————————— A J IN ONE SYLLABLE. A REMARKABLE ADDRESS TO AN INDIANA SCHOOL. The President of Fort Wayne's Board of Trustees Shows thee Strugth which Lies In Short Words, The strength which lias in words of one syllable has been often demonstarted, and no doubt the simple directness of this address delivered to a graduating class ut Fort Wayne impressed itself on the minds of the listeners with a force that made them remember it, says the Chicago Tribune. The president of the board of trustecs was Mr. A. P. Edgerton, after wards national civil service commis sioner, and his advice, given eleven years ago, is still worth preserving, The greater part is here quoted ; “This day we close for the year the Fort Wayne free schools, and we now part with you, the girls and boys we ar no more to teach. “I say giris and boys, for when three- score and ten years have come to you you will be glad to have your friends say that health and peace of mind have kept your heart warm; that you wear no brow of gloom; are not borne down with age, but still, tn heart, are ‘girls and boys.’ When these years come, and I hope they will come to all, the tide of time will fall back and tell you of your school-time days, when the fair, the Kind, and the true found love, but the false heart found no friends, no tongues to praise. These days bring rich gifts to age, and when you shall cease to think of them you tire has burnt low, and your light has gone out. You have been here taught i the hope that the free schools of Fort Wayne would help to make you of use t« your friends and to the world; wouls give you faith in all that is good and rue, and lead you to seek work: for this you must seek and do if you would have a good name, wealth, a home, a charge to keep, or a trust to serve. Go forth with a bold, true heart to seek the work for you to do. **Keep in mind that the hours of work run through each day, and that God's great law of life is: ‘In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread.’ *“‘Now for you, young men, this truth is told. **Go where you will through the world, aud you will find on the front door of shops and mills, of stores and banks, and on ships, on farms, on roads, in deep mines where men toil for wealth: where laws are made that make some men too rich, and men of worth and work through all our land too poor; where men by law are taught to plot with sin, to spurn the right, that charge and cost and spoil may make old ‘Quirks’ | law firms rich; where the law is so plead | that the judge must guess to find what's | law; where quacks most fight o'er sick men's pains snd dead men's bones; | where types are set, and mind | the proots; where priests do preach and | pray, and where schools are aught this | sign: ‘Brains Will Fiad Work Here’ “Don’t fear. Step up and ask for work; brains will get it. Don’t let ‘I dare not wait on [I would’—like the cat | that loves fish, but dare not wet her | feet. “If it be said ‘What can you dnt? Will sou learn a trade! say ‘I have! none, but I can learn one and put brains | in it." When you go to a place where brains should hont for work and will Le aure to find it, it may be said toy ‘Do you see that plow?! Can you held | and drive it deep! That plow, in its] wise use gives all men food, “*Do you see that wheel snd that crani and those shafts and that press and do | you hear the rush and hiss of the steam which moves them! can you make and | bold and run them! ean you build and | drive the works and wheels which make the wealth of the earth and cause it to roll and to float to and fro from place to place where it is best for man to use it? “*Can you spiu the thread and weave it, which makes ropes for kings and silks for the rich and vain, and dress for the poor, snd alli that skill and art have wrought by loom and hand for man's use!” ‘“Toese things are all shot through with threads of light—the light of mind | and art and skill which shines zach day | more bright and dims all the old by some new found light, as the ye rs go on. “‘If you say that you do not know how to do all this work, but will try to learn somes of it and do it well, then will be said to you, ‘Can you aad will you work? and will you spesk the truth, and in all things strive to do no maa wrong? If you say * Yes,' then all the doors where man's good aud great work is done will swing for you to pass you in to do your part; and thus you will see how God rules in all His ways, in man's good works and deeds. Home may hope for fame, but if they doubt that God rules, bave not trust and faith, they well may fear their fate. New books, not old coins, keep charge of fame. Look well to books, for through them the world's best thoughts and deeds now speak. “To you, young girls, I must say a word, uot to chide ner to praise. You an plant the rose which shail bloom ani give its sweets to all; or you can grow | e thorn, which shall pierce and tear the hearts of those who love you. hope for you, pray for you, * ‘The turn your minds now will take will fix your fife to come. if you are led in a just way of pure thought and deed, you will be sure to fiad joy and pesce and health in all you do. You each hope, some