future is yet in you make a les. cannot 1x your power, After a man has studied the genera principle of the law, reading the reports of adjudged cases, collected by men of great sagacity, will richly improve his mind towards acquiring this desirable amplitude and extent of thought. Nothing is easier than fault-finding. No talent, no self-denial, no brains, nc character are required to sel up in ihe But those who are moved by a general desire to d« complaint. The importance of fidelity in small things 1s seen in the fact that small oc casions are coming continually, while great ones seldom occur. Thus our education in faithfulness will depend pot so much oa our doing right or great occasions, but in the small buf frequent tests of daily life, 1t 1s these which educate us to good or to evil. It is steady, permanent work that tells in the long run. A man may suc- ceed by a spasm, and inconsiderate people looking at him will conclude that he affords the example they should follow. But they are mistaken, and their experience will likely teach them s0. To take hold and not let go; to follow the lost till is is found; to oulti- vate the staying qualit is what brings us the rewards we look for.