A BREAK AT MORGANIA. THE LEVEE GONE AND THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE IN DANGER. THE WATERS INVADE THE TUWN OF BAYOU BARA. NEw ORLEANS, April 22, — Gov. ernor Nichols received to-day a de- spateh from Martin Glynn, President of the Police Jury of Pointe Coupee Parish, dated Bayou Sara, saying: We nave heen overwhelmed by storm and ralp. Crevasses numerous along the front, Upper (old) Morganza bas bro- keo. Send a boat at once to save peo- ple, or thers may be great loss of life. Governor Nichols at once made ar- rangements with the owners of the stesmer Arthur Lambert, and barges, then at Baton Rouge, and the boat started immediately for Pointe Coupee with several barges to render assist- ance. Other boats will be sent up to- night, Governor Nichols was interviewed this evening. He was much concerned for the safety of the people in the Point Goupe section, and stated that Captaid Jackson, President of the In- ternational Transportation Company, had placed two steamers with barges at his disposal. He had accepted them, and they sre now en route for Mor- ganza, He stated that he bad also telegraphed to Colonel Wheeler and Captain Jobn A. Grant, of the Texas and Pacific Railroad, requesting them to place the steamer Wheeler In the same service. Governor Nichols then said: **Con- sidering the extreme emergency of the occasion and the dire calamity of the Morganza break, I have telegraphed Sapator Gibson that such a great dis- aster was sufficient to cause us to ap- peal to the Government for ald. I asked him to act as promptly as possi- ble.” A break occurred this morning in the levee near Gardere, ten mlies below Baton Rouge, left bank, At last ac count tue crevasse was 25 feet wide and seven feet deep, The crevasses on the Yolnte Coupe front will submerge a large section of that parish, and back water will probably affect West Baton Rouge and lberville. The Times-Democrat’s Bayou Sara special says: ‘‘After a most heroic struggle to save our city from the food we had to surrender to the great Father of waters. The guards re- ported that the levee had given away at the foot of Fountain street. A gen eral alarm was started and the people responded promptly to the call. “This break was closed, but on examination t was found tha* the rising river was running over the front levee, All that human efforts could do had been done, and at last the solemn cry went up all along the line: “Give up, men; we are gone,” aud then the confusion of the people can be better imagined than described, Every Impromptu boat and rsft was brought into position. Lanterns could be seen everywhere, and the efforts of men, women and children attempting to save their ef- fects was & sight that was sickening. Not a house in town has escaped. Toe beantiful Fisher building, the home of Mayor Irvine, supposed to be the high- eat, is deluged. Our town is In ruins Nothing but chaos and destruction greets the eye at every view. To-day it 18 raining bard, which makes the picture more gloomy. The waler is also running over a large extent of the Pointe Coupee from the Tayior levee, which has given way, and the Fanny Yoor crevasse will probably prove a serious one. The large levees, from the last accounts, are intact, but things look eritical. The Picayune’s Natchez, Miss, special says: A protection levee in Vidalia has broken, submerging a num- ber of houses. This morning the Lake Coneordia levee gave way. At 5 p. m. the break is 150 feet wide, the waler going through like a mill race, This break will flood the lower portiou of Concordia parish, and cannot fail to be disastrous. West Melville: Rainfall in past 48 hours, 6} inches, Two crevasses oc- curred ia the Atchafalaya levees to- day—one, five miles above town, 80 feet wide; the other, at Oid Church- ville, 48 feet wide, The water Is run- ning over the levee at a dozen places Ip this vicinity. NEw OrLEANS, April 23.