day, to be a good man's wife. It is well to be this: but take oare that you be not a fool's drudge “What should you bring to a good and true man to make his and your's a home of peace? I can tell you: Good health; a mind rich in stores of thought; a pure heart, full of love and truth and trust in God. “It is not a curl, nor a bang, nor a smile, nor a dress, nor art io a sigh or a tear, that can win the worth you need to bless you: but it is the t sense to know the way to a good man's heart; to know how to bo true to your own self; to be at your own home and in all you do the girl that pure and good men seek; the girl that knows such men when she meets them, and finds the worth that dwells in them, and does not drive them from her to hear the praise make all her life noae to ou, of fools—~and thus to ee De ee found. They own the world and do all its best work. “The man with the hard hand of toll can press a heart as true——can lift the babe he loves in a way as soft—and at its. smile will kiss its cheek, and at its pain will wet it with a tear—oan sing the song that doth please as well—and ‘an strike with his strong arm as quick and sure the blow that makes men free ~a8 judge, or priest, or king. “The right choice at first, in all things, is all there is to ‘well done,” at last, “Our words of ‘well done,’ here we vow ‘give you, with the hope that they may help to guard your way to the end of a well spent life." WILLOW FARMING, A New and Growling landustry in the West, A new industry has been established in St. Louis county, near the little town of Allenton, thirty six miles west of the vity of St. Louis, on the Missouri and Pacific and St Louis and San Francisco railroads, which, if successful, will fur- nish employment to thousands of unem- ployed laborers. The enterprise is for the cultivation, on a large scale, of wil- lows suitable for the manufactu.o willow wae, A description of the process through which the willow in its various stages of cultivation, harvesting and preparation for the factory, as given by St. Louis Globe-Democrat, is interesting. oes up live willow twigs twelve inches long. Fhese are sharpened at one end planted in rows by thrusting them into he ground to the depth of six or eight nches. As soon as the plants begin to sprout, the work of weeding and culti NOTES AND COMMENTS Bavrimone has more than a hundred Christian Endeavor societies, represent- ing sixteen sectarian denominations, and an effort is already being made in that city to have the annual convention in 1896 held there. Next year's convention will be held in San Francisco, Mr. Cuavscey Warner, an elderly farmer of Cambridge, Vt., has promised to present to the town of Sturbridge, Mass., $8,000, in recognition and appre- ciation of the care the town has taken of his deat-mute female cousin, This is a ractical manifestation of gratitude that 1s not us common as the occasion for it. CoMernaixT is often made about our Senators and Representatives absenting themselves from Washington while Con- gress is in session. But we are much better served than England, for out of 670 members of th: House of Commons seldom more than 400 are present and are evidently never expected to be present, for there is only seating accommodation for 860. Tur growth of the orange industry in Florida has increased from a production of 600,000 boxes in 1¥85 to 3 to conservative estimates the crop will be fully 5,000,000 boxes, of which over 4,000,000 will be marketed. til the crop is laid by, the same as in the cultivation of corn. the fall, whea the frost strips them of the leaves and turns the bark a gl brown color, under ten WEY circumstances, feet in length. they are then cut and tied in bundles like rye, carted to the hothouses, where they are subjected to a sweating process, which softens and bleaches the bark, which is then easily peeled off, b, dragging them through a little machine made for the purpose, Another process is that of steaming the favorable twelve Are, from to ing only 8 few hours, while the former requires a month, bat is not so desirable us the willows are discolored some extent and thus rendered less valuable for fine work. he willow plants last about twelve years, after which they are grubbed up sud the ground replanted. The plant retain i's full growth until the to Goes not energy is speat the first year in making its roots, It is estimated that under the most fa vorable circumstances an acre of prop three years will produce from 8,000 to for market, the prioe of which is cents per pound wholesale, Taking the lowest estimate of the pro ten lowest market price, six cents, the mark. etable value of one acre is $180. The labor, is $40 per acre. The highest esti. nated cost of cutting, hauling, steaming ind peeling is about $30 per acre, mak ing a total expense of $30 per acre, and Nocturnal Creatures, Most curious in origin of all nocturnal winged bats, which may be regarded, keys, highly speoializd for the task of catching nocturnal flees and midges. Few people know how nearly they are related to us. They belong to the self same division of the higher mammals as man and the apes; their skeleton answers to