—The Times- Democrat's Bayou Sara special says: The great hercic struggle 1s over, and a general surrender has been made all along the line, The Polute Coupee front has crevasses'at Preston, St. Maurice and one just above Mor- gansea, which will, befors many hours, take away this grand levee, We have had two days’ heavy rain, and the sit- uation is beyond description. The suffering in Pointe Coupe Is terrible, 1t is reported that people are resorting to trees for safety, A relief boat should be sent at once If possible. Skiff loads of people are passing through oir inundated streets seeking safety on our hills, The situation in Bayou Sara is frightful; not a house in the town is above the flood. The State’s Bayon Sara special says: Another treak oecurred last night in Polute Coupes levee, and the iadica- vons are that the entire Polnte Coupee front will be submerged. The water now pouring through the crevasses at Morgansea and in the vicinity will overflow the greater portion of the country between the Atchafalaya and Miseiwnippi rivers, and extending from Old river, above the Bayou Lafourche, below, embracing about 700 square wiles of territory. Xo news yet received from the in terior of Polute Coupes Parish, but re- Jtef hosts are takiog care of all those who have reached the levees. As Lhe oritieal condition of the levees has been known for some weeks, the hope Is entertained that all have, in & measure, prepared for the worst and that no lows of life will result from the breaks along the front. An Arkanras City special says: The Arkansas Valley route between Reed. ville and Varner is submerged for the third time during the past Ove weeks Trains on that road have been aband- oned south of ine Biol, ike northwest wind, which blew wery strong again last night, drovein : the Louisville and Nashville road, and all the trains have been abandoned. The wind last night aeain caused the lake water to encroach upon the rear of the city, north of Chalborne street, and some trouble Is experienced by water from the canal flowing over the banks of the old basin on both sides, between Johnson and Galvez streets, but not sufficient to do any great damage. The rear of the Seventh Ward, up to Roman street, from Ely- sian Fields to St. Bernard street, snd the entire rear of the Eighth Ward are flooded and the water 18 rapidly rising. ————— I Wi ss———— 51s: CONGRESS.~First Session BENA1E. —In the U.S. Senate, on the 21st, Mr. Reagan troduced a bill to repeal all laws for the retirement of officers of the army and navy, the marine corps and the judiciary, The World's Fair bill was taken up, on motion of Mr. Hawley, and after debate was pas- sed with An amendment providing for a naval review at the harbor of New York, but omitting the provision for ceremonies In inaugurating a statue of Columbus, The vote was 43 to 13. A conference was asked on the disagree. journed. In the U. 8S. Senate, on the 22d, Mr. Plumb's silver resolution Was sented, and Mr, Eastis moved an ad- that all laws, limiting the coinage of silver, ought to berepealed. The resolu- tion went over for the present, Mr, Mitchell spoke in support of his pro- posed Constitutional amendment, pro- viding for the election of Senators by popular vote. A conference report on the bill for a National Zoological Park {fn the District of Columbia was agreed to and the bill goes to the President, The District of Columbia Appropria- tion bill was passed, Afler an tive session the Senate adjourned. In the U. S, Senate on the 231 acon- current resolution was adopted re- questing the President to negotiate with Mexico in regard to the irrigation of arid lands 1n the Rio Grande valley. Mr. Reagan spoke in support of hls Lill to repeal all laws for the retirement of on pay. A conference report Oklahoma il was agreed House bill lnefeasing to $250 000 the limit of cost for the public building in Wilmington, Delaware, was passed, The Land Forfeiture bill was taken up and the Senate adiourned. In the U. 8S. Senate, on the 24:h, the Pension Appropriation bill was re to, SLATE Hamp. The bill appropriating $50 000 for a statue at Manchester, New shire, was passed—37 to 15. ter service to the Navy Department was considered, and the amendments of the Naval Committee were agresd to. Pending cousideration of this bill, Mr. Hoar, from the Committea on Privileges and E'ections, Federal Election bill, and it was placed on the calendar, The consideration of the Revepae Cutter bill was resumed, but at 2 o'clock the Land Forfeiture bill came up as unfinished business, Pending its consideration the went Into executive session, and, when the doors were reopened, adjourned, HOUSE, In the House on the 21st, A bill was passed providing that soldiers who lost their limbs during the war shall be entitled to receive artificial limbs every three years. A conference report on the Oklahoma bill was agreed to. A motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill giving pensions to prisoners of the late war falled to pass for want of two-tiirds in the affirmative—the yeas being 143, the nays 78. Adjourned. In the House, on the 224, a bill was reported from the Ways and Means Committee providing for the classifica- tion as woolens of all imported worsted clothes, It was referred to the Com: mittee of the Whole, The Senate amendments to the World’s Fair bill were concurred in, and the bill gees to the President. The Legislative Appro- priation bill was considered, pending which tire House adjourned, In the House, on the 234, the entire session was occupied with debates in Committee of the Whole on the Legis. lative Appropriation bill. The discus. sion took a wide range, snd the South. ern outrage business was ventilated. Adjourned. In the House on the 24th the joint resolution for the appointment of Charles Devans, of Massachusetts, and James C. Welling, of the District of Columbia, to fill vacancies In the Re- gency of the Swilbsouian Institution, was passed, The Legislative Apopro- priation bill was considered in Com- mittee of the Whole, and the partisan discussions of the 234 were coutinued. The question of civil service reform also received a large share of attentioa. Without disposing of the bill the com- mittee rose and the Houss adjourned ~The family of Lewis Prewitt, liv. Ing near Lagrange, Kentucky, has been attacked by a virulent disease. One of his daughters has died, and two other children ate in a eritical condi. tion. The attending physician decided that the disease was “tornado polson- ing.” The germs, he said, were borne on the recent torpado from some in- fected district, probably hundreds of miles away, and lodged in the vielnity of the Prewitt homestead, —Thres miners in shaft No. 2 of the Spring Valley Coal Company, at La Salle, Tllinois, were suffocated on the morning of the 20th while fOghting fire. While a large crowd were watch ing » baptism by immersion at Spring. field, Ohio, on the 20th, a spun of the bridge om which they were standing gave way, and twelve or thirteen were severely injured, Two of them, Mrs Lewis Myers and her young son are not expected to recover, «Farmers in the vielnity of Atchl. son, Kansas, report that a sort of wire worm fs doing great damage to the wheat. The worm Is about an Inch long and of the thickness of fine wire, Wherever It works the wheat soon withe:s, A FATAL HILL FIRE | THE UNICORN SILK MILL AT CATA- SAUQUA DESTROYED FOUR DEAD AND MANY INJURED, BEV- ERAL MORTALLY. ALLENTOWN, Pa, April 24, —The total destruction of the Unicorn silk mill, the loss of four lives, the probable fatal injury of several men and the injury of about a score more tell the story of the calamity which at an early city. The loss of property is estimated between 200,000 and $300,000, on which the insurances aggregate proba- bly $150,000. It was shortly before six o'clock when flames were discovered in the second floor of the dyeing department. To the alarm of fire the two steamers of the town promptly responded, but were unable to render timely service owing to the nearest fire plug being far away, and the difficulty in getting the eugines down to the canal, which Is but a short distance from the mill. At half-past seven o'clock the flames had spread to all parts of the large mill, and | were then shooting high into the air and from every window, Projecting from the south end of the | main building is the one.story annex, { in which plush machinery was put up. The firemen had entered this annex {and were playing & stream from It into the burning interior of the adja- | cent compartment. Joseph Loteglana, {boss of the dying department, who | had observed the precarious condition | of the now tottering walls, entered the | danger. The words of warning were | yet on his lips when, with a great {erash, the upper part of the south | wall fell upon the roof of the annex, | erushing it in and burying those be- peath it under an immense mass of brick and splintered timbers, ‘This | was at 7.40 o'clock, and it was up- | wards of an hour before the last of the | unfortunates who bad been caught in |the fall of the debris, was removed. { Two of them were dead when found, {and two others died of their Injuries | pital, at South Bethlehem. The following 1s & list of the dead, Joseph