ours, bone for bone aod joint for joint, in an extraordinary manner; only the un essential fact that they have very long fingers with a web between as an organ of flight prevents us from intantly and instinctively recognizing them as remote cousins once removed from the gorilla, The female bat in particular is absurd. ly human. Most of them fetd off insects alone, but a few, like the famous vam- pire bats of South America, take 8 mean advantage of sleeping animals, and suck their blood sfter the fashion of mos. quitoes, as they le defenseless in the forests or on the open pampas. Others, like the flying foxes of the Malay archi- pelago, make a frugal meal off fruits and veyctables, but even these are per. sistent night fliers. during the hot trophical daytime, but of ial, to rob the banana patches and invade the plantain grounds of the in- dustrious native, compelled by dire need to become a fly- ing night bird. {Cornhill Magazine. Two Miles a Minute by Rail Engineers are always, like the great Alexander, seeking new worlds to con- quer. F. B. Behr, associate of the In- stitution of Civil Eugineers, finds steam locomotion on the surface of this planet too slow at a more or less dangerous maximum of sixty miles an hour and he proposes to whirl the man of the twen. tieth century at the rate of two miles per minute. Under the title of * Lighining Fx Prom Railway Service” he publishes a full statement of his plans with all the necessary technical details. The motive power proposed is electricity and the method that which is known as the Lar tigue single-rail system, which, in a rudimentary form, is now at work on a short line of nine miles and a half from Listowel to Baliybunion, in Ireland, and from Fours to Pan in the depart- many | idea, includ the absolute impossibility of train leaviog the metals, its cheapness of construction as well as a speed that brings Edinb within threes hours of London. The King of the Belgians has accepted the n of Mr. Bebr's in. teresting little work. {London Tele- graph. Tar wandering St Lawrenos, still retain their own langunge, most them speak Eoglish aod some of them French. wy address one another and their beasts, dogs, and horses in the Indian tongue, to their belief, rebin bird speaks the Indisn language.” The women are industrious, kindly, and shapeless in middle life, while the men are fat and idle, after the manoer of sav- age males brought under civilizing influ cuces, though of “Lhe Linenar thinkers in the churches are in the time of Bishop Colenso, 3) years ago. After the Bishop published book asserting that certain and figures in the Pentateuch were un true he found himsell almost universally ostracized. Men and women he had known intimately from childhood refused to speak to him. And so general was the detestation of him that his lsun dress in London refused any wash his clothes, tomers by coming into such close contact with him fain statements whom songrer to because she lost ous s men have Evin since there began to be college in the United been in the babit of to graduation by school, farming, and could be States young working their futoring, w hintever taken up and dropped with ease, The presence of a ooliege at Athens, OO. in the Hocking Yalley coal region, has offered still an other opportunity young in search of It is got unusual for students at Athens to interrupt their college course by a scason of labor it the mines for the purpose of raisin money with which to go on with their ¥ studies WHY teachings other occupation to men education, Oo Yd K A Sr. Louis physician is querying to know why marriage ceremonies shoald not be performed by doetors of medicine, instead of haviog the sathority lodged in hands of doctors of divinity and other ministers, He thinks it would be a good thing for this country if doctors were given the power and exer cised it properly. "1 1 had my way,” he says, ‘no two persons should be united for life unless they had good, strong and sound physical make-ups, Then [ would never marry two blondes, but would al ways require a blonde to secure a bru nette for a partner. If this were done we should becowme more beautiful as a race, and stronger and longer lived the hoe $ hue Ax exposition will be held at Lyons France, next year. The fair is to be opened on April 26th. The principal building is to be polygonal in shape, with a lofty central dome, which wiil rise to a height upon the ioterior of some one hundred and eighty feet. Jt being strengtheved by means of the airy lateral supports which resemble the flying buttress of a Gothic cathedral. The building will be seven hundred aad fifty feet in diameter, and will cover a space of nearly five hundred thousand square feet. The total sand four hundred and eighty tons, A Fuexcn scientist has been usiog his microscope recently on bank and oational These, he says, may woney against placing it in the mouth under any circumstances. On some of The professor declares that the bills are a dangerous medium for the spread of contagious bills adopted by other purpose. Tur chartering of the Bellamy colony, has excited a great deal of comment, Several hundred of the Bellamy believers have got