Loteglana, | years, silk dyer at the works, and leaves a | family consisting of a wife and child, About a year ago | from Paterson, and his body burned shockingly. John Good, aged 28 years, employed {as brokkeeper al Chatles grocery store in Catasauqua, | member of the Plax Fire and leaves a family. He opened { the alarm of Ore, | formance of his duty. He was a Company had. just ‘perished in the per- A $500 lle in. {eral years he allowed to lapse ooly a few davs ago, Charles Frick, aged 25 years, leaves {a wife sand threes chillren, He was a | member of the Poeaix Fire Company { and was the lest man taken out of the i ruins. He died | this afternoon, He was a employed by the Uui | Machine Company. Ulysses Everett, of West Catasauqua, wa Foundry and frightfully burped all over the body, He was taken to Si Luke's Hospital, South DBasthishem, where he died an bour after his arrival, The seriously injured are Johu Pafl, aged 22. an oiler in the employ of the Central Railroad of New Jarsey., His right leg is broken and the left side of his body so badly burned that the flesh peeled off. His face is badly scalded, and he also sustained internal injuries. He will probably dle, Willlam Feustermacher, aged 30 years, an employe of the Catasauqua Rolling Mill, badly burned and oruised, and his skull fractured, One of Lis legs is broken. result in his death, pital, Michael Moran, of Water street, Hokendauqua, buried about the head and face, and severely injured inter. pally. He is 30 years of age, and was employed in the mill, He is a brother of Join Moran, who was murdered at Hotenguvgan on the night of March 4th, Clifford Riegel, aged 22 years, em- He is in the hos National Bank, hit on the head with a brick, and painfully Injured. About twenty others were wounded, but their injuries are not of a danger- ous nature, though some of them are suffering great pain from burns, bruises and scalds A TORNADO IN ALABAMA. HEAVY LOSS OF PROPERTY RE- PORTED, BIRMINGHAM, ALA, April 21.—A destructive cyclone passed over a por- tion of Geneva county, Ala, late Sat. urday afternoon. No towns were In the path of the tornado, but a number of farm houses with their out-buildings were destroyed, The path of the cy- clone was only a few hundred yards in width and about 7 miles long. In its course it swept everything before it. Owing to the section visited by the storm being remote from a telegraph office the full extent of the damage and the number of lives lost has not been ascertained. It is thought, bowever, that the loss of life wili not be great. The cyclone appeared in the form of a funnel shaped cloud, which could be seen for many miles, and a nutaber of farm houses were torn to fragments aid seattered in all directions. Fences were blown away, eattle killed, and the loss of property will be great, —A despatch from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, says that the river rose 1} inches during the past 24 hours, and is now 24 inches above the highest water . =George Mason und Joseph Han- | serd went rowlug at Columbus, Geor- | gla, on the 20th, They rowed Loo near the dsm, and thelr boat was drawn by suction against the rocks and broken. The two men were thrown in the water and Hanserd was drowned. James Morgan, an operator in the Erie tower Howells, New York, was examining a pistol on the morping of the 21st, and it went off. The bullet entered the head of Frank Grier, aged { 12 years, killing him instantly, Charles E. Graves, aged 52 years, died in DBen- pington, Vermont, on the 21st, from the effects of an overdose of morphine, taken to alleviate pain from rheumas tism. David Bly, Willlam Erb and a Polander were severely burned by an explosion of gas In Slope No. 4, al Nanticoke, Pa., on the 20th, It 1s not thought that their Injuries will prove fatal, ~— Malignant diphtheria is epidemic in the village of Vining, Minnesota. There is a population of abou 150 per- sons, nmine-tenths of whom are afflicted with the disease. There have been twenty deaths since April 1st, and thirty altogether, The funerals of all the victims have been public and largely attended, ~The boiler at the Etna Mills In New Castle, Pa. exploded on the morning of the 234, killing George Kiingensmith, John Welsh and Jobn Murphy, and injuring Barney Regan, L. Shifnocker, Lawrence Flynn, An- drew Myers, Joseph Rounds and John Meyers, —itatbl Cohn, the Jewish Pastor In Mt, Carmel, Pa., was atlacked and perhaps fatally injured, on the 224, by John Dorsey and John Handriban, highway robbers, Iandrihan was captured, John Voth, mght watch- man of No, 8 breaker at Lauorel Hill, pear Wilkesbarre, was shot at twice on the morning of the 221, while making his round, and the second shot shat- tered the bones of his left arm and wrist. The assassin escaped. John Beecher, a miner, was robbed and murdered near his home at Oliphant { Furnace, Penna., on the evening of the 21st, His body was found on the morning of the 224, with the back of { his skuil crushed in and his pockels | were emptied. —Wilillam Hooper and James Marlin were killed and five others were bad y injured on the 221 by the fall of a rock ‘in a shaft of the Great Eastern Mine, pear Norway, Michigan. Michael and Peter Clunsky, brothers, were fatally burned by an explosion of gas in the | Twin shaft, at Pittston, Penna. on the i morning of the 224. On the moro ing of the 224 thers was an explosion iat one of the Colebrook furnaces, in | Lebanon, Pa. The jacket at the fur. i nace stack was blown out aod the fron roof blown into the air, Wm. P. Wright, engineer, was knocked down and severely burned, sheet — Policeman Peterson came Across a gang of toughs in Bt. Paul, Minnesota, | on the evening of the 23d, and stopped { them. He was attacked and beaten so | badly that it is thought that he will | not recover. He shot and killed one | of the gang, Neil Cashman. members of the gang escaped. Ben. jamin Horstman was shot and probably | fatally wounded in Ballimore on the 123d, by Henry Seebecth, a saloon- | keeper, -A Rock Island passenger traln was {derailed by an open switch in Des | Moines, Iowa, on the 22d, and several passengers were injured. The engine | and one car passed over safely, and train | men assert that the Switch was turned | by means of an iron bar in the bands | of a train wrecker, who was lying beside ! the track. All the circumstances are | said to support the theory that it was { a deliberate attempt to wreck the train, | either for revenge or for the sake of plunder, i ~ Mrs, Patrick McLaughlin, of Pitta. | burg, aged 65 years, who Lad been | visiting ber daughter, al Stockton, was lon the 23d, struck and killed by a Lehigh Valley train, ~The little town of Kyle, 20 miles south of Austin, Texas, was visited by a tornado on the evening of the 234, Many houses were damaged and de- molished , and several persons. were io- | jured, There was great damage to the ! fences and crops. | ~ Fires are raging In the Blue Moun. tains, near Wind Gap, and at dierent points along the Ridge. The station of the Lehigh and Lackawanna road at Katellen, together with the post. office, and a store, are reported in ashes, The people along the base of the mountains are fighting the fames, ~The drug store of H, K. Doane, in Delavan, Wiscousin, was wrecked on the afternoon of the 24th by an explo- sion of dynamite in the eeliar, Doane snd an unknown man were killed, and another man was badly injured, ~The boller at Cook Broa.® tile and brick yards, near Flint, Michigan, ex- ploded on the 234, Fredenck Cook, aged 18 years, was killed snd two other boys were Injured, George Baldwin probably fatally, ~ Rain bas fallen In Texas for three days, and the rivers and bayous are out of their banks Dridges have been swept away and travel is delayed. All stock in the low Innds and cane brakes has been drowned. The waters are still rising. ~ An earthquake shock was felt in Sun Francisco and other ports of California on the worning of the 24.h, Cunsider- able alarm was felt by persons aroused from sleep. At Pajaro the railroad bridge was thrown two feet out of jine, Gas mains were d and chimueys thrown down. A farmer named Morrison living near Sheiburne, Ontario, drowned three of his children In & barrel of ram water on the 24th, and hen tried tn drown himself in a creek. Some of the neigh. bors found him In the water and it is said he is in a critical ecoudition, Xo reason is assigned for the tragedy. Al a gypry camp at Morrisville, Pa, on the morning of the 256 h, Nosh Palmer, the patriarch of the perty, shot aud e1led his wife and then od himaeif, A KNOWINC COLLIE, stands the English Language. I saw this myself, down in Kentucky, and thereunto I give my hand and seal form. I was visiting a ¢ down in the blue-grass region -{ his name. He has been