together and propose to go to this new country and demovstate that the Bellamy scheme as outlined in * Looking Backward ” is a success, They are haviog built a great many apartment houses in sections ready to transport by wagon and rush them wp in Aur as soon as the opening takes place. Everything will be ran on the covperative plan, and no one will be al- lowed to buy property unless they join the colony. e food for all of the peo- le of the town will be cooked in ove Kitchen, and it will be served in one monster dining room. There are 500 or 400 in the company, and they declare themselves populists, and propose to Sass the banner of the people’s party in- to the new territory. Tue reports of the patent office ut Washington afford the best evidence of what has been accomplished by elec. tri in recent years, Until 1876, w nay be ed as the dawn of the age of electricity, very few patents 80 few applications for patents were pation of instruments for use in natural sciences, plications increased so rapidly thas it be vision for electricity, In 1884 the patent office granted 1,200 patents protecting inventions in the field of electricity alone. In that year three per cent. of all the patent claims busied themselves with electricity, Since then two electrical divisions have arisen in the patent office, and these have been divided into ten or 200 classes of inventions and experi ments. From 1876 to 1803 21,000 pat ents have been issued for inventions in this domain of applied science--900 for arc lights, 800 for incandescent lamps, 220 for applieation of new power in the working of metals, 1,680 for electric railronds and the rest for hundreds of varied purposes. Ten per cent. of sll the applications in the patent office are confined to the uses of electricity. Tur Commissioner of Patents has just rendered an interesting decision in the the refusal of the name of the State, It appears that a certain label, and ¢ i liquors had already sold in its liquors bearing such trade mark, claiming that it possessed The Commissioner, closing his decision, It is considered thas the State of Carolina, votwithstanding the acts of its Governor and the State Board has authorized trade in Hguors outside own limits, is not RAVE ne of its this time the right the of the trade mark sought to be registered, and to Lise Eceentricities in Palaces, The King of Siam, who, according to reports, has had a palace construct which he can submerge in the sca at under water whenever not the only monarch idulged eccentricities of a] live in For instance, history has preserved the of the Russian Empress Anne. who punished several of her dainty eourtiers by com them to paw the night in this at chamber of state, where they were almost frozen to death The Czar Paul, ancestor of the present memory ice palace built by the we : rE ot fear sing Emperor of Russia, constructed a room ormed entirely of huge mirrors, where he walking to and fro in full spent hours ¥ the ugliest uniform--a singular taste for man in Russia the native princes cooled his palace by making a stream in a cascade over the gateway; and Indian despot Tippo Sahib placed beside his dinner table a life-size figure of a tiger devouring an English officer, the of the beast and the shrieks of being imitated by hid den machinery, Harper's Young Peo pie One of of Java 5 fa thie sr roar the victim Facts About Glycerine Glycerine is one of the most useful and misunderstood of every-day assistants, It must not be applied to the skin un- diluted, or it will cause it to become red and hard, but if rubbed well into the skin while wet it bas a soltenisg and whitening effect It will prevent and cure chapped hands, two or three drops will often stop the baby's stomach ache It will allay the thirst of fever patients and soothe an irritable cough by moist Equal parts of bay rum sod glycerine applied to the face after shaving makes a man rise up and call the woman who pro. vided it blessed. preservative of the leather and effectu- ally keeps out the water and prevents wet fect A few drops of glycerine put in the fruit jars the last thing before scaling them helps to keep the preserves from holding on top. Half « teaspoonful every hall hour will cure summer compiaint or dvspep. sia. - New York Commercial Advertiser. Lave for the Zigrag. The straight line is an abomination te the Chinese, in their streets and have banished it completely where coun try field paths are concerned. They will always substitute a curve zigeag. In districts not devastated by the Tai Pings nor subject to the influence of the foreigner the houses and temples are characterized by curved, often peaked, roofs, ornamented with fantastic modifi. cations of the “myriad stroke pattern.” found to have a mental world to corre spond. The straight line is scouted. They think in curves and zigezags., To suggestive of death and demons, It be longs not to the heaven above nor to the In a true horizon line are veen the “undulations of the dragon.” Therefore, argues the Chinese, the straight line pertains to hades, —[Con- temporary Review, a Seven Wonders of Corea The seven wor ders of Corea are de scribed at length by a Chinese paper. They consist of a hot mineral near Kin Shantao, which is of ctiring any disesse, no matter how serious: two wells, one at each end of the peninsala, which have the uliar characteristic that when one is full the other is empty; a cold cave, from which issues constantly sa jce-cold wind of t force: a pine forest which cannot one a “hovering stone” of massive ree lar id hot stone, which Bree - si sides; a w En the roma a hill an evolving a glowin and a “sweating Buddha,” on hr not a blade ot Es on a flower or tree hat flourished for thirty years. —[Philadel FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS, A LITTLE SECRET. About the meadow all the day 1 see the bumblebee at play; Also the lazy butterfly Beneath the shining silken sky. But when the aatumn’s brown and red The merry bumblebee has fled ; And vo fair butterfly is seen Drifting about on wing serene, I know the secret: when "tis cool These pretty insects are in school; But in the summer's golden prime pod ‘ : : i They're out for their vacation time, — i Onee A Week, A FIGHTING BIRD, Doctor Franklin, when he recom mended the adoption of the turkey as our national! emblem often unclean and not particularly i good reasons to give on behalf of his candidate, Among them he did fail to include its fighting qualities, i engages in battle, and decidedly more willing to meet an adversary of his own size than is an eagle; at least an eagle of i eur American thunderbolts in his talons We are used to fortunate infants carried and likewise of rash eng los’ CHES OF young eng attacked by the i while clinging wo the sides of precipitous alifl«, and just escape with their liv A few—u very few of probably true terrified by a shrieking about his ears, how many cans have trembled well-grown turkey cock, with his wattle faming, his breast rofled to the utmost his wings half spread, and every feather! How nomiciously fled before such an monarch of the barn yard? And now, if really an addition bird of pow ar, we can claim that There have various anecdotes of the aims and of small children broken by the blow bis mighty wing: but these because the same tales are geese. But an antiquarisn Among ancient newspapers Pe i 5 3 covered io an old journal publ hearing tales of off i in uy Dovs wrathiul thos But for eve wrath many have the to slay be 4 ity of a that the turkey capacity mn fad . ad been feos af ao not « int reisteq ol searcher recentiv dis ished io he obi nodee of a Newburyport, maa killed by a turkey, He was a very aged pears, and htly childish. A day of Indian summer haviog come, relatives put him in a comfortable ar chair on the porch, wrapped in a iressing gown and wearing on his head % keep off red ni t here he unfortunately ns he drowsed, as his head nodded, his n o The scarlet tassel | tuary i ey : \ : red gentieman, it sig : wi fl i00&e {ood colds snd neur i, & peaked ap with a tassel on the end and and ip wagered thus an a the fell psieeD his head nodded: DOLL spicuously caught the eye that was wasdering about place, undergoing his autumn fattening no loubt, and was revarded in the light of & challenge Swelling and gobbling meeting no response, the the poor old gentle nightcap off, beat him with his wings until he fell out of his chair, and the paper puts gg so ill-used and mal treated him as he soon thereafter died Perhaps, despite Doctor Franklin, to eaten is a fate than ication for so dangerous & bird th's Companion. turkey t} 3 will w $ bird at lensth fie it man, placked his as be more suitable A BUTTERYILY 8 BATH River iu Jamaica one brilliant July day, watching the dragon flies, or “dsrning needies,” darting over the water, | saw a sight that was entirely new to me, and one that filled me with wonder A beautiful butterfly, of common in the West Indies, the naturalists as Victorina banded with pale g deep black bars across its vings, floated iazily down to the water's settied on the damp sand. a sort known Steneles, the water, where the breeze sent in little so that its body and bead were com wings to and fro, seemingly in an attempt to cover them with the water also, Of course it could not do this, for panse of its wings that whenever it at tempted to force them under the water Quickly flying up from this perilous position, it regained the shore and again egan the atterupt to get entirely under All this was a most interesting spec. tacle to me, and I wae entirely at a loss to understand its meaning. 1 had been a student of butterflies for nearly twenty. five years and a collector in many dif. ferent countries, yet 1 had never wit nessed such a sight before. The weather was not especially warm, in fact ‘‘the doctor,” as the Jamaicans call the strong sea breeze that daily makes life more endarable, was unusually cool that day. So it could hardly be for the purpese of cooling itself that the in- sect indulged in these strange proceed. ings, or it would have been a sight long since familiar to me and to other collec. tore. I was well aware that butterflies do get overheated and out of breath; often after watching two of them fight. ing furiously in the hot sunshine, or having raced them mysell across the fields. 1 had seen them flapping their wings lightly up and down, Rory forcing the air more rapidly through the little holes at the base of the wings though which they do their breathing, and thus cooling themeeives off, Failing to fathom such queer anl ap. Patently unoatural actions on the part of this butterfly, I was just preparing to capture it to make a closer examination when | was thwarted b a third party. Evidently I had not the only in. terested watcher, for at that instant a whip-poor-will dashed out from the gloom of the bordering woods and in {iis attempt to capture the butterfly effect. ly a y It was some months after this, on another stream in Jamaica, precisely the same performance * 4 : ~agnin on the part of the beautifi) banded Victorina., This time, however, 1 was more fortunate, and quickly had the butterfly in my net and a moment ufter it was between my fingers and under the powerful lens, which ismy constant pocket companion, ~ At once all was clear to me, for hess and there on the hairy covering of its velvety body, but especially near the bases of the wings, were little bright carmine putehes, which on close examin. ation, after stirring them up with a pin, proved to be made up of scores of tiny red parasites, Holding the butterfly carefully be- tween my thumb and finger by the wings 80 as not to hurt it, | immersed it io the water and held it there until the kicking of its legs plainly told me that it was Then, on re-examining it, | found that most of the tiny parasites had been drowned off; and after three or four such baths I could not find one remaining Then 1 allowed my to fly away, snd | have often wondered just what its thoughts—if any it bad-—must have been giant who thus aided it to get rid of its microscopic Wormentors Cunt ive concerning the with that covered on the with 8 mst formida- beak, hicl ascertained, BICTOM ope, I have raxite | di butte fly is armed i rot 18 Or powers syslem, driven to this parently very a bath— r is about the last ould « xpet t of so srfly, St, taxing Trapping the Beaver, h structure interesting , in bot most inted for the sake of was its fur in demand i of silk and rab- re of hats that me districts iis i tu nso minsleq , be he white man LT ¥ lead a soli fangerous life, To be f unknown es demsnds a courage and endurance of no kind A beaver is a very animal to trap Th trapper the various marks of T hese to find the wildest solitudes o want ordinary alt iit 1115 © QISCOVe out bow his house, which is yw water, 1 in the water ow the surfa iy over the trap is the bait, or medicine gland of the suspended from a 80 8% just to clear the water, with a long cord and log of cedar wood as a buoy, the latter to mark the position of the trap when swims away with it, he fated little builder— perhaps return ing to his home ar family — scents the tempting castor. He cannot reach it as hie y he feels about with his hina legs for some this, too, has been craftly ed for him. Putting down his feet to etch up for the cov morsel b nds them suddenly clasped in a steel embrace; there is no escape he o his zed by trapper 1 beaver dispatched by head i signs hen a steel or four- Immedi om trap is sunk iwelve teen Inches (wm ale made {1 the Deaver, Cas101 SLICK, the beaver and swims, s thing to stand on; tiy pia wv ected 7 reeds hope of revealin hiding and t piace, 1s se the im prisor blow fie wie on the se made of the beaver manufacture hats hair is pulled out down close and iicazo Times, of ur shaved Be. Ll Made the Judge Listen. Judge Van Brunt of New York hasa the bar who appear before him, particu. larly young men, of talking to his asso- ciates on the beach while the lawyers are delivering their speeches Mr. Choate Forty allotted him for the PUTPOSE had scarcely uttered a doz when Judge Ven Brunt w heeled around in his chair and began a discussion with Judge Andrews. Mr. ceased speaking immediately, minutes had been He n words handsome {20e 8 trifle A hash fell upon the Judge Van Bruet, noticing looked inquiringly at the silent advocate. “Your honor,” said Mr. Choate, “| have just forty minutes in which to make my final argument. 1 shall not only need every second of that time to do it justice, but Ishall also need your vadivided at. tention.” “And you shall have it,” promptly re. sponded the Judge, at the same time acknowledging the justice of the rebuke by a faint flush on his cheeks, It was an exhibition of genuine courage, but one that was more fully appreciated by members of the profession than by the laymen who witnessed it. [New York Tribune, the Judges, his courtroom : A Cantonment, The cantoomcot at sn Indian town means the place where the Eaglish live. The native town is usually inclosed by high walls and is accessible only by a few gates. It is brimful of people, who crowd its bazaars or shop streets. Quite outside the town and a mile or two away is the cantonment, an unwalled district, where each house stands in its own in. closure or compound, and where the - ments— British or native—are quartered in *‘lives" or rows of huts, The cantonment usually has wide, wall. kept roads, with a grassy avenues of fine trees, givin To ir: it rT a might be a week without