ao the Kentucky Legislature Min HINGE Was H wapnber of for years, fine eattle, good horses, and oiler pessions that belong naturally to tie We were sitting out on the old veranda fn the shade one hot August afternoon, smoking. A gplendid collie lay sleep ing on the step. I commented beanty. “Yes,” said the legislator, “‘that’s the smartest dog in all this country. Every evening at six o'clock, punctual to the minute, he goes by himee!! and brings the cows from the pasture.” Then the conversation turned upon on something else and we forgot all about In a little while we heard a commotion in the road before the front the dog. gate, and there was the collie with the whole herd, which he had roused from their siesta end cud-chewing His tail waived in the mid- die of the afternoon. eyes were blazing with pride, and a smile of radiant exultation lighted his He said as plainly as “There ye see, ils true; I can do it just exactly as I'm billed." handsome face. aver a man spoke: But pride goes before a fall, or some- thing of that sort, a silly ol whatever it is. Conner lool the front walk in amazemen stood up and shouted, as > footer Kentuckian can shout: “You, Ranger, take those cows straight back where ye got ‘em from.” down Y of = | owner in Paris, and his pedigree was | never ascertained. It is the fushion of | English writers to deery the Arabian | blood, and it i= trne that the present | thoroughbred, owing to many years of | good food and severe training, is » big- ger, stronger, swifter animal then the | Arab; but the latest and perhaps the | highest anthority on this subject, Wil liam Das the wgnifieans ad. mission that all the best thoronghtmeds ¥, mukes now on the English turf trace beek io | one or more of the threes Arab horoes whose uses have just been mention i. The chiel reason why a good roadster | must have thoroughbred or Arab blood | in his veins is that from no other source | ean he the i i i rey # This is even more important 1 | derivs NECORSATY NeTVOus | energy. | than the superior bony structure of the thoroughbred Arabian. Exactly | what nervous energy is, nobody, 1 pre- | sume, can tell; but it is something that, | in horses at least, develops the physi- | cal system early, makes it capable of great exertion, and enables it 40 recov- | er quickly from fatigue. | more correctly, a similar capacily is | continually mankind | Readers of Arctic travels for exsmple, or The same, or i remarked in | must often have been struck by the fact that it is invariably the men, and never the officers, who succumb to the labor snd exposure of | a sledge journey. Loosely speaking, it may be that in the | educated man, es] the man whose ancestors also have been educated, | the mind has acquired a degree of con- trol over the body which eannot other | wise be attained. Bo also with horses, A thoroughbred is one whose progeni- tors for many generations have been called upon to exert themselves to the etmmost; they have run hard and long, and struggled to beat their competitors. | — HH. C. Merwin, in the Atlantic Month- «3 WIRY In - THE COLD-AIR CURE, Has § Un- language perfectly, formation! His ears fell, he hung his and started off down the road again He was the most chagrined, dejected wand humilated c.eature ye ever saw. Twelve Millions Wasted. A Chicago photographer writes the Photographie Times, calling attention to the great amount of money which is absolutely thrown away every year by the photographers of America. Hesays: It is estimated that there is $40,000 to £50,000 worth of nitrate of silver and gold used by the photographers every year in our little city of Chicago alone and as much more in the great State of Lilinvis, and $1,000,000 worth of nitrate for the phot wraphers of the United Nintes to use every year in money could have been saved thet was wasted, thrown away, in solutic photographs. prise every one of you, as it would reach the enormous sum of §12,500,000 quite enough to retire every photo dependent fortune, to about the annual interest of this vast sum, which certainly would have doubl- od the whole amount that has been wasted in the past twenty-five years Say ROAD HORSES. roadsters are bred, the answer can be given with more confidence, for the source of their endurance and courage is always found either in Arabian or in thoroughbred blood. terms were at one time more nearly synonymous than they are now. A thoroughbred is one whose pedigree 1s registered in the English Stud Book, in 1808, and the English race horse is founded upon the courser of the desert. Arabs were imported to England at a very early period, but not in such num- bers as to effect any decided improve- ment in the native breed until the reign of James I. This monarch established a racing stable and installed therein some fine Arabian stallions. Charles I continued the same policy, and the royal stud which he left at Tutbury consisted chiefly of Arab bred horses. Soon after his execution it was seized by order of Parliament, but happily the change in dynasty did not interfere with the conduct of the stud. Crom- well, as is well known, had a sharp eye for a horse, and the best of the King's Jot were soon “chosen” for the Lord Protector. Charles IT, again, had no Jess a passion for horses, and almost the first order that he issued after lending in England, was one to the effect that the Tutbury negs should be returned to the royal stables. He and many private breeders besides added to the Arabian stock in England; but it was not until the first half of the eighteenth century that the three horses were imported who have exercised the greatest influsnce upon the aoe of English thorough breds. These were the Byerly '[urk, the Darley Arabian, and, more especial. ly, Godolphin Arabian. The last named was a dark bay horse, about 15 Lands high (Arab “orees seldom exces! 14} hands), wits » white off-heel behind. | A good many people are afraid of | cold air, especially at night, shutting themselves in close bed-rooms, where | thelr systems are poisoned and their | constitution gradually undermined by breathing the bad alr. And even hos or warm air that is pure, air in 4 room that has ver dlation as well as heat, is debilitaticg where breathed all might, Pulmonary complaints are Inevitably and exclusively caused by foul in-door air, and cured by pure, especially by cold, pure, out-door air. The influence of fresh air so much in- creased a Jow temperatures that “colds’ are, n fact, far more curable in midw nler than was shot i remedial is oy in midsummer, I through the Jungs in Mexico, | and have ever since been susceplible to he contagion of a “‘catarrh factory,” as a friend of mine calls the unvealilated school-roowns and meeting-houses of our country towns, In warm weather I | avoid such man-traps as [ would the pit of a gas well, but in winter I risk their infection in assurance that its in- | fluence can be counteracted by an extra } the | dose of ice air, On returning from a crowded lecture | hall, a stifling sick-room, a stuffy omul- bus, ete., I remove my bed to the draft | side of the house, and cpen a window to | the full extent of {ts mechanism taking | care to go to sleep facing the drafi, I | have often awakened in the moming with my bead grizzled with hoar frost, but without the slightest vestige of the catarrh which had announced its ap- proach the night before. Cold is an antiseptic and a powerful digestive stimulant. The hospitals of the future will be ice-houses, Dyspepsia, catarrh and fevers of all kinds can be frozen ou® of the system, not by Jetting the patient shiver in the snow-bank, but by giving extra allowance of warm bed-clothing with the additional! luxury of breathing ice cold air, which, under such circum- | stances, becomes as preferable to bot miasma 8s cold spring water {oo warm dizeh water. 1 have also found that the best brain work can be done in a cold room, and that stove heat has a tenden- ey to stultify like = narcotic beverage] Warm wraps make fires tolerably dis pensable, instruction of the Blind in China. Rev. W, H. Murry, a missionary at Peking, has devised a system for teach- ing the blind, and has reduced the Chinese language to 408 syllables. By this system the blind have been enabled to learn to read with marvelous facility. The blind themselves are employed in the stereotyping and printing of books, which are produced at an amsszingly jow rate, compared with books smboss- ed for the blind in this country. Among the Chinese the blind are re- garded with great consideration, and they are watched with interest when they read with their fingers from the books which they carry in (their hands —————— AI OI SIE Some Peculiar Crabs. running along like a blown by a strong wind," sion Island there are “